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+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 #66638 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/66638)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of Ireland in Fiction, by Stephen J. Brown
-
-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
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: Ireland in Fiction
- A Guide to Irish Novels, Tales, Romances, and Folk-lore
-
-Author: Stephen J. Brown
-
-Release Date: October 31, 2021 [eBook #66638]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-Produced by: Tim Lindell and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
- https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images
- generously made available by The Internet Archive/American
- Libraries.)
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK IRELAND IN FICTION ***
-
-
-
-
-
-IRELAND IN FICTION.
-
-
-
-
- IRELAND IN FICTION
-
- _A GUIDE TO_
- IRISH NOVELS, TALES, ROMANCES,
- AND FOLK-LORE
-
- BY
- STEPHEN J. BROWN, S.J.
-
- _Author of A Reader’s Guide to Irish Fiction,
- A Guide to Books on Ireland, etc._
-
- Do chum glóire Dé agus Onóra na h-Éireann.
-
- MAUNSEL AND COMPANY, LIMITED,
- DUBLIN AND LONDON.
- 1916.
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS.
-
-
- PAGE
-
- PREFACE vii.
-
- PREFACE TO _A Reader’s Guide to Irish Fiction_ (1910) x.
-
- ACKNOWLEDGMENTS xiv.
-
- SIGNS, ABBREVIATIONS, ETC. xvii.
-
- IRISH FICTION UNDER NAMES OF AUTHORS ARRANGED ALPHABETICALLY 1
-
- APPENDIX:
-
- A.—SOME USEFUL WORKS OF REFERENCE 261
-
- B.—PUBLISHERS AND SERIES 264
-
- C.—IRISH FICTION IN PERIODICALS 270
-
- D.—CLASSIFIED LISTS:
-
- I.—HISTORICAL FICTION 273
-
- II.—GAELIC EPIC AND ROMANTIC LITERATURE 279
-
- III.—FOLK-LORE AND LEGEND 282
-
- IV.—FAIRY TALES FOR CHILDREN 283
-
- V.—CATHOLIC CLERICAL LIFE 284
-
- VI.—HUMOROUS BOOKS 285
-
- INDEX OF TITLES AND SUBJECTS 287
-
-
-
-
-PREFACE.
-
-
-It may be well to state at the outset in what respects the present work
-differs from _A Reader’s Guide to Irish Fiction_ published in 1910, and
-now out of print. The differences may be reduced to four:—
-
-(1). The number of books dealt with is almost double that of the earlier
-work.
-
-(2). The arrangement is quite new. In the former work the books were
-classified according to subject matter: in this they are arranged under
-the names of the Authors, these names being arranged alphabetically.
-Some lists are appended in which the books are classified as historical
-novels, Folk-lore, Gaelic Epic and Romantic Literature, &c.
-
-(3). A combined title and subject index has been provided, both of
-which were lacking in the earlier book. Some new matter is given in the
-Appendix, in particular some notes on fiction in Irish periodicals.
-
-(4). In _A Reader’s Guide_, &c., a few notes on Authors were added at the
-end. In the present work biographical notes on a large proportion of the
-Authors are given immediately before the notes on their books.
-
-Apart from these differences, the two works have the same scope and aim.
-In both, the scope includes all works of fiction published in volume
-form, and dealing with Ireland or with the Irish abroad, and such works
-only. The present book, therefore, is not, any more than was the earlier
-book, a guide to the works of Irish novelists—else, Goldsmith, for
-instance, might surely claim a place. Neither is it, properly speaking,
-a book of advice as to what is best to read. The aim has been to provide
-descriptive notes of an _objective_ nature, to record facts, not to set
-forth personal views and predilections. This is a book of reference pure
-and simple; it neither condemns nor recommends. In this respect it
-differs from several other guides to fiction which at first sight it
-seems to resemble. The Abbé Bethléem’s most valuable _Romans à lire et
-romans à proscrire_ has been mentioned in the former preface. Its title
-proclaims its character. Of a similar nature are some works by members of
-my own Order that have since come to my knowledge. It will be useful to
-record their titles:
-
- 1. P. Gerardo Decorme, S.J.—Lecturas recomendables. (Barcelona:
- Luis Gili). 1908.
-
- 2. P. Pablo Ladron de Guevara, S.J.—Novelistas malos y buenos.
- Pp. 523. (Bilbao). 1910.
-
- 3. Was soll ich lesen? Ein Ratgeber [advice giver] für
- Studierende (Trier), 1912.
-
- 4. Guide de Lecture. (Brussels). Second ed., 1912. A
- magnificent 4to volume of 1032 pp., compiled by a Belgian
- Jesuit, Fr. Schmidt, and constituting the catalogue of his
- great Bibliothèque Choisie of 200,000 volumes.
-
-No. 1 devotes only a chapter to fiction. No. 2 contains a critical
-examination from a moral point of view of 413 Spanish writers, 1,220
-French, 150 English, 98 German, as well as Russian, Belgian, &c. No. 3
-devotes a section to _Schöne Literatur_ giving notes and bibliographical
-details. Symbols are used to indicate the suitability of the books to
-readers of various ages. The same plan is followed in No. 4, but to a
-much fuller extent, and the whole work is on a larger scale.
-
-Enough has been said, I think, in the former preface as to the object
-aimed at in the notes. I have tried to make that object clear: I am far
-from thinking that it has always been attained, even in this revised
-work. Some of the excuses for incompleteness that held good for the first
-steps into an almost untrodden field have no doubt ceased to have the
-same force. I have had time to explore new ground, and to survey anew
-that already occupied. On the other hand the years that have slipped away
-since the former book have been filled by many duties that left little
-time for literary work. Yet, though I am unable to say with confidence
-that this work is bibliographically exhaustive, I trust that, for
-practical purposes, for the purposes for which it is intended, it may be
-found reasonably complete. For the achievement of even this result I can
-by no means claim all the credit. My obligations to my numerous helpers
-are very great indeed, as will appear from the Acknowledgements.
-
-One further point needs to be dwelt upon—the non-inclusion of works
-of fiction written in the Irish language. I cannot do better in this
-connection than quote from the preface to a former work[1] in which this
-same point came up for explanation:—“I have not included books in the
-Irish language. My reasons for this are threefold. In the first place
-my own knowledge of Irish is not yet sufficient to enable me even to
-edit satisfactorily notes of books in Irish.... In the second place I do
-not think that a bibliography of works in Irish should be made a mere
-appendage or sub-section, as it would inevitably be, of a work such as
-the present. Lastly, it may well be doubted whether the time be yet come
-for doing this work in the way that it deserves to be done.” This last
-reason is partly based on the fact of the great mass of Irish literature
-still remaining in MS., a quantity probably much greater than what has
-been printed and published. The publication of the National Library’s
-bibliography is mentioned in the Appendix on Gaelic literature as an
-additional reason for my omission of books in Irish.
-
-Nevertheless, the omission of books in the Irish language from a Guide to
-Irish Fiction remains an anomaly, one of the many anomalies produced by
-the historic causes that have all but destroyed the Irish language as the
-living speech of Ireland.
-
- DUBLIN, _September_, 1915.
-
-[1] _A Guide to Books on Ireland_, Part I. (Hodges & Figgis), 1912.
-
-
-
-
-PREFACE TO A READERS GUIDE TO IRISH FICTION (1910).
-
-
-The present GUIDE TO IRISH FICTION is intended by the Author as the first
-part of a work in which it is hoped to furnish notes on books of all
-kinds dealing with Irish subjects.
-
-Before explaining the scope of this section of the work it may be well,
-in order to forestall wrong impressions, to say at once what it is _not_.
-In the first place, then, it does not lay claim to be a bibliography. By
-this I do not mean that I am content to be inaccurate or haphazard, but
-simply that I do not aim at exhaustive completeness. In the second place,
-it is not a catalogue of books _by Irish writers_. Lastly, it does not
-deal exclusively with books printed or published in Ireland.
-
-The Author’s aim has been to get together and to print in a convenient
-form a classified list of novels, tales, &c. (whether by Irish or by
-foreign writers), bearing on Ireland—that is, depicting some phase of
-Irish life or some episode of Irish history—and to append to each title a
-short descriptive note.
-
-Two things here call for some explanation, viz., the list of titles and
-the descriptive notes.
-
-As to the former, I have, with some trifling exceptions, included
-everything that I have been able to discover, provided it came within
-the scope of the work, as indicated above. It has been thought well to
-do this, because a vast amount of fiction that, from an artistic or from
-any other point of view, is defective in itself may yet be valuable
-as a storehouse of suggestion, fact, and fancy for later and better
-writers. For was it not worthless old tales and scraps of half-mythical
-history that held the germs of “Hamlet” and “Macbeth,” “King Lear” and
-“Othello”? There remains, indeed a large class of novels and tales that,
-so far as one may judge, can serve no useful purpose. It may be thought
-that with such books the best course to pursue is to allow them to
-pass into merited oblivion. But it must be remembered that booksellers
-and publishers will naturally continue to push such books because it
-is their business to do so, and the public will continue to buy them
-because it has ordinarily no other means of knowing their contents than
-the publisher’s announcement, the title, or—the cover. A “Guide” would,
-therefore, surely shirk an important portion of its task if it excluded
-worthless books, and thereby failed to put readers on their guard.
-
-Next, as regards the descriptive notes: there are three points which
-I should wish to make clear—the source of the information contained
-in these notes; their scope, that is, the nature and extent of the
-information with which they purpose to furnish the reader; and, thirdly,
-the tone aimed at throughout the work.
-
-Information about the books has been obtained in various ways. A
-considerable number have been read by the Author. Indeed, there are few
-writers of note included in the Guide about whose works he cannot speak
-from first-hand knowledge. Of the books that remain the great majority
-have been specially read for this work by friends, and a full account of
-the same written by them according to a formula drawn up for the purpose.
-In all cases, except in a very few—and these have been indicated—the
-wording of the final note is mine. In the few cases referred to, printed
-reviews or notices of the books have been drawn upon, the source of the
-note being mentioned in each instance.
-
-A word about the _scope_ of the notes. My chief object in undertaking
-this work was to help the student of things Irish. This object determined
-the character of the notes. A few years ago there appeared in France
-an excellent work, entitled _Romans à lire et Romans à proscrire_
-(Cambrai: Masson), by the Abbé Bethléem, which has since passed through
-many editions. In this work novels are classed _au point de vue moral_.
-In the rare cases in which the books included in my list contain
-matter objectionable from a moral or a religious standpoint, I have not
-hesitated to remark the fact in the note. This was, however, but a small
-part of the task. It will be clear likewise, from what has been said that
-my object is not to attempt _literary_ criticisms of Irish fiction. Such
-literary appreciations are to be found in other works already published,
-accounts of several of which will be found in the Appendix. True, a
-certain amount of criticism is often needed lest the account given of a
-book should be misleading, but it has been avoided wherever it did not
-seem to further the main purpose. This purpose, let me repeat, is, above
-all, to give _information_ to intending readers. I have, therefore,
-endeavoured, as well as might be, in the small space available, simply
-to give a clear idea of the contents of the books. In a good many cases
-I have further attempted an appreciation, or rather a characterization,
-of the book in question, but this was not always possible nor, indeed,
-necessary.
-
-Of the tone adopted in these notes little need be said. I did not
-consider that it would further my purpose to aim at that literary flavour
-and epigrammatic turn of phrase affected, and with reason, by reviewers
-in many periodicals. Moreover, to do so would have been inconsistent with
-brevity. Then, I must disclaim all intention of saying “clever” things
-at the expense of any book, however low it may deserve to be rated. I
-have endeavoured to avoid, too, the technicalities of criticism. Lastly,
-I trust the little work has not been rendered suspect to any class of
-Irishmen by the undue intrusion of religious or political bias.
-
-Apology might well be made here for the defects of the work. They will,
-I fear, be but too evident. But it should be borne in mind that, with
-the exception of Mr. Baker’s works, to which I cannot sufficiently
-acknowledge my indebtedness, I have had no guide upon the way, since no
-writer, so far as I am aware, has hitherto dealt in this way with Irish
-fiction as a whole.
-
-It may be asked, for whom especially this book is meant? In the first
-place, I hope it may be useful to the general reader who wishes to
-study Ireland. Next, it may help in the important and not easy task
-of selection those who have to buy books for any purpose, such as the
-giving of presents, the conferring of prizes in school or out of it, the
-stocking of shops and libraries—in other words, booksellers, library
-committees, heads of schools and colleges, librarians, pastors, and many
-others. Again, it may be of some service to lecturers and to popular
-entertainers. I have some hopes, too, that coming writers of Irish
-fiction, from seeing what has been done and what has not yet been done,
-may get from it some suggestions for future work. It may even help in a
-small way towards the realization of a great work not yet attempted, the
-writing of a history of Anglo-Irish literature.
-
-
-
-
-ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
-
-(_Reader’s Guide, etc._)
-
-
-My best thanks are due, in the first place, to the authorities of
-Clongowes Wood College, without whose constant aid and encouragement my
-task would have been impossible.
-
-Next, I wish to thank those publishers who courteously sent me copies
-of a number of their books, viz., the Irish publishers, Messrs. Gill;
-Duffy; Sealy, Bryers and Walker; Maunsel; and Blackie: and the London
-publishers, Messrs. Macmillan; Nelson; Methuen; Dent; Chatto and Windus;
-Burns and Oates; Sands; Blackwood; Nutt; Elliot Stock; and Smith, Elder.
-I should like to give greater prominence to the publications of these
-firms. The plan of this book prevents me from doing so but I may say that
-this little work, which will, I hope, help to make known their books,
-could not have appeared but for their generosity.
-
-To those who, as already mentioned, have aided in the work by reading
-books, and supplying information about them, my sincerest thanks are
-hereby tendered. I should be glad, if it were possible, to express here
-my obligations to each individually, but I must, for obvious reasons,
-limit myself to this general acknowledgment. There are, however, some
-whom, on account of special obligations on my part, I shall have the
-pleasant task of thanking by name. To Mr. E. A. Baker, M.A., D.LITT.,
-Librarian of the Woolwich Public Library, I am indebted both for kind
-permission to quote from his books and for constant advice and suggestion
-given with the greatest cordiality. To Dr. Conor Maguire, of Claremorris,
-I owe most of my notes of books on Irish Folk-lore, and to Mr. Edmund
-Downey, the well-known author and publisher, notes on Lever’s books,
-together with many useful suggestions. Mr. Francis J. Bigger, M.R.I.A.,
-of Belfast, the always ready and enthusiastic helper of every Irish
-enterprise, has aided me with valuable advice and no less valuable
-encouragement. Mr. J. P. Whelan, Librarian of the Kevin Street Public
-Library, Dublin, has rendered me every assistance in his power. Dr. J.
-S. Crone of London, Editor of the _Irish Book Lover_, has on several
-occasions kindly opened to me the pages of his periodical. Lastly, I must
-acknowledge here, with sincere thanks, much help of various kinds given
-me by many members of my own Order, and notably, Rev. M. Russell, S.J.;
-Rev. M. Corbett, S.J.; Rev. P. J. Connolly, S.J., and the Rev. J. F. X.
-O’Brien, S.J.—the last of whom very kindly undertook the tedious labour
-of revising my proofs.[2]
-
-
-[_Additional (Present Work)._]
-
-My obligations to my various kind helpers in the present work are even
-greater than in the case of the former book, and I am at a loss for an
-adequate expression of them. My thanks have, of course, been privately
-conveyed, but there are some collaborators who have had so large a
-share in the making of this book that I cannot but place on record its
-indebtedness towards them.
-
-For valuable work in the British Museum Library extending over a
-considerable length of time I have to thank Mrs. Pearde Beaufort, Miss
-C. J. Hamilton, and Miss G. B. Ryan. For much tedious labour in the
-rearrangement of the matter contained in the earlier book, I am indebted
-to the Misses Chenevix Trench (who also supplied many notes), and to Mrs.
-O’Neill, of Dundalk. To Dr. Crone, whose readiness to help when any Irish
-literary enterprise is afoot is inexhaustible, I owe many corrections,
-suggestions, and additions, and the laborious task of revising my MS.
-and correcting my proofs. Mr. Edmund Downey, of Waterford, has kindly
-read part of the proofs. Many books have been read for me and notes
-supplied by Lady Gilbert; Mrs. Concannon, of Galway; Mrs. L. M. Stacpoole
-Kenny, of Limerick; Miss J. F. Walsh, of Derry; Miss R. Young, of
-Galgorm Castle, Co. Antrim; Mrs. Macken, of the National University;
-Fr. MacDwyer, of Killybegs; and, perhaps most of all, Fr. J. Rabbitte,
-S.J., of St. Ignatius College, Galway. Mr. D. J. O’Donoghue, Librarian of
-the National University, has given me many suggestions, as well as some
-useful notes on fiction in Irish periodicals. Mr. Frank Macdonagh also
-has been very helpful with notes and corrections. I owe likewise a debt
-of gratitude to the authorities and the staff of the National Library
-for their courtesy and helpfulness. Nor must I omit a word of thanks to
-the publishers (including all the Irish publishers, and Messrs. Flynn,
-of Boston), who, as on a former occasion, made my task much lighter by
-supplying me with review copies of their books.
-
-Lastly to all the others, and they are many, who have in various ways
-given me help my very sincere thanks are hereby tendered.
-
-For the matter contained in my notes on the Authors, I am much indebted
-to Mr. D. J. O’Donoghue’s _Poets of Ireland_, and to the pages of the
-IRISH BOOK LOVER.
-
-[2] Through an unfortunate oversight the earlier work contained no
-mention of much kind help rendered me by several students of St.
-Patrick’s College, Maynooth, notably by Rev. J. Henaghan and Rev. J.
-Pinkman, at present priests on the mission. I now gratefully acknowledge
-this help.
-
-
-
-
-SIGNS, ABBREVIATIONS, ETC.
-
-
- b. = born.
- c. (before dates) = approximately.
- d. = died, daughter.
- ed. = edition, edited, editor, educated.
- q.v. = which may be referred to.
- n.d. = no date printed in the book referred to.
- _sqq._ = and following (years or pages).
- =C.B.N.= = Catholic Book Notes.
- =D.R.= = The Dublin Review.
- =I.B.L.= = The Irish Book Lover.
- =I.E.R.= = The Irish Ecclesiastical Record.
- =I.M.= = The Irish Monthly.
- =N.I.R.= = The New Ireland Review.
- =T. Lit. Suppl.= = The Times Literary Supplement.
- =C.T.S.I.= = Catholic Truth Society of Ireland.
- =S.P.C.K.= = Society for the Promotion of Christian Knowledge.
- =R.T.S.= = Religious Tract Society.
- =Allibone= = Allibone’s _Critical Dictionary of English
- Literature_.
- =Baker= = Baker’s Guides (_see_ Appendix A) a 2 indicates
- that the new ed. has been used.
- =Krans= = Krans’s _Irish Life in Irish fiction_. (Appendix
- A).
- =Read= = _The Cabinet of Irish Literature._ (Appendix A).
- =I. Lit.= = _Irish Literature_ in twelve Vols. (Appendix A).
- =N.Y.= = New York.
-
-The _place of publication_ has been mentioned in the case of books not
-published in Dublin or in London. A list of the Irish publishers will be
-found in Appendix B.
-
-The _price_ of most new novels on first publication is 6_s._, not
-net. When new fiction is issued at a lower price than that this price
-is usually net. I have not thought it useful to insert the prices of
-books no longer to be had otherwise than from second-hand booksellers:
-second-hand prices are constantly varying. The publication _Book-Prices
-Current_ might be usefully consulted in some reference library. The price
-I have given is usually the latest price mentioned in the Publishers’
-catalogue.
-
-_Dates_ in square brackets, thus [1829], indicate dates of first
-publication. Besides these I have mentioned the date of the latest
-edition I am aware of.
-
-The names of an Author placed within square brackets is an indication
-that the name in question did not appear on the title page of the book to
-which it is now affixed, the book having been published anonymously, or
-under a pen-name.
-
-Inverted commas are used thus “M. E. Francis” to indicate a _pen-name_.
-The writers’ works are entered under the name most familiar to the
-public, under Katharine Tynan and Rosa Mulholland rather than under Mrs.
-Hinkson and Lady Gilbert. However, in the case of old books I have not
-thought it useful to place the book under the literary disguise. I have
-entered them under the real name, with a cross-reference. I fear that
-perfect uniformity and consistency has not been secured, but hope that
-the book’s usefulness—utility, and not scientific precision, has been the
-aim—is not thus impaired.
-
-The _publishers_ mentioned are, so far as I have succeeded in discovering
-them, the publishers not of the first, but of the latest edition.
-
-Books published under a pseudonym which obviously could not be a real
-name, I have entered as anonymous, except where I have come to know the
-real name, in which case it will be found under the real name, with a
-cross reference from the pseudonym.
-
-When the note depends mainly or exclusively on a single already published
-authority or source, this authority or source is indicated at the end of
-the note.
-
-
-
-
-IRISH FICTION UNDER NAMES OF AUTHORS, ARRANGED ALPHABETICALLY.
-
-
-=ANONYMOUS.=
-
-⸺ ADVENTURER, THE.
-
- In Mitchel’s _Life of Hugh O’Neill_ there is a note in
- reference to his wooing of Sir Henry Bagenal’s sister, stating
- that a novel was published founded on this story, and entitled
- _The Adventurer_. (Query in I.B.L., vol. iv., p. 161.) This
- book does not seem to be in the British Museum Library, but
- I have found in an old catalogue a book with the title “The
- Adventurers; or, Scenes in Ireland in the Reign of Elizabeth,
- 1825.” This is probably the book referred to by Mitchel.
-
-⸺ ADVENTURES OF FELIX AND ROSARITO, THE; or, The Triumph of Love and
-Friendship. Pp. 58. (Title-p. missing). 1802.
-
- The hero is one Felix Dillon. Though the story begins and ends
- in Dublin, its scene is chiefly France, and afterwards Spain.
-
-⸺ ADVENTURES OF MR. MOSES FINEGAN, AN IRISH PERVERT. (N.Y.: _Benziger_).
-$0.30.
-
-⸺ ALBION AND IERNE: A Political Romance; by “An Officer.” Pp. 192.
-(_Marcus Ward_). 1886.
-
- An allegory in which the personages stand for countries and
- institutions. Ierne is of course Ireland, Albion is England.
- Then there are minor characters, such as Dash, Dupe, Plan,
- Sacrifice. Under this form the relations between the two
- countries and the possible results of separation are exhibited.
- Ends with the happy marriage of Albion with Kathleen, Ierne’s
- sister, and the burial of the hereditary feud.
-
-⸺ ANNA REILLY, THE IRISH GIRL. (N.Y.: _Pratt_). $1.50.
-
-⸺ BALLYBLUNDER: an Irish story. Pp. 291. (LONDON: _Parker_). 1860.
-
- Scene: the N.E. coast of Ireland, with its rugged rocks
- and lofty cliffs. The plot concerns the kindly family
- of “Ballyblunder,” on whose estate sheep are constantly
- being killed. A priest instigates to the crime, and
- encourages the perpetrators. Mr. Kindly’s son goes out to
- track the sheep-killers; a friend of his is murdered, and
- Brady, the murderer, falls off a cliff and is killed. The
- Kindlys eventually sell the estate. Some social scenes are
- interspersed. Written in a spirit of religious intolerance.
-
-⸺ BALLYRONAN.
-
- “A wonderfully interesting story, written in an easy, rattling
- style, with cleverly conceived plot, abundant humour, and no
- lack of incident. There is an unmistakably Irish atmosphere
- about it, and it bespeaks an intimate personal knowledge of the
- people, not only in regard to their speech, but also as to many
- of their characteristic ways and customs.”—(_Press Notices_).
-
-⸺ BLACK MONDAY INSURRECTION. Pp. 135-328.
-
- Bound up with “The Puritan,” _q.v._ The story opens at Bandon
- with the rescue of two of the principal characters who had
- been kidnapped by Rapparees. Then follows the taking of Bandon
- by McCarthy More. The battles of the Boyne and Aughrim, the
- sieges of Athlone and Limerick are also dealt with, the two
- latter being described in detail. Standpoint: Williamite. The
- Irish are “barbarians,” “brave and savage bacchanalians;” the
- Rapparees are “infernal banditti,” &c., but on the whole the
- tone is not violent. Through it all runs an interesting and
- curious story of the private fortunes of several persons. See
- _The Last of the O’Mahonys_.
-
-⸺ BOB NORBERRY; or, Sketches from the Note Book of an Irish Reporter; ed.
-by “Captain Prout.” Pp. 360. Eighteen good illustr. by Henry MacManus,
-A.R.H.A., and others. Dedicated to C. Bianconi. (_Duffy_). 1844.
-
- The Author (Pref.) tells us that he has written the book to
- vindicate the character of his countrymen, and to show Irish
- affairs to Englishmen in their true light. Accordingly we
- have, not so much a novel, as a series of crowded canvases
- depicting nearly every phase of life in Ireland from a period
- before the Union to the date of this book. It begins with
- the marriage of the hero’s grandparents in Dublin at the
- end of the 18th century (1780). We have a glimpse of penal
- laws at work and of agrarian disturbances, but the Author is
- especially at pains all through the book to set forth how the
- law works in Ireland. There are swindling attorneys, bribed
- and perjured jurors, packed benches, partisan judges, endless
- proceedings in Chancery, and so on. Young Bob is sent first
- to a private school, then to Stonyhurst (an account is given
- of the Jesuits). He is first intended for the priesthood and
- goes to Louvain, but finally becomes a reporter on a Dublin
- paper. Here we have a picture of low journalism. Bob shows
- up several frauds of self-styled philanthropists, describes
- trial at Assizes of Lord Strangeways’ evicted tenants. This
- brings in much about the agrarian question. The book ends with
- his elopement to the Continent and marriage with Lady Mary
- Belmullet. There are innumerable minor episodes and pictures.
- There is no literary refinement in the style, and the colours
- of the picture are laid on thickly.
-
-⸺ BRIDGET SULLIVAN; or, The Cup without a Handle. A Tale. 1854.
-
-⸺ BY THE BROWN BOG; by “Owen Roe and Honor Urse.” Pp. 296. (_Longmans_).
-Illustr. by silhouettes. 1913.
-
- An imitation of the Somerville and Ross stories, but with their
- leading features exaggerated. For Flurry we have Fossy, for
- Slipper Tinsy Conroy. Instead of by an R.M. the stories are
- told by a young D.I. There is the same background of comic
- and filthy peasants, the same general Irish slovenliness and
- happy-go-luckiness, and universal drunkenness. The brogue is
- made the most of. Moonlighters of a very sinister kind appear
- once or twice. The incidents are such as hunting, racing, the
- local horseshow, country petty sessions, &c. They are very well
- told, with a jaunty style, and in a vein of broad comedy. There
- is a chapter purporting to relate experiences in “The Black
- North,” but for the most part the scene is West Cork. Some of
- these sketches appeared in the BADMINTON MAGAZINE.
-
-⸺ BYRNES OF GLENGOULAH, THE. Pp. 362. (U.S.A.)
-
- “The incidents related in this tale really and truly occurred,
- though not in the consecutive order in which they are placed”
- ... viz., “the trial and execution, in February, 1846, at the
- town of Mullingar, Co. Westmeath, of Bryan Seery for the murder
- of Sir Francis Hopkins, Bart.” “The characters introduced are
- all real.” (Pref.) A sad and touching story of the heartless
- treatment of the Irish peasantry by certain of the landlords,
- picturing the deep religious faith of the former, and their
- patient resignation in their sufferings. The plot, which is
- vigorously worked out, centres in the execution of Bryan Seery
- for the attempted murder of Sir Francis Hopkins, a crime of
- which he was innocent.
-
-⸺ CAVERN IN THE WICKLOW MOUNTAINS, THE; or, Fate of the O’Brien Family.
-Two Vols. 12mo. (Dublin, _printed for the Author_). 1821.
-
- Told in letters between “Augustus Tranton” and “Sir Edward
- Elbe.” Said on title-p. to be “a tale founded on facts.” Seems
- to be a re-issue in a slightly altered form of THE UNITED
- IRISHMAN, _q.v._ The story is related to “Aug. Tranton” by a
- gentleman (O’Brien) who had been a U.I., and as a result had
- lost all, and was then in hiding in a cave near the Dargle
- river.
-
-⸺ CHARACTERISTIC SKETCHES OF IRELAND AND THE IRISH. 16mo. Pp. 288.
-(HALIFAX). 1849.
-
- A reprint of an earlier publication by Philip Dixon Hardy,
- the fourth edition of which appeared in 1842. Contents: I.
- By Carleton:—“The Horse Stealers,” “Owen McCarthy,” “Squire
- Warnock,” “The Abduction,” “Sir Turlough.” II. By Lover:—“A
- Legend of Clanmacnoise” (_sic_), “Ballads and Ballad Singers,”
- “Paddy Mullowney’s Travels in France.” III. By Mrs. Hall:—“The
- Irish Agent,” “Philip Garraty.”
-
-⸺ CHARLES MOWBRAY; or, Duelling, a tale founded on fact. Pp. 82. (CORK).
-1847.
-
- By the author of “The Widow O’Leary.” Dr. B., whose parents
- live at Y. (probably Youghal), has a practice in England. He is
- challenged to fight a duel by Sir J. C. He is killed, and his
- parents both die from the shock. A dull little book, with much
- moralising.
-
-⸺ COLONEL ORMSBY; or, the genuine history of an Irish nobleman in the
-French service. Two Vols. (DUBLIN). 1781.
-
- In form of letters between the Colonel and Lady Beaumont,
- couched in the most amatory terms. There is no reference to
- Ireland and little to the history of the gallant Colonel: the
- correspondence is all about the private love affairs of the
- writers.
-
-⸺ DUNSANY: an Irish Story. Two Vols. 12mo. Pp. 278 + 308. (LONDON.) 1818.
-
- The principal character and a few of the others, _e.g._, Mrs.
- Shady O’Blarney (!), happen to be born in Ireland, and there is
- talk of the usual tumbled-down castle somewhere in Ireland, but
- at this the Irishism of the story stops. The scene is England,
- the persons wholly English in sympathy and education. A
- sentimental and insipid story dealing chiefly with the marrying
- off of impecunious sons and daughters. Interesting as giving a
- picture, seen from an English standpoint, of the Irish society
- of the day. No politics.
-
-⸺ EARLY GAELIC ERIN; or, Old Gaelic Stories of People and Places.
-(DUBLIN). 1901.
-
-⸺ EDMOND OF LATERAGH: a novel founded on facts. Two vols. (DUBLIN). 1806.
-
- Two lovers kept apart by cruel circumstances and villainous
- plots meet at last and are happy. This thread serves to connect
- many minor plots, which bring us from Ireland (near Killarney)
- to England and then the continent and back again, and introduce
- a great variety of personages. These latter are nearly all of
- the Anglo-Irish Protestant gentry—Wharton, Wandesford, Peyton,
- Ulverton, Blackwood, Elton—no Irish name is mentioned. Great
- profusion of incident, but not very interestingly told. No
- historical or social background. Relates rather a large number
- of instances of misconduct. Speaks of “paraphernalia of Popish
- doctrine,” yet one of the best characters is Father Issidore
- (_sic_).
-
-⸺ EDMUND O’HARA: an Irish Tale. Pp. 358. (DUBLIN: _Curry_). 1828.
-
- By the author of “Ellmer Castle.” A controversial story of
- an anti-Catholic kind. The hero goes to Spain to be educated
- for the priesthood. He meets Hamilton, who indoctrinates him
- with Protestantism. They are wrecked off the Irish coast. A
- priest refuses them the money to take them home to the North of
- Ireland, while the Protestants generously give it. He falls in
- love with Miss Williams, who insists on a year’s probation so
- that he may be sufficiently “adorned with Christian graces.”
- But he dies, and she marries Hamilton.
-
-⸺ ELLMER CASTLE. Pp. 320. (DUBLIN: _Curry_). 1827.
-
- By the author of “Edmund O’Hara,” _q.v._ Henry Ellmer travels,
- and comes back converted to convert his family. He causes only
- anger and disturbance. They turn him out, and he departs with
- a blessing. But after some adventures returns to his father’s
- deathbed. Contains much controversial matter.
-
-⸺ EMERALD GEMS. (BOSTON). 1879.
-
- “A Chaplet of Irish Fireside Tales, Historic, Domestic, and
- Legendary. Compiled from approved sources.”
-
-⸺ FATHER BUTLER; or, Sketches of Irish Manners. 16mo. (PHILADELPHIA).
-1834.
-
- I am not sure whether this is the American edition of a little
- Souper tract by Carleton (_q.v._) published by Curry in 1829,
- in which Father Butler finally is convinced of the falsity of
- his religion and becomes a Protestant.
-
-⸺ FATHER JOHN; or, Cromwell in Ireland (1649); by “S. E. A.” Pp. 477.
-(_Whittaker_, later _Gill_). Still reprinted. [1842].
-
- A well told story, with a love interest and a mystery admirably
- sustained to the end. The plot largely turns on the misfortunes
- and sufferings brought about by Father John’s fidelity to
- the secrecy of the confessional, a fidelity which the author
- strongly condemns. The hero is a young Irish Protestant, who
- before the close of the story has converted to his faith such
- of the Catholic personages of the tale as do not rank as
- villains. The moral of the story is the iniquity and falseness
- of the Catholic religion, for which the author throughout
- displays a very genuine horror. The author’s political
- sympathies are Ormondist, but Owen Roe O’Neill is favourably
- described. The massacres of Drogheda and Wexford are described.
- It is “by the Author of ‘The Luddite’s Sister,’ ‘Richard of
- York,’” &c.
-
-⸺ FAVOURITE CHILD, THE; or, Mary Ann O’Halloran, an Irish tale: by a
-retired priest. (DUBLIN). 1851.
-
-⸺ FOLK-LORE AND LEGENDS (Ireland); edited by “C. J. T.” 16mo. Pp. 192.
-(_Gibbings_). 1889.
-
- A volume of a good popular series which includes vols. on
- Oriental, English, German, American, and other folk-lores.
- Thirty-three tales chosen from published collections, chiefly
- Croker’s. A good selection. Humorous and extravagant element
- not too prominent. Some in dialect. Some titles:—“Fuin”
- (_sic_), “MacCumhal and the Salmon of Knowledge,” “Flory
- Cantillon’s Funeral,” “Saint Brandon” (_sic_), and “Donagha,”
- “Larry Hayes,” and “The Enchanted Man,” “The Brewery of
- Egg-shells,” “The Field of Boliauns,” &c.
-
-⸺ FORD FAMILY IN IRELAND, THE. Three Vols. (LONDON: _Newby_). 1845.
-
- Ford, an English merchant comes to the west coast of Ireland
- to pursue a business speculation in grain, and brings his
- family. He is imprisoned owing to a misunderstanding, and his
- daughter marries an officer, Macalbert, who becomes chief of
- the pikemen, and eventually dies on the scaffold. Period: ’98,
- soon after the landing of French at Killala. Point of view:
- very sympathetic towards Ireland and anti-Orange. No religious
- bias. A pathetic and a dramatic story.
-
-⸺ FRANK O’MEARA; or, The Artist of Collingwood; by “T. M.” Pp. 320.
-(DUBLIN: _McGlashan & Gill_). 1876.
-
- Frank, of the tenant class, falls in love with the landlord’s
- daughter, Fanny. Their love is discovered, and Frank finds
- it best to emigrate to Australia. Here he has various
- adventures—bush-rangers, gold-diggings, and so on. A comic
- element is afforded by the sayings and doings of his man,
- Jerry Doolin. Meanwhile F’s father and his friend, another
- widower, contend for the favours of the widow Daly—rather broad
- comedy—while Fanny, without losing her place in society, is
- running a bookshop while waiting for Frank. All is well in the
- end. A very pleasant story in every respect. “Collingwood” is a
- village near Melbourne. Part of the story takes place at Bray.
-
-⸺ GERALD AND AUGUSTA; or, The Irish Aristocracy. Pp. 320. (_Cameron &
-Ferguson_). 6_d._ paper.
-
- How Gerald, orphan son of Lord Clangore, is brought up in
- London to be anti-Irish, while his sister is brought up by a
- Mr. Knightly (a stay-at-home Irish squire absorbed in Ireland)
- to love Ireland. How chance brings Gerald to Ireland where he
- is quite won over to her cause. This chance is a wreck off the
- W. coast of Ireland resulting in Gerald’s falling temporarily
- into the hands of “Captain Rock.” Many amusing adventures and
- situations follow. The author’s sympathies are all for Ireland,
- but they are not blind or unreasoned sympathies. Very ably
- written both in style and construction.
-
-⸺ HAMPER OF HUMOUR, A; by Liam. Pp. 176. (_Gill_). 2_s._ 1913.
-
- A series of character and _genre_ studies—the shy man, the
- drunken driver who wakes to find himself in a hearse and thinks
- it is his own funeral, the returned American, the magistrates
- who do a good turn for their friends. In this last and in
- several other sketches (notably in the two concerned with Cork
- railways) there is a note of satire. There is plenty of genuine
- humour to justify the title. The Cork accent is cleverly hit
- off; practically all the sketches are more or less Corkonian.
-
-⸺ HARRY O’BRIEN: a Tale for Boys. (N.Y.: _Benziger_. 0.25 net. _Burns and
-Lambert_). 1859.
-
- By the author of “Thomas Martin.” A little pious and moral
- Catholic story. The scene is laid in London.
-
-⸺ HERMITE EN IRLANDE, L’. Two Vols. 12mo. (PARIS: _Pillet Ainé_). 1826.
-
- “Ou observations sur les mœurs et usages des irlandais au
- commencement du xix siècle.” Interspersed with stories,
- occupying a large part of the book. Titles:—“Le Cunnemara,”
- “Le naufrage,” “Mogue le Boiteux,” “Le rebelle,” “La sorcière
- de Scollough’s Gap,” “Les bonnes gens,” “Les cluricaunes,”
- “Bill le Protestant,” “Turncoat Watt ou l’apostat,” “Le double
- vengeance,” “Le retour de l’absent,” etc. These are obviously
- taken for the most part from Whitty’s book, _q.v._
-
-⸺ HONOR O’MORE’S THREE HOMES. (N.Y.: _Benziger_). 0.25 net.
-
-⸺ HUGH BRYAN: The Autobiography of an Irish Rebel. (BELFAST). Pp. 478.
-1866.
-
- Scene: Valley of Blackwater, Lismore. Time: end of eighteenth
- century (1798) and beginning of nineteenth century. May be
- described as a Souper story. Purports to be a moving picture
- of the last struggle of the Gael against the English Planter,
- ending in failure, and resulting, in the hero’s case, in
- conversion to Protestantism. He finally marries an escaped nun
- whom he meets in an English town while engaged in slum-work.
-
-⸺ IRISH BUBBLE AND SQUEAK, THE. Pp. 160. (LONDON: _Clarke & Beeton_).
-1854.
-
- “A selection [thirty-five in all] of the most popular Irish
- tales, anecdotes, wit, and humour, illustrative of the manners
- and customs of the Irish peasantry.” There is many a hearty
- laugh in these stories, especially for ourselves, for in them
- the Irishman always comes out on top. Some of the titles
- are:—“Serving a writ in Ireland,” “Anecdotes of Curran,” “Irish
- Bulls,” “Paddy Doyle’s Trip to Cork,” “Lending a Congregation,”
- &c. &c.
-
-⸺ IRISH COQUETTE, THE: a novel. Vol. I. 1844.
-
- No more published. Scene: an old Castle in the South of Ireland.
-
-⸺ IRISH EXCURSION, THE; or, I Fear to Tell You. Four Vols. Pp. 1205.
-(DUBLIN: _Lane_). 1801.
-
- How Mrs. M’Gralahan and family came to London and what they
- heard and saw and did there. The Irish are represented as
- dishonest, extravagant, and many other things, but all this
- and more is to be remedied by the great panacea—the Union—and
- the last of the four volumes closes with, “Bless the Beloved
- Monarch of the Union.” Full of political discussions and of
- lectures delivered to Ireland. What the Author “fears to tell”
- us is not clear.
-
-⸺ IRISH FAIRY TALES. Illustrated by Geoffry Strahan. (_Gibbings_). 2_s._
-6_d._
-
- A neat little volume, prettily illustrated, suitable as a
- present for children.
-
-⸺ IRISH FIRESIDE STORIES, TALES AND LEGENDS. Pp. 400. (N. Y.: _Kenedy_).
-63 cents. net. Illustr. 1910.
-
- “It brings out very well the true Irish wit, for which that
- race is famous.”—(_Publ._).
-
-⸺ IRISH GIRL, THE: a Religious Tale. Pp. 102. (LONDON: _Walker_). One
-engraving by Parris. 1814. Second ed. same year.
-
- By the Author of “Coelebs Married.” The girl begins life in a
- mud hut in the filthiest and most disgusting conditions. She
- is found in a barn and taken in by kindly English people, and
- after a little management becomes a Protestant at the age of
- fourteen, and indeed quite a theologian in her way. A visit
- to a church in Cork and to Ardman, near Youghal, where the
- dust of St. Dillon is sold by the bushel for miracle purposes,
- completes her conversion. The book is full of the vilest
- slanders against the Catholic Church. The Irish are represented
- as murderers and savages driven on by their priests.
-
-⸺ IRISH GUARDIAN, THE: a Pathetic Story; by “A Lady.” Two Vols. (DUBLIN).
-1776.
-
- Told in a series of letters to Miss Julia Nesbitt, Dublin, from
- Sophia Nesbitt, of “Brandon Castle,” in Co. Antrim, and from
- Sabina Bruce, of “Edenvale,” Co. Antrim. The two Miss Nesbitts
- fall in love, and the course of their love affairs forms the
- chief subject of the letters. These are dated 1771. There is
- some vague description of Irish places, but feminine matters,
- chiefly, absorb the writers. To be found in Marsh’s Library,
- Dublin.
-
-⸺ IRISH LOVE TALES. (N. Y.: _Pratt_). $1.50.
-
-⸺ IRISHMAN AT HOME, THE. Pp. 302. (_McGlashan & Orr_). Five Woodcuts by
-Geo. Measom. 1849.
-
- “Characteristic Sketches of the Irish Peasantry.” In part
- reprinted from the DUBLIN PENNY JOURNAL. “The Whiteboy” (1828)
- Cahill, a _scullogue_, hanged an innocent man, for which the
- Whiteboys cut out his tongue. “The Rockite” is a man who
- took the oath of the secret society when drunk and had to go
- through with the business. “The Wrestler,” description of the
- Bog of Allen and of a wake. “The False Step,” a pathetic story
- of an Irish girl’s ruin, her broken heart, and her mother’s
- death. “The Fatal Meeting” (1397). How a Palmer meets Raymond
- de Perrilleaux at St. Patrick’s Purgatory in Lough Derg, and
- what came of the meeting. They nearly all depict wild times.
- There is no religious bias, an absence of humour, and much
- description of scenery.
-
-⸺ IRISHMAN, THE; or, The Favourite of Fortune. Two Vols. (LONDON). 1772.
-
-⸺ IRISHMEN, THE: a Military-Political Novel; by “A Native Officer.” Two
-Vols. 12mo. (LONDON: _Newman_). 1810.
-
- Title-page:—“Wherein the idiom of each character is carefully
- preserved and the utmost precaution constantly taken to
- render the ebullitionary phrases peculiar to the sons of Erin
- inoffensive as well as entertaining.” Told in letters between
- Major O’Grady and Major-General O’Lara, Miss Harriet O’Grady,
- and Lady Arabella Fitzosborne. The letters are full of italics
- and of the trifling gossip of fashionable or domestic life. The
- personages all live in England. Letters from Patrick O’Rourke
- to Taddy McLenna—heavy humour. Seem to contain no politics save
- a passing reference to the war then (1808) in progress.
-
-⸺ IRISH PEARL, THE: a Tale of the Time of Queen Anne. Pp. 98. (DUBLIN:
-_Oldham_). 1850.
-
- Reprinted from the CHRISTIAN LADIES’ MAGAZINE for 1847 and
- published for charitable purposes. A religious tale of a
- strongly Evangelical and anti-Roman character, in which Father
- Eustace, the hermit of Gougane Barra, relates to Lady Glengeary
- his own conversion to Protestantism and that of her mother.
- Lady G., in her turn, relates her conversion to Lady Ormond,
- who tells the story to Queen Anne.
-
-⸺ IRISH PLEASANTRY AND FUN. Pp. 380. 9¼ + 7 in. (_Gill_). 3_s._ 6_d._ 16
-illustr. by J. F. O’Hea. [1892] 1910.
-
- Still reprinted without change, and is as popular as ever.
- Seventy-two stories, fourteen anonymous, the bulk of the
- remainder by Carleton, Lover, and Lever. Maginn, Maxwell, and
- M. J. Barry are represented by two each; Irwin, Lefanu, Lynam,
- Coyne, Sullivan by one each. Practically all the tales are
- of the Lover (_Handy Andy_, _q.v._) type, genuinely funny in
- their way, but broadly comic, farcical, and full of brogue. The
- illustrations are some of them clever, but inartistic and of
- the most pronouncedly Stage-Irish kind.
-
-⸺ IRISH PRIEST, THE; or, What for Ireland? Pp. 171. 16mo. (_Longman,
-Brown, Green, &c._). 1847.
-
- “This sees the light with the earnest hope that it may
- conciliate prejudice, disarm opposition....” The Author speaks
- of his “intensest sympathy for a despoiled, neglected, ill-used
- people.” Supposed to be a MS. given to a doctor in the W. of
- Ireland by a doctor on his deathbed. Sentimental and emotional
- in style. A rambling series of incidents in priest’s life,
- with much moralising of a non-Catholic tone. Incidents of
- land agitation given, without explanation of their causes.
- Suggestions to make Ireland an ideal place, &c.
-
-⸺ IRISH WIDOW, THE; or, A Picture from life of Erin and her Children; by
-author of “Poor Paddy’s Cabin.” Pp. 205. 12mo. (LONDON: _Wertheim and
-Macintosh_). 1855.
-
- Like the Author’s former work, this deals with the religious
- question in Ireland from a Protestant (Evangelical) standpoint.
- But in this case the personages are drawn from the middle
- classes, the causes of their enslavement to Rome being set
- forth. It is full of religious controversy. See ch. xvi. “The
- Fruits of an Irish Church Missions sermon,” and ch. xviii.,
- “Priest and Landlords.”
-
-⸺ JIM EAGAN. (N.Y.: _Pratt_). $1.00.
-
-⸺ KATE KAVANAGH. (N.Y.: _Benziger_). 0.45 net.
-
-⸺ LAST DROP OF ’68, THE: a Picture of Real Life with Imaginary
-Characters; by “An Irish Bramwellian.” Pp. 127. (_Hodges Figgis_). 1_s._
-1885.
-
- Begins in Dublin, the teller being a Dublin lawyer, but nearly
- all the incidents take place out of Ireland. All the personages
- are more or less disreputable, including the teller, but
- especially the hero, Helgate, who is a thorough blackguard. The
- story consists chiefly in the doings of this latter, a drunken,
- swindling wretch, who deceives foolish people and lives on
- them. The writer does not seem to adopt any definite moral
- attitude. ’68 refers to the _vintage_ of that year.
-
-⸺ LAST OF THE O’MAHONYS, THE; and other historical tales of the English
-settlers in Munster. Three Vols. (_Bentley_). 1843.
-
- Contents:—1. “The Title-story.” 2. “The Physician’s Daughter.”
- 3. “The Apprentice.” 4. “Emma Cavendish.” 5. “The Puritan.”
- 6. “Black Monday.” Scene: Co. Cork and chiefly around Bandon.
- All deal with troublous times of 17th century as seen from the
- settlers’ point of view, with which the Author is in sympathy.
- The Irish are painted in no flattering colours. Useful
- historical notes are appended. Longer notices of Nos. 5 and 6
- are given as specimens of the whole.
-
-⸺ LEGENDS AND FAIRY TALES OF IRELAND. With 50 wood engravings. Large
-12mo. (N.Y.: _Kenedy_). 63 cents net.
-
- Being a complete collection of all the Fairy Tales published
- by Crofton Croker and embodying the entire volumes of Kenedy’s
- _Fictions of the Irish Celts_.
-
-⸺ LIFE IN THE IRISH MILITIA; or, Tales of the Barrack Room. Pp. 255.
-(LONDON: _Ridgway_). 1847.
-
- The dedication (to O’Connell) is dated 1834, and the first
- words of the book are “In the summer of 1833....” A very
- eccentric book, intended by the Author (a lady) as a satire
- on the “fashionable depravities of the times,” with intent
- to “exhibit folly and vice to public scorn and reproach.”
- (Pref.). She is out against proselytism, bigotry, hypocrisy,
- aristocracy, race-hatred between Ireland and England, and all
- abuses that bear heavily on the people. This book consists of
- various parts:—I. “The Sojourner in Dublin”—a young Englishman
- who lives in lodgings and tells what he sees and hears. II.
- “The Modern Pharisees of the city of Shim-Sham in Ireland,”
- in the form of a story. III. “Life in the Irish Militia”—a
- fierce attack on the militia, especially a Northern and a Kerry
- regiment. IV. “A Visit to Killarney.” V. An Allegorical Tale.
-
-⸺ MAD MINSTREL, THE; or, The Irish Exile. (_Murray_). 1812.
-
-⸺ MICK TRACY, THE IRISH SCRIPTURE READER; or, The Martyred Convert and
-the Priest; by “W. A. C.” (_Partridge_). 3_s._ 6_d._ Illustr., but
-without reference to the story. _n.d._
-
- The hero is “a day labourer reared in the R.C. communion but
- through mercy enabled to see its delusions and to escape from
- them.” He is denounced by the priest and assaulted by the
- parishioners. These are prosecuted, but the only result is
- moonlighting, murder, and the kidnapping of converts. Yet the
- converts multiply. The reproduction of the brogue is ludicrous.
- See _Tim Doolin_.
-
-⸺ MISTLETOE AND THE SHAMROCK, THE; or, The Chief of the North. (GLASGOW:
-_Cameron & Ferguson_). 6_d._
-
- In C. & F.’s “Sensation Series of Sixpenny Novels.”
-
-⸺ MY OWN STORY: a Tale of Old Times. Pp. 168. (_Curry_). One illustr. by
-Geo. Petrie, engraved by Kirkwood. 1829.
-
- James O’Donnell is sworn in by a priest and joins the rebels,
- but later he is made a “Bible Christian,” turns traitor, and is
- eventually hanged. Period: some time in reign of George III.
- The country about Fort nan Gall and the woods of Coolmore are
- described.
-
-⸺ NATIONAL FEELING; or, The History of Fitzsimon: a Novel, with
-Historical and Political Remarks; by “An Irishman.” Two Vols. (_Dublin_).
-1821.
-
- A straggling story of the adventures in Ireland (Co. Mayo
- and Dublin) and abroad of Edward F. Tells of the progress of
- his wooing of Matilda, which is much interfered with by the
- machinations of a wicked lord. There are also some minor love
- affairs. Pp. 103 _sqq._ of Vol. I. contain some pictures of
- Dublin life at the time, introducing public personages such
- as the Duke of Leinster, Lady Rossmore, Mr. Justice Fletcher,
- Alderman M’Kenny, &c. The hero goes to the U.S. and then to S.
- America. The title of the tale seems to be due to his meeting
- various peoples—Greeks, Argentiners, Chilians, &c.—fighting for
- their national independence. See pp. 206, 217, 222. I failed to
- come across Vol. II. Preface shows Author to be Nationalist in
- his Irish views.
-
-⸺ NICE DISTINCTIONS: a Tale. Pp. 330. (_Hibernia Press Offices_). 1820.
-
- Scene: Co. Wicklow. The Courtneys of Glendalough Abbey have
- a tutor named Charles Delacour, who makes friends with the
- clergyman’s family—Mr. Vernon and his wife, son, and daughters.
- Presented ultimately with a living, he marries Maria Vernon.
- Many subordinate characters of no importance are introduced
- into this invertebrate tale, the style of which is stilted and
- unnatural.
-
-⸺ OLD COUNTRY, THE: a Christmas Annual. Pp. 200. Demy 8vo. (_Sealy,
-Bryers_). 1_s._ 1893.
-
- Irish Stories (and Poems) by Katherine Tynan, F. Langbridge,
- Dick Donovan, Edwin Hamilton, W. B. Yeats, Edmund Downey, Nora
- Wynne, &c., &c.
-
-⸺ OUTCAST, THE: a Story of the Modern Reformation. Pp. 172. (_Curry_).
-1831.
-
- The “Outcast” was educated for the priesthood, read Voltaire
- and Rousseau, but did not finally awake to the error of the
- Roman “system” until he had read _Italy_, by Lady Morgan. He
- ceases to believe in Catholicism; is turned out by his father,
- while his mother dies of a broken heart. There is a description
- of the Slaney. Contains much that would be extremely offensive
- to Catholics and some remarks about Confession and Mass that
- would appear to them blasphemous.
-
-⸺ PASSION AND PEDANTRY: a Novel illustrative of Dublin Life. Three Vols.
-(LONDON: _Newby_). 1853.
-
- A somewhat ordinary tale of the fortunes of young Charles
- Desmond, an army officer, is made the vehicle for a careful and
- detailed picture of manners and customs at the period, and for
- a presentation of the Author’s views on things Irish, though
- with little reference to politics or to religion. The plot,
- such as it is, turns chiefly on the question whether Charles
- will come in for his old uncle’s money and will, in spite of
- whispering tongues, marry the lady—both of which he does. The
- conversation of some of the personages is full of pedantry and
- of quotations in various languages. Dublin life well portrayed
- by a keen observer.
-
-⸺ PEAS-BLOSSOM; by the Author of “Honour Bright.” (_Wells, Gardner_).
-3_s._ 6_d._ 30 illustr. by Helen Miles. C. 1911.
-
- “‘Peas-blossom’ may be described as a rollicking, respectable
- Irish story, the names of the juvenile pair of heroes being Pat
- and Paddy.... An exceptionally readable volume.”—(TIMES).
-
-⸺ PHILIP O’HARA’S ADVENTURES [and other tales]. Pp. 144. (_Chambers_).
-1885.
-
- A young man’s adventures in the American Civil War. Only the
- first story has the slightest connection with Ireland.
-
-⸺ POOR PADDY’S CABIN; or, Slavery in Ireland. By “An Irishman.” Pp. xii.
-+ 242. 12mo. (LONDON: _Wertheimer & Macintosh_). 2_s._ 6_d._ Second
-edition. 1854.
-
- “A true representation of facts and characters,” names of
- persons and places being disguised. “His [the Author’s] aim has
- been, along with a matter-of-fact representation of the real
- state of things in Ireland, to exhibit in a parable ... a just
- and true view of what the gracious dealings of the Almighty
- always are.” (Pref.). A pamphlet in story form written against
- the Catholic Church in Ireland and in support of the “Irish
- Reformation Movement.” Appendix, giving with entire approval a
- bitterly anti-Catholic article from the TIMES of November 29th,
- 1853 (?), and others of like nature from the MORNING ADVERTISER
- (Oct. 22nd, 1853). The characters are drawn from the peasant
- class.
-
-⸺ POPULAR TALES AND LEGENDS OF THE IRISH PEASANTRY. Pp. 404. (DUBLIN: _W.
-F. Wakeman_). Illustr. by Samuel Lover. 1834.
-
- Fifteen stories, including two by Carleton and one by Mrs. S.
- C. Hall. Five are by Denis O’Donoho, three by J. L. L., and
- one each by J. M. L. and B. A. P. Titles:—“Charley Fraser,”
- “The Whiteboy’s revenge,” “Laying a ghost,” “The wife of two
- husbands,” “Mick Delany,” “The lost one,” “The dance,” “The
- Fetch,” “The 3 devils,” “The Rebel Chief, 1799,” &c., &c.
-
-⸺ PRIESTS AND PEOPLE: a No-rent Romance; by the Author of “Lotus,” etc.
-Three Vols. (LONDON: _Eden, Remington_). 1891.
-
- “Lotus” is by I. M. O. A book inspired by the bitterest dislike
- and contempt for Ireland. The views expressed by the young
- English soldier (p. 101) seem throughout to be those of the
- author. The interest turns almost entirely on the relations
- between landlord, tenant, and League, and no effort is spared
- to represent the two latter in the most odious light. It is the
- work of a practised writer, and the descriptions are distinctly
- good and the story well told. The brogue is painfully
- travestied. The author is ignorant of Catholic matters.
-
-⸺ PROTESTANT RECTOR, THE. Pp. 216. (_Nesbit_). 1830.
-
- At the hospitable Protestant rectory even the priest is
- received. This priest “performed several masses on Sundays”:
- he is frequently drunk. He goes to Rome and, at the “fearful
- sight” of the Pope treated as God, he recoils in disgust,
- and is converted. On his return he is again welcomed at the
- Rectory, where he converts many and dies a holy death.
-
-⸺ PURITAN, THE. Pp. 134.
-
- The interest of this story turns chiefly on the religious
- differences of the times. The author is for “the calm and
- rational service of the Church of England” as against the new
- fanaticism of the Parliamentarians. The characters, such as
- those of Obadiah Thoroughgood and Lovegrace, are well-drawn.
- There is but little local colour and no description of scenery.
- The scene is laid at Bandon, Co. Cork. Bound up in one vol.
- with “Black Monday Insurrection,” _q.v._, being Vol. III. of
- _The Last of The O’Mahonys_.
-
-⸺ RIDGEWAY; by “Scian Dubh.” Pp. xx. + 262 (close print). (BUFFALO:
-_McCarroll_). 1868.
-
- “An historical romance of the Fenian invasion of Canada,” June,
- 1866. Introd. (pp. xx. close print) gives a view of Irish
- history and politics from a bitterly anti-English point of
- view. England has been “a traitor, a perjurer, a robber, and an
- assassin throughout the whole of her infamous career.” Append.
- gives in 5 pp. an “Authentic Report” of the invasion of Canada,
- Fenianism is fully discussed, especially in ch. vi. Career of
- Gen. O’Neill, ch. vii. A love story of an ordinary kind is used
- as a medium for politics and historical narrative.
-
-⸺ ROBBER CHIEFTAIN, THE. Pp. 342. Post 8vo. (_Duffy_). 2_s._ [1863].
-Still in Print.
-
- Scene chiefly Dublin Castle. Cromwellian cruelties under Ludlow
- depicted, and early years of Restoration. The Robber Chieftain
- is Redmond O’Hanlon, the Rapparee. The Ven. Oliver Plunket is
- also one of the characters. Some incidents suggest Catholic
- standpoint, but in places the book reads like a non-Catholic
- (though not anti-Catholic) tract. The hero and heroine are
- Protestant. Full of sensational incidents, duels, waylayings
- by robber bands, law court scenes, tavern brawls. Also many
- repulsive scenes of drunkenness among the native Irish, and
- of murder, wild vengeance, and villainy of all kinds. Hardly
- suitable for young people.
-
-⸺ ROMAN CATHOLIC PRIEST, THE. Pp. 298. (_Curry_). One illustr. by
-Kirkwood. 1827.
-
- A Catholic boy, Doyle, risks his life and saves a Protestant
- boy from drowning. The boy’s father out of gratitude offers to
- send Doyle to T.C.D., guaranteeing that “he will not have to
- make even a temporary renunciation of his religion.” But the
- priest refuses, and soon Doyle becomes a Protestant.
-
-⸺ SAINT PATRICK: a National Tale of the Fifth Century; by “An Antiquary.”
-Three Vols. (EDIN.: _Constable_). 1819.
-
- A romance of love and vengeance and druidical mysteries into
- which St. Patrick enters as one of the _dramatis personæ_.
- There are plenty of exciting incidents, some fine scenes, and
- a very good picture of druidism in the fifth century. Very
- well written but for the unfortunate introduction of modern
- Irish brogue and Scotch dialect. The religious point of view
- is Church of Ireland, and there is an effort to represent the
- Christianity of those days as essentially different from the
- Catholicism of these. Scene: chiefly Tara, Dunluce, the Giant’s
- Causeway, the Bann.
-
-⸺ SEPARATIST, THE; by “A New Writer.” Pp. 323. (_Pitman_). 6_s._ 1902.
-
- The love story of Stella Mertoun, who is a Royalist, and Philip
- Venn, who is on the Parliamentary side in the Civil War. Only
- a small portion of the action takes place in Ireland. The
- author’s sympathies are with the Puritans, but the bias is not
- pronounced.
-
-⸺ SIEGE OF MAYNOOTH, THE; or, Romance in Ireland. Two Vols. (CHELSEA:
-_Ridgeway_). 1832.
-
- A very long novel with a rather confused plot, but containing
- good scenes. Purports to be a MS. given to her descendant by
- the old Countess of Desmond, who has fallen on evil days, and
- relating stirring incidents of the Desmond wars and of the
- rebellion of Silken Thomas, including the attack on Desmond
- castle by the Butlers, the defeat and capture of Lord Grey in
- Glendalough, the escape of Lord Thomas Fitzgerald from the
- Black Castle of Wicklow, and the siege and betrayal of the
- Castle of Maynooth. Written on the whole from the Irish point
- of view.
-
-⸺ SIR ROGER DELANEY OF MEATH; by “Hal.” Pp. 228. (_Simpkin, Marshall_).
-6_s._ 1908.
-
- The Sir Roger of the story (he is “10th baron Navan”) is an
- elderly married man, blustering, cursing, lying, cheating,
- but described in such a way that one does not see whether the
- author means him for a hero or not. He falls in love with Lady
- Kitty, who is in love with somebody else. Sir Roger tries to
- get the latter into disreputable situations. They fight a duel,
- and the curtain falls on Sir Roger mortally wounded. The book
- is quite devoid of seriousness.
-
-⸺ SMITH OF THE SHAMROCK GUARDS; by “An Officer.” (_Stanley Paul_).
-
-⸺ STORIES OF IRISH LIFE, PAST AND PRESENT; by “Slieve Foy.” Pp. 160.
-(_Lynwood_), 1_s._ 1912.
-
- Ten stories, amusing and pathetic, some of which have appeared
- in the WEEKLY FREEMAN and the IRISH EMERALD.
-
-⸺ STORY OF NELLY DILLON, THE; by the author of “Myself and my Relatives.”
-Two Vols. (LONDON: _Newby_). 1866.
-
- Nelly Dillon, daughter of a Tipperary farmer, is abducted in
- suspicious circumstances by a former lover, who is a Ribbonman
- and illicit distiller. She is disowned by her parents but
- befriended and sheltered by Bet Fagan, a fine character. The
- latter prevails upon the abductor, when under sentence of
- death, to clear Nelly Dillon’s character in presence of the
- parish priest, who afterwards tells the facts from the altar.
- The parents wish to receive Nelly back, but she rejects their
- advances and dies. A sad story, well told, and with a healthy
- moral.
-
-⸺ TALES AND LEGENDS OF IRELAND. Two Vols. (CORK: _Bolster_). 1831.
-
- “Illustrative of society, history, antiquities, manners, and
- literature, with translations from the Irish, biographical
- notices, essays, etc.”
-
-⸺ THOMAS FITZGERALD THE LORD OF OFFALEY; by “Mac Erin O’Tara, the last of
-the Seanachies.” Three Vols. (LONDON). 1836.
-
- “The first of a projected series illustrative of the history
- of I.” (Title-p.). See also Introd. (pp. xxx.) containing some
- interesting remarks about Irish historical fiction. Claims to
- “give the history as it really occurred.” The book is a quite
- good attempt to relate the rebellion of Silken Thomas in a
- romantic vein (though with no love interest) and to picture
- the times. The conversations, though somewhat long-drawn-out,
- are in very creditable Elizabethan English, redolent of
- Shakespeare. Opens with a description of Christmas in Dublin in
- 1533. The Author is not enthusiastically Nationalist, but is
- quite fair to the Irish side.
-
-⸺ TIM DOOLIN, THE IRISH EMIGRANT. Pp. 360 (close print). (_Partridge_).
-3_s._ 6_d._ Illustr. Third ed., 1869.
-
- By the Author of “Mick Tracy” (_q.v._). Tim, son of a
- small farmer in Co. Cork, as a result of his conversion to
- Protestantism, has his house burned down and his cattle killed.
- He emigrates to U.S.A., but soon passes to Canada, and helps to
- repel the Fenian raid. He is joined by his family, and all live
- happily at Castle Doolin. Less offensive than “Mick Tracy” in
- its allusions to religious controversies.
-
-⸺ UNITED IRISHMAN, THE; or, The Fatal Effects of Credulity. Two Vols.
-(DUBLIN). 1819.
-
- A United Irishman who had escaped from Dublin Castle by
- the heroism of a sister, tells the tale of his woes to an
- Englishman, who meets him by accident. The latter in turn tells
- his story, equally woeful. The writer seems to be a Catholic
- and to sympathize more or less with the United Irishman. The
- book contains material for a good story, but it is told in a
- rambling manner, without art, and is full of sentimentality. No
- attempt to picture events or life of the times.
-
-⸺ VERTUE REWARDED; or, The Irish Princess. A New Novel. Pp. 184. 16mo.
-(LONDON: _Bentley_). 1893.
-
- This is No. III. in Vol. xii. of “Modern Novels,” printed for
- R. Bentley, 1892-3. Dedicatory Epist. “To the Incomparable
- Marinda.” (Pref.) “To the ill-natured reader.” A petty foreign
- prince in the train of William III. falls in love with an Irish
- beauty whom he sees in a window when passing through Clonmel.
- The story tells of the vicissitudes of his love suit. It is
- eked out by several minor incidents. Nothing historical except
- the mention of the siege of Limerick.
-
-⸺ VEUVE IRLANDAISE ET SON FILS, LA; Histoire véritable. Pp. 36. (PARIS:
-_Delay_). 1847.
-
- A little Protestant religious tract telling how a poor Irish
- widow was brought round to Protestant ideas by means of Bible
- readings.
-
-⸺ WEIRD TALES. Irish. 256 pp. 18mo. (_Paterson_). [1890].
-
- Eleven tales selected from Carleton (“The Lianhan Shee”), Lover
- (“The Burial of O’Grady”), Lever, Croker (“The Banshee”), Mrs.
- Hall, and J. B. O’Meara, together with some anonymous items.
-
-⸺ WILLIAM AND JAMES; or, The Revolution of 1689; by “A Lady.” Pp. xiv. +
-354. (DUBLIN). 1857.
-
- “An Historical Tale, in which the leading events of that ...
- period of our history ... are faithfully and truly narrated.”
- Introduces William III., James II., Tyrconnell, Sarsfield,
- Richard Hamilton, &c. Describes Boyne and Aughrim. Scene
- chiefly Co. Fermanagh. Tone strongly Protestant (there are
- digressions on religious matters), but without offensiveness to
- the other side. It is a rather rambling, ill-connected story,
- the work of a prentice hand. The initials of the author seem to
- be J. M. M. K.
-
-
-=[ABRAHAM, J. Johnstone]=, a native of Coleraine. B.A., 1898; M.D.,
-T.C.D., 1908; a consulting Surgeon in London; now serving in R.A.M.C.
-Author of _The Surgeon’s Log_.
-
-⸺ THE NIGHT NURSE. Pp. 318. (_Chapman & Hall_). 6_s._ Fifth edition.
-1913. 2_s._
-
- Life in a Dublin hospital, carefully observed. Sex problem of
- “the greater and the lesser love,” studied in a distinctly
- “biological” way. As foil to the main characters, who are
- of the respectable Protestant classes, we have “R.C.’s” of
- a most undesirable type, and, in the background, the wholly
- disreputable Irishry of a western town. The four plagues of
- Ireland are Priests, Politicians, Pawnbrokers, and Publicans,
- according to one of the personages. The medical interest is
- prominent throughout. By the same Author: _The Surgeon’s Log_.
-
-
-=ADAMS, Joseph.=
-
-⸺ UNCONVENTIONAL MOLLY. Pp. 320. (_Methuen_). 6_s._ 1913.
-
- The young heir of the old rackrenting absentee comes (from
- Cambridge) incognito among his tenantry in the West and lives
- their life. He meets the heroine who gives its title to the
- book—with the expected result. The rest is a series of little
- episodes—fishing in a western mountain-stream, a day’s shooting
- on a moor, a sail on Clew Bay, a petty sessions court, a
- matchmaking, a fair, &c., &c., all with a splendid setting of
- Western scenery. Might be written by a sympathetic and kindly
- visitor who had enjoyed his holiday.
-
-
-=ALEXANDER, Eleanor.= Born at Strabane, daughter of the late Dr.
-Alexander, Archbishop of Armagh (d. 1911), and of Mrs. Cecilia Frances
-Alexander, both of them well known as poets. Educated at home. Has
-written verse for the SPECTATOR and for other periodicals. At the
-outbreak of war was preparing for publication a collection of Ulster
-stories illustrative of the peculiar humour of the North. Her _Lady
-Anne’s Walk_, a miscellany of historical reminiscence woven round a place
-and one who walked there long ago, contains an excellent bit of Ulster
-dialect—the talk of the old gardener.
-
-⸺ THE RAMBLING RECTOR. Pp. 344. (_Arnold_). Third impression, 1904.
-(N.Y.: _Longmans_). 1.50.
-
- A story of love, marriage, and social intercourse among
- various classes of Church of Ireland people in Ulster. Draws
- a sympathetic picture of clerical life, the hero being a
- clergyman. Every character, and there are very many interesting
- types, is drawn with sure and distinct traits. There are no
- mere lay figures. John Robert is a curious and amusing study
- of a certain type of servant. Full of shrewd observation and
- knowledge of human nature, at least in all its outward aspects.
- Very well written. By the same author: _Lady Anne’s Walk_, _The
- Lady of the Well_, &c.
-
-
-=ALEXANDER, Evelyn.=
-
-⸺ THE HEART OF A MONK. Pp. 318. (_Long_). 6_s._ 1910.
-
- The love story of Ivor Jermyn, who for reasons connected with
- an hereditary family curse is induced by his mother to become a
- Benedictine. During a vacation five years after his profession
- he meets his former love at a country house, and a liaison
- is formed. Taxed with this by his rival, the shock makes
- him see the family “ghost”—the “old man of horror.” A fatal
- illness results, and he leaves the field to his rival. Written
- pleasantly and lightly. Shows little knowledge of Catholic ways
- and doctrines.
-
-⸺ THE ESSENCE OF LIFE. Pp. 320. (_Long_). 6_s._ 1911.
-
- Youth is “the Essence of Life,” as exemplified in the heroine’s
- crowded moments in the social life of Dublin and London,
- closing with her marriage with Lord Portstow, but shadowed by
- the tragedy of a beautiful actress, who turns out to be her
- mother. The novel does not rise above the commonplace.—[TIMES
- LIT. SUPPL.].
-
-
-=ALEXANDER, L. C.=
-
-⸺ THE BOOK OF BALLYNOGGIN. Pp. 315. (_Grant, Richards_). 6_s._ 1902.
-
- Stories of a miscellaneous kind, mostly humorous, told in a
- pleasant and readable style. Shows little knowledge of Irish
- life. The peasantry are treated somewhat contemptuously. The
- interest at times turns on the absurdities of Irish politics
- and of Irish legal proceedings.
-
-
-=ALEXANDER, Miriam (Mrs. Stokes).= Born at Birkenhead. Educated at home,
-except for a short period at Alexandra College, Dublin. Has almost
-finished another novel, dealing this time with modern Irish life. Was
-much interested in the Gaelic League till alienated from it by recent
-events.
-
-⸺ THE HOUSE OF LISRONAN. Pp. 312. (_Melrose_). 6_s._ 1912.
-
- A tale of the Williamite wars. Dermot Lisronan vows vengeance
- on the brutal Dutchman who has driven him from his ancestral
- home and been the death of his mother. The book is the story
- of that vengeance. Dermot by a strange fatality marries the
- daughter of this Dutchman, and some fine psychological and
- human interest is afforded by the struggle in her mind between
- love (the love of Dermot’s once bosom friend Fitz Ulick)
- and wifely duty. The book is full of exciting and dramatic
- incidents and situations, and never flags from the lurid
- beginning to the tragic close. The characters are clearly drawn
- and they are worth drawing:—Bartley, the Hedge-schoolmaster;
- Taaffe, the besotted coward, sorry product of Williamite rule;
- Father Talbot, the devoted priest of penal days; Barry Fitz
- Ulick, a kind of Sir Launcelot, and the rest. William III.
- is painted in darkest colours, and the penal days that he
- inaugurated are shown in their full horror, though as an offset
- to this we have a picture of the persecution of Huguenots in
- France.
-
- N.B.—This novel gained a 250 guinea prize by the unanimous
- award of three competent judges. Six editions were sold in less
- than two months.
-
-⸺ PORT OF DREAMS, THE. Pp. 351. (_Melrose_). 6_s._ 1912.
-
- Dedication: To Caitlín ni Houlihan. A stirring and vivid
- romance of Jacobite days (18th century) in Ireland, containing
- some intensely dramatic episodes, _e.g._, the escape of Prince
- Charles Edward. There are many threads in the narrative,
- but the chief interest, perhaps, centres in a Jacobite who,
- having served the cause well for twenty years, finds himself
- confronted with the spectre of physical cowardice. To save
- the cause from disgrace, his cousin Denis takes his place on
- the scaffold. The girl marries Clavering for the same reason,
- not for love. The author interrupts her narrative at times to
- express her views on Celticism (for which she is enthusiastic),
- religious persecution, and modern degeneracy.
-
-⸺ RIPPLE, THE. Pp. 367. (_Melrose_). 6_s._ 1913.
-
- Opens in Mayo (Achill scenery described), but soon shifts to
- Poland and then to France. Adventures of Deirdre van Kaarew
- (daughter of a recreant Irishman who has Dutchified his name
- and turned Protestant), who has followed her brother to rescue
- him from the designs of a hated kinsman. She falls in love
- with Maurice de Saxe (of whom a careful and vivid portrait is
- drawn), and the story of this “friendship” takes up much of
- the book. She refuses him in the end, and marries the hated
- kinsman. A fine plot, full of dramatic incidents.
-
-⸺ MISS O’CORRA, M.F.H. (_Melrose_). 6_s._ 1915.
-
- Miss O’Corra, who has become a rich heiress, leaves her
- English home and comes to hunt in Ireland. She is quite
- ignorant of equine matters, and various amusing difficulties
- beset her. She meets her fate in the person of a young Irish
- sportsman.—(_Press_).
-
-
-=ALEXANDER, Rupert.=
-
-⸺ MAUREEN MOORE: a Romance of ’98. Pp. viii. + 355. (_Burleigh_). 6_s._
-1899.
-
- A well told story, introducing Lord Edward and the other
- leaders. Maureen, an American, is the niece of John Moore, who
- is driven into rebellion by the persecution of the “Yeos.”
- His two sons, one a captain in the army, the other a priest,
- also join the rebel ranks. A love interest with cross purposes
- pervades the story. Larry Farrell is a great character,
- performing wonderful deeds of bravery and having equally
- wonderful escapes. The book leans entirely to the rebel side.
- The fight at New Ross and the atrocities of Wexford are vividly
- described.
-
-
-=ALGER, Horatio.= Author of over fifty books for Boys.
-
-⸺ ONLY AN IRISH BOY. (N.Y.: _Burt_). $0.75. 1904.
-
-
-=ANCKETILL, W. R.=
-
-⸺ THE ADVENTURES OF MICK CALLIGHIN, M.P.: A Story of Home Rule; and THE
-DE BURGHOS: A Romance. Pp. 243. (_Tinsley_). Seven rather rough illustr.
-1874. Second ed., Belfast, 1875. 1_s._
-
- 1. Mick Callighin leaves Ballypooreen, somewhere near the
- Galtees, of which there is a fine description, for Dublin and
- then London. He meets his future wife in Kensington Gardens.
- The plot is slight, but there is a good deal of pleasant wit,
- many political hits, and much satire, not of Home Rule but of
- Home Rulers.
-
- 2. Arthur Mervyn meets Col. de Burgho and his daughter, home
- from Italy. An Italian count, who is also a pirate, carries off
- Nora, but she is rescued and married to Arthur. A pretty story,
- with some good descriptions of life among the better classes in
- the West of Ireland.
-
-
-=ANDREWS, Elizabeth, F.R.I.A.=
-
-⸺ ULSTER FOLKLORE. Pp. 121. (_Stock_). 5_s._ net. Fourteen illustr.,
-mainly from photos. 1914.
-
- A series of papers read before local learned societies or
- contributed to archæological journals. An endeavour to deal
- with the folk belief in fairies from an archæological point of
- view. The conclusion is that the “souterrains” were originally
- the abode of a primitive pigmy race. Imbedded in these pages
- (the outcome of much personal research) are many good fairy and
- folk stories.
-
-
-=ANDREWS, Marion.=
-
-⸺ COUSIN ISABEL. Pp. 147. (_Wells Gardner, Darton_). 1_s._ 6_d._ Two
-illustr. 1903.
-
- A tale, for young people, of the Siege of Londonderry, the
- hardships of the defenders, and their brave patience. Isabel,
- a veritable angel of mercy for her uncle and cousins is
- a pleasant study. Another fine character is old Geoffrey
- Lambrick, drawn from a quiet life and his tulips into the smoke
- of battle.
-
-
-=[ARCHDEACON, Matthew].=
-
-⸺ LEGENDS OF CONNAUGHT, TALES, &c. Pp. 406. (DUBLIN: _John Cumming_).
-1829.
-
- Seven stories:—“Fitzgerald,” “The Banshee,” “The Election,”
- “Alice Thomson,” “M’Mahon,” “The Rebel’s Grave,” “The
- Ribbonman.” “Almost every incident in each tale is founded on
- fact.” (Pref.). The first story (165 pp.) depicts Connaught “in
- a wild and stormy state of society” towards the close of the
- eighteenth century, and records the wild deeds and memorable
- exit of the very widely known individual who is its hero.
-
-⸺ CONNAUGHT: a Tale of 1798. Pp. 394. (DUBLIN: _printed for M.
-Archdeacon_). 1830.
-
- The Author was “from infancy in the habit of hearing details
- of ‘the time of the Frinch’” ... and has “had an opportunity
- of frequently hearing the insurrectionary scenes described by
- some of the Actors themselves.” (Pref.) The Author is loyalist,
- but not bitterly hostile to the rebels. The rebellion is not
- painted in roseate colours, but it is not misrepresented.
- Humbert’s campaign is vividly described, but history does not
- absorb all the interest. The love story (the lovers are on
- the rebel side) is told with zest, and there is abundance of
- exciting incident. Quite well written.
-
-⸺ SHAWN NA SAGGARTH, THE PRIESTHUNTER. (_Duffy_). 6_s._ 1843.
-
- A tale of the Penal times.
-
-
-=ARCHER, Patrick, “MacFinegall.”= Born at Oldtown, North County Dublin,
-about fifty years ago. Lives in Dublin, where he is a Customs Official.
-
-⸺ THE HUMOURS OF SHANWALLA. Pp. 162. (_Gill_). 2_s._ 6_d._ Frontisp.
-photo of Author. [1906]. New edition, 1_s._ 6_d._ 1913.
-
- A series of sketches exhibiting the humorous side of village
- life in the North County Dublin district, or thereabouts.
- Quite free from caricature; in fact tending to set the
- people described in a favourable light, and to make them
- more appreciated. There is a portrait of a priest, earnest,
- persevering, and wholly taken up with his people’s good.
- Thoroughly hearty, wholesome humour.
-
-
-=ARGYLE, Anna.=
-
-⸺ OLIVE LACY. Pp. 365. (PHILADELPHIA: _Lippincott_). 1874, and earlier
-editions.
-
- Scene: Wicklow during rebellion. Story told in first person
- by Olive Lacy, a peasant’s daughter, adopted into a country
- gentleman’s family. Castlereagh and Curran are introduced. A
- good specimen of the latter’s table talk is given. Olive’s
- father becomes a United Irishman, is betrayed by a foreign
- monk (who goes about in a habit and cowl!), escapes, is
- rearrested, and finally is shot. A general description of
- the rising is given. Tone, healthy. Story well told, but for
- some improbabilities. Wrote also: _Cecilia; or, The Force of
- Circumstances_. N.Y.: 1866; _Cupid’s Album_; _The General’s
- Daughter_.
-
-
-=ARTHUR, F. B.=
-
-⸺ THE DUCHESS. (_Nelson_).
-
- Scene: mainly in Donegal. Standpoint: Protestant and English.
- Not unfair to peasantry. A pleasantly told little story. The
- hero implicated in Fenian movement, and arrested, escapes from
- prison through the cleverness of his little daughter, “the
- Duchess.”
-
-
-=[ASHWORTH, John H.]= Author of _The Saxon in Ireland_.
-
-⸺ RATHLYNN. Three Vols. (_Hurst & Blackett_). 1864.
-
- A young Englishman, son of “Admiral Wyville,” takes up and
- works a property in a remote district in Ireland. Told in first
- person. The chief interest seems to lie in jealousies and
- consequent intrigues arising out of love affairs.
-
-
-=“ATHENE”= _see_ =HARRIS=.
-
-
-=AUSTIN, Stella.=
-
-⸺ PAT: A Story for Boys and Girls. (_Wells Gardner_). 2_s._ 6_d._ Illustr.
-
- “One of the prettiest stories of child life. Even the
- adult reader will take a great liking to the lively Irish
- Boy”—(CHRISTIAN WORLD). By the same Author: _Stumps_,
- _Somebody_, _Tib and Sib_, _For Old Sake’s Sake_, &c., &c.
-
-
-=“AYSCOUGH, John” [Mgr. Bickerstaffe Drew].= The Author is a Catholic
-priest (a convert), now (August, 1915) acting as a chaplain in the
-British Army in France. He is one of the best-known writers of the day.
-
-⸺ DROMINA. Pp. 437. (_Arrowsmith_). 6_s._ 1909.
-
- The Author brings together in a queer old castle on the
- Western coast the M’Morrogh, descendant of a long line of
- Celtic princes, his children by an Italian wife, his French
- sister-in-law, a band of gypsies of a higher type, whose king
- is Louis XVII. of France, rescued from his persecutors of the
- Terror and half-ignorant of his origin. These are some of the
- personages of the tale. It is noteworthy that not one of the
- characters has a drop of English blood. I shall not give the
- plot of the story. The last portion is full of the highest
- moral beauty. The lad Enrique or Mudo, son of Henry M’Morrogh
- (whose mother was an Italian) and of a Spanish gypsy princess,
- is a wonderful conception. When the Author speaks, as he does
- constantly, of things Catholic (notably the religious life and
- the Blessed Sacrament) he does so not only correctly but in a
- reverential and understanding spirit. The one exception is the
- character of Father O’Herlihy, which is offensive to Catholic
- feeling, and unnatural. The moral tone throughout is high. One
- of the episodes is the seduction of a peasant girl, but it is
- dealt with delicately and without suggestiveness.
-
-
-=BANIM, John and Michael “The O’Hara Family.”= John Banim (1798-1842) and
-Michael Banim (1796-1876) worked together, and bear a close resemblance
-to one another in style and in the treatment of their material; but the
-work of John is often gloomy and tragic; that of Michael has more humour,
-and is brighter. They have both a tendency to be melodramatic, and can
-picture well savage and turbulent passion. They have little lightness of
-humour or literary delicacy of touch, but they often write with vigour
-and great realistic power. The object with which the “O’Hara” Tales were
-written is thus stated by Michael Banim: “To insinuate, through fiction,
-the causes of Irish discontent and insinuate also that if crime were
-consequent on discontent, it was no great wonder; the conclusion to be
-arrived at by the reader, not by insisting on it on the part of the
-Author, but from sympathy with the criminals.”
-
- P. J. Kenedy, of New York, publishes an edition of the Banims’
- works in ten volumes at seven dollars the set.
-
-
-=BANIM, John.=
-
-⸺ JOHN DOE; or, The Peep o’ Day. 1825.
-
- The story of a young man who, for revenge, joins the
- Shanavests, a secret society, terrible alike to landlord,
- tithe-proctor, and even priest. The first of the _Tales by the
- O’Hara Family_, republished separately by _Simms & M’Intyre_,
- 1853; and _Routledge_, _n.d._
-
-⸺ THE FETCHES. (_Duffy_). [1825].
-
- A gloomy story, turning on the influence of superstitious
- imaginations on two nervous and high-strung minds. The fetch is
- the spirit of a person about to die said to appear to friends.
- The story is somewhat lightened by the introduction of two
- farcical characters.
-
-⸺ THE NOWLANS. Pp. 256 (close print). [1826], 1853, &c.
-
- The temptation and fall of a young priest, resulting in misery
- which leads to repentance. Contains some of Banim’s most
- powerful scenes.
-
-⸺ PETER OF THE CASTLE. Pp. 191. (_Duffy_). [1826].
-
- A sensational and romantic tale. The opening chapters (by
- Michael Banim) give a detailed description of country
- matchmaking and marriage festivities at the time, c. 1770.
-
-⸺ THE BOYNE WATER. Pp. 564. (_Duffy_). 2_s._ [1826]. Many editions since.
-
- In this great novel, which is closely modelled on Scott, scene
- after scene of the great drama of the Williamite Wars passes
- before the reader. Every detail of scenery and costume is
- carefully reproduced. Great historical personages mingle in the
- action. The two rival kings with all their chief generals are
- represented with remarkable vividness. Then there are Sarsfield
- and Rev. George Walker, Galloping O’Hogan the Rapparee, Carolan
- the bard, and many others. The politics and other burning
- questions of the day are thrashed out in the conversations.
- The intervals of the great historical events are filled by the
- adventures of the fictitious characters, exciting to the verge
- of sensationalism, finely told, though the _deus ex machina_
- is rather frequently called in, and the dialogue is somewhat
- old-fashioned. The wild scenery of the Antrim coast is very
- fully described, also the scenes through which Sarsfield passed
- on his famous ride. The standpoint is Catholic and Jacobite,
- but great efforts are made to secure historical fairness. The
- book ends with the Treaty of Limerick.
-
-⸺ THE ANGLO-IRISH OF THE NINETEENTH CENTURY. Three Vols. (_Colburn_).
-[1828]. Republ. in one volume by Duffy in 1865 under title _Lord
-Clangore_.
-
- Opens in London. Several members of Anglo-Irish Society are
- introduced—the Minister (Castlereagh) and the Secretary (Wilson
- Croker). There are long disquisitions on Emancipation, the
- conversion of the peasantry, &c. Gerald Blount, younger son of
- an Irish peer, has all the anti-Irish bias of this set. Flying
- after a duel he reaches Ireland, where he has many exciting
- adventures with the Rockites. Finally he succeeds to the title
- and settles down. The “double” (or mistaken identity) plays
- a part in this story, as in so many of Banim’s. A meeting of
- the Catholic Association with O’Connell and Shiel debating is
- finely described, also a Dublin dinner-party, at which Scott’s
- son appears. The early part is somewhat tedious, but the later
- scenes are powerful.
-
-⸺ THE CONFORMISTS. Pp. 202. (_Duffy_). [1829].
-
- Period: reign of George II. A very singular story, whose
- interest centres in the denial under the Penal Laws of the
- right of education to Catholics. A young man, crossed in love,
- resolves to become a “conformist” or pervert, and thus at once
- disgrace his family, and oust his father from the property.
-
-⸺ THE DENOUNCED; or, The Last Baron of Crana. Pp. 235. (_Duffy_). [1826].
-(_Colburn_). 1830. (N.Y.: _Benziger_). 0.75.
-
- Deals with the fortunes of two Catholic families in the period
- immediately following the Treaty of Limerick. Depicts their
- struggles to practise their religion, and the vexations they
- had to undergo at the hands of hostile Protestants. The tale
- abounds in incident, often sensational. There is a good deal in
- the story about the Rapparees.
-
-⸺ THE CHANGELING. Three Vols. Pp. 315 + 350 + 414. (LONDON). 1848.
-
- Published anonymously. Preface tells us it was written some
- few years before date of publication. Scene: City of Galway
- and Connemara (including Aran). The main plot is concerned
- with the mystery surrounding the heir of Ballymagawley, got
- out of the way in early childhood by the present owner, Mr.
- Whaley, but returning in disguise to claim his rights. The
- interest is threefold:—First, Mr. Whaley’s awful secret unknown
- to the daughter, whom he loves with his whole soul, and who
- returns his love, and the desperate efforts he makes to avert
- the revelation; 2nd, the study of character: Clara Whaley,
- high-souled, intellectual, unworldly, scorning fashion and
- flirtation, the astute worldly intellectual Hon. Augustus
- Foster, the empty-headed Miss Fosters and so on; 3rd, a series
- of quite admirable and amusing vignettes of the _petite
- bourgeoisie_ of Galway—the vulgar and showy Mrs. Heffernan
- with her absurd accent, the match-making Mrs. Flanagan (an
- inimitable portrait), the mischief-making Peter Harry Joe,
- Considine the Butler, the consequential Captain O’Connor, and
- the endless flirtations of the marriageable young ladies. The
- peasantry are well drawn, but it is quite an outside view
- of their life. The conversations are clever, but sometimes
- tediously long, as are also the Author’s reflections.
-
-
-=BANIM, Michael.=
-
-⸺ CROHOORE OF THE BILLHOOK. (_Duffy_). [1825].
-
- Has been a very popular book. The action lies in one of the
- darkest periods of Irish history, when the peasantry, crushed
- under tithe-proctor, middleman, and Penal laws, retorted by the
- savage outrages of the secret societies. One of these latter
- was the “Whiteboys,” with the doings of which this book largely
- deals. The Author does not justify outrage, but explains it by
- a picture of the conditions of which it was an outcome. A dark
- and terrible story. The scene is Kilkenny and neighbourhood. It
- must be added that most of the characters savour strongly of
- what is now known as the “stage Irishman.”
-
-⸺ THE CROPPY. Pp. 420. (_Duffy_). 2_s._ Still reprinted. [1828].
-
- Opens with a long and serious historical introduction. There
- follow many pages of a love story of the better classes which
- is, perhaps, not very convincing. Samples of the outrages by
- which the people were driven to revolt are given. Then there
- are many scenes from the heart of the rebellion itself, some
- of them acquired from conversation with eye-witnesses. The
- attitude is that of a mild Nationalist, or rather Liberal,
- contemplating with sorrow not unmixed with contempt the savage
- excesses of his misguided countrymen. The rebellion is shown
- in its vulgarest and least romantic aspect, and there are
- harrowing descriptions of rebel outrages on Vinegar Hill and
- elsewhere. The one noble or even respectable character in the
- book, Sir Thomas Hartley, is represented as in sympathy with
- constitutional agitation, but utterly abhorring rebellion. The
- other chief actors in the story are unattractive. They have
- no sympathy with the insurgents, and the parts they play are
- connected merely accidentally with the rebellion. There is much
- movement and spirit in the descriptive portions.
-
-⸺ THE MAYOR OF WINDGAP. Pp. 190. (_Duffy_). [1834].
-
- Romantic and sensational—attempted murders, abductions, &c. Not
- suitable for the young. Interest and mystery well sustained.
- Scene: Kilkenny in 1779. There was a Paris edition, 1835.
-
-⸺ THE BIT O’ WRITING.
-
- This is the title-story of a volume of stories. First published
- in London, 1838. It may be taken as typical of Michael Banim’s
- humour at his best. It is a gem of story-telling, and, besides,
- a very close study of the ways and the talk of the peasantry.
- The “ould admiral,” with his sailor’s lingo, is most amusing.
- It was republished along with another story, _The Ace of
- Clubs_, by Gill, in a little volume of the O’Connell Press
- Series, pp. 144, cloth, 6_d._, 1886. The original volume, with
- twenty stories, is still published by Kenedy, New York.
-
-⸺ FATHER CONNELL. Pp. 358. [1840].
-
- The scene is Kilkenny. The hero is an Irish country priest. The
- character, modelled strictly (see Pref.) on that of a priest
- well known to the author, is one of the noblest in fiction.
- He is the ideal Irish priest, almost childlike in simplicity,
- pious, lavishly charitable, meek and long-suffering, but
- terrible when circumstances roused him to action. Interwoven
- with his life-story is that of Neddy Fennell, his orphan
- protégé, brave, honest, generous, loyal. Father Connell is
- his ministering angel, warding off suffering and disaster,
- saving him also from himself. The last scene, where, to save
- his protégé from an unjust judicial sentence, Father Connell
- goes before the Viceroy, and dies at his feet, is a piece of
- exquisite pathos. There is an element of the sombre and the
- terrible. But the greater part of the book sparkles with a
- humour at once so kindly, so homely, and so delicate, that
- the reader comes to love the Author so revealed. The episodes
- depict many aspects of Irish life. The character-drawing is
- masterly, as the best critics have acknowledged. There is Mrs.
- Molloy, Father Connell’s redoubtable housekeeper; Costigan,
- the murderer and robber; Mary Cooney, the poor outcast and her
- mother, the potato-beggar; and many more. The Author faithfully
- reproduces the talk of the peasants, and enters into their
- point of view. Acknowledged to be the most pleasing of the
- Banims’ novels.
-
-⸺ THE GHOST HUNTER AND HIS FAMILY. (_Simms & M’Intyre_). [1833]. 1852.
-
- Still published by P. J. Kenedy, New York: 75 cents. An
- intricate plot skilfully worked out, never flagging, and with a
- mystery admirably sustained to the end. Gives curious glimpses
- of the life of the times (early nineteenth century), as seen
- in a provincial town (Kilkenny). But the style often offends
- against modern taste. The book soon turns to rather crude, if
- exciting, melodrama. Moreover, though the Author is always on
- the side of morality, there is too much about abduction, &c.,
- and too many references to the loose morals of the day to make
- it suitable reading for certain classes.
-
-⸺ THE TOWN OF THE CASCADES. Two Vols. Pp. 283 + 283. (_Chapman & Hall_).
-1864.
-
- Scene: sea-board town in West. A powerful story in which the
- chief interest is a tragedy brought about by drink. The town
- seems to be Ennistymon, Co. Clare. The characters belong to the
- peasant class, and of course are drawn with thorough knowledge.
- The work could easily go in one not very large volume.
-
-
-=“BAPTIST, Father”= _see_ =Mgr. R. B. O’BRIEN=.
-
-
-=BARBOUR, M. F.=
-
-⸺ THE IRISH ORPHAN BOY IN A SCOTTISH HOME. Pp. 87. (LONDON). [1866]. 1872.
-
- “A sequel to ‘The Way Home,’ &c.” A little religious tract
- (Protestant) in story form.
-
-
-=BARDAN, Patrick.=
-
-⸺ THE DEAD-WATCHERS. Pp. 83. (MULLINGAR: _Office of_ WESTMEATH GUARDIAN).
-1891.
-
- “And other Folk-lore Tales of Westmeath.” The author is a
- member of the Royal Society of Antiquaries. Intended as a
- contribution to folk-lore. But the title-story (54 pp.) is a
- fantastic story told in melodramatic modern English, and has
- little or no connexion with folk-lore. The remainder consists
- of ghost stories, spirit-warnings, superstitions, chiefly of
- local interest. Appended are a few explanatory notes of some
- value.
-
-
-=BARLOW, Jane.=
-
-⸺ IRISH IDYLLS. Pp. 284. (_Hodder & Stoughton_). 6_s._ [1892]. Ninth ed.
-(N.Y.: _Dodd & Mead_). 2.00. 1908.
-
- Doings at Lisconnell, a poverty-stricken little hamlet, lost
- amidst a waste of unlovely bogland. These sketches have been
- well described as “saturated with the pathos of elementary
- tragedy.” Yet there is humour, too, and even fun, as in the
- story of how the shebeeners tricked the police. The illustrated
- edition contains about thirty exceptionally good reproductions
- of photographs of Western life and scenery.
-
-⸺ KERRIGAN’S QUALITY. Pp. 254. (_Hodder & Stoughton_). 6_s._ Eight
-Illustr. [1893]. (N.Y.: _Pratt_). 1.75. Second edition.
-
- In this story the peasants only appear incidentally. The main
- characters are Martin Kerrigan, a returned Irish-Australian;
- the invalid Lady O’Connor; her son, Sir Ben; and her niece,
- Merle. The story is one of intense, almost hopeless, sadness,
- yet it is ennobling in a high degree. It is full of exquisite
- scraps of description.
-
-⸺ STRANGERS AT LISCONNELL. Pp. 341. (_Hodder & Stoughton_). 6_s._ [1895].
-(N.Y.: _Pratt_). 1.75.
-
- A second series of Irish Idylls, showing the Author’s
- qualities in perhaps a higher degree even than the first. A
- more exquisite story than “A Good Turn” it would be hard to
- find. Throughout there is the most thorough sympathy with the
- poor folk. The peasant dialect is never rendered so as to
- appear vulgar or absurd. It is full of an endless variety of
- picturesqueness and quaint turns. No problems are discussed,
- yet the all but impossibility of life under landlordism is
- brought out (see p. 15). There are studies of many types
- familiar in Irish country life—the tinkers; Mr. Polymathers,
- the pedagogue (a most pathetic figure); Mad Bell, the crazy
- tramp; and Con the “Quare One.” It should be noted that, though
- there is in Miss Barlow’s stories much pathos, there is an
- entire absence of emotional gush.
-
-⸺ MAUREEN’S FAIRING. Pp. 191. (_Dent_). Six Illustr., of no great value.
-[1895]. (N.Y.: _Macmillan_). 0.75.
-
- Eight little stories reprinted from various magazines in a very
- dainty little volume. Like all of Jane Barlow’s stories, they
- tell of the “tear and the smile” in lowly peasant lives, with
- graceful humour or simple, tender pathos. The stories are very
- varied in kind.
-
-⸺ MRS. MARTIN’S COMPANY. (_Dent_). Uniform with _Maureen’s Fairing_.
-[1896]. (N.Y.: _Macmillan_). 0.75.
-
- “Seven stories, chiefly of a light and humorous kind, very
- tender in their portrayal of the hearts of the poor. There
- is a touching sketch of child-life and a police-court
- comedy.”—(_Baker_).
-
-⸺ FROM THE EAST UNTO THE WEST. Pp. 342. (_Methuen_). 1_s._ 8vo. Cloth.
-First ed., 1898; new ed., 1905.
-
- The first six of this collection of fifteen stories are tales
- of foreign lands—Arabia, Greece, and others. The remainder deal
- with Irish peasant life. They tell of the romance and pathos
- that is hidden in lives that seem most commonplace. “The Field
- of the Frightful Beasts” is a pretty little story of childish
- fancies. “An Advance Sheet” is weird and has a tragic ending.
-
-⸺ FROM THE LAND OF THE SHAMROCK. Pp. 318. (_Methuen_). 5_s._ (N.Y.:
-_Pratt_). 1.75. 1900. (N.Y.: _Dodd & Mead_). 1.50.
-
- Fourteen stories, some humorous, some pathetic, including some
- of the author’s best work. There is the usual sympathetic
- insight into the eccentricities and queernesses of the minds
- of the peasant class, but little about the higher spiritual
- qualities of the people, for that is not the author’s province.
- Among the most amusing of the sketches is that which tells the
- doings of a young harum-scarum, the terror of his elders.
-
-⸺ THE FOUNDING OF FORTUNES. Pp. 335. (_Methuen_). 1_s._ Cloth. 8vo.
-[1902]. New ed. 1906.
-
- The tale of how Timothy Galvin, a ragged urchin living in
- a mud cabin and remarkable only for general dishonesty and
- shrewd selfishness, is given a start in life by an ill-gotten
- purse, and rises by his mother wit to wealth. The study of the
- despicable character of the parvenu is clever and unsparing.
- Other types are introduced, the landlord of the old type,
- and two reforming landlords, who appear also in _Kerrigan’s
- Quality_. The book displays Jane Barlow’s qualities to the full.
-
-⸺ BY BEACH AND BOGLAND. Pp. 301. (_Fisher Unwin_). 6_s._ One Illustr.
-1905.
-
- Seventeen stories up to the level of the author’s best, the
- usual vein of quiet humour, the pathos that is never mawkish,
- the perfect accuracy of the conversations, and the faithful
- portrayal of characteristics. The study in “A Money-crop
- at Lisconnell,” of the struggle between the Widow M’Gurk’s
- deep-rooted Celtic pride and her kind heart, is most amusing.
- As usual, there are delightful portraits of children.
-
-⸺ IRISH NEIGHBOURS. Pp. 342. (_Hutchinson_). 1907.
-
- Seventeen stories of Irish life, chiefly among the peasantry.
- They have all Miss Barlow’s wonted sympathy and insight, her
- quiet humour and cheerful outlook.
-
-⸺ IRISH WAYS. Pp. 262. (_George Allen_). 15_s._ Sq. demy 8vo. Sixteen
-Illustr. in colour. Headpieces to chapters. 1909.
-
- Chapter I., “Ourselves and Our Island,” gives the author’s
- thoughts about Ireland, its outward aspect, the peculiarities
- of its social life, its soul. It includes an exquisite
- pen-picture of Irish landscape beauty. The remaining fourteen
- sketches are “chapters from the history of some Irish country
- folk,” whom she describes as “social, pleasure-loving,
- keen-witted,” but “prone to melancholy and mysticism.” The last
- sketch is a picture, almost photographic in its fidelity, of
- a little out-of-the-way country town and its neighbourhood.
- The illustrations are pretty, and the artist, who, unlike many
- illustrators of Irish books, has evidently been in Ireland, has
- made a great effort to include in his pictures as much local
- colour as possible. Yet it seems to us that un-Irish traits
- often intrude themselves despite him.
-
-⸺ FLAWS. Pp. 344. (_Hutchinson_). 6_s._ 1911.
-
- Embroidered upon an exceptionally involved plot—four times we
- are introduced to a wholly new set of characters—we have the
- author’s usual qualities, minute observation and depiction of
- curious aspects of character, snatches of clever picturesque
- conversation, an occasional vivid glimpse of nature. But in
- this case the caste is made up of spiteful, petty, small-minded
- and generally disagreeable personages. They are nearly all
- drawn from the middle and upper classes in the South of
- Ireland, Protestant and Anglicized. The snobbishness, petty
- jealousies, selfishness of some of these people is set forth
- in a vein of satire. The incidents include an unusually tragic
- suicide.
-
-⸺ MAC’S ADVENTURES. (_Hutchinson_). 6_s._ 1911.
-
- Eight stories in which Mac, or rather Macartney Valentine
- O’Neill Barry, who is four years old in the first and six in
- the last, plays a leading part. Indeed he is quite a little
- _deus ex machina_, or rather a good fairy in the affairs of his
- elders. Mac is neither a paragon nor a youthful prodigy. He
- is just a natural child, with a child’s love of mischief and
- “grubbiness,” and full of quaint sayings. Bright and genial in
- tone.—(_Press Notices_).
-
-⸺ DOINGS AND DEALINGS. Pp. 314. (_Hutchinson_). 6_s._ 1913.
-
- Thirteen stories, all but one (the longest) dealing with
- peasant life in the author’s wonted manner. Perhaps scarcely so
- good as some of her earlier collections.
-
-⸺ A CREEL OF IRISH STORIES. (_Methuen_). 1_s._ Cloth. 8vo. (N.Y.: _Dodd &
-Mead_). 1.25.
-
- The first of these, “The Keys of the Chest,” is a curious
- and original conception, showing with what strange notions a
- child grew up in a lonely mansion by the sea. The story of the
- suicide is a gem of story-telling. “Three Pint Measures” is a
- comic sketch of low Dublin life.
-
-⸺ ANOTHER CREEL OF IRISH STORIES. Published, I believe, in U.S.A. (On
-sale by _Pratt_: N.Y.). 1.75.
-
-
-=[BARRETT, J. G.], “Erigena.”=
-
-⸺ EVELYN CLARE; or, The Wrecked Homesteads. Pp. viii. + 274. (DERBY:
-_Richardson_). 1870.
-
- “An Irish story of love and landlordism.” Crude melodrama with
- all the usual accessories—a landlord, “Lord Ironhoof,” and an
- agent, “Gore”—eviction, agrarian murders, a disguised priest,
- and secret Mass, a poteen still, an elopement, a changeling
- brought up in wealth, a lover supposed drowned, and an innocent
- man unjustly convicted. No sense of reality. Scene: West of
- Ireland, _c._ 1850. Several anachronisms.
-
-
-=BARRINGTON, F. Clinton.=
-
-⸺ FITZ-HERN; or, The Irish Patriot Chief. Pp. 122. (GLASGOW: _Cameron &
-Ferguson_). _n.d._
-
- Scene: Galway Bay. Crude melodrama, without historical
- significance. Wicked married bishops, scheming foreign monks,
- and coarse fat friars are the villains of the piece. But
- the hero, a smuggler of noble birth, always escapes from
- their clutches, and finally marries the heroine. Specimen of
- dialect:—“Arrah, gorrah, avic, father John, it’s the Pope o’
- Rome ye bate, out and out.” (p. 13).
-
-
-=BARRON, Percy.=
-
-⸺ THE HATE FLAME. Pp. 382. (_Hodder & Stoughton_). 6_s._ 1908.
-
- The story of a noble life wrecked by racial hatred. The hero,
- a young Englishman, Jack Bullen, fights a duel, in Heidelberg,
- with an Irish student, and kills him. This deed comes in after
- years between him and the Irish girl (cousin of the slain
- student, and pledged against her will to vengeance by his
- father) whom he was to marry—and this through the plotting of
- her rejected lover and a priest. Bullen had, for the upraising
- of the Irish people, started a great peat factory in Ireland,
- and it had prospered. This work is wrecked by the same agency
- that ruins his private happiness. Throughout the book the
- Author attacks all the cherished ideas of Irish Nationalism and
- of the present Irish revival, and sets over against them the
- ideals of England and his personal views. Much bitterness is
- shown against the priests of Ireland. The scene-painting and
- the handling of situation and of narrative are very clever.
- There is nothing objectionable from a moral point of view.
-
-
-=BARRY, Canon William, D.D.= Born in London, 1849. Educated at
-Oscott and Rome. He is a man of very wide learning, a theologian and
-a man-of-letters, known in literature both by his novels (_The New
-Antigone_, &c.) and by important historical and religious works. Is now
-Rector of St. Peter’s, Leamington.
-
-⸺ THE WIZARD’S KNOT. Pp. 376. (_Unwin_). 6_s._ Second ed. (N.Y.:
-_Pratt_). 3.00. 1900.
-
- Dedicated to Douglas Hyde and Standish Hayes O’Grady. Scene:
- coast of South-west Cork during famine times, of which some
- glimpses are shown. There is a slight embroidery of Irish
- legend and a good deal about superstition, but the incidents,
- characters, and conversations have little, if any, relation
- to real life in Ireland. It is mainly a study of primitive
- passions. It might be described as a dream of a peculiarly
- “creepy” and morbid kind. It is wholly unlike the Author’s _New
- Antigone_.
-
-
-=BAYNE, Marie.=
-
-⸺ FAIRY STORIES FROM ERIN’S ISLE. Pp. 131. (_Sands_). 2_s._ 6_d._ net.
-Illustr. by Mabel Dawson and John Petts. 1908.
-
- Pretty and attractive picture-cover. Six little stories told
- in pretty, poetic style, one about a fairy changeling, another
- about the mermaids. The “Luck of the Griddle Darner” is in
- pleasant swinging verse. So is the “Sleep of Earl Garrett.”
- Though intended for small children, none of the stories are
- silly.
-
-
-=BENNETT, Louie.= Born in Dublin, educated there by private tuition and
-in London. Has done some journalistic work, but is chiefly interested
-in social questions, in particular the woman’s movement and pacifism.
-Resides near Bray, Co. Wicklow.
-
-⸺ THE PROVING OF PRISCILLA. Pp. 303. (_Harper_). 1902.
-
- Scene: varies between Mayo and Dublin. Story of an ill-assorted
- marriage. The wife, daughter of a Protestant rector, is a
- Puritan of the best type, simple, religious, and sincere. The
- husband is a fast man of fashion, who cannot understand her
- “prejudices.” After much bickering they part. Troubles fall on
- both. In the end his illness brings them together again—each
- grown more tolerant. Quiet and simply but well written, with
- nothing objectionable in the treatment.
-
-⸺ PRISONER OF HIS WORD, A. Pp. 240. (_Maunsel_). 6_s._ Handsome cover.
-1908. New edition. 1s. 1914.
-
- “A tale of real happenings” (sub-title). Opens at Ballynahinch,
- Co. Down, in June, 1797. A pleasant, exciting romance, written
- in vigorous and nervous style. A young Englishman joins
- the Northern rebellion. He pledges himself to avenge his
- friend taken after the fight at Ballynahinch, and hanged as
- a rebel. The story tells how he carries out the pledge. The
- only historical character introduced is Thomas Russell. His
- pitiful failure in 1803 to raise another rebellion in Ulster is
- related. The little heroine, Kate Maxwell, is finely drawn.
-
-
-=BERENS, Mrs. E. M.=
-
-⸺ STEADFAST UNTO DEATH. Pp. 275. (_Remington_). Frontisp. by Fairfield.
-1880.
-
- “A tale of the Irish famine of to-day.” Period: 1879-80. Place:
- Ballinaveen, not far from Cork. Black Hugh, a kind of outlaw
- of the mountains is the hero. He had loved Mrs. Sullivan
- before she married the drunken, worthless Pat. He promises her
- when she is on her deathbed to care for the children she is
- leaving, and the worthless husband. Hugh takes the blame of the
- latter’s crime, and is hanged in Dublin. The family is rescued
- by benevolent English people. A well-told, but very sad story.
- The people’s miseries are feelingly depicted. Standpoint of a
- kind-hearted Englishwoman who pities, but does not in the least
- understand Ireland.
-
-
-=BERTHET, Elie.=
-
-⸺ DERNIER IRLANDAIS, LE. Three Vols. 16mo. (BRUXELLES: _Meline_). 1851.
-
- Ireland in the eighteen forties. Abortive rising under one of
- the O’Byrnes of Wicklow (_Le dernier Irlandais_). O’Connell
- looms in the background as the opponent of all this. The
- rebellion, which at once fizzles out, is the result of an
- insult to O’Byrne’s sister by a _roué_ named Clinton. O’B.
- flies to Cunnemara (_sic_) with Nelly Avondale, daughter of the
- landlord of Glendalough, is besieged there in a fortress. Nelly
- returns to marry the above-mentioned _roué_ and O’B. flies.
- The Author is evidently not consciously hostile to Ireland,
- but he is totally ignorant of it. The peasants are travestied.
- They are all drunkards, slovenly, sly, mean, lawless. Some
- descriptions of scenery in Wicklow and Connemara.
-
-
-=BERTHOLDS, Mrs. W. M.=
-
-⸺ CONNOR D’ARCY’S STRUGGLES. (N.Y.: _Benziger_). 2_s._ 1914.
-
-
-=BESTE, Henry Digby, 1768-1836.= Son of the prebendary of Lincoln. Became
-a Catholic 1798. An interesting biographical sketch of him (largely
-autobiographical) is prefixed to the novel here noticed. It includes a
-full account of his conversion.
-
-⸺ POVERTY AND THE BARONET’S FAMILY: An Irish Catholic Novel. Pp. xxxii. +
-415. (LONDON: _Jones_). 1845.
-
- Bryan O’Meara, son of a poor Irish migratory labourer, is
- educated as a gentleman by Sir Cecil Foxglove, of Denham,
- near Grantham, in gratitude for the rescue of his child by
- Bryan’s father. Coming to man’s estate, and being refused by
- the Baronet’s daughter he returns to his father’s people at
- Athlone, where for some time he plays at being a farmer’s
- lad—and at rebellion. But a fortunate chance puts great
- wealth into his hands, and he returns to marry the Baronet’s
- daughter. Interesting glimpses of Catholic life in penal days
- (the story opens in 1805) when Catholicism was at the lowest
- ebb in England. The DUBLIN REVIEW says (1848, Vol. xxiv., p.
- 239): “The hero is a pious pedant, a truculent fellow, and a
- self-conceited proser. The story itself is purposeless; bitter
- in sentiment, and swamped in never-ending small-talk.” The
- “small-talk,” however is, if anything, over-serious and moral.
-
-
-=“BIRMINGHAM, George A.”= Rev. James Owen Hannay, M.A., Canon of St.
-Patrick’s Cathedral (1912). Born 1865, son of Rev. Robert Hannay, vicar
-of Belfast. Educated at Temple Grove, East Sheen; Haileybury; T.C.D.
-Curate of Delgany, Co. Wicklow. Rector of Westport, 1892-1913. Has
-resigned this cure in order to devote himself to literature. Is a member
-of the General Synod of the Church of Ireland. He has shown himself
-equally at home in political satire, humorous fiction and historical
-fiction. He is in sympathy with the ideals of the Gaelic League, and
-has actively shown this sympathy. He seems on the whole Nationalist in
-his views, but has nothing in common with the Parliamentary Party. His
-earlier books showed strong aversion for the Catholic Church, but, except
-perhaps in _Hyacinth_, he has never striven to represent it in an odious
-light, and he is an enemy of all intolerance.
-
-⸺ THE SEETHING POT. Pp. 299. (_Arnold_). 6_s._ 1904.
-
- Main theme: the apparently hopeless embroilment of politics
- and ideas in Ireland. Many aspects of Irish questions and
- conditions of life are dealt with. Many of the characters are
- types of contemporary Irish life, some are thinly disguised
- portraits of contemporary Irishmen, _e.g._, Dennis Browne,
- poet, æsthete, egoist; Desmond O’Hara, journalistic freelance
- (said to be modelled on Standish O’Grady); Sir Gerald
- Geoghegan, nationalist landlord; John O’Neill, the Irish
- leader, who is deserted by his party and ruined by clerical
- influence; and many others. All this is woven into a romance
- with a love interest and a good deal of incident.
-
-⸺ HYACINTH. (_Arnold_). 6_s._ 1906.
-
- An account, conveyed by means of a slight plot, of contemporary
- movements and personages in Ireland. Most of these are
- satirized and even caricatured, especially “Robeen” Convent, by
- which seemed to be meant Foxford Mills, directed by the Sisters
- of Charity (see NEW IRELAND REVIEW, March, 1906). A grasping,
- unscrupulous selfishness is represented to be one of the chief
- characteristics of the Catholic Church in Ireland.
-
-⸺ THE BAD TIMES. Pp. 312. (_Methuen_). 6_s._ [1907]. New edition, 1_s._
-1914.
-
- Period: chiefly Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement. Stephen
- Butler, representative of a landlord family of strong
- Nationalist sympathies, determines to work for Ireland. He
- joins the Home Rule Party, but he hates agrarian outrage, and
- so, through the Land League, becomes unpopular in his district
- in spite of all he has done. The author introduces types of
- nearly every class of men then influential in Ireland: a priest
- who favours and a priest who opposes the new agrarian movement,
- an incurably narrow-minded English R.M., an old Fenian, and so
- on. The impression one draws from the whole is much the same
- as that of the _Seething Pot_. The Author’s views are strongly
- National, and there is no bitter word against any class of
- Irishmen, _except_ the present Parliamentary Party.
-
-⸺ BENEDICT KAVANAGH. Pp. 324. (_Arnold_). 6_s._ 1907.
-
- Dedication in Irish. Foreword in which the Author states that
- by “Robeen” Convent he did not intend Foxford (cf. _Hyacinth_).
- A criticism of Irish political life, free from rancour, and
- from injustice to any particular class of Irishmen, showing
- strong sympathy for the Gaelic League, and all it stands for.
- The hero is left at the parting of the ways, with the choice
- before him of “respectability” and ease, or work for Ireland.
- The book should set people asking why is it that Irishmen—no
- matter what their creed or politics—cannot work together for
- their common country?
-
-⸺ THE NORTHERN IRON. Pp. 320. (_Maunsel_). Bound in Irish linen. 1907.
-New ed. at 1_s._, 1909. Cheap ed. (_Everett_), 7_d._, 1912.
-
- Scene: Antrim; a few incidents of the rising woven into a
- thrilling and powerful romance. Splendid portraits—the United
- Irishmen James Hope, Felix Matier, and Micah Ward, the loyal
- Lord Dunseverick, chivalrous and fearless, Finlay the Informer,
- and others. Vivid presentment of the feelings and ideas of
- the time, without undue bias, yet enlisting all the reader’s
- sympathies on the side of Ireland.
-
-⸺ SPANISH GOLD. (_Methuen_). 6_s._ 1908. Cheap ed., 1_s._ (N.Y.:
-_Doran_). 1.20.
-
- A comedy of Irish life, full of the most amusing situations.
- Scene: a lonely island off the coast of Connaught, in which
- treasure is hidden. The action consists of the adventures of
- various people who come to the island—an Irish chief secretary,
- a retired colonel, a baronet, a librarian, a Catholic priest,
- and a Protestant curate. This last, the Rev. J. J. Meldon, is
- a most original creation. There are touches of social satire
- throughout, but without bitterness or offensiveness.
-
-⸺ THE SEARCH PARTY. Pp. 316. (_Methuen_). 6_s._ 1909. (N.Y.: _Doran_).
-1.20.
-
- “How a mad Anarchist made bombs in a lonely house on the west
- coast of Ireland, and imprisoned the local doctor for fear lest
- he should reveal the secret. Mr. Birmingham’s irresponsible
- gaiety and the knowledge of Irish character revealed in
- his more serious fiction carry the farce along at a fine
- pace.”—(TIMES LIT. SUPPL.).
-
-⸺ LALAGE’S LOVERS. Pp. 312. (_Methuen_). 6_s._ (N.Y.: _Doran_). 1.20.
-1911.
-
- The main idea—in so far as the book is serious—may be stated
- thus:—How much can one young person (aetat 14 _sqq._) of
- perfect candour and fearlessness do to upset the peace of
- comfortable people, who are jogging along in the ruts of
- convention and compromise. Lalage begins with her governess,
- then tries the bench of bishops, but causes most consternation
- by disturbing an election with her Association for the
- Suppression of Public Lying. The whole is full of fun and
- laughter. L. has been well described as “an especially
- enterprising and slangy schoolboy in skirts.”
-
-⸺ THE MAJOR’S NIECE. Pp. 302. (_Smith, Elder_). 6_s._ 1911.
-
- Rev. J. J. Meldon in new situations. Major Kent expects from
- Australia a grown-up niece, who turns out to be a naughty
- little girl of ten. Mr. Meldon had made innumerable plans for
- the reception and treatment of the young lady. How does he face
- the new situation? There are capital minor characters—Doyle the
- hotel keeper, and Father MacCormack, and the housekeeper, Mrs.
- O’Halloran.
-
-⸺ THE SIMPKINS PLOT. Pp. 384. (_Nelson_). 2_s._ net. (N.Y.: _Doran_).
-1.20. 1911.
-
- Scene: “Ballymoy.” Problem: how to get rid of Simpkins, a
- meddlesome busybody. The interest of the plot mainly turns
- on the amusing manœuvres of Rev. J. J. Meldon (the hero of
- _Spanish Gold_) to marry Simpkins to a mysterious “Miss King,”
- a lady supposed to be identical with a Mrs. Lorimer, recently
- acquitted, against the opinion of the Judge, of the murder
- of her husband. Full throughout of fun, clever talk, and
- deftly sketched character study. Sabina Gallagher, Sir Gilbert
- Hawksby, and Major Kent are all well done, and there is no
- mistaking the nationalities.
-
-⸺ THE INVIOLABLE SANCTUARY. Pp. 370. (_Nelson_). 2_s._ 1912.
-
- How Frank Mannix comes for vacation to Rosnacree (in the
- wildest west of Ireland) in all the glory and dignity of a
- Haileybury prefect. How, owing to a sprained ankle, he is
- obliged to spend the time sailing in the bay with Priscilla,
- his fifteen-year-old madcap cousin. How various exciting
- adventures follow, including the finding, in most unexpected
- and comical circumstances, by a Cabinet Minister of his
- daughter, who had eloped with a clergyman, and how Frank and
- Priscilla were responsible for the reconciliation. Told with
- all the Author’s sense of fun and _flair_ for comic situations.
- But why must _all_ Irish peasants appear as liars?
-
-⸺ THE RED HAND OF ULSTER. Pp. 318. (_Smith, Elder_). 6_s._ Cheap ed.,
-6_d._ 1912.
-
- How an Irish-American millionaire runs a revolution in Ireland,
- sweeping into his plans the rabid Orangemen, who are in deadly
- earnest, the Tory M.P. who only meant to bluff, and members of
- the Irish Tory aristocracy who meant nothing in particular.
- Of this class is poor Lord Kilmore, who tells the story, and
- was an unwilling actor in the whole business. The book is a
- mixture of shrewd satire (_e.g._, Babberley, M.P., the Dean,
- and McConkey) in which all parties receive their share, and of
- Gilbertian extravaganza. The _dénouement_ is both amusing and
- unexpected.
-
-⸺ DOCTOR WHITTY. Pp. 320. (_Methuen_). 6_s._ 1913.
-
- Types and humours of a west Connaught village—the P.P., the
- Protestant Rector, Colonel Beresford, Thady Glynn, proprietor
- of “The Imperial Hotel,” chairman of the League, and popular
- demagogue, J.P., general philosopher, and “ipse dixit” of the
- village, and then the Doctor himself, genial, sociable, “all
- things to all men” to an extent that gets him into fixes, and
- that is not easily reconcilable with the moral order. There are
- broadly comical situations from which the Doctor extricates
- himself, and emerges radiant as ever. The seamy side of Irish
- life is depicted in the Author’s usual vein of satire.
-
-⸺ GENERAL JOHN REGAN. Pp. 324. (_Hodder & Stoughton_) 6_s._ Second ed.,
-1913.
-
- A very slight plot, centering in the erection of a statue to
- an imaginary native of Ballymoy. The real interest lies in the
- Author’s satirical pictures of Irish life, and in his humorous
- delineations of such types as Dr. O’Grady, Doyle the dishonest
- hotel-keeper, Major Kent, whom we have met in _Spanish Gold_,
- Thady Gallagher, the editor of the local paper, and a rather
- undignified and not wholly honest P.P. The thesis, if there
- be any, would seem to be that the Irishman is so clever and
- humorous that he will allow himself to be gulled, and will even
- gull himself for the pleasure of gulling others.
-
-⸺ MINNIE’S BISHOP, and Other Stories of Ireland. Pp. 320. (_Hodder &
-Stoughton_). 6_s._ 1915.
-
- Not all of these stories deal with Ireland, and those that do
- are very varied in character. Some are in the Author’s most
- humorous vein, others are more serious in tone. In several he
- pokes fun at Government methods in the West, and some show the
- comic side of gun-running, despatch-riding, and other Volunteer
- activities. In the background, at times, is a vision of the
- hopeless poverty of the Western peasant’s lot.
-
-
-=BLACK, William.= Born in Glasgow, 1841. One of the foremost of
-English nineteenth century novelists. Published his first novel 1864;
-thirty-three others appeared before his death in 1898, at Brighton, where
-he had long resided.
-
-⸺ SHANDON BELLS. Pp. 428. (_Sampson, Low_). 2_s._ 6_d._ [1883]. (N.Y.:
-_Harper_). 0.80. New and revised ed. 1893.
-
- Scene: partly in London, partly in city and county of Cork. A
- young Irishman goes to London to make his fortune. Disappointed
- in his first love, he turns to love of nature. The book has all
- the fine qualities of W. Black’s work. Sympathetic references
- to Irish life and beautiful descriptions of Irish scenery in
- Cork. Willy Fitzgerald, the hero, had for prototype William
- Barry, a brilliant young Corkman and a London journalist.
-
-
-=“BLACKBURNE, E. Owens.”= Elizabeth O. B. Casey, 1848-1894. Born at
-Slane, near the Boyne. Lived the first twenty-five years of her life
-in Ireland; then went to London to take up journalistic work. In 1869
-her first story was accepted, and in the early seventies her _In at
-the Death_ (afterwards published as _A Woman Scorned_) appeared in THE
-NATION. To the end she used the pen-name “E. Owens Blackburne.” Other
-works of hers were _A Modern Parrhasius_, _The Quest of the Heir_,
-_Philosopher Push_, _Dean Swift’s Chest_, _The Love that Loves alway_.
-“Her stories are mostly occupied with descriptions of Irish peasant life,
-in which she was so thoroughly at home that she has been compared to
-Carleton. They are for the most part dramatic and picturesque; and she
-understood well the art of weaving a plot which should hold the reader’s
-interest.”—(_Irish Lit._).
-
-⸺ A WOMAN SCORNED. Three Vols. (_Tinsley_). [1876]. Also one Vol.
-(_Moxon_). 1878.
-
- Out-at-elbows Irish household—upper class—brother, sister, and
- young step-sister (the heroine) Katherine. Captain Fitzgerald
- falls in love with Katherine. The elder sister (the woman
- scorned) filled with jealousy plots to marry K. to a rich
- elderly suitor. The plot miscarries, and she dies a miserable
- death. Scene: near the Boyne. Some good descriptions of river
- scenery.
-
-⸺ THE WAY WOMEN LOVE. Three Vols. (_Tinsley_). 1877.
-
- Hugh O’Neill, a Donegal man, after an unsuccessful career as
- an artist in London, settles near Weirford (Waterford). He has
- two daughters—Moira, handsome, proud of her ancient lineage and
- a poet, and Honor, plain and domestic. The story is concerned
- with the loves of these two. Local society cleverly hit off.
- Local newspapers and their editors come in for a good deal
- of banter; several real characters, thinly disguised, being
- introduced. Brogue very well done.
-
-⸺ A BUNCH OF SHAMROCKS. Pp. 306. (N.Y.: _Munro_: “_Seaside Library_”).
-[1879]. 1883.
-
- A collection of tales and sketches, illustrating for the most
- part the gloomier side of the national character, viewed,
- apparently, from a Protestant standpoint. In one, “The Priest’s
- Boy,” there is much pathos.
-
-⸺ MOLLY CAREW. Three Vols. (_Tinsley_). _n.d._ (1879).
-
- A tale of the unrequited love of an Irish girl of talent, but
- of humble origin, for a selfish and ruffianly English author
- named Eugene Wolfe. She falls in love with him as a child and
- then, in young womanhood, falls still more deeply in love with
- the ideal of him which she forms from his books. Nothing can
- kill or even daunt this love, and for its sake she undergoes
- the supremest sacrifices, but all in vain. The two chief
- characters are carefully and consistently drawn, and there are
- some dramatic scenes. The action passes chiefly in London,
- whither Molly Carew had followed her ideal.
-
-⸺ THE GLEN OF SILVER BIRCHES. Two Vols. (_Remington_). 1880. (N.Y.:
-_Harper_). 1881.
-
- Nuala O’Donnell’s extravagant father has mortgaged his estate
- in the Donegal Highlands, near Glenvich (The Glen of Silver
- Birches). A scheming attorney tries to get the family into his
- toils, and to marry N. The scheme is defeated, and N. marries
- Thorburn, an English landlord, who has bought the neighbouring
- estate. Some good characters, _e.g._, kindly old Aunt Nancy and
- N.’s nationalist poet cousin.
-
-⸺ THE HEART OF ERIN: An Irish story of To-day. Three Vols. (N.Y.:
-_Munro_: “_Seaside Library_”). [1882]. 1883.
-
- Standish Clinton, a clever speechmaker, raises himself to a
- foremost position in Parliament. Getting into higher social
- circles he breaks with his faithful Mary Shields. The mystery
- of his birth is cleared up in the end, and he succeeds as
- lawful heir to the family mansion of the Hardinges. The
- campaign of the Land League, with which the Author is in
- sympathy, forms the background. The famous letter of Dr. Nulty,
- of Meath, is cited as an argument for land reform. Interesting
- picture of the peasantry.
-
-
-=BLAKE-FORSTER, Charles Ffrench.=
-
-⸺ A COLLECTION OF THE OLDEST AND MOST POPULAR LEGENDS OF THE PEASANTRY OF
-CLARE AND GALWAY.
-
-⸺ THE IRISH CHIEFTAINS; or, A Struggle for the Crown. Pp. 728, demy 8vo.
-(_M’Glashan & Gill_). 1872.
-
- An account, in the form of a tale, of the Williamite Wars, from
- the landing of James II. at Kinsale to the surrender of Galway,
- with all the battles and sieges (except Derry). Into this is
- woven large sections of the family history of the O’Shaughnessy
- and Blake-Forster clans of Co. Galway. This latter story
- is carried past the Treaty of Limerick down to the final
- dispossession of the O’Shaughnessys in 1770. It includes many
- episodes in the history of the Irish Brigade in France and of
- the history of the period at home (including the Penal Laws and
- the doings of the Rapparees). A surprising amount of erudition
- drawn from public and private documents is included in the
- volume. The notes occupy from p. 429 to 573. An Appendix,
- pp. 574 to end, contains many valuable documents, relating
- largely to family history, but also to political history. The
- standpoint is Jacobite and national.
-
-
-=“BLAYNEY, Owen,” Robert White.=
-
-⸺ THE MACMAHON; or, The Story of the Seven Johns. Pp. x + 351.
-(_Constable_). 6_s._ 1898.
-
- Founded on a County Monaghan tradition. Colonel MacMahon
- escaping from the defeat at the Boyne entrusts his infant son
- to John M’Kinley, a settler. The boy grows up, falls in love
- with M’Kinley’s daughter, and after unsuccessfully pleading
- his cause with the father, abducts her. M’Kinley calls to
- his aid six other settlers of the name of John, pursues the
- fugitives, seizes them, and hangs MacMahon on the windmill at
- Carrickmacross. A powerful story giving a faithful picture of
- the times. Ulster dialect good.
-
-
-=[BLENKINSOP, A.]=
-
-⸺ PADDIANA; or, Scraps and Sketches of Irish Life, Past and Present. Two
-Vols. (_Bentley_). [1847]. Second ed. 1848.
-
- By the Author (an Englishman, _see_ p. 2) of _A Hot Water
- Cure_. Contents:—1. “Mr. Smith’s Irish Love.” 2. “Mick Doolan’s
- Head.” 3. “Still-Hunting.” 4. “A Mystery among the Mountains.”
- 5. “The Adventure of Tim Daley.” 6. “Mrs. Fogarty’s Tea
- Party.” 7. “A Quiet Day at Farrellstown.” 8. “A Duel.” 9.
- “Mr. H⸺.” 10. “The Old Head of Kinsale.” 11. “Barney O’Hay.”
- 12. “Headbreaking.” 13. “Cads, Fools, and Beggars.” 14. “The
- Mendicity Association.” 15. “The Dog-Fancier.” 16. “Dublin
- Carmen.” 17. “Horses.” 18. “Priests: Catholic and Others.”
- 19. “An Irish Stew.” Vol. II.—1. “Executions.” 2. “Ronayne’s
- Ghost.” 3. “The Last Pigtail.” 4. “The Green Traveller.” 5.
- “Larry Lynch.” 6. “Potatoes.” Then (pp. 142-275) follows “Irish
- History”—scraps from various Irish annals and histories, told
- in a facetious and anti-Irish spirit. All the old calumnies are
- raked up and set down here. The Author concludes that the Irish
- are an uncivilized people, and that their national character
- is “a jumble of contradictions.” The stories are told with
- considerable verve.
-
-
-=BLESSINGTON, Countess of.= Marguerite Power, born near Clonmel, 1789,
-daughter of Edmund Power and Ellen Sheehy. In 1818 she married the Earl
-of Blessington, and became a leader of society in London, afterwards in
-Paris, and then again in London. Wrote upwards of thirty books—novels,
-travel, reminiscences, &c. Died 1849.
-
-⸺ THE REPEALERS; or, Grace Cassidy. (LONDON). [1833].
-
- “Contains scarcely any plot and few delineations of character,
- the greater part being filled with dialogues, criticisms, and
- reflections. Her ladyship is sometimes sarcastic, sometimes
- moral, and more frequently personal. One female sketch, that of
- Grace Cassidy, a young Irish wife, shows that the Author was
- most at home among the scenes of her early days.”—(_Chambers’_
- CYCLOPÆDIA OF ENGLISH LITERATURE).
-
-⸺ COUNTRY QUARTERS. Three Vols. (LONDON: _Shoberl_). [1850]. Port. Second
-ed. 1852.
-
- In Vol. I., pp. iii.-xxiii., memoir of Author by M. A.
- P. Scene: South of Ireland (descriptions of Glanmire and
- references to Waterford and to the Blackwater), among county
- and garrison people. There is a great deal about their
- courtships and marriages, much small talk and pages of
- reflections. Grace, the heroine, is loved by two officers,
- friendly rivals. Mordaunt makes Vernon propose. V. is refused,
- but M. is too poor to marry. However, after many vicissitudes,
- Grace is united to M. Full of sentimentality.
-
-
-=BLOOD SMITH, Miss=, _see_ =“DOROTHEA CONYERS.”=
-
-
-=BODKIN, M. M’Donnell, K.C.=; County Court Judge of Clare since 1907.
-Born 1850. Son of Dr. Bodkin, of Tuam, Co. Galway. Educated at Tullabeg
-Jesuit College; Catholic University. Was for some years Nationalist
-M.P. for North Roscommon. Besides works of fiction, has published an
-historical work on Grattan’s Parliament. Resides in Dublin.—(WHO’S WHO).
-
-⸺ POTEEN PUNCH. (_Gill_). 1_s._ 1890.
-
- “After-dinner stories of love-making, fun, and fighting,”
- supposed to be told in presence of Lord Carlisle, one of the
- Viceroys, in a house at Cong, whither he had been obliged to
- go, having been refused a lodging at Maam by order of Lord
- Leitrim. The stories are of a very strong nationalist flavour,
- some humorous, some pathetic.
-
-⸺ PAT O’ NINE TALES. (_Gill_). 1894. (N.Y.: _Benziger_). 0.90.
-
- Stories of various kinds, all pleasantly told. The first
- and longest is a pathetic tale, introducing an eviction
- scene vividly described. Among other stories there is “The
- Leprachaun,” humorous, and told in dialect; a “ghost” story; a
- story of unlooked for evidence at a trial; a tale of Fontenoy,
- &c. The last, “The Prodigal Daughter,” is, from its subject,
- hardly suitable for certain classes of readers.
-
-⸺ LORD EDWARD FITZGERALD. Pp. 415. (_Chapman & Hall_). 1896.
-
- The story of the earlier years of Lord Edward is woven into the
- love-story of one Maurice Blake. Pictures Irish social life
- at the time in a lively, vivid way. Hepenstal, the “walking
- gallows,” Beresford and his riding school, the infamous
- yeomanry and their doings, these are prominent in the book. The
- standpoint is strongly national. “History supplies the most
- romantic part of this historical romance. The main incidents
- of Lord Edward’s marvellous career, even his adoption into
- the Indian tribe of the Great Bear, are absolutely true. Some
- liberties have, however, been taken with dates.”—(Pref.).
-
-⸺ THE REBELS. Pp. 358. (_Duffy_). 2_s._ [1899]. (N.Y.: _Benziger_). 0.60.
-1908.
-
- Sequel to _Lord Edward_. Later years of Lord Edward’s life.
- Shows Castlereagh and Clare planning the rebellion. Shows us
- Government bribery and dealings with informers. Some glimpses
- of the fighting under Father John Murphy, also of Humbert’s
- invasion and the Races of Castlebar. A stirring and vigorous
- tale, strongly nationalist.
-
-⸺ SHILLELAGH AND SHAMROCK. (_Chatto_). 3_s._ 6_d._ 1902.
-
- Short stories dealing mainly with the wild scenes of old
- election days. Pictures of evictions and the old-time
- fox-hunting, whiskey-drinking landlord. Always on the peasants’
- side. Tales full of voluble humour and “go.” The peasants’ talk
- is faithfully and vividly reproduced.
-
-⸺ IN THE DAYS OF GOLDSMITH. Pp. 309. (_Long_). 6_s._ 1903.
-
- A panegyric of Goldsmith, dealing with the part of his
- life spent in England. Conversations introducing Reynolds,
- Beauclerk, Johnson, etc., the latter’s talk recorded with
- Boswellian fidelity. A picture, too, of the life and manners of
- the day drawn with such frankness as to render the book unfit
- for the perusal of certain classes of readers.
-
-⸺ PATSY THE OMADHAUN. Pp. 260. (_Chatto_). 3_s._ 6_d._ (N.Y.:
-_Benziger_). 0.60. 1904.
-
- A dozen short stories, in which the village tailor recounts the
- exploits of Patsy, who proves to be by no means the fool he
- seems, and extricates himself and his friends from all kinds
- of comical situations. All told in broadest brogue. Somewhat
- farcical comicality.
-
-⸺ TRUE MAN AND TRAITOR. (_Duffy_). 1910.
-
- The career of Robert Emmet from his Trinity days to his tragic
- end, told in the Author’s usual spirited fashion. Emmet is
- represented as an able and practical organizer, but the story
- of his love for Sarah Curran is not neglected. The historical
- facts are thoroughly leavened with romance—Emmet’s perilous
- voyage to France in a fishing-hooker, the detailed accounts of
- his interviews with Napoleon, the character of Malachi Neelin,
- the traitor: these and many other things are blended with the
- narrative of real events.
-
-
-=[BOLES, Agnes], “J. A. P.”=
-
-⸺ THE BELFAST BOY. Pp. 464. (_Nutt_). 5_s._ 1912.
-
- Opens in Belfast during the great riots of twenty-five years
- ago. The hero, falsely accused of murder, flees to South
- Africa, where he becomes a millionaire, and is known as “The
- Belfast Boy.” The heroine, when she is going out to marry him,
- omits to mention that she is leaving a son and his father (the
- villain) in Belfast. These are conveniently got rid of, one by
- lightning, the other by lightning-like small-pox. Several real
- persons are introduced as personages in the story. Many of the
- incidents are sensational, there is much dialect, and the style
- in places is far from refined. An intense love for Belfast and
- its surroundings pervades the book.—(_Press Notices_).
-
-
-=BOVET, Madame.=
-
-⸺ TERRE D’EMERAUDE.
-
-
-=BOWLES, Emily.=
-
-⸺ IRISH DIAMONDS: A Chronicle of Peterstown. Pp. 219. (_Richardson_).
-1864.
-
- A story of landlord and tenant, of illicit distilling, and
- of proselytising. A Bible reader, an agent, and the sister
- of a landlord are the villains of the piece. Tone strongly
- Catholic and anti-Protestant. There is a love interest and a
- certain amount of adventure, which are not made subordinate
- to the pictures of Souperism. In 1878 a writer in the DUBLIN
- REVIEW said of it: “It has not been surpassed since it was
- written.... The characters are so well drawn that even those
- in barest outline are interesting and individual.... Told in
- the brightest, most natural, and most quietly humorous way.”
- Miss B. published more than a dozen other books, largely
- translations.
-
-
-=BOYCE, Rev. John, D.D.= [From _Inishowen and Tirconnell_, by W. J.
-Doherty]. Born in Donegal, 1810. Ordained, Maynooth, 1837. Emigrated to
-U.S.A., 1845. Died 1864. Besides the three novels mentioned in the body
-of this work, he published lectures on the Influence of Catholicity on
-the Arts and Sciences, Mary Queen of Scots, Queen Elizabeth, Charles
-Dickens, Henry Grattan, &c.
-
-⸺ SHANDY MAGUIRE; or, Tricks upon Travellers. (N.Y.: _Pratt_). 1.75.
-[1848]. Also (_Richardson_) 1855, and _Warren_, Kilmainham, _n.d._
-
- “First appeared in a Boston periodical, with the pen-name of
- Paul Peppergrass. It attracted at once the attention of Bishop
- Fenwick of Boston. Dr. Brownson, in his QUARTERLY REVIEW,
- pronounced upon the book the highest eulogium, and assigned
- to the writer a place equal if not superior to any writers of
- Irish romance. _Shandy Maguire_ was recognised by the London
- Press and the DUBLIN REVIEW as a work of great merit. It has
- been successfully dramatized and translated into German” (from
- _Inishowen and Tirconnell_, by W. J. Doherty).
-
-⸺ THE SPAEWIFE: or, The Queen’s Secret. [1853]. Still in print. (BOSTON:
-_Marlier_). 1.50.
-
- Begins at Hampton Court. The facility with which Father Boyce
- makes Nell Gower, the Scotch Spaewife (a woman gifted with
- second sight), discourse in broad Scotch dialect, in contrast
- with the stately and imperious language of Elizabeth, displays
- an unusual power of transition. No finer character could
- be depicted than Alice Wentworth, daughter of Sir Geoffrey
- Wentworth, the representative of an old English Catholic
- baronetage, who suffered persecution under Elizabeth; whilst
- Roger O’Brien, attached to the Court of Mary Queen of Scots,
- affords an opportunity of presenting the high-spirited and
- brave qualities that ought to belong to an Irish gentleman.
- Elizabeth appears in anything but a favourable light.
-
-⸺ MARY LEE; or, The Yankee in Ireland. (U.S.A.). (N.Y.: _Pratt_). 1.75.
-(BALTIMORE: _Kelly & Piet_). 1864. Pp. 391. Frontisp. by J. Harley.
-
- The last story written by this Author, for whom see General
- Note. It is considered to display an intimate knowledge of
- Irish character and to contain an excellent description of the
- typical Yankee. The scene is Donegal. Time 185-.
-
-
-=BOYLE, William.= Born in Dromiskin, Co. Louth, 1853; educated St. Mary’s
-College, Dundalk. Has written many poems, songs, and plays, including
-some of the best of modern Irish comedies. The atmosphere of his stories
-is thoroughly Irish and their humour and pathos are genuine.
-
-⸺ A KISH OF BROGUES. (_O’Donoghue_). Pp. 252. 2_s._ 6_d._ 1899.
-
- The humour and pathos of country life, Co. Louth. The Author
- knows the people thoroughly, and understands them. There is
- much very faithful character-drawing of many Irish peasant
- types and a few good poems.
-
-
-=BOYSE, E. C.=
-
-⸺ THAT MOST DISTRESSFUL COUNTRY. Three Vols. (_F. V. White_). 1886.
-
- A tale of love and marriage. Scene: first in Wexford, opening
- with pleasant pictures of country-house life and merry-making.
- Then there is an account of some minor incidents of the
- rebellion, viewed from loyalist standpoint, with insistence on
- savage cruelty of rebels. Then the scene shifts to London, and
- thence to Dublin, where we have pictures of life in military
- society. Finally, the scene is transferred to Tuam, where word
- is brought of Humbert’s campaign in the West. Pleasant style,
- but the conversations, full of chaff and nonsense, are long
- drawn out. Author says in preface that the incidents are taken
- from private letters or accounts of eye-witnesses.
-
-
-=BRAY, Lady.=
-
-⸺ EVE’S PARADISE. (_Wells, Gardner_). 6_s._ Etched frontispiece and
-title-page.
-
- “Lady B.’s descriptions of child life are admirable,
- well-observed, and cleverly done.”—(PALL MALL GAZETTE).
-
-⸺ A TROUBLESOME TRIO; or, Grandfather’s Wife. (_Wells, Gardner_). 2_s._
-6_d._ Second ed.
-
-
-=BRERETON, F. S.=
-
-⸺ IN THE KING’S SERVICE. Pp. 352. (_Blackie_). Attractive cover. Eight
-Illustr. by Stanley L. Wood. (N.Y.: _Scribner_). 1.50. _n.d._ (1901).
-
- Exciting adventures, abounding in dramatic climaxes, of an
- English cavalier during Cromwell’s Irish campaign. Chief scenes
- of latter described from English cavalier standpoint. Burlesque
- brogue. Juvenile.
-
-
-=BREW, Margaret W.= Wrote much for the IRISH MONTHLY and other Irish
-periodicals.
-
-⸺ THE BURTONS OF DUNROE. Three Vols. Pp. 934. (_Tinsley_). 1880.
-
- Scene: Munster _c._ 1810, also Dublin and (in third vol.)
- Spain, when the hero, William Burton, takes part in the
- Peninsular War. Robert marries beneath him, and is disinherited
- by disappointed father, who had meant him for his cousin
- Isabella. Rose, Robert’s wife dies. Robert goes to the wars,
- and returns covered with glory to marry Isabel and settle down
- in respectable prosperity. Conventional and a little dull. Much
- brogue as comic relief to the prevailing appeal to the tender
- feelings.
-
-⸺ CHRONICLES OF CASTLE CLOYNE. Three Vols. (_Chapman & Hall_). 1886.
-
- Highly praised by the TIMES, the STANDARD, the MORNING POST,
- the SCOTSMAN, &c., &c. The IRISH MONTHLY says: “It is an
- excellent Irish tale, full of truth and sympathy, without
- any harsh caricaturing on the one hand, or any patronizing
- sentimentality on the other. The heroine, Oonagh M’Dermott, the
- Dillons, Pat Flanagan, and Father Rafferty are the principal
- personages, all excellent portraits in their way; and some of
- the minor characters are very happily drawn. The conversation
- of the humbler people is full of wit and common sense; and
- the changes of the story give room for pathos sometimes
- as a contrast to the humour which predominates. Miss Brew
- understands well the Irish heart and language; and altogether
- her “Pictures of Munster Life” (for this is the second title
- of the tale) is one of the most satisfactory additions to the
- store of Irish fiction from _Castle Rackrent_ to _Marcella
- Grace_.”
-
-
-=[BRITTAINE, Rev. George].= Was Rector of Kilcormack, Diocese of Ardagh.
-Died in Dublin, 1847. The ATHENÆUM of December 14, 1839, said of the
-first three works mentioned below: “The sad trash which is here put
-forward as a portraiture of the social condition of the Irish peasantry
-needs no refutation; in his ardour to calumniate, the Author has
-forgotten that there are limits to possibility, and that when they are
-overstepped the intended effect of the libel is lost in its absurdity.”
-All this writer’s books seem to have appeared anonymously.
-
-⸺ CONFESSIONS OF HONOR DELANY. Pp. 86. (DUBLIN: _Tims_). 1_s._ 6_d._
-[1830]. Third ed., 1839.
-
- She admits getting a pension as a reward for “turning.”
-
-⸺ IRISH PRIESTS AND ENGLISH LANDLORDS. Pp. 249. (DUBLIN: _Tims_). [1830].
-Second ed., 1839; others 1871, 1879.
-
- “By the author of _Hyacinth O’Gara_.” A priest has authority
- from a bishop to marry a girl to a man against her will. She
- refuses, and subsequently dies—a martyr for the Protestant
- faith.
-
-⸺ RECOLLECTIONS OF HYACINTH O’GARA. Pp. 64. (DUBLIN: _Tims_). 6_d_. Fifth
-ed., 1839.
-
- The above three books were originally written by Rev. Geo.
- Brittaine, Rector of Kilcormack, Co. Limerick. They were
- “re-written and completely revised” by Rev. H. Seddall, Vicar
- of Dunany, Co. Louth, and published by Hunt, London, 1871.
- They are frankly proselytising tales designed “to give a
- true picture of the Irish peasantry, and how priestcraft has
- wound itself into all their concerns.” (Pref.) The peasantry
- are represented as exceedingly debased, the priesthood as
- conscienceless and selfish tyrants. Religion is practically the
- sole theme throughout. There is practically no reference to
- contemporary questions. One reviewer says: “There is nothing
- more graphic in all the pages of _The Absentee_, or _Castle
- Rackrent_ than the account of Kit M’Royster’s disclosures to
- his brother, the Popish Bishop, about the heretical purity
- of their niece; or the description of Priest Moloney’s
- oratory about the offerings at the funeral of old Mrs.
- O’Brien.”—CHRISTIAN EXAMINER.
-
-⸺ IRISHMEN AND IRISHWOMEN. Pp. 219. (DUBLIN: _Tims_). 1831.
-
-⸺ JOHNNY DERRIVAN’S TRAVELS. Pp. 36. (DUBLIN: _Tims_). 6_d._ [1833].
-Second ed., 1839.
-
- Not religious in subject. Deals with Irish amusements,
- drinking, &c.
-
-⸺ MOTHERS AND SONS. Pp. 297. (DUBLIN: _Tims_). 1833.
-
- A lady turns Methodist at the age of 44. The Author thereby
- takes occasion to condemn dyed hair and wigs, and many other
- things. The story includes a murder of which a Curate is the
- victim. The murderer dies howling for the priest.
-
-⸺ NURSE M’VOURNEEN. Pp. 33. (DUBLIN: _Tims_). Second ed., _c._ 1839.
-
-⸺ THE ELECTION. Pp. 331. (DUBLIN: _Tims_). 1840.
-
- Election manœuvres described. There is a murder in the story.
- Tone very anti-Catholic.
-
-
-=[BRONTE, Rev. Patrick, B.A.].= 1777-1861. A county Down man, father of
-the famous novelists.
-
-⸺ THE MAID OF KILLARNEY; or, Albion and Flora. Pp. 166. (_Baldwin_).
-[1818]. 1898.
-
- Albion, an Englishman, visits Killarney, and falls in love with
- Flora Loughlean. The tale exhibits the anti-Catholic bias of
- the time.
-
-
-=BROOKE, Richard Sinclair, D.D.= (1802-1882). Incumbent of Mariners’
-Church, Kingstown, afterwards Rector of Eyton. Published several volumes
-of verse and prose. Father of Stopford Brooke.
-
-⸺ THE STORY OF PARSON ANNALY. Pp. 429. (_Drought_). 1870.
-
- A long, rather involved story, in part reprinted from DUBLIN
- UNIVERSITY MAGAZINE. It contains some excellent descriptions of
- Donegal scenery—Glenveagh and Barnesmore.
-
-
-=BROPHY, Michael=, ex-Sergeant, R.I.C.
-
-⸺ TALES OF THE ROYAL IRISH CONSTABULARY. Pp. xx. + 192. (DUBLIN: _Bernard
-Doyle_). 2_s._ [1888]. 1896.
-
- Intended as the first volume of a series. Introduction gives
- a condensed history of the Force. This is followed by a long
- story founded on facts—“The Lord of Kilrush, Fate of Marion,
- and Last Vicissitudes of Lord Edward Fitzgerald’s Estate.” This
- tells how Sub-Constable Butler, a real “character,” bought in
- the Encumbered Estates Court the property of Lord Edward near
- the Curragh of Kildare, but was subsequently dispossessed—a
- curious tale, containing much out-of-the-way information,
- including an enquiry into the parentage of Pamela. Then follow
- “Episodes of ’48” (Ballingarry, &c.), and “The Story of a
- Sword,” (8 pp.) Sub-Constable Butler and Sub-Inspector Tom
- Trant are amusing personages.
-
-
-=BROWN, Rev. J. Irwin.= Minister of the Scottish Church in Rotterdam, and
-son of Rev. Dr. Brown, of Drumachose, Derry, in his time a well-known
-public speaker, and a defender of the Irish tenant farmers.
-
-⸺ IRELAND: Its Humour and Pathos. (ROTTERDAM: _J. M. Bredee_). 1910.
-
- The book contains some racy stories, and is bright and readable
- throughout.—I.B.L.
-
-
-=BRUEYRE, Loys.= Born in Paris, 1835. A French folk-lorist,
-Vice-President of the _Société des Traditions Populaires_. A frequent
-contributor to French folk-lore periodicals.
-
-⸺ CONTES POPULAIRES DE LA GRANDE BRETAGNE. Pp. 382. (PARIS: _Hachette_).
-
- Contains 100 tales. A very few are English (chiefly Cornish),
- none are Welsh. The majority are Scotch (largely from
- Campbell’s collection) but there are a good many Irish, taken
- from Croker and Kennedy. The book is entirely in French.
-
-
-=BUCHANAN, Robert=, 1841-1901. Born in Staffordshire, son of Robert
-B., “Socialist, Missionary, and Journalist.” Educated at Glasgow.
-Published many volumes of poetry and several plays, among others a
-dramatised version of Harriett Jay’s _Queen of Connaught_ (_q.v._). In
-1876 published his first novel—_The Shadow of the Sword_. Many others
-followed. In 1874 he settled at Rosspoint, Co. Mayo, but left Ireland in
-1877. _Father Anthony_ was written during this period, but not published
-till later. _See_ the notice in D.N.B., and the LIFE, published in 1903,
-by Harriet Jay, his adopted daughter.
-
-⸺ FATHER ANTHONY. (_Long_). 6_s._ Sixteen illustr. Many editions. 1903.
-New edition, 6_d._ 1911.
-
- Scene: a country village in the West of Ireland. Father Anthony
- is a young priest, who for his brother’s sake has sacrificed
- a career in the world to devote himself to God’s poor. He
- finds himself called upon in virtue of his sacred office to
- keep the secret of the confessional when by a word he could
- save his brother from the hangman’s hands. The pathos of the
- young priest’s agony of mind is depicted with great power and
- sympathy. The other priest, Father John, is drawn as the true
- parish priest of the old type, blood and bone of the people,
- jovial, homely, lovable and beloved. The Author, though alien
- in faith and race, tells us that he knew intimately and loved
- both priests and people during his stay in Ireland.
-
-⸺ THE PEEP-O’-DAY BOY: A Romance of ’98. (_Dicks_). 6_d._ _n.d._
-
- A conventional sensational tale, little above the “shilling
- shocker,” with oath-bound societies meeting in under-ground
- caverns, abductions, informers, an absentee landlord, the
- Earl of Dromore, whose daughter loves the expatriated owner,
- The O’Connormore, and soforth. The three chapters on the
- insurrection are from Cassell’s _History of Ireland_. The story
- is scarcely worthy of this Author.
-
-
-=BUCKLEY, William.= Born in Cork, and educated there at St. Vincent’s
-Seminary and the Queen’s College. His first literary work appeared in
-MACMILLAN’S MAGAZINE. Resides in Dublin.
-
-⸺ CROPPIES LIE DOWN. Pp. 511. (_Duckworth_). 6_s._ 1903.
-
- Scene: Wexford, the year of the rising. The Author banishes
- all romance and artistic glamour, and deals with the horrors
- of the time in a spirit of relentless realism. Quite apart
- from historical interest, the book is thrilling as a story of
- adventure. The tone is impartial, but the writer clearly means
- the events and scenes described to tell for the Irish side.
- The NEW IRELAND REVIEW says that “it sketches the origin
- and course of the Wexford insurrection with a conscientious
- accuracy which would do credit to a professed historian”; and
- it praises the Author’s “exceptional literary ability” and the
- “intense reality of his characters.” “Rather more than justice
- is done to the English authorities (_e.g._, Castlereagh),
- to the Irish Protestants, and even to the government
- spies.”—(_Baker_, 2).
-
-⸺ CAMBIA CARTY AND OTHER STORIES. Pp. 230. (_Maunsel_). 1_s._ 1907.
-
- Close descriptions of lower and middle classes in modern
- Youghal. In places will be unpleasant reading for the people
- of Youghal. Picture of Cork snobbery decidedly unfavourable to
- Cork people, and on the whole disagreeable and sordid.
-
-
-=BUGGE, Alexander=, Professor in University of Christiania, ed.
-
-⸺ CATHREIM CELLACHAIN CAISIL: The Victorious Career of Cellachain of
-Cashel. Pp. xix. + 171. (_Christiania_). 1905.
-
- The original Irish text, from the Book of Lismore, is edited in
- a scholarly way and accompanied with an English translation,
- notes, and index. There is an interesting introduction. It is a
- story of the struggles of Cellachan and the Danes in the tenth
- century.
-
-
-=BULLOCK, Shan F.= Born Co. Fermanagh, 1865. Son of a Protestant
-landowner on Lough Erne. Depicts with vigour and truth the country
-where the Protestant North meets the Catholic and almost Irish-speaking
-West. There is at times a curious dreariness in his outlook which mars
-his popularity. But his work is “extraordinarily sincere, and at times
-touched with a singular pathos and beauty.... He writes always with
-evident passion for the beauty of his country, and an almost pathetic
-desire to assimilate, as it were, national ideals, of which one yet
-perceives him a little incredulous.”—(_Stephen Gwynn_).
-
-⸺ THE AWKWARD SQUADS. (_Cassell_). 5_s._ 1893.
-
- The Author’s first book. Has all the qualities for which his
- subsequent books are remarkable. It is a study of the people
- of his native country—the borders of Cavan and Fermanagh—their
- political ideas, general outlook, humours and failings,
- their peculiar dialect and turns of thought. Four stories in
- all:—“The title story,” “The White Terror,” “A State Official,”
- “One of the Unfortunates.”
-
-⸺ BY THRASNA RIVER. Pp. 403. (_Ward, Lock)_. 6_s._ Illustr. 1895.
-
- The experiences of two lads on an Ulster farm in the district
- where the Author lays nearly all his scenes. There are many
- clever studies of peasant types. The hero is an Englishman, an
- amusing character. The story of his unsuccessful love-affair
- with the “Poppy Charmer” is told by one of the lads familiar
- to us as Jan Farmer. There is no approach to anything
- objectionable in the book. Chapter XXI., “Our Distressful
- Country,” is good reading.
-
-⸺ RING O’ RUSHES. Pp. 195. (_Ward, Lock_). 1_s._ 6_d._ (CHICAGO:
-_Stone_). 1.00. 1896.
-
- A cycle of eleven stories dealing with various aspects of
- Ulster life in the neighbourhood of Lough Erne. In “His
- Magnificence” an enriched peasant returns to his native
- village and tries to show off his grandeur. “Her Soger Boy”
- recounts a mother’s innocent fraud and her soldier lad’s savage
- retaliation.—(_Baker_, 2).
-
-⸺ THE BARRYS. Pp. 422. (_Methuen_). 1_s._ Full-sized cloth. 1899. (N.Y.:
-_Doubleday_). 1.25.
-
- Book I. has its scene on Innishrath, an island in Lough Erne.
- Frank Barry, on a visit from London to his uncle, betrays a
- peasant girl named Nan. In Book II. we find Nan in London. She
- discovers Frank’s treachery. So does Frank’s wife, and the
- nemesis of his deeds overtakes him. But Nan finds consolation
- with her still faithful lover, Ted. A study in temperaments.
-
-⸺ IRISH PASTORALS. Pp. 308. (_Grant Richards_). 6_s._ (N.Y.: _McClure_).
-1.50. 1901.
-
- A series of pictures—the Planters, the Turf-cutters, the
- Mowers, the Haymakers, the Reapers, the Diggers, &c.—forming
- an almost complete view of life among the rural classes in
- Co. Cavan. These pictures are the setting for country idylls,
- humorous, pathetic, or tragic. In all there is the actuality,
- the minute fidelity that can be attained only by one who has
- lived the life he describes and has the closest personal
- sympathy with the people. The descriptions of natural scenes,
- the weather, &c., are admirable.
-
-⸺ THE SQUIREEN. Pp. 288. (_Methuen_). 1_s._ Cloth, full-sized. (N.Y.:
-_McClure_). 1.50. 1903.
-
- A study of Ulster marriage customs. Jane Fallon is practically
- sold to the Squireen by her family, and, after long resistance,
- yields, and marries him. Tragic consequences follow. Most of
- the characters are Ulster Protestant peasants. “The Squireen”
- is a study of the old type of fox-hunting gentleman-farmer.
-
-⸺ THE RED LEAGUERS. Pp. 315. (_Methuen_). 6_s._ (N.Y.: _Pratt_). 0.75.
-1904.
-
- Scenes from an imaginary rebellion in Ireland, purporting to
- be related by a Protestant who has sided with the rebels and
- captains the men of Armoy, a barony a little to the north of
- the Woodford River (the Thrasna of the story), which enters
- Lough Erne about two miles to the west of where the River Erne
- flows into the same. England having left Ireland almost without
- a garrison, the Protestants are all (except in a few places)
- killed or taken, the Irish Republic triumphs. Then the country
- gives itself up to an orgy of thoughtless rejoicing and more
- or less drunken revelling. In “a handful of weeks” the “land
- is hungry, wasted, lawless, disorganized, an Ireland gone
- to wrack.” The story closes with the news of English troops
- landing in Cork and Derry and Dublin. The author does not write
- simply from the standpoint of the dominant class, much less is
- he merely anti-Catholic and anti-Irish. He merely lacks faith
- in the wisdom and staying power of Irish character. He tries to
- show the actualities of the rebellion in their naked realism,
- eschewing all romance. He succeeds in being strangely vivid and
- realistic without apparent effort. Of the leaders on the Irish
- side one is a coward and a swaggerer, another is bloodthirsty,
- all are selfish and vulgar. The heroes are in the opposite camp.
-
- N.B.—The scene of this story is also the scene of the Author’s
- other North of Ireland studies and sketches.
-
-⸺ THE CUBS. Pp. 349. (_Werner Laurie_). 6_s._ 1906.
-
- A story of life in an Irish school, recognized by old
- schoolfellows of the Author as bearing a strong resemblance
- to the Author’s old school of Farra, near Mullingar. It is
- naturally thought to be partly autobiographical. It is the
- history of a great friendship. It includes also some scenes of
- home life.
-
-⸺ DAN THE DOLLAR. (_Maunsel_). 3_s._ 6_d._ [1906]. New edition. 1908.
-
- A study of national character and of human nature in which
- the touch is delicate, sure, and true. The whole study is
- concentrated on five persons. First there is the picture of
- the neglected farm of the happy, easy-going Felix. His wife
- is a contrast with him in all, yet they agree perfectly.
- Then there is Mary Troy, a Catholic girl living with them, a
- beautifully-drawn character, and Felim, the dreamer of dreams.
- Into their lives suddenly comes Dan, who after years of hard,
- sordid striving in the States, has made his pile. He brings his
- hard, practical American materialism to bear on the improvement
- of “this God-forsaken country,” with what result the reader
- will see. There is a love story of an exceptional kind, handled
- with much subtlety and knowledge of human nature. There is much
- pathos and moral beauty in the story.
-
-⸺ MASTER JOHN. Pp. 281. (_Werner, Laurie_). 6_s._ 1909.
-
- Master John is a strong man, who makes his way in the world
- and returns wealthy to settle in Fermanagh. The place he buys
- has a curse upon it, and strange things happen. The story is
- told by an old retainer—now a car-driver—whose verbosity and
- ramblingness are very quaint and amusing.
-
-⸺ HETTY: The Story of an Ulster Family. Pp. 322. (_Laurie_). 6_s._ 1911.
-
- Essentially what the sub-title suggests, a domestic story, with
- careful delineation of character for its chief interest. Old
- Dell is perhaps the central figure, an old Northern farmer,
- reserved, silent, conservative, with his love of the land and
- his unwillingness to part with his authority, even to the end.
- Then there is the contrast between Hetty, quiet, retiring,
- peace-loving, and her wilful, wayward younger sister Rhona,
- lively, quick of tongue, and beautiful. The coming of Rhona
- makes shipwreck of poor Hetty’s happiness and well-nigh brings
- tragedy into the family life. A quiet, slow-moving story,
- intensely faithful to reality. “Problems” are in the background
- but are not wearisomely worked out. There is an occasional
- gleam of humour, but there is much true pathos.
-
-
-=BUNBURY, Selina.= Daughter of Rev. Henry Bunbury. Born about 1804,
-probably in Kilsaran House, County Louth, and lived at Beaulieu. First
-work published in 1821, and for fifty years she was a prolific author,
-her last appearing in 1870. After the death of her parents, she began to
-travel, and visited every country in Europe except Turkey, recording her
-adventures in many volumes. Her most successful work was _Coombe Abbey_:
-an Historical Tale of the Days of James 1st. (_Curry_, Dublin, 1843). She
-died at Cheltenham sometime in “the seventies,” and some of her works are
-still reprinted.
-
-⸺ CABIN CONVERSATIONS AND CASTLE SCENES. Pp. 173. (_Nisbet_). One
-illustr. 1827.
-
- Period 1815, but public events are not dealt with.
-
-⸺ MY FOSTER BROTHER. Pp. 134. (_Tims_). [1827]. Second edition, 1833.
-
- Alick, foster-brother to Mr. Redmond’s boy, converts the
- latter, Bible in hand. The boy dies a pious death.
-
-⸺ THE ABBEY OF INNISMOYLE: A Tale of another Century. Pp. 336. (_Curry_).
-[1828]. Second edition, 1829. Engraved frontisp.
-
- Consists largely of the history of the Abbey from its
- foundation in the twelfth century. The story is very rambling
- and obscure. Introduces, incidentally, a “cold, ambitious
- plotting Jesuit,” and inveighs against the “monstrous creed
- of Jesuitism.” The Abbey is in “an unfrequented part of the
- north-western coast of Ireland.” We take leave of it in
- Protestant hands.
-
-⸺ TALES OF MY COUNTRY. Pp. 301. (_Curry_). 1833.
-
- Viz. 1. “A visit to Clairville Park, and the Story of Rose
- Mulroon.” 2. “An Arrival at Moneyhaigue, and the Doctor’s
- Story of Eveleen O’Connor.” 3. “A Tale of Monan-a-gleena.” 4.
- “Six Weeks at the Rectory.” In 3 the Irish are represented
- as cherishing a diabolical thirst for vengeance. 4 is a long
- lecture. 1 is a ’98 story.
-
-⸺ SIR GUY D’ESTERRE. Two Vols. (_Routledge_). 1858.
-
- Sir Guy is a young soldier in the train first of Sir Philip
- Sidney, then of Essex. Before the latter he comes to
- Ireland—“the cursedest of all lands,” in his opinion—where he
- is captured, and taken to the Castle of the O’Connors. Here
- he falls in love, and here begin his troubles. Enemies plot
- his ruin. He is thrown into the Tower, but is released by
- Essex, and goes with him to Ireland on his fatal campaign.
- Careful and vivid portraits of Elizabeth, Essex, Hugh O’Neill,
- and other historical characters. A vigorously-written and
- interesting historical novel, not Nationalist, but fair and
- even sympathetic to Ireland. No religious bias. Essex meeting
- with O’Neill, V. II., p. 151.
-
-
-=BURKE, Edmund.=
-
-⸺ A CLUSTER OF SHAMROCKS. Pp. 312. (_Lynwood_). 6_s._ 1912.
-
- “Very pleasing and human tales of humble life, Swiss, Breton,
- Norwegian, English, &c.; some of them rather in the school of
- Hans Anderson.”—(T. LIT. SUPPL.). “Pleasantly-written short
- stories drawn from many sources, home and Continental. There is
- a purity of feeling about them which renders them exceptionally
- suitable for young people.”—I.B.L. The Author shows himself a
- lover of flowers and of nature generally. Press notices speak
- of him as Mr. E. Burke, of Liverpool, an M.A. of T.C.D.
-
-
-=BURKE, John.=
-
-⸺ CARRIGAHOLT: a Tale of Eighty Years ago. Pp. 77. (_Hodges Figgis_),
-1_s._ 1885.
-
- A story of Ireland (S.W.) in early days of 19th century. Shows
- us the goodnatured spendthrift landlord, the gombeenman, the
- nice young ladies whose education has been “finished” in
- Belgium, the young men of property whose objects in life are
- sport and attentions to the young ladies; and the scapegrace
- youth, who narrowly escapes being hanged for forgery.
-
-
-=BURROW, Charles Kennett.=
-
-⸺ PATRICIA OF THE HILLS. Pp. 330. (_Lawrence & Bullen_). 6_s._ 1902.
-
- A love story of which the incidents take place during the
- Famine years and the Young Ireland movement. With the latter
- the hero, who tells the story, is clearly in sympathy,
- though no controversial matter is introduced. The characters
- (exceptionally well drawn) are types, but also very live
- personalities. Locality not indicated. An interesting and
- uncommon tale. By same author: _The Lifted Shadow_, _The Way of
- the Wind_, &c.
-
-
-=BURTON, J. Bloundelle.=
-
-⸺ THE LAND OF BONDAGE. (_F. V. White_). 6_s._ 1904.
-
- Ireland and England in 1727; then the colony of Virginia,
- adventures with Indians, &c. The last pages bring us to
- 1748.—(_Nield_).
-
-
-=BUTLER, A.=
-
-⸺ SHAMROCK LEAVES. (_Sealy, Bryers_). Pp. 84. 1_s._ 1886.
-
- “The (five) stories are founded—not upon unreliable, secondhand
- information—but _bona fide_ facts.”—(_Preface_). “A kindly
- Irish spirit runs through these Tales.”—NATION.
-
-
-=BUTLER, Mary E.= Mrs. O’Nowlan. Daughter of Peter Lambert Butler,
-and granddaughter of William Butler, of Bunnahow, Co. Clare. Educated
-privately, and at Alexandra College, Dublin. Married (1907) the late
-Thomas O’Nowlan, Professor of Classics and Irish in University College,
-and at Maynooth. Lives in Dublin.—(CATH. WHO’S WHO).
-
-⸺ A BUNDLE OF RUSHES. Pp. 150. (_Sealy, Bryers_). 1_s._ 1899.
-
- A little volume of short stories, pleasantly written; Irish
- in tone and poetic. Well received by the Press, and by the
- public—(_Press Notice_). Fifteen stories in all. Six are prose
- idyls of ancient Celtic inspiration, nine are lively little
- modern sketches in which he and she get happily married in the
- end.—(_I.M._).
-
-⸺ THE RING OF DAY. Pp. 360. (_Hutchinson_). 6_s._ 1906.
-
- A romance the interest of which centres in the aspirations
- of the Irish Ireland movement. Highly idealized, but full of
- intense earnestness and conviction. The characters are types
- and talk as such. Eoin, however, is a strong personality.
-
-
-=BUTT, Isaac.= Born in Glenfin, Co. Donegal, 1813. Son of Rev. Robert
-Butt, Rector of Stranorlar. Educated Royal School, Raphoe, and T.C.D.
-Helped to found the DUBLIN UNIVERSITY MAGAZINE, 1833, and was editor from
-1834-38. Was called to the Bar and distinguished himself there. Opposed
-O’Connell and Repeal. Defended Smith O’Brien, 1848, and the Fenian
-prisoners in 1865-9. Became a Home Ruler, practically founded the party
-in 1870, and worked strenuously for it. Died 1879. Wrote important works
-on many subjects, Irish and other.
-
-⸺ IRISH LIFE IN COURT AND CASTLE. Three Vols. (LONDON). 1840.
-
- Story of a young barrister named Tarleton, who while studying
- in London forms a firm friendship with Gerald MacCullagh
- (really O’Donnell), who becomes a nationalist leader. The
- latter, in spite of himself, sees the national movement drift
- into one of incendiarism and robbery, resulting, among other
- things, in a night attack (fully described) on Merton Castle,
- somewhere in Co. Clare. Tarleton refusing to give up his friend
- is disowned by his father, and comes to live in a Dublin
- boarding house. There are good pictures of Dublin life, the
- amusing foibles of a peculiar section of the upper classes
- being well hit off. The Author gives his views on the various
- questions of the day. Shows how the Bar was injured by the
- prevalent jobbery. There are a good many incidents, but perhaps
- they scarcely rescue the book from being dull.
-
-⸺ THE GAP OF BARNESMORE. Three Vols, each about 335 pp. (LONDON). 1848.
-
- “A tale of the Irish Highlands and the Revolution of 1688.”
- Appeared without the author’s name. An attempt to portray,
- without partisan bias, the events of the time and the heroism
- of both sides in the Williamite Wars. The whole question at
- issue between the colonists and the native Irish is well
- discussed in a conversation between Father Meehan, representing
- the latter, and Captain Spencer, representing the former. Every
- word of it applies, as it was meant to apply, to modern times.
-
-⸺ CHAPTERS OF COLLEGE ROMANCE. Pp. 344. (LONDON). 1863.
-
- A reprint of stories that first appeared in the DUBLIN
- UNIVERSITY MAGAZINE, some of them as far back as 1834. The
- purpose and character of these stories is well described in
- Preface:—“When I say that these pages are the romance of truth,
- I mean that they are true.... I am very sure that if I succeed
- in simply bringing before the reader’s eyes the life and the
- death of many whom I myself remember gay and light-hearted....
- I shall have done something towards impressing on his mind the
- lesson, ‘remember thy Creator.’” He tells us also, “I was much,
- very much longer an inmate of Alma Mater than falls to the
- average of her sons.” Five Stories, tragic for the most part,
- viz. I. “The Billiard Table” (ruinous results of gambling.) II.
- “Reading for Honours” (a harrowing story of the fatal results
- of jealousy). III. “The Mariner’s Son.” IV. “The Murdered
- Fellow; an incident of 1734.” V. “The Sizar,” “a story of a
- young heart broken in the struggle for distinction.”
-
-⸺ CHILDREN OF SORROW.
-
- An obituary notice in, I think, the IRISH TIMES describes this
- as Butt’s first essay in fiction, but the book is not in the
- British Museum Library, and I have been unable to trace it.
-
-
-=BUXTON, E. M. Wilmot-=, _see_ =WILMOT-BUXTON=.
-
-
-=[BYRNE, E. J.].= Author of _Without a God_.
-
-⸺ AN IRISH LOVER. Pp. 271. (_Kegan Paul_). 6_s._ 1914.
-
- A melodrama full of plot and murder and hair-breadth escape,
- in which the hero wins his way to the heroine through unheard
- of perils from swindlers, assassins, jealous rivals, and all
- the other _dramatis personæ_ of melodrama. Yet the hero and
- heroine start with a peaceful youth in Tipperary as members
- of the small farmer class. Parents oppose the match, and the
- hero goes to Dublin, where he falls into the hands of a gang
- of desperadoes. Then the scene shifts to America, to return
- to Ireland only for the wedding bells of the close. The Irish
- peasant at home is appreciatively described, his intense spirit
- of faith being dwelt on.
-
-
-=CADDELL, Cecilia Mary=, 1814-1877.
-
-⸺ NELLIE NETTERVILLE; or, One of the Transplanted. (N.Y.: _Catholic
-Publication Co._). 1878.
-
- “A tale of Ireland in the time of Cromwell.”
-
-
-=CALLWELL, J. M.= Mrs. Callwell, a member of the famous family, the
-Martins of Ross, Galway, is a frequent contributor to BLACKWOOD’S
-MAGAZINE, and Author of _Old Irish Life_, 1912.
-
-⸺ A LITTLE IRISH GIRL. Pp. 240. (_Blackie_). 2_s._ 6_d._ Four good
-pictures by Harold Copping. (N.Y.: _Pratt_). 1.25. 1908.
-
- Scene: West of Ireland. The doings and adventures of a lot of
- very natural and “human” children, particularly the bright,
- wild little heroine, and Manus, a typical English-reared
- schoolboy. Peasants seen in relation to better class, but
- treated with sympathy and understanding. No moralizing.
-
-
-=CAMPBELL, Frances.= A county Antrim woman.
-
-⸺ LOVE, THE ATONEMENT. Pp. 345. (_Digby, Long_). 6_s._ Second edition.
-1902.
-
- A very pretty and highly idealized little romance of marriage,
- with a serious lesson of life somewhere in the background all
- the while. It opens—and closes—in an old baronial mansion
- somewhere in the West of Ireland, but the chief part of the
- action passes amid vice-regal society in Australia. Two quaint
- Australian children furnish delightful interludes.
-
-
-=CAMPBELL, J[Iain] F., of Islay.=
-
-⸺ POPULAR TALES OF THE WEST HIGHLANDS. Four Vols., containing in all
-cxxxi. + 1743 pp. (PAISLEY: _Gardner_). [1861]. New edition, an exact
-reprint of first, 1890. Handsome binding.
-
- Ranks among the world’s greatest collections of folk-lore. Of
- great scientific value to the folk-lorist, for each tale is
- “given as it was gathered in the rough.” (Preface). Moreover,
- the table of contents gives, besides title of story, name of
- teller and of collector, date and place of telling. Most, if
- not all of the stories are in origin Irish. The Gaelic text
- is given along with translation. Exceptionally interesting
- Introduction—untechnical, pleasantly written, and full of
- curious information.
-
-
-=CAMPBELL, J. F.=
-
-⸺ THE CELTIC DRAGON MYTH. Pp. li. + 172. (EDINBURGH: _Grant_). 6_s._ net.
-Good illustr. in colour by Miss R. A. Grant-Duff. 1911.
-
- The Author set down the whole Celtic Dragon legend—perhaps
- the most important and widespread of myths, and the basis of
- the state-myth of England, Russia, and Japan—in English, on
- the authority of many oral sources accessible between 1862
- and 1884. To this is here added “The Geste of Fraoch and the
- Dragon” in Gaelic, with translation by G. Henderson, Lecturer
- in Celtic at Glasgow University. Also Gaelic text of “The Three
- Ways,” and “The Fisherman.” Introduction, 40 pp., and Notes.
- Full of Irish names, references, and incidents. The English of
- the translation is simple and pleasant. The whole book is very
- well turned out.
-
-
-=CAMPBELL, John Gregorson, of Tiree.=
-
-⸺ THE FIANS. Pp. xxxviii. + 292. (_Nutt_). 7_s._ 6_d._ net. One illustr.
-by E. Griset. 1891.
-
- Introduction by A. Nutt treats of nature and antiquity of
- Gaelic folk-tales, theories about the Fenian cycle, and
- the classification of texts composing it, and makes some
- interesting remarks about its value and import. His notes
- at the end chiefly consist of references to D’Arbois de
- Jubainville’s _List of Irish Sources_, and to Campbell of
- Islay’s _Leabhar na Féinne_. The book collects a mass of
- floating and fragmentary oral tradition about the Fians.
- Sources entirely oral, many of the translators knowing no
- word of English. Through the greater part of the book the
- collector gives the substance of what he heard, but he gives
- also verbatim in Gaelic, with an English translation, many
- tales, poems, ballads. Nature-myth, God-myth, folk-fancy and
- hero tale, prose and poetry, are mingled. Naturally the quality
- varies a good deal. Some of the tales are extravagant and even
- silly. Many are so corrupted in oral transmission as no longer
- to be intelligible. Some are very archaic, some modern. A
- few are noble heroic legends in verse, but the literal prose
- translation makes them somewhat obscure. Index.
-
-
-=CAMPION, Dr. J. T.= Born in Kilkenny, 1814. Contributed much verse
-and some prose stories to National papers, such as THE NATION, UNITED
-IRISHMAN, THE IRISH FELON, IRISH PEOPLE, SHAMROCK, &c., &c.
-
-⸺ THE LAST STRUGGLES OF THE IRISH SEA SMUGGLERS. Pp. 119. (GLASGOW:
-_Cameron & Ferguson_). 1869.
-
- Scene: Wicklow coast, around Bray head, “about 50 years ago.”
- Struggles between smugglers and Government officials, with a
- love interest, and a moral. Has the elements of a very good
- story, but is long drawn out, and is told in a turgid style
- repugnant to modern taste.
-
-⸺ MICHAEL DWYER, THE INSURGENT CAPTAIN. Pp. 128. (_Gill_). 1_s._ 6_d._
-Very cheap paper and print. _n.d._
-
- A reprint of a book first published many years ago. An
- account of the life, exploits, and death of a Wicklow outlaw,
- 1798-1805. The anecdotes are for the most part given as handed
- down among the Wicklow peasantry. They are not arranged in
- any special order. Many of them are so wonderful as to be
- scarcely credible, yet most of them are, in the main, well
- authenticated. The style is turgid and highflown to the verge
- of absurdity.
-
-
-=CANNING, Hon. Albert S.=, D.L. for Counties Down and Derry. Born 1832,
-second son of 1st Baron Garvagh. Resides in Rostrevor, Co. Down. Has
-published about thirty works, chiefly on Scott, Macaulay, Dickens, and
-Shakespeare. Also religious works, and two books about Ireland.
-
-⸺ BALDEARG O’DONNELL: a Tale of 1690. Two Vols. (_Marcus Ward_). 1881.
-
- This O’Donnell was for a short time an independent,
- half-guerilla, leader on the Irish side. Afterwards, on the
- promise of a pension, he deserted to the English. “He had
- the shallowness, the arrogance, the presumption, the want of
- sincerity and patriotism of too many Irish chiefs”—(D’Alton:
- _History of Ireland_).
-
-⸺ HEIR AND NO HEIR. Pp. 271. (_Eden Remington_). 5_s._ 1890.
-
- The scene opens in Dalragh (Garvagh, Co. Derry), shifts to
- London and back again. Time: the eve of the outbreak of
- ’98. The people, with their sharply divided religious and
- political opinions are well described, and the northern accent
- and idiom ring true. Two priests, Father O’Connor and his
- curate, O’Mahony, the one imbued with loyalist principles, the
- other leaning towards the United Irishmen, are naturally and
- sympathetically drawn. The plot is founded on the well known
- story of the disinheritance of George Canning, the father
- of the Prime Minister, here called Randolph Stratford, a
- good-hearted and popular scapegrace, easily led astray. It is a
- pleasant, healthy, and well told tale.
-
-
-=CANNON, Frances E.=
-
-⸺ IERNE O’NEAL. Pp. 446. (_Whitcomb & Tombs_). 3_s._ 6_d._ net. 1911.
-
- A long, gentle, and pleasing tale of an Irish girl of good
- family, from her childhood with her grandfather in Ireland to
- her life in London society (including a little turn as factory
- girl) and her marriage.—(TIMES LIT. SUPPL.).
-
-
-=“CARBERY, Ethna”; Anna Macmanus.= Mrs. Macmanus, wife of Seumas
-Macmanus, was a Miss Johnston. She was born in Ballymena, Co. Antrim,
-in 1866. Her early death in 1902 robbed her friends of a most lovable
-personality, and Ireland of one of the most promising of her poets.
-Her poems in _The Four Winds of Erinn_ are full of passionate love of
-Ireland. A short notice of her life will be found prefixed to the volume
-just mentioned.
-
-⸺ THE PASSIONATE HEARTS. Pp. 128. (_Gill_). 2_s._ 1903.
-
- Studies of the heart, tender, passionate, and deep, told in
- language of refined beauty. No one else has written, or perhaps
- ever will write, like this, of pure love in the heart of a pure
- peasant girl. These are prose poems, as perfect in artistic
- construction as a sonnet. They are full too of the love of
- nature, as seen in the glens and coasts of Donegal. They are
- all intensely sad, but without morbidness and pessimism.
-
-⸺ IN THE CELTIC PAST. Pp. 120. (_Gill_). 1904.
-
- Contents: “The Sorrowing of Conal Cearnach”; “The Travelling
- Scholars;” “Pursuit of Diarmuid and Grainne;” “The Death of
- Diarmuid O’Dubhine;” “The Shearing of the Fairy Fleeces;” “How
- Oisin convinced Patric the Cleric,” &c. Told in refined and
- poetic language.
-
-
-=CAREY, Mrs. Stanley.=
-
-⸺ GERALD MARSDALE: a Tale of the Penal Times. (N.Y.: _Benziger_). 1.50,
-0.30, 0.63.
-
- Sub-title:—or, “The Out-Quarters of St. Andrew’s Priory: a Tale
- of the reign of Queen Elizabeth.” This story was announced for
- serial publication in DUFFY’S HIBERNIAN MAGAZINE, 1861, and ran
- through the Vols. for 1862-63 under its sub-title.
-
-
-=CARLETON, William.= Born in Prillisk, Clogher, Co. Tyrone, 1794. His
-father, a tenant farmer, who supported fourteen children on as many
-acres, was remarkable for his extraordinary memory and had a thorough
-acquaintance with Irish folk-lore. The family was bilingual. Carleton
-was chiefly educated at hedge-schools and at a small classical school
-at Donagh (Co. Monaghan). Somewhere about 1814 Carleton made the Lough
-Derg Pilgrimage, afterwards described in a story with that title written
-for the CHRISTIAN EXAMINER. About the same period he seems to have
-gradually lost his faith, and subsequently he became a Protestant, but
-for most of his life was indifferent to all forms of religion. After many
-vicissitudes he came to Dublin, where he had very varied and painful
-experiences in the effort to make a living. He wrote for the CHRISTIAN
-EXAMINER, the FAMILY MAGAZINE, the DUBLIN UNIVERSITY MAGAZINE, &c. He
-also wrote for the NATION, though, as Mr. O’Donoghue says, “Carleton
-never was a Nationalist, and was quite incapable of adopting the
-principles of the Young Irelanders.” What he wrote from the Nationalist
-standpoint was written through the need of earning his bread. For, though
-famous long before his death, he never freed himself from money troubles.
-Died 1869. _See_ D. J. O’Donoghue’s _Life of Carleton_, two vols., which
-includes Carleton’s Autobiography.
-
-⸺ AMUSING IRISH TALES. Two Series in One. Fourth edition. 256 pp.
-(Published 5_s._).
-
- Not to be confounded with _Traits and Stories of the Irish
- Peasantry_, by the same Author. This is an entirely different
- work. Contains:—“Buckram Back, the Country Dancing Master”;
- “Mary Murray, the Irish Matchmaker”; “Bob Pentland, the Irish
- Smuggler”; “Tom Gressley, the Irish Sennachie”; “Barney
- M’Haigney, the Irish Prophecy Man,” and ten others.
-
-⸺ ANNE COSGRAVE.
-
- “A vigorous attempt to exhibit the manners and customs, and
- especially the religious feelings, of the Ulster people. Some
- of the chapters are very graphic, and there is no lack of
- Carleton’s peculiar humour.”—(_O’Donoghue_).
-
-⸺ FATHER BUTLER AND THE LOUGH DERG PILGRIM: Sketches of Irish Manners.
-Pp. 302. (_Curry_). 1829.
-
- Published anonymously. Two of Carleton’s most virulently
- anti-Catholic writings. The second, in particular, contains
- passages which, for Catholics, are blasphemous.
-
-⸺ THE POOR SCHOLAR; and other Tales. Pp. 252. (_Duffy_). 1_s._ Still in
-print. [1830].
-
- Selections, comprising some of Carleton’s best work, and
- quite free from religious and political rancour. _The
- Poor Scholar_ is full of human interest. Carleton works
- powerfully upon all our best feelings in turn. Particularly
- touching is his picture of the depth and tenderness of family
- affections (he was himself a doting father). The pictures of
- the hedge-schoolmaster’s brutalities, and of the days of the
- pestilence are vivid. He is in this story altogether on the
- side of the peasant. This little volume contains also eight
- other stories, humorous for the most part, all excellent.
-
-⸺ TALES OF IRELAND. [1834].
-
- Contains: “The Death of a Devotee;” “The Priest’s Funeral;”
- “Lachlin Murray and the Blessed Candle;” “Neal Malone;” “The
- Dream of a Broken Heart,” &c. This last has been described as
- one of the purest and noblest stories in our literature; but
- the remainder are among Carleton’s feeblest efforts, and are
- full of rank bigotry.
-
-⸺ FARDOROUGHA THE MISER. Pp. 280. (_Downey_). [1839]. _n.d._ (N.Y.:
-_Haverty_). 0.50.
-
- Prefaces by the Author and by D. J. O’Donoghue. A powerful
- novel, full of strong character study, and of deep and tragic
- pathos, relieved by humorous scenes. Carleton tells us that all
- the characters save one are drawn from originals well known to
- himself. The original of the miser’s wife, a perfect type of
- the Catholic Irish mother, was his own mother. Una O’Brien is
- one of the loveliest of Carleton’s heroines. Honor O’Donovan
- is scarcely less admirable. The mental struggles of the miser,
- torn between the love of his son and the love of his money, are
- finely depicted.
-
-⸺ THE FAWN OF SPRINGVALE; THE CLARIONET, AND OTHER TALES. Two Vols. 1841.
-
-⸺ PADDY GO EASY AND HIS WIFE NANCY. (_Duffy_), 1_s._ [1845]. Still
-reprinted.
-
- Racy sketch of humorous and good-natured but lazy, thriftless,
- good-for-nothing Irishman, drawn with much humour and with the
- faithfulness of a keen observer. But the book leaves on the
- reader the absurd impression that this character is typical of
- the average peasant. The story is a prototype of the famous
- _Adventures of Mick M’Quaid_. The first title of this book was
- originally _Parra Sastha_.
-
-⸺ VALENTINE M’CLUTCHY. (_Duffy_). 2_s._ [1845]. Numerous editions since.
-Still reprinted. (N.Y.: _Sadleir_). 1.50.
-
- A detailed study of the character and career of an Irish
- land agent of the worst type. It puts the reader on intimate
- terms with the prejudices, feelings, aims, and manners of
- the Orangemen of the day, and bitterly satirizes them.
- It gives vivid pictures of both Anglican and Dissenting
- proselytizing efforts. Written from a strongly national
- and even Catholic standpoint. Contains several remarkable
- character studies. There is Solomon M’Slime, “the religious
- attorney,” sanctimonious, canting, hypocritical; Darby O’Drive,
- M’Clutchy’s ruffianly bailiff, a converted Papist; the Rev. Mr.
- Lucre, a very superior absentee clergyman of the Establishment,
- and an ardent proselytizer; the old priest, Father Roche, very
- sympathetically drawn. The bias throughout is very strong and
- undisguised. There are some grotesquely and irresistibly comic
- scenes, but there are also fine scenes of tragic interest.
- “Nothing in literature,” says Mr. O’Donoghue, “could be more
- terrible than some of the scenes in this book.” He calls it
- “one of Carleton’s most amazing efforts.” Of the book as a
- whole, Mr. Krans says: “It is one of the most daring pictures
- of Irish country life ever executed.” And Mr. G. Barnett Smith
- speaks of the eviction scene as “unexampled for its sadness and
- pathos.”
-
-⸺ RODY THE ROVER. (_Duffy_). 1_s._ [1845]. Still in print.
-
- Study of the origin of Ribbonism, and of its effects upon
- countryside. The hero is an emissary of the Society. The
- latter is represented as organized and worked by a set of
- self-interested rascals who deluded the peasantry with hopes
- of removing grievances, whilst they themselves pursued their
- personal ends, and were often at the same time in the pay of
- the Castle. The Government spy system is denounced.
-
-⸺ DENIS O’SHAUGHNESSY GOING TO MAYNOOTH. Pp. 200. (_Routledge_). 1845.
-Illustrated by W. H. Brooke.
-
-⸺ ART MAGUIRE. (_Duffy_). 1_s._ [1847]. Still reprinted. (N.Y.:
-_Sadleir_). 0.15.
-
- The story of a man ruined by drink. Conventional and obviously
- written for a purpose, yet enlivened by scenes of humour and
- pathos, written in Carleton’s best vein. Dedicated in very
- flattering terms to Father Theobald Mathew, and irreproachable
- from a Catholic point of view. Incidentally there is an
- interesting picture of one of Father Mathew’s meetings. Father
- Mathew himself thought highly of the book.
-
-⸺ THE BLACK PROPHET. Pp. 408. (_Lawrence & Bullen_). [1847]. Introd. by
-D. J. O’Donoghue, and Illustr. by J. B. Yeats. 1899. (N.Y.: _Sadleir_).
-1.50.
-
- The plot centres in a rural murder mystery, but there are many
- threads in the narrative. As a background there is the Famine
- and typhus-plague of 1817, described with appalling power and
- realism. Of this the Author himself was a witness, and he
- assures us that he has in no wise exaggerated the horrors. All
- through there are passages of true and heart-rending pathos,
- lit up by the humorous passages of arms between Jemmy Branigan
- and his master, the middleman, Dick o’ the Grange. Many
- peculiar types of that day appear: Skinadre the rural miser,
- Donnell Dhu the Prophecyman. There is not a word in the book
- that could hurt Catholic or national feeling.
-
-⸺ THE EMIGRANTS OF AHADARRA. [1847]. (_Routledge_). 1_s._ (N.Y.:
-_Sadleir_). 1.50.
-
- A story of rural life, depicting with much beauty and pathos
- the sadness of emigration. The book is first and foremost a
- love story and has no didactic object. It contains one of
- Carleton’s most exquisite portraits of an Irish peasant girl.
- The struggle between her love and her stern and uncompromising
- zeal for the faith is finely drawn. O’Finigan, with his
- half-tipsy grandiloquence, is also cleverly done. A kindly
- spirit pervades the book, and it is almost entirely free from
- the bad taste, coarseness, and rancour which show themselves at
- times in Carleton.
-
-⸺ THE TITHE-PROCTOR. (BELFAST: _Simms & M’Intyre_). [1849].
-
- Founded on real events, the murder of the Bolands, a terrible
- agrarian crime. Written in a mood of savage resentment against
- his countrymen. D. J. O’Donoghue says of this book: “It is
- a vicious picture of the worst passions of the people, a
- rancorous description of the just war of the peasantry against
- tithes, and some of the vilest types of the race are there
- held up to odium, not as rare instances of villainy, but as
- specimens of humanity quite commonly to be met with.” Yet there
- are good portraits and good scenes. Among the former are Mogue
- Moylan, the Cannie Soogah, Dare-devil O’Driscoll, Buck English,
- and the Proctor himself. The latter, hated of the people, is
- painted in dark colours. “As a study of villainy,” says Mr.
- O’Donoghue, “the book is convincing. There is one touching and
- fine scene—that in which the priest stealthily carries a sack
- of oats to the starving Protestant minister and his family.”
- “As a study of Irish life,” says Mr. O’Donoghue again, “even
- in the anti-tithe war time it is a perversion of facts, and a
- grotesque accumulation of melodramatic horrors.”
-
-⸺ JANE SINCLAIR; or, The Fawn of Springvale. [1849].
-
- A melancholy story of middle-class life, with many truthful
- touches, but overcharged with a sentiment that to modern taste
- appears somewhat strained and somewhat insipid. Contains a
- highly eulogistic portrait of a dissenting minister, John
- Sinclair—Calvinistic, didactic, but warm-hearted and truly
- charitable.
-
-⸺ TALES AND SKETCHES OF IRISH LIFE AND CHARACTER. (DUBLIN). Plates by
-Phiz. 1845. This is the original 1_s._ edition of the following and
-_Amusing Irish Tales_, _ante_.
-
-⸺ TALES AND SKETCHES OF THE IRISH PEASANTRY. 1851.
-
- Is as good as the _Traits_, and has, moreover, little that is
- objectionable.
-
-⸺ THE SQUANDERS OF CASTLE SQUANDER. [1852]. Two Vols. Pp. 326 + 311.
-Illustr.
-
- An attempt to present the life of the gentry, a task for which
- Carleton was imperfectly qualified. “It reminds one,” says Mr.
- O’Donoghue, “at a superficial examination, of Lever, but is far
- inferior to any of that writer’s works. It is full of rancour
- and rage, and makes painful and exasperating reading: the best
- that can be said for it is that there are pages here and there
- not unworthy of the Author’s better self. The latter part of
- the book is an acrid political argument.” There is an amusing
- story of a trick played upon a gauger.
-
-⸺ WILLY REILLY AND HIS DEAR COLLEEN BAWN. (_Duffy_). 2_s._ [1855]. 1908.
-
- Introduction by E. A. Baker, M.A., LL.D., who included this in
- his series, “Half-Forgotten Books.” (_Routledge_). 2_s._ 1904.
- The most popular of Carleton’s works, having passed through
- more than fifty large editions. A pleasant, readable romantic
- melodrama, founded on the famous ballad, “Now rise up, Willy
- Reilly,” which refers to an episode of the Penal days, _c._
- 1745-52. It is practically free from political and religious
- bias, but is greatly inferior to his earlier works.
-
-⸺ THE BLACK BARONET. Pp. 476, close print. (_Duffy_). 2_s._ [1856]. Still
-reprinted.
-
- A tragedy of upper-class society life. The interest lies
- chiefly in the intricate plot, which, however, is distinctly
- melodramatic. There is little attempt to portray the manners of
- the society about which the book treats, and there is little
- character-drawing. The tragedy is relieved by humorous scenes
- from peasant life. In the Preface the Author tells us that the
- circumstances related in the story really happened. Contains a
- touching picture of an evicted tenant, who leaves the hut in
- which his wife lies dead and his children fever-stricken to
- seek subsistence by a life of crime. “There is nothing,” says
- G. Barnett Smith in THE XIXTH. CENTURY (Author of notice of C.
- in D.N.B.), “more dramatic in the whole of Carleton’s works
- than the closing scene of this novel.” And he rates it very
- high.
-
-⸺ THE EVIL EYE; or, the Black Spectre. (_Duffy_). 2_s._ [1860]. Still
-reprinted.
-
- “Probably the weakest of his works.” Perilously near the
- ridiculous in style and plot.
-
-⸺ REDMOND O’HANLON. Pp. 199. 16mo. (_Duffy_). 1_s._ [1862]. Still
-reprinted.
-
- The exploits of a daring Rapparee. A fine subject feebly
- treated. From National point of view the book is not inspiring.
- Very slight plot, consisting mainly in the rescue by O’Hanlon
- of a girl who had been abducted. Moral tone good. An appendix
- (32 pages) by T. C. Luby gives the historical facts connected
- with the hero.
-
-⸺ THE RED-HAIRED MAN’S WIFE. Pp. viii. + 274. (_Sealy, Bryers_). 1889.
-
- Exploits of one Leeam O’Connor, a notorious “lady-killer.”
- One of the chief characters Hugh O’Donnell is implicated in
- the Fenian movement. Father Moran and Rev. Mr. Bayley, the
- priest and the rector, bosom friends, are finely portrayed.
- There are flashes here and there of Carleton’s old powers.
- Mr. O’Donoghue (_Life of Carleton_, ii., p. 321) states that
- part of the original MS. was destroyed in a fire, and that the
- missing portions were supplied after Carleton’s death by a Mr.
- MacDermott and published, first in the CARLOW COLLEGE MAGAZINE
- (1870), then in book form as above.
-
-⸺ TRAITS AND STORIES OF THE IRISH PEASANTRY. Many editions, _e.g._
-(_Routledge_). One Vol. 3_s._ 6_d._ N.Y.: (_Dutton_). 1.50.
-
- Perhaps the best is that edited in four volumes, 3_s._ 6_d._
- net each, by D. J. O’Donoghue, and published in 1896 by Dent.
- Its special features are: handsome binding, print, and general
- get-up; reproduction of original illustrations by Phiz;
- portraits of Carleton; inclusion of Carleton’s Introduction;
- biography and critical introduction by Editor. The original
- edition first appeared in 1830-33. Contents: (1) “Ned M’Keown;”
- (2) “Three Tasks;” (3) “Shane Fadh’s Wedding;” (4) “Larry
- M’Farland’s Wake;” (5) “The Station;” (6) “An Essay on Irish
- Swearing;” (7) “The Battle of the Factions;” (8) “The Midnight
- Mass;” (9) “The Party Fight and Funeral;” (10) “The Hedge
- School;” (11) “The Lough Derg Pilgrim;” (12) “The Donagh, or
- the Horse Stealers;” (13) “Phil Purcel, the Pig Driver;” (14)
- “The Leanhan Shee;” (15) “The Geography of an Irish Oath;” (16)
- “The Poor Scholar;” (17) “Wildgoose Lodge;” (18) “Tubber Derg;”
- (19) “Dennis O’Shaughnessy going to Maynooth;” (20) “Phelim
- O’Toole’s Courtship;” (21) “Neal Malone.”
-
- This work constitutes the completest and most authentic picture
- ever given to us of the life of the peasantry in the first
- quarter of the last century. It is the more interesting in that
- it depicts an Ireland wholly different from the Ireland of our
- days, a state of things that has quite passed away. Speaking
- of the _Traits_, Mr. D. J. O’Donoghue says that, “taken as a
- whole, there is nothing in Irish literature within reasonable
- distance of them for completeness, variety, character-drawing,
- humour, pathos and dramatic power.” And most Irishmen would
- be at one with him. About the absolute life-like reality of
- his peasants there can be no doubt. But reserves must be made
- as to his fairness and impartiality. To the edition of 1854
- he prefixed an introduction, in which he states his intention
- “to aid in removing many absurd prejudices ... against his
- countrymen,” and in particular the conception of the “stage
- Irishman.” He then enters into a vindication and a eulogy of
- the national character which is fully in accord with national
- sentiment. But many of the stories were originally written for
- a violently anti-national and anti-Catholic periodical. Some of
- the _Traits_ were consequently marred by offensive passages,
- some of which the author himself afterwards regretted. He
- frequently betrays the rancour he felt against the religion
- which he had abandoned. The Catholic clergy in particular he
- never treated fairly, and in some of the _Traits_ ridicule is
- showered upon them, _e.g._, in “The Station.” Yet in others,
- _e.g._, “The Poor Scholar,” things Catholic are treated with
- perfect propriety. In 1845 Thomas Davis wrote for the NATION
- a very appreciative article on Carleton. The illustrations by
- Phiz are very clever, but many of them are simply caricatures
- of the Irish peasantry.
-
-⸺ STORIES FROM CARLETON, with an Introduction by W. B. Yeats. Pp. xvii. +
-302. (_Walter Scott_), 1_s._ _n.d._
-
- Contains: “The Poor Scholar;” “Tubber Derg;” “Wildgoose Lodge;”
- “Shane Fadh’s Wedding;” “The Hedge School.” Mr. Yeats says of
- Carleton: “He is the greatest novelist of Ireland, by right of
- the most Celtic eyes that ever gazed from under the brows of
- storyteller.”
-
-
-=CARMICHAEL, Alexander.=
-
-⸺ DEIRDRE AND THE LAY OF THE CHILDREN OF UISNE. Pp. 146. (_Gill_, &c.).
-1905.
-
- Orally collected in 1867 from the recital of John MacNeill
- (aged 83), of the Island of Barra. Scotch-Gaelic and English
- on opposite pages. Differs from the average Irish version in
- numerous details.
-
-
-=CARROLL, Rev. P. J.=
-
-⸺ ROUND ABOUT HOME: Irish Scenes and Memories. Pp. 234. (U.S.A.: _Notre
-Dame, Ind._). $1. 1915.
-
- Idylls of Irish country life (West Limerick), told with
- simplicity and genuine sympathy in language charged with
- feeling, and often of much beauty. Memory has no doubt cast
- a golden haze over the scenes and persons, idealizing them
- somewhat, yet they are very real for all that. They are nearly
- all in the form of stories, and are told with zest. Some
- are sad enough, but with a sadness that is softened by the
- kindly genial spirit of the teller. The writer is of course in
- complete sympathy with the people. Many queer types (Micky the
- Fenian, the bell-man, Mad Matt the tramp, the polite beggar,
- the believer in ghosts, &c.) are studied in these sketches.
- “There is not one of the twenty-six sketches that is not in its
- way a masterpiece.”—(C.B.N.).
-
-
-=CASEY, W. F.=
-
-⸺ ZOE: a Portrait. Pp. 376. (_Herbert & Daniel_). 6_s._ 1911.
-
- A study from the life of an exceedingly unpleasant Dublin
- girl, an inveterate society flirt. The plot is chiefly
- concerned with her treatment of her various suitors, including
- a loveless marriage, contracted with one of them in order to
- spite another. Incidentally there are other clever character
- studies—Major Delaney, Barry Conway, Maurice Daly. Some are
- doubtless studies from life. Incidentally there is a clever and
- accurate picture of the Dublin middle-class, with its golf, its
- bridge, and its theatres. The Author has written successful
- plays for the Abbey Theatre.—(_Press Notices_).
-
-
-=CASSIDY, Patrick Sarsfield.=
-
-⸺ GLENVEAGH; or, The Victims of Vengeance. (BOSTON). 1870.
-
- First appeared in the BOSTON PILOT; afterwards in book form.
- The Author was born at Dunkineely, Co. Donegal, 1852. In 1869
- or so he emigrated to America, where he became a journalist.
- Deals with the celebrated Glenveagh trials, arising from
- difficulties between landlord and tenant, at which the author
- had been present in boyhood. He wrote also _The Borrowed
- Bride_: a Fairy Love Legend of Donegal. Pp. 255. (N.Y.:
- _Holt_). 1892. A long story in verse.
-
-
-=CAWLEY, Rev. Thomas.=
-
-⸺ AN IRISH PARISH, ITS SUNSHINE AND SHADOWS. Pp. 189. (BOSTON: _Angel
-Guardian Press_). 1911.
-
- Stories collected from magazines in which they first appeared
- (“Irish Rosary,” “C.Y.M.,” “Irish Packet”). Giving pictures
- drawn with knowledge and skill, and considerable humour of
- local celebrities and their political careers. Satirises the
- shady side of local politics, and depicts the ruin wrought by
- drink. But the moral is not too much obtruded. Father Cawley is
- a curate in Galway City.
-
-⸺ LEADING LIGHTS ALL: a Contentious Volume. Pp. 129. (GALWAY: _The
-Connaught Tribune_). 6_d._ 1913.
-
- Reprinted from “An Irish Parish,” _q.v._
-
-
-=[CHAIGNEAU, William].=
-
-⸺ THE HISTORY OF JACK CONNOR. Two Vols. 12mo. (DUBLIN). Plates. [1751].
-Fourth edition. 1766.
-
- Dedicated to Lord Holland (then Henry Fox). A series of
- adventures of Jack Connor alias Conyers. Born 1720, son of
- a Williamite soldier. Though affecting to be on the side
- of morality, the writer describes minutely a long series
- of scandalous adventures in Dublin, London, Paris, &c.,
- of the hero. The intervals between these are filled up by
- disquisitions of various kinds, _e.g._, the schemes of
- benevolent landlords, &c. Facetious tone affected throughout.
- No real description of contemporary manners or of politics.
- The foreword to this edition gives us to understand that the
- previous edition contained still more objectionable matter.
- Gives fairly accurately the average Protestant’s views of
- priests and “popery” at the time.
-
-
-=CHARLES, Mrs. Rundle.=
-
-⸺ ATTILA AND HIS CONQUERORS. Pp. 327. (S.P.C.K.). 2_s._
-
- Episodes of the inroad of the Huns and their contact with
- Christianity, chiefly in the person of St. Leo, from whose
- writings much of the matter is borrowed. Two young Irish
- converts of St. Patrick are carried off by British pirates.
- The story tells of their adventures on the Continent. St.
- Patrick’s historical Epistle to Coroticus is introduced. The
- story is somewhat in the conventional Sunday School manner,
- being obviously intended solely for the conveyance of moral
- instruction. Has no denominational bias.
-
-
-=CHISHOLM, Louey.=
-
-⸺ CELTIC TALES. Pp. 113. 12mo. (_Jack_). 1_s._ 6_d._ (N.Y.: _Dutton_).
-Eight coloured pictures by K. Cameron. [1905]. 1911, &c.
-
- In “Told to the Children” series. Three tales:—“The Star-eyed
- Deirdre,” “The Four White Swans,” “Dermat and Grauna.”
- Moderately well told.
-
-
-=CHRISTINA, Sister M.=, a native of Youghal, and now a member of the
-Community of Loreto Convent, Fermoy, Co. Cork. Her only published volume
-hitherto is the book noted below, but she has written serials both in
-French and in English for various periodicals, “Kilvara,” “The Forbidden
-Flame,” “A Modern Cinderella,” “Sir Rupert’s Wife,” “A Steel King” (all
-Irish in subject), “Yolanda,” “A Royal Exile,” “Une gerbe de lis,” “Mis
-à l’épreuve,” are some of the titles. She is an enthusiast in the cause
-of a literature which, while genuinely Irish, should be also Catholic in
-spirit.
-
-⸺ LORD CLANDONNELL. Pp. 166. (_Washbourne_). 2_s._ 1914.
-
- An ingenious and pious little story, pleasantly written, with
- abundance of incident (secret marriage, lost papers, rightful
- heir restored to his own in wonderful manner), and many
- characters. The scene shifts between Donegal, Italy, America,
- and Rostrevor. The Clandonnell family, in spite of the bigoted
- old Lord, is brought back into the Catholic Church.—(I.B.L. and
- C.B.N.).
-
-
-=CHURCH, Samuel Harden.=
-
-⸺ JOHN MARMADUKE. (_Putnam_). 6_s._ 0.50. [1889]. Fifth edition, 1898.
-
- Opens 1649 at Arklow. Captain M., who tells the story, is an
- officer under the Cromwellian General Ireton. Closes shortly
- after massacre of Drogheda. The author says in his _Oliver
- Cromwell, a History_ (p. 487): “He (Cromwell) had overthrown a
- bloody rebellion in Ireland, and transformed the environment
- of that mad people into industry and peace.” Elsewhere he
- speaks of Cromwell’s “pure patriotism, his sacrifice to duty,
- his public wisdom, his endeavour for the right course in every
- difficulty.” The novel is written in the spirit of the history,
- a panegyric of Cromwell. It is full of battles, sieges, and
- exciting adventures. The Author tells us that he “went to
- Ireland, traced again the line of the Cromwell Invasion, and
- gave some studious attention to the language and literature of
- the country” (Pref.). Anti-Catholic in tone.
-
-
-=CLARK, Jackson C.=
-
-⸺ KNOCKINSCREEN DAYS. Pp. 308. (_Methuen_). 6_s._ Illustr. 1913.
-
- Episodes in a Lough Neagh-side village conceived in a vein of
- broad comedy, in which Mr. Peter Carmichael, a young squire
- on the look-out for amusement and his irresponsible—and
- resourceful—friend Billy Devine are the chief characters. How
- the two of them defeated the Nationalist candidate for the
- dispensary, and how two members of the Force arrested the
- County Inspector on a charge of Sunday drinking. The local
- colour and the dialect are perfect, and the local types well
- sketched.
-
-
-=CLARKE, Mrs. Charles M.; “Miriam Drake.”=
-
-⸺ STRONG AS DEATH. Pp. 538. (ABERDEEN: _Moran_). 6_s._
-
- The scene is laid in Ulster: the personages are Irish
- Presbyterians. The Author’s sympathies are with the rebels,
- but she does justice to the men on the loyalist side. The book
- contains many stirring adventures, but is far removed from mere
- sensationalism (Publ.).
-
-
-=CLERY, Arthur E.; “A. Synan.”= Born in Dublin, 1879. Educated at
-Clongowes Wood College, Catholic University School. Professor of Law in
-University College, N.U.I., since 1910. Author of _The Idea of a Nation_,
-and of some books on law. Usual pen-name “Chanel.”
-
-⸺ THE COMING OF THE KING: a Jacobite Romance. Pp. 143. (_C.T.S. of
-Ireland_). 1_s._ Pretty binding. 1909.
-
- Deals with an imaginary landing of James II. to head a rising
- in Ireland. Scene: first on shores of Bantry Bay, then in
- Celbridge. A plot to seize Dublin Castle, in which the
- King is aided by Swift, fails through divisions caused by
- sectarian hatred. A rapidly moving story with many exciting
- situations. Though no elaborate picture of the times is
- attempted, innumerable small touches show the Author’s thorough
- acquaintance with their history and literature. The style is
- pleasant, and the conversations seldom jar by being too modern
- in tone.
-
-
-=COATES, H. J.=
-
-⸺ THE WEIRD WOMAN OF THE WRAAGH; or, Burton and Le Moore. Four Vols. Pp.
-1224. (LONDON: _Newman_). 1830.
-
- Wild adventures in 1783 _sqq._ The Wraagh is a cave near
- Baltinglass. The scene frequently shifts from one part of
- Ireland to another—Cork, Wicklow, Kilkenny, Cashel (historical
- sketch given), &c. Kidnappings, hairbreadth escapes from
- robbers, a duel, love story of Walter (whose identity is long
- a mystery) with Lena Fitzgerald, and their final marriage.
- Several long stories are sandwiched in here and there. Tone
- quite patriotic. Well-written on the whole.
-
-⸺ LUCIUS CAREY; or, The Mysterious Female of Mora’s Dell. Four Vols. Pp.
-1007. (LONDON: _Newman_). 1831.
-
- Dedicated to O’Connell. Lucius goes over to England with his
- followers, fights in the Royalist cause, and finally returns
- to Ireland. Sympathies: Royalist, and Irish. But the noble
- characters are for the most part English, some of the Irish
- characters being little better than buffoons. The book is full
- of Astrology. There are some interesting allusions to Irish
- heroic legend.
-
-⸺ THE WATER QUEEN; or, The Mermaid of Loch Lene, and other Tales. Three
-Vols. (LONDON: _Newman_). 1832.
-
- A very romantic story of Killarney in the days of Elizabeth’s
- wars with Hugh O’Neill. Sir Bertram Fitzroy, a gallant young
- Englishman, comes over with Essex, and is sent down to
- Killarney. He becomes friendly with the Irish and falls in love
- with the “Mermaid” Eva, a young lady who chose this disguise
- for greater safety. She wins him to love Ireland. They are kept
- apart by the schemes of the villain O’Fergus, standard bearer
- to O’Neill. But, after a scene of considerable dramatic power
- in which O’Fergus is slain, they are united again. There are
- many adventures, and much fighting. Killarney well described.
- In sympathy with Ireland. No religious bias.
-
-
-=COGAN, J. J.=
-
-⸺ OLD IRISH HEARTS AND HOMES: A Romance of Real Life. Pp. 271.
-(MELBOURNE: _Linehan_). 3_s._ [_n.d._]. New edition, 1908.
-
- A series of episodes, somewhat idealised by memory, from the
- annals of an Irish Catholic family of the well-to-do farmer
- class. There is not much literary skill, but this is made up
- for by the evident faithfulness and the intrinsic interest of
- the pictures. Old de Prendergast is admirably drawn. Brings
- out well how thoroughly penetrated with religious spirit many
- such families in I. are. A sad little boy-and-girl love story
- runs through the book. Scene: Dublin (election of Alderman well
- described) and West Wicklow.
-
-
-=COLLINS, William.= (1838-1890). A Tyrone man who emigrated to Canada and
-U.S.A.
-
-⸺ DALARADIA. (N.Y.: _Kenedy_). 36 cents net.
-
- “A tale of the days of King Milcho,” the time of St. Patrick.
-
-
-=COLTHURST, Miss E.= “A Cork lady of marked poetical ability. She
-wrote also some prose works, such as _The Irish Scripture Reader_,
-_The Little Ones of Innisfail_, &c. Most of her works were publ. anon.
-She was associated with the Rev. E. Nangle’s mission to Achill” (D. J.
-O’Donoghue, _Poets of Ireland_).
-
-⸺ THE IRISH SCRIPTURE READER.
-
-⸺ IRRELAGH: or, The Last of the Chiefs. Pp. 448. (LONDON: _Houlston &
-Stoneman_). 1849.
-
- Dedication dated from Danesfort, Killarney. Scene: Killarney.
- Time: towards the close of 17th century, but there is no
- reference to historical events, and the tone and the atmosphere
- are quite modern. A Waldensian pastor comes to live in the
- family of the O’Donoghue, and converts that family and some
- of the neighbouring chieftains’ families. A great deal of
- Protestant doctrine is introduced; Catholic doctrines (_e.g._,
- the Rosary, p. 49) are referred to with strong disapproval.
- There is a slight love interest and some vague descriptions of
- scenery. The style is somewhat turgid.
-
-⸺ THE LITTLE ONES OF INNISFAIL.
-
-
-=COLUM, Padraic.= Born in Longford, 1881. Has published several plays,
-which have been acted with success in the Abbey Theatre and elsewhere;
-a volume of verse; and a very interesting social study of Ireland, _My
-Irish Year_.
-
-⸺ A BOY IN EIRINN. Pp. 255. (N.Y.: _Dutton_). Frontisp. in colour and
-four Illustr. by Jack B. Yeats. 1913. New ed. (_Dent_), 1915.
-
- Third volume in “Little Schoolmate Series.” Adventures of
- peasant lad, Finn O’Donnell at home in the Midlands and on his
- way to Dublin by Tara in the time of the Land War. Charming
- pictures of the world as seen with the wondering eyes of a
- child. Finn learns Irish legend and history from stories told
- by his grandfather, a priest, and others. The pictures of
- things seen and lived in Ireland are what one might expect
- from the Author of _My Irish Year_—literal reality vividly but
- very simply presented. This boy is not idealised; he is very
- life-like and natural. The Author does not “write down” to
- children.
-
- N.B.—In this case at least the reader would do well to take
- the book _before_ the Preface, which latter is by the general
- editor of the series.
-
-
-=CONCANNON, Mrs., _née_ Helena Walsh.= Born in Maghera, Co. Derry, 1878.
-Educated there and at Loreto College, St. Stephen’s Green, Dublin;
-also at Berlin, Rome, and Paris. M.A. (R.U.I.) with Honours in Mod.
-Lit. Besides the story mentioned below, she has published _A Garden of
-Girls_ (Educational Co. of Ireland), and is about to publish a Life of
-St. Columbanus which won against noteworthy competitors a prize offered
-by Dr. Shahan of the Catholic University of America. Has contributed
-to Catholic magazines. Resides in Galway. Her husband is prominently
-connected with the Gaelic League, and she herself reads and speaks Irish.
-
-⸺ THE SORROW OF LYCADOON. 12mo. Pp. 150. (C.T.S.I.: _Iona Series_), 1_s._
-1912.
-
- Story of the life and martyrdom (1584) of Dermot O’Hurley and
- of the first mission of the Jesuits to Ireland. The author
- has an “historic imagination” of exceptional vividness. The
- incidents and the colouring are both solidly based on historic
- fact. But erudition is never allowed to obtrude itself on the
- reader. The characters are flesh and blood, and the story has a
- pathetic human interest of its own. It is told with much charm
- of style.
-
-
-=CONDON, John A., O.S.A.= Born in Dungarvan, Co. Waterford, in 1867.
-Educated locally at the Augustinian Seminary and at Castleknock College.
-Became an Augustinian 1883. Has studied in Rome and travelled in U.S.A.
-and Canada. He has resided in various parts of Ireland—New Ross, Cork,
-Dublin. Has held positions of special trust in his Order.
-
-⸺ THE CRACKLING OF THORNS. Pp. 175. (_Gill_). 3_s._ 6_d._ Six Illustr. by
-M. Power O’Malley. 1915.
-
- Ten stories of various types. The majority are of the
- high-class magazine type and very up-to-date in subject and
- treatment, but here and there one comes upon bits of real life
- observed at first hand and pictured with genuine feeling.
- Several are Irish-American, and their interest turns on the
- sorrow and hardship of emigration. The last, “By the Way,” in
- which Sergeant Maguire, R.I.C., spins yarns, is full of the
- most genuine Irish humour (dialect perfect), and is a fine
- piece of story-telling.
-
-
-=CONYERS, Dorothea.= Born 1871. Daughter of Colonel J. Blood Smyth,
-Fedamore, Co. Limerick. Has published, besides the works here mentioned,
-_Recollections of Sport in Ireland_. Resides near Limerick. It may be
-said of her books in general that they are humorous, lively stories of
-Irish sport, full of incident, with quick perception of the surfaces and
-broad outlines of character. Her _dramatis personæ_ are hunting people,
-garrison officers, horse dealers, and the peasantry seen more or less
-from their point of view.
-
-⸺ THE THORN BIT. Pp. 332. (_Hutchinson_). 6_s._ 1900.
-
- An earlier effort, with the Author’s qualities not yet
- developed. Society in a small country town, days with the
- hounds, clever situations.
-
-⸺ PETER’S PEDIGREE. Pp. 326. (_Arnold_). 6_s._ 1904.
-
- Perhaps the best of the lot. Hunting, horse-dealing, and
- love-making in Co. Cork.
-
-⸺ AUNT JANE AND UNCLE JAMES. Pp. 342. (_Hutchinson_). 6_s._ 1908.
-
- A sequel to the last, with the same vivid descriptions of
- “runs” and “deals.” A murder trial enters into the plot.
-
-⸺ THE BOY, SOME HORSES, AND A GIRL. Pp. 307. (_Arnold_). 6_s._ 1908.
-
- Of the same type as the last and scarcely inferior. Irish
- peasants and servants are described with much truth as well as
- humour. Full of glorious hunts and pleasant hunting people.
-
-⸺ THREE GIRLS AND A HERMIT. Pp. 328. (_Hutchinson_). 6_s._ 1908.
-
- Life in a small garrison town. Many droll situations.
-
-⸺ THE CONVERSION OF CON CREGAN. Pp. 327. (_Hutchinson_). 6_s._ 1909.
-
- Thirteen stories, dealing mostly with horses and hunting. Full
- of shrewd wit and kindly humour. Shows a good knowledge of
- Irish life and character, and an understanding of the relations
- between the classes. One of the stories is a novel in itself.
-
-⸺ THE STRAYINGS OF SANDY. Pp. 362. (_Hutchinson_). 6_s._ and 1_s._ 1909.
-
- The externals of Irish country life as seen by a London
- business man on a holiday. Study of Irish character as seen
- chiefly in sporting types—needy, good-natured, spendthrift—as
- contrasted with the Englishman, wealthy, businesslike, and
- miserly. Contact with Irish life softens the Englishman’s
- asperities. Full of genuinely humorous and amusing adventures
- of Sandy with race-horses and hounds, and other things.
- The brogue is not overdone and we are not, on the whole,
- caricatured. Scene: West coast.
-
-⸺ TWO IMPOSTORS AND TINKER. Pp. 344. (_Hutchinson_). 6_s._ 1910.
-
- One impostor is Derrick Bourke Herring who, under his namesake
- cousin’s name, took up the Mullenboden hounds, and the other
- was his sister Jo who, in man’s clothes, acted as whip. Tinker
- is a yellow mongrel who does many wonderful things in the
- course of the story. The main interest centres in the doings
- of these three, chiefly in the hunting field. A melodramatic
- element is introduced by the attempt of the father of the
- wealthy heiress Grania Hume to steal her jewels. Of course
- there are love affairs also. A breezy story, with much lively
- incident and pleasant humour.
-
-⸺ SOME HAPPENINGS OF GLENDALYNE. (_Hutchinson_). 6_s._ 1911.
-
- Eve O’Neill is under the guardianship of The O’Neill, an
- eccentric, rapidly growing into a maniac. His mania is
- religious, he has a passion for horse-racing, and keeps
- the heir Hugh O’Neill (supposed to be dead) shut up in
- a deserted wing of the old mansion. Here this latter is
- accidentally discovered by Eve, and then there are thrilling
- adventures. Atmosphere throughout weird and terrifying in
- the manner of Lefanu. Peasantry little understood and almost
- caricatured.—(_Press Notice_).
-
-⸺ THE ARRIVAL OF ANTONY. Pp. 348. (_Hutchinson_). 6_s._ 1912.
-
- Anthony Doyle, brought up from childhood in Germany, and with
- the breeding of a gentleman, comes home to help his old uncle,
- a horsedealer living in an old-fashioned thatched farmhouse
- in a remote country district in Ireland. Tells of the wholly
- inexperienced Antony’s adventures among horse-sharpers, of his
- devotion to his old uncle, and of the social barriers that for
- long keep him aloof from his own class and from his future
- wife. The backwardness and slovenliness of Irish life are a
- good deal exaggerated, but the story is very cleverly told,
- with a good deal of dry humour. The Author’s satire is not
- hostile.
-
-⸺ SALLY. Pp. 307. (_Methuen_). 6_s._ 1912.
-
- How Sally Stannard charms the hero from his melancholia more
- efficaciously than the hunting in Connemara on which he was
- relying for his cure. Has all the appearances of a story dashed
- off carelessly and in haste for the publishers. Nothing in it
- is studied or finished.
-
-⸺ OLD ANDY. Pp. 309. (_Methuen_). 6_s._ 1914.
-
- Peasant life in Co. Limerick.
-
-⸺ A MIXED PACK. Pp. 296. (_Methuen_). 6_s._ 1915.
-
- A collection of stories of very various type—hunting sketches,
- the strange experience of an engine driver, the adventures of a
- traveller for a firm of jewellers.
-
-⸺ MEAVE. Pp. 336. (_Hutchinson_). 6_s._ 1915.
-
- Here the scene is laid in England, and the characters are
- English, all but a wild little Irish girl, Meave, who plays one
- of the chief parts. The story is full of hunting scenes.
-
-
-=CONYNGHAM, Major David Power, LL.D.; “Allen H. Clington.”= Born in
-Killenaule, Co. Tipperary. Took part, along with his kinsman Charles
-Kickham, in the rising of 1848. Fought in the American Civil War in the
-’Sixties, after which he engaged in journalism until his death in 1883.
-Wrote many works on Irish and American subjects.
-
-⸺ FRANK O’DONNELL: a Tale of Irish life; edited by “Allen H. Clington.”
-Pp. 370. (_Duffy_). 5_s._ 1861.
-
- Tipperary in the years before (and during) the Famine of 1846.
- Glimpses of Tipperary homes, both clerical and lay. Almost
- every aspect of Irish life at the time is pictured—the Famine,
- Souperism, an Irish agent and his victims (ch. xii.), how St.
- Patrick’s Day is kept, Irish horse races (ch. ii.), &c. “I
- have shewn how the people are made the catspaw of aspiring
- politicians [elections are described] and needy landlords.”
- Author says the characters are taken from real life. They
- are for the most part very well drawn, _e.g._, Mr. Baker, “a
- regular Jack Falstaff,” full of boast about wonderful but
- wholly imaginary exploits; and Father O’Donnell. A pleasant
- little love-story runs through the book. The whole is racy
- of the soil. The dialect is good, but the conversations of
- the upper class are artificial and scarcely true to life.
- Introduces the episode of the execution of the Bros. C⸺ in N⸺.
-
-⸺ SARSFIELD; or, The Last Great Struggle for Ireland. (BOSTON:
-_Donahue_). Port. of Sarsfield. 1871.
-
- The Author calls this a historical romance, but the element
- of romance is very small. Ch. I. gives a backward glance over
- Ireland’s national struggle in the past. The nominal hero
- is Hugh O’Donnell and the heroine Eveleen, granddaughter of
- Florence McCarthy, killed on the Rhine. But Sarsfield is
- the central figure, and the Author contrives to give us his
- whole career. There is plenty of exciting incident, partly
- fictitious—forays of the Rapparees, captures, escapes. In spite
- of the schemes of the villain rival, Saunders, hero and heroine
- are united. The historical standpoint seems fair if not quite
- impartial.
-
-⸺ THE O’DONNELLS OF GLEN COTTAGE. Pp. 498. (N.Y.: _Kenedy_). _n.d._
-(1874). Still in print.
-
- Scene: Tipperary during the Famine years. The fortunes of
- a family in the bad times. Famine and eviction and death
- wreck its peace, and things are only partially righted after
- many years. The author, whose view-point is nationalist
- and Catholic, vividly describes the evils of the time—the
- terrible sufferings of the Famine, eviction as carried out
- by a heartless agent, souperism in the person of Rev. Mr.
- Sly, judicial murder as exemplified by the execution of the
- M’Cormacks.
-
-⸺ THE O’MAHONY, CHIEF OF THE COMERAGHS. Pp. 268. (N.Y.: _Sadlier_). 1879.
-
- A tale of Co. Waterford in 1798, written from a strongly Irish
- and Catholic standpoint. Depicts the tyranny of the Protestant
- gentry, the savagery of the yeomanry. Typical scenes are
- introduced, _e.g._, a flogging at the cart’s tail through the
- streets of Clonmel, seizures for tithes, the execution of
- Father Sheehy (an avowed anachronism), &c. Chief historical
- personages: Sir Judkin Fitzgerald, the “flogging” Sheriff, and
- Earl Kingston. A vivid picture, though obviously partisan, and
- marred by some inartistic melodrama.
-
-⸺ ROSE PARNELL, THE FLOWER OF AVONDALE. Pp. 429. (N.Y.: _Sadlier_). 1883.
-
- A tale of the rebellion of ’98.
-
-
-=COSTELLO, Mary.=
-
-⸺ PEGGY THE MILLIONAIRE. (_C.T.S. of Ireland: Iona Series_). 1_s._ 1910.
-
- The story of an Irish girl living in “Loughros,” in the West
- of Ireland, some fifty years ago. She is the third and plain
- daughter of a disappointed “fine lady,” who has married a
- country doctor out of pique, and rues her fate for the rest of
- her life, as she cannot appreciate her husband’s good heart
- and he cannot give her luxuries and grandeur. To this home
- Peggy comes from school. And the book tells us, with plenty of
- good fun in the telling, how she made her fortune and how she
- scattered happiness and blessings around her.—(_Press Notice_).
-
-
-=COTTON, Rev. S. G.=
-
-⸺ THE THREE WHISPERS, AND OTHER TALES. Pp. 256. (DUBLIN: _Robertson_).
-_c._ 1850.
-
- In the title story we have two attempted suicides of parents
- distraught with grief, the return of a former convict, and an
- inheritance for the people who were dying with hunger. Dublin
- is the scene. The next story, “Grace Kennedy,” takes place in
- the Queen’s Co.: a mother murders her boy, the sister holds the
- corpse to the fire and “nestles beside him.” In “The Foundling”
- the mother drowns herself, but some charitable Protestants
- rescue her child and bring him up in their religion. “Ellen
- Seaton” tells how Ellen’s father goes off to be a priest and
- her mother to be a nun, and deals with the efforts made by
- priests and nuns to get hold of her. Finally she converts her
- nun jailer and both escape. In some of these stories the Author
- introduces very vulgar brogue, with coarse expressions.
-
-
-=CRAIG, Richard Manifold=, 1845-1913. Born in Dublin, and educated
-there. He entered the army as surgeon, and retired with the rank of
-Lieut.-Colonel. His other works of fiction—_A Widow Well Left_, _All
-Trumps_, _A Sacrifice of Fools_, &c.—do not deal with Irish subjects.
-
-⸺ THE WEIRD OF “THE SILKEN THOMAS.” Pp. 230. (ABERDEEN: _Moran_). 1900.
-
- The story of how Lord Thomas Fitzgerald was drawn into revolt
- by the treachery of a private enemy. Purports to be a narrative
- written at the time by Martyn Baruch Fallon, “scrivener and
- cripple,” a loyal inhabitant of Maynooth, with some account
- of the latter’s private affairs. Written in quaint, antique
- language difficult to follow, especially at the outset of the
- book. It seems of little value from an historical point of view.
-
-⸺ LANTY RIORDAN’S RED LIGHT.
-
- I am not certain whether this story appeared in book form. It
- is not in the B. Museum Library.
-
-
-=CRAIG, J. Duncan, D.D.=
-
-⸺ BRUCE REYNALL, M.A. Pp. 271. (_Elliot Stock_). 3_s._ 6_d._ 1898.
-
- Author of “Real Pictures of Clerical Life in Ireland,” and of
- several learned works. A story of an Oxford man who came to
- Ireland as _locum tenens_ in the most disturbed time, and found
- life a good deal more exciting than at his English curacy.
- The Orangemen are very favourably represented. In the preface
- to the following work the Author says of this, “The Reign of
- Terror which prevailed in Ireland while the horrors of the Land
- League were brooding over the land, and a picture of which I
- have endeavoured to delineate in _Bruce Reynall_.”
-
-⸺ REAL PICTURES OF CLERICAL LIFE IN IRELAND. Pp. 351. (_Elliot Stock_).
-[1875]. 1900.
-
- The first six chapters are autobiographical, the remaining
- sixty-five are a series of anecdotes and stories in which
- the Catholic clergy and the doctrines of the Church appear
- to great disadvantage. The lawlessness and brutality of the
- peasantry are also much insisted on, and the conversion of
- Ireland to Protestantism seems to obsess the writer. Some of
- the incidents related are improbable in the extreme, and it is
- not clear from the Preface to what extent the Author intended
- them as narratives of actual fact. At all events they are told
- in the form of fiction. There are also gruesome reminiscences
- of agrarian disturbances and of the Fenian outbreak, and a
- chapter against Home Rule. The Author was born in Dublin in
- the twenties, of Scottish parents. He went to T.C.D. in 1847.
- He was long Vicar of Kinsale. He was remarkable as the author
- of several important works on the Provençal language and
- literature. He died in 1909.
-
-
-=CRANE, Stephen, and BARR, Robert.=
-
-⸺ THE O’RUDDY. (_Methuen_). 6_s._ 1904.
-
- Has been well described as a fairy story for grown-ups, with
- plenty of humorous incident—love affairs, duels, &c. The
- O’Ruddy is a reckless, rollicking, lovable character. There is
- little or no connexion with real life.—(THE ACADEMY).
-
-
-=CRAWFORD, Mrs. A.=
-
-⸺ LISMORE. Three Vols. (LONDON: _Newby_). 1853.
-
- A rambling and sentimental tale, the scene of which is Southern
- Ireland (Lismore and Ardmore) and Italy in 1659-60. It is in
- no sense historical, nor does the Author seem to have any
- knowledge of the period dealt with. The personages live in
- “suburbs” and ring the “breakfast-bell.” An amusing ignorance
- of Catholic matters is evidenced. The plot is confused and
- without unity.
-
-
-=CRAWFORD, Mary S.; “Coragh Travers.”=
-
-⸺ HAZEL GRAFTON. Pp. 350. (_Long_). 6_s._ 1911.
-
- Hazel leaves Bournemouth and her school days and two rejected
- suitors—both curates—to live with her adoring parents in the
- W. of Ireland. She and Denis Martin fall in love, but the
- course of love does not run smooth. The two are kept apart
- by their parents, who are intent on other matches. A quarrel
- completes the breach, but all comes right in the end by help
- of a divorce and a death. Trips to Dublin and to Bundoran and
- the performances of a genuine stage-Irishman are introduced to
- enliven the tale.
-
-
-=CRAWFORD, Michael George.=
-
-⸺ LEGENDARY STORIES OF THE CARLINGFORD LOUGH DISTRICT. Pp. 201, close
-print. (NEWRY: _Offices of “The Frontier Sentinel”_). 1_s._ 1914.
-
- Thirty-four stories, embodying the legends of a district
- exceptionally rich in memories of old Gaelic Ireland—Cuchulain
- and the Red Branch—and also with great Irish-Norman families
- like the De Courcys and De Burgos. By a writer thoroughly
- acquainted with the district.
-
-
-=CRICHTON, Mrs. F. E.= Born in Belfast, 1877; educated at a private
-school near Richmond. Travelled much in Italy, Switzerland, and Germany.
-Besides the three novels noted below she publ. some short stories, a
-little book _The Precepts of Andy Saul_, based on the character of an old
-gardener, and some books for children.
-
-⸺ THE SOUNDLESS TIDE. Pp. 328. (_Arnold_). 6_s._ 1911.
-
- Life of country gentry and peasantry in County Down. With the
- latter the Author is particularly effective, bringing out their
- characteristics with quiet “pawky” humour. Especially, there is
- Mrs. M’Killop and her wise saws. But the Colonel and his wife
- are also very well drawn. There is pathos as well as humour.
- Noteworthy also are the descriptions of sea-coast scenery, and
- the story of the fight on the “twalth”—(I.B.L.). It is a simple
- tale of lover’s misunderstandings. Religious strife is pictured
- with perhaps undue insistence.
-
-⸺ TINKER’S HOLLOW. Pp. 336. (_Arnold_). 6_s._ 1912.
-
- A charming and delicately-told love story, with a background
- of life among the Presbyterians (both the better class, and
- the peasantry and servants) near a small town in Co. Antrim.
- Shows an intimate and sympathetic knowledge of the people that
- furnishes the characters of the story. The dialect is perfectly
- reproduced. There is a pleasant picture of the bright and
- sunny Sally Bruce growing from girlhood into womanhood amid
- the dull austerity of Coole House, in the society of her two
- maiden aunts and her bachelor uncle. There are pleasant gleams
- of Northern humour, not a few gems of rustic philosophy, and
- vignettes of Antrim scenery. The human interest is, however,
- strongest of all.
-
-⸺ THE BLIND SIDE OF THE HEART. Pp. 299. (_Maunsel_). 6_s._ 1915.
-
- The story of Dick Sandford’s choice between his cousin
- Betty—English like himself—bright, charming, wholly of this
- world, and Ethne Blake whom he meets while on a visit to
- Ireland. The book is really a study, or rather an imaginative
- presentment of this strange, almost unearthly, figure as
- typifying the mystic, faery side of the Celtic temperament,
- and of the background of haunted Irish landscape and peasant
- fairy-lore, against which she moves. The vital difference in
- the two temperaments, Celt and Saxon, is suggested throughout.
- The peasantry of the remote mountain glens are pictured with
- sympathy and insight.
-
-
-=CROKER, Mrs. B. M.=, wife of Lieut.-Col. Croker, late Royal Munster
-Fusiliers; daughter of Rev. W. Sheppard, Rector of Kilgefin, Co.
-Roscommon; educated at Rockferry, Cheshire. She spent fourteen years in
-the East, whence the Eastern subjects of some of her novels. These number
-nearly forty. She resides for the most part in London and Folkestone.
-
-⸺ A BIRD OF PASSAGE. Pp. 366. (_Chatto & Windus_). [1886.] New edition.
-1903.
-
- A love story, beginning in the Andamans. There is a lively
- picture of garrison life, including the clever portrait of
- the “leading lady” (and tyrant), Mrs. Creery. The lovers are
- separated by the scheming of an unsuccessful rival. The girl
- first lives a Cinderella life, with disagreeable relations in
- London, then is a governess, and finally (p. 256) goes to a
- relation in Ireland. Then there are amusing studies of Irish
- types—carmen (Larry Flood, with his famous “Finnigan’s mare”),
- and servants, and a family of broken-down gentry. Things come
- right in the end.
-
-⸺ IN THE KINGDOM OF KERRY. (_Chatto & Windus_). 3_s._ 6_d._ 1896.
-
- “Seven sketchy little stories of poor folk, written in light
- and merry style.”—(_Baker_).
-
-⸺ BEYOND THE PALE. (_Chatto & Windus_). 3_s._ 6_d._ and 6_d._ (N.Y.:
-_Fenno_). 0.50. 1897.
-
- Story of an Irish girl of good family, who is obliged to train
- horses for a living, but ends successfully. Scene: a hunting
- county three hours’ journey from Dublin. Much stress is laid
- on the feudal spirit of the peasantry, who are viewed from the
- point of view of the upper classes, but sympathetically.
-
-⸺ TERENCE. Pp. 342. (_Chatto & Windus_). 6_s._ Six illustr. by Sidney
-Paget. (N.Y.: _Buckles_). 1.25. 1899.
-
- Scene: an anglers’ hotel in Waterville, Co. Kerry, and the
- neighbourhood, which the Author knows and describes well. A
- tale of love and foolish jealousy. The personages belong to
- the Protestant upper classes. The chief interest is in the
- working out of the plot, which is well sustained all through.
- “Contains comedy of a broad and sometimes vulgar kind, turning
- on jealousy and scandal.”—(_Baker_ 2).
-
-⸺ JOHANNA. Pp. 315. (_Methuen_). 1903.
-
- The story of a beautiful but very stupid peasant girl who,
- forced by a tyrannical stepmother to fly from her home in
- Kerry, sets off for Dublin. On the way she loses the address
- of the house she is going to, is snapped up by the keeper of a
- lodging-house, and there lives as a slavey a life of dreadful
- drudgery and of suffering from unpleasant boarders.
-
-⸺ A NINE DAYS’ WONDER. Pp. 310. (_Methuen_). 6_s._ [1905].
-
- How Mary Foley, brought up for twenty-one years in an Irish
- cabin, is suddenly claimed as his daughter by an English
- peer, and becomes Lady Joseline Dene. How she gives Society a
- sensation by her countrified speech and manners, and by her
- too truthful and pointed remarks, but carries it by storm in
- the end, and marries her early love. The writer has a good
- knowledge of the talk of the lower middle classes. There is no
- bias in the story, which is a thoroughly pleasant one.
-
-⸺ LISMOYLE: an Experiment in Ireland. Pp. 384. (_Hutchinson_). 6_s._ 1914.
-
- The six months’ visit of a young English heiress to the
- stately, dilapidated mansion of Lismoyle, in the Co. Tipperary,
- involving a comedy of courtship, many amusing situations, and
- some description of the small social affairs of the county. No
- Irish “problem” is touched upon.
-
- The Scenes of some others of her novels are laid partly in
- Ireland, _e.g._, TWO MASTERS (_Chatto_), 1890; and INTERFERENCE
- (_Chatto_), 1894.
-
-
-=CROKER, T. Crofton.= Born in Cork, 1798; died in London, 1854. Was one
-of the most celebrated of Irish antiquaries, folk-lorists, and collectors
-of ancient airs. He helped to found the Camden Society (1839), the Percy
-Society (1840), and the British Archæological Association (1843). Was a
-Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries, and of many Continental societies.
-Wrote or edited a great number of works. His leisure hours were spent
-in rambles in company with a Quaker gentleman of tastes similar to his
-own. In these excursions he gained that intimate knowledge of the people,
-their ideas, traditions, and tales, which he afterwards turned to good
-account.
-
-⸺ LEGENDS OF THE LAKES. [1829]. Illustr. by Maclise.
-
- Killarney. A series of stories, similar to those in the _Fairy
- Legends_, of fairies, ghosts, banshees, &c.
-
-⸺ KILLARNEY LEGENDS. Pp. 294. 16mo. (LONDON: _Fisher_). Some steel
-engravings (quite fanciful). [1831]. Second edition, 1879.
-
- An abbreviated ed. of _Legends of the Lakes_. Second ed. was
- edited by Author’s son, T. F. D. Croker. Topographical Index.
-
-⸺ FAIRY LEGENDS AND TRADITIONS OF THE SOUTH OF IRELAND. New and complete
-edition. Illustr. by Maclise & Green. 1882.
-
- First appeared 1825; often republished since. Classified under
- the headings:—The Shefro; the Cluricaune; the Banshee; the
- Phooka; Thierna na oge (_sic_); the Merrow; the Dullahan,
- &c. “I make no pretension to originality, and avow at once
- that there is no story in my book which has not been told
- by half the old women of the district in which the scene
- is laid. I give them as I found them” (Pref.). This is the
- first collection of Irish folk-lore apart from the peddler’s
- chap-books. Dr. Douglas Hyde (Pref. to _Beside the Fire_) calls
- this a delightful book, and speaks of Croker’s “light style,
- his pleasant parallels from classics and foreign literature,
- and his delightful annotations,” but says that he manipulated
- for the English market, not only the form, but often the
- substance, of his stories. Scott praised the book very highly
- in the notes to the 1830 ed. of the _Waverley Novels_, as well
- as in his _Demonology and Witchcraft_. The original ed. was
- trans. into German by the Bros. Grimm, 1826, and into French by
- P. A. Dufour, 1828.
-
-
-=CROKER, Mrs. T. Crofton.=
-
-⸺ BARNEY MAHONEY. [1832].
-
- “Has for a hero an Irish peasant, who conceals under a vacant
- countenance and blundering demeanour shrewdness, quick
- wit, and, despite a touch of rascality, real kindness of
- heart.”—(_Krans_).
-
-
-=CROMARTIE, Countess of; Sibell Lilian Mackenzie, Viscountess of Tarbat,
-Baroness of Castlehaven and Macleod.= Born 1878. Lives at Castle Leod,
-Strathpeffer, N.B. Publ. _The End of the Song_, 1904, _The Web of the
-Past_, _The Golden Guard_, &c.
-
-⸺ SONS OF THE MILESIANS. Pp. 306. (_Eveleigh, Nash_). 1906.
-
- Short stories, some Irish, some Highland Scotch, somewhat in
- the manner of Fiona MacLeod’s beautiful _Barbaric Tales_. The
- stories deal with various periods from the time of the Emperor
- Julian to the present day, and they are vivid pictures of
- life and manners at these different epochs. The standpoint is
- thoroughly Gaelic, and there is much pathos and much beauty in
- the tales.
-
-⸺ THE DAYS OF FIRE. Pp. 114. (_Wellby_). Artistic cover in white and
-gold. 1908.
-
- The scene is laid in Ireland in the days of the first
- Milesians, but does not deal with historical events. Tells of
- the love of Heremon the King for a beautiful slave. Full of
- sensuous description in a smooth, dreamy style. Frankly pagan
- in spirit.
-
-⸺ THE GOLDEN GUARD. Pp. 407. (_Allen_). 6_s._ 1912.
-
- “A tale of ‘far off things and battles long ago,’ when King
- Heremon the Beautiful, who reigned at Tara over Milesian and
- Phoenician ..., fought with his Golden Guard against the
- Northern Barbarians. Lady Cromartie gives fire and passion to
- the shadowy figures, filling her imaginative pages with crowded
- hours of love and fighting, toil, pleasure, and vigorous
- life.”—(T. LIT. SUPPL.).
-
-
-=CROMIE, Robert.= Born at Clough, Co. Down, the son of Dr. Cromie. Was on
-the staff of Belfast NORTHERN WHIG, and died suddenly about ten years ago.
-
-⸺ THE SHADOW OF THE CROSS. Pp. 326. (_Ward & Locke_). 6_s._ 1902.
-
- A sympathetic study of Ulster Presbyterian life is the
- background for the romance, ending in tragedy, of a young
- minister. Besides the occasional dialect (well handled) there
- is little of Ireland in the book, but the story is told with
- much skill, and never flags. Bromley, an unbeliever, almost a
- cynic, but a true man and unselfish to the point of heroism, is
- a remarkable study. The author has also published _The Crack of
- Doom_, _The King’s Oak_, _For England’s Sake_, &c.
-
-
-=CROMMELIN, May de la Cherois.= Born in Ireland. Daughter of late S.
-de la Cherois Crommelin, of Carrowdore Castle, Co. Down, a descendant
-of Louis Crommelin, a Huguenot refugee, who founded the linen trade in
-Ulster. Educated at home. Early life spent in Ireland; resided since in
-London; has travelled much. Publ. more than thirty novels.—(WHO’S WHO).
-_Queenie_ was the Author’s first novel. _A Jewel of a Girl_ deals with
-Ireland and Holland.
-
-⸺ ORANGE LILY. Two Vols., afterwards One Vol. (_Hurst & Blackett_). 1879.
-
- The story of Lily Keag, daughter of a Co. Down Orangeman,
- who, to the disgust of her social circle, falls in love with
- her father’s servant boy. The latter goes to America, and
- thence returns, a wealthy man, to claim Lily. The scenery is
- well described and the dialect well rendered. A healthy and
- high-toned novel.
-
-⸺ BLACK ABBEY. Pp. 447. (_Sampson, Low_). [1880]. 1882.
-
- We are first introduced to a delightful circle, the three
- children of Black Abbey (somewhere in Co. Down) and those about
- them, their German governess and Irish nurse and their playmate
- Bella, born in America, granddaughter of the old Presbyterian
- minister. The picture of their home-life is pleasant and
- life-like, with a vein of quiet humour. Then they grow up
- and things no longer run smoothly. Bella, by her marriage,
- well-nigh wrecks four lives, including her own, but things seem
- to be righting themselves as the story closes. The dialect of
- the Northern servants is very well done. The tone of the book
- is most wholesome though by no means “goody-goody.”
-
-⸺ DIVIL-MAY-CARE; alias Richard Burke, sometime Adjutant of the Black
-Northerns. Pp. x. + 306. (_F. V. White_). 6_s._ 1899.
-
- A series of humorous and exciting episodes, forming the
- adventures of an officer home from India on sick leave. Most of
- them are located in Antrim. No religious or political bias, but
- a tinge of the stage Irishman.
-
-⸺ THE GOLDEN BOW. (_Holden & Hardingham_). 6_s._ _c._ 1912.
-
- Story of the sorrows and suitors, from her unhappy childhood
- to a happy engagement, of an Irish girl, who is poor, proud,
- and pretty. A lovable character is Judith’s crippled sister
- Melissa. Scene: N. of Ireland. There is a good deal of dialect,
- and the ways of the peasantry are faithfully depicted.
-
-
-=CROSBIE, Mary.= Born in England. Educated privately and at various
-English schools. Has frequently visited and stayed in Ireland. Her first
-novel, _Disciples_, was publ. in 1907; but it was the second that was
-most successful, three editions being called for within a short time.
-
-⸺ KINSMEN’S CLAY. Pp. 389. (Close print). (_Methuen_). 6_s._ First and
-second editions. 1910.
-
- Main theme: wife and lover waiting for invalid and impossible
- husband to die. The treatment of this theme and that of a minor
- plot makes the book unsuited for certain classes of readers.
- Moreover, the tone is alien to religion. God is “perhaps the
- flowering of men’s ideals under the rain of their tears.” But
- the tone is not frankly anti-moral. The personages are all of
- the country Anglo-Irish gentry, except one peasant family, and
- this shows up badly. The types are drawn with much skill, and
- there is constant clever analysis of moods and emotions. The
- story brings out in a vague way the transmission through a
- family of ancestral peculiarities.
-
-⸺ BRIDGET CONSIDINE. Pp. 347. (_Bell_). 6_s._ 1914.
-
- Bridget’s father is the son of a broken-down shopkeeper
- somewhere beyond the Shannon, but clings to aristocratic
- notions. She grows up in London along with “Lennie-next-door,”
- but her mind outgrows his. She goes to stay W. of the Shannon
- as secretary to a rich lady. There she becomes engaged to Hugh
- Delmege, a young landowner. All her yearnings seem fulfilled,
- yet somehow it is not what she had expected; a short separation
- from Hugh still further opens her eyes, and she returns
- disillusioned. This is the bare skeleton: it does not do
- justice to the philosophy and the style of the book, both of
- which are remarkable.
-
-
-=CROSBIE, W. J.=
-
-⸺ DAVID MAXWELL. (_Jarrold_). 6_s._ 1902.
-
- ’98 from the loyalist standpoint, and adventures in Mexico and
- South Texas, &c. “David” is “Scotch-Irish.”—(_Baker_, 2).
-
-
-=CROSFIELD, H. C.=
-
-⸺ FOR THREE KINGDOMS. Pp. 241. (_Elliott Stock_). 1909.
-
- “Recollections of Robert Warden, a servant of King James.” By
- a series of accidents the teller finds himself on board one of
- the ships that raises the blockade of Derry; he escapes and
- goes to Dublin, where he has exciting adventures. Tyrconnell
- is introduced—a very unfavourable portrait; and the hero goes
- through the Boyne Campaign. Told in lively style, with plenty
- of incident.
-
-
-=CROTTIE, Julia M.= Born in Lismore, Co. Waterford. Educated privately
-and at the Presentation Convent, Lismore. Contributed to the CATHOLIC
-WORLD, N.Y., and to other American Catholic periodicals, also to the
-MONTH, the ROSARY, &c. She resides in Ramsay, Isle of Man.
-
-⸺ NEIGHBOURS. Pp. 307. (_Unwin_). 6_s._ 1900.
-
- Pictures of very unlovely aspects of life in a small stagnant
- town. Twenty separate sketches. Wonderfully true to reality
- and to the petty unpleasant sides of human nature. The gossip
- of the back lane is faithfully reproduced, though without
- vulgarity. The stories are told with great skill.
-
-⸺ THE LOST LAND. Pp. 266. (_Fisher Unwin_). 6_s._ [1901]. 1907.
-
- “A tale of a Cromwellian Irish town [in Munster]. Being the
- autobiography of Miss Annita Lombard.” A picture of the
- pitiful failure of the United Irishmen to raise and inspirit a
- people turned to mean, timid, and crawling slaves by ages of
- oppression. Thad Lombard, sacrificing fortune, home, happiness,
- and at last his life for the Lost Land, is a noble figure. The
- book is a biting and powerful satire upon various types of
- anglicized or vulgar or pharisaical Catholicism (the author is
- a Catholic). The whole is a picture of unrelieved gloom. The
- style, beautiful, and often poetic, but deepens the sadness.
- Thad Lombard, a hundred years before the time, pursues the
- ideals of the Gaelic League. Period: _c._ 1780-1797.
-
-
-=CROWE, Eyre Evans=, 1799-1868. Though born in England, this
-distinguished historian and journalist was of Irish origin, and was
-educated at Trinity. In BLACKWOOD he first published several of his Irish
-novels. Though imperfectly acquainted with the art of a novelist this
-writer is often correct and happy in his descriptions and historical
-summaries. Like Banim he has ventured on the stormy period of 1798, and
-has been more minute than his great rival in sketching the circumstances
-of the rebellion.—(Chambers’s _Cyclopædia of English Literature_).
-
-⸺ TO-DAY IN IRELAND. Three Vols. (LONDON: _Knight_). 1825.
-
- Four stories:—1. “The Carders.” 2. “Connemara.” 3. “Old and
- New Light.” 4. “The O’Toole’s Warning.” The scene of 1 is
- “Rathfinnan,” on Lough Ree, not far from Athlone. It is a very
- dark picture of the secret societies and of the peasants in
- general, but an equally merciless picture of certain types
- of the Ascendancy class, notably a Protestant curate and
- Papist-hunter named Crosthwaite. The hero Arthur Dillon (a true
- hero of romance) is a young Catholic student of T.C.D., who
- narrowly escapes being implicated in the secret societies. He
- dreams of rebellion, and is nearly caught in the meshes of a
- villainous-plotting Jesuit. There is a love story, with a happy
- ending. 2. Is a burlesque story telling how M’Laughlin, a sort
- of King of Connemara, escaped his debtors in a coffin. Some
- smuggling episodes. Description of the fair of Ballinasloe, p.
- 196. Much about wild feudal hospitality and lawlessness. 3. Is
- a satirical study of Protestant religious life at “Ardenmore,”
- Co. Louth. “Sir Starcourt Gibbs” seems obviously intended as a
- portrait of Sir Harcourt Lees, an Evangelical Orange leader in
- Dublin in the twenties and thirties.
-
-⸺ CONNEMARA OU UMA ELEIÇÃO NA IRLANDA: Romance Irlandez tradusido por
-C[amillo] A[ureliano] da S[ilva] e S[ousa] (PORTO). 1843.
-
-⸺ YESTERDAY IN IRELAND. Three Vols., containing two long stories, viz.:
-1. “Corramahon.” Pp. 600. Large loose print.
-
- O’Mahon, an Irish Jacobite soldier of fortune, is the hero. The
- plot consists mainly of the intertwined love stories of men and
- women separated by barriers of class, creed, and nationality.
- Good picture of politics at the time. Hardships of Penal days
- illustrated (good description of Midnight Mass). Ulick O’More,
- the Rapparee, is a fine figure. Interest sustained by exciting
- incidents. Scene laid near town of Carlow.
-
-2. “The Northerns of ’98.” Pp. 367.
-
- Scene: Mid-Antrim. Adventures of various persons in ’98 (Winter
- and Orde are the chief names). Feelings and sentiments of the
- times portrayed, especially those of United Irishmen. Battle of
- Antrim described. Author leans somewhat to National side.
-
-
-=[CRUMPE, Miss].= Daughter of Dr. Crumpe (1766-1796), a famous physician
-in Limerick. According to the Madden MSS., she wrote several other novels.
-
-⸺ GERALDINE OF DESMOND; or, Ireland in the Reign of Queen Elizabeth.
-Three Vols. (LONDON: _Colburn_). 1829.
-
- Dedicated to Thomas Moore. A story of the Desmond Rebellion
- 1580-2, (battle of Monaster-ni-via, the massacre of Smerwick,
- &c.) with, as personages in the story, the chief historical
- figures of the time:—the Desmonds and Ormonds, Fr. Allen,
- S.J., Sanders, Sir Henry Sidney, Sir William Drury, Dr.
- Dee the Astrologer, Queen Elizabeth herself. The Author has
- worked into the slight framework of her story an elaborate and
- careful picture of the times, the fruit, she tells us, of years
- of study and research. As a result the romance is overlaid
- and well-nigh smothered with erudition, apart even from the
- learned notes appended to each volume. The Author is obviously
- inspired by a great love and enthusiasm for Ireland, and takes
- the national side thoroughly. The book is ably written, but
- resembles rather a treatise than a novel.
-
-⸺ THE DEATH FLAG; or, The Irish Buccaneers. Three Vols. (LONDON). 1851.
-
-
-=CUNINGHAME, Richard.=
-
-⸺ THE BROKEN SWORD OF ULSTER: A brief relation of the Events of one of
-the most stirring and momentous eras in the Annals of Ireland. Crown 8vo.
-(_Hodges & Figgis_). 3_s._ 6_d._ 1904.
-
- Account of chief events. Not in form of fiction. Tone somewhat
- anti-national (_cf._ authorities chiefly relied on). Moral:
- Ireland’s crowning need is to accept the teaching of St. Paul
- on charity. This is “the God-provided cure for all her woes.”
- This Author wrote also _In Bonds but Fetterless_, 1875.
-
-
-=CURTIN, Jeremiah=, 1840-1916. Born in Milwaukee, educated at Harvard.
-A distinguished American traveller, linguist, and ethnologist. Has
-translated great numbers of books from the Russian and the Polish, and
-has published many works on the folk-lore of the Russians, Magyars,
-Mongols, American Aborigines, &c. Visited Ireland in 1887 and 1891.
-
-⸺ MYTHS AND FOLK-LORE OF IRELAND. (_Sampson, Low_). 9_s._ Etched
-frontispiece. 1890.
-
- “Twenty tales” says Douglas Hyde (Pref. to _Beside the Fire_),
- “told very well, and with much less cooking and flavouring
- than his predecessors employed.” The tales were got from
- Gaelic speakers through an interpreter (Mr. Curtin knowing
- not a word of Gaelic). Beyond this fact he does not tell us
- where, from whom, or how he collected the stories. Dr. Hyde
- says again, “From my own knowledge of Folk-lore, such as it
- is, I can easily recognise that Mr. Curtin has approached the
- fountain-head more nearly than any other.”
-
-⸺ HERO TALES OF IRELAND, collected by. Pp. lii. + 558. (_Macmillan_).
-7_s._ 6_d._ 1894.
-
- Learned introduction speculates on origin of myths of primitive
- races. Compares Gaelic myths with those of other races,
- especially North American Indians. Contends that the characters
- in the tales are personifications of natural forces and the
- elements, and that the tales themselves in their earliest form
- give man’s primitive ideas of the creation, &c. The volume
- consists of twenty-four folk-lore stories dealing chiefly with
- heroes of the Gaelic cycles. Not interesting in themselves, and
- with much sameness in style, matter, and incident. There is
- some naturalistic coarseness here and there, and the tone in
- some places is vulgar. The stories were told to the Author by
- Kerry, Connemara, and Donegal peasants, whose names are given
- in a note on p. 549.
-
-⸺ TALES OF THE FAIRIES AND OF THE GHOST WORLD. Pp. ix. + 198. (_Nutt_).
-1895.
-
- Preface by Alfred Nutt. This collection supplements the two
- previous collections. It is collected from oral tradition
- chiefly in S.-W. Munster. Illustrates the present-day belief
- of the peasantry in ghosts, fairies, &c. There are thirty
- tales, many of them new. A good number of them are, of course,
- grotesque and extravagant. They contain nothing objectionable,
- but obviously are hardly suitable for children.
-
-
-=CURTIS, Robert.=
-
-⸺ THE IRISH POLICE OFFICER. Pp. vii. + 216. (_Ward, Lock_). 1861.
-
- Six short stories, reprinted from DUBLIN UNIVERSITY MAGAZINE,
- entitled “The Identification,” “The Banker of Ballyfree,” “The
- Reprieve,” “The Two Mullanys,” “M’Cormack’s Grudge,” “How ‘The
- Chief’ was Robbed.” They deal chiefly with remarkable trials in
- Ireland. “They are all founded upon facts which occurred within
- my own personal knowledge; and for the accuracy of which not
- only I, but others, can vouch.”—(Pref.). Author was Inspector
- of Police, and published (1869) _The History of the R.I.C._ and
- _The Trial of Captain Alcohol_. Pp. 48. (_McGlashan & Gill_).
- 1871.
-
-⸺ RORY OF THE HILLS. Pp. 356. Post 8vo. (_Duffy_). 2_s._ [1870]. Still in
-print.
-
- A faithful and sympathetic picture of the peasant life and
- manners at the time (early nineteenth century). The Author,
- a police officer, has drawn on his professional experiences.
- The tale, founded on fact, is an edifying one despite the
- unrelieved villainy of Tom Murdock. The influence of religion
- is felt throughout, especially in the heroic charity of the
- heroine even towards the murderer of her lover. Peasant speech
- reproduced to the life.
-
-
-=CURRAN, H. G.= (1800-1876). Natural son of John Philpot Curran, and a
-barrister.
-
-⸺ CONFESSIONS OF A WHITEFOOT. Pp. 306. (_Bentley_). (Edited by G. C. H.,
-Esq., B.L.). 1844.
-
- The supposed teller began as a supporter of “law and order,”
- but the conviction of the abuses of landlordism is forced upon
- him by experience and observation, and he ends by joining the
- secret society of the Whitefeet. He makes no secret of the
- crimes of this body, and many of them are described in the
- course of the narrative.
-
-
-=CUSACK, Mary Frances=, known as “The Nun of Kenmare.” Originally a
-Protestant, she became a Catholic and a Poor Clare. From her convent
-in Kenmare she issued quite a library of books on many subjects—Irish
-history, general and local, Irish biography, stories, poems, works of
-piety and of instruction. Subsequently she left her convent, went to
-America, and reverted to Protestantism. Died Leamington, 1899, aged 70.
-She has published her autobiography.
-
-⸺ NED RUSHEEN; or, Who Fired the First Shot? Pp. 373. (_Burns & Oates._
-BOSTON: _Donahoe_). Four rather mediocre Illus. 1871.
-
- A murder mystery. The hero is wrongly accused, but is acquitted
- in the end. The real culprit (scapegrace son of the victim,
- Lord Elmsdale) confesses when dying. The mystery is well kept
- up to the end. Indeed, the explanation of it is by no means
- clear, even at the close. The moral purpose is kept prominently
- before the reader throughout. Tone strongly religious and
- Catholic, the Protestant religion being more than once
- compared, to its disadvantage, with the Catholic.
-
-⸺ TIM O’HALLORAN’S CHOICE; or, From Killarney to New York. Pp. 262.
-(LONDON: _Burns_). [1877]. 1878.
-
- “This little story gives a strong picture of the heroic faith,
- sufferings, and native humour of the Irish poor.”—(_Press
- Notice_). When Tim is dying a priest and a “Souper” contend for
- possession of his boy Thade. Tim is faithful to his Church,
- but after his death the boy is kidnapped by the proselytisers.
- He escapes, and is sheltered by a good Catholic named O’Grady.
- Subsequently he finds favour with a rich American, who takes
- him off to New York.
-
-
-=D’ARBOIS DE JUBAINVILLE, Henri.= Born in Nancy, 1827. Died 1910.
-Educated in École des Chartes. A biographical notice of him, followed
-by a bibliography of his works, will be found in the _Revue Celtique_
-(Vol. 32, p. 456, 1911), which he edited for many years. The list of his
-works contains 238 items, the greater number of which concern Celts.
-Perhaps rather more than half deal with Ireland. They include a _Cours
-de Littérature Celtique_ in 12 vols., a history of the Celts, a work on
-the Irish mythological cycle, and a catalogue of the epic literature of
-Ireland. That on the Irish mythological cycle has been well translated by
-R. I. Best (_Hodges & Figgis_). 1903. Pp. xv. + 240.
-
-
-=D’ARCY, Hal.=
-
-⸺ A HANDFUL OF DAYS. Pp. 319. (_Long_). 6_s._ 1914.
-
- “How John O’Grady left his irritating wife and selfish children
- to revisit the home of his fathers in I. for a short time;
- how he met ... Mary O’Connor ...; how he fell in love, and
- told her so—forgetting to mention the irritating wife, &c....
- The picture of the old Irish priest, Mary’s uncle, is the one
- redeeming feature of a mawkish, unsatisfactory tale.”—(T. LITT.
- SUPPL.). This fairly describes the story. Non-Catholic, but not
- prejudiced. Scene: Glendalough.
-
-
-=DAMANT, Mary.= The Author is a daughter of General Chesney, the Asiatic
-explorer.
-
-⸺ PEGGY. Pp. 405. (_Allen_). 1887.
-
- _Domestic_ life in North Antrim previous to, and during, the
- Rebellion of 1798. “Many of the facts of my little tale were
- told me in childhood by those, whose recollection of the rising
- was rendered vivid by desolate homes, loss of relations,
- &c.”—(Pref.). Eschews historical or political questions.
- Favourable to “poor deluded peasants.” Thinks little of United
- Irishmen who are “imbued with the poison of revolutionary
- principles.” Well and pleasantly written in autobiographical
- form.
-
-
-=DAUNT, Alice O’Neill=, 1848-1915. Was the only daughter of W. J. O’Neill
-Daunt. Contributed to THE LAMP, IRELAND’S OWN, and other magazines. She
-wrote many little stories, as serials or in book form, for the most part
-religious (Catholic) and didactic.
-
-⸺ EVA; or, as the Child, so the Woman. Pp. 107. 16mo. (_Richardson_).
-1_s._ 1882.
-
- One of a little series of Catholic Tales for the young. A sad
- little story, full of piety. Scene in Ireland, but the story is
- not specially Irish in any way.
-
-
-=DAUNT, W. J. O’Neill.= Born in Tullamore, 1807. Son of Joseph Daunt, of
-Ballyneen, Cork. Became a Catholic about 1827. Was in Repeal Association
-from the first, and remained to the end one of O’Connell’s most loyal
-co-operators. Died 1894. His biography has been published under the
-title, _A Life Spent for Ireland_, 1896.
-
-⸺ SAINTS AND SINNERS. Two Vols. aftds. One Vol. (_Duffy_). (N.Y.:
-_Pratt_). 0.50. 1843, &c.
-
- “The reader who expects in this narrative what is commonly
- called the plot, or story, of a novel will, we fairly warn
- him, be disappointed. Our object in becoming the historian of
- Howard is merely to trace the impressions produced on his mind
- by the very varied principles and notions with which he came in
- contact” (beginning of chap. xiii.). The book is, besides, a
- very satirical study of various types of Ulster Protestantism,
- and a controversial novel, reference to Scripture and to
- various Catholic authorities being frequently given in
- footnotes. The story, a slight one, moves slowly, but the
- situations have a good deal of humour.
-
-⸺ HUGH TALBOT. Pp. 473. (_Duffy_). 1846.
-
- “A Tale of the Irish confiscations of the 17th century,”
- _i.e._, the reign of James I. Scene varies between England,
- Ireland, and Scotland. Opens in 1609. Portrait of James I. No
- other historical personage. Persecution, arrest, and adventures
- of Father Hugh Talbot. Chief interest lies in the picture of
- the times, which is carefully drawn. The story, however, is
- well told, the conversations clever and fairly natural, the
- character-drawing good. The Author is strongly opposed to
- religious persecution. The Irish localities are not specified.
-
-⸺ THE GENTLEMAN IN DEBT. Pp. 339. (_Cameron & Ferguson_). 1_s._ (N.Y.:
-_Pratt_). 1.50. [1848]. 1851, &c.
-
- Adventures of a penniless young gentleman trying to get a
- position. Depicts (after Lever), first life in Galway, among
- impecunious, fox-hunting, hard-drinking, duelling squires
- (Blakes, Bodkins, and O’Carrolls); then the vapid life of
- Castle aristocracy in the Dublin of the time, with its
- place-hunting and ignoble time-serving. Incidentally (for the
- author does not moralise) we have glimpses of the working
- of the Penal laws. The story is an unexciting one of rather
- matter-of-fact courtship and of domestic intrigue. There are
- not a few amusing scenes, nothing objectionable, and little
- bias. A striking character study is that of the Rev. Julius
- Blake, who is of the tribe of Pecksniff, but with quite
- distinctive features.
-
-
-=[DEACON, W. F.].=
-
-⸺ THE EXILE OF ERIN; or, the Sorrows of a Bashful Irishman. Two Vols.
-(_Whittaker_). 1835.
-
- Early 19th century. Adventures of a villain of the worst type
- in Ireland, England, and on the Continent. Commits almost every
- conceivable crime, including bigamy and embezzlement. Acts
- every part from strolling player to journalist and political
- partisan. Tells all this in first person. Incidentally the
- book is a bitter satire on Ireland, Irish priests, Irish
- politicians. Represents the “O’Connellite rabble” as capable
- of any outrage and O’Connell himself (under the name of
- O’Cromwell) as a political adventurer. Author admits not being
- Irish.
-
-⸺ ADVENTURES OF A BASHFUL IRISHMAN. (LONDON). 1862.
-
- This is a new ed. of _The Exile of Erin; or, the Sorrows of a
- Bashful Irishman_.
-
-
-=DEASE, Alice.= Daughter of J. A. Dease, of Turbotstown, Co. Westmeath.
-Lives Simonstown, Coole, Co. Westmeath.—(CATH. WHO’S WHO).
-
-⸺ THE BECKONING OF THE WAND. Pp. 164. (_Sands_). 3_s._ 6_d._. Very
-tastefully bound. 1908. (N.Y.: _Benziger_). 1.00. Cheap edition, 1_s._
-6_d._ 1915.
-
- We are used to having depicted with painful realism all our
- faults, all the defects of Irish life on the material side.
- This little book denies none of these, but it shows another
- side of the Irish character, the deep-rooted, intense Catholic
- faith, the union with the supernatural, that brightens even the
- most squalid lives. The anecdotes, which are true, are related
- with delicate insight by one who knows and loves the people.
- There is a vivid sketch of a Lough Derg pilgrimage.
-
-⸺ OLD-TIME STORIES OF ERIN. Pp. 215. (_Browne & Nolan_). 2_s._ Illustr.
-by C. A. Mills. 1908.
-
- Sixteen old Gaelic hero legends retold in simple, lucid style
- for children. Most of them are well known: “The Wise Judgment
- of Cormac Mac Art;” “The Neck Pin of Queen Macha;” “The
- Chivalry of Goll Mac Morna,” &c.
-
-⸺ GOOD MEN OF ERIN. (_Browne & Nolan_). 2_s._ Six Illustr. 1910.
-
- Stories of a quaint legendary kind connected with nine Irish
- Saints. Prettily told.
-
-⸺ THE MARRYING OF BRYAN; and Other Stories. Pp. 83. (_Sands_). 7_d._
-Coloured frontisp. (N.Y.: _Benziger_). 0.50. Second edition. 1911.
-
- Six little tales, slight in theme, but delicately wrought. They
- are the poetry of real life, mostly Irish peasant life. A moral
- may be gleaned from each, but there is no irritating insistence
- on it. One tells how, through his love for birds and his fear
- of frightening them, a good old P.P. loses his chance of a
- canonry. Another tells of the beautiful neighbourly charity of
- the Irish peasant. Four are love stories. They are perfect of
- their kind.
-
-⸺ SOME IRISH STORIES. Pp. 96. (_C.T.S._). 6_d._ Stiff wrapper. 1912.
-
- Eight little stories similar in character and qualities to
- _Down West_, _q.v._
-
-⸺ THE LADY OF MYSTERY. Pp. 159. (_Duffy_). 2_s._ 1913.
-
- Better class Catholic family life somewhere in the
- West—O’Malleys, Dillons, Burkes. Two interwoven love-stories,
- a mystery of identity, and the story of a philanthropic
- enterprise, the Drinagh Mills. Thoroughly Catholic atmosphere
- and moral purpose.
-
-⸺ DOWN WEST, and Other Sketches of Irish Life. Pp. 119. (ROEHAMPTON: _The
-Catholic Library_). 1_s._ Preface by Sir H. Bellingham. 1914.
-
- Glimpses of real life in Connemara and Aran (described p. 48
- _sq._), dealing less with outward incidents than with the
- beauty of the people’s faith, the hardness of their lot, the
- joys and sorrows of their lives. Told with a very delicate
- suggestiveness, full of touches of humour and of feeling,
- without preaching or moralising, by one in thorough sympathy
- with the people, and alive, too, to all the influences of
- nature. The dialect is reproduced with great fidelity.
-
-
-=DEASE, Charlotte.=
-
-⸺ CHILDREN OF THE GAEL. Pp. 196. (_Washbourne_). 2_s._ 6_d._ (N.Y.:
-_Benziger_). 0.75. 1911.
-
- Eight little studies—vignettes—of Irish peasant types,
- evidently drawn direct from real life. They are in narrative
- form, but in most the incident is slight. They give curiously
- vivid glimpses of the life of the poor, of which the Author
- has intimate knowledge. The tone is Catholic and “Gaelic.” The
- Author avoids phonetic renderings of peasant dialect.
-
-
-=DEBENHAM, Mary H.=
-
-⸺ CONAN THE WONDER WORKER. Pp. 302. (_National Society_). 3_s._ 6_d._
-Four or five illustr. (N.Y.: _Whittaker_). 1902.
-
- Norway, _c._ 912-3. Conan is a Christian Scot (_i.e._,
- Irishman) who is captured by a Viking, and brought to Norway.
- In time he converts the Viking and his family. A good story for
- children and even for grown-ups.
-
-⸺ THE SHEPHERD PRIOR; and other Stories for Sunday Evenings. Pp. 252.
-(_National Society_). 2_s._ 6_d._ Four illustr. by Violet M. Smith.
-(N.Y.: _Whittaker_). 1907.
-
- Written for children in a religious vein, with a moral
- attached. Only one story deals with Ireland, “The Great
- Handwriting.” In it the conversion of the King’s daughters by
- St. Patrick is prettily told. Protestant, but not unsuited to
- Catholic children.
-
-
-=DEENEY, Daniel.=
-
-⸺ PEASANT LORE FROM GAELIC IRELAND. Second edition. Pp. 80. (_Nutt_).
-1_s._ Stiff wrapper. 1901.
-
- Relates to the Donegal Highlands and Connemara, in the latter
- of which (at Spiddal, I believe) the writer taught Irish.
- Consists of illustrations of the peasants’ belief in the
- preternatural world of spirits and fairies and influences,
- with examples of common superstitious practices. The writer,
- if he does not share these beliefs, at least is very far from
- despising them. “The majority of them [the items included]
- were related to me in the broken English of a Western
- peasant”—(Introd.). The book is chiefly interesting to
- folk-lorists.
-
- The same Author’s _Tales and Superstitions of the Connaught
- Peasants_. (_Nutt_), 1_s._, 1901, is a collection similar to
- the preceding.
-
-
-=DENANCE, L. V.=
-
-⸺ O’SULLIVAN, DERNIÈRE INSURRECTION DE L’IRLANDE. Pp. 130. (LIMOGES:
-_Ardant et Thibant_). 1874?
-
- Historical introd. very favourable to Ireland. Scene of story:
- Cork. Relates incidents of ’98, including French expedition.
- Told by O’S. himself, part of whose adventures take place in
- Africa. The last page brings him back to Ireland.
-
-
-=DENNY, Madge E.=
-
-⸺ IRISH TOWN AND COUNTRY TALES. Pp. 232. (_Sealy, Bryers_). 1_s._ An ugly
-cover.
-
- Pleasant little tales, some of them humorous, written in a
- light, breezy style. Many of them deal with love and courtship,
- and are sentimental enough, but not in the least objectionable.
-
-
-=DENVIR, John.= Born 1834. Lived nearly all his life in England
-(Liverpool, London, and Birmingham). Throughout his long career has never
-ceased to work for Ireland. Conducted for some years the CATHOLIC TIMES.
-Publ. _The Irish in England_ and his own autobiography, _The Life Story
-of an Old Rebel_ (1910), new ed., 1914. He is still living in London. He
-has publ. there a considerable number of popular books about Ireland,
-including “Denver’s Irish Library,” booklets at a penny each.
-
-⸺ THE BRANDONS: a Story of Irish life in England. Pp. 153. (_Denver’s
-Irish Library_). 2_s._ 6_d._ Paper 1_s._ 1903.
-
- An Italian carbonaro tragedy that by a strange combination of
- circumstances comes into a peaceful back water of Liverpool,
- Homer’s Gardens, and mingles with the lives of its Irish
- inhabitants. A romantic interest is added by the love of
- Hugh and Jack Brandon for Rose Aylmer. Jack’s self-sacrifice
- is rewarded in the end. There are several pleasant Irish
- characters besides Hugh and Jack—Father MacMahon, genial,
- generous, and fatherly; Mick Muldowney and his wife, rough
- customers enough, but always cheery, and willing to share their
- last crust with anyone in need.
-
-⸺ OLAF THE DANE. Pp. 103. (_Sealy, Bryers_). 6_d._ Paper.
-
- Scene: Donegal. Extraordinary story, full of sensational
- incidents. It turns chiefly on a prophecy made in the ninth
- century about men then living, which is fulfilled in their
- descendants of the nineteenth century. One of these latter
- is endowed with supernatural powers. There are some pretty
- faithful pictures of the peasantry.
-
-
-=[DERENZY, M. G.].=
-
-⸺ THE OLD IRISH KNIGHT: a Milesian Tale of the Fifth Century. Pp. 186.
-(LONDON: _Poole & Edwards_). 1828.
-
- By the Author of _A Whisper to a Newly-married Pair_,
- _Parnassian Geography_, &c. In spite of an apparent effort to
- be archæologically correct the book is full of rather absurd
- anachronisms. There are already in Ireland abbeys with long
- lines of arches, there is talk of the finest organ in Europe
- being purchased for one of them, and so on. The story does not
- hang together. It is merely a string of disjointed incidents,
- most of them wholly improbable.
-
-
-=D’ESPARBÈS, Georges.=
-
-⸺ LE BRISEUR DE FERS. Pp. 316. (PARIS: _Louis-Michaud_). 3_fr._10.
-[1908]. New edition, 1911.
-
- Dedication (to Colonel Arthur Lynch), and Preface (telling
- about the erection of the Humbert Memorial at Ballina).
- Humbert’s invasion told in impassioned and somewhat high-flown
- language. Describes some of the episodes with extraordinary
- vividness. Based mainly on reliable works, but not strictly
- historical. The Author is a distinguished writer, and very
- prolific, having produced a long series of novels, volumes of
- verse, &c. Born 1863 in the department of Tarn-et-Garonne.
-
-
-=DEVINE, D. C.= Is a native of Tubbercurry, Co. Sligo, where at present
-he is a National School Teacher. Is a man of about 45.
-
-⸺ FAITHFUL EVER, and Other Tales. Pp. 280. (_Duffy_). 2_s._ 1910.
-
- Eleven stories of Sligo peasant life. The Author has thorough
- sympathy with the aspects of life about which he writes. Three
- of the tales are love stories, one is a story of ’67, others
- are humorous, _e.g._, “Meehaul M’Cann’s Wooing.” We have a
- glimpse of the dance, the pattern, rustic courtship, lake and
- mountain scenery. The Author avoids politics, but the Catholic
- atmosphere is pronounced, throughout. The literary standard is,
- perhaps, not of a high order.
-
-⸺ BEFORE THE DAWN IN ERIN. Pp. 308. (_Duffy_). 2_s._ [1913]. Second
-edition. 1914.
-
- A story of landlord, agent, and tenant in the County Sligo,
- about the eighteen thirties or forties, bringing out what a
- hostile agent can do to make the lot of the peasants a very
- hard one, and showing how in the end his machinations are
- brought to nought thanks to Father Pat. This latter and Father
- Tom are fine types of Irish priests. The Author has a good eye
- for characters and a keen sense of humour.
-
-
-=DILLON, Patricia.= Born in Dublin. Educated chiefly in France. Has lived
-most of her life in London. Has written for periodicals on historical
-subjects for the most part.
-
-⸺ EARL OR CHIEFTAIN. Pp. 140. (_C.T.S. of Ireland_). 1_s._ 1910.
-
- The opening career of Hugh O’Neill looked at on its romantic
- side, including his marriage with Mabel Bagenal. Other historic
- characters appear in the tale, notably Feagh MacHugh O’Byrne.
-
-
-=DODGE, W. P.=
-
-⸺ THE CRESCENT MOON. Pp. 125. (_Long_). 1_s._ 6_d._ 1911.
-
- A little love story, told skilfully enough in letters from
- Sir Desmond Fitzgerald to his brother in S. Africa.—[T. LIT.
- SUPPL.].
-
-
-=DOLLARD, Rev. J. B.=
-
-⸺ THE GAELS OF MOONDHARRIG. Pp. 124. (_Sealy, Bryers_). 6_d._
-
- A collection of pleasant, breezy tales of the exploits,
- especially in hurling, of the young men of Moondharrig (South
- Kilkenny), showing an intimate knowledge and love of the people
- of the author’s native place. An unobtrusive spirit of piety
- runs through it.
-
-
-=DORSEY, Anna Hanson.=[3] Born Georgetown, D.C., 1815. Received into the
-Catholic Church, 1840. She is a pioneer of Catholic light literature
-in the States. Nearly all her stories—there are more than thirty of
-them—have a religious purpose, but as a rule this is not too much forced
-on the reader. She was a Laetare medallist, described as the highest
-honour the Church in America can bestow. Some titles of her books
-are—_Tears on the Diadem_, _Dummy_, _Tangled Paths_, _Warp and Woof_, and
-her last _Palms_, which was by many considered her best.
-
-[3] Her daughter, Ella Loraine Dorsey, has written even more than Mrs. A.
-H. Dorsey, and is one of the most prominent figures in American Catholic
-literature.
-
-⸺ THE HEIRESS OF CARRIGMONA. Pp. 381. (BOSTON: _Murphy_). Third thousand.
-(_Washbourne_). 4_s._ 1910.
-
- Scene: Co. Wicklow and Western U.S.A. Chiefly concerned
- with the fortunes of an Irish peasant family named Travers,
- especially the son, who goes to America, gets into trouble,
- is rescued, and then⸺. A strong warning against emigration
- is conveyed in this latter part of the story. Mrs. Dorsey’s
- peasants here, as usual, are lifelike and interesting. Their
- best qualities—trust in Providence, resignation under trial,
- piety, self-sacrifice—are well brought out. The brogue is not
- overdone. Anti-Irish characters are represented as mean and
- hypocritical.
-
-⸺ MONA THE VESTAL. Pp. 163-324. (N.Y.: _Christian Press Association
-Publishing Co._). _n.d._
-
- Bound in same vol. as “Norah Brady’s Vow” and under latter
- title. An endeavour to place the heroic virtues of new
- Christians in contrast with the decaying Druidic paganism. The
- writer claims the Abbé McGeoghegan’s authority (also that of
- Mooney and Carey) for her descriptions of the Ireland of the
- time. But, with the exception of the incident of Patrick’s
- arrival at Tara, the story and its setting are purely imaginary
- and ideal. The Druids worship in vast temples with long
- corridors and fine carvings. Tara is a great city of marble
- palaces.
-
-⸺ NORA BRADY’S VOW. Pp. 160. (N.Y.: _Christian Press Association
-Publishing Co._). 0.50. _n.d._
-
- Nora is only a servant girl, but is, without suspecting it,
- a true heroine. But she is no saint, and has a sharp tongue
- in her head. Her witty sallies are cleverly reproduced. The
- author tells us that Nora was a “real and living person.” John
- Halloran takes part in the rising of ’48, and is obliged to
- fly to America. Nora vows not to settle down in life until the
- fortunes of the Hallorans are restored. She goes to America,
- works to support the family, which has been ruined by an
- informer, and at length finds Halloran and reunites the family
- once more. Scene: near Holy Cross Abbey on the Suir; afterwards
- Boston. On the whole the tone and style are very emotional, but
- with an emotion that rings true. This is relieved by not a few
- gleams of pleasant humour. Irish dialect well done. Sympathy
- strongly national.
-
-⸺ THE OLD HOUSE AT GLENARAN. (N.Y.: _Benziger_). 0.80. In print.
-(_Washbourne_). 4_s._
-
-
-=DOTTIN, Henry Georges.= Born 1863 in France. Prof. of Greek Lit. (1905)
-at the University of Rennes. Has contributed to learned reviews and has
-published several learned works, _La religion des Celtes_, 1903; _La
-Bretagne et le Culte du passé_, 1903.
-
-⸺ CONTES IRLANDAIS TRADUITS DU GAËLIQUE. Pp. 274. (_Rennes_). 1901.
-
- Tales, thirty-five in number, collected in Connaught and
- republished from the “Annales de Bretagne,” tome x.
-
- N.B.—A book with the title of “Contes Irlandais” was published
- by Messrs. Gill, of Dublin, 70 pp., 4to, 7_s._ 6_d._ It
- consists of extracts from the untranslated portion of Douglas
- Hyde’s “Leabhar Sgeuluigheachta” translated into French by M.
- Georges Dottin, with the original Irish text in Roman letters
- on the opposite page.
-
-⸺ CONTES ET LÉGENDES D’IRLANDE. Pp. 218. (_Le Havre_). 3_fr._ 50. 1901.
-
- See previous item. Thirty-eight tales translated from Irish
- texts, published without translation in the Gaelic Journal
- since 1882. Collected in all parts of Ireland, _e.g._, Les
- exploits de Fion MacCumhail et de son géant Seachrin. Fion
- MacCumhail et son pouce de science. Le Gobán Saor et Saint
- Moling. La belle fille rusée du Gobán Saor. Le trèfle à quatre
- feuilles, &c.
-
-
-=DOUGLAS, James.= Born in Belfast of a Tyrone family. Is assistant
-editor and literary critic of the London STAR. Author of _The Man in the
-Pulpit_, _Adventures in London_, &c. Contributes to ATHENÆUM, BOOKMAN, &c.
-
-⸺ THE UNPARDONABLE SIN. Pp. x + 418. 6_s._ (_Grant Richards_). 1907.
-
- Falls into two parts. Part I. describes upbringing of a boy
- in Belfast (Bigotsborough). Pictures sectarian hatred leading
- to riots, in one of which, vividly described, the hero loses
- a little brother. Other characters finely portrayed are “Jane
- the Nailor” and the then Head Master of the Model School (“the
- Castle”). In Part II. the boy has become a great preacher. All
- London flocks to hear him, but he is beset with doubts and
- difficulties. W. B. Yeats and Miss Maud Gonne are introduced
- under thinly disguised names. The first part has been called by
- editor of I. B. L. “the finest delineation of Belfast boyhood
- ever penned.” The second part has been not inaptly described as
- “the dream of an opium-eater.”
-
-
-=DOWLING, Richard.= Born in Clonmel, Co. Tipperary, 1846. Educated St.
-Munchin’s, Limerick. Much of his life was passed in journalistic work,
-first for the NATION, then for London papers. He edited the short-lived
-comic papers ZOZIMUS and YORICK, and was a leading spirit in another,
-IRELAND’S EYE. In 1879 came his Irish romance, _The Mystery of Killard_;
-but he found that there was no public at the time for Irish novels, so he
-devoted himself to writing sensational stories for the English public.
-He published some delightful volumes of essays, _Ignorant Essays_ and
-_Indolent Essays_. These deal with all kinds of subjects in a quaint,
-humorous, fanciful vein. Other novels—_The Sport of Fate_, _Under St.
-Paul’s_, _The Weird Sisters_, &c., seventeen or so in all.
-
-⸺ THE MYSTERY OF KILLARD. Pp. 357. (_Tinsley Bros._) [1879]. New edition,
-1884.
-
- A tale of the Clare coast and its fishing population (drawn
- with much skill and fidelity) half a century back. The story
- centres in a mysterious and romantic rock unapproachable by sea
- and connected with the land by a single rope only. There is a
- mysterious owner, or rather a series of them, and mysterious
- gold. But the central idea of the book (one of the most
- original in literature, it has been justly called) is the study
- of a deaf-mute who, by brooding on his own misfortune, grows to
- envy and then to hate his own child, because the child can hear
- and speak.
-
-⸺ SWEET INNISFAIL. Three Vols. (_Tinsley_). 1882.
-
- Scene: chiefly the neighbourhood of Clonmel. The interest is
- mainly in the plot, which is full of dramatic adventure and of
- movement, without any very serious study of Irish character.
-
-⸺ OLD CORCORAN’S MONEY. Pp. 310. (_Chatto & Windus_). Crown 8vo. Cloth.
-3_s._ 6_d._ 1897.
-
- Money is stolen from an old miser. The interest of the
- complicated plot centres in the detection of the thief. Clever
- sketches of life in a southern town. Characters carefully and
- faithfully drawn, especially Head-Constable Cassidy, R.I.C.
-
-⸺ ZOZIMUS PAPERS. (N.Y.: _Kenedy_). 38 cents net. 1909.
-
- “A series of comic and sentimental tales and legends of
- Ireland.” The title is most misleading. There are six pages of
- an introduction dealing with Michael Moran, a famous Dublin
- “character,” nicknamed Zozimus. The rest of the book consists
- of a series of stories by Carleton, Lover, Lever, Barrington,
- &c. The contents have nothing to do with Dowling nor with the
- famous periodical ZOZIMUS.
-
-
-=DOWNE, Walmer.=
-
-⸺ BY SHAMROCK AND HEATHER. Pp. 325. (_Digby, Long_). 1898.
-
- Scene: mainly in Ards of Down, near Strangford Lough, but
- shifts to Edinburgh, London, and Capetown. Theme: an American
- girl visiting her father’s native place in Ireland. Consists
- largely of gossip about the characters introduced, not rising
- above this level. The writer likes Ireland and the Irish,
- but knows little of them. There is an air of unreality and
- improbability about the whole book. Some prejudice against
- Church of Ireland clergymen is displayed.
-
-
-=DOWNEY, Edmund; “F. M. Allen.”= Born (1856) and educated in Waterford.
-Being the son of a shipbroker, he came to know well the various sea types
-that frequent a port. Went to London at twenty-two, and became partner
-in the firm of Ward and Downey. Retired in 1890, and in 1894 founded
-Downey & Co. Both of these firms, especially the latter, did a great deal
-for the publishing of Irish books. His writings are many and varied.
-They include humorous sketches, extravaganzas, sea stories, fairy tales,
-sensational stories, a biography of Lever, a volume of reminiscences, and
-a history of Waterford, and the two novels, _Clashmore_ and the _Merchant
-of Killogue_. He at present carries on a publishing business in Waterford.
-
-⸺ IN ONE TOWN. (_Ward & Downey_). 2_s._ [1884].
-
- A seafarer’s life ashore. Scene: a port not unlike Waterford.
- Many portraits of old salts, &c., drawn from life. Some
- descriptions of scenery. “By turns romantic, pathetic, and
- humorous”—(Review).
-
-⸺ ANCHOR WATCH YARNS. Pp. 315. (_Downey_). [1884]. Seventh edition. _n.d._
-
- Yarns told in a quaint nautical lingo by old salts around the
- inn fire in a seaport town. The characters of the tellers
- are very cleverly brought out in the telling. Full of humour
- without mere farce.
-
-⸺ THROUGH GREEN GLASSES. (_Ward & Downey_). Various prices from 6_s._ to
-6_d._ [1887]. Many editions since.
-
- This now famous book belongs to the same class as the
- _Comic History of England_, but its humour is much superior
- in quality. It consists of a series of historical or
- pseudo-historical episodes purporting to be related by a
- humorous Waterford countryman, Dan Banim, as seen from his
- point of view. Kings and princes, saints and ancient heroes,
- all play their parts in the delightful comedy, and talk in the
- broadest brogue. “From Portlaw to Paradise,” one of the best
- known, may be taken as a type. King James’s escape after the
- Boyne is also admirably done.
-
-⸺ THE VOYAGE OF THE ARK. (_Ward & Downey_). 1_s._ [1888]. Several
-editions since.
-
- The scriptural narrative of Noah and the Ark is made the basis
- for a series of farcical episodes related in brogue.
-
-⸺ FROM THE GREEN BAG. (_Ward & Downey_). 2_s._ 6_d._ and 1_s._ 1889.
-
- More stories by “Dan Banim,” like those in _Through Green
- Glasses_. The Pope and St. Patrick, Horatius and Julius Cæsar
- figure in the stories. We cannot see that these stories are
- “irreverent” in any serious sense, though they have sometimes
- been taxed with irreverence.
-
-⸺ BRAYHARD. (_Ward & Downey_). 2_s._ 6_d._ 1890.
-
- Extravaganza founded on legends of the Seven Champions of
- Christendom. Full of jokes, repartees, and comic situations.
-
-⸺ CAPTAIN LANAGAN’S LOG. (_Ward & Downey_). 2_s._ (N.Y.: _Pratt_). 1.75.
-1891, and since.
-
- Story of an Irish-Canadian lad who runs away to sea, and goes
- through all sorts of adventures full of excitement and fun.
-
-⸺ GREEN AS GRASS. (_Chatto & Windus_). 3_s._ 6_d._ (N.Y.: _Pratt_). 1.75.
-1892.
-
- More “Dan Banim” stories. The first, running to 160 pages, is
- a humorous account of Dermot MacMurrough’s love affair with
- Devorgilla, and his betrayal of Ireland. Another tells how the
- Earl of Kildare found out that Lambert Simnel was an imposter
- by the latter’s skill in cooking griddle cakes.
-
-⸺ THE ROUND TOWER OF BABEL. (_Ward & Downey_). 1_s._ Several editions;
-first, 1892.
-
- Further adventures in foreign parts of descendants of the Co.
- Waterford voyagers in the Ark.
-
-⸺ THE LAND-SMELLER. (_Ward & Downey_). [1892], and several editions since.
-
- Yarns of sea-captains.
-
-⸺ THE MERCHANT OF KILLOGUE: a Munster Tale. Three Vols. (_Heinemann_).
-1894.
-
- The Author’s first attempt at serious fiction, and one of his
- finest works.
-
-⸺ BALLYBEG JUNCTION. Pp. 276. (_Downey_). Very well illustr. by John F.
-O’Hea. (N.Y.: _Pratt_). 1.75. 1895.
-
- A comedy of southern Irish life, full of fun, without farcical
- exaggeration, and true to reality.
-
-⸺ PINCHES OF SALT. Pp. 246. (_Downey_). 3_s._ 6_d._ 1895.
-
- Nine Irish tales, mostly humorous, not told in dialect; full
- of keen observation of Irish life.—(Review). “The Eviction at
- Ballyhack,” and “The Viceroy’s Visit” are among the best.
-
-⸺ GLIMPSES OF ENGLISH HISTORY. (_Downey_). 3_s._ 6_d._ Illustr. by J. F.
-Sullivan. 1901.
-
- Versions of episodes in English History told by “Dan Banim” in
- his usual dialect.
-
-⸺ THE LITTLE GREEN MAN. Pp. 152. (_Downey_). Illustr. very tastefully by
-Brinsley Lefanu.
-
- The pranks of the Leprechaun and his dealings with his human
- friend Denis. A delightful fairy-tale, told with a purpose,
- which does not take anything from its interest.
-
-⸺ CLASHMORE. Pp. 406. (WATERFORD: _Downey_). 1_s._ [1903]. New edition.
-1909.
-
- A tale of a mystery centering in the strange disappearance of
- Lord Clashmore and his agent. The story is healthy in tone, and
- never flags. There is a pleasant love interest. The dénouement
- is of an original and unexpected kind. The scene is the
- neighbourhood of Tramore and Dunmore, Co. Waterford. There is
- little or no study of national problems or national life, but
- some shrewd remarks about things Irish are scattered here and
- there in the book. The characters are not elaborately studied,
- but are well drawn.
-
-⸺ DUNLEARY: Humours of a Munster Town. Pp. 323. (_Sampson, Low_). 6_s._
-1911.
-
- Fourteen capital yarns told with great verve and go just for
- the sake of the story. They are all humorous, just avoiding
- uproarious farce. The personages of the stories are the various
- queer types to be met with in a small southern port:—the
- convivial spirits in the local semi-genteel club, those of
- lower degree who foregather in the bar parlour of the “Dragon,”
- the rival editors of the local papers, the candidates for the
- harbour mastership, the skippers of the Dunleary steam-packet
- company, the professional jail-bird—Micky Malowney, and
- the “general play boy” Jeremiah Maguire. There is no stage
- Irishism, and no politics. Dunleary is, of course, W—rf—d.
-
-
-=DOYLE, J. J.=
-
-⸺ CATHAIR CONROI, and other Tales. (_Sealy, Bryers_). 6_d._
-
- Written for the Oireachtas, 1902, and now translated by the
- Author from his own Irish original. They are for the most part
- Munster folk-lore.
-
-
-=“DOYLE, Lynn”; Leslie A. Montgomery.= Born Downpatrick, Co. Down.
-Educated at Educational Institution, Dundalk. Has written a successful
-play, “Love and Land.” Is a bank-manager, residing at Skerries, Co.
-Dublin.
-
-⸺ BALLYGULLION. Pp. 249. (_Maunsel_). 6_s._ Handsome cover. 1908. Cheap
-edition. 1_s._ 1915.
-
- A dozen stories supposed to be told by one Pat Murphy, in
- the humorous brogue affected by country story-tellers. Comic
- character and incident in neighbourhood of Northern town.
- Considerably above the usual books of comic sketches. A good
- example of the humour is “The Creamery Society”—the visit of
- the Department’s expert, and his failure to make butter from
- whitewash, and the difficulties that arise incidentally between
- Nationalists and Orangemen, followed by Father Connolly’s
- famous speech. Perhaps “Father Con’s Card-table” ought to have
- been omitted.
-
-
-=[DOYLE, M.]; “M. E. T.”=
-
-⸺ EXILED FROM ERIN. Pp. 266. (_Duffy_). _n.d._ (N.Y.: _Benziger_). 0.45.
-
- A homely, pleasant tale relating the pathetic life-story of two
- brothers of the peasant class. The scene of the first part of
- the tale is laid in Shankill, Vale of Shanganagh, Co. Dublin,
- afterwards it changes to Wales, and then to America. The Author
- tells us that his story is a true one, and that his endeavour
- throughout has been to draw a faithful and sympathetic picture
- of the life of the humbler classes. The sorrow and misfortune
- of emigration is feelingly rendered.
-
-
-=“DRAKE, Miriam”=; =Mrs. Clarke=, _née_ =Marion Doak= (_q.v._). Born
-Dromard, Co. Down.
-
-
-=DREISER, Theodore.=
-
-⸺ JENNIE GERHART. (_Harper_). 6_s._ $1.35. 1911.
-
- “A piece of industrial realism, inartistic and undramatic, but
- thoroughly honest and full of serious thought. The fortunes
- of two immigrant families, German and Irish, are contrasted.
- Jennie is the daughter of the unsuccessful German, and falls
- a victim to the pleasure-loving son of the enterprising
- Irishman, who illustrates the dangers of our ... social
- organization.”—(_Baker_ 2).
-
-
-=DROHOJOWSKA, Mme. la Comtesse.=
-
-⸺ RÉCITS DU FOYER, LÉGENDES IRLANDAISES, SCÈNES DE MŒURS. Pp. 208.
-(PARIS: _Josse_). 1861.
-
- Introd. very favourable to Ireland, but based on insufficient
- and not first-hand information. It dwells chiefly on Irish
- religious faith; also on superstition in Ireland. Then come the
- legends—King Laura Lyngsky, Glendalough (King O’Toole’s Goose),
- Donaghoo (a learned schoolmaster, who found a gold mine); King
- O’Donoghue (Killarney), Grace O’Malley and Queen Elizabeth,
- The King of Claddagh, John O’Glyn (a fisherman who marries a
- mermaid, and joins her in the sea), James Lynch, &c.
-
-
-=DUFF GORDON, Lady.=
-
-⸺ STELLA AND VANESSA. Trans. (_Ward, Lock_). [1850: _Bentley_]. 1859.
-
- Days of Swift, _c._ 1730. From the French of Léon de Wailly.
- The scene is laid entirely in Ireland. The story opens at
- Laracor. Swift is, of course, one of the central figures.
-
-
-=DUGGAN, Ruby M.=
-
-⸺ ONLY A LASS. Pp. 169. (_Sealy, Bryers_). 6_d._ Paper.
-
- A sensational story with nothing really Irish about it. The
- only Irish character is almost a caricature.
-
-
-=DUNBAR, Aldis.=
-
-⸺ THE SONS O’ CORMAC; an’ Tales of other Men’s Sons. Pp. x. + 240.
-(_Longmans_). 6_s._ Eight illustr. by Myra Luxmoore. 1904.
-
- “Some of the old heroic legends retold by a humorous Irishman
- for children.”—(_Baker_). The stories (there are twelve) are
- very clever, picturesque, and, like all good tales of faërie,
- full of unconscious poetry.—_I.E.R._
-
-
-=DUNN, Joseph.=
-
-⸺ THE ANCIENT IRISH EPIC TALE: TÁIN BO CUALGNE, THE CUALGNE CATTLE RAID.
-Now for the first time done entire into English out of the Irish of the
-Book of Leinster and allied Manuscripts. Pp. xxxvi. + 382. Demy 8vo.
-(_Nutt_). 25_s._ 1914.
-
- Pref., on Irish Epic in general, and on the Táin in particular.
- The Editor calls it “the wildest and most fascinating saga
- tale, not only of the entire Celtic world, but even of all
- Western Europe.” The work is a scholarly one, the various MSS.
- being carefully collated by means of marginal- and foot-notes.
- The Irish text is not given. Index of place and personal names.
- A somewhat archaic style is adopted, but this is not overdone.
- “The Táin,” says the Ed. truly, “is one of the most precious
- monuments of the world’s literature.” The Ed. is a professor in
- the Catholic University of Washington, D.C., U.S.A.
-
-
-=[DUNN, N. J.].=
-
-⸺ VULTURES OF ERIN: a Tale of the Penal Laws. Pp. 530 (N.Y.: _Kenedy_).
-1.50. One woodcut. 1884.
-
- Edward Fitzgerald is robbed of his property by his enemy,
- Templeton, who accuses him falsely of a murder instigated by
- himself. Shemus M’Andrew plots and plans to save Fitzg., but
- the latter is nevertheless condemned to death, and his wife
- loses her reason. He escapes, however, and after many years
- returns with proof of T.’s guilt. The wife recovers, and all
- ends happily. Scene: between Slieve Bouchta and Lough Derg.
- Religion not formally introduced, but Catholic bias very
- strong. Penal laws denounced, and scripture-readers appear in
- unfavourable light.
-
-
-=DUNNE, Finley Peter.=
-
-⸺ THE DOOLEY BOOKS:—
-
- 1. MR. D. IN PEACE AND WAR. (_Routledge_). Seventh edition,
- 1906.
-
- 2. MR. D.’S PHILOSOPHY. (_Heinemann_). 3_s._ 6_d._ Illustr.
- 1901.
-
- 3. MR. D.’S OPINIONS. (_Heinemann_). 3_s._ 6_d._ 1905.
-
- 4. MR. D. IN THE HEARTS OF HIS COUNTRYMEN. 1909.
-
- 5. OBSERVATIONS BY MR. D. (_Heinemann_). 3_s._ 6_d._
-
- 6. DISSERTATIONS BY MR. D. (_Harper_). 6_s._
-
- 7. MR. DOOLEY SAYS. (_Heinemann_). 3_s._ 6_d._ 1910.
-
- A series of fictitious conversations purporting to take place
- over the counter of his bar in Archey Road, a seedy Irish
- quarter of New York, between Mr. Dooley, “traveller, historian,
- social observer, saloon-keeper, economist, and philosopher,”
- who has not been out of his ward for twenty-five years “but
- twict,” and his friend Hennessy. From the cool heights of life
- in the Archey Road Mr. Dooley muses, philosophizes, moralizes
- on the events and ideas of the day. He talks in broad brogue
- (perhaps overdone), but his sayings are full of dry humour,
- and the laugh is always with him. Many of these sayings have
- the point and brevity of epigrams. No ridicule is cast on
- Irish character, with which the Author, himself an Irishman,
- obviously sympathizes. The view of politics, &c., is wholly at
- variance with that which comes to us from the English Press.
-
-
-=DUNNE, F. W.=
-
-⸺ THE PIRATE OF BOFINE: an historical romance. Three Vols. 12mo.
-(LONDON). 1832.
-
- A strange medley of melodramatic episodes. The story jumps from
- place to place in the most bewildering way, and wholly without
- warning to the reader. Scene laid in various parts of the W.
- of I. (Boffin, Galway, Bantry, &c.) in reign of Henry VIII.
- Historical characters are introduced, but without historical
- background. Style: “Know you aught of my maternal parent.”
- (Vol. III., p. 15). “Fire flashed from his eyes, and death sat
- upon his gleaming blade,” and soforth.
-
-
-=“EBLANA,”= _see_ =ROONEY=.
-
-
-=ECCLES, Charlotte O’Connor; “Hal Godfrey.”= Died 1911. Was a daughter
-of A. O’C. Eccles, of Ballingard Ho., Co. Roscommon. She wrote first for
-Irish periodicals. Later she went to London, and became a prominent lady
-journalist there. Her _The Rejuvenation of Miss Semaphore_ is a very
-clever and witty novel.
-
-⸺ ALIENS OF THE WEST. Pp. 351. (_Cassell_). 6_s._ 1904.
-
- Six stories reprinted from the AMERICAN ECCLESIASTICAL REVIEW
- (Catholic), and the PALL MALL MAGAZINE. Scene: “Toomevara,” an
- Irish country town of about 2,000 inhabitants, near Shannon
- estuary. Life in this town is depicted in a realistic and
- objective way, without moralizing, and without obtrusive
- religious or political bias. Yet there are lessons—the miseries
- of class distinctions and of social and religious cleavage; the
- disasters of education above one’s sphere (even in a convent).
- There is much pathos in the death of the peasant boy-poet, and
- in the faithfulness of the servant girl to the fallen fortunes
- of the family. A serious and earnest book.
-
-
-=EDELSTEIN, Joseph.=
-
-⸺ THE MONEYLENDER. Pp. 110. (DUBLIN: _Dollard_). Illustr. by Phil Blake.
-1908.
-
- A strangely realistic story of Jewish life in Dublin, told with
- rude power. Written by a Jew, it gives a dreadful picture of
- the life of the poor in Dublin slums, and of the misery wrought
- by the Jewish moneylender, who grows rich on their misery. The
- Jew, Levenstein, who is driven on in his evil course by desire
- to avenge the sufferings of his persecuted race is a revolting,
- yet a pathetic figure.
-
-
-=EDGE, John Henry, M.A., K.C.= Born 1841. Son of late John Dallas Edge,
-B.L. Lives in Clyde Road, Dublin.
-
-⸺ AN IRISH UTOPIA. Pp. 296. (_Hodges & Figgis_). 3_s._ 6_d._ Frontisp.,
-View of Glendalough. 1906 and 1910. Fourth ed. (_Cassell_), with fine
-portraits and interesting autobiographical introduction, 1915.
-
- “A Story of a Phase of the Land Problem.” Scene: Wicklow
- County and Shropshire, England. A slender plot, telling of the
- abortive attempt of a younger twin to oust the rightful heir
- from title and property, ending with a lawsuit in which some
- well known lawyers are introduced under slightly disguised
- names. Father O’Toole is a very pleasant character study. The
- famous “J.K.L.” Dr. Doyle, Bishop of Kildare and Leighlin,
- figures in the story. The standpoint is that of an Irish
- Conservative, without religious bias, and sympathizing with
- certain Irish grievances. Humour, pathos, and brogue are absent.
-
-⸺ THE QUICKSANDS OF LIFE. Pp. 392. (_Milne_). 6_s._ 1908.
-
- Scene: first half in England, portion of second half on
- an estate somewhere in the South of Ireland. The interest
- centres chiefly in the plot, which is complicated, a great
- many of the personages passing through quite an extraordinary
- number of vicissitudes. Though the Author is never prurient,
- a considerable number of dishonest “love” intrigues are
- introduced, treated in a matter-of-fact way as every-day
- occurrences. Of Ireland there is not very much. The land
- troubles furnish incidents for the story, but are not
- discussed. The Irish aristocracy shows up somewhat badly in
- the book. Some tributes are paid to the virtues of the Irish
- peasantry.
-
-
-=EDGEWORTH, Maria.= Scott, in his Preface to _Waverley_ (1829), speaks
-of “the extended and well-merited fame of Miss Edgeworth, whose Irish
-characters have gone so far to make the English familiar with the
-character of their gay and kind-hearted neighbours of Ireland.” And he
-continues: “Without being so presumptuous as to hope to emulate the rich
-humour, the pathetic tenderness, and admirable tact, which pervade the
-works of my accomplished friend, I felt that something might be attempted
-for my own country, of the same kind as that which Miss Edgeworth has so
-fortunately achieved for Ireland.” She came of an old County Longford
-family, but was born in England in 1767; her father was a landed
-proprietor at Edgeworthstown, Co. Longford, whose life she afterwards
-wrote. Most of her long life was spent in Ireland. She came to know the
-Irish peasantry very well, though from outside, and also the country life
-of the nobility and gentry. She had much sympathy for Ireland, but was
-unable to understand that radical changes were needful if the grievances
-that weighed upon the country were to be removed. She died in 1849. The
-circulation of her books has been enormous, and they are still frequently
-reprinted both in these countries and in America.[4]
-
- Uniform editions of her works: (1) Macmillan, with excellent
- illustrations, 2_s._ 6_d._ and 3_s._ 6_d._ each; pocket
- edition, 2_s._, and leather, 3_s._ (2) Dent, in twelve vols.,
- 2_s._ 6_d._ each, very tasteful binding, etched frontisp.,
- ed. by W. Harvey. Messrs. Routledge also publish _Stories of
- Ireland_; introduction by Professor Henry Morley; 1_s._
-
-[4] An able and certainly not over-enthusiastic estimate of Miss
-Edgeworth will be found in the DUBLIN REVIEW, April, 1838, p. 495, _sq._
-
-⸺ WORKS, collected in eighteen Vols. 1832.
-
-⸺ TALES AND MISCELLANEOUS PIECES. Nine Vols. (LONDON). 1848.
-
- These were received with a chorus of praise by critics, such
- as Lord Jeffery, Lord Dudley, and Sir James Mackintosh. Scott
- called them “a sort of essence of common sense.”
-
-⸺ CASTLE RACKRENT. (_Macmillan, &c._). (N.Y.: _Pratt_). 0.75. [1800].
-
- A picture of the feudal gentry in the latter half of the
- seventeenth century, in the form of reminiscences by an old
- retainer of the glories of the family he had served. One
- after another, he tells the careers of his various masters,
- the wild waste and endless prodigality of one, the skinflint
- exactingness of another. There is no religious bias nor
- discussion of problems, the chief interest being the ingenuous
- and unquestioning devotion of the old servant and his quaint
- observations. The literary merits of the book are usually rated
- very high.
-
-⸺ THE ABSENTEE. (_Macmillan, &c._). (N.Y.: _Pratt_). 0.75. [1809].
-
- A vivid impression of the Irish nobility trying to dazzle
- London society, and to prove itself more English than the
- English themselves, while the English great ladies mock at
- their parvenu extravagance and outlandish ways. The fine lady
- spends her days in social emulation, while her lord sinks to
- the company of toadies and hangers-on, until the conscience of
- the young heir is aroused by a tour in Ireland, and he brings
- the family back to their estates. The peasants are drawn purely
- in their relation of grateful and patient dependents.
-
-⸺ ENNUI. [1809].
-
- The Earl of Glenthorn, an English-bred absentee landlord, is
- afflicted with _ennui_. He determines to attempt a cure by a
- visit to Ireland, and the cure is effected in a very unlooked
- for way. The Author draws in an amusing and vivid way the
- contrast, as felt by Lord Glenthorn, between English tastes,
- prejudices, and decorum and the strange Irish ways, which
- surprise him at every turn.—(_Krans_).
-
-⸺ ORMOND. Pp. 379. (_Macmillan, Dent, &c._) [1817].
-
- Pictures of the scheming, political, extravagant gentry,
- especially of a type of the Catholic country gentleman, the
- good-natured, happy-go-lucky Cornelius O’Shane, known to his
- worshipping tenantry as King Corny. There is also a sketch
- of Paris society, to which Ormond, the attractive, impulsive
- young hero, is introduced by an officer of the Irish Brigade.
- Generally thought the most interesting, gayest, and most
- humorous of Miss Edgeworth’s books.
-
-⸺ TALES FROM MARIA EDGEWORTH. (_Darton_). 10_s._ 6_d._ Illustr. by Hugh
-Thomson. 1912.
-
- Introd. by Austin Dobson.
-
-⸺ MISS EDGEWORTH’S IRISH STORIES (A Selection).
-
- Ed. by Malcolm Cotter Seton, M.A., in _Every Irishman’s
- Library_ (The Talbot Press). [In preparation].
-
-
-=“EDWARDES, Martin”; E. L. Murphy.= Son of Mr. W. M. Murphy, of Dartry.
-
-⸺ THE LITTLE BLACK DEVIL. Pp. 190. (_Everett_). 3_s._ 6_d._, and 1_s._
-1910.
-
- A first novel by a new Irish writer. Scene: Bantry and London.
- The story of a young Irishman who, badly treated at home by
- his guardian, goes to London to make his fortune. His heart
- is broken by an adventuress, but in the end he marries a true
- woman. A little immature, but pleasant, and suitable for any
- class of readers.
-
-
-=EDWARDS, R. W. K.=
-
-⸺ UNCHRONICLED HEROES. Pp. 119. (DERRY: _Gailey_). 1_s._ 1888.
-
- A rather feeble story of the Siege of Derry. Walker and
- Mackenzie are introduced, the former highly lauded, the latter
- disparaged. Appendix (filling nearly half the book) gives
- extracts from scarce documents relating to the siege.
-
-⸺ THE MERMAID OF INISH-UIG. Pp. 248. (_Arnold_). 3_s._ 6_d._ 1898.
-
- To Inish-Uig, a western island with a primitive people, comes
- a new lighthouse keeper, a scoundrel and a hypocrite, who
- leads “Black Kate” astray. He tries to turn to account the
- illicit stilling propensities of the people, but is foiled in
- an amusing way. Father Tim and a Presbyterian minister on the
- mainland are two finely drawn characters. The islanders are
- well described, and their dialect well rendered.
-
-
-=EGAN, Maurice Francis, M.A., LL.D.= Born Philadelphia, 1852. Educated
-La Salle Coll., Philadelphia and Georgetown Coll., Washington. Was Prof.
-of English Literature in Catholic University of Washington till his
-appointment as American Ambassador at Copenhagen. Has edited several
-periodicals, and has contributed to most of the noteworthy periodicals in
-the States. Has published many books on a great variety of subjects. His
-father was from Tipperary.
-
-⸺ THE SUCCESS OF PATRICK DESMOND. Pp. 400. (NOTRE DAME, INDIANA: _Office
-of Ave Maria_). 1893.
-
- A novel with a purpose. “The Author does not waste much space
- on descriptions or impersonal reflections, nor does he trust
- to sensational incidents. The development of feeling and
- character, very often as revealed in natural conversation,
- seems to be his strong point. He knows his own people best, but
- we are sorry that he considers Miles and Nellie to be typical
- of the manners and dispositions of that class of the Irish race
- in the United States. The book is so cleverly written that one
- might cull from its pages a very respectable collection of
- epigrams.”—(_I. M._).
-
-⸺ THE WILES OF SEXTON MAGINNIS. Pp. 380. (N.Y.: _Century Co._). Illustr.
-by A. J. Keller. 1909.
-
-
-=[EGAN, Pierce].= (1772-1849).
-
-⸺ REAL LIFE IN IRELAND; or, the Day and Night Scenes, Rovings, Rambles,
-and Sprees, Bulls, Blunders, Bodderation and Blarney, of Brian Boru,
-Esq., and his elegant friend Sir Shawn O’Dogherty, exhibiting a Real
-Picture of Characters, Manners, &c., in High and Low Life, in Dublin and
-various parts of Ireland, embellished with humorous coloured engravings
-from original designs by the most eminent Artists, “by a real Paddy.”
-[1821].
-
- Messrs. Methuen in 1904 reprinted the book from the fourth ed.
- which was publ. by Evans & Co. The title-p. well describes
- the book. Brian and his friend were what were then called
- bucks and bloods. There is much absurdity, and extreme
- exaggeration. The follies and vagaries of the two heroes are
- told in a facetious and roistering style. There is not a little
- coarseness. But the book is interesting for its side-lights on
- the period, 1820-1830. Geo. IV.’s visit is described in a vein
- of burlesque. The illustrations are even more vulgar than the
- text, but have a similar interest.
-
-
-=EGAN, P. M.=
-
-⸺ SCULLYDOM: an Anglo-Irish Story of To-day. Pp. 360. (_Maxwell_). 2_s._
-Picture boards. 1886.
-
- Scene: Kilkenny. Time: 1880-84. Lucifer Scully, moneylender,
- by degrees becomes possessed of much land, and grinds down
- the tenants. They revolt, and this gives opportunity for good
- descriptions of evictions and reprisals. Fred O’Brien, a fine
- character whose sweetheart is spirited away by the villainy of
- Scully, goes in pursuit of her, and has many adventures and
- disappointments before all ends happily. Mickey Crowe and his
- love episodes supplies the comic relief. The tone is strongly
- National, and the dialect well done. The Author has also
- written “A History and Guide to Waterford.”
-
-
-=ELIZABETH, Charlotte.= [Mrs. Charlotte Elizabeth Tonna, 1790-1846].
-
-⸺ THE ROCKITE. [1832].
-
- The Tithe War (_c._ 1820) from Protestant standpoint. Captain
- Rock was a famous leader of Whiteboys during the anti-tithe
- war. The _Memoirs of Captain Rock_ were published anonymously,
- 1824, in Paris, by Thomas Moore.
-
-⸺ DERRY: A Tale of the Revolution. Pp. xxiv. + 317. (_Nisbet_). [1839].
-Sixth edition. 1886, and since.
-
- Story of the Siege of Derry, written from ultra-Protestant
- standpoint. The proceeds of the sale of the book are to be
- devoted to teaching the Protestant religion “in their own
- tongue to the Irish-speaking aborigines of the land.”—(Pref.).
- The Author says elsewhere that “Popery is the curse of God upon
- a land.” And the expression of similar views is very frequent
- in the book.
-
-
-=ELRINGTON, H.=
-
-⸺ RALPH WYNWARD. Pp. 310. (_Nelson_). 2_s._ Attractive binding. Good
-illustr. _n.d._ (1902).
-
- Youghal in the days of Queen Elizabeth. A tale of adventure in
- wild times, ending in the sack of Youghal during the Desmond
- Wars. Without bias. Told by Ralph himself, a descendant of the
- 8th Earl of Desmond, who runs away from his home in England.
- The 16th Earl and Sir Richard Boyle (afterwards the Great Earl
- of Cork) appear in the story. Juvenile.
-
-⸺ THE SCHOOL-BOY OUTLAWS. Pp. 266. (_Simpkin_). 2_s._ 6_d._ Six illustr.
-1905.
-
- Life at a school in the South of Ireland “for the sons of
- the gentry.” Incidents of resistance to masters attempting a
- reform. Two of the boys Jerry and Fitzgerald (who tells the
- story, and is “the son of a well-known Dublin clergyman),” run
- away, and live as outlaws. The accession of Queen Victoria
- (1837) is the means of obtaining their pardon. A pleasant tale
- for boys, free from religious or political bias.
-
-
-=ENNIS, Alicia Margaret.=
-
-⸺ IRELAND; or, The Montague Family.
-
-
-=ENSELL, Mrs.=
-
-⸺ THE PEARL OF LISNADOON. Pp. 126. (_Elliot Stock_). 1886.
-
- Scene: Killarney in the time following O’Connell’s
- imprisonment. Aims to prove that the landlords were extremely
- ill-treated, and that the Irish are uncivilised, and more or
- less savage. Strong Protestant bias. Usual pictures of agrarian
- crime.
-
-
-=ERVINE, St. John G.= Born Belfast, 1883. Has published four plays, three
-of which have been successfully acted at the Abbey Theatre. Hopes to
-publish a new novel, _Changing Winds_, in the near future.
-
-⸺ EIGHT O’CLOCK, and Other Stories. Pp. 128. (_Maunsel_). 2_s._ 6_d._
-1913.
-
- Reprinted from various periodicals. Six out of the seventeen
- are Irish in subject. There is the sketch of Clutie John, a
- queer old North of Irelander, whose profession is “fin’in’
- things.” “The Well of Youth,” a fantastic and humorous story
- about the Well of St. Brigid in the Vale of Avoca—told in North
- of Ireland dialect! In “The Fool,” John O’Moyle, a little
- “astray in his mind,” gives an English tourist some eye-opening
- facts about the condition of peasant farms (Catholic
- and Protestant) in Donegal. “The Match” is a satire on
- match-making. In “Discontent” a young Antrim boy on Lurigedan
- tells of the hunger of the country-bred for the excitements of
- town life. “The Burial” is concerned with life in Ballyshannon.
- Clever and finished. The remainder deal with English life.
-
-⸺ MRS. MARTIN’S MAN. Pp. 312. (_Maunsel_). 6_s._ 1915.
-
- Theme: the triumph of an injured wife over a situation that
- would have finally wrecked the lives of most women—her
- desertion by an unfaithful husband, and, still harder to face,
- his return after sixteen years, a worthless drunken lout, to
- live with her again. Mrs. Martin is the book, which is both a
- careful character study and a page of life-philosophy. But the
- minor characters are good—the Presbyterian clergyman, verbose
- and self-sufficient (a very unfavourable portrait), the canting
- and narrow-minded Henry Mahaffy, and Mrs. Martin’s Man himself.
- There is a somewhat drab background of lower middle-class life
- in Ulster (Ballyreagh (= Donaghadee) and Belfast). A very
- remarkable book that has had a deservedly great success. As for
- its moral aspect, the Author is against cant, hypocrisy, and
- intolerance; he is somewhat contemptuous towards religion: he
- is never salacious, but there is an occasional sensuousness in
- his treatment of a painful subject.
-
-
-=ESLER, Mrs. Erminda Rentoul.= Daughter of Rev. Alexander Rentoul, M.D.,
-D.D., of Manor Cunningham, Co. Donegal. Lives in London, and contributes
-to CORNHILL, CHAMBERS’S, QUIVER, SUNDAY AT HOME, and many other
-periodicals. Author of _The Way of Transgressors_ (1890), _Youth at the
-Prow_, _The Awakening of Helena Thorpe_.
-
-⸺ THE WAY THEY LOVED AT GRIMPAT: Village Idylls. (_Sampson Low_). 1893.
-
-⸺ A MAID OF THE MANSE. Pp. 315. (_Sampson, Low_). 1895.
-
- A story of Presbyterian clerical life in Co. Donegal forty
- years ago. A pleasant, readable story, with a well wrought
- plot. There is both pathos and humour in the book, and as a
- picture of manners it is true to life, if somewhat idyllic.
-
-⸺ THE WARDLAWS. (_Smith_). 3_s._ 6_d._ 1896.
-
- “A grave domestic story worked out on a basis of character,
- laid in an Irish rural district.”—(_Baker_).
-
-⸺ THE TRACKLESS WAY. Pp. 465. (_Brimley Johnson_). 6_s._ 1903.
-
- “The story of a man’s quest for God.” (Sub-t.). Scene: chiefly
- “Garvaghy, Co. Innismore,” in Ulster. The book is a searching
- study of the inward religious and outward social life of a
- Presbyterian minister, Gideon Horville, his difficulties,
- aspirations, friendships, disappointment in marriage. He is
- dismissed by his Church for teaching erroneous doctrines,
- begins to write, and subsequently helps his great friend
- Lord Tomnitoul in his religious and socialistic schemes. The
- Author’s religious attitude is equally opposed to Catholicism,
- to Calvinism, and, indeed, to Christianity. The background,
- Horville’s social circle, with its meannesses, spites, and
- petty jealousies, is not a pleasant one. The Author writes with
- thorough knowledge. There are no politics.
-
-
-=“ESMOND, Henry.”=
-
-⸺ A LIFE’S HAZARD: or, The Outlaw of Wentworth Waste. Three Vols.
-(_Sampson, Low_). 1878.
-
- Scene: N. Co. Dublin. A sensational tale—abducted heir, forged
- will, usurped title, jealousy, revenge, attempted murders,
- perjury, &c. The outlaw, O’Grady, a T.C.D. man and a barrister,
- heads a popular rising, twice escapes execution, and performs
- wonderful deeds, always appearing in the nick of time to rescue
- beauty in distress, or upset the schemes of the false lord.
- There is much brogue—of a sort. The supernatural is frequently
- introduced.
-
-
-=FABER, Christine.= This is said to be a pen-name. An American Catholic
-writer. Other novels—_An Original Girl_ (1901), _Ambition’s Contest_,
-_A Fatal Resemblance_, _Reaping the Whirlwind_ (1905), _A Chivalrous
-Deed_, _The Guardian’s Mystery_, _A Mother’s Sacrifice_. All of these are
-published by P. J. Kenedy of New York.
-
-⸺ CARROLL O’DONOGHUE; a Tale of the Irish Struggles of 1866 and of recent
-times. Pp. 501. Pretty cover. (_Duffy_). 3_s._ 6_d._ 1903.
-
- Scene laid chiefly in Kerry, at the time of the Fenian
- movement, though it is not a narrative of the latter. A very
- dramatic story finely wrought out. Full of local colour,
- humour, and pathos.
-
-
-=“FALY, Patrick C.”; John Hill.=
-
-⸺ NINETY-EIGHT: being the Recollections of Cormac Cahir O’Connor Faly
-(late Col. in the French Service) of that awful period. Collected and
-edited by his grandson, Patrick C. Faly, Attorney-at-Law, Buffalo, N.Y.
-(_Downey_). Illustr. A. D. M’Cormick. 1897.
-
- Cormac is heart and soul with the rebels. Life in Dublin, 1798,
- described. Then we are brought all through the scenes of the
- rising.
-
-
-=FARADAY, Winifred, M.A.=
-
-⸺ THE CATTLE RAID OF CUALNGE. (Táin bó Cuailnge). An ancient Irish prose
-epic [Grimm Library, No. 16]. Pp. xxi. + 141. (_Nutt_). 4_s._ (N.Y.:
-_Scribner_). 1.25. 1904.
-
- A close student’s translation from the _Leabhar na h-Uidhri_
- and the _Yellow Book of Lecan_. No notes, but interesting and
- scholarly introduction.
-
-
-=FENNELL, Charlotte and J. P. O’CALLAGHAN.=
-
-⸺ A PRINCE OF TYRONE. Pp. 363. (_Blackwood_). 1897.
-
- The amours of Seaghan O’Neill. Seems worthless from an
- historical point of view. O’Neill appears as little better than
- a villain of melodrama.
-
-
-=FERGUSON, R. Menzies, D.D.= Author of _Rambles in the Far North_, &c.
-
-⸺ THE OCHIL FAIRY TALES. Pp. 157. (_Nutt_). 3_s._ 6_d._ Illustr. 1913.
-
- Most of the Tales related in this Book are founded on local
- tradition: they are the echoes of that Celtic folk-lore which
- is fast dying out. The western spurs of the Ochill hills and
- the country lying between the Allan Water and the River Forth
- form the scenes of the curious cantrips of the Wee Folk, once
- so firmly believed in by the people of a former generation.
- The purpose of the Author is to preserve some of those curious
- tales which are still floating in the popular mind. In another
- generation it will be too late.—(_Publ._).
-
-
-=FERGUSON, Sir Samuel.= Born Belfast, 1810. Son of John Ferguson, of
-Collen House, Co. Antrim. Educated Academical Institution, Belfast, and
-T.C.D. Was first deputy keeper of the public records in Ireland. Was a
-noted antiquarian, but is best known as one of the best of our Irish
-poets. Most of his poetry deals with the heroic period of early Ireland.
-Died 1886. See _Sir Samuel Ferguson in the Ireland of his Day_, by Lady
-Ferguson. Besides the _Hibernian Nights_, Sir Samuel wrote also a very
-amusing if not very reverent sketch, “Father Tom and the Pope,” which had
-the unique distinction of being reprinted in BLACKWOOD’S MAGAZINE, 1910.
-
-⸺ HIBERNIAN NIGHTS ENTERTAINMENTS. Three Vols. Pp. 146 and 184 and 278.
-(_Sealy, Bryers_). 1_s._ each, paper; 2_s._ cloth. [1887]. Still in print.
-
- Written by the Author in early youth. Supposed to be told in
- 1592 by Turlough O’Hagan, O’Neill’s bard, to Hugh Roe O’Donnell
- and his companions imprisoned in Dublin Castle. They are almost
- entirely fictitious, but give many details of locality and of
- the contemporary manners, customs, and modes of fighting. There
- is an historical introduction. Contents: “Children of Usnach,”
- “The Capture of Killeshin,” “Corby MacGillmore,” “An Adventure
- of Seaghan O’Neill’s,” and the “Rebellion of Silken Thomas.”
- Popular in style and treatment.
-
-⸺ THE “RETURN OF CLANEBOY.” Pp. 43-98.
-
- Relates how Aodh Duidhe O’Néill regained (_c._ 1333) his
- territory of Claneboy in Antrim on the death of William
- de Burgh, Earl of Ulster. The story is rather an ordinary
- one—fighting and intrigues. There is some description of men
- and manners and of County Antrim scenery.
-
-⸺ THE “CAPTURE OF KILLESHIN.” Pp. 98-146.
-
- A tale of the struggle of the Leinster Clans—chiefly the
- O’Nolans—with the English settlers. Full of stirring incidents,
- including a battle most vividly described. Period: end of 14th
- century.
-
-⸺ “CORBY MACGILLMORE.” Pp. 140.
-
- Scene: North Antrim at the beginning of the fifteenth century.
- A Franciscan preaches Christianity to the MacGillmores, who had
- relapsed into barbarism and paganism. There is a very warlike
- and un-Christian abbot in the story. The chief interest is the
- enmity between the Clan Gillmore and the Clan Savage of North
- Down, and the events, dark and tragic for the most part, that
- result from it.
-
-⸺ THE “REBELLION OF SILKEN THOMAS.” Pp. 278.
-
- The main features of the rebellion are told in form of romance.
- The real hero is Sir John Talbot, who first joins Lord Thomas
- but afterwards leaves him. The story of Sir John’s private
- fortunes occupies a large part of the narrative. The author is,
- of course, perfectly acquainted with the history of the time.
-
-
-=FIELD, Mrs. E. M.= This Author (born 1856) is daughter of J. Story,
-J.P., D.L., of Bingfield, Co. Cavan. Besides _Ethne_, she has published
-several other novels, _e.g._, _At the King’s Right Hand_.
-
-⸺ DENIS. Pp. viii. + 414. (_Macmillan_). 2_s._ [1896]. Still in print.
-
- A story of the Famine. Interesting portrait of Young Ireland
- leader. Standpoint rather anti-national. Dedicated “to my
- kinsfolk and friends among the landowners of Ireland.”
-
-⸺ ETHNE. Pp. 312. (_Wells, Gardner_). 3_s._ 6_d._ Three or four good
-Illustr. [1902]. Third edition. 1911.
-
- A tale of Cromwell’s transplantation of the Irish to Connaught.
- Purports to be taken partly from the diary of Ethne O’Connor,
- daughter of one of the transplanted, and partly from the
- “record” of Roger Standfast-on-the-Rock. The former is
- converted to the religion of the latter by a single reading of
- the Bible. The interest of the book is mainly religious.
-
-
-=FIGGIS, Darrell.= Born Gleann-na-Smol, Co. Dublin, 1882. Was taken to
-India in infancy and remained there till he was ten years old. Was put
-into a London business house, and did not abandon this walk of life, in
-which his fortunes were sometimes low enough, till about 1909, the date
-of his first volume of poems, _A Vision of Life_. Since then he has been
-engaged in journalism and literature. He has taken an active part in the
-national movement in Ireland. For the past five years he has spent every
-winter in Achill, where he now lives permanently. Has, among other works,
-two novels, _Broken Arcs_ and _Jacob Elthorne_, and is now engaged on an
-Irish story.
-
-
-=FILDES, H. G.=
-
-⸺ “TRIM” AND ANTRIM’S SHORES. Pp. 312. (_Greening_). 6_s._ 1904.
-
- Account of holiday trip, supposed to be taken by the writer (an
- Englishman) and his friend, “Trim,” to the coast of Antrim,
- also Lough Neagh, and a few other places. Consists mainly of
- humorous incidents treated more or less in the _Three Men in a
- Boat_, or rather the _Three Men on the Bümmel_ style, but much
- inferior. Little or no description of Antrim.
-
-
-=FINLAY, T. A., S.J., M.A.; “A. Whitelock.”= Born 1848. Educated at
-Cavan College, at Amiens, and at the Gregorian University, Rome. Entered
-Irish Province S.J., 1866. Commissioner of Intermediate Education, 1900;
-Vice-President of Irish Agricultural Organisation Society; Ex-Fellow of
-Royal Univ. of I.; Editor, THE LYCEUM and then THE NEW IRELAND REVIEW
-(1894-1910); President of Univ. Hall, Dublin, since 1913.—(CATH. WHO’S
-WHO).
-
-⸺ THE CHANCES OF WAR. (_Gill_). [1877]. New edition, 1908, and
-(_Fallon_), 2_s._ 6_d._ 1911.
-
- Aims (cf. Preface) to indicate the causes that led to failure
- of Confederation of Kilkenny. Represents in the characters
- introduced the aims and motives of the chief actors in the
- events of the period, such as Owen Roe O’Neill, Rinuccini,
- Sir Charles Coote, &c. There is a spirited description of the
- first relief of Derry, the Battle of Benburb, Ireton’s siege
- of Limerick. The hero is an exile returned from a continental
- army. Between him and the heroine the villain Plunkett
- interposes his schemes. Scene: chiefly an island in Lough Derg.
- Though the main aim is historical, this fact in no way detracts
- from the interest and excitement of the romance. Written in a
- style above that of the majority of Irish historical novels.
- Standpoint: Catholic and national, but free from violent
- partisanship.
-
-
-=FINN, L. A.=
-
-⸺ BARNEY THE BOYO.[5] Pp. 180. (_Ireland’s Own Library_). 6_d._ _n.d._
-
- How B. is, with many sighs of relief, sent forth by his native
- village to found his fortune on a subscribed capital of £4
- 2_s._ 10_d._ How he is involved in the Castle Jewels mystery,
- wins the “Ardilveagh Cup” at the Horse Show, swims the Channel,
- and has many other topical adventures, succeeding always by his
- native wit. Plenty of broad popular humour, somewhat in the
- vein of Mick McQuaid.
-
-[5] A Midland word for the Western “playboy” or general wag and practical
-joker.
-
-
-=FINN, Mary Agnes.=
-
-⸺ NORA’S MISSION. Pp. 268. (_Washbourne_). 2_s._ 6_d._ (N.Y.:
-_Benziger_). 1.75. [1911]. Second edition. 1914.
-
- The mission was to bring back her uncle, who had settled in
- Australia, both to his Church and to his country, and she
- successfully carried it out: his wife and daughters, too,
- “adapted themselves speedily to Irish manners and customs.” And
- her visit to Australia unravelled some mysteries which we shall
- not reveal. Scene laid in I. and most of characters Irish.
- The “brogue” is avoided, but the conversation is somewhat
- stilted and unnatural. The book is nicely printed and prettily
- bound.—(_C.B.N._).
-
-
-=FINNEY, Violet G.=
-
-⸺ THE REVOLT OF THE YOUNG MACCORMACKS. Pp. 227. (_Ward & Downey_).
-Illustr. by Edith Scannell. (N.Y.: _Pratt_). 1.50. 1896.
-
- A story written for children and much appreciated by them. The
- four young MacCormacks are very live and real children. Their
- delightfully novel pranks are told in a breezy, natural style.
- Many a “grown-up” will find interest in the book. Scene: partly
- in Dublin, partly in West of Ireland.
-
-⸺ A DAUGHTER OF ERIN. Pp. 224. (_Blackie_). 2_s._ 6_d._ Well illustr. by
-G. Demain Hammond.
-
- A bright little story, free from “problems,” “morals,”
- morbidness, and prejudice. It tells how Norah’s hostility and
- dislike to her cousin, John Herrick, gradually changes to love
- in spite of herself. Her old lover accepts the inevitable like
- a brave man, and loses his life in trying to do a service,
- for her sake, to the favoured suitor. The Irish characters
- are capitally sketched—Mrs. Ryan and Judy, the Rector’s
- housekeeper. Bertie, the spoilt little invalid, is drawn to the
- life. So, too, is the somewhat sententious old Rector.
-
-
-=FITZGERALD, John Godwin.=
-
-⸺ RUTH WERDRESS, FATHER O’HARALAN, AND SOME NEW CHRISTIANS. Pp. 340.
-(_Blackwood_). 6_s._
-
- An argument in narrative form against the celibacy of the
- Catholic priesthood. Ruth W., flying from a home made unhappy
- by evangelicalism, takes refuge with Fr. O’H., P.P. of
- Blossomvale, who receives her into the Catholic Church. Fr.
- O’H. falls madly in love with her, and there are a series of
- situations, compromising and equivocal in appearance. Under
- extraordinary circumstances the two are forced into a merely
- formal marriage. We need not reveal the sequel. There is a
- great deal about Catholic usages, priests, nuns, &c., with
- which the Author shows considerable superficial acquaintance.
- The Author is cautiously fair in detail, but the general
- impression produced is sometimes distinctly unfavourable to
- Catholicism. The New Christians are a sect of latter-day
- evangelicals whom the Author satirises severely. One scene we
- consider particularly offensive to Catholic feeling and highly
- improbable into the bargain.
-
-
-=[FITZGERALD, M. J.].=
-
-⸺ THE MAKING OF JIM O’NEILL. Pp. 140. 16mo. (_C.T.S.I.: Iona Series_).
-1910.
-
- The story of the course of a young man’s vocation to the
- priesthood, of his life at a typical Irish provincial seminary,
- and of his vacations at home. The doings of the seminarians
- are described frankly, not being at all idealised. The tale is
- pleasantly and plainly told, without much analysis of motive or
- of emotion. It is a vivid glimpse of the making of a priest.
-
-
-=FITZGERALD, Rev. T. A., O.F.M.= Born Callan, Co. Kilkenny, 1862. Brought
-up in Thurles; ed. at Christian Bros. Schools and St. Patrick’s College.
-Became a Franciscan in 1879. Spent five years in Rome, and twenty in
-Australia. Since his return to Ireland has learned the Irish language,
-and has taken part in the revival movement. Witness his _Stepping Stones
-to Gaeldom_.
-
-⸺ HOMESPUN YARNS: WHILE THE KETTLE AND THE CRICKET SING. Pp. 222.
-(_Gill_). 3_s._ 6_d._ Illustr. 1914.
-
- Eighteen tales and sketches of Irish life—at home and in exile.
- For the most part humorous, with genuine and spontaneous
- humour. But pathos is often not far off, and edification is to
- be got, though it is not thrust upon the reader. The sketches
- of life in the slums and back streets of Dublin show the Author
- at his best, for his errands of mercy have made him know them
- thoroughly.
-
-⸺ FITS AND STARTS. (_Gill_). 1915.
-
- Another series of sketches similar to the previous, but
- here, besides making the acquaintance of Cook Street, Great
- Britain Street, and Chancery Lane, we have glimpses of Dalkey,
- Kingstown, Rathmines, and even Lower Leeson Street. “The
- Adventures of Black Pudden” is an exceptionally comic story.
-
-
-=FITZPATRICK, Kathleen.=
-
-⸺ THE WEANS AT ROWALLAN, Pp. 234. (_Methuen_). 6_s._ Illustr. Second
-edition. 1905.
-
- “We think it is one of the best books about children published
- since the days of Mrs. Ewing.”—(_Speaker_). “Amusing and
- pleasant. Some of the fun is tinged with the unconscious pathos
- of child-life, and the mixed mirth and melancholy of the Irish
- peasantry.”—(_Athenæum_).
-
-
-=FITZPATRICK, Mary; Mrs. W. C. Sullivan.= Born in Barony of Farney, Co.
-Monaghan, but belongs to the Fitzpatricks of Ossory. Educated in Dublin
-and Paris. In 1894 married Dr. W. C. Sullivan, son of the late Dr. W. K.
-Sullivan, President of the Queen’s College, Cork. Has contributed a good
-deal to periodicals in Ireland and in America. Her writings are marked by
-love for Ireland, and faith in Her future.
-
-⸺ THE ONE OUTSIDE. Pp. 245. (_Maunsel_). 3_s._ 6_d._ 1914.
-
- Eight stories, six of which are Irish in subject. Seven of
- the stories are tragedies. “The Doctor’s Joke” is the only
- comedy. The title story tells how the father, after sixteen
- years of absence, bread-winning in England, comes home to
- find that the wife and children of the reality are far other
- than what his dreams had pictured, and his wife has a similar
- disillusionment. He is an outsider, and he realises it
- bitterly. Painful tragedy is the outcome. The 2nd is a tragedy
- of blighted hopes. The 3rd a lighter story laid in Fenian
- times. 4. W. of Ireland. Love’s young dream destroyed by the
- plotting of an ambitious and masterful old woman. Atmosphere
- of loneliness and terror given to the whole. 5. A London slum
- tragedy, with Irish characters. 6. A study in character, and
- a peasant love-tale. All are told in beautiful and refined
- language, often charged with pathos. The situations are
- dramatic. The whole manner, the atmosphere, and the sentiment
- are Irish.
-
-
-=FITZPATRICK, T., LL.D.= Born, 1845, in Co. Down. Became a teacher in
-early life. He was attached successively to Blackrock Coll., Dublin; St.
-Malachy’s, Belfast; Athenry, Galway, and Birr schools. Of the last he was
-headmaster in 1876. Was author of a serious historical work—_The Bloody
-Bridge and other Studies of 1641._ Died 1912 in Dublin.
-
-⸺ JABEZ MURDOCK, by “Banna Borka.” Two Vols. Pp. 300 + 335. (_Duffy_).
-1_s._ 6_d._ (Two vols. in one). [1887]. 1888 still in print.
-
- Scene: South Co. Down. The central figure is a rascally Scotch
- settler who dabbles in poetry, and attains to wealth as “ajint”
- by unscrupulous means. Between the episodes of his life are
- interlarded scenes illustrating nearly every aspect of peasant
- life at the time, all minutely and vividly described, and
- conversations in which the problems of the times are discussed.
- A good deal of humorous incident and character. The Author
- evidently writes from first-hand knowledge. He is on the
- Catholic and popular side. Period: first quarter of nineteenth
- century.
-
-⸺ THE KING OF CLADDAGH. Pp. 249. (_Sands_). Frontisp. ancient map of
-Galway in 1651. 1899.
-
- Galway City and County during Cromwellian period. Atrocities of
- the eight years’ rule of the Roundheads. Forcible and vivid.
- Point of view: National and Catholic.
-
-
-=FITZSIMON, Miss E. A.=
-
-⸺ THE JOINT VENTURE: A Tale in Two Lands. Pp. 327. (N.Y.: _Sheehy_). 1878.
-
- Scene: opens in a valley of the Knockmealdowns, passes to
- U.S.A. in ch. 7 (p. 109). Was a first novel, and so somewhat
- immature. High moral and Catholic tone (perhaps somewhat
- aggressive at times). Attacks Protestant divorce laws. One of
- the best incidents, perhaps, is Mrs. Ned O’Leary’s conversion
- to Catholicism.—(_Press Notices_). This was republ. in 1881
- under title _Gerald Barry; or, The Joint Venture_.
-
-
-=“FLOREDICE, W. H.”=
-
-⸺ MEMORIES OF A MONTH AMONG THE “MERE IRISH.” Pp. xxix. + 321. (_Keegan,
-Paul_). [1881]. Second edition, 1886.
-
- A record of conversations held and things seen, but especially
- of legends, stories, and anecdotes heard from the peasantry
- during a stay made by the Author when a youth at Doe Castle,
- near the head of Sheephaven, Co. Donegal. Owen Gregallah
- (Gallagher?), an old water-bailiff, with whom the Author
- used to go fishing, tells many of these latter, in the local
- dialect, which is faithfully reproduced. The stories are
- interesting in themselves, and very well told. Dr. Mahaffy
- referred in the _Academy_ to one of them as the funniest Irish
- story in print. There is no condescension in the Author’s
- tone. He likes and respects, as well as enjoys, his peasant
- companions. He seems to be an American. The Preface to the
- second ed. gives a humorous account of the difficulties of
- travel in Donegal in those days. N.B.—The title on the cover is
- “‘Mere Irish’ Stories.”
-
-⸺ DERRYREEL. Pp. vi. + 184. (LONDON: _Hamilton, Adams_). 1886.
-
- “A collection of stories from N.W. Donegal.” This writer
- published also a volume entitled _Floredice Stories_.
-
-
-=FLYNN, T. M.= Was living at Carrick-on-Shannon at the time of writing
-these sketches.
-
-⸺ A CELTIC FIRESIDE: Tales of Irish Rural Life. (_Sealy Bryers_). 1_s._
-1907.
-
- Nine little tales—tragedies and comedies—of Irish life in
- country and city. Many little touches show how well the Author
- knows Irish life. He has a power, too, of making the truth of
- his pictures go home to our hearts.—(_N.I.R._).
-
-
-=FOREMAN, Stephen.=
-
-⸺ THE OVERFLOWING SCOURGE, Pp. 335. (_Alston Rivers_). 6_s._ 1911.
-
- Career of an unprincipled lawyer, who gains judgeship by a
- series of crimes and keeps it by crimes even more heinous. A
- greatly overdrawn picture of a dark and unpleasant side of
- life. Such incidents as a packed jury condemning unjustly the
- presiding judge’s son (with the judge’s own approbation) to
- penal servitude seem wholly improbable. The parson and his
- wife afford a gleam of humour. Although some of the worst of
- the characters are Protestants, there are several apparent
- sneers at things Catholic. “It is not written virginibus
- puerisque.”—(_I.B.L._). The career of Blanco Hamilton seems
- to be founded on that of Judge Keogh, and the incidental
- references are to the latter’s times. Other novels of this
- writer, a Corkman, living in Cork, are _The Errors of the
- Comedy_, _The Fen Dogs_, _The Terrible Choice_.
-
-
-=FORSTER, C. F. Blake-=, _see_ =BLAKE-FORSTER=.
-
-
-=FRANCILLON, Robert E.=
-
-⸺ UNDER SLIEVE BÁN: a Yarn in Seven Knots. Pp. 275. (N.Y.: _Holt_). 1881.
-It originally appeared as a Christmas Annual with Coloured Illustrations.
-Pp. 128. (_Grant_). 1_s._
-
- A story of faithful love laid (at least its opening and closing
- scenes) in Wexford (“Dunmoyle”). Period about 1798. Michael
- and Phil both love Kate Callan. Kate loves P. best, and M.
- goes away. Returning after three years, he finds Kate mourning
- P., said to be lost at sea. M. and Kate are married, but on
- the evening of the marriage M. meets P. M. “disappears,” but
- in foreign parts meets P.’s French wife. The two couples are
- united again. Kate is shot in the rebellion, but survives to
- discover that M. was the best man after all. Dialect natural
- but refined.
-
-
-=“FRANCIS, M. E.”; Mrs. Blundell.= Born at Killiney Park, near Dublin.
-Is the daughter of Mr. Sweetman, of Lamberton Park, Queen’s County; and
-was educated there and in Belgium. In 1879 she married the late Francis
-Blundell, of Liverpool. This home of her married life is the background
-of many of her stories—(_Ir. Lit._). Among her books are: _Whither_
-(1892), _In a North Country Village_, _A Daughter of the Soil_, _Among
-Untrodden Ways_, _Maimie o’ the Corner_, _Pastorals of Dorset_, _The
-Manor Farm_, _The Tender Passion_ (1910), and several others, besides
-those noticed in this book—about thirty in all. All Mrs. Blundell’s
-writings are noted for their delicacy of sentiment, deftness of touch,
-pleasantness of atmosphere. They are saved from excessive idealism by
-close observation of character and manners. Her Irish stories show
-sympathy and even admiration for the peasantry.
-
-⸺ THE STORY OF DAN, (LONDON: _Osgood, M’Ilvaine_). (BOSTON: _Houghton_).
-0.50. 1894.
-
- “A brief tale, told with directness and tragic simplicity
- of a magnanimous peasant, who adores with infatuation a
- worthless girl, and sacrifices himself uselessly and blindly.
- Friendly portraits of Irish country people are among the minor
- characters.”—(_Baker_).
-
-⸺ FRIEZE AND FUSTIAN. (_Osgood_). 3_s._ 6_d._ 1896.
-
- The book is in two parts—the first a reflection or picture
- of the mind and soul of the Irish peasant, the second of
- that of the English peasant. The comparison or contrast is
- not elaborated nor insisted upon. The pictures are there,
- the reader judges. A series of short stories or studies form
- the traits of the pictures, bringing out such points as the
- kindness of the poor to one another, a mother’s love, a
- mother’s pride in her son become priest, a servant’s fidelity,
- and various stories of love. All told with delicate feeling and
- insight. The Author has lived among both peoples. There is a
- good deal of dialect.
-
-⸺ MISS ERIN. Pp. 357. (_Methuen_). 6_s._ [1898]. Included in Benziger’s
-(N.Y.) series of Standard Catholic Novels at 2_s._; also $1.00.
-
- The story of a girl who, brought up as a peasant, afterwards
- becomes a landowner. She tries to do her best for her tenants,
- and her difficulties in the task are well depicted, the Author
- fully sympathizing with Irish grievances. There are some
- sensational scenes—among them an eviction. The love interest is
- well sustained, and the character-drawing very clever.
-
-⸺ NORTH, SOUTH, AND OVER THE SEA. Pp. 347. (_Country Life, and Newnes_).
-Charming Illustr. by H. M. Brock. 1902.
-
- Somewhat on the plan of _Frieze and Fustian_ by the same
- Author, _q.v._ Three parts, each containing five stories or
- sketches. The first part deals with North of England life, the
- second with South of England, the third with Ireland. Humble
- life depicted in all. In last part the subject of the first
- sketch (an amusing one) is a rustic courtship of a curious
- kind; 2, an old woman dying in the workhouse; 4 and 5, a
- rural love-story. Studies rather of the minds and hearts of
- poor Irish folk than of their outward ways. The author has
- reproduced almost perfectly that brogue which is not merely
- English mispronounced, but practically a different idiom
- expressing a wholly different type of mind.
-
-⸺ THE STORY OF MARY DUNNE. Pp. 312. (_Murray_). 6_s._ 1913.
-
- The love story of Mat, “the priest’s boy,” for Mary, beginning
- as a sweet and tender idyll in the home in Glenmalure, ending
- in the tragedy of a law-court scene, where the hero is on trial
- for murder and Mary faces worse than death in telling the story
- of her wrongs—she has been an innocent victim of the white
- slave traffic. Full of exquisite scenes, with touches of humour
- as well as pathos. But in the main the book is a tragedy.
- Its purpose seems clearly to be a warning and an appeal. The
- poignant consequences of Mary’s undoing are not suitable for
- every class of reader, but there is nothing approaching to
- prurient description.
-
-⸺ DARK ROSALEEN. Pp. 392. (_Cassell_). 6_s._ 1915.
-
- The story of a “mixed marriage” between Norah, a Connemara
- peasant girl, and Hector, a young engineer of Belfast origin.
- They go to live at Derry. Bitterness and misunderstanding come
- to blight their love, and the end is tragedy. The two points of
- view, Protestant and Catholic, are put with impartiality.—(T.
- LIT. SUPPL.).
-
-
-=FREDERIC, Harold.=
-
-⸺ THE RETURN OF THE O’MAHONEY: a Romantic Fantasy. Pp. 279.
-(_Heinemann_). 3_s._ 6_d._ Three Illustr. 1893.
-
- Scene: South-west Cork in Fenian times. The O’M., who comes
- to Muirisc is not the real O’M. at all, but a Mr. Tisdale,
- who has managed to secure the papers of the real O’M., who is
- not aware of his own origin and real name. T. becomes a model
- landlord, and is beloved of all. Tries his hand at Fenianism,
- but soon abandons it and goes abroad to foreign wars. O’Daly,
- left as manager, thrusts himself into his master’s place. But
- a young American engineer (the real O’M. of course) turns up
- and spoils his plans, but does not reveal his own identity till
- after Tisdale’s death. Besides this there are numerous exciting
- incidents and several mysteries. The characters are well drawn.
- The Author is distinctly favourable to Ireland, and seems to
- have a good knowledge of the country.
-
-
-=FREMDLING, A.=
-
-⸺ FATHER CLANCY. Pp. 358. (_Duckworth_). 1904.
-
- Father Clancy is an unselfish devoted country parish priest,
- beloved of his people, unworldly and simple to a fault. His
- virtue serves to throw into deeper shadow the character of
- his curate, Father O’Keeffe, who is an abandoned and vicious
- ruffian. The purpose of the book is not at all clear to the
- average reader.
-
-
-=FROST, W. H.=
-
-⸺ FAIRIES AND FOLK OF IRELAND. Pp. xvi. + 290. (N.Y.: _Scribner’s_). Ill.
-by Sidney Richmond Burleigh. 1900.
-
-
-=FROUDE, James Anthony.= 1818-1894. This celebrated writer had already
-published his _History of England_ when, in 1869, he came to live (for
-the summer) at Derreen, Kenmare, Co. Kerry, where he began his _The
-English in Ireland in the Eighteenth Century_ (first vol. appeared 1872).
-Like most of F.’s books, it provoked numerous answers, among others that
-of Father Thomas Burke, O.P., _Froude on Ireland_. The novel mentioned
-below embodies his chief ideas on Ireland.
-
-⸺ THE TWO CHIEFS OF DUNBOY, Pp. 456. (_Longmans_). 3_s._ 6_d._ [1889].
-Several editions since.
-
- Scene: the O’Sullivan’s country in south-west Cork. Period:
- 1750-98. The ideas expressed in the Author’s _The English in
- Ireland_ put into the form of fiction. Thesis: if the English
- had from the first striven to replace the hopeless Celt by
- Anglo-Saxon and Protestant colonists she would have avoided her
- subsequent troubles in Ireland, and all would have been well.
- The English character (Colonel Goring) is throughout contrasted
- with the Irish (Morty Sullivan), the whole forming a powerful
- indictment of Ireland and the Irish as seen by Froude.
-
-
-=FULLER, J. Franklin; “Ignotus.”= Born 1835. Is a native of Derryquin,
-near Sneem, Co. Kerry. In his young days he was a close friend of the
-priest (Fr. Walsh) who was the original of A. P. Graves’s “Father
-O’Flynn.” As architect to the Ecclesiastical Commissioners and to the
-Church Representative Body he has travelled extensively through Ireland
-and has lived in various parts of it—North, South, East, and West—always
-on friendly terms with his Catholic neighbours. He resides in Dublin.
-
-⸺ CULMSHIRE FOLK. Pp. 384. (_Cassell_). [1873]. Third edition, _n.d._
-
- The plot is concerned with Sidney Bateman, heir of a family
- that has come down in the world, his struggles against
- misfortune, and his eventual attainment of fortune and
- happiness. But the chief interest is the kindly, thoughtful
- study of character and motive, of human nature in fact, also
- in the picture of the ways of the little society (largely
- clerical, _e.g._, the egregious Mr. M’Gosh) of Culmshire.
- Lady Culmshire, woman of the world, but with a warm and true
- heart within, is the central figure and is a very pleasant,
- happily drawn portrait. The Irish interest is (1) the excellent
- description of the homecoming of Sidney Bateman to the
- ancestral castle of Rathvarney, in the wilds of Kerry, which
- are well described; (2) the doings of Tim Conroy, a sort of
- Mickey Free, and the Leveresque stories told of him by Capt.
- Howley; (3) the portrait of the old P.P. of Rathvarney, Fr.
- Walsh (the original of Graves’s “Father O’Flynn”).
-
-⸺ JOHN ORLEBAR, CLERK. Pp. 293. (_Cassell_). [1878]. Second edition,
-_n.d._
-
- The plot of a villainous attorney, Joe Twinch, and his clerk,
- an absconding Fenian, to cheat the rightful heiress out of
- the Arderne estates. Dr. Packenham, a personal friend of
- Orlebar, who had married the heiress, suspects foul play and
- comes to Kerry, where the first Lady Arderne had for some
- time resided, to make enquiries. He puts up at Rathvarney
- (see _Culmshire Folk_), meets Tim and Fr. Walsh (who helps to
- unravel the mystery), and sees something of Ireland in the
- sixties (pp. 240-274). This something, it must be confessed,
- is chiefly squalor, described, however, in a humorous and not
- unsympathetic way.
-
-
-=FURLONG, Alice.=
-
-⸺ TALES OF FAIRY FOLKS, QUEENS, AND HEROES. Pp. 212. (_Browne & Nolan_).
-2_s._ Four or five Illustr. by F. Rigney. Pretty cover. 1909.
-
- Stories from ancient Gaelic Literature simply and pleasantly
- told. Contents:—“Illan Bwee and the Mouse;” “Country under
- Wave;” “The Step Mother;” “The Fortunes of the Shepherd’s Son;”
- “The Golden Necklet;” “The Harp of the Dagda Mor;” “The Child
- that went into the Earth;” and several others.
-
-
-=GALLAHER, Miss Fannie; “Sydney Starr.”= Daughter of Frederick Gallaher,
-one time Ed. of FREEMAN’S JOURNAL.
-
-⸺ KATTY THE FLASH. (_Gill_). 1880.
-
- Very low life in Dublin, with no attempt to idealise the rags
- and filth and squalor; but clever and realistic.—(_I.M._).
-
-⸺ THY NAME IS TRUTH. Three Vols. (_Maxwell_). 1884.
-
- Incidentally describes the Hospice for the Dying, Harold’s
- Cross, and the inner working of a daily newspaper office.
- Cleverly written. The conversations are natural, and the human
- interest strong. The politics of the time (1881) are discussed,
- but they are not the main interest.
-
-
-=GAMBLE, Dr. John.= I take the following account of this writer from
-a note on him contributed by Mr. A. A. Campbell, of Belfast, to the
-IRISH BOOK LOVER (September, 1909): Dr. Gamble was born in Strabane,
-Co. Tyrone, in the early ’seventies of the eighteenth century. He was
-educated in Edinburgh. He devoted most of his life to a study of the
-people and characteristics of Ulster. He used to make frequent journeys
-on foot, or by coach, through the country, chatting with everyone he
-met, picking up story and legend and jest, and noting incidents. All his
-writings were imbued with a deep sympathy for his fellow-countrymen. As a
-vivid picture of the Ulster of his day his books are invaluable. They did
-much to produce in England a kindly feeling for his countrymen. He died
-in 1831.
-
-⸺ SARSFIELD. Three Vols. 12mo. (LONDON). 1814.
-
- The hero is a young Irishman who, under the name of Glisson, is
- a French prisoner of war at Strabane. Aided by the daughter of
- the postmaster he escapes, and wanders all over Ulster, where
- the wildest excitement about the threatened French invasion
- prevailed. Thence he goes to Scotland, England, and abroad.
- He fights with Thurot at the Siege of Carrickfergus, and
- eventually returns to Strabane, where he meets with a tragic
- ending. The Author embodies in the story many local traditions
- and much of his own observation and experience. Well worthy of
- republication.
-
-⸺ HOWARD. Two Vols. 12mo. (LONDON). 1815.
-
- “The subject of the following tale was born in a remote part
- of Ireland ... my principal character is not altogether an
- imaginary one.” The hero of this autobiography is Irish. The
- scene is London. The central incident is his seduction of a
- young lady who after attempting suicide dies of remorse and
- chagrin.
-
-⸺ NORTHERN IRISH TALES. Two Vols. 8vo. (LONDON). 1818.
-
- “Stanley,” the first tale tells the adventures of a young
- profligate, son of a Derry Alderman, chiefly in Dublin. After
- life of debauch he gets married, but goes bankrupt. His wife
- dies, he attempts suicide, is rescued, and plunges once more
- into vice. The rest of the story tells of his determined
- pursuit of a young lady, ending in a murder for which he is
- tried and hanged. It is founded on a romantic episode well
- known in Ulster, the courtship and murder of Miss Knox,
- of Prehen, near Derry, by Macnaughton, and his subsequent
- execution for the crime. “Nelson” is a story of the American
- Revolutionary War. Vol. II. contains only one tale, “Lesley.”
- The hero is a North of Ireland man, whose travels and love
- adventures on the Continent and at home are described. The
- Author indulges in a good deal of moralizing.
-
-⸺ CHARLTON; or, Scenes in the North of Ireland. Three Vols. 12mo.
-(LONDON). [1823]. New edition, 1827.
-
- Depicts, with sympathy for the views of the United Irishmen,
- the state of Ireland during the years that immediately preceded
- the rebellion. The hero is a young surgeon in a N. of Ireland
- town who is tricked into becoming a United Irishman, and leads
- the rebels at Ballynahinch. Under the name of Dimond the Rev.
- James Porter is introduced, and many quotations are made from
- his satire “Billy Bluff.” Northern dialect very well done.
-
-
-=GAUGHAN, Jessie.= Born in Shropshire; one parent Irish, the other
-Scotch. Educated in Paisley and in Ursuline Convent, Sligo. Besides
-the book here mentioned she has publ. serially in I.M. _The Brooch of
-Lindisfarne_, and has in preparation a story dealing with Ireton’s days
-in Limerick.
-
-⸺ THE PLUCKING OF THE LILY. Pp. 220. (_Washbourne_). 1912.
-
- Reprinted from I.M. 1911-2. A charming little story of
- Elizabethan times in Ireland (_c._ 1589-94), telling the
- love-story of Eileen daughter of Earl Clancarthy and Florence
- M’Carthy. Their love is crossed by the policy of Elizabeth,
- who, for State purposes, wants an English husband for Eileen,
- and not till the end are the two lovers united again. The
- historical setting and colouring are accurate, but never
- interfere with the story. The tone is Catholic, but not
- obtrusively so. Good portrait of Elizabeth. Burleigh (in a
- favourable light), Sir Warham St. Leger, and other historical
- personages appear.
-
-
-=GAY, Mrs. Florence, _née_ Smith.= Born in Molong, N.S.W., Australia. Is
-an ardent imperialist, but proud of the strain of Celtic blood in her
-family, and sympathetic towards Ireland. Resides in Surrey.
-
-⸺ DRUIDESS, THE. Pp. 195. (_Ouseley_). 2_s._ 6_d._ 1908.
-
- Cormac, a youth of Pictish royal blood, has a mission from
- his dying father to rescue from the Saxons the mother of his
- intended bride. His adventures in carrying out this mission
- bring him from Damnonia (between the Yeo and the Axe) to
- Ireland (Glendalough, Tailltenn, Donegal). He is present at
- the half-pagan festival of Beltaine, and at the Convention
- of Drumceat. At the latter he meets St. Columba, who is
- sympathetically described. The story deals largely with the
- lingerings of Paganism in Ireland. Several battles between
- Saxons and Britons are described. The savage manners of the
- time are pictured with realistic vividness. The wild scenes
- of adventure follow one another without a pause. Intended for
- “boys and others.”
-
-
-=[GETTY, Edmund].=
-
-⸺ THE LAST KING OF ULSTER. Three Vols. (LONDON: _Madden_). 1841.
-
- Ostensibly a tale, in reality a kind of historical miscellany
- of Elizabethan times, containing memoirs, anecdotes, family
- history, &c., of the O’Neills, O’Donnells, and other Irish
- chiefs. The Author was one of the best of our Northern
- antiquaries.
-
-
-=GIBBON, Charles.=
-
-⸺ IN CUPID’S WARS. Three Vols. (_F. V. White_). 1884.
-
- The scene is laid in Kilkenny in 1798 or thereabouts, but
- both the topographical and historical settings are of the
- vaguest—there is very little local colour, and practically no
- depiction of historical events, though there is much about
- rebellion and secret societies. The story is thoroughly
- melodramatic: it has no serious purpose, but the tone is
- wholesome. The characters of the story are all represented as
- Catholics. This Author wrote upwards of thirty other novels.
-
-
-=[GIBSON, Rev. Charles Bernard].= (1808-1885). Was chaplain at Spike
-Island, and sometime minister of the Independent congregation at Mallow,
-Co. Cork, but afterwards joined the Church of England. He was made
-M.R.I.A. in 1854. He wrote a _History of Cork City and County_ (1861),
-and five or six other works, including _Historical Portraits of Irish
-Chieftains and Anglo-Norman Knights_, 1871.
-
-⸺ THE LAST EARL OF DESMOND. Two Vols. (_Hodges & Smith_). 1854.
-
- Extensive pref., introd. (summarising history of Earls of
- Desmond), and notes. Scene: Mallow, various parts of Munster,
- and the Tower of London. All the great personages of the time,
- English and Irish, figure in the story, but several fictitious
- characters are introduced, and many fictitious episodes are
- throughout the story mingled with the facts of history. The
- main plot turns on the Sugán Earl’s love for, and marriage
- with, Ellen Spenser (an imaginary daughter of the poet). The
- bias is strongly anti-Catholic. Fr. Archer, S.J., is the
- villain of the piece, stopping at no crime to gain his ends.
- It is also, though not to the same extent, anti-Irish. He
- relies for his facts entirely on _Pacata Hibernia_ (point of
- view wholly English). The Irish chiefs are made to speak in
- vulgar modern-Irish dialect (“iligant,” “crattur,” “yr sowls
- to blazes,” &c., &c.). The humour is distinctly vulgar, as in
- the case of the Author’s other novel. Raleigh is one of the
- personages.
-
-⸺ DEARFORGIL, THE PRINCESS OF BREFFNY. Pp. 287. (LONDON: _Hope_). [1857].
-Second edition (_Longmans_). 1884. Pp. xxiv. + 284.
-
- Story of Diarmuid MacMurrough’s abduction of the wife of
- O’Ruairc of Breffni, and subsequent events, including an
- account of the Norman Invasion. The tone throughout is
- anti-National and most offensive to Catholic feeling. The
- frequent humorous passages are nearly always vulgar, and in
- some instances coarse. There are many absurdities in the course
- of the narrative.
-
-
-=GIBSON, Jennie Browne.=
-
-⸺ AILEEN ALANNAH. Pp. 86. (_Stockwell_). 1_s._ net. One good illustr.
-1911.
-
- Desmond Fitzgerald and Aileen have been sweethearts
- from childhood, D. has to go to America. Percy Gerrard
- intercepts their letters, and tries to marry Aileen. She is
- broken-hearted, and goes as nurse to a London hospital. Percy
- at the point of death confesses his wickedness, and No. 27 in
- one of the wards turns out to be⸺. Scene: at first Donegal. A
- very pleasant story, full of kindly Irish people, entirely free
- from bigotry, and with an excellent though unobtruded moral
- purpose.
-
-
-=“GILBERT, George;” Miss Arthur.= Has written also _In the Shadow of the
-Purple_ (1902), and _The Bâton Sinister_ (1903).
-
-⸺ THE ISLAND OF SORROW. Pp. 384. (_Long_). 6_s._ 1903.
-
- Deals, in considerable detail, with political and social life
- in the Ireland of the time. The circles of Lord Edward and
- Pamela Fitzgerald (centering in Leinster House), of the Emmet
- family (at the Casino, Milltown), and of the Curran family
- (at the Priory, Rathfarnham) are fully portrayed and neatly
- interlinked in private life. The whole romance of Emmet and
- Sarah Curran is related. There are many portraits—Charles James
- Fox, Curran (depicted as a domestic monster), many men of
- the Government party, above all, Emmet. This portrait is not
- lacking in sympathy, though the theatrical and inconsiderate
- character of his aims is insisted on. The whole work shows
- considerable power of _dramatizing_ history, and is made
- distinctly interesting. “The author,” says Mr. Baker, “tries to
- be impartial, but cannot divest himself of an Englishman’s lack
- of sympathy with Ireland.” The book is preceded by a valuable
- list of authorities and sources.
-
-
-=GILL, E. A. Wharton.=
-
-⸺ AN IRISHMAN’S LUCK. (_Hodder & Stoughton_). 6_s._ 1914.
-
- “A domestic tale of young folk in a British settlement in
- Manitoba, and of the Canadian contingent in the Boer War.”—(T.
- LIT. SUPPL.).
-
-
-=GODFREY, Hal=, _see_ =CHARLOTTE O’C. ECCLES=.
-
-
-=GOODRICH, Samuel Griswold; “Peter Parley.”= Born 1793 in Connecticut.
-Author of 170 volumes, the list of them, with notes, occupying 7½ columns
-of Allibone, of which 116 appeared under pseud. “Peter Parley.” Seven
-millions had, according to the Author, been sold at date of Allibone.
-
-⸺ TALES ABOUT IRELAND AND THE IRISH. 16mo. Pp. 300. (LONDON: _Berger_).
-[1834]. 1836, 1852, 1856. _n.d._ _c._ 1865.
-
- In Ch. I. there is a short account of the physical features,
- climate, etc., of I. Pages 20-140 give a popular account of
- Irish history from the English point of view, but on the whole
- not unfair to Ireland. At p. 150 commences a pleasant little
- description of a tour round I., with some little account of
- antiquities seen on the way; also occasional legends and
- stories connected with places. Illustrated by a number of small
- nondescript woodcuts of no value. The above work seems to be
- a portion of the Author’s _Tales about Great Britain_. First
- publ. Baltimore, 1834.
-
-
-=GRANT, John O’Brien; “Denis Ignatius Moriarty.”= The former of these two
-names is signed to a dedication in _The Wife Hunter_, one of the “Tales
-by the Moriarty Family.” I am not sure that it is not as fictitious as
-the second.
-
-⸺ THE HUSBAND HUNTER. Three Vols. 1839.
-
- A society novel. Scene: Kerry, _c._ 1830. There is very little
- plot, and the matrimonial complications (a Russian prince and
- a German baron are involved) of the lady who gives to the
- story its title form by no means the central episode. The
- conversations are rather artificial and the humour a little
- insipid. Pleasant portrait of a priest of the old sporting
- type. Nothing objectionable.
-
-⸺ INNISFOYLE ABBEY. Three Vols. (LONDON). 1840.
-
- A story dealing with the religious question in Ireland, as seen
- from a Catholic standpoint. It is full of able controversy
- and shows keen observation. The hero Howard’s Protestant
- and anti-Irish prejudices are made to give way as the real
- situation of things is forced in on him. The restoration of
- Innisfoyle Abbey is one of the main incidents. Some of the
- incidents are taken from facts, _e.g._, the Rathcormac tithe
- massacre. These incidents are related with energy and pathos.
- But in general the story is of a lighter character, full of
- broad Irish humour, and placing the sayings and doings of our
- Orange fellow-countrymen in a point of view as ludicrous as it
- is horrible. “A rambling, spirited, and racy tale, eccentric
- and even absurd sometimes, but very original and entertaining.”
- “This writer is known as the author of several amusing and
- clever novels.”—(_D. R._).
-
-
-=GRAVES, Alfred Perceval.= Born in Dublin, 1846, but his family resided
-in Kerry. Son of late Dr. Graves, Bp. of Limerick. Educated at Windermere
-Coll. and T.C.D. Was Inspector of Schools from 1875-1910. For eight years
-Hon. Sec. of Irish Literary Society. Publ. upwards of seventeen books,
-nearly all on Irish subjects—poems, songs (including the famous “Father
-O’Flynn”), translations from the Irish, essays. Resides in Wimbledon.
-
-⸺ THE IRISH FAIRY BOOK. (_Fisher Unwin_). Illustr. by George Denham.
-1909. A new ed. at 3_s._ 6_d._, with fresh introd., is forthcoming.
-
- A collection of fairy, folk, and hero-tales, nearly all
- selected from books already published, together with poems by
- Mangan, Tennyson, Nora Hopper, &c. Also tales from Standish
- H. O’Grady, Brian O’Looney, Thomas Boyd, Mrs. M’Clintock,
- Mrs. Ewing, Douglas Hyde, O’Kearney, &c. All are inspired by
- Gaelic originals. “The book is one to delight children for its
- simple, direct narratives of wonder and mystery,” while the
- fairy mythology will interest the student of the early life
- of man. The illustrations are as fanciful and elusive as the
- beings whose doings are told in the tales. Mr. Graves’s Preface
- is a popular review of the origin and character of fairy
- lore.—(_Press Notice_).
-
-
-=GREER, James.=
-
-⸺ THREE WEE ULSTER LASSIES; or, News from our Irish Cousins. (_Cassell_),
-1_s._ 6_d._ Illustr. by old blocks. 1883.
-
- The three lassies are Bessie Strong, the Ulster-Saxon, a
- landlord’s daughter; Jennie Scott, the Ulster-Scot, a farmer’s
- daughter; and Nelly Nolan, the Ulster-Kelt, a peasant girl.
- The Author insists throughout on the vast superiority of the
- English and Scotch elements of the population—“the grave,
- grim, hardy, sturdy race.” Interlarded with texts and hymns.
- In the end Nelly, after an encounter with the priest and
- stormy interviews with the neighbours, is converted and goes
- to America. The Author died in Derry in 1913 at an advanced
- age. He edited a _Guide to Londonderry and the Highlands of
- Donegal_, 1885, which went through several editions.
-
-
-=GREER, Tom.= Was born at Anahilt, Co. Down, a member of a well known
-Ulster family. Ed. at Queen’s College, Belfast. M.A. and M.D., Queen’s
-University, and practised in Cambridge. Unsuccessfully contested North
-Derry as a Liberal Home Ruler, 1892, and died a few years afterwards. The
-central idea of this tale was suggested by the old Co. Derry folk tale of
-Hudy McGuiggen. See HARKIN, Hugh.
-
-⸺ A MODERN DÆDALUS. Pp. 261. (LONDON: _Griffith, Farran_, &c.). 1885.
-
- The introd. is signed John O’Halloran, Dublin, 30th Feb.,
- 1887! A curious story, told in first person, of a Donegal
- lad who learned the secret of aerial flight by watching the
- sea-birds. He flies over to London. Is in the House of Commons
- for a debate. Parnell is well described. The way Parliament
- and the Government and the Press dealt with the new invention
- is cleverly and amusingly told. Jack, the hero, is imprisoned
- but escapes, and on his return there is a successful rising in
- Ireland, who establishes her independence by her air fleet.
- The book is full of politics (Nationalist point of view).
- An eviction scene in Donegal—“The Battle of Killynure”—is
- described. Shrewd strokes of satire are aimed at the Tories
- throughout.
-
-
-=GREGORY, Lady.= Daughter of Dudley Persse, D.L., of Roxborough, Co.
-Galway. She has identified herself with the modern Irish literary
-movement. Besides the books here noted she has written a great many plays
-for the Abbey Theatre. Her home is Coole Park, Gort, Co. Galway.
-
-⸺ CUCHULAIN OF MUIRTHEMNE. Pp. 360. (_Murray_). 6_s._ Pref. by W. B.
-Yeats. (N.Y.: _Scribner_). 2.00. 1902.
-
- The Cuchulain legends woven into an ordered narrative. The
- translation for the most part is taken from texts already
- published. Lady Gregory has made her own translation from them,
- comparing it with translations already published. “I have fused
- different versions together and condensed many passages, and I
- have left out many.” The narrative is not told in dialect, but
- in the idiom of the peasant who speaks in English and thinks
- in Gaelic. “I have thought it more natural to tell the stories
- in the manner of thatched houses, where I have heard so many
- legends of Finn, &c. ... than in the manner of the slated
- houses where I have not heard them.” The matter also is often
- such as the peasant Seanchuidhe might choose; the clear epic
- flow being clogged with garbage of the Jack-the-Giant-killer
- type. Fiona MacLeod says very well of the style that it is
- “over cold in its strange sameness of emotion, a little chill
- with the chill of studious handicraft,” and speaks elsewhere of
- its “monotonous passionlessness” and its “lack of virility.”
- Yet to the book as a whole he gives high, if qualified, praise.
- W. B. Yeats, in his enthusiastic Preface, speaks of it as
- perhaps the best book that has ever come out of Ireland. All
- these remarks apply also to the following work.
-
-⸺ GODS AND FIGHTING MEN. Pp. 476. (_Murray_). 6_s._ Pref. by W. B. Yeats.
-(N.Y.: _Scribner_). 2.00. 1906.
-
- Treats of: Part I. “The Gods” (Tuatha De Danaan, Lugh, The
- Coming of the Gael, Angus Og, the Dagda, Fate of Children
- of Lir, &c.); II. “The Fianna” (Finn, Oisin, Diarmuid, and
- Grania). The Finn Cycle is treated as being wholly legendary.
-
-⸺ A BOOK OF SAINTS AND WONDERS. (_Murray_). 5_s._ 1907.
-
- A series of very short (half page or so) and disconnected
- stories of fragmentary anecdotes. Told in language which is
- a literal translation from the Irish, and in the manner of
- illiterate peasants. First, there are stories of the saints,
- all quite fanciful, of course, and usually devoid of definite
- meaning. Then there is the Voyage of Maeldune, a strange piece
- of fantastic imagination often degenerating into extravagance
- and silliness. The book is not suitable for certain readers
- owing to naturalistic expressions.
-
-⸺ THE KILTARTAN WONDER-BOOK. Pp. 103. 9 in. + 7. (_Maunsel_). 3_s._ 6_d._
-net. Illustr. by Margaret Gregory. Linen cover. 1910.
-
- Sixteen typical folk-tales collected in Kiltartan, a barony in
- Galway, on the borders of Clare, from the lips of old peasants.
- “I have not changed a word in these stories as they were told
- to me.”—(Note at end). But some transpositions of parts have
- been made. It does not appear whether the stories were told
- to Lady Gregory in Irish or in English. Nothing unsuited to
- children. All the tales are distinctly _modern_ in tone if not
- in origin. The illustrations are quaint and original, with
- their crude figures vividly coloured in flat tints.
-
-
-=GRIERSON, Elizabeth.=
-
-⸺ THE CHILDREN’S BOOK OF CELTIC STORIES. Pp. 324. (_Black_). 6_s._ Twelve
-very good illustrations in colour from drawings by Allan Stewart. 1908.
-
- Sixteen fairy, folk, and hero-tales, partly Irish, partly
- Scotch, dealing, among other things, with wonderful talking
- animals that prove to be human beings transformed, adventures
- of king’s sons amid all kinds of wonders, &c. One is “The Fate
- of the Children of Lir,” and there are five or six about Fin.
- There is little or no comicality. The style is simple and
- refined, free from the usual defects of folk-lore. The book is
- beautifully and attractively produced.
-
-⸺ THE SCOTTISH FAIRY BOOK. Pp. 384. (_Fisher Unwin_). 6_s._ 100 Ill. by
-M. M. Williams. 1910.
-
- Same series as Mr. A. P. Graves’s _Irish Fairy Book_, _q.v._
- Illustr. in a similar way. Not all of these tales will be new
- to Irish children.
-
-
-=GRIERSON, Rev. Robert.= Resides at 41 Ormond Road, Rathmines. His two
-books are long out of print. I have been unable to obtain information
-about them. They are not in the British Museum Library.
-
-⸺ THE INVASION OF CROMLEIGH: a Story of the Times.
-
-⸺ BALLYGOWNA. (ABERDEEN: _Moran_). 1898.
-
-
-=GRIFFIN, Gerald.= Is one of our foremost novelists of the old
-school. Born 1803, died 1840. Brought up on the banks of the Shannon,
-twenty-eight miles from Limerick, at twenty he went to London, where all
-his writing was done. Two years before his death he became a Christian
-Brother. “He was the first,” says Dr. Sigerson, “to present several of
-our folk customs, tales, and ancient legends in English prose.” P. J.
-Kenedy, of New York, publishes an edition of his works in seven volumes,
-and Messrs. Duffy have an edition in ten vols. at 2_s._ each.
-
-⸺ HOLLAND TIDE. Pp. 378. (_Simpkin & Marshall_). 1827.
-
- First series of _Tales of the Munster Festivals_, _q.v._ Often
- published separately.
-
-⸺ THE COLLEGIANS; or, The Colleen Bawn. (_Duffy_). 2_s._ [1828]. Still
-reprinted. (N.Y.: _Benziger_). 0.75. A new ed. forthcoming (_Talbot
-Press_). 2_s._ 6_d._
-
- Pronounced the best Irish novel by Aubrey de Vere, Gavan Duffy,
- and Justin M’Carthy. Its main interest lies in its being a
- tragedy of human passion. The character of Hardress Cregan,
- the chief actor, is powerfully and pitilessly analysed. Eily
- O’Connor is one of the most lovable characters in fiction.
- Danny Man, with his dog-like fidelity; Myles, the mountainy
- man, simple yet shrewd; Fighting Poll of the Reeks; Hardress
- Cregan’s mother, are characters that live in the mind, like the
- memories of real persons. There are pictures, too, of the life
- of the day, the drunken, duelling squireen, the respectable
- middle-class Dalys, the manners and ways of the peasantry,
- whose quaint, humorous, anecdotal talk is perfectly reproduced,
- but who are shown merely from without. The scene is laid partly
- in Limerick and partly in Killarney. Dion Boucicault’s drama
- “The Colleen Bawn” is founded on this story, which itself is
- founded on a real murder-trial in which O’Connell defended the
- prisoner and which Griffin reported for the press.
-
-⸺ CARD-DRAWING, &c. 1829.
-
- Second series of _Tales of the Munster Festivals_, _q.v._
-
-⸺ THE CHRISTIAN PHYSIOLOGIST. Tales illustrative of the Five Senses. Pp.
-xxvi. + 376. (_Bull_). 1830.
-
- The tales are:—1. _The Kelp Gatherers_; 2. _The Day of Trial_;
- 3. _The Voluptuary Cured_; 4. _The Self Consumed_; and, 5. _The
- Selfish Crotarie_. All are clever little stories of ancient and
- modern Ireland, several of which have been reprinted separately.
-
-⸺ THE INVASION. Very long. (_Duffy_). 2_s._ [1832]. Still reprinted.
-(N.Y.: _Benziger_). 0.75.
-
- Scene: chiefly the territory of the O’Haedha sept on Bantry
- Bay. The story deals chiefly with the fortunes of the
- O’Haedhas, but there are many digressions. The innumerable
- ancient Irish names give the book a forbidding aspect to one
- unacquainted with the language. The narrative interest is
- almost wanting, the chief interest being the laborious and
- careful picture of the life and civilization of the time, the
- eve of the Danish Invasions. The archæology occasionally lacks
- accuracy and authority, but these qualities are partly supplied
- in the notes, which are by Eugene O’Curry. The invasion
- referred to is an early incursion on the coasts of West Munster
- by a Danish chief named Gurmund. Some of the characters are
- finely drawn, _e.g._, the hero, Elim, and his mother and Duach,
- the faithful kerne.
-
-⸺ THE RIVALS. 1832.
-
- Third series of _Tales of the Munster Festivals_, _q.v._
-
-⸺ TALES OF THE MUNSTER FESTIVALS. (N.Y.: _Pratt_). 0.50.
-
- Scene: the wild cliffs and crags of Kerry and West Clare.
- Theme: the play of passions as wild and terrible as the scenes;
- yet there are glimpses of peasant home-life and hospitality,
- and many touches of humour. The tales appeared in three series,
- 1827, 1829, and 1832. The first (Holland Tide) contained the
- _Aylmers of Ballyaylmer_, a story about a family of small
- gentry on the Kerry coast, with many details of smuggling; _The
- Hand and Word_, _The Barber of Bantry_, with its picture of
- the Moynahans, a typical middle-class family, like the Dalys
- in _The Collegians_, and several shorter tales. The second
- series contains _Card-drawing_, _The Half-Sir_, and _Suil Dhuv
- the Coiner_, which deals with the “Palatines” of Limerick. The
- third series contains _The Rivals_ and _Tracy’s Ambition_.
- These are sensational stories. The first has an interesting
- picture of a hedge-school, the second brings out the people’s
- sufferings at the hands of “loyalists” and government
- officials. They contain several instances of seduction and of
- elopement. Perhaps the best of these is _Suil Dhuv the Coiner_.
- The characters of the robbers who compose the coiner’s gang are
- admirably discriminated, and the passion of remorse in _Suil
- Dhuv_ is pictured with a power almost equal to that of _The
- Collegians_.
-
-⸺ TALES OF MY NEIGHBOURHOOD. Three Vols. (_Saunders & Otley_). 1835.
-
- Vol. 1 contains _The Barber of Bantry_. Vol. 2. Three sketches
- and the dramatic ballad _The Nightwalker_. Vol. 3. Eight short
- sketches and the poems _Shanid Castle_ and _Orange and Green_.
-
-⸺ THE DUKE OF MONMOUTH. Pp. 423. (_Maxwell_). 1842.
-
- A clever historical novel, dealing with this unfortunate
- nobleman and the battle of Sedgmoor. Two Irish soldiers, Morty
- and Shemus Delany, supply the comic relief. The fine ballad,
- _The Bridal of Malahide_, first appears here, and the song, “A
- Soldier, A Soldier.”
-
-⸺ TALES OF A JURY ROOM. Pp. 463. (_Duffy_). 2_s._ [1842]. Still reprinted.
-
- The scenes of three of these tales are in foreign lands—Poland,
- the East, France in the days of Bayard. The remaining ten
- are Irish. Among them are fairy tales, tales of humble life,
- an episode of Clontarf, a story of the days of Hugh O’Neill,
- and several, including the Swans of Lir, that deal with
- pre-Christian times. All are well worth reading, especially
- “Antrim Jack”—Macalister, who died to save Michael Dwyer.
-
-
-=GRIFFITH, George.=
-
-⸺ THE KNIGHTS OF THE WHITE ROSE. Pp. 311. (_J. F. Shaw_). 3_s._ 6_d._
-Several good illustr. by Hal Hurst. 1908.
-
- The adventures of three young soldiers, an Englishman (the
- hero), an Irishman, and a Scotchman, in a Royalist crack
- regiment. Lively descriptions of fighting before Derry and at
- the Boyne. Good outline of the campaign but little historical
- detail or description. Told in pleasant style with plenty of
- go. For boys.
-
-
-=GRIMSHAW, Beatrice.= An Irish Authoress, born in Cloona, Co. Antrim.
-Hitherto her novels do not deal directly with Ireland, but some of her
-chief characters are Irish. Thus Hugh Lynch, a Co. Clare man, is the hero
-of her _When the Red Gods Call_ (Mills & Boon), 1910, and Geo. Scott,
-a typical Belfastman, plays a prominent part in _Guinea Gold_ (Mills &
-Boon), 1912. These novels deal with New Guinea life.
-
-
-=GRINDON, Maurice.=
-
-⸺ KATHLEEN O’LEOVAN: a Fantasy. Pp. 107. Two illustr. (_Simpkin,
-Marshall_). 1896.
-
- Levan, grandson of an O’Leovan who had settled in England,
- visits the home of his ancestors, Castle Columba, Kilronan, and
- meets the heroine.
-
-
-=GUINAN, Rev. Joseph.= Father Guinan is P.P. of Dromod, in Co. Longford.
-Before his appointment to an Irish parish he passed five years in
-Liverpool. This gave him “the fresh eye,” the power to see things which,
-had he remained in Ireland, he might never have observed. His books deal
-with two things—the life of the poorest classes in the Midlands and the
-life of the priests. Of both he has intimate personal knowledge, and for
-both unbounded admiration. He writes simply and earnestly. To the critic
-used only to English literature, his work may seem wanting in artistic
-restraint, for he gives free vein to emotion. But this is more than
-atoned for by its obvious sincerity.
-
-⸺ SCENES AND SKETCHES IN AN IRISH PARISH; or, Priests and People in Doon.
-(_Gill_). 2_s._ Fourth edition. 1906.
-
- A faithful picture of typical things in Irish life: the
- Station, the Sunday Mass, the grinding of landlordism, the
- agrarian crime, the eviction, the emigration-wake. See
- especially the chapter “Sunday in Doon.” This is the Author’s
- first novel and is somewhat immature.
-
-⸺ THE SOGGARTH AROON. (_Gill & Duffy_). 2_s._ 6_d._ (N.Y.: _Benziger_).
-1.00. Second edition, 1907. Third, 1908.
-
- Pathetic experiences of a country curate in an out-of-the-way
- parish, where the people’s faith is strong and their lives
- supernaturally beautiful. The Soggarth shares the few joys and
- the many sorrows of their lives.
-
-⸺ THE MOORES OF GLYNN. Pp. 354. (_Washbourne_). 3_s._ 6_d._ (N.Y.:
-_Pratt_). 2.00. [1907]. Third edition. 1915.
-
- The fortunes of a family of four children whose mother is a
- beautiful and lovable character. The book is full of pictures
- of many phases of Irish life, the relations between landlord
- and tenant, priests and people, evictions, emigration, a
- “spoiled priest.” A typical description is the realistic
- picture of the pig fair. Full of true pathos, with an
- occasional touch of kindly humour.
-
-⸺ THE ISLAND PARISH. Pp. 331. (_Gill_). 1908.
-
- The work of an ideal young priest in Ballyvora, a kind of
- Sleepy Hollow where all is stagnation, poverty, and decay.
- The picture of these squalid conditions of life is one of
- photographic and unsparing exactness. Yet with loving insight
- the Author shows the peasant’s quiet happiness, beauty of soul,
- and downright holiness of life in the midst of all this. There
- is no plot, the book is a series of pictures loosely strung
- together. There is a chapter on Lisdoonvarna.
-
-⸺ DONAL KENNY. (_Washbourne_). 1910. (N.Y.: _Benziger_). 1.10.
-
- Donal tells his own story—his mother’s early death, followed
- by his father’s rapid fall into habits of drink; his own early
- struggles; his love for Norah Kenny; his search for traces of
- her real identity; and the happy ending of it all. Displays all
- the Author’s knowledge of Irish life in sketches of priests and
- people. Especially good is the character study of the faithful
- old nurse, Nancy, with her quaint sayings.—(_Press Notice_).
-
-⸺ THE CURATE OF KILCLOON. Pp. 282. (_Gill_). 3_s._ 6_d._ 1913.
-
- Labours, sorrows, and consolations of a young priest in
- a very out of the way country parish. He had been very
- distinguished at Maynooth and seemed thrown away on such a
- place as Kilcloon, but he finds that there is work there worth
- his doing—temperance to be promoted, the Gaelic League to be
- established, industries to be fostered. The story has the same
- qualities as the Author’s former books, and in fact differs
- little from them.
-
-
-=GWYNN, Stephen.= Born in Donegal, 1864. Eldest son of Rev. John Gwynn
-of T.C.D. Is a grandson of William Smith O’Brien. Educated St. Columba’s
-College, Rathfarnham, and Oxford, where he read a very distinguished
-course. Since 1890 he has published a great deal—literary criticism,
-translations, Irish topography, journalism, novels, politics. Has been
-Nationalist M.P. for Galway City since 1906, and is one of the most
-active members of the Irish Parliamentary Party.
-
-⸺ THE OLD KNOWLEDGE. (_Macmillan_). 6_s._ 1901.
-
- A book quite unique in conception. Into the romance are woven
- fishing episodes and cycling episodes and adventures among
- flowers. There are exquisite glimpses, too, of Irish home life,
- and the very spirit of the mists and loughs and mountains of
- Donegal is called up before the reader. But above all there
- is the mystic conception of Conroy, the Donegal schoolmaster,
- whose soul lives with visions, and communes with the spirits of
- eld, the nature gods of pagan Ireland.
-
-⸺ JOHN MAXWELL’S MARRIAGE. (_Macmillan_). 6_s._ 1903.
-
- Scene: chiefly Donegal, _c._ 1761-1779. A strong and intense
- story. Interesting not only for its powerful plot, but for
- the admirably painted background of scenery and manners, and
- for its studies of character. It depicts in strong colours
- the tyranny of Protestant colonists and the hate which it
- produces in the outcast Catholics. One of the main motives of
- the story is a forced marriage of a peculiarly odious kind. In
- connexion with this marriage there is one scene in the book
- that is drawn with a realism which, we think, makes the book
- unsuitable for certain classes of readers. The hero fights on
- the American side in the war of Independence, and takes a share
- in Nationalist schemes at home.
-
-⸺ THE GLADE IN THE FOREST. Pp. 224. (_Maunsel_). 1_s._ Cloth. 1907.
-
- Seven short stories, chiefly about Donegal, five of them
- dealing with peasant life, of which the Author writes with
- intimate and kindly knowledge. “The Grip of the Land” describes
- the struggles of a small farmer and the love of his bleak
- fields that found no counterpart in his eldest boy, who has his
- heart set on emigration. Compare Bazin’s _La Terre qui Meurt_.
- All the stories had previously appeared in such magazines as
- the CORNHILL and BLACKWOOD’S.
-
-⸺ ROBERT EMMET. (_Macmillan_). 6_s._ Map of Dublin in 1803. 1909.
-
- An account of the Emmet rising related with scrupulous
- fidelity to fact and in minute detail. The Author introduces
- no reflections of his own, leaving the facts to speak. His
- narrative is graphic and vivid, the style of high literary
- value. The minor actors in the drama—Quigley, Russell,
- Hamilton, Dwyer—are carefully drawn. Though he gives a
- prominent place in the story to Emmet’s romantic love for Sarah
- Curran, Mr. Gwynn has sought rather to draw a vivid picture of
- the event by which the young patriot is known to history than
- to reconstruct his personality.
-
-
-=HALL, E.=
-
-⸺ THE BARRYS OF BEIGH. Pp. 394. (_M’Glashan & Gill_). [1875.]
-
- Scene: banks of Shannon twenty miles below Limerick. Story
- opens about 1775.
-
-
-=HALL, Mrs. S. C.= Born in Dublin, 1800. Brought by her mother (who was
-of French Huguenot descent) to Wexford in 1806. Here she lived, mixing
-a good deal with the peasantry, until the age of fifteen, when she was
-taken away to London, and did not again return to Wexford. Wrote nine
-novels, and many short stories and sketches. Besides the works noticed
-here, she and her husband produced between them a very large number of
-volumes. See his _Reminiscences of a Long Life_. Two vols. London. 1883.
-A reviewer in BLACKWOOD’S describes her work as “bright with an animated
-and warm nationality, apologetic and defensive.” She died in 1881.
-
-⸺ SKETCHES OF IRISH CHARACTER. Pp. 443. (_Chatto & Windus_). 7_s._
-6_d._ With Sixty-one Illustrations by Maclise, Gilbert, Harvey, George
-Cruikshank, &c. [1829]. 1854 (5th), 1892, &c., &c.
-
- Mrs. Hall intends in these sketches to do for her village
- of Bannow, in Wexford, what Miss Mitford did for her
- English village. This district, she says, “possesses to a
- very remarkable extent all the moral, social, and natural
- advantages, which are to be found throughout the country.”
- The author proclaims (cf. Introduction) her intention “so
- to picture the Irish character as to make it more justly
- appreciated ... and more respected in England.” She applies
- to the peasantry the saying “their virtues are their own;
- but their vices have been forced upon them.” Again she
- says, “the characters here are all portraits.” Yet it must
- be confessed that the standpoint is, after all, alien, and
- something strangely like the traditional stage Irishman appears
- occasionally in these pages. There is, however, not a shadow of
- religious bias. The “Rambling Introduction” makes very pleasant
- reading.
-
-⸺ LIGHTS AND SHADOWS OF IRISH LIFE. Three vols. (long). (_Colburn_). 1838.
-
- In five parts:—1. “The Groves of Blarney” (whole of Vol.
- I.). 2. “Sketches on Irish Highways during the Autumn of
- 1834” (whole of Vol. II.). 3. “Illustrations of Irish Pride”
- (two stories). 4. “The Dispensation.” 5. “Old Granny.” No. 1
- “derives its title from an occurrence ... in ... Blarney ...
- about the year 1812.”—(_Pref._). It is a thoroughly good story,
- telling how Connor in order to win the fair widow Margaret,
- his early love, takes an oath against drinking, flirting, and
- faction-fighting for a year, and how a vengeful old tramp woman
- makes him break it on the very last day. Amusingly satirical
- portrait of the little Cockney, Peter Swan. Author’s sympathies
- thoroughly Irish. Contents of Vol. II.:—“The Jaunting Car,”
- “Beggars,” “Naturals,” “Servants,” “Ruins” [or stories told _a
- propos_ of them], &c. The dialect is very well done, full of
- humour and flavour. Characters all drawn from peasant class.
-
-⸺ STORIES OF THE IRISH PEASANTRY. Pp. 302, (close print). (_Chambers_).
-[1840]. 1851, &c.
-
- Aims to reconcile landlords and peasantry. To this end tries
- to show each to what their enmity is due and how they may
- remedy the evil. The stories are to show the peasantry that
- their present condition is due to defects in the national
- character and in the prevailing national habits—chiefly drink,
- early marriages, laziness, conservatism, superstition. The
- Authoress has a good grasp of the ways of the people, but her
- reasoning is peculiar. When a peasant, driven to desperation by
- a cruel eviction, swears vengeance, this is put down to innate
- lawlessness, sinfulness, and a murderous disposition. Twenty
- stories in all, some melodramatic, some pastoral.
-
-⸺ THE WHITEBOY. (_Ward, Lock, Routledge_). 2_s._, and 6_d._ [1845].
-Several eds. since. (N.Y.: _Pratt_). 0.50.
-
- In the height of the Whiteboy disturbances, which are luridly
- described, a young Englishman comes to Ireland with the
- intention of uplifting the peasantry and bettering their lot.
- After some terrible experiences he at length succeeds to a
- wonderful extent in his benevolent purposes. The book is of a
- didactic type.—(_Krans_).
-
-⸺ THE FIGHT OF FAITH: a Story of Ireland. Two Vols. (_Chapman & Hall_).
-[1862]. 1869.
-
- Opens at Havre in 1680 with a Huguenot family about to fly
- from persecution. Their ship is wrecked off the Isle of Wight,
- where the little girl Pauline is rescued and adopted by an old
- sea-captain. The scene then changes to Carrickfergus, then held
- by Schomberg. Geo. Walker is introduced, and the story ends
- with the battle of the Boyne (the fight of faith). View-point
- strongly Protestant.
-
-⸺ NELLY NOWLAN, and Other Stories. Popular Tales of Irish Life and
-Character. Seventh edition, with numerous Illustr. Demy 8vo. (LONDON).
-1865.
-
- Contains twenty-five delightful tales of Irish life, with
- numerous illustrations by Maclise, Franklin, Brooke, Herbert,
- Harvey, Nichol, and Weigall; “Sweet Lilly O’Brian,” “Mary
- Ryan’s Daughter,” “The Bannow Postman,” “Father Mike,” and
- twenty-one other tales. As a graphic delineator of Irish life
- and character, no other writer has dealt with the subject so
- delightfully and truly as Mrs. Hall. She wrote many volumes on
- the subject, of which this is the best.
-
-⸺ TALES OF IRISH LIFE AND CHARACTER. (_T. N. Foulis_). 5_s._ With Sixteen
-Illustr. in colour from the famous Irish paintings of Erskine Nichol,
-R.S.A. 1909.
-
-
-=HALPINE, Charles Graham; “Private Myles O’Reilly.”= Born in Oldcastle,
-Co. Meath, 1829. Son of Rev. N. J. Halpin (_sic_). Ed. T.C.D. Took up
-journalism and went first to London, where he came to know some of the
-young Irelanders, and thence to America. Became a well-known journalist.
-Fought through the Civil War. His songs became very well-known throughout
-the Union. D. 1868. Publ. also a series of prose sketches, _Baked Meats
-of the Funeral_, and a vol. of reminiscences.
-
-⸺ MOUNTCASHEL’S BRIGADE; or, The Rescue of Cremona. Pp. 151 (close
-print). (DUBLIN: _T. D. Sullivan_). Fifth ed., 1882.
-
- Episodes in the story of the Irish Brigade in the service of
- France. The narrative is enlivened with love affairs, duels,
- and exciting adventures very well told.
-
-⸺ THE PATRIOT BROTHERS; or, The Willows of the Golden Vale. (DUBLIN).
-Sixth ed. 1884. One ed., pp. 173 (small print), _n.d._, was publ. by A.
-M. Sullivan.
-
- Sub-title: A page from Ireland’s Martyrology. A finely written
- romance dealing with the fate of the brothers Sheares,
- executed in 1798. Their story is followed with practically
- historical exactitude, a thread of romance being woven in. A
- good account of the politics of the time, especially of the
- elaborate spy-system then flourishing, is given, but not so
- as to interfere with the interest of the tale. There are fine
- descriptions of the scenery of Wicklow, in which the action
- chiefly takes place, and especially of the Golden Vale between
- Bray and Delgany.
-
-
-=HAMILTON, Catherine J.= Born in Somerset of Irish parents, her father
-being from Strabane and her mother from Queen’s Co. Ed. chiefly by her
-father, a vicar of the Ch. of England. At his death, in 1859, removed to
-Ireland and lived there more than thirty years. Publ. at twenty-five her
-first story, _Hedged with Thorns_. Wrote verse for the ARGOSY and Irish
-stories for the GRAPHIC; contributed regularly to WEEKLY IRISH TIMES and
-IRELAND’S OWN, including several serials. At present resides in London.
-Author of _Notable Irishwomen_ (1904), _Women Writers, their Works and
-Ways_ (1892), &c.
-
-⸺ MARRIAGE BONDS; or, Christian Hazell’s Married Life. Pp. 439. (_Ward,
-Lock_). _n.d._ (1878).
-
- First appeared in THE ENGLISHWOMAN’S DOMESTIC MAGAZINE. An
- unhappy marriage of a sweet, loving, sensitive nature to a man
- of a hard, selfish character, who treats his wife with studied
- neglect and discourtesy. Christian comes from her native
- English manor house to live with Alick Hazell in an ugly,
- ill-managed Irish country house, among disagreeable neighbours
- somewhere on the S.E. coast of Ireland. He hates the people,
- and is a bad landlord. She has no friend until the arrival
- of his brother Eustace, whose mother was Irish and who loves
- Ireland. Almost unawares they fall in love, but E. is a man of
- honour, and C. is faithful to her husband to the very end. The
- author is on Ireland’s side, though somewhat apologetically and
- vaguely. Good picture of bitterly anti-Irish narrow-minded type
- of minor country gentry.
-
-⸺ THE FLYNNS OF FLYNNVILLE. Pp. 250. (_Ward, Lock_). 1879.
-
- A story of the sensational kind, founded on the murder of a
- bank-manager by a constabulary officer called Montgomery, and
- the subsequent trial, which many years ago excited considerable
- interest. Scene: S. of Ireland.
-
-⸺ TRUE TO THE CORE: a Romance of ’98. Two Vols. (_F. V. White_). 1884.
-
- The story of the love of a Kerry peasant girl for the ill-fated
- John Sheares. The interest is that of plot, history being quite
- of minor importance, and centres in the scheming of his various
- enemies to compass the destruction of John Sheares in spite
- of all the efforts of his guardian angel, Norah Nagle. There
- is not one really sympathetic character. Sheares is a mere
- dreamer; Norah is generous and faithful, but lies and “barges”
- on occasion; almost all the rest, except Norah’s peasant lover,
- are fools or villains of the blackest sort. Disagreeable
- picture of the Dublin of the day. The story is told with
- considerable verve and carries one along. The Author is not at
- all hostile, but seems unstirred to any feeling of enthusiasm
- for the cause of Ireland.
-
-⸺ DR. BELTON’S DAUGHTERS. Pp. 169. (_Ward, Lock_). 1890.
-
- Alice the second marries a curate in the W. of Ireland and
- struggles to keep up on small means a good appearance. Her
- husband is an incurable optimist.
-
-⸺ THE LUCK OF THE KAVANAGHS. (_Sealy, Bryers_). 6_d._ 1910.
-
- Strange adventures of an emigrant Irish boy.
-
-
-=HAMILTON, Edwin, M.A., B.L., M.R.I.A.= Born 1849. Resides at Donaghadee,
-Co. Down. Author of _Dublin Doggerels_ (1880), _The Moderate Man_ (1888,
-_Downey_). The two following books are not in the British Museum Library.
-
-⸺ BALLYMUCKBEG. 1885.
-
- Political satire.
-
-⸺ WAGGISH TALES. (_Sealy, Bryers_). 1897.
-
-
-=HAMILTON, John, of St. Ernan’s. “An Irishman” [N.M.].=
-
-⸺ THE THREE FENIAN BROTHERS. (_Macmillan_). 18mo. 1866. 1_s._
-
- Paul, Mark, and Ned Ryan, sons of a well-to-do farmer, were
- enticed into joining the Brotherhood, the two former by
- Patrick Mahoney, the village schoolmaster. Ned had served
- in the Federal Army (U.S.A.), and was sent back to Ireland
- as a captain. “The characters and careers of the brothers
- are vividly depicted in an interesting tale, the dialogue is
- pointed, often witty.... In the unfolding of the story much
- light is incidentally thrown on the state of feeling in Ireland
- in 1865-6.” The Author has told his life-story in _Sixty Years’
- Experience as an Irish Landlord_, and given his views in
- _Thoughts on Ireland by an Irish Landlord_ (1886).
-
-
-=“HAMILTON, M.”; Mrs. Churchill-Luck=, _née_ =Spottiswoode-Ashe=. Is a
-native of Co. Derry. Publ. also _The Freedom of Harry Meredith_, _M’Leod
-of the Camerons_, _A Self-denying Ordinance_, _Mrs. Brett_, _The Woman
-who Looked Back_, &c.
-
-⸺ ON AN ULSTER FARM. Pp. 143. (_Everett_).
-
- A realistic sketch of the life of a workhouse child sent out to
- service to a particularly unlovable set of hard Scotch Ulster
- folk. Interesting as a study of character and as an exposure
- of the misery attendant on the working of certain parts of
- the workhouse system. This subject is also treated in Rosa
- Mulholland’s _Nanno_, _q.v._
-
-⸺ ACROSS AN IRISH BOG. (_Heinemann_). 1896.
-
- An ugly, but very powerful, tale of seduction in Irish peasant
- life. The study of the ignominious aspirations of the seducer,
- a Protestant clergyman, after social elevation forms the pith
- of the book. The difficulty of his position, technically on a
- level with the gentry, though he is wholly unequal to them in
- breeding, is brought out.
-
-⸺ BEYOND THE BOUNDARY. Pp. 306. (_Hurst & Blackett_). 1902.
-
- Scene: first in London, afterwards among Ulster peasantry
- (dialect cleverly reproduced). Theme: a curiously ill-assorted
- marriage. Brian Lindsay, son of Presbyterian Ulster peasants,
- had during a panic deserted his men in action. Afterwards he
- had been decorated mistakenly, instead of the man who had died
- to save him. In London he meets this man’s sister, a solitary
- working girl, but a lady. They are married, and he takes her
- home. Disillusionment on the wife’s part follows, and Brian is
- threatened with the discovery of his secret. What came of it
- all is told in a beautiful and convincing story. Not gloomy
- nor morbid. Running through the main plot is the story of
- poor little French Pipette, deserted by the foolish, selfish,
- mother, whom she adores. Old Lindsay, dour and godly, is very
- well done. An element of humour is found in the characters of
- Miss Arnold of the venomous tongue; fat little Mr. Leslie, who
- loves his dinners; and Maggie, the Lindsay’s maid-of-all-work.
-
-
-=HANNAY, Rev. James Owen=, _see_ =“GEORGE A. BIRMINGHAM.”=
-
-
-=HANNIGAN, D. F.= Was born at Dungarvan, 1855. Ed. at St. John’s,
-Waterford, and Queen’s College, Cork. Called to Irish bar, and formerly a
-journalist in Dublin; is now in America. Contributed a long serial, _The
-Moores of Moore’s Court_, to the MONITOR, 1879, and other stories to the
-Dublin press.
-
-⸺ LUTTRELL’S DOOM. Pp. 76. (ABERDEEN: _Moran_). 1_s._ 1896.
-
- Purports to be extracts from an Irish gentlewoman’s diary kept
- between 1690 and 1726.
-
-
-=HANNON, John.= Born at Isleworth, 1870. Son of John Hannon, of
-Kildorrery, Co. Cork. Ed. at St. Edmunds, England. For long engaged
-in educational work, he afterwards took up journalism. He resides in
-Isleworth.—(CATH. WHO’S WHO).
-
-⸺ THE KINGS AND THE CATS: Munster Fairy Tales. Pp. 78. Size 6¾ × 9¾
-(_Burns & Oates_). 2_s._ 6_d._ Thirteen illustr. by Louis Wain. 1908.
-
- Handsomely produced. Preface by Father M. Russell, S.J.
- Introductory verse by Katharine Tynan. Stories gleaned from old
- Irish peasants in England. Full of quaint, amusing turns of
- expression.
-
-
-=HANRAHAN, P. R.=
-
-⸺ EVA; or, the Buried City of Bannow.
-
- Mentioned in the notice of this Author in O’Donoghue’s _Poets
- of Ireland_.
-
-
-=[HARDY, Miss].=
-
-⸺ MICHAEL CASSIDY; or, The Cottage Gardener: a tale for small beginners.
-(_Seeley_). [1840]. 1845.
-
- By the Author of “The Confessor: a Jesuit tale of the times
- founded on fact” [viz., Miss Hardy]. Cushing. The 1845 ed. has
- a Pref. by C. B. Tayler. It is an attempt to urge people to
- small allotments, green crops, rotation, economy, and hard work.
-
-
-=HARDY, Philip Dixon.= _c._ 1794-1875. Was a bookseller and editor of
-various Dublin periodicals. Publ. several volumes of verse, some books on
-Irish topography, and some religious works of a strongly anti-Catholic
-character.
-
-⸺ LEGENDS, TALES, AND STORIES OF IRELAND. Pp. 328. (DUBLIN: _John
-Cumming_). 1837.
-
- Dedicated to Sir W. Betham. Hardy was the first editor of
- the DUBLIN PENNY JOURNAL. His tales of Irish life deal with
- fairies, faction-fights, smugglers, and burlesque or tragic
- adventures in a manner by no means without vivacity and
- cleverness, though the trail of the “stage-Irishman” is over
- most of his work. This edition was illustrated in a somewhat
- coarse and stage-Irish fashion. Other works of this Author
- were:—_Essays and Sketches of Irish Life and Character_;
- _Ireland in 1846-7, considered in reference to the rapid growth
- of Popery_, and several works on Irish topography.
-
-
-=HARKIN, Hugh= (1791-1854). For good account of this writer supplied by
-his son, see O’Donoghue’s _Poets of Ireland_.
-
-⸺ THE QUARTERCLIFT: or, the Adventures of Hudy McGuiggen. (BELFAST), _c._
-1841. In shilling monthly parts. Illustrated.
-
- An amusing story founded on the old Co. Derry folk tale of a
- “gommeral” named Hudy McGuiggin, who didn’t see why he couldn’t
- fly. So he made himself wings out of the feathers of a goose.
- Arrayed in these, he jumped off a high mountain (still shown
- by the peasantry), and of course came to grief. Strange to
- say, he recovered and lived to be an old man. This and other
- incidents are related with great verve and truth, and many well
- pourtrayed characters are introduced. See GREER, Tom.
-
-
-=[HARRIS, Miss S. M.]; “Athene.”= Fourth daughter of a Co. Down farmer,
-the late William Harris, of Ballynafern, Banbridge. The family has been
-long resident in Belfast.
-
-⸺ IN THE VALLEYS OF SOUTH DOWN. Pp. viii. + 155. (BELFAST: _M’Caw,
-Stevenson, & Orr_). 1898.
-
- Rupert Stanwell is kept apart from Mabel Mervyn, for his
- parents want him to marry a rich American heiress; but the
- two are joined in the end, and all is well. Conventional and
- unobjectionable, without any special local colour.
-
-⸺ GRACE WARDWOOD. Pp. 269. (_Duffy_). 2_s._ 6_d._ Tasteful binding. 1900.
-
- A domestic tale of middle class folk in Co. Down. Several
- love stories intertwined. Gracefully written but “feminine,”
- and not very mature in style. Contains little that is
- characteristically Irish, except some legends introduced
- incidentally.
-
-⸺ DUST OF THE WORLD. Pp. vi. + 293. (_Allen_). 6_s._ 1913.
-
- Sub-t.: “An historical romance of Belfast in the 17th century.”
- Introduces the Earl of Donegall, the lord of the soil; Lady
- Donegall who, to the annoyance of Bp. Jeremy Taylor, has
- hankerings after Presbyterianism; George Macartney, the
- Sovereign or Mayor; and other Belfast townsfolk of the day.
- Swift is an anachronism in this story, and there are no grounds
- in history for the portrait given of Patrick Adair, an early
- Presbyterian minister. Lord Donegall is made to talk with a
- brogue, while a butcher’s wife talks in the best of English.
-
-
-=HARTLEY, Mrs.=, _née_ =May Laffan=. Born in Dublin. Widow of the late W.
-N. Hartley, F.R.S. Her brother William Laffan was at the head of Laffan’s
-Agency. For some considerable time past she has done no literary work.
-
-⸺ HOGAN, M.P. Pp. 491. (_Macmillan_). 3_s._ 6_d._ [1876]. New ed. 1882.
-
- Picture of Dublin society, showing how Catholics are
- handicapped by their want of education and good breeding,
- due, in the Author’s view, to wholly wrong system of Catholic
- education. Discursive and garrulous. Full of social manœuvres,
- petty intrigues, gossip, and scandal. Convent education from
- within.
-
-⸺ THE HON. MISS FERRARD. [1877]. (_Macmillan_). 1882. 3_s._ 6_d._
-
- The Hon. Miss F. is the only daughter of the ancient and
- broken-down house of the Darraghmores. The father squanders
- his income faster than he gets it, and has to keep moving from
- place to place, living chiefly on credit. Miss F. is brought up
- in this inconsequent, semi-gipsy family, with wild harum-scarum
- brothers. The Author does not blink the consequent shortcomings
- of the heroine. Amusing things happen when she goes to live
- with her maiden aunts at Bath—an unsuccessful experiment.
- Her choice between her Irish farmer lover and the admirable
- English Mr. Satterthwaite—we shall not reveal. Good minor
- characters—Cawth, the old servant of the family; Mr. Perry,
- the family lawyer. “The Author represents the interiors of all
- Irish households of the middle classes as repulsive in the
- extreme.... There is in them an innate vulgarity of thought,
- with an atmosphere of transparent pretension.”—(SATURDAY REV.,
- xliv., 403).
-
-⸺ FLITTERS, TATTERS, AND THE COUNSELLOR. (_Macmillan_). 3_s._ 6_d._
-[1879]. New ed., 1883.
-
- Four stories: (1) Three little Dublin street arabs, nicknamed
- as in title. Lively and realistic portraits. Poignant and
- sympathetic picture of slum misery and degradation. (2) Deals
- with the same subject. (3) Glasgow slum life. (4) Lurid and
- revolting story of conspiracy and murder in a country district.
- There are those who consider No. 1 quite the most perfect thing
- that has been written about Dublin life.
-
-⸺ THE GAME HEN. (DUBLIN). 1880.
-
-⸺ CHRISTY CAREW. Pp. 429. (_Macmillan_). 2_s._ [1880]. New ed., 1883;
-still in print.
-
- Written in spirit of revolt against Catholic discouragement
- of mixed marriages, showing the social disabilities which it
- draws upon Catholics. Several portraits of priests, _e.g._, a
- collector of old books and a model priest. Studies of various
- aspects of Catholic life.
-
-⸺ ISMAY’S CHILDREN. (_Macmillan_). 2_s._ [1887].
-
- Tale of Fenian times, little concerned with political aims, but
- rather with personal fortunes of the lads who are drawn into
- the midnight drillings. Little political bias, but sympathies
- with “the quality.” Close studies of Irish middle-class
- domestic life. Scene: Co. Cork. The ATHENÆUM pronounced this
- novel to be “the most valuable and dispassionate contribution
- towards the solution of that problem [the Irish character]
- which has been put forth in this generation in the domain of
- fiction.”
-
-
-=HATTON, Joseph.=
-
-⸺ JOHN NEEDHAM’S DOUBLE. Pp. 208. 16mo. (_Maxwell_). 1_s._ Paper. _n.d._
-(1885)
-
- “A story founded on fact,” viz., John Sadleir’s career, his
- fraud on the Tipperary Bank, &c. An exciting and melodramatic
- story. Needham poisons his “double,” Joseph Norbury, and
- deposits his body on Hampstead Heath, then escapes to America,
- is tracked and arrested, but dramatically takes poison when
- under arrest. Told with considerable verve. Thirty of this
- Author’s books are enumerated by Allibone.
-
-
-=HARVEY, W.=
-
-⸺ IRISH LIFE AND HUMOUR. Pp. 221. (STIRLING: _Eneas Mackey_). 2_s._ 6_d._
-1906.
-
- A collection of short, witty anecdotes and jokes, four or five
- to a page. Source: not indicated, but they are obviously culled
- from periodicals, or from previous collections of the kind. A
- few seem to be taken from serious biographies. They are given
- without comment, exactly as he found them, says the Author
- (Pref.). They exhibit no religious nor racial bias (witness the
- last chapter on Priest and People), but throughout you have the
- “Paddy” of the comic paper, and in many places the traditional
- Stage-Irishman whirls his shillelagh and “hurroos for ould
- Oireland” in a wholly impossible brogue. The stories are
- classified under various heads, but for convenience only. They
- do not illustrate national traits nor phases of national life.
- The above is an abridgment of a larger work [1st ed., 1904,
- without illustr.] with the same title, of which a new edition,
- pp. 488, twelve illustrations in colour, 5_s._ net, has been
- issued (August, 1909) by Simpkin, Marshall, & Co. More recently
- a cheap ed. has been issued at 1_s._, pp. 206, paper covers,
- with some poor illustr.
-
-
-=“HASLETTE, John.”=
-
-⸺ DESMOND ROURKE: Irishman. (_Sampson, Low_). 6_s._ 1911.
-
- Scene: South America. The hero is intended to be typically
- Irish. The story is described as racy and dashing, and has
- received high praise from the Press. We understand that the
- Author’s real name is Vahey, and that he lives at the Knock,
- near Belfast (1911); see I. B. L., Vol. IV., p. 73. He had
- before this novel already published two others. He is of
- Huguenot descent, but was b. and ed. in Ireland.
-
-
-=HAYENS, Herbert.=
-
-⸺ AN AMAZING CONSPIRACY. Pp. 247. (S.P.C.K.). 2_s._ 6_d._ Illustr. by
-Adolf Thiede. _n.d._ (1914).
-
- An exciting boys’ adventure story, opening in an island of
- the W. coast of Ireland, where mysterious events take place,
- but passing chiefly in Guatemala, where the hero goes through
- thrilling adventures in various revolutions.
-
-
-=HEALY, Cahir.=
-
-⸺ A SOWER OF THE WIND. Pp. 168. (_Sealy, Bryers_). 6_d._ Paper. _c._ 1910.
-
- Scene: the Donegal coast. A sensational and romantic story.
- Local Land League doings described. The author writes of the
- people with knowledge and sympathy.
-
-⸺ THE ESCAPADES OF CONDY CORRIGAN. (N.Y.: _Benziger_). 0.50 net.
-
-
-=[HEMPHILL, Barbara].=
-
-⸺ THE PRIEST’S NIECE. Three Vols. (_Hurst & Blackett_). 1855.
-
- In the first two volumes there is nothing about Ireland. In the
- third the scene shifts to Cashel, and there are some attempts
- to picture Irish life. The Author is not anti-Catholic nor
- anti-Irish: she is amusingly ignorant of Catholic matters
- and is not interested in Ireland. P. 37—a scene of Irish
- lawlessness (capture of a private still). P. 40—unpleasant
- description of a wake. The plot hinges mainly on the strife
- in the hero’s mind between his love for Ellen, the penniless
- peasant girl, to whom he owes several rescues from the
- Shanavests, and the heiress to marry whom would be to save his
- father from ruin.
-
-
-=HENDERSON, George.=
-
-⸺ THE FEAST OF BRICRIU: an Early Gaelic Saga. (_Irish Texts Society_).
-6_s._ 1899.
-
- Belongs to Cuchullin cycle. C. contends in a series of
- competitive feats with Conall and Loigare for the championship
- of Ulster ... the origin of the contest being the desire of B.
- to stir up strife among his guests. Introd. and notes.
-
-⸺ SURVIVALS IN BELIEF AMONG THE CELTS. Pp. 340. Demy 8vo. (EDINBURGH:
-_MacLehose_). 10_s._ net. 1911.
-
- The Author is Lecturer in Celtic language and literature in
- the University of Glasgow. The book consists of the substance
- of a series of lectures on Folk Psychology. It is a study in
- Celtic “psychical anthropology”—practically a study of magic,
- superstitions, and other survivals of primitive paganism. Deals
- chiefly with the Scottish Highlands, but there are frequent
- allusions to Irish folklore and legend. Highly technical in
- conception and language.
-
-
-=[HENDERSON, Rev. Henry]; “Ulster Scot.”= Was for many years a
-Presbyterian minister in Holywood, Co. Down, and wrote for BELFAST WEEKLY
-NEWS _Woodleigh Hall, a Tale of the Fenians_, and _The Moutrays of
-Clonkeen_.
-
-⸺ THE TRUE HEIR OF BALLYMORE. Pp. 80. Demy 8vo. (BELFAST). 1_s._
-Wrappers. 1859.
-
- Sub-t.:—“Passages from the history of a Belfast Ribbon Lodge.”
- Frontisp.—the insignia of Ribbonism. An anti-Ribbon pamphlet
- in the form of a story. Relates the machinations of a certain
- Ribbon lodge for the destruction of Protestantism, and, in
- particular, the scheme whereby a Catholic widow is made to
- inveigle Col. Obrey into marriage. The latter drives out his
- sister and nephew, and Ballymore is invaded by a low-class
- drinking set of Catholics, who finally bring the poor Colonel
- to his grave. Subsequently it transpires that Mrs. Connor’s
- husband was alive all the time, and the Colonel’s nephew
- comes into his own. The book is full of the awful crimes
- of Ribbonism, and closes thus:—“No statesmanship, no good
- government will ever deliver our land from Ribbon disloyalty,
- outrages, and savage assassinations until Romanism is
- extirpated from the country. Ribbonism is the offspring of
- Romanism.”
-
-⸺ THE DARK MONK OF FEOLA: Adventures of a Ribbon Pedlar. (_Office of_
-BELFAST NEWS LETTER). c. 1859.
-
- “The first part contains a very affecting episode illustrative
- of the evils which are certain to follow the union of
- Protestant women with men who belong to the Roman Catholic
- faith. To all Protestants the story cannot fail to be
- interesting; and Orangemen, especially, will peruse it with
- peculiar pleasure.”—(DOWNSHIRE PROTESTANT).
-
-⸺ THE SANDY ROW CONVERT.
-
-
-=HENRY-RUFFIN, Mrs. M. E.=
-
-⸺ THE NORTH STAR. Pp. 356. (BOSTON: _Little, Brown_). $1.50 net. Six good
-Ill. by Wilbur D. Hamilton. [1904]. 1908.
-
- Scene: Norway and Ireland. The story of how Olaf Trygvesson,
- the exiled king of Norway, returned as a Christian champion,
- and overthrew his pagan rival. The wild brutal paganism of the
- time is depicted with realism. There is an interesting account
- of a great gathering in Dublin, and a sketch of Olaf’s life in
- exile amid his Irish hosts. There is also a love interest. Mrs.
- Henry-Ruffin is the only daughter of the late Thomas Henry, of
- Mobile, Alabama.
-
-
-=HENTY, G. A.= Born 1832, in Cambridgeshire. He spent some time in
-Belfast in his capacity of Purveyor to the Forces. D. 1902. One of the
-greatest, perhaps quite the greatest, of writers for boys. His eighty-six
-or more published stories deal with almost all countries and every period
-of history. All his stories are sane and healthy and told in the manner
-that boys love. Their historical side is carefully worked out.
-
-⸺ FRIENDS THOUGH DIVIDED. (_Frowde and Hodder & Stoughton_). 3_s._ 6_d._
-Excellent coloured Illustr. Attractive binding and general get-up. (N.Y.:
-_Burt_). 1.00. [1883]. New eds.
-
- A fine boys’ adventure-story of the Civil War. Scene: mainly
- Great Britain, but at end shifts to Ireland for the Siege of
- Drogheda, which is well described. Good account of Cromwell,
- the two Charles, Argyll. Sympathies of writer clearly royalist.
- Ireland represented to be in state of semi-barbarism. Juvenile.
-
-⸺ ORANGE AND GREEN. (_Blackie_). 5_s._ Handsome binding; eight Illustr.
-by Gordon Browne. (N.Y.: _Burt_). 1.00. [1887]. 1907.
-
- Adventures of two boys (one a Protestant, the other a Catholic)
- in the Williamite Wars. Battles of Boyne, Aughrim, sieges of
- Athlone, Cork, and Limerick, described. Impartial. Williamite
- excesses condemned. Sarsfield’s action after Limerick severely
- dealt with.
-
-⸺ IN THE IRISH BRIGADE. Pp. 384. (_Blackie_). 6_s._ Twelve excellent
-illustr. by Chas. M. Sheldon. (N.Y.: _Scribner_). 1.50. 1901.
-
- Adventures of Desmond Kennedy, officer of the Irish Brigade,
- in the service of France, during the War of the Spanish
- Succession—chiefly in Flanders and Spain. The facts are based
- on O’Callaghan’s _History of the Irish Brigade_ and Boyer’s
- _Annals of the Reign of Queen Anne_. No Irish Nationalist could
- quarrel with the views expressed in the Author’s Preface.
-
-
-=HEYGATE, W. E.=
-
-⸺ WILD SCENES AMONG THE CELTS. Pp. 114. (_Parker_). 6_d._ 1859.
-
- One of a series “Tales for Young Men and Women” (Church of
- England). This volume contains the two following tales:—
-
- THE PENITENT.—How Shossag, a prince of S. Leinster, was
- accessory to his brother’s murder. How punishment overtook him,
- and how he ended his life as a penitent at the feet of St.
- Piran of Cornwall. Period _c._ 410 A.D.
-
- THE FUGITIVE.—A story of crime, and its punishment in the
- person of a Pictish chief. St. Columba has a prominent place
- in the story. Of him a sympathetic and appreciative picture
- is drawn. Scene: Scottish mainland, Iona, and N. Connaught,
- _c._ 590-597. This Author has written a dozen other historical
- stories. See NIELD. The two above noted are quite suitable for
- Catholic children.
-
-
-=HICKEY, Rev. P.=
-
-⸺ INNISFAIL. Pp. 284. (_Gill_). 3_s._ 6_d._ [1906]. (N.Y.: _Pratt_).
-1.75. Third ed. 1907.
-
- Life-story of a young priest from early youth to departure for
- Australia, largely told in letters from college, with verse
- interspersed. Sketches of life in Tipperary (fox-hunt, school
- scenes, &c.).
-
-
-=HINKSON, H. A.= Born in Dublin, 1865. Married Katharine Tynan, 1893
-(_q.v._). Ed. Dublin High School, T.C.D., and in Germany. Called to the
-English Bar, 1902. Until the last few years he has resided in England. He
-now lives in Claremorris, Co. Mayo, for which county he is R.M.
-
-⸺ GOLDEN LADS AND GIRLS. Pp. 312. (_Downey_). 1895.
-
- A love story of the upper middle classes. Pictures of western
- (Galway) county family life, and of student life in Trinity,
- both strongly reminiscent of Lever. Good portraits of Irish
- types, the country doctor, the unpopular agent, the reforming
- landlord (English and a convert to Catholicism); the Protestant
- country clergyman, &c. This latter portrait is rather
- satirical. The tone on the whole is nationalist and Catholic.
-
-⸺ FATHER ALPHONSUS. Pp. 282. (_Unwin_). 1898.
-
- The life-story of two young seminarians. One of these, finding
- he has no vocation, leaves before ordination, and has no reason
- to repent the step. The other, ignoring uneasy feelings that
- trouble may come of it later, becomes a priest. Afterwards he
- meets with a certain lady, a recent convert from Protestantism.
- A mutual attachment springs up, and eventually they are
- married. The circumstances, as arranged by the novelist, are
- so strange as almost to seem to palliate this sin, were it not
- for his omission of one factor, viz., that particular form of
- divine help towards the doing of duty which Catholics call
- the _gratia status_. The erring priest ends his life in a
- Carthusian monastery. The tone throughout is almost faultless
- from a Catholic standpoint. Indeed, though there are several
- passionate scenes, rendering the book unfitted for certain
- readers, the moral tone is high. Some of the characteristics of
- Irish social life are admirably portrayed.
-
-⸺ UP FOR THE GREEN. Pp. 327. (_Lawrence & Bullen_). 6_s._ 1898.
-
- “For several of the incidents related in this story, the Author
- is indebted to the narrative of Samuel Riley, a yeoman [Quaker]
- of Cork, who was captured by the rebels, while on his way to
- Dublin, in September, 1798.” This worthy man discovers the
- rebels to be very different from what he had taken them to
- be. A healthy, breezy tale with more adventure than history.
- Standpoint: thoroughly national. There is quiet humour in the
- quaintly told narrative of the Quaker. Castlereagh, Major Sirr,
- Grattan, Lord Enniskillen figure in the story.
-
-⸺ WHEN LOVE IS KIND. Pp. 320. (_Long_). 1898.
-
- A wholesome Irish love-story of the present day. The hero,
- Rupert Standish, is a soldier and a soldier’s son. The story
- brings out the comradeship which may exist between father and
- son. The page-boy, Peter, with his gruesome tales, is a curious
- study. There are many passages descriptive of scenes and
- incidents in Ireland.
-
-⸺ THE KING’S DEPUTY. Pp. 236. (_Lawrence & Bullen_). 6_s._ (CHICAGO:
-_M’Clurg_). 1.25. 1899.
-
- Period: the days of Grattan’s Parliament, of which a vivid
- picture is drawn, and of the viceroyalty of the Duke of
- Rutland. The interest is divided between a love story and the
- story of a plot of the Protestant aristocracy to establish an
- independent Irish Republic on the Venetian model. Grattan,
- Curran, Napper Tandy, Sir John Parnell, Sir Boyle Roche, Father
- Arthur O’Leary, &c., are introduced. Descriptions (historically
- accurate) of the Hell-Fire Club and the Funny Club.
-
-⸺ SIR PHELIM’S TREASURE. Pp. 255. (S.P.C.K.) 1_s._ 6_d._ Illustr. W. S.
-Stacey. _n.d._ (1901).
-
- A boy’s adventure-story of search for treasure. No “moral” or
- lesson. Good description of Crusoe-life on a little island off
- the Irish coast. Pleasant style; no tediousness nor dullness.
-
-⸺ THE POINT OF HONOUR. (_Lawrence & Bullen_). 6_s._ (CHICAGO: _M’Clurg_).
-1.50. 1901.
-
- “Stories about the quarrelsome, bottle-loving, duelling gentry
- of the eighteenth century.”—(_Baker_).
-
-⸺ SILK AND STEEL. Pp. 336. (_Chatto & Windus_). 6_s._ Picture cover. 1902.
-
- Adventures of an Irish soldier of fortune at the Court of
- Charles I., in the Netherlands, and in Ireland. Brisk and
- picturesque in style. Sketch of Owen Roe and description of
- Benburb. The hero is Daniel O’Neill, a nephew of Owen Roe.
- Full of historical incidents and personages, _e.g._, the Earl
- of Essex, Father Boethius Egan, Lord Antrim. Point of view:
- national.
-
-⸺ FAN FITZGERALD. Pp. 340. (_Chatto & Windus_). 6_s._ 1902.
-
- Young Dick Burke, brought up in England, feels the call of the
- Celt, and returns to his inherited estates with intent to be
- a model landlord. We are told in a lively and amusing style
- how he succeeds or fails. The Author is nationalist, but by no
- means a bitter partisan.
-
-⸺ THE WINE OF LOVE. 1904.
-
- Deals mainly with the upper classes in the West of Ireland.
- Abuses of landlordism not spared. Picture of horse-dealing,
- fox-hunting, and card-playing lives. Also picture of typically
- good landlords. Standpoint on the whole national and even
- Catholic. Style: breezy and vigorous. Good knowledge shown of
- inner lives and feelings of all classes.
-
-⸺ THE SPLENDID KNIGHT. Pp. 262. (_Sealy, Bryers_). Illustr. by Lawson
-Wood. 1905.
-
- Adventures of an Irish boy in Sir Walter Raleigh’s expedition
- up the Orinoco. A brisk and entertaining narrative.
-
-⸺ GOLDEN MORN. Pp. 303. (_Cassell_). Frontisp. 1907.
-
- Tells the strange adventures in Ireland, London, and France
- of Captain O’Grady. At Leopardstown Races his mare breaks her
- neck, just at the finish; the Captain loses a fortune, and is
- fain to depart on his travels—but “all is well that ends well,”
- and it is so with Captain O’Grady.
-
-⸺ O’GRADY OF TRINITY. (_Lawrence & Bullen_). 6_s._ Re-issued by C. H.
-White at 6_d._ 1909.
-
- Fun, frolic, and love in a student’s career. A gay and
- wholesome novel. Sympathetic picture of Trinity College life.
- Highly praised by Lionel Johnston.
-
-⸺ THE CONSIDINE LUCK. Pp. 300. (_Swift_). 6_s._ 1912.
-
- It was popularly believed that the estate could not pass from
- Considine hands. Sir Hugh C. dies, and lo! the estate is found
- to be mortgaged to Mr. Smith, of London. Mr. Smith arrives, and
- brings with him his English notions which he proceeds to carry
- out to the disgust of the locality. He refuses all attempts
- to buy him out, but the Considine luck comes to the rescue,
- and the estate falls once more into the hands of a Considine.
- Pleasant, light style.
-
-
-=HOARE, Mrs.=
-
-⸺ SHAMROCK LEAVES; or, Tales and Sketches of Ireland. Pp. 237.
-(_M’Glashan_). 1851.
-
- If one could abstract from the bits of gossipy anecdote
- intended as links to the principal stories, this book consists
- of several studies, touching and true to the reality, of the
- lives of the poor, and in particular of their sufferings during
- and after the Famine years. Written with much sympathy for the
- lowly, and a vivid sense of actuality. Most of the tales have a
- moral, but it does not spoil the story.
-
-
-=HOBHOUSE, Violet.= Born 1864. Eldest daughter of Edmund McNeill, D.L.,
-of Craigdunn, Co. Antrim. Married Rev. Walter Hobhouse, second son of
-Bishop Hobhouse. She was devoted to Irish traditions, folklore, &c., and
-could speak Irish, but was a keen Unionist, and in 1887 and the following
-years spoke much against Home Rule on English platforms. After her death
-in 1902 a small volume of poems, serious and deeply religious, _Speculum
-Animae_ was printed for private circulation.
-
-⸺ AN UNKNOWN QUANTITY. Pp. 382. (_Downey_). 6_s._ 1898.
-
-⸺ WARP AND WEFT. (_Skeffington_). 3_s._ 6_d._ 1899.
-
- “A conscientious rendering of homely aspects of life in Co.
- Antrim.”—(_Baker_).
-
-
-=HOCKING, Rev. Joseph.=
-
-⸺ ROSALEEN O’HARA. Pp. 352. (_Hodder & Stoughton_). 3_s._ 6_d._ and 1_s._
-Two illustr. 1913.
-
- A product of the Home Rule controversy. The Author is a noted
- anti-Catholic writer, but he is also a Liberal, and desirous of
- defending Liberalism from the charge of seeking to establish
- Rome Rule in Ireland. Home Rule, so reads the story, would mean
- Rome Rule for some years, but would ultimately lead to the
- emancipation of the Irish from the thralldom of priestcraft and
- dogma. The story tells of Denis who unexpectedly discovers that
- he is heir to an Irish estate, and neighbour of Elenore Tyrone,
- whom he had seen and loved. A quarrel and the attractions
- of the beautiful “Fenian,” Rosaleen, separate the two for a
- time. The Author clearly knows little or nothing of Ireland,
- but he would like to be benevolent in tone to “dear old
- beautiful Erin.” By the same Author: _Follow the Gleam_, _The
- Wilderness_, _The Jesuit_, _The Scarlet Woman_, and some thirty
- other novels.
-
-
-=HOEY, Mrs. Cashel=, _née_ =Sarah Johnston.= Born at Bushy Park, Co.
-Dublin, 1830. Wife of the well-known Irish journalist, John Cashel Hoey
-(d. 1892). Has published more than twenty-seven volumes, _e.g._, _The
-Question of Cain_ (1882), _The Lover’s Creed_, _No Sign_ (1876), _The
-Queen’s Token_, _A Stern Chase_, &c., &c. She became a Catholic in 1858.
-D. 1908.
-
-
-=HOLLAND, Denis.= A well-known Irish journalist. Born in Cork about 1826.
-He founded THE IRISHMAN, 1858. _See_ Pigot’s _Recollections of an Irish
-Journalist_, and D. J. O’Donoghue’s _Poets of Ireland_.
-
-⸺ DONAL DUN O’BYRNE: A Tale of the Rising in Wexford in 1798. Pp. 224.
-(_Gill_). 1_s._ _n.d._
-
- The story of the rising (including Oulart, Tubberneering,
- Gorey, and Ross, and the guerilla warfare after Vinegar Hill)
- from an insurgent’s point of view. The book is full of scenes
- of blood, and breathes a spirit of vengeance. The narrative is
- not remarkable. Some of the scenes border on indelicacy.
-
-⸺ ULICK O’DONNELL: an Irish Peasant’s Progress. 1860.
-
- A romantic and pleasant story. Adventures in Liverpool and
- elsewhere in England of a clever peasant lad from Newry. He
- wins his way by his sterling qualities, and returns prosperous
- to his native Co. Down. Author tries to bring out contrasting
- characteristics of English and Irish.
-
-
-=HOLT, Emily S.=
-
-⸺ UNDER ONE SCEPTRE; or, Mortimer’s Mission. (_Shaw_). 3_s._ 6_d._ 1884.
-
- Career of Roger Mortimer, Earl of March and Ulster (1374-98)
- in Monmouthshire, Ireland, and London. He was lieutenant of
- Ulster, Connaught, and Meath. Richard II. declared him heir to
- the throne, but later grew jealous of his popularity. He was
- slain at Kells in battle with Art McMurrough Kavanagh. Juvenile.
-
-
-=HOPKINS, Tighe.= Born 1856. Son of Rev. W. R. Hopkins, Vicar of Moulton,
-Cheshire. Besides the work mentioned here this Author ed. Carleton’s
-_Traits and Stories_ in the “Red Letter Library,” and wrote _Kilmainham
-Memories_, several novels, and various other works. Resides at Herne
-Bay. Has written many other novels:—_For Freedom_, _The Silent Gate_,
-_Tozer’s_, _’Twixt Love and Duty_, &c.
-
-⸺ THE NUGENTS OF CARRICONNA. Three Vols., afterwards one Vol. (_Ward &
-Downey_). 1890.
-
- Main theme: an old impoverished family suddenly enriched
- by Australian legacy. Interwoven there is an interesting
- love-story. Anthony Nugent, eccentric, of astronomical tastes,
- has on his housetop a telescope which plays a prominent part
- in the story. Brogue well done. The dramatic interest centred
- in an Inspector of Police, a type probably very rare in Irish
- fiction.
-
-
-=HOPPER, Nora; Mrs. W. H. Chesson.=
-
-⸺ BALLADS IN PROSE. Pp. 186. (_Lane_). 5_s._ Beautifully bound and
-printed. 1894.
-
- Strange, wayward tales of far-off pagan days in which one moves
- as in a mist of dreams. Soaked with Gaelic fairy and legendary
- lore. The prose pieces, all very short, are interspersed with
- little poems, that are slight and frail as wreaths of vapour.
- Some of the stories are symbolical. They are told in simple and
- graceful prose.
-
-
-=HUDSON, Frank.= This Author, after many years’ work for Dublin
-periodicals, went to London early in the ’eighties. He wrote a few Irish
-sporting novels of a light and humorous kind.
-
-⸺ THE ORIGIN OF PLUM PUDDING, and other Irish Fairy Tales. Illustr. by
-Gordon Browne. 1888.
-
- Only one of these five stories is genuinely Irish—“Shaun
- Murray’s Challenge,” the scene of which is Dalkey. The
- title-story tells how a drunken man one evening threw his sack
- of groceries into a pot on the fire, and in the morning found a
- plum-pudding.
-
-⸺ THE LAST HURDLE: a Story of Sporting and Courting. Pp. 304. (_Ward &
-Downey_). 1888.
-
- Life in an Irish county family of the old stock, with
- sympathy for the poor around them. Good idea of refined
- Irish country life and its easy-going ways. A story full of
- sport, gaiety, and dramatic incidents, turning mainly on the
- winning of the heroine by the hero in spite of the plots of
- the rival. Good and bad landlords are contrasted. An eviction
- scene is described, with full sympathy for the victims.
- Shamus-the-Trout, a poacher, is a very picturesque figure.
-
-⸺ RUNNING DOUBLE: a Story of Stage and Stable. Two Vols. (_Ward &
-Downey_). 1890.
-
- Scene: varies between England, Dublin, and “Ennisbeg.” There
- are remarks on Irish life, scenery, and customs, but the chief
- interest is sporting—fishing, racing, betting. The stage part
- is in England. There is very little plot. All ends in a double
- wedding.
-
-
-=HUGHES, Mrs. Kate Duval.=
-
-⸺ THE FAIR MAID OF CONNAUGHT: and other Tales for Catholic Youth. Pp.
-178. (N.Y.: _Kenedy_ and _Benziger_). 1.25, 0.60, 0.30. 1889.
-
-
-=HULL, Eleanor.= Born in Ireland of a Co. Down family. Daughter of Prof.
-Edward Hull, the eminent geologist, long Director of the Geological
-Survey of Ireland. Ed. at Alexandra Coll., Dublin, and in Brussels. Has
-written much—chiefly on Irish literature, folk-lore, and history—for
-various periodicals. Is the Author of eight important books on Irish
-subjects:—_Pagan Ireland_, _Early Christian Ireland_, _A Text-Book of
-Irish_ [Gaelic] _Literature_, _The Poem-Book of the Gael_. Has for many
-years studied Old Irish under the best professors, and it is her chief
-pleasure and interest. Founded in 1899 the Irish Texts Society, and
-has been its Hon. Secretary ever since. Is President of Irish Literary
-Society in London.
-
-⸺ THE CUCHULLIN SAGA IN IRISH LITERATURE. Pp. lxxx. + 316. (_Nutt_). 1898.
-
- A collection of fourteen stories relating to Cuchulin,
- translated from the Irish by various scholars (Meyer, O’Curry,
- Stokes, Windisch, O’Grady, Duvan, &c.). A more valuable
- work, says Fiona MacLeod (in substance), for students of
- Gaelic legend and literature than the more recent works by
- Lady Gregory. The book is not cast in an artistic mould. It
- merely contains the rude materials from which epic and lyric
- inspiration may be drawn. Important and valuable Introduction
- deals with literary qualities of the Saga, its historical
- aspects and its mythology. Map of Ireland to illustrate
- Cuchulin Saga. Appendix contains chart of Cuchulin Saga. Notes
- pp. 289-297.
-
-⸺ CUCHULAIN, THE HOUND OF ULSTER. Pp. 279. (_Harrap_). 5_s._ net.
-Illustr. in colour by Stephen Reid. [1909].
-
- Intended for young, but not very young readers. Told in modern
- language, free from Gaelicisms, archaisms, and difficult names.
- The story is continuous, not told in detached episodes. The
- style, though without the strange wild grandeur of Standish
- O’Grady, is on the whole beautiful. The story itself is full
- of the spirit of heroism and chivalry. It is selected and
- adapted from many sources (indicated in Appendix), and the epic
- narrative is not mixed with puerile or absurd episodes. Some of
- the illustrations are excellent, others tend, perhaps, too much
- to quaintness.
-
-
-=HUME, Martin.=
-
-⸺ TRUE STORIES OF THE PAST. Pp. xi. + 226. (_Eveleigh Nash_). 5_s._ net.
-1911.
-
- Ed. with introd. by R. B. Cunningham Grahame. Eight stories
- from History. i. “How Rizzio was Avenged;” ii. “A Rebellious
- Love-match;” iii. “Prince and Pastry Cook;” iv. “The Revenge of
- John Hawkins;” v. “The Scapegoat;” vi. “Sir Walter [Raleigh]’s
- Homecoming;” vii. “Cloth of Gold and Frieze.” Some of these
- treat of the amours of great personages. Their standpoint is,
- of course, English and Protestant. viii. “The Last Stand of the
- O’Sullivans” is told with much spirit, and with sympathy for
- the Irish cause. It does not include the famous retreat of the
- O’Sullivans.
-
-
-=HUNGERFORD, Mrs.= Born 1855. Daughter of Canon Hamilton, Rector of Ross,
-Co. Cork. Ed. in Ireland. Her early home was St. Brenda’s, Co. Cork.
-Wrote upwards of forty-six novels dealing with the more frivolous aspects
-of modern society. They had a great vogue in their day. The most popular
-of all was, perhaps, _Molly Bawn_ (1878). Most of her books appeared
-Anon. Her plots are poor and conventional, but she possessed the faculty
-of reproducing faithfully the tone of contemporary society. She died at
-Bandon 1897.—(D.N.B.).
-
-⸺ MOLLY BAWN. (_Smith, Elder_). 6_s._ and 2_s._ (BOSTON: _Caldwell_).
-0.75. [1878].
-
- “A love tale of a tender, but frivolous and petulant Irish
- girl, who flirts and arouses her lover’s jealousy, and
- who offends against the conventions in all innocence. A
- gay and witty story spiced with slang, and touched with
- pathos.”—(_Baker_).
-
-⸺ A LITTLE IRISH GIRL; and other Stories. (LONDON: _Whitefriars Libr._).
-1891.
-
-⸺ THE O’CONNORS OF BALLYNAHINCH. Pp. 261. (_Heinemann_). 1_s._ 6_d._ 1896.
-
- A domestic story of love and marriage in the Author’s lightest
- vein. The characters belong chiefly to the landlord class, a
- local carman being the only peasant introduced. There is no
- expression of political views. The scene is laid in Cork.
-
-⸺ NORA CREINA. Pp. 328. (_Chatto & Windus_). 1903.
-
- A love-story from start to finish, without pretence of the
- study of character. The story of how Norah is won from dislike
- to love is pleasantly told. No politics. Peasants hardly
- mentioned. Scene not specified.
-
-
-=HUNT, B.=
-
-⸺ FOLK TALES OF BREFFNY. Pp. viii. + 197. (_Macmillan_). 3_s._ 6_d._ 1913.
-
- Breffny, _i.e._, Cavan and Leitrim. Many of these stories—there
- are twenty-six of them, all very short—“were told by an
- old man, who said he had more and better learning nor the
- scholars,” and are a curious mixture of literary language,
- and a very peculiar and picturesque peasant dialect. They are
- somewhat off the ordinary lines of folk-lore stories, and are
- told in a quaint drily-humorous vein.
-
-
-=HYDE, Dr. Douglas, LL.D., D.Litt.; “An Craobhin Aoibhinn.”= Son of
-late Rev. Arthur Hyde, Frenchpark, Co. Roscommon. Ed. T.C.D. Has been
-President of the Gaelic League since its foundation in 1893. Is Professor
-of Modern Irish in the National University of Ireland.
-
-⸺ BESIDE THE FIRE. Gaelic Folk-stories. Collected, ed. (Irish text facing
-English), and trans. by D. H. With Introd., Notes on Irish text, and
-Notes on tales, by Ed. and Alfred Nutt. Pp. lviii. + 204. (_Nutt_). 7_s._
-6_d._ 1891.
-
- Extremely interesting and valuable Preface (50 pages) by the
- Author, in which he reviews what had been hitherto done for
- Irish folk-lore, remarks on the genesis of the folk-tale, its
- affinities with the Scotch folk-tale, and tells us where and
- from whom and in what circumstances he got his stories, ending
- by some explanations of the style of his translations. The
- preface is followed by some critical remarks on it by Alfred
- Nutt. The English of the translations is that of the peasants.
- This is the first really scientific treatment of Irish
- folk-lore.
-
-⸺ THE ADVENTURES OF THE LAD OF THE FERULE.
-
-⸺ THE ADVENTURES OF THE CHILDREN OF THE KING OF NORWAY. (_Irish Texts
-Society_). 1899.
-
- Two Irish romantic tales of the 16th and 17th centuries,
- ed. and transl. for the first time with introd., notes, and
- glossary. The “Lad” is a mysterious being who appears to
- Murough, son of Brian Boru, and carrying home for him the
- spoils of a miraculous hunting, demands as reward a certain
- ferule that lies at the bottom of a lake. Murough slays a
- serpent, and delivers the land of the Ever Young, which lies
- at the bottom of the lake. The second is a long story of
- enchantment and marvellous adventures.—(_Baker_, 2).
-
-⸺ An Sgéalaidhe Gaedhealach: Connaught Folk Tales. Three Parts. With
-French Trans. by Georges Dottin. (_Rennes_). Parts 1 and 2, 10_s._; Part
-3, 2_s._ 1901.
-
-⸺ LEGENDS OF SAINTS AND SINNERS. Pp. xiv. + 295. (_Talbot Press: Every
-Irishman’s Library_). 2_s._ 6_d._ 1915.
-
- Forty-six stories described by the Author as Christian
- folk-lore, all translated for the first time from the Irish,
- and for the most part gathered from the lips of the people
- by the Author himself, who has been gathering folklore for
- twenty-five years. Each tale is preceded by a preface giving
- all the details of its collection, origin, character, &c., that
- are of interest to the folk-lorist as well as to the general
- reader. The tales are compared with similar tales occurring in
- foreign countries.
-
-
-=INGELOW, Jean. 1820-1897.=
-
-⸺ OFF THE SKELLIGS. Three Vols. (_Keegan Paul._ BOSTON: _Roberts_).
-[1872]. Second ed., _c._ 1881.
-
- Has no other connection with Ireland than the episode of the
- picking up near the Skellig Island, off Waterville, Co. Kerry,
- of a boat’s crew that had escaped from a burning ship.
-
-
-=IRVINE, Alexander.= B. in town of Antrim of very poor parents. Was a
-newsboy in Antrim, a coal-miner in Glasgow, a Marine. Began again at
-the bottom in N.Y. 1888, and went through extraordinary experiences. Is
-a Socialist. Lives in Peekskill, N.Y. See his autobiography _From the
-Bottom Up_. (_Heinemann_). 1910.
-
-⸺ MY LADY OF THE CHIMNEY CORNER. Pp. 224. (_Nash_). 3_s._ 6_d._ net.
-Eight eds. in three or four months. 1914.
-
- Sub-t.:—“A story of love and poverty in Irish peasant life.”
- The central figure—almost the only figure in the book—is Anna
- Gilmore, a poor woman living in Pogue’s Entry, in the town of
- Antrim. Brought up as a pious Catholic by Catholic parents,
- she marries a Protestant against their wish. Henceforth she
- has renounced Catholicism, having chosen, as she says, love
- instead of religion. To show that her choice was of the better
- part seems to be the purpose of the Author. The book is a
- lovingly-drawn portrait, with slight incidents, and the many
- wise sayings of Anna as traits. There is a strong evangelical
- religious atmosphere throughout. The story is largely in
- dialect. It is laid in Famine times; yet there are several
- mention of Fenians, which seems to spell Catholic. The book
- would be better understood by a reading of the Author’s
- autobiography, _From the Bottom Up_.
-
-
-=IRVINE, G. Marshall, B.A., M.B.=
-
-⸺ THE LION’S WHELP. Pp. 406. (_Simpkin_). 6_s._ 1910.
-
- Introd. (by J. Campbell, M.A., M.D., F.R.C.S., LL.D. (_Hon.
- Causa_)) says, “In writing _The Lion’s Whelp_ Dr. Irvine has
- set before himself two main objects. He desires to inculcate
- on the medical profession the necessity which exists for the
- education of the public in all that pertains to the maintenance
- of health ... and he wishes to impress upon the public all
- that is summed up in the time-worn adage—‘Prevention is better
- than cure.’” Incidentally, the book is also a satire against
- professional make-believe. Scene varies between Belfast, the
- North of England, and Denver City, U.S.A. The hero, Dan Nevin,
- starts his career as a doctor, with high ideals—too high,
- as he discovers, for real life. The story is concerned with
- his love-affair and various other adventures. A fine plot,
- well worked out, with several striking characters. Moral tone
- high. Religion scarcely touched upon. There are interesting
- descriptions of Co. Down scenery and of life in Queen’s
- College, Belfast. The Author is a doctor, practising in Co.
- Armagh.
-
-
-=IRWIN, Madge.=
-
-⸺ THE DIAMOND MOUNTAIN; or, Flowers of Fairyland. (DUNDALK: _The
-Dundalgan Press_). 1_s._ Illustr. by A. Donnelly. 1908. Cover in white
-and gold.
-
-
-=IRWIN, Thomas Caulfield.= 1823-1892. Is better known as a poet than as
-a prose-writer. Yet he wrote one hundred and thirty tales of various
-length, essays on many subjects, and an historical romance “From Cæsar to
-Christ.” He was of unsound mind for a number of years before his death.
-
-⸺ WINTER AND SUMMER STORIES AND SLIDES OF FANCY’S LANTERN. Pp. 252. Close
-print. (_Gill_). 1879.
-
- Contents: 1. “Old Christmas Hall;” 2. “The First Ring”; 3.
- “An Irish Fairy Sketch”; 4. “The Miser’s Cottage”; 5. “By
- Moonlight”; 6. “By Gaslight”; 7. “A Visit to a Great Artist”;
- 8. “Falstaff’s Wake”; 9. “A Scene in Macbeth’s Castle”; 10.
- “Julio”; 11. “A Death”; 12. “Visions of an Old Voyage from Rome
- to Asia”; 13. “The Shores of Greece”; 14. “Theocritus”; 15. “A
- Glimpse of Arcadia”; 16. “A Ballad of Old Dublin” (verse); 17.
- “Corney McClusky” (verse); 18. “Ethel Maccara”; 19. “Pausias
- and Glycera”; 20. “Manon and her Spirit Lover”; 21. “An Ancient
- Aryan Legend”; 22. “A Florentine Fortune”; 23. “Insielle’s
- Dimple and Fan.”
-
- Miscellaneous sketches and stories. Several are literary
- _jeux-desprit_ (_e.g._, 8, 9, 10). Others slight studies of
- curious little aspects of life, rather imaginary than real.
- For the most part, however, they are peculiar, weird tales,
- several touching the preternatural, but not morbid. The prose
- is poetic, imaginative, and of high literary qualities—at times
- comparable with those of de Quincey, _e.g._, in No. 4, p. 72,
- _sq._ Here and there are exquisite pen-pictures. Several of the
- tales have Irish settings. No. 4 has curious pictures of old
- Dublin, _c._ 1770.
-
-
-=JACOBS, Joseph.=
-
-⸺ CELTIC FAIRY TALES. Pp. xvi. + 274. (_Nutt_). 6_s._ Complete edition.
-[1891]. Third, 1902.
-
- Eight full-page plates and numerous illustrations in the text
- by J. D. Batten. The pictures are exquisite, and could scarcely
- be more appropriate. Interesting and valuable Notes and
- References at end, about 30 pages, giving the source of each
- tale and parallels. The tales are drawn mainly from previous
- printed collections. The twenty-six tales include some Scotch
- and Welsh. Some are hero-tales, as “Deirdre,” and “The Children
- of Lir”; some folk-tales; some drolls, _i.e._, comic anecdotes
- of feats of stupidity or cunning. There are practically no
- fairy-tales properly so called. The tales are admirably
- selected, and are told in simple, straightforward language.
-
-⸺ MORE CELTIC FAIRY TALES. Pp. xvi. + 234. (_Nutt_). 6_s._ Complete
-edition.
-
- All that has been said of the first series can be applied to
- the second, which is in every way worthy of its predecessor.
- Twenty stories. The two volumes may fairly be said to
- constitute the most representative and attractive collection of
- Celtic tales ever issued.
-
-⸺ CELTIC FAIRY TALES. By Joseph Jacobs and J. D. Batten. (_Nutt_). 3_s._
-6_d._
-
-⸺ MORE CELTIC FAIRY TALES. By the same Authors. (_Nutt_). 3_s._ 6_d._
-
- The above are children’s editions of these well-known books.
- The text is practically the same as in the complete edition,
- but there are two or three illustrations omitted, as well as
- the Introduction and Notes. The tales are well known to be
- admirably suited to children.
-
- N.B.—The same writers have edited _English Fairy Tales_, _More
- English Fairy Tales_, _Indian Fairy Tales_, and _The Book of
- Wonder Voyages_, which includes the voyage of Maelduin.
-
-
-=“JAMES, Andrew”; James Andrew Strahan, LL.D.=, a Belfast man, Prof. of
-Jurisprudence in the Queen’s Univ. there.
-
-⸺ NINETY-EIGHT AND SIXTY YEARS AFTER. (_Blackwood_). 3_s._ 6_d._ 1911.
-
- In two parts. Part I. (four short stories) is told in dialect
- (correctly rendered) by an old schoolmaster, and relates
- incidents of the rebellion in Presbyterian Ulster, in which
- the narrator’s father had played a part on the loyalist side.
- Shows thorough understanding of the political and social
- conditions of the time, and is written in evident sympathy with
- the rebels, though with no blind partisanship. Part II. (four
- chapters of a longer story) introduces the supernatural, ghosts
- of ’98 returning to influence events sixty years after. A book
- of much power and truth.
-
-
-=JARROLD, Ernest.=
-
-⸺ MICKEY FINN IDYLLS. Pp. 281. (N.Y.: _Harper_). 1899. Introd. by Charles
-A. Dana (N.Y. _Sun_).
-
- Reprinted from the SUNDAY SUN, LESLIE’S WEEKLY, &c. Micky is a
- youngster of 9 or 10, born of Irish parents, settled at Coney
- Island, where the scene of the idylls is laid. A good deal of
- humour and some pathos. A goat figures largely in the sketches.
-
-⸺ MICKY FINN’S NEW IRISH YARNS. N.Y. 1902.
-
-
-=JAY, Harriett.= A sister-in-law and adopted daughter of the late Robert
-Buchanan, Scottish poet and novelist. She lived for some years in Mayo,
-and the result of her observations was two good novels. She wrote also
-_Madge Dunraven_, and some other novels.
-
-⸺ THE QUEEN OF CONNAUGHT. (_Chatto & Windus_). Picture boards. 2_s._
-_n.d._ (1875).
-
- How an Englishman, John Bermingham, fell in love with and
- married the descendant of an old western family. How he
- tried, but failed, to reform with English ideas the Connaught
- peasantry. Told with considerable power and insight. Note
- especially the description of a police hunt over the mountains
- in the snow. Has been dramatised.
-
-⸺ THE DARK COLLEEN. Three Vols. (_Bentley_). 1876.
-
- Scene: an island off the W. coast. Morna Dunroon finds a French
- sailor, survivor of a shipwreck. She afterwards marries him,
- but he abandons her and goes back to France. She follows him,
- and passes through strange adventures, but he is still false
- to her. Nemesis follows in the end. Father Moy is a fine
- portrait of a priest. The dialect and the scenery are both true
- to the reality, the description of the storm at the close is
- particularly well done.
-
-⸺ THE PRIEST’S BLESSING; or, Poor Patrick’s progress from this world to a
-better. Pp. 308. (_F. V. White_). Two eds. 1881.
-
- A most objectionable book from a Catholic point of view. Very
- hostile picture of priesthood of Ireland who keep the people
- in “bovine ignorance.” The two specimens that appear in the
- story are villains of the worst type. One is 25, and has been
- seven years a priest! He drinks heavily, and works miracles. By
- another a respectable peasant is incited to murder. The views
- of politics can only be described as “Orange.”
-
-⸺ MY CONNAUGHT COUSINS. Three Vols. (_F. V. White_). 1883.
-
- Jack Kenmare goes to his uncle’s place in Connaught, and has a
- pleasant time in company with his cousins. He becomes engaged
- to one of them, who writes stories. Several of these are given.
- An excellent moral tale, and a glimpse of happy Irish life in a
- country house. The political point of view is not Nationalist:
- neither is it hostile to Ireland.
-
-
-=JEBB, Horsley.=
-
-⸺ SPORT ON IRISH BOGS. Pp. 192. (_Everett_). 1_s._ Paper. 1910.
-
- Farcical Irish stories by a Londoner who occasionally shoots
- and fishes in Ireland. Peasants made grotesque, but Author has
- no hostile intentions. Nondescript dialect. “A Home in Calery”
- is quite different, and makes very pleasant reading. “Sister
- Eugenia” is an agreeable, melodramatic story.
-
-
-=JESSOP, George H.= B. in Ireland; ed. at Trinity. Went to U.S.A., 1873.
-Edited JUDGE (1884), and contributed to other humorous papers. Wrote
-some very successful plays. He died in 1915 at Hampstead. Another of his
-novels is _The Emergency Men_, a novel in which he pictures the land
-troubles in Ireland from the anti-popular point of view.
-
-⸺ GERALD FRENCH’S FRIENDS. Pp. 240. (_Longmans_). Well illustr. 1889.
-
- Six stories reprinted from the CENTURY MAGAZINE, 1888. Gerald,
- a spendthrift son of good family, takes to journalism, and
- goes to San Francisco. There he meets various types of his
- fellow-countrymen, and the stories are about these. “All the
- incidents related in this book are based on fact, and several
- of them are mere transcripts from actual life.... The purpose
- is to depict a few of the most characteristic types of the
- native Celt of the original stock, as yet unmixed in blood, but
- modified by new surroundings and a different civilization.” An
- excellent work, and perhaps the Author’s best.
-
-⸺ WHERE THE SHAMROCK GROWS. (_Murray & Evenden_). 3_s._ 6_d._ 1911.
-
- A rather commonplace story. The characters are mostly of the
- squireen class, notably the drunken Mat O’Hara. There are two
- love stories, both having happy conclusions, to which the
- racehorse Liscarrick largely contributes. “The paper is poor
- and the binding tawdry.”—(I.B.L.) “The writer has only put on
- record that part of his experience which can be reconciled with
- conceptions derived from Lever.”—(IRISH TIMES).
-
-⸺ DESMOND O’CONNOR. Pp. 320. (_Long_). 6_s._ 1914.
-
- The “Wild Geese” in Flanders. Desmond is the “Lion of the Irish
- Brigade.” A love story that moves through camps and courts,
- siege, battle, adventure, misunderstanding, to a happy ending,
- under the aegis of the _Grand Monarque_. Told with spirit and
- verve.
-
-
-=JOHNSTON, Miss.=
-
-⸺ ELLEN: A Tale of Ireland. Pp. 139. 16mo. (LONDON). 1843.
-
- A curious and rather meaningless little story. Ellen O’Rorick,
- daughter of a drunken tavern keeper, of Leixlip, goes to
- England, and mixes in high society. Forgotten and looked down
- upon by her childhood’s friend, whom she loves, she marries
- in succession two elderly, rich men, and then settles in
- Ireland to a life of philanthropy, having meanwhile become a
- Protestant. A good deal of moralising.
-
-
-=JOHNSTON, M. L.=
-
-⸺ MAVOURNEEN; or, The Children of the Storm. Pp. 233. (_Walter Scott_).
-1904.
-
- Kitty O’Neill on her way to her aunt at Lostwin, in England,
- is saved from a wreck by Ralph Whitteridge, of that place.
- Kitty grows up, and has several suitors, but meets Ralph again,
- and marries him in spite of the aunt who wishes her to marry
- Edward, the Squire. Some of the action takes place at Malhay,
- in the S. of Ireland, Kitty’s native place. Kitty dies, and
- Ralph takes to drink, but is rescued by a former rival, and on
- the voyage out to S. Africa proves his sterling worth, but is
- drowned in a storm along with his little boy, Curly. Author’s
- knowledge of Ireland very slight. Brogue poor. No anti-Catholic
- bias.
-
-
-=JOHNSTON, William=, of Ballykilbeg, 1829-1902. Was in his day one of
-the most strenuous opponents of Home Rule, a leader of Orangemen, and
-Unionist M.P. for Belfast during many years. His novels reflect his
-political opinions.
-
-⸺ NIGHTSHADE. (BELFAST: _Aicken_). 2_s._ Portrait. [_c._ 1870]. Many
-editions; the last _c._ 1902.
-
- The hero, Charles Annandale, a young Ulster landlord and an
- Oxfordman, returns to Ireland in the thick of the agrarian
- agitation. His agent is shot by Ribbonmen, who had been
- previously absolved by the priest. He is an unsuccessful
- candidate for Parliament. The election is well described, the
- Author probably drawing on his experiences at Downpatrick in
- 1857. Among the characters is Rev. Mr. Werd (Dr. Drew, of
- Belfast). The sister of Charles’s betrothed is entrapped by
- a Jesuit, who poses as her guardian, and immured in a Paris
- convent, but is released after a lawsuit. There is much
- denunciation of “prowling Jesuits,” “Liberal Protestants,” and
- “Puseyite Traitors.”
-
-⸺ UNDER WHICH KING. Pp. 308. (_Tinsley_). 1873.
-
- A plain historical narrative, with little plot, and no
- character drawing of the various events of 1688-91—Derry, the
- Boyne, &c. Very strong Williamite bias.
-
-
-=JONES, T. Mason.=
-
-⸺ OLD TRINITY: a Tale of real life. Three Vols. 1867.
-
- Period, _c._ 1850. Scene: T.C.D., Ossory, and Co. Limerick.
- Career, told by himself of a brilliant young Trinity man,
- including a love story. A fine piece of narrative. But the
- chief source of interest, perhaps, is the account of the land
- troubles of the day, as the very sympathetic picture of the
- sufferings of the peasantry during and after the Famine years.
- It includes portraits, drawn with feeling and admiration,
- of an Ossory P.P., and of a dissenting minister. There are
- pointed criticisms of educational methods and a study, none too
- favourable, of life in T.C.D. The Author ran THE TRIBUNE in
- Dublin in the fifties, and was afterwards well-known in England
- as a lecturer of the Reform League.
-
-
-=JOYCE, James A.= B. of Galway parentage about thirty years ago. Was
-a student of Clongowes Wood College and of University Coll., Dublin.
-Published some years ago a small book of verse that has been much
-admired, entitled _Chamber Music_. Is at present in Trieste.
-
-⸺ DUBLINERS. Pp. 278. (_Grant, Richards_). 3_s._ 6_d._ 1914.
-
- Seventeen _genre_ studies in the form of stories picturing
- life among the Dublin lower-middle and lower classes, but
- from one aspect only, viz., the dark and squalid aspect. This
- is depicted with almost brutal realism, and though there is
- an occasional gleam of humour, on the whole we move, as we
- read, in the midst of painful scenes of vice and poverty. His
- characters seem to interest the author in so far as they are
- wrecks or failures in one way or another. He writes as one who
- knows his subject well.
-
-
-=JOYCE, Patrick Weston, M.A., LL.D.= 1827-1914. B. at Ballyorgan, Co.
-Limerick. Ed. at private schools; graduated at T.C.D. In 1845 he entered
-the service of the Commissioners of National Education. He rose to be
-principal of the Marlborough Street Training Schools, Dublin. Elected
-M.R.I.A., 1863; President of Royal Society of Antiquaries. Wrote several
-histories of Ireland, of one of which 86,000 copies were sold. Publ.
-works on Irish place-names, Irish music, a grammar of the Irish language,
-a social history of Ancient Ireland, &c., &c. D. Jan., 1914. He was
-writing practically up to the day of his death.
-
-⸺ OLD CELTIC ROMANCES. Pp. xx. + 474. (_Longmans_). [1879]. Third ed.,
-revised and enlarged. 1907.
-
- Thirteen tales, selected and translated from the manuscripts of
- Trinity College and of the Royal Irish Academy. Some had been
- already published, but in a form inaccessible to the public,
- and in _literal_ translations made chiefly for linguistic
- purposes. The author justly claims that this is “the first
- collection of the old Gaelic prose romances that has ever
- been published in fair English translation.”—(_Pref._). The
- translations are, as the Author says, in “simple, plain, homely
- English.” He has made little or no attempt to invest them with
- the glamour of poetry. The text is preceded by some particulars
- concerning these tales and their origin, and followed by notes
- and a list of proper names. The tales are: “The Fates of the
- Children of Lir, Tuireann and Usnach”; “The Voyages of Mailduin
- and of the Sons of O’Corra”; “The Pursuit of the Gilla Dacker
- and of Dermat and Grania”; “Connla of the Golden Hair”; “Oisin
- in Tir-na-nOge,” &c. “I would bring out,” said Dr. Richard
- Garnett, Librarian of the British Museum “Joyce’s _Irish
- Romances_ in the cheapest possible form and place them in the
- hands of every boy and girl in the country.”
-
-
-=JOYCE, Robert Dwyer.= Brother of the preceding. B. Glenosheen, Co.
-Limerick, 1830. Graduated in Queen’s Coll., Cork. Went to U.S.A. in 1866,
-where he was very successful as a doctor. Returned to Ireland, 1883, and
-died the same year. He is perhaps better known as a poet than as a prose
-writer.
-
-⸺ LEGENDS OF THE WARS IN IRELAND. Pp. 352. (BOSTON: _Campbell_). 1868.
-
- Thirteen historical and semi-historical legends, told by
- a thoroughly good story-teller, with plenty of colour and
- exciting incident and without clogging erudition. “A Batch of
- Legends” includes the story of the monks of Kilmacluth and
- the wonderful bird, a story of love in the ’45 (Culloden,
- &c.), a legend about Murrough of the Burnings, _c._ 1663, how
- Patrick saved the life of his servant Duan, Black Hugh Condon’s
- vengeance on the English, _c._ 1601; and another, “The Master
- of Lisfinry,” the takings and retakings of Youghal during the
- Desmond rebellion, story of a lost child found. “The Fair
- Maid of Killarney”—the taking of Ross Castle by Ludlow during
- Cromwellian wars. “An Eye for an Eye”—knightly combats during
- the Bruce invasion, 1315. “The Rose of Drimnagh”—abduction
- of Eleanora de Barneval of Drimnagh (near Inchicore) by the
- O’Byrnes. “The House of Lisbloom,” a legend of Sarsfield and
- the Rapparees, an exciting story. “The Whitethorn Tree,” a
- strange tale of Rapparees and Puritans, abductions and rescues
- and fights. “The First and Last Lords of Fermoy,” 1216 and 1660
- (the faithless Charles II.) “The Little Battle of Bottle Hill”
- is another Rapparee story. “The Bridal Ring,” a story of Cahir
- Castle. “Rosaleen; or, the White Lady of Barna”—end of 18th
- century.
-
- P.S.—Some of these Legends were publ. without the name of the
- Author in cheap paper ed. by Cameron & Ferguson, of Glasgow,
- under title, _Galloping O’Hogan, and other tales_, _n.d._
-
-⸺ IRISH FIRESIDE TALES. Pp. 376. (_Boston_). 1871.
-
- Sixteen stories, some historical (or pseudo-historical), some
- legendary, some serious, some comic. The scenes are laid in
- various parts of Ireland, and at various periods. Told in
- very pleasant if somewhat old-fashioned style. Contents—“The
- Geraldine and his Bride Fair Ellen”; “The Pearl Necklace”
- (a love story of Kilmallock); “The Building of Mourne”
- (Cork—Legend); “A Little Bit of Sport” (four comic stories);
- “Madeline’s Vow” (modern); “The Golden Butterfly” (Co. Clare);
- “Creevan, the Brown Haired”; “Mun Carberry and the Phooka”; “a
- story of Dublin life in the days of Queen Ann,” &c. Very little
- dialect.
-
-
-=JUBAINVILLE, H. d’Arbois de.=
-
-⸺ TÁIN BO CUALNGE. ENLÈVEMENT DU TAUREAU DIVIN ET DES VACHES DE COOLEY.
-Pp. 190. (PARIS: _Champion_). En livraisons. 1907-9.
-
- “La plus ancienne épopée de l’Europe occidentale traduite
- par H. d’A. de J., Membre de l’Institut, Prof. au College de
- France, avec la collaboration de MM. Alexandre Smirnoff et
- Eugène Bibart.”
-
-
-=KAVANAGH, Rev. M.=
-
-⸺ SHEMUS DHU; the Black Pedlar of Galway. (_Duffy_). 2_s._ [LONDON:
-1867]. Very many editions. Still in print. (N.Y.: _Benziger_). 0.60.
-
- Life in and about Galway during Penal times. The peasantry are
- portrayed as well as the citizens and the upper classes. The
- plot is somewhat rambling, yet the book is interesting. In
- Allibone this is said to be by Maurice Dennis Kavanagh, LL.D.,
- called to the Bar at the Middle Temple, 1866.
-
-
-=KEARY, Miss Annie.= B. at Bilton Rectory, nr. Wetherby, Yorkshire,
-1825. Her father, a Galway man, was rector of the parish. She wrote
-many novels, _Early Egyptian History_, _The Nations Around_, _Heroes
-of Asgard_, &c. She had very little personal knowledge of Ireland. D.
-1879.—(D.N.B.). _See_ Memoir of Annie Keary, by her sister, 1882.
-
-⸺ CASTLE DALY: The Story of an Irish House thirty years ago. Pp. 576.
-(_Macmillan_). 3_s._ 6_d._ [1875]; often reprinted. Fourth ed., 1889.
-(PHILADELPHIA: _Porter_). 1.00.
-
- Period: the Famine years and Smith O’Brien rising. The
- sufferings of the people sympathetically described. The Young
- Ireland movement dwelt on both from an English and an Irish
- standpoint. All through the book constant contrast between
- English and Irish characters, showing their incompatibility,
- and on the whole the superiority of the English; yet the book
- shows sympathies with Home Rule, to which one of the chief
- characters is converted. There are some descriptions of scenery
- in Connemara.
-
-
-=KEEGAN, John.=
-
-⸺ LEGENDS AND POEMS. Pp. 552. (_Sealy, Bryers_). 3_s._ 6_d._ 1907.
-
- Memoir of Author by D. J. O’Donoghue, pp. v.-xxxiii. He was a
- self-educated Midlands peasant, who lived in the first half of
- the last century. This miscellany consists of (_a_) Six tales
- of the Rockites, the brutal doings of a secret society that
- flourished about 1830; (_b_) Legends and tales of the peasantry
- of Queen’s County and North Munster; (_c_) Pp. 289-446,
- “Gleanings in the Green Isle,” a series of letters written in
- 1846 to DOLMAN’S, a London Catholic magazine, which deals with
- Irish country life, and are interspersed with stories; (_d_)
- Pp. 493-552, Poems.
-
-
-=KEIGHTLEY, Sir Samuel R.= B. Belfast, 1859. Son of S. Keightley, of
-Bangor, Co. Down. Ed. Queen’s Coll., Belfast. Contested Antrim as Indep.
-Unionist (1903), and S. Derry as Liberal (1910). Member of Senate of
-Queen’s Univ. Resides in Lisburn, Co. Antrim. Other works:—_A King’s
-Daughter_, _The Cavaliers_, _Heronford_, &c.
-
-⸺ THE CRIMSON SIGN. Pp. 189. (_Hutchinson_). 6_s._, and 6_d._ (N.Y.:
-_Harper_). 1.50. [1894].
-
- Adventures of a Mr. Gervase Orme, “sometime lieutenant in
- Mountjoy’s (Williamite) regiment of foot,” previous to and
- during the siege of Derry. The story is told with great verve,
- and is full of romantic and exciting adventure. There is little
- or no discussion of politics, and no bitter partisan feeling.
-
-⸺ THE LAST RECRUIT OF CLARE’S. (_Hutchinson_). (N.Y.: _Harper_). 1.50.
-[1897]. 1908.
-
- A stirring and exciting story of the Irish Brigade in Jacobite
- days, told in bold, dashing style. Strong pro-Jacobite feeling.
- Part of the story takes place at Kilmallock, Co. Limerick,
- the rest on the Continent—Tournay, Fontenoy, &c. Madame de
- Pompadour is one of the historical personages.
-
-⸺ THE PIKEMEN. Pp. viii + 311. Well illustrated. (_Hutchinson_). 6_s._
-1903.
-
- The supposed “narrative of Rev. Patrick Stirling, M.A., of
- Drenton, Sangamon Co., Ill., U.S.A., formerly of Ardkeen, Co.
- Down,” telling his experiences in the Ards of Down (district
- between Strangford Lough and the sea) during the rising.
- Presbyterian-Nationalist bias. Strong character study. Faithful
- descriptions of scenery. The study of the Government spy is
- especially noteworthy.
-
-⸺ A BEGGAR ON HORSEBACK. Pp. 319. (_Long_). 1906.
-
- A swaggering young bravo—a faint imitation of Barry
- Lyndon—tells his adventures in Dublin and on the Continent in
- the days of the drinking, gambling, out-at-elbows squireens
- (end of eighteenth century). The hero is thus described:—“I
- should like to have seen the man who at cards, drinking punch,
- riding or selling a horse, deludhering a woman, or winging his
- man had any advantage of Rody Blake” (p. 12). A facetious,
- swashbuckler tone is adopted throughout.
-
-⸺ RODY BLAKE.
-
- The preceding book seems to have been publ. also under this
- title, or possibly this is a sequel, but I failed to come
- across it, in spite of much research.
-
-
-=KELLY, Eleanor F.= Resides in Dublin. She is a constant contributor to
-Catholic periodicals here and in the States.
-
-⸺ BLIND MAUREEN; and other Stories. Pp. 160. (_Washbourne_). 2_s._ _n.d._
-(1913).
-
- Ten short stories reprinted from THE CATHOLIC FIRESIDE, and
- other Catholic magazines. High moral tone, characterisation
- good, dialogue (often in dialect) natural. St. Antony plays a
- prominent part. “The Fate of the Priest Hunter” is a tale of
- 18th century persecution in Ireland.
-
-⸺ OUR LADY INTERCEDES. Pp. 210. (_Washbourne_). 2_s._ 6_d._ 1913.
-
- Twelve stories, several of which are Irish, devoted to showing
- the care of the Blessed Virgin for those who invoke her. One
- relates to Cromwellian times, but for the most part the stories
- relate to the present time.
-
-⸺ THE THREE REQUESTS; and other Stories. Pp. 192. (_Duffy_). 3_s._ 6_d._
-1914.
-
- Twelve little stories, Irish in subject. The interest of the
- story is always quite subordinate to the religious and moral
- interest. The tales deal with answers to prayer (two of them
- are about prayers to St. Antony), the evils of emigration,
- and of proselytism, the reward of charity, &c., one is a
- ghost-story. They are told with great simplicity.
-
-
-=KELLY, Peter Burrowes.= 1811-1883. B. Stradbally, Queen’s Co. Took an
-active part in politics, and was a noted speaker. Died in Dublin.
-
-⸺ THE MANOR OF GLENMORE; or, The Irish Peasant. Three Vols. (LONDON: _Ed.
-Bull_). 1839.
-
- Scene: Stradbally, in the Queen’s County. Most of the
- personages of the tale and many of its incidents are real.
- The country is very well described; the book has many
- interesting incidents; peasant life is pictured with knowledge
- and sympathy. The last year of the agitation for Catholic
- Emancipation is the period dealt with. The famous Clare
- election is described, and there is a character sketch of
- Dr. Doyle (“J.K.L.”). It criticised strongly the Protestant
- ascendancy and landlord party, dwells upon the doings of
- Orangemen and of Whiteboys, and the attempts to reconcile the
- two factions.
-
-
-=KELLY, William Patrick.= B. 1848. Son of John Kelly, of Mount Brandon,
-Graigue, Co. Kilkenny. Ed. Clongowes Wood College and R.M.A. Woolwich.
-Late R. Artillery. Lives in Harrogate. Has written seven or eight other
-stories, chiefly semi-historical adventure stories.
-
-⸺ SCHOOLBOYS THREE. Pp. 320. (_Routledge_). 3_s._ 6_d._ Eight illustr.
-(good). [1895]. Several new eds.
-
- A story of school-boy life at Clongowes Wood College in the
- early ’sixties, told in a pleasant and picturesque style, and,
- almost all through, with frank fidelity to reality. It is full
- of lively incident. Was highly praised by the leading literary
- reviews.
-
-
-=[KEMBLE, Ann]; “Ann of Swansea.”=
-
-⸺ GERALD FITZGERALD; an Irish Tale. Five Vols (!). (LONDON: _Newman_).
-1831.
-
- Gerald, whose Catholic wife has deserted him, lives in an
- old half-ruined family castle, near Armagh. The book is
- an interminable (1698 pp.) series of petty scandals and
- flirtations, gossip, and matchmaking among the titled persons
- living in “Doneraile Castle,” and “Lisburn Abbey.” The insipid
- affairs of an out-of-date _beau monde_. This Author also wrote
- _Uncle Peregrine’s Heiress_, _Conviction_, _Guilty or not
- Guilty_, and many other stories.
-
-
-=KENNEDY, Patrick; “Harry Whitney.”= Born in Co. Wexford, 1801. In
-1823 he removed to Dublin, and for the greater part of his life he
-kept a bookshop in Anglesea Street. His sketches of Irish rural
-life as he had known it are told with spirit, and with a kind of
-photographic literalness and exactness. They are very free from anything
-objectionable. Dr. Douglas Hyde, speaking of his folk-lore, says that
-“many of his stories appear to be the detritus of genuine Gaelic
-folk-stories filtered through an English idiom and much impaired and
-stunted in the process. He appears, however, not to have adulterated them
-very much.” In the Pref. to _Evenings in the Duffrey_ he says (and the
-remarks apply to his other books), “On all other points [viz., than the
-matrimonial fortunes of his hero and heroine] there is not a fictitious
-character, nor incident in the mere narrative, nor legend related, nor
-ballad sung, which was not current in the country half a century since.
-The fireside discussions were really held, and the extraordinary fishing
-and hunting adventures detailed, as here set down.” He died in 1873.
-
-⸺ LEGENDS OF MOUNT LEINSTER. Pp. 283. 16mo. (_Dublin_). 1855.
-
- Title of a miscellany published under pseudonym of “Harry
- Whitney.” Contains: “Three Months in Kildare Place,” “Bantry
- and Duffrey Traditions,” “The Library in Patrick Street”; in
- all nine sketches, four of which are stories supposed to be
- told at fireside of Wexford farm-house. Careful picture of
- manners and customs. No. 1 is a story of the time of Brian,
- _c._ 1001 A.D. 3. A love-tale of the days of Sarsfield. 6.
- Penal days, a hunted priest.
-
-⸺ FICTIONS OF OUR FOREFATHERS. 1859.
-
-⸺ LEGENDARY FICTIONS OF THE IRISH CELTS. (_Macmillan_). [1866]. Several
-eds. since.
-
- Over 100 stories, given, for the most part, “as they were
- received from the story-tellers with whom our youth was
- familiar.” They are derived from the English-speaking peasantry
- of County Wexford. They include “Household Stories” (wild and
- wonderful adventures), “Legends of the Good People” or fairies,
- witchcraft, sorcery, ghosts and fetches, Ossianic, &c.,
- legends, and “Legends of the Celtic Saints.” All these are in
- this book published for the first time. All through there is an
- interesting running comment, introductory and connective. The
- book is hardly suitable for children.
-
-⸺ THE BANKS OF THE BORO. Pp. 362. (_M’Glashan & Gill_). 2_s._ [1867]. New
-ed., 1875, &c.
-
- Into the tissue of a pleasant and touching story of quiet
- country life in North-west Wexford the Author has woven a
- collection of tales, ballads, and legends, some of which are
- of high merit. They contain a wealth of information on local
- customs and traditions. Incidentally, Irish peasant character
- is truthfully painted in all its phases—grave, gay, humorous,
- and grotesque. The moral standard is very high throughout.
- There are many vivid descriptions of scenery. The whole is told
- in a simple, pleasant, genial style. The Author tells us that
- the chief incidents, circumstances, and fireside conferences
- mentioned in the book really occurred.
-
-⸺ EVENINGS IN THE DUFFREY. Pp. 396. (_M’Glashan & Gill_). 2_s._ 1869.
-
- A kind of sequel to the _Banks of the Boro_. The adventures
- of the hero, Edward O’Brien, are continued, the story being,
- as before, interspersed with legends and ballads. It has the
- same good qualities as the earlier book, the tone being again
- thoroughly healthy.
-
-⸺ THE FIRESIDE STORIES OF IRELAND. Pp. 162. 32mo. (_M’Glashan & Gill_).
-1_s._ 6_d._ 1870.
-
- “A good book” (Douglas Hyde in _Beside the Fire_). Fifty tales,
- chiefly fairy and folk-lore, but of very varied types, full of
- local colour and interest. Many of them are of the kind found
- in the folk-tales of all nations, but have an unmistakably
- Irish (not stage-Irish) savour. Moreover, they are told with
- vivacity, quaintness, and sly humour. A good selection,
- suitable for readers of any age or class.
-
-⸺ THE BARDIC STORIES OF IRELAND. Pp. 227. (_M’Glashan & Gill_). 2_s._
-[1871].
-
- Fifty-eight stories, founded, some on pagan myth, others on
- historical traditions of great families. All were originally
- found in poetic form, and many of them retain much of their
- poetic qualities. Many are told with a singular humorous
- naïveté. In all the language is simple but very adequate and
- dignified. They are free from anything that would make them
- unsuitable for the young.
-
-⸺ THE BOOK OF MODERN IRISH ANECDOTES. Pp. 192. 12mo. New ed. (_Gill_).
-6_d._ Has passed through several editions and is still in print. 1913.
-
- “Has no higher ambition than that of agreeably occupying a
- leisure hour.”—(_Pref._). “It has entered into the present
- writer’s purpose to draw the attention of his readers to the
- principal events in the history of his country since the
- Revolution of 1691.”—(_Pref._). Anecdotes of Swift, Sheridan,
- Curran, Moore, O’Connell, &c. Stories of duelling, gaming,
- hunting, shooting, acting, electioneering, drinking. Taken
- from such Authors as R. R. Madden, W. J. Fitzpatrick, Sir John
- Gilbert, Sir Jonah Barrington, Hon. Edward Walsh, &c., &c. Free
- from coarseness, and practically free from the Stage-Irishman.
- In the new ed. there are about 200 proverbs transl. from the
- Irish and an Index.
-
-
-=KENNEDY, Rev. John J.=
-
-⸺ CARRIGMORE; or, Light and Shade in West Kerry. Pp. 128. (_Office of
-Chronicle_: WANGARATTA). 1909.
-
-
-=KENNY, Mrs. Stacpoole.= D. of J. R. Dunne, of Ennistymon, Co. Clare, and
-wife of T. H. Kenny, of Limerick, near which city she resides.
-
-⸺ JACQUETTA. Pp. 227. (_Washbourne_). 2_s._ 6_d._ (N.Y.: _Benziger_).
-0.75. 1910.
-
- Scene: Kilrush, Co. Clare, and London. The story of an
- Irish-Australian girl who comes to live in Ireland with her
- uncle, Dr. Desmond. She had contracted an unhappy marriage, but
- believed her husband dead. The story tells how she finds him,
- and the fate that overtakes him. There is also the love-story
- of Dr. Desmond. In the end all is well with uncle and niece.
-
-⸺ LOVE IS LIFE. Pp. 317. (_Greening_). 6_s._ 1910.
-
- The heroine, Iseult Dymphna Macnamara, whose mother was French,
- lives at the Court of Louis XIV. at the time when James II.
- held his exiled Court at St. Germain. She loves the son of
- Sarsfield, but is forced by circumstances into a loveless
- marriage with a noble and chivalrous Frenchman, St. Amand, whom
- the king had chosen for her. St. Amand goes off to the wars
- (Steenkirk and Landen), and meantime the king pursues Iseult
- with amorous attentions. To avoid them she flies to Ireland.
- Here we get a glimpse of the Penal days in Co. Clare. All comes
- right when Iseult comes to love her husband. Brightly and
- entertainingly told.
-
-⸺ CARROW OF CARROWDUFF. Pp. 331. (_Greening_). 6_s._ 1911.
-
- Scene: West County (obviously Clare). The hero, son of an
- unpopular landlord, whose cattle have been houghed and
- otherwise maimed, goes, in spite of warnings, to a wake among
- the tenantry. This wake is described as a scene of savagery.
- On his return he is “shot at” and wounded, and there comes
- to nurse him a young nun with whom, before her entrance into
- religious life, he had fallen in love. It turns out that
- she had entered the convent in a moment of pique. The hero
- accordingly proposes, and they are married by the death-bed of
- his father, who has fallen a victim to the League.
-
-⸺ THE KING’S KISS. Pp. 288. (_Digby, Long_). 6_s._ 1912.
-
- A kind of sequel to _Love is Life_. How Iseult, who tells the
- story, buys the life of her cousin Harry Macnamara by a kiss
- given to Louis XIV. This, though innocent on her part, was the
- beginning of her troubles. Her enraged husband rides post-haste
- to Versailles to tell Louis what he thinks of him. St. Armand
- disappears, and Iseult almost dies of fever; but through
- a whole series of plots and court intrigues and exciting
- adventures things right themselves at last. James II., the
- Duchess of Tyrconnell, and many other historical persons play a
- part in the romance.
-
-⸺ OUR OWN COUNTRY. Pp. 142. (_Duffy_). 2_s._ 1913.
-
- Sequel to _Carrow of Carrowduff_, with same personages. Several
- interwoven love stories—in particular that of an English
- Protestant gentleman (converted in the course of the tale)
- with Mrs. Monsel, a widow, mother-in-law to Corona Carrow, who
- tells part of the story. The _dénouement_ has a deep religious
- interest, which indeed is the chief interest of the whole book.
-
-⸺ DAFFODIL’S LOVE AFFAIRS. Pp. 320. (_Holden & Hardingham_). 6_s._ 1913.
-
- A story of life among gentlefolk. Scene: near Carlingford and
- in London. D.’s mother, of a good but impoverished family, has
- five daughters on her hands, and the way in which these are
- married off, partly owing to her matchmaking exertions, forms
- the burden of the story. For the most part it is a light and
- vivacious story of social life and flirtations, but an element
- of tragedy is introduced in one of the subsidiary love-stories,
- that of D.’s sister Kit, who was thus punished for a flirtation
- carried on with Sir Dermot de Courcy while his wife was still
- alive.
-
-⸺ MARY: A Romance of West County. Pp. 273. (_Washbourne_). 2_s._ 6_d._
-1915.
-
- On leaving her convent school in Dublin, Mary goes home to
- realise for the first time that her father not only cares
- little for her but dislikes her (her birth had cost her
- mother’s life). But in the long run she wins his love. There
- is a double love story—her own and that of her madcap, slangy,
- tomboy cousin Benigna. The Author is persistently vivacious and
- sprightly (calling in slang to her assistance) in a way that
- might irritate. There is no repose or quiet beauty about the
- style.
-
-
-=KENNY, Louise.=
-
-⸺ THE RED-HAIRED WOMAN: Her Autobiography. Pp. 400. (_Murray_). 6_s._
-1905.
-
- The interest centres in an old county family of Thomond, the
- O’Currys. Characters typical of various conditions of life in
- Ireland: an unpopular, police-protected landlord, a landowner
- with an encumbered estate, an upstart usurer, faithful
- retainers, evicted tenants, etc. (_N.I.R._, Dec., 1905).
-
-
-=KENNY, M. L.=
-
-⸺ THE FORTUNES OF MAURICE CRONIN. Three Vols. (_Tinsley_). 1875.
-
- A very long novel with a very complicated plot and without a
- trace of brightness or of humour. The plot turns chiefly on
- a case of mistaken identity. Maurice returns from soldiering
- in India to find that he is really heir to the estates of the
- Grace family, and can marry Mary Grace, his cousin, whom his
- putative mother had thought to be his sister. No national
- interest. Date 184-. Places such as Deverell’s Chase, Desmond’s
- Tower, Rathcroghan, are mentioned.
-
-
-=KERR, Eliza.=
-
-⸺ SLIEVE BLOOM. Pp. 153. (_Wesleyan Conference Office_). Three illustr.
-1881.
-
- A little non-controversial Methodist story for young people.
- Tells (in the present tense throughout) how May and Willie
- lived a very poor life with their maternal grandmother, but
- by the coming of their father’s mother were raised to better
- circumstances. Nice descriptions of Mountmellick, the Bog of
- Allen, and Slieve Bloom.
-
-⸺ KILKEE. Pp. 193. (_Wesleyan Methodist School Union_). Third ed. 1885.
-
- A moral and religious (but not controversial) tale. Adventures
- of two boys near the Pollock Hole Rocks, Kilkee, the scenery
- around which is well described. On all occasions the boys quote
- Scripture texts, and the piety of the personages concerned is
- constantly insisted on.
-
-⸺ KEENA KARMODY, &c.: A Tale. Pp. 192. (_Wesleyan Methodist Sunday School
-Union_). 1887.
-
- Also _The Golden City_, _Hazel Haldene_, and four or five
- others.
-
-
-=KETTLE, Rosa Mackenzie.=
-
-⸺ ROSE, SHAMROCK, AND THISTLE. Pp. 286. (_Fisher, Unwin_). 6_s._ 1893.
-
- “A Story of two Border Towers.” Rhoda Carysfort, an Irish girl,
- comes to live with her English cousins, and eventually marries
- a Scotch laird. Except for the heroine’s nationality there is
- nothing Irish about the story, though the Author’s sympathies
- are with Ireland. The tone is very “respectable” and somewhat
- prim. It seems intended as a book of instruction for girls.
-
-
-=KICKHAM, Charles J.= B. Mullinahone, Co. Tipperary, 1828. Began early
-to write for nationalist papers—THE NATION, THE CELT, THE IRISHMAN, THE
-IRISH PEOPLE. Most of his contributions were verse, but to THE SHAMROCK
-he contributed his chief novels. He threw himself into the Fenian
-movement, was arrested along with John O’Leary, and sentenced to fourteen
-years’ penal servitude. His health never recovered from this period of
-prison. He died in 1882 at Blackrock, near Dublin. See the short _Life_
-by J. J. Healy, publ. 1915 by Messrs. Duffy. Besides the novels mentioned
-below, Kickham wrote the following short stories:—“Poor Mary Maher” (a
-sad tale of ’98); “Never Give Up,” “Annie O’Brien,” “Joe Lonergan’s Trip
-to the Lower Regions” (Irish life in the fifties, dealing largely with
-land troubles); “White Humphrey of the Grange: A Glimpse of Tipperary
-fifty years ago”; “Elsie Dhuv” (a story of ’98, full of incident, much
-of it humorous). These tales have been collected for publication in the
-near future by Mr. William Murphy, of Blackrock. K. knew thoroughly and
-loved intensely his own place and people. He had wonderful powers of
-observation and a great fund of quiet humour.
-
-⸺ SALLY CAVANAGH. (_Duffy_). 2_s._ [1869]. (N.Y.: _Benziger_). 0.75. New
-ed. 1902.
-
- Kickham’s first story. Contains in germ all the great qualities
- of _Knocknagow_. We feel all through that it is the work of a
- man of warm, tender, homely heart—a man born and bred one of
- the people about whom he writes. It is a simple and natural
- tale of love among the small farmer class. Sally Cavanagh’s
- tragedy is due to the combined evils of landlordism and
- emigration. Some of the saddest aspects of the latter are dwelt
- upon. The book is quite free from declamation and moralizing,
- the events being left to tell their own sad tale. Perhaps the
- noblest characters in the book are the Protestant Mr. and Mrs.
- Hazlitt. There is no trace of religious bigotry. There are
- touches of humour, too—for example, the love affairs of Mr.
- Mooney and the inimitable scene between Shawn Gow and his wife.
-
-⸺ KNOCKNAGOW. Pp. 628. (_Duffy_). 3_s._ 6_d._ [1879]. Upwards of 14 eds.
-since. (N.Y.: _Benziger_). 1.25.
-
- One of the greatest, if not the greatest, of all Irish novels.
- Yet it is not so much a novel as a series of pictures of life
- in a Tipperary village. We are introduced to every one of its
- inhabitants, and learn to love them nearly all before the end.
- Everything in the book had been not only seen from without
- but _lived_ by the Author. It is full of exquisite little
- humorous and pathetic traits. The description of the details
- of peasant life is quite photographic in fidelity, yet not
- wearisome. There is the closest observation of human nature
- and of individual peculiarities. It is realism of the best
- kind. The incidents related and some of the discussions throw
- much light on the Land Question. The Author does not, however,
- lecture or rant on the subject. Occasionally there are tracts
- of middle-class conversation that would, I believe, be dull for
- most readers.
-
-⸺ FOR THE OLD LAND. Pp. 384. (_Gill_). 2_s._ [1886]. New ed. 1914. (N.Y.:
-_Benziger_). 0.75.
-
- Main theme: the fortunes and the sufferings of an Irish family
- of small farmers under the old land system. The peasant’s love
- of home and the bitter sadness of emigration are brought out in
- the unfolding of the tale. All through there runs a love-tale
- told with the Author’s usual restraint, simplicity, and
- delicate analysis of motive. There is a humorous element, too,
- amusing bailiffs and policemen furnishing much of it. Constable
- Sproule driving home the pigs is capitally done. Rody Flynn is
- a grand old character, evidently sketched from life.
-
-⸺ THE PIG-DRIVING PEELERS.
-
- Appears in one of the “Knickerbocker Nuggets,” entitled
- “Representative Irish Tales.” Compiled, with Introd. and notes
- by W. B. Yeats. (N.Y.: _Putnam_). Two Vols. _n.d._
-
-
-=KING, Richard Ashe; “Basil,” “Desmond O’Brien.”= The Author is (1914)
-Staff Extension Lecturer of Oxford and London Universities. Has
-contributed a good deal to the CORNHILL and to the PALL MALL GAZETTE, and
-is reviewer for TRUTH. Has written, besides the books noticed here, _Love
-the Debt_, _A Drawn Game_, _A Coquette’s Conquest_, and many others.
-Also a life of Swift. B. Co. Clare. Ed. at Ennis Coll. and T.C.D. He
-gave up in the eighties his living in the Church of England and began
-contributing to FREEMAN’S JOURNAL, TRUTH, &c. “He is,” says W. P. Ryan in
-his _The Irish Literary Revival_, “intensely Celtic, but too candid to
-overlook the Celt’s failings.” For some time in the eighties he lived in
-Blackrock, Co. Dublin. See Mrs. Hinkson’s _Reminiscences of Twenty-five
-Years_, pp. 282-3.
-
-⸺ THE WEARING OF THE GREEN. Pp. 299. (_Chatto & Windus_). 2_s._ 6_d._
-1886.
-
- A story of the course of true love, in which the lovers are
- long kept apart by many untoward happenings. The writer’s
- sympathies and the characters of his story are Protestant,
- yet there is no hostility to Catholics, and one of the
- pleasantest characters in the book is Father Mac. One of the
- minor incidents of the story is connected with the Fenian
- conspiracy. The chief interest of the book lies, perhaps, in
- the drawing of the lesser characters. In his delineation of all
- the English personages the Author is unsparingly caustic. The
- book is brightly written; the conversation particularly good;
- there is a vein of sarcasm throughout, and plenty of incident.
- The author evidently sympathises with Irish grievances, and is
- proud of his country.
-
-⸺ BELL BARRY. (_Chatto_). 2_s._ 1891.
-
- “An exciting story, laid in I., then in Liverpool, and in part
- aboard a liner. The Irish servants and other minor characters
- ... provide a good deal of humorous talk.”—(_Baker_).
-
-⸺ A GERALDINE. Two Vols. 1893. (_Ward & Downey_).
-
- A story of almost contemporary life, largely concerned with
- land troubles in Ireland. The heroine, a very attractive
- character and a woman of great resourcefulness, is the daughter
- of a rack-renting squireen, and is a contrast to the remainder
- of the family, which is weak, idle, and selfish. Other
- unpleasant characters are a villainous attorney and a bigoted
- and pedantic clergyman. Some of the duties which the R.I.C.
- have to perform are severely commented upon. The Author takes
- the popular side. The incidents are related with spirit and
- humour.
-
-
-=KING, Toler.=
-
-⸺ ROSE O’CONNOR: A Story of the Day. Pp. 173. (CHICAGO: _Sumner_). Second
-ed. 1881.
-
- Rose O’C. and Tim Brady love each other. Tim has to go to
- America. Meanwhile the famine years come in Ireland. Rose’s
- family is reduced to extremities, and she is compelled to
- promise marriage to Tim’s rival in order to save it. But Tim
- returns in the nick of time. Locality not indicated. Purpose,
- to contrast the tyranny of landlordism with the refinement and
- gentleness of the Irish peasantry. The tone is Catholic, but
- not aggressively so.
-
-
-=KINGSTON, W. H. G.=
-
-⸺ PETER THE WHALER. Pp. 252. (_Blackie: Library of Famous Books_). 1_s._
-Full size. Cloth. One Illustr. At present in print.
-
- Peter associates with low company in his Irish home and gets
- into such scrapes that he has to be sent to sea. The rest is a
- fine series of adventures such as boys love. Here and there a
- good moral lesson is slipped in, not too obtrusively. K. was a
- great writer for boys. Allibone enumerates 161 of his works.
-
-
-=KNOWLES, Richard Brinsley.= 1820-1882. B. Glasgow. Son of the dramatist,
-James Sheridan Knowles, a Cork man who ended as a Baptist preacher. Was
-at first a barrister, but took up journalism as a profession. In 1849
-he became a Catholic. In 1853 _sq._ ed. of ILLUSTRATED LONDON MAGAZINE.
-_Glencoonoge_ originally appeared as a serial in the MONTH.
-
-⸺ GLENCOONOGE. Three Vols. (_Blackwood_). 1891.
-
- Three threads of romance skilfully intertwined, the chief of
- which is the love story of an English girl of gentle birth
- and a splendid young Irish peasant. The scene is an inn in
- a valley somewhere on the South-west coast. The valley as
- described bears a strong resemblance to Glengarriff. The story
- is eminently sane and natural, reading like a record of real
- events. It is full of human interest, and is written in a
- style unaffected yet charmingly literary. There are some good
- portraits—the Protestant Rector, the lovable Father John,
- Conn Houlahan, the hero, Old Mr. Jardine, the O’Doherty. The
- description of an Irish Sunday is one of the most beautiful
- in fiction. The book shows understanding sympathy for Irish
- characteristics and ideals.
-
-
-=[KNOX, Rev. J. Spencer]; “An Irish Clergyman.”=
-
-⸺ PASTORAL ANNALS. Pp. 397. (LONDON: _Seeley_). [1840]. Second ed., 1841.
-
- Contents:—“The Sick Parish,” “The First Death,” “The Sermon,”
- “The Warning,” “The Private Still,” “The Pluralist,” “The Inn,”
- “The School,” “Ribbonism” (a very unfavourable picture of
- bailiffs, process-servers. Very fair towards Catholics); “The
- Night,” “The Starving Family,” “The Birth,” “The Soup Shop”
- (Famine of 1817), “Death by Starvation,” “The Confessional”
- (a plea for private confession), “Family Worship,” “Tithe
- Setting,” “Lough Derg” (facetious in tone. Lough D. pilgrimage
- = “a scene of mockery and dissoluteness”). A series of
- studies—for the most part careful and sympathetic—of peasant
- life as seen by a liberal-minded and kindly Protestant Rector.
- The part of Ireland dealt with would appear to be Donegal.
-
-
-=“LAFFAN, May,”= _see_ =HARTLEY=.
-
-
-=LALOR, Desmond.=
-
-⸺ LOUGHBAR. Pp. 252. (_Stockwell_). 6_s._ 1914.
-
- Adventures, not of a very remarkable kind, of a young doctor in
- the W. of Ireland, locality indefinite. He is presented with a
- practice, and a furnished house. There is a ghost, but he is
- not a real one, and rather commonplace. The whole thing is very
- _couleur de rose_, everybody being nicely married off, and the
- descriptions do not give the impression of things seen.
-
-
-=LANE, Elinor Macartney.=
-
-⸺ KATRINE. (_Harper_). 6_s._ 1909.
-
- “An Irish-American love-story with scenes of planters’ life
- in South Carolina. The Authoress has a keen appreciation of
- the psychology of the Irish character, and in her portrayal
- of Dermott MacDermott and Katrine Dulany, she successfully
- indicates the lights and shades of that puzzling combination of
- mysticism and practicality.”—(IRISH TIMES).
-
-
-=LANGBRIDGE, Rev. Frederick.= Rector of St. John’s, Limerick. Chaplain
-district asylum. B. Birmingham, 1849. Ed. there, and at Oxford. D.Litt.,
-T.C.D., 1907. Has publ. many volumes of poetry, and some plays.—(WHO’S
-WHO).
-
-⸺ MISS HONORIA. Pp. 216. (WARNE: _Tavistock Library_). 1894.
-
- Sub-t.: “A tale of a remote corner of Ireland,” viz.,
- “Carrowkeel,” a seaside village. Miss Honoria, a woman of 32,
- full of piety and zeal, the prop of the parish, has never
- known love till she meets Sebert, to whom she becomes engaged,
- Sebert writes beautiful letters from London. Miss H. goes there
- to find Sebert making love to her niece “Daisy.” H. stands
- aside, and S. marries Daisy. They return to Ireland, where
- S. makes love to a poor girl. She is drowned. H. dies, and
- S. becomes an East End missionary. There is much sentiment.
- Some pretty descriptions of scenery, and some good minor
- characters—“Kevin Kennedy” and “Corney the Post.”
-
-⸺ THE CALLING OF THE WEIR. Pp. 304. (Large print). (_Digby, Long_). 1902.
-
- A love story of Protestant middle classes. Scene: near the
- Shannon Weir and Falls of Donass, Co. Limerick. Two girls
- become engaged to two men rather through force of circumstances
- than for love. Problem: are the circumstances such as to
- justify Mary in marrying the man she does not love. In a
- strange way it comes about that each girl marries the other’s
- fiancé, and finds happiness. Not without improbabilities, but
- lively and piquant in style. Irish flavour and humour provided
- by Mrs. Mack, the housekeeper, and Constable Keogh. By same
- Author: _The Dreams of Dania_, _Love has no Pity_, &c.
-
-⸺ MACK THE MISER. Pp. 125. (_Elliott Stock_). 1907.
-
- A tale of middle class Protestant life in Limerick, turning on
- the vindication of the supposed miser’s character by a young
- girl. The tendency of the book is moral and religious.
-
-
-=LANGBRIDGE, Rosamond.= Dau. of preceding. B. Glenalla, Donegal. Brought
-up and ed. privately in Limerick. Has contributed short stories and
-articles to the MANCHESTER GUARDIAN and to other periodicals. Her
-attitude towards Ireland has been expressed in a fine passage worthy to
-be quoted. “Nationalist by sympathy and inclination, but not by contact
-or association, and belonging to no particular party or clique she
-[the Author] believes in Ireland as the Land of Spiritual Happiness;
-as the Land which has kept itself innocent, religious, and vividly
-individualistic, in face of the wave of undistinguishable sameness which
-is engulfing all national idiosyncrasy, and tends towards becoming the
-Esperanto of the soul. Ireland she believes in as the Child-Soul amongst
-nations, not to be deceived or bought, but perceiving and desiring with
-incorruptible ingenuousness those things which alone make individual, as
-well as national life worth while: Faith and Freedom before Subordination
-and Sophistication, and the Traffic of the Heart to the Traffic of the
-Mart.” Their necessary brevity must give to the following notes an
-impression of want of sympathy. They scarcely do full justice to all the
-qualities of the books.
-
-⸺ THE FLAME AND FLOOD. Pp. xii. + 339. (_Fisher, Unwin_; _First Novel
-Library_). 1903.
-
- A love-story. The lovers marry other people _not_ for love.
- It is only the presence of a child that prevents the heroine
- from leaving her husband for her lover. There are accordingly
- curious situations, but nothing positively immoral in the tone.
- The story is well constructed. Scene: partly in Ireland, partly
- in England.
-
-⸺ THE THIRD EXPERIMENT. Pp. 300. (_Fisher, Unwin_). 1904.
-
- The scene is laid amid very low class society in an Irish town.
- The interest centres in a young girl who is reared on charity,
- but finally marries a fairly respectable tradesman. The
- personages of the story seem to be Protestants, but religion is
- scarcely touched on. The brogue is very thick, but the stage
- Irishman humour is absent. There is a persistent attempt to
- study types and characters.
-
-⸺ AMBUSH OF YOUNG DAYS. Pp. vii. + 344. (_Duckworth_). 1906.
-
- The scene is laid in a temperance hotel. The central character
- is a young girl, daughter of proprietor, who is given to
- telling out the truth in a most unnecessary and inconvenient
- manner. The lodgers come prominently into the story, and the
- heroine ends by marrying one of them.
-
-⸺ THE STARS BEYOND. Pp. vii. + 375. (_Nash_). 1907.
-
- A problem novel dealing with an ill-assorted marriage—the
- wife’s name (symbolic) is “Vérité,” the husband’s “Virtue”;
- hence the clash. Religion enters largely into the book. Types
- of Irish Protestant clergy. The writer’s sympathy seems to
- waver between Catholicism and Protestantism, but the heroine
- rejects both. The servants’ talk in conventional brogue.
-
-⸺ IMPERIAL RICHENDA. Pp. 313. (_Alston Rivers_). 6_s._ 1908.
-
- Scene: a small watering-place near Dublin. A fantastic comedy,
- somewhat vulgar in places, but on the whole amusing, abounding
- as it does in bright dialogue, and in absurdly comical
- situations. Some shrewd strokes of satire are aimed at Dublin
- Society, and there are piquant sayings on other subjects.
- The central figure is a young lady who takes a situation as
- waitress in a small hotel. Her character is so equivocal that
- the book cannot be recommended for general reading.
-
-
-=LARMINIE, William. B.= 1849, in Co. Mayo. D. at Bray, 1900. Was many
-years in the Civil Service. He is better known as a poet, Author of
-_Glanlua_ and _Fand_, than as a folk-lorist.
-
-⸺ WEST IRISH FOLK-TALES AND ROMANCES. Pp. xxvi. + 258. (_Elliot Stock_).
-3_s._ 6_d._ 1898.
-
- Taken down, by the editor, between 1884 and 1898, word for word
- in Irish from peasants in Galway (Renvyle), Mayo (Achill),
- and Donegal (Glencolumbkille and Malinmore), and translated
- literally. Interesting introduction on the origin and sources
- of folk-lore. At the end are some remarks on phonetics,
- which do not show a deep knowledge of the Irish system of
- orthography, and specimens of the tales in Irish written
- phonetically. The book is primarily for folk-lorists and some
- naturalistic expressions render it unsuitable reading for the
- young. There are eighteen stories in all.
-
- N.B.—The Author tells us (introduction) that besides the
- tales in this book, he has in his possession many others not
- yet published. This collection, a large one, is preserved in
- safety, but still awaits publication.
-
-
-=“LAUDERDALE, E. M.”; Mrs. Moore.=
-
-⸺ TIVOLI. Pp. 278. (CORK: _Guy_). 1886.
-
- A family story (landlord class) laid first at Deer Park, near
- Cork, afterwards in England, whither the family retires to be
- out of the Land League agitation. This last is referred to
- with evident aversion. The interest turns largely on a mystery
- of identity. The Author knows the Cork district well, and
- describes localities accurately. Her sympathies are clearly not
- nationalist. The religious attitude is one of tolerance.
-
-
-=LAWLESS, Hon. Emily.= B. in Ireland, 1845. Eldest d. of Lord Cloncurry.
-Came to know the W. of Ireland through her associations with the home of
-her mother’s family. Her mother was a Miss Kirwan, of Castle Hackett, Co.
-Galway. _See_ Miss Lawless’s _Traits and Confidences_ for some memories
-of her childhood. She went a good deal among the people in her natural
-history excursions. She had wide knowledge of Irish history, as her
-volume on _Ireland_ in the History of the Nations Series bears witness.
-She wrote several books besides those here noted. D. 1913. For a good
-article on her _see_ NINETEENTH CENTURY, July, 1914.
-
-⸺ HURRISH. Pp. 342. (_Methuen_). [1886]. 1902.
-
- Scene: a wild and poverty-stricken district in Clare. A view of
- the bad days of the ’eighties by one to whom the Land League
- stands for “lawlessness and crime.” The people are depicted as
- half-savage. The story is a gloomy one, full of assassinations
- and the other dark doings of the Land League. The picture it
- gives of an Irish mother will jar harshly on the feelings of
- most Irishmen. The Irish dialect is all but a caricature. Yet
- the story met with an immediate and extraordinary success. In
- a vol. publ. by Mr. Gladstone in 1892, _Special Aspects of the
- Irish Question_, he says of _Hurrish_, “She has made present to
- her readers, not as an abstract proposition, but as a living
- reality, the estrangement of the people of Ireland from the
- law.... As to the why of this alienation, also, she has her
- answer (p. 309 of first ed.), ‘The old long-repented sin of the
- stronger country was the culprit.’ She thinks there was a sin,
- a deep sin, and (so I construe her) an inveterate sin, but a
- sin now purged by repentance.”
-
-⸺ WITH ESSEX IN IRELAND. Pp. 298. (_Methuen_). 6_s._ [1890]. New ed.,
-1902.
-
- A narrative of Essex’s Irish expedition, 1599, purporting to
- be related by his private secretary. Pictures Elizabethan
- barbarity in warfare. It has a strange element of the uncanny
- and supernatural. Hints at the spell that Ireland casts over
- her conquerors. Written in quaint Elizabethan English which
- never lapses into modernness.
-
-⸺ GRANIA: the Story of an Island. (_Smith, Elder_). 3_s._ 6_d._, and
-2_s._ 6_d._ [1892].
-
- A sympathetic picture of life in the Aran Islands, where
- existence is a struggle against the elements. There are typical
- characters, such as Honor, the saintly and patient, with her
- eyes on the life beyond, and Grania, young and impetuous, and
- longing for joy as she battles with the endless privations of
- her stern lot, and the lover, Irish alike in his goodness and
- in his vices. The success of this book exceeded even that of
- _Hurrish_. Swinburne thought it “just one of the most exquisite
- and perfect works of genius in the language” (in a letter).
-
-⸺ MAELCHO. Pp. 418. (_Methuen_). 1_s._ (N.Y.: _Appleton_). 1.50. [1895].
-1905.
-
- Gloomy picture of misery and devastation during the Desmond
- rebellion. An English boy escaping from a night attack
- finds refuge in a Connemara glen among the native Irish
- (O’Flaherties), hideous wretches of savage appearance
- and uncouth tongue. Then comes a confused account of the
- melodramatic struggles of Fitzmaurice and his wild followers
- against the English, noble, steady, and civilized. There is a
- vague impression throughout of an Irish race without ideals or
- religion, inevitably losing ground, moved by no impulse but
- love of strife and cringing superstition. But the cruelties of
- the English at the time are not in any way slurred over.
-
-⸺ TRAITS AND CONFIDENCES. Pp. 272. (_Methuen_) 6_s._ 1897.
-
- A volume of stories and sketches, founded for the most part
- on fact. Some are autobiographical episodes of childhood.
- There is an incident of ’98, an incident of the Land War,
- and two episodes of Irish history, the story of Geroit Mor,
- Earl of Kildare, and that of Art Macmurrough, told in vivid,
- romantic style without political bias. Again, there are
- extremely interesting “memories” of the Famine of 1846-7.
- On pages 142-150 is a remarkable description of Connemara.
- The story-telling is full of vivacity and picturesqueness,
- reminding one of French storytellers, such as Daudet. The book
- is filled from first to last with Ireland.
-
-⸺ THE BOOK OF GILLY. Pp. 285. (_Smith, Elder_). Four illustr. by Leslie
-Brooke. 1906.
-
- Scene: a small island in Kenmare Bay. Gilly is an
- eight-year-old boy sent to Inishbeg for a few months by his
- father, Lord Magillicuddy, who is in India. The book makes
- a marvellous pen-picture of life and scenery in this remote
- corner of Ireland.
-
-
-=LAWLESS, Emily, and Shan F. BULLOCK.=
-
-⸺ THE RACE OF CASTLEBAR. Pp. 364. (_Murray_). 6_s._ 1914.
-
- The story of Humbert’s invasion of Ireland in 1798, as seen
- by the narrator, an Englishman named Bunbury, fresh come
- to Ireland. B. is represented as an honest, unprejudiced,
- if somewhat phlegmatic personage. The historic events are
- presented with great vividness and vigour. The Authors aim at
- painstaking objectivity. On the one side the sufferings of the
- Catholics and the harsh treatment of the rebels are painted in
- strong colours. The portraits both of the rebel leaders and of
- the Orangemen are far from flattering. The narrative is largely
- based on that written at the time by Dr. Stock, the excellent
- Protestant Bishop of Killala. Bunbury is made to spend some
- weeks at his palace.
-
-
-=LEAHY, A. H.= B. in Kerry in 1857. Is a Fellow of Pembroke Coll.,
-Cambridge.
-
-⸺ THE COURTSHIP OF FERB. Square 16mo. Pp. xxix. + 100. (_Nutt_). 2_s._
-Two illustr. by Caroline Watts. 1902.
-
- Vol. I. of Irish Saga Library. Elegantly produced in every way.
- An English version of Professor Windisch’s German translation
- of an old Irish romance from the _Book of Leinster_ (twelfth
- century). The verse of the original is translated here into
- English verse, the prose into prose. “In the verse-translations
- endeavour has been made to add nothing to a literal rendering
- except scansion and rhyme.”—(Pref.). The tale itself is a kind
- of preface to the great Tàin. It is not of very striking merit,
- but is told in simple, dignified language. The translation
- reads very well. A literal translation of all the poetry is
- given at the end.
-
-⸺ ANCIENT HEROIC ROMANCES OF IRELAND. Two Vols. Small 4to. Vol. I., pp.
-xxv. + 197. Vol. II. pp. ix. + 161. (_Nutt_). 8_s._ net. 1905.
-
- Contents: Vol. I. “The Courtship of Etain”; “MacDatho’s Boar”;
- “The Death of the Sons of Usnach” (Leinster Version); “The
- Sick Bed of Cuchulainn”; “The Combat at the Ford” (Leinster
- Version). Vol. II. “The Courtship of Fraech”; “The Cattle Spoil
- of Flidias”; “The Cattle Spoil of Dartaid”; “The Cattle Spoil
- of Regamon.” The Preface deals with Irish Saga literature in
- general and in particular with the sagas here translated. Each
- piece is preceded by a special Introduction dealing with its
- sources and character. At the end of Vol. I. (pp. 163-197)
- are copious notes explaining difficulties and giving literal
- translations. At the end of Vol. II. is a portion of the Text
- of “The Courtship of Etain,” with interlinear translation.
- Elsewhere the Text is not inserted. The book is “an attempt to
- give to English readers some of the oldest romances, in English
- literary forms, that seem to correspond to the literary forms
- which were used in Irish to produce the same effect.”—(Pref.).
- The translation is partly in prose, partly in verse. The former
- is dignified and fully worthy of the subject, literal and yet
- in literary English. The verse does not seem to us to reach as
- high a level. It is very varied as to metre, yet the poetic
- spirit seems to be wanting.
-
- N.B.—The theme of “The Courtship of Etain,” though not coarse
- or prurient, is such as to render it unfit for the young.
-
-
-=LEAHY, Walter T.=
-
-⸺ COLUMBANUS THE CELT. Pp. 455. (PHILADELPHIA: _Kilner_). $1.50. 1913.
-
- The eventful career of the great St. Columbanus (d. 615) in
- the form of fiction. Father Leahy bases his story on the
- narrative of Jonas, a monk of Bobbio, who wrote the founder’s
- life about the middle of the seventh century. But some of the
- incidents (notably the incipient love story) are unhistorical.
- The Author does little to reproduce the colour and “atmosphere”
- of these distant times. He even falls into somewhat glaring
- anachronisms. Yet much is done to make the story interesting.
-
-
-=LEAMY, Edmund.= B. Waterford, 1848, and educated there. Was for many
-years in Parliament as M.P. for Waterford and afterwards for Kildare. Was
-a kindly man and a delightful story-teller, beloved of children. He died
-in 1904.
-
-⸺ IRISH FAIRY TALES. Pp. xix. + 155. [1889]. New ed. (_Gill_). 2_s._
-6_d._ With Introd. by Mr. John E. Redmond, M.P., and Note by T. P. G.
-Delightful Illustr. by George Fagan. Cr. 8vo. Handsome art linen binding.
-1906. (N.Y.: _Benziger_). 0.90.
-
- Sources of inspiration: O’Curry and Joyce. Child audience aimed
- at throughout. Hence naïveté in style. At times there is a
- simple, sweet beauty of language, and some passages, especially
- in the last tale, of true prose poetry. Some useful notes at
- end.
-
-⸺ THE FAIRY MINSTREL OF GLENMALURE. Pp. 48. 4to. (_Duffy_). 1_s._ Cover
-design and many very pretty illustrations by C. A. Mills.
-
- Adventures of Irish children in an Irish fairyland of giants
- and little old men and little old women. Told in refined
- and graceful style, quite free from brogue, for very little
- children, with here and there an unobtrusive moral.
-
-⸺ BY THE BARROW RIVER, and Other Stories. Pp. 281. (_Sealy, Bryers_).
-3_s._ 6_d._ Portrait. 1907.
-
- Twenty dramatic, exciting stories, including several good ghost
- stories, tales of the exploits of the Irish Brigade, of early
- Ireland, of tragedy, and of comedy. By a capital story-teller.
- The book would make an excellent present or prize.
-
-⸺ GOLDEN SPEARS, and other Fairy Tales. (N.Y.: _Fitzgerald_). Cover
-design in colours by Corinne Turner. 1911.
-
- This is simply a new American ed. of _Irish Fairy Tales_.
-
-
-=LEE, Aubrey.=
-
-⸺ A GENTLEMAN’S WIFE. Pp. 328. (EDINBURGH: _Morton_). 6_s._ 1904.
-
- Part I. tells how a peasant girl is, after a week’s
- acquaintance, enticed from her home by a man who, it
- transpires, is already married. In Part II. their daughter,
- adopted by a saintly English clergyman, learns her parentage
- on the morrow of her engagement. She releases her betrothed;
- but a year afterwards marries a charming elderly baronet (the
- “gentleman” of the story). The first part is rather coarse. The
- book is witty, the plot well worked out, some of the characters
- most amusing; the end unexpected. By the same Author: _John
- Darker_.
-
-
-=LEFANU, J. Sheridan.= B. in Dublin, 1814. Ed. T.C.D. Contributed largely
-to DUBL. UNIV. MAGAZINE, of which he became ed. and owner, as well as of
-the DUBLIN EVENING PACKET and EVENING MAIL. D. 1873. His chief power was
-in describing scenes of a mysterious or grotesque character, and in the
-manipulation of the weird and the supernatural.
-
- This Author also wrote _Uncle Silas_, _In a Glass Darkly_, _The
- Tenants of Malory_, _Willing to Die_, _The Rose and Key_, _The
- Evil Guest_, _The Room in the Dragon Volant_, _A Chronicle of
- Golden Friars_, _Checkmate_, _The Watcher_, _Wylder’s Hand_,
- _All in the Dark_, _Guy Deverel_, _Wyvern Mystery_, &c. Nearly
- all published by Downey & Co. Messrs. Duffy publ. a set of
- eight of his novels at 3_s._ 6_d._ each.
-
-⸺ THE COCK AND ANCHOR: A Tale of Old Dublin. Pp. 358. (_Duffy_). 3_s._
-6_d._ [1845]. 1909.
-
- A dreadful story of the conspiracy of a number of
- preternaturally wicked and inhuman villains to ruin a young
- spendthrift baronet, and to compel his sister to marry one
- of themselves. The threads of the story are woven with
- considerable skill. The tale, a gloomy one throughout, reaches
- its climax in a scene of intense and concentrated excitement.
- The time is the Viceroyalty of the Earl of Wharton, the story
- ending in 1710, but, except for the incidental introduction
- in one scene of Addison, Swift, and the Viceroy himself, the
- events or personages of the time are not touched upon. There
- are some slight pictures of the life of the people of the
- period, but of Ireland there is nothing unless it be the talk
- of some comic Irish servants.
-
-⸺ THE FORTUNES OF COL. TORLOGH O’BRIEN. Pp. 342. (_Routledge_). 3_s._
-6_d._ Twenty-two Plates by Phiz. [_Anon._: 1847]. Several other eds. 1904.
-
- Reckoned among the three or four best Irish historical novels.
- Main theme: the efforts of the hero, an officer in the Jacobite
- army, to regain possession of his estates in Tipperary, which
- are held by the Williamite, Sir Hugh Willoughby, whose daughter
- O’Brien loves. There are many minor plots and subordinate
- issues, among them the unscrupulous and nearly successful
- conspiracy against Sir Hugh. The history is not the main
- interest, but there is an account of the causes of Jacobite
- downfall, descriptions of James’s Court at Dublin, and a
- fine description of Aughrim. There are excellent pictures
- of scenery, and some skilful though roughly drawn character
- sketches. The action closes shortly after the Treaty of
- Limerick.
-
-⸺ THE HOUSE BY THE CHURCHYARD. (_Duffy_). 3_s._ 6_d._ [1863].
-
- “A sensational story with a mystery plot based on a murder.
- Black Dillon, a sinister and ingenious ruffian, is a grim
- figure of melodramatic stamp. The setting gives scenes of
- social life in a colony of officers and their families near
- Dublin.”—(_Baker_, 2).—Chapelizod.
-
-⸺ THE PURCELL PAPERS. Three Vols. (_Bentley_). 1880.
-
- Short stories collected and ed. by Mr. A. P. Graves, with
- short memoir of the Author prefixed. For the most part they
- are either rollicking comic stories, told in broad brogue, or
- tales of mystery and terror in the vein of this Author’s longer
- novels. Examples of the former are:—“Billy Malowney’s taste of
- love and glory” and “The Quare Gander.” These are not meant as
- “stage-Irish” ridicule, but as pure fun. Examples of the latter
- type:—“Passages in the Secret History of an Irish Countess”
- and “A Chapter in the history of a Tyrone family.” There are
- also pure adventure stories, such as:—“An Adventure of Hardress
- Fitzgerald, a Royalist Captain.” All are admirably told. All
- but one are of Irish interest. They were originally contributed
- to the DUBLIN UNIV. MAGAZINE.
-
-
-=LENIHAN, D. M.=
-
-⸺ THE RED SPY: A Story of Land League Days. Pp. 236. (_Duffy_). 3_s._
-6_d._ _n.d._ (in print).
-
- Appears to be largely autobiographical. A story of Land
- League days, full of incident. The interest chiefly turns
- on the interplay of plot and counterplot, in which the
- various parties—the moonlighters, the Castle, and Parnell’s
- followers—figure. The centre of all the plots is McGowan, the
- “Red Spy,” a secret service agent of the Castle. The scene
- shifts from America to Ireland—Dublin, Kildare, the Kerry
- border (good description), Lisdoonvarna. Types well studied—the
- genial landlord Col. O’Hara; the sporting squire Sir Thady
- Monroe; the weak-minded oppressor Sir Richard A⸺; the American
- journalist, &c. The “Red Spy” in real life was “Red Jim”
- McDermott.
-
-
-=LEPPER, J. H.=
-
-⸺ CAPTAIN HARRY. (_Sealy, Bryers_). 6_d._ 1908.
-
- “Tale of Parliamentary Wars, introducing the principal
- characters who took part on the Royalist and the Parliamentary
- sides.”
-
-⸺ FRANK MAXWELL. (_Sealy, Bryers_). 6_d._ Paper.
-
- Adventures of an Irish Puritan planter’s son, who by an unlucky
- series of accidents finds himself on the royalist and Irish
- side just before the rebellion of 1641. The central incident
- of the story is the journey of one Hugh O’Donnell to Glasgow,
- where he meets Charles secretly, and is returning as Viceroy
- when he is wrecked, and Frank Maxwell along with him, on the
- coast of Antrim. The Irish are, on the whole, represented as
- rather bloodthirsty and barbaric, especially “Hugh O’Donnell.”
- A good “adventure” book.
-
-
-=LESTER, Edward.=
-
-⸺ THE SIEGE OF BODIKE: A Prophecy of Ireland’s Future. Pp. 140. (LONDON:
-_Heywood_). 1886.
-
- A political skit written from a strongly Tory standpoint, in
- which the Author tells us how _he_ would deal with the Irish
- question. The time is 188-, yet an imaginary Fenian rebellion
- is described. Kilkenny falls into the hands of the enemy,
- and a bomb is dropped from a balloon on Bodike, a village in
- Kilkenny. The whole is wildly improbable, but it is probably
- meant to be so.
-
-
-=LETTS, W. M.= A granddaughter of Alexander Ferrier, Esq., of Knockmaroon
-Park, Co. Dublin, where she spent many summers. She resides in Blackrock,
-Co. Dublin. Ed. at St. Anne’s, Abbots Bromley, and Alexandra College,
-Dublin. Has written _Diana Dethroned_, _Christina’s Son_, _The Rough
-Way_ (Wells, Gardner), short Irish stories for children in the MONTH and
-other periodicals. She is coming to be very well known as a poet, and has
-written some plays for the Abbey Theatre.
-
-⸺ THE MIGHTY ARMY. Pp. 128. (_Wells, Gardner_). 5_s._ net. Ill. by
-Stephen Reid. 1912.
-
- Stories from the lives of saints, including St. Columba.
-
-
-=LEVER, Charles.= Born (1806) in Dublin, of English parentage; graduated
-at T.C.D. Wrote much for the NATIONAL MAGAZINE, the D.U. MAGAZINE,
-BLACKWOOD’S, the CORNHILL, &c. Consul in Spezzia, 1858, and at Trieste,
-1867. Here he died in 1872. Is by far the greatest of that group of
-writers who, by education and sympathies, are identified with the English
-element in Ireland. He was untouched by the Gaelic spirit, was a Tory in
-politics, and a Protestant. “His imagination,” says Mr. Krans, “did not
-enable him to see with the eyes of the Catholic gentry or the peasantry.
-He knew only one class of peasants well—servants and retainers, and he
-only knew them on the side they turned out to their masters. Most of his
-peasants are more than half stage-Irishmen.” He had no sympathy with the
-religious aspirations of Catholics, and his pictures of their religious
-life are sometimes offensive. These are his limitations. On the other
-hand, his books are invariably clean and fresh, free from vulgarity,
-morbidness, and mere sensationalism. His first four books overflow with
-animal spirits, reckless gaiety, and fun. It has been well remarked
-by his biographer, W. J. Fitzpatrick, that his genius was much more
-French than English. After _Hinton_ he is more serious, more attentive
-to plot-weaving, and to careful character-drawing. His books give a
-wonderful series of pictures of Irish life from the days of Grattan’s
-Parliament to the Famine of 1846. Many of these pictures, though true to
-certain aspects of Irish life, create a false impression by directing
-the eye almost exclusively to what is grotesque and whimsical. Lever’s
-portrait gallery is one of the finest in fiction. It includes the
-dashing young soldiers of the earlier books; the comic characters, an
-endless series; diplomatists, doctors, lawyers, politicians, usurers,
-valetudinarians, aristocrats, typical Irish squires, adventurers,
-braggarts, spendthrifts, nearly all definite and convincing. See Art,
-in BLACKWOOD, Apr., 1862, and in DUBL. REV., 1872, Vol. 70, p. 379.
-Also Edmund Downey’s book, _Charles Lever: his Life and Letters_. Many
-of Lever’s novels were originally published in shilling monthly parts,
-with two illustrations by “Phiz” (Hablot K. Browne), and had as great
-a vogue as those of Dickens. There have been many editions since by
-_Routledge_ (3_s._ 6_d._) and _Chapman & Hall_ (2_s._), with and without
-illustrations, but the finest ever issued is:—
-
-⸺ COMPLETE NOVELS. Edited by the Novelist’s Daughter. Thirty-seven Vols.
-(_Downey_). Publ. £19 18_s._ Cloth. 1897-9.
-
- The only complete and uniform ed. of Lever. Contains all
- the original steel engravings and etchings by “Phiz” and
- Cruikshank, and many ill. by Luke Fildes and other artists.
- Ed. and annotated by means of unpublished memoranda found
- among Author’s papers. Lever’s prefaces are printed, and
- bibliographical notes appended to each story.
-
-⸺ HARRY LORREQUER. Pp. 380. (N.Y.: _Dutton_). 1.00. [1839].
-
- The first of Lever’s rollicking military novels. The hero is
- a dashing young English officer, who comes to Cork with his
- regiment, and there passes through what the Author calls “a
- mass of incongruous adventures. Such was our life in Cork,
- dining, drinking, riding steeplechases, pigeon-shooting, and
- tandem-driving.” The book abounds in humorous incidents, and
- is packed with good stories and anecdotes. All sorts of Irish
- characters are introduced. There are sketches of Catholic
- clerical life in a vein of burlesque. The latter part of the
- story takes the reader to the Continent (various parts of
- France and Germany), where we meet Arthur O’Leary, afterwards
- made the hero of another story. Mr. Baker describes the book
- well as “very Irish in the stagey sense, very unreal.”
-
-⸺ CHARLES O’MALLEY. Pp. 632, close print. (N.Y.: _Putnam_). 1.00. [1841].
-
- From electioneering, hunting, and duelling with the Galway
- country gentry, the scene changes to Trinity, where the hero
- goes in for roistering, larking, and general fast living with
- the wildest scamps in town. Then he gets a commission in the
- dragoons, and goes to the Peninsula (p. 147). There he goes
- through the whole campaign, and ends by viewing Waterloo from
- the French camp. Throughout, the narrative is enlivened by the
- raciest and spiciest stories. The native Irish, where they
- appear, are drawn in broad caricature. “Major Monsoon” was the
- portrait of a real personage, and so was the tomboy Miss “Baby
- Blake.” “Mickey Free” is the best known of Lever’s farcical
- Irish characters.
-
-⸺ JACK HINTON. Pp. 402. (BOSTON: _Little, Brown_). 5.00. [1843].
-
- Adventures of a young English officer who arrives in Ireland
- during the Viceroyalty of the Duke of Grafton. The hero’s Irish
- experiences include steeplechasing, fox-hunting, “high life”
- in Dublin, a glimpse of society life in the Castle, love,
- duelling, and murder. But Lever wrote the book to show how
- Irish character and Irish ways differed wholly from English,
- and he represents Hinton as constantly having his prejudiced
- English eyes opened with a vengeance. This novel contains some
- of Lever’s most famous characters: Corny Delaney, Hinton’s
- body servant; Mr. and Mrs. Paul Rooney, parvenu leaders of
- Dublin society; Father Tom Loftus, Lever’s idea of the jolly
- Irish priest; Bob Mahon, the devil-may-care impecunious Irish
- gentleman; most of all Tipperary Joe. “For these,” says the
- Author (Pref.,) “I had not to call upon imagination.” Tipperary
- Joe was a real personage. For the last 100 pages the scene
- shifts to Spain, France, and Italy. Throughout, event succeeds
- event at reckless speed. There are some scenes of Connaught
- life, and a fine description of a meeting of “The Monks of the
- Screw.”
-
-⸺ TOM BURKE OF “OURS.” Pp. 660. (N.Y.: _Dutton_). [1844].
-
- The early scenes (150 pp.) of Tom’s life (told throughout in
- the first person) take place in Ireland. Lever tells us (Pref.)
- that he tried to make Tom intensely Irish before launching
- him into French life. Tom enlists, but in consequence of a
- quarrel with a fatal ending has to fly the country. He goes
- to France, then under the First Consul, and joins the army.
- Military, civil, and political life at Paris is described with
- wonderful vividness and knowledge. These form a background to
- the exciting and dramatic adventures and love affairs of the
- hero. Then there is the Austerlitz campaign fully described;
- then life at Paris in 1806. Then the campaign of Jena. Finally,
- we have a description of the last campaign that ended with
- the abdication at Fontainebleau. The portrait of Napoleon is
- lifelike and convincing. Lever throws himself thoroughly into
- his French scenes. A pathetic episode is the love of Minette,
- the Vivandière, for Tom, and her heroic death at the Bridge
- of Montereau. Darby the Blast is a character of the class of
- Mickey Free and Tipperary Joe, yet quite distinct and original.
- The scene near the close where Darby is in the witness-box is
- a companion picture to Sam Weller in court, and is one of the
- best things of its kind in fiction.
-
-⸺ ARTHUR O’LEARY. Pp. 435. (N.Y.: _Dutton_). 1.00. [1844].
-
- Rather a collection of stories of adventure than a novel. Lever
- has worked into it many of his own experiences in Canada, and
- also at Göttingen. There is a good deal about Student life in
- Germany. Many stories (of the Napoleonic wars chiefly) are
- told by the various characters all through the book. Some
- contemporary critics thought this the best of Lever’s books.
-
-⸺ ST. PATRICK’S EVE. Pp. 203. (_Chapman & Hall_). illustr. by “Phiz.”
-(N.Y.: _Harper_). [1845].
-
- A short and somewhat gloomy tale of a period that Lever knew
- well—the pestilence of 1832. Scene: borders of Lough Corrib.
- The life described is that of the small farmer and the peasant
- struggling to make ends meet. Faction-fighting is dealt with in
- the opening of the tale, and the relations between landlord and
- agent and tenantry, at the period, are described with insight.
- “When I wrote it, I desired to inculcate the truth that
- prosperity has as many duties as adversity has sorrows.” It is
- far the most national of Lever’s stories, and there is a depth
- of feeling and of sympathy in it that would surprise those
- acquainted only with _Charles O’Malley_ and _Harry Lorrequer_.
-
-⸺ THE O’DONOGHUE. Pp. 369. (_Routledge_). [1845].
-
- Scene: Glenflesk (between Macroom and Bantry) and Killarney.
- Period: from just before to just after the French expedition to
- Bantry. The O’Donoghue, poor and proud, is intended as a type
- of the decaying Catholic gentry of ancient lineage, living
- in a feudal, half-barbaric splendour, beset by creditors and
- bailiffs whom fear of the retainer’s blunderbuss alone kept
- at a distance. Mark O’Donoghue, proud, gloomy, passionate,
- filled with hatred of the English invader, wears a frieze
- coat like the peasants, sells horses, hunts and fishes for a
- livelihood. He joins the United Irishmen, who are represented
- as making an ignoble traffic of conspiracy, and takes part
- in Hoche’s attempted invasion. Other characters are: Kate
- O’Donoghue, educated abroad; Lanty Lawler, horse-dealer, who
- supplies plenty of humour; in particular Sir Marmaduke Travers,
- a well-meaning but self-sufficient Englishman, who, knowing
- nothing of Ireland, makes ludicrous attempts to better his
- tenants’ condition. “I was not sorry to show,” says Lever
- (Pref.), “that any real and effective good to Ireland must have
- its base in the confidence of the people.” For this book Lever
- was bitterly accused of Repeal tendencies.
-
-⸺ THE MARTINS OF CRO’ MARTIN. Pp. 625. (N.Y.: _Harper_). 1856. [1847].
-
- Scene: chiefly Connemara; the novel opening with a fine picture
- of the old-time splendours of Ballynahinch Castle, the seat of
- the “Martins.” For awhile the scene shifts to Paris during the
- Revolution of 1830. The story illustrates the practical working
- of the Emancipation Act. Martin is a type of the ease-loving
- Irish landlord, “shirking the cares of his estates, with an
- immense self-esteem, narrow, obstinate, weak, without ideas,
- and with a boundless faith in his own dignity, elegance, and
- divine right to rule his tenants” (Krans). Rejected by his
- tenantry at an election he quits the country in disgust,
- leaving them to the mercies of a Scotch agent. Lever pictures
- vividly the sufferings of the people both from this evil
- and from the cholera, drawing for the latter upon his own
- experiences when ministering to cholera patients in Clare. He
- says of the people that “no words of his could do justice to
- the splendid heroism they showed each other in misfortune.”
- Mary Martin is one of Lever’s most admirable heroines. There
- is a fine study, also, of a young man of the people, son of a
- small shopkeeper in Oughterard, who, by his sterling worth,
- raises himself to the highest positions.
-
-⸺ THE KNIGHT OF GWYNNE. (PHILADELPHIA: _Peterson_). 1847.
-
- A close study, based on considerable knowledge, of the ways
- and means adopted by the English Government to destroy the
- Irish Parliament. Castlereagh figures in no flattering
- fashion. Con Heffernan is a type of his unscrupulous tools.
- The Knight himself is an engaging portrait of a lovable old
- Irish gentleman, frank, high-spirited, courteous, chivalrous.
- At first placed in ideal circumstances for the display of
- all his best qualities, he shows himself no less noble in
- meeting adversity. Other notable characters are Bagenal Daly
- (a portrait of Beauchamp Bagenal), the villainous attorney
- Hickman, and Mr. Dempsey, the story-telling innkeeper. In
- describing the coasts of Antrim and Derry and the country about
- Castlebar and Westport, Lever draws upon his own experiences.
-
-⸺ ROLAND CASHEL. Pp. 612. [1850]. (N.Y.: _Harper_). 1849.
-
- Opens with wonderfully vivid and picturesque description of
- life in the Republic of Columbia. A harum-scarum young Irish
- soldier of fortune almost promises marriage to the daughter
- of a Columbian adventurer. Then he learns he is heir to a
- large property in Ireland, and he immediately returns there.
- In Dublin the daughters of his lawyer, Mr. Kennyfeck, and
- others try to capture the young heir, but instead he falls
- in love with a penniless girl. Then there are exciting and
- romantic adventures. The villain, Tom Linton, with the
- intention of ruining Roland, introduces him to fast society,
- nearly implicates him with the young wife of Lord Kilgoff;
- the Columbian adventurer turns up to claim him; he is charged
- with murder; but eventually all is well. Lady Kilgoff is an
- admirably drawn character, as also is the Dean of Drumcondra,
- a portrait of Archbishop Whately. In the last chapter there
- is a passage which seems to show how Lever realized that the
- anglicized society of the Pale is far from being the true
- Ireland. Incidentally, too, the evils of landlordism are
- touched upon.
-
-⸺ THE DALTONS; or, Three Roads in Life. Pp. 700. (N.Y.: _Pratt_). 1.50.
-[1852].
-
- The longest and most elaborate of Lever’s novels. Subject: the
- careers of Peter Dalton, an absentee Irish landlord—needy,
- feckless, selfish, Micawberish—and his children, on the
- Continent in Germany, Austria, and Italy. Some of the leading
- characters are involved in the Austro-Italian campaign of 1848,
- and in the Tuscan Revolution. There is a study—a flattering
- one—to Austrian military life, and lively, amusing pictures of
- Anglo-Italian life in Florence. A noteworthy character is the
- Irish Abbé d’Esmonde, who towards the close of the book takes
- part in some dramatic incidents during a visit to Ireland,
- undertaken in the cause of the Church. There is in the book a
- good deal about “priest-craft.”
-
-⸺ MAURICE TIERNAY. (N.Y.: _Harper_). 1.00. [1852].
-
- Adventures of a young Jacobite exile in many lands, 1793-1809.
- Opens with vivid description of “The Terror.” Later Maurice
- joins the Army of the Rhine, and then Humbert’s expedition to
- Ireland. The latter is fully related, and also the capture and
- death of Wolfe Tone. After some adventures in America, the hero
- returns to Europe, and is in Genoa during its siege by the
- Austrians. Taken prisoner by the latter, he escapes and joins
- Napoleon, of whose Austrian campaign a brilliant description is
- given. Napoleon and some of his great marshals loom large in
- the story, and the military life of the period on the Continent
- is described. But perhaps the best part of the book is the
- account of Humbert’s invasion of Ireland.
-
-⸺ CON CREGAN. Pp. 496. (PHILADELPHIA: _Peterson_). [1854].
-
- Lever describes his hero as the “Irish Gil Blas.” Born on the
- borders of Meath, Cregan goes to Dublin, where he has some
- exciting experiences, ending in his being carried off in the
- yacht of an eccentric baronet. He is wrecked on an island off
- the coast of North America. Here he meets a runaway negro
- slave, Menelaus Crick, one of the most striking characters
- in the book. There follow experiences (tragic and comic) in
- Quebec, and afterwards in Texas and Mexico, life in which is
- described with remarkable vividness and wealth of colour. At
- last Cregan returns to Ireland, and marries a Spanish lady whom
- he had met in Mexico.
-
-⸺ SIR JASPER CAREW. Pp. 490. (N.Y.: _Harper_). [1855].
-
- The early part (152 pages) deals with the career of the hero’s
- father, a wealthy Irish gentleman of Cromwellian stock, who has
- estates and copper and lead mines in Wicklow. He goes to Paris,
- allies himself by a secret marriage with the party of the Duke
- of Orleans, then returns to Ireland, where he kills a Castle
- official in a duel, receiving himself a mortal wound. His widow
- is deprived of the property, and left in poverty. She retires
- to Mayo, with her son, Jaspar. In this part there are elaborate
- pictures of politics in the early days of the Irish Parliament,
- and of the wild, extravagant social life of the period. Jasper
- goes to France, is involved in revolutionary plots, is sent to
- London as secret agent, and there has interviews with Pitt and
- Fox. Finally he returns to Ireland to claim his birthright.
- The story is told in the first person, and Lever intended the
- narrative to reveal the intimate character of the teller. The
- book is crammed with adventure. It was a favourite with the
- Author.
-
-⸺ THE FORTUNES OF GLENCORE. Pp. 395. (N.Y.: _Pratt_). 1.50. [1857].
-
- Intended (_see_ Pref.) as an experiment to bear out (or the
- contrary) his conviction that “any skill I possess lies in the
- delineation of character and the unravelment of that tangled
- skein that makes up human motives.” The scene at first is in
- a castle on the shores of the Killaries, between Mayo and
- Galway; afterwards it is on the Continent. Lord Glencore is a
- passionate, proud, soured man, misanthropical and suffering
- from disease. A scandal connected with his wife has filled
- him with hatred and bitterness. He determines to disown his
- son, who, after a terrible scene, runs away from home. The
- book is largely taken up with the adventures in Italy and
- elsewhere of Sir Horace Upton, a distinguished diplomatist
- and a valetudinarian, together with the doings and sayings
- of his follower, Billy Traynor, formerly poor scholar,
- hedge-schoolmaster, fiddler, journalist, now unqualified
- medical practitioner—a strange character drawn from a real
- personage. Many of the characters are cosmopolitan political
- intriguers. In the end Lady Glencore’s innocence is established.
-
-⸺ DAVENPORT DUNN. (PHILADELPHIA: _Peterson_). 1859.
-
- The astonishing histories of two adventurers. Dunn is an
- ambitious, clever man who by shady means lifts himself into
- a high position as a financier and launches into immense
- financial schemes. This character was drawn from John Sadlier,
- Junior Lord of the Treasury, who was the associate of Judge
- Keogh in “The Pope’s Brass Band,” (so-called) and closed
- an extraordinary career by committing suicide on Hampstead
- Heath. Grog David, a blackleg, rivals Dunn in another sphere,
- his sporting cheats being as vast as the other’s financial
- swindles. Davis’ high-hearted daughter, Lizzie, is a
- finely-drawn character.
-
-⸺ ONE OF THEM. Pp. 420. (N.Y.: _Harper_). 0.50. (1861).
-
- Scene varies between Florence and the North of Ireland, many of
- the incidents described being real experiences of his own gone
- through in each of these places. Lever having been asked which
- of his novels he deemed best suited for the stage, replied
- that if a sensation drama were required, he thought _One of
- Them_ a good subject. Deals largely with the adventures on the
- Continent of a queer type of Irish M.P.; but its outstanding
- character is Quackinboss, a droll specimen of Yankee.
-
-⸺ BARRINGTON. (N.Y.: _Pratt_). 0.50. [1862].
-
- A novel of social and domestic life in the middle classes.
- Scene: a queer little inn, “the Fisherman’s Home,” on the banks
- of the Nore, Co. Kilkenny. Here the Barringtons live. Among
- the striking characters are the fire-eating Major M’Cormack;
- Dr. Dill, an excellent study of a country medical man, and
- his lively daughter, Polly. The interest largely turns on
- the disgrace and subsequent vindication of Barrington’s son,
- George. In this Lever portrays his own son and his career.
-
-⸺ A DAY’S RIDE. Pp. 396. (N.Y.: _Pratt_). 1.50. [1863].
-
- The whimsical adventures of Algernon Sydney Potts, only son
- of a Dublin apothecary. An extravaganza in the vein of _Don
- Quixote_, and quite unlike Lever’s other works. Potts’s
- experiences begin in Ireland, but most of them take place on
- the Continent.
-
-⸺ THE DODD FAMILY ABROAD. Pp. 565. (N.Y.: _Pratt_). 0.50. [1863-65.]
-
- Humorous adventures on the Continent of an Anglo-Irish family
- filled with preposterously false ideas about the manners and
- customs of the countries they visit. Told in a series of
- letters in which the chief personages are made the unconscious
- exponents of their own characters, follies, and foibles, each
- character being so contrived as to evoke in the most humorous
- form the peculiarities of all the others. There are many acute
- reflections on Irish life, especially in the letters of Kenny
- Dodd to his friend in Bruff (Co. Limerick). Kenny Dodd is a
- careful and thoughtful character-study. The Author considered
- Kate Dodd to be the true type of Irishwoman. Biddy Cobb,
- servant of the Dodds, is one of Lever’s most humorous women
- characters. Lever held that he had never written anything equal
- to “The Dodds.”
-
-⸺ LUTTRELL OF ARRAN. (N.Y.: _Pratt_). 1.50. [1865].
-
- Opens in Innishmore, Aran Islands, off the coast of Galway.
- Luttrell, a proud, morbid man of broken fortunes arrives there
- with his wife, the daughter of an Aran peasant. The latter
- dies, leaving an only son, Harry. Shortly afterwards Sir
- Gervais Vyner, a wealthy Englishman, calls at the island in his
- yacht, and renews acquaintance with Luttrell. Vyner then goes
- to Donegal, where he meets with and adopts a beautiful peasant
- girl. The interest turns largely on the success of Vyner’s
- experiment in making a fine lady out of the girl. She is one
- of Lever’s most charming heroines. After many vicissitudes she
- comes to Innishmore. Here she meets Harry, who had returned
- from an adventurous career at sea, and they are married. Tom
- O’Rorke, who keeps an inn in a wild part of Donegal, provides
- a good deal of the humour. His inveterate hatred of everything
- English, his wit and his audacity (not always commendable),
- mark him out for special mention. There is also an amusing
- American skipper.
-
-⸺ TONY BUTLER. (N.Y.: _Pratt_). 1.50. [1865].
-
- Scene: partly in North of Ireland, partly on the Continent.
- Tony gets a post in the diplomatic service, and has many
- adventures, strange, humorous, or stirring. Diplomatic life
- (Lever was a British Consul abroad for most of his days) is
- described with a cunning hand. Some of Tony’s experiences take
- place during the Garibaldian war. The most striking figure in
- the book is Major M’Caskey, the noisy, swaggering, impudent
- soldier of fortune. Skeff Damer, the young diplomat, is also
- interesting, and Dolly Stewart is a most pleasing study.
-
-⸺ SIR BROOKE FOSBROOKE. [1866]. (_Routledge, &c._). 3_s._ 6_d._ (N.Y.:
-_Harper_). 0.50.
-
- “Reproduces much of the humour and frolic of his earlier tales,
- the mess-room scene in the officers’ quarters at Dublin, with
- which the drama opens, recalling the sprightly comedy of Harry
- Lorrequer. The vigorous story that follows contains much more
- serious characterization and portraiture of real life than the
- earlier books.”—(_Baker_).
-
-⸺ THE BRAMLEIGHS OF BISHOP’S FOLLY. (N.Y.: _Harper_). 0.50. [1868].
-
- Scene of first portion: North of Ireland, near Coleraine, Co.
- Londonderry; afterwards Italy. Deals with the experiences of a
- rich English banker and his family, who come to Ireland, but
- the central figure is the selfish old peer, Viscount Culduff,
- a neighbouring landowner, on whose estate coal is found. Much
- of the novel deals with the exploiting of the Culduff mine. Tom
- Cutbill, a bluff, vulgar, humorous engineer, who comes to work
- this mine, provides most of the fun, which is scattered through
- the story. All the characters are vividly drawn, among others
- that of a young Irish Protestant clergyman, the only one that
- appears prominently in Lever’s pages. The mystery that runs
- through the book is kept veiled with great cleverness to the
- very end. Finally, the book is packed with witty epigrammatic
- talk.
-
-⸺ LORD KILGOBBIN. (N.Y.: _Harper_). 1.00. [1872].
-
- Lever’s last novel. It pictures social and political conditions
- in Ireland about 1865, the days of the Fenians. The book is
- marked by almost nationalist sympathies, one of the finest
- characters being Daniel Donogan, Fenian Head-Centre and
- Trinity College student, who while “on his keeping” is elected
- M.P. for King’s County. Matthew Kearney, styled locally Lord
- Kilgobbin, is a shrewd, good-natured, old-fashioned type of
- broken-down Catholic gentility, living in an old castle in
- King’s County. His daughter Kate, is a high-spirited, clever,
- and amiable girl, but the real heroine is the brilliant Nina
- Kostalergi, of mixed parentage (the mother Irish, the father a
- Greek prince and adventurer), who bewitches in turn Fenians,
- soldiers, politicians, and Viceregal officials. A remarkable
- creation is Joe Atlee, a kind of Bohemian student of Trinity,
- cynical, indolent, but miraculously clever and versatile. It
- teems with witty talk and dramatic situations. Throughout there
- is food for thought about the affairs of Ireland. Has been
- illustr. by Luke Fildes (Macmillan). 3_s._ 6_d._
-
-⸺ GERALD FITZGERALD. (N.Y.: _Harper_). 0.40. [First ed. in book form,
-1899].
-
- The hero is a legitimate son of the Young Pretender,
- offspring of a secret marriage with an Irish lady. Recounts
- his surprising adventures and his relations with Mirabeau
- (whose death is powerfully described), the poet Alfieri,
- Madame Roland, the Pretender himself, whose court at Rome is
- described, &c., &c. There is little humour, the book being a
- sober historical or quasi-historical romance. There are some
- passages offensive to Catholic feeling.
-
- Lever also wrote:—_A Rent in a Cloud_; _That Boy of Norcott’s_;
- _Paul Goslett’s Confessions_; _Nuts and Nutcrackers_, 1845;
- _Tales of the Trains_, 1845; _Horace Templeton_, 1848;
- _Cornelius O’Dowd_, 1873.
-
-
-=LIPSETT, Caldwell.=
-
-⸺ WHERE THE ATLANTIC MEETS THE LAND. Pp. 268. (_Lane_). 3_s._ 6_d._ net.
-1896.
-
- Sixteen stories, many of them artistically constructed, and
- told with literary grace and finish. The Irish character is
- viewed from an unsympathetic and, at times, hostile standpoint.
- Only a few of the stories deal with the peasants or have any
- special bearing on Irish life. Two or three deal with seduction
- in rather a light manner.
-
-
-=LIPSETT, E. R.=
-
-⸺ DIDY. Pp. 301. (_Duckworth_). 6_s._ $1.30. Eight full-page Illustr. by
-Joseph Damon. 1912.
-
- Published in U.S.A. by the John Lane Co., N.Y., under the title
- of _The House of a Thousand Welcomes_ (price 1.50), this being
- the name of a boarding house in New York opened by Mr. and
- Mrs. Dunleary and their daughter Didy, who have emigrated from
- Cork. The story is chiefly concerned with the lodgers in this
- house—the eccentric Dr. O’Dowd, a journalist, and the son of
- a big landlord in Ireland—all of whom fall in love with Didy.
- The last named is successful, and he makes the journalist, a
- Protestant named Healy (the remainder of the personages are
- Catholics), editor of the principal Irish Unionist paper,
- which he owns, in order “to make it a message of peace to all
- Ireland.” The author avoids religious or political bias, and
- tells a merry, good-humoured story.
-
-
-=“LISTADO, J. T.”=
-
-⸺ MAURICE RHYNHART. Two Vols. (_Chapman & Hall_). 1871.
-
- “Or, A few passages in the life of an Irish rebel.” The hero,
- descended from a Williamite soldier, “in every respect the very
- model of a respectable young Protestant,” is a clerk in Selskar
- (Wexford) and in love with Miss Rowan, socially much above him.
- An ardent young Irelander, he joins the local branch and works
- might and main for the movement. Soon he is “on his keeping,”
- but escapes to London. There he marries Miss Rowan. After many
- hardships they go to Australia, where he rises to be Premier
- and is knighted. Returns, and is made M.P. for Selskar. Reminds
- one of the career of Sir C. Gavan Duffy. Splendidly told, the
- interest never flagging. Protestant dissenting tea-parties hit
- off cleverly. The whole atmosphere of the critical summer of
- ’48 is reproduced with vividness and fidelity. Dialogue good
- and characterisation life-like.
-
-
-=LOCHHEAD, A.=
-
-⸺ SPRIGS OF SHILLELAH. Pp. 158. (DUNDEE: _Leng_). 1907. 6_d._
-
- Sixteen humorous sketches, “founded on fact—more or less,”
- reprinted from the PEOPLE’S FRIEND.
-
-
-=LOGAN, J.=
-
-⸺ THE McCLUSKY TWINS. Pp. 112. (_Drane_). 1912. 1_s._
-
- A tale of twin tomboys, who provide gossip for an Ulster
- countryside. Dialect well handled.—(I.B.L.).
-
-
-=LOUGH, Desmond.=
-
-⸺ THE BLACK WING. (_“Ireland’s Own” Library_). 6_d._ _n.d._ (1914).
-
- A story of secret societies and of revenge. Scene: Kerry and
- Corsica. Unconvincing, but unobjectionable.
-
-⸺ RED RAPPAREE. Pp. 179. (_“Ireland’s Own” Library_). 6_d._ _n.d._
-
- Thrilling adventures and hairbreadth escapes of Cahir Ronayne,
- who has taken to the road in revenge for his father’s
- execution. A fair lady is involved, also a dissolute lord, and
- there are plenty of plots and counter plots, duels and combats.
-
-
-=LOUGHNAN, Edmond Brenan.=
-
-⸺ THE FOSTER SISTERS. Three Vols. (_Tinsley_). 1871.
-
- Opens in Sligo, near Lough Arrow. Largely concerned with an
- intricate family history and mysteries of identity. Scene soon
- shifts to Paris, where many of the personages have gone and
- where most of the action takes place. The chief interest is a
- very melodramatic murder in the secret room of the _Chat Noir_,
- and the subsequent tracing of the crime to the murderer, a
- typical stage villain. The story is pretty well told, but the
- conversations are most artificial.
-
-
-=LOVER, Samuel.= B. in Dublin, 1797. Was not only a novelist but a
-musician, a painter, and a song-writer (he wrote some 300 songs, and
-composed the music for most of them). He ed. the DUBLIN NATIONAL MAGAZINE
-and the SATURDAY MAGAZINE. D. 1868. _See_ “Lives” by J. A. Symington and
-Bayle Bernard. “Lover,” says Mr. D. J. O’Donoghue, “is first and last
-an Irish humourist.” Readers should bear this fact in mind. His humour
-is of the gay, careless, rollicking type. He is sometimes coarse, but
-never merely dull. He does not caricature the Irish character, for his
-sympathies were strongly Irish; but wrote to amuse his readers, not to
-depict Irish life. He was often accused by his friends of exaggerating
-the virtues of his countrymen, and it may be admitted that he sometimes
-did so. “The chief defect of his novels,” says Maurice Francis Egan,
-_q.v._, “is that they were written with an eye on what the English reader
-would expect the Irish characters to do.”
-
-⸺ RORY O’MORE. Pp. 452. (_Constable_). 3_s._ 6_d._ [1837]. (N.Y.:
-_Dutton_). 1.00. 1897.
-
- Introduction and notes by D. J. O’Donoghue, who considers this
- to be Lover’s best long story. A tale of adventure in 1798,
- with a slight historical background. National in sentiment,
- without being unfairly biased. Contains some of Lover’s best
- humour, especially the endless drollery and whimsicalities of
- the hero, Rory. Some of the types are very true to life. There
- are passages of genuine pathos. Tries to prove that the more
- heinous atrocities in ’98 were due to a few desperadoes.
-
-⸺ HANDY ANDY. Pp. 460. (_Constable_). 3_s._ 6_d._ Portrait of Lover.
-[1842]. 1898. Critical Introd. and Notes by D. J. O’Donoghue. (N.Y.:
-_Dutton_). 1.00.
-
- A series of side-splitting misadventures of a comic, blundering
- Irishman. Does not pretend to be a picture of real Irish life,
- yet, though exaggerated, it is not without truth. Besides
- Andy’s adventures there are scenes from the life of the
- harum-scarum gentry, uproarious dinners, a contested election,
- practical jokes. The characters include peasants, duellists,
- hedge-priests, hedge-schoolmasters, beggars, and poteen
- distillers. There is a good deal of vulgarity.
-
-⸺ TREASURE TROVE; or, He Would be a Gentleman. Pp. 469. (_Constable_).
-3_s._ 6_d._ [1844]. Many since. (BOSTON: _Little, Brown_). 1.00. 1899.
-
- Critical introduction by D. J. O’Donoghue. Adventures of a
- somewhat stagey hero, Ned Corkery, with the Irish Brigade in
- the service of France and of the Young Pretender. Fontenoy,
- and the ’45 in Scotland, are introduced. The novel, says
- the editor, can only be called pseudo-historical. The
- writer had but imperfectly mastered the history, and treats
- it unconvincingly. The humour is below the author’s usual
- standard, but the interest is well sustained. It is coarse and
- vulgar in parts.
-
-⸺ LEGENDS AND STORIES OF IRELAND. Two Vols. Pp. xix. + 240, and xvi +
-274. (_Constable_). 3_s._ 6_d._ each. [1832 and 1834; many editions
-since]. 1899. (N.Y.: _Sadlier_). 1.50.
-
- Introductions by the Author and by the editor, D. J.
- O’Donoghue. A miscellany consisting chiefly of humorous stories
- with regular plots. It contains also some old legends told
- in comic vein, yarns told by guides and boatmen, and several
- serious stories. There is nothing to offend Catholic feeling.
- There is a most sympathetic sketch of a priest and a story
- about the secret of the confessional that any Catholic might
- have written. The peasantry are seen only from outside, though
- the author mixed much among them. They are not caricatured,
- though chiefly comic types are selected. There is plenty of
- brogue, faithfully rendered on the whole. The first volume
- contains a humorous essay on Street Ballads, with specimens.
- Lover is at his best in uproariously laughable stories such us
- “The Gridiron” and “Paddy the Sport.”
-
-⸺ FURTHER STORIES OF IRELAND. Pp. 220. (_Constable_). 3_s._ 6_d._ 1899.
-Critical and biographical introduction (pp. xxviii.) by D. J. O’Donoghue.
-
- Chiefly very short, humorous sketches. Some are stories written
- around various national proverbs.
-
-⸺ IRISH HEIRS: A Novel. Pp. 173. (N.Y.: _Dick & Fitzgerald_). Illustr.
-187-.
-
- Mentioned in catal. of N. Y. Library. _Treasure Trove_ bore on
- original title-page the announcement that it was “the first of
- a series of accounts of Irish Heirs.”
-
-
-=LOVER and CROKER.=
-
-⸺ LEGENDS AND TALES OF IRELAND. Pp. 436. (_Simpkin, Marshall_, &c.).
-_n.d._ Now in print.
-
- Contains:—Lover’s _Legends and Tales of Ireland_ (twenty-four
- in all), and Croker’s _Fairy Legends of the South of Ireland_.
- “Croker and Lover,” says W. B. Yeats, “full of the ideas of
- harum-scarum Irish gentility, saw everything humourized. The
- impulse of the Irish literature of their time came from a class
- that did not—mainly for political reasons—take the people
- seriously, and imagined the country as a humorist’s Arcadia;
- its passion, its gloom, its tragedy they knew nothing of.
- What they did was not wholly false; they merely magnified an
- irresponsible type, found oftenest among boatmen, carmen, and
- gentlemen’s servants, into the type of a whole nation, and
- created the Stage-Irishman.”—(Introd. to _Fairy and Folk-tales
- of the Irish Peasantry_).
-
-
-=LOWRY, Frank M.=
-
-⸺ THE DUBLIN STATUES “AT HOME”: A New Year’s Tale. 4to. (_Sealy,
-Bryers_). Illustr. with Seven Cartoons. 1912.
-
-
-=LOWRY, Mary.=
-
-⸺ THE ENCHANTED PORTAL. Pp. 142. (_Sealy, Bryers_). 6_d._ Paper. _c._
-1910.
-
- Scene: Antrim coast, whose scenery is vividly pictured. A novel
- of romance, intrigue, and adventure, pleasant and healthy in
- tone, but fanciful and somewhat unreal.
-
- Author has also written _The Clans of Ireland_, _Old Irish Laws
- and Customs_, and _The Story of Belfast_.
-
-
-=“LYALL, Edna”; Ada Ellen Bayley.= Was born and educated at Brighton,
-and resided there and at Eastbourne. Her first story, _Won by Waiting_,
-appeared in 1879. Titles of eighteen of her books are to be found in
-Mudie’s LIST.
-
-⸺ DOREEN. Pp. 490. (_Longmans_). Various prices from 6_d._ to 6_s._
-[1894]. 1902.
-
- Doreen, daughter of an old ’48 man and Fenian, and herself an
- ardent Nationalist, is a professional singer, but helps the
- Home Rule cause by her singing. The chief interest is a love
- story, but in the background there is the national struggle
- and a vivid picture is drawn of the feelings of those engaged
- on both sides. The author is on the nationalist side, and the
- most striking figure in the book is Donal Moore, a Nationalist
- member. The first ed. was dedicated to Gladstone.
-
-
-=LYNAM, Col. William F.= Belonged to the 5th Royal Lancashire Militia.
-Lived at Churchtown Ho., Dundrum, 1863-87, and then at Clontarf till his
-death in 1894. He was a Catholic and a man of much piety. He lived a very
-retired life.
-
-⸺ MICK McQUAID.
-
- Magazine stories that have never been published in a volume
- do not come within the scope of this work. But I think an
- exception must be made in this case. The serial or series of
- serials centering in the character of Mick McQuaid has made a
- record in literature. It began in the pages of the SHAMROCK on
- Jan. 19th, 1867. With short interruptions it has been running
- ever since in the pages of that periodical, and is running
- still, though the Author died in 1894. The following are some
- of the series that appeared:—1. “M. McQ.’s Conversion,” 1867;
- 2. “M. McQ., the Evangeliser,” 1868-9; 3. “M. McQ. Under
- Agent,” 52 chapters, 1869-70; 4. “M. McQ., M.D.,” 28 ch., 1872;
- 5. “M. McQ., M.P.,” 51 ch., 1872-3; 6. “M. McQ., Solicitor,” 43
- ch., 1873-4; 7. “M. McQ.’s Spa,” 91 ch., 1876-8; 8. “M. McQ.,
- Alderman,” 61 ch., 1879-80; 9. “M. McQ., Moneylender,” 47 ch.,
- 1880-1; 10. “M. McQ., Gombeen Man,” 48 ch., 1881-2; 11. “M.
- McQ.’s Story,” 1884; 12. “M. McQ., Workhouse Master,” 1885; 13.
- “M. McQ., Sub-Sheriff,” pt. 1, 47 ch., 1888-9; 14. “M. McQ.,
- Sub-Sheriff,” pt. 2, 1889; 15. “M. McQ., Stockbroker,” 61 ch.,
- 1889-90; 16. “M. McQ., Removable,” 1890.
-
- The Author himself tired of Mick McQuaid, and tried to put
- other creations in the field:—“Dan Donovan,” “Corney Cluskey,”
- “Japhet Screw,” “Sir Timothy Mulligan,” and so on. But after a
- few chapters the readers invariably demanded “Mick” again, and,
- if the Author had not new adventures ready, he had to reproduce
- the already published adventures. More than once editors tried
- to drop the series, but the circulation which was 60,000 fell
- at once, and “Mick” had to appear again. Apart from their issue
- in the SHAMROCK many of “Mick’s” adventures were reproduced
- in penny numbers, and sold far and wide. After the Author’s
- death the editors simply reproduced the series over again.
- Harry Furniss began his artistic career by illustrating _Mick
- McQuaid_. Besides _Mick McQ._ another humorous series, _Darby
- Darken, P.L.G._, ran in the IRISH EMERALD.
-
-
-=LYNCH, E. M.=
-
-⸺ KILBOYLAN BANK; or, Every Man his own Banker. Pp. 240. (_Kegan Paul_).
-3_s._ 6_d._ 1896.
-
- Father O’Callaghan returning from Italy greatly impressed by
- what he has seen of the Raffeisen Banking System at work, tries
- to start a similar system in Kilboylan. The book is the story
- of his efforts, difficulties, and final success. The local
- types—landlord, strong farmer, miller, publican, schoolmaster,
- “pote,” and “chaney merchant” are cleverly hit off, and their
- conversation rings true. The book is primarily a lesson in
- economics, but the characters are well brought out, and a
- little love-story runs through the whole. Miss Lynch also wrote
- for Sir Charles Gavan Duffy’s “New Irish Library” a story
- adapted from the French—_A Parish Providence_. It was intended
- to teach certain economic lessons to Irishmen.
-
-
-=LYNCH, Hannah.= B. in Dublin. Lived much in Spain, in Greece, and in
-France, publishing various articles and books about them, notably a
-book on Toledo and _French Life in Town and Country_. Among her novels
-are _Prince of the Glades_, _Dr. Vermont’s Fantasy_, _Daughters of
-Men_, _Jimmy Blake_, _Clare Monroe_. She was associated with Miss Anna
-Parnell in the Ladies’ Land League in the eighties. When UNITED IRELAND
-was suppressed she carried the type to Paris, and the paper was issued
-there. Mrs. Hinkson says of her,[6] “She was one of the few people I have
-known who eat, drink, and dream books, and not many can have given to
-literature a more passionate delight and devotion.”
-
-[6] _Reminiscences_, p. 76-7.
-
-⸺ THROUGH TROUBLED WATERS. Pp. 460. (_Ward, Lock_). 1885.
-
- Scene: chiefly Carantrila House, Dunmore (“Cardene”) near
- Tuam, Co. Galway. Opens with an impending lawsuit about the
- inheritance of “Cardene.” It is settled by Mrs. St. Leger
- giving it up to her brother-in-law for a large sum. Henceforth
- she plots to get it back for her son. In later years he comes
- on a visit to the place. He falls in love with Nora Dillon, but
- carries on an innocent flirtation with a peasant girl. He is
- accused of seduction, the real culprit being Nora’s brother,
- and denounced from the altar. This latter scene is well done.
- But the truth comes out, and all is well with Hartley and Nora.
- The portrait drawn of one of the two priests introduced is
- rather satirical, but the tone is Catholic throughout.
-
-⸺ AUTOBIOGRAPHY OF A CHILD. Publ. Anon. Pp. 306. (_Blackwood_). 6_s._
-1899.
-
- Clearly genuine autobiography. Begins in little village in
- Kildare, but at five or six the child is taken to Dublin.
- Story of an unhappy childhood, for she was treated with great
- harshness by sisters and mother. Had some friends, however,
- among them an old gentleman, who believed himself to be
- Hamlet and O’Donovan Rossa, then a young lad. (_See_ p. 609
- in BLACKWOOD’S MAGAZINE, vol. 164, where the story appeared
- serially). Her unhappiness was continued at the convent school,
- near Birmingham, where she was educated. Everything is set
- down, including a flogging she received and an account of her
- first confession. A very curious book, very well written.
-
-
-=LYON, Capt. E. D.= Late 68th Durham Light Infantry.
-
-⸺ IRELAND’S DREAM: a Romance of the Future. Two Vols. (_Sonnenschein_).
-1888.
-
- A forecast of Ireland under Home Rule. Contains much about
- relations of Orangemen and Catholics, the National League,
- secret societies, emigration, and so on. Represents an Ireland
- hopelessly “gone to the dogs”—no security for life or property,
- murder rife, prosperity gone, &c. Written in flippant style,
- betraying bitter contempt for Irish nationalism.
-
-
-=LYSAGHT, Mrs.=
-
-⸺ REX SINGLETON; or, The Pathway of Life. (_Wells, Gardner_). 2_s._
-Illustr. Third ed., _c._ 1911.
-
- Thoroughly a boy’s book, full of the adventures and pranks of
- an Irish boy.—(Publ.).
-
-
-=LYSAGHT, Sidney Royse.= Eldest son of T. R. Lysaght, of Mintinna, Co.
-Cork. Has published three volumes of verse between 1886 and 1911. Lives
-in Somerset.
-
-⸺ HER MAJESTY’S REBELS. Pp. 488. (_Macmillan_). 6_s._ 1907.
-
- In a prefatory note the Author tells us that though the career
- of his hero resembles that of Charles Stewart Parnell, Connor
- Desmond is not intended as a portrait of Parnell. “There is
- an historical basis for the structure of the story—not for
- the persons.” A political novel, written mainly about the
- course of national life in Ireland, 1875-1891. The central
- figure most obviously reproduces the career and even the
- personal characteristics of Parnell, who is well and even
- sympathetically portrayed. The writer’s view-point is free,
- on the whole, from party bias. He is convinced that a Royal
- residence in Ireland would be a sure antidote to seditious
- tendencies. There is a strong love interest. The Author
- depicts many scenes of Irish life among various classes.
- The hero is “involved in flagitious relations with several
- women.”—(_Baker_, 2).
-
-
-=LYTTLE, Wesley Guard; “Robin.”= Born, 1844, at Newtownards, Co. Down.
-Was successively a junior reporter, a school teacher, a lecturer on
-Dr. Corry’s _Irish Diorama_, a teacher of shorthand, an accountant, an
-editor. Started, in 1880, THE NORTH DOWN AND BANGOR GAZETTE, a strong
-Liberal and Home Rule paper. Afterwards owned and edited THE NORTH DOWN
-HERALD. Died 1896.
-
-⸺ ROBIN’S READINGS. Eight Vols.
-
- Series of humorous stories, poems, and sketches in the dialect
- of a Co. Down farmer, of which he had a thorough mastery.
- Some verse as well as prose. The Author gave several thousand
- recitals in various parts of the three kingdoms. The success of
- the above books was immediate and remarkable. They have enjoyed
- great popularity ever since. The character of these readings
- may be seen from the following titles:—V. I. “Adventures of
- Paddy McQuillan”—“a simple country fellow”—“his trip tae
- Glesco”—“his courtships”—“his wee Paddy”—“his twins”—“his tay
- perty.” V. II. “The adventures of Robin Gordon”—“Peggy and
- how I courted her”—“Wee Wully”—“the fechtin’ dugs”—“Robin
- on the ice”—“dipplemassy.” V. III. “Life in Ballycuddy, Co.
- Down”—“my brither Wully”—“kirk music”—“the General Assembly of
- 1879” (exciting scenes, Robin’s oration)—“the royal visit to
- Ireland”—“the Ballycuddy Meinister”—“wee Paddy’s bumps,” &c.,
- &c.
-
-⸺ SONS OF THE SOD: a Tale of County Down. (BANGOR). 1_s._ Paper. 1886.
-
- A racy story dealing with the peasantry of North Down which the
- Author knew well, and could depict admirably. The tale gives a
- picture of their merry-makings, courtships, humours, joys, and
- sorrows—wakes, weddings, evictions, &c., &c.
-
-⸺ BETSY GRAY. Pp. 116. (BANGOR). 1_s._ 3_d._ [1888]. New ed. (BELFAST:
-_Carswell_). Revised by F. J. Bigger. 1913.
-
- Betsy Gray, the heroine (founded on a real personage) takes
- part in the rebellion, and fights at Ballynahinch. A story of
- thrilling interest. Relates events that preceded rebellion,
- dwelling much on the atrocities of the yeomanry, then describes
- in full the chief incidents of the rebellion. Introduces Wm.
- Steele Dickson, William Orr, H. Joy McCracken, Henry Munro,
- and Mick Maginn—the informer. “The Author has gone over every
- inch of the ground, and has hunted up old documents and old
- traditions indefatigably.” In entire sympathy with rebels.
- There is a good deal of local dialect, and much local colour.
-
-⸺ THE SMUGGLERS OF STRANGFORD LOUGH.
-
- “A melodramatic romance of an old-fashioned type, founded on
- facts. What with murder, robbery, abduction, smuggling, secret
- societies, and underground caverns, the reader is carried
- breathlessly along from start to finish. The local dialect is
- well conveyed.”—(I.B.L.). The headquarters of the smugglers
- was Killinchy, and the period of the story the end of the
- eighteenth century.
-
-⸺ DAFT EDDIE. Pp. 162. (BELFAST: _Carswell_). 6_d._ 1914.
-
- A re-issue of _The Smugglers of Strangford Lough_.
-
-
-=MACALISTER, R. A. Stewart, M.A., F.S.A.= B. Dublin, 1870. At present
-Professor of Irish Archæology in the National University. Author of
-a series of learned works on Palestine exploration, the Philistines,
-Ecclesiastical Vestments, Irish Epigraphy and Archæology, &c.
-
-⸺ TWO IRISH ARTHURIAN ROMANCES. Pp. ix. + 207. (_Nutt, for Irish Texts
-Society_). 10_s._ 6_d._ net. 1908.
-
- Text and transl. on opposite pages. Contains two stories:—The
- Story of the Crop-eared Dog and The Story of Eagle-Boy. They
- are of the Wonder-voyage type. Arthur plays a secondary part.
- “The dreamland of _gruagachs_ and monstrous nightmare shapes is
- here as typically a creation of Irish fancy as in any of the
- stories of the Finn cycle.”... “Eagle-Boy is a striking story,
- displaying ... no small constructive ingenuity and literary
- feeling.”—(_Introd._).
-
-
-=M’ANALLY, D. R., Jr.=
-
-⸺ IRISH WONDERS. Pp. 218. (_Ward, Lock_). Illustr. (pen and ink), H. R.
-Heaton. 1888.
-
- “The ghosts, giants, pookas, demons, leprechawns, banshees,
- fairies, witches, widows, old maids, and other marvels of
- the Emerald Isle. Popular tales as told by the people.
- Collected during a recent lengthy visit, in the course of
- which every county in the Island was traversed from end to
- end.”—(_Title-page and Pref._). Very broad brogue. Somewhat
- “Stage-Irish” in tone.
-
-
-=“MACARTHUR, Alexander”; Mrs. Nicchia=, _née_ =Lily MacArthur=. At
-present residing in New York.
-
-⸺ IRISH REBELS. Pp. 219. (_Digby, Long_). 3_s._ 6_d._ _n.d._ (1893).
-
- “O’Donoghue,” the hero, a young Catholic T.C.D. student,
- is deputed by the secret societies to shoot a landlord. He
- escapes at the time, and has a successful career at the bar, in
- parliament, and also in love, for he marries the girl of his
- choice, a daughter of “Judge Kavanagh,” a bitter Orangeman.
- But years afterwards his crime becomes known to some of his
- friends, and the discovery kills his wife. The Author is
- entirely favourable to the national cause. Parnell is mentioned
- several times. The central figure is not O’D., but “Lowry,” a
- remarkable portrait, probably drawn from life.
-
-
-=M’AULIFFE, E. F.=
-
-⸺ GRACE O’DONNELL: A Tale of the 18th Cent. Pp. 220. (CORK: _Guy & Co._).
-1891.
-
- Ireland in Penal times, middle of 18th century (Fontenoy, 1745,
- is introduced). Period fairly well illustrated—sufferings
- of Catholics, tithe-proctors, hedge-schools, etc. Scene
- varies between Galway, Madrid, London, Dublin, and Paris. The
- characters all belong to the better class, and the tone of the
- story may be described as “genteel”: there is nothing specially
- national about it. Author wishes to show “how many claims
- each [Catholic and Protestant] has on the other for love and
- admiration.” Some poems are included.
-
-
-=MACCABE, William Bernard.= B. in Dublin, 1801. Was a journalist for the
-greater part of his life, first in Dublin, then for fifteen years in
-London, and again in Dublin from 1852-57. Wrote many Catholic works. Died
-at Donnybrook, 1891.
-
-⸺ AGNES ARNOLD. Three Vols. (LOND.: _Newby_). 1861.
-
- A well constructed plot, with many fine dramatic scenes and
- much truthful character drawing. Shows the courses by which the
- people were driven into rebellion in 1798. The Author tells us
- that much of the materials were gleaned from his conversations
- in his boyhood with Wm. Putnam MacCabe, one of the insurgent
- leaders. Scene: Wexford.
-
-
-=M’CALL, Patrick J.= B. in Dublin, 1861, and ed. at Catholic University
-School, Leeson Street. Much better known as a poet by his _Irish
-Noinins_, _Songs of Erin_, _Irish Fireside Songs_, and _Pulse of the
-Bards_ than as a prose writer. Resides in Patrick Street, Dublin.
-
-⸺ FENIAN NIGHTS’ ENTERTAINMENTS. Pp. 132. (DUBLIN: _T. G. O’Donoghue_).
-[1895].
-
- Twelve evenings of story-telling at a Wexford fireside. The
- stories are mostly Ossianic legends, but there are a few fairy
- tales. They purport to be told by a farmer with all the arts
- of the shanachie—the quaintness, the directness, the pithy
- sayings, the delightful digressions, and the gay humour. They
- are, of course, in dialect.
-
-
-=M’CALLUM, Hugh and John.= Ed. an original collection of the poems of
-Ossian, Orrann, Ullin, and other bards who flourished in the same age.
-(_Montrose_). 1816.
-
-
-=M’CARTHY, Justin.= B. in Cork, 1830, and ed. there. Began there his
-literary career of over sixty years. In 1853 he went to Liverpool, and
-thence to London in 1860. From that time till his death in 1912 he lived
-almost exclusively in England. But he never lost touch with Ireland.
-For many years he was a Nationalist M.P., and from 1890-96 was Chairman
-of the Party. His works number over forty, many of them dealing with
-Ireland—novels, history, biography, reminiscences, &c.
-
-⸺ A FAIR SAXON. Pp. 386. (_Chatto & Windus_). 3_s._ 6_d._ [1873]; several
-since. New ed. about 1907.
-
- Main theme: the love of an English girl for Maurice FitzHugh
- Tyrone, an Irish M.P., famous in the House as a clever and
- insuppressible opponent of the Government. Much of the story
- (a complicated one) is concerned with the efforts of another
- lover of the Fair Saxon to supplant Tyrone, and also to get
- him to violate the conditions of a legacy. The latter are (1)
- that Tyrone shall not marry before forty; (2) that he shall
- not join the Fenians; (3) that he shall not fight a duel. His
- efforts meet with a wonderful succession of alternate success
- and failure. Incidentally we have glimpses of Fenian plotting,
- the Fenian movement being portrayed with little sympathy. The
- characters are nearly all insipid or vicious worldlings, drawn
- in a satirical and sometimes cynical vein. Such is Mrs. Lorn,
- the rich American widow, of fast life. The heroine, and to a
- certain extent the hero, are exceptions. The precocious young
- American, Theodore, is one of the best things in the book.
-
-⸺ MAURICE TYRONE. (_Benziger_). 0.75. The American ed. of _A Fair Saxon_.
-
-⸺ MONONIA. Pp. 383. (_Chatto & Windus_). 6_s._ [1901]. New edition, 1902.
-
- Scene: a large Munster town, presumably Cork. Time: the
- attempted rising in 1848. The chief interest is the unfolding
- in action of the various characters. Some of these are
- strikingly and distinctively portrayed. The treatment of
- the love element is original, the course of true love being
- smooth from the start. Here and there are pleasant bits of
- description. The standpoint is Catholic and nationalist, but
- without anti-English feeling, several of the principal and most
- admirable characters being English. A happy love story runs
- through the book.
-
-
-=M’CARTHY, Justin Huntley.= S. of preceding. B. 1860. Ed. University
-College School, London. Began writing 1881. Nationalist M.P. 1884-1892,
-during which period he was an ardent politician. Publ. _England under
-Gladstone_ (1884), and in the same year a successful play, “The
-Candidate.” Then followed _Hours with Great Irishmen_, _Ireland since
-the Union_, _The Case for Home Rule_, &c., and a number of books, poems,
-tales, &c., on Oriental subjects. His knowledge of our myth and legend
-has been described as comprehensive and exhaustive. He has publ. many
-other novels and plays and volumes of verse. But of late years the
-theatrical world has claimed him wholly.
-
-⸺ LILY LASS. Pp. 150. (_Chatto & Windus_). 1_s._ 6_d._ 1889.
-
- Picture from nationalist point of view of Young Ireland
- movement, especially in Cork. Full of sensational incidents,
- told with much verve.
-
-⸺ THE ILLUSTRIOUS O’HAGAN. (_Hurst & Blackett_). 1905. (N.Y.: _Harper_).
-1.50, &c.
-
- Melodramatic adventures of two cosmopolitan adventurers of
- Irish origin, in various parts of Europe and, in particular,
- among the courts of the petty German princes, where very fast
- living prevails. The picture we are given of these latter is
- frank enough. The colouring is brilliant, the style bright and
- swift. Copyrighted for the stage.
-
-⸺ THE O’FLYNN. Pp. 352. (_Hurst & Blackett_). 1_s._ (N.Y.: _Harper_).
-1.50. 1910.
-
- O’Flynn is a swashbucklering, swaggering soldier of fortune,
- who has seen service in the Austrian army. The story tells of
- the varying fortunes of O’F. and of Lord Sedgemouth in their
- rivalry for the hand of the Lady Benedetta Mountmichael. Both
- suitors are in the service of King James, and the scene varies
- between Dublin Castle and Knockmore, a castle “in the heart of
- the Wicklow hills.” Full of more or less burlesque plots and
- stratagems and surprises. Written in a pleasant but reckless
- and rattling style. Smacks strongly of the stage throughout,
- indeed it was originally a successful play before appearing in
- book form. Incidents not historical. _Not for young people._
-
-⸺ THE FAIR IRISH MAID. Pp. 344. (_Mills & Boon_). 6_s._ (N.Y.: _Harper_).
-1.30. 1911.
-
- Ireland a few years after the Union; but not political. Mr.
- McC., in his usual vein of gay romanticism, takes his beautiful
- maiden from Kerry to London, where in the modish days of the
- Dandies she is for a time the reigning toast. But she is
- true to her Kerry lover, whom she finds in London lost and
- ruined, and whom she rescues and enables to produce his Irish
- play. Other characters are Lord Cloyne, the Irish ascendancy
- landlord, Mr. Rubie, the English M.P. who has come to visit
- and improve Ireland, and an antiquary who wants to buy a round
- tower and provides many amusing situations.—(_Press notices_).
-
-
-=M’CARTHY, Michael J. F.= B. Midleton, Co. Cork. Ed. Vincentian Coll.,
-Cork; Midleton College, Cork; T.C.D. After the appearance of _Five Years
-in Ireland_ in 1901, “has written and spoken against the power exercised
-by the Roman Catholic Church in politics and in education. Started and
-conducted Christian Defence Effort in opposition to Home Rule, 1911-14.”
-Author of _Priests and People in Ireland_, _Rome in Ireland_, &c.—(WHO’S
-WHO).
-
-⸺ GALLOWGLASS. Pp. 540. (_Simpkin, Marshall_). 6_s._ 1904.
-
- Purports to portray the social and political life of various
- classes in a typical South of Ireland town (“Gallowglass”).
- Written in a vein of bitter satire. Peasant, shopkeeper,
- politician, and especially priest, are held up to unmeasured
- scorn. Aspersions are cast upon Catholic teachings and
- practices. Eviction scenes, the workings of a secret society,
- political meetings, a scene in Parliament, serve the writer for
- his purpose in various ways.
-
-
-=M’CHESNEY, Dora.=
-
-⸺ KATHLEEN CLARE. Pp. 286. (_Blackwood_). Six Illustr. by J. A. Shearman.
-1895.
-
- Story of Wentworth, Earl of Strafford’s Viceroyalty in Ireland,
- told in form of diary purporting to be written by a kinswoman
- of Strafford’s, who sees him in his home life and acquires
- extraordinary love and reverence for him. The tale of his
- execution is pathetically told. Quaint Elizabethan English.
- Pretty Elizabethan love-songs interspersed.
-
-
-=M’CLINTOCK, Letitia.=
-
-⸺ A BOYCOTTED HOUSEHOLD. Pp. 319. (_Smith, Elder_). 1881.
-
- Period, _c._ 1880. Mr. Hamilton is a model as a man and
- landlord. His family is in very reduced circumstances owing to
- “No-Rent Campaign.” Then we have various incidents of the land
- war—threatening letters, burning of hay, and finally the eldest
- son is brutally murdered by tenants on whom favours had been
- heaped. The beautiful home life, sympathetic love affairs, &c.,
- of the Hamiltons are dwelt upon as pointing the contrast with
- the wickedness of the League and the meaningless ingratitude
- of the peasantry. Sympathies of Author wholly with landlords.
- The Hamilton boys were all educated at Rugby, and the general
- outlook of the family is English. Scene: King’s Co. and Donegal
- alternately.
-
-
-=M’CLINTOCK, Major H. S.=
-
-⸺ RANDOM STORIES; chiefly Irish. Pp. 147. (BELFAST: _Marcus Ward_).
-Illustr. _n.d._ _c._ 1885.
-
- A collection of unobjectionable smoke-room yarns, more or less
- original, and more or less humorous. Illustr. somewhat crude.
-
-
-=M’CRAITH, L. M.= Mrs. L. M. M’Craith Blakeney, of Loughloher, Cahir, Co.
-Tipperary. B. 1870. Ed. in Ireland and at Cheltenham. Has written also
-_The Suir from its Source to the Sea_, _The Romance of Irish Heroines_,
-_The Romance of Irish Heroes_, &c. In these and other writings her aim
-has been to popularise Irish local history and antiquities in the hopes
-of fostering a love of country, especially in the young.
-
-⸺ A GREEN TREE. Pp. 221. (_Sealy, Bryers_). 3_s._ 6_d._ 1908.
-
- A pleasant family story with a sympathetically, though somewhat
- dimly-sketched, Irish background. All through there is the
- contrast between English and Irish ideals. One or two peculiar
- Irish types are well drawn.
-
-
-=MACDERMOTT, S.=
-
-⸺ LEIGH OF LARA: a Novel of Co. Wicklow. (_Gill?_). 1_s._ 6_d._
-
- A slight but pleasant tale, told in straightforward manner,
- without character-study, scene-painting, problems, or politics.
- Deals with the false and misunderstood position of a man who
- has been entrusted with the charge of his sister-in-law, while
- his brother is abroad “on his keeping,” and the complications
- that arise from this position.
-
-
-=MACDERMOTT, W. R.=
-
-⸺ FOUGHILOTRA: A Forbye Story. Pp. 326. (_Sealy, Bryers_). _c._ 1906.
-
- Sub-t.:—A memorial of the Ulster handloom weavers. A
- sociological study, in form of novel, of the history and
- development of a family. Scene: shore of Lough Neagh. Time:
- present day, though the family history goes back two hundred
- years. The forceful and pungent dialect in which it is written
- is quite natural and true to life. An unusual and noteworthy
- book—interesting alike for its plot, its clever character-study
- and the thoughtfulness that pervades it. Has considerable
- humour, and nothing in the least objectionable. This author
- also has published, under the pen name of “A. P. O’Gara,” _The
- Green Republic_.
-
-
-=MACDONAGH, Michael.= B. Limerick, 1862. Ed. Christian Bros.’ Schools.
-At twenty-two joined the staff of FREEMAN’S JOURNAL. From 1894 to the
-present has been on staff of TIMES, and he lives in London. His father,
-Michael O’Doherty MacDonagh, was a Donegal man, a printer and poet.
-Has been writing about Ireland all his life in an immense variety of
-periodicals, and has published about a dozen books, many of them relating
-to Parliament, of great historic value.
-
-⸺ IRISH LIFE AND CHARACTER. Pp. 382. (_Hodder & Stoughton_). 6_s._ Many
-editions, the 5th being in 1905.
-
- Object: “To give a clear, full, and faithful picture of
- Irish life and character, illustrated by anecdotes and by
- my own experience during a twelve years’ connexion with
- Irish journalism.” “I have admitted into my collection only
- anecdotes that are truly genuine, really humorous, and
- certainly characteristic of the Irish people.” “The face of
- Ireland as seen in these pages is always puckered with a
- smile.”—(_Pref._). May be described as anecdotes, chiefly
- comic, classified and accompanied by a running commentary.
- Chapters: The Old Irish Squire; Duelling; Faction Fighting;
- Some Delusions about Ireland (_e.g._, “Stage-Irishman”); Bulls;
- In the Law Courts; “Agin the Government”; Irish Repartee and
- Sarcasm; Love-making in Ireland (its matter-of-factness, &c.);
- Humours of Politics In and Out of Parliament; The Ulster
- Irishman; The Jarvey; The Beggar; Sunniness of Irish Life, &c.
- It is to be observed that the laugh is often against the Irish
- throughout, and perhaps our national failings are rather more
- prominent here than our national virtues, the serious side of
- Irish life being scarcely touched on at all.
-
-
-=M’DONNELL, Randal William.= B. in Dublin, 1870. Son of Randal M’Donnell,
-Q.C. Ed. Armagh Royal School. B.A., T.C.D. Was for a time assistant
-librarian in Marsh’s Library, and now a L.G.B. inspector. Has published
-also three volumes of verse.
-
-⸺ KATHLEEN MAVOURNEEN. Pp. 270. (_Sealy, Bryers_). 2_s._ Frontisp. 1898.
-
- Pictures first the causes and events that led to the rebellion,
- Tone’s visit to America, his schemes, the French invasion. Then
- vivid description of the outbreak in Wicklow, the fight at
- Tubberneering, the battle of New Ross, the capture and death of
- Lord Edward Fitzgerald.
-
-⸺ WHEN CROMWELL CAME TO DROGHEDA. Pp. 147. (_Gill_). 2_s._ 6_d._ Map of
-Drogheda and map of Ireland in time of Cromwell. (N.Y.: _Benziger_).
-0.90. 1906.
-
- “Edited from the record of Clarence Stranger,” an officer in
- the army of Owen Roe O’Neill. Covers principal events from
- Cromwell’s landing to the Plantation, including defence of
- Clonmel.
-
-⸺ MY SWORD FOR PATRICK SARSFIELD. Pp. 201. (_Gill_). 3_s._ 6_d._ 1907.
-
- Adventures of Phelim O’Hara (character well drawn), a colonel
- in Sarsfield’s horse, who witnesses siege of Derry, battle of
- the Boyne, two sieges of Limerick. Much history, varied by
- startling adventures.
-
-⸺ ARDNAREE. Pp. 227. (_Gill_). 1911.
-
- “The story of an English girl in Connaught, told by herself.”
- Mainly a record of social life (tea-parties, military balls,
- &c.), with a good deal of fairly mild love-making. The ’98
- insurrection (landing of French at Killala, &c.) forms a kind
- of background but is little spoken of. The Author hits off
- cleverly enough the outlook and language of a narrator such as
- the heroine.
-
-
-=MACDOUGALL, Rev. J.=
-
-⸺ CRAIGNISH TALES, collected by. Notes on the War Dress of the Celts by
-Lord A. Campbell. Pp. xvi. + 98. (_Nutt_). 5_s._ 20 plates. 1889.
-
-⸺ FOLK AND HERO TALES. Pp. xxx. + 311. Demy 8vo. (_Nutt_). 7_s._ 6_d._
-net. Three Illustr. by E. Griset. 1891.
-
- Introduction by A. Nutt deals with aims of study of folk-lore,
- and various theories of the origin of this latter, and the
- value of Celtic folk-lore.
-
- Ten tales collected in district of Duror (Argyllshire) between
- Summer of 1889 and Spring of 1890, obtained from a labouring
- man named Cameron, who had them in his boyhood from Donald
- MacPhie and others. As folk-lore they are thoroughly reliable
- and genuine, the Gaelic text given after each story being
- written at the narrator’s dictation with painstaking accuracy.
- The stories are typical folk-tales—a string of marvellous
- adventures of some hero with giants and enchanted castles and
- witches, &c., &c.—often grotesque and extravagant and devoid
- of moral or other significance beyond the mere narrative....
- Free from coarseness. Finn is the hero in several of these
- tales. Good Index. 50 pp. of Notes, devoted chiefly to variant
- versions of the tales, explanations of terms and comparisons
- with other tales.
-
-
-=M’DOWELL, Lalla.=
-
-⸺ THE EARL OF EFFINGHAM. Pp. 280. (_Tinsley_). 1877.
-
- Time: the forties, in Ballyquin, Co. Galway. It is a kind of
- appeal in story form to the Irish landlords to stay at home
- and “right Ireland’s wrongs.” The good points in the Irish
- character are well brought out, the brogue is well reproduced,
- and there is much humour. There are some glimpses of Dublin
- society. The bias is somewhat Protestant.
-
-
-=“MACEIRE, Fergus.”=
-
-⸺ THE SONS OF EIRE. Three vols. (LOND.: _Newby_). 1872.
-
- Author styles himself “The last of the Sons of Eire,” an old
- broken-down Irish family living in Hampshire (Vol. II. brings
- them back to Ireland). A long autobiography, with a multitude
- of rather trifling incidents, much conversation, and a good
- deal of moralising. The portrait of the writer’s mother is
- interesting and curious. The Author seems Catholic and Irish in
- sympathies. In the end the teller marries the betrothed of his
- brother Brian, the real hero, who has been killed in a skating
- accident.
-
-
-=MACGILL, Patrick.= “The Navvy Poet.” B. Glenties, Co. Donegal, 1891. Ed.
-at National school until he was twelve. At fourteen began to write verse
-for the DERRY JOURNAL. Soon after set out for Greenock with 10_s._ in his
-pocket. “Since then I have done all sorts of things, digging, draining,
-farming, and navvying.” In 1912 was a plate-layer on the Caledonian
-Railway.—(I.B.L., III., p. 71). His poems are _Songs of a Navvy_,
-_Gleanings from a Navvy’s Scrap Book_, and _Songs of the Dead End_. Is
-now a soldier in the London Irish Rifles, and has written a good account
-of military life in _The Amateur Army_. A series of sketches from the
-firing line, entitled _The Red Horizon_, is in preparation.
-
-⸺ CHILDREN OF THE DEAD END. Pp. 305. (_Herbert Jenkins_). 6_s._ 1914.
-
- “Most of my story is autobiographical.”—(_Foreword_). It opens
- in the Glenties with a faithful picture of the people and their
- hard life. The scene then shifts to Scotland and depicts the
- toils and temptations that beset the men, and especially the
- girls, in their sordid and insanitary surroundings. The hero
- goes on tramp with “Moleskin Joe,” a philosophic vagabond,
- finely described; and the shifts they are put to and the scenes
- they come through all bear the mark of truth, as does the wild
- life led by the navvies at Kinlochleven. The description of
- these scenes in a London newspaper led to his employment on the
- press. The hero’s love for Norah Ryan is purely and touchingly
- delineated, and, save for one unhappy gibe at the P.P., the
- book is unobjectionable.
-
-⸺ THE RAT PIT. Pp. 308. (_Jenkins_). 1915.
-
- The story of Norah Ryan, the heroine of _The Children of the
- Dead End_, from her childhood in Western Donegal to her death,
- a woman of the streets, in a Glasgow slum. A heartrending
- story from start to finish, with scarcely a gleam of cheer.
- The Author has exceptional powers of observation and gifts
- of description, and the book is extraordinarily realistic.
- But the realism and the sombreness being exclusive, the
- effect is exaggerated even to falseness. Farley McKeown is
- impossibly villainous, the picture of the wake revolting
- because undiscerning, Norah’s innocence overdrawn. Yet on the
- whole the Author’s claim that it is a transcript from life,
- life seen and lived by him, is doubtless well sustained. There
- are several needless sneers at the priests, _e.g._, p. 286,
- which is wantonly unpleasant. The Author is not prurient, but
- he describes plainly and vividly scenes in Glasgow brothels.
- Good picture of the conditions of life of the Irish migratory
- labourers.
-
-
-=[M’GOVERN, Rev. J. B.]; “J. B. S.”= Of St. Stephen’s Rectory,
-Chorlton-on-Medlock, Manchester. An enthusiast for Irish archæology and a
-frequent contributor on his favourite subject to N. & Q., CORK ARCHAEOL.
-JOURNAL, the ANTIQUARY, &c.
-
-⸺ IMELDA, or Retribution: a Romance of Kilkee. (_Tinsley_). 7_s._ 6_d._
-1883.
-
- Scene: varies between Kilkee and Meenahela on the one hand
- and Italy on the other. The story is concerned with the
- faithlessness of Imelda Lestrange, an Irish girl, to her
- affianced Florentine lover, Gasper Bicchieri, whom she had
- met at Kilkee, and the Nemesis that befalls her in the
- faithlessness of her new lover—and husband—Monckton, who
- deserts her for his cousin, Teresa Dempsey. Most of this
- happens at Kilkee. The end is tragedy. Forty years later Gasper
- returns to Kilkee to brood in the scene of the catastrophe of
- his life. There is little or no characterisation or study of
- motive. The story opens in 1829.
-
-
-=M’HENRY, James, M.D.= B. Larne, Co. Antrim, 1785. Ed. Dublin and
-Glasgow. Lived 1817-1842 in U.S.A. From 1842 till his death in 1845 he
-was U.S. consul at Derry. Publ. several volumes of verse (Mr. O’Donoghue
-enumerates nine) and several novels besides those mentioned below.
-
-⸺ THE INSURGENT CHIEF. Pp. 128, very close print. (_Gill_). Bound up with
-HEARTS OF STEEL. _n.d._
-
- Adventures of a young loyalist during the rebellion in the
- North, pleasantly told, but with improbabilities and a good
- deal of the _deus ex machina_. Gives the very best description
- of the scenes in Belfast and Larne leading up to the Battle
- of Antrim and the consequent defeat of the “United men,” many
- of whom were personally known to the Author. The leaders are
- referred to by name, and the heroic death of Willy Neilson
- pathetically described. The famous rebel ballad of “Blaris
- Moor” is put into the mouth of a ballad singer in Belfast, and
- the northern dialect is excellently rendered.
-
- The original title of this was _O’Halloran; or, The Insurgent
- Chief_, [1824], Philadelphia, three vols., and in same year
- London, one vol. Republ. frequently in Glasgow (_Cameron &
- Ferguson_) and Belfast (_Henderson_).
-
-⸺ THE HEARTS OF STEEL. (_Gill_). 6_d._ [1825]. Still in print.
-
- A story full of sensational adventure. There is a good deal
- about the Oak Boys and Steel Boys, Ulster Protestant secret
- societies which indulged in agrarian outrages as a protest
- against various abuses. The writer praises the Presbyterian
- religion somewhat at the expense of the Catholic. Some of
- the incidents related are rather coarse. Includes legends of
- Carrickfergus, also a good deal of verse.
-
-
-=MACHRAY, Robert.= B. 1857. Formerly Prof. of Ecclesiastical History in
-St. John’s University College, Manitoba. War editor, DAILY MAIL, 1904-05.
-Between 1898 and 1914 has publ. a dozen novels, besides other works.
-
-⸺ GRACE O’MALLEY, Princess and Pirate. Pp. viii. + 338. (_Cassell_).
-6_s._ 1898.
-
- Purporting to be “Told by Ruari Macdonald, Redshank and Rebel,
- The same set forth in the Tongue of the English.” Scene:
- various points on the west coast from Achill to Limerick. To a
- dual love story—of Grace (= Grania Waile) and Richard Burke,
- Ruari (the hero) and Eva, Grace’s foster-sister—are added
- many stirring descriptions of sea-fights and escapes, sieges
- and hostings. Historical personages, such as Sir Nicholas
- Malbie, the Earl of Desmond, and Stephen Lynch of Galway, are
- introduced. The moral tone is entirely good. The point of view
- is Grace O’Malley’s.
-
-
-=M’ILROY, Archibald.= B. Ballyclare, Co. Antrim, 1860. Entered first the
-banking and then the insurance business. Took part in public life in his
-native county and in Co. Down. For the last three years of his life,
-which was ended in the Lusitania disaster, 1915, he lived in Canada.
-
-⸺ THE AULD MEETIN’ HOOSE GREEN. Pp. 260. (BELFAST: _M’Caw, Stevenson &
-Orr_). 1898.
-
- Stories of the Co. Antrim peasantry. Time: thirty or forty
- years ago. Imitative of the “Kailyard” school in England. An
- intimate picture of Ulster Presbyterianism and its ways of
- thought. Has both humour and pathos. Is offensive to no creed
- or class. Ulster-Scot dialect true to life. Titles of some of
- the stories:—“Two Little Green Graves,” “At Jesus’ Feet,” “The
- Old Precentor Crosses the Bar.”
-
-⸺ WHEN LINT WAS IN THE BELL. (_Unwin_). 1898.
-
-⸺ BY LONE CRAIG LINNIE BURN. Pp. 153. (_Unwin_). 1900.
-
- “Two series of local stories of the Scoto-Irish folk of Ulster,
- the chat of village gossips, character-sketches of doctor,
- minister, agent, and inn-keeper: quaint blends of Scottish and
- Irish traits. Most of the tales of idyllic kind.”—(_Baker_).
- The reviewer in the IRISH MONTHLY says of the second of the
- above: “It is a wonderfully realistic picture of various grades
- of social life in a little country town in the North ... giving
- amusing glimpses of the working of practical Presbyterian
- theology in the rustic middle class.... Leaves on the reader
- a very remarkable impression of truthfulness and reality.”
- In this second novel there is some humour and a good deal of
- pathos. The same remarks apply here as to _The Auld Meetin’
- Hoose Green_.
-
-⸺ A BANKER’S LOVE STORY. Pp. 247. (_Fisher Unwin_). 1901.
-
- The story opens in “the Union Bank, Spindleton” (the Ulster
- Bank, Belfast), the various types of bank directors and
- clerks being cleverly described—the mischief-making Blake,
- the jolly Harry Burke, &c. The scene shifts to “Craig Linnie”
- (Ballyclare), where George Dixon’s love story begins. He
- is transferred to Ballinasloe (good description of the big
- fair). Through no fault of his own he comes under a cloud, but
- eventually matters clear up and all ends happily. The Author
- knows his Ulster types thoroughly.
-
-⸺ THE HUMOUR OF DRUID’S ISLAND. Pp. 127. (_Hodges, Figgis_; and _Mullan_,
-BELFAST). 2_s._ 6_d._ 1902.
-
- Scene: “Druid’s Island” is Islandmagee, Co. Antrim. A series of
- very short anecdotes told to one another by the Presbyterian
- country people, in their peculiar Scoto-Irish dialect, and full
- of the dry, “pawky” humour of the North. Gives glimpses of the
- manners and life of the place.
-
-
-=MACINNES, Rev. D.=
-
-⸺ FOLK AND HERO TALES. Collected, ed. (in Gaelic), and trans. by; with
-a Study on the Development of the Ossianic or Finn Saga, and copious
-Notes by Alfred Nutt. Pp. xxiv. + 497. (_Nutt_). 15_s._ net. Portrait of
-Campbell of Islay and two Illustr. by E. Griset. 1890.
-
- Gaelic and English throughout on opposite pages. The tales
- were taken down at intervals during 1881-2, chiefly from the
- dictation of A. MacTavish, a shoemaker of seventy-four, a
- native of Mull. The tales are typical folk-tales, full of
- giants, monsters, and other mythic and magic beings. They
- are often quaint, imaginative and picturesque, but abound in
- extravagance and absurdity. In Mr. Nutt’s notes (pp. 443 to
- end) he studies chiefly—(1) What relation, if any, obtains
- between the folk-tales current in Scotland and the older Gaelic
- literature; (2) what traces of early Celtic belief and customs
- do these tales reveal. They are very elaborate and scholarly.
- Good Index.
-
-
-=M’INTOSH, Sophie.= Born at Kinsale, where she resided for many years,
-until her marriage with Rev. H. M’Intosh, of Methodist College, Belfast.
-In her sketches she describes faithfully and vividly the people of her
-native town.—(IRISH LIT.).
-
-⸺ THE LAST FORWARD, and Other Stories. Pp. 152. (_Brimley Johnson_). Five
-Illustr. by Jack B. Yeats. 1902.
-
- Ten Irish school and football stories, with plenty of schoolboy
- language and slang, told in lively, stirring style, never dull.
-
-
-=McKAY, J. G.=
-
-⸺ THE WIZARD’S GILLIE; or, Gille A’Bhuidseir and Other Tales. Ed. and
-transl. by J. G. McKay. (_St. Catherine’s Press_). 3_s._ 6_d._ 1915.
-
- A selection from the MS. collection of the tales gathered by
- the late J. F. Campbell, of Islay (_q.v._), and preserved
- in the Advocates’ Library, Edinburgh. The Gaelic and the
- translation are given on opposite pages. Some of the titles are
- “Donald Caol Cameron,” “The Carpenter MacPheigh,” “The Sept of
- the Three Score Fools.”
-
-
-=MACKAY, William.=
-
-⸺ PRO PATRIA: the Autobiography of a Conspirator. Two Vols.
-(_Remington_). 1883.
-
- The narrator, Ptolemy Daly, is a weak, conceited youth,
- given to hysterics and poetry. Full of visions of Robert
- Emmet, he joins the staff of “The Sunburst,” the organ of
- an insurrectionary movement led by Phil Gallagher, a fine
- character, evidently modelled on T. C. Luby. At the critical
- moment Daly plays the traitor and decamps to England. Isaac
- Butt and John Rea are introduced, under thinly disguised
- names. Scene: Dublin and Wicklow. Written in ironical vein:
- Daly’s only “Speech from the Dock” was on a charge of drunk
- and disorderly. The Author was one of three brothers, all
- well-known London journalists. He was born in Belfast in 1846.
- Wrote also _A Popular Idol_ and _Beside Still Waters_.
-
-
-=MACKENZIE, Donald A.=
-
-⸺ FINN AND HIS WARRIOR BAND; or, Tales of Old Alban. Pp. 248.
-(_Blackie_). 2_s._ 6_d._ 1910.
-
- Stories, arranged in a connected series, of the Fenian cycle,
- adapted for children from twelve to fourteen or thereabouts.
- Told in picturesque language, but perfectly simple and
- direct. For the most part folklore, full of magic and wonder,
- nine-headed giants and fire-breathing dogs. But here and
- there the antique hero-tale appears, as in the Battle of
- Gavra and the death of Dermaid. Localities mostly Scotch. The
- illustrations (6 coloured, 34 in black and white) are charming
- in every way. Picture cover.
-
-
-=MACKENZIE, R. Shelton.=
-
-⸺ BITS OF BLARNEY. (N.Y.: _Redfield_). [1854]. (N.Y.: _Alden_). 1884.
-
- “A series of Irish stories and legends collected from the
- peasantry,” familiar to the Author in youth (see pref.). It is
- a volume of miscellanies. Includes three stories of Blarney
- Castle told in serio-comic manner by a schoolmaster; some
- local legends of Finn McCool, &c.; eccentric characters (the
- bard O’Kelly, Father Prout, Irish dancing masters, Charley
- Crofts, Buck English); Irish publicists; sketches of Grattan
- and O’Connell (the former enthusiastic, the latter not wholly
- favourable—O’C. “the greatest professor of Blarney these latter
- days have seen or heard”). He speaks of O’C. from personal
- knowledge. On the whole thoroughly nationalist in tone. The
- Author, b. in Co. Limerick, 1809, educated Cork and Fermoy,
- was a journalist in London, afterwards in New York, and wrote
- or edited many valuable works, historical and biographical. D.
- 1880.
-
-
-=M’KEON, J. F.=
-
-⸺ ORMOND IDYLLS. Pp. 144. (_Nutt_). 1_s._ Paper. 1901.
-
- Scene: Co. Kilkenny. Eight little sketches of peasant life,
- pathetic and sad. In one a glimpse is given with knowledge and
- sympathy of the work of a country priest.
-
-
-=M’LENNAN, William.=
-
-⸺ SPANISH JOHN. Pp. 270. (_Harper_). 6_s._ Eighteen v. g. Illustr. by F.
-de Myrbach. 1898.
-
- Adventures of Col. John McDonnell from the Highlands, when a
- lieutenant in the regiment Irlandia, in the service of the K.
- of Spain, operating in Italy (1744-6). At the Scots College in
- Rome, whither he had been sent to be made a priest, he had met
- a young student, a Mr. O’Rourke. This latter, now a chaplain in
- the Irish Brigade, saves McD.’s life on the field of Villetri.
- Subsequently the two are sent by the Duke of York to Scotland
- on a mission to Prince Charlie. They find that all is lost.
- Characters admirably drawn, notably the humorous, warm-hearted,
- heroic Father O’Rourke.
-
-
-=“MACLEOD, Fiona”; William Sharp.= B. Paisley, 1856. Ed. Glasgow Univ.
-Spent his boyhood in the West Highlands and Islands and became imbued
-with love for things Celtic. Even as late as 1899 it was positively
-stated that, in spite of conjectures to the contrary, William Sharp and
-Fiona MacLeod were not the same person, and Mrs. Hinkson says in her
-_Twenty-five Years’ Reminiscences_ that she is not yet convinced that
-they were.
-
-⸺ THE LAUGHTER OF PETERKIN. Pp. 288. (_Constable_). Four Drawings by S.
-Rollenson. 1897.
-
- “A re-telling of old tales of the Celtic Wonder-World.
- Contains: ‘The Laughter of Peterkin’; ‘the Four White Swans
- (Sons of Lir)’; ‘the Fate of the Sons of Tuireann’; ‘Darthool
- and the Sons of Usnach.’” Told in language of great beauty and
- simplicity.
-
-⸺ SPIRITUAL TALES. (EDINB.: _Geddes_). 1897.
-
-⸺ TRAGIC ROMANCES. (EDINB.: _Geddes_). 1897.
-
-⸺ BARBARIC TALES. (EDINB.: _Geddes_). 1897.
-
-⸺ THE DOMINION OF DREAMS. (_Constable_). 1899.
-
-⸺ THE SIN-EATER, and Other Tales. (_Constable_). 1899.
-
-⸺ THE WASHER OF THE FORD, and Other Tales. (_Constable_). 1899.
-
-⸺ The collected works written under the above pen-name (between 1894 and
-1905). Ed. by his widow, and publ. by _Heinemann_ in seven Vols., 5_s._
-net each. Three Vols. have appeared, viz.:—I. _Pharais; The Mountain
-Lovers_. II. _The Sin Eater; The Washer of the Ford_ (April). Pp. 450.
-III. _The Dominion of Dreams; Under the Dark Star_ (April). Pp. 438. The
-following are announced:—IV. _The Divine Adventure; Iona_, &c. V. _The
-Winged Destiny._ VI. _The Silence of Amor; Where the Forest Murmurs._
-VII. _Poems and Dramas._
-
- Some titles of the stories in these three vols.:—“Morag of the
- Glen,” “The Dan-nan-Ron,” “The Sin-Eater,” “The Flight of the
- Culdees,” “The Harping of Cravetheen,” “Silk o’ the Kine,”
- “Cathal of the Woods,” “St. Bride of the Isles,” “The Awakening
- of Angus Ogue,” “Three Marvels of Iona,” &c.
-
- These books of Fiona Macleod’s are, for the most part, shadowy,
- elusive dream-poems in prose, wrought into a form of beauty
- from fragments of old Gaelic tales heard in the Western isles
- (where the Author lived for years) from fishermen and crofters.
- They are full of the magic of words subtly woven, of vague
- mystery, and of nature—wind and sea and sky. He strives to
- infuse into his stories the sadder and more mystic aspects of
- the Gaelic spirit, as he conceives it. “I have not striven to
- depict the blither Irish Celt.” But many of his stories are
- simply Irish legends, _e.g._, _The Harping of Cravetheen_. The
- Author thus describes his work: “In certain sections are tales
- of the old Gaelic and Celtic Scandinavian life and mythology;
- in others there is a blending of paganism and Christianity; in
- others again are tales of the dreaming imagination having their
- base in old mythology, or in a kindred mythopæic source....
- Many of these tales are of the grey wandering wave of the
- West, and through each goes the wind of the Gaelic spirit which
- turns to the dim enchantment of dreams.” On the other hand,
- some of these stories deal with life in modern Gaelic Scotland,
- _e.g._, _The Mountain Lovers_, which, however poetically told,
- is after all a tale of seduction. _The Winged Destiny_, amid
- much matter of a different nature, contains several tales of
- Gaelic inspiration.
-
-
-=MACLEOD and THOMSON.=
-
-⸺ SONGS AND TALES OF ST. COLUMBA AND HIS AGE. By Fiona Macleod and
-J. Arthur Thomson. Third edition. Large paper 4to. (EDINB.: _Patrick
-Geddes_). 6_d._ nett.
-
-
-=M’MAHON, Ella.= Dau. of late Rev. J. H. MacMahon, Chaplain to the
-Lord-Lieutenant. Ed.: home. Has written much for various magazines and
-periodicals, and particularly on historical and archæological subjects.
-Has publ. about seventeen novels. Now resides in Chelsea.—(WHO’S WHO).
-
-⸺ FANCY O’BRIEN. (_Chapman & Hall_). 6_s._ 1909.
-
- A tragedy of city life centering in the betrayal and desertion
- of Bridgie Doyle by Fancy O’Brien. Full of human interest,
- careful and skilful study of character and motive. Catholic
- in sympathy. “In its minor details the book is true to life,
- photographic in its realism.” The story is of high dramatic
- and literary excellence. In the account of the Easter Monday
- excursion to Bray “the story of Bridgie’s undoing is told with
- a rare combination of poetry, force, and restraint.”—(N.I.R.,
- Aug., 1909).
-
-⸺ THE JOB. Pp. 383. (_Nisbet_). 6_s._ 1914.
-
- Sir Thady, a Cromwellian-Irish baronet, grows interested
- in his Irish surroundings on his estate of Ballymaclashin.
- He ceases to haunt the Bath Club, Piccadilly, and takes to
- starting carpet factories (_The Job_). Many of the incidents
- are furnished by the difficulties that beset the task owing to
- the amateurish innocence of the baronet and the stupidity of
- his local helpers. And besides there are the love affairs of
- Sir Thady and the English Miss Devereux. The point of view is
- Anglo-Irish, the “mere” Irish being regarded _de haut en bas_
- as rather impossible, thriftless, poor people, in short, as a
- problem to be dealt with philanthropically. The style is easy
- and pleasant.
-
-
-=MACMANUS, Miss L.= Holds a distinct place among Irish authors of
-to-day as being one of the very few writers of Irish historical
-fiction who write from a thoroughly national standpoint. Her books are
-straightforward, stirring tales, enthusiastically Irish, free from
-tedious disquisitions, but based on considerable historical research.
-She is a worker in the ranks of the Gaelic League, and in her Co. Mayo
-(Kiltimagh) home does much for the cause of Irish Ireland. She is
-interested in folklore, and some of the tales she has collected have
-recently been publ. in the FOLKLORE JOURNAL. Some of her stories in the
-Dublin weeklies deal in the weird and the mysterious. The following have
-been publ. by The Educational Co. of Ireland as penny pamphlets:—_In the
-High King’s Camp_, _A Battle Champion_, _Felim the Harper_, _The Prince
-of Breffny’s Son_, _How Enda went to the Iceland_, _The Leathern Cloaks_.
-She has publ. two serials in SINN FEIN: _The Professor in Erin_ and _One
-Generation Passeth_.
-
-⸺ THE SILK OF THE KINE. Pp. 282. (_Fisher Unwin_). 3_s._ 6_d._ (N.Y.:
-_Harper_). 1.00. 1896.
-
- Scene: chiefly Connaught and south-west Ulster during the
- Parliamentary Wars. The heroine is a daughter of the Maguire of
- Fermanagh. Her capture by the Roundheads, her rescue from the
- man-hunters by a Parliamentarian officer, her condemnation to
- slavery in St. Kitt’s, and her escape, are told in vivid and
- thrilling style. It is a story for young readers especially.
-
-⸺ LALLY OF THE BRIGADE. (_Duffy_). 2_s._ 1_s._ (BOSTON: _Page_). 25_c._
-1899.
-
- Adventures, during the War of the Spanish Succession, of a
- Colonel of the Brigade, who, after many thrilling experiences,
- distinguishes himself at Cremona, and marries a girl whom he
- had met during the war under romantic circumstances. The tale
- is lively and interesting, and makes one realize somewhat
- of the intrigues and dangers of war.... Young readers may
- derive a great deal of amusement and instruction from the
- book.—(N.I.R.). Lally is a young captain in the regiment of
- Dillon. “James III.,” Louis XIV., Prince Eugène, Marshall
- Villeroy, and General O’Mahony all appear in the story.
-
-⸺ NESSA. Pp. 147. (_Sealy, Bryers_). 2_s._ (N.Y.: _Benziger_). 0.60.
-_n.d._ (1904).
-
- A tale of the Cromwellian Plantation, characterized by a simple
- unpretentious style and considerable power of description, both
- of character and scenery.—(_Press notices_). The little book
- was highly praised by the ACADEMY and by the IRISH TIMES. It
- is, of course, strongly national in sentiment. Scene: an old
- castle near Lough Conn, Co. Mayo.
-
-⸺ IN SARSFIELD’S DAYS. Pp. 306. (_Gill_). Illustr. 1907.
-
- “A Passage from the Memoirs of Brigadier Niall MacGuinness
- of Iveagh, sometime captain in Sarsfield’s Horse.” Scene:
- Limerick during Siege. Includes account of Sarsfield’s Ride and
- of the repulse of William’s assault. The plot hinges on the
- disappearance of Balldearg O’Donnell’s cross, which Iveagh is
- suspected of having stolen. The central figure is perhaps the
- wayward and imperious Ethna Ni Briain. The story moves rapidly,
- unencumbered by descriptions or digressions. The scenes are
- vivid and dramatic. The Author’s play, “O’Donnell’s Cross,” is
- founded on this novel. Publ. in U.S.A. (N.Y.: _Buckles_), 1.50,
- under title _The Wager_.
-
-⸺ NUALA. Pp. 322. (_Browne & Nolan_). 3_s._ 6_d._ Four Illustr. by Oswald
-Cunningham. 1908.
-
- Tells how the only child, aged fifteen, of the head of the
- O’Donnells, then in the service of the Austrian Government, is
- entrusted by her father just before his death with the mission
- of obtaining the Cathach, or battle-book of the O’Donnells,
- from the monks at Louvain. On the way she passes through
- exciting adventures, being captured by some of Napoleon’s
- soldiers. Gen. Hoche figures in the story. Juvenile.
-
-
-=MACMANUS, Seumas.= B. Mountcharles, Co. Donegal, 1870. Son of a peasant
-farmer. Was for some years a National School teacher, but subsequently
-turned entirely to journalism. Has written for most of the Irish papers
-and magazines and for many English and American periodicals. Is well
-known in the States, where he frequently goes on lecturing tours.
-
-⸺ SHUILERS FROM HEATHY HILLS. Pp. 102. (MOUNTCHARLES: _G. Kirke_). 1893.
-
- The Author’s earliest poems and three prose sketches:—“Micky
- Maguire” (the last of the hedge schoolmasters), “How you bathe
- at Bundoran,” and “A Trip with Phil M’Goldrick.”
-
-⸺ THE LEADIN’ ROAD TO DONEGAL. Pp. 246. (_Digby, Long_). 3_s._ 6_d._
-(N.Y.: _Pratt_). 2.00. [1896]. Second ed., 1908; others since.
-
- Twelve short stories of the Donegal peasantry, full of very
- genuine, if somewhat broad, humour and drollery. They are not
- meant as pictures of peasant life. The dialect is exaggerated
- for humorous purposes, and at times the fun goes perilously
- near “Stage-Irishism.” But they are never coarse or vulgar.
-
-⸺ ’TWAS IN DHROLL DONEGAL. (_Gill_). 1_s._ Third ed., 1897.
-
- Eight tales dealing with the humorous side of the home-life of
- Donegal peasants. A few, however, are folk-tales of the Jack
- the Giant-killer type. Told with verve and piquancy and with
- unflagging humour, but the skill in story-telling is naturally
- not as developed in this as in the Author’s later work, drawing
- a good deal upon humorous padding to aid the intrinsic humour
- of the incidents.
-
-⸺ THE BEND OF THE ROAD. (_Gill, Duffy_). 2_s._, 3_s._ (N.Y.: _Pratt_).
-1.75. [1897].
-
- This is a sequel to _A Lad of the O’Friels_,[7] but consists
- of detached sketches, and is not told in the first person.
- Most of the sketches are humorous, notably “Father Dan and
- Fiddlers Four”; but there is pathos, too, as in “The Widow’s
- Mary,” a scene at a wake before an eviction. The Introduction
- is an admirable summing up of the peculiarities, emotions, and
- vicissitudes of life in an out-of-the-way Donegal countryside.
-
-[7] Yet seems to have been publ. before it. I give the dates as they are
-given (doubtless by the Author) in the _Literary Year Book_.
-
-⸺ THE HUMOURS OF DONEGAL. (_Unwin_). (N.Y.: _Pratt_). 1.50. [1898].
-
- Seven stories admirably told, and full of the richest and most
- rollicking humour. In the first only, viz., “When Barney’s
- Thrunk Comes Home,” is there a touch of the pathetic. It would
- be hard to beat “Shan Martin’s Ghost,” and “Why Tómas Dubh
- Walked,” and “How Paddy M’Garrity did not get to be Gauger.”
- “One St. Patrick’s Day” gives the humorous side of Orange and
- Green rivalry.
-
-⸺ THROUGH THE TURF SMOKE. (_Fisher Unwin_). 2_s._ (N.Y.: _Doubleday_.
-TORONTO: _Morang_). 2.00. [1899]. 1901.
-
- Simple tales of the Donegal peasantry. There is both pathos
- and humour—the former deep, and at times poignant; the latter
- always rich and often farcical. The Author writes with all the
- vividness of one who has lived all he writes about. He has full
- command of every device of the story-teller, yet never allows
- his personality to show except, as it should, through the
- medium of the actors.
-
-⸺ IN CHIMNEY CORNERS. Pp. 281. (N.Y.: _Harper_). Illustr. by Pamela
-Colman Smith. 1899.
-
- “Subtle, merry tales of Irish Folk-lore.”—(_Pref._). The
- stories are very similar in kind to the same Author’s _Donegal
- Fairy Tales_. There is the same quaint, humorous, peasant
- language, the same extravagances and impossibilities. The
- illustrations are very numerous. They are very brightly
- coloured, but for the most part extremely bizarre.
-
-⸺ THE BEWITCHED FIDDLE, and Other Irish Tales. Pp. ix. + 240. (N.Y.:
-_Doubleday and McClure_). 1900.
-
- Ten short stories, humorous for the most part, but one, “The
- Cadger Boy’s Last Journey,” moving and pathetic. They are
- an exact reproduction in dialect and phraseology of stories
- actually heard by the Author at Donegal firesides, and the
- fidelity of the reproduction is perfect.
-
-⸺ DONEGAL FAIRY STORIES. Pp. 255. (_Isbister_). 1902. (N.Y.: _McClure_).
-
- Dedication in Irish and English. Thirty-four full-page pen
- and ink drawings, signed “Verbeek.” These latter are quaint
- and amusingly grotesque. The stories are folk-tales, told
- just as the peasantry tell them, without brogue, but with all
- the repetitions, humorous extravagances and naïveté of the
- folk-tale. They are just the thing for children, and are quite
- free from coarseness and vulgarity.
-
-⸺ THE RED POACHER. (N.Y.: _Funk & Wagnalls_). 0.75. 1903.
-
-⸺ A LAD OF THE O’FRIELS. Pp. 318. (_Gill_; _Duffy_). 2_s._, 2_s._ 6_d._,
-3_s._ (N.Y.: _Pratt_). 2.00. [1903]. Third ed., 1906.
-
- In this book one actually seems to have been living among the
- childlike and quaint yet deep-natured, true, and altogether
- lovable little circle of Knocknagar, and to have shared
- its joys and sorrows. Every character described stands out
- altogether distinct, old Toal a’Gallagher the sententious;
- his wife, Susie of the sharp tongue; their son, Toal the
- “Vagabone,” with his wild pranks; the grandiloquent “Masther,”
- and all the rest. Through it all runs the simple love story of
- Dinny O’Friel and Nuala Gildea, companions from childhood. The
- book is full of deep, but quiet and restrained, feeling. The
- description of the pilgrimage to Lough Derg has much beauty.
-
-⸺ DOCTOR KILGANNON. (_Gill_). 1_s._ (Wrapper). Well illustr. 1907.
-
- A string of loosely-connected after-dinner stories chiefly
- about comic duelling and electioneering. Told with pleasant
- drollery.
-
-⸺ YOURSELF AND THE NEIGHBOURS. Pp. 304. (N.Y.: _Devin Adair Co._). Five
-Illustr. by T. Fogarty. 1914.
-
- A picture by one who has lived it of the life of the Donegal
- peasant—not their outward life merely, but their most intimate
- thoughts and beliefs, hopes and joys, their whole outlook on
- things. The Author is discerning and sympathetic in a high
- degree. “Yourself and Herself” gives a Donegal man’s life
- story from “the barefoot time” through love and marriage to
- “evening’s quiet end.” Some of the remaining stories show
- the Author’s humour at its best—the Homeric struggles of
- the “priest’s boy” with the New Curate and the Tartar of a
- postmistress, the “come home Yankee,” and so on.
-
-
-=M’NALLY, Mrs.=[8]
-
-⸺ ECCENTRICITY. Three Vols. (over 1,000 pp.). (DUBL.: _Cumming_). 1820.
-
- An endless series of love affairs between charming ladies and
- wealthy gentlemen, all of the upper classes, very proper, very
- stilted, and dull. The eccentricity is on the part of an old
- soldier who is a misanthrope and a hermit, but resolves to
- return to normal life and renew acquaintance with his daughter.
- He descends upon the friend’s family in which he has left her,
- carries off another by mistake, &c. The plot never really moves
- on.
-
-[8] So the name is given on the title-page, and it seems improbable
-that this Author is the same as the Author of the following item, first
-because there is a difference of thirty-four years between the dates,
-and secondly because the two books are wholly unlike. But the B. Museum
-Catal. assigns both to the same person.
-
-
-=M’NALLY, Louisa.=
-
-⸺ THE PIRATE’S FORT. Pp. 210. (_Hodges & Smith_). 1854.
-
- The fort is Dunalong, on Inisherkin, in Baltimore Bay, a
- stronghold of the O’Driscoll’s towards close of 16th cent.
- English ship captured. O’D.’s natural son, a ferocious pirate,
- falls in love with captain’s daughter. She is true to her
- English officer. The beautiful daughter of O’D. saves her
- from his fury. Vengeance of the English—destruction of the
- fort—double wedding of the two fair maids to two English
- officers. A prominent rôle is assigned to money-grabbing, idle,
- besotted Franciscan friar.
-
-
-=MACNAMARA, Lewis.=
-
-⸺ BLIND LARRY: Irish Idylls. (_Jarrold_). 3_s._ 6_d._ 1897.
-
- “Artless records of life among the very poor in West of
- Ireland, the fruit of kindly observation, and, obviously,
- essays in the _Thrums_ style. Larry is a poor blind fiddler,
- whose one joy in life is his son, and he turns out a reproach
- to his father. “Katty’s Wedding” is a very Irish bit of farce,
- and “Mulligan’s Revenge” expresses the vindictive passions of
- the Celt, an episode of jealousy and crime, alleviated at the
- close by repentance and reconciliation.”—(_Baker_).
-
-
-=MACNAMARA, Rachel Swete.=
-
-⸺ SPINNERS IN SILENCE. Pp. 317. (_Blackwood_). 6_s._ 1911.
-
- Fingal and Lutie are lovers somewhere in the wilds of Ireland.
- Enter an Interloper (a danseuse of doubtful reputation),
- who falls genuinely in love with F., and tries to win him.
- She fails, and exit. The atmosphere is very ideal and the
- language, especially the conversations, somewhat high-flown.
- Author writes well, and is clearly sympathetic to Ireland. The
- housekeeper cousin of “county family” status, with her genteel
- notions, is well sketched.
-
-
-=M’NULTY, Edward.= B. 1856, Randalstown, Co. Antrim. Ed. in the
-Incorporated Society’s School, Aungier St., Dublin, where he was
-a schoolmate and intimate of G. B. Shaw. Contributes to various
-periodicals—IRISH SOCIETY, THE OCCULT REVIEW, &c., and has written a
-play, “The Lord Mayor,” for the Abbey Theatre. Satirizes Irish failings,
-but is proud of being an Irishman himself. Resides in Ranelagh, Dublin.
-
-⸺ MISTHER O’RYAN. Pp. 271. (_Arnold_). 3_s._ 6_d._ 1894.
-
- A priest, squat, red-faced, whiskey-loving, unspeakably vulgar,
- and a ruffian to whom he is disgracefully related, organize a
- branch of the “Lague,” and boycott a farmer who will not join.
- The latter’s daughter dies tragically in consequence. The
- typical “pesint” is introduced as cringeing, priest-ridden, and
- wholly degraded. Impossible brogue throughout.
-
-⸺ SON OF A PEASANT. Pp. 342. (_Arnold_). 1897.
-
- A great advance on _Misther O’Ryan_, _q.v._ A tragic-comedy
- of life among lower middle class people in a small provincial
- town. The “son of a peasant” is Clarence Maguire, an obscure
- young schoolmaster, who in the end comes in for great wealth
- and all but wins the daughter of Sir Herbert O’Hara, an
- impoverished gentleman. A sub-plot is furnished by the love
- affairs of Constable Kerrigan and his determined efforts after
- promotion. The plot affords the Author scope for many genuinely
- humorous scenes, especially those in the Flanagan family, which
- are admirably done, and for the clever portrayal of some of
- the meaner aspects of human nature—class pride, servility, the
- worship of the moneyed man, time serving, &c. The plot largely
- turns on an absurd superstition about changelings. This leads
- to the hideous tragedy of the close. The book is marred by a
- travesty of the brogue. Otherwise it is not anti-national.
-
-⸺ MAUREEN. Pp. 343. (_Arnold_). 6_s._ 1904.
-
- Of the same type as _Misther O’Ryan_. One of the priests
- introduced trades with a miraculous statue on the superstition
- of the people; the other is a sleek, smooth fop, thoroughly and
- heartlessly vicious. There is little else besides this in the
- book.
-
-⸺ MRS. MULLIGAN’S MILLIONS. (_Hurst & Blackett_). 6_s._ 1908.
-
- A broad farce, with Irish people (of the worst stage-Irish
- type) as actors, and a small, vulgar Irish town for scene.
- Mrs. Mulligan is a very low species of tramp. She is supposed
- suddenly to come in for a fortune, and her relations tumble
- over one another in efforts to gain her favour—until the bubble
- bursts. There is much caricature of Irish traits and manners.
- Local journalism is specially ridiculed.—(_News cuttings_).
-
-
-=M’SPARRAN, Archibald.=
-
-⸺ THE LEGEND OF M’DONNELL AND THE NORMAN DE BORGOS. Pp. 213, close print.
-16mo. (_Gill_). 1_s._ [BELFAST, 1829]. Still in print.
-
- Writer (1795-1850?) was a school-master in Derry, who emigrated
- to America in 1830, where he published _Tales and Stories of
- the Alleghenys_ and _The Hermit of the Rocky Mountains_. A
- tale of the struggles between O’Neills, O’Donnells, O’Cahans,
- M’Quillans, M’Donnells, and other Ulster septs. Scene:
- northern portions of Antrim, Derry, and Donegal. The work of a
- half-educated man. A rambling story marked by frequent lapses
- from literary good taste and numerous grammatical mistakes.
- The peasantry talk in broad modern brogue, full of “arrah,”
- “musha,” “tare-an-ouns,” &c. Shows a considerable though
- undigested knowledge of Irish history and topography. The book
- had considerable vogue both here and in U.S.A.
-
-
-=MACSWEENEY, Rev. Patrick M., M.A.= One of the most erudite of Irish
-priests. Was Chancellor’s Gold Medallist in the Royal University. Was
-afterwards Professor of Mod. Lit. in Holy Cross College, Clonliffe. Is at
-present editor of the IRISH ECCLESIASTICAL RECORD.
-
-⸺ THE MARTIAL CAREER OF CONGHAL CLÁIRINGHNEACH. Pp. lxvii. + 225. (_Nutt,
-for Irish Texts Society_). 1904.
-
- Ed. for the first time with all the apparatus of
- scholarship—critical study of the Tale or Saga, literary study
- of the text, grammatical study, notes, glossary, and index. The
- story belongs to the pre-Cuchulainn stage of the Red Branch
- Cycle. Conghal is supposed to have reigned from 177 to 162 B.C.
-
-
-=MACWALTER, J. G., F.R.S.L., &c.=
-
-⸺ TALES OF IRELAND AND THE IRISH. Pp. 224. (_Farquhar Shaw_). 1854.
-
- Wrote also _The Irish Reformation Movement_, 1852; _Modern
- Mystery_, 1854, &c. The object of these three stories is to
- point out the wickedness and the evil influence, especially in
- Ireland, of the Catholic Church. In “Betty Bryan’s Fortune,”
- Thady becomes a Protestant, and all goes well with him: the
- sign of the Cross is called a charm; and there is a description
- of Beltaine superstitions. In “The Terry Alt,” a girl is seized
- just after marriage and immured in a convent for life: the
- conspirators are a monk, a priest, and “Blackboys.”
-
-
-=MADDEN, M. S.=
-
-⸺ THE FITZGERALD FAMILY. (R.T.S.). 2_s._ Three cold. ill. by Victor
-Prout. 1910.
-
- The family is left very poor on death of father, a C. of I.
- clergyman. Rich and vulgar relations adopt Barry and Moya, the
- former of whom becomes an unbearable bounder, the latter a
- heartless flirt. The rest of the family remains very poor, very
- good, and rather dull. There is an occasional mention of Irish
- peasants and the Irish language. Apart from this, the persons,
- their doings, and the atmosphere are wholly un-Irish. The story
- has a moral purpose that is good and not too obtrusive.
-
-
-=MAGENNIS, Peter.= A retired National School teacher. B. near
-Derrygonnelly, Co. Fermanagh, in 1817, the son of a farmer. D. 1910, aged
-93, at his birth-place.
-
-⸺ THE RIBBON INFORMER: a Tale of Lough Erne. Pp. 158. (LONDON). 1874.
-
- An unskilfully constructed, rambling narrative, interspersed
- with indifferent verse. The Author says in his Preface: “This
- novel is founded on fact, almost every incident in it actually
- occurred, and many of them within the recollection of the
- writer. It contains local traditions and legendary lore. It
- treats of highway robbery, illicit distilling, rural manners,
- party feeling, and a rather disorganized state of society.”
-
-⸺ TULLY CASTLE: a Tale of 1641. Pp. 266. (ENNISKILLEN: _Trimble_). 1877.
-
- A very crude, rambling tale, bringing in a few incidents of
- the Confederate War and several historic characters, but
- mainly taken up with private love affairs, abductions, &c. No
- character study and no real portrayal of the times. Occasional
- vulgarity. Scene: chiefly the shores of Lough Erne.
-
-
-=MAGINN, J. D.=
-
-⸺ FITZGERALD, THE FENIAN. Two Vols. Pp. 576. (_Chapman & Hall_). 1889.
-
- Deals with Fenian and Land League movements. The Author is
- unacquainted with the history and organization of Fenianism.
- The land agitation he represents as forced upon an unwilling
- peasantry by a kind of murder-club in America. Scene: mainly
- Co. Sligo. Parnell and Biggar are brought in under assumed
- names, and are broadly caricatured. The portrayal of Butt
- is truer to reality and less marred by bias. The Author is
- uninformed and, on the whole, uncomprehending: hence some
- absurd statements about things Irish, some objectionable (but
- evidently unintentionally so) references to the Catholic
- Church, and a quite impossible Irish brogue. But he is on the
- whole not unfriendly to Ireland.
-
-
-=MAGINN, William.= B. Cork, 1793. Ed. T.C.D. Began early to write for the
-magazines (BLACKWOOD’S, &c.), chiefly parodies and other _jeux d’esprit_.
-Went to London, 1823, where, in 1830, he established FRASER’S MAGAZINE,
-which with Carlyle, Thackeray, Maclise, Prout as contributors, for some
-years was at the head of English periodical literature. He fell more and
-more into habits of drunkenness, and engaged in disreputable journalism.
-Writing to the end, he died in 1842. Thackeray drew a portrait of him as
-Captain Shandon in _Pendennis_. Many memoirs of him have been written.
-His “Bob Burke’s Duel with Ensign Brady” is said to be the raciest Irish
-story ever written.
-
-⸺ MISCELLANIES: Prose and Verse. (LONDON). [First collection, 1840].
-Selections ed. by “R. W. Montagu.” 1885. (N.Y.: _Scribner_). 9.60.
-
- Contains “Bob Burke’s Duel,” “The Story without a Tail,” and
- other Irish stories, published in magazines between 1823 and
- 1842. These stories are told mostly in a vein of broad comedy.
- Their characters are roysterers and swaggerers. Maginn was a
- man of brilliant gifts. The fantastic humour and wild gaiety of
- his stories give them an original flavour. Maginn was a high
- Tory and an Orangeman.—(_Krans_). Dr. Mackenzie edited, in
- 1857, _The Miscellanies of William Maginn_ (5 vols.), published
- in America. Contents:—Vols. I. and II. “The O’Doherty Papers.”
- III. “The Shakespeare Papers.” IV. “Homeric Ballads.” V. “The
- Fraserian Papers,” with a life of the Author.
-
-
-=MAHONY, Martin Francis; “Matthew Stradling.”= B., Co. Cork, 1831. D.
-1885. Was a nephew of “Father Prout.” Also wrote _Cheap John’s Auction_.
-
-⸺ THE IRISH BAR SINISTER. Pp. 136. LONDON. 1872.
-
- “New ed. in four chapters.” The original was publ. by Gill,
- Dublin, 1871. Really a pamphlet showing up the place-hunting
- whiggery that prevailed in the Irish Bar at that time,
- and giving a picture of Irish politics after the Fenian
- insurrection, and at the outset of the Home Rule movement.
-
-⸺ THE MISADVENTURES OF MR. CATLYNE, Q.C. An Autobiography. Two Vols.
-(_Tinsley_). 1873.
-
- Elaborates the idea of the above-mentioned work. Depicts, under
- assumed names, well-known Irish lawyers of the day. Intrigues
- of the candidate for a small Irish borough, and his difficulty
- in placating all parties well described. This originally
- appeared in FRASER’S MAGAZINE. There is little plot, and no
- romantic interest.
-
-⸺ JERPOINT. An ungarnished Story of the Time. Three Vols. (_Chapman &
-Hall_). 1875.
-
- A satirical study of parvenus, snobs, and various curious
- types, very cleverly characterised. The story is chiefly
- concerned with the Courtneys, risen from the publichouse to
- county-family importance. P. 49 _sq._ gives an excellent
- picture of a meet, with a study of the personages present. Full
- of close observation and excellent descriptions. Among the best
- portraits are those of the Hanlon family, always shabby and
- out-at-elbows, yet ever struggling with fortune. We are not
- told the situation of “the Cathedral City of Jerpoint on the
- Sea.”
-
-
-=MALONE, Molly.= A Dublin lady, married to a Mr. Riordan, living in
-Carlow.
-
-⸺ THE GOLDEN LAD. 16mo. (_C.T.S. of Ireland: Iona Series_). 1_s._ 1910.
-
- A study of Dublin slum-children, told with humour, insight, and
- sympathy, by one who thoroughly knows their ways. The dialect
- is faithfully rendered.
-
-
-=MANNERS, T. Hartley.=
-
-⸺ PEG O’ MY HEART. Pp. 320. (_Hodder & Stoughton_). 1913.
-
- “Novelized” from a popular play. Peg is daughter of an Irish
- agitator of the eighties who goes to America in the troubled
- times. On the death of Peg’s mother her father returns to
- Ireland, and lives there for many years, till bright prospects
- call him back to America. But the main part of the action is
- taken up with Peg’s visit of a month to her English relations
- in Scarborough. The Author rather overdraws the contrast
- between English and Irish types. There is much clever dialogue.
- Ends with passing of second reading of Home Rule Bill, and the
- glorification of the one-time agitator.
-
-
-=MANNIX, Mary E.=
-
-⸺ MICHAEL O’DONNELL; or, The Fortunes of a Little Emigrant. (BOSTON:
-_Flynn_). 0.60. [1900]. In print, 1910.
-
- “Michael, an honest, industrious youngster, not too good to
- use his fists when attacked by other boys, comes to the U.S.,
- and steps into an excellent situation after three months
- of walking across the Continent. By a series of innocent
- misunderstandings, combined with hostile malice, he is made to
- appear guilty of theft; but the truth is soon manifest.... Told
- with much animation and liveliness.”—(AMERICAN ECCLES. REV.)
- Juvenile.
-
-⸺ PILGRIM FROM IRELAND. (BOSTON: _Flynn_). 0.36. In print, 1910.
-
-
-=MAPOTHER, Mary J.=
-
-⸺ THE DONALDS: an Irish Story (_Gill_). 6_s._ _c._ 1879.
-
- Not in British Museum Library.
-
-
-=MARSH, Mrs.=
-
-⸺ THE NEVILLES OF GARRETSTOWN. Three Vols. (_Saunders & Otley_). 1860.
-
- The main plot is a somewhat slight story of a lost heir
- returning to claim his inheritance, which had been usurped
- by an intruder. But the chief interest lies in the numerous
- side incidents and digressions which are designed to portray
- various phases of the life of the times. Opens and closes at
- Clonmel, but the scene shifts to Dublin, Bantry, Paris, and
- other places. Introduces Jacobite conspiracies, street-rioting,
- hedge schools, city entertainments, political discussions, the
- working of the Penal laws, and historical personages, such
- as Primate Stone, Thurot, Prince Charles Edward, Archbishop
- Dillon, and many others. Is more or less on the side of the
- English colony, but is not unfair to any party. Has little or
- no character study, and not much human interest, but abounds in
- incident.
-
-
-=MARTIN, Miss H. L.=
-
-⸺ CANVASSING. (_Duffy_). Still in print. (N.Y.: _Kenedy_). [1832].
-
- Published as one of the O’Hara’s tales. An elaborate tale of
- matchmaking and marriage among the upper classes, written with
- a moral purpose. Incidentally there is a good picture of an
- election contest in the first quarter of the nineteenth century.
-
-
-=MARTINEAU, Harriet.=
-
-⸺ IRELAND: a Tale. Pp. 136. (LONDON: _Fox_). 1832.
-
- Appeared in a series of illustrations of political economy.
- Written in the cause of the Irish poor, aiming to show “how
- long a series of evils may befal individuals in a society
- conducted like that of Ireland, and by what a repetition
- of grievances its members are driven into disaffection and
- violence.” Shows three sources of evils—thriftlessness in
- tenants, rapacity in landlords, misplaced benevolence.
-
-
-=MASON, Miss.=
-
-⸺ KATE GEARY; or, Irish Life in London. (LONDON: _Dolman_). 1853.
-
- “A Tale of 1849.” “The specific object of this work is to
- exemplify the various ways in which the poor are placed at a
- disadvantage, and the misery and, almost of necessity, the
- crime that ensue from their present crowded condition.” “Miss
- M. describes the life of one who might be called a Sister
- of Charity living in the world.... She tells us she has
- witnessed the incidents of her tale, which are described with
- vivacity.... The Author has entangled her heroine in a love
- affair, which, in itself, is very frigid and tedious.”—(D.R.).
-
-
-=MASON, A. E. W.=
-
-⸺ CLEMENTINA. (_Methuen_). 2_s._ Eight illustr. by Bernard Partridge.
-[1901]. Second ed., 1903. (_Nelson_). New ed., 7_d._ 1911.
-
- The story of the romantic escape in 1720 of the Princess
- Clementina Sobieski from Austria, and how she was conducted to
- Rome to be married to the Pretender by the Chevalier Charles
- Wogan, member of an Anglo-Irish family of Clongowes Wood, in
- the County Kildare. Some glimpses of the Irish Brigade. A
- lively narrative. Mr. Baker calls it “a particularly close
- imitation of Dumas.”
-
-⸺ THE FOUR FEATHERS. Pp. 338. (_Smith, Elder_). 6_s._ (_Nelson_). 7_d._
-[1903]. 1912.
-
- Scene varies between London, Devonshire, the Soudan, and
- Donegal (Ramelton and Glenalla), the scenery of which latter
- is finely described. The theme is original and striking. The
- hero, an English soldier, is all his life haunted by the fear
- of showing “the white feather” at a critical moment. He resigns
- his commission rather than risk in a campaign his reputation
- for courage. This action brings on him the dreaded imputation
- of cowardice. How he redeems his honour is finely told. A
- delicate soul-study. The heroic self-sacrifice of Jack Durance
- still further raises the moral worth of the book.
-
-
-=MASON JONES=, _see_ =JONES=.
-
-
-=MATHEW, Frank.= A grand-nephew of Father Mathew, the Apostle of
-Temperance. B. 1865; ed. Beaumont, King’s College School, and London
-University. The writer of the Preface to the New Ed. of the _Cabinet of
-Irish Literature_ says: “A good many people of excellent judgment look
-upon Mr. Mathew as the Irish novelist we have been so long awaiting....
-He does not write merely from the point of view of a sympathetic
-outsider. He has the true Celtic temperament, with the advantage of
-education, inherited and otherwise, over the peasants of genius who have
-so long represented the Irish spirit.” Wrote also _Father Mathew, his
-Life and Times_, _One Queen Triumphant_, _The Royal Sisters_, &c. Resides
-in London.
-
-⸺ AT THE RISING OF THE MOON. Pp. 240. (_M’Clure_). 3_s._ 6_d._
-Twenty-seven good Illustr. (N.Y.: _M’Clure_). 1.50. 1893.
-
- Twenty tales (memories of the old days, says the Author),
- picturing many phases of peasant life on the West coast:
- incidents of the moonlighting days, faction fights, the joke
- of the potheen-makers, the attachment of priests and people,
- the hardships of the poor, the days of sorrow, the love of home
- and country. Told with sympathy in simple but literary style.
- Dialogue clever and full of bright snatches of Celtic humour.
-
-⸺ THE WOOD OF THE BRAMBLES. (_Lane_). 6_s._ 1896.
-
- Gives a grotesque picture, intended for vivid realism, of
- the rebellion. The rebels are comic savages, their leaders
- (the priests included) little better than buffoons. It is
- a burlesque ’98. It is well, however, to add the following
- estimate from the prefatory essay to the new edition of _The
- Cabinet of Irish Literature_: “A born critic here and there
- will find out that Mr. Frank Mathew’s _Wood of the Brambles_ is
- as full of wit, wisdom, observation, and knowledge as genius
- can make it; but to the ordinary reader it is deliberately and
- offensively topsy-turvy, and there’s an end of it.”
-
-⸺ THE SPANISH WINE. Pp. 180. (_Lane_). 3_s._ 6_d._ 1898.
-
- A tale of Dunluce Castle, Co. Antrim, in the days when the
- MacDonnells from Scotland were Lords of Antrim, and Perrott was
- Elizabeth’s deputy. The story is told in form of reminiscence,
- the actual movement of the plot occupying only a few hours.
- Little attempt at description of scenes or times. The Author’s
- sympathies are with the MacDonnells, who were on the English
- side at the time. The book has been greatly admired, especially
- for the vividness of its historical atmosphere and its poetic
- and romantic glamour.
-
-⸺ LOVE OF COMRADES. (_Lane_). 3_s._ 6_d._ 1900.
-
- “Ultra romantic. The sprightly daughter of a Wicklow squire,
- bosom friend of Lord Strafford (then Lord Lieutenant
- of Ireland), goes on a perilous journey disguised as a
- gallant, with a message of life or death to Strafford at
- Dublin.”—(_Baker_, 2).
-
-
-=MATURIN, Charles Robert.= 1782-1824. Born in Dublin, and educated at
-Trinity College. Was a clergyman of the Church of Ireland, and all
-his life the sworn enemy of Catholicism and of Presbyterianism, both
-of which, especially the latter, he treats unsparingly in some of his
-books. Besides his novels he wrote tragedies, such as “Bertram,” and
-bloodcurdling melodramas, such as “Fredolpho.” In his way of life he
-was somewhat of an oddity—the madness of genius, his admirers said—and
-this is reflected in his works. “His romances attracted Scott and
-Byron, and many critics have given them great though qualified praise.
-Bombastic extravagance of language, tangled plots, and impossible
-incidents characterize them all. A remarkable eloquence in descriptions
-of turbulent passion is his strong point.” Besides the novels mentioned
-below, he wrote _Melmoth, the Wanderer_, generally considered his
-masterpiece, and “_The Albigenses_, his last and best (1824), which was
-pronounced by BLACKWOOD to be ‘four volumes of vigour, extravagance,
-absurdity, and splendour’” (compiled from Krans and Read). It should be
-noted that this writer sometimes violates good morals by indecency. Mr.
-N. Idman, of Lotsgotan, Helsingfors, Finland, is at present engaged on
-a study of M. which he intends to publish. The 1892 ed. of _Melmoth_
-contains an introductory memoir of M., a bibliography, and a criticism of
-each of his works.
-
-⸺ THE WILD IRISH BOY. Three Vols. 12mo. (LONDON). [1808]. 1814, 1839.
-
- Republ. in “The Romancists’ and Novelists’ Library,” two vols.
- (_Clements_), 1839. The original ed. was anon.—by the Author
- of “Montorio” [_i.e._, “Dennis Jasper Murphy”]. Intended as
- an exposition of the unhappy condition of Ireland and as a
- picture of the life and manners of the time. The former is
- soon lost sight of, but the latter is well carried out. The
- hero is a strong Nationalist who works wholly for Ireland’s
- cause. Apart from this graver purpose, interest is sustained
- by a succession of exciting incidents and by good character
- drawing. There is little plot, a great deal of sentiment,
- and a great many disreputable intrigues, without, however,
- objectionable details. The scene varies between Dublin and the
- W. of Ireland—life in the family of a Protestant landowner and
- in that of a Catholic feudal chief. Period, _c._ 1806-8. The
- society depicted is that of the aristocratic classes. Author’s
- standpoint full of sympathy and even admiration for Ireland,
- strongly Protestant (Ch. of I.) and anti-“Roman.”
-
-⸺ LE JEUNE IRLANDAIS. Four Vols. (PARIS). 1828.
-
- Traduction per Madame la Comtesse de Molé.
-
-⸺ THE MILESIAN CHIEF. Four Vols. 12mo. (LONDON). 1812.
-
- “Was generally well received by the critics. Even Talfourd,
- who had been rather hard on his first novel (_The Fatal
- Revenge_), said of this: ‘There is a bleak and misty grandeur
- about it which, in spite of all its glaring defects, sustains
- for it an abiding place in the soul.’”—(C. A. Read). Deals
- with the “prehistoric” Milesian invasion. Gustave Planche
- in his critique on M. says of this book, “C’est un livre où
- étincellent ça et là des pages magnifiques.”
-
-⸺ CONNAL OU LES MILESIENS. Traduit de l’anglais par Madame la Comtesse
-[de Molé]. Four tom. (PARIS). 1828.
-
-⸺ WOMEN; or, Pour et Contre. Three Vols. [1818].
-
- Young de Courcy rescues Eva, who had been carried off to be
- made a Catholic of by a fanatical grandmother, and he falls in
- love. This brings him into Calvinistic Methodist circles in
- Dublin. These the Author describes minutely and with satire.
- The Methodist gloom and coldness drive the hero to the company
- of a brilliant actress (really Zaira, Eva’s mother). He is long
- torn between the two, but finally goes to Paris with Zaira.
- There he deserts her for another. There is a fine description
- of Z.’s despair. Eva dies of decline, and de Courcy, repentant,
- soon follows. “A moral and interesting tale.” “The full praise
- both of invention and of execution must be allowed to Mr. M.’s
- sketch of Eva.” As regards Methodism, Mr. M. “has used the
- scalpel, not, we think, unfairly but with professional rigour
- and dexterity.”—(From a review by Sir Walter Scott in the
- EDINB. REV., xxx., 234).
-
-⸺ EVA; ou, Amour et Religion. Traduit de l’anglais sur la 2e éd. par M. 4
-tom. (PARIS). 1818.
-
-
-=MATURIN, Edward.= Son of the preceding.
-
-⸺ THE IRISH CHIEFTAIN; or, The Isles of Life and Death. Pp. 316, v. close
-print. 16mo. (GLASGOW: _Griffin_). 1848.
-
- A wild story, in which historical names (O’Ruarc of Breffny,
- Dermod MacMurrough, Strongbow, Eva, Devorgilla) are given to
- the personages, but which has no foundation in history. The
- incidents are supposed to take place some short time after the
- Norman invasion, but the book bristles with anachronisms. It is
- a series of thrilling adventures, fighting, revenge, murders,
- hairbreadth escapes, and so forth. Highly melodramatic,
- sentimental, and extravagant.
-
-⸺ BIANCA: a Tale of Erin and Italy. Two Vols. 660 pp. (N.Y.: _Harper_).
-1852.
-
- An outlandish sort of story, full of murders, perhaps a dozen,
- if not more. Nearly all the characters have some terrible
- secret connected with their past; hardly any of them are
- legitimate children. A duel between two brothers, and banshees,
- and mysterious ladies with dark prophesyings, etc., and all the
- fee-faw-fum of the times when all this was popular.
-
-
-=MAXWELL, W. Hamilton.= 1792-1850. He was a clergyman of the Church of
-Ireland, with a parish at Ballagh, in the wilds of Connaught, but was
-largely relieved of pastoral duties by the absence of a flock. He divided
-his leisure between field sports of all kinds and the writing of books.
-_Wild Sports of the West_, _Stories of Waterloo_, and _The Bivouac_ were
-the most successful of these; they are still much read. He tells a story
-capitally, with verve and spirit, and his situations are as exciting as
-those of any modern novelist. Maxwell was the first writer of military
-novels: he is the forerunner and even the inspirer of Lever. Mr. Baker
-describes his _Stories of Waterloo_ as “A farrago of Irish stories,
-sensational, with a dash of Hibernian character and local colouring.”
-This book is still to be had (Routledge, 2_s._), and a new ed. publ. by
-The Talbot Press, Dublin (Every Irishman’s Library), and ed. by Lord
-Dunraven, has recently (Sept., 1915) appeared of his _Wild Sports_.
-
-⸺ O’HARA. Two Vols. (_Andrews_). [1825].
-
- A Protestant landowner casts in his lot with the United
- Irishmen. The Government attaints him of treason; he is tried
- by a jury of drunken bigots, and hanged as a traitor. His
- son, the hero of the tale, then throws himself heart and soul
- into the rebellion. The interest centres in the accounts
- of the fighting in the North. The hero is a leader at the
- battle of Antrim. Some light is thrown on the nature of the
- friction between the Catholic and the Protestant commanders,
- which constantly threatens the disruption of the rebel
- forces.—(_Krans_). Publ. anon.
-
-⸺ THE DARK LADY OF DOONA. [1836]. Also (_Smith, Elder_) 1837. Pp. 306.
-(BELFAST) 1846. (LOND.) 1854. (_Warne_). 6_d._ 1891.
-
- “A weak historical novel, in Scott’s manner, which attempts
- a picture of sixteenth-century life.”—(_Krans_). The heroine
- is Grace O’Malley. The story opens in 1601, but there is a
- retrospective portion going back to tell the early life of the
- heroine. A tale of love and wild vengeance. In the story figure
- the heir of the Geraldines (who marries Grace’s granddaughter),
- Hugh O’Neill, and Sir Richard Bingham. Grace joins the latter
- against O’Neill. Well written on the whole.
-
-⸺ LA DAME NOIRE DE DOONA. Roman historique traduit par Pâquis. Two tom.
-(PARIS). 1834(!).
-
-⸺ ADVENTURES OF CAPT. BLAKE; or, My Life. (_Routledge_). 6_d._
-[_Bentley_, 1835]. 1838. Third ed., 1882.
-
- Really two practically independent stories, that of Major Blake
- and that of his son, the Captain. The former is far the more
- interesting, giving a good account of Gen. Humbert’s invasion
- and of the manners of the peasantry at the time (especially
- their open-hearted hospitality and kindliness), and some nice
- descriptions of Connaught scenery. But for an absurd scene of
- confession in a courthouse no religious bias is displayed. The
- remaining two volumes are a rambling series of miscellaneous
- adventures in Portugal, Paris, and London, consisting largely
- of amorous episodes not edifying, to say the least, and told in
- a facetious and somewhat vulgar strain.
-
-⸺ THE ADVENTURES OF HECTOR O’HALLORAN AND HIS MAN, MARK ANTONY O’TOOLE.
-(_Warne_). 6_d._ Paper. (N.Y.: _Pratt_). 0.30. [1842]. _n.d._ (recently
-reprinted).
-
- The hero is the son of a landlord and ex-soldier living in the
- South of Ireland. Beginning with an attack on the castle by
- local malcontents, Hector and his man pass through a series
- of adventures (some of which are described with considerable
- “go”), first in Dublin, then in London, and finally in the
- Peninsular War under Wellington. Most of the incidents take
- place amid the lowest society, and some of them are distinctly
- coarse. There is no character-drawing and little or no attempt
- to picture the life of the period. The military experiences in
- Spain form, perhaps, the best part of the book. There is no
- sympathy for Ireland, and there are some gibes at Catholicism.
-
-⸺ THE ADVENTURES OF CAPT. O’SULLIVAN. Three Vols. (_Colburn_). [1848].
-1855.
-
- “Or adventures civil, military, and matrimonial of a gentleman
- on half-pay.” Some of these take place near “Ballysallagh,” in
- Connaught, where the hero is stationed, his duties being mainly
- to keep down the Ribbonmen and to hunt for illicit stills.
- Attitude towards the former somewhat bloodthirsty. The two
- chief houses belong to the priest and the tithe-proctor, the
- task of the latter being described as the grinding of money
- “out of the wretched serfs.” Little plot, long and tedious
- conversations.
-
-⸺ ERIN GO BRAGH; or, Irish Life Pictures. Two Vols. (_Bentley_).
-Portrait. 1859.
-
- A posthumous collection of short stories originally contributed
- to BENTLEY’S MISCELLANY and other magazines. Written in the
- light, rollicking, high-spirited vein characteristic of
- Maxwell. Many of them are recollections of actual experience.
- Prefaced by biographical sketch by Dr. Maginn.
-
-⸺ LUCK IS EVERYTHING; or, The Adventures of Brian O’Linn. Pp. 440.
-(_Routledge_). (N.Y.: _Pratt_). 3.00. 1860.
-
- An infant, child of a dying mother who had been abducted, is
- landed on Innisturk. He is adopted by the head man there, grows
- up, goes to England, and after many exciting adventures, love
- episodes, and hair-breadth escapes, finds out his own origin
- and succeeds to ancestral estates. Originally appeared as
- serial (with illustrations on steel by John Leech) under the
- title of _Brian O’Linn_ in BENTLEY’S MISCELLANY.
-
-
-=MAYNE, Thomas Ekenhead.= Son of a well-known bookseller of Belfast, was
-fast earning for himself a considerable literary reputation, but died at
-32, 1899.
-
-⸺ THE HEART O’ THE PEAT: Irish Fireside and Wayside Sketches. Pp. 214.
-(BELFAST: _W. Erskine Mayne_). 1_s._ Paper. 1899.
-
- “These are all Irish stories, written on the spot, with a
- faithfulness that can be felt in every line. There is no
- attempt at meretricious workmanship, no maudlin sentimentality,
- no mock heroics. They are simple tales, simply told; but
- occasionally the restraint, which is everywhere discernible, is
- relaxed for a moment, and the fire of the poet glows in half a
- dozen lines, as a landscape or a sea-piece is enthusiastically
- drawn, or some incident touches the gentle human heart of the
- writer.”—(James H. Cousins, in SINN FEIN).
-
-
-=“MEADE, L. T.”; Elizabeth Thomasina Toulmin Smith.= She was a daughter
-of Rev. R. T. Meade, of Nohoval, Co. Cork. She was b. at Bandon. She
-lived in England from 1874 till her death in 1915. Mudie’s catalogue
-enumerates 185 of her novels, many of which were stories for school
-girls. Of these novels several, no doubt, besides those here mentioned,
-relate to Ireland.
-
-⸺ THE O’DONNELLS OF INCHFAWN. (_Hatchards_). 6_s._ 1887.
-
-⸺ THE WILD IRISH GIRL. Pp. 444. (_Chambers_). 6_s._ Eight coloured
-Illustr. by the well-known PUNCH artist, Lewis Baumer. 1910.
-
- Warm-hearted, impulsive Patricia has been allowed to run wild
- at her own sweet will in Ireland. She is brought to London,
- finds the conventional restraints of society too narrow for
- her, and as a consequence gets into many amusing and harmless
- scrapes, and out of them again.—(_Press Notices_).
-
-⸺ DESBOROUGH’S WIFE. Pp. 319. (_Digby, Long_). 6_s._ One Illustr. 1911.
-
- Scene: near Tralee, in Kerry. Patrick D. contracts a runaway
- marriage with a beautiful peasant girl. He falls heavily in
- debt, finds that his mother, on whom he had relied, is even
- more heavily involved, and that the only way out is a marriage
- with a rich heiress. Patrick basely yields, and the poor wife
- consents to “disappear,” but in a strange way, connected with a
- certain “silent room” in the D. mansion, whose secret we shall
- not divulge, things right themselves at last. Peter Maloney,
- Patrick’s faithful foster-brother, is curiously similar to
- Griffin’s Danny Mann. The moral tone is high.
-
-⸺ PEGGY FROM KERRY. Pp. 330. (_Chambers_). 6_s._ Pretty cover and eight
-coloured Illustr. by Miss A. Anderson. 1912.
-
- Peggy is the daughter of a poor Irish peasant and of an
- officer. She is now an orphan, but has been adopted by an
- English friend of her father’s and sent to an English boarding
- school. The story is made up of plots and petty jealousies
- amongst the schoolgirls. Peggy, though much ridiculed for
- her dreadful brogue, triumphs over her special enemy and the
- latter’s followers and ends by being popular and happy.
-
-⸺ KITTY O’DONOVAN. Pp. 330. (_Chambers_). 5_s._ Six good coloured
-Illustr. by J. Finnemore. 1912.
-
- Doings in a select English boarding school, where the pretty
- heroine from Kerry comes scatheless through the spiteful plots
- of her jealous rivals, and is crowned Queen of the May. There
- is a pretty description of Kerry scenery, but most of the
- action takes place outside of Ireland.
-
-⸺ THE PASSION OF KATHLEEN DUVEEN. Pp. 284. (_Stanley Paul_). 6_s._ 1913.
-
- “A tale of the novelette class about a young Irishman forced
- into crime and faithlessness to his young wife by his family’s
- need of money.”—[TIMES LIT. SUPPL.]. Another “Colleen Bawn”
- story. Brilliant young officer marries penniless girl.
- Financial straits. Murder; and nemesis.
-
-⸺ AT THE BACK OF THE WORLD. (_Hurst & Blackett_). 6_s._ _n.d._
-
- Scene: “Arranmore,” on the sea coast of Cork. Sheila O’Connor
- is long sundered from her lover by the suspicion, shared by
- herself, that he is the murderer of her father, the Squire.
- Whether they are ever united again we leave the reader to
- discover. There are many scenes that show us the life of the
- peasantry, in particular their religious customs. The book
- seems free from bias, and the brogue is not exaggerated.
-
-
-=[MEANY, Mary L.].=
-
-⸺ CONFESSORS OF CONNAUGHT; or, The Tenants of a Lord Bishop. Pp. viii. +
-319. (PHILADELPHIA: _Cunningham_). [1864]. _n.d._ (still in print).
-
- Hardly a story: rather a relation of real incidents in
- which the names are thinly disguised. Turns chiefly on the
- proselytising efforts of Lord Plunkett, Protestant Archb. of
- Tuam, resulting in the Partry evictions. Archb. MacHale,
- Father Patrick Lavelle, Mgr. Dupanloup, and J. F. Maguire play
- parts in the tale. Written with strong Catholic bias, but among
- the chief characters are a Protestant minister and his wife,
- who are represented as estimable in every way. Style lively,
- and at times humorous. Dialogue good and natural. The Author is
- a great admirer of William Smith O’Brien. She has also publ.
- _Grace Morton; or, The Inheritance_. _A Catholic Tale._
-
-
-=MEANY, Stephen Joseph.= B. nr. Ennis, Co. Clare, 1825. A noted
-journalist, first in his native Clare, then in Dublin. In 1848 he was
-imprisoned for some months. Then he went to Liverpool, where he founded
-the first English Catholic paper outside London—THE LANCASHIRE FREE
-PRESS. Went to U.S.A., 1860. Returned to England, and was arrested on a
-charge of Fenianism, 1867, and sentenced to 15 years. D. N.Y., 1888. His
-“Life” has been written by John Augustus O’Shea.
-
-⸺ THE TERRY ALT: a Tale of 1831. Three Vols. 1841.
-
- The “Terry Alts” was a name adopted by the secret agrarian
- agitators in Munster, previously known as “Whiteboys.” Not in
- British Museum Library.
-
-
-=[MEIKLE, James.]=
-
-⸺ KILLINCHY; or, The Days of Livingston. Pp. 156. 12mo. (BELFAST:
-_McComb_). 1839.
-
- Description of Presbyterian life in Ulster immediately after
- the Scottish Plantation, with biographical details concerning
- Rev. John Livingston, a Scot from Kilsyth, who was minister of
- Killinchy, Co. Down, from 1630-5. Story element slight. The
- Author was a schoolmaster in the district.
-
-
-=MELVILLE, Theodore.=
-
-⸺ THE IRISH CHIEFTAIN AND HIS FAMILY. Four Vols. Pp. 910. (LONDON: _Lane,
-Newman_). 1809.
-
- The chieftain is The O’Donoghue of Killarney, dispossessed for
- loyalty to the Stuarts. His family, that of Lord Roskerrin, a
- Williamite, rewarded with an estate, and an exiled Venetian
- are the _dramatis personæ_. Scene: chiefly Killarney. Period,
- only vaguely indicated, 18th century. Conrad O’D. the hero,
- falls in love with the daughter of the hated Lord R. There are
- kidnappings and highly sensational adventures of all kinds,
- told in a romantic manner, among others how Conrad helps to
- reinstate the exiled Venetian grandee. Author’s sympathies
- thoroughly on the Irish side, but does not seem unfair to the
- English. He wrote also _The White Knight_, _The Benevolent
- Monk_, &c. Good descriptions of Killarney.
-
-
-=MEREDITH, George.= B. Portsmouth, 1828. He had, as he used to boast,
-both Welsh (from his father) and Irish blood (from his mother) in his
-veins. Ed. chiefly in Germany. The writer of his life in the ENCYCLOPEDIA
-BRITTANICA says of him, “In Meredith went the writer who had raised the
-creative art of the novel, as a vehicle of character and constructive
-philosophy, to its highest point.... The estimate of his genius formed
-by “an honourable minority,” who would place him in the highest rank of
-all, by Shakespeare, has yet to be confirmed by the wider suffrage of
-posterity.” He died in 1909.
-
-⸺ CELT AND SAXON. Pp. 300. (_Constable_). 6_s._ 1910.
-
- Left unfinished, like Dickens’s _Edwin Drood_. The plot has
- hardly begun to work out. The chief interest lies in the
- purpose which was—the author tells us—to contrast English,
- as typified in John Bull, to the description of whose
- characteristics a whole chapter is devoted, with Celtic
- character and ideals. This purpose is manifest throughout the
- book. There is a set of Irish and a set of English characters,
- and within these two sets are types differing widely from
- one another. One of the most pronounced types of Irishman is
- married to a lady of peculiarly English characteristics, and
- the resulting ménage affords the author scope for much dry
- humour. A romantic episode is just beginning to develop. The
- highly-wrought Meredithian style is as distinctive as in his
- former books, and there are stray glimpses of the Meredithian
- philosophy.
-
-
-=“MERRY, Andrew”; Mrs. Mildred H. G. Darby=, _née_ =Gordon-Dill=. B.
-1869, in Sussex, d. of a North of Irelander, a cousin of Sir Samuel Dill,
-and of an English mother. Ed. at home. Married in 1889 J. C. Darby, Esq.,
-D.L. Her writings are noted for their impartial standpoint as regards
-Irish questions, and for their virile style. Never in the criticisms of
-her literary work has it been suggested that the pen-name hid a woman.
-
-⸺ THE GREEN COUNTRY. Pp. viii. + 378. (_Grant, Richards_). 1902.
-
- Little studies, humorous or pathetic, of the Irish people of
- to-day. Both the landlord class and the peasantry, Catholics
- as well as Protestants, figure in the tale. The Author makes
- (_c.f._ Pref.) her characters responsible for the views they
- express. She applies herself with insight and sympathy and
- without bias to a careful presentation of various aspects of
- the national character, its shadows no less than its lights.
- But there is no preaching. The story entitled “The love of God
- or Men” is full of true religious feeling.
-
-⸺ PADDY RISKY; or, Irish Realities of To-day. Pp. 367. (_Grant,
-Richards_). 1903.
-
- Seven stories dealing with aspects of Irish life from the
- landlord and Unionist point of view, yet tone not anti-Irish,
- nor unjust to any class. The spirit is that of Davis’ “Celt and
- Saxon,” quoted at outset:—
-
- “What matter that at different times
- Your fathers won this sod?
- In fortune and in name we’re bound
- By stronger links than steel,” &c.
-
- One story shows the hardship of compulsory sale of grass lands.
- Another deals (delicately) with seduction in peasant life. Most
- of the characters in the stories are peasants of the Midlands.
- Charming descriptions of Irish scenery.
-
-⸺ THE HUNGER: Being Realities of the Famine Years in Ireland, 1845-1848.
-Pp. 436. (_Melrose_). 6_s._ 1910.
-
- This is, in the form of fiction, a narrative of happenings in
- one district, with a plot and personal drama and talk proper
- to the novel, and all of these show the gifts of a practised
- and able novelist; but “every incident,” the writer assures
- us, “is fact, not fiction.” His matter is mainly derived from
- oral statements, helped and verified from books, records, and
- trustworthy private sources; and in an introduction Mr. Merry
- deals with the causes and characteristics of the famine, the
- horrors of which were such that even many of the incidents
- here selected had to be modified in their details to become
- publishable.—(TIMES LIT. SUPPL.).
-
-
-=MEYER, Kuno.= B. Hamburg, 1858. Ed. Hamburg and Leipzig. Lecturer in
-Teutonic Languages at Univ. Coll., Liverpool, 1884; Professor, 1895.
-Founded the ZEITSCHRIFT FUR CELTISCHE PHILOLOGIE, 1895, and, along with
-Whitley Stokes, the ARCHIV. FUR CELTISCHE LEXICOGRAPHIE, 1898; founded
-the School of Irish Learning in Dublin, 1903; Prof. of Celtic in Univ.
-of Berlin since 1911. Has publ. a long series of most valuable works on
-Celtic-Irish subjects.
-
-⸺ THE VISION OF MACCONGLINNE: a Twelfth Century Irish Wonder-Tale.
-(_Nutt_). 7_s._ 6_d._ net. 1892.
-
- “Transl. by K. Meyer, literary introd. by W. Woolner. A
- primitive tale combining two elements—satire of the Abbot
- and Monks of Cork, and the vision of the Lake of Milk, which
- reveals to the gleeman MacConglinne how King Cathal may be
- delivered from the demon of gluttony that has been the bane of
- his land. Full of extravagance and comic fancy.”—(_Baker_, 2).
-
-⸺ THE VOYAGE OF BRAN, SON OF FERBAL, TO THE LAND OF THE LIVING. An old
-Irish saga, now first edited, with translation. Notes and Glossary by
-Kuno Meyer. With an Essay upon the Irish Vision of the Happy Otherworld,
-and the Celtic Doctrine of Rebirth by Alfred Nutt. [Grimm Library, Vols.
-4 and 6].
-
- Vol. I. “The Happy Otherworld.” Pp. xviii. + 331. 1895.
-
- Vol. II. “The Celtic Doctrine of Rebirth.” Pp. xii. + 352.
- 1897. (_Nutt_). 10_s._ 6_d._ each.
-
-⸺ LIADAIN AND CUIRITHIR. (_Nutt_). 1_s._ 6_d._ 1902.
-
- An Irish love-story of the ninth century, partly in prose,
- partly in verse. Old Irish text and English translation.
- Introduction by Editor. Interesting chiefly to the student of
- Old Irish and the folk-lorist.
-
-
-=MILLIGAN, Alice and W. H.=
-
-⸺ SONS OF THE SEA KINGS. Pp. 404. (_Gill_). 6_s._ Ten illustr. by J.
-Carey. 1914.
-
- Based on the Scandinavian sagas—the Burnt Njal, Snorri
- Sturleson’s Saga of Olaf, Tryggvesons, the Heimskringla,
- &c. Iceland is the centre of these sagas, but Ireland looms
- in the background, for the hero, Kiartain, comes of famous
- Irish-Danish stock. The Authors have vividly realised and
- vividly pictured these far times (end of 10th century). The
- tone and “atmosphere” of the sagas has been preserved with
- great fidelity, and the tale, told in language of much dignity
- and beauty, is of high dramatic force and interest. Miss
- Milligan is well known as poetess, journalist, and lecturer on
- Irish subjects. Resides in Bangor, Co. Down.
-
-
-=[MILLINGEN, John Gideon].= B. Westminster, 1782. Son of a Dutch
-merchant. Served as Surgeon in Peninsular War under Wellington,
-1809-1814. Wrote many plays, a history of duelling, and other works. D.
-1862. (Boase).
-
-⸺ ADVENTURES OF AN IRISH GENTLEMAN. Three Vols. (_Colburn & Bentley_).
-1830.
-
- A very unpleasant book. Only the opening and closing scenes
- are in Ireland (neighbourhood of Bantry Bay, Skibbereen, and
- Tralee), the interval being filled by adventures in Portugal
- (where the Inquisition is held up to obloquy), and in Paris
- (where Freemasonry is praised and convents vilified). These
- adventures are, for the most part, more or less scandalous
- “love” affairs. At the outset there is a good deal about Irish
- disaffection and lawlessness. The Author seizes every occasion
- to drag in the confessional, the Pope, &c., and to inveigh
- against them.
-
-
-=MONTGOMERY, J. W.=
-
-⸺ MERVYN GRAY; or, Life in the R.I.C. (EDINBURGH: _Cameron & Ferguson_).
-1_s._ _c._ 1875.
-
- The Author was a native of Virginia, Co. Cavan. He was
- a zealous antiquary, and wrote on antiquarian subjects.
- Published, besides the above, two volumes of verse and one of
- prose sketches. D. Bangor, Co. Down, 1911.
-
-
-=MOORE, F. Frankfort.= B. in Limerick, 1855, but brought up and ed. in
-Belfast. Began to write at 16. For sixteen years worked on staff of
-BELFAST NEWS-LETTER. See his _Journalist’s Note Book_, 1894. All this
-time he was turning out at least one book a year. In 1893 he scored a
-great success with his _I Forbid the Banns_. Since then his output has
-been very large. He resides at Lewes.
-
-⸺ THE JESSAMY BRIDE. (_Hutchinson_). 6_s._ (N.Y.: _Fenno_). 50c. 1897.
-
- The story of the last years and death of Goldsmith, told with
- all the Author’s well-known verve. Full of dialogue, witty
- and lively, yet not merely flashy, in which Johnson, Burke,
- Garrick, and other wits and worthies of the day take part. The
- central theme is Goldsmith’s attachment to the beautiful Mary
- Horneck, called the Jessamy Bride. There is much true pathos in
- the story, and not a word that could offend susceptibilities.
-
-⸺ CASTLE OMERAGH. (_Constable_). 2_s._ 6_d._ (N.Y.: _Appleton_). 1.50.
-1903.
-
- Scene: the West of Ireland (Co. Clare) during Cromwell’s
- invasion. The central figures are the Fawcetts, a Protestant
- planter family, whose sympathies have become Irish. The eldest
- son is an officer in the army of O’Neill. The second, the hero,
- is literary and unwarlike, and inclined to Quakerism. A Jesuit
- friend of the family figures prominently in the story, and is
- presented in a very favourable light. The Drogheda massacre and
- Cromwell’s repulse at Clonmel are included.
-
-⸺ THE ORIGINAL WOMAN. Pp. 343. (_Hutchinson_). 1904.
-
- Thesis: whatever culture may have done for the modern woman,
- she reverts to the instincts of the original woman in the
- crisis of a life-decision. Scene: first, country house in
- Galway. The heroine is a typical modern girl of the best kind.
- The hero, who is also the villain, is a singularly attractive
- personality, the complicated workings of whose mind the Author
- delights to analyse. Later the scene changes to Martinique.
- Here an element of the supernatural and uncanny enters the
- story. The style is witty, the character-drawing very clever.
-
-⸺ CAPTAIN LATYMER. (_Cassell_). 6_s._ Also 6_d._ ed. 1908.
-
- A sequel to _Castle Omeragh_. The eldest Fawcett is condemned
- by Cromwell to the West Indies, but escapes along with the
- daughter of Hugh O’Neill, nephew of Owen Roe. There are
- exciting adventures. The book, as does _Castle Omeragh_, gives
- a faithful picture of the times.
-
-⸺ THE ULSTERMAN: a Story of To-day. Pp. 323. (_Hutchinson_). 6_s._ 1914.
-
- A very candid, plainspoken, and judicious picture of life in
- North-East Ulster. Pictures what the TIMES LIT. SUPPL. calls
- “the unsympathetic materialism, the drab ugliness of a life
- which finds its chief recreation in religious strife, and
- much of its consolation in strong drink.” But dwells upon the
- sterling good qualities that go to counterbalance these others.
- Opens in a mid-Antrim town on the eve of “the 12th.” Story of
- a bigoted Ulster mill-owner whose sons eventually marry into
- Catholic families of a lower class. Not political.
-
-⸺ THE LADY OF THE REEF. Pp. 348. (_Hutchinson_). 6_s._ 1915.
-
- A young English artist in Paris suddenly inherits a
- property in North Co. Down, and arrives to find himself in
- a puzzling environment. Cleverly sketched characters are
- introduced—MacGowan, the pushful attorney, the excellent parson
- Gilliland, and the dipsomaniac captain. Then there is a wreck,
- a rescue, and enter the “Lady of the Reef.” The sequel tells
- whether she accepts the artist or not.—(I.B.L. and T. LIT.
- SUPPL.).
-
-
-=MOORE, George.= A distinguished poet, novelist, dramatist, and art
-critic. Was born in Ireland, 1857, of a Catholic family of Co. Mayo, many
-of whose members were distinguished nationalists. He has produced some
-twenty books. Much of Mr. Moore’s education has been acquired in France,
-with the result that, as Dr. William Barry says, “he is excessively,
-provokingly un-English.” At the same time he has little but scorn for
-things Irish. He has, as he tells us in _Confessions of a Young Man_,
-abandoned the Catholic Church. He may be said to be at war with all
-prevailing types of religion and current codes of morality. His books
-bear abundant evidence of the fact. Many of them treat of most unsavoury
-topics, and that with naturalistic freedom and absence of reserve.
-They were consequently excluded from lending libraries such as Mudie’s
-and Smith’s. Many critics rank Mr. Moore very high as a psychologist
-and as a critic. An interesting article on him will be found in G. K.
-Chesterton’s _Heretics_. His non-Irish stories include _Evelyn Innes_,
-_Sister Theresa_, _Esther Waters_, _A Mummer’s Wife_, _Celibates_, _Vain
-Fortune_, _A Mere Accident_, &c. Within the last two or three years he
-has published at intervals three vols. of reminiscences entitled _Ave,
-Salve, Vale_, in which no privacies are respected and which in other
-respects resemble his novels.
-
-⸺ A DRAMA IN MUSLIN. Pp. 329. (_Vizetelly_). 1886.
-
- Period: just before and just after the Phœnix Park murders.
- Some attention is given to Land League tyranny before, and
- coercion after. The interest centres in a party of girls
- educated at a convent school at St. Leonard’s, and their
- subsequent adventures in Irish society looking for husbands,
- and all eventually going to the bad, with two exceptions. Of
- these latter, one is a mad missionary and a Protestant, who
- becomes a Catholic and a nun, the other is a free-thinker and
- an authoress, a combination which the Author considers natural.
- For the Irish peasant the Author has only disgust. The picture
- of a Mass in an Irish chapel (pp. 70-72) would be offensive and
- painful to a Catholic. Re-issued as _Muslin_, 1915.
-
-⸺ THE UNTILLED FIELD. (_Unwin_). 6_s._ (PHILADELPHIA: _Lippincott_).
-1.50. [1903]. New ed. (_Heinemann_). 1914.
-
- A series of unconnected sketches of Irish country life, most
- of which deal with relations between priests and people—evil
- effects of religion on the latter, banishing joy, producing
- superstition, killing art. In some of the stories priests are
- depicted favourably. In the first the subject of the nude in
- artist’s models is treated with complete frankness. Another
- contains warnings against emigration. Some of the sketches are
- exquisite; most of them, religious bias apart, true to life.
- Has been transl. into Irish under title _An t-Ur Gort_ by P.
- O’Sullivan.
-
-⸺ THE LAKE. Pp. 340. (_Heinemann_). 6_s._ 1905. (N.Y.: _Appleton_). 1.50.
-
- “A vague and inchoate novel with some passionate and delightful
- descriptions of Nature. The theme, very indecisively worked
- out, is that of a young priest’s rebellion against celibacy,
- stimulated by the attractions of a girl whom he drove from the
- parish because she had gone wrong.”—(_Baker_). Scene: Connaught
- and Kilronan Abbey. The story seems meant to uphold the purely
- Hedonistic view of life.
-
-
-=MOORE, Sidney O.=
-
-⸺ THE FAMILY OF GLENCARRA: a Tale of the Irish Rebellion. Pp. 154.
-(_Bath_). Six illustr. of little value. _n.d._ (1858).
-
- Ninety-eight (Humbert’s Invasion) seen from the standpoint
- of the “Irish Society” (a proselytising organisation). The
- book is intended to set forth “the ignorance and degradation
- peculiar to the Romish districts of Ireland,” and tells how
- Aileen who was engaged to one of the rebels (a murderer) is
- converted, and endeavours to convert others, with varying
- success. The book is full of calumnies against, and grotesque
- misrepresentations of, the Catholic Church. It closes with an
- appeal to the “Daughters of England” for funds for the Irish
- Society.
-
-
-=MORAN, D. P.= Editor since its inception of the LEADER (Dublin). A
-Waterford man.
-
-⸺ TOM O’KELLY. Pp. 232. (_Duffy_). 3_s._ 6_d._ 1905.
-
- An ugly picture of lower middle class life in a small Irish
- provincial town. It depicts the vulgarity and shoneenism
- of this class, its drunkenness, its efforts to imitate the
- well-to-do Protestant better classes, &c., &c. Unsparing
- ridicule is showered upon Nationalist politics and politicians.
- The unpleasantness of the picture is somewhat relieved by the
- doings of Tom O’Kelly and the juvenile Ballytowners. Very
- slight plot.
-
-
-=MORAN, J. J.=
-
-⸺ THE DUNFERRY RISIN’. (_Digby, Long_). 1894.
-
- A study of the Fenian movement. The EVENING SUN of London
- devoted a two-column review to the book, written by an old
- participator in the Fenian movement (we understand that the
- writer was the late J. F. X. O’Brien, M.P.), in which the story
- was described as one of the most vivid pictures of the Irish
- Republican Brotherhood and their movement that had yet been
- written.
-
-⸺ IRISH STEW. (_Digby, Long_). 1895.
-
- A collection of humorous stories. “Jack Arnold’s Tour,” the
- longest story, may be taken as typical. It relates the comical
- adventures of an English visitor at Bundoran. The stories are
- remarkable for their spirited and racy dialogue.
-
-⸺ STORIES OF THE IRISH REBELLION. (ABERDEEN: _Moran_). 1_s._ 6_d._
-
- Short stories, noteworthy for vividness and dramatic power (for
- example, the story of Leonie Guiscard and Teeling). Humour and
- pathos alternate. Neither is overdone.—(Publ.).
-
-⸺ TWO LITTLE GIRLS IN GREEN. (ABERDEEN: _Moran_). 6_s._ 1898.
-
- Land League story—extreme popular point of view; gives vivid
- idea of feelings of people during hottest years of the
- agitation. Introduces amiable Englishman who sees justice done
- for his tenants. Clear and pleasant style.—(IRISH MONTHLY).
-
-⸺ IRISH DROLLERIES. (_Drane_). 3_s._ 6_d._ 1909.
-
- Ten comic stories such as “Pat Mulligan’s Love-making,”
- a bashful young man “proposing” by proxy; “Miss Mullan’s
- Mistake,” story of an elderly spinster who answers a
- matrimonial advertisement with amusing results. Others are:
- “Torsney’s Ghost,” “O’Hagan’s Golden Weddin’,” “Tim Mannion the
- Hero,” “The Wake at Mrs. Doyle’s,” and so on.—(_Press Notice_).
- “Mr. Moran has done much good work as a publisher of Irish
- books in Aberdeen. In his humorous sketches of Irish life he
- has ever striven to eschew the ‘Stage-Irishman’ type of vulgar
- comicality. He writes much for various papers. Besides the
- books noted here, he has published _A Deformed Idol_, &c.”
-
-
- =MORGAN, Lady.= She was the daughter of a poor Dublin actor,
- named Owenson, and was born in 1777. Her self-reliance, gaiety,
- and accomplishments won her a prominent place in the literary
- and social life of Dublin. She married Sir T. C. Morgan,
- physician to the Lord Lieutenant. She protests energetically
- in her books against the religious and political grievances
- of Ireland. “Her books are a sign of the growth of a broader
- spirit of Irish nationality and reflect the growing interest in
- Irish history and antiquities.”—(_Krans_). She is said to have
- published more than seventy volumes. Her satires of the higher
- social life of Dublin are spirited and readable even to-day,
- but their tone is often sharp and bad-tempered. She caught
- well the outward drolleries of the lower classes: postillions,
- innkeepers, Dublin porters, &c.; but she seldom looks beneath
- the surface. It has been well said that her novels are
- “thoroughly Irish in matter, in character, in their dry humour,
- and cutting sarcasm; no less than in their vehemence and
- impetuosity of feeling.” Twenty-two of her works are mentioned
- by Allibone. She died in 1859.
-
-⸺ ST. CLAIR; or, the Heiress of Desmond. [1803]. 1807, 1812.
-
- “_St. Clair_, in sentiment and situation a weak imitation of
- Werter, introduces an Irish antiquary, who discourses upon
- local legends and traditions, ancient Irish MSS., and Celtic
- history, poetry, and music.”—(_Krans_). Aims at upsetting the
- notion of the possibility of platonic love between the sexes
- without any approach to real attachment. Into the description
- of places and scenes the Authoress worked much of her Connaught
- experience.
-
-⸺ ST. CLAIR EN OLIVIA ... MET PLATEN. Dutch trans. by F. van Teutem.
-(AMSTERDAM). 1816.
-
-⸺ THE WILD IRISH GIRL. [1806]. (N.Y.: _Haverty_). 1.50. (_Routledge_).
-_n.d._ 6_d._
-
- A love story of almost gushing sentiment. The scene is the
- barony of Tirerragh, in Sligo (where the book was actually
- written). Here the “Prince” of Inismore, though fallen on evil
- days, still keeps up all the old customs of the chieftains, his
- ancestors. He wears the old dress, uses the old salutations,
- has his harper and his shanachie, &c. His daughter, Glorvina,
- is the almost ethereal heroine. The personages of the book
- frequently converse about ancient Irish history, legend,
- music, ornaments, weapons, and costumes. There is much acute
- political discussion and argument in the book. It is fervently
- on the side of Irish nationality. “Father John” is a fine
- character modelled on the then Dean of Sligo. It contains
- many other portraits drawn from real life. Its success at
- the time was enormous. In two years it passed through seven
- editions.—(Fitzpatrick, Krans, &c.).
-
-⸺ O’DONNEL. Pp. 288. (_Downey_). 2_s._ 6_d._ [1814]. 1895.
-
- The central figure of this tale is a scion of the O’Donnells
- of Tyrconnell, proud, courteous, travelled, who has fought
- in the armies of Austria and of France, and finally that of
- England. He is a type of the old Catholic nobility, and his
- story is made to illustrate the working of the Penal laws.
- Nearly all the personages of the story are people of fashion,
- mostly titled. There is much elaborate character-study, and not
- a little social satire. The native Irish of the lower orders
- appear in the person of M’Rory alone, a humorous faithful old
- retainer, whose conversation is full of bulls. Lady Singleton,
- the meddling, showy, flippantly talkative woman of fashion,
- and Mr. Dexter, the obsequious, a West Briton of those days,
- are well drawn. The main purpose of the book, says the Author,
- was to exhibit Catholic disabilities. There are interesting
- descriptions of scenery along the Antrim coast and in Donegal.
- As fiction it is slow reading, yet Sir Walter Scott speaks
- highly of it.
-
-⸺ FLORENCE MACARTHY. (N.Y.: _Sadlier_). 1.50. 1816.
-
- Combines, as so many of Lady Morgan’s books do, political
- satire with a romantic love tale. A kidnapped heir asserts
- his claim to a peerage and estates and unwittingly woos the
- romantic Florence, to whom he had been betrothed in his youth.
- Mr. Fitzpatrick calls the book “an exceedingly interesting
- and erudite novel,” and tells us how, before attempting
- it, she had “saturated her memory with a large amount of
- reading which bore upon the subject of it.” The character of
- Counsellor Con Crawley constitutes a bitter attack on Lady
- Morgan’s unscrupulous enemy, John Wilson Croker. The half-mad
- schoolmaster, Terence Oge O’Leary, is a curious type.
-
-⸺ THE O’BRIENS AND O’FLAHERTYS. Three eds. in one year. [1827]. (N.Y.:
-_Haverty_).
-
- May be said to have for its object Catholic Emancipation, yet
- the author was no admirer of O’Connell, and in this book keen
- strokes of satire are aimed at the Jesuits, and even at the
- Pope. Mr. Fitzpatrick says that “though professedly a fiction
- it is really a work of some historical importance, and may
- be safely consulted in many of the details by statistic or
- historic writers.” He tells us also that it “contains a few
- coarse expressions; and, in common with its predecessors,
- exhibits a somewhat inconsistent love for republicanism and
- aristocracy.” The novel is the story of a young patriot who,
- expelled from Trinity College along with Robert Emmet and
- others, becomes a volunteer and a United Irishman, and is
- admitted to the councils of Tone, Napper Tandy, Rowan, and
- the rest. After ’98 (which is not described in detail) he
- goes to France, where he rises to be a General, and marries
- the heroine. The book depicts with vividness and fidelity the
- manners of the time (hence the occasional coarseness). There
- are lively descriptions of Castle society in the days of the
- Duke of Rutland. Lord Walter Fitzgerald was the original of
- “Lord Walter Fitzwalter.”
-
-⸺ LES O’BRIEN ET LES O’FLAHERTY OU L’IRLANDE EN 1793 is the title of a
-French translation of the preceding by J. Cohen. Three Vols. (PARIS: _C.
-Gosselin_). 1828.
-
-⸺ DRAMATIC SCENES FROM REAL LIFE. Two Vols. (_Saunder’s & Otley_). [1833].
-
- Contains a piece entitled “Mount Sackville.” “It possesses a
- great deal of her peculiar power, has much truth, and much good
- feeling, alloyed with some angry prejudice. There are some
- scenes inimitable for their racy humour, and the characters
- of Gallagher, the orange-agent, his ally the housekeeper, and
- Father Phil, are worthy the hand that sketched M’Rory and the
- Crawley family.... The Whiteboy scenes, though forcibly drawn,
- are perhaps too melodramatic. Shows much bitterness against the
- Repealers.”—(DUBL. REV.).
-
-
-=MORIARTY, Denis Ignatius.= Ed. by.
-
-⸺ THE WIFE HUNTER AND FLORA DOUGLAS. Three Vols.[9] (_Bentley_). 1838.
-
- Prefatory notice signed by “John O’Brien Grant,” of Kilnaflesk,
- the teller of the story. K. is “situated in a remote corner
- of the kingdom,” near Bandon (vol. II., p. 186); it is
- an old rambling family mansion, dating from 1713. We are
- introduced to a set of hard-drinking, Orange squireens. The
- hero, refused by his nurse’s daughter Mary, has a “go” at a
- rich heiress, merely to better himself. He also, in company
- with Morrough O’Driscoll, a “restless, blustering, dexterous,
- successful, ambitious, amusing and farcical genius,” throws
- himself into politics. Then there are a number of burlesque
- electioneering scenes. Duly elected, the hero goes to Dublin,
- meets Charlemont, &c., in high society. Hero marries Mary
- after all; then, on her death, rescues an heiress and marries
- her.... A third matrimonial venture is unsuccessful. There is
- no seriousness in the book.
-
-[9] The first two (pp. 342 + 332) are taken up by _The Wife Hunter_.
-
-
-=MORRIS, E. O’Connor.=
-
-⸺ KILLEEN: a Study of Girlhood. Pp. 348. (_Elliot Stock_). 1895.
-
- Scene: “Killeen Castle,” Queen’s County. The plot turns on
- misunderstandings that keep lovers apart. The characters are
- of the Anglo-Irish and English upper classes. The book is
- religious and moral in tone, the standpoint Protestant. Peasant
- character sympathetically treated.
-
-⸺ CLARE NUGENT. Pp. 324. (_Digby, Long_). 1902.
-
- A rather sentimental tale of an Irish girl who goes to work
- in England, in order to retrieve the fallen fortunes of the
- family. This a particularly successful marriage enables her to
- do, and all ends most ideally. An ordinary plot, somewhat long
- drawn out. One or two charming descriptions of Irish scenery.
-
-⸺ FINOLA. Pp. 304. (_Digby, Long_). 6_s._ 1910.
-
- Scene: chiefly Dublin at the present day. Murrough O’Brien is
- to get a great inheritance on condition of marrying Finola
- de Burgh. He gives his consent. Then he is ordered off to
- S. Africa. On his return he falls in love with a certain
- Kathleen Burke, and is resolved to lose his inheritance for
- her sake. The situation has been planned by the romantic Lady
- Mary Eustace. Her plans nearly turn out in an unforeseen way.
- The interest then settles on the identity of Kathleen Burke.
- Several of the characters are well sketched. Notably, Eleanor
- Butler, a sharp and amusing spinster.
-
-
-=MORRIS, W. O’Connor.= B. 1824 at Kilkenny. Son of B. Morris, Rector of
-Rincurran, near Kinsale. Ed. in England. Became a County Court Judge. He
-devoted himself largely to politics; was a Liberal Unionist, strongly
-opposed to Home Rule, and especially to the land agitation. Was himself
-a good landlord, and an estimable man. D. 1904. _See_ his reminiscences,
-_Memories and Thoughts of a Life_.
-
-⸺ MEMOIRS OF GERALD O’CONNOR. Pp. 311. (_Digby, Long_). 1903.
-
- Reminiscences (told in the first person) of one Gerald
- O’Connor, an ancestor of the Author. “Compiled partly from
- old documents and papers in my possession, partly from
- reminiscences handed down from father to son during five
- generations, and partly from my own researches.”—(Pref.).
- But the Author has freely filled in gaps in the authentic
- records and supplied colouring, though there is practically
- no dialogue. O’Connor served in the Williamite Wars, 1689-91,
- emigrated to France with Sarsfield, and joined the staff of
- Marshal Villars. Was in all the great battles of the War of the
- Spanish Succession. The Author describes effects on Ireland of
- conquest and confiscation from point of view of O’Connor, but
- admits in Preface that he himself looks at modern Ireland from
- the landlord’s standpoint.
-
-
-=MULHOLLAND, Clara.= Is a sister of Lady Gilbert. Was born in Belfast,
-but left it at an early age, and was educated at convents in England
-and Belgium. The style of her stories is simple and bright, their tone
-thoroughly wholesome. Even when there is nothing directly about religion,
-they breathe an atmosphere of Catholicism. All of them can safely and
-with profit be given to the young. Many of them are specially meant
-for young readers. Some of her non-Irish stories are _The Miser of
-Kingscourt_, _A Striking Contrast_.
-
-⸺ PERCY’S REVENGE. (_Gill_). 1887.
-
- Irish and Catholic.
-
-⸺ LITTLE MERRY FACE AND HIS CROWN OF CONTENT. (_Burns & Oates_). 1889.
-
- Stories for children. Irish and Catholic.
-
-⸺ LITTLE SNOWDROP AND OTHER STORIES. Pp. 192. (_Washbourne_). 2_s._ 6_d._
-Illustr. 1889.
-
- The scene of the principal story, a great favourite with
- children, is laid in Killiney, near Dublin. It tells of a child
- kidnapped by gypsies.
-
-⸺ THE LITTLE BOGTROTTERS. Pp. 188. (BELFAST: _Ward_; BALTIMORE, U.S.A.:
-_John Murphy_). Illustr. _n.d._
-
- The child heroine actually loves her prospective step-mother,
- and is delighted at the approaching marriage. During the
- honeymoon Elise visits her cousins the Sullivans in Ireland—a
- pleasant houseful of harum-scarum boys and girls, with whom
- Elsie has many adventures. “Father John” is a fine type of
- Irish priest.
-
-⸺ DIMPLING’S SUCCESS. Pp. 150. (N.Y.: _Benziger_). _n.d._
-
- Reminds one of _Little Lord Fauntleroy_, but Dimpling O’Connor
- not only wins her stern old grandfather’s heart, but wins him
- to the Catholic Church. There are plenty of adventures and a
- good deal of piety, not of the goody-goody description.
-
-⸺ KATHLEEN MAVOURNEEN. Pp. 143. (BALTIMORE: _Murphy_). 1890.
-
- A cruel Donegal landlord fearing that his son is becoming
- attached to Kathleen Burke, daughter of a poor tenant of one
- of his farms, evicts Mrs. Burke. This blow kills her. Kathleen
- goes as a governess to London, and there the lovers meet again.
- But the hero has seen the error of his father’s ways, and
- goes into Parliament. In the end he and his father too become
- Catholics, and all ends well. For young people.
-
-⸺ LINDA’S MISFORTUNES, AND LITTLE BRIAN’S TRIP TO DUBLIN. (_Gill_).
-(N.Y.: _Benziger_). 0.70 net. [_c._ 1892]. Still in print.
-
- Two stories, the first and longer not being concerned with
- Ireland. The second is a delightful little children’s story.
-
-⸺ IN A ROUNDABOUT WAY. Pp. 224. (_Washbourne_). 2_s._ 6_d._ 1908.
-
- Main theme: a plot to defraud an orphan girl of inherited
- property, which in a strange manner fails, and all is well
- again. Scene: first, London, then Donegal, of the scenery of
- which the Author gives vivid descriptions. The life of the
- peasants and their relations with their priests are depicted
- with sympathy and feeling.
-
-⸺ TERENCE O’NEILL’S HEIRESS. Pp. 358. (_Browne & Nolan_). 3_s._ 6_d._
-Illustr. by C. A. Mills. (N.Y.: _Benziger_). 1.35. 1909.
-
- A pleasant story of a young girl left an unprovided orphan, who
- is cared for by generous relatives, whom in their hour of need
- she strives to repay. Suspected of a theft, she is vindicated
- only after much sorrow and heart-burning. The heroine is a
- noble and beautiful character. Refined and sensitive, loving
- music and art, she is obliged to take service as a governess in
- an English family. There she meets the great trial of her life,
- but also the final crown of her happiness.
-
-⸺ SWEET DOREEN. (_Washbourne_). 3_s._ 6_d._ 1915.
-
- Poverty and misery in Ballygorst have reached a climax. At the
- suggestion of the Agent, Father Ryan goes to Dublin to get
- the Landlord to do something. The latter is respectful, but
- will do nothing. Just as Father Ryan is going the Landlord’s
- daughter and her American friend Laura come in. They will go to
- Ballygorst, and Papa is persuaded to be of the party. The story
- tells how they came, met “Sweet Doreen” and her brothers and
- sister, and met with many adventures, pleasant and unpleasant,
- in the effort to do good.
-
-
-=MULHOLLAND, Rosa; Lady Gilbert.= Born in Belfast, about 1855. She spent
-some years in a remote mountainous part of the West of Ireland. Of the
-rest of her life most has been passed in Ireland, where she still lives.
-In her early literary life she received much help and encouragement from
-Dickens, who highly valued her work. She has written much poetry of
-high literary quality and “marked by a thought and diction peculiar to
-herself.”—(IRISH LIT.). Her novels are intensely Catholic, though without
-anti-Protestant feeling, and intensely national. But their most striking
-quality is a literary style of singular purity and grace, and a quiet
-beauty very different from the flash and rattle of much recent writing.
-She has publ. several vols. of verse. Among her non-Irish novels may be
-mentioned _The Late Miss Hollingford_, _The Squire’s Granddaughter_, _The
-Haunted Organist_. Lady Gilbert has also written many children’s stories
-full of originality and playful fancy.
-
-⸺ DUNMARA. By “Ruth Murray.” Three Vols. (_Smith, Elder_). 1864.
-
- Wrecked on the coast Ellen, of mysterious antecedents, is taken
- into the family of Mr. Aungier, or Dunmara Castle, in the
- West. Strange household—the half-witted Miss Rowena, the dark,
- vindictive Miss Elswitha, with unpleasant family history in
- the background. A will is discovered making Ellen heiress of
- Dunmara, but revealing to her that she is the daughter of a man
- formerly slain by Mr. Aungier, who had asked her in marriage.
- This long keeps the two apart, but they are married in the end.
- Little Irish colour. Written in somewhat strained style and at
- times over-emotional.
-
-⸺ HESTER’S HISTORY. Pp. 237. (_Chapman & Hall_). 1869.
-
- Pastoral life in the Glens of Antrim at the time of the
- Union, the main theme being a love story. Humour and tragedy
- alternate. Incidents of the rebellion of ’98, including an
- attack on a castle in the Glens by the English soldiery. Some
- historical characters are introduced. During part of the action
- the scene shifts to London. The story was written at the
- request of Charles Dickens, and he thought highly of it.
-
-⸺ ELDERGOWAN; and Other Tales (three). (_Marcus Ward_). Illustr. 1874.
-
- “Eldergowan” is a very careful and clever study of a girl’s
- varying moods. “It is an excellent example of artistic work
- and perfect in its way.” “Mrs. Archie” is a comedy in which
- the chief actors are the antiquated family of the MacArthurs,
- dwelling in the glens of Antrim. The third story, “Little Peg
- O’Shaughnessy” is written in a lively style, with plenty of
- interest of a healthy “real” kind.—(I.M.).
-
-⸺ THE WILD BIRDS OF KILLEEVY. Pp. 311. (_Burns & Oates_). (N.Y.:
-_Benziger_). 1.10. [1883].
-
- An exquisite little tale, not of the realistic sort, but sweet
- and ideal. Kevin and Fanchea are little peasant playmates
- together in Killeevy. Kevin is dull at his books, but full
- of the love of nature. Fanchea is a fairy with a bird-like
- voice. One day she is stolen by gipsies, then by strange
- fortune gets into the upper stratum of society. Kevin goes
- out into the world to look for her. He gets education and
- becomes a poet. After long years they meet again and all is
- well. Killeevy is an Irish-speaking district where the people
- treasure religiously their Irish MSS. Here and there there
- are pen-pictures of much beauty. It is not of course a mere
- children’s book. It has been well said of the book: “It is our
- own world after all, seen through the crystal of pure language,
- artistic sense, and joyous perception of natural beauty.”
-
-⸺ THE WALKING TREES; and Other Tales. Pp. 256. (_Gill_). 1885.
-
- Contains “The Girl from under the Lake,” an Irish fairy tale,
- occupying about one-third of the book. It is charmingly told.
-
-⸺ MARCELLA GRACE: an Irish Novel. (_Kegan, Paul_). 6_s._ 1886.
-
- A story with an elaborate plot, full of dramatic incident.
- Incidentally the evils of landlordism and Fenianism are dwelt
- upon, the former in the picture drawn of the hovels, the
- starved land, and the meek misery of the people—and here the
- author is at her best. The minor characters are clearly and
- sympathetically drawn, evidently from life. There is much
- sadness and even tragedy in the story. The Phœnix Park Murders
- are touched upon.
-
-⸺ A FAIR EMIGRANT. Pp. 370. (_Kegan, Paul_). 2_s._, &c. [1889]. New ed.,
-1896, &c.
-
- Period: about the ’seventies. Scene: at first in America
- (farming life), then in Ireland, north coast of Antrim. A love
- story. The heroine, one of those whom all must love, is an only
- daughter, whose mission in life is to clear her dead father’s
- reputation. Full of romantic incident. There is a picture of
- the landlord class of the time, and there are many good things
- about the vexed economic and social questions of the day. The
- book has the Author’s usual grace of diction, sincerity of
- thought, and fine descriptions of scenery. It was very highly
- praised in Irish, English, and Scotch literary journals.
-
-⸺ NANNO. Pp. 287. (_Grant Richards_). 3_s._ 6_d._ 1899.
-
- A rural love-story. Scene: Dublin and Youghal and Ardmore. The
- heroine is a girl born in the workhouse, who is saved from
- its dangerous and degrading atmosphere, and raised, by true
- affection and by living among good country people, to high
- moral feeling and purpose and to the heights of self-sacrifice.
- The most realistic and the strongest of Lady Gilbert’s works.
- Esteemed by the literary critics and by herself to be the best
- of her novels. It is based on facts, and it occasioned the
- reform of certain abuses in workhouses.
-
-⸺ ONORA. Pp. 354. (_Grant Richards_). 1900.
-
- A story of country life in Waterford in the days of the
- Land League. Eviction scenes. Life in Land League huts on
- the Ponsonby Estate. Has a strong emotional interest, with
- much study of the family affections and of the interplay of
- character. Many touches of humour. Highly praised in English
- literary reviews. Incidentally there are glimpses of Mount
- Melleray and of the scenery on the Blackwater. The sterling
- goodness of obscure people is rendered with womanly sympathy.
- Interwoven with the main story is that of Norah’s little lame
- poet brother Deelan, a pathetic episode. Also folk-tales and
- ballads.
-
-⸺ TERRY. Pp. 112. (_Blackie_). Thirteen good illustr. by E. A. Cabitt.
-1902.
-
- Scene: West of Ireland. A story for children, about a girl and
- boy of an adventurous turn, relating their doings while living
- with their grandmother and their nurse, their parents being
- away in Africa.
-
-⸺ THE TRAGEDY OF CHRIS: The Story of a Dublin Flower-Girl. (_Sands_).
-[1903]. Second ed., 2_s._ 6_d._ 1914.
-
- Sheelia, the little workhouse girl, is boarded out with Mary
- Ellen Brady, and lives a happy life with her in her cottage in
- the fold of the hills. But Mary Ellen dies, and Sheelia, to
- escape dependence on the worthless cousins of her dead “Mammy,”
- runs away to Dublin. Here she is friendless and penniless
- till she becomes a flower-girl under the tutorship of Chris.
- Tragedy comes when Chris disappears (she had been decoyed away
- to London and made a “white slave”), and Sheelia makes it her
- life work to find her again. She does so, but in the saddest
- circumstances. The pitiful story is told with perfect delicacy.
- Scene: Dublin, various other parts of Ireland, and London.
-
-⸺ THE STORY OF ELLEN. Pp. 434. (_Burns & Oates_). 5_s._ 1907.
-
- This is a reprint of an earlier story entitled _Dunmara_
- (Smith, Elder), _q.v._
-
-⸺ OUR SISTER MAISIE. Pp. 383. (_Blackie_). 6_s._ Illustr. by G. Demain
-Hammond, R.I. 1907.
-
- Maisie, aged eighteen, comes from Rome to take charge of a
- whole family of step-brothers and sisters. She owns an island
- off the West coast. The family goes there. The children, after
- many vicissitudes, turn out clever, develope special aptitudes,
- and put these to use in helping the poor islanders in various
- ways. There is a pretty love-story towards the close.
-
-⸺ COUSIN SARA. Pp. 399. (_Blackie_). 6_s._ Eight fine illustr. by Frances
-Ewan. 1908.
-
- An ideal love-story woven into a strong plot. There is tragedy
- and humour with touches of heroism. High ideals are set forth.
- The scene varies between the North of Ireland, Italy, and
- London. The central idea of the story is this: Sara’s father, a
- retired soldier, has a talent for the invention of machinery.
- One of his inventions is stolen, and then patented by one whom
- he had trusted. Then Sara shows her true worth.
-
-⸺ A GIRL’S IDEAL. Pp. 399. (_Blackie_). Bound in solid gift-book style;
-cover attractive though not in perfect taste; many illustr. 1908.
-
- Tells how an Irish-American girl comes to Ireland to spend a
- huge fortune to the greatest advantage of her country. There
- is also a love interest. Incidentally there is a description
- of the Dublin Horse Show; a number of folklore tales are
- told by Duncie, and there are good descriptions of Connaught
- scenery. The book is rather crowded with somewhat characterless
- personages, and there are improbabilities not a few.
-
-⸺ THE GIRLS OF BANSHEE CASTLE. Pp. 384. (_Blackie_). 3_s._ 6_d._ Illustr.
-by John Bacon. _n.d._
-
- Three girls, brought up in poverty by a governess in London,
- migrate to Galway to occupy the castle, pending the discovery
- of the missing heir. The latter turns up, but is not what he
- was thought to be, and there are complications. The girls hear
- a great deal of folk-lore and legend from the servants and from
- the peasantry.
-
-⸺ CYNTHIA’S BONNET SHOP. (_Blackie_). 5_s._ Eight illustr. by G. Demain
-Hammond, R.I.
-
- “Cynthia, daughter of an impoverished Connaught family, wants
- to support a delicate mother. She and her star-struck sister
- go to London, where Cynthia opens a bonnet shop. How they
- find new interests in life is told with mingled humour and
- pathos.”—(_Publ._).
-
-⸺ GIANNETTA: A Girl’s Story of Herself. (_Blackie_). 3_s._ Six full-page
-illustr. by Lockhart Bogle.
-
- “The story of a changeling who is suddenly transferred to
- the position of a rich English heiress. She develops into
- a good and accomplished woman, and has gained too much
- love and devotion to be a sufferer by the surrender of her
- estates.”—(_Publ._).
-
-⸺ THE RETURN OF MARY O’MURROUGH. Pp. 282. (_Sands_). 2_s._ (N.Y.:
-_Benziger_). 0.75. [1908]. Cheap ed., 1915.
-
- Illustrated by twelve exceptionally good photos of Irish
- scenery and types. Scene: near Killarney. The girl comes back
- from the States to find her lover in jail, into which he had
- been thrown owing to the perjury and treachery of some of the
- police. We shall not reveal the sequel. The story is told with
- a simplicity and restraint which render the pathos all the
- more telling. It is faithful to reality, deeply Catholic, and
- wholly on the side of the peasantry, of whose situation under
- iniquitous laws a picture is drawn which can only be described
- as exasperating.
-
-⸺ THE WICKED WOODS. Pp. 373. (_Burns & Oates_). New ed. 1909.
-
- The hero is a scion of a family in which a curse, uttered
- against one of its founders by poor peasants whom he had
- dispossessed, had worked ruin for many generations. He is
- wholly unlike his ancestors, yet he, too, in a strange and
- tragic manner, falls under the influence of the curse—for
- a time. The story tells how he escapes from the terrible
- trial. Incidentally the best qualities of the peasantry are
- beautifully shown forth, especially the charity of the poor to
- one another.
-
-⸺ THE O’SHAUGHNESSY GIRLS. Pp. 383. (_Blackie_). 6_s._ Eight pleasant
-half-tone ill. by G. Demain Hammond. (N.Y.: _Benziger_). 1.50. 1910.
-
- Scene: partly in London, partly by the Blackwater, in Munster,
- where live Lady Sibyl O’Shaughnessy and her two unmarried
- daughters. Of these latter, Lavender lives at home, takes an
- interest in things Gaelic, and has fireside ceilidhes. The
- other, Bell, runs away and goes on the stage. The search for
- Bell and the discovery of the identity of a mysterious boy on
- the O’S. farm constitute the main incidents of a delightful
- story. There is a love interest. The moral of the whole (not
- too obtrusive) is “Do the work that’s nearest, though it’s dull
- at times.”
-
-⸺ FATHER TIM. Pp. 314 (large print). (_Sands_). 2_s._ 6_d._ net. One
-coloured illustr. (_Benziger_). 0.90. 1910. Still in print.
-
- Father T. is a zealous curate, first in a Dublin mountain
- parish, afterwards in a parish among the Dublin slums. The
- interest centres in his influence and work among upper and
- lower classes alike. The story tells, too, of the varying
- fortunes of other people that come into his life. Harrowing
- pictures are drawn of the Dublin slums. Written with the
- Author’s habitual literary charm. The plot is slight, but the
- incidents follow one another rapidly and the interest does not
- flag.
-
-⸺ FAIR NOREEN: the Story of a Girl of Character. (_Blackie_). 6_s._
-Illustr. by G. Demain Hammond. (N.Y.: _Benziger_). 1.50. 1911.
-
-⸺ TWIN SISTERS: An Irish Tale. Pp. 392. (_Blackie_). 6_s._ 1912.
-
-⸺ NORAH OF WATERFORD. Pp. 251. (_Sands_). 3_s._ 6_d._ 1915.
-
- A republication of _Onora_.
-
-
-=MURPHY, Con. T.=
-
-⸺ THE MILLER OF GLANMIRE: an Irish Story. Pp. 227. (CHICAGO: _Baker_).
-Illustr. 1895.
-
-
-=MURPHY, James.= B. Glynn, Co. Carlow, 1839. Ed. locally. He entered
-the teaching profession, and was for some years Principal of the
-Public Schools at Bray, Co. Wicklow, being appointed in 1860. He was
-successively Town Clerk of Bray and Prof. of Mathematics in Cath. Univ.
-and in Blackrock Coll. He resides in Kingstown. He has written more than
-twenty-five novels, eleven of which have been published. Others he hopes
-to publish in the near future.
-
-⸺ THE HAUNTED CHURCH. (LOND.: _Spencer Blackett_). 4 eds.
-
- The story of a treasure buried by buccaneers in an old
- graveyard near Dublin, telling how the chief characters of the
- tale, after many exciting adventures in Peru at the time of the
- revolution there, eventually find the treasure and also the
- heir to the earldom of Glenholme.
-
-⸺ THE SHAN VAN VOCHT: a Tale of ’98. Pp. 347. (_Gill_). 2_s._ 6_d._
-_n.d._ [1883]. Several since.
-
- A melodramatic story, full of hairbreadth escapes, related with
- a good deal of dash, and at times of power. Tells of Tone’s
- negotiations in Paris leading to the various attempted French
- invasions of Ireland, with a detailed and vivid account of
- that in which Admiral Bompart was defeated in Lough Swilly and
- Tone himself captured, also details of the latter’s trial and
- execution.
-
-⸺ THE FORGE OF CLOHOGUE. Pp. 332. (_Sealy, Bryers, and Gill_). [1885].
-5th ed., 1912.
-
- The story opens on Christmas Eve, 1797, and ends with the
- battle of Ross, including very stirring descriptions of the
- battle there and at Oulart. As is usual with this Author, the
- plot is somewhat loose, there are improbabilities, and the love
- interest is of a stereotyped kind; yet the reader is carried
- along by the quick succession of exciting incident. Of course
- the standpoint is national. A good idea is given of the state
- of the country at the time.
-
-⸺ THE HOUSE IN THE RATH. Pp. 291. (_Sealy, Bryers_). 2_s._ [1886]. Fifth
-ed., 1909.
-
- Has the usual qualities of this Author’s stories: plenty of
- exciting and dramatic incident, and stirring descriptions—among
- the latter the battle of Camperdown. Deals with Wolfe Tone’s
- efforts to obtain aid from France for the United Irishmen and
- with the plans of the latter at home. Lord Edward Fitzgerald
- and Oliver Bond appear. There are pictures, too, of the
- atrocities of the yeomanry. Interwoven with these events there
- is a romance of private life centering in the cleverly drawn
- characters of Teague, the Fiddler, and Kate Hatchman. As usual,
- the Author makes much use of “the long arm of coincidence.”
-
-⸺ CONVICT No. 25; or, The Clearances of Westmeath. Pp. 324. (_Duffy_).
-3_s._ 6_d._ [1886]. Fifth ed., 1913.
-
- Depicts landlordism in its worst days and at its worst—about
- forty or fifty years ago. A complicated and somewhat
- melodramatic plot in which probability is a good deal strained.
- A slight love story runs through the book.
-
-⸺ THE FORTUNES OF MAURICE O’DONNELL. 1887, and two others since.
-
-⸺ HUGH ROACH, THE RIBBONMAN. (_Duffy_). 1_s._ [_c._ 1887]. Fourth ed.,
-1909.
-
- One of the most popular of the author’s stories. The
- leading incidents are founded on occurrences of the time.
- Full of thrilling and dramatic situations and historical
- pictures.—(FREEMAN).
-
-⸺ LUKE TALBOT. Pp. 278. (_Sealy, Bryers_). 1_s._ 1890. Sixth ed. in
-preparation.
-
- A sensational story, filled, without any interval of dullness,
- with exciting adventures—sea battles, wrecks, hairbreadth
- escapes, fighting under Wellington in Spain, &c., &c. The
- main theme is a murder committed by a wicked land agent in
- Ireland—Malcolm M’Nab—and of which Luke is suspected on strong
- circumstantial evidence. All through the book, until just the
- end, M’Nab is on top, but right finally triumphs. There is no
- attempt at character drawing and very little probability.
-
-⸺ THE FLIGHT FROM THE CLIFFS. Pp. 266. (_Duffy_). 1911.
-
- Author’s avowed intention—to present Irish and Catholic view
- of the Confederation War. With the political and military
- events of the time in mingled the romance of Walter Butler
- (the hero), who is on the Confederate side, and the daughter
- of Inchiquin. Owen Roe and Father Luke Wadding are prominent
- in the tale. Careful description of Benburb. Scene laid in
- many parts of Ireland (Dublin, Wicklow, Cork, Donegal, &c.),
- and in Spain and Rome. Full of exciting adventures, battles,
- sieges, &c. Illustr. very numerous. They are crude, but serve
- to enliven the narrative.
-
-⸺ LAYS AND LEGENDS OF IRELAND. (_Duffy_). 1912.
-
- Twelve in prose and five in verse. Includes two of Author’s
- best short stories—“Maureen’s Sorrow” and “At Noon by the
- Ravine,” as well as several of his best known ballads.
-
-⸺ THE INSIDE PASSENGER. (_Duffy_). 1913.
-
- The mail coach from Limerick is overtaken by a snow-storm
- near the old castle of Bullock, near Dalkey, and held up by
- a snowdrift. Passengers have to get out and shelter in the
- castle. To while away the time they tell stories each more
- weird and wonderful than the preceding, and all referring
- indirectly to the Inside Passenger. Towards morning the I. P.,
- the coachman, and the six brass-bound boxes are found to have
- disappeared. The story tells what befell on the head of this
- and how the mystery was finally solved.
-
-
-=MURPHY, Nicholas P.= D. 1914. Ed. Clongowes Wood College. Was a member
-of the English Bar.
-
-⸺ A CORNER IN BALLYBEG. Pp. 256. (_Long_). 6_s._ 1902.
-
- A collection of short, humorous sketches of life in a midland
- village in Ireland at the present day. The dialect is well
- done. The book is not written in a spirit of caricature.
-
-
-=MURRAY, John Fisher.= B. Belfast, 1811. Ed. there and T.C.D. Wrote much
-for Irish and English periodicals, including the NATION and the UNITED
-IRISHMAN. D. Dublin, 1865.
-
-⸺ THE VICEROY. Three Vols. (LOND.). 1841.
-
- Deals with Dublin official life, satirizing it unmercifully.
- First appeared in BLACKWOOD’S MAGAZINE. The Author was born in
- Belfast in 1811; died 1865. Wrote for the NATION, the UNITED
- IRISHMAN (1848), the DUBLIN UNIVERSITY MAGAZINE, &c. Graduated
- M.A. in T.C.D., 1832.
-
-
-=NAUGHTON, William.=
-
-⸺ THE PRIEST’S BOY: a Story of Irish Rural Life. (DUBLIN: _Hunter_).
-1_s._ 1914.
-
-
-=NEVILLE, Elizabeth O’Reilly.=
-
-⸺ FATHER TOM OF CONNEMARA. (N.Y.: _Rand, McNally Co._). $1.50. Illustr.
-[1902]. 1903.
-
- Rural life in W. of Ireland.
-
-
-=NEVILLE, Ralph.=
-
-⸺ LLOYD PENNANT: a Tale of the West. Two Vols. (_Chapman & Hall_). 1864.
-
- First ran as a serial in “Duffy’s Hibernian Magazine,” 1863.
- Well-written and exciting melodrama, with a good plot, but very
- quiet and plain in style. The hero, who bears an assumed name,
- and is really heir of an old Anglo-Irish family, joins the
- British navy. He is unjustly accused of disloyalty and intimacy
- with Lord Edward Fitzgerald. But all ends well, including his
- love affair with Kate Blake, daughter of a family that plays a
- principal part in the story. The Humbert invasion is touched
- upon, especially the Castlebar “Races.” There is a good deal
- about the ways of gombeen men and middlemen in the West.
- Sympathies national. Wrote also _The Squire’s Heir_, 1881.
-
-
-=NEWCOMEN, George.=
-
-⸺ A LEFT-HANDED SWORDSMAN: a Romance of the Eighteenth Century. Pp. 239.
-(_Smithers_). 6_s._ 1900.
-
- The life and doings of Cicely Grattan and of her adopted son
- Victor La Roche, a noble and generous youth, brave and skilled
- in sword-play—examples respectively of womanly virtue and manly
- character. The interest centres chiefly in Cicely’s wrecked
- love affairs and in Victor’s successful ones. Abundance of
- incident sustains the interest throughout, and the book gives a
- fairly good picture of society in the Dublin of the day, with
- not a little reference to its loose morals.
-
-
-=NEWTON, W. Douglas.=
-
-⸺ THE NORTH AFIRE. Pp. 204. (_Methuen_). 2_s._ 1914.
-
- Sub-t.: “A non-political story of Ulster’s war.” By a Catholic
- Conservative.
-
-
-=NOBLE, Mrs. Nicholas; [Madge Irwin].=
-
-⸺ DRUIDEAN THE MYSTIC, and Other Irish Stories. Pp. 93. Sq. 12mo.
-(DUNDALK: _W. Tempest_). 1_s._ 6_d._ 1913.
-
- Three little stories, only the last of which has a definite
- plot, and a poem. They deal with peasant life. They are told
- in a dialect which is not very sure of itself nor very true to
- reality. The nine little illustrations by J. E. Corr and the
- excellent printing and general get-up make the book very dainty.
-
-
-=NOBLE, E.=
-
-⸺ AN IRISH DECADE. Pp. 110. (_Digby, Long_). _n.d._ (1891).
-
- Three stories:—1. “The O’Donol (_sic_) Rent,” 1879-80; 2.
- “Rosie,” 1885; 3. “By Kerry Moonlight,” 1889. 1. How a
- thriftless young farmer went in for anti-rent agitation and
- brought ruin on himself and his young wife. 2. Story of a
- resisted eviction ending in tragedy. 3. The “moonlighter” phase
- of the land war. All three stories are written to show the
- wickedness and the uncalled for nature of the land agitation.
- They are nicely written and constitute a clever piece of
- special pleading. In 2, the priest is represented as “heartily
- sympathetic with the Cause but utterly unsympathetic with
- gratuitous demonstrations of mass violence.”
-
-
-=O’BRIEN, Charlotte Grace.= B. 1845. A dau. of William Smith O’Brien, the
-Young Ireland leader who in 1848 was condemned to death for high treason,
-a sentence afterwards commuted to transportation. Lived nearly all her
-life in Co. Limerick. Worked strenuously on behalf of Irish emigrants.
-Took active part in Nationalist politics and in the Gaelic League. Became
-a Catholic towards the end of her life. D. 1905. See _Charlotte Grace
-O’Brien, Selections from her Writings and Correspondence_, with a memoir
-by Stephen Gwynn [her nephew]. (_Maunsel_). 1909.
-
-⸺ DOMINICK’S TRIALS: an Irish Story. Pp. 120. (_Gall & Inglis_). _n.d._
-(1870).
-
- A little tract in story form, telling how Dominick was
- converted by his Bible, lost his job as farmer’s scarecrow,
- converts his sister Judy, and is sent with her to a Protestant
- orphanage in England, after which “they never lost an
- opportunity of turning any poor benighted Roman Catholic to the
- light of God’s truth.”
-
-⸺ LIGHT AND SHADE. Two Vols. Pp. 287, 256. (_Kegan, Paul_). 1878.
-
- A tale of the Fenian rising by the daughter of William Smith
- O’Brien. A double love story runs through the book. The
- descriptions of the scenery of the Shannon and neighbouring
- districts are derived from livelong observations. Tone pure and
- healthy, dialect perfect. Of this story Stephen Gwynn says:
- “Violent, even melodramatic, in incident, it lacks the power of
- characterisation, but it has many passages of beauty.... She
- worked largely upon material gathered from the lips of men who
- had been actors in the Fenian rising.”
-
-
-=O’BRIEN, Dillon.= B. 1817, at Kilmore, Co. Roscommon. Ed. at St.
-Stanislaus Coll., Tullabeg. Went to U.S.A. and settled in St. Paul, Minn.
-Wrote a good deal of verse and several novels of Irish-American life. D.
-1882. His serial _Dead Broke_, in the IRISH MONTHLY of 1882, is a good
-example of his pleasant, gay manner of telling a story.
-
-⸺ THE DALYS OF DALYSTOWN. (U.S.A., ST. PAUL). 1866.
-
-⸺ FRANK BLAKE. (U.S.A., ST. PAUL). 1876.
-
-
-=O’BRIEN, FitzJames.=
-
-⸺ THE POEMS AND STORIES OF FITZJAMES O’BRIEN. Pp. lxii. + 485. (BOSTON:
-_Osgood_). 1881.
-
- Coll. and ed., with sketch of Author, by W. Winter. FitzJames
- O’Brien was one of the most distinguished of Irish-American
- writers. B. Limerick, 1838. Ed. T.C.D. D. 1862. He is a master
- of the weird and eerie, after the manner of Lefanu (_q.v._)
- and Poe. His prose works are little if at all concerned with
- Ireland.
-
-⸺ THE DIAMOND LENS, and Other Stories. (LOND.). 1887.
-
- Sketch of Author prefixed. Contains no Irish stories.
-
-
-=O’BRIEN, Hon. Georgina.= Eldest dau. of the late Lord O’Brien of
-Kilfenora, Lord Chief Justice of Ireland.
-
-⸺ THE HEART OF THE PEASANT, and Other Stories. Pp. 277. (_Sisley_). 6_s._
-1908.
-
- Twelve stories of various types. Some have a slight meaning
- behind the mere tale. Four or five do not concern Ireland, and
- several others do not touch peasant life. The tone is on the
- whole sympathetic towards the external aspects of Catholicism.
- The stories do not deal in politics or in problems. They are
- chiefly little aspects of life and feeling. The last and
- longest is a very modern story of the love affair of Rev. Mark
- Dibbs and a certain Lady Glynn.
-
-⸺ A TWENTIETH CENTURY HERO. Pp. 308. (_Maunsel_). 6_s._ 1913.
-
- The scene and most of the characters of this story are
- English. Some Irish interest, however, is afforded by Mr. and
- Mrs. Flanagan, the latter bright, thrifty, busy; the former
- of the happy-go-lucky type, content to let his wife do the
- bread-winning.
-
-
-=O’BRIEN, Morrough.=
-
-⸺ THE LEAGUE OF THE RING and TORN APART. (_Ireland’s Own Library_). 6_d._
-_n.d._ (1914).
-
- Exciting stories of mysteries unravelled by the great Irish
- detective, Dermod O’Donovan. Villainy is defeated and
- couples are happily married. Quite healthy in tone, but very
- sensational. The scene is Belfast and neighbourhood.
-
-
-=O’BRIEN, Mgr. Richard Baptist; “Father Baptist.”= B. at Carrick-on-Suir,
-1809. D. 1885. A distinguished priest, who was Dean of Limerick. Was
-well-known in religious and philanthropic works. He wrote poems for the
-NATION under the pen-name of “Baptist.”
-
-⸺ AILEY MOORE. Pp. 311. (_Duffy_). 3_s._ 6_d._ [1856]. Fifth ed. _n.d._
-(N.Y.: _Benziger_). 0.60.
-
- Period: the years before and after ’48. Plot pleasant, but
- main interest abundance of side incidents, character studies
- and details of Irish life, introduced chiefly to picture the
- evils of misgovernment prevailing at the time. The style is
- agreeable, though there are rather lengthy moralizings. It was
- advertised by Dolman as “showing how Eviction, Murder, and such
- like pastimes are managed and Justice administered in Ireland.”
-
-⸺ JACK HAZLITT, A.M. Pp. 380. (_Duffy_). Third ed. _n.d._ Still in print.
-(N.Y.: _Benziger_). 0.60. [1875].
-
- The Preface tells us that Jack Hazlitt, whose fortunes are
- followed in this book, was a real person known to the Author,
- and that many of the adventures recorded are true. Scene:
- first, banks of Shannon (King’s County or Westmeath), then
- America. Story of sensational kind, but with many moral
- lessons, often verging on homilies, directed chiefly against
- free-thought and undenominational education.
-
-⸺ THE D’ALTONS OF CRAG. Pp. 283. (_Duffy_). 2_s._ 1882. (N.Y.:
-_Benziger_). 0.60. [1882].
-
- A tale laid in a time of helplessness and hopelessness, in
- which the Author gives “many illustrations of the beautiful and
- devoted love that has ever bound together the people and the
- priests of Ireland.”—(_Pref._). The Author tells us that every
- one of the main incidents is based on fact, and that many of
- the characters are portraits of real persons. The story is told
- with great vigour, and is full of diversified incident of no
- humdrum or commonplace character.—(IRISH MONTHLY).
-
-
-=O’BRIEN, William.= B. Mallow, Co. Cork, 1852. Ed. Cloyne diocesan
-seminary and Queen’s Coll., Cork. Early engaged in journalism. He long
-edited UNITED IRELAND, to which he contributed much prose and verse. He
-is one of the best known and most remarkable of modern Irish politicians.
-He has been prosecuted nine times for political offences, and spent more
-than two years in prison, where _When We Were Boys_ was written. Has been
-Member of Parliament, except for short intervals, since 1883.
-
-⸺ WHEN WE WERE BOYS. Pp. 550. (_Longmans_). 6_s._ 1890. Frequently
-republished.
-
- One of the most remarkable of Irish novels. A tale of Ireland
- in Fenian times. Scene: Glengarriff, Co. Cork. A very brilliant
- book, sparkling with epigram and metaphor. Full of criticism,
- argument, thought and dream about Ireland. The story itself is
- strong in romantic and human interest. The characterization is
- full of life and reality, yet many of the characters are types.
- In the course of the tale many aspects of Irish life, among
- all classes, pass in review. There are many touches of satire.
- Over all the characters and scenes the author’s exuberant
- imagination has cast a glare as of the footlights, making them
- stand out in vivid colours and clear outlines. Yet there is
- little or no distortion or misrepresentation. The Author’s
- sympathies are strongly nationalist and Catholic, yet national
- failings are not blinked, and some of the portraits of priests
- are distinctly satirical. The central interest, perhaps, is the
- romantic excitement, enthusiasm, and exaltation of an impending
- rising.
-
-⸺ A QUEEN OF MEN. Pp. 321. (_Unwin_). [1898]. Third ed., 1899. There is a
-cheap ed. in paper covers.
-
- Scene: Galway City, Clare Island, and the opposite coast, just
- before the great War of the Earls. A very highly-coloured
- romance, full of flashy and dramatic sensation, told with an
- exuberance of language that sometimes exceeds, but at times
- is very effective. Some of the descriptive pieces are quite
- above the common and attain remarkable vividness. The book was
- written in the midst of the scenes described. An effective
- device to secure colour is the frequent interjection of Gaelic
- phrases phonetically spelt. The heroine of the tale is the
- famous Gránia Ni Mháille, who appears not only as dauntless
- sea-queen of the O’Malleys, but above all in her womanly
- character. Fitzwilliam, Bingham, and Perrott also appear,
- the last as a hero. Though many of the incidents are quite
- fictitious and few happened exactly as narrated, yet some of
- those which might seem most incredible to anyone unacquainted
- with the State Papers could be paralleled by real happenings.
- Some of the incidents narrated are: the Composition of
- Connaught, the disgrace of Perrott, the wrecking of the Armada
- on the Connaught coast, Gránia’s visit to Elizabeth. With
- Gránia’s love story is entwined another, that of Cahal O’Malley
- and Nuala O’Donnell.
-
-
-=O’BRIEN, Mrs. W.= Wife of preceding; _née_ Sophie, dau. of Herman
-Raffalovich, of Paris. She is a convert to Catholicism, and a thoroughly
-naturalised Irishwoman for many years past. She has written also a book
-of reminiscences, _Under Croagh Patrick_. I have also seen mentioned as
-by her a book entitled _Amidst Mayo Bogs_.
-
-⸺ ROSETTE: a Tale of Dublin and Paris. Pp. 266. (_Burns & Oates_). 1907.
-
- Diary of Rosette, only child of a Parisian bourgeois family.
- Deals chiefly with the life of this family in Paris, and
- afterwards in Dublin. There is no sensationalism. Rosette’s
- religious development is thoughtfully worked out, and there is
- good character-drawing (_e.g._, Rosette’s artistically inclined
- mother and the old servant, Mélanie). The point of view is, of
- course, distinctly feminine. The style is pretty and graceful.
-
-
-=O’BYRNE, Dermot.=
-
-⸺ CHILDREN OF THE HILLS. Pp. 148. (_Maunsel_). 2_s._ 6_d._ _n.d._ [1913].
-
- Seven stories reprinted from THE IRISH REVIEW and ORPHEUS
- (an art periodical). They belong to the literary movement
- associated with the Abbey Theatre. They have the weird
- imaginativeness and the flavour of the occult and uncanny of
- Yeats’s prose stories, together with the vivid word-painting
- of “Fiona McLeod.” The Author delights in the portrayal of
- primitive and savage passions on the one hand, and on the other
- in the suggestion of the wild landscapes, rock-strewn and
- mist-shrouded, of Western Donegal (_e.g._, Glencolumbcille, in
- “Ancient Dominions”). These stories of pure fancy are strangely
- interwoven with settings of extreme realism—drunken tinkers,
- peasants, &c. Only here and there have we remarks like the
- following (p. 123):—“But those who are intimate with the soul
- of the Gaelic peasant know that the God of the Christian is
- only one amongst a Pantheon of hidden dominations lovely and
- terrible, though the priest at the altar may thunder anathemas
- from a fettered intelligence,” &c. The reviewer in the TIMES
- LIT. SUPPL. pointed out the real defect of these stories—they
- are wanting in heart.
-
-
-=O’BYRNE, D.=
-
-⸺ THE SISTERS AND GREEN MAGIC. Pp. 76. (_Daniel_). 2_s._ 6_d._ net. 1912.
-
-
-=O’BYRNE, M. L.=
-
-⸺ THE PALE AND THE SEPTS. Two Vols. (_Gill_). [1876].
-
- The design is to illustrate, in all its cruelty, treachery,
- greed, and unscrupulousness, the steady advance of the English
- settlement. Yet by no means all the English are painted as
- villains. We are shown the forces of government at work at
- home in the Castle. Careful portraits of Archbishop Loftus
- and the old Earl of Kildare. Descriptions of battle of
- Glenmalure, Hungerford’s massacre at Baltinglass, the capture
- and recapture of Glenchree, &c., &c. Fine description of
- scenery, _e.g._, Gougane Barra. The religious persecutions
- are vividly portrayed. Highly praised by the ATHENÆUM. The
- original sub-title was “Or, The Baron of Belgard and the Chiefs
- of Glenmalure. A Romance of the 16th Century, by Emelobie de
- Celtis.”
-
-⸺ LEIXLIP CASTLE. Pp. 649. (_Gill_). [1883]. Others since.
-
- Period: years 1690 _sqq._ Deals with battle of Boyne, flight
- of James II., sieges of Limerick and Athlone, the battle of
- Aughrim—all fully and vividly described. Standpoint: strongly
- national and Catholic. Gives pleasant insight into the
- private lives of some Catholic families at the time and their
- difficulties with Protestant neighbours. Narrative somewhat
- tedious and slow-moving.
-
-⸺ ILL-WON PEERAGES; or, An Unhallowed Union. Pp. 716. (_Gill_). 1884.
-
- At the outset of this book we are introduced in a series of
- pictures to the homes of representative people of various
- parties, and long, imaginary political conversations between
- the prominent men of the time are given. Then there is a full
- account of the rebellion from the battle of Kilcullen to
- Vinegar Hill. Practically every noteworthy personage of the
- time is described in private and in public life. The romantic
- interest is entirely subservient to the historical, yet there
- is plenty of adventure. The bias is ultra-nationalist. The
- style, and especially the descriptions, were highly praised by
- a reviewer in the TABLET.
-
-⸺ ART MACMURROUGH O’KAVANAGH. Pp. 706. (_Gill_). [1885].
-
- A full account of the life and exploits of Art MacMurrough,
- with many adventures of fictitious characters, and much
- description of the manners and life of the times within and
- without the Pale. In the conversations the Author attempts to
- reproduce the spoken English of the time, with a lamentable
- result. They are full of _yclept_, _eftsoons_, _by my halidom_,
- _marry_, &c., &c., so as to be unintelligible at times. The
- speech of the Irish characters is nearly as full of Gaelic
- expressions. “Many of the events narrated in this story are
- supplied from tradition,” says the Author. But she has been at
- much pains to utilize undoubtedly authentic sources. The style,
- on the whole, is pleasant.
-
-⸺ THE COURT OF RATH CROGHAN. Pp. 465. (_Gill_). 2_s._ 6_d._ 1887.
-
- The story of the Norman Invasion of Ireland, together with the
- series of events that led to it, and the consequences that
- followed, the central idea being that it was the treachery and
- disunion of her own princes that wrought the ruin of Ireland.
- All the chief men connected with the events narrated play
- prominent parts in the story. St. Laurence O’Toole is finely
- drawn. The last Ard Righ, Roderick, is shown weak and unfit to
- rule in perilous times. Strongbow is a leading character; his
- death is vividly described. Art MacMurrough is, of course, the
- villain. The style is somewhat highflown and often loaded with
- antiquated phrases and latinized expressions. Yet the story,
- apart from its historical value, which is considerable, has a
- strong interest of its own.
-
-⸺ LORD ROCHE’S DAUGHTERS OF FERMOY. Pp. 344. (_Sealy, Bryers_). (N.Y.:
-_Pratt_). 1.50. 1892.
-
- In the course of this romance the whole history of the Wars of
- the Confederation of Kilkenny and of the Cromwellian Invasion
- is related. The story is described by the Author as “a very
- encyclopædia of tragedies.” The Author is strongly on the side
- of Owen Roe O’Neill as against the Confederate Catholics of the
- Pale, and, of course, the Puritans. A fine series of adventures
- and of historical pictures, but spoiled by frequent lapses from
- literary good taste.
-
-
-=O’BYRNE, W. Lorcan.= B. in Dublin, 1845. Son of Christopher O’Byrne, of
-Ballinacor, Co. Wicklow. Delighted from earliest youth in Irish lore of
-all kinds. Held a position in the Education Office during the greater
-part of his life. D. 1913. His books, though popular in style, were the
-result of much patient research.
-
-⸺ A LAND OF HEROES. Pp. 224. (_Blackie_). 2_s._ 6_d._ Well illustr. by J.
-H. Bacon. (N.Y.: _Scribners_). 1.25. 1899.
-
- “Intended to reach the level of children.” Very interesting
- Introduction. The book is a series of Irish hero tales from
- various cycles, including the best-known (Sons of Tuirean, Lir,
- Usnach, &c.), and the Romance of the early kings very much as
- in Miss Hull’s _Pagan Ireland_. The book contains a larger
- number of tales than any other except the most expensive. The
- bare story is told without any attempt to work up the materials
- into poetic or dramatic form.
-
-⸺ KINGS AND VIKINGS. Pp. 240. (_Blackie_). 2_s._ 6_d._ Six illustr. by
-Paul Hardy. _n.d._ (1900). (N.Y.: _Scribners_). 1.25.
-
- Drawn from published translations of Gaelic MSS., _e.g._,
- Standish H. O’Grady’s _Silva Gadelica_; Dr. Todd’s edition
- of the _Wars of the Gael and Gall_; Dr. O’Donovan’s _Battle
- of Magh Rath_, &c. Contents: stories of early Christian
- times, chiefly from the lives of St. Patrick, St. Brigid, St.
- Columbkille, and St. Brendan; the trial of the Bards; the
- battles of Dunbolg, Moira, &c.; stories of the Danish invasions
- and in particular of Brian Borumha. Full of good information,
- but not strong in narrative interest.
-
-⸺ CHILDREN OF KINGS. Pp. 240. (_Blackie_). 2_s._ 6_d._ Illustr. by Paul
-Hardy. 1904.
-
- “The aim of this book is to present tales from Three Cycles of
- Romance, viz., the Cuchulain, the Ossianic, and the Arthurian,
- interwoven after the manner of a Celtic design” (Introduction).
- The chief characters of the three cycles appear in various
- stories (there are thirty-one in all). A truly wonderful
- knowledge of the period embraced by these tales is displayed in
- the book, but the glamour of romance and the magic of words are
- wanting.
-
-⸺ THE KNIGHT OF THE CAVE; or, The Quest of the Pallium. Pp. 248.
-(_Blackie_). 2_s._ 6_d._ Six illustr. by Paul Hardy. 1906.
-
- A thin thread of narrative connecting much interesting and
- valuable information about historical events and about the life
- of the people at the period. The hero passes from England, then
- laid waste by the wars of Stephen’s reign, to Ireland, where
- we are shown in great detail the civil and ecclesiastical life
- of the day. Thence he accompanies St. Malachi to Clairvaux on
- a visit to St. Bernard. Then he visits Italy—Tivoli, Horace’s
- Sabine Farm, and Rome, whose antiquities are described at
- length. Finally, he returns to Ireland, whose state is again
- dwelt upon. The narrative is relieved by exciting adventures
- and by stories told incidentally. The Author’s erudition is
- extensive and accurate. The title refers to St. Patrick’s
- Purgatory, Lough Derg.
-
-⸺ THE FALCON KING. Pp. 240. (_Blackie_). 2_s._ 6_d._ Six illustr. by Paul
-Hardy. Picture Cover. 1907.
-
- “A series of historical episodes (beginning in Wales, 1146),
- vignettes of contemporary life, and stories from Celtic
- and Icelandic sagas and Norman French _chansons de geste_,
- illustrating events, manners, and religion.... Shows Henry II.
- and his barons engaged in the conquest of Ireland, and gives
- a good account of Dermot MacMurrough, and also of life in
- Dublin.”—(_Baker_, 2).
-
-
-=[O’CONNELL, Mrs. K. E.]=, of Leenane, Co. Galway; =“Aroon.”=
-
-⸺ NOREEN DHAS. Pp. 62. (_Sealy, Bryers_). 1_s._ 1902.
-
- A pretty love-story of Connemara (the Killaries). The Author is
- for the language movement, and strongly opposed to the bargain
- marriages of the West.
-
-⸺ WHITE HEATHER. Pp. 62. (_Sealy, Bryers_). 1_s._ 1903.
-
- Three tales of Connemara. The first is a graceful little fairy
- story, the third a story of faithful love.
-
-
-=O’CONNOR, Barry.=
-
-⸺ TURF-FIRE STORIES, and Fairy Tales of Ireland. Pp. 405. (N.Y.:
-_Kenedy_). 0.63. Illustr. with woodcuts. 1890.
-
- “The greater number of the following sketches are original;
- the others have been transcribed, and in most cases materially
- altered, from the musty pages of some ‘Quaint and curious
- volumes of forgotten lore.’” (Pref.) Most of the stories
- are comic. The persons and incidents are mostly drawn from
- peasant life. Most of them are capitally told. A few are
- somewhat journalistic and hurriedly written. There is no
- caricaturing nor “Stage Irishism.” Some are legends of places,
- others typical fairy or folk tales. There are a large number
- of woodcuts, which, however, have no connection with the
- letter-press.
-
-
-=[O’CONNOR, Joseph K.]; “Heblon.”=
-
-⸺ STUDIES IN BLUE. (_Sealy, Bryers_). 2_s._ Illustr. by C. A. Mills.
-_n.d._ (_c._ 1903).
-
- Sketches, true to life, and cleverly told, of the most
- disreputable side of Dublin slum-life, as seen, chiefly, in the
- Police Courts. Amusing, but at times verging on vulgarity.
-
-
-=O’DONNELL, Lucy.=
-
-⸺ ST. PATRICK’S CATHEDRAL. Pp. 86. (DUBLIN: _Curry_). 1855.
-
- The fortunes of the house of Desmond in the 16th century,
- and chiefly those of Lord James Fitzgerald (son of the great
- Earl) who became a Protestant, and was therefore rejected
- by his people and retired to England. The story opens with
- a Protestant service in St. Patrick’s Cathedral in 1581. It
- contains interesting allusions to Glendalough, Dublin, and
- Adare. Author’s viewpoint Protestant.
-
-
-=O’DONOGHUE, ⸺.=
-
-⸺ THE PRINCE OF KILLARNEY. (LONDON).
-
-
-=O’DONOVAN, Gerald.=
-
-⸺ FATHER RALPH. Pp. 494. (_Macmillan_). 6_s._ Six impressions within a
-few months. 1914.
-
- An anti-clerical and modernist novel by an Author with inside
- knowledge of the Catholic Church in Ireland. It is the story
- of a young priest from his birth until we take leave of him
- (_défroqué_) on board a ship leaving Ireland. In the course
- of the narrative there is presented a general view of Irish
- life as seen from the standpoint of such writers as M. J.
- F. M’Carthy, W. P. O’Ryan, and “Pat,” but clerical life
- is depicted with far more minute knowledge than by any of
- these. Sensational features such as the amours of priests,
- nuns, &c., are avoided, though much innuendo is indulged in.
- All the estimable characters in the book are represented
- as either Modernists, or else voteens and people who avoid
- thinking on serious problems. The Bishop, Father Molloy, and
- Ralph’s mother, as depicted by the Author, are revolting in
- the extreme. Except in rare instances all the outward details
- of Irish life are true to reality, but seen with jaundiced
- eyes. It may fairly be said that there is scarcely a page
- of this book that does not appeal in one form or another to
- non-Catholic prejudice.
-
-⸺ WAITING. Pp. 387. (_Macmillan_). 6_s._ 1914.
-
- Maurice Blake is a young National Schoolmaster, an ideal
- teacher, an enthusiast for Irish Ireland and for industrial
- revival. He falls foul of Father Mahon, the P.P., who is made
- as odious as possible. Maurice cannot get a dispensation to
- marry Alice Barton, a Protestant, and is compelled to marry her
- in a registry office. Maurice is selected as candidate by his
- constituency but, through the agency of Fr. Mahon, is set aside
- in favour of a worthless drunkard, and a mission is preached
- by “Seraphists.” Ch. XXIII., describing this mission, is most
- offensive and vulgar. Minor characters are Driscoll, the
- former Master; Breslin, editor and free-thinker; Fr. Malone,
- a lovable character; Dr. Hannigan with his “diffident, humble
- manner covering the pride of Lucifer”; Fr. Cafferley, fond of
- tea parties in publicans’ back parlours, &c. THE CHURCH TIMES
- says of the book, “It is much more angry and malevolent than
- its predecessor,” and the TIMES LIT. SUPPL., in an article
- obviously written by a non-Catholic, “It is a bitter and,
- if true, a deadly attack on the priesthood, and an almost
- rancorous indictment of the practice and influence of the Roman
- Catholic Church in Ireland.”
-
-
-=O’DONOVAN, Michael.=
-
-⸺ MR. MULDOON. Pp. 328. (_Greening_). 6_s._
-
- Scene: Dublin and suburbs. A book for an idle hour, recounting
- the whimsical adventures of the hero and his experiments with
- professions of all kinds. Humour broad, but not vulgar.
-
-
-=O’DONOVAN ROSSA=, _see_ =ROSSA=.
-
-
-=O’FLANAGAN, James Roderick, B.L., M.R.I.A.=
-
-⸺ BRYAN O’REGAN. 1866.
-
- The Author was b. at Fermoy in 1814, and wrote some important
- works on Irish biography and topography, such as _The
- Blackwater in Munster_; _The History of Dundalk_ (with John
- Dalton); _Lives of the Lord Chancellors of Ireland_; _The
- Munster Circuit_; _The Irish Bar_. Founded the FERMOY JOURNAL,
- and published his autobiography, _An Octogenarian Literary
- Life_, Cork, 1896.
-
-⸺ CAPTAIN O’SHAUGHNESSY’S SPORTING CAREER. Two Vols. 1872.
-
-⸺ GENTLE BLOOD.
-
- A novel founded on the remarkable Yelverton Marriage Case at
- Killowen, Co. Down, mentioned in the Author’s Autobiography.
-
-
-=[O’FLANAGAN, T.]; “Samoth.”=
-
-⸺ NED M’COOL AND HIS FOSTER BROTHER. Pp. 281. (DERRY: printed at Offices
-of DERRY JOURNAL). 1871.
-
- Sub-t., “An Irish tale founded on facts.” The Author was a
- native of Castlefin, Co. Donegal. He wrote also _Strabane and
- Lifford_, _The Consequences of a Refusal_, &c.
-
-
-=OGLE, Thomas Acres.=
-
-⸺ THE IRISH MILITIA OFFICER. Pp. 314. 12mo. (DUBLIN: no name of publ.).
-1873.
-
- “The tale embraces the services of the old Wexford Regiment
- from 1810 to its disbandment in 1816, and is a true picture
- of the rollicking and free life of that half-disciplined
- soldiery.” (Pref.). Full of stories, good, bad, and
- indifferent, told with considerable spirit. One chapter goes
- back to ’98, and gives some interesting personal reminiscences.
- There are a good many love affairs. The Author is a firm
- loyalist, and something of an Orangeman, but displays little
- bias. The scene is laid in various parts of Ireland.
-
-
-=O’GRADY, Standish.= B. 1846, at Castletown Berehaven, on Bantry Bay,
-Co. Cork, of which his father was rector. Ed. at home and in Tipperary,
-and at T.C.D. Was called to the Bar, but his main occupations have
-been literary. Besides the works here mentioned he has written much
-on literary, political, and economic subjects, and is one of the most
-distinguished of living Irish writers.
-
-⸺ HISTORY OF IRELAND. The Heroic Period.[10] Two Vols. Pp. xxii. + 267 +
-348. (_Sampson, Low_). 1878.
-
- Described by the Author (Pref.) as “the reduction to its
- artistic elements of the whole of that heroic history taken
- together, viewing it always in the light shed by modern
- archæologians, frequently using the actual language of the
- bards, and as much as possible their style and general
- character of expression.”... “Through the loose chaotic mass
- ... I have endeavoured to trace the mental and physical
- personality of the heroes and heroines, and to discover the
- true order of events.” The chapter headings read like those of
- a novel—“Only a Name,” “Perfidy,” “In Vain,” “Swift Succour.”
- Vol. I. deals with the Fianna, Cuchulain, the Cattle-raid of
- Cuailgne. Vol. II. is entirely taken up (all but the first 88
- pp.) with the Cuchulain cycle. The above work is carefully
- to be distinguished from the Author’s _History of Ireland,
- Critical and Philosophical_. Vol. I. (all publ.) pp. 468
- (Sampson, Low), 1881. In the Pref. to this latter he says, “The
- books already published by me on this subject are portions of a
- work in which I propose to tell the History of Ireland through
- the medium of tales, epic or romantic.”
-
-[10] This is not a work of fiction. But it seems well to mention it here
-for it is really an elaborate re-telling of the ancient Irish hero-myths
-and romances.
-
-⸺ RED HUGH’S CAPTIVITY. 1889.
-
- An early ed. of _The Flight of the Eagle_, _q.v._
-
-⸺ FINN AND HIS COMPANIONS. Pp. 182. Size, 4 × 6½. (_Unwin, Children’s
-Library_). Illustr. by J. B. Yeats. 1892.
-
- Delightful tales of the heroic age of the Fianna told in poetic
- but very simple language. Will appeal not to children only but
- to all. Part IV., “The Coming of Finn,” is particularly fine.
- “Most of these tales are, I think, quite new.”—(Preface).
-
-⸺ THE BOG OF STARS. Pp. 179. (_Fisher Unwin, New Irish Library_). 2_s._
-1893.
-
- Stories and pictures, nine in number, of Ireland in the
- days of Elizabeth “not so much founded on fact as in fact
- true.”—(Pref.). (1) How a drummer-boy saved Clan Ranal from
- destruction by the Deputy; (2) A sketch of Philip O’Sullivan,
- historian, soldier, and poet; (3) The destruction of the
- O’Falveys by Mac an Earla of the Clan M’Carthy; (4) The
- vengeance of the O’Hagans on Phelim O’Neill; (5) A sketch
- of Sir Richard Bingham, the infamous but mighty Captain of
- Connaught; (6) How the English surprised by treachery Rory Og
- O’More and his people; (7) The story of Brian of the Ramparts
- O’Rourke; (8) Don Juan del Aquila, the heroic defender of
- Kinsale; (9) Detailed and vivid description of the battle
- of the Curlew Mountains from the Irish point of view. These
- have all the great qualities of the _Flight of the Eagle_,
- and indicate the same views of history—the selfishness and
- frequent savagery of some of the Irish chieftains, their hatred
- of one another, their constant readiness to submit to the
- Queen’s grace when it suited—all this is brought out. Yet the
- Author is on the side of Ireland: he dwells on what is heroic
- in our history, he paints the Elizabethan deputies and their
- subordinates in dark colours.
-
-⸺ COMING OF CUCHULAINN. Pp. 160. (_Methuen_). Six good illustrations by
-D. Murray Smith. 1894.
-
- The story of the hero’s boyhood told in epic language, full
- of antique colour and simile, and rising at times to wild
- grandeur. The great shadows of ancient De Danaan gods are never
- far from the mortal heroes who figure in the saga.
-
-⸺ THE GATES OF THE NORTH. New ed. Pp. 151. (_Sealy, Bryers_). 3_s._ 6_d._
-1908.
-
- A sequel to the preceding, telling the heroic tale of how
- Cuchulainn held the fords of Ulster alone against the hosts of
- Maeve. It is even fuller than is the first book of the myth
- and lore of the primitive Gael. There is a very interesting
- introduction by the Author.
-
-⸺ LOST ON DHU CORRIG. Pp. 284. (_Cassell_). Nine good illustr. 1894.
-
- Strange adventures among the caves and cliffs of the west
- coast, with a touch of the uncanny, and some interesting and
- curious things about seals.
-
-⸺ THE CHAIN OF GOLD. Pp. 304. (_Fisher Unwin_). Sixteen good illustr.
-Nice cover. 1895.
-
- A story of adventure on the wild west coast of Ireland. Curious
- and original plot, with an element of the supernatural.
-
-⸺ ULRICK THE READY. New ed. (_Sealy, Bryers_). 3_s._ 6_d._ [1896]. 1908.
-
- Period: last years of Elizabeth’s reign. Scene: the country of
- O’Sullivan Beare, the south-west corner of Cork. Weaves the
- battle of Kinsale and the siege of Dunboy into the story of the
- young O’Sullivan, Ulrick. Full of vividly presented details
- of the public and private life of the time, and of novel and
- suggestive presentments of its political and social ideals.
- These it brings home to the reader as no history could do. Yet
- the story is not neglected. Standpoint: impartial, on the whole.
-
-⸺ IN THE WAKE OF KING JAMES. Pp. 242. (_Dent_). 4_s._ 6_d._ 1896.
-
- A wild and nightmare-like tale. Scene: a lonely castle on
- the west coast inhabited by a gang of Jacobite desperadoes.
- Contains no historical incidents.
-
-⸺ FLIGHT OF THE EAGLE. Pp. 298. (_Sealy, Bryers_). 3_s._ 6_d._ [_Lawrence
-& Bullen_, 1897]. New ed., 1908. (N.Y.: _Benziger_). 1.10.
-
- The historical episode of the kidnapping of Hugh Roe O’Donnell
- and his escape from Dublin Castle evoked in a narrative
- of extraordinary dramatic power and vividness. The Author
- has breathed a spirit into the dry bones of innumerable
- contemporary documents and State Papers, so that the men of
- Elizabethan Ireland seem to live and move before us. The
- effect is greatly strengthened by the vigour and rush of the
- style, which reminds one of that of Carlyle in his _French
- Revolution_. The Author has peculiar and decided views about
- Elizabethan Irish politics. “The authorities for the story,”
- he tells us in his Preface, “are the _Annals of the Four
- Masters_, the _Historia Hiberniæ_ of Don Philip O’Sullivan
- Beare, O’Clery’s _Life of Hugh Roe_, and the _Calendar of State
- Papers, Ireland_, from 1587 forward.”
-
-
-=O’GRADY, Standish Hayes.= B. 1832, Co. Limerick. Was a fluent Irish
-speaker, and his knowledge of the language and of Irish traditions was,
-according to those who knew him, unrivalled. Evidence of this will be
-found in his _Catalogue of the Irish MSS. in the British Museum_, never
-finished, but, as far as it goes, a mine of Gaelic lore. Was one of the
-founders of the Ossianic Society. D. 16th October, 1915.
-
-⸺ SILVA GADELICA. Two Vols. Demy 8vo. (_Williams & Norgate_). 1892.
-
- Vol. I., pp. 416, contains Irish text (Roman letters); Vol.
- II., pp. xxxii. + 604, contains Preface, Translation, and
- Notes. Thirty-one tales and other pieces, all taken from
- ancient MSS., such as the _Book of Leinster_, the _Leabhar
- Breac_, &c. Fifteen are from MSS. in the British Museum. Out of
- the thirty-one, only six or seven had been published before.
- Ranged under four heads—(I.) Hagiology, or Stories of early
- Irish saints; (II.) Legend, historical or romantic; (III.)
- Ossianic lore; (IV.) Fiction, some of which is humorous.
- The Irish text is presented in a difficult and archaic
- dialect, much as if, says a critic, _Robinson Crusoe_ and the
- _Anglo-Saxon Chronicle_ were to be printed in the dialect of
- Chaucer. The Author in his Preface discusses and describes his
- sources most minutely. Forty years of study intervened between
- the Author’s previous publication, _Diarmaid and Grainne_,
- for the Ossianic Society (1853), and this. The English of his
- translation, though sometimes affected, is vigorous, rich,
- varied, often picturesque and on the whole thoroughly worthy
- of the subject. Twenty-eight pages of notes and corrections.
- Indexes: A, of personal and tribal names; B, of place-names.
-
-
-=O’HANLON, Canon John; “Lageniensis.”= B. Stradbally, 1821. From
-1842-1857 he was in U.S.A., where he was ordained. He published eighteen
-important works dealing with Irish history, archæology, and especially
-hagiography, his great _Lives of the Irish Saints_, nine vols. of which
-appeared, being a lasting monument to his research. He died in 1905.
-
-⸺ IRISH FOLK-LORE: Traditions and Superstitions of the Country: with
-Humorous Tales. (_Cameron & Ferguson_). Pp. viii. + 312. 2_s._ 1870.
-
- A miscellany containing folk-lore proper, studies in popular
- superstition viewed as remnants of paganism, historical
- episodes, tales, &c., gathered from ancient MSS., with a great
- store of antiquarian and historical information about all
- periods of our annals and very many parts of Ireland. Much of
- all this is drawn from rare and not easily accessible sources.
- Contains chapters on Druidism, Legendary Voyages, Dungal the
- Recluse. A type of the humorous stories is the capital “Mr.
- Patrick O’Byrne in the Devil’s Glen.” The book is intended for
- the general public rather than for folklorists. It is pleasant
- and chatty in style. The source of the stories is not, as a
- rule, indicated by the Author.
-
-⸺ THE BURIED LADY: a Legend of Kilronan. (DUBLIN). 1877.
-
-⸺ IRISH LOCAL LEGENDS. Pp. 133. (_Duffy_). 1_s._ First publ. 1896; still
-in print.
-
- A collection of thirty stories picked up by the Author
- during holidays in various parts of Ireland, and “received,
- mostly, from accidental and familiar intercourse with the
- peasantry.”—(Pref.). The place with which the legend is
- connected is indicated in each case. The legends are of a
- very miscellaneous nature, local incidents, fairy stories,
- ghost stories, old hero stories, &c. A considerable number of
- counties are represented by one or more stories.
-
-
-=O h-ANNRACHAIN, Michea.= B. New Ross, Co. Wexford. Ed. Christian Bros.’
-Schools and Collegiate Academy, Carlow. Has written a good deal for the
-press. Is an ardent worker in the Language Movement.
-
-⸺ A SWORDSMAN OF THE BRIGADE. Pp. 231. (_Sands_). 3_s._ 6_d._ 1914.
-
- A fine stirring adventure story of the doings of one of the
- “Wild Geese” in Sheldon’s division of the Irish Brigade in the
- service of France. Scene: Flanders, Bavaria, Italy, and Dublin.
- _c._ 1703. Told in a breezy way and thoroughly Irish in spirit.
-
-
-=O’HARE, Hardress.=
-
-⸺ CONQUERED AT LAST: from Records of Dhu Hall and its Inmates. A Novel.
-Three Vols. 1874.
-
-
-=O’HIGGINS, Brian; “Brian na Banban.”= B. Kilskyre (Cill Scire), Co.
-Meath, 1882; ed. there. Came to Dublin about twelve years ago and threw
-himself into the work of the Gaelic League, for which he became a
-travelling teacher (múinteoir taistil) in Cavan and Meath. Has publ. two
-books in Irish. Has for years past been a frequent contributor to the
-Catholic and Irish press at home and in America and Australia. His songs
-are popular at Irish-Ireland concerts all over the country.
-
-⸺ BY A HEARTH IN EIRINN. (_Gill_), 1_s._ 1908.
-
- The gay and humorous side of the language movement seen from a
- League point of view—the Seonín, the Feis, the Gaelic Christmas
- hearth. One sketch gives a glimpse of the early years of John
- Boyle O’Reilly.
-
-⸺ GLIMPSES OF GLEN-NA-MONA. Pp. 115. (_Duffy_). 6_d._ Paper. 1908.
-
- Sketches of peasant life in a remote glen (place not
- indicated). Almost wholly taken up with the sadness and the
- miseries of emigration. Simple, pathetic, and religious.
-
-⸺ FUN O’ THE FORGE. (DUBLIN: _Whelan_). 1915.
-
- A collection of humorous stories.
-
-
-=O’Kane, Rev. W. M.= B. 1872, at Millisle, Co. Down. Son of Capt. Francis
-O’Kane, of Weymouth and Millisle. Ed. Royal Academical Institution,
-Belfast, and at Queen’s Coll., Belfast; B.A. and LL.B., R.U.I. Was Curate
-in Banbridge and Belfast and is at Present Incumbent of Ashbourne,
-Derbyshire. Author of _The King’s Luck_ and _Guppy Guyson_.
-
-⸺ WITH POISON AND SWORD. Pp. 402. (_Mills & Boon_). 6_s._ 1910.
-
- Love story and adventures in 1561 or thereabouts of Cormac
- O’Hagan, follower and friend of Shane O’Neill, his escape from
- the Tower, his rescue of Marjorie Drayton, his share in the
- battle of Armagh where Shane defeats the Deputy, his going with
- Shane to visit Elizabeth, and many sensational adventures in
- consequence. He finally gives up Ireland altogether, settles
- in England, and he and his descendants ever after are good
- Englishmen. One of the chief characters is the ever resourceful
- Dickie Toogood.
-
-
-=O’KEARNEY, Nicholas.= Trans.
-
-⸺ THE STORY OF CONN-EDA; or, The Golden Apples of Loch Erne, from the
-Irish. Pp. 17. (LONDON: _J. R. Smith_). 1855.
-
- Reprinted from the Proceedings of the “Cambrian Archæological
- Association.”
-
-
-=O’KEEFFE, Christopher M.=
-
-⸺ THE KNIGHTS OF THE PALE. Pp. viii. + 263. (GLASGOW: _Cameron &
-Ferguson_). 1857 and 1870.
-
- Sub-title, “Ireland 400 Years Ago.” First appeared in _The
- Celt_. The Author was sentenced about 1866 to penal servitude
- for Fenianism, was released about 1877, went to U.S.A., and
- died in Brooklyn about 1889. Wrote also a Life of O’Connell in
- two vols. “The object of the story is to give the impression
- which a prolonged study of Irish antiquities has produced on
- the Author’s mind.”—(Pref.). Interspersed with the narrative
- are several pieces of verse, some original, some translated by
- the Author from the Gaelic. The period is the middle of the
- 15th century.
-
-
-=O’KELLY, Seumas.=
-
-⸺ BY THE STREAM OF KILMEEN. (_Sealy, Bryers_). 6_d._ Paper. _c._ 1910.
-
- Ten short sketches of the little tragedies and comedies of
- the lives of the humbler classes. They are simple, true, and
- sincere. The scene is Clare or Galway.
-
-
-=O’KENNEDY, Father Richard.= P.P. of Fedamore, Co. Limerick.
-
-⸺ COTTAGE LIFE IN IRELAND.
-
- “Father O’Kennedy was born in 1850, was educated in Limerick
- and in Maynooth. Has been for a long time contributor to
- various Irish and American magazines, notably the IRISH
- MONTHLY. He knows his people intimately, and knows how to
- interest us in the simple pains and pleasures of the poor....
- His style is charming. He has an eye for the simplicities of
- life.”—(IRISH LIT.). His stories and sketches are known and
- appreciated in the U.S. even more than at home in Ireland.
-
-
-=O’LEARY, C.=
-
-⸺ THE IRISH WIDOW’S SON; or, The Pikemen of ’98. (BOSTON). 1869.
-
- Wrote also _The Last Rosary_ (BOSTON), 1869.
-
-
-=O’MAHONY, Nora Tynan.= A sister of Katharine Tynan, _q.v._ Dau. of the
-late Andrew C. Tynan, of Whitehall, Clondalkin, Co. Dublin. Married John
-O’Mahony (d. 1904), a brilliant Irish barrister. She has written much for
-Irish and American periodicals and has just published a vol. of poems
-which has been highly praised. Her work is simple, gentle, with many
-touches of beauty. The atmosphere is always Irish and Catholic.
-
-⸺ UNA’S ENTERPRISE. Pp. 241. (_Gill_). Neat binding. 1907.
-
- Struggles of a young girl of good social position to maintain
- her widowed mother and little brother and sister. She
- eventually does this by means of poultry farming, of which much
- is said. There is little distinctively Irish in the story. The
- style is graceful and pleasing.
-
-⸺ MRS. DESMOND’S FOSTER CHILD. (_Browne & Nolan_). 1_s._ 6_d._ 1912.
-
-
-=O’MEARA, Graves.=
-
-⸺ OWEN DONOVAN, Fenian. (_Sealy, Bryers_). 6_d._ Paper. 1909.
-
- Adventures of a Fenian in England, and of his lady-love, a
- _prima donna_ at Covent Garden. Plenty of sensation, of a crude
- and improbable type. A “time-slayer,” as the Author calls it.
-
-
-=O’MEARA, Kathleen; “Grace Ramsay.”= B. Dublin, 1839. Dau. of Dennis
-O’Meara, of Tipperary, and granddaughter of Barry O’M., Napoleon’s
-surgeon. She went with her parents to Paris at an early age, and it
-is doubtful whether she afterwards visited her native land. D. N. B.
-enumerates fifteen of her works, six of which were novels. D. 1888.
-
-⸺ THE BATTLE OF CONNEMARA. (_Washbourne_). 1878.
-
- A story of priests and people in Connaught in the days of
- the Soupers by an Author distinguished in other fields of
- literature. The scene is laid partly in Paris. Noteworthy
- characters are Mr. Ringwood, an English convert clergyman,
- and Father Fallon, an Irish country priest. The plot turns
- mainly on the conversion of an English lady who had married an
- Irishman and settled in Connaught. Controversy is avoided.
-
-
-=O’MULLANE, M. J., M.A.= B. 1889 in Sligo. Gained an honours diploma
-in education in the National University. Is Principal of the National
-Examining Institute of Ireland, Professor of Mod. Languages in Christian
-Schools, Westland Row, and of Irish in Spiddal Summer Irish College,
-Galway. He has contributed serials on Irish historical subjects to OUR
-BOYS. He has done much to spread among the people knowledge of and
-interest in the heroic period of early Gaelic Ireland by means of his
-excellent penny C.T.S.I. pamphlets, soon, we hope, to be given a more
-permanent form. The following are the titles:—
-
-_Craobh Ruadh; or, the Red Branch Knights._ Two parts. 1910.
-
- This is partly a serious study of the subject, partly a
- retelling of the old sagas.
-
-_The Tuatha de Danaan; or, the Children of Dana._ Two parts.
-
-_Links with the Past._ Containing “Lug-na-Gall” (a legend of 1642),
-“Green are the Distant Hills,” “The Origin of Lough Gill,” “Melcha,” “The
-Wooing of Eithne.”
-
-_The Coming of the Children of Miledh._
-
-_Finn MacCoole._
-
-_Biroge of the Mountain_, and Other Tales, viz.:—“The Recovery of the
-Táin Bo Cuailgne,” “The First Water-Mill in Ireland,” “The Wooing of
-Moriath,”—all tales of early Ireland.
-
-_The Return of the Red Hand._ A story of Dunamase, fortress of the
-O’Moores in the year 1200.
-
- These nine pamphlets are very well but not pretentiously
- written. They are written with good knowledge of the period
- referred to, but are not overloaded with archæology. In
- footnotes the pronunciation of the Gaelic names is given
- phonetically. The first eight of these booklets, together
- with Fr. Skelly’s _Cuchulainn of Muirthemne_ (_q.v._) form an
- excellent introduction to Ireland’s Heroic Period and to our
- saga literature.
-
-
-=O’NEILL, John.=
-
-⸺ HANDRAHAN, the Irish Fairy Man; and Legends of Carrick[-on-Suir].
-Edited by Mrs. S. C. Hall and publ. 1854. (LONDON: _Tweedie_). Pp. 187.
-
- The Author was born in Waterford, 1777. Lived the last years
- of his chequered life in poverty in London. Published several
- volumes of verse, chiefly on Temperance subjects, and a drama
- entitled _Alva_. D. _c._ 1860. The above is a very good and
- original story. Handrahan is a kind of herb-doctor skilled in
- potions and in charms against the fairies.
-
-⸺ MARY OF AVONMORE; or, The Foundling of the Beach. Three Vols.
-
- N.B.—This is not in the British Museum Library or elsewhere
- that I know of, but is given a prominent mention in all his
- biographies.
-
-
-=“O’NEILL, Moira,” Mrs. Skrine=, _née_ =Nesta Higginson=. Author of
-the well-known _Songs of the Glens of Antrim_. Her home was long in
-Cushendun, Co. Antrim. She has also published _An Easter Vacation_, 1893.
-The scene laid in an English watering place. A frequent contributor to
-BLACKWOOD’S MAGAZINE.
-
-⸺ THE ELF ERRANT. Pp. 109. (_A. H. Bullen_). Seven illustr. by W. E. F.
-Britten. New ed., 1902.
-
- An excursion into Fairyland. A fanciful tale, told in exquisite
- and simple language, with elves and fairies for characters.
- All through there is a subtle comparison, which only the grown
- and thoughtful children will notice, of English and Irish
- character. This latter by no means interferes with the interest
- of the book for children, but makes it well worth reading by
- the grown-ups.
-
- Republished, Christmas, 1909, by _Sidgwick & Jackson_. 3_s._
- 6_d._
-
-
-=O’REILLY, Gertrude M.=
-
-⸺ JUST STORIES. Pp. 233. (N.Y.: _Devin-Adair Co._). $1.00. 1915.
-
- The Author came to America from Ireland in 1907. Agnes Repplier
- says of the book: “These Irish stories are as good as good can
- be; gay, sad, amusing, pathetic, human. I like the stories
- themselves; I like the way they are told. They don’t suggest
- ‘plot,’ but bits of real life.” In the Pref. the Author says:
- “Thoughts go back to the long restful days beside Galway Bay,
- to the still evenings in the Cork hills.... These little
- stories are the fruit of these moments of retrospection.” There
- is much dialect, well reproduced.
-
-
-=“O’REILLY, Private Myles,”= _see_ =HALPINE=.
-
-
-=ORPEN, Mrs.=
-
-⸺ CORRAGEEN IN ’98. (_Methuen_). 6_s._ (N.Y.: _New Amsterdam Book Co._).
-Pp. 325. 1.50. 1898.
-
- “Written with sympathy for the loyalists. A realistic
- description of the more horrible features.”—(_Baker_).
-
-
-=O’RYAN, Julia and Edmund.=
-
-⸺ _IN RE_ GARLAND. (_Richardson_). 1873.
-
- Time: after Famine of 1846, when the Encumbered Estates Court
- was in full swing. Cleverly written, and showing intimate
- knowledge of Munster ways of speech and thought among the
- farming and lower classes. Good taste and strong faith in the
- people and in the people’s faith are everywhere discernible.
- The writers eschew all moralizing and also all description of
- scenery.—(IRISH MONTHLY).
-
-
-=O’RYAN, W. P.; “Kevin Kennedy.”= B. near Templemore, Co. Tipperary,
-1867. Lived for several years in London, where he took an active share
-in the activities of the Southwark Irish Literary Club and the Irish
-Literary Society: he has written a history of their beginnings. Was
-editor of THE PEASANT and of its successors, THE IRISH PEASANT and THE
-IRISH NATION. In these he mingled anti-clericalism with much excellent
-writing strongly national in tone. _The Plough and the Cross_ is largely
-autobiographical. Publ. 1912, _The Pope’s Green Island_.
-
-⸺ THE PLOUGH AND THE CROSS. Pp. 378. (_The Irish Nation_). 1_s._ 1910.
-
- A story, how much of which is fact we do not learn, woven round
- certain real events of recent date, and in particular the
- stopping of a paper of which the Author was editor. Many of the
- characters may be recognised as portraits of real personages,
- among others the Author himself, Mr. T. P. O’Connor, Geo.
- Moore, Mr. James McCann, Mr. Edward Martyn, and Mr. Sweetman.
- The book is largely taken up with conversations in which
- the Author gives expression to his peculiar views on many
- subjects. Many of these belong to the class of ideas known
- collectively to Catholics as Modernism. Throughout the book
- there is constant criticism of the Irish clergy, much of this
- criticism being put into the mouths of “progressive” priests.
- The personages and the series of events dealt with are highly
- idealized. Distinctly well written, but somewhat “exalté” in
- style. Scene: Dublin and the Boyne Valley.
-
- _See_ =RYAN, W. P.=
-
-
-=O’SHAUGHNESSY, Tom.=
-
-⸺ TERENCE O’DOWD; or, Romanism To-day. Pp. 350. (PHILADELPHIA:
-_Presbyterian Board of Publication_). _n.d._
-
- “An Irish story founded on facts.” Scene near Mt. Nephin and
- the Deel, Co. Mayo. A long diatribe against the Catholic
- Church, representing it in the most odious light, in order,
- says the Introd., to warn Protestants that it is the same
- monstrously wicked system as ever. Ignorance, squalour,
- rudeness, and brutality are the terms constantly used to
- describe the Irish peasantry. The tone is often facetious and
- sarcastic. The peasants, including “Father McNavigan,” speak an
- extraordinary jargon. Appendices give extracts from Kirwan’s
- letter to Bishop Hughes.
-
-
-=O’SHEA, James.=
-
-⸺ FELIX O’FLANAGAN, an Irish-American. Pp. 206. (CORK: _Flynn_). 1902.
-
- The story of an Irish peasant lad, first in Ireland as clerk
- in a shop and commercial traveller in a small way, then in
- America as labourer, soldier, and business man. Good picture of
- farming and provincial town life in Ireland of the day. Point
- of view Catholic and strongly nationalist. The book almost a
- sermon against drink and emigration. Style and handling of plot
- somewhat immature.
-
-
-=O’SHEA, John Augustus; “The Irish Bohemian.”= 1840-1905. B. Nenagh.
-Ed. Catholic Univ. Went to London, 1859. Was war correspondent and
-writer on THE STANDARD for twenty-five years. Was a man of extraordinary
-versatility—journalist, writer on continental politics, lecturer,
-dramatist, Irish politician. He was a member of the Southwark Irish
-Literary Club, 1885, _sqq._ Mr. W. P. Ryan speaks of him as drawing upon
-his own experiences of “merry and dashing life” in Tipperary for his
-stories—“Conal O’Rafferty” and others. See his _Leaves from the Life of a
-Special Correspondent_ and _Random Recollections_.
-
-⸺ MILITARY MOSAICS: a Set of Tales, &c. Pp. viii. + 303. (_Allen_). 1888.
-
-
-=[O’SULLIVAN, Rev. P. P.]; “An Ulster Clergyman.”=
-
-⸺ THE DOWNFALL OF GRABBUM. Pp. 148. (BELFAST: _Carswell_). 6_d._ Illustr.
-1913.
-
- A political skit on the then situation in Ulster. Grabbum =
- the English Garrison in Ireland; Drudge, his devoted dupe =
- Orangeism. Farmer John Bull sends Grabbum over to Pat to help
- him, and is amazed at the result. The moral is the beneficial
- effects (including an Anglo-American alliance) of Home Rule.
- Irish public men—F. J. Bigger, Sir Roger Casement, Douglas
- Hyde, &c., are introduced under thin disguises. The tone is, of
- course, light and facetious.
-
-
-=OUTRAM, Mary Frances.=
-
-⸺ BRANAN THE PICT. Pp. 356. (_R.T.S._). 2_s._ 6_d._ Coloured frontisp.
-1913.
-
- “An exceedingly well-written tale of the times of St. Columba,
- based on the ‘life’ by Adamnan. The hero and his associates are
- fictitious, but the setting of the story is worked out with
- remarkable care.”—(C.B.N.). _In the Van of the Vikings_ is by
- the same Author.
-
-
-=“PARLEY, Peter,”= _see_ =GOODRICH=.
-
-
-=[PARNELL, William, M.P.].= Wrote also _An Historical Apology for the
-Irish Catholics_ (1807). He was knight of the shire for Wicklow and
-brother of Lord Congleton. He died 1821. (See Moore’s Memoirs, vii.,
-109). Charles Stewart Parnell came of the same family.
-
-⸺ MAURICE AND BERGHETTA; or, the Priest of Rahery. Pp. xxiv. + 213.
-(BOSTON and LONDON). [1819]. Second ed., 1825.
-
- “Dedicated to the Catholic priesthood of Ireland.” “The
- character of Maurice is drawn from a person who not many years
- ago was a ploughman. The Author’s object is not to write a
- novel but to place his observations on the manners of the
- Irish peasantry in a less formal shape than that of a regular
- dissertation.”—(Introd.). Related by Father O’Brien. The love
- of Maurice O’Neal for Berghetta Tual, their marriage and
- subsequent fortunes, misfortunes, and romantic adventures, till
- they rise to be grandees of Spain. The coincidences are rather
- far-fetched and improbable and the characters not very real.
- Many moral lessons are inculcated.
-
-
-=[PATRICK, Mrs. F. C.].=
-
-⸺ THE IRISH HEIRESS. (LONDON). 18—.
-
-
-=PAUL, Major Norris.=
-
-⸺ MOONLIGHT BY THE SHANNON SHORE. Pp. 312. (_Jarrold_). [1888].
-
- An anti-Land League novel, describing the terrorism of that
- organisation and the sufferings it entailed. The plot is the
- love-story of John Seebright, an Englishman, for the Irish
- Eveline Wellwood, who is persecuted by the League. Devoid of
- humour and almost of romance. The dialect is well handled,
- and the writer clearly knew well his Limerick and Clare. But
- the tone of the book is on the whole bitter and somewhat
- narrow-minded.
-
-⸺ EVELINE WELLWOOD. (_Jarrold_). 1892.
-
- This is simply another ed. of _Moonlight by the Shannon Shore_.
-
-
-=PECK, Mrs. F.=
-
-⸺ THE LIFE AND ACTS OF THE RENOWNED AND CHIVALROUS EDMUND OF ERIN,
-commonly called Emun ac Knuck or Ned of the Hills, &c. Two Vols. Pp. 345,
-300. (DUBLIN: _Tegg_). Other eds., 1841. Ten good illustr. by B. Clayton.
-
- Sub-title: “An Irish Historical Romance of the Seventh
- Century founded on facts and blended with a brief and pithy
- epitome of the origin, antiquity, and history of Ireland.” An
- extraordinary and rather eccentric production, written in a
- strain of exaggerated enthusiasm for Ireland. The facts are
- supposed to be taken mainly “from some very ancient documents
- found amongst the papers of the late Dr. Andrews, Provost
- of T.C.D.,” whose grandniece the Author was. To the novel
- she appends “a Circular Letter,” relating her matrimonial
- differences with her husband, Capt. P. She also wrote _Tales
- for the British People_, and became a Catholic.
-
-
-=PELHAM, Gordon.=
-
-⸺ SHEILA DONOVAN, a Priest’s Love-Story. Pp. 295. (_Lynwood_). 1911.
-
- “Stephen Glynn loves Sheila D., and there is never the smallest
- reason why he should not marry her. Both are represented
- as sweet and good, and he is a clergyman. After their sin
- Stephen’s whole mind is set on religious atonement: he joins a
- religious order, leaving Sheila to struggle on alone with her
- child. He breaks his vows, and all is apparently to end happily
- when, acting under a misapprehension, he drowns himself.”—(T.
- LIT. SUPPL.)
-
-
-=PENDER, Mrs. M. T.=, _née_ =O’Doherty=. B. Co. Antrim. Ed. at home, at
-Ballyrobin National School and Convent of Mercy, Crumlin Road, Belfast.
-Has contributed much prose and verse to various Irish periodicals.
-
-⸺ THE GREEN COCKADE. Pp. 380, close print. (_Sealy, Bryers_). 3_s._ 6_d._
-
- A love story, the scene of which is laid in Ulster during the
- rebellion. Full of romantic adventures. Historical characters
- introduced: Lord Edward Putnam M’Cabe, and especially Henry
- Joy M’Cracken. Battle of Antrim described, but remainder
- of incidents almost entirely fictitious. No attempt at
- impartiality. The Government side is painted in the darkest
- colours.
-
-⸺ THE LAST OF THE IRISH CHIEFS.[11]
-
- A sensational romance of the time of Sir Cahir O’Doherty’s
- rising and the governorship of Paulett in Derry. _c._ 1608.
-
-[11] I have not been able to ascertain whether this novel was ever
-reprinted in volume form from the periodical in which it appeared as a
-serial.
-
-
-=PENROSE, Mrs. H. H.=, _née_ =Lewis=. B. Kinsale. Ed. at Rochelle
-School, Cork. Took honours in T.C.D. in German and English Literature.
-In addition to her novels she has written innumerable stories for the
-magazines, _e.g._, TEMPLE BAR and the WINDSOR. Resides in Surrey. Besides
-the novels mentioned below, _As Dust in the Balance_ and _An Unequal
-Yoke_ are partly concerned with Ireland.
-
-⸺ DENIS TRENCH. Pp. 432. (_Alston Rivers_). 6_s._ 1911.
-
- Denis and his sister on their mother’s death are left in doubt
- about the character and identity of their father, whom they
- had seen only in their infancy, and who, as a matter of fact,
- had left his wife in order to become a Roman Catholic priest.
- This priest acts as a kind of providence to his two children,
- and reveals himself only on his death bed. The Authoress seems
- quite unacquainted with Catholic practice, but does not depict
- it in a hostile spirit. The scene is partly in Ireland, but the
- only trace of Irish interest is an occasional reference to a
- mysterious quality in the Celtic blood of the hero and heroine,
- and the character of the poor girl Stella Delaney, whom Denis
- marries.
-
-⸺ A FAERY LAND FORLORN. Pp. 312. (_Alston Rivers_). 6_s._ 1912.
-
- Life among better-class Protestant folk in a little seaside
- town in the S. of Ireland. The main interest is furnished
- by the sad love story of Evelyn Eyre. Mr. Eyre, gentle and
- bookloving, and Capt. Donovan, given to drink and a tyrant
- in his family, are neighbours and close friends till a
- misunderstanding brings estrangement and leads to a tragedy,
- resulting in the separation—for ever, as it proves—of Evelyn
- and her lover Terence Donovan. The story is wholesome and human
- and free from religious or other bias. Aunt Kitty, a lovable
- old maid, provides an element of humour.
-
-⸺ BURNT FLAX. Pp. 319. (_Mills & Boon_). 6_s._ 1914.
-
- The Land League agitation from landlord standpoint. Excellent
- but over-firm landlord, hired agitator, attempt on landlord’s
- life. The rent-payers are brutally murdered by leaguers, who
- are represented as drunken and credulous. There is some good
- character drawing: Tinsy O’Halloran the half-witted boy, is
- original: Father O’Riordan is represented as a good sensible
- priest. The brogue is travestied.
-
-
-=[PERCIVAL, Mrs. Margaret].=
-
-⸺ THE IRISH DOVE; or, Faults on Both Sides. Pp. 206. (DUBLIN:
-_Robertson_). 1849.
-
- By the Author of _Rosa, the Work Girl_. Helen Wilson, whose
- mother was Irish, inherits an estate in Kerry. After years of
- residence in India and then in England, she comes to live in
- Ireland, grows to love the people, and spends what is left of
- her failing life in teaching the natives the New Testament in
- Irish. The interest of the book lies in its picture of and
- apology for, the attempt made (chiefly by “The Irish Society”)
- in the first half of the 19th century to convert the Irish to
- Protestantism through the medium of the Irish language. The
- witness it gives to the bitterly anti-Irish feeling prevailing
- in England at the time is interesting. The peasantry is
- represented as debased and priest-ridden, but their condition
- is ascribed in part to English hostility and to absenteeism.
-
-
-=PETREL, Fulmar.=
-
-⸺ GRANIA WAILE. Pp. 285, large print. (_Unwin_). Frontispiece and map.
-1895.
-
- A fanciful story written around the early life and after-career
- of the O’Malley Sea-queen. Her robbing, when only a young girl,
- of the eagle’s nest, her desperate sea-fights, and her many
- other adventures make pleasant reading. The atmosphere of the
- period is well brought out. But few of the incidents narrated
- are historical facts.
-
-
-=PICKERING, Edgar.=
-
-⸺ TRUE TO THE WATCHWORD. Pp. 299. (_Warne_). 3_s._ 6_d._ Eight illustr.
-1902.
-
- A spirited account of the siege of Derry from the point of view
- of the besieged. Full of hairbreadth escapes and of desperate
- encounters with the Irishry, who are spoken of throughout as
- ferocious savages. Apart from this last point there is no
- noteworthy falsification of history. For boys.
-
-
-=POLLARD, Eliza F.=
-
-⸺ THE KING’S SIGNET. (_Blackie_, and U.S.A.: _Scribner_).
-
- France in the days of Madame de Maintenon, and Ireland during
- Williamite wars. B. of the Boyne described. Juvenile.
-
-
-=POLSON, Thomas R. J.=
-
-⸺ THE FORTUNE TELLER’S INTRIGUE. Three Vols. (DUBLIN: _McGlashan_). 1847.
-
- “Or, Life in Ireland before the Union, a tale of agrarian
- outrage.” An unusually objectionable and absurd libel on the
- priests and people of Ireland. The latter are represented
- as slavishly submissive to the former, who are spoken of as
- “walking divinities.” The priests attend their dupes at their
- execution for agrarian crimes, telling them that they are
- martyrs for the faith. The scene is Co. Clare.
-
- The Author, an Englishman, and originally a private soldier,
- owned and edited the FERMANAGH MAIL for about forty years.
-
-
-=PORTER, Anna Maria.= Born, 1780, in Durham. Died 1832. Was daughter of
-a surgeon of the 6th Inniskilling Dragoons, of Ulster extraction, and a
-sister of Jane Porter, author of _The Scottish Chiefs_, &c. She published
-more than nineteen books.
-
-⸺ HONOR O’HARA. Three Vols. (_Longmans_). [1826]. American ed., _Harper_,
-1827. Two Vols.
-
- The scene is laid in the N. of England, and the book has no
- relation to Ireland except that the heroine is supposed to be
- of Irish origin.
-
-⸺ THE LAKE OF KILLARNEY. Pp. 350. (LONDON). New ed., 1839.
-
- Described by the Author as “a harmless romance, which, without
- aiming to inculcate any great moral lesson, still endeavours to
- draw amiable portraits of virtue.”—(Pref.). An old-fashioned
- novel in the early Victorian sentimental manner. The plot is
- laid chiefly in Killarney (of which there is some description)
- and Dublin, at the time of the earlier Napoleonic wars, when
- Dublin had its parliament and was the centre of fashion. The
- plot is intricate, but turns chiefly on the mischances and
- misunderstandings that keep apart the hero, Felix Charlemont,
- and the heroine, Rose de Blaquière. This latter name was the
- title of later editions of this book, _e.g._ (LONDON: _C. H.
- Clare_), 1856.
-
-
-=POWER, Marguerite A.=
-
-⸺ NELLY CAREW. Two Vols. (_Saunders & Otley_). Engraved frontisp. 1859.
-
- The heroine, daughter of an Irish landlord, is driven by the
- scheming of a crafty French stepmother (once her governess)
- into marriage with an Irish roué, and leads a life of bitter
- humiliation. But her honour is stainless through it all, and
- there is a happy ending. Characters (_e.g._, Larry McSwiggan)
- are for the most part capitally drawn. The moral is good. The
- brogue is well done. This Author, a niece of the Countess of
- Blessington, wrote also _Evelyn Forrester_, 1856, and _The
- Foresters_, 1857.
-
-
-=POWER, V. O’D.=
-
-⸺ BONNIE DUNRAVEN: a Story of Kilcarrick. Two Vols. (589 pp.).
-(_Remington_). 1881.
-
- A very sympathetic and pleasant love story of modern life in
- Co. Cork. The characters are thoroughly natural and human, and,
- moreover, thoroughly Irish. Conversations good. But perhaps
- the chief merit of the story is its faithful reproduction of
- South of Ireland “atmosphere,” especially by word-pictures of
- Southern scenes—the coasts, the Blackwater, Mount Mellaray.
- Was highly praised by THE ATHENÆUM, THE ACADEMY, and by the
- Catholic Press.—(I.M.).
-
-⸺ THE HEIR OF LISCARRAGH. (_Art and Book Co._). 1892.
-
- A story in which the romantic elements are very strong.
-
-⸺ TRACKED. (_“Ireland’s Own” Library_). 6_d._ Paper covers. 1914.
-
- A wholesome and pleasant story of unrequited love and of
- jealousy. Scene: Innishowen (Co. Donegal). A well-worked out
- plot, with good descriptions of scenery. Peasants depicted with
- sympathy and understanding.
-
-
-=PRESTON, Dorothea.=
-
-⸺ PADDY. (_Sealy, Bryers_). 1_s._ Twenty coloured illustrs.
-
- Paddy’s dreams and adventures in Celtic Fairyland.
-
-
-=PREVOST, Antoine Francois=; called =Prevost d’Exiles=, 1697-1763.
-
-⸺ LE DOYEN DE KELLERINE. Histoire morale composée sur les mémoires d’une
-illustre famille d’Irlande; et ornée de tout ce qui peut rendre une
-lecture utile et agréable. (LA HAYE: _P. Poppy_). 1744.
-
- A trans. of this under title _The Dean of Coleraine_. _A Moral
- History founded on the Memoirs of an Illustrious Family in
- Ireland_, was printed in London (Vol. I.) and Dubl. (Vols. II.
- and III.) in 1742; another ed. 1780. The work was originally
- publ. in Paris, 1735, and there were further editions in 1750,
- 1821 (six vols.), &c. The Author was a French abbé, and a very
- voluminous author, having published upwards of 200 vols. There
- is a selection of his works in 39 vols. in the Library of
- T.C.D. His chief title to fame is the romance _Manon Lescaut_.
- The present is a well written, though very long, story, showing
- how the teller of the tale, the Dean or P.P. of Coleraine, in
- Antrim, watched with more than a father’s anxious care over the
- fortunes of his two half-brothers and sister. Their several
- characters appear admirably in the telling, especially that of
- the poor good Dean, unworldly, unselfish, deeply affectionate,
- but over anxious and almost over conscientious. His efforts
- to keep his wayward charges in the straight path amid the
- allurements of Paris are very well told. There is nothing in
- the least objectionable. There is an air of reality about the
- whole, though the style is old-fashioned. Towards the close the
- Dean acts as a Jacobite agent in Ireland.
-
-
-=PURDON, K. F.= B. in Enfield, Co. Meath, and has always resided there.
-Ed. at home, in England, and at Alexandra College, Dublin. Has written
-much for Irish and English periodicals, her first encouragement coming
-from the IRISH HOMESTEAD. She also owes much to the helpfulness of
-Richard Whiteing, the well-known writer.
-
-⸺ CANDLE AND CRIB. Pp. 42. 12mo. (_Maunsel_). 1_s._ Christmas, 1914.
-
- Quietly but tastefully bound. Four good illustr. in colour by
- Beatrice Elvery. An exquisite little Christmas idyll telling
- of the strange way Art Moloney brought his new wife home to
- Ardenoo for Christmas.
-
-⸺ THE FOLK OF FURRY FARM. Pp. 315. (_Nisbet_). 6_s._ 1914.
-
- A story of life at Ardenoo, somewhere in the Midlands,
- depicting in the most intimate way the conversation, manners,
- humours, kindliness of the people. Told as if by one of
- themselves with the strange phraseology, the unexpected turns,
- the often poetic figurativeness of the best shanachies. Miss
- Purdon writes as one with close and accurate knowledge of the
- home-life, at least in its outward aspects, of the small farmer
- class to which the chief characters belong. The matrimonial
- affairs of Michael Heffernan and his sharp-tongued sister Julia
- are humorously told, and the Author is almost a specialist in
- tramps. Pref. by “Geo. Birmingham,” giving a sketch of the
- Irish Literary movement.
-
-
-=QUIGLEY, Rev. Hugh; “A Missionary Priest.”= 1818-1883. B. in Co. Clare,
-studied in Rome, and was there ordained for the American Mission. Was
-Rector of the University of St. Mary, Chicago, but resigned and laboured
-among the Chippewa Indians and among miners in California. Died in Troy,
-N.Y.
-
-⸺ THE CROSS AND SHAMROCK. Pp. 240. (_Duffy_). 2_s._ (N.Y.: _Benziger_).
-0.60. Still in print. [1853].
-
- Religious and moral instruction conveyed in the form of a story
- of the trials and sufferings (amounting at times to martyrdom)
- of a family of orphan children at the hands of various types
- of proselytisers. A harsh and satirical tone is adopted
- in speaking of American Protestantism. Incidentally there
- are sidelights on several phases of American life, notably
- rail-road construction. Full sub-t.:—“Or, how to defend the
- faith, an Irish-American Catholic tale of real life descriptive
- of the temptations, trials, sufferings, and triumphs of the
- children of St. Patrick in the great republic of Washington.”
-
-⸺ THE PROPHET OF THE RUINED ABBEY; or, A Glance of the Future of Ireland.
-Pp. 247. (_Duffy_). 1863.
-
- “A narrative founded on the ancient ‘Prophecies of Culmkill’
- and on other predictions and popular traditions among the
- Irish.”—(Title p.). To keep alive these traditions is the
- Author’s first aim, his second “to keep alive and kindle in the
- bosoms of the Irish Catholic people of this republic genuine
- sentiments both of patriotism and religion.”—(Pref.). Fr. Senan
- O’Donnell, under sentence of death in town of Cloughmore,
- Co. Waterford, at the hands of the British Government, is
- rescued by his brother. In the first part of the book there is
- abundance of stirring incident, thrilling escapes, &c., but the
- latter part becomes more wildly improbable and unreal as it
- proceeds. Fr. Senan is wrecked off coast of Clare and lives for
- years in a cave in cliffs of Moher with a little boy, rescued
- from the eagles. Time: about 1750-1798. Bitterly anti-English
- sentiment throughout. Only by an incident in the last few pages
- are the title and sub-titles justified.
-
-⸺ PROFIT AND LOSS; or, the Life of a Genteel Irish-American. Pp. 458.
-(N.Y.: _T. O’Kane_). 1873.
-
- Purpose: to teach Catholic piety and to guard youth from
- danger. The genteel Irish-American is Michael Mulrooney, who
- was driven out of Ireland by the tyranny of the landlord class.
- The first twenty-five pp. tell us of his troubles in Ireland.
-
-
-=QUINLAN, May.=
-
-⸺ IN THE DEVIL’S ALLEY. Pp. 262. (_Art and Book Co._). 3_s._ 6_d._
-Illustr. very cleverly and humorously by the Author. 1907.
-
- Sketches of the lowest life in the East End of London, chiefly
- among the poorest Irish. Told with sympathy, close observation,
- and quiet humour. There is pathos too, but the Author never
- strains it nor forces the note. _Sunt lachrimae rerum._
- The Author is the dau. of Judge Quinlan, late of Victoria,
- Australia.
-
-
-=READ, Charles Anderson.= 1841-1878. Born near Sligo. Was for some
-years a merchant in Rathfriland, Co. Down. Went to London, 1863. Was an
-industrious and able writer, and a man full of enthusiastic admiration
-for Ireland, its people, and its literature. Produced numerous sketches,
-poems, short tales, and nine novels, the most notable of the latter being
-_Love’s Service_; but better known are his _Aileen Aroon_ and _Savourneen
-Dheelish_, of which the LONDON REVIEW said: “We are presented with a view
-of agrarian crime in its most revolting aspect, and there is no false
-glamour thrown around any of the characters. Many of the incidents are
-highly dramatic, while the dialogue is bright and forcible.” The above
-notice is taken from an article by Mr. Charles Gibbon in the _Cabinet of
-Irish Literature_, edited by Mr. Read himself.
-
-⸺ SAVOURNEEN DHEELISH; or, One True Heart. 16mo. (LONDON: _Henderson_),
-1_s._ [1869]. 1874, 7th ed.
-
- First appeared in THE WEEKLY BUDGET. A melodramatic but finely
- told story. The principal incident is the historic tragedy
- utilised by Carleton in his “Wild Goose Lodge.” Especially
- thrilling is the scene where Kate Costelloe gives the evidence
- which she knows will bring her brother and her lover to the
- gallows. Barney Fegan, a jovial pedlar, plays a conspicuous
- part. The usual devices of evictions, murders, Whiteboys,
- traitors, trials, secret caves, &c. Scenery well described:
- brogue well done. The fair at Keady is a noteworthy piece of
- description. Scene: the district round Dundalk.
-
-⸺ AILEEN AROON; or, The Pride of Clonmore. (LONDON: _Henderson_). 1_s._
-[1870.]. Sixth ed. _n.d._
-
- First appeared in THE WEEKLY BUDGET. Garratt O’Neill is
- falsely accused of murder. His sweetheart Aileen on her way to
- Downpatrick to defend him is abducted by his enemy. Suspected
- of infidelity, she is driven from her home, but is befriended
- by Father Nugent, an unfrocked priest, and his Fenian band, who
- lurk in the Mourne Mountains. After many thrilling episodes and
- hairbreadth escapes the lovers are united at last. Sensational
- but well-told, and containing some good descriptions.
-
-
-=READE, Amos.=
-
-⸺ NORAH MORIARTY; or, Revelations of Irish Life. (_Blackwood_). Two Vols.
-1886.
-
- “A romance bound up with the story of the Land League, its
- rise ... in 1880, its development, and the outrages and bitter
- sufferings endured by the victims.”—(_Baker_).
-
-
-=READE, Mrs. R. H.=
-
-⸺ PUCK’S HALL. Pp. 254. (BELFAST: _Charles W. Olley_). 1889.
-
- Scene: Newcastle, Co. Down. A pleasant story, told in a
- straightforward way, with good characterisation. By the same
- Author:—_Milly Davidson_, _Dora_, _Silver Mill_, &c.
-
-
-=REED, Talbot Baines.=
-
-⸺ SIR LUDAR. Pp. 343. (_R.T.S._). Seven illustr. by Alfred Pearse.
-[1889]. Cheap reprints (_“Leisure Hour” Office_), 6_d._, 1910, and
-(_Boys’ Own Paper_). 1913.
-
- Adventures of an English ’prentice boy in company with Sir
- Ludar, who is a son of Sorley Boy MacDonnell of Dunluce
- Castle, Co. Antrim. There is a constant succession of exciting
- incidents. The retaking of Dunluce from the English is the
- most noteworthy. The heroes are on board the Armada during
- its fight with the English. The tone is not anti-Irish, but
- occasionally unfair to Catholics. It is a book for boys.
-
- The Author (1852-1893) was a son of Sir Chas. Reed, M.P.,
- F.S.A., Deputy Governor of the Irish Society, and nephew of
- John Anderson, the Belfast bibliographer. He had a great love
- for Ireland and her people, and always delighted in visiting
- her shores.
-
-⸺ KILGORMAN. Pp. 420. (_Nelson_). Six illustr. (good). 1906.
-
- Scene: mainly in Donegal. Relates adventures of Donegal
- fisherboy, first at home, then in Paris during Reign of
- Terror, then at battle of Camperdown, then in Dublin, where he
- frequents meetings of United Irishmen and meets Lord Edward.
- Standpoint: not anti-Irish, but hostile to aims of United
- Irishmen. Full of exciting adventure. Juv.
-
-
-=REID, Forrest.=
-
-⸺ THE BRACKNELS: a Family Chronicle. Pp. 304. (_Arnold_). 6_s._ 1911.
-
- This unpleasant and, we hope, abnormal family is that
- of a self-made Belfast merchant. The book is a study in
- temperaments; Mr. Bracknel himself, a harsh man, with little
- humanness, without affection, except a certain regard for an
- illegitimate child of past days; the daughter Amy, in love with
- Rusk, the tutor, and ready to go to any lengths to win him; the
- wilful, selfish, elder son; above all, Denis, the youngest,
- morbid, dreamy, the victim of delusions, engaging in strange
- pagan worship, yet with amiable traits. There is not a trace of
- religion in the chronicle of this family.
-
-⸺ FOLLOWING DARKNESS. Pp. 320. (_Arnold_). 6_s._ 1912.
-
- A soul study in form of autobiography. The hero is a son of
- a Co. Down schoolmaster. He is brought up amid uncongenial
- people and in uncongenial circumstances, first amid the Mourne
- Mountains, then in sordid Cromac St., Belfast. His soul
- sickens with the dreariness of the education, and especially
- of the religion that is imposed on him, and the father, a
- hard, unresponsive man, is perversely blind to the genius (an
- artistic and somewhat moody temperament) and aspirations of the
- young man—with consequences almost fatal. He is thrown back on
- himself. Hence intense introspection and then an outlet sought
- in occult sciences. There is a love story, too, but it is of
- minor importance. The book is but a fragment, and has no real
- conclusion. The style is exceptionally good.
-
-⸺ AT THE DOOR OF THE GATE. Pp. 332. (_Arnold_). 6_s._ 1915.
-
- “One needs no knowledge of Belfast and its people to appreciate
- nine-tenths of what Mr. Reid here describes; there can be
- no question that his characters are true to life: the small
- family at the combined post office and lending library; the
- hardworking, clean, and grim Mrs. Seawright, her two sons
- Martin and Richard, her adopted daughter Grace ... all this one
- thoroughly appreciates as one admires the sustained skill with
- which in a succession of small strokes Mr. Reid builds up his
- admirable story.”—(TIMES LIT. SUPPL.).
-
-
-=RHYS, Grace.= “Mrs. Rhys (_née_ Little) was born at Knockadoo, Boyle,
-Co. Roscommon, 1865. She is youngest daughter of J. Bennett Little, and
-married, in 1891, Ernest Rhys, the poet.... Her novels deal with Irish
-life, which she knows well, and are written with sympathetic insight,
-tenderness, and tragic power.”—(IRISH LIT.).
-
-⸺ MARY DOMINIC. Pp. 296. (_Dent_). 1898.
-
- The main theme is the seduction of a young peasant girl by the
- son of the landlord, and the nemesis that overtook the seducer
- after many years. The story is told with exceptional power and
- pathos. There is no prurient description, unless one half-page
- might be objected to on this score. The peasants are natural
- and life-like, but there is something strangely repellant
- in the pictures of the upper classes. There are incidents
- bringing out the darker aspects of the land-war. There is no
- anti-religious bias.
-
-⸺ THE WOOING OF SHEILA. (_Methuen_). 6_s._ [1901]. Second ed., 1908.
-(N.Y.: _Holt_). 1.50.
-
- A gentleman, from unnatural motives, deliberately brings up
- his son as a common labourer. The boy falls in love with and
- marries a peasant girl, whom he had saved from the pursuit of a
- rascally young squire. On her marriage morning she learns that
- her husband has killed her unworthy lover. She at once leaves
- her husband, but a priest induces her to return, and the crime
- is hushed up in a rather improbable manner. As in the Author’s
- other books, there is a subtle charm of style, delicate
- analysis of character, and fair knowledge of peasant life.
-
-⸺ THE PRINCE OF LISNOVER. (_Methuen_). 1904.
-
- Ireland in the early ’sixties. Has same qualities as _Mary
- Dominic_. Devotion of the people to the old and dispossessed
- “lord of the soil” is touchingly brought out. A pretty
- girl-and-boy love story runs through the whole.
-
-⸺ THE CHARMING OF ESTERCEL. Pp. 318. (_Dent_). 6_s._ 1913.
-
- A love story of Ireland in the days of O’Neill and Essex. The
- main interest lies in the story of how Estercel is brought to
- love his cousin Sabia, and in the adventures of the former,
- an O’Neill and the envoy of the great Hugh, in Dublin and in
- Ulster. But the historical background is well painted and the
- historical personages carefully studied. The hero’s wonderful
- horse, Tamburlaine, is a strange and original “character”
- in the piece, and there is a splendid description of how he
- carried his master from Dublin home to the North. The Author
- writes with sympathy for Ireland. The charm of the style
- is enhanced by her sympathy with wild nature and delicate
- perception of its sights and sounds.
-
-
-=RHYS, Rt. Hon. Sir John, M.A., D.Litt.= B. Cardiganshire, 1840. Ed.
-Bangor and Oxford. Also at the Sorbonne, College de France, Heidelberg,
-Leipsic, and Göttingen. Prof. of Celtic at Oxford since 1877. Member of
-innumerable learned societies and royal commissions. He has read many
-valuable papers on Celtic subjects before the R.I.A. Publ. a long series
-of works on Celtic subjects, _e.g._, _Celtic Heathendom_, 1886.
-
-⸺ CELTIC FOLK-LORE, Welsh and Manx. Two Vols. Pp. xlvi. + 718. (OXFORD:
-_Clarendon Press_). 10_s._ 1901.
-
- Stories gathered partly by letter, partly _viva voce_,
- classified and critically discussed. The group of ideas, he
- concludes, connected with the fairies is drawn partly from
- history and fact, partly from the world of imagination and
- myth, the former part representing vague traditions of earlier
- races. Many subsidiary questions are raised, _e.g._, magic, the
- origin of druidism, certain aspects of the Arthurian legends,
- &c. Ch. x. deals with Difficulties of the Folk-lorist; Ch. xi.
- with Folk-lore Philosophy; Ch. xii. with Race in Folk-lore and
- Myth. Throughout constant references are made to and frequent
- parallels drawn with Irish folk-lore, _e.g._, the Cuchulainn
- cycle.
-
-
-=RIDDELL, Mrs.= _née_ =Charlotte E. Cowan=. Born at Carrickfergus,
-1832. Published her first book 1858, since when she has written nearly
-forty novels. All of these are remarkably clever, and some have been
-very popular. They deal chiefly with social and domestic life among
-the Protestant upper and middle classes. The scene is laid in London,
-Hertfordshire, Lincolnshire, Scotland, &c. Few deal with Ireland. We may
-mention _George Geith of Fen Court_ (1864), _City and Suburb_ (1861),
-_A Life’s Assize_ (1870), _Above Suspicion_ (1875), _Too Much Alone_,
-_Susan Drummond_, _Race for Wealth_, _Head of the Firm_. Her books are
-noteworthy for the intimate knowledge of the proceedings of law and the
-business world of London which they display. D. 1906.
-
-⸺ MAXWELL DREWITT. [1865]. New illustr. ed., 1869. (_Arnold_).
-
- A rather lengthy but well-told tale of adventures in Connemara,
- including an old-fashioned election (time, 1854) and a
- well-described trial for robbery on the Drogheda and Dundalk
- Railway. The plot is well constructed and the characters,
- mainly of the landlord class, sympathetically depicted. The
- peasantry are faithfully, if somewhat humorously, delineated.
- Dr. Sheen, the dispensary doctor, and his patients are well
- pourtrayed.
-
-⸺ A STRUGGLE FOR FAME. 1883. Several eds.
-
- Partly autobiographical. Describes a young girl and her father
- sailing from Belfast with her MS. to win her way in London. Her
- experiences of publishers and love affairs.
-
-⸺ BERNA BOYLE. Pp. 443. (_Macmillan_). 6_s._ [1884]. 1900, &c.
-
- A love story of the Co. Down about fifty years ago. Deals
- mainly with the trials of a young lady, who suffers much from
- suitors with disagreeable relatives. The characters are mainly
- drawn from a rather uninspiring and unsympathetic type of
- Ulster folk. Perhaps the most striking feature is the character
- of Berna’s mother, a vulgar, pushful, foolish woman. There is
- humour not a little in the situations and characters. The story
- suffers from its great length.
-
-⸺ THE BANSHEE’S WARNING, and Other Tales. (LONDON: _Macqueen_). 6_d._
-Paper. 1903.
-
- Six stories, four having some concern with Ireland. The first
- tells how the Banshee goes to London to warn the scapegrace
- son of an Irish family, who is a clever surgeon, yet always
- plunged in debt. It is a study of a strange personality. “A
- Vagrant Digestion” humorously relates the journeyings of the
- hypochondriacal Vicar of Rathdundrum in search of health.
- “Mr. Mabbot’s Fright” and “So Near, or the Pity of It” both
- illustrate the honesty and the proper pride of the Irish. The
- latter is pathetic. The former is humorous, is full of life and
- movement, and contains fine descriptions of the coast-drive
- from Belfast to Larne in the old days, and of an exciting
- run-away.
-
-
-=RIDDALL, Walter.=
-
-⸺ HUSBAND AND LOVER. Pp. 304. (_Swift_). 6_s._ 1913.
-
- The love affairs of a London journalist who comes to Ireland,
- marries Doris, and makes love to Laura.—(T. LIT. SUPPL.). The
- Author, who was the second son of the late Dean Riddall of
- Belfast, died in 1913, at the age of forty.
-
-
-=“RITA”; Mrs. Desmond Humphreys.= Author of a great many novels: Mudie’s
-list enumerates 58, amongst them _Peg the Rake_ and _Kitty the Rag_,
-both introducing Irish elements, and _The Masqueraders_ describing the
-wanderings and social experiences of two Irish singers.
-
-⸺ THE SIN OF JASPER STANDISH. Pp. 342. (_Constable_). 1901.
-
- Scene: one of the midland counties. The story is founded on
- the Newtonstewart, Co. Tyrone, tragedy, where a scoundrelly
- inspector of police murders the local bank-manager, then
- himself conducts the investigation, but is unmasked and brought
- to justice by the English heroine and her housekeeper. A
- morbid and sensational type of book, with not a few traces
- of religious and national bias. The English characters are
- belauded, the Irish for the most part represented as fools.
- There is much “stage-Irish” dialogue.
-
-⸺ A GREY LIFE. Pp. 347. (_Stanley Paul_). 6_s._ 1913.
-
- Scene: a boarding-house in Bath kept by three reduced ladies,
- with whom Rosaleen O’Hara passes (in the later 1870’s) the
- three or four years covered by the story. The central figure is
- the Chevalier Theophrastus O’Shaughnessy, a charming, scholarly
- man, with sad stories of his past to tell.
-
-
-=ROBINSON, F. Mabel.=
-
-⸺ THE PLAN OF CAMPAIGN. Two Vols. (_Vizetelly_). 1888.
-
- Scene: Dublin, except for a chapter at Dromore and a visit to
- London. Deals with the famous agrarian “Plan of Campaign” in
- the eighties, viewed with Nationalist sympathies. Religion
- is not discussed. A number of men and women of the educated
- classes meet to talk politics. They go to see evictions, and
- vivid but heartrending pictures of these are drawn. A bad
- landlord is killed by a gentleman named Considine. The latter’s
- friend, Talbot, helps him to escape, but his daughter Stella
- dies of grief. Considine, who is an unbeliever, shoots himself.
- The story is a good one and skilfully worked out.
-
-
-=ROCHE, Hon. Alexis.=
-
-⸺ JOURNEYINGS WITH JERRY THE JARVEY. (_Smith, Elder_). 6_s._ 1915.
-
- Two of these sketches first appeared in the CORNHILL. “One
- of the most mirth-provoking collection of sketches that has
- appeared for many a long day. There is a laugh in every page
- and a roar in every chapter. Yet it is all pure comedy:
- only once does the Author descend to farce.... a delightful
- book.”—(I.B.L.). The Author, son of 1st Baron Fermoy, was born
- in 1853, and died in 1915.
-
-
-=ROCHE, Regina Maria.= 1765-1845. A once celebrated novelist. For many
-years before her death she lived in retirement at Waterford. Wrote also
-_The Vicar of Lansdowne_ (1793), _Maid of the Hamlet_, _The Monastery of
-St. Columba_, &c., &c.
-
-⸺ THE CHILDREN OF THE ABBEY. Four Vols. 12 mo. [1798]. (_Mason_). Twelfth
-ed., 1835; others 1863, 1867.
-
- A sentimental story of a very old-fashioned type. The
- personages are chiefly earls and marquises, the heroines have
- names like Amanda, Malvina, &c. Though in this novel Irish
- places (Enniskillen, Dublin, Bray) are mentioned, the book does
- not seem to picture any reality of Irish life. This is still
- on Mudie’s list. It was republ. in U.S.A. at Hartford, Exeter,
- Philadelphia, and N.Y.
-
-⸺ THE MUNSTER COTTAGE BOY. Four Vols. Pp. 1195. (LONDON: _Newman_). 1820.
-
- A little girl, Fidelia, grows up without knowing who her
- parents are. Bad people try to exploit her: a servant named
- Connolly tries to save her, but she falls from one misfortune
- into another, till finally she meets her father, and finds
- herself an heiress. Interminable conversations and intricacies
- of episode. A multitude of characters, who are for the most
- part English in Ireland. No humour, nor style.
-
-⸺ THE BRIDAL OF DUNAMORE. Pp. 888. (LONDON: _Newman_). 1823.
-
- A character study of Rosalind Glenmorlie, beautiful but haughty
- and ambitious, and of the misery she caused to many and finally
- to herself. It is tragedy almost all through. The scene in
- “Dunamore,” on E. coast of Ireland. The character of the
- heroine is overdrawn and exaggerated, like most of the Author’s
- _dramatis personæ_.
-
-⸺ THE TRADITION OF THE CASTLE; or, Scenes in the Emerald Isle. Four Vols.
-Pp. 1414. 1824.
-
- A very long story, with a multitude of characters. The aim
- seems to be to plead that Irishmen should reside in their
- own country and work for its welfare. Scenery of Howth,
- Artoir-na-Greine, a place near Dublin, and Killarney. Dialect
- good. No discussion of religious matters, but a good deal
- of politics. The story opens during last session of Irish
- Parliament, and, in a discussion between husband and wife, the
- Author’s nationalist sentiments appear. Donoghue O’Brien, the
- hero, is long kept apart from his Eveleen Erin, but they are
- united in the end.
-
-⸺ THE CASTLE CHAPEL. Three Vols. Pp. 963. (LONDON: _Newman_). 1825.
-
- A story of a family of O’Neills of St. Doulagh’s Castle,
- somewhere in Ulster, early nineteenth century. Eugene falls
- in love with Rose Cormack, his sister’s companion, and they
- make vows of marriage in the chapel by moonlight. Eugene,
- who dabbles in phrenology and seems somewhat of a fool, goes
- away. On his return he is told that Rose has been killed in an
- accident. In reality she has been taken away by her father,
- a Mr. Mordaunt, former owner of the castle, who has poisoned
- his wife. Rose becomes an heiress, dies abroad, and leaves her
- fortune to the O’Neills, and an apology for her duplicity. A
- queer, outlandish sort of story.
-
-
-=ROCHFORT, Edith.=
-
-⸺ THE LLOYDS OF BALLYMORE. Two Vols. (_Chapman & Hall_). 1890.
-
- A domestic story, told with simplicity and feeling. The Lloyds
- belong to the Protestant landlord class, as do most of the
- personages in the tale. Period: 1881: the Land League days.
- Scene: the Midlands and afterwards Dublin. The first part of
- the plot turns on the agrarian murder of Mr. Lloyd, the trial,
- and execution of the murderer; the second on Tom Lloyd’s being
- suspected of a bank-robbery when the Lloyds are living in very
- straitened circumstances. All through runs a delicately told
- and very sympathetic love story. The land question is viewed
- from the landlord standpoint, but discussed without excessive
- bitterness. Conversations natural and peasant dialect good.
-
-
-=RODENBERG, Julius.=
-
-⸺ DIE HARFE VON IRLAND: Märchen und dichtung in Irland. Pp. 299. 16mo.
-(LEIPZIG: _Grunow_). 1861.
-
- Contains:—I. Thirteen Irish melodies, with music. II. Tales.
- III. Poems and songs transl. into German verse. At the end
- are useful notes, and at p. 283 a list of sources. These are
- chiefly the DUBLIN AND LONDON MAGAZINE for 1825-7. Two are
- given as “mündlich” (gathered orally). Titles such as:—The
- land in the sea, the wizard of Crunnaan, two stories of the
- Leprechaun, the land of the ever young (Tír na n-óg), the fairy
- handkerchief of the Phuka, the fair Nora, &c.
-
-
-=ROGERS, R. D.=
-
-⸺ THE ADVENTURES OF ST. KEVIN, and Other Irish Tales. (_Swan
-Sonnenschein_). Pp. 266. [1897]. 1907.
-
- A dozen humorous sketches, well told, giving the old legends
- in a modern comic setting, much in the vein of Edmund Downey’s
- _Through Green Glasses_. The brogue is faithfully rendered.
-
-
-=ROLLESTON, T. W.= B. 1857, at Shinrone, King’s Co. His father was County
-Court Judge for Tipperary. Ed. St. Columba’s, Rathfarnham, and T.C.D.
-Lived some years on the Continent, but has since lived alternately in
-London and in Dublin. Has written much verse. Also several literary,
-philosophical, and biographical works. Was the first secretary of the
-Irish Literary Society, London.
-
-⸺ MYTHS AND LEGENDS OF THE CELTIC RACE. Pp. ix. + 457. (_Harrap_). 7_s._
-6_d._ Sixty-four full-page illustr. by Stephen Reid—excellent. (N.Y.:
-_Crowell_). 2.50. 1911.
-
- A very handsome volume, beautifully printed and bound.
- Contents:—1. The Celts in ancient history. 2. The religion of
- the Celts. 3. The Irish invasion myths. 4. The early Milesian
- kings. 5. Tales of the Ultonian cycle. 6. Tales of the Ossianic
- cycle. 7. The voyage of Maeldun. 8. Myths and Tales of the
- Cymry. Elaborate Glossary and Index. From about p. 106 onwards
- the legends, sagas, &c., are not simply discussed but told as
- stories. The résumé of early Celtic history, with the customs,
- art, religion, and influence of the race, is very valuable; but
- the main interest lies in his complete survey of the cycles of
- Irish myth and legend. The editor claims that he has “avoided
- any adaptation of the material for the popular taste.” Some
- very unfortunate (to say the least) remarks about religion (see
- pp. 47 and 66) might well have been omitted.
-
-⸺ THE HIGH DEEDS OF FINN, and Other Bardic Romances of Ancient Ireland.
-Pp. lv. + 214. (_Harrap_). 5_s._ Sixteen illustr. by Stephen Reid. (N.Y.:
-_Crowell_). 1.50. 1910.
-
- Introduction long, but very interesting, by the well-known man
- of letters (author of nearly thirty volumes), Rev. Stopford
- Brooke. Deals with the relationships and contrasts between the
- various cycles of Irish bardic literature and their several
- characteristics—and this in a style full of literary charm. The
- stories told by Mr. Rolleston (than whom few more competent
- could be found for the work) are re-tellings in a style
- graceful and poetic, but simple and direct, of ancient Gaelic
- romances, some already told in English elsewhere, others now
- first appearing in an English dress. They are drawn from all
- three cycles above mentioned. Source for each mentioned at end
- of book. Some of these tales are already well known, such as
- Oisin in the Land of Youth, and the Children of Lir. The style,
- it may be added, has not the fire and the dramatic force of
- Standish O’Grady, but it has good qualities of its own.
-
-
-=ROONEY, Miss Teresa J.; “Eblana.”= B. 1840. D. in 1911.
-
-⸺ THE LAST MONARCH OF TARA. Pp. 311. (_Gill_). 2_s._ [1880]. (N.Y.:
-_Benziger_). 0.80. 1889, &c.
-
- Period: reigns of Tuathal and Diarmaid O Cearbhail. Scene:
- chiefly the district around Tara. Aims to present a detailed
- picture of the daily life and civilization of Ireland at
- the time. Chief events: the murder of Tuathal, the judgment
- of Diarmaid against Columbkille, followed by the battle
- of Cooldrevne, and finally the Cursing and Abandonment of
- Tara. The story is slight and moves slowly; there is no love
- interest. The historical events are not all, perhaps, very
- certain, but the author has brought very great industry and
- erudition (from the best sources) to the portrayal of the life
- of the time. The edition (of 1889) was revised and corrected by
- Canon U. J. Bourke, M.R.I.A., and is admirably produced.
-
-⸺ EILY O’HARTIGAN, an Irish-American Tale. (_Sealy, Bryers_). 2_s._ 1889.
-
- Time of the Volunteers. Chief incidents in tale: Battle of
- Bunker’s Hill, and Irish Declaration of Independence in 1782.
- A disagreeable person of the name of Buck Fox (the name under
- which the story originally appeared) takes up quite too large
- a space in this book; and he and his friends, with their
- _soi-disant_ English accents, are most decided bores. The point
- of view is strongly national.—(I.M.).
-
-⸺ THE STRIKE. (_Sealy, Bryers_). 6_d._ 1909.
-
- “A stirring tale of Dublin in the eighteenth century, when
- Ireland stood well ahead in industrial activity, and the Dublin
- Liberties were the hub of Irish Industrialism.”
-
-
-=RORISON, E. S.=
-
-⸺ A TASTE OF QUALITY. Pp. 319. (_Long_). 6_s._ 1904.
-
- Family life among Protestant upper middle class folk in a
- country district—very pleasant and refined society. A kindly,
- human story, eminently true to life, without bias of any
- kind. One becomes quite familiar with the cleverly-drawn
- characters—the kindly, cultured Archdeacon and his sister;
- patient, crippled Larry, with his cheery slang; devoted Auntie
- Nell, bringing comfort and brightness where she goes; the
- Austrian countess; and the twins.
-
-
-=ROSSA, Jeremiah O’Donovan.=
-
-⸺ EDWARD O’DONNELL: a Story of Ireland of Our Day. Pp. 300. (N.Y.:
-_Green_). 1884.
-
- Scene somewhere near Fethard, Co. Tipperary, during Land League
- agitation. The Author’s sympathies are against the L.L. and for
- the physical force party, often called dynamiters at the time.
- The book is full of the agrarian question, viewed with bitterly
- anti-landlord bias. Eviction scenes, boycotting, midnight
- conspiracy. Satirical portrait of the pious landlord—Catholic
- attorney who battens on the miseries of the poor; also of
- various landlord types. In the case of “Father Tim” the
- portraits shows all the weak spots, but without bitterness
- or disrespect. See ch. 18, Fr. Tim’s sermon against the
- dynamiters. Good picture of a dispensary doctor’s life and
- difficulties. Well written, but rather a pamphlet than a story.
- It is believed in many quarters that Rossa did not write a word
- of this story;[12] the edition I examined has on the title-page
- what purports to be a facsimile of Rossa’s signature. Rossa
- was b. in Rosscarbery, Co. Cork, 1831. Died in U.S.A., 1915,
- and was given a public funeral in Dublin. He was a well known
- Fenian leader, was condemned for treason-felony in 1865, and
- sentenced to perpetual imprisonment, but was subsequently
- released and went to New York, where he edited THE UNITED
- IRISHMAN.
-
-[12] In a contribution to I.B.L. for Sept., 1915, Mr. Edmund Downey
-unhesitatingly assigns the book to the late Edward Moran, brother of the
-present Ed. of THE LEADER.
-
-
-=RUFFIN, Mrs. M. E. HENRY-=, _see_ =HENRY-RUFFIN=.
-
-
-=RUSSELL, Maud M.=
-
-⸺ SPRIGS OF SHAMROCK; or, Irish Sketches and Legends. Pp. 134. (_Browne &
-Nolan_). 6_d._ 1900.
-
- “The little books show how full of charm and fascination the
- holiday resorts of Ireland really are.”—(LADY’S PICTORIAL).
-
-
-=RUSSELL, T. O’Neill; “Reginald Tierney.”= B. near Moate, Co. Westmeath,
-1828. Son of Joseph Russell, a Quaker. Was devoted from about 1858 till
-the end of his life to the revival of the Irish language. During the
-Fenian movement he was an object of suspicion. He emigrated, and spent
-thirty years in U.S.A. Returning in 1895, he threw himself heart and soul
-into the Gaelic Revival. D. 1908.
-
-⸺ TRUE HEART’S TRIALS. (_Gill_). 1_s._ and 1_s._ 6_d._ Still in print,
-1910.
-
- A rather rambling tale of the troubles of a pair of lovers.
- Scene: first, the Lake district of Cavan and Westmeath, where
- we have a glimpse of squireen life. Afterwards the backwoods
- north of Albany, U.S.A. Both light and shade of American
- colonist life depicted. There are many laughable episodes in
- the book.
-
-⸺ DICK MASSEY. Pp. 300. (_Gill_). 1_s._ 1860. New ed., poor print, 1908.
-
- Famine in 1814 and following years, as background for a story
- full of incident, humour, and pathos, with faithful pictures
- of many sides of Irish life—the emigrant ship, a wedding,
- relations of good and bad landlords with tenants. Altogether on
- the side of the peasant. Original title:—_The Struggles of Dick
- Massey; or, the battles of a boy_, by “Reginald Tierney.”
-
-
-=RUSSELL, Violet.= Is the wife of George Russell, “A.E.,” Ed. of the
-IRISH HOMESTEAD and a well-known poet.
-
-⸺ HEROES OF THE DAWN. Pp. 251. (_Maunsel_). 5_s._ Sixteen black and white
-drawings and four coloured illustr. by Beatrice Elvery. _n.d._ [1913].
-
- Stories of the Fionn cycle, drawn from Standish O’Grady’s
- _Silva Gadelica_ and from the _Transactions of the Ossianic
- Society_, and retold, with a pleasant simplicity and
- directness, for children. “I would have you see in them,” says
- the dedication, “a record of some qualities which the heroes
- of ancient times held to be of far greater worth than anything
- else—an absolute truthfulness and courtesy in thought and
- speech and action; a nobility and chivalry of mind, &c....” But
- the Author leaves the reader to draw his own moral and does not
- force it on him. The illustrations are charming, and the whole
- book is produced with great artistic taste.
-
-
-=RYAN, W. P.=, _see also_ =O’RYAN, W. P.=
-
-⸺ THE HEART OF TIPPERARY. Pp. 256. (_Ward & Downey_). 1893.
-
- A romance of the Land League, but not too much taken up with
- politics. Nationalist. Introd. by William O’Brien, M.P.
-
-⸺ STARLIGHT THROUGH THE ROOF. Pp. 240. (_Downey_). 1895. Under pseudonym
-“Kevin Kennedy.”
-
- Scene: an inland village of Munster (presumably in Co.
- Tipperary). A tale of peasant life—Utopian reforms realized by
- a returned emigrant, opposed by land agents and a landlord’s
- priest; partial conversion of the latter to the people’s side;
- arrest of reformer on false charge of murder; breaking open of
- prison, and rescue, &c. An early and crude effort in fiction.
- Pleasant, emotional style. Very strong Nationalist bias.
-
-
-=“RATHKYLE, M. A.”=
-
-⸺ FAREWELL TO GARRYMORE. Pp. 127. (_Sealy, Bryers_). 1_s._ net. 1912.
-
- A simple little tale of life in an Irish village, showing
- knowledge of the country-folk and of their ways of thought and
- speech; also a thorough understanding of children. The Author
- is Miss M. Younge, of Upper Oldtown, Rathdowney.
-
-
-=SADLIER, Mrs. James=,[13] _née_ =Madden=. Born at Cootehill, 1820. D.
-1903. In 1844 she went to Canada, where the rest of her life was spent.
-Between 1847 and 1874 she wrote frequently for the principal Catholic
-papers in America. In 1895 she received the Laetare Medal. “Each of her
-works of fiction had a special object in view, bearing on the moral
-and religious well-being of her fellow Irish Catholics.” She says: “It
-is needless to say that all my writings are dedicated to the one grand
-object: the illustration of our holy Faith by means of tales or stories.”
-Her sympathies are strongly nationalist. Besides the books here noticed,
-she also published _The Red Hand of Ulster_, and a large number of
-religious works. Flynn of Boston publishes a uniform ed. of her works at
-0.60 each vol. Many of them were, naturally, originally published by the
-firm of her husband, James Sadlier.
-
-[13] _i.e._, Mary A. Sadlier, to be carefully distinguished from Anna T.
-Sadlier, her daughter, born in Montreal. The latter has written nearly as
-much as her mother, but her works are not concerned with Ireland.
-
-⸺ THE FATE OF FATHER SHEEHY. Pp. 178 + appendix 76. (_Duffy_). 1_s._
-6_d._ Still in print. [_c._ 1845]. (N.Y.: _Benziger_). 0.60.
-
- The story (true, though told in form of fiction) of how the
- heroic patriot-priest was judicially murdered at Clonmel in
- 1766 by the ascendancy faction, backed by the Government.
- Appendix by Dr. R. R. Madden, giving full details of the trial,
- depositions of witnesses, &c.
-
-⸺ WILLY BURKE. Pp. 224. (_Duffy_). 1_s._ 6_d._ [_c._ 1850]. In print,
-1909.
-
- Story of two Irish emigrant boys left orphans in the States,
- and their struggles with temptations against their Faith. One
- is a model boy; the other goes off the track, but is brought
- back again. A moral and religious story, full of Catholic faith
- and feeling. It might, however, be not unreasonably considered
- somewhat “goody-goody.”
-
-⸺ NEW LIGHTS; or, Life in Galway. Pp. 443. (N.Y.: _Sadlier_). [1853].
-
- Peasant life in Famine times. Written with a strong sympathy
- for the sufferings of the people, and with admiration for
- their virtues. There is a good deal about the proselytism
- or “souperism” that was rife at the time. The evils of
- landlordism, resulting in evictions, &c., are depicted. There
- is no love interest.
-
-⸺ THE BLAKES AND FLANAGANS. Pp. 391. (N.Y.: _Kenedy_). 60 cents. net; and
-(_Duffy_) 2_s._ 6_d._ [1855]. 1909.
-
- Life among lower middle class Irish in New York, showing
- in a somewhat satirical way, evil effects of public school
- education. The moral purpose, though fairly evident, does not
- detract from the naturalness of the story. The conversation is
- particularly lifelike.
-
-⸺ THE CONFEDERATE CHIEFTAINS. Pp. 384. Demy 8vo. (_Gill_). 4_s._ Many
-editions. [1859]. Still in print. (N.Y.: _Benziger_). 0.60 net.
-
- A romance of a popular kind, without great literary
- pretensions, giving a good picture of the events of the time,
- written from a Catholic standpoint, and sympathising with
- the Old Irish party led by O’Neill, who is the hero of the
- tale. All the chief men of the various parties figure in the
- narrative. Full expression is given to the Author’s sympathies
- and dislikes, yet without, we believe, historic unfairness.
-
-⸺ BESSY CONWAY; or, The Irish Girl in America. Pp. 316. (N.Y.: _Kenedy_).
-60 cents. net. Print rather poor. _n.d._ [1861].
-
- Theme of story: influence of religion on character. Object
- (as stated in Pref.): to point out to Irish girls in America
- (especially servants) “the true and never-failing path to
- success in this life, and happiness in the next.” Bessy,
- daughter of Tipperary farmer, leaves for America. She finds
- when on board that Henry Herbert, son of her father’s landlord,
- a Protestant, is without encouragement from her, following her
- through love. The story tells how a change came over the wild
- young man, how he became a Catholic, and married Bessy; how
- the two of them made their fortunes in N. Y., and how Bessy
- came home just in time to stop the eviction of her father in
- the Famine year. Readable, with touches both of humour and of
- pathos. Highly moral and religious in tone.
-
-⸺ THE RED HAND OF ULSTER; or, the Fortunes of Hugh O’Neill. (LONDON and
-DUBLIN), _c._ 1862.
-
- Mentioned in most lists of this Author’s works, but not in
- British Museum Library.
-
-⸺ THE HERMIT OF THE ROCK. Pp. 320. (_Gill_). 2_s._ 6_d._ _n.d._ [1863].
-In print.
-
- Story of Irish society in the ’sixties. The “hermit,” who
- tends the graves and monuments on the Rock of Cashel, is a
- sort of Irish “Old Mortality,” and is a storehouse of legend
- and tradition. The story is by no means a tame one: there is
- a murder mystery, and sensation, though the latter does not
- degenerate into melodrama.
-
-⸺ THE DAUGHTER OF TYRCONNELL: a Tale of the Reign of James I. Pp. 160.
-(_Duffy_), 1_s._ (N.Y.: _Kenedy_). 60 cents, net. [1863]. Still in print.
-
- Sufferings of Mary O’Donnell, daughter of the exiled Earl of
- Tyrconnell, at the hands of James I., who adopted her and
- wished her to marry a Protestant. She dresses as a man and
- escapes to the Continent, where she enters a convent. Founded
- on a tradition recorded in MacGeoghegan’s _History of Ireland_.
- James is painted in very dark colours; Mary is almost too good
- for real life.
-
-⸺ CON O’REGAN; or, Emigrant Life. Pp. 405. (N.Y.: _Kenedy_). 60 cents.
-[1864]. 1909.
-
- A powerful anti-emigration novel, depicting the hardships of
- Irish emigrants in the New England states in the ’forties.
- Thoroughly Catholic and sympathetic to the Irish, but does not
- conceal their faults.
-
-⸺ THE OLD HOUSE BY THE BOYNE. Pp. 319. (_Gill_). 2_s._ 6_d._ [1865]; also
-(LONDON) 1888. New ed., 1904. (N.Y.: _Benziger_). 0.60.
-
- Scene: Drogheda. Many descriptions of old historic spots, and
- much legendary lore. There is a love interest, also, but the
- book is hardly up to the Author’s usual standard. At the outset
- of the book Drogheda is well described.
-
-⸺ THE HEIRESS OF KILORGAN. Pp. vi. + 420. (N.Y.: _Kenedy_). 60 cents.
-[1867]. New ed., 1909.
-
- “A slight and very simple thread of fiction connects throughout
- the series of historical sketches constituting these ‘Evenings
- with the old Geraldines.’”—(Pref.). The plan is similar to
- that of _Hibernian Nights Entertainments_ (Ferguson), _q.v._
- At Kilorgan, near the Maigue, in Co. Limerick, dwell a poor
- family of descendants of the Geraldines. They are visited by
- an Englishman, who has (without their knowledge) bought the
- old place in the courts. Every night of his stay a story is
- told, the intervals being filled in by somewhat insipid love
- episodes, long poems (by Mrs. Hernans, Longfellow, Gerald
- Griffin, &c.), and songs. The stories are a series of episodes
- from Geraldine history from Gerald FitzWalter in Wales to
- the Sugán Earl, _c._ 1598, together with a few miscellaneous
- romantic stories. They are simply and interestingly told. Some
- are hardly for children. An Appendix gives some Geraldine
- documents.
-
-⸺ MACCARTHY MÓR. Pp. 277. (N.Y.: _Kenedy_). [1868]. At present in print.
-_n.d._
-
- Life and character of Florence MacCarthy Mór based on his _Life
- and Letters_ by Daniel M’Carthy. M’Carthy is said by the Author
- (Pref.) almost to merit the name of the Munster Machiavelli.
- The book presents a striking picture of the struggles of the
- great families of the day to preserve faith and property amid
- the petty persecutions of the government and the intrigues of
- rivals. Chief events introduced: battles of Pass of Plumes,
- Curlew Mountains, and Bealanathabuidhe. Elizabeth, Cecil,
- Burleigh, the Northern Earls, the “Sugán” Earl, Sir Henry
- Power, &c., appear incidentally. The scene varies between
- the Killarney district, West Carbery, the Council Chamber of
- Elizabeth, and the Tower. The episode of the marriage of the
- daughter of MacCarthy Mór to Florence MacCarthy Reagh forms the
- theme of Miss Gaughan’s _The Plucking of the Lily_, _q.v._
-
-⸺ MAUREEN DHU. Pp. 391. (N.Y.: _Sadlier_). [1869].
-
- A tale of the Claddagh, the famous fishing village beside
- Galway city. Its manners and ways are described in detail and
- with fidelity. Tells how the beautiful daughter of the chief
- fisherman is wooed and won from all competitors by a wealthy
- young merchant of the city. The plot is well sustained and
- interesting, though somewhat complicated and hampered by
- digressions.
-
-
-=SANBORN, Alvan Francis.=
-
-⸺ MEG McINTYRE’S RAFFLE, and Other Stories. Two Vols. (BOSTON: _Small &
-Maynard_). $1.25 each. 1896.
-
- “Studies of the poorest classes in a great city, the pathos
- often ghastly in its intensity. The title-story is an Irish
- idyll.”—(_Baker_, 2).
-
-
-=SAVAGE, Marmion W.= 1805-1872. B. Dublin. Ed. T.C.D. He was a government
-official in Dublin for some years, and at that time wrote for DUBL.
-UNIV. MAGAZINE. In 1856 he went to London, and there edited several
-periodicals. He was a witty and clever novelist, very popular in his
-day. Wrote also _Bachelor of the Albany_, _My Uncle the Curate_, _Reuben
-Medlicott_, _A Woman of Business_.
-
-⸺ THE FALCON FAMILY. (_Chapman & Hall_). [1845]. (_Ward, Lock_). New ed.,
-1854.
-
- “The best known and choicest of the author’s numerous
- stories. It is intended as a satire on the leaders of the
- Young Ireland Party; and some of the satire is very keen
- and amusing, but as political pictures his sketches are no
- better than caricatures.”—(_Read_). John Mitchel, reviewing
- it (THE NATION, 13th Decr., 1845), calls it “another of those
- pamphlet-novels that infest the literary world ... though
- too obviously the production of an Irishman, is as obviously
- intended and calculated for the English market.... We have had
- some opportunities of acquaintance with the men the writer
- attempts to satirize, and do unfeignedly declare that we have
- never met (them).... In short, this book is a very paltry and
- ill-conditioned performance.”
-
-
-=SAVILE, Mrs. Helen.=
-
-⸺ LOVE THE PLAYER. (_Sonnenschein_). 6_s._ 1899.
-
- “A tragic plot, with sketches of Irish life, and unpleasant
- specimens of humanity in the rector and rector’s wife in the
- Protestant community of Tuleen. Old Micky Hogan, the sexton, is
- depicted with humour.”—(_Baker_, 2). By the same Author: _The
- Wings of the Morning_.
-
-⸺ MICKY MOONEY, M.P. Pp. 250. (BRISTOL: _Arrowsmith_). Illustr. by Nancy
-Ruxton. 1902.
-
- Career of the hero from bog-trotter to M.P. As a background, a
- vulgar and absurd caricature of Irish life. Humour throughout
- of a very broad kind. Characters speak in an impossible brogue.
-
-
-=SCHLICHTTRULL, Aline Von.=
-
-⸺ DER AGITATOR VON IRLAND. Pp. 1043. (BERLIN: _Otto Janke_). 1859.
-
- O’Connell is the hero, but there are a multitude of characters,
- chiefly of the ruling classes. Politics are much discussed, the
- Author’s sympathies being pretty clearly on the Catholic and
- Nationalist side. Scene partly in Ireland, partly in England,
- where the reader listens to speeches in the House of Lords.
-
-
-=SCHOFIELD, Lily.=
-
-⸺ ELIZABETH, BETSY, AND BESS. (_Duckworth_). 6_s._ 1912.
-
- “The purport of the Author is to reveal the varied charm and
- grace of a delightful Irish girl’s character between the
- ages of thirteen and eighteen or so.... A vital, significant
- portrait.”—(T. LITT. SUPPL.). Scene: partly at “Castlemorne,”
- partly in a big English school near Liverpool.
-
-
-=SCOTT, Florence, and HODGE, Alma.=
-
-⸺ THE ROUND TOWER. Pp. 229. (_Nelson_). 1_s._ 6_d._ Pretty picture cover.
-1906.
-
- A very slight story centering in the landing of the French
- at Killala in 1798. Adventures of two small English boys. An
- interesting but one-sided glimpse of some of the episodes of
- the time. For boys.
-
-
-=SENIOR, Dorothy.=
-
-⸺ THE CLUTCH OF CIRCUMSTANCES; or, The Gates of Dawn. Pp. 333. (_Black_).
-Frontisp. 1908.
-
- An Arthurian romance, with Finola, daughter of Cormac, King
- of Leinster, as heroine. She is married to a brutal husband,
- but in the end is united to her true love. Not, however,
- without passing through a long series of adventures, rescues by
- knights errant, escapes, &c. Has all the usual elements of the
- romantic _chanson de geste_—tourneys, rose-gardens, adventures
- in the green-wood. Told in highly romantic manner, but with
- the romance is blended a curious element of the modern problem
- novel.
-
-
-=SEYMOUR, St. John D.=
-
-⸺ IRISH WITCHCRAFT AND DEMONOLOGY. Pp. 256. (_Hodges & Figgis_). 5_s._
-net. 1914.
-
- A very competent piece of work from a scientific point of view.
- From the point of view of fiction it is full of weird and
- uncanny stories, gleaned from all sorts of sources.
-
-
-=SEYMOUR, St. John D., B.D., and HARRY L. NELIGAN, D.I., R.I.C.=
-
-⸺ TRUE IRISH GHOST STORIES. (_Hodges & Figgis_). 3_s._ 6_d._ 1914.
-
- Author says in Pref.: “For myself I cannot guarantee the
- genuineness of a single incident in this book—how could I, as
- none of them are my own personal experience. This at least
- I _can_ vouch for, that the majority of the stories were
- sent to me as first or second-hand experiences by ladies and
- gentlemen whose statement on an ordinary matter of fact would
- be accepted without question.” The names of some contributors
- are mentioned. The stories are classified partly according to
- locality, partly according to the type of ghost in question. A
- final chapter gives a kind of Apologia for the book. Index of
- place names. The telling is, perhaps, a little monotonous and
- dull.
-
-
-=SHAND, Alexander Innes.= 1832-1907. A Scotchman who interested himself
-in the Irish land question and wrote _Letters from the West of Ireland,
-1884_. Other novels of his were _Against Time_ and _Shooting the Rapids_.
-
-⸺ KILCARRA. Three Vols. (_Blackwood_). 1891.
-
- The influence of a good and sweet-natured woman on selfish men,
- with the Land League agitation in Co. Galway for a background.
- The peasantry are depicted as wild and lawless and mere tools
- of the Land League, but as capable of much good. The shooting
- of landlords is sheer barbarism, no attempt being made by
- the Author to set forth its causes. The plot is furnished by
- the efforts of the hero, Capt. Martin Neville, to trace the
- murderer of a previous owner of the Kilcarra estate, and also
- by the story of his love for his cousin Ida, or rather hers for
- him. There is much about the relations between landlord and
- tenant.
-
-
-=SHARP, William=, _see_ =“FIONA MACLEOD.”=
-
-
-=SHEEHAN, M. F.=
-
-⸺ NEATH SUNNY SKIES: Stories of the Co. Waterford. Pp. 123. (_Waterford
-News_). 6_d._ 1912.
-
- A series of simple tales well told and true to life.
-
-
-=SHEEHAN, Canon Patrick A., D.D.= B. 1852. Educated at St. Colman’s,
-Fermoy, and Maynooth. Spent two years (1875-77) on English mission in
-Devonshire. Parish Priest of Doneraile from 1895 till his death in
-1913. His books deal chiefly with Catholic clerical life in Ireland—a
-subject which he was the first to deal with from within. He brought to
-bear on the features and problems of Irish life a deeply thoughtful and
-cultured mind. He did not indulge in thoughtless panegyric of Irish
-virtues, but touched firmly, though sympathetically, upon our national
-shortcomings and failings. His ideals are of the loftiest, yet never of
-an unsubstantial and airy, kind. His style is influenced too much perhaps
-in his earlier books by his very wide reading in many literatures, but
-particularly in Greek, German, Italian, and English. Besides the novels
-mentioned here, he has published two books of studies and reflections,
-viz., _Under the Cedars and the Stars_, and _Parerga_; also a book of
-poems, _Cithara Mea_, and a selection of _Early Essays and Lectures_.
-
-⸺ GEOFFREY AUSTIN, STUDENT. (_Gill_). 3_s._ 6_d._ Fifth ed., 1908.
-
- Story of life in a secondary school, near Dublin, nominally
- controlled by the clergy, but in reality left to the care of
- a grinder of more than doubtful character. A most uncatholic
- worldliness prevails at Mayfield, and the standards of conduct
- and of religion are very low. Geoffrey’s faith is weakened and
- well-nigh ruined. The curtain falls upon him as he goes out to
- face the world, and we are left to conjecture his fate. Has
- been transl. into French under title _Geoffroy_.
-
-⸺ THE TRIUMPH OF FAILURE. Pp. 383. (_Burns & Oates_). [1899].
-
- A sequel to the preceding. It is a close and sympathetic
- soul-study. Geoffrey loses all his worldly hopes and falls
- low indeed. He suffers the shipwreck of his faith. But in
- this valley of humiliation he learns strength to rise and
- conceives far different hopes, and we leave him on the heights
- of atonement and of regeneration. The book is philosophic in
- tone, and is enriched with many elevating thoughts from German,
- French, and English moralists. It is said to have been the
- Author’s favourite. It has been translated into many languages,
- _e.g._, French, under title _Le succès dans l’échec_ (1906),
- and German as _Der Erfolg des Misserfolgs_ (_Press of the
- Missionaries of Steyl_), M. 6.
-
-⸺ MY NEW CURATE. Pp. 480. (_Art and Book Co._). 6_s._ Eighteenth ed.
-Eighteen rather poor illustr. [1899]. New ed. (_Longmans_), 2_s._ 6_d._
-1914. (BOSTON: _Marlier_). 1.50.
-
- Into a sleepy, backward, out-of-the-way parish comes a splendid
- young priest, cultured, energetic, zealous, up-to-date. He
- succeeds in many reforms, but the moral of the whole would seem
- to be, “Nothing on earth can cure the inertia of Ireland,” or
- rather, perhaps, “You cannot undo in a day the operations of
- 300 years.” The old parish priest tells the story. There is
- in the book intimate sympathy with, and love of, the people,
- their humours, and foibles, and virtues. There is plenty of
- very humorous incident. Delightful moralizings, like those
- in the Author’s _Under the Cedars and the Stars_. It is
- full of undidactic lessons for both priests and people. The
- religious life of the people is, of course, much dwelt on,
- and a good deal of light is thrown on the private life of the
- priests. Transl. into French (_Mon nouveau vicaire_), Dutch
- (_Mijn nieuwe kapelaan_, by M. van Beek, 1904), German (_Mein
- neuer Kaplan_, Bachem, M. 6.), Italian, Spanish (_Mi nuevo
- coadjutor_, Herder), Hungarian, Slovene, Ruthenian.
-
-⸺ LUKE DELMEGE. Pp. 580. (_Longmans_). 6_s._ 1901.
-
- The life-story of a priest. The main theme of this great novel
- is the setting forth of the spiritual ideals of the race and of
- the heights of moral beauty and heroism to which these ideals
- can lead. A strong contrast is drawn between the ideals which
- the hero sees at work around him during his stay in England,
- and those which he finds at work at home. Many phases and
- incidents of Irish life are shown—the home-life of the priest,
- the eviction, the funeral, scenes in Dublin churches, the
- beauty of Irish landscape. One of the best, if not the best,
- of Irish novels. Yet as a “problem” novel it is strangely
- inconclusive. Luke seems to die with his life-questions
- unanswered. Trans. into French, _Luke Delmege, âmes celtiques
- et âmes saxonnes_; German, _Lukas Delmege_, trans. Ant. Lohr.
- (_Habbel_), M. 6, 1906, sixth ed.; and Hungarian. Canon Sheehan
- used to say of this book that its central idea was the doctrine
- of vicarious atonement.
-
-⸺ GLENANAAR. Pp. 321. (_Longmans_). 6_s._ [1905]. New ed., 1915. 2_s._
-6_d._
-
- “Tainted blood, inherited shame, is a terrible thing amongst a
- people who attach supreme importance to these things.” This is,
- perhaps, the central theme of the story. The narrative opens
- in 1829 with the famous Doneraile Conspiracy trial in Cork,
- when O’Connell, summoned in hot haste from Derrynane, was just
- in time to save the lives of the innocent prisoners. The story
- traces to the third generation the strange fortunes of the
- descendants of one of the informers in this trial. There are
- glimpses of the famine of ’48 and of the spirit of the men of
- ’67. The story of Nodlag is a touching and beautiful one, and
- the episode of the returned American is very well done. Trans.
- into German, _Das Christtagskind_ (STEYL: _Mission Press_), M.
- 2.50.
-
-⸺ THE SPOILED PRIEST, and Other Stories. Pp. 213. (_Gill_ and _Burns &
-Oates_). 5_s._ Nine illustr. by M. Healy. 1905.
-
- Eight stories. The title-story gives a glimpse of the workings
- of an ecclesiastical seminary, and also of the Irish peasants’
- attitude towards a student who has been refused ordination.
- “Remanded” is the story, founded on fact, of a hero-priest of
- Cork. “The Monks of Trabolgan” is a curious, fanciful story of
- Ireland at some future period. The remaining tales, “Rita, the
- Street Singer,” “A Thorough Gentleman,” and “Frank Forest’s
- Mince-Pie,” &c., do not deal with Ireland. Has been transl.
- into German and Dutch.
-
-⸺ LOST ANGEL OF A RUINED PARADISE. Pp. vi. + 168. (_Longmans_). 3_s._
-6_d._
-
- Three schoolgirls on leaving college take part in tableau as
- _Parcae_ or Fates. They announce in make-believe the fates
- of their companions. A mysterious voice from the audience
- announces their own. The story tells how their fates worked
- out. The first part of the drama takes place in Dublin, but
- after a time the scene shifts to London. Transl. into French as
- _Ange égaré d’un paradis ruiné_.
-
-⸺ LISHEEN; or, the Test of the Spirits. Pp. 454. (_Longmans_). 6_s._
-1907. New ed., 1914, 2_s._ 6_d._
-
- The conception is that of Tolstoi’s _Resurrection_, with the
- scene transferred to Kerry. It is the story of how a young
- man of the Irish landlord class determines to put to the test
- of practise his ideals of altruism. To this end he abandons
- the society of his equals and lives the life of a labourer.
- He finds how full of pain and heartburning and disappointment
- is the way of the reformer. There are many reflections on the
- national character and its defects are not whittled down. The
- book has two main themes—the greed and callousness of Irish
- landlords, and the inability of the Englishman to understand
- Irish character.
-
-⸺ THE BLINDNESS OF DR. GRAY; or, The Final Law. (_Longmans_). 6_s._ 1909.
-New ed., 1914. 2_s._ 6_d._
-
- The interest of this novel centres partly in its pictures of
- clerical life, partly in a charming love story of an uncommon
- type. The central figure is drawn with care and thoroughness.
- He is a strict disciplinarian, a rigid moralist, who worships
- the law with Jansenistic narrowness and hardness. But as the
- story goes on we discover beneath this hard surface unsuspected
- depths of human kindness. He himself finds out before the end
- that it is love, not law, that rules the world. The story
- contains many beautiful and touching scenes, and some fine
- description, notably in the South African portion of the book.
- There is some incidental criticism of various features of Irish
- life—popular politics, religious divisions, the Gaelic League,
- the change in the mentality of the people, and there is in it
- food for thought about some of our besetting faults. Considered
- by many to be the Author’s most finished and most powerful
- work. Transl. into German, _Von Dr. Grays Blindheit_, with
- introductory sketch (EINSIEDELN: _Benziger_). M. 6. 1911.
-
-⸺ MIRIAM LUCAS. Pp. 470. (_Longmans_). 6_s._ [1912]. New ed., 1914. 2_s._
-6_d._
-
- Miriam is the daughter of wealthy Protestant parents in
- Glendarragh, in the W. of Ireland. Her mother, on becoming a
- Catholic, is driven by domestic persecution into evil ways,
- and subsequently disappears. Society ostracizes Miriam, who,
- in revolt against it, goes to Dublin, where, in alliance with
- a young visionary Trinity student, she flings herself into the
- Socialist movement. Her efforts end in a disastrous strike.
- For a time she staves off crime and tragedy, but it comes at
- last. Book III. brings her to New York in search of her mother,
- whom she discovers sunk to the lowest moral depths. The story
- hinges partly, too, on the lifting of the curse of Glendarragh
- by Miriam and the hero, who makes her happy in the end. There
- are not a few fine dramatic situations, but the plot does not
- hang together. The book is meant to deal with Irish social
- and religious problems and to picture certain phases of Irish
- life. The life pictured is chiefly that of the Protestant
- upper classes, of whom a severe and satirical portrait is
- drawn. There are just a few glimpses of peasant life. The
- Author raises more problems than he solves, and the prevailing
- impression left upon the reader is one of gloom. Has been
- transl. into German.
-
-⸺ THE GRAVES AT KILMORNA. Pp. 373. (_Longmans_). 6_s._ 1915.
-
- An attempt to set forth the spirit of the Fenian movement of
- 1867, and even to contrast it with subsequent movements, to
- the great disadvantage of the latter; for the Author thought
- that the fire of Nationality has burned very low since ’67.
- The heroes are James Halpin (apparently intended for Peter
- O’Neill Crowley, who fell in ’67) and Miles Cogan, Fenians and
- unselfish patriots. There is some good character drawing, but
- the interest of plot and incident is slight, the chief interest
- being the vein of very ideal philosophy which runs through the
- book. The Author is gloomy and pessimistic about modern Ireland.
-
-
-=SHERLOCK, J.=
-
-⸺ THE MAD LORD OF DRUMKEEL. Pp. 199. (_Sealy, Bryers_). 3_s._ 6_d._ 1909.
-
- “An unexciting chronicle of the solitary Lord Barnabweel,
- his quaint experiments with his Irish property and tenantry,
- and the story of his son who left him, married in a Dublin
- lodging-house, and became a famous musician.”—(TIMES’ LIT.
- SUPPL.).
-
-
-=SIDGWICK, Ethel.=
-
-⸺ HERSELF. (_Sidgwick & Jackson_). 1912.
-
- The story of an Irish girl in Paris and of her life and love
- affairs there. Pleasantly written, and giving a kindly account
- of the Irish character. (_Press Notice_).
-
-
-=SIGERSON, Hester.=
-
-⸺ A RUINED RACE; or, the Last Macmanus of Drumroosk. (_Ward & Downey_).
-6_s._ 1890.
-
- A very gloomy view of Ireland. The Author displays intimate
- knowledge of Irish scenes, idioms, and characteristics.
- Period: middle of nineteenth century. Pictures with painful
- fidelity and much power the misfortunes of a once happy and
- prosperous couple belonging to the well-to-do peasant class.
- Misery seems to dog their steps from one end of the book to
- the other. The girl dies in the workhouse, the man takes to
- drink and is killed in an accident. Seems to aim at picturing
- the difficulties and sufferings of the peasantry, especially
- under the old land system. The Author was the wife of Dr. Geo.
- Sigerson.
-
-
-=SIME, William.= B. Wick, Caithness, 1851. D. Calcutta, 1895. Author
-of several other works of fiction—_King Capital_, _To and Fro_,
-_Boulderstone_.
-
-⸺ THE RED ROUTE; or, Saving a Nation. Three Vols. (_Sonnenschein_). 1884.
-
- Scene: West and South of Ireland, beginning with Galway, where
- the hero, Finn O’Brien, goes to college and suffers much both
- from collegians and peasantry. Finn becomes a Fenian, but falls
- in love with an English widow who had become a Catholic to
- escape the pursuit of bishops and parsons of her own Church.
- The heroine is a Claddagh girl, whose love for an English
- captain, Jeffrey, is crossed by the fact that she is a Fenian.
- One of the love affairs ends happily, the other tragically. The
- Author is not anti-Irish, but knows little about Ireland. He
- drags in priests “smelling strongly of whiskey” and nuns who
- have broken their vows.
-
-
-=SIMPSON, John Hawkins.=
-
-⸺ POEMS OF OISIN, Bard of Erin. Pp. 280. (_M’Glashan & Gill_). 1857.
-
- Translated into English prose from Irish by the Author with
- help of native speakers. Contents: Oisin, Bard of Erin
- (introductory by the Author); Deardra; Conloch Son of Cuthullin
- (_sic_); The Fenii of Erin and Fionn MacCumhal; Dialogue
- between Oisin and St. Patrick (pp. 61-184); Mayo Mythology
- (various Fenian Tales); The Battle of Ventry.
-
-
-=SKELLY, Rev. A. M., O.P.=
-
-⸺ CUCHULAIN OF MUIRTHEMNE. Pp. 48. (C.T.S.I.). 1_d._ 1908.
-
- A paper read before the Catholic Literary Society, Tralee. The
- Cuchulain epic briefly but admirably related. Passages of verse
- from Ferguson and De Vere are skilfully interwoven. Excellent
- notes at the end explain difficulties and references.
-
-
-=SMART, Hawley.=
-
-⸺ THE MASTER OF RATHKELLY. (_F. V. White_). Fifth ed. 1890.
-
- A stirring story of love and sport in “Co. Blarney” in “the
- eighties.” Mr. Eyre, one of the “ould stock,” gets into
- difficulties with his tenants, who stop the “Harkhallow”
- hounds and boycott him. Written from the English and landlord
- standpoint. The dialect is wonderfully good and the “horsey”
- scenes well done. The Author was a well-known sporting
- novelist; 1833-1893.
-
-
-=SMITH, Agnes; Mrs. Lewis.=
-
-⸺ THE BRIDES OF ARDMORE: A Story of Irish Life. Pp. 393. (_Elliott,
-Stock_). Frontisp.—view of Ardmore. 1880.
-
- Ardmore, Co. Waterford, in twelfth century. A few descriptions
- of scenery, but little local colour, and almost no historical
- _mise-en-scène_. The chief object of the story appears to be
- to picture forth a “primitive” Irish Church, unconnected with
- Rome, and resembling the modern Church of Ireland in many
- of its features. The priests are all married. Indeed their
- matrimonial affairs and the cruel interruption of these by
- decrees from Rome provide the greater part of the incidents.
- The tone is not bitter towards Catholicism, but innocently
- patronising and didactic.
-
-
-=[SMITH, John].=
-
-⸺ IRISH DIAMONDS. Pp. 183. 16mo. (_Chapman & Hall_). 1847. (_Gibbings_).
-Five Illus. by “Phiz.” 1890.
-
- Chapters:—On the Road, Young Ireland, Irish Wit, Irish Life,
- Irish Traits, The Latter End. Humorous Irish anecdotes, rather
- above the average “pigs, poteen, and praties” type, frankly
- meant to amuse, but showing not a little knowledge of and
- sympathy with Irish traits. When the book was written the
- Author was “one of the editors of the LIVERPOOL MERCURY.”
-
-
-=SMYTH, Patrick G.= B. Ballina, Co. Mayo, about 1856. Was in early years
-a National School teacher. Besides his novels, he wrote verse for several
-Irish periodicals between 1876-1885. For some time he was engaged on a
-Chicago paper.
-
-⸺ THE WILD ROSE OF LOUGH GILL. Pp. 306. (_Gill_). 2_s._ 6_d._ [1883].
-Fifth ed., 1904. (_Benziger_). 0.85.
-
- Though nominally not the heroes, Owen Roe O’Neill and Miles
- the Slasher are the chief figures in this fine novel of the
- Wars of the Confederation. A love-story is interwoven with the
- historical events. The view-point is thoroughly national. The
- style abounds in imagery and fine descriptive passages. The
- novel is one of the most popular ever issued in Ireland. The
- story ends shortly after the fall of Galway in 1652. The scene
- is laid partly in Co. Sligo, where (near Lough Gill) one of the
- most thrilling episodes, founded on a still living tradition,
- takes place.
-
-⸺ KING AND VIKING; or, The Ravens of Lochlan. Pp. 200. (_Sealy, Bryers_).
-1_s._ _n.d._ (1889).
-
- Tireragh (Co. Sligo) in 888, the date assigned by the Four
- Masters to a great battle fought between the men of Connaught
- and the Danes. The wars between Danes and Irish furnish the
- chief interest of the book, but there is also the story of
- the feud between Ceallach the tanist of Hy Fiachrach and
- Dungallach, a rival. Much information, drawn from reliable
- sources, is given regarding the Irish clans, their customs, and
- their territories.
-
-
-=SOMERVILLE, Edith Œnone, and “MARTIN, Ross.”= Miss Violet Martin, of
-Ross, Co. Galway. Miss Somerville is dau. of the late Col. Somerville, of
-Drishane, Skibbereen, Co. Cork. Both Authors are granddaughters of Chief
-Justice Charles Kendal Bushe. Amongst their other works are _Naboth’s
-Vineyard_, _Beggars on Horseback_, and _Through Connemara in a Governess’
-Cart_ (illust.).
-
-⸺ AN IRISH COUSIN. Pp. iv. + 306. (_Longmans_). 3_s._ 6_d._ [First ed.,
-1889]; new ed., quite re-written, 1903. Ten illustr. by E. Œ. Somerville.
-
- Modern country-house life in Co. Cork. A serious study of the
- slow awakening of a young man to the realization that there are
- things in life more real to him than horses and dogs. His love
- for a clever cousin returned from Canada has a tragic ending.
- The characters of the tale are drawn from Protestant county
- society. Clever description of Durrus, the ramshackle home of
- the Sarsfields. Miss Jackson-Croly’s “At Home” and the run with
- the Moycullen hounds are said to be worthy of Lever.
-
-⸺ THE REAL CHARLOTTE. (_Longmans_). 3_s._ 6_d._ [1894]. Three Vols.
-(_Ward & Downey_).
-
- A dark tale of a world “weary, stale, flat, and unprofitable.”
- An unscrupulous woman works the ruin of a sweet-natured,
- ill-trained girl. Scene: Irish country neighbourhood.
- Characters, land agents, farmers, great ladies, drawn with
- impartial and relentless truth. Pronounced by many critics to
- be worthy of Balzac.
-
-⸺ THE SILVER FOX. Pp. 195. (_Longmans_). 3_s._ 6_d._ [1898]. (_Lawrence
-and Bullen_).
-
- The chief interest of this story lies in some sporting scenes
- in the West of Ireland. The peasantry are seen from an
- uncomprehending standpoint, and the chief figures are people
- of fashion, of no particular nationality. “Broadly speaking,
- the novel may be said to exhibit in a dramatic form the
- extraordinary hold which superstition still possesses on the
- minds of the Irish peasantry.”—(_Spectator_).
-
-⸺ SOME EXPERIENCES OF AN IRISH R.M. Pp. iv. + 310. Thirty-second
-thousand. (_Longmans_). 3_s._ 6_d._ Thirty-one illustr. (pen and ink
-sketches) by E. Œ. Somerville. 1899.
-
- Racy, humorous sketches of hunting and other episodes in the
- south and west. The Author’s most successful work originally
- appeared in THE BADMINTON MAGAZINE.
-
-⸺ ALL ON THE IRISH SHORE. Pp. iv. + 274. Eighteenth thousand.
-(_Longmans_). 3_s._ 6_d._ Ten illustr. by E. Œ. Somerville. 1903.
-
- Sketches of fox-hunting, horse-dealing, racing, trials for
- assault between neighbours, petty boycotting, rural larking,
- full of sprightly and rollicking humour. Chief characters, the
- petty county gentry. The peasantry are drawn in caricature,
- usually friendly, and are shown in relation to their social
- superiors, not in their own life and reality. If these sketches
- were taken seriously, the peasantry would appear as drunken,
- quarrelsome, lying, dirty, unconsciously comical—with scarcely
- a single redeeming trait. The scene is south-western Cork.
-
- _All on the Irish Shore_ has been described (IRISH MONTHLY) as
- “a blend of Lover and Lever (in his coarser rollicking days)
- refined by some of the literary flavour of Jane Barlow, but
- with none of the insight and sympathy of _Irish Idylls_. The
- same may be said of the _Experiences of an Irish R.M._, which
- moreover, contains here and there passages needlessly offensive
- to national feeling.” Titles of some chapters:—Fanny Fitz’s
- Gamble, A Grand Filly, High Tea at McKeown’s, A Nineteenth
- Century Miracle, &c.
-
- N.B.—Messrs. Longmans have (April, 1910) issued a new uniform
- edition of the works of Somerville and Ross, at 3_s._ 6_d._ per
- volume.
-
-⸺ FURTHER EXPERIENCES OF AN IRISH R.M. Pp. 315. (_Longmans_). 3_s._ 6_d._
-1908.
-
-⸺ SOME IRISH YESTERDAYS. Eleventh thousand. (_Longmans_). 3_s._ 6_d._
-Fifty-one illustr. by E. Œ. Somerville. 1908.
-
- Admirable illustrations of Connemara scenery, clever sketches
- of “natives” (usually of the lowest type). Light magazine
- sketches written in clever, racy style. Subjects: Holidays
- in Aran and Connemara and Carbery, picnics, country house
- anecdotes, superficial studies of peasants in Connemara and
- Cork. “In Sickness and in Health” pays a tribute to the
- strength of the marriage bond in Ireland.
-
-⸺ DAN RUSSELL, THE FOX. Pp. 340. (_Methuen_). 6_s._ 1911.
-
- Miss Rowan comes over to Ireland and takes “Lake View,” in
- the midst of a hunting district in S. Munster. She falls in
- love—for the time—with John Michael, handsome, and the most
- valiant of huntsmen, but a child of nature whose whole mind
- is absorbed in hounds and horses. Hence complications. The
- Author’s usual pictures of hunting scenes and happy-go-lucky
- country gentry. Mrs. Delanty, the sharp and devious widow, is
- a curious portrait. Dan Russell is scarcely more than a minor
- character in the piece. It is a story about which we cannot
- speak favourably.
-
-⸺ IN MR. KNOX’S COUNTRY. (_Longmans_). 6_s._ Eight full-page illustr. in
-chalk. 1915.
-
- Eleven sketches of the same type as the _Experiences of an
- Irish R.M._, with some new _dramatis personæ_ in the old
- localities.
-
-
-=SQUIRE, Charles.=
-
-⸺ THE BOY HERO OF ERIN. Pp. 240. (_Blackie_). 2_s._ 6_d._ Handsome cover.
-Four good illustr. by A. A. Dixon. 1907.
-
- The Cuchulainn Saga told in simple and clear, but somewhat
- unemotional and matter-of-fact, style. Sources: Miss Hull’s
- _Cuchulainn Saga_ and Miss Winifred Faraday’s _Cattle Raid of
- Cuailgne_ (_q.v._). The Author holds Cuchulainn to be a hero
- “not less brave and far more chivalrous than any Greek or
- Trojan” (Pref.), and thinks that the ancient Gael “invented the
- noble system of conduct which we call courtesy.”
-
-⸺ CELTIC MYTH AND LEGEND, Poetry and Romance. Pp. 450. (_Gresham
-Publishing Co._). Four Plates in colour by J. H. F. Bacon; fourteen in
-monochrome by the same and others, and a few photos, _n.d._
-
- A kind of digest of the chief published translations of ancient
- Irish and Welsh saga and romance, preceded by four short
- essays on the interest of Celtic mythology, and the sources
- of our knowledge of it, the origin of the Britons and their
- religion (44 pp. in all). Pp. 47-248 are a summary of Gaelic
- myth, &c., and pp. 250-395 of British ditto. Then there is an
- essay on survivals of Celtic paganisms, and an Append. giving
- brief bibliogr. Index. The myths and romances are not related
- as a tale is told; they are merely placed on record, almost
- stripped of their poetry, along with all the extravagances
- and absurdities that disfigure them, chiefly through modern
- corruptions. Of little or no interest for young people.
-
-
-=STACE, Henry.=
-
-⸺ THE ADVENTURES OF COUNT O’CONNOR in the Dominions of the Great Mogul.
-Pp. 343. (_Alston Rivers_). 1_s._ [1907]. 1909.
-
- A string of impossible situations and thrilling escapes,
- purporting to be the adventures of an Irish soldier of fortune
- in India about 1670, related by himself. The Count frequently
- discourses of the honour of an Irish gentleman, and never acts
- up to it. His character is that of a thorough rascal. The book
- contains many disreputable adventures in harems.
-
-
-=STACPOOLE KENNY, Mrs.= _see_ =KENNY=.
-
-
-=STACPOOLE, H. de Vere.= Son of Rev. William Church Stacpoole, D.D., of
-Kingstown, Co. Dublin. Ed. Malvern College, and St. Mary’s Hospital,
-London. Is a qualified medical man, but does not practise. Has travelled
-much. Resides near Chelmsford. Has publ. about twenty-two novels.—(WHO’S
-WHO). Some of these have been very successful, _e.g._, _The Blue Lagoon_.
-
-⸺ PATSY. Pp. 362. (_Fisher Unwin_). 6_s._ 1908.
-
- A gay and humorous story of a house-party in a country
- mansion somewhere in “Mid-Meath.” Full of amusing characters,
- cleverly sketched, _e.g._, the Englishman, Mr. Fanshawe, and
- the naughty and natural children. Above all there is Patsy,
- the page-boy, an odd mixture of soft-hearted simplicity and
- preternatural cuteness. He is the _deus ex machina_ of the
- piece, causes all sorts of entanglements, and unravels them
- again in the strangest way. There is just a little study of
- national characteristics, but no politics nor problems.
-
-⸺ GARRYOWEN: The Romance of a Racehorse. Pp. 352. (_Fisher Unwin_). 6_s._
-1910.
-
- “A rattling good story ... Moriarty the trainer is a gem—Mickey
- Free redivivus, as full of tricks as a bag of weasels. The
- Author knows his Irish peasantry inside and out, and the only
- blot on an exceptional book is a needless disquisition on the
- rights and wrongs of ‘cattle-driving.’”—(I.B.L.).
-
-⸺ FATHER O’FLYNN. Pp. 245. (_Hutchinson_). 1_s._ 1914.
-
- The idea of the book, which is dedicated to Sir E. Carson and
- Mr. Redmond, is (see Pref.) to show the Catholic priest as the
- chief factor in present-day Irish life. The priest in question
- is represented in a favourable and friendly spirit, though
- perhaps hardly “at his best,” as the Author suggests. The
- chief interest is perhaps a love affair, conducted chiefly on
- horseback, which is told in a lively and spirited way.
-
-
-=STAVERT, A. A. B.=
-
-⸺ THE BOYS OF BALTIMORE. Pp. 212. (_Burns & Oates_). 2_s._ 6_d._ 1907.
-
- A splendid boy’s story. Rich in the vein of adventure, of sport
- and fight by land, of war by sea, of captivity and slavery.
- With this there is a solid, but not too obtrusive, lesson of
- the value of faith and piety in a boy’s life. The piety of
- the young heroes has nothing mawkish about it. The tone is
- Catholic. The brogue is very badly imitated.—(N.I.R.). Scene
- changes from Cork to Africa, and thence to London. Strafford,
- Wentworth, Laud, and Charles I. appear in the story.
-
-
-=STEPHENS, James.= B. Dublin, 1884. Worked for some years in a
-solicitor’s office, but has definitely taken to literature. His first
-published volume was _Insurrections_, since which two other volumes
-of verse have appeared, and a fourth is about to appear. Has resided
-principally in Paris for the past two years, but is now living in Dublin,
-where he holds the position of Registrar at the National Gallery of
-Ireland. His writings have met with an enthusiastic reception from the
-critics.
-
-⸺ THE CHARWOMAN’S DAUGHTER. Pp. 228. (_Macmillan_). 3_s._ 6_d._ 1912.
-Publ. in U.S.A. under title _Mary, Mary_.
-
- A study of the soul of a simple girl of the people and its
- development amid the surroundings of a Dublin tenement house
- and of the Dublin streets—her girlhood, her dreams for the
- future, her love affairs. The incidents are quite subordinate
- to the psychological interest. The atmosphere of the reality is
- carefully reproduced if somewhat idealised. There is nothing
- morbid nor sensational in the book. This, the Author’s first
- published novel, and many think his best, first appeared in THE
- IRISH REVIEW.
-
-⸺ THE CROCK OF GOLD. Pp. 312. (_Macmillan_). Many reprints. 1912.
-
- Described, accurately enough, by THE TIMES as “this delicious,
- fantastical, amorphous, inspired medley of topsy-turveydom.”
- A fantasy in which human beings with Irish names, Irish gods
- and fairies, and the god Pan are mingled to bewilderment. And
- the whole is leavened with what may or may not be the Author’s
- philosophy. “Love is unclean and holy” ... “Virtue is the
- performance of pleasant actions.” “Philosophy would lead to
- the great sin of sterility.” These sentences are isolated from
- the context, but they seem to indicate the general trend—the
- philosophy of Pan. However, there is much besides this in the
- torrent of wayward thought and fancy that is here let loose.
- The pictures of nature are finely and delicately touched. And
- there is humour of a strange kind not easy to define.
-
-⸺ HERE ARE LADIES. Pp. 349. (_Macmillan_). 5_s._ 1913.
-
- Fragments of the Author’s peculiar philosophy of life conveyed
- in odds and ends of stories and sketches. Some are pure fancy,
- some are very closely observed bits of real life; some are
- humorous, with a kind of sardonic humour; some whimsical,
- some border on pathos. Many deal with various phases of
- married life. Little poems are sandwiched between the tales.
- The book is full of aphorisms, indeed the style is a riot
- of curious metaphor, flights of fancy, unexpected turns of
- phrase. The last piece (pp. 277-348) consists of a series of
- disquisitions by an old gentleman in the style of the Autocrat
- of the Breakfast Table. An Irish flavour is noticeable at
- frequent intervals. The idiom (not the brogue) of Anglo-Irish
- conversation is well reproduced.
-
-⸺ THE DEMI-GODS. Pp. 280. (_Macmillan_). 5_s._ 1914.
-
- The travels through Ireland of Patsy McCann, tinker and general
- rascal, and his daughter Mary, in company with three angels,
- become tinkers for the nonce. Patsy is a very human and a very
- real tinker, an ugly specimen of a disreputable class. The
- wanderings of this strange company form a thin thread on which
- is strung a medley of strange fancies, wayward comments, scraps
- of very excellent description, and glimpses of low life in
- its most sordid aspects (_e.g._, the drab Eileen Cooley, who
- appears at intervals). There is an effort to picture not only
- the outward doings, experiences, and sensations of the tramps,
- but also their outlook, such as it is, upon life, their makings
- of a philosophy, and the morality of the roads.
-
-
-=STEUART, John A.= Author (born 1861) of _A Millionaire’s Daughter_,
-_Self Exiled_, _In the Day of Battle_, _The Minister of State_, _Wine
-on the Lees_, _The Eternal Quest_, _A Son of Gad_, _The Rebel Wooing_,
-&c., &c. Was born in Perthshire; lived in Ireland, America, and England.
-Edited PUBLISHERS’ CIRCULAR, 1896-1900.
-
-⸺ KILGROOM. Pp. 228. (_Low_). 6_s._ and 2_s._ 6_d._ [1890]. 1900.
-
- The interest of the story turns on incidents of the Land War
- in a southern county. The Author takes the popular side, and
- paints the evils of landlordism in the darkest colours. Most of
- the characters are humble folk, including an amusing Scotchman,
- Sandy M’Tear. The story tells how a thirst for vengeance,
- engendered by oppression, takes possession of the young
- peasant, Ned Blake, almost stifling his love for his betrothed
- and ruining his life.
-
-
-=STEVENSON, JOHN.= Is a member of the printing and publishing firm of
-McCaw, Stevenson & Orr, of Belfast. He made his first hit with _Pat
-McCarty, Farmer of Antrim: His Rhymes, with a Setting_ (1903), in part
-reprinted from THE PEN, a magazine run by the employes of his company.
-
-⸺ A BOY IN THE COUNTRY. Pp. 312. (_Arnold_). 5_s._ Illustr. by W. Arthur
-Fry. 1913.
-
- A lad sent for his health to the care of an aunt in Co. Antrim
- tells his experiences and observations, his thoughts and
- dreams, and he tells them charmingly. Stories and anecdotes of
- the lives of the folk among whom he lives, told with insight
- and sympathy.
-
-
-=STEWART, Agnes M.=
-
-⸺ GRACE O’HALLORAN. (_Gill._ N.Y.: _Benziger_). 0.60 net. [1857]. 1884,
-&c.
-
- Sub-title: “Ireland and Its Peasantry.” “Another of A.
- Stewart’s pious little stories.... The reader will fail to
- discover much originality or force; but in these days it is no
- small praise to say there is nothing to condemn.”—(D.R.). Miss
- S. wrote a great number of stories between 1846 and 1887. All
- are highly moral in aim and tone, a series of them having for
- titles the various moral virtues.
-
-⸺ FLORENCE O’NEILL; or, The Siege of Limerick. 1871.
-
- Also publ. under title _Florence O’Neill_, or, The Rose of
- Saint Germain.
-
-⸺ THE LIMERICK VETERAN; or, The Foster Sisters. (N.Y.: _Benziger_). 0.60
-net. 1873.
-
-
-=STEWART, Miss E. M.=
-
-⸺ ALL FOR PRINCE CHARLIE; or, The Irish Cavalier. Pp. 270. (_Duffy_).
-1_s._ Very cheap paper and print. _n.d._
-
- The ’45 from a strongly Catholic and Jacobite standpoint.
- The story opens in an old castle in Bantry Bay, where the
- hero and heroine meet before the former goes off to fight for
- Prince Charlie. Various adventures during the raid on England
- and the retreat, and a complicated plot turning on the close
- resemblance between the hero and a twin brother, supposed dead,
- but who plays the traitor and the spy. All is well in the end.
- Some glimpses of penal laws at work. A little comic relief is
- afforded by the talk of Paddy O’Rafferty. Dialect poor.
-
-
-=STEWART, Rev. J.=
-
-⸺ THE KILLARNEY POOR SCHOLAR. Pp. 164. 16mo. (LONDON). [1845]. Third ed.,
-1846. New ed., 1866.
-
- Sub-t.:—“Comprising the most remarkable features of the
- enchanting scenery of the Irish lakes, interspersed with
- sketches of real character.” In pref. Author claims thorough
- knowledge of places and people described. His object is to
- impress a high moral tone upon the mind. “A moral is deduced
- from every incident: a moral established by every dialogue.”
- This aim is fully carried out in the little story, which is
- merely a peg whereon to hang a moral, and is very sentimental.
-
-
-=STOKER, Bram.= 1847-1912. B. in Dublin. Ed. T.C.D., where he had a
-distinguished career. Entered Civil Service and was called to the
-Bar, but subsequently for twenty-seven years secretary to Sir Henry
-Irving. Wrote also _Dracula_, _Miss Betty_, _The Mystery of the Sea_,
-_Snowbound_, &c., &c.
-
-⸺ THE SNAKE’S PASS. Pp. 372. (_Collier_). 1_s._ New ed. [1891]. (N.Y.:
-_Harper_). 0.40. 1909.
-
- A tale written around the strange phenomenon of a moving bog.
- Scene: the Mayo coast, which is finely described. Hidden
- treasure, prophetic dreams, attempted murder, and much love and
- sentiment are bound up with the story. The sentiment is pure
- and even lofty. There is no bigotry nor bias, and no vulgar
- stage-Irishism. Andy Sullivan, the carman, is drawn with much
- humour and kindliness, but we cannot consider “Father Pether” a
- true type of Irish priest.
-
-
-=STOKES, Whitley.= Ed.
-
-⸺ THE DESTRUCTION OF DÁ DERGA’S HOSTEL. (PARIS: _Bouillon_). 1902.
-
- “Conary becomes king on condition that he abide by certain
- bonds (_geasa_) imposed on him by his fairy kinsfolk. Having
- transgressed these conditions, he comes to his death in a
- great affray with outlaws, who attack the hostel. Portents
- and marvels are characteristic of the story from beginning to
- end.”—(_Baker_, 2).
-
-
-=“STRADLING, Matthew,”= _see_ =MAHONY, Martin F.=
-
-
-=STRAHAN, Samuel A. K., M.D.=
-
-⸺ THE RESIDENT MAGISTRATE. (LONDON: _Alexander & Shepherd_). 1_s._ 1888.
-
- A tale of the “Jubilee Coercion days.” The leading character is
- founded on Captain Plunket of “Don’t hesitate to shoot” fame.
- With the doings of this personage (which look like clippings
- from the STAR newspaper of those days) is mingled the story
- of a persecuted heroine suffering from an uncommon form of
- mania (in which the Author was a specialist). Dr. Strahan was
- a Belfast man. The materials of the story are handled, we
- think, with but little skill. Another of his stories, _Dead yet
- Speaketh_ (Arrowsmith), was founded on the sudden death in his
- chambers in the Temple of an Irish fellow-student of the Author.
-
-
-=STRAIN, E. H.=
-
-⸺ A MAN’S FOES. Pp. 467. (_Ward, Lock_). 6_s._ Illustr. by A. Forestier.
-(N.Y.: _New Amsterdam Book Co._). 0.50. [1895.] Three Vols.
-
- A strongly conceived and vigorously written historical tale
- of the siege of Derry. Point of view aggressively English and
- Protestant. The personages in the story often express bitterly
- anti-Catholic sentiments, but only such as may reasonably
- be supposed to have been freely expressed at the period.
- The Author, a Scottish lady resident in Ayrshire, has also
- published four other works of fiction.
-
-
-=“SWAN, Annie S.”; Mrs. Burnett Smith.= B. Mountskip, Goresbridge, N.B.
-Ed. Edinburgh. Has written a great many novels. Resides in England or at
-Kinghorn, Scotland.—(WHO’S WHO).
-
-⸺ A SON OF ERIN. Pp. 344. (_Hutchinson_). 6_s._ Six illustr. 1899 and
-1907.
-
- Scene: first Edinburgh, then chiefly Co. Wicklow. Period: just
- before retirement of Butt and rise of Parnell, who is one of
- the personages of the tale. The interest turns on the discovery
- of the identity of a child abandoned in Edinburgh when an
- infant. No love interest. Titles of over sixty of her novels
- will be found in Mudie’s list.
-
-
-=SYKES, Jessica S. C.=
-
-⸺ THE M’DONNELLS. Pp. 299. (_Heinemann_). 6_s._ 1905.
-
- Aims at presenting picture of early Victorian manners and
- morals as seen in the life of this (rather unattractive)
- family, of Irish origin, but living in England, and in their
- surroundings. It was a period lacking in ideals and unstirred
- by new ideas, artistic, literary, or other. The Author paints
- it stupid, gross, and material, and seems to sum it up as
- “humbug” (from a review in the ATHENÆUM).
-
- Lord Charles Beresford, in a letter to the writer (see Pref.),
- acknowledges the book as “a true picture of English and Irish
- life in the upper circles of society five and forty years
- ago,” and that “it explains the idiocrasies (_sic_) of the
- Irish people, both Nationalist and Orange, and gives a clear
- explanation of the real causes of the unceasing discontent and
- strife existing in our sister isle.” “I have tried to give
- a description of the condition ... to which English females
- of position were reduced by a wave of Evangelical cant and
- exaggerated morality....”—(Pref.). Has written also _Algernon
- Casterton_ and _Mark Alston_.
-
-
-=“SYNAN, A.,”= _see_ =CLERY, A. E.=
-
-
-=TAUNTON, M.=
-
-⸺ THE LAST OF THE CATHOLIC O’MALLEYS. (_Washbourne._ N.Y.: _Kenedy_).
-
- Scene: Western Mayo, about 1798, but no historical events are
- introduced. An unpretentious little story, telling how Grace
- is married at fifteen against her will to a disreputable young
- man. He grows fond of her, and dies penitent three years after.
- Their child is stolen by a too fond nurse. The child grows up
- and joins the navy. Years after, Grace, who has married a naval
- officer, gets her sailor son back.
-
-
-=TAYLOR, Mary Imlay.=
-
-⸺ MY LADY CLANCARTY. Pp. 298. (_Gay & Bird_). Illus. by A. B. Stephens.
-1905.
-
- “Being the true story of the Earl of Clancarty and Lady
- Elizabeth Spencer.” Donough McCarthy, a Jacobite nobleman,
- married in childhood to wealthy heiress of English Whig family,
- does not meet his bride again till many years later, and then
- in strange circumstances. Scene: England in days of William
- III., with glimpses of Ireland in the background. Appears to be
- founded on Tom Taylor’s play, _Clancarty_.
-
-
-=TEMPLETON, Herminie.=
-
-⸺ DARBY O’GILL AND THE GOOD PEOPLE. (N.Y.: _McClure_). 1.50. 1903.
-
-
-=TENCH, Mary F. A.= Resides in London, and writes a good deal for the
-periodicals.
-
-⸺ AGAINST THE PIKES. Pp. 357. (_Russell_). _n.d._ (1903).
-
- How the sins of the fathers are visited upon the children to
- the third and fourth generation. Phil O’Brien, returning to
- Ireland after long years of sin and suffering in Australia,
- finds his first love unchanged in heart—only to see her taken
- from him by death. He foregoes for her sake revenge on the man
- who had wrecked his life, and dies to save his enemy. Though
- the characters are Irish, there is little about Irish life
- (nothing about pikes). The whole book is very sad, the pathos
- of the close is painful, “_navrant_.” By the same Author:
- _Where the Surf Breaks_, _A Prince from the Great Never-Never_,
- &c.
-
-
-=THACKERAY, William Makepeace.= The great novelist paid only one visit
-to Ireland (1842), the immediate outcome of which was his _Irish Sketch
-Book_ (1843). The tone of this book gave great offence to Irishmen
-generally. Sir Samuel Ferguson severed his connection with the DUBLIN
-UNIVERSITY MAGAZINE because Lever, then editor, accepted Thackeray’s
-dedication. He could speak of the Young Irelanders only in terms of
-ridicule—witness his ballad “The Battle of Limerick”—though he was a
-personal friend of Gavan Duffy. He derived some of the incidents of
-_Barry Lyndon_ from the chap-book, _Life of Freney_, which he read one
-night in Galway. Many of the characters in his greater novels are Irish,
-_e.g._, “The O’Mulligan,” said to be founded on W. J. O’Connell; “Capt.
-Shandon,” whose original was Dr. Maginn; “Capt. Costigan” and his famous
-daughter, “the Fotheringay,” said to be suggested by the dramatic triumph
-of Miss O’Neill, afterwards Lady Becher. “Ye hate us, Mr. Thackeray, ye
-hate the Irish,” said to him Anthony Trollope’s old Irish coachman. “Hate
-you? God help me, when all I ever loved on earth was Irish!” and his eyes
-filled with tears.—(_Trollope_). His wife was Irish.
-
-⸺ THE MEMOIRS OF BARRY LYNDON, ESQ. [1844]. Many editions in all styles.
-
- The autobiography of a blackguard and a cad, a compound of
- every vice—meanness, mendacity, licentiousness, heartless
- selfishness. Add to these swagger, vulgarity, and a fire-eating
- audacity, which, however, is always on the safe side, and you
- have the portrait of the hero as painted by himself. All the
- characters are vicious or contemptible or both, the English
- and other foreigners no better than the Irish. Lyndon (real
- name Redmond Barry) belongs to an ancient and decayed family,
- once aristocratic. The story tells how he fights a duel at
- home in Ballybarry, falls in with swindlers in Dublin, deserts
- from the army, serves under Frederick the Great in the Seven
- Years’ War, becomes a professional but aristocratic gamester,
- marries (after a desperate struggle) the rich Lady Lyndon,
- blazes through a brief season in Dublin (1771), worries his
- wife into her grave, and finally runs through all his wealth.
- There is some humour in places, but it is grim and sardonic,
- and does not relieve the picture. Moral (see footnote near the
- close)—“Do not as many rogues succeed in life as honest men?
- More fools than men of talent?” Founded in part on the strange
- marriage of Andrew Bowes and the Countess of Strathmore at end
- of eighteenth century.
-
-
-=THOMAS, Edward.=
-
-⸺ CELTIC STORIES. Pp. 128. (OXFORD: _The Clarendon Press_). 1911.
-
- “The Boyhood of Cuhoolin,” “Father and Son,” “The Battle of the
- Companions” (C. and Ferdia), “The Death of C.,” “Deirdre and
- Naisi,” “The Palace of the Quicken Trees,” “The Land of Youth.”
- The rest (pp. 82-end) are Welsh tales. Told very plainly
- and briefly, yet not dully. The diction is quite modern and
- prosaic. The grotesquer folk-lore elements are not excluded.
- The Author has also publ. _Norse Stories_ and many other works
- on a variety of subjects.
-
-
-=THOMPSON, E. Skeffington.= Was a granddaughter of John Foster, last
-Speaker of the Irish House of Commons. She was an ardent Nationalist.
-About 1889 she and her sister Mrs. Rae founded the Southwark Junior Irish
-Literary Society.
-
-⸺ MOY O’BRIEN. Pp. 300. (_Gill_). 3_s._ 6_d._ [1887]. New ed., 1914.
-
- Deals with the politics of the day, but not to the neglect of
- the story, which shows considerable literary power, though
- containing but little incident. Strongly patriotic in tone.
- There is no religious bias. Treats of social and political life
- in Ireland thirty or forty years ago. Ends with many happy
- marriages. First appeared in U.S.A. in HARPER’S (IRISH MONTHLY).
-
-
-=THOMSON, C. L.=
-
-⸺ THE CELTIC WONDER WORLD. Pp. 155. (_Horace Marshall_). 1902.
-
- No. 2 of the _Romance Readers_. Irish, Welsh, and Breton
- stories edited for children. Very pretty and imaginative
- illustr. by E. Connor. The tales are taken from good
- sources—Whitley Stokes, Standish O’Grady, Crofton Croker,
- “Atlantis,” O’Curry, the Mabinogion, &c. Contains “Deirdre,”
- “Ossian in the Land of Youth,” Cuchulainn stories, &c., told in
- simple but not childish language.
-
-
-=THURNEYSEN, Rudolf.=
-
-⸺ SAGEN AUS DEM ALTEN IRLAND. Pp. 152. Demy 8vo. (BERLIN: _Wiegandt &
-Grieben_). 1901.
-
- Short introd., then very briefly (in German, of course) the
- chief Irish sagas—the Courtships of Etain and of Fraoch,
- Mesgedra, Bricriu, episodes from the Cuchulainn cycle, the
- birth of Conachar, the Vision of MacConglinne, &c.
-
-
-=THURSTON, E. Temple.= His novels are for the most part a series of
-studies or rather pamphlets on the action and influence of the Catholic
-Church on human nature. His conclusions are usually hostile to that
-Church. His writings give constant evidence of misconception of Catholic
-doctrine. Incidentally Irish types and scenes are introduced, and the
-writer is fond of comments on Irish life and character. Moreover, his
-first four books aim at “brutal” realism, or naturalism. His recent book,
-_The City of Beautiful Nonsense_, is a reaction to Idealism. Besides
-his Irish novels, noticed below, he has written _Sally Bishop_, _The
-Evolution of Katherine_, _The Realist_, and other tales (more or less
-anti-Christian in tendency), and _Mirage_.
-
-⸺ THE APPLE OF EDEN. Pp. 323. (_Chapman & Hall_). 1905.
-
- An argument against the celibacy of the clergy, conveyed in
- the story of a young priest—his childhood, inexperience, life
- at Maynooth, first experiences in confessional. Here he meets
- the woman whom he had loved. He tells her that, but for the
- fact that she is married, he would break all ties for her sake.
- There is much study of Irish life (in Waterford), but the
- Author has nothing good to say about anything Irish, country
- doctors and priests being especially attacked.
-
-⸺ TRAFFIC. Pp. 452. (_Duckworth_). 1906.
-
- Scene: Waterford and London. Has been well described by the
- ATHENÆUM as a pamphlet in guise of a story, the thesis being
- that the refusal of the right of divorce in the Catholic Church
- may lead in practice to results disastrous to morality. This is
- conveyed in the story of a girl who leaves an unworthy Irish
- husband, and goes to London, where, being obliged to refuse
- an offer of marriage from an honourable Protestant, she takes
- to the streets. Contains strange misconceptions of Catholic
- doctrine and morality.
-
-⸺ THE GARDEN OF RESURRECTION. Pp. 307. (_Chapman & Hall_). 6_s._ [1911].
-1912.
-
- Sub-t.: “Being the love story of an ugly man”—viz., Bellairs,
- a confirmed bachelor, who tells his own story. Overhears in
- restaurant conversation of a young man, from which he learns
- that the latter is about to marry a young West Indian girl
- named Clarissa, but cares only for her money. Bellairs is
- struck with pity for her, and determines to tell Clarissa of
- the worthlessness of Harry. He goes to the W. of Ireland, where
- Harry had left her in charge of two maiden aunts. She will not
- believe him, and goes to London with Harry. He betrays and
- deserts her: she comes back forlorn to Bellairs, and they are
- married. The writer has a keen feeling for nature, and there
- is much description. The character study is careful and the
- style is full of pleasant whimsicalities. The “Cruikshank” and
- “Bellwattle” of _The Patchwork Papers_ reappear here.
-
-⸺ THIRTEEN. Pp. 279. (_Chapman & Hall_). 1912.
-
- Short stories reproduced from magazines. Three of the thirteen
- are little bits of Irish—Wexford—life:—“The Little Sisters of
- Mercy,” “An Idyll of Science,” and “Holy Ann.” The rest deal
- with London. There is sentimentality and mannerism, but the
- literary craftsmanship is very good.
-
-⸺ THE PASSIONATE CRIME: a Tale of the Faerie. Pp. 311. 6_s._ (_Chapman &
-Hall_). 1915.
-
- “The story of a strange murder—the murderer a poet—solitary
- among the romantic atmosphere of the lonely Irish
- hills.”—(TIMES LIT. SUP.).
-
-
-=THURSTON, Katherine Cecil.= B. Cork in 1875. Dau. of Paul Madden, a
-friend of Parnell, and at one time nationalist mayor of Cork. She began
-to write only in 1903, and married E. Temple Thurston, _q.v._ Died at
-Cork, 1911. In this short period appeared six or seven novels. Of _John
-Chilcote, M.P._, her greatest success, it is estimated that 200,000
-copies were sold in America alone.
-
-⸺ THE GAMBLER. (_Hutchinson_). 6_s._, and 6_d._ _n.d._ (1906). (N.Y.:
-_Harper_). 1.50.
-
- A psychological study of an Irish woman’s character. Treats of
- Protestant upper middle class society, but questions of creed
- do not enter into the book. The scene for about the first third
- of the book is laid in Ireland, in an out-of-the-way country
- district. Then it shifts to Venice, and afterwards to London.
- In both places the heroine moves in a smart set, whose empty
- life and petty follies are well drawn. There is a problem of
- pathetic interest centering in two ill-assorted marriages. The
- part about Irish life, showing the foolish pride of some of the
- Irish gentry, is skilfully and sympathetically done.
-
-⸺ THE FLY ON THE WHEEL. Pp. 327. (_Blackwood_). 6_s._ (N.Y.: _Dodd &
-Mead_). 1.50. 1908.
-
- Middle class Catholic society in Waterford, pictured, without
- satire, in its exterior aspects by one quite familiar with
- them. The heroine is an impulsive, self-willed girl in revolt
- against conventionality. With her Stephen Carey, a middle-aged
- man, conventionally married, falls in love and is loved in
- return. The theme on the whole is treated with restraint,
- yet there are passionate scenes. The complication is ended
- by the intervention of a priest, whose character is very
- sympathetically drawn. The end of all is the suicide of the
- girl.
-
-
-=THYNNE, Robert.=
-
-⸺ RAVENSDALE. Three Vols. (_Tinsley_). 1873.
-
- An attempt to represent the men and motives of the Emmet
- insurrection. Point of view Unionist. Free from caricature,
- vulgarity, patois, and conventional local colour. Scene at
- first in England, but mainly Dublin and Co. Wicklow. Deals with
- fortunes of a family named Featherstone—loyalists, with one
- exception, Leslie, who is a friend of Emmet. Michael Dwyer,
- Emmet, Lord Kilwarden, &c., figure in the tale. Love, hatred,
- murder, incidents of 1803, Emmet’s trial, escape of Leslie and
- his ultimate restoration keep up the interest to the end, when
- the real murderer confesses.
-
-⸺ TOM DELANY. Three Vols. (_Tinsley_). [1873]. 1876.
-
- Begins with sale, in Encumbered Estates Court, of Mrs.
- Delany’s property in the West. The family then emigrate to
- Melbourne, where the rest of the story takes place. Most of
- the characters, however, are Irish, from Sergeant Doolan to
- Mr. Brabazon. There are various love-affairs, ending some
- brightly, others sadly; and there are pictures of life in the
- gold-diggings. Eventually the estate is restored, and the
- family comes back to Ireland.
-
-⸺ STORY OF A CAMPAIGN ESTATE. Pp. 429. (_Long_). 6_s._ Several editions.
-1899.
-
- A tale of the Land League and the Plan of Campaign, written
- from the landlord’s point of view. The estate is placed near
- the Curragh of Kildare. The chief characters are nearly all
- drawn from the Protestant middle and upper classes. There is
- also a fanatical Land League priest, and a peacemaking one, of
- whom a favourable portrait is drawn. “More cruel,” says the
- hero, “more selfish, more destructive than our fathers’ loins
- is the little finger of this unwritten law of the land—this
- juggernaut before which the people bow, and are crushed.” The
- question is ably argued out in many places in the book. The
- Author seems to identify the Land League with the worst secret
- societies, such as the Invincibles. The tone is not violent;
- there is no caricaturing, and no brogue.
-
-⸺ IRISH HOLIDAYS. Pp. 317. (_Long_). 6_s._ 1898, 1906, &c.
-
- Story of an Englishman who goes down to spend his holidays
- with the Rev. John Good, Curate of Coolgreany, somewhere in
- the Bog of Allen, six miles from Birr and six from Banagher.
- Chiefly concerned, apart from a few sporting incidents, with
- aspects of agrarian agitation. Traditional English Conservative
- standpoint, accentuated by ignorance of Irish history and
- present conditions, and by ludicrous misconceptions. Fanciful
- descriptions of moonlighting, in which the peasantry appear as
- a mixture of fools and ruffians. But little humour, and that
- unconscious. No objectionable matter from religious or moral
- standpoint.
-
-⸺ BOFFIN’S FIND. Pp. 324. (_Long_). 6_s._ 1899 and 1906.
-
- An exciting tale of Australian life in the fifties. One of the
- characters is a stage-Irishman of the earlier Lever type, who
- in one chapter relates his experiences with the Ribbonmen.
-
-⸺ JOHN TOWNLEY. Pp. 346. (_Drane_). 1901.
-
- A political novel, “the last of a trilogy of Irish
- disaffection.”—(Pref.). J. T. is an Anglican clergyman who
- becomes a Catholic and, later, a priest. He comes to Ireland,
- where he finds the priests immersed in politics and using
- the confessional for political purposes. He is involved
- in circumstances of a tragic kind, and to escape from a
- disagreeable situation he goes to S. Africa, where he reverts
- to Protestantism. Dwells much on boycotting, moonlighting and
- murder. Describes the Phœnix Park murders, the subsequent
- trial, and the murder of the informer. The interest is
- exclusively political.
-
-
-=TOTTENHAM, G. L.=
-
-⸺ TERENCE McGOWAN, the Irish Tenant. Two Vols. (_Smith, Elder_). 1870.
-
- Depicts, from the landlord’s point of view, the land struggle
- in the sixties. This view-point is, in general, that “poor
- backward, barbarous, benighted Ireland” owed whatever good it
- possessed to the landlord class: the influence of the priest
- was evil: and Ireland’s troubles due mainly to the lawlessness
- and unreasonableness of the people and the weakness of the
- government. But the writer is not without knowledge of the
- people, and his pictures of life are probably true enough
- in the main. The story is well told, and the love story of
- Terence and Kathleen O’Hara and their sad fate is feelingly
- related. The book brings out well the evil results of the rule
- of a thoroughly unsympathetic landlord in the person of the
- English Mr. Majoribanks. An idea is given of how elections were
- conducted at the time. This Author wrote also _Harry Egerton_,
- _Harcourt_, and other novels.
-
-
-=TOWNSHEND, Dorothea.=
-
-⸺ THE CHILDREN OF NUGENTSTOWN and their Dealings with the Sidhe.[14] Pp.
-176. (_Nutt_). 3_s._ 6_d._ Eight good illustr. by Ruth Cobb. 1911.
-
- The young Nugents, two boys and a girl, go to visit their Aunt
- in her tumbledown old family place near Cork. The children get
- into touch with the fairies, and as a result family papers are
- recovered and fortune smiles once more on the Nugents.
-
-[14] i.e., Fairies.
-
-
-=“TRAVERS, Coragh,”= _see_ =CRAWFORD, Mary S.=
-
-
-=TRENCH, W. Stewart.= 1808-1872. Was land agent in Ireland to the
-Marquess of Lansdowne, the Marquess of Bath, and Lord Digby. Owing to
-his very admirable character he came to be respected by the people. His
-opinion of Irish character was very high. His views will be found set
-forth more fully in his _Realities of Irish Life_.
-
-⸺ IERNE. (_Longmans_). Two Vols. 1871.
-
- “A study of agrarian crime ... in which the Author used
- material collected for a history of Ireland, which he refrained
- from publishing owing to the feeling occasioned by the
- controversy over the Irish Land Bill. He endeavours ... to
- show the causes of the obstinate resistance by the Irish to
- measures undertaken for their benefit, and to show the method
- of cure.”—(_Baker_).
-
-
-=TROLLOPE, Anthony.= 1815-1882. Lived in Ireland, 1841-1859, at
-Banagher and at Clonmel. Finished in Ireland his first two novels, _The
-MacDermotts_ (1844), and _The Kellys and O’Kellys_ (1848), both failures
-with the public. He claims to have known the people, and was sympathetic
-but anti-nationalist. It would be out of place here to dwell on the place
-in English literature of the Author of _Barchester Towers_ and _The
-Warden_ and _Orley Farm_, and the rest. An admirable contemporary article
-on his novels will be found in DUBLIN REVIEW, 1872, Vol. 71, p. 393.
-The following deserves quotation: “This Englishman, keenly observant,
-painstaking, absolutely sincere and unprejudiced, with a lynx-like
-clearness of vision, and a power of literal reproduction of which his
-clerical and domestic novels, remarkable as they exhibit it, do not
-furnish such striking examples, writes a story as true to the saddest
-and heaviest truths of Irish life, as racy of the soil, as rich with the
-peculiar humour, the moral features, the social oddities, the subtle
-individuality of the far west of Ireland as George Eliot’s novels are
-true to the truths of English life.”
-
-⸺ THE MACDERMOTTS OF BALLYCLORAN. (_Lane_). 1_s._ [1844]. 1909.
-
- Scene: Co. Leitrim. Chief characters: the members of a
- broken-down Catholic county family. Miss MacDermott is engaged
- to a Sub-Inspector of police. This latter, because of certain
- difficulties that stand in the way of their marriage, attempts
- to elope with her. Her brother comes on the scene, and there
- is an affray, in which the Sub-Inspector is killed. Young
- MacDermott is tried and publicly hanged. This is the mere
- outline. More interesting is the background of Irish rural
- life, seen in its comic and quaint aspect, by an observant and
- not wholly unsympathetic Englishman. The portrait of the grand
- old Father John M’Grath is most life-like and engaging, but
- the pictures of low life in the village and among the illicit
- stills is vulgar in tone and the humour somewhat coarse. The
- book is spoken of by a competent critic, Sir G. O. Trevelyan,
- as in some respects the Author’s best. The Author himself
- considers this his best plot. It has been spoken of as “one of
- the most melancholy books ever written.”
-
-⸺ THE KELLYS AND THE O’KELLYS. (_Chapman & Hall_). [1848]. New ed., 1907.
-(_Lane_). 1_s._
-
- Scene: Dunmore, Co. Galway, at the time of O’Connell’s trial,
- 1844. Mainly a love story of the upper classes. Some clever
- portraits, _e.g._, Martin Kelly, the Widow Kelly, and the
- hero, Frank O’Kelly, Lord Ballindine. Picture of hard-riding,
- hard-drinking, landlord class. A much more cheerful story than
- the preceding. It is fresh and genuinely humorous, and the
- human interest is very strong. The seventh London ed. appeared
- in 1867.
-
-⸺ CASTLE RICHMOND. Pp. 474. (_Harper, Ward, Lock_). 2_s._ [1860]. Fifth
-London ed., 1867. Still in print.
-
- Scene: Co. Cork during the Famine years, 1847, and following,
- with which it deals fully. Tale of two old Irish families.
- The plot is commonplace enough but redeemed by great skill in
- the treatment, by admirable delineation of character, and by
- the drawing of the background. Absolutely cool and free from
- partisanship, he yet draws such a picture of those dreadful
- times as, in days to come, it will be difficult to accept as
- free from exaggeration. It is a graphic and terrible picture.
- The noble character of Owen Fitzgerald is finely drawn. There
- are touches of pleasant humour and of satire.
-
-⸺ PHINEAS FINN, the Irish Member. (_Bell_). 1866.
-
-⸺ PHINEAS REDUX. (_Bell_). 1874.
-
- A study of political personalities. The scene is London, and
- the story is little, if at all, concerned with Ireland.
-
-⸺ THE LAND LEAGUERS. Three Vols. (_Chatto & Windus_). 1883.
-
- Story of an English Protestant family who buy a property
- and settle in Galway. The book was never finished, and has,
- perhaps, little interest as a novel. But the life and incidents
- of the period are well rendered, notably the trials of people
- who are boycotted. Much sympathy with the people is displayed
- by the Author, and, on the whole, fair views of the faults and
- misunderstandings on both sides are expressed. The plot turns
- on the enmity of a peasant towards his landlord, whom he tries
- to injure in every way. The landlord’s little son is the only
- witness against the peasant. The child is murdered for telling
- what he knows. There is some harsh criticism of Catholic
- priests.
-
-
-=TROTTER, John Bernard.= 1775-1818. Of a Co. Down family, and brother of
-E. S. Ruthven, M.P. for Dublin. Ed. T.C.D.; B.A., 1795. Barrister, and
-private secretary to Charles James Fox. Died in great poverty in Cork.
-His _Walks in Ireland_ is his best known work, though he wrote many other
-works, literary and political.
-
-⸺ STORIES FOR CALUMNIATORS. Two Vols. (DUBLIN: _Fitzpatrick_). 1809.
-
- “Interspersed with remarks on the disadvantages, misfortunes,
- and habits of the Irish.” Dedicated to Lord Holland. A
- remarkable book in many ways. Through the medium of three
- stories, largely based on fact, the Author sets forth instances
- of the sad aftermath of the rebellion, illustrating the tragic
- consequences that may ensue if those in authority listen to
- the voice of slander and condemn on suspicion. The stories
- are told to a Mr. Fitzmaurice by persons related to the
- victims, and Mr. F.’s own romance is interwoven with the tale.
- Incidentally the Author gives his own views on Irish politics,
- views full of the most kindly tolerance and of true patriotic
- feeling without _ráiméis_. He seems not a Catholic, but is most
- friendly towards Catholics. He is strongly in favour of the
- Irish language, of land reform, and of the higher education of
- women—astonishing views considering the period.
-
-
-=TURK, S. A.=
-
-⸺ THE SECRET OF CARRICFEARNAGH CASTLE. (_Washbourne_). 2_s._ [1912].
-Second ed., 1915.
-
- “It has a somewhat sensational plot; but it certainly displays
- the deep piety, patriotism, and Christian charity of Erin’s
- sons and daughters.”—(Publ.).
-
-
-=TYNAN, Katherine; Mrs. H. A. Hinkson.= Born in Dublin, 1861, ed.
-Dominican Convent, Drogheda. Lived for many years in England, but now
-resides in Co. Mayo. Her stories aim at the purely romantic. As they are
-not concerned with the seamy side of life, their atmosphere is almost
-entirely happy and ideal. They are never morbid nor depressing. They do
-not preach, and are not of the goody-goody type. The style is pleasant
-and chatty, with plenty of colour, often full of the poet’s vivid sense
-impressions. The tone is thoroughly Catholic, the sentiment Irish.
-Mrs. Hinkson is a very prolific writer. Besides the novels mentioned,
-and several volumes of poems, she has written several novels which are
-not concerned with Ireland, _e.g._, _A Red Red Rose_, _The Luck of the
-Fairfaxes_, _Dick Pentreath_, _For Maisie_, _Mary Gray_, &c. In choice of
-subject she has made a speciality of broken-down gentlefolk, and often
-introduces Quakers into her stories.
-
-⸺ A CLUSTER OF NUTS. Pp. 242. (_Lawrence & Bullen_). 1894.
-
- Seventeen short sketches written for English periodicals.
- Subject: daily life of the peasantry—the village “characters,”
- a spoilt priest, the migrating harvesters, and a pathetic
- picture of a poor old village priest. Charming descriptions of
- scenery, not too long drawn out. Much tender and unaffected
- pathos.
-
-⸺ AN ISLE IN THE WATER. Pp. 221. (_Black_). 1895.
-
- Fifteen short pieces collected out of various English
- periodicals. The scene of about half of them is an unnamed
- island off the West coast. The scene of the other is Achill.
- The title does not cover the rest. Sketches chiefly of
- peasant life, in which narrative (sometimes told in dialogue)
- predominates. The stories are very varied. There are pathetic
- sketches of young girls: “Mauryeen,” “Katie,” “How Mary came
- Home”; tales of the supernatural, such as “The Death Spancel”;
- “A Rich Woman,” a racy story of legacy hunting; while heroic
- self-sacrifice is depicted in “The Man who was hanged” and “A
- Solitary.” The last two pieces in the book are not stories:
- they are musings or subjective impressions.
-
-⸺ THE WAY OF A MAID. Pp. 300. (_Lawrence & Bullen_). 1895.
-
- Domestic and social life in Coolevara, a typical Irish country
- town, chiefly among Catholic middle class folk. It is a simple
- and pleasant story of love and marriage with a happy ending.
-
-⸺ A LAND OF MIST AND MOUNTAIN. Pp. 195. (_Catholic Truth Society_). 1895.
-
- Short sketches of Irish life written with the Author’s
- accustomed tenderness and simple pathos. Noteworthy are the
- tales that contain Jimmy, the Wicklow peasant lad, who loves
- all animals; the prodigal who returns after twenty years, and
- the exiles Giuseppe and Beppo, in their queer little Dublin
- shop. Real persons—Rose Kavanagh, Ellen O’Leary, and Sarah
- Atkinson—are introduced in a fictitious setting.
-
- _The Land I Love Best_ is another series of eight tales issued
- by the same publishers about 1898. 200 pages.
-
-⸺ THE DEAR IRISH GIRL. (_Smith, Elder_). 6_s._ (CHICAGO: _McClurg_). 1.50.
-
- Motherless, and an only child, Biddy O’Connor brings herself
- up in a big, lonely Dublin house. Dr. O’Connor lives amid his
- memories and his books. Biddy is a winsome girl, and keeps
- the reader’s heart from the time we first meet her with the
- homeless dogs of Dublin as her favourite companions to the day
- when she weds the master of Coolbawn. The chief charm of the
- book lies in the picture of life amid the splendid scenery
- of Connaught. The book has a pleasant atmosphere of bright
- simplicity and quick mirthfulness. The SPECTATOR calls it
- “fresh, unconventional, and poetic.”
-
-⸺ SHE WALKS IN BEAUTY. Pp. 310. (_Smith, Elder_). (CHICAGO: _McClurg_).
-1.50. 1899.
-
- Three delightful girls of a class which the Author delights to
- picture—impoverished gentry and their love affairs. The minor
- characters, servants, village people, &c., are very humorous
- and true to life. In this story the course of true love is by
- no means smooth, but all is well at the last. The scene varies
- between “Carrickmoyle” and London.
-
-⸺ A GIRL OF GALWAY. (_Blackie_). 5_s._ Handsome gift-book binding. 1900.
-
- She stays with her grandfather, a miserly old recluse living
- in the wilds of Connemara, seeing nobody but his agent, an
- unscrupulous fellow, in whom he has perfect confidence. A love
- affair is soon introduced. It seems hopeless at first, but
- turns out all right owing to a strange unlooked for event.
- Pleasant and faithful picture of Connemara life.
-
-⸺ THREE FAIR MAIDS. Pp. 381. (_Blackie_). 6_s._ [1900]. (N.Y.:
-_Scribner_). 1.50. Twelve illustr. by G. Demain Hammond. 1909.
-
- The three daughters of Sir Jasper Burke are of the reduced
- county family class, about which the Author loves to write. The
- expedient of receiving paying guests results in matrimony for
- the three girls. With this simple plot there are all the things
- that go to make Katharine Tynan’s works delightful reading:
- insight into character, impressions of Irish life, lovable
- personalities of many types.
-
-⸺ A DAUGHTER OF THE FIELDS. (_Smith, Elder_). 6_s._ (CHICAGO: _McClurg_).
-1900.
-
- “Another gracious Irish girl. Well educated, and brought
- up to a refined and easy life, she applies herself to the
- drudgery of farm work rather than desert her toiling mother;
- but the novelist finds her a husband and a more fortunate
- lot.”—(_Baker_).
-
-⸺ A UNION OF HEARTS. Pp. 296. (_Nisbet_). 2_s._ 6_d._ and 1_s._ 6_d._
-_n.d._ [1900].
-
- A typical example of Mrs. Hinkson’s stories. The main plot is
- a simple, idyllic love-story. The hero, much idealized, is
- an Englishman who tries to do good to his Irish tenants in
- his own way, and hence incurs their hatred, for a time. The
- heroine is an heiress come of a good old stock. Several of the
- characters are cleverly sketched: old Miss Lucy Considine and
- her antiquarian brother, in particular. Scenes of peasant life
- act as interludes to the main action, which lies in county
- family society. All the chief persons are Protestants, but the
- religious element is quite eliminated from the book.
-
-⸺ THAT SWEET ENEMY. (_Constable_). 6_s._ (PHILADELPHIA: _Lippincott_).
-1.50. 1901.
-
- “A sentimental story of two Irish girls, children of a decayed
- house; their love affairs, the hindrance to their happiness,
- and the matrimonial _dénouement_.”—(_Baker_).
-
-⸺ A KING’S WOMAN. Pp. 155. (_Hurst & Blackett_). 6_d._ [1902]. 1905.
-
- Told by Penelope Fayle, a young Quaker gentlewoman, a loyalist
- or King’s woman, but sympathetic to the Irish. Scene: a
- Leinster country house in 1798. No descriptions of the
- fighting, but glimpses of the cruelty of Ancient Britons,
- yeomanry, &c., and of the dark passions of the time. Racy,
- picturesque style, with exciting incidents and dramatic
- situations.
-
-⸺ THE HANDSOME QUAKER. Pp. 252. (_A. H. Bullen_). 1902.
-
- Eighteen exquisite little stories and sketches dealing, nearly
- all, with the lives of the poorest peasantry. They have all the
- Author’s best qualities.
-
-⸺ LOVE OF SISTERS. Pp. 344. (_Smith, Elder_). 6_s._ [1902]. Third ed.
-1908.
-
- The scene varies between the West of Ireland and Dublin.
- A love-story, in which the central figures are Phillippa
- Featherstonhaugh and her sister, Colombe: a contrast in
- character, but each lovable in her own way. The plot turns on
- the unselfish devotion of the former, who, believing that her
- lover has transferred his affections to her sister, heroically
- stands aside. We shall not reveal the _dénouement_. The minor
- characters are capital, all evidently closely copied from life.
- There are the elderly spinsters, Miss Finola and Miss Peggy,
- and quite a number of charming old ladies, the country priest
- and the sisters’ bustling, philanthropic mother, always in a
- whirl of correspondence about her charities, and others equally
- interesting.
-
-⸺ A DAUGHTER OF KINGS. (_Nash_). 6_s._ (N.Y.: _Benziger_). 1.25. 1903.
-
- The daughter of a broken-down aristocratic county family is
- obliged to take service as chaperon in an English family.
- Careful study of girl’s lovable character. Contrast between the
- pride and poverty of Witches’ Castle, Co. Donegal, and opulence
- of English home.
-
-⸺ THE HONOURABLE MOLLY. Pp. 312. (_Smith, Elder_). Second impression,
-1903.
-
- The Honourable Molly is of mixed Anglo-Irish aristocratic (her
- father was a Creggs de la Poer) and Scoto-Irish middle class
- origin (her mother’s people were O’Neills and Sinclairs).
- She has two suitors, one is from her mother’s people, the
- other is the heir to Castle Creggs and the title. Both are
- eminently worthy of her hand. She finally chooses one,
- after having accepted the other. Has all the sweetness and
- femininity of Katherine Tynan’s work. Is frankly romantic but
- not mawkish. There is no approach to a villain. There is some
- quiet and good-natured satire of old-fashioned aristocratic
- class-notions. The portraits of the two old maiden aunts are
- very clever.
-
-⸺ JULIA. Pp. 322. (_Smith, Elder_). 6_s._ Second impression, 1904.
-
- How a baseless slander nearly ruined the life of Julia, the
- Cinderella of her family, how she was nearly lost to her lover,
- and by what strange turns of fortune she was restored. The
- chief characters belong to two branches of a Kerry family,
- whose history is that of many another in Ireland. Julia’s
- mother is a splendid type of the old-fashioned Irish matron.
- There is touching pathos in the picture of the Grace family
- (minor personages of the tale)—a mother’s absolute devotedness
- to a pair of thankless and worthless daughters. The old parish
- priest, too, is well drawn.
-
-⸺ THE ADVENTURES OF ALICIA. (_White_). 6_s._ 1906.
-
- “A characteristically winning story of a poor young Irish
- girl, who had to serve English employers, but, in spite of
- all temptations, remained true to her Irish lover.”—(_Press
- Notice_).
-
-⸺ THE STORY OF BAWN. Pp. 312. (_Smith, Elder_). 6_s._ (CHICAGO:
-_McClurg_). 1.50. 1906.
-
- One of the Author’s prettiest stories. Family of high standing
- falls into the meshes of money-lender. The daughter consents to
- marry him—but the plot need not be revealed. The scene appears
- to be Co. Kerry in the early ’sixties, but there seem to be
- some anachronisms.
-
-⸺ HER LADYSHIP. Pp. 305. (_Smith, Elder_). 6_s._ (CHICAGO: _McClurg_).
-1.25. Second impression, 1907.
-
- Lady Anne Chute is mistress of a vast estate in Co. Kerry. From
- the moment of her succession to the property she resolves to
- act the part of Providence in her people’s lives. She sets
- about improving their condition, founding industries, &c., and
- with full success. This is the background to a love-story.
- Old Miss Chenevix, once a “lady,” but now living almost on
- the verge of starvation in an obscure quarter of Dublin, is
- a pathetic figure. Pathetic also is the devotion of her old
- servant to the fallen fortunes of the family. Then there is the
- picture, drawn with exquisite sympathy, of the poor girl dying
- of consumption, and of how her religion exalted and brightened
- her last days. The descriptions or rather impressions of nature
- which brighten the story are peculiarly vivid.
-
-⸺ THE HOUSE OF THE CRICKETS. (_Smith, Elder_). 1908.
-
- A story of Irish peasant farmer life. The heroine lives, with
- her brothers and sisters, a life of abject slavery, ruled by a
- tyrannical and puritanical father. In this wretched home she
- and her brother, Richard, develop noble qualities of character
- and mind. The members of the family are very life-like
- portraits, and the picture of Irish life is drawn with much
- care and skill.
-
-⸺ MEN AND MAIDS. Pp. 294. (_Sealy, Bryers_). 3_s._ 6_d._ Illustr. by
-Dorothea Preston. 1908.
-
- A collection of short stories, chiefly thoroughly romantic
- love-stories. “A Big Lie” is, however, of a different
- character, and the Author has hardly ever written a more
- delightful story.
-
-⸺ PEGGY THE DAUGHTER. Pp. 335. (_Cassell_). 1909.
-
- A romance of Ireland in early Victorian days. A young
- spendthrift nobleman, a widower, runs away with Priscilla, a
- Quakeress, and also an heiress. The description of the pursuit
- is exciting and dramatic. The penalty of his deed is a long
- imprisonment, from which he issues a sadder and wiser man.
- Priscilla’s care of his little daughter, Peggy, in the meantime
- is a pathetic story. The plot suggested by the attempted
- abduction by Sir H. B. Hayes of the Quakeress, Miss Pike, of
- Cork.
-
-⸺ COUSINS AND OTHERS. Pp. 319. (_Laurie_). 1909.
-
- Eleven stories. The title story, the longest (there are nine
- chapters) tells how a shabby branch of an old Irish family
- finally won recognition by means of a marriage with the
- supposed heir and by the finding of certain old family papers.
- Contains some goodnatured satire on the snobbishness of Irish
- county society. One of the remaining stories is Irish in
- subject. All show the Author’s best qualities—freshness, charm,
- and cheerful optimism.
-
-⸺ THE HANDSOME BRANDONS. (_Blackie_). 3_s._ 6_d._ New ed. Illustr. by G.
-Demain Hammond.
-
- How a marriage between scions of two ancient Irish houses heals
- a long-standing feud.
-
-⸺ THE HOUSE OF THE SECRET. Pp. 314. (_James Clarke_). 6_s._ 1910.
-
- The story of Maeve Standish’s self-sacrifice in the
- sorrow-shadowed home of her father’s old friend, Miss Henrietta
- O’Neill, of her ultimate good fortune, and finally of her happy
- marriage. The setting is entirely Irish.—(_Press Notice_).
-
-⸺ HEART O’ GOLD; or, The Little Princess. Pp. 344. (_Partridge_). 3_s._
-6_d._
-
- Story of how Cushla MacSweeney and her sister, left as orphans,
- are carried off from their tumbled-down Irish home and brought
- up at Tunbridge Wells. How Cushla returns at twenty-one full
- of dreams for the improvement of Ireland, and is aided in her
- plans by a young man whom she afterwards marries. Full of the
- Author’s interesting character-studies.
-
-⸺ THE STORY OF CECILIA. Pp. 304. (_Smith, Elder_). 6_s._ (N.Y.:
-_Benziger_). 1.00. 1911.
-
- Scene: Kerry and Dublin. Two stories, of mother and daughter,
- Ciss and Cecilia, interwoven. Ciss’s fiancé is reported killed.
- She loses her reason and persuades herself that a Dr. Grace,
- who is of peasant extraction, is her lover come back. To save
- her from the asylum Lord Dromore, her cousin and guardian,
- has to consent unwillingly to the marriage. The absent
- lover returns, but she does not meet him for twenty years.
- Meanwhile Ciss’s mésalliance is causing trouble in the course
- of Cecilia’s love for Lord Kilrush. But all ends happily. The
- characters are mainly drawn from the denationalised Irish upper
- classes. The story is told with much charm.
-
-⸺ PRINCESS KATHARINE. Pp. 320. (_Ward_). 6_s._ 1912.
-
- A girl educated much above her mother’s condition in life and
- mixing in upper class society.
-
-⸺ ROSE OF THE GARDEN. Pp. 312. (_Constable_). 1912.
-
- The story of Lady Sarah Lennox (1745-1826) in the form of
- fiction. A good many Irish members of the _beau monde_ appear
- in the tale. It is not for young readers. See _The Life and
- Letters of Lady Sarah Lennox_, edited by the Countess of
- Ilchester and Lord Stavordale. Two vols. (_Murray_).
-
-⸺ A SHAMEFUL INHERITANCE. Pp. 324. (_Cassell_). 6_s._ 1914.
-
- “Katharine Tynan, in her gentle way, puts before us the growing
- up of the boy Pat in ignorance of the disgrace (a jewel
- robbery) of his mother and the suicide of his father, and the
- effect upon him of the disclosure. A lovable and spiritual
- Father Peter plays a leading part in it all.”—(T. LITT.
- SUPPL.). Pat finds his mother in time to comfort her deathbed,
- and in the end marries an old friend. Somewhat vague, and not
- free from inconsistencies.
-
-⸺ COUNTRYMEN ALL. Pp. 238. (_Maunsel_). 2_s._ 1915.
-
- A volume of stories and sketches, very varied in its contents,
- from well-told but rather unconvincing little melodramas like
- “The Fox Hunter” and “John ’a Dreams” to very vivid glimpses
- of life, _choses vues et vécues_. These show various sides
- of Irish life and character; an unpleasant side in “The
- Ruling Passion” (a woman discussing her own funeral with
- her daughter), as well as the pleasant and lovable aspects.
- “The Mother” and “The Mother of Jesus” are little studies of
- exquisite tenderness. Several of the sketches are humorous,
- for instance the weird episode, “Per istam sanctam unctionem,”
- related by a priest. The scene of several seems to be the
- neighbourhood of Dublin.
-
-⸺ THE HOUSE OF THE FOXES. Pp. 307. (_Smith, Elder_). 6_s._ 1915.
-
- The Turloughmores are overshadowed by a curse made long ago by
- an old woman wounded to death by the hounds of a former Lord
- T. when hunting. According to the curse, every head of the
- house must die a violent death, in forewarning of which foxes
- will be seen in twos and threes about the house for some time
- before. The actual Lord T. is expected home from his yachting
- cruise, his wife ever in dread of the doom. He is wrecked
- and apparently lost, but Meg Hildebrand, who is staying at
- the castle, discovers the almost dying lord in mysterious
- circumstances. He dies in his bed, his heir is married into a
- lucky house, and the curse is said to be lifted. Founded on
- a legend (still current) of a well-known Irish family. Many
- threads of various interest are woven into the tale.
-
-⸺ MEN, NOT ANGELS, and Other Tales told to Girls. (_Burns & Oates_).
-3_s._ 6_d._ Many full-p. illustr. 1915.
-
- Dainty stories, healthy and pleasant in tone, not weakly
- sentimental, definitely Catholic in character. Laid in various
- countries—England, France, Switzerland, as well as Ireland.
- Sympathetic studies of priests.
-
-
-=UPTON, W. C.=
-
-⸺ UNCLE PAT’S CABIN. Pp. vi. + 284. (_Gill_). 1882.
-
- “Or life among the agricultural labourers of Ireland.” “All the
- facts relative to the agricultural labourer in these pages can
- be vouched for.”—(Pref.). Describes vividly the long struggle
- of a labourer against adversity, the evils arising out of the
- competition for the land. A graphic picture of the conditions
- of the poor. Scene: Co. Limerick in the years from 1847 to
- 1880 or so. The writer was a carpenter working at Ardagh,
- who afterwards went to America. The chapters relating to a
- parliamentary contest are less valuable than the rest of the
- book. Lecky, in his “_History of Ireland in the Eighteenth
- Century_” (Vol. 3, ch. 8, pp. 413-14 in a footnote), speaks of
- the book as “one of the truest and most vivid pictures of the
- present condition of the Irish labourer.”
-
-
-=VAIZEY, Mrs. G. de Horne.=
-
-⸺ PIXIE O’SHAUGHNESSY.
-
- Scene: first, a fashionable English girls’ school, afterwards a
- half-ruined castle in the West of Ireland. The book is taken up
- with the amusing scrapes and other adventures of a wild little
- Irish girl, and with the love affairs of her sisters. Gives
- a good, if somewhat overdrawn, picture of Irish character,
- especially of traditional Irish hospitality.
-
-⸺ MORE ABOUT PIXIE. (_R.T.S._). 6_d._ 1910.
-
-⸺ THE FORTUNES OF THE FARRELLS. Pp. 190. (_Leisure Hour Library Office_).
-6_d._ 1911.
-
-
-=VANCE, Louis Joseph.=
-
-⸺ TERENCE O’ROURKE, Gentleman Adventurer. Pp. 393. (_E. Grant Richards_).
-1906.
-
- Thrilling adventures of a penniless soldier, who goes about Don
- Quixote-wise rescuing distressed damsels—each more beautiful
- than the last—fighting duels, and so forth. A good story of its
- class, and free from anything objectionable.
-
-
-=VEREKER, Hon. C. S., M.A., F.G.S.=
-
-⸺ OLD TIMES IN IRELAND. Three Vols. (_Chapman & Hall_). 1873.
-
- The Author was commandant of the Limerick City Artillery
- Militia and son of Lord Gort. Chiefly heavy light-comedy,
- with conventional characters and an air of unreality about
- the whole. The humour, the dialect, the characteristics of
- the various personages, all are highly exaggerated. A Lord
- Lieutenant, a Duke, the absurd Mr. and Mrs. O’Rafferty, the
- still more absurd love-sick schoolmaster, ruffianly Terry Alts,
- figure, among many others, in the tale.
-
-
-=VERNE, Jules.=
-
-⸺ FOUNDLING MICK (P’tit Bonhomme). Pp. 303. (_Sampson, Low_). Seventy-six
-good illustr. 1895.
-
- The very varied and often exciting adventures of a poor waif.
- Rescued from a travelling showman at Westport, Co. Mayo, he is
- sent to a poor school in Galway, resembling the workhouse in
- _Oliver Twist_. Further adventures bring him to Limerick, and
- then to Tralee, and afterwards to many other parts of Ireland.
- The book is written in thorough sympathy with Ireland, and in
- particular with the sufferings of the poor under iniquitous
- Land Laws, though at times with a little exaggeration. There
- is a vivid description of an eviction. Other aspects of Irish
- life are touched on, and with considerable knowledge. Dublin,
- Belfast, Killarney, Bray, are some of the places described. The
- spirit is Catholic: witness the kindly words on page 8 about
- Irish priests.
-
-
-=“WALDA, Viola.”=
-
-⸺ MISS PEGGY O’DILLON; or, the Irish Critic. (_Gill_). 1890.
-
-
-=WALSHE, Miss E. H.=
-
-⸺ THE FOSTER BROTHERS OF DOON. Pp. 394. (_R.T.S._). Illustr. _n.d._ (_c._
-1865).
-
- The foster-brothers are Myles Furlong, a Co. Wexford blacksmith
- on the rebel side in the rising of ’98, and Capt. Butler, a
- loyalist. Their respective adventures amid the historic events
- of the time are very well told. The Captain’s election as M.P.
- for Doon is well described. Putnam McCabe, Hamilton Rowan,
- Tone, Curran, and Jackson appear in the tale. Dialect good.
- Leans to loyalist side. “Written from a decidedly Protestant
- standpoint.”—(_Nield_).
-
-⸺ GOLDEN HILLS. (_R.T.S._). 1865.
-
- The Famine.
-
-⸺ THE MANUSCRIPT MAN; or, the Bible in Ireland. Pp. 226. (_R.T.S._). 1869.
-
- In the biographical note prefixed to this story we are told
- that the Author was all her life interested and actively
- engaged in evangelical work. She was born in Limerick,
- 1835, died 1868. The story tells how a family of Protestant
- landowners succeeded in distributing among their Catholic
- tenantry copies of the Bible in Irish, and thereby converted
- a number of them to Protestantism. The converts afterwards
- emigrate and settle in America. Scene: apparently West
- Connaught. Throughout, “Romanism” and “Romish” practices are
- contrasted with Protestantism, greatly to the disadvantage of
- the former. The book is well and interestingly written.
-
-
-=WARD, Mrs.=
-
-⸺ WAVES ON THE OCEAN OF LIFE: a Dalriadian Tale. Pp. 322. (_Simpkin_).
-1869.
-
- Domestic life, with glimpses of religious and political strife
- in Ulster at close of eighteenth century truthfully delineated.
- Scene: Lough Erne and Antrim, the scenery of Dunluce and
- the Causeway described, and some real incidents introduced.
- Sympathetic towards the people, and does not disparage the ’98
- insurgents.
-
-
-=WATSON, Helen H.=
-
-⸺ PEGGY, D.O.: the Story of the Seven O’Rourkes. Pp. 312. (_Cassell_).
-3_s._ 6_d._ Four coloured plates from drawings by Gertrude Steele. 1910.
-
- The story told by a little lame girl of fourteen of a proud
- Irish family reduced to a cheap flat, and living in discomfort
- and anxiety without losing their cheerfulness of heart. There
- is both humour and pathos. We are introduced to some pleasant
- and lovable children.
-
-
-=WENTZ, Walter Yeeling Evans.=
-
-⸺ THE FAIRY-FAITH IN CELTIC COUNTRIES: Its Psychica Origin and Nature.
-(RENNES: _Imprimerie Oberthur_). 1909.
-
- The Author is Docteur ès Lettres, France; A.M., Stanford
- College, California; Member of Jesus College, Oxford; an
- American, and a pupil of Sir John Rhys, _q.v._ An investigation
- and discussion of “that specialised form of belief in a
- subjective realm inhabited by subjective beings which
- has existed from prehistoric times until now in Ireland,
- Scotland, Man, Wales, Cornwall, and Brittany.” The Author, a
- believer in the existence of fairies, went himself through
- many parts of the countries above mentioned and spoke with
- and studied the peasantry. Divisions of work: I. The Living
- Fairy Faith Psychically Considered. II. The Recorded Fairy
- Faith Psychically Considered. III. The Cult of Gods, Spirits,
- Fairies, and the Dead. IV. The Fairy Faith Reconstructed.
-
-
-=[WEST, Jane].= 1758-1852. B. in London; the wife of a farmer in
-Northamptonshire. Author of _A Gossip’s Story_.
-
-⸺ THE HISTORY OF NED EVANS: A Tale of the Times. Two Vols. (_Dublin_).
-[1796]. 1805.
-
- Title-p.:—“Interspersed with moral and critical remarks;
- anecdotes and characters of many persons well known in the
- polite world; and incidental strictures on the present state of
- Ireland.” The hero is supposed to be the son of a Welsh parson.
- The story opens in 1779, and is the love story of the Lady
- Cecilia, daughter of Lord Ravensdale, and the hero, who turns
- out in the end to be the true Lord Ravensdale. The story is
- full of incident. Ch. xxii. brings the hero to Ireland. He has
- some adventures in Dublin, which is partly described; then goes
- down to Ravensdale, which is seventy-six miles from Dublin. He
- goes to the American war, and has many adventures with Indians,
- narrow escapes, &c.; but finally returns to wed Cecilia. The
- story is highly moral and sentimental, with a religious tone.
- The characters are mainly of the Anglo-Irish gentry—Lord
- Rivers, Lord Squanderfield, &c. The then state of Ireland is
- but slightly dwelt on.
-
-
-=[WESTRUP, Margaret]; Mrs. W. Sydney Stacey.= Author of _Elizabeth’s
-Children_.
-
-⸺ THE YOUNG O’BRIENS. Pp. 347. (_Lane_). 6_s._ 1906.
-
- Doings of a family of Irish children left with an aunt in
- London during their father’s absence in India. With all their
- fun and pranks the children pine in London and long for the
- meadows and the woods of their home in Kilbrannan.
-
-
-=WEYMAN, Stanley.=
-
-⸺ THE WILD GEESE. (_Hodder & Stoughton_). 6_s._ 1908. (N.Y.:
-_Doubleday_). 1.50. New thin paper ed., pp. 384, 2_s._ 1911.
-
- Story of an abortive rising in Kerry in reign of George I.,
- with exciting situations and a love interest. Style clear and
- vigorous. Irish characters nearly all vacillating, treacherous,
- and fanatical. Generally considered as giving an unreal idea of
- the times.
-
-
-=WHISTLER, Rev. Charles Watts.= B. 1856. Author of a series of admirable
-stories for boys.
-
-⸺ A SEA QUEEN’S SAILING. (_Nelson_). 3_s._ 6_d._ 1907.
-
- The Vikings about A.D. 935, time of Hakon the Good. Adventures
- of, among others, an Irish prince with the Vikings. Scene:
- northern and Irish coasts. Juvenile.
-
-⸺ A PRINCE ERRANT. (_Nelson_). 2_s._ 6_d._ 1908.
-
- S.W. Wales, Cornwall, and Ireland about A.D. 792. Saxon,
- Briton, Norseman, and Dane. Juvenile.
-
-
-=WHITE, Captain L. Esmonde.=
-
-⸺ IRISH COAST TALES OF LOVE AND ADVENTURE. Pp. 307. (_Smith, Elder_).
-1865.
-
- Contains two tales—(1) “The Black Channel of Cloughnagawn;” (2)
- “The Lovers of Ballyvookan.” Dr. Small goes to the west as a
- dispensary doctor, and meets the various types of character.
- The pursuit of a slave ship is well described, as are the
- men who man the western hookers, and know every turn of the
- dangerous Black Channel. The second deals with the wreck
- of H.M.S. Wasp and the love story of Norah Flynn. Both are
- exciting stories. The brogue is fairly good.
-
-
-=[WHITTY, Michael James].= (1795-1873).
-
-⸺ TALES OF IRISH LIFE. Two Vols. 12mo. (LONDON: _Robins_). Six illustr.
-by Cruikshank. 1824.
-
- “Illustrative of the manners, customs, and condition of
- the people.” Contents:—“Limping Mogue,” “The Rebel,” “The
- Absentee,” “The Robber,” “The Witch of Scollough’s Gap,” “The
- Informer,” “The Poor Man’s Daughter,” “Poor Mary,” “North and
- South, or Prejudice Removed” (showing, see especially pp.
- 29 _sq._, V. II., the Author’s freedom from bigotry), “The
- Priest’s Niece,” “The Last Chieftain of Erin,” “Turn-coat
- Watt” (Proselytism), “Protestant Bill,” &c. Intended “to
- disabuse the public mind and communicate information on a
- subject confessedly of importance.” Excellent stories by a
- journalist very well known in his day. B. Wexford, 1795, he
- came to London in 1821. In 1823 he was appointed editor of the
- LONDON AND DUBLIN MAGAZINE, in which he published his work on
- Robert Emmet. From 1829 till his death he lived and worked in
- Liverpool. His LIVERPOOL DAILY POST, 1855, was the first penny
- daily paper.—(D.N.B.). His son, E. M. Whitty (1827-1860), was a
- brilliant journalist, and wrote a novel: _Friends in Bohemia_,
- and _Parliamentary Portraits_.
-
-
-=WHYTE-MELVILLE, Major G. J.= (1821-1878). Had Irish connections and
-wrote many novels. Killed in hunting field—a death he had often described.
-
-⸺ SATANELLA: A story of Punchestown. Pp. 307. (_Chapman and Hall_). 1873.
-2_s._ other eds.
-
- A racy story of sportsmen and soldiers. Opens in Ireland and
- scene shifts to London. The talk of grooms and trainers fairly
- well done. The fate of the heroine and the famous black mare,
- both called “Satanella,” is tragic.
-
-
-=WILDE, Lady; “Speranza.”= Well known as a poet of the NATION, one of
-the most passionately patriotic of them all. B. in Wexford, 1826. D. in
-London, 1896.
-
-⸺ ANCIENT LEGENDS OF IRELAND. Pp. 350. (_Ward & Downey_). 6_s._ 1888.
-
- A collection of fairy stories, legends, descriptions of
- superstitious practices, medicals cures and charms, robber
- stories, notes on holy wells, &c., taken down from the
- peasantry, some in Gaelic, some in English. The legends, &c.,
- are preceded by a learned essay on the origin and history of
- legend, and the book concludes with chapters on Irish art and
- ethnology and a lecture by Sir W. Wilde on the ancient races
- of Ireland. Contains a vast amount of matter useful to the
- folk-lorist, to the general reader, and even to the historian.
- The stories are rather pathetic and tender than humorous. Wrote
- also _Ancient Cures, Charms, and Superstitions of Ireland_,
- _Driftwood from Scandinavia_, _The American Irish_, &c.
-
-
-=WILLIAMS, Charles.= B. Coleraine, 1838. D. London, 1904. The celebrated
-war correspondent of the DAILY CHRONICLE and STANDARD; first editor of
-EVENING NEWS, and founder of the Press Club. Wrote a _Life of Sir Evelyn
-Wood_.
-
-⸺ JOHN THADDEUS MACKAY. Pp. 327. (_Burleigh_). (1889). 6_s._
-
- In this clever novel the Author draws upon his recollections
- of early days in Ulster. The hero, “a stickit minister,” goes
- out to India in company with a “Howley” father, so named after
- a famous Archbishop of Canterbury, and both learn charity
- and brotherly love and see the narrowness of their own views
- through mixing with the natives. Many real personages are
- introduced under thinly disguised cognomens, thus “Rev. Thomas
- Trifle” is the late Rev. Thomas Toye, of Belfast.
-
-
-=WILLS, William Gorman.= B. Kilkenny, 1828. D. London, 1891. Poet,
-Painter, Dramatist, and Novelist. Ed. T.C.D. Son of Rev. James Wills,
-also a prolific writer. Wills is better known as a dramatist, having
-written no fewer than thirty-three plays, amongst the finest of them
-being _Charles I._, _Olivia_, and _Faust_. Amongst his other novels
-are _Life’s Foreshadowings_, which first appeared as a serial in IRISH
-METROPOLITAN MAGAZINE, 1857-8; _The Wife’s Evidence_, founded on an Irish
-tragedy, where a man named McLaughlin was hanged for a murder committed
-by his mother; _Old Times_, _Notice to Quit_, _David Chantry_, besides a
-long poem, _Melchior_.
-
-⸺ THE LOVE THAT KILLS. Three Vols. (_Tinsley_). 1867.
-
- “It [the above novel] drew striking pictures of the relations
- between landlord and tenant in Ireland, the Irish Famine, and
- the Rebellion of 1848: and it showed a warm glow of sympathy
- with the Irish peasantry, which no one would have suspected in
- a man apparently so wholly out of touch with politics.” [From
- “Life of W. G. Wills” by Freeman Wills. LONDON. 1898].
-
-
-=WILMOT-BUXTON, E. M.=
-
-⸺ BRITAIN LONG AGO: Stories from Old English and Celtic Sources.
-(_Harrap_: _Told through the Ages_ series).
-
-⸺ OLD CELTIC TALES. Pp. 128, large clear type. (_Harrap_). 6_d._ 1910.
-
- One of Harrap’s “All-Time Tales,” a series of supplementary
- readers for young children. The first tale is “The Children of
- Lir,” told in three-and-a-half pages. The rest are from the
- Mabinogion and other Welsh sources. Six or seven moderately
- good full page ill. (one col.). Neat cover. Remarkably cheap.
-
-
-=WINGFIELD, Hon. Lewis Strange.= B. 1842. Son of 6th Lord Powerscourt.
-Ed. Eton and Bonn. Lived a very strange life, trying as experiments
-various rôles—actor, nigger minstrel, attendant in a mad-house, traveller
-in Algeria and China, painter, &c., &c. Wrote many novels and books of
-travel. D. 1891.
-
-⸺ MY LORDS OF STROGUE. Three Vols. (_Bentley_). 1879.
-
- “A Chronicle of Ireland from the Convention to the Union.”
- History and romance curiously intermingled, _e.g._, Robert
- Emmet’s Insurrection is purposely ante-dated by two years and
- a half. “The prominence given to such unpleasant personages as
- Mrs. Gillin makes the book unsuitable at least for the lending
- libraries of convents.”—(I.M.). The Author is fair-minded and
- not anti-national.
-
-
-=WOODS, Margaret L.= B. Rugby, 1856. Dau. of late Dr. Bradley, Dean of
-Westminster. Ed. at home and at Leamington. Lives in London. Author of
-about a dozen volumes—novels, poems, and plays.
-
-⸺ ESTHER VANHOMRIGH. Pp. 347. (_Murray_). 1891.
-
- A clever and interesting psychological study of the relations
- between Swift and the two Esthers, Johnson and Vanhomrigh, the
- latter being the chief centre of interest. The scene: partly in
- Ireland, partly in England. The political events and questions
- of the time are scarcely touched upon, but the atmosphere,
- language, and costume of the time have evidently been carefully
- studied, and are vividly reproduced. Swift’s relations to these
- two women are represented in a convincing and sympathetic
- manner. There is nothing objectionable in the tone of the book.
-
-⸺ THE KING’S REVOKE. Pp. 334. (_Smith, Elder_). 6_s._ (N.Y.: _Dutton_).
-1.50. Second impression. 1905.
-
- The strange adventures of Patrick Dillon, an officer in
- the Spanish army, in the course of his attempt to set free
- Ferdinand VII. of Spain, imprisoned in France by Napoleon
- I. Its pictures of Catholic life in Spain are not always
- flattering, though doubtless not intentionally offensive.
-
-
-=[WRIGHT, E. H.].=
-
-⸺ ANDRÉ BESNARD. (CORK). 1889.
-
- A tale of Old Cork, giving good descriptions of its people,
- buildings, &c. Period: that preceding the times of the
- Volunteers. A tale of courtship and adventure. One of the chief
- characters is Paul Jones, the celebrated American admiral.
- Published under pen-name “G. O’C.”
-
-
-=WRIGHT, John, A.M.=
-
-⸺ THE LAST OF THE CORBES: or, The MacMahon’s Country. Pp. 342.
-(_Macrone_). 1835.
-
- Described on title-p. as “a legend connected with Irish history
- in 1641.” A plain tale, devoid of description, excitement, and
- historical “atmosphere,” chiefly concerned with a family named
- Willoughby. The writer is anti-Puritan but not pro-Irish. He
- mentions the deed of the traitor O’Connolly with approval, and
- dwells much on the excesses of the insurgents. Heber Macmahon
- (afterwards Bishop of Clogher), Sir Phelim O’Neill, and Roger
- Moore are introduced into the story. The writer was rector of
- Killeevan, Co. Monaghan.
-
-
-=WRIGHT, R. H.=
-
-⸺ A PLAIN MAN’S TALE. Pp. 192. (BELFAST: _McCaw, Stevenson & Orr_). 1904.
-
- Adventures of a young Yorkshireman who, about the ’98 period,
- sails for Ireland and lands at Island Magee, in Antrim.
- Exciting episodes—love-making, smuggling, &c. Not concerned
- with the rising. For boys.
-
-⸺ THE SURPRISING ADVENTURES OF MY FRIEND PATRICK DEMPSEY. (_Sealy,
-Bryers_). 6_d._ 1910.
-
-
-=WYNDHAM, Eleanor.=
-
-⸺ THE WINE IN THE CUP. Pp. 380. (_Werner Laurie_). 6_s._ 1909.
-
- Scene laid in Rathlin Island, but the book cannot be said to
- depict the life of the place with fidelity to real conditions.
- By same Author: _The Lily and the Devil_, 1908.
-
-
-=WYNNE, Florence.=
-
-⸺ THE KING’S COMING. Pp. 489. (_Skeffington_). 6_s._ 1904.
-
- The king is “Edward VII. of England and I. of Ireland” (_sic_).
- Nearly half the book is composed of minute descriptions of his
- reception in various parts of Ireland. The rest is chiefly
- made up of long discussions (mostly by the hero and heroine)
- on religion, divorce, loyalty, Irish history, the position of
- the Church of Ireland, and landlords. The Author seems to be
- strongly “loyal,” a High-Church member of the C. of I., an
- ardent Home-Ruler, and a Gaelic enthusiast. But no bias is
- displayed _against_ any class or creed, though the Author does
- not seem partial to the landlord class, unpleasant specimens
- of whom are introduced. Written with obvious sincerity and
- earnestness.
-
-
-=“WYNNE, May”; Miss N. W. Knowles.= Writes much for magazines, and has
-published some twenty books. Has much sympathy with Ireland and the
-Irish. Resides in Kent.
-
-⸺ LET ERIN REMEMBER. Pp. 312. (_Greening_). 6_s._ 1908.
-
- A sensational romance of the Norman invasion of Ireland, very
- similar in kind to the Author’s _For Church and Chieftain_,
- _q.v._ The Irish are depicted as a wild, passionate people,
- torn by murderous feuds, led by selfish, unscrupulous
- chieftains. The Normans, who appear in the story, Strongbow in
- particular, are represented as gentle and courteous knights.
-
-⸺ FOR CHURCH AND CHIEFTAIN. Pp. 314. (_Mills & Boon_). 6_s._ 1909.
-
- A romance of the thrilling and popular type. Full of wonderful
- coincidences and the still more wonderful escapes of the
- heroes from the clutches of their enemies. The story is little
- concerned with historical events and persons. The Earl of
- Desmond, Archbishop O’Hurley, Dowdall, and Zouch are introduced
- occasionally. The tone is healthy, the standpoint Irish and
- Catholic.
-
-⸺ FOR CHARLES THE ROVER. Pp. 324. (_Greening_). 6_s._ (N.Y.: _Fenno_).
-1.50. Third ed., 1909.
-
- Scene: Cork city, and the neighbourhood of Kenmare. Adventures
- of Hugh Graham, a Scotchman, in recruiting for the Irish
- Brigade in company with Morty Oge O’Sullivan, a gay, reckless,
- debonnair type of Irish chieftain. On the other side are the
- brainless Whig fop, Sir Henry Morton, and O’Callaghan, a spy in
- King George’s pay. The unfortunate love-story of O’Callaghan’s
- beautiful sister and the happier love of the sister of Morty
- are interwoven with the narrative. The Author’s sympathies are
- Irish and Jacobite.
-
-
-=WYNNE, George Robert, D.D.= Archdeacon of Aghadoe, Rector of St.
-Michael’s, Limerick, and Canon of St. Patrick’s, Dublin. Author of a
-number of religious works: _The Light of the City_, _Spiritual Life in
-its Advancing Stages_, &c.
-
-⸺ NOT PEACE BUT A SWORD. Pp. 190. (_R.T.S._). _n.d._ (1897).
-
- Relates how Miss Sybil Marchant, a young English lady,
- succeeded in converting to Protestantism some members of a
- poor family of Joyces in Connemara. Is concerned chiefly with
- the trials of the new converts at the hands of friends and the
- clergy. Tone not bitter towards Catholicism, which however, is
- regarded from the Low Church, strongly Protestant, standpoint.
- The story is pleasantly told.
-
-⸺ BALLINVALLEY; or, A Hundred Years Ago. Pp. 244. (_S.P.C.K._). 2_s._
-6_d._ Two illustr. by J. Nash. 1898.
-
- Scene: Wicklow, whose scenery is well described. Rebellion
- seen from Protestant and loyalist standpoint. Rebels appear as
- recklessly brave savages. Battles of New Ross and Hacketstown
- described. Characters well brought out. Some aspects of the
- life of the times described, notably stage-coach travelling and
- illicit distilling. Brogue not well reproduced. Based, says the
- Pref., chiefly on Lecky, but also on Maxwell, Musgrave, and
- Hay. There is a good deal about gold-mining in Co. Wicklow.
-
-
-=YEATS, William Butler.= B. 1865, at Sandymount, Co. Dublin. Son of J.
-B. Yeats, R.H.A., a distinguished Irish artist. Ed. Godolphin School,
-Hammersmith, and Erasmus Smith School, Dublin. Went to London in 1888,
-and there, in 1889, publ. his first volume of verse. Since then many
-others have appeared, and he is now known as one of the foremost poets of
-the day, perhaps the only Irish poet whose name is familiar to students
-of European literature outside of Ireland, and it is true to say with
-Mrs. Hinkson in her _Reminiscences_, “All the world that cares about
-literature knows of his work to-day.” He was for a number of years
-actively interested in spiritism and magic, and there is more of this
-than of genuine folk-lore in his writings. What there is of folklore in
-them seems to have been gleaned during visits to his mother’s people in
-Sligo. His prose is that of a poet full of changing colour and strange
-rhythm and vague suggestion.
-
-⸺ FAIRY AND FOLK-TALES OF THE IRISH PEASANTRY. Pp. 326. (_W. Scott_).
-3_s._ 6_d._ and 1_s._ [1888]; often republ.
-
- Introd. and notes by Ed. The Tales, sixty-four in number, are
- selected from previously published collections (Croker, Lover,
- Kennedy, Wilde, &c.), including several examples of poetry
- about the fairies. They are classed under these heads:—The
- Trooping Fairies, The Solitary Fairies, Ghosts, Witches, Tir
- na-n-óg, Saints and Priests, The Devil, Giants, &c. Each
- class is introduced by some general remarks. There is nothing
- objectionable but it is hardly a book for children. The weird
- and grotesque element largely predominates.
-
-⸺ IRISH FAIRY AND FOLK-TALES. Twelve full page illustr. by James
-Torrance. (_W. Scott_). 3_s._ 6_d._
-
-⸺ JOHN SHERMAN, and DHOYA. Pp. 195. (_Fisher Unwin_). 1891.
-
- _John Sherman_ is not wild and fantastic like _The Secret
- Rose_, &c., but a pleasant narrative dealing with life in
- Ballah (Sligo), the scene at times shifting to London. The
- descriptions both of scenery and character are full of quaint
- little touches of very subtle observation. The style is
- remarkable for a dainty simplicity, lit up now and then by a
- striking thought or a brilliant aphorism. _Dhoya_ (last 25 pp.)
- is a wild Celtic phantasy.—(I.M.). Published under the pen-name
- of “Ganconagh.”
-
-⸺ IRISH FAIRY TALES. Ed. with Introd. by. Pp. 236. 16mo. (_Fisher
-Unwin_). 2_s._ 6_d._ Illustr. by J. B. Yeats. Third impress. 1892.
-
- A dainty little volume, very popular with children. None of the
- stories included in it are to be found in the same Author’s
- _Irish Fairy and Folk-tales_.—(_W. Scott_).
-
-⸺ THE SECRET ROSE: Irish Folk-lore. Illustr. by J. B. Yeats. Pp. 265.
-(_Maunsel_). 3_s._ 1898. (N.Y.: _Dodd & Mead_). 2.00.
-
- Wild, formless tales, altogether from the land of dreams, told
- with the Author’s accustomed magic of word and expression, but
- to the ordinary reader well-nigh meaningless. In one of these
- tales some monks solemnly crucify a wandering gleeman because
- he had dared complain of the filthy food and lodging which they
- had given him. This tale may fairly be taken as typical of much
- that is in the book.
-
-⸺ THE CELTIC TWILIGHT. Pp. 235. (_A. H. Bullen_). 3_s._ [1893]. New ed.,
-enlarged, 1902. (N.Y.: _Macmillan_). 1.50.
-
- Disconnected fragments of dim beliefs in a supernatural world
- of fairies, ghosts, and devils, still surviving among the
- peasantry. Told in a style often beautiful, but vague and
- elusive, by a latter-day “pagan,” who would fain share these
- beliefs himself. The talk of half-crazy peasants, the Author
- tells us, is set down as he heard it. To the ordinary reader
- the book cannot but seem full of puerilities. The peasants of
- whom the Author speaks are chiefly those of North-Eastern Sligo.
-
-⸺ STORIES OF RED HANRAHAN: The Secret Rose: Rosa Alchemica. Pp. 228.
-(_Bullen_). 6_s._ net. 1913.
-
- The first ed., 1897, had the general title _The Secret Rose_,
- _q.v._ In the present volume the revised ed., which appeared in
- Mr. Yeats’s collected works, 1908, has been followed.
-
-
-=YOUNG, Ella.= B. 1867, at Fenagh, Co. Antrim. Is a graduate of the
-Royal, now the National, University. Is chiefly interested in the old
-tales of the Irish MS. collections and in folk-lore gathered directly
-from the people. Has published a volume of poems and many articles and
-tales in the MANCHESTER GUARDIAN, THE IRISH REVIEW, IRISH YEAR BOOK, &c.,
-and in American and New Zealand periodicals. Her writings are full of
-the influence of the Celtic Revival, in which movement she numbers many
-friends.
-
-⸺ THE COMING OF LUGH. (_Maunsel_). 6_d._ net. 1909.
-
- “A Celtic Wonder-tale Retold” for the young. A dainty little
- volume in which is prettily told the story of Lugh Lamh Fada’s
- sojourn in Tir-na-nOg and his return to Erin with the Sword of
- Light to drive out the Fomorians. The illustrations by Madame
- Gonne-MacBride are very well done.—(_Press Notice_).
-
-⸺ CELTIC WONDER TALES. Pp. 202. (_Maunsel_). 3_s._ 6_d._ Illustr. by Maud
-Gonne. 1910.
-
- Tales of the ancient days of De Danaan gods and heroes—of Angus
- and Midyir and Lugh and the Gobhaun Saor. Told in rhythmic
- and musical language and with much beauty of expression, but
- most of the tales are altered quite out of their antique and
- primitive form by a strong flavour of modern mysticism and
- symbolism of the school of Yeats and A. E. “Conary Mor,” the
- finest (we think) of the tales, is perhaps freest from this.
- The first two or three are most influenced by it. Tales like
- “A Good Action,” “The Sheepskin,” strike a different and,
- as it seems to us, a discordant note, viz., broadly comical
- episodes, in which the actors are gods. Includes The Children
- of Lir and the Children of Turann (under title “The Eric Fine
- of Lugh”), and the Coming of Lugh. Original and artistic Celtic
- cover design, head-pieces, and tail-pieces. Four coloured
- illustr. The first two are mystic and symbolic. Most Catholics
- would consider them very much out of place here. The book is
- beautifully produced.
-
-
-
-
-APPENDIX A.
-
-SOME USEFUL WORKS OF REFERENCE.
-
-
-=1. IRISH LITERATURE.= Ten Vols. 4126 pp., exclusive of introductory
-essays, which average over 20 pp.
-
-Originally published by John D. Morris & Co. Afterwards taken over by the
-De Bower Elliot Co., Chicago, and brought out in 1904.
-
-Edited by Justin M’Carthy, M.P., with the help of an advisory committee,
-including Stephen Gwynn, M.P., Lady Gregory, Standish O’Grady, D. J.
-O’Donoghue, Douglas Hyde, LL.D., J. E. Redmond, M.P., G. W. Russell (“A.
-E.”), J. J. Roche, LL.D., of the BOSTON PILOT, Prof. W. P. Trent, of
-Columbia University, Prof. F. N. Robinson, of Harvard, H. S. Pancoast,
-and W. P. Ryan; with Charles Welsh as Managing Director.
-
-_Scope and Object_: To give a comprehensive, if rapid, view of the whole
-development of Irish Literature from its earliest days. In the words
-of the Editor, it is “an illustrated catalog of Ireland’s literary
-contributions to mankind’s intellectual store.”
-
-_The Choice of Extracts_ is determined by two canons: literary value
-and human interest. The Library gives examples of “all that is best,
-brightest, most attractive, readable, and amusing,” in the writings of
-Irish authors. There is no dry-as-dust. The extracts comprise mythology,
-legend, folklore, poems, songs, street-ballads, essays, oratory, history,
-science, memoirs, fiction, travel, drama, wit, and humour. The vast
-majority are chosen as being specially expressive of Irish nationality.
-Choice is made both from the Gaelic and the Anglo-Irish literatures, but
-the ancient Gaelic literature is given solely in translation. A volume
-(the tenth) is given to _modern_ Gaelic literature, the Irish text and
-English translation being given on opposite pages. This volume also
-contains brief biographies of ancient Gaelic authors. The extracts are
-never short and scrappy, but nearly always complete in themselves.
-
-_Other Special Features_: Three hundred and fifty Irish authors
-are represented by extracts. Of these one hundred and twenty are
-contemporaries, the great modern intellectual revival being thus very
-fully represented.
-
-The extracts are given under the name of the authors, and these names are
-arranged alphabetically, beginning in Vol. I. with Mrs. Alexander, and
-ending with W. B. Yeats in Vol. IX.
-
-To the extracts from each author there is prefixed a biographical
-notice, including, in many cases, a literary appreciation by a competent
-authority, and a fairly full bibliography.
-
-Each volume contains an article, by a distinguished writer, on some
-special department of Irish literature. Thus, the Editor-in-Chief gives
-a general survey of the whole subject. W. B. Yeats writes on Irish
-Poetry, Douglas Hyde on Early Irish Literature, Dr. Sigerson on Ireland’s
-Influence on European Literature, Maurice Francis Egan on Irish Novels,
-Charles Welsh on Fairy and Folk Tales, J. F. Taylor, K.C., on Irish
-Oratory, Stephen Gwynn on the Irish Theatre, &c.
-
-_Index_ of authors, books quoted from, titles and subjects dealt
-with—exceptionally full and valuable (over 80 pp.).
-
-_Publisher’s Work_: 1. Illustrations, over 100 (several in colour),
-consisting of facsimiles of ancient Irish MSS., and of ancient prints and
-street-ballads, portraits of Irish authors, views of places, objects,
-scenery and incidents of Irish interest.
-
-2. Letterpress—large and clear type.
-
-3. Binding—cloth, and half-morocco.
-
-4. Price—has varied a good deal since first publication.
-
-
-=2. THE CABINET OF IRISH LITERATURE.= Four Vols. Super royal 8vo. Pp.
-311 + 324 + 346 + 369. (_Gresham Publishing Co._). 8_s._ 6_d._ each.
-Illustrations in black and white by J. H. BACON, C. M. SHELDON, W.
-RAINEY, &c., and portraits. 1903.
-
-_Editors_: Originally planned by C. A. Read, who collected matter for the
-first three volumes of the original edition. Completed and edited by T.
-P. O’Connor, M.P. New edition brought out by Mrs. Katharine Tynan Hinkson.
-
-_New edition_: The original edition (1879) was published by Blackie.
-The new edition contains about the same quantity of matter, but large
-portions of the original edition have been omitted to make room for new
-matter, which occupies the whole of the fourth volume and a large part of
-the third. A new Introduction (pp. xi.-xxxiv.) has been prefixed. It is a
-general survey of Irish literature.
-
-_Scope, arrangement, &c._: The authors are arranged chronologically.
-There is first a sketch (full and carefully done) of each author’s
-life and works; then follow extracts, as a rule very short, from his
-works. The principle of selection is to give such extracts as would best
-illustrate the author’s style, to avoid anything hackneyed, and “anything
-that would offend the taste of any class or creed.”
-
-In the original edition there was, perhaps inevitably, little of Irish
-Ireland, still less of Gaelic Ireland. That has been to a certain extent
-remedied in the new edition. But the old edition had the advantage of
-containing a mass of information about little known writers and of
-extracts from curious and rare books.
-
-
-=3. BAKER, Ernest A., M.A., D.Lit., F.L.A.=
-
-⸺ A GUIDE TO THE BEST FICTION IN ENGLISH. Sq. 4to. Pp. 813.
-(_Routledge_). 21_s._ New ed., enlarged and thoroughly revised. [1902,
-_Sonnenschein_]. 1913.
-
-This new edition is a superb work, deserving the title of an Encyclopedia
-of English Fiction. It gives information in descriptive notes of
-between 7,000 and 8,000 works of fiction, including particulars of
-publishers (both in England and in U.S.A.), prices, and date of
-publication. It comprises every description of novel, translations
-of important continental and even non-European fiction, and of early
-stories and sagas from the Norse and from Celtic languages. The Guide is
-selective—not everything in the novel line is included—but it is most
-comprehensive. The _arrangement_ is first by nationalities (English,
-American, Celtic, pp. 517-521, French, &c.). Each of these divisions is
-subdivided according to the century in which the book was published,
-and the entries under the various centuries are arranged alphabetically
-according to names of authors. The _Index_, which runs to 170 pp., gives
-full reference to Authors, Titles, and Subjects. Every specific subject
-illustrated in the works is indexed with extraordinary accuracy and
-completeness.
-
-
-4. ⸺ A GUIDE TO HISTORICAL FICTION. Pp. xii. + 566. 1914.
-
-A new ed. of the Author’s _History in Fiction_; a companion to the
-preceding and uniform with it in size, publisher, and price. As in
-the case of the former work, full bibliographical particulars and
-descriptive notes are given. The main _arrangement_ is according to
-countries. Under each country it is chronological. The Index (140 pp.)
-gives information as full as in the preceding work. The standard of
-selection is “the extent to which a story illustrates any given period of
-history.”—(_Pref._). Ireland is not dealt with separately, the history of
-the British Isles being taken as a whole.
-
-
-5. ⸺ HISTORY IN FICTION. Two Vols. 16mo. Pp. 228 + 253. (Routledge).
-2_s._ 6_d._ each. _n.d._ (1906).
-
-“A kind of dictionary of historical romance from the earliest sagas
-to the latest historical novel.”—(_Pref._). Aims to include “every
-good work of prose fiction dealing with past times.”—(_Pref._). Full
-bibliographical particulars (date, price, publisher) are given about
-each book. In most cases a short descriptive note is added. The entries
-average seven on a page. The titles are arranged first in order of
-countries. Thus in Vol. I., pp. 1-128 deal with English History; pp.
-129-154, with Scotch; pp. 155-167, with Irish, and so on. Vol. II., pp.
-1-56, U.S.A.; pp. 61-117, France; pp. 118-131, Germany, and so on. The
-books dealing with the history of each particular country are arranged in
-order of date. A copious Author, Title, and Subject Index is appended to
-each volume. We retain the note on this book as, though now in a sense
-out of date, it is still in print, and its price makes it more generally
-available than is the new edition.
-
-
-=6. NIELD, Jonathan.=
-
-⸺ A GUIDE TO THE BEST HISTORICAL NOVELS AND TALES. Pott 4to. Pp. xviii. +
-522. (_Elkin Mathews_). 8_s._ nett. [1902, pp. viii. + 124]. Fourth ed.,
-rev. and enlarged. 1911.
-
-Introd. pp. 16 defends historical fiction. The work is in two parts—the
-main body as it appeared in the third ed., and a supplement nearly as
-large. Each is separately indexed. Each part is arranged in chronological
-order. The titles of the books, the author and publisher, the subject
-are arranged in three vertical columns. Prices are not given. On pp. 119
-_sq._ there is a supplementary list of noteworthy semi-historical novels.
-On p. 129 a list of fifty representative historical novels. The Author
-appends suggested courses of juvenile reading and a valuable _Bibliogr._
-The _Indexes_ are (1) Author and title, (2) Title only. The former give
-the dates of publication of the books. The number of novels noted is
-about 3,000. Ireland is, of course, not dealt with separately, as the
-histories of the various countries are mingled in one chronological list.
-
-
-=7. BUCKLEY, J. A., M.A., and W. T. WILLIAMS, B.A.=
-
-⸺ A GUIDE TO BRITISH HISTORICAL FICTION. Pp. 182. (_Harrap_). 2_s._ 6_d._
-1912.
-
-Intended for teachers of Secondary and Elementary schools. Chronological
-order with author- and title-indexes. Neatly arranged for ready
-reference. Full notes on each novel. A good many Irish novels are
-included.
-
-
-=8. KRANS, Horatio Sheafe.=
-
-⸺ IRISH LIFE IN IRISH FICTION. Pp. 338. (N.Y.: _Macmillan Co._). 6_s._
-6_d._ net. 1903.
-
-The Author is a Professor of Columbia University.
-
-_Scope of work_: A survey and criticism of the leading Irish novelists of
-the first half of the nineteenth century in so far as give us a picture
-of the national life and character.
-
-_Contents_: Chap. i. A general survey of Irish society during the period
-treated by the novelists, _e.g._, 1782-1850, based on O’Neill Daunt’s
-_Eighty-five Years of Irish History_, Justin M’Carthy’s _Outline_, J.
-E. Walshe’s _Ireland Sixty Years Ago_, Barrington’s Reminiscences, &c.
-Chap. ii. The novelists of the Gentry. Chap. iii. The novelists of the
-Peasantry. Chap. iv. Types met with in the novels and typical incidents
-taken from them. Chap. v. Literary estimate. Then there is a “list of the
-more important stories and novels of Irish life by Irish writers whose
-literary activity began before 1850.” Throughout copious quotations are
-made.
-
-_Treatment_: Wholly free from bias. Marked by broad-minded, judicial
-spirit, thorough interest in and sympathy with the subject, wide
-knowledge, and a remarkable gift of literary characterization. On the
-whole a work which I can scarcely praise too highly.
-
-
-=9.= The following book may be mentioned as possibly useful to reviewers,
-teachers, and others:—
-
-=WHITCOMB, Selden L.=
-
-⸺ THE STUDY OF A NOVEL. (_Heath_). 1906.
-
-It is “the result of practical experience in teaching the novel, and its
-aim is primarily pedagogical.”—(_Pref._). Contents:—External Structure,
-Consecutive Structure, Plot, The Settings, The Dramatis Personæ,
-Characterization, Subject Matter, Style, Influence, Rhetoric, Æsthetics,
-Analysis.
-
-
-10. THE IRISH BOOK-LOVER. Published by Salmond & Co. Monthly. 2_s._ 6_d._
-per annum, post free.
-
-This excellent little periodical, edited by Dr. J. S. Crone, Kensal
-Lodge, Kensal Green, London, N.W., is entirely devoted to Irish books
-and their authors, and is the only publication of the kind. Beginning
-in August, 1909, and appearing monthly since then, its six volumes are
-a most valuable storehouse of Irish book lore of all kinds. As regards
-fiction, it reviews most of the Irish novels that appear, has many
-articles on Irish novelists past and present, and supplies a quarterly
-classified bibliography of current Irish literature, in which there is a
-section for fiction. The obligations of the present work towards it are
-very great.
-
-
-
-
-APPENDIX B.
-
-PUBLISHERS AND SERIES.
-
-
-1. The Principal Irish Publishers:—
-
- DUBLIN: MESSRS. BROWNE & NOLAN, Nassau Street.
- ” JAMES DUFFY & CO., Westmoreland Street.
- ” THE EDUCATIONAL CO. OF IRELAND, Talbot Street.
- ” M. H. GILL & CO., O’Connell Street.
- ” HODGES & FIGGIS, Grafton Street.
- ” MAUNSEL & CO., Ltd., 96 Middle Abbey Street.
- ” SEALY, BRYERS & WALKER, Middle Abbey Street.
- ” ALEX. THOM & CO., Middle Abbey Street.
- BELFAST: ERSKINE MAYNE.
- MCCAW, STEVENSON & ORR.
- CORK: GUY & CO.
-
-NOTE.—None of these publishers, with the exception of Messrs. Maunsel,
-has a London house. The London address of Messrs. Maunsel is 40 Museum
-Street, W.C.
-
-
-=2. IRISH NATIONAL TALES AND ROMANCES.= Nineteen Vols. (_Colburn_). 1833.
-
-By LADY MORGAN (_O’Briens and O’Flahertys_), J. BANIM (_The
-Anglo-Irish_), E. E. CROWE (_Yesterday in Ireland_), THOMAS COLLEY
-GRATTAN (_Tales of Travel_), &c. This series is occasionally to be met
-with on sale at second hand.
-
-
-=3. DOWNEY & CO.’S IRISH NOVELISTS’ LIBRARY.= EDMUND DOWNEY, General
-Editor. Biographical sketch prefixed to each volume, and portrait of
-Author. Price, 2_s._ 6_d._, cloth.
-
-Included:—
-
- O’DONNEL. By LADY MORGAN. Biography by Mrs. Cashel Hoey.
-
- ORMOND. By MARIA EDGEWORTH. Biography by Mrs. Cashel Hoey.
-
- FARDOROUGHA THE MISER. By W. CARLETON. Biography by D. J.
- O’Donoghue.
-
- THE EPICUREAN. By THOMAS MOORE. Biography by E. Downey.
-
- RORY O’MORE. By SAMUEL LOVER. Biography by Mrs. Cashel Hoey.
-
- THE COLLEGIANS. By GERALD GRIFFIN. Biography by E. Downey.
-
- THE O’DONOGHUE. By CHARLES LEVER. Biography by E. Downey.
-
- TORLOGH O’BRIEN. By J. SHERIDAN LEFANU. Biography by E. Downey.
-
-Downey & Co. issued, 1902, paper-covered, well printed, on good paper,
-a Sixpenny Library of Novels, many of which were by Irish authors such
-as Lever, Banim, Lady Morgan, Lover, and Carleton. Irish novels were
-included in several other series published by this firm.
-
-
-=4. CHEAP POPULAR FICTION= published by CAMERON & FERGUSON, of Glasgow.
-The publications of this firm were taken over by MESSRS. WASHBOURNE, who
-keep in print such of them as were of any value.
-
- THE GREEN AND THE RED; or, Historical Tales and Legends of
- Ireland. Picture boards, 1_s._
-
- GERALD AND AUGUSTA; or, the Irish Aristocracy: A Novel, 1_s._
-
- THE MISTLETOE AND THE SHAMROCK: a National Tale. 1_s._
-
- BILLY BLUFF AND THE SQUIRE: a Picture of Ulster in 1796. 6_d._
-
- THE IRISH GIRL; or, the True Love and the False. 6_d._
-
- THE KNIGHTS OF THE PALE; or, Ireland 400 Years Ago. 256 pp.
- 6_d._
-
-
-=5. SEALY, BRYERS & WALKER’S SIXPENNY LIBRARY OF FICTION.=
-
- OWEN DONOVAN, FENIAN. By GRAVES O’MARA. A Tale of the ’67
- Rising.
-
- CAPTAIN HARRY. By J. H. LEPPER. A Tale of the Royalist Wars.
-
- A SOWER OF THE WIND. By CAHIR HEALY. A Tale of the Land League.
-
- OLAF THE DANE. By JOHN DENVIR. A Story of Donegal.
-
- THE GAELS OF MOONDHARRIG. By REV. J. DOLLARD. A Tale of the
- Famous Kilkenny Hurlers.
-
- FRANK MAXWELL. By J. H. LEPPER. A Royalist Tale of 1641.
-
- PAUL FARQUHAR’S LEGACY. By J. G. ROWE. A Thrilling Tale of
- Mining Life in South Africa.
-
- ONLY A LASS. By RUBY M. DUGGAN. A Tale of Girl School Life.
-
- THE STRIKE. By T. J. ROONEY. A Tale of the Dublin Liberties.
-
- BULLY HAYES, BLACKBIRDER. By J. G. ROWE. An Adventure Tale of
- the South Seas.
-
- THE ENCHANTED PORTAL. By MARY LOWRY. A Tale of the Giant’s
- Causeway.
-
- STORMY HALL. By M. L. THOMPSON. A Thrilling Tale of Adventure.
-
- TOLD IN THE TWILIGHT. By ROBERT CROMIE. A Romance of the
- Norwegian Fjords.
-
- BY THE STREAM OF KILMEEN. By SEAMAS O’KELLY. Exquisite Sketches
- of Irish Life.
-
- THE MACHINATIONS OF CISSY. By MRS. PIERRE PATTISON. A Tale of a
- Sister’s Jealousy.
-
- WHEN STRONG WILLS CLASH. By ANNIE COLLINS. A Tale of Love and
- Pride.
-
- THE HUMOURS OF A BLUE DEVIL IN THE ISLE OF SAINTS. By ALAN
- WARRENER. A Tale of the Love Escapades of a certain Captain.
-
- THE HONOUR OF THE DESBOROUGHS. By RITA RICHMOND. Concerns the
- Love Affairs of Honor Desborough, and a fight for an Estate.
-
- THE LUCK OF THE KAVANAGHS. By C. J. HAMILTON. Relates the
- extraordinary Adventures of an Emigrant Irish Boy.
-
- THE DOCTOR’S LOCUM-TENENS. By LIZZIE C. READ.
-
- LADY GREVILLE’S ERROR. By MRS. WATT.
-
- SWEET NELLIE O’FLAHERTY. By T. A. BREWSTER.
-
-
-=6. “IRELAND’S OWN” LIBRARY.=
-
-This excellent popular periodical, the circulation of which in England
-and abroad as well as in Ireland is very considerable, is bringing out
-cheap reprints of stories and other features that have appeared in its
-pages. The following is a list of the Library to date:—
-
- RED RAPPAREE. By DESMOND LOUGH.
-
- BARNEY THE BOYO. By L. A. FINN.
-
- THE BLACK WING. By DESMOND LOUGH.
-
- TRACKED. By V. O’D. POWER.
-
- IRELAND’S OWN SONG BOOK.
-
- THE LEAGUE OF THE RING and TORN APART. By MORROUGH O’BRIEN.
-
-Each price 6_d._ Address:—“THE PEOPLE” PRINTING AND PUBLISHING WORKS,
-Wexford; or, 11 Sackville Place, Dublin.
-
-
-=7. DUFFY’S POPULAR LITERATURE.= Messrs. DUFFY publish and keep in print
-very cheap editions of the standard Irish novelists.
-
-(1) The following by Carleton: _The Black Baronet_, _The Evil Eye_,
-_Valentine M’Clutchey_, _Willy Reilly_, _Art Maguire_, _Paddy-go-Easy_,
-_The Poor Scholar_, _Traits and Stories_ (1_s._); _The Red Well_, _Rody
-the Rover_, _Redmond Count O’Hanlon_. (2) All Griffin’s works, at 2_s._
-each. (3) All Kickham’s novels. (4) Banim’s _Boyne Water_ and _The
-Croppy_, at 2_s._ 6_d._ each. (5) Many stories by Lever, Mgr. O’Brien,
-Mrs. Sadlier, &c., noticed in the body of this work.
-
-Besides these, Messrs. Duffy issue seven or eight series of popular
-fiction. The volumes of these series are neatly, in many cases
-tastefully, bound, and very cheap. Many, however, are old-fashioned
-in turn-out, and printed from old founts. The majority of the stories
-are moral and religious in tendency, but by no means all. The literary
-standard in some is not very high, but in many it is good. Of “Prize
-Library,” Series I. (42 titles), Mrs. Sadlier’s _Daughter of Tyrconnell_
-is an example; of II. (20 titles), the same author’s _Willy Burke_; of
-III. (24 titles), Curtis’s _Rory of the Hills_, and Anon. _The Robber
-Chieftain_. Series IV. has 16 titles, 2_s._ 6_d._ each; V., 15 titles, at
-3_s._; VI., 9 titles at 3_s._ 6_d._ There is also a “Popular Library” at
-6_d._, “for the instruction of youth,” and a “Juvenile Library,” with 24
-stories, at 1_d._ each.
-
-
-=8. MESSRS. M. H. GILL & SONS.=
-
-This firm (originally McGlashan, then McGlashan & Gill) has behind it a
-long history of publication, most of the books issued by it being Irish
-in subject. At present the catalogue of its publications contains various
-popular series or “libraries” at more or less uniform prices. None of
-these consist exclusively of fiction. The “Green Cloth Library” is one of
-them.
-
-
-=9. THE CATHOLIC TRUTH SOCIETY OF IRELAND (C.T.S.I.).=[15]
-
-The main object of this Society is religious and moral propaganda, but it
-aims also at fostering among the people an interest in their country—its
-history, antiquities, ruins, scenery, &c. Cheap popular fiction is
-one of the chief vehicles of this propaganda, and it has published
-in the fifteen years of its existence—it was founded in 1899—upwards
-of a hundred penny booklets, besides the shilling series mentioned
-below. Nearly all these stories are Irish in subject. Most of them are
-distinctively Catholic in tone, and a number of them aim directly or
-indirectly at religious instruction. But there are a fairly considerable
-number which simply tell tales of ancient Ireland in pagan as well as
-in Christian times. The importance of the work of this Society may be
-gathered from the fact that since its start it has distributed over seven
-million copies of its publications. All that can be done here is to give
-a list of the stories published by the C.T.S.I., indicating the nature of
-the contents of some of them.
-
-T. B. CRONIN.—THE COLLEEN FROM THE MOOR.
-
-⸺ THE BOY FROM OVER THE HILL.
-
- These are two stories of Kerry life, deservedly popular.
-
-MARY MAHER.—THE IRISH EMIGRANT’S ORPHAN.
-
-LADY GILBERT (ROSA MULHOLLAND).—A MOTHER OF EMIGRANTS.
-
-NANO TOBIN.—NANCY DILLON’S CHOICE and FROM TEXAS TO INCHRUE.
-
-A. CUNNINGHAM.—PASSAGE TICKETS.
-
- Four emigration stories.
-
-E. F. KELLY.—KEVIN O’CONNOR.
-
- Religious persecutions in 17th cent. at home and in convict
- settlements.
-
-ALICIA GOLDING.—ELLEN RYAN.
-
- Land troubles.
-
-PATRICIA DILLON.—IN THE WAKE OF THE ARMADA.
-
- Home life of native Irish chiefs and their intercourse with
- continent, end of 16th century.
-
-MARY T. MCKENNA.—MAUREEN DOHERTY: the Story of a Trinket.
-
-ANNA M. MARTIN.—MAHON’S LEAP.
-
- S. Sligo in ’98.
-
-ALICE DEASE.—ON THE BROAD ROAD.
-
- A Story of the White Slave Traffic.
-
-K. M. GAUGHAN.—SHEELAH: the Story of a Mixed Marriage.
-
-MYLES V. RONAN, C.C.—WOMAN’S INFLUENCE: a Dublin Hospital Romance.
-
-⸺ THE HOUSE OF JULIANSTOWN; or, a Flight for the Faith.
-
- Days of the Volunteers. Historically true.
-
-M. SULLIVAN.—THE DESERTER AND OTHER STORIES.
-
- Very nicely told.
-
-MACDONAGH (MARY L.), _née_ BURROUGHS PARKER.—THREE TIPPERARY BOYS.
-
- One of whom, a minister’s son, is converted and marries Delia.
-
-LADY GILBERT.—AVOURNEEN.
-
- A waif cast up by the sea on the island of Inishglas, and his
- life among the islanders.
-
-⸺ THE GHOST IN THE RATH.
-
-⸺ MRS. BLAKE’S NEXT OF KIN.
-
-DELIA GLEESON.—WHERE THE TURF FIRES BURN.
-
- Others by Lucy M. Curd, Nora F. Degidon, S. A. Turk, &c., and a
- series of thirteen stories entitled THE EMERALD LIBRARY.
-
-For M. J. O’Mullane’s stories, see in the body of the book under his name.
-
-=TEMPERANCE STORIES.=
-
- A BATCH OF SACRIFICES. By Rev. FREDERICK C. KOLBE, D.D.
-
- THE STRIKE; or, The Drunkard’s Fate.
-
- THE BROKEN HEART and THE MISER’S DEATH.
-
- DONAL’S EXTRAVAGANCE. By Rev. DAVID MCKEE, C.C.
-
- REAPING THE WHIRLWIND. By MOLLY MALONE.
-
- HELENA’S SON. By NORA F. DEGIDON.
-
- THE CHILD OF HIS HEART. By MARY T. MCKENNA.
-
- MIKE HANLON’S MOTHER-IN-LAW. By K. GAUGHAN.
-
- MORE TEMPERANCE STORIES. By ALICE DEASE.
-
-=THE IONA SERIES.= A new venture of the Irish Catholic Truth Society.
-Consists of 16mo volumes, prettily bound in cloth, with frontispiece.
-Price 1_s._
-
- THE COMING OF THE KING. A Jacobite Romance. By ARTHUR SYNAN.
-
- HIAWATHA’S BLACK ROBE. Father Marquette, S.J. By E. LEAHY.
-
- PEGGY THE MILLIONAIRE. By MARY COSTELLO.
-
- EARL OR CHIEFTAIN? The Romance of Hugh O’Neill. By PATRICIA
- DILLON.
-
- ISLE OF COLUMBCILLE. A Pilgrimage and a Sketch. By SHANE LESLIE.
-
- THE GOLDEN LAD. A Story of Child Life. By MOLLY MALONE.
-
- A LIFE’S AMBITION. Ven. Philippine Duchesne. By M. T. KELLY.
-
- THE MAKING OF JIM O’NEILL. A Story of Seminary Life. By M. J. F.
-
- NICHOLAS CARDINAL WISEMAN. By REV. JOSEPH E. CANAVAN, S.J.
-
- THE SORROW OF LYCADOON. By MRS. THOMAS CONCANNON, M.A.
-
- THE EMPEROR MARCUS AURELIUS. A Study in Ideals. By JOHN C. JOY,
- S.J.
-
- A GROUP OF NATION BUILDERS—O’DONOVAN, O’CURRY, PETRIE. By REV.
- P. M. MACSWEENEY, M.A.
-
-[15] O’Connell Street, Dublin.
-
-
-=10. THE CATHOLIC TRUTH SOCIETY.=
-
-Address, 69 Southwark Bridge Rd., London, S.E. This is the original
-Society, founded in 1884, on the model of which the Irish, Scottish, and
-Australian bodies were founded. It has on its lists a few Irish stories.
-Lady Gilbert has written a certain number for it, _e.g._, _Penal Days_,
-_Nellie_. Her sister Clara Mulholland has published through it a little
-shilling volume: _Some Stories_ (also in penny parts); Katharine Tynan
-another shilling volume: _The Land I love best_; Alice Dease: _Some Irish
-Stories_, 6_d._ (and in penny parts); and “M. E. Francis” has also some
-stories.
-
-
-=11. MESSENGER OFFICE.=
-
-The Office of the little periodical THE IRISH MESSENGER OF THE S. HEART,
-Gt. Denmark St., Dublin, publishes penny booklets of a kind similar to
-those of the Catholic Truth Societies. Here are some of the titles:—
-
- JOE CALLINAN. (In its 20th thousand).
-
- No. 18 BLANK ST. (85th thousand).
-
- THE TRAIL OF THE TRAITOR. (35th thousand). A story of
- Cromwell’s sack of Wexford.
-
- KATHLEEN’S PILGRIMAGE. (25th thousand). A tale of Lough Derg.
-
- TEMPERANCE STORIES. By M. A. C. (15th thousand).
-
-The fiction in the IRISH MESSENGER itself and in the MADONNA is almost
-always of an Irish complexion. The circulation of the former of these is
-over 170,000 a month.
-
-
-=12. EVERY IRISHMAN’S LIBRARY.=
-
-A new (Autumn, 1915) enterprise of THE TALBOT PRESS, 89 Talbot Street,
-Dublin. The aim is to bring out in a cheap (2_s._ 6_d._) but worthy
-form both well-known works by Irishmen about Ireland and new works. The
-Editors-in-chief are Mr. Alfred Percival Graves, Prof. William Magennis,
-and Dr. Douglas Hyde. It hopes to include every department of Irish
-literature—poetry, fiction, oratory, sport and travel, history, wit and
-humour, essays and belles lettres, politics, biography, art, music and
-the drama. Each book is in the hands of a competent editor, so that none
-of the books in the series are mere reprints. The volumes have been
-designed, printed, and bound (cloth, Celtic design in green and gold) in
-Ireland. The publication has been greatly interfered with by the war.
-The first six volumes, which are as follows, do not include a work of
-fiction, but Griffin’s “Collegians” and Carleton’s Stories will be in the
-next batch.
-
-Now Ready:—
-
- THOMAS DAVIS. Selections from his Prose and Poetry. Edited by
- T. W. ROLLESTON, M.A.
-
- WILD SPORTS OF THE WEST. By W. H. MAXWELL. Edited by the EARL
- OF DUNRAVEN.
-
- LEGENDS OF SAINTS AND SINNERS. From the Irish. Edited by
- DOUGLAS HYDE, LL.D.
-
- HUMOURS OF IRISH LIFE. Edited by CHARLES L. GRAVES, M.A.
- (Oxon.).
-
- IRISH ORATORS AND ORATORY. Edited by Professor T. M. KETTLE,
- National University of Ireland.
-
- THE BOOK OF IRISH POETRY. Edited by ALFRED PERCEVAL GRAVES, M.A.
-
-
-=13. MAUNSEL & Co., Ltd.=
-
-Has in course of publication two series of novels and stories by Irish
-writers, viz.:—
-
-(1). A series at 1_s._, bound in red cloth, crown 8vo size, with
-excellent paper and printing. It includes the following books:—
-
- THE NORTHERN IRON. By GEORGE A. BIRMINGHAM.
-
- BALLYGULLION. By LYNN DOYLE.
-
- THE GLADE IN THE FOREST. By STEPHEN GWYNN.
-
- THE PRISONER OF HIS WORD. By LOUIE BENNETT.
-
- CAMBIA CARTY. By WILLIAM BUCKLEY.
-
-(2). A series at 2_s._, crown 8vo., cloth; equal in get-up to the average
-6_s._ novel. The following is a list of the books hitherto published in
-this series:—
-
- MRS. MARTIN’S MAN. By ST. JOHN G. ERVINE.
-
- THE BLIND SIDE OF THE HEART. By F. E. CRICHTON.
-
- COUNTRYMEN ALL. By KATHARINE TYNAN.
-
- THE ONE OUTSIDE. By MARY FITZPATRICK.
-
-
-=14. AMERICAN PUBLISHERS OF IRISH BOOKS.=
-
-A great many American publishers bring out books on Irish subjects: few
-specialize in this line. On the whole little new fiction of an Irish
-complexion is published in the States. On the other hand a large number
-of Irish tales and novels which have been allowed to go out of print in
-this country are still reprinted and sold on the “other side.” Many such
-books will be found in the catalogues of such firms as Benziger Bros., of
-New York; P. J. Kenedy, of the same city; Flynn, of Boston; John Murphy
-Co., of Baltimore; McVey, of Philadelphia, &c. J. S. Pratt, of 161 6th
-Ave., nr. 12th St., N.Y., publishes a catalogue containing Irish items
-exclusively.
-
-
-
-
-APPENDIX C.
-
-IRISH MAGAZINE FICTION.[16]
-
-
-There is a wealth of Irish fiction buried in the volumes of long extinct
-Irish periodicals and others still existing. Most people will have
-pleasurable recollections of stories read by them in one or other of
-the magazines which they were accustomed to read in youth—recollections
-which are only occasionally confirmed on a second reading in after life.
-I can still recall with delight many stories of Irish and even of alien
-characters which appeared in THE SHAMROCK, YOUNG IRELAND, THE LAMP,
-and other periodicals—not to speak of the numerous tales, serial and
-otherwise, which were a feature of the weekly editions of the ordinary
-Irish newspapers. Perhaps in some future edition of “A Guide to Irish
-Fiction” it may be possible to appraise some of the more notable of these
-stories and their authors. Meanwhile, it is worth recalling that in the
-old DUBLIN AND LONDON MAGAZINE, 1825-7, there is much admirable Irish
-fiction, chiefly by Michael James Whitty and Denis Shine Lawlor. The same
-may be said, in a more restricted sense, of that in THE DUBLIN PENNY
-JOURNAL, THE DUBLIN JOURNAL OF TEMPERANCE, SCIENCE, AND LITERATURE, THE
-IRISH PENNY JOURNAL, THE IRISH PENNY MAGAZINE, and, above all, in THE
-DUBLIN UNIVERSITY MAGAZINE, which in its forty odd years of existence
-added enormously to the general body of Irish literature. A good word
-must also be said for Duffy’s HIBERNIAN and FIRESIDE magazines, which
-carried on the work down to about the seventies. THE IRISH MONTHLY,
-most valuable of all in its services to the literature of the country,
-encouraged a host of clever novelists and sketch writers, though, as
-in the case of THE DUBLIN UNIVERSITY MAGAZINE, much of its output has
-been gathered into volumes, there is still much to be gleaned. Much of
-the work already referred to is partly accessible in the libraries, but
-where is one to consult the stores of fiction—often charming and mostly
-interesting—which appeared first (and last) in the pages of THE SHAMROCK,
-YOUNG IRELAND, THE IRISH FIRESIDE, THE LAMP (especially during John
-F. O’Donnell’s editorship), THE IRISH EMERALD, and other more recent
-magazines? So far as I know, there are no complete sets of these in any
-library. But some of our best writers began their literary career by
-writing for these humble periodicals, and even authors who had arrived
-did not deem it beneath their dignity to contribute their maturer work.
-But it is a large question how much of this fiction is of permanent
-value. I have no doubt myself that a judicious collector could make many
-discoveries if an enterprising publisher could be found to give the
-results to the public. But perhaps that is not even worth discussing in
-these stormy days.
-
- D. J. O’DONOGHUE.
-
-[16] I have thought it best to insert Mr. O’Donoghue’s note as it stood,
-though my doing so involved certain repetitions in the following note.
-
-
-IRISH FICTION IN PERIODICALS.[17]
-
-
-I.—DEFUNCT PERIODICALS.
-
-I should have liked to include in this work the fiction, at least
-the serial fiction, that lies buried in the back numbers of Irish
-periodicals. I was obliged to make up my mind, regretfully enough, that
-this was impossible. All that I have found practicable is to insert here
-a general note giving the names and dates, with occasional remarks, of
-some of the more noteworthy of Irish periodicals, omitting of course such
-as contain no fiction.
-
-Of the eighteenth century literary periodicals, such as Droz’s LITERARY
-JOURNAL (1744-8) and Walker’s HIBERNIAN MAGAZINE (1771-1811), it is
-unnecessary to say much, as the little fiction they contain is not of a
-very Irish character. But in Watty Cox’s famous IRISH MAGAZINE, which
-began in 1807 and ran to 1815, there are excellent Irish stories. To THE
-DUBLIN AND LONDON MAGAZINE (1825-27) M. J. Whitty and Denis Shine Lawlor,
-both noteworthy writers, contributed Irish tales of a sympathetic and
-national character. Whitty collected his into a volume, which is noted in
-the body of this work. A serial about Robert Emmet and another entitled
-“The Orangeman” ran in this periodical. Bolster’s QUARTERLY (1826-31) and
-THE DUBLIN MONTHLY MAGAZINE (1830), afterwards revived in 1842-3 as THE
-CITIZEN OR DUBLIN MONTHLY MAGAZINE, call for no special comment though
-they contain a certain amount of fiction. The latter, for instance, had
-a story of 1641, “Lord Connor of Innisfallen,” and, in the 1842 revival,
-“Gerald Kirby, a tale of ’98.” Some of Carleton’s _Traits and Stories_
-first saw the light in this magazine. THE DUBLIN PENNY JOURNAL (1832-6),
-first edited by Philip Dixon Hardy, contains a large proportion of
-Carleton’s stories, and many others signed McC., S. W., J. H. K., E. W.,
-&c. In fact, it is full of matter interesting from an Irish point of view.
-
-Then there was THE IRISH PENNY JOURNAL, THE IRISH PENNY MAGAZINE, and THE
-IRISH METROPOLITAN MAGAZINE, 1857 _sqq._ This last was not very Irish in
-tone; its eyes were upon the ends of the earth, but an occasional Irish
-story such as “Life’s Foreshadowings” is to be found in it.
-
-Much was done for Irish periodical literature by the firm of James Duffy.
-Duffy’s IRISH CATHOLIC MAGAZINE, 1847 _sq._, contains much interesting
-Irish matter, but little fiction except a serial, “King Simnel and
-the Palesmen,” which, however, seems to have been dropped after the
-thirteenth chapter. Duffy’s HIBERNIAN MAGAZINE appeared in the early
-sixties. It had many of Carleton’s stories[18] and several serials, such
-as “Raymond de Burgh, or the Fortune of a Stepson, A Romance of the
-Exodus,” and “Winifred’s Fortune,” a story of Dublin in the days of Queen
-Anne.
-
-Other ventures of Duffy’s were THE ILLUSTRATED DUBLIN JOURNAL (1862) and
-Duffy’s FIRESIDE MAGAZINE.
-
-In the fifties came a periodical whose title seems a faint premonition
-of the Irish revival—THE CELT, 1857 _sq._ It had a curious series of
-articles on Ireland’s temptations, failings, and vices. There were
-sketches of the South of Ireland by Aymer Clington, and C. M. O’Keeffe’s
-“Knights of the Pale” ran in it as a serial.
-
-The sixties were, as we have seen, catered for by some of Duffy’s
-ventures. In the middle of the seventies appeared THE ILLUSTRATED
-MONITOR, afterwards THE MONITOR, published by Dollard, a Catholic
-magazine which ran for about eight volumes. Vol. I. contains two serials,
-“The Moores of Moore’s Court,” by D. F. Hannigan, and “High Treason,”
-which is not of Irish interest. Other serials that ran in subsequent
-volumes were “Julia Marron, a tale of Irish peasant life,” by “Celt,” and
-“The False Witness; or, the martyr of Armagh,” by A. M. S.
-
-In 1877 THE DUBLIN UNIVERSITY MAGAZINE reached its 89th volume and
-became THE UNIVERSITY MAGAZINE, losing thereby its distinctively Irish
-character. In the forty odd years of its existence this magazine
-collected a great body of first-rate Irish literature.
-
-Then there was YOUNG IRELAND, THE IRISH FIRESIDE, and THE LAMP
-(especially during the editorship of John F. O’Donnell). In these and
-others such some of the best of our Irish writers began their literary
-careers.
-
-As we near our own times the number of periodicals of all kinds that have
-appeared and disappeared—most of them after a very brief career—becomes
-bewildering. But the fact that they have run their course within our own
-memory makes detailed reference to them the less necessary. It is not
-many years since THE IRISH PACKET closed its career, an excellent little
-popular periodical that was edited by Judge Bodkin. The Irish Literary
-movement produced several periodicals, for the most part perhaps somewhat
-exotic—DANA, SAMHAIN, BELTAINE, &c., &c. Their latest successor, and
-to our way of thinking much the best of them—THE IRISH REVIEW—is only
-just deceased. The Gaelic movement, too, has produced its periodicals,
-but naturally most, if not all, of the fiction they contain is in
-the national language. The two best of these, THE GAELIC JOURNAL and
-GADELICA, have most unhappily come to an end, the former after quite a
-considerable career, the latter after a short one.
-
-I have said nothing of the provincial press, though there were excellent
-literary periodicals in Cork and Belfast,[19] nor of the weekly editions
-of the ordinary daily papers, which sometimes contain fiction of very
-good quality.
-
-It would be impossible to give here even a bird’s-eye view of the fiction
-of the Irish-American press. I may, however, mention a very fine review,
-the GAEL, of New York, which reached its twenty-third and last volume in
-1904. It has contributions from all our leading present day Irish writers.
-
-[17] In the compilation of this short survey I am indebted for useful
-notes to Dr. J. S. Crone.
-
-[18] _E.g._, “The Man with the Black Eye,” “The Rapparee,” and “The
-Double Prophecy.”
-
-[19] Notably a periodical of fine national spirit which was run by Miss
-Alice Milligan and “Ethna Carbery,” THE SHAN VAN VOCHT (1896-1899).
-
-
-II.—CURRENT PERIODICALS.
-
-The IRISH MONTHLY may fairly, I think, claim mention in the first place
-for, to the best of my knowledge, its forty-three years constitute a life
-longer than that of any other still surviving Irish literary review.[20]
-In it, under the sympathetic guidance and the kind encouragement of
-Father Matthew Russell, its founder and for forty years its editor, many
-authors well known to-day began the making of their literary reputations.
-It contains many serials, not a few of which have since appeared in book
-form. “The Wild Birds of Killeevy” first ran in its pages.
-
-THE IRISH ROSARY is in its nineteenth volume. It is one of the very few
-Irish periodicals that has succeeded in maintaining itself as a well
-illustrated magazine, and it has done so at the exceptionally low price
-of fourpence. Fiction forms a large proportion of its contents, which are
-never stodgy nor yet what is called goody-goody.
-
-THE CATHOLIC BULLETIN is comparatively a new-comer, but already quite a
-number of volumes, including Fr. Fitzgerald’s two books (_q.v._), have
-been reprinted from its pages. Its tone is thoroughly Irish.
-
-Then there are innumerable little periodicals which, unlike the three
-just mentioned, contain stories of an almost exclusively religious or
-moral character, such as the ANNALS OF ST. ANTONY, THE MESSENGER OF THE
-SACRED HEART, &c.
-
-The excellent IRELAND’S OWN, a popular weekly on the lines of ANSWERS and
-TIT-BITS, deserves a word of mention. Its library of reprints is referred
-to elsewhere.
-
-Besides these there are the weekly numbers of the daily papers already
-referred to and the periodicals devoted to Gaelic literature, a list of
-which will be found in the section of this Appendix, entitled Gaelic Epic
-and Romantic Literature.
-
-In America many periodicals publish Irish fiction from time to time, but
-practically the only periodicals the contents of which are predominantly
-Irish are of an almost exclusively political character. THE CATHOLIC
-WORLD has published Irish serials, _e.g._, in the seventies, “The Home
-Rule Candidate: a tale of New Ireland,” by the author of “The Little
-Chapel at Monamullin.” Several of Canon Sheehan’s novels first appeared
-in American periodicals.
-
-[20] THE DUBLIN REVIEW and THE IRISH ECCLESIASTICAL RECORD, which are
-older, not being, properly speaking, literary reviews.
-
-
-
-
-APPENDIX D.
-
-
-I.—IRISH HISTORICAL FICTION.
-
-The following is a select list: it does not aim to include all the
-historical novels mentioned in the body of this work. But many novels
-that, as literature, are of very little value have been included in order
-to cover periods not otherwise dealt with in fiction.
-
- DALARADIA. WILLIAM COLLINS.
- _c._ 500-1016. KINGS AND VIKINGS. LORCAN O’BYRNE.
- 500-507. THE LAST MONARCH OF TARA. T. J. ROONEY.
- _c._ 550-597. BRANAN THE PICT. MARY FRANCES OUTRAM.
- _c._ 560-615. COLUMBANUS THE CELT. WALTER T. LEAHY.
- _c._ 584-592. THE DRUIDESS. MRS. FLORENCE GAY.
- _c._ 650. THE LIFE AND ACTS OF EDMOND OF ERIN. MRS. F. PECK.
- THE INVASION. GERALD GRIFFIN.
- 888. KING AND VIKING. P. G. SMYTH.
- 935. A SEA QUEEN’S SAILING. C. W. WHISTLER.
- _c._ 1130-1151. THE KNIGHT OF THE CAVE. W. LORCAN O’BYRNE.
- 1152-1172. DEARFORGIL, THE PRINCESS OF BREFFNY. C. B. GIBSON.
-
- The Invasion and After.
-
- 1169. THE FALCON KING. LORCAN O’BYRNE.
- 1167-1198. THE COURT OF RATH CROGHAN. MISS M. L. O’BYRNE.
- LET ERIN REMEMBER. MAY WYNNE.
- 1333. THE RETURN OF CLANEBOY. SIR SAMUEL FERGUSON.
- 1373-1399. UNDER ONE SCEPTRE. EMILY S. HOLT.
- 1375-1417. ART MURROUGH O’KAVANAGH. M. L. O’BYRNE.
- _c._ 1397. THE CAPTURE OF KILLESHIN. SIR SAMUEL FERGUSON.
- _c._ 1410. CORBY MacGILLMORE. SIR SAMUEL FERGUSON.
-
- The Geraldines.
-
- THE HEIRESS OF KILORGAN. MRS. J. SADLIER.
-
- Silken Thomas.
-
- 1533-7. THOMAS FITZGERALD THE LORD OF OFFALY.
- 1532-1537. THE WEIRD OF “THE SILKEN THOMAS.” R. MANIFOLD-CRAIG.
- 1534-5. THE SIEGE OF MAYNOOTH.
- 1534-5. THE REBELLION OF SILKEN THOMAS. SIR SAMUEL FERGUSON.
-
- Seaghan O’Neill.
-
- 1559-1567. A PRINCE OF TYRONE. CHARLOTTE FENNELL AND J. P.
- O’CALLAGHAN.
-
- The Desmond Wars.
-
- _c._ 1560. THE PALE AND THE SEPTS. M. L. O’BYRNE.
- 1565. RALPH WYNWARD. H. ELRINGTON.
- _c._ 1577. FOR CHURCH AND CHIEFTAIN. MAY WYNNE.
- 1577-1582. MAELCHO. EMILY LAWLESS.
- 1580-2. GERALDINE OF DESMOND. MISS CRUMPE.
-
- Grania Ni Mhailie (Grace O’Malley).
-
- _c._ 1585-1590. A QUEEN OF MEN. WILLIAM O’BRIEN, M.P.
- _c._ 1579 _sq._ GRACE O’MALLEY, PRINCESS AND PIRATE. ROBERT MACHRAY.
- _c._ 1585. GRANIA WAILE. FULMAR PETREL.
- _c._ 1585. THE DARK LADY OF DOONA. W. H. MAXWELL.
-
- Elizabethan Persecutions.
-
- THE SPAEWIFE. REV. JOHN BOYCE, D.D.
- 1584. THE SORROW OF LYCADOON. MRS. T. CONCANNON.
-
- Elizabethan Ireland.
-
- 1585-1590. SIR LUDAR. TALBOT BAINES REED.
- HIBERNIAN NIGHTS ENTERTAINMENTS. SIR SAMUEL FERGUSON.
- THE BOG OF STARS. STANDISH O’GRADY.
- 1580-1600. THE SPANISH WINE. FRANK MATHEW.
-
- The War of the Earls.
-
- 1587. FLIGHT OF THE EAGLE. STANDISH O’GRADY.
- 1601-1602. ULRICK THE READY. STANDISH O’GRADY.
- EARL OR CHIEFTAIN. PATRICIA DILLON.
- THE ADVENTURER.
- THE RED HAND OF ULSTER. MRS. SADLIER.
- THE CHARMING OF ESTERCEL. GRACE RHYS.
- _c._ 1597. MacCARTHY MOR. MRS. JAMES SADLIER.
- 1599-1603. LAST EARL OF DESMOND. C. B. GIBSON.
- THE BROKEN SWORD OF ULSTER. RICHARD CUNINGHAME.
- SIR GUY D’ESTERRE. SELINA BUNBURY.
- 1599. WITH ESSEX IN IRELAND. EMILY LAWLESS.
-
- Ireland under James I. and Charles I.
-
- 1608. THE LAST OF THE IRISH CHIEFS. MRS. M. T. PENDER.
- 1603. THE DAUGHTER OF TYRCONNELL. MRS. JAMES SADLIER.
- 1609. HUGH TALBOT. W. J. O’NEILL DAUNT.
- 1633. KATHLEEN CLARE. DORA MCCHESNEY.
- 1640. FRANK MAXWELL. J. H. LEPPER.
-
- The Confederation and the Parliamentary Wars.
-
- 1641-1652. THE CONFEDERATE CHIEFTAINS. MRS. JAMES SADLIER.
- 1641-1652. THE WILD ROSE OF LOUGH GILL. P. G. SMYTH.
- 1642-1652. THE CHANCES OF WAR. REV. T. A. FINLAY, S.J.
- 1644. CAPTAIN HARRY. J. H. LEPPER.
- _c._ 1645. SILK AND STEEL. H. A. HINKSON.
- 1645. FRIENDS THOUGH DIVIDED. G. A. HENTY.
- 1647-1654. LORD ROCHE’S DAUGHTERS OF FERMOY. M. L. O’BYRNE.
- THE FLIGHT FROM THE CLIFFS. JAMES MURPHY.
- 1649. WHEN CROMWELL CAME TO DROGHEDA. RANDAL M’DONNELL.
- 1649. IN THE KING’S SERVICE. F. S. BRERETON.
- 1649. CASTLE OMERAGH. F. FRANKFORT MOORE.
- 1649. JOHN MARMADUKE. SAMUEL HARDEN CHURCH.
- _c._ 1649. THE SILK OF THE KINE. MISS L. MACMANUS.
-
- Roundhead Rule.
-
- 1652-1660. THE KING OF CLADDAGH. T. FITZPATRICK.
- 1654. CAPTAIN LATYMER. F. FRANKFORT MOORE.
- 1654. ETHNE. MRS. FIELD.
- 1654. NESSA. L. MACMANUS.
-
- The Williamite Wars.
-
- 1671-1748. MEMOIRS OF GERALD O’CONNOR. W. O’CONNOR MORRIS.
- 1680. THE FIGHT OF FAITH. MRS. S. C. HALL.
- 1685-1691. THE BOYNE WATER. J. BANIM.
- 1689. TRUE TO THE WATCHWORD. E. PICKERING.
- 1689-1690. A MAN’S FOES. E. H. STRAIN.
- 1689. THE KNIGHTS OF THE WHITE ROSE. GEORGE GRIFFITH.
- 1689. DERRY. CHARLOTTE ELIZABETH.
- 1690. IN SARSFIELD’S DAYS. MISS L. MACMANUS.
- 1690. LEIXLIP CASTLE. M. L. O’BYRNE.
- 1689-91. THE FORTUNES OF COL. TORLOGH O’BRIEN. J. SHERIDAN
- LE FANU.
- 1689-1691. MY SWORD FOR PATRICK SARSFIELD. RANDAL M’DONNELL.
- 1689-1690. THE CRIMSON SIGN. S. R. KEIGHTLEY.
- 1689-1691. ORANGE AND GREEN. G. A. HENTY.
- BALDEARG O’DONNELL. HON. ALBERT S. CANNING.
- THE HOUSE OF LISRONAN. MIRIAM ALEXANDER.
- 1689-1770. THE IRISH CHIEFTAINS. CHARLES FFRENCH BLAKE-FORSTER.
-
- The Eighteenth Century.
-
- _c._ 1696. THE DENOUNCED. JOHN BANIM.
- 1696. REDMOND O’HANLON. WILLIAM CARLETON.
- 1690-1726. LUTTRELL’S DOOM. D. F. HANNIGAN.
- _c._ 1698. THE COMING OF THE KING. ARTHUR SYNAN.
- _c._ 1705-1710. THE COCK AND ANCHOR. J. SHERIDAN LE FANU.
- _c._ 1712. ESTHER VANHOMRIGH. MARGARET L. WOODS.
- 1761-1764. THE HEARTS OF STEEL. JAMES M’HENRY, M.D.
- 1770. ANDRÉ BESNARD.
- 1770. IN THE DAYS OF GOLDSMITH. M. M’D. BODKIN.
- _c._ 1771. THE JESSAMY BRIDE. F. FRANKFORT MOORE.
- 1750-1798. THE TWO CHIEFS OF DUNBOY. J. A. FROUDE.
- 1760. SARSFIELD. DR. JOHN GAMBLE.
- 1766. THE FATE OF FATHER SHEEHY. MRS. JAMES SADLIER.
-
- The Irish Brigade.
-
- A SWORDSMAN OF THE BRIGADE. M. O’HANNRACHAIN.
- _c._ 1702. MOUNTCASHEL’S BRIGADE. BRIGADIER-GEN. C. G. HALPINE.
- _c._ 1702. LALLY OF THE BRIGADE. MISS L. MACMANUS.
- 1703-1710. IN THE IRISH BRIGADE. G. A. HENTY.
- 1719. CLEMENTINA. A. E. W. MASON.
- SPANISH JOHN. WILLIAM MCLENNAN.
- _c._ 1745. THE LAST RECRUIT OF CLARE’S. S. R. KEIGHTLEY.
- _c._ 1745. TREASURE TROVE. SAMUEL LOVER.
-
- Grattan’s Parliament and the Union.
-
- _c._ 1785. THE KING’S DEPUTY. H. A. HINKSON.
- 1780-1797. THE LOST LAND. JULIA M. CROTTIE.
- 1782-1803. MY LORDS OF STROGUE. LEWIS WINGFIELD.
- 1793-1798. THE O’BRIENS AND O’FLAHERTYS. LADY MORGAN.
- 1797-1801. ILL-WON PEERAGES. M. L. O’BYRNE.
- _c._ 1800. THE KNIGHT OF GWYNNE. CHARLES LEVER.
-
- Ninety-eight in the North.
-
- THE INSURGENT CHIEF. JAMES MCHENRY.
- O’HARA. W. H. MAXWELL.
- THE NORTHERN IRON. GEORGE A. BIRMINGHAM.
- THE GREEN COCKADE. MRS. M. T. PENDER.
- STRONG AS DEATH. MRS. CHARLES M. CLARKE.
- THE NORTHERNS OF ’98. EYRE EVANS CROWE.
- A PRISONER OF HIS WORD. LOUIE BENNETT.
- NINETY-EIGHT AND SIXTY YEARS AFTER. “ANDREW JAMES.”
- BETSY GRAY. W. G. LYTTLE.
- THE PIKEMEN. S. R. KEIGHTLEY.
-
- Ninety-eight in Wexford.
-
- THE FORGE OF CLOHOGE. JAMES MURPHY.
- THE CROPPY. MICHAEL BANIM.
- CROPPIES LIE DOWN. WILLIAM BUCKLEY.
- AGNES ARNOLD. WILLIAM BERNARD MACCABE.
- NINETY-EIGHT. “PATRICK C. FALY” (JOHN HILL).
- MAUREEN MOORE. RUPERT ALEXANDER.
- KATHLEEN MAVOURNEEN. RANDAL M’DONNELL.
- THE IRISH WIDOW’S SON. C. O’LEARY.
- CORRAGEEN IN ’98. MRS. ORPEN.
- ROSE PARNELL. D. P. CONYNGHAM.
- OLIVE LACY. ANNA ARGYLE.
- THE WOOD OF THE BRAMBLES. FRANK MATHEW.
- UP FOR THE GREEN. H. A. HINKSON.
- THE O’MAHONY, CHIEF OF THE COMERAGHS. D. P. CONYNGHAM.
- 1798-1805. MICHAEL DWYER, THE INSURGENT CAPTAIN. DR. CAMPION.
-
- Humbert in the West.
-
- 1798. THE ROUND TOWER. FLORENCE SCOTT and ALMA HODGE.
- 1793-1809. MAURICE TIERNAY. CHARLES LEVER.
- CONNAUGHT: A TALE OF 1798. M. ARCHDEACON.
- 1798. LE BRISEUR DE FERS. GEORGES D’ESPARBES.
- THE RACE OF CASTLEBAR. EMILY LAWLESS and SHAN
- F. BULLOCK.
-
- The United Irishmen.
-
- TRUE TO THE CORE. C. J. HAMILTON.
- THE PATRIOT BROTHERS. CHARLES GRAHAM HALPINE.
- 1798. THE SHAN VAN VOCHT. JAMES MURPHY.
- _c._ 1796. LORD EDWARD FITZGERALD. M. M’DONNELL BODKIN.
- 1792-1798. KILGORMAN. TALBOT BAINES REED.
- 1796. THE REBELS. M. M’DONNELL BODKIN.
- 1796-1797. THE HOUSE IN THE RATH. JAMES MURPHY.
- 1797. THE O’DONOGHUE. CHARLES LEVER.
-
- Emmet.
-
- 1803. ROBERT EMMET. STEPHEN GWYNN.
- TRUE MAN AND TRAITOR. M. M’D. BODKIN.
- 1803. RAVENSDALE. ROBERT THYNNE.
- 1797-1803. THE ISLAND OF SORROW. GEORGE GILBERT.
-
- The Nineteenth Century.
-
- 1817. THE BLACK PROPHET. WILLIAM CARLETON.
- 1829. GLENANAAR. CANON P. A. SHEEHAN.
- 1830. HUGH ROACH THE RIBBONMAN. JAMES MURPHY.
- _c._ 1830. THE MANOR OF GLENMORE. PETER BURROWES KELLY.
- 1831. THE TERRY ALT. STEPHEN JOSEPH MEANY.
- IRISH LIFE IN COURT AND CASTLE. (ISAAC BUTT.)
- 1843. THE KELLYS AND THE O’KELLYS. ANTHONY TROLLOPE.
-
- The Famine and Young Ireland.
-
- THE HUNGER. ANDREW MERRY.
- 1845-1848. CASTLE DALY. MISS KEARY.
- 1846-1847. CASTLE RICHMOND. ANTHONY TROLLOPE.
- 1848. MONONIA. JUSTIN M’CARTHY.
- 1848. LILY LASS. JUSTIN HUNTLY M’CARTHY.
- 1848. THE FALCON FAMILY. MARMION SAVAGE.
- 1848. MAURICE RHYNHART. J. T. LISTADO.
-
- Fenianism.
-
- 1865-6. THE THREE FENIAN BROTHERS. JOHN HAMILTON.
- THE GRAVES AT KILMORNA. CANON P. A. SHEEHAN.
- 1866. CARROLL O’DONOGHUE. CHRISTINE FABER.
- 1865-1883. FITZGERALD, THE FENIAN. J. D. MAGINN.
- 1865. WHEN WE WERE BOYS. WILLIAM O’BRIEN, M.P.
- 1866. RIDGEWAY. “SCIAN DUBH.”
- 1867. THE DUNFERRY RISIN’. J. J. MORAN.
- 1867. LIGHT AND SHADE. CHARLOTTE GRACE O’BRIEN.
-
- Home Rule, &c.
-
- 1870. THE BAD TIMES. G. A. BIRMINGHAM.
- _c._ 1870. A SON OF ERIN. ANNIE S. SWAN.
- 1875-1891. HER MAJESTY’S REBELS. S. R. LYSAGHT.
-
-
-II.—GAELIC EPIC AND ROMANTIC LITERATURE.
-
-I have thought it well to set apart from the mass of Anglo-Irish
-fictional literature and to put together in a list that portion of our
-national fiction which draws its inspiration from ancient Gaelic sources.
-To do this with any sort of completeness, it would be necessary, of
-course, to deal with the whole body of fiction that has been written in
-the Irish language. Reasons have been given in the Preface stating why
-this task was not undertaken. A further reason presented itself some
-two years ago, viz., the appearance of the magnificent work published
-in 1913 by the National Library—_Bibliography of Irish Philology and
-of Printed Irish Literature_ (price 5_s._). In this scholarly work the
-literature of Gaelic epic, saga, and romance is scientifically classified
-and described with the greatest bibliographical accuracy. For me to
-attempt that task over again would be little better than an impertinence.
-It might even be thought, and not unnaturally, that the present list is
-wholly superfluous. Yet perhaps it may not be without its utility, owing
-to the fact that in the work just referred to descriptive notes are not
-provided. This list, then, is practically an excerpt from that work, with
-the addition of some notes that may be useful. The notes will be found in
-the body of the book.
-
- O’GRADY, STANDISH HAYES. SILVA GADELICA.
-
- FARADAY, WINIFRED, M.A. THE CATTLE RAID OF CUAILNGE.
-
- MEYER, KUNO. THE VOYAGE OF BRAN, SON OF FERBAL, TO THE LAND OF
- THE LIVING.
-
- ⸺ LIADAIN AND CUIRITHIR.
-
- ⸺ THE VISION OF MACCONGLINNE.
-
- JOYCE, P. W. OLD CELTIC ROMANCES.
-
- GREGORY, LADY. CUCHULAIN OF MUIRTHEMNE.
-
- ⸺ GODS AND FIGHTING MEN.
-
- SKELLY, REV. A. M., O.P. CUCHULAIN OF MUIRTHEMNE.
-
- O’MULLANE, M. FINN MACCOOLE: His Life and Times, and other
- pamphlets published by the C.T.S. of Ireland. See under name
- O’Mullane.
-
- HULL, ELEANOR. THE CUCHULLIN SAGA IN IRISH LITERATURE.
-
- ⸺ CUCHULAIN THE HOUND OF ULSTER.
-
- ROLLESTON, T. W. THE HIGH DEEDS OF FINN, and other Bardic
- Romances of Ancient Ireland.
-
- ⸺ MYTHS AND LEGENDS OF THE CELTIC RACE.
-
- RUSSELL, VIOLET. HEROES OF THE DAWN (Stories of Finn and the
- Fianna).
-
- O’GRADY, STANDISH. FINN AND HIS COMPANIONS.
-
- ⸺ THE COMING OF CUCHULAINN.
-
- ⸺ THE GATES OF THE NORTH.
-
- ⸺ HISTORY OF IRELAND: Heroic Period.
-
- LEAHY, A. H. THE COURTSHIP OF FERB.
-
- ⸺ ANCIENT HEROIC ROMANCES OF IRELAND.
-
- SQUIRE, CHARLES. THE BOY HERO OF ERIN.
-
- ⸺ CELTIC MYTH AND LEGEND.
-
- O’BYRNE, W. LORCAN. CHILDREN OF KINGS.
-
- ⸺ A LAND OF HEROES.
-
- MACLEOD, FIONA. THE LAUGHTER OF PETERKIN, etc.
-
- CARBERY, ETHNA. IN THE CELTIC PAST.
-
- HOPPER, NORA; MRS. W. H. CHESSON. BALLADS IN PROSE.
-
- DEASE, ALICE. OLD-TIME STORIES OF ERIN.
-
- BUXTON, E. M. WILMOT. OLD CELTIC TALES RETOLD.
-
- M’CALL, P. J. FENIAN NIGHTS’ ENTERTAINMENTS.
-
- YOUNG, ELLA. THE COMING OF LUGH.
-
- ⸺ CELTIC WONDER TALES.
-
- SIMPSON, JOHN HAWKINS. POEMS OF OISIN, BARD OF ERIN.
-
- CARMICHAEL, ALEXANDER. DEIRDRE AND THE LAY OF THE CHILDREN OF
- UISNE.
-
- THOMAS, EDWARD. CELTIC STORIES.
-
- CHISHOLM, LOUEY. CELTIC TALES.
-
- FURLONG, ALICE. TALES OF FAIRY FOLKS, QUEENS, AND HEROES.
-
- CAMPBELL, J. F. THE CELTIC DRAGON MYTH.
-
- HENDERSON, GEORGE. THE FEAST OF BRICRIU.
-
- MACSWEENEY, P. M. MARTIAL CAREER OF CONGHAL CLÁIRINGHNEACH.
-
- HYDE, DOUGLAS. ADVENTURES OF THE LAD OF THE FERULE.
-
- ⸺ ADVENTURES OF THE CHILDREN OF THE KING OF NORWAY.
-
- MACALISTER, R. A. S. TWO IRISH ARTHURIAN ROMANCES.
-
- STOKES, WHITLEY. THE DESTRUCTION OF DÁ DERGA’S HOSTEL.
-
- BUGGE, A. CATHREIM CELLACHAIN CAISIL.
-
- THURNEYSEN, RUDOLF. SAGEN AUS DEM ALTEN IRLAND.
-
- DOTTIN, GEORGES. CONTES ET LÉGENDES D’IRLANDE.
-
- D’ARBOIS DE JUBAINVILLE. COURS DE LITTÉRATURE CELTIQUE.
-
- ⸺ TÁIN BO CUALNGE.
-
-Owing to a mistake the note on this writer and his books will be found
-partly on p. 68 and partly on p. 125.
-
- DUNN, JOSEPH. THE ANCIENT IRISH EPIC, TÁIN BO CUALNGE.
-
-Many of our heroic legends and ancient sagas have been retold in
-English verse. Though fiction in verse does not come within the scope
-of the present Guide, yet it may be of interest to mention here a few
-of these poetic renderings of ancient Gaelic tales. Sir Samuel Ferguson’s
-_Congal_, _Conary_, _Lays of the Red Branch_, and _Lays of the Western
-Gael_; Aubrey de Vere’s _Foray of Queen Maeve_; Robert Dwyer Joyce’s
-_Blanid_ and _Deirdre_; John Todhunter’s _Three Irish Bardic Tales_;
-Douglas Hyde’s _Three Sorrows of Story-telling_; Herbert Trench’s _The
-Quest_; Katharine Tynan’s “Diarmuid and Gráinne” in her _Shamrocks_; Mrs.
-Hutton’s stately blank verse translation of _The Táin_; and, last year,
-Dr. Geo. Sigerson’s _The Saga of King Lir_; also _The Red Branch Crests_,
-a trilogy by Charles L. Moore; _The Death of Oscar_ by Alice Sargant.
-Hector MacLean has collected in the Highlands and presented in English
-verse _Ultonian Hero Ballads_, which, as the title implies, are of Irish
-origin. For notes and bibliographical particulars of the above see _A
-Guide to Books on Ireland_, Part I. (_Hodges & Figgis_), 1912.
-
-For an introduction to Gaelic Literature the reader may be referred to:—
-
- DOUGLAS HYDE. STORY OF EARLY GAELIC LITERATURE.
-
- MISS HULL. PAGAN IRELAND.
-
- ⸺ TEXT-BOOK OF IRISH LITERATURE.
-
- MATTHEW ARNOLD. INTRODUCTION TO THE STUDY OF CELTIC LITERATURE.
-
-It may be useful to subjoin here a list of publications (periodical and
-other) which contain, generally along with other matter, ancient Gaelic
-tales. I can give here only a bare list, but it will serve to give an
-idea of what has already been accomplished in this field.
-
-(a) Publications of the following Societies:—
-
- The Gaelic Society. 1808. One volume.
-
- The Ossianic Society. Six big volumes concerned exclusively
- with the Fenian Cycle. 1854-1861.
-
- The Irish Archæological Society and the Celtic Society,
- afterwards united as the Irish Archæological and Celtic
- Society. Twenty-seven volumes.
-
- The Royal Historical Archæological Association. Nine volumes.
-
- The Irish Texts Society. Thirteen volumes; five or six more in
- preparation.
-
- The Gaelic League. Oireachtas publications, &c., &c.
-
- The Society for the Preservation of the Irish Language.
-
- The Celtic Society. 1847-55. Six volumes.
-
- The Iberno Celtic Society. 1820. One volume.
-
- The Royal Irish Academy. Transactions. 1786-1907.
-
- ” ” Proceedings, 1836-1915, in progress.
-
- ” ” Todd Lecture Series, 1889-1911.
-
-(b) Periodicals:—
-
- ATLANTIS.
-
- THE GAELIC JOURNAL.
-
- ERIU. Organ of the School of Irish Learning; in progress.
-
- THE CELTIC REVIEW of Edinburgh. Seven volumes; in progress.
-
- LA REVUE CELTIQUE. Collected in thirty-six volumes; in progress.
-
- ZEITSCHRIFT FUR CELTISCHE PHILOLOGIE. Collected in eight or
- nine volumes; in progress.
-
- THE CELTIC MAGAZINE. Thirteen volumes. 1876-88.
-
- THE GAEL (N.Y.).
-
- GADELICA. Three or four volumes.
-
- GUTH NA MBLIADHNA (Highland Gaelic and English); in progress.
-
-(c) Various:—
-
- Kuno Meyer’s _Anecdota Oxoniensia_.
-
- _Irische Texte_ of Windisch and Whitley Stokes. Five volumes,
- 3793 pp., exclusive of introductory matter.
-
- O’Curry: _Manuscript Materials of Ancient Irish History_.
-
- ⸺ _Manners and Customs of the Ancient Irish_ (Appendices).
-
- De Jubainville: _L’Epopée Celtique en Irlande_.
-
- Windisch’s great edition of the _Táin_, pp. xcii. + 1120.
- Leipzig. 1905.
-
-
-III.—LEGENDS AND FOLK-TALES.
-
- CROKER, THOMAS CROFTON. FAIRY LEGENDS AND TRADITIONS OF THE
- SOUTH OF IRELAND.
-
- ⸺ KILLARNEY LEGENDS.
-
- ⸺ LEGENDS OF THE LAKES.
-
- WILDE, LADY; “SPERANZA.” ANCIENT LEGENDS OF IRELAND.
-
- KENNEDY, PATRICK. LEGENDARY FICTIONS OF THE IRISH CELTS.
-
- ⸺ THE FIRESIDE STORIES OF IRELAND.
-
- ⸺ FICTIONS OF OUR FOREFATHERS.
-
- ⸺ THE BARDIC STORIES OF IRELAND.
-
- ⸺ LEGENDS OF MOUNT LEINSTER.
-
- O’HANLON, CANON JOHN; “LAGENIENSIS.” IRISH FOLK LORE:
- Traditions and Superstitions of the Country, with Humorous
- Tales.
-
- ⸺ IRISH LOCAL LEGENDS.
-
- BLAKE-FORSTER, CHARLES FFRENCH. A COLLECTION OF THE OLDEST AND
- MOST POPULAR LEGENDS OF THE PEASANTRY OF CLARE AND GALWAY.
-
- JOYCE, ROBERT DWYER. LEGENDS OF THE WARS IN IRELAND.
-
- ⸺ FIRESIDE STORIES OF IRELAND.
-
- BARDAN, PATRICK. THE DEAD-WATCHERS.
-
- CURTIN, JEREMIAH. MYTHS AND FOLK-LORE OF IRELAND.
-
- ⸺ HERO TALES OF IRELAND.
-
- ⸺ TALES OF THE FAIRIES AND OF THE GHOST WORLD.
-
- HYDE, DOUGLAS. BESIDE THE FIRE. Gaelic Folk-stories.
-
- ⸺ AN SGÉALAIDHE GAEDHEALAC.
-
- ⸺ LEGENDS OF SAINTS AND SINNERS.
-
- LARMINIE, WILLIAM. WEST IRISH FOLK-TALES AND ROMANCES.
-
- YEATS, W. B. THE CELTIC TWILIGHT.
-
- ⸺ THE SECRET ROSE: Irish Folk-lore.
-
- ⸺ FAIRY AND FOLK-TALES OF THE IRISH PEASANTRY.
-
- GREGORY, LADY. A BOOK OF SAINTS AND WONDERS.
-
- DEENEY, DANIEL. PEASANT LORE FROM GAELIC IRELAND.
-
- DUNBAR, ALDIS. THE SONS O’ CORMAC; an’ Tales of other Men’s
- Sons.
-
- M’ANALLY, D. R., Jr. IRISH WONDERS.
-
- KENNEDY, P. J. IRISH FIRESIDE STORIES, TALES AND LEGENDS.
-
- ⸺ LEGENDS AND FAIRY TALES OF IRELAND.
-
- O’CONNOR, BARRY. TURF FIRE STORIES AND FAIRY TALES OF IRELAND.
-
- LOVER AND CROKER. LEGENDS AND TALES OF IRELAND.
-
- ANON.; C. J. T., ed. FOLK-LORE AND LEGENDS (IRELAND).
-
- O’NEILL, JOHN. HANDERAHAN, THE IRISH FAIRY MAN, and LEGENDS OF
- CARRICK-ON-SUIR.
-
- BRUEYRE, LOYS. CONTES POPULAIRES DE LA GRANDE BRETAGNE.
-
- RHYS, PROF. JOHN. CELTIC FOLK-LORE, WELSH AND MANX.
-
- WENTZ, WALTER YEELING EVANS. THE FAIRY-FAITH IN CELTIC
- COUNTRIES: Its Psychical Origin and Nature.
-
- HUNT, B. FOLK TALES FROM BREFFNI.
-
- ANDREWS, ELIZABETH. ULSTER FOLKLORE.
-
- CRAWFORD, M. G. LEGENDS OF THE CARLINGFORD LOUGH DISTRICT.
-
- DOYLE, J. J. CATHAIR CONROI, &c.
-
- HENDERSON, GEO. SURVIVALS IN BELIEF AMONG THE CELTS.
-
- HARDY, P. DIXON. LEGENDS, TALES, AND STORIES OF IRELAND.
-
- DROHOJOWSKA, COUNTESS. RÉCITS DU FOYER.
-
- KEEGAN, JOHN. LEGENDS AND POEMS.
-
- RODENBERG, JULIUS. DIE HARFE VON IRLAND.
-
- SEYMOUR, ST. JOHN D. IRISH WITCHCRAFT AND DEMONOLOGY.
-
- ⸺ TRUE IRISH GHOST STORIES.
-
-It may be of interest to mention, as specimens, some of the chief
-collections of Scottish Gaelic folk-lore, for it is, at bottom, identical
-with that of Gaelic Ireland.
-
- CAMPBELL, J. F., OF ISLAY. POPULAR TALES OF THE WEST HIGHLANDS.
-
- WAIFS AND STRAYS OF CELTIC TRADITION. A Series initiated and
- directed by Lord Archibald Campbell. It comprises four volumes:—
-
- Vol. I.—CRAIGNISH TALES. Ed. by Rev. J. MacDougall.
-
- Vol. II.—FOLK AND HERO TALES. Ed. by Rev. D. MacInnes.
-
- Vol. III.—FOLK AND HERO TALES. Ed. by Rev. J. MacDougall.
-
- Vol. IV.—THE FIANS. Ed. by John Gregorson Campbell of Tiree.
-
-FERGUSON, R. M. THE OCHIL FAIRY TALES.
-
-MCKAY, J. G. THE WIZARD’S GILLIE.
-
-MACKENZIE, D. A. FINN AND HIS WARRIOR BAND.
-
-
-IV.—FAIRY TALES FOR CHILDREN.
-
- GRAVES, ALFRED PERCEVAL. THE IRISH FAIRY BOOK.
-
- BAYNE, MARIE. FAIRY STORIES FROM ERIN’S ISLE.
-
- HANNON, JOHN. THE KINGS AND THE CATS: Munster Fairy Tales.
-
- GRIERSON, ELIZABETH. THE CHILDREN’S BOOK OF CELTIC STORIES.
-
- MACMANUS, SEUMAS. DONEGAL FAIRY STORIES.
-
- ⸺ IN CHIMNEY CORNERS.
-
- LEAMY, EDMUND. THE FAIRY MINSTREL OF GLENMALURE.
-
- ⸺ IRISH FAIRY TALES.
-
- YEATS, W. B. IRISH FAIRY TALES.
-
- IRISH FAIRY TALES. Illustr. by Geoffrey Strahan (GIBBINGS).
-
- DOWNEY, EDMUND; “F. M. ALLEN.” THE LITTLE GREEN MAN.
-
- FURLONG, ALICE. TALES OF FAIRY FOLKS, QUEENS, AND HEROES.
-
- O’NEILL, MOIRA. THE ELF ERRANT.
-
- IRWIN, MADGE. THE DIAMOND MOUNTAIN; or, Flowers of Fairyland.
-
- PRESTON, DOROTHEA. PADDY.
-
- THOMSON, C. L. THE CELTIC WONDER WORLD.
-
- JACOB, JOSEPH. CELTIC FAIRY TALES.
-
- ⸺ MORE CELTIC FAIRY TALES.
-
-
-V.—CATHOLIC CLERICAL LIFE.
-
- BANIM, MICHAEL. FATHER CONNELL.
-
- BANIM, JOHN. THE NOWLANS.
-
- NEVILLE, E. O’REILLY. FATHER TOM OF CONNEMARA.
-
- CARLETON, WILLIAM. THE POOR SCHOLAR, and Other Tales.
-
- ⸺ DENIS O’SHAUGHNESSY GOING TO MAYNOOTH. (In TRAITS AND
- STORIES).
-
- ⸺ FATHER BUTLER.
-
- MCCARTHY, M. J. F. GALLOWGLASS.
-
- MOORE, GEORGE. THE LAKE.
-
- MCNULTY, EDWARD. MISTHER O’RYAN.
-
- ⸺ MAUREEN.
-
- HINKSON, H. A. FATHER ALPHONSUS.
-
- BUCHANAN, ROBERT. FATHER ANTHONY.
-
- FREMDLING, A. FATHER CLANCY.
-
- SHEEHAN, CANON P. A. MY NEW CURATE.
-
- ⸺ LUKE DELMEGE.
-
- ⸺ THE SPOILED PRIEST, and Other Stories.
-
- ⸺ THE BLINDNESS OF DR. GRAY; or, The Final Law.
-
- Most of Canon Sheehan’s books deal directly or indirectly with
- the priestly life.
-
-GUINAN, REV. J. SCENES AND SKETCHES IN AN IRISH PARISH; or, Priests and
-People in Doon.
-
-⸺ THE SOGGARTH AROON.
-
-⸺ THE ISLAND PARISH.
-
- And, in fact, practically all his books.
-
-HICKEY, REV. P. INNISFAIL.
-
-THURSTON, E. TEMPLE. THE APPLE OF EDEN.
-
-O’DONOVAN, GERALD. WAITING.
-
-⸺ FATHER RALPH.
-
-ANON. THE PROTESTANT RECTOR.
-
-⸺ THE ROMAN CATHOLIC PRIEST.
-
-⸺ THE IRISH PRIEST.
-
-⸺ FATHER JOHN; or, Cromwell in Ireland.
-
-⸺ PRIESTS AND PEOPLE.
-
-FULLER, J. FRANKLIN. CULMSHIRE FOLK (“Father O’Flynn”).
-
-JAY, HARRIETT. THE DARK COLLEEN.
-
-⸺ THE PRIEST’S BLESSING.
-
-ARCHDEACON, MATTHEW. SHAWN NA SOGGARTH.
-
-STACPOOLE, H. DE VERE. FATHER O’FLYNN.
-
-It would be easy to extend this list, as many novelists introduce Irish
-priests, at least incidentally.
-
-
-VI.—HUMOROUS BOOKS.
-
-The word “humour” is used here in a wide sense to cover wit and
-comicality or broad comedy, as well as humour in the strict sense of the
-word. The present list is not a selection of the best samples of Irish
-humour. It merely brings together a number of books which are entirely
-or mainly of a humorous character. Humour of a greatly superior order
-is often to be found here and there in books of a predominantly serious
-purpose—in _My New Curate_, for instance, or in _Knocknagow_.
-
- O’DONOGHUE, D. J. THE HUMOUR OF IRELAND.
-
- MACDONAGH, MICHAEL. IRISH LIFE AND CHARACTER.
-
- HARVEY, W. IRISH LIFE AND HUMOUR.
-
- KENNEDY, PATRICK. THE BOOK OF MODERN IRISH ANECDOTES.
-
- LEVER, CHARLES. A DAY’S RIDE.
-
- ⸺ THE DODD FAMILY ABROAD.
-
- The rollicking novels of Lever’s earlier manner might all be
- included here.
-
-LOVER, SAMUEL. HANDY ANDY.
-
-⸺ FURTHER STORIES OF IRELAND.
-
-MACMANUS, SEUMAS. THE LEADIN’ ROAD TO DONEGAL.
-
-⸺ THE HUMOURS OF DONEGAL.
-
-⸺ ’TWAS IN DHROLL DONEGAL.
-
-⸺ DOCTOR KILGANNON.
-
-DOWNEY, EDMUND. THROUGH GREEN GLASSES.
-
-⸺ GREEN AS GRASS.
-
-⸺ FROM THE GREEN BAG.
-
- And most of his other books; see pp. 75-77.
-
-BODKIN, M. M’D. PAT O’ NINE TALES.
-
-⸺ POTEEN PUNCH.
-
-⸺ PATSY THE OMADHAUN.
-
-“HEBLON.” STUDIES IN BLUE.
-
-DUNNE, F. P. THE DOOLEY BOOKS.
-
-ARCHER, PATRICK. THE HUMOURS OF SHANWALLA.
-
-DOYLE, LYNN. BALLYGULLION.
-
-MCILROY, ARCHIBALD. THE HUMOUR OF DRUID’S ISLAND.
-
-MORAN, J. J. IRISH STEW.
-
-⸺ IRISH DROLLERIES.
-
-BIRMINGHAM, G. A. SPANISH GOLD.
-
-⸺ THE MAJOR’S NIECE.
-
- And those of his books that are mentioned on pp. 28 and 29.
-
-CRANE, STEPHEN, and BARR, ROBERT. THE O’RUDDY.
-
-O’DONOVAN, MICHAEL. MR. MULDOON.
-
-WRIGHT, R. H. THE SURPRISING ADVENTURES OF MY FRIEND PATRICK DEMPSEY.
-
-GILL, M. H. & Co., Publ. IRISH PLEASANTRY AND FUN.
-
-LYTTLE, W. G.; “ROBIN.” ROBIN’S READINGS.
-
-MAGINN, WM. MISCELLANIES.
-
-FITZGERALD, REV. T. A. HOMESPUN YARNS.
-
-⸺ FITS AND STARTS.
-
-HARKIN, HUGH. THE QUARTERCLIFT.
-
-BLENKINSOP, A. PADDIANA.
-
-CONYERS, DOROTHEA. Most of her sporting novels are humorous. See pp. 55
-_sqq._
-
-ROGERS, R. D. THE ADVENTURES OF ST. KEVIN.
-
-ROCHE, HON. ALEXIS. JOURNEYINGS WITH JERRY THE JARVEY.
-
-LANGRIDGE, ROSAMUND. IMPERIAL RICHENDA.
-
-JEBB, HORSLEY. SPORT ON IRISH BOGS.
-
-⸺ THE IRISH BUBBLE AND SQUEAK.
-
-There are some humorous stories in LEFANU’S “Purcell Papers” that make
-us regret that he did not give us more in the same vein. CARLETON’S
-“Stories” are a miscellany containing episodes of the wildest fun
-amid much that is gloomy, and scenes of pleasant and kindly humour
-interspersed with traits of savagery and of fanaticism.
-
-
-
-
-INDEX.
-
-
-This is, in the main, an index of _titles_. Some selected subjects have
-also been indexed, viz., the more important of those occurring in the
-notes. Subjects dealt with in the classified lists (Appendix D) have not
-been indexed here.
-
- Abbey of Innismoyle, The; 40.
-
- Absentee, The; 81.
-
- Across an Irish Bog, 107.
-
- Adventurer, The; 1.
-
- Adventurers, The; 1.
-
- Adventures of a Bashful Irishman, 69.
-
- Adventures of an Irish Gentleman, 180.
-
- Adventures of Alicia, The; 248.
-
- Adventures of Capt. Blake, The; 175.
-
- Adventures of Capt. O’Sullivan, The; 176.
-
- Adventures of Count O’Connor, The; 239.
-
- Adventures of Felix and Rosarito, The; 1.
-
- Adventures of Hector O’Halloran, The; 176.
-
- Adventures of Mick Callighin, M.P., 16.
-
- Adventures of Mr. Moses Finegan, 1.
-
- Adventures of St. Kevin, and other Irish Tales, The; 220.
-
- Adventures of the Children of the King of Norway, 118.
-
- Against the Pikes, 239.
-
- Agitator von Irland, Der; 226.
-
- Agnes Arnold, 154.
-
- _Agrarian Agitation_, 1, 2, 3, 5, 6, 7, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 18, 20,
- 24, 26, 27, 33, 36, 37, 48, 49, 59, 67, 102, 123, 129, 136,
- 140, 148, 152, 154, 156, 169, 178, 194, 195, 210, 211, 212,
- 215, 220, 221, 227, 242, 243, 244, 245.
-
- Aileen Alannah, 96.
-
- Aileen Aroon, 215.
-
- Ailey Moore, 195.
-
- Albion and Ierne, 1.
-
- Aliens of the West, 79.
-
- All for Prince Charlie, 237.
-
- All on the Irish Shore, 233.
-
- Amazing Conspiracy, An; 110.
-
- Ambush of Young Days, 135.
-
- _America, Irish in_; 10, 11, 13, 40, 41, 43, 51, 55, 64, 73, 77, 79,
- 82, 110, 114, 144, 171, 189, 191, 196.
-
- Amusing Irish Tales, 46.
-
- Anchor Watch Yarns, 75.
-
- Ancient Heroic Romances of Ireland, 137.
-
- Ancient Irish Epic Tale, The Táin, An; 78.
-
- Ancient Legends of Ireland, 254.
-
- André Besnard, 256.
-
- Anglo-Irish of the Nineteenth Century, The; 19.
-
- Anna Reilly, the Irish Girl; 1.
-
- Anne Cosgrave, 46.
-
- Another Creel of Irish Stories, 24.
-
- _Antrim_, 6, 19, 27, 60, 63, 65, 68, 86, 87, 101, 115, 119, 150, 160,
- 161, 173, 184, 188, 189, 207, 210, 215, 236, 256.
-
- Apple of Eden, The; 241.
-
- Ardnaree, 158.
-
- _Armagh_, 94, 127, 205.
-
- _Arran Islands_, 20, 70, 136, 146, 233.
-
- Arrival of Antony, The; 56.
-
- Arthurian Romances, Two Irish; 153.
-
- Art Maguire, 48.
-
- Arthur O’Leary, 142.
-
- Art MacMurrough O’Kavanagh, 198.
-
- At the Back of the World, 177.
-
- At the Door of the Gate, 216.
-
- At the Rising of the Moon, 173.
-
- Attila and his Conquerors, 52.
-
- Auld Meetin’ Hoose Green, The; 160.
-
- Aunt Jane and Uncle James, 56.
-
- _Australia_, 5, 28, 43, 88, 112, 116, 129.
-
- Autobiography of a Child, 151.
-
- Awkward Squads, The; 38.
-
-
- Bad times, The; 27.
-
- Baldearg O’Donnell, 45.
-
- Ballads in Prose, 116.
-
- Ballinvalley, 257.
-
- Ballybeg Junction, 76.
-
- Ballyblunder, 1.
-
- Ballygowna, 100.
-
- Ballygullion, 77.
-
- Ballymuckbeg, 106.
-
- Ballyronan, 1.
-
- Banker’s Love Story, A; 161.
-
- Banks of the Boro, The; 128.
-
- Banshee’s Warning and other Tales, The; 218.
-
- Barbaric Tales, 163.
-
- Bardic Stories of Ireland, The; 128.
-
- Barney Mahoney, 62.
-
- Barney the Boyo, 88.
-
- Barrington, 145.
-
- Barry Lyndon, Memoirs of; 240.
-
- Barrys, The; 39.
-
- Barrys of Beigh, The; 103.
-
- Battle of Connemara, The; 206.
-
- Beckoning of the Wand, The; 69.
-
- Before the Dawn in Erin, 72.
-
- Beggar on Horseback, A; 126.
-
- _Belfast_, 33, 27, 74, 84, 102, 108, 119, 161, 195, 216, 218, 251.
-
- Belfast Boy, The; 33.
-
- Bell Barry, 132.
-
- Bend of the Road, The; 166.
-
- Benedict Kavanagh, 27.
-
- Berna Boyle, 218.
-
- Beside the Fire, 118.
-
- Bessy Conway, 224.
-
- Betsy Gray, 153.
-
- Bewitched Fiddle and other Irish Tales, The; 166.
-
- Beyond the Boundary, 107.
-
- Beyond the Pale, 61.
-
- Bianca, 175.
-
- Bird of Passage, A; 61.
-
- Bit o’ Writing, The; 21.
-
- Bits of Blarney, 162.
-
- Black Abbey, 63.
-
- Black Baronet, The; 49.
-
- Black Monday Insurrection, 1.
-
- Black Prophet, The; 48.
-
- Black Wing, The; 148.
-
- Blakes and Flanagans, The; 224.
-
- Blind Larry, 168.
-
- Blind Maureen and other Stories, 126.
-
- Blindness of Dr. Gray, The; 230.
-
- Blind Side of the Heart, The; 60.
-
- Bob Norberry, 2.
-
- Boffin’s Find, 243.
-
- Bog of Stars, The; 202.
-
- Bonnie Dunraven, 213.
-
- Book of Ballynoggin, The; 15.
-
- Book of Gilly, The; 137.
-
- Book of Modern Irish Anecdotes, The; 128.
-
- Book of Saints and Wonders, A; 99.
-
- Boycotted Household, A; 156.
-
- Boyne Water, The; 19.
-
- Boy Hero of Erin, The; 234.
-
- Boy in Eirinn, A; 54.
-
- Boy in the Country, A; 236.
-
- Boy, Some Horses, and a Girl, The; 56.
-
- Boys of Baltimore, The; 235.
-
- Bracknells, The; 216.
-
- Bramleighs of Bishop’s Folly, The; 146.
-
- Branan the Pict, 209.
-
- Brandons, The; 71.
-
- Brayhard, 76.
-
- Bridal of Dunamore, The; 219.
-
- Brides of Ardmore, The; 232.
-
- Bridget Considine, 64.
-
- Bridget Sullivan, 2.
-
- _Brigade, Irish_; 15, 31, 50, 81, 105, 112, 122, 126, 138, 149, 163,
- 165, 204, 215, 253, 257.
-
- Briseur de Fers, Le; 72.
-
- Britain Long Ago, 255.
-
- Broken Sword of Ulster, The; 66.
-
- “Bruce Reynall, M.A.”; 59.
-
- Bryan O’Regan, 201.
-
- Bunch of Shamrocks, A; 30.
-
- Bundle of Rushes, A; 42.
-
- Buried Lady, The; 204.
-
- Burnt Flax, 211.
-
- Burtons of Dunroe, The; 35.
-
- By a Hearth in Eirinn, 205.
-
- By Beach and Bogland, 23.
-
- By Lone Craig Linnie Burn, 161.
-
- Byrnes of Glengoulah, The; 2.
-
- By Shamrock and Heather, 75.
-
- By the Barrow River and other Stories, 138.
-
- By the Brown Bog, 2.
-
- By the Stream of Kilmeen, 206.
-
- By Thrasna River, 38.
-
-
- Cabin Conversations and Castle Scenes, 40.
-
- Calling of the Weir, The; 134.
-
- Cambia Carty and other Stories, 38.
-
- _Cameron and Ferguson’s Publications_. Append. B., 265.
-
- Canvassing, 172.
-
- Candle and Crib, 213.
-
- Captain Harry, 140.
-
- Captain Lanagan’s Log, 76.
-
- Captain Latymer, 181.
-
- Captain O’Shaughnessy’s Sporting Career, 201.
-
- “Capture of Killeshin, The”; 86.
-
- Card Drawing, 100.
-
- _Carlow_, 65.
-
- Carrigaholt, 41.
-
- Carrigmore, 129.
-
- Carroll O’Donoghue, 85.
-
- Carrow of Carrowduff, 129.
-
- Castle Chapel, The; 220.
-
- Castle Daly, 125.
-
- Castle Omeragh, 181.
-
- Castle Rackrent, 81.
-
- Castle Richmond, 244.
-
- Cathair Conroi, 77.
-
- _Catholic Truth Societies._ Append. B.
-
- Cathreim Cellachain Caisil, 38.
-
- Cattle Raid of Cualnge, The; 85.
-
- _Cavan_, 38, 39, 118.
-
- Cavern in the Wicklow Mountains, The; 3.
-
- Celt and Saxon, 178.
-
- Celtic Dragon Myth, The; 44.
-
- Celtic Fairy Tales, 120.
-
- Celtic Fireside, A; 90.
-
- Celtic Folk-lore, Welsh and Manx, 217.
-
- Celtic Stories, 240.
-
- Celtic Tales, 52.
-
- Celtic Myth and Legend Poetry and Romance, 234.
-
- Celtic Twilight, The; 258.
-
- Celtic Wonder Tales, 259.
-
- Celtic Wonder World, The; 240.
-
- Chain of Gold, The; 203.
-
- Chances of War, The; 87.
-
- Changeling, The; 20.
-
- Chapters of College Romance, 42.
-
- Characteristic Sketches of Ireland and the Irish, 3.
-
- Charles Mowbray, 3.
-
- Charles O’Malley, 141.
-
- Charlton, 95.
-
- Charming of Estercel, The; 217.
-
- Charwoman’s daughter, The; 235.
-
- Children of Kings, 199.
-
- Children of Nugentstown, The; 243.
-
- Children of Sorrow, 43.
-
- Children of the Abbey, The; 219.
-
- Children of the Dead end, 159.
-
- Children of the Gael, 70.
-
- Children of the Hills, 197.
-
- Children’s Book of Celtic Stories, The; 99.
-
- Christian Physiologist, The; 100.
-
- Christy Carew, 109.
-
- Chronicles of Castle Cloyne, 35.
-
- _Clare_, 21, 74, 99, 101, 124, 129, 136, 181, 196, 206.
-
- Clare Nugent, 186.
-
- Clashmore, 77.
-
- Clementina, 172.
-
- _Clongowes Wood College_, 53, 123, 127, 172.
-
- Cluster of Nuts, A; 246.
-
- Cluster of Shamrocks, A; 41.
-
- Clutch of Circumstances, The; 227.
-
- Cock and Anchor, The; 139.
-
- Collection of the Oldest and Most Popular Legends of the Peasantry of
- Clare and Galway, A; 31.
-
- Collegians, The; 100.
-
- Colonel Ormsby, 3.
-
- Columbanus the Celt, 138.
-
- Coming of Cuchulainn, 203.
-
- Coming of Lugh, The; 259.
-
- Coming of the King, The; 53.
-
- Conan the Wonderworker, 70.
-
- Con Cregan, 144.
-
- Confederate Chieftains, The; 224.
-
- Confessions of a Whitefoot, 67.
-
- Confessions of Con Cregan, 144.
-
- Confessions of Harry Lorrequer, 141.
-
- Confessions of Honor Delany, 35.
-
- Confessors of Connaught, 177.
-
- Conformists, The; 19.
-
- Connal ou les Milesiens, 174.
-
- Connaught, A Tale of 1798; 17.
-
- Connemara, 65.
-
- _Connemara_, 5, 20, 26, 57, 70, 71, 92, 125, 136, 143, 193, 200, 218,
- 233, 247.
-
- Connor D’Arcy’s Struggles, 26.
-
- Con O’Regan, 225.
-
- Conquered at Last, 205.
-
- Considine Luck, The; 114.
-
- Contes et Légendes d’Irlande, 74.
-
- Contes Irlandais traduits du Gaëlique, 73.
-
- Contes Populaires de la Grande Bretagne, 37.
-
- Conversion of Con Cregan, The; 56.
-
- Convict No. 25, 192.
-
- Corby MacGillmore, 86.
-
- _Cork_, 1, 2, 5, 6, 11, 13, 16, 20, 25, 26, 29, 31, 32, 38, 56, 71,
- 92, 93, 100, 104, 113, 118, 124, 135, 141, 155, 177, 180, 191,
- 196, 198, 203, 113, 229, 232, 233, 243, 244, 249, 256, 257.
-
- Corner in Ballybeg, A; 193.
-
- Corrageen in ’98, 208.
-
- Cottage Life in Ireland, 206.
-
- Countrymen All, 250.
-
- Country Quarters, 32.
-
- Court of Rath Croghan, The; 198.
-
- Courtship of Ferb, The; 137.
-
- Cousin Isabel, 16.
-
- Cousins and Others, 249.
-
- Cousin Sara, 190.
-
- Crackling of Thorns, The; 55.
-
- Craignish Tales, 158.
-
- Creel of Irish Stories, A; 24.
-
- Crescent Moon, The; 72.
-
- Crimson Sign, The; 125.
-
- Crock of Gold, The; 235.
-
- Crohoore of the Billhook, 20.
-
- Croppies Lie Down, 37.
-
- Croppy, The; 20.
-
- Cross and Shamrock, The; 214.
-
- Cubs, The; 39.
-
- Cuchulain of Muirthemne (Gregory), 99.
-
- Cuchulain of Muirthemne (Skelly), 231.
-
- Cuchullin Saga in Irish Literature, 117.
-
- Cuchulain, the Hound of Ulster, 117.
-
- Culmshire Folk, 93.
-
- Curate of Kilcloon, The; 102.
-
- Cynthia’s Bonnet Shop, 190.
-
-
- Daffodil’s Love Affairs, 129.
-
- Daft Eddie, 153.
-
- Dalaradia, 54.
-
- D’Altons of Crag, The; 196.
-
- Daltons, The; 144.
-
- Dalys of Dalystown, The; 195.
-
- Dame Noire de Doona, La; 175.
-
- Dan Russell, the Fox, 234.
-
- Dan the Dollar, 40.
-
- Darby O’Gill and the good people, 239.
-
- Dark Colleen, The; 121.
-
- Dark Lady of Doona, The; 175.
-
- Dark Monk of Feola, The; 111.
-
- Dark Rosaleen, 92.
-
- Daughter of Erin, A; 88.
-
- Daughter of Kings, A; 248.
-
- Daughter of the Fields, A; 247.
-
- Daughter of Tyrconnell, The; 225.
-
- Davenport Dunn, 145.
-
- David Maxwell, 64.
-
- Days of Fire, The; 62.
-
- Day’s Ride, A; 145.
-
- Dead-Watchers, The; 22.
-
- Dearforgil, the Princess of Breffny, 96.
-
- Dear Irish Girl, The; 246.
-
- Death Flag, The; 66.
-
- Deirdre and the Lay of the Children of Uisne, 51.
-
- Demi-Gods, The; 236.
-
- Denis, 87.
-
- Denis O’Shaughnessy going to Maynooth, 48.
-
- Denis Trench, 211.
-
- Denounced, The; 19.
-
- Dernier Irlandais, Le; 26.
-
- _Derry_, 39, 45, 82, 83, 87, 92, 101, 108, 128, 125, 143, 158, 212,
- 238.
-
- Derry, 83.
-
- Derryreel, 90.
-
- Desborough’s Wife, 177.
-
- Desmond O’Connor, 122.
-
- Desmond Rourke, 110.
-
- Destruction of Dá Derga’s Hostel, The; 237.
-
- Diamond Lens and other Stories, The; 195.
-
- Diamond Mountain, The; 119.
-
- Dick Massey, 223.
-
- Didy, 147.
-
- Dimpling’s Success, 187.
-
- Divil-May-Care, 63.
-
- Doctor Kilgannon, 167.
-
- Doctor Whitty, 29.
-
- Dodd Family Abroad, The; 145.
-
- Doings and Dealings, 24.
-
- Dominick’s Trials, 194.
-
- Dominion of Dreams, The; 163.
-
- Donalds, The; 171.
-
- Donal Dun O’Byrne, 115.
-
- Donal Kenny, 182.
-
- _Donegal_, 17, 30, 34, 36, 45, 51, 66, 74, 85, 90, 98, 103, 110, 133,
- 146, 159, 165, 166, 167, 172, 184, 187, 193, 213, 216, 248.
-
- Donegal Fairy Stories, 166.
-
- Dooley Books, 79.
-
- Doreen, 150.
-
- _Down_, 25, 60, 63, 86, 90, 108, 115, 119, 126, 152, 153, 181, 201,
- 215, 218.
-
- Downey & Co. Appendix, 265.
-
- Downfall of Grabbum, The; 209.
-
- Down West, and other sketches of Irish Life, 70.
-
- Doyen de Kellerine, Le; 213.
-
- Drama in Muslin, A; 182.
-
- Dramatic Scenes from Real Life, 185.
-
- Dr. Belton’s Daughters, 106.
-
- _Drink_ (see Temperance), 8, 11, 21, 48, 181.
-
- Dromina, 18.
-
- Druidean the Mystic and other Irish Stories, 194.
-
- Druidess, The; 95.
-
- _Dublin_, 1, 9, 10, 11, 12, 14, 16, 17, 24, 34, 42, 51, 54, 61, 69,
- 75, 85, 89, 95, 106, 109, 116, 118, 123, 124, 126, 139, 144,
- 146, 156, 171, 173, 190, 191, 193, 194, 197, 201, 208, 219,
- 222, 235, 242, 246, 248, 250.
-
- Dublin Statues “At Home,” The; 150.
-
- _Dublin University_, see _Trinity College_.
-
- Dubliners, 123.
-
- Duchess, The; 17.
-
- _Duffy and Sons._ Appendix, 266.
-
- Duke of Monmouth, The; 101.
-
- Dunferry Risin’, The; 183.
-
- Dunleary, 77.
-
- Dunmara (Mulholland), 188.
-
- Dunmore, 244.
-
- Dunsany, 3.
-
- Dust of the World, 108.
-
-
- Earl of Effingham, The; 158.
-
- Earl or Chieftain, 72.
-
- Early Gaelic Erin, 3.
-
- Eccentricity, 167.
-
- Edmond of Lateragh, 3.
-
- Edmund O’Hara, 4.
-
- Edward O’Donnell, 222.
-
- Eight O’Clock and other stories, 84.
-
- Eily O’Hartigan, 221.
-
- Eldergowan and other Tales, 188.
-
- Election, The; 36.
-
- Elf Errant, The; 207.
-
- Elizabeth, Betsy, and Bess, 227.
-
- Ellen, 122.
-
- Ellmer Castle, 4.
-
- _England, Irish in_; 12, 30, 33, 34, 57, 80, 92, 107, 114, 115, 116,
- 119, 122, 134, 171, 177, 186, 206, 227.
-
- Emerald Gems, 4.
-
- Emergency Men, The; 122 (Jessop).
-
- Emigrants of Ahadarra, The; 48.
-
- Enchanted Portal, The; 150.
-
- Enlèvement du taureau divin, 125.
-
- Ennui, 81.
-
- Erin-go-bragh, 176.
-
- Escapades of Condy Corrigan, The; 110.
-
- Essence of Life, The; 14.
-
- Esther Vanhomrigh, 255.
-
- Ethne, 87.
-
- Eva, or Buried City of Bannow, 107.
-
- Eva. Daunt (Alice O’Neill), 68.
-
- Eva. Maturin (C.R.), 174.
-
- Eveline Wellwood, 210.
-
- Evelyn Clare, 24.
-
- Evenings in the Duffrey, 128.
-
- Eve’s Paradise, 35.
-
- Evil Eye, The; 49.
-
- Exiled from Erin. Doyle (M.), 77.
-
- Exile of Erin, The; 68.
-
-
- Faery Land Forlorn, A; 211.
-
- Fair Emigrant, A; 189.
-
- Fairies and Folk of Ireland, 93.
-
- Fair Irish Maid, The; 156.
-
- Fair Maid of Connaught, 116.
-
- Fair Noreen, 191.
-
- Fair Saxon, A; 155.
-
- Fairy and Folk Tales of the Irish Peasantry, 258.
-
- Fairy-Faith in Celtic Countries, The; 252.
-
- Fairy Legends and Traditions of the South of Ireland, 62.
-
- Fairy Minstrel of Glenmalure, The; 138.
-
- Fairy Stories from Erin’s Isle, 25.
-
- _Fairy Tales._ Append. D. IV.
-
- Faithful Ever and other Tales, 72.
-
- Falcon Family, The; 226.
-
- Falcon King, The; 199.
-
- Family of Glencarra, The; 182.
-
- Fancy O’Brien, 164.
-
- Fan Fitzgerald, 114.
-
- Fardorougha the Miser, 47.
-
- Farewell to Garrymore, 223.
-
- Fate of Father Sheehy, The; 224.
-
- Father Alphonsus, 113.
-
- Father Anthony, 37.
-
- Father Butler, 4, 46.
-
- Father Clancy, 93.
-
- Father Connell, 21.
-
- Father John, 4.
-
- Father O’Flynn, 235.
-
- Father Ralph, 200.
-
- Father Tim, 191.
-
- Father Tom of Connemara, 193.
-
- Favourite Child, The; 4.
-
- Fawn of Springvale, etc., 47.
-
- Feast of Bricriu, The; 111.
-
- Felix O’Flanagan, an Irish-American, 209.
-
- Fenian Nights’ Entertainments, 154.
-
- _Fenians_, 11, 13, 27, 50, 51, 59, 89, 92, 106, 109, 115, 119, 132,
- 146, 150, 154, 155, 162, 170, 183, 189, 194, 196, 206, 215,
- 230, 231.
-
- _Fermanagh_, 13, 38, 40, 164, 169, 212.
-
- Fetches, The; 18.
-
- Fians, The; 44, 94.
-
- Fictions of our Forefathers, 127.
-
- Fight of Faith, The; 105.
-
- Finn and His Companions, 202.
-
- Finn and His Warrior Band, 162.
-
- Finn MacCoole, 207.
-
- Finola, 186.
-
- Fireside Stories of Ireland, The; 128.
-
- Fits and Starts, 89.
-
- Fitzgerald Family, The; 169.
-
- Fitzgerald, The Fenian; 170.
-
- Fitz-Hern, 24.
-
- Flame and Flood, The; 134.
-
- Flaws, 23.
-
- Flight from the Cliffs, The; 192.
-
- Flight of the Eagle, 203.
-
- Flitters, Tatters and the Counsellor, 109.
-
- Florence Macarthy, 184.
-
- Florence O’Neill, 237.
-
- Flynns of Flynnville, The; 106.
-
- Fly on the Wheel, The; 242.
-
- _Folk-Lore and Legends._ Append. D. III.
-
- Folk of Furry Farm, The; 214.
-
- _Folk Tales_, see Folk-Lore.
-
- Folk and Hero Tales (Macdougall), 94, 158.
-
- Folk and Hero Tales (MacInnes), 161.
-
- Folk Tales of Breffny, 118.
-
- Following Darkness, 216.
-
- For Charles the Rover, 257.
-
- For Church and Chieftain, 257.
-
- Ford Family in Ireland, 4.
-
- Forge of Clohogue, The; 192.
-
- For the Old Land, 131.
-
- For Charles the Rover, 257.
-
- For Three Kingdoms, 64.
-
- Fortunes of Col. Torlogh O’Brien, The; 139.
-
- Fortunes of Glencore, The; 145.
-
- Fortunes of Maurice Cronin, The; 130.
-
- Fortunes of Maurice O’Donnell, The; 192.
-
- Fortunes of the Farrells, The; 251.
-
- Fortune-Teller’s Intrigue, The; 212.
-
- Foster Brothers of Doon, The; 252.
-
- Foster Sisters, The; 148.
-
- Founding of Fortunes, The; 23.
-
- Foundling Mick, 251.
-
- Foughilotra, 157.
-
- Four Feathers, The; 172.
-
- Frank Blake, 195.
-
- Frank Maxwell, 140.
-
- Frank O’Donnell, 57 (Conyngham).
-
- Frank O’Meara, 5.
-
- Frieze and Fustian, 91.
-
- Friends though Divided, 112.
-
- From the East unto the West, 23.
-
- From the Green Bag, 76.
-
- From the Land of the Shamrock, 23.
-
- Fugitive, The; _see_ Wild Scenes among the Celts.
-
- Fun o’ the Forge, 205.
-
- Further Experiences of an Irish R.M., 233.
-
- Further Stories of Ireland, 149.
-
-
- Gaels of Moondharrig, The; 72.
-
- Galloping O’Hogan, 19.
-
- Gallowglass, 156.
-
- _Galway_, 20, 24, 31, 51, 69, 90, 112, 125, 141, 146, 151, 158, 159,
- 160, 190, 196, 226, 227, 231, 232, 244, 245.
-
- Gambler, The; 242.
-
- Game Hen, The; 109.
-
- Gap of Barnesmore, The; 42.
-
- Garden of Resurrection, The; 241.
-
- Garryowen, 235.
-
- Gates of the North, The; 203.
-
- General John Regan, 29.
-
- Gentle Blood, 201.
-
- Gentleman in Debt, The; 69.
-
- Gentleman’s Wife, A; 138.
-
- Geoffrey, Austin, Student, 228.
-
- Gerald and Augusta, 5.
-
- Gerald Fitzgerald. (Kemble), 127.
-
- Gerald Fitzgerald. (Lever), 147.
-
- Gerald Ffrench’s Friends, 122.
-
- Geraldine, A; 132.
-
- Gerald Marsdale, 46.
-
- Geraldine of Desmond, 65.
-
- _Ghost Stories, Irish_; 14, 16, 153, 166, 227.
-
- Ghost Hunter and his Family, The; 21.
-
- Giannetta: Girl’s Story of Herself, A; 190.
-
- Girl of Galway, A; 247.
-
- Girl’s Ideal, A; 190.
-
- Girls of Banshee Castle, The; 190.
-
- Glade in the Forest, The; 103.
-
- Glenanaar, 229.
-
- Glencoonoge, 133.
-
- Glen of Silver Birches, The; 30.
-
- Glenveagh, 51.
-
- Glimpses of English History, 76.
-
- Glimpses of Glen-na-Mona, 205.
-
- Gods and Fighting Men, 99.
-
- Golden Bow, The; 63.
-
- Golden Guard, The; 63.
-
- Golden Hills, 252.
-
- Golden Lad, The; 171.
-
- Golden Lads and Girls, 112.
-
- Golden Morn, 114.
-
- Golden Spears and other Fairy Tales, 138.
-
- Good Men of Erin, 70.
-
- Grace O’Donnell, 154.
-
- Grace O’Halloran, 236.
-
- Grace O’Malley, Princess and Pirate, 160.
-
- Grace Wardwood, 108.
-
- Grania, 136.
-
- Grania Waile, 211.
-
- Graves at Kilmorna, The; 230.
-
- Green as Grass, 76.
-
- Green Cockade, The; 210.
-
- Green Country, The; 179.
-
- Green Tree, A; 157.
-
- Grey Life, A; 219.
-
- Guide to British Historical Fiction, A; 263.
-
-
- Hamper of Humour, A; 5.
-
- Handrahan, The Irish Fairy Man, 94, 207.
-
- Handful of Days, A; 68.
-
- Handsome Brandons, The; 249.
-
- Handsome Quaker, The; 247.
-
- Handy Andy, 149.
-
- Harfe von Erin, Die; 220.
-
- Harry Lorrequer, 141, 144.
-
- Harry O’Brien, 5.
-
- Hate Flame, The; 24.
-
- Haunted Church, The; 191.
-
- Hazel Grafton, 60.
-
- Heart of the Peasant and other Stories, The; 195.
-
- Heart of Erin, The; 31.
-
- Heart of a Monk, The; 14.
-
- Heart o’ Gold, 249.
-
- Heart o’ the Peat, The; 176.
-
- Hearts of Steel, The; 160.
-
- Heart of Tipperary, The; 223.
-
- Heiress of Carrigmona, The; 75.
-
- Heiress of Kilorgan, The; 225.
-
- Heir and no Heir, 45.
-
- Heir of Liscarragh, The; 213.
-
- Here are Ladies, 236.
-
- Her Ladyship, 248.
-
- Her Majesty’s Rebels, 152.
-
- Hermite en Irland, L’; 5.
-
- Hermit of the Rock, The; 225.
-
- Heroes of the Dawn, 223.
-
- _Hero Tales._ Append. D. II.
-
- Hero Tales of Ireland, 66.
-
- Herself, 231.
-
- Hester’s History, 188.
-
- Hetty, 40.
-
- Hibernian Nights’ Entertainments, 86.
-
- High Deeds of Finn and other Bardic Romances of Ancient Ireland,
- The; 221.
-
- History in Fiction, 87.
-
- History of Ireland, Heroic Period, 202.
-
- History of Jack Connor, The; 52.
-
- History of Ned Evans, The; 253.
-
- Hogan, M.P., 109.
-
- Holland-Tide, 100.
-
- Homespun Yarns, 89.
-
- Honor O’Hara, 212.
-
- Hon. Miss Ferrard, The; 109.
-
- Honor O’More’s Three Homes, 5.
-
- Honourable Molly, The; 248.
-
- Honour of the Desboroughs, The. Appendix B.
-
- House by the Churchyard, The; 139.
-
- House in the Rath, The; 192.
-
- House of a Thousand Welcomes, The. _See_ Didy, 147.
-
- House of Lisronan, The; 15.
-
- House of the Crickets, The; 249.
-
- House of the Foxes, The; 250.
-
- House of the Secret, The; 249.
-
- Howard, 94.
-
- Hugh Bryan, 5.
-
- Hugh Roach the Ribbonman, 192.
-
- Hugh Talbot, 69.
-
- _Humour, Irish._ Append. D. VI.
-
- Humour of Druids Island, The; 161.
-
- Humours of Donegal, The; 166.
-
- Humours of Shanwalla, The; 17.
-
- Hunger, The; 179.
-
- Hurrish, 136.
-
- Husband and Lover, 218.
-
- Husband Hunter, The; 97.
-
- Hyacinth, 27.
-
-
- Ierne, 244.
-
- Ierne O’Neal, 45.
-
- Island of Sorrow, The; 97.
-
- Island Parish, The; 102.
-
- Illustrious O’Hagan, The; 155.
-
- Ill-won Peerages, 198.
-
- Imperial Richenda, 135.
-
- In a Glass Darkly, 139.
-
- In Chimney Corners, 166.
-
- Imelda, 159.
-
- In a Roundabout Way, 187.
-
- In Cupid’s Wars, 96.
-
- In Mr. Knox’s Country, 234.
-
- Innisfail, 112.
-
- Innisfoyle Abbey, 97.
-
- In one Town, 75.
-
- _In Re_ Garland, 208.
-
- In Sarsfield’s Days, 165.
-
- Inside Passenger, The; 193.
-
- Interference, 61.
-
- In the Celtic Past, 46.
-
- In the Days of Goldsmith, 33.
-
- In the Devil’s Alley, 214.
-
- In the Irish Brigade, 112.
-
- In the Kingdom of Kerry, 61.
-
- In the King’s Service, 35.
-
- In the Valleys of South Down, 108.
-
- In the Wake of King James, 203.
-
- Inside Passenger, The; 193.
-
- Insurgent Chief, The; 160.
-
- Invasion, The; 100.
-
- Invasion of Cromleigh, The; 100.
-
- Inviolable Sanctuary, The; 28.
-
- Ireland: Its Humour and Pathos, 37.
-
- Ireland, a Tale, 172.
-
- Ireland; or, The Montague Family, 84.
-
- Ireland’s Dream, 152.
-
- _Ireland’s Own Library_, 68, 88, 105, 148, 195, 213.
-
- Irish Bar Sinister, The; 170.
-
- Irish Bubble and Squeak, 6.
-
- Irish Coast Tales, 253.
-
- Irish Chieftain, The; 174.
-
- Irish Chieftain and his family, The; 178.
-
- Irish Chieftains, The; 31.
-
- Irish Coquette, The; 6.
-
- Irish Cousin, An; 232.
-
- Irish Decade, An; 194.
-
- Irish Diamonds. (Smith, John), 232.
-
- Irish Diamonds. (Bowles, Emily), 33.
-
- Irish Dove, The; 211.
-
- Irish Drolleries, 183.
-
- Irish Excursion, The; 6.
-
- Irish Fairy Book, The; 98.
-
- Irish Fairy Tales. (Yeats), 258.
-
- Irish Fairy and Folk Tales, 258.
-
- Irish Fairy Tales. (Strahan), 6.
-
- Irish Fairy Tales. (Leamy), 138.
-
- Irish Fireside Stories, Tales and Legends, 6.
-
- Irish Fireside Tales, 124.
-
- Irish Folk-lore, 204.
-
- Irish Girl, The; 6.
-
- Irish Guardian, The; 6.
-
- Irish Heirs, 149.
-
- Irish Heiress, The; 210.
-
- Irish Holidays, 243.
-
- Irish Idylls, 22.
-
- Irish Life and Character, 157.
-
- Irish Life in Irish Fiction, 87.
-
- Irish Life in Court and Castle, 42.
-
- Irish Life and Humour, 110.
-
- Irish Local Legends, 204.
-
- Irish Lover, An; 43.
-
- Irish Love Tales, 6.
-
- Irishman at Home, The; 7.
-
- Irishman, The; 7.
-
- Irishman’s Luck, An; 97.
-
- Irishmen and Irish Women, 36.
-
- Irishmen, The; 7.
-
- Irish Militia Officer, The; 201.
-
- Irish National Tales and Romances, 264.
-
- Irish Neighbours, 23.
-
- Irish Orphan Boy in a Scottish Home, The; 21.
-
- Irish Parish, its Sunshine and Shadows, An; 57.
-
- Irish Pastorals, 39.
-
- Irish Pearl, The; 7.
-
- Irish Police Officer, The; 67.
-
- Irish Pleasantry and Fun, 7.
-
- Irish Priest, The; 7.
-
- Irish Priests and English Landlords, 35.
-
- Irish Rebels, 154.
-
- Irish Scripture Reader, The; 54.
-
- Irish Stew, 183.
-
- Irish Town and Country Tales, 71.
-
- Irish Utopia, An; 80.
-
- Irish Ways, 23.
-
- Irish Widow, The; 8.
-
- Irish Widow’s son, The; 206.
-
- Irish Witchcraft and Demonology, 227.
-
- Irish Wonders, 153.
-
- Irrelagh, 54.
-
- Island of Sorrow, The; 97.
-
- Island Parish, The; 102.
-
- Isle in the Water, An; 246.
-
- Ismay’s Children, 109.
-
-
- Jabez Murdock, 90.
-
- Jack Hazlitt, 195.
-
- Jack Hinton, 141.
-
- Jacquetta, 129.
-
- Jane Sinclair, 49.
-
- Jennie Gerhart, 78.
-
- Jerpoint, 171.
-
- Jessamy Bride, The; 181.
-
- Jeune Irlandais, Le; 174.
-
- Jim Eagan, 8.
-
- Job, The; 164.
-
- Johanna, 61.
-
- John Doe, 18.
-
- John Marmaduke, 52.
-
- John Maxwell’s Marriage, 103.
-
- John Needham’s Double, 109.
-
- John Thaddeus Mackay, 254.
-
- Johnny Derrivan’s Travels, 36.
-
- John Orlebar, Clk.; 93.
-
- John Sherman, and Dhoya, 258.
-
- John Townley, 243.
-
- Joint Venture, The; 90.
-
- Journeyings with Jerry the Jarvey, 219.
-
- Jubainville, D’Arbois de, 44, 68.
-
- Julia, 248.
-
- Just Stories, 208.
-
-
- Kate Geary, 172.
-
- Kate Kavanagh, 8.
-
- Kathleen Clare, 156.
-
- Kathleen Mavourneen. (Mulholland), 187.
-
- Kathleen Mavourneen. (M’Donnell, Randal William), 158.
-
- Katrine, 133.
-
- Katty the Flash, 94.
-
- Keena Karmody, 130.
-
- Kellys and the O’Kellys, The; 244.
-
- Kerrigan’s Quality, 22.
-
- _Kerry_, 8, 61, 85, 94, 97, 101, 106, 129, 148, 156, 177, 211, 229,
- 248, 250.
-
- Kilboylan Bank, 151.
-
- Kilcarra, 227.
-
- _Kildare_, 12, 53, 59, 136, 140, 151, 172, 197, 242. [Tynan (K.),
- _passim_].
-
- Kilgorman, 216.
-
- Kilgroom, 236.
-
- Kilkee, 130.
-
- _Kilkenny_, 18-21, 72, 83, 96, 140, 162.
-
- _Killarney_, 3, 8, 36, 54, 78, 84, 100, 124, 178, 212.
-
- Killarney Legends, 62.
-
- Killarney Poor Scholar, The; 237.
-
- Killeen, 186.
-
- Killinchy, 178.
-
- Kiltartan Wonder-Book, The; 99.
-
- King of Claddagh, The; 90.
-
- Kings and the Cats, The; 107.
-
- Kings and Vikings, 199.
-
- King and Viking, 232.
-
- King’s Coming, The; 256.
-
- _King’s Co._, 156.
-
- King’s Deputy, The; 113.
-
- King’s Kiss, The; 129.
-
- King’s Revoke, The; 256.
-
- King’s Signet, The; 212.
-
- King’s Woman, A; 247.
-
- Kinsmen’s Clay, 64.
-
- Kish of Brogues, A; 34.
-
- Kitty O’Donovan, 177.
-
- Knight of Gwynne, The; 143.
-
- Knight of the Cave, The; 199.
-
- Knights of the Pale, The; 205.
-
- Knights of the White Rose, The; 101.
-
- Knockinscreen Days, 53.
-
- Knocknagow, 130.
-
-
- Lad of the Ferule, The; 118.
-
- Lad of the O’Friels, A; 167.
-
- Lady of Mystery, The; 70.
-
- Lady of the Reef, The; 181.
-
- Lake, The; 182.
-
- Lake of Killarney, The; 212.
-
- Lalage’s Lovers, 28.
-
- Lally of the Brigade, 165.
-
- Land I love best, The; 242 (Tynan).
-
- _Land League_, 10, 27, 31, 59, 110, 112, 135, 136, 139, 170, 182,
- 183, 189, 210, 211, 215, 220, 222, 223, 227, 242.
-
- Land Leaguers, The; 245.
-
- Land of Bondage, The; 41.
-
- Land of Heroes, A; 199.
-
- Land of Mist and Mountain, A; 246.
-
- Land-Smeller, The; 76.
-
- Lanty Riordan’s Red Light, 59.
-
- Last Drop of ’68, The; 8.
-
- Last Earl of Desmond, The; 96.
-
- Last Forward, The; 161.
-
- Last Hurdle, The; 116.
-
- Last King of Ulster, The; 96.
-
- Last Monarch of Tara, The; 221.
-
- Last of the Catholic O’Malleys, The; 239.
-
- Last of the Corbes, 256.
-
- Last of the Irish Chiefs, 210.
-
- Last of the O’Mahonys, The; 8.
-
- Last Recruit of Clare’s, The; 126.
-
- Last Struggles of the Irish Sea Smugglers, The; 44.
-
- Laughter of Peterkin, The; 163.
-
- Lays and Legends of Ireland, 193.
-
- Leading Lights All, 51.
-
- Leadin’ Road to Donegal, The; 165.
-
- League of the Ring, The; 195.
-
- Le Briseur de Fers, 72.
-
- Left-handed Swordsman, A; 194.
-
- Legendary Fictions of the Irish Celts, 128.
-
- Legendary Stories of the Carlingford Lough District, 60.
-
- Légendes irlandaises, 78.
-
- Legend of M’Donnell and the Norman de Borgos, The; 169.
-
- Legends and Poems, 125.
-
- Legends and Stories of Ireland, 149.
-
- Legends and Fairy Tales of Ireland, 8.
-
- Legends and Tales of Ireland, 150.
-
- Legends of Connaught, 16.
-
- Legends of Mount Leinster, 127.
-
- Legends of Saints and Sinners, 119.
-
- Legends of the Lakes, 62.
-
- Legends of the Wars in Ireland, 124.
-
- Legends, Tales and Stories of Ireland, 108.
-
- _Leitrim_, 118, 244.
-
- Leigh of Lara, 157.
-
- Leixlip Castle, 198.
-
- Let Erin Remember, 257.
-
- Liadain and Cuirithir, 180.
-
- Life and Acts of the Renowned and Chivalrous Edmund of Erin, The;
- 210.
-
- Life in the Irish Militia, 8.
-
- Life’s Hazard, A; 85.
-
- Light and Shade, 194.
-
- Lights and Shadows of Irish Life, 104.
-
- Lily Lass, 155.
-
- _Limerick_, 1, 2, 13, 19, 31, 51, 57, 87, 100, 101, 112, 126, 134,
- 139, 158, 165, 193, 198, 210, 215, 251.
-
- Limerick Veteran, 237.
-
- Linda’s Misfortunes and Little Brian’s Trip to Dublin, 187.
-
- Lion’s Whelp, The; 119.
-
- Lisheen, 229.
-
- Lismore, 59.
-
- Lismoyle, 61.
-
- Little Black Devil, The; 82.
-
- Little Bogtrotters, The; 187.
-
- Little Green Man, The; 76.
-
- Little Irish Girl, A; 43 (Callwell).
-
- Little Irish Girl, 118 (Hungerford).
-
- Little Merry Face and his Crown of Content, 186.
-
- Little ones of Innisfail, The; 54.
-
- Little Snowdrop and other Stories, 187.
-
- Lloyd Pennant, 193.
-
- Lloyds of Ballymore, The; 220.
-
- _London, Irish in_; 5, 19, 29, 30, 39, 42, 75, 81, 82, 89, 98, 107,
- 129, 134, 148, 154, 156, 172, 175, 176, 187, 191, 218, 229,
- 242, 245.
-
- _Longford_, 54.
-
- Lord Clandonnell, 52.
-
- Lord Clangore, _see_ The Anglo-Irish, 5.
-
- Lord Edward Fitzgerald, 32.
-
- Lord Kilgobbin, 146.
-
- Lord Roche’s Daughters of Fermoy, 198.
-
- Lost Angel of a Ruined Paradise, 229.
-
- Lost Land, The; 64.
-
- Lost on Dhu Corrig, 203.
-
- Loughbar, 133.
-
- _Louth_, 34, 65.
-
- Love is Life, 129.
-
- Love of Comrades, 173.
-
- Love of Sisters, 248.
-
- Love that Kills, The; 255.
-
- Love, the Atonement, 43.
-
- Love, the Player, 226.
-
- Lucius Carey, 53.
-
- Luck is everything, 176.
-
- Luck of the Kavanaghs, 106.
-
- Luke Delmege, 229.
-
- Luke Talbot, 192.
-
- Luttrell of Arran, 146.
-
- Luttrell’s Doom, 107.
-
-
- Mack the-Miser, 134.
-
- MacCarthy Mor, 225.
-
- McCluskey Twins, The; 148.
-
- MacDermotts of Ballycloran, The; 244.
-
- M’Donnells, The; 238.
-
- Macmahon, The; 31.
-
- Macmahon’s Country; _see_ Last of the Corbes.
-
- Mac’s Adventures, 24.
-
- Mad Lord of Drumkeel, The; 230.
-
- Mad Minstrel, The; 8.
-
- Maelcho, 136.
-
- Maid of the Manse, A; 85.
-
- Maid of Killarney, The; 36.
-
- Major’s Niece, The; 28.
-
- Making of Jim O’Neill, The; 89.
-
- Manor of Glenmore, The; 126.
-
- Man’s Foes, A; 238.
-
- Manuscript Man, The; 252.
-
- Marcella Grace, 189.
-
- Marriage Bonds, 106.
-
- Marrying of Bryan, and other Stories, The; 70.
-
- Mary, 130.
-
- Mary Dominic, 216.
-
- Mary Lee, 34.
-
- Mary, Mary; _see_ The Charwoman’s Daughter (Stephens).
-
- Mary of Avonmore, 207.
-
- Martial Career of Conghal Cláiringhneach, 169.
-
- Martins of Cro’ Martin, 143.
-
- Master John, 40.
-
- Master of Rathkelly, The; 231.
-
- Maureen, 168.
-
- Maureen Dhu, 226.
-
- Maureen Moore, 16.
-
- Maureen’s Fairing, 22.
-
- Maurice and Berghetta, 209.
-
- Maurice Rhynhart, 147.
-
- Maurice Tiernay, 144.
-
- Maurice Tyrone, _see_ A Fair Saxon, 155.
-
- Mavourneen, 122.
-
- Maxwell Drewitt, 218.
-
- _Maynooth_, 12, 102, 206, 241.
-
- _Mayo_, 9, 15, 25, 135, 165, 251.
-
- Mayor of Windgap, The; 20.
-
- _Meath_, 31.
-
- Meave, 57.
-
- Meg McIntyre’s Raffle, 226.
-
- Memoirs of Barry Lyndon, Esq., The; 240.
-
- Memoirs of Gerald O’Connor, 186.
-
- Memories of a Month among the “Mere Irish,” 90.
-
- Men and Maids, 249.
-
- Men, Not Angels, 250.
-
- Merchant of Killogue, The; 76.
-
- Mermaid of Inish-uig, The; 82.
-
- Mermaid of Loch Lene (sub-t. of _The Water Queen_, _q.v._), 54.
-
- Mervyn Gray, 180.
-
- _Methodists_, 130, 161, 174.
-
- Michael Cassidy, 108.
-
- Michael Dwyer, The Insurgent Captain, 45.
-
- Michael O’Donnell, 171.
-
- Mickey Finn Idylls, 121.
-
- Mick McQuaid, 150.
-
- Mick Tracy, 9.
-
- Micky Mooney, M.P., 226.
-
- _Midlands_, 179, 214, 218, 220.
-
- Mighty Army, The; 140.
-
- _Migratory Labourers_, 159 (The Rat Pit), 26 (Poverty, &c.).
-
- Milesian Chief, The; 174.
-
- Military Mosaics, 209.
-
- Miller of Glanmire, The; 191.
-
- Minnie’s Bishop, 29.
-
- Miriam Lucas, 230.
-
- Miscellanies, 170.
-
- Misadventures of Mr. Catlyne, Q.C., 170.
-
- Miss Erin, 92.
-
- Miss Honoria, 133.
-
- Miss O’Corra, M.F.H., 15.
-
- Miss Peggy O’Dillon, 252.
-
- Misther O’Ryan, 168.
-
- Mistletoe and the Shamrock, The; 9.
-
- Mixed Pack, A; 57.
-
- Modern Daedalus, A; 98.
-
- Molly Bawn, 117.
-
- Molly Carew, 30.
-
- _Monaghan_, 31, 89.
-
- Mona the Vestal, 73.
-
- Moneylender, The; 80.
-
- Mononia, 155.
-
- Moonlight by the Shannon Shore, 210.
-
- Moores of Glynn, The; 102.
-
- More about Pixie, 251.
-
- Mothers and Sons, 36.
-
- Mountcashel’s Brigade, 105.
-
- Moy O’Brien, 240.
-
- _Mr. Dooley_, 79.
-
- Mr. Dooley says, 79.
-
- Mr. Muldoon, 201.
-
- Mrs. Desmond’s Foster Child, 206.
-
- Mrs. Martin’s Company, 22.
-
- Mrs. Martin’s Man, 84.
-
- Mrs. Mulligan’s Millions, 168.
-
- Munster Cottage Boy, The; 219.
-
- My Connaught Cousins, 12.
-
- My Foster Brother, 40.
-
- My Lady Clancarty, 239.
-
- My Lady of the Chimney Corner, 119.
-
- My Lords of Strogue, 255.
-
- My New Curate, 228.
-
- My Own Story, 9.
-
- Mystery of Killard, The; 74.
-
- My Sword for Patrick Sarsfield, 158.
-
- Myths and Folk-lore of Ireland, 66.
-
- Myths and Legends of the Celtic Race, 221.
-
-
- Nanno, 189.
-
- National Feeling, 9.
-
- Neath Sunny Skies in Waterford, 228.
-
- Ned McCool and his Foster Brother, 201.
-
- Ned Rusheen, 67.
-
- Neighbours, 64.
-
- Nellie Carew, 212.
-
- Nelly Netterville, 43.
-
- Nelly Nowlan, and other Stories, 105.
-
- Nessa, 165.
-
- Nevilles of Garretstown, The; 171.
-
- New Lights, 224.
-
- Nice Distinctions, 9.
-
- Night Nurse, The; 14.
-
- Nightshade, 123.
-
- Nine Days’ Wonder, A; 61.
-
- Ninety-Eight, 85.
-
- Ninety-Eight and Sixty Years after, 121.
-
- Nora Creina, 118.
-
- Nora Brady’s Vow, 73.
-
- Nora Moriarty, 215.
-
- Norah of Waterford, 191.
-
- Nora’s Mission, 88.
-
- Noreen Dhas, 200.
-
- North Afire, The; 194.
-
- Northern Irish Tales, 95.
-
- Northern Iron, The; 27.
-
- Northerns of ’98, The; 65.
-
- North, South and over the Sea, 92.
-
- North Star, The; 111.
-
- Not Peace but a Sword, 257.
-
- Nowlans, The; 19.
-
- Nuala, 165.
-
- Nugents of Carriconna, The; 116.
-
- Nurse M’Vourneen, 36.
-
-
- O’Briens and O’Flahertys, The; 184.
-
- Ochil Fairy Tales, The; 86.
-
- O’Connors of Ballynahinch, The; 118.
-
- O’Donel, 184.
-
- O’Donnells of Glen Cottage, The; 58.
-
- O’Donnells of Inchfawn, The; 177.
-
- O’Donoghue, The; 142.
-
- Off the Skelligs, 119.
-
- O’Flynn, The; 155.
-
- O’Grady of Trinity, 114.
-
- O’Hara, 175.
-
- Olaf the Dane, 71.
-
- Old Andy, 57.
-
- Old Celtic Romances, 123.
-
- Old Celtic Tales, 255.
-
- Old Celtic Tales Retold, 255.
-
- Old Corcoran’s Money, 75.
-
- Old Country, The; 9.
-
- Old House at Glenaran, The; 73.
-
- Old House by the Boyne, The; 225.
-
- Old Irish Hearts and Homes, 54.
-
- Old Irish Knight, The; 72.
-
- Old Knowledge, The; 103.
-
- Old Times in Ireland, 251.
-
- Old-Time Stories of Erin, 69.
-
- Old Trinity, 123.
-
- Olive Lacy, 17.
-
- O’Mahony, The; 58.
-
- On an Ulster Farm, 107.
-
- One of Them, 145.
-
- One Outside, The; 89.
-
- Only a Lass, 78.
-
- Only an Irish Boy, 16.
-
- Onora, 189.
-
- Orange and Green, 112.
-
- Orange Lily, 63.
-
- _Orangemen_, 4, 29, 47, 59, 63, 65, 77, 111, 123, 127, 152, 154, 166,
- 185, 209.
-
- Original Woman, The; 181.
-
- Original Collection of the Poems of Ossian, Orann, Ullin, An; 154.
-
- Origin of Plum Pudding, The; 116.
-
- Ormond, 81.
-
- Ormond Idylls, 162.
-
- O’Ruddy, The; 59.
-
- O’Shaughnessy Girls, The; 191.
-
- O’Sullivan, dernière insurrection, etc., 71.
-
- Our Lady Intercedes, 126.
-
- Our Own Country, 129.
-
- Our Sister Maisie, 190.
-
- Outcast, The; _see_ Wild Scenes among the Celts.
-
- Overflowing Scourge, The; 91.
-
- Owen Donovan, 206.
-
-
- Paddiana, 31.
-
- Paddy, 213.
-
- Paddy go Easy and his Wife Nancy, 47.
-
- Paddy Risky, 179.
-
- Pale and the Septs, The; 197.
-
- Parish Providence, A; 151.
-
- Parra Sastha, _see_ Paddy-go-Easy, 47.
-
- Passion and Pedantry, 10.
-
- Passionate Crime, 241.
-
- Passionate Hearts, The; 45.
-
- Passion of Kathleen Duveen, The; 177.
-
- Pastoral Annals, 133.
-
- Pat, 18.
-
- Pat o’ Nine Tales, 32.
-
- Patricia of the Hills, 41.
-
- Patriot Brothers, The; 105.
-
- Patsy, 234.
-
- Patsy the Omadhaun, 33.
-
- Pearl of Lisnadoon, The; 84.
-
- Peasant Lore from Gaelic Ireland, 71.
-
- Peas-Blossom, 10.
-
- Peep-o’-Day Boy, The; 37.
-
- Peggy, 68.
-
- Peggy, D.O., 252.
-
- Peggy from Kerry, 177.
-
- Peggy the Daughter, 249.
-
- Peggy the Millionaire, 58.
-
- Peg o’ my Heart, 171.
-
- _Penal Laws_, 31, 65, 125, 127, 129, 171, 184, 237.
-
- Penitent, The; _see_ Wild Scenes among the Celts.
-
- Percy’s Revenge, 186.
-
- Peter of the Castle, 19.
-
- Peter’s Pedigree, 56.
-
- Peter the Whaler, 132.
-
- Philip O’Hara’s Adventures, 10.
-
- Phineas Finn, 245.
-
- Pig-Driving Peelers, The; 131.
-
- Pikemen, The; 126.
-
- Pilgrim from Ireland, 171.
-
- Pinches of Salt, 76.
-
- Pirate of Bofine, The; 79.
-
- Pirate’s Fort, The; 167.
-
- Pixie O’Shaughnessy, 251.
-
- Plain Man’s Tale, A; 256.
-
- Plan of Campaign, The; 219.
-
- Plough and the Cross, The; 208.
-
- Plucking of the Lily, The; 95.
-
- Poems and Stories of FitzJames O’Brien, 195.
-
- Poems of Oisin, Bard of Erin, 231.
-
- Point of Honour, The; 113.
-
- Poor Paddy’s Cabin, 10.
-
- Poor Scholar and other Tales, The; 46.
-
- Popular Tales of the West Highlands, 44.
-
- Popular Tales and Legends of the Irish Peasantry, 10.
-
- Port of Dreams, The; 15.
-
- Poteen Punch, 32.
-
- Poverty and the Baronet’s Family, 26.
-
- _Presbyterian Peasantry_, 39, 60, 63, 84, 107, 160, 161, 209.
-
- _Priests, Irish._ Append. D. V.
-
- Priests and People, 10.
-
- Priest’s Blessing, The; 121.
-
- Priest’s Boy, The; 193.
-
- Priest’s Niece, The; 110.
-
- Prince Errant, A; 253.
-
- Prince of Killarney, The; 200.
-
- Prince of Lisnover, The; 217.
-
- Prince of Tyrone, A; 86.
-
- Princess Katharine, 250.
-
- Prisoner of his Word, A; 25.
-
- Profit and Loss, 214.
-
- Pro Patria, 162.
-
- Prophet of the Ruined Abbey, The; 214.
-
- _Proselytism_, 4, 6, 7, 9, 11, 26, 33, 35, 40, 47, 54, 70, 87, 177,
- 254.
-
- Protestant Rector, The; 11.
-
- Proving of Priscilla, The; 25.
-
- P’tit Bonhomme (_see_ Foundling Mick), 251.
-
- Puck’s Hall, 215.
-
- Purcell Papers, The; 139.
-
- Puritan, The; 11.
-
-
- Quarterclift, The; 108.
-
- Queen of Connaught, The; 121.
-
- Queen of Men, A; 196.
-
- _Queen’s County_, 58, 126, 186.
-
- Quicksands of Life, The; 80.
-
-
- Race of Castlebar, The; 137.
-
- Ralph Wynward, 83.
-
- Rambling Rector, The; 14.
-
- Random Stories, 157.
-
- _Rathlin Island_, 256.
-
- Rathlynn, 17.
-
- Rat-Pit, The; 159.
-
- Ravensdale, 242.
-
- Real Charlotte, The; 232.
-
- Real Life in Ireland, 83.
-
- Real Pictures of Clerical Life in Ireland, 59.
-
- Rebellion of Silken Thomas, The; 86.
-
- Rebels, The; 32.
-
- Récits du Foyer, 78.
-
- Recollections of Hyacinth O’Gara, 36.
-
- Red-Haired Man’s Wife, The; 50.
-
- Red-haired Woman, The; 130.
-
- Red Hand of Ulster, The (Birmingham), 29.
-
- Red Hand of Ulster, The (Sadlier), 224.
-
- Red Hugh’s Captivity, 202.
-
- Red Leaguers, The; 39.
-
- Redmond O’Hanlon, 49.
-
- Red Poacher, The; 167.
-
- Red Rapparee, 148.
-
- Red Route, The; 231.
-
- Red Spy, The; 139.
-
- Repealers, The; 32.
-
- Resident Magistrate, The; 238.
-
- Return of Claneboy, The; 86.
-
- Return of Mary O’Murrough, The; 190.
-
- Return of the O’Mahoney, The; 92.
-
- Revolt of the Young MacCormacks, The; 88.
-
- Rex Singleton, 152.
-
- Ribbon Informer, The; 169.
-
- Ridgeway, 11.
-
- Ring of Day, The; 42.
-
- Ring O’ Rushes, 38.
-
- Ripple, The; 15.
-
- Rivals, The; 101.
-
- Robber Chieftain, The; 11.
-
- Robert Emmet, 103.
-
- Robin’s Readings, 152.
-
- Rockite, The; 83.
-
- Rody Blake, 126.
-
- Rody the Rover, 48.
-
- Roland Cashel, 143.
-
- Roman Catholic Priest, The; 11.
-
- Rory of the Hills, 67.
-
- Rory O’More, 149.
-
- Rosaleen O’Hara, 115.
-
- _Roscommon_, 195, 216.
-
- Rose de Blaquière; _see_ The Lake of Killarney (Porter).
-
- Rose O’Connor, 132.
-
- Rose of the Garden, 250.
-
- Rose Parnell, 58.
-
- Rose, Shamrock, and Thistle, 130.
-
- Rosette, 197.
-
- Round about Home, 51.
-
- Round Tower, The; 227.
-
- Round Tower of Babel, The; 76.
-
- Ruined Race, A; 231.
-
- Running Double, 116.
-
- Ruth Werdress, 88.
-
-
- Sagen aus dem alten Irland, 240.
-
- Saint Patrick, 11.
-
- Saints and Sinners, 68.
-
- Sally, 57.
-
- Sally Cavanagh, 131.
-
- Sandy Row Convert, The; 111.
-
- Sarsfield (Gamble), 94.
-
- Sarsfield (Conyngham), 57.
-
- Satanella, 254.
-
- Savourneen Dheelish, 215.
-
- Scenes and Sketches in an Irish Parish, 102.
-
- Schoolboys Three, 127.
-
- School-Boy Outlaws, The; 84.
-
- _Scotland, Irish in_; 21, 64, 94, 159.
-
- Scottish Fairy Book, The; 100.
-
- Scullydom, 83.
-
- Sea Queen’s Sailing, A; 253.
-
- Search Party, The; 28.
-
- Sea Stories; _see_ Downey, 75-77.
-
- Secret of Carrickfearnagh Castle, The; 245.
-
- Secret Rose, The; 258.
-
- Seething Pot, The; 27.
-
- Separatist, The; 12.
-
- Sgéalaidhe Gaedhealach, An; 118 (Hyde).
-
- Shadow of the Cross, The; 63.
-
- Shameful Inheritance, A; 250.
-
- Shamrock Leaves (Butler), 41.
-
- Shamrock Leaves (Hoare), 114.
-
- Shandon Bells, 29.
-
- Shandy Maguire, 34.
-
- Shan Van Vocht, The; 192.
-
- Shawn na Saggarth, 17.
-
- Sheila Donovan, 210.
-
- Shemus Dhu, 125.
-
- Shepherd Prior, The; 70.
-
- She Walks in Beauty, 246.
-
- Shillelagh and Shamrock, 33.
-
- Shuilers from Heathy Hills, 165.
-
- Siege of Bodike, The; 140.
-
- Siege of Maynooth, The; 12.
-
- Silk and Steel, 114.
-
- Silk of the Kine, The; 164.
-
- Silva Gadelica, 204.
-
- Silver Fox, The; 233.
-
- Simpkins Plot, The; 28.
-
- Sin of Jasper Standish, The; 218.
-
- Sin-Eater, The; 163.
-
- Sir Brooke Fosbrooke, 146.
-
- Sir Guy d’Esterre, 41.
-
- Sir Jasper Carew, 144.
-
- Sir Ludar, 215.
-
- Sir Phelim’s Treasure, 113.
-
- Sir Roger Delaney of Meath, 12.
-
- Sisters and Green Magic, The; 197.
-
- Sketches of Irish Character, 104.
-
- Slieve Bloom, 130.
-
- _Sligo_, 72, 232, 258.
-
- Smith of the Shamrock Guards, 12.
-
- Smugglers of Strangford Lough, The; 153.
-
- Snake’s Pass, The; 237.
-
- Soggarth Aroon, The; 102.
-
- Some Experiences of an Irish R.M., 233.
-
- Some Happenings of Glendalyne, 56.
-
- Some Irish Stories, 70.
-
- Some Irish Yesterdays, 233.
-
- Songs and Tales of St. Columba and his Age, 164.
-
- Son of a Peasant, 168.
-
- Son of Erin, A; 238.
-
- Sons o’ Cormac, The; 78.
-
- Sons of Eire, 159.
-
- Sons of the Milesians, 62.
-
- Sons of the Sea Kings, 180.
-
- Sons of the Sod, 153.
-
- Sorrow of Lycadoon, The; 55.
-
- Soundless Tide, The; 60.
-
- _Soupers_, 4, 5, 33, 57, 133, 167, 206, 224.
-
- Sower of the Wind, A; 110.
-
- Spaewife, The; 34.
-
- Spanish Gold, 28.
-
- Spanish John, 163.
-
- Spanish Wine, The; 173.
-
- Spinners in Silence, 168.
-
- Spiritual Tales, 163.
-
- Splendid Knight, The; 114.
-
- Spoiled Priest, The; 229.
-
- _Sporting Novels_, 56, 57, 61, 69, 88, 114, 116, 141, 146, 161, 231,
- 233, 235, 254.
-
- Sport on Irish Bogs, 122.
-
- Sprigs of Shamrock, 222.
-
- Sprigs of Shillelagh, 148.
-
- Squanders of Castle Squander, The; 49.
-
- Squireen, The; 39.
-
- Starlight through the Roof, 223.
-
- Stars Beyond, The; 135.
-
- Steadfast unto Death, 26.
-
- Stella and Vanessa, 78.
-
- Stories for Calumniators, 245.
-
- Stories from Carleton, 50.
-
- Stories of Irish Life, Past and Present, 12.
-
- Stories of Red Hanrahan, 258.
-
- Stories of the Irish Peasantry, 104.
-
- Stories of the Irish Rebellion, 183.
-
- Story of a Campaign Estate, 242.
-
- Story of Bawn, The; 248.
-
- Story of Cecilia, The; 250.
-
- Story of Conn-Eda, The; 205.
-
- Story of Dan, The; 91.
-
- Story of Ellen, The; 189.
-
- Story of Mary Dunne, The; 92.
-
- Story of Nellie Dillon, The; 12.
-
- Story of Parson Annaly, 36.
-
- St. Clair, 184.
-
- St. Patrick’s Cathedral, 200.
-
- St. Patrick’s Eve, 142.
-
- Strangers at Lisconnell, 22.
-
- Strayings of Sandy, The; 56.
-
- Strike, The; 222.
-
- Strong as Death, 53.
-
- Struggle for Fame, A; 218.
-
- Studies in Blue, 200.
-
- Success of Patrick Desmond, The; 82.
-
- Surprising Adventures of my Friend Patrick Dempsey, The; 256.
-
- Survivals in Belief among the Celts, 111.
-
- Sweet Doreen, 187.
-
- Sweet Innisfail, 74.
-
- Swordsman of the Brigade, A; 204.
-
-
- Táin Bo Cualgne (de Jubainville), 125.
-
- Do., (Windisch). Append. D. II.
-
- Tales about Great Britain. _See_ Tales about Ireland and the Irish,
- 97.
-
- Tales and Legends of Ireland, 12.
-
- Tales and Sketches of the Irish Peasantry, 49.
-
- Tales and Superstitions of the Connaught Peasants, 71.
-
- Tales from Maria Edgeworth, 81.
-
- Tales of a Jury Room, 101.
-
- Tales of Fairy Folk, Queens and Heroes, 94.
-
- Tales of my Country, 41.
-
- Tales of Ireland, 47.
-
- Tales of Ireland and the Irish (MacWalter), 169.
-
- Tales about Ireland and the Irish, 97 (Goodrich).
-
- Tales of Irish Life (Whitty), 254.
-
- Tales of Irish Life and Character, 105.
-
- Tales and Sketches of Irish Life and Character, 49.
-
- Tales of the Royal Irish Constabulary, 36.
-
- Tales of the Fairies and of the Ghost World, 66.
-
- Tales of my Neighbourhood, 101.
-
- Tales of the Munster Festivals, 101.
-
- Taste of Quality, A; 222.
-
- _Temperance_ (_see_ Drink), 8, 11, 21, 48, 121.
-
- Terence, 61.
-
- Terence McGowan, the Irish Tenant, 243.
-
- Terence O’Dowd, 208.
-
- Terence O’Neill’s Heiress, 187.
-
- Terence O’Rourke, Gentleman Adventurer, 251.
-
- Terre d’Emeraude, 33.
-
- Terry, 189.
-
- Terry Alt, The; 178.
-
- That Most Distressful Country, 34.
-
- That Sweet Enemy, 247.
-
- Third Experiment, The; 134.
-
- Thirteen, 241.
-
- Thomas Fitzgerald, the Lord of Offaley, 12.
-
- Thorn Bit, The; 55.
-
- _Tipperary_, 57, 58, 61, 109, 131, 222, 223, 224.
-
- Tivoli, 135.
-
- Three Fair Maids, 247.
-
- Three Fenian Brothers, The; 106.
-
- Three Girls and a Hermit, 56.
-
- Three Requests, The; 126.
-
- Three Wee Ulster Lassies, 98.
-
- Three Whispers, The; 58.
-
- Through Green Glasses, 75.
-
- Through the Turf Smoke, 166.
-
- Through Troubled Waters, 151.
-
- Thy Name is Truth, 94.
-
- Tim Doolin, 13.
-
- Tim O’Halloran’s Choice, 67.
-
- Tinker’s Hollow, 60.
-
- Tithe-Proctor, The; 48.
-
- To-day in Ireland, 65.
-
- Tom Burke of “Ours,” 142.
-
- Tom Delaney, 242.
-
- Tom O’Kelly, 183.
-
- Tony Butler, 146.
-
- Torn Apart, 195.
-
- Town of the Cascades, The; 21.
-
- Tracked, 213.
-
- Trackless Way, The; 85.
-
- Tradition of the Castle, The; 220.
-
- Through Troubled Waters, 151.
-
- Traffic, 241.
-
- Tragedy of Chris, The; 189.
-
- Tragic Romances, 163.
-
- Traits and Confidences, 136.
-
- Traits and Stories of the Irish Peasantry, 50.
-
- Treasure Trove, 149.
-
- “Trim” and Antrim’s Shores, 87.
-
- _Trinity College_, 33, 112, 114, 123, 141, 146, 147, 154, 185, 230.
-
- Triumph of Failure, The; 208.
-
- Troublesome Trio, A; 35.
-
- True Heart’s Trials, 222.
-
- True Heir of Ballymore, The; 111.
-
- True Irish Ghost Stories, 227.
-
- True Man and Traitor, 33.
-
- True Stories of the Past, 117.
-
- True to the Core, 106.
-
- True to the Watchword, 212.
-
- Tully Castle, 170.
-
- Turf-Fire Stories and Fairy Tales of Ireland, 200.
-
- ’Twas in Dhroll Donegal, 166.
-
- Twentieth Century Hero, A; 195.
-
- Twin Sisters, 191.
-
- Two Chiefs of Dunboy, The; 93.
-
- Two Impostors and Tinker, 56.
-
- Two Irish Arthurian Romances, 153.
-
- Two Little Girls in Green, 183.
-
- Two Masters, 61.
-
- _Tyrone_, 46, 54, 86, 139, 155, 218.
-
-
- Ulick O’Donnell, 115.
-
- Ulrick the Ready, 203.
-
- Ulster Folklore, 16, 94.
-
- Ulsterman, The; 181.
-
- Una’s Enterprise, 206.
-
- Unchronicled Heroes, 82.
-
- Uncle Pat’s Cabin, 251.
-
- Uncle Silas, 139.
-
- Unconventional Molly, 14.
-
- Under one Sceptre, 115.
-
- Under Slieve Ban, 91.
-
- Under Which King? 123.
-
- Union of Hearts, A; 247.
-
- United Irishman, The; 13.
-
- _United States, Irish in_; 10, 13, 119, 121, 133, 143, 144, 147, 207,
- 214, 221, 223, 224, 225, 253.
-
- Unknown Quantity, An; 115.
-
- Unpardonable Sin, The; 74.
-
- Untilled Field, The; 182.
-
- Up for the Green, 113.
-
-
- Valentine M’Clutchy, 47.
-
- Vertue Rewarded, 13.
-
- Veuve Irlandaise, La; 13.
-
- Viceroy, The; 193.
-
- Victorious Career of Cellachain of Cashel, The; 38.
-
- Vision of MacConglinne, The; 180.
-
- Voyage of Bran, Son of Ferbal, to the Land of the Living, The; 180.
-
- Voyage of the Ark, The; 76.
-
- Vultures of Erin, 79.
-
-
- Wager, The; _see_ In Sarsfield’s Days (MacManus).
-
- Waggish Tales, 106.
-
- Waiting, 201.
-
- Walking Trees, The; 188.
-
- Wardlaws, The; 85.
-
- Warp and Weft, 115.
-
- Washer of the Ford, 163.
-
- _Waterford_, 32, 58, 75, 76, 83, 177, 189, 207, 214, 228, 241, 242.
-
- Water Queen, The; 54.
-
- Waves on the Ocean of Life, 252.
-
- Way of a Maid, The; 246.
-
- Way they loved at Grimpat, The; 84.
-
- Way Women Love, The; 30.
-
- Weans at Rowallan, The; 89.
-
- Wearing of the Green, The; 132.
-
- Weird of “The Silken Thomas,” The; 59.
-
- Weird Tales, 13.
-
- Weird Woman of the Wraagh, 53.
-
- West Irish Folk-tales and Romances, 135.
-
- _West Meath_, 2, 22, 192, 222.
-
- _Wexford_, 4, 16, 34, 37, 91, 104, 115, 128, 147, 154, 241, 252.
-
- When Cromwell came to Drogheda, 158.
-
- When Lint was in the Bell, 161.
-
- When Love is Kind, 113.
-
- When we were Boys, 196.
-
- Where the Atlantic meets the Land, 147.
-
- Where the Shamrock Grows, 122.
-
- Whiteboy, The; 104.
-
- White Heather, 200.
-
- Whitethorn Tree, The; 124.
-
- Wicked Woods, The; 191.
-
- _Wicklow_, 3, 9, 17, 26, 44, 45, 53, 73, 80, 105, 144, 156, 157, 162,
- 173, 209, 242.
-
- Wife Hunter, The; 185.
-
- Wild Birds of Killeevy, The; 188.
-
- Wild Geese, The; 253.
-
- Wild Irish Boy, The; 174.
-
- Wild Irish Girl, The; (“Meade”), 177.
-
- Wild Irish Girl, The; (Morgan), 184.
-
- Wild Rose of Lough Gill, The; 232.
-
- Wild Scenes among the Celts, 112.
-
- Wiles of Sexton Maginnis, The; 82.
-
- William and James, 13.
-
- Willy Burke, 224.
-
- Willy Reilly and his Dear Colleen Bawn, 49.
-
- Wine in the Cup, The; 256.
-
- Wine of Love, The; 114.
-
- Winter and Summer Stories, and Slides of Fancy’s Lantern, 120.
-
- With Essex in Ireland, 136.
-
- With Poison and Sword, 205.
-
- Wizard’s Gillie, The; 162.
-
- Wizard’s Knot, The; 25.
-
- Woman Scorned, A; 30.
-
- Women, 174.
-
- Wood of the Brambles, The; 173.
-
- Wooing of Sheila, The; 217.
-
-
- Young O’Briens, The; 253.
-
- Yourself and the Neighbours, 167.
-
- Yesterday in Ireland, 65.
-
-
- Zoe: A Portrait, 51.
-
- Zozimus Papers, 75.
-
-
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-<div style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of Ireland in Fiction, by Stephen J. Brown</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-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
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-country where you are located before using this eBook.
-</div>
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-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: Ireland in Fiction</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:0;'>A Guide to Irish Novels, Tales, Romances, and Folk-lore</p>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: Stephen J. Brown</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: October 31, 2021 [eBook #66638]</div>
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-<div style='display:block; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Produced by: Tim Lindell and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)</div>
-
-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK IRELAND IN FICTION ***</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_i"></a>[i]</span></p>
-
-<h1>IRELAND IN FICTION.</h1>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_ii"></a>[ii]</span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_iii"></a>[iii]</span></p>
-
-<p class="titlepage larger">IRELAND IN FICTION</p>
-
-<p class="titlepage"><i>A GUIDE TO</i><br />
-IRISH NOVELS, TALES, ROMANCES,<br />
-AND FOLK-LORE</p>
-
-<p class="titlepage"><span class="smaller">BY</span><br />
-STEPHEN J. BROWN, S.J.</p>
-
-<p class="center smaller"><i>Author of A Reader’s Guide to Irish Fiction,<br />
-A Guide to Books on Ireland, etc.</i></p>
-
-<p class="titlepage">Do chum glóire Dé agus Onóra na h-Éireann.</p>
-
-<p class="titlepage">MAUNSEL AND COMPANY, LIMITED,<br />
-DUBLIN AND LONDON.<br />
-1916.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_iv"></a>[iv]</span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_v"></a>[v]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CONTENTS.</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<table summary="Contents">
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td class="tdpg smaller">PAGE</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><span class="smcap">Preface</span></td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#PREFACE">vii.</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><span class="smcap">Preface to</span> <i>A Reader’s Guide to Irish Fiction</i> (1910)</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#PREFACE_TO_A_READERS_GUIDE_TO">x.</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><span class="smcap">Acknowledgments</span></td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#ACKNOWLEDGMENTS">xiv.</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><span class="smcap">Signs, Abbreviations, etc.</span></td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#SIGNS_ABBREVIATIONS_ETC">xvii.</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><span class="smcap">Irish Fiction under names of Authors arranged alphabetically</span></td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#IRISH_FICTION_UNDER_NAMES_OF_AUTHORS">1</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><span class="smcap">Appendix</span>:</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="h3">A.—<span class="smcap">Some useful Works of Reference</span></td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#APPENDIX_A">261</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="h3">B.—<span class="smcap">Publishers and Series</span></td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#APPENDIX_B">264</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="h3">C.—<span class="smcap">Irish Fiction in Periodicals</span></td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#APPENDIX_C">270</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="h3">D.—<span class="smcap">Classified Lists</span>:</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="h4">I.—<span class="smcap">Historical Fiction</span></td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#APPENDIX_D_I">273</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="h4">II.—<span class="smcap">Gaelic Epic and Romantic Literature</span></td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#APPENDIX_D_II">279</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="h4">III.—<span class="smcap">Folk-Lore and Legend</span></td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#APPENDIX_D_III">282</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="h4">IV.—<span class="smcap">Fairy Tales for Children</span></td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#APPENDIX_D_IV">283</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="h4">V.—<span class="smcap">Catholic Clerical Life</span></td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#APPENDIX_D_V">284</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="h4">VI.—<span class="smcap">Humorous Books</span></td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#APPENDIX_D_VI">285</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><span class="smcap">Index of Titles and Subjects</span></td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#INDEX">287</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_vi"></a>[vi]</span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_vii"></a>[vii]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="PREFACE">PREFACE.</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>It may be well to state at the outset in what respects the
-present work differs from <i>A Reader’s Guide to Irish Fiction</i>
-published in 1910, and now out of print. The differences
-may be reduced to four:—</p>
-
-<p>(1). The number of books dealt with is almost double
-that of the earlier work.</p>
-
-<p>(2). The arrangement is quite new. In the former work
-the books were classified according to subject matter: in this
-they are arranged under the names of the Authors, these names
-being arranged alphabetically. Some lists are appended in
-which the books are classified as historical novels, Folk-lore,
-Gaelic Epic and Romantic Literature, &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p>(3). A combined title and subject index has been provided,
-both of which were lacking in the earlier book. Some new
-matter is given in the Appendix, in particular some notes on
-fiction in Irish periodicals.</p>
-
-<p>(4). In <i>A Reader’s Guide</i>, &amp;c., a few notes on Authors
-were added at the end. In the present work biographical
-notes on a large proportion of the Authors are given immediately
-before the notes on their books.</p>
-
-<p>Apart from these differences, the two works have the
-same scope and aim. In both, the scope includes all works
-of fiction published in volume form, and dealing with Ireland
-or with the Irish abroad, and such works only. The present
-book, therefore, is not, any more than was the earlier book, a
-guide to the works of Irish novelists—else, Goldsmith, for
-instance, might surely claim a place. Neither is it, properly
-speaking, a book of advice as to what is best to read. The
-aim has been to provide descriptive notes of an <i>objective</i>
-nature, to record facts, not to set forth personal views and
-predilections. This is a book of reference pure and simple;
-it neither condemns nor recommends. In this respect it<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_viii"></a>[viii]</span>
-differs from several other guides to fiction which at first sight
-it seems to resemble. The Abbé Bethléem’s most valuable
-<i>Romans à lire et romans à proscrire</i> has been mentioned in the
-former preface. Its title proclaims its character. Of a
-similar nature are some works by members of my own Order
-that have since come to my knowledge. It will be useful
-to record their titles:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="hanging">1. P. Gerardo Decorme, S.J.—Lecturas recomendables.
-(Barcelona: Luis Gili). 1908.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">2. P. Pablo Ladron de Guevara, S.J.—Novelistas malos
-y buenos. Pp. 523. (Bilbao). 1910.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">3. Was soll ich lesen? Ein Ratgeber [advice giver] für
-Studierende (Trier), 1912.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">4. Guide de Lecture. (Brussels). Second ed., 1912.
-A magnificent 4to volume of 1032 pp., compiled
-by a Belgian Jesuit, Fr. Schmidt, and constituting
-the catalogue of his great Bibliothèque
-Choisie of 200,000 volumes.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">No. 1 devotes only a chapter to fiction. No. 2 contains a
-critical examination from a moral point of view of 413 Spanish
-writers, 1,220 French, 150 English, 98 German, as well as
-Russian, Belgian, &amp;c. No. 3 devotes a section to <i>Schöne
-Literatur</i> giving notes and bibliographical details. Symbols
-are used to indicate the suitability of the books to readers of
-various ages. The same plan is followed in No. 4, but to a
-much fuller extent, and the whole work is on a larger scale.</p>
-
-<p>Enough has been said, I think, in the former preface as
-to the object aimed at in the notes. I have tried to make that
-object clear: I am far from thinking that it has always been
-attained, even in this revised work. Some of the excuses for
-incompleteness that held good for the first steps into an almost
-untrodden field have no doubt ceased to have the same force.
-I have had time to explore new ground, and to survey anew
-that already occupied. On the other hand the years that
-have slipped away since the former book have been filled by
-many duties that left little time for literary work. Yet,
-though I am unable to say with confidence that this work is<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_ix"></a>[ix]</span>
-bibliographically exhaustive, I trust that, for practical purposes,
-for the purposes for which it is intended, it may be
-found reasonably complete. For the achievement of even
-this result I can by no means claim all the credit. My
-obligations to my numerous helpers are very great indeed, as
-will appear from the Acknowledgements.</p>
-
-<p>One further point needs to be dwelt upon—the non-inclusion
-of works of fiction written in the Irish language. I
-cannot do better in this connection than quote from the preface
-to a former work<a id="FNanchor_1" href="#Footnote_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a> in which this same point came up for explanation:—“I
-have not included books in the Irish language.
-My reasons for this are threefold. In the first place my own
-knowledge of Irish is not yet sufficient to enable me even to
-edit satisfactorily notes of books in Irish.... In the
-second place I do not think that a bibliography of works in
-Irish should be made a mere appendage or sub-section, as it
-would inevitably be, of a work such as the present. Lastly,
-it may well be doubted whether the time be yet come for doing
-this work in the way that it deserves to be done.” This last
-reason is partly based on the fact of the great mass of Irish
-literature still remaining in MS., a quantity probably much
-greater than what has been printed and published. The publication
-of the National Library’s bibliography is mentioned
-in the Appendix on Gaelic literature as an additional reason for
-my omission of books in Irish.</p>
-
-<p>Nevertheless, the omission of books in the Irish language
-from a Guide to Irish Fiction remains an anomaly, one of the
-many anomalies produced by the historic causes that have all
-but destroyed the Irish language as the living speech of
-Ireland.</p>
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">Dublin</span>, <i>September</i>, 1915.</p>
-
-<div class="footnotes">
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1" href="#FNanchor_1" class="label">[1]</a> <i>A Guide to Books on Ireland</i>, Part I. (Hodges &amp; Figgis), 1912.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_x"></a>[x]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="PREFACE_TO_A_READERS_GUIDE_TO">PREFACE TO A READERS GUIDE TO
-IRISH FICTION (1910).</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The present <span class="smcap">Guide to Irish Fiction</span> is intended by the
-Author as the first part of a work in which it is hoped to
-furnish notes on books of all kinds dealing with Irish subjects.</p>
-
-<p>Before explaining the scope of this section of the work
-it may be well, in order to forestall wrong impressions, to
-say at once what it is <i>not</i>. In the first place, then, it does
-not lay claim to be a bibliography. By this I do not mean
-that I am content to be inaccurate or haphazard, but simply
-that I do not aim at exhaustive completeness. In the second
-place, it is not a catalogue of books <i>by Irish writers</i>. Lastly,
-it does not deal exclusively with books printed or published in
-Ireland.</p>
-
-<p>The Author’s aim has been to get together and to print
-in a convenient form a classified list of novels, tales, &amp;c.
-(whether by Irish or by foreign writers), bearing on Ireland—that
-is, depicting some phase of Irish life or some episode of
-Irish history—and to append to each title a short descriptive
-note.</p>
-
-<p>Two things here call for some explanation, viz., the list
-of titles and the descriptive notes.</p>
-
-<p>As to the former, I have, with some trifling exceptions,
-included everything that I have been able to discover, provided
-it came within the scope of the work, as indicated above.
-It has been thought well to do this, because a vast amount of
-fiction that, from an artistic or from any other point of view,
-is defective in itself may yet be valuable as a storehouse of
-suggestion, fact, and fancy for later and better writers. For
-was it not worthless old tales and scraps of half-mythical
-history that held the germs of “Hamlet” and “Macbeth,”
-“King Lear” and “Othello”? There remains, indeed a
-large class of novels and tales that, so far as one may judge, can<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xi"></a>[xi]</span>
-serve no useful purpose. It may be thought that with such
-books the best course to pursue is to allow them to pass into
-merited oblivion. But it must be remembered that booksellers
-and publishers will naturally continue to push such
-books because it is their business to do so, and the public
-will continue to buy them because it has ordinarily no other
-means of knowing their contents than the publisher’s announcement,
-the title, or—the cover. A “Guide” would, therefore,
-surely shirk an important portion of its task if it excluded
-worthless books, and thereby failed to put readers on their
-guard.</p>
-
-<p>Next, as regards the descriptive notes: there are three
-points which I should wish to make clear—the source of
-the information contained in these notes; their scope, that
-is, the nature and extent of the information with which they
-purpose to furnish the reader; and, thirdly, the tone aimed
-at throughout the work.</p>
-
-<p>Information about the books has been obtained in various
-ways. A considerable number have been read by the Author.
-Indeed, there are few writers of note included in the Guide
-about whose works he cannot speak from first-hand knowledge.
-Of the books that remain the great majority have been
-specially read for this work by friends, and a full account of
-the same written by them according to a formula drawn up
-for the purpose. In all cases, except in a very few—and
-these have been indicated—the wording of the final note is
-mine. In the few cases referred to, printed reviews or notices
-of the books have been drawn upon, the source of the note
-being mentioned in each instance.</p>
-
-<p>A word about the <i>scope</i> of the notes. My chief object
-in undertaking this work was to help the student of things
-Irish. This object determined the character of the notes.
-A few years ago there appeared in France an excellent
-work, entitled <i>Romans à lire et Romans à proscrire</i> (Cambrai:
-Masson), by the Abbé Bethléem, which has since passed
-through many editions. In this work novels are classed
-<i>au point de vue moral</i>. In the rare cases in which the books<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xii"></a>[xii]</span>
-included in my list contain matter objectionable from a moral
-or a religious standpoint, I have not hesitated to remark the
-fact in the note. This was, however, but a small part of the
-task. It will be clear likewise, from what has been said
-that my object is not to attempt <i>literary</i> criticisms of Irish
-fiction. Such literary appreciations are to be found in other
-works already published, accounts of several of which will be
-found in the Appendix. True, a certain amount of criticism
-is often needed lest the account given of a book should be
-misleading, but it has been avoided wherever it did not seem
-to further the main purpose. This purpose, let me repeat, is,
-above all, to give <i>information</i> to intending readers. I have,
-therefore, endeavoured, as well as might be, in the small
-space available, simply to give a clear idea of the contents of
-the books. In a good many cases I have further attempted
-an appreciation, or rather a characterization, of the book
-in question, but this was not always possible nor, indeed,
-necessary.</p>
-
-<p>Of the tone adopted in these notes little need be said.
-I did not consider that it would further my purpose to aim
-at that literary flavour and epigrammatic turn of phrase
-affected, and with reason, by reviewers in many periodicals.
-Moreover, to do so would have been inconsistent with brevity.
-Then, I must disclaim all intention of saying “clever” things
-at the expense of any book, however low it may deserve
-to be rated. I have endeavoured to avoid, too, the technicalities
-of criticism. Lastly, I trust the little work has not
-been rendered suspect to any class of Irishmen by the undue
-intrusion of religious or political bias.</p>
-
-<p>Apology might well be made here for the defects of the
-work. They will, I fear, be but too evident. But it
-should be borne in mind that, with the exception of Mr.
-Baker’s works, to which I cannot sufficiently acknowledge
-my indebtedness, I have had no guide upon the way, since no
-writer, so far as I am aware, has hitherto dealt in this way
-with Irish fiction as a whole.</p>
-
-<p>It may be asked, for whom especially this book is meant?
-In the first place, I hope it may be useful to the general<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xiii"></a>[xiii]</span>
-reader who wishes to study Ireland. Next, it may help
-in the important and not easy task of selection those who
-have to buy books for any purpose, such as the giving of
-presents, the conferring of prizes in school or out of it, the
-stocking of shops and libraries—in other words, booksellers,
-library committees, heads of schools and colleges, librarians,
-pastors, and many others. Again, it may be of some service
-to lecturers and to popular entertainers. I have some hopes,
-too, that coming writers of Irish fiction, from seeing what has
-been done and what has not yet been done, may get from it
-some suggestions for future work. It may even help in a small
-way towards the realization of a great work not yet attempted,
-the writing of a history of Anglo-Irish literature.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xiv"></a>[xiv]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="ACKNOWLEDGMENTS">ACKNOWLEDGMENTS<br />
-<span class="smaller">(<i>Reader’s Guide, etc.</i>)</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>My best thanks are due, in the first place, to the authorities
-of Clongowes Wood College, without whose constant aid and
-encouragement my task would have been impossible.</p>
-
-<p>Next, I wish to thank those publishers who courteously
-sent me copies of a number of their books, viz., the Irish
-publishers, Messrs. Gill; Duffy; Sealy, Bryers and Walker;
-Maunsel; and Blackie: and the London publishers, Messrs.
-Macmillan; Nelson; Methuen; Dent; Chatto and Windus;
-Burns and Oates; Sands; Blackwood; Nutt; Elliot Stock;
-and Smith, Elder. I should like to give greater prominence
-to the publications of these firms. The plan of this book
-prevents me from doing so but I may say that this little
-work, which will, I hope, help to make known their books,
-could not have appeared but for their generosity.</p>
-
-<p>To those who, as already mentioned, have aided in the
-work by reading books, and supplying information about
-them, my sincerest thanks are hereby tendered. I should
-be glad, if it were possible, to express here my obligations
-to each individually, but I must, for obvious reasons, limit
-myself to this general acknowledgment. There are, however,
-some whom, on account of special obligations on my
-part, I shall have the pleasant task of thanking by name.
-To Mr. E. A. Baker, <span class="allsmcap">M.A., D.LITT.</span>, Librarian of the Woolwich
-Public Library, I am indebted both for kind permission
-to quote from his books and for constant advice and
-suggestion given with the greatest cordiality. To Dr.
-Conor Maguire, of Claremorris, I owe most of my notes of
-books on Irish Folk-lore, and to Mr. Edmund Downey, the
-well-known author and publisher, notes on Lever’s books,
-together with many useful suggestions. Mr. Francis J.
-Bigger, <span class="allsmcap">M.R.I.A.</span>, of Belfast, the always ready and enthusiastic
-helper of every Irish enterprise, has aided me with valuable<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xv"></a>[xv]</span>
-advice and no less valuable encouragement. Mr. J. P.
-Whelan, Librarian of the Kevin Street Public Library, Dublin,
-has rendered me every assistance in his power. Dr. J. S.
-Crone of London, Editor of the <i>Irish Book Lover</i>, has on
-several occasions kindly opened to me the pages of his
-periodical. Lastly, I must acknowledge here, with sincere
-thanks, much help of various kinds given me by many members
-of my own Order, and notably, Rev. M. Russell, <span class="allsmcap">S.J.</span>; Rev.
-M. Corbett, <span class="allsmcap">S.J.</span>; Rev. P. J. Connolly, <span class="allsmcap">S.J.</span>, and the Rev.
-J. F. X. O’Brien, <span class="allsmcap">S.J.</span>—the last of whom very kindly undertook
-the tedious labour of revising my proofs.<a id="FNanchor_2" href="#Footnote_2" class="fnanchor">[2]</a></p>
-
-<h3>[<i>Additional (Present Work).</i>]</h3>
-
-<p>My obligations to my various kind helpers in the present work
-are even greater than in the case of the former book, and I am
-at a loss for an adequate expression of them. My thanks
-have, of course, been privately conveyed, but there are some
-collaborators who have had so large a share in the making of
-this book that I cannot but place on record its indebtedness
-towards them.</p>
-
-<p>For valuable work in the British Museum Library extending
-over a considerable length of time I have to thank
-Mrs. Pearde Beaufort, Miss C. J. Hamilton, and Miss G. B.
-Ryan. For much tedious labour in the rearrangement of the
-matter contained in the earlier book, I am indebted to the
-Misses Chenevix Trench (who also supplied many notes), and
-to Mrs. O’Neill, of Dundalk. To Dr. Crone, whose readiness
-to help when any Irish literary enterprise is afoot is inexhaustible,
-I owe many corrections, suggestions, and additions,
-and the laborious task of revising my MS. and correcting my
-proofs. Mr. Edmund Downey, of Waterford, has kindly
-read part of the proofs. Many books have been read for<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xvi"></a>[xvi]</span>
-me and notes supplied by Lady Gilbert; Mrs. Concannon,
-of Galway; Mrs. L. M. Stacpoole Kenny, of Limerick;
-Miss J. F. Walsh, of Derry; Miss R. Young, of Galgorm
-Castle, Co. Antrim; Mrs. Macken, of the National University;
-Fr. MacDwyer, of Killybegs; and, perhaps most
-of all, Fr. J. Rabbitte, <span class="allsmcap">S.J.</span>, of St. Ignatius College, Galway.
-Mr. D. J. O’Donoghue, Librarian of the National University,
-has given me many suggestions, as well as some useful notes
-on fiction in Irish periodicals. Mr. Frank Macdonagh also
-has been very helpful with notes and corrections. I owe
-likewise a debt of gratitude to the authorities and the staff of
-the National Library for their courtesy and helpfulness. Nor
-must I omit a word of thanks to the publishers (including
-all the Irish publishers, and Messrs. Flynn, of Boston), who,
-as on a former occasion, made my task much lighter by
-supplying me with review copies of their books.</p>
-
-<p>Lastly to all the others, and they are many, who have
-in various ways given me help my very sincere thanks are
-hereby tendered.</p>
-
-<p>For the matter contained in my notes on the Authors, I
-am much indebted to Mr. D. J. O’Donoghue’s <i>Poets of Ireland</i>,
-and to the pages of the <span class="smcap">Irish Book Lover</span>.</p>
-
-<div class="footnotes">
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_2" href="#FNanchor_2" class="label">[2]</a> Through an unfortunate oversight the earlier work contained no
-mention of much kind help rendered me by several students of St. Patrick’s
-College, Maynooth, notably by Rev. J. Henaghan and Rev. J. Pinkman,
-at present priests on the mission. I now gratefully acknowledge this help.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xvii"></a>[xvii]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="SIGNS_ABBREVIATIONS_ETC">SIGNS, ABBREVIATIONS, ETC.</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<table summary="A list of the abbreviations used in this book, and their meanings">
- <tr>
- <td>b.</td>
- <td>= born.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="nw">c. (before dates)</td>
- <td>= approximately.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>d.</td>
- <td>= died, daughter.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>ed.</td>
- <td>= edition, edited, editor, educated.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>q.v.</td>
- <td>= which may be referred to.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>n.d.</td>
- <td>= no date printed in the book referred to.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><i>sqq.</i></td>
- <td>= and following (years or pages).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><b>C.B.N.</b></td>
- <td>= Catholic Book Notes.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><b>D.R.</b></td>
- <td>= The Dublin Review.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><b>I.B.L.</b></td>
- <td>= The Irish Book Lover.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><b>I.E.R.</b></td>
- <td>= The Irish Ecclesiastical Record.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><b>I.M.</b></td>
- <td>= The Irish Monthly.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><b>N.I.R.</b></td>
- <td>= The New Ireland Review.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><b>T. Lit. Suppl.</b></td>
- <td>= The Times Literary Supplement.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><b>C.T.S.I.</b></td>
- <td>= Catholic Truth Society of Ireland.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><b>S.P.C.K.</b></td>
- <td>= Society for the Promotion of Christian Knowledge.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><b>R.T.S.</b></td>
- <td>= Religious Tract Society.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><b>Allibone</b></td>
- <td>= Allibone’s <i>Critical Dictionary of English Literature</i>.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><b>Baker</b></td>
- <td>= Baker’s Guides (<i>see</i> <a href="#APPENDIX_A">Appendix A</a>) a 2 indicates that the new ed. has been used.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><b>Krans</b></td>
- <td>= Krans’s <i>Irish Life in Irish fiction</i>. (<a href="#APPENDIX_A">Appendix A</a>).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><b>Read</b></td>
- <td>= <i>The Cabinet of Irish Literature.</i> (<a href="#APPENDIX_A">Appendix A</a>).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><b>I. Lit.</b></td>
- <td>= <i>Irish Literature</i> in twelve Vols. (<a href="#APPENDIX_A">Appendix A</a>).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><b>N.Y.</b></td>
- <td>= New York.</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_xviii"></a>[xviii]</span></p>
-
-<p class="hanging">The <i>place of publication</i> has been mentioned in the case of books not published
-in Dublin or in London. A list of the Irish publishers will be found
-in <a href="#APPENDIX_B">Appendix B</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">The <i>price</i> of most new novels on first publication is 6<i>s.</i>, not net. When new
-fiction is issued at a lower price than that this price is usually net.
-I have not thought it useful to insert the prices of books no longer
-to be had otherwise than from second-hand booksellers: second-hand
-prices are constantly varying. The publication <i>Book-Prices
-Current</i> might be usefully consulted in some reference library. The
-price I have given is usually the latest price mentioned in the Publishers’
-catalogue.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><i>Dates</i> in square brackets, thus [1829], indicate dates of first publication.
-Besides these I have mentioned the date of the latest edition I am
-aware of.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">The names of an Author placed within square brackets is an indication that
-the name in question did not appear on the title page of the book
-to which it is now affixed, the book having been published anonymously,
-or under a pen-name.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">Inverted commas are used thus “M. E. Francis” to indicate a <i>pen-name</i>.
-The writers’ works are entered under the name most familiar to the
-public, under Katharine Tynan and Rosa Mulholland rather than
-under Mrs. Hinkson and Lady Gilbert. However, in the case of old
-books I have not thought it useful to place the book under the literary
-disguise. I have entered them under the real name, with a cross-reference.
-I fear that perfect uniformity and consistency has not
-been secured, but hope that the book’s usefulness—utility, and not
-scientific precision, has been the aim—is not thus impaired.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">The <i>publishers</i> mentioned are, so far as I have succeeded in discovering
-them, the publishers not of the first, but of the latest edition.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">Books published under a pseudonym which obviously could not be a real
-name, I have entered as anonymous, except where I have come to
-know the real name, in which case it will be found under the real
-name, with a cross reference from the pseudonym.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">When the note depends mainly or exclusively on a single already published
-authority or source, this authority or source is indicated at the end
-of the note.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_1"></a>[1]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="IRISH_FICTION_UNDER_NAMES_OF_AUTHORS">IRISH FICTION UNDER NAMES OF AUTHORS,
-ARRANGED ALPHABETICALLY.</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="author"><b>ANONYMOUS.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ ADVENTURER, THE.</p>
-
-<p>In Mitchel’s <i>Life of Hugh O’Neill</i> there is a note in reference to his wooing
-of Sir Henry Bagenal’s sister, stating that a novel was published founded
-on this story, and entitled <i>The Adventurer</i>. (Query in I.B.L., vol. iv., p. 161.)
-This book does not seem to be in the British Museum Library, but I have
-found in an old catalogue a book with the title “The Adventurers; or,
-Scenes in Ireland in the Reign of Elizabeth, 1825.” This is probably the book
-referred to by Mitchel.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ ADVENTURES OF FELIX AND ROSARITO, THE; or, The Triumph
-of Love and Friendship. Pp. 58. (Title-p. missing). 1802.</p>
-
-<p>The hero is one Felix Dillon. Though the story begins and ends in Dublin,
-its scene is chiefly France, and afterwards Spain.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ ADVENTURES OF MR. MOSES FINEGAN, AN IRISH PERVERT.
-(N.Y.: <i>Benziger</i>). $0.30.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ ALBION AND IERNE: A Political Romance; by “An Officer.”
-Pp. 192. (<i>Marcus Ward</i>). 1886.</p>
-
-<p>An allegory in which the personages stand for countries and institutions.
-Ierne is of course Ireland, Albion is England. Then there are minor
-characters, such as Dash, Dupe, Plan, Sacrifice. Under this form the
-relations between the two countries and the possible results of separation
-are exhibited. Ends with the happy marriage of Albion with Kathleen,
-Ierne’s sister, and the burial of the hereditary feud.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ ANNA REILLY, THE IRISH GIRL. (N.Y.: <i>Pratt</i>). $1.50.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ BALLYBLUNDER: an Irish story. Pp. 291. (<span class="smcap">London</span>: <i>Parker</i>).
-1860.</p>
-
-<p>Scene: the N.E. coast of Ireland, with its rugged rocks and lofty cliffs.
-The plot concerns the kindly family of “Ballyblunder,” on whose estate
-sheep are constantly being killed. A priest instigates to the crime, and
-encourages the perpetrators. Mr. Kindly’s son goes out to track the sheep-killers;
-a friend of his is murdered, and Brady, the murderer, falls off a cliff
-and is killed. The Kindlys eventually sell the estate. Some social scenes
-are interspersed. Written in a spirit of religious intolerance.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ BALLYRONAN.</p>
-
-<p>“A wonderfully interesting story, written in an easy, rattling style, with
-cleverly conceived plot, abundant humour, and no lack of incident. There
-is an unmistakably Irish atmosphere about it, and it bespeaks an intimate
-personal knowledge of the people, not only in regard to their speech, but also
-as to many of their characteristic ways and customs.”—(<i>Press Notices</i>).</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ BLACK MONDAY INSURRECTION. Pp. 135-328.</p>
-
-<p>Bound up with “The Puritan,” <i>q.v.</i> The story opens at Bandon with
-the rescue of two of the principal characters who had been kidnapped by
-Rapparees. Then follows the taking of Bandon by McCarthy More. The<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_2"></a>[2]</span>
-battles of the Boyne and Aughrim, the sieges of Athlone and Limerick are also
-dealt with, the two latter being described in detail. Standpoint: Williamite.
-The Irish are “barbarians,” “brave and savage bacchanalians;” the Rapparees
-are “infernal banditti,” &amp;c., but on the whole the tone is not violent.
-Through it all runs an interesting and curious story of the private fortunes of
-several persons. See <i>The Last of the O’Mahonys</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ BOB NORBERRY; or, Sketches from the Note Book of an Irish Reporter;
-ed. by “Captain Prout.” Pp. 360. Eighteen good illustr. by Henry
-MacManus, <span class="allsmcap">A.R.H.A.</span>, and others. Dedicated to C. Bianconi. (<i>Duffy</i>).
-1844.</p>
-
-<p>The Author (Pref.) tells us that he has written the book to vindicate the
-character of his countrymen, and to show Irish affairs to Englishmen in their
-true light. Accordingly we have, not so much a novel, as a series of crowded
-canvases depicting nearly every phase of life in Ireland from a period before
-the Union to the date of this book. It begins with the marriage of the hero’s
-grandparents in Dublin at the end of the 18th century (1780). We have a
-glimpse of penal laws at work and of agrarian disturbances, but the Author
-is especially at pains all through the book to set forth how the law works in
-Ireland. There are swindling attorneys, bribed and perjured jurors, packed
-benches, partisan judges, endless proceedings in Chancery, and so on. Young
-Bob is sent first to a private school, then to Stonyhurst (an account is given
-of the Jesuits). He is first intended for the priesthood and goes to Louvain,
-but finally becomes a reporter on a Dublin paper. Here we have a picture
-of low journalism. Bob shows up several frauds of self-styled philanthropists,
-describes trial at Assizes of Lord Strangeways’ evicted tenants. This brings
-in much about the agrarian question. The book ends with his elopement to
-the Continent and marriage with Lady Mary Belmullet. There are
-innumerable minor episodes and pictures. There is no literary refinement in
-the style, and the colours of the picture are laid on thickly.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ BRIDGET SULLIVAN; or, The Cup without a Handle. A Tale. 1854.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ BY THE BROWN BOG; by “Owen Roe and Honor Urse.” Pp. 296.
-(<i>Longmans</i>). Illustr. by silhouettes. 1913.</p>
-
-<p>An imitation of the Somerville and Ross stories, but with their leading
-features exaggerated. For Flurry we have Fossy, for Slipper Tinsy Conroy.
-Instead of by an R.M. the stories are told by a young D.I. There is the same
-background of comic and filthy peasants, the same general Irish slovenliness
-and happy-go-luckiness, and universal drunkenness. The brogue is made
-the most of. Moonlighters of a very sinister kind appear once or twice.
-The incidents are such as hunting, racing, the local horseshow, country petty
-sessions, &amp;c. They are very well told, with a jaunty style, and in a vein of
-broad comedy. There is a chapter purporting to relate experiences in
-“The Black North,” but for the most part the scene is West Cork. Some of
-these sketches appeared in the <span class="smcap">Badminton Magazine</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ BYRNES OF GLENGOULAH, THE. Pp. 362. (U.S.A.)</p>
-
-<p>“The incidents related in this tale really and truly occurred, though not in
-the consecutive order in which they are placed” ... viz., “the
-trial and execution, in February, 1846, at the town of Mullingar, Co. Westmeath,
-of Bryan Seery for the murder of Sir Francis Hopkins, Bart.” “The
-characters introduced are all real.” (Pref.) A sad and touching story of the
-heartless treatment of the Irish peasantry by certain of the landlords, picturing
-the deep religious faith of the former, and their patient resignation in their
-sufferings. The plot, which is vigorously worked out, centres in the execution
-of Bryan Seery for the attempted murder of Sir Francis Hopkins, a crime of
-which he was innocent.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_3"></a>[3]</span></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ CAVERN IN THE WICKLOW MOUNTAINS, THE; or, Fate of
-the O’Brien Family. Two Vols. 12mo. (Dublin, <i>printed for the
-Author</i>). 1821.</p>
-
-<p>Told in letters between “Augustus Tranton” and “Sir Edward Elbe.”
-Said on title-p. to be “a tale founded on facts.” Seems to be a re-issue in a
-slightly altered form of <span class="smcap">The United Irishman</span>, <i>q.v.</i> The story is related
-to “Aug. Tranton” by a gentleman (O’Brien) who had been a U.I., and as a
-result had lost all, and was then in hiding in a cave near the Dargle river.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ CHARACTERISTIC SKETCHES OF IRELAND AND THE IRISH.
-16mo. Pp. 288. (<span class="smcap">Halifax</span>). 1849.</p>
-
-<p>A reprint of an earlier publication by Philip Dixon Hardy, the fourth
-edition of which appeared in 1842. Contents: I. By Carleton:—“The Horse
-Stealers,” “Owen McCarthy,” “Squire Warnock,” “The Abduction,” “Sir
-Turlough.” II. By Lover:—“A Legend of Clanmacnoise” (<i>sic</i>), “Ballads
-and Ballad Singers,” “Paddy Mullowney’s Travels in France.” III. By
-Mrs. Hall:—“The Irish Agent,” “Philip Garraty.”</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ CHARLES MOWBRAY; or, Duelling, a tale founded on fact. Pp. 82.
-(<span class="smcap">Cork</span>). 1847.</p>
-
-<p>By the author of “The Widow O’Leary.” Dr. B., whose parents live at Y.
-(probably Youghal), has a practice in England. He is challenged to fight a
-duel by Sir J. C. He is killed, and his parents both die from the shock.
-A dull little book, with much moralising.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ COLONEL ORMSBY; or, the genuine history of an Irish nobleman
-in the French service. Two Vols. (<span class="smcap">Dublin</span>). 1781.</p>
-
-<p>In form of letters between the Colonel and Lady Beaumont, couched in the
-most amatory terms. There is no reference to Ireland and little to the history
-of the gallant Colonel: the correspondence is all about the private love affairs
-of the writers.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ DUNSANY: an Irish Story. Two Vols. 12mo. Pp. 278 + 308.
-(<span class="smcap">London.</span>) 1818.</p>
-
-<p>The principal character and a few of the others, <i>e.g.</i>, Mrs. Shady
-O’Blarney (!), happen to be born in Ireland, and there is talk of the usual
-tumbled-down castle somewhere in Ireland, but at this the Irishism of the
-story stops. The scene is England, the persons wholly English in sympathy
-and education. A sentimental and insipid story dealing chiefly with the
-marrying off of impecunious sons and daughters. Interesting as giving a
-picture, seen from an English standpoint, of the Irish society of the day.
-No politics.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ EARLY GAELIC ERIN; or, Old Gaelic Stories of People and Places.
-(<span class="smcap">Dublin</span>). 1901.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ EDMOND OF LATERAGH: a novel founded on facts. Two vols.
-(<span class="smcap">Dublin</span>). 1806.</p>
-
-<p>Two lovers kept apart by cruel circumstances and villainous plots meet
-at last and are happy. This thread serves to connect many minor plots,
-which bring us from Ireland (near Killarney) to England and then the
-continent and back again, and introduce a great variety of personages. These
-latter are nearly all of the Anglo-Irish Protestant gentry—Wharton, Wandesford,
-Peyton, Ulverton, Blackwood, Elton—no Irish name is mentioned.
-Great profusion of incident, but not very interestingly told. No historical
-or social background. Relates rather a large number of instances of misconduct.
-Speaks of “paraphernalia of Popish doctrine,” yet one of the
-best characters is Father Issidore (<i>sic</i>).</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_4"></a>[4]</span></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ EDMUND O’HARA: an Irish Tale. Pp. 358. (<span class="smcap">Dublin</span>: <i>Curry</i>). 1828.</p>
-
-<p>By the author of “Ellmer Castle.” A controversial story of an anti-Catholic
-kind. The hero goes to Spain to be educated for the priesthood.
-He meets Hamilton, who indoctrinates him with Protestantism. They are
-wrecked off the Irish coast. A priest refuses them the money to take them
-home to the North of Ireland, while the Protestants generously give it. He
-falls in love with Miss Williams, who insists on a year’s probation so that he
-may be sufficiently “adorned with Christian graces.” But he dies, and she
-marries Hamilton.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ ELLMER CASTLE. Pp. 320. (<span class="smcap">Dublin</span>: <i>Curry</i>). 1827.</p>
-
-<p>By the author of “Edmund O’Hara,” <i>q.v.</i> Henry Ellmer travels, and
-comes back converted to convert his family. He causes only anger and
-disturbance. They turn him out, and he departs with a blessing. But
-after some adventures returns to his father’s deathbed. Contains much
-controversial matter.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ EMERALD GEMS. (<span class="smcap">Boston</span>). 1879.</p>
-
-<p>“A Chaplet of Irish Fireside Tales, Historic, Domestic, and Legendary.
-Compiled from approved sources.”</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ FATHER BUTLER; or, Sketches of Irish Manners. 16mo. (<span class="smcap">Philadelphia</span>).
-1834.</p>
-
-<p>I am not sure whether this is the American edition of a little Souper tract
-by Carleton (<i>q.v.</i>) published by Curry in 1829, in which Father Butler finally
-is convinced of the falsity of his religion and becomes a Protestant.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ FATHER JOHN; or, Cromwell in Ireland (1649); by “S. E. A.”
-Pp. 477. (<i>Whittaker</i>, later <i>Gill</i>). Still reprinted. [1842].</p>
-
-<p>A well told story, with a love interest and a mystery admirably sustained
-to the end. The plot largely turns on the misfortunes and sufferings brought
-about by Father John’s fidelity to the secrecy of the confessional, a fidelity
-which the author strongly condemns. The hero is a young Irish Protestant,
-who before the close of the story has converted to his faith such of the Catholic
-personages of the tale as do not rank as villains. The moral of the story is
-the iniquity and falseness of the Catholic religion, for which the author
-throughout displays a very genuine horror. The author’s political sympathies
-are Ormondist, but Owen Roe O’Neill is favourably described. The massacres
-of Drogheda and Wexford are described. It is “by the Author of ‘The
-Luddite’s Sister,’ ‘Richard of York,’” &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ FAVOURITE CHILD, THE; or, Mary Ann O’Halloran, an Irish tale:
-by a retired priest. (<span class="smcap">Dublin</span>). 1851.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ FOLK-LORE AND LEGENDS (Ireland); edited by “C. J. T.”
-16mo. Pp. 192. (<i>Gibbings</i>). 1889.</p>
-
-<p>A volume of a good popular series which includes vols. on Oriental, English,
-German, American, and other folk-lores. Thirty-three tales chosen from
-published collections, chiefly Croker’s. A good selection. Humorous and
-extravagant element not too prominent. Some in dialect. Some titles:—“Fuin”
-(<i>sic</i>), “MacCumhal and the Salmon of Knowledge,” “Flory Cantillon’s
-Funeral,” “Saint Brandon” (<i>sic</i>), and “Donagha,” “Larry Hayes,”
-and “The Enchanted Man,” “The Brewery of Egg-shells,” “The Field of
-Boliauns,” &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ FORD FAMILY IN IRELAND, THE. Three Vols. (<span class="smcap">London</span>: <i>Newby</i>).
-1845.</p>
-
-<p>Ford, an English merchant comes to the west coast of Ireland to pursue
-a business speculation in grain, and brings his family. He is imprisoned<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_5"></a>[5]</span>
-owing to a misunderstanding, and his daughter marries an officer, Macalbert,
-who becomes chief of the pikemen, and eventually dies on the scaffold.
-Period: ’98, soon after the landing of French at Killala. Point of view:
-very sympathetic towards Ireland and anti-Orange. No religious bias. A
-pathetic and a dramatic story.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ FRANK O’MEARA; or, The Artist of Collingwood; by “T. M.”
-Pp. 320. (<span class="smcap">Dublin</span>: <i>McGlashan &amp; Gill</i>). 1876.</p>
-
-<p>Frank, of the tenant class, falls in love with the landlord’s daughter, Fanny.
-Their love is discovered, and Frank finds it best to emigrate to Australia.
-Here he has various adventures—bush-rangers, gold-diggings, and so on. A
-comic element is afforded by the sayings and doings of his man, Jerry Doolin.
-Meanwhile F’s father and his friend, another widower, contend for the
-favours of the widow Daly—rather broad comedy—while Fanny, without
-losing her place in society, is running a bookshop while waiting for Frank.
-All is well in the end. A very pleasant story in every respect. “Collingwood”
-is a village near Melbourne. Part of the story takes place at Bray.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ GERALD AND AUGUSTA; or, The Irish Aristocracy. Pp. 320.
-(<i>Cameron &amp; Ferguson</i>). 6<i>d.</i> paper.</p>
-
-<p>How Gerald, orphan son of Lord Clangore, is brought up in London to be
-anti-Irish, while his sister is brought up by a Mr. Knightly (a stay-at-home
-Irish squire absorbed in Ireland) to love Ireland. How chance brings Gerald
-to Ireland where he is quite won over to her cause. This chance is a wreck
-off the W. coast of Ireland resulting in Gerald’s falling temporarily into the
-hands of “Captain Rock.” Many amusing adventures and situations follow.
-The author’s sympathies are all for Ireland, but they are not blind or unreasoned
-sympathies. Very ably written both in style and construction.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ HAMPER OF HUMOUR, A; by Liam. Pp. 176. (<i>Gill</i>). 2<i>s.</i> 1913.</p>
-
-<p>A series of character and <i>genre</i> studies—the shy man, the drunken driver
-who wakes to find himself in a hearse and thinks it is his own funeral, the
-returned American, the magistrates who do a good turn for their friends.
-In this last and in several other sketches (notably in the two concerned with
-Cork railways) there is a note of satire. There is plenty of genuine humour
-to justify the title. The Cork accent is cleverly hit off; practically all the
-sketches are more or less Corkonian.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ HARRY O’BRIEN: a Tale for Boys. (N.Y.: <i>Benziger</i>. 0.25 net.
-<i>Burns and Lambert</i>). 1859.</p>
-
-<p>By the author of “Thomas Martin.” A little pious and moral Catholic
-story. The scene is laid in London.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ HERMITE EN IRLANDE, L’. Two Vols. 12mo. (<span class="smcap">Paris</span>: <i>Pillet
-Ainé</i>). 1826.</p>
-
-<p>“Ou observations sur les mœurs et usages des irlandais au commencement
-du xix siècle.” Interspersed with stories, occupying a large part of the book.
-Titles:—“Le Cunnemara,” “Le naufrage,” “Mogue le Boiteux,” “Le
-rebelle,” “La sorcière de Scollough’s Gap,” “Les bonnes gens,” “Les cluricaunes,”
-“Bill le Protestant,” “Turncoat Watt ou l’apostat,” “Le double
-vengeance,” “Le retour de l’absent,” etc. These are obviously taken for
-the most part from Whitty’s book, <i>q.v.</i></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ HONOR O’MORE’S THREE HOMES. (N.Y.: <i>Benziger</i>). 0.25 net.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ HUGH BRYAN: The Autobiography of an Irish Rebel. (<span class="smcap">Belfast</span>).
-Pp. 478. 1866.</p>
-
-<p>Scene: Valley of Blackwater, Lismore. Time: end of eighteenth century
-(1798) and beginning of nineteenth century. May be described as a Souper<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_6"></a>[6]</span>
-story. Purports to be a moving picture of the last struggle of the Gael against
-the English Planter, ending in failure, and resulting, in the hero’s case, in
-conversion to Protestantism. He finally marries an escaped nun whom he
-meets in an English town while engaged in slum-work.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ IRISH BUBBLE AND SQUEAK, THE. Pp. 160. (<span class="smcap">London</span>: <i>Clarke
-&amp; Beeton</i>). 1854.</p>
-
-<p>“A selection [thirty-five in all] of the most popular Irish tales, anecdotes,
-wit, and humour, illustrative of the manners and customs of the Irish
-peasantry.” There is many a hearty laugh in these stories, especially for
-ourselves, for in them the Irishman always comes out on top. Some of the
-titles are:—“Serving a writ in Ireland,” “Anecdotes of Curran,” “Irish
-Bulls,” “Paddy Doyle’s Trip to Cork,” “Lending a Congregation,” &amp;c.
-&amp;c.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ IRISH COQUETTE, THE: a novel. Vol. I. 1844.</p>
-
-<p>No more published. Scene: an old Castle in the South of Ireland.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ IRISH EXCURSION, THE; or, I Fear to Tell You. Four Vols.
-Pp. 1205. (<span class="smcap">Dublin</span>: <i>Lane</i>). 1801.</p>
-
-<p>How Mrs. M’Gralahan and family came to London and what they heard
-and saw and did there. The Irish are represented as dishonest, extravagant,
-and many other things, but all this and more is to be remedied by
-the great panacea—the Union—and the last of the four volumes closes with,
-“Bless the Beloved Monarch of the Union.” Full of political discussions
-and of lectures delivered to Ireland. What the Author “fears to tell” us is
-not clear.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ IRISH FAIRY TALES. Illustrated by Geoffry Strahan. (<i>Gibbings</i>).
-2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
-
-<p>A neat little volume, prettily illustrated, suitable as a present for children.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ IRISH FIRESIDE STORIES, TALES AND LEGENDS. Pp. 400.
-(N. Y.: <i>Kenedy</i>). 63 cents. net. Illustr. 1910.</p>
-
-<p>“It brings out very well the true Irish wit, for which that race is famous.”—(<i>Publ.</i>).</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ IRISH GIRL, THE: a Religious Tale. Pp. 102. (<span class="smcap">London</span>: <i>Walker</i>).
-One engraving by Parris. 1814. Second ed. same year.</p>
-
-<p>By the Author of “Coelebs Married.” The girl begins life in a mud hut
-in the filthiest and most disgusting conditions. She is found in a barn and
-taken in by kindly English people, and after a little management becomes a
-Protestant at the age of fourteen, and indeed quite a theologian in her way.
-A visit to a church in Cork and to Ardman, near Youghal, where the dust of
-St. Dillon is sold by the bushel for miracle purposes, completes her conversion.
-The book is full of the vilest slanders against the Catholic Church. The Irish
-are represented as murderers and savages driven on by their priests.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ IRISH GUARDIAN, THE: a Pathetic Story; by “A Lady.” Two
-Vols. (<span class="smcap">Dublin</span>). 1776.</p>
-
-<p>Told in a series of letters to Miss Julia Nesbitt, Dublin, from Sophia Nesbitt,
-of “Brandon Castle,” in Co. Antrim, and from Sabina Bruce, of “Edenvale,”
-Co. Antrim. The two Miss Nesbitts fall in love, and the course of their love
-affairs forms the chief subject of the letters. These are dated 1771. There
-is some vague description of Irish places, but feminine matters, chiefly, absorb
-the writers. To be found in Marsh’s Library, Dublin.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ IRISH LOVE TALES. (N. Y.: <i>Pratt</i>). $1.50.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_7"></a>[7]</span></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ IRISHMAN AT HOME, THE. Pp. 302. (<i>McGlashan &amp; Orr</i>). Five
-Woodcuts by Geo. Measom. 1849.</p>
-
-<p>“Characteristic Sketches of the Irish Peasantry.” In part reprinted from
-the <span class="smcap">Dublin Penny Journal</span>. “The Whiteboy” (1828) Cahill, a <i>scullogue</i>,
-hanged an innocent man, for which the Whiteboys cut out his tongue. “The
-Rockite” is a man who took the oath of the secret society when drunk and
-had to go through with the business. “The Wrestler,” description of the
-Bog of Allen and of a wake. “The False Step,” a pathetic story of an Irish
-girl’s ruin, her broken heart, and her mother’s death. “The Fatal Meeting”
-(1397). How a Palmer meets Raymond de Perrilleaux at St. Patrick’s
-Purgatory in Lough Derg, and what came of the meeting. They nearly all
-depict wild times. There is no religious bias, an absence of humour, and much
-description of scenery.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ IRISHMAN, THE; or, The Favourite of Fortune. Two Vols.
-(<span class="smcap">London</span>). 1772.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ IRISHMEN, THE: a Military-Political Novel; by “A Native
-Officer.” Two Vols. 12mo. (<span class="smcap">London</span>: <i>Newman</i>). 1810.</p>
-
-<p>Title-page:—“Wherein the idiom of each character is carefully preserved
-and the utmost precaution constantly taken to render the ebullitionary
-phrases peculiar to the sons of Erin inoffensive as well as entertaining.”
-Told in letters between Major O’Grady and Major-General O’Lara, Miss
-Harriet O’Grady, and Lady Arabella Fitzosborne. The letters are full of
-italics and of the trifling gossip of fashionable or domestic life. The personages
-all live in England. Letters from Patrick O’Rourke to Taddy McLenna—heavy
-humour. Seem to contain no politics save a passing reference to the
-war then (1808) in progress.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ IRISH PEARL, THE: a Tale of the Time of Queen Anne. Pp. 98.
-(<span class="smcap">Dublin</span>: <i>Oldham</i>). 1850.</p>
-
-<p>Reprinted from the <span class="smcap">Christian Ladies’ Magazine</span> for 1847 and published
-for charitable purposes. A religious tale of a strongly Evangelical and anti-Roman
-character, in which Father Eustace, the hermit of Gougane Barra,
-relates to Lady Glengeary his own conversion to Protestantism and that of
-her mother. Lady G., in her turn, relates her conversion to Lady Ormond,
-who tells the story to Queen Anne.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ IRISH PLEASANTRY AND FUN. Pp. 380. 9¼ + 7 in. (<i>Gill</i>). 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>
-16 illustr. by J. F. O’Hea. [1892] 1910.</p>
-
-<p>Still reprinted without change, and is as popular as ever. Seventy-two
-stories, fourteen anonymous, the bulk of the remainder by Carleton, Lover,
-and Lever. Maginn, Maxwell, and M. J. Barry are represented by two each;
-Irwin, Lefanu, Lynam, Coyne, Sullivan by one each. Practically all the
-tales are of the Lover (<i>Handy Andy</i>, <i>q.v.</i>) type, genuinely funny in their
-way, but broadly comic, farcical, and full of brogue. The illustrations are
-some of them clever, but inartistic and of the most pronouncedly Stage-Irish
-kind.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ IRISH PRIEST, THE; or, What for Ireland? Pp. 171. 16mo.
-(<i>Longman, Brown, Green, &amp;c.</i>). 1847.</p>
-
-<p>“This sees the light with the earnest hope that it may conciliate prejudice,
-disarm opposition....” The Author speaks of his “intensest sympathy for
-a despoiled, neglected, ill-used people.” Supposed to be a MS. given to a
-doctor in the W. of Ireland by a doctor on his deathbed. Sentimental and
-emotional in style. A rambling series of incidents in priest’s life, with much
-moralising of a non-Catholic tone. Incidents of land agitation given, without
-explanation of their causes. Suggestions to make Ireland an ideal place, &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_8"></a>[8]</span></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ IRISH WIDOW, THE; or, A Picture from life of Erin and her Children;
-by author of “Poor Paddy’s Cabin.” Pp. 205. 12mo. (<span class="smcap">London</span>:
-<i>Wertheim and Macintosh</i>). 1855.</p>
-
-<p>Like the Author’s former work, this deals with the religious question in
-Ireland from a Protestant (Evangelical) standpoint. But in this case the
-personages are drawn from the middle classes, the causes of their enslavement
-to Rome being set forth. It is full of religious controversy. See ch. xvi.
-“The Fruits of an Irish Church Missions sermon,” and ch. xviii., “Priest
-and Landlords.”</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ JIM EAGAN. (<span class="allsmcap">N.Y.</span>: <i>Pratt</i>). $1.00.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ KATE KAVANAGH. (<span class="allsmcap">N.Y.</span>: <i>Benziger</i>). 0.45 net.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ LAST DROP OF ’68, THE: a Picture of Real Life with Imaginary
-Characters; by “An Irish Bramwellian.” Pp. 127. (<i>Hodges Figgis</i>).
-1<i>s.</i> 1885.</p>
-
-<p>Begins in Dublin, the teller being a Dublin lawyer, but nearly all the incidents
-take place out of Ireland. All the personages are more or less disreputable,
-including the teller, but especially the hero, Helgate, who is a
-thorough blackguard. The story consists chiefly in the doings of this latter,
-a drunken, swindling wretch, who deceives foolish people and lives on them.
-The writer does not seem to adopt any definite moral attitude. ’68 refers to the
-<i>vintage</i> of that year.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ LAST OF THE O’MAHONYS, THE; and other historical tales of the
-English settlers in Munster. Three Vols. (<i>Bentley</i>). 1843.</p>
-
-<p>Contents:—1. “The Title-story.” 2. “The Physician’s Daughter.” 3.
-“The Apprentice.” 4. “Emma Cavendish.” 5. “The Puritan.” 6.
-“Black Monday.” Scene: Co. Cork and chiefly around Bandon. All deal
-with troublous times of 17th century as seen from the settlers’ point of
-view, with which the Author is in sympathy. The Irish are painted in no
-flattering colours. Useful historical notes are appended. Longer notices of
-Nos. 5 and 6 are given as specimens of the whole.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ LEGENDS AND FAIRY TALES OF IRELAND. With 50 wood
-engravings. Large 12mo. (<span class="allsmcap">N.Y.</span>: <i>Kenedy</i>). 63 cents net.</p>
-
-<p>Being a complete collection of all the Fairy Tales published by Crofton
-Croker and embodying the entire volumes of Kenedy’s <i>Fictions of the Irish
-Celts</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ LIFE IN THE IRISH MILITIA; or, Tales of the Barrack Room. Pp.
-255. (<span class="smcap">London</span>: <i>Ridgway</i>). 1847.</p>
-
-<p>The dedication (to O’Connell) is dated 1834, and the first words of the book
-are “In the summer of 1833....” A very eccentric book, intended by
-the Author (a lady) as a satire on the “fashionable depravities of the times,”
-with intent to “exhibit folly and vice to public scorn and reproach.” (Pref.).
-She is out against proselytism, bigotry, hypocrisy, aristocracy, race-hatred
-between Ireland and England, and all abuses that bear heavily on the people.
-This book consists of various parts:—I. “The Sojourner in Dublin”—a
-young Englishman who lives in lodgings and tells what he sees and hears.
-II. “The Modern Pharisees of the city of Shim-Sham in Ireland,” in the
-form of a story. III. “Life in the Irish Militia”—a fierce attack on the
-militia, especially a Northern and a Kerry regiment. IV. “A Visit to
-Killarney.” V. An Allegorical Tale.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ MAD MINSTREL, THE; or, The Irish Exile. (<i>Murray</i>). 1812.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_9"></a>[9]</span></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ MICK TRACY, THE IRISH SCRIPTURE READER; or, The
-Martyred Convert and the Priest; by “W. A. C.” (<i>Partridge</i>). 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>
-Illustr., but without reference to the story. <i>n.d.</i></p>
-
-<p>The hero is “a day labourer reared in the R.C. communion but through
-mercy enabled to see its delusions and to escape from them.” He is denounced
-by the priest and assaulted by the parishioners. These are prosecuted, but
-the only result is moonlighting, murder, and the kidnapping of converts.
-Yet the converts multiply. The reproduction of the brogue is ludicrous.
-See <i>Tim Doolin</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ MISTLETOE AND THE SHAMROCK, THE; or, The Chief of the
-North. (<span class="smcap">Glasgow</span>: <i>Cameron &amp; Ferguson</i>). 6<i>d.</i></p>
-
-<p>In C. &amp; F.’s “Sensation Series of Sixpenny Novels.”</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ MY OWN STORY: a Tale of Old Times. Pp. 168. (<i>Curry</i>). One
-illustr. by Geo. Petrie, engraved by Kirkwood. 1829.</p>
-
-<p>James O’Donnell is sworn in by a priest and joins the rebels, but later he
-is made a “Bible Christian,” turns traitor, and is eventually hanged.
-Period: some time in reign of George III. The country about Fort nan Gall
-and the woods of Coolmore are described.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ NATIONAL FEELING; or, The History of Fitzsimon: a Novel, with
-Historical and Political Remarks; by “An Irishman.” Two Vols.
-(<i>Dublin</i>). 1821.</p>
-
-<p>A straggling story of the adventures in Ireland (Co. Mayo and Dublin) and
-abroad of Edward F. Tells of the progress of his wooing of Matilda, which
-is much interfered with by the machinations of a wicked lord. There are
-also some minor love affairs. Pp. 103 <i>sqq.</i> of Vol. I. contain some pictures
-of Dublin life at the time, introducing public personages such as the Duke of
-Leinster, Lady Rossmore, Mr. Justice Fletcher, Alderman M’Kenny, &amp;c.
-The hero goes to the U.S. and then to S. America. The title of the tale
-seems to be due to his meeting various peoples—Greeks, Argentiners, Chilians,
-&amp;c.—fighting for their national independence. See pp. 206, 217, 222. I
-failed to come across Vol. II. Preface shows Author to be Nationalist in his
-Irish views.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ NICE DISTINCTIONS: a Tale. Pp. 330. (<i>Hibernia Press Offices</i>).
-1820.</p>
-
-<p>Scene: Co. Wicklow. The Courtneys of Glendalough Abbey have a
-tutor named Charles Delacour, who makes friends with the clergyman’s
-family—Mr. Vernon and his wife, son, and daughters. Presented ultimately
-with a living, he marries Maria Vernon. Many subordinate characters of
-no importance are introduced into this invertebrate tale, the style of which is
-stilted and unnatural.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ OLD COUNTRY, THE: a Christmas Annual. Pp. 200. Demy 8vo.
-(<i>Sealy, Bryers</i>). 1<i>s.</i> 1893.</p>
-
-<p>Irish Stories (and Poems) by Katherine Tynan, F. Langbridge, Dick
-Donovan, Edwin Hamilton, W. B. Yeats, Edmund Downey, Nora Wynne,
-&amp;c., &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ OUTCAST, THE: a Story of the Modern Reformation. Pp. 172.
-(<i>Curry</i>). 1831.</p>
-
-<p>The “Outcast” was educated for the priesthood, read Voltaire and
-Rousseau, but did not finally awake to the error of the Roman “system” until
-he had read <i>Italy</i>, by Lady Morgan. He ceases to believe in Catholicism;
-is turned out by his father, while his mother dies of a broken heart. There
-is a description of the Slaney. Contains much that would be extremely
-offensive to Catholics and some remarks about Confession and Mass that
-would appear to them blasphemous.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_10"></a>[10]</span></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ PASSION AND PEDANTRY: a Novel illustrative of Dublin Life.
-Three Vols. (<span class="smcap">London</span>: <i>Newby</i>). 1853.</p>
-
-<p>A somewhat ordinary tale of the fortunes of young Charles Desmond, an
-army officer, is made the vehicle for a careful and detailed picture of manners
-and customs at the period, and for a presentation of the Author’s views on
-things Irish, though with little reference to politics or to religion. The plot,
-such as it is, turns chiefly on the question whether Charles will come in for
-his old uncle’s money and will, in spite of whispering tongues, marry the lady—both
-of which he does. The conversation of some of the personages is full
-of pedantry and of quotations in various languages. Dublin life well portrayed
-by a keen observer.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ PEAS-BLOSSOM; by the Author of “Honour Bright.” (<i>Wells,
-Gardner</i>). 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> 30 illustr. by Helen Miles. C. 1911.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Peas-blossom’ may be described as a rollicking, respectable Irish story,
-the names of the juvenile pair of heroes being Pat and Paddy.... An exceptionally
-readable volume.”—(<span class="smcap">Times</span>).</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ PHILIP O’HARA’S ADVENTURES [and other tales]. Pp. 144.
-(<i>Chambers</i>). 1885.</p>
-
-<p>A young man’s adventures in the American Civil War. Only the first
-story has the slightest connection with Ireland.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ POOR PADDY’S CABIN; or, Slavery in Ireland. By “An Irishman.”
-Pp. xii. + 242. 12mo. (<span class="smcap">London</span>: <i>Wertheimer &amp; Macintosh</i>).
-2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> Second edition. 1854.</p>
-
-<p>“A true representation of facts and characters,” names of persons and places
-being disguised. “His [the Author’s] aim has been, along with a matter-of-fact
-representation of the real state of things in Ireland, to exhibit in a parable ...
-a just and true view of what the gracious dealings of the Almighty always
-are.” (Pref.). A pamphlet in story form written against the Catholic Church
-in Ireland and in support of the “Irish Reformation Movement.” Appendix,
-giving with entire approval a bitterly anti-Catholic article from the <span class="smcap">Times</span>
-of November 29th, 1853 (?), and others of like nature from the <span class="smcap">Morning
-Advertiser</span> (Oct. 22nd, 1853). The characters are drawn from the peasant
-class.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ POPULAR TALES AND LEGENDS OF THE IRISH PEASANTRY.
-Pp. 404. (<span class="smcap">Dublin</span>: <i>W. F. Wakeman</i>). Illustr. by Samuel Lover. 1834.</p>
-
-<p>Fifteen stories, including two by Carleton and one by Mrs. S. C. Hall. Five
-are by Denis O’Donoho, three by J. L. L., and one each by J. M. L. and
-B. A. P. Titles:—“Charley Fraser,” “The Whiteboy’s revenge,” “Laying
-a ghost,” “The wife of two husbands,” “Mick Delany,” “The lost one,”
-“The dance,” “The Fetch,” “The 3 devils,” “The Rebel Chief, 1799,”
-&amp;c., &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ PRIESTS AND PEOPLE: a No-rent Romance; by the Author of
-“Lotus,” etc. Three Vols. (<span class="smcap">London</span>: <i>Eden, Remington</i>). 1891.</p>
-
-<p>“Lotus” is by I. M. O. A book inspired by the bitterest dislike and
-contempt for Ireland. The views expressed by the young English soldier
-(p. 101) seem throughout to be those of the author. The interest turns almost
-entirely on the relations between landlord, tenant, and League, and no effort
-is spared to represent the two latter in the most odious light. It is the work of
-a practised writer, and the descriptions are distinctly good and the story
-well told. The brogue is painfully travestied. The author is ignorant of
-Catholic matters.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_11"></a>[11]</span></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ PROTESTANT RECTOR, THE. Pp. 216. (<i>Nesbit</i>). 1830.</p>
-
-<p>At the hospitable Protestant rectory even the priest is received. This
-priest “performed several masses on Sundays”: he is frequently drunk.
-He goes to Rome and, at the “fearful sight” of the Pope treated as God, he
-recoils in disgust, and is converted. On his return he is again welcomed at
-the Rectory, where he converts many and dies a holy death.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ PURITAN, THE. Pp. 134.</p>
-
-<p>The interest of this story turns chiefly on the religious differences of the
-times. The author is for “the calm and rational service of the Church of
-England” as against the new fanaticism of the Parliamentarians. The
-characters, such as those of Obadiah Thoroughgood and Lovegrace, are
-well-drawn. There is but little local colour and no description of scenery.
-The scene is laid at Bandon, Co. Cork. Bound up in one vol. with “Black
-Monday Insurrection,” <i>q.v.</i>, being Vol. III. of <i>The Last of The O’Mahonys</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ RIDGEWAY; by “Scian Dubh.” Pp. xx. + 262 (close print).
-(<span class="smcap">Buffalo</span>: <i>McCarroll</i>). 1868.</p>
-
-<p>“An historical romance of the Fenian invasion of Canada,” June, 1866.
-Introd. (pp. xx. close print) gives a view of Irish history and politics from a
-bitterly anti-English point of view. England has been “a traitor, a perjurer,
-a robber, and an assassin throughout the whole of her infamous career.”
-Append. gives in 5 pp. an “Authentic Report” of the invasion of Canada,
-Fenianism is fully discussed, especially in ch. vi. Career of Gen. O’Neill,
-ch. vii. A love story of an ordinary kind is used as a medium for politics and
-historical narrative.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ ROBBER CHIEFTAIN, THE. Pp. 342. Post 8vo. (<i>Duffy</i>). 2<i>s.</i>
-[1863]. Still in Print.</p>
-
-<p>Scene chiefly Dublin Castle. Cromwellian cruelties under Ludlow depicted,
-and early years of Restoration. The Robber Chieftain is Redmond O’Hanlon,
-the Rapparee. The Ven. Oliver Plunket is also one of the characters. Some
-incidents suggest Catholic standpoint, but in places the book reads like a
-non-Catholic (though not anti-Catholic) tract. The hero and heroine are
-Protestant. Full of sensational incidents, duels, waylayings by robber bands,
-law court scenes, tavern brawls. Also many repulsive scenes of drunkenness
-among the native Irish, and of murder, wild vengeance, and villainy of
-all kinds. Hardly suitable for young people.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ ROMAN CATHOLIC PRIEST, THE. Pp. 298. (<i>Curry</i>). One illustr.
-by Kirkwood. 1827.</p>
-
-<p>A Catholic boy, Doyle, risks his life and saves a Protestant boy from
-drowning. The boy’s father out of gratitude offers to send Doyle to T.C.D.,
-guaranteeing that “he will not have to make even a temporary renunciation
-of his religion.” But the priest refuses, and soon Doyle becomes a Protestant.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ SAINT PATRICK: a National Tale of the Fifth Century; by “An
-Antiquary.” Three Vols. (<span class="smcap">Edin.</span>: <i>Constable</i>). 1819.</p>
-
-<p>A romance of love and vengeance and druidical mysteries into which
-St. Patrick enters as one of the <i>dramatis personæ</i>. There are plenty of exciting
-incidents, some fine scenes, and a very good picture of druidism in the fifth
-century. Very well written but for the unfortunate introduction of modern
-Irish brogue and Scotch dialect. The religious point of view is Church of
-Ireland, and there is an effort to represent the Christianity of those days
-as essentially different from the Catholicism of these. Scene: chiefly Tara,
-Dunluce, the Giant’s Causeway, the Bann.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_12"></a>[12]</span></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ SEPARATIST, THE; by “A New Writer.” Pp. 323. (<i>Pitman</i>).
-6<i>s.</i> 1902.</p>
-
-<p>The love story of Stella Mertoun, who is a Royalist, and Philip Venn, who
-is on the Parliamentary side in the Civil War. Only a small portion of the
-action takes place in Ireland. The author’s sympathies are with the Puritans,
-but the bias is not pronounced.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ SIEGE OF MAYNOOTH, THE; or, Romance in Ireland. Two Vols.
-(<span class="smcap">Chelsea</span>: <i>Ridgeway</i>). 1832.</p>
-
-<p>A very long novel with a rather confused plot, but containing good scenes.
-Purports to be a MS. given to her descendant by the old Countess of Desmond,
-who has fallen on evil days, and relating stirring incidents of the Desmond
-wars and of the rebellion of Silken Thomas, including the attack on Desmond
-castle by the Butlers, the defeat and capture of Lord Grey in Glendalough,
-the escape of Lord Thomas Fitzgerald from the Black Castle of Wicklow,
-and the siege and betrayal of the Castle of Maynooth. Written on the whole
-from the Irish point of view.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ SIR ROGER DELANEY OF MEATH; by “Hal.” Pp. 228.
-(<i>Simpkin, Marshall</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1908.</p>
-
-<p>The Sir Roger of the story (he is “10th baron Navan”) is an elderly married
-man, blustering, cursing, lying, cheating, but described in such a way that
-one does not see whether the author means him for a hero or not. He falls in
-love with Lady Kitty, who is in love with somebody else. Sir Roger tries to
-get the latter into disreputable situations. They fight a duel, and the curtain
-falls on Sir Roger mortally wounded. The book is quite devoid of seriousness.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ SMITH OF THE SHAMROCK GUARDS; by “An Officer.” (<i>Stanley
-Paul</i>).</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ STORIES OF IRISH LIFE, PAST AND PRESENT; by “Slieve
-Foy.” Pp. 160. (<i>Lynwood</i>), 1<i>s.</i> 1912.</p>
-
-<p>Ten stories, amusing and pathetic, some of which have appeared in the
-<span class="smcap">Weekly Freeman</span> and the <span class="smcap">Irish Emerald</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ STORY OF NELLY DILLON, THE; by the author of “Myself and
-my Relatives.” Two Vols. (<span class="smcap">London</span>: <i>Newby</i>). 1866.</p>
-
-<p>Nelly Dillon, daughter of a Tipperary farmer, is abducted in suspicious
-circumstances by a former lover, who is a Ribbonman and illicit distiller.
-She is disowned by her parents but befriended and sheltered by Bet Fagan, a
-fine character. The latter prevails upon the abductor, when under sentence
-of death, to clear Nelly Dillon’s character in presence of the parish priest, who
-afterwards tells the facts from the altar. The parents wish to receive Nelly
-back, but she rejects their advances and dies. A sad story, well told, and with
-a healthy moral.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ TALES AND LEGENDS OF IRELAND. Two Vols. (<span class="smcap">Cork</span>: <i>Bolster</i>).
-1831.</p>
-
-<p>“Illustrative of society, history, antiquities, manners, and literature, with
-translations from the Irish, biographical notices, essays, etc.”</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THOMAS FITZGERALD THE LORD OF OFFALEY; by “Mac
-Erin O’Tara, the last of the Seanachies.” Three Vols. (<span class="smcap">London</span>). 1836.</p>
-
-<p>“The first of a projected series illustrative of the history of I.” (Title-p.).
-See also Introd. (pp. xxx.) containing some interesting remarks about Irish<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_13"></a>[13]</span>
-historical fiction. Claims to “give the history as it really occurred.” The
-book is a quite good attempt to relate the rebellion of Silken Thomas in a
-romantic vein (though with no love interest) and to picture the times. The
-conversations, though somewhat long-drawn-out, are in very creditable
-Elizabethan English, redolent of Shakespeare. Opens with a description of
-Christmas in Dublin in 1533. The Author is not enthusiastically Nationalist,
-but is quite fair to the Irish side.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ TIM DOOLIN, THE IRISH EMIGRANT. Pp. 360 (close print).
-(<i>Partridge</i>). 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> Illustr. Third ed., 1869.</p>
-
-<p>By the Author of “Mick Tracy” (<i>q.v.</i>). Tim, son of a small farmer in Co.
-Cork, as a result of his conversion to Protestantism, has his house burned
-down and his cattle killed. He emigrates to U.S.A., but soon passes to
-Canada, and helps to repel the Fenian raid. He is joined by his family, and
-all live happily at Castle Doolin. Less offensive than “Mick Tracy” in its
-allusions to religious controversies.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ UNITED IRISHMAN, THE; or, The Fatal Effects of Credulity.
-Two Vols. (<span class="smcap">Dublin</span>). 1819.</p>
-
-<p>A United Irishman who had escaped from Dublin Castle by the heroism
-of a sister, tells the tale of his woes to an Englishman, who meets him by
-accident. The latter in turn tells his story, equally woeful. The writer seems
-to be a Catholic and to sympathize more or less with the United Irishman.
-The book contains material for a good story, but it is told in a rambling
-manner, without art, and is full of sentimentality. No attempt to picture
-events or life of the times.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ VERTUE REWARDED; or, The Irish Princess. A New Novel.
-Pp. 184. 16mo. (<span class="smcap">London</span>: <i>Bentley</i>). 1893.</p>
-
-<p>This is No. III. in Vol. xii. of “Modern Novels,” printed for R. Bentley,
-1892-3. Dedicatory Epist. “To the Incomparable Marinda.” (Pref.) “To
-the ill-natured reader.” A petty foreign prince in the train of William III.
-falls in love with an Irish beauty whom he sees in a window when passing
-through Clonmel. The story tells of the vicissitudes of his love suit. It is
-eked out by several minor incidents. Nothing historical except the mention
-of the siege of Limerick.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ VEUVE IRLANDAISE ET SON FILS, LA; Histoire véritable. Pp.
-36. (<span class="smcap">Paris</span>: <i>Delay</i>). 1847.</p>
-
-<p>A little Protestant religious tract telling how a poor Irish widow was brought
-round to Protestant ideas by means of Bible readings.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ WEIRD TALES. Irish. 256 pp. 18mo. (<i>Paterson</i>). [1890].</p>
-
-<p>Eleven tales selected from Carleton (“The Lianhan Shee”), Lover (“The
-Burial of O’Grady”), Lever, Croker (“The Banshee”), Mrs. Hall, and J. B.
-O’Meara, together with some anonymous items.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ WILLIAM AND JAMES; or, The Revolution of 1689; by “A Lady.”
-Pp. xiv. + 354. (<span class="smcap">Dublin</span>). 1857.</p>
-
-<p>“An Historical Tale, in which the leading events of that ... period of
-our history ... are faithfully and truly narrated.” Introduces William III.,
-James II., Tyrconnell, Sarsfield, Richard Hamilton, &amp;c. Describes Boyne
-and Aughrim. Scene chiefly Co. Fermanagh. Tone strongly Protestant
-(there are digressions on religious matters), but without offensiveness to
-the other side. It is a rather rambling, ill-connected story, the work of a
-prentice hand. The initials of the author seem to be J. M. M. K.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_14"></a>[14]</span></p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>[ABRAHAM, J. Johnstone]</b>, a native of Coleraine. B.A., 1898; M.D.,
-T.C.D., 1908; a consulting Surgeon in London; now serving in
-R.A.M.C. Author of <i>The Surgeon’s Log</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE NIGHT NURSE. Pp. 318. (<i>Chapman &amp; Hall</i>). 6<i>s.</i> Fifth
-edition. 1913. 2<i>s.</i></p>
-
-<p>Life in a Dublin hospital, carefully observed. Sex problem of “the greater
-and the lesser love,” studied in a distinctly “biological” way. As foil to
-the main characters, who are of the respectable Protestant classes, we have
-“R.C.’s” of a most undesirable type, and, in the background, the wholly
-disreputable Irishry of a western town. The four plagues of Ireland are
-Priests, Politicians, Pawnbrokers, and Publicans, according to one of the
-personages. The medical interest is prominent throughout. By the same
-Author: <i>The Surgeon’s Log</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>ADAMS, Joseph.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ UNCONVENTIONAL MOLLY. Pp. 320. (<i>Methuen</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1913.</p>
-
-<p>The young heir of the old rackrenting absentee comes (from Cambridge)
-incognito among his tenantry in the West and lives their life. He meets
-the heroine who gives its title to the book—with the expected result. The
-rest is a series of little episodes—fishing in a western mountain-stream, a
-day’s shooting on a moor, a sail on Clew Bay, a petty sessions court, a matchmaking,
-a fair, &amp;c., &amp;c., all with a splendid setting of Western scenery. Might
-be written by a sympathetic and kindly visitor who had enjoyed his holiday.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>ALEXANDER, Eleanor.</b> Born at Strabane, daughter of the late Dr.
-Alexander, Archbishop of Armagh (d. 1911), and of Mrs. Cecilia Frances
-Alexander, both of them well known as poets. Educated at home. Has
-written verse for the <span class="smcap">Spectator</span> and for other periodicals. At the
-outbreak of war was preparing for publication a collection of Ulster
-stories illustrative of the peculiar humour of the North. Her <i>Lady
-Anne’s Walk</i>, a miscellany of historical reminiscence woven round a place
-and one who walked there long ago, contains an excellent bit of Ulster
-dialect—the talk of the old gardener.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE RAMBLING RECTOR. Pp. 344. (<i>Arnold</i>). Third impression,
-1904. (N.Y.: <i>Longmans</i>). 1.50.</p>
-
-<p>A story of love, marriage, and social intercourse among various classes of
-Church of Ireland people in Ulster. Draws a sympathetic picture of clerical
-life, the hero being a clergyman. Every character, and there are very many
-interesting types, is drawn with sure and distinct traits. There are no mere
-lay figures. John Robert is a curious and amusing study of a certain type of
-servant. Full of shrewd observation and knowledge of human nature, at
-least in all its outward aspects. Very well written. By the same author:
-<i>Lady Anne’s Walk</i>, <i>The Lady of the Well</i>, &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>ALEXANDER, Evelyn.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE HEART OF A MONK. Pp. 318. (<i>Long</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1910.</p>
-
-<p>The love story of Ivor Jermyn, who for reasons connected with an hereditary
-family curse is induced by his mother to become a Benedictine. During a
-vacation five years after his profession he meets his former love at a country
-house, and a liaison is formed. Taxed with this by his rival, the shock makes
-him see the family “ghost”—the “old man of horror.” A fatal illness
-results, and he leaves the field to his rival. Written pleasantly and lightly.
-Shows little knowledge of Catholic ways and doctrines.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE ESSENCE OF LIFE. Pp. 320. (<i>Long</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1911.</p>
-
-<p>Youth is “the Essence of Life,” as exemplified in the heroine’s crowded
-moments in the social life of Dublin and London, closing with her marriage
-with Lord Portstow, but shadowed by the tragedy of a beautiful actress,
-who turns out to be her mother. The novel does not rise above the commonplace.—[<span class="smcap">Times
-Lit. Suppl.</span>].</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_15"></a>[15]</span></p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>ALEXANDER, L. C.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE BOOK OF BALLYNOGGIN. Pp. 315. (<i>Grant, Richards</i>). 6<i>s.</i>
-1902.</p>
-
-<p>Stories of a miscellaneous kind, mostly humorous, told in a pleasant and
-readable style. Shows little knowledge of Irish life. The peasantry are
-treated somewhat contemptuously. The interest at times turns on the
-absurdities of Irish politics and of Irish legal proceedings.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>ALEXANDER, Miriam (Mrs. Stokes).</b> Born at Birkenhead. Educated at
-home, except for a short period at Alexandra College, Dublin. Has
-almost finished another novel, dealing this time with modern Irish life.
-Was much interested in the Gaelic League till alienated from it by recent
-events.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE HOUSE OF LISRONAN. Pp. 312. (<i>Melrose</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1912.</p>
-
-<p>A tale of the Williamite wars. Dermot Lisronan vows vengeance on the
-brutal Dutchman who has driven him from his ancestral home and been the
-death of his mother. The book is the story of that vengeance. Dermot by
-a strange fatality marries the daughter of this Dutchman, and some fine
-psychological and human interest is afforded by the struggle in her mind
-between love (the love of Dermot’s once bosom friend Fitz Ulick) and wifely
-duty. The book is full of exciting and dramatic incidents and situations,
-and never flags from the lurid beginning to the tragic close. The characters
-are clearly drawn and they are worth drawing:—Bartley, the Hedge-schoolmaster;
-Taaffe, the besotted coward, sorry product of Williamite rule;
-Father Talbot, the devoted priest of penal days; Barry Fitz Ulick, a kind
-of Sir Launcelot, and the rest. William III. is painted in darkest colours,
-and the penal days that he inaugurated are shown in their full horror, though
-as an offset to this we have a picture of the persecution of Huguenots in
-France.</p>
-
-<p>N.B.—This novel gained a 250 guinea prize by the unanimous award of
-three competent judges. Six editions were sold in less than two months.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ PORT OF DREAMS, THE. Pp. 351. (<i>Melrose</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1912.</p>
-
-<p>Dedication: To Caitlín ni Houlihan. A stirring and vivid romance of
-Jacobite days (18th century) in Ireland, containing some intensely dramatic
-episodes, <i>e.g.</i>, the escape of Prince Charles Edward. There are many threads
-in the narrative, but the chief interest, perhaps, centres in a Jacobite who,
-having served the cause well for twenty years, finds himself confronted with
-the spectre of physical cowardice. To save the cause from disgrace, his
-cousin Denis takes his place on the scaffold. The girl marries Clavering for
-the same reason, not for love. The author interrupts her narrative at times
-to express her views on Celticism (for which she is enthusiastic), religious
-persecution, and modern degeneracy.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ RIPPLE, THE. Pp. 367. (<i>Melrose</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1913.</p>
-
-<p>Opens in Mayo (Achill scenery described), but soon shifts to Poland and
-then to France. Adventures of Deirdre van Kaarew (daughter of a recreant
-Irishman who has Dutchified his name and turned Protestant), who has
-followed her brother to rescue him from the designs of a hated kinsman.
-She falls in love with Maurice de Saxe (of whom a careful and vivid portrait
-is drawn), and the story of this “friendship” takes up much of the book.
-She refuses him in the end, and marries the hated kinsman. A fine plot, full
-of dramatic incidents.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ MISS O’CORRA, M.F.H. (<i>Melrose</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1915.</p>
-
-<p>Miss O’Corra, who has become a rich heiress, leaves her English home and
-comes to hunt in Ireland. She is quite ignorant of equine matters, and
-various amusing difficulties beset her. She meets her fate in the person of a
-young Irish sportsman.—(<i>Press</i>).</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_16"></a>[16]</span></p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>ALEXANDER, Rupert.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ MAUREEN MOORE: a Romance of ’98. Pp. viii. + 355. (<i>Burleigh</i>).
-6<i>s.</i> 1899.</p>
-
-<p>A well told story, introducing Lord Edward and the other leaders. Maureen,
-an American, is the niece of John Moore, who is driven into rebellion by the
-persecution of the “Yeos.” His two sons, one a captain in the army, the
-other a priest, also join the rebel ranks. A love interest with cross purposes
-pervades the story. Larry Farrell is a great character, performing wonderful
-deeds of bravery and having equally wonderful escapes. The book leans
-entirely to the rebel side. The fight at New Ross and the atrocities of Wexford
-are vividly described.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>ALGER, Horatio.</b> Author of over fifty books for Boys.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ ONLY AN IRISH BOY. (N.Y.: <i>Burt</i>). $0.75. 1904.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>ANCKETILL, W. R.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE ADVENTURES OF MICK CALLIGHIN, M.P.: A Story of
-Home Rule; and THE DE BURGHOS: A Romance. Pp. 243.
-(<i>Tinsley</i>). Seven rather rough illustr. 1874. Second ed., Belfast,
-1875. 1<i>s.</i></p>
-
-<p>1. Mick Callighin leaves Ballypooreen, somewhere near the Galtees, of
-which there is a fine description, for Dublin and then London. He meets his
-future wife in Kensington Gardens. The plot is slight, but there is a good
-deal of pleasant wit, many political hits, and much satire, not of Home Rule
-but of Home Rulers.</p>
-
-<p>2. Arthur Mervyn meets Col. de Burgho and his daughter, home from Italy.
-An Italian count, who is also a pirate, carries off Nora, but she is rescued and
-married to Arthur. A pretty story, with some good descriptions of life among
-the better classes in the West of Ireland.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>ANDREWS, Elizabeth, F.R.I.A.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ ULSTER FOLKLORE. Pp. 121. (<i>Stock</i>). 5<i>s.</i> net. Fourteen illustr.,
-mainly from photos. 1914.</p>
-
-<p>A series of papers read before local learned societies or contributed to
-archæological journals. An endeavour to deal with the folk belief in fairies
-from an archæological point of view. The conclusion is that the “souterrains”
-were originally the abode of a primitive pigmy race. Imbedded
-in these pages (the outcome of much personal research) are many good fairy
-and folk stories.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>ANDREWS, Marion.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ COUSIN ISABEL. Pp. 147. (<i>Wells Gardner, Darton</i>). 1<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>
-Two illustr. 1903.</p>
-
-<p>A tale, for young people, of the Siege of Londonderry, the hardships of
-the defenders, and their brave patience. Isabel, a veritable angel of mercy
-for her uncle and cousins is a pleasant study. Another fine character is old
-Geoffrey Lambrick, drawn from a quiet life and his tulips into the smoke of
-battle.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>[ARCHDEACON, Matthew].</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ LEGENDS OF CONNAUGHT, TALES, &amp;c. Pp. 406. (<span class="smcap">Dublin</span>:
-<i>John Cumming</i>). 1829.</p>
-
-<p>Seven stories:—“Fitzgerald,” “The Banshee,” “The Election,” “Alice
-Thomson,” “M’Mahon,” “The Rebel’s Grave,” “The Ribbonman.” “Almost
-every incident in each tale is founded on fact.” (Pref.). The first story
-(165 pp.) depicts Connaught “in a wild and stormy state of society” towards
-the close of the eighteenth century, and records the wild deeds and memorable
-exit of the very widely known individual who is its hero.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_17"></a>[17]</span></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ CONNAUGHT: a Tale of 1798. Pp. 394. (<span class="smcap">Dublin</span>: <i>printed for
-M. Archdeacon</i>). 1830.</p>
-
-<p>The Author was “from infancy in the habit of hearing details of ‘the
-time of the Frinch’” ... and has “had an opportunity of frequently
-hearing the insurrectionary scenes described by some of the Actors themselves.”
-(Pref.) The Author is loyalist, but not bitterly hostile to the
-rebels. The rebellion is not painted in roseate colours, but it is not misrepresented.
-Humbert’s campaign is vividly described, but history does
-not absorb all the interest. The love story (the lovers are on the rebel
-side) is told with zest, and there is abundance of exciting incident. Quite
-well written.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ SHAWN NA SAGGARTH, THE PRIESTHUNTER. (<i>Duffy</i>). 6<i>s.</i>
-1843.</p>
-
-<p>A tale of the Penal times.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>ARCHER, Patrick, “MacFinegall.”</b> Born at Oldtown, North County
-Dublin, about fifty years ago. Lives in Dublin, where he is a Customs
-Official.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE HUMOURS OF SHANWALLA. Pp. 162. (<i>Gill</i>). 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>
-Frontisp. photo of Author. [1906]. New edition, 1<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> 1913.</p>
-
-<p>A series of sketches exhibiting the humorous side of village life in the
-North County Dublin district, or thereabouts. Quite free from caricature;
-in fact tending to set the people described in a favourable light, and to make
-them more appreciated. There is a portrait of a priest, earnest, persevering,
-and wholly taken up with his people’s good. Thoroughly hearty, wholesome
-humour.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>ARGYLE, Anna.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ OLIVE LACY. Pp. 365. (<span class="smcap">Philadelphia</span>: <i>Lippincott</i>). 1874, and
-earlier editions.</p>
-
-<p>Scene: Wicklow during rebellion. Story told in first person by Olive
-Lacy, a peasant’s daughter, adopted into a country gentleman’s family.
-Castlereagh and Curran are introduced. A good specimen of the latter’s
-table talk is given. Olive’s father becomes a United Irishman, is betrayed
-by a foreign monk (who goes about in a habit and cowl!), escapes, is rearrested,
-and finally is shot. A general description of the rising is given.
-Tone, healthy. Story well told, but for some improbabilities. Wrote also:
-<i>Cecilia; or, The Force of Circumstances</i>. N.Y.: 1866; <i>Cupid’s Album</i>;
-<i>The General’s Daughter</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>ARTHUR, F. B.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE DUCHESS. (<i>Nelson</i>).</p>
-
-<p>Scene: mainly in Donegal. Standpoint: Protestant and English. Not
-unfair to peasantry. A pleasantly told little story. The hero implicated
-in Fenian movement, and arrested, escapes from prison through the cleverness
-of his little daughter, “the Duchess.”</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>[ASHWORTH, John H.]</b> Author of <i>The Saxon in Ireland</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ RATHLYNN. Three Vols. (<i>Hurst &amp; Blackett</i>). 1864.</p>
-
-<p>A young Englishman, son of “Admiral Wyville,” takes up and works a
-property in a remote district in Ireland. Told in first person. The chief
-interest seems to lie in jealousies and consequent intrigues arising out of love
-affairs.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>“ATHENE”</b> <a href="#HARRIS"><i>see</i> <b>HARRIS</b></a>.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_18"></a>[18]</span></p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>AUSTIN, Stella.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ PAT: A Story for Boys and Girls. (<i>Wells Gardner</i>). 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> Illustr.</p>
-
-<p>“One of the prettiest stories of child life. Even the adult reader will take
-a great liking to the lively Irish Boy”—(<span class="smcap">Christian World</span>). By the same
-Author: <i>Stumps</i>, <i>Somebody</i>, <i>Tib and Sib</i>, <i>For Old Sake’s Sake</i>, &amp;c., &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>“AYSCOUGH, John” [Mgr. Bickerstaffe Drew].</b> The Author is a Catholic
-priest (a convert), now (August, 1915) acting as a chaplain in the British
-Army in France. He is one of the best-known writers of the day.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ DROMINA. Pp. 437. (<i>Arrowsmith</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1909.</p>
-
-<p>The Author brings together in a queer old castle on the Western
-coast the M’Morrogh, descendant of a long line of Celtic princes,
-his children by an Italian wife, his French sister-in-law, a band of gypsies of a
-higher type, whose king is Louis XVII. of France, rescued from his persecutors
-of the Terror and half-ignorant of his origin. These are some of the personages
-of the tale. It is noteworthy that not one of the characters has a drop
-of English blood. I shall not give the plot of the story. The last portion
-is full of the highest moral beauty. The lad Enrique or Mudo, son of Henry
-M’Morrogh (whose mother was an Italian) and of a Spanish gypsy princess,
-is a wonderful conception. When the Author speaks, as he does constantly,
-of things Catholic (notably the religious life and the Blessed Sacrament) he
-does so not only correctly but in a reverential and understanding spirit.
-The one exception is the character of Father O’Herlihy, which is offensive
-to Catholic feeling, and unnatural. The moral tone throughout is high.
-One of the episodes is the seduction of a peasant girl, but it is dealt with
-delicately and without suggestiveness.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>BANIM, John and Michael “The O’Hara Family.”</b> John Banim (1798-1842)
-and Michael Banim (1796-1876) worked together, and bear a close
-resemblance to one another in style and in the treatment of their material;
-but the work of John is often gloomy and tragic; that of Michael has
-more humour, and is brighter. They have both a tendency to be melodramatic,
-and can picture well savage and turbulent passion. They
-have little lightness of humour or literary delicacy of touch, but they
-often write with vigour and great realistic power. The object with
-which the “O’Hara” Tales were written is thus stated by Michael
-Banim: “To insinuate, through fiction, the causes of Irish discontent
-and insinuate also that if crime were consequent on discontent, it was
-no great wonder; the conclusion to be arrived at by the reader, not by
-insisting on it on the part of the Author, but from sympathy with the
-criminals.”</p>
-
-<p>P. J. Kenedy, of New York, publishes an edition of the Banims’
-works in ten volumes at seven dollars the set.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>BANIM, John.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ JOHN DOE; or, The Peep o’ Day. 1825.</p>
-
-<p>The story of a young man who, for revenge, joins the Shanavests, a secret
-society, terrible alike to landlord, tithe-proctor, and even priest. The first of
-the <i>Tales by the O’Hara Family</i>, republished separately by <i>Simms &amp; M’Intyre</i>,
-1853; and <i>Routledge</i>, <i>n.d.</i></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE FETCHES. (<i>Duffy</i>). [1825].</p>
-
-<p>A gloomy story, turning on the influence of superstitious imaginations on
-two nervous and high-strung minds. The fetch is the spirit of a person
-about to die said to appear to friends. The story is somewhat lightened
-by the introduction of two farcical characters.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_19"></a>[19]</span></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE NOWLANS. Pp. 256 (close print). [1826], 1853, &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p>The temptation and fall of a young priest, resulting in misery which leads
-to repentance. Contains some of Banim’s most powerful scenes.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ PETER OF THE CASTLE. Pp. 191. (<i>Duffy</i>). [1826].</p>
-
-<p>A sensational and romantic tale. The opening chapters (by Michael
-Banim) give a detailed description of country matchmaking and marriage
-festivities at the time, c. 1770.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE BOYNE WATER. Pp. 564. (<i>Duffy</i>). 2<i>s.</i> [1826]. Many
-editions since.</p>
-
-<p>In this great novel, which is closely modelled on Scott, scene after scene
-of the great drama of the Williamite Wars passes before the reader. Every
-detail of scenery and costume is carefully reproduced. Great historical
-personages mingle in the action. The two rival kings with all their chief
-generals are represented with remarkable vividness. Then there are Sarsfield
-and Rev. George Walker, Galloping O’Hogan the Rapparee, Carolan the bard,
-and many others. The politics and other burning questions of the day are
-thrashed out in the conversations. The intervals of the great historical
-events are filled by the adventures of the fictitious characters, exciting to
-the verge of sensationalism, finely told, though the <i>deus ex machina</i> is rather
-frequently called in, and the dialogue is somewhat old-fashioned. The wild
-scenery of the Antrim coast is very fully described, also the scenes through
-which Sarsfield passed on his famous ride. The standpoint is Catholic and
-Jacobite, but great efforts are made to secure historical fairness. The book
-ends with the Treaty of Limerick.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE ANGLO-IRISH OF THE NINETEENTH CENTURY. Three
-Vols. (<i>Colburn</i>). [1828]. Republ. in one volume by Duffy in 1865
-under title <i>Lord Clangore</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Opens in London. Several members of Anglo-Irish Society are introduced—the
-Minister (Castlereagh) and the Secretary (Wilson Croker). There are
-long disquisitions on Emancipation, the conversion of the peasantry, &amp;c.
-Gerald Blount, younger son of an Irish peer, has all the anti-Irish bias of this
-set. Flying after a duel he reaches Ireland, where he has many exciting
-adventures with the Rockites. Finally he succeeds to the title and settles
-down. The “double” (or mistaken identity) plays a part in this story, as in
-so many of Banim’s. A meeting of the Catholic Association with O’Connell
-and Shiel debating is finely described, also a Dublin dinner-party, at which
-Scott’s son appears. The early part is somewhat tedious, but the later
-scenes are powerful.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE CONFORMISTS. Pp. 202. (<i>Duffy</i>). [1829].</p>
-
-<p>Period: reign of George II. A very singular story, whose interest centres
-in the denial under the Penal Laws of the right of education to Catholics.
-A young man, crossed in love, resolves to become a “conformist” or pervert,
-and thus at once disgrace his family, and oust his father from the property.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE DENOUNCED; or, The Last Baron of Crana. Pp. 235.
-(<i>Duffy</i>). [1826]. (<i>Colburn</i>). 1830. (N.Y.: <i>Benziger</i>). 0.75.</p>
-
-<p>Deals with the fortunes of two Catholic families in the period immediately
-following the Treaty of Limerick. Depicts their struggles to practise their
-religion, and the vexations they had to undergo at the hands of hostile
-Protestants. The tale abounds in incident, often sensational. There is a
-good deal in the story about the Rapparees.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_20"></a>[20]</span></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE CHANGELING. Three Vols. Pp. 315 + 350 + 414. (<span class="smcap">London</span>).
-1848.</p>
-
-<p>Published anonymously. Preface tells us it was written some few years
-before date of publication. Scene: City of Galway and Connemara (including
-Aran). The main plot is concerned with the mystery surrounding the heir of
-Ballymagawley, got out of the way in early childhood by the present owner,
-Mr. Whaley, but returning in disguise to claim his rights. The interest is
-threefold:—First, Mr. Whaley’s awful secret unknown to the daughter, whom
-he loves with his whole soul, and who returns his love, and the desperate
-efforts he makes to avert the revelation; 2nd, the study of character: Clara
-Whaley, high-souled, intellectual, unworldly, scorning fashion and flirtation,
-the astute worldly intellectual Hon. Augustus Foster, the empty-headed
-Miss Fosters and so on; 3rd, a series of quite admirable and amusing vignettes
-of the <i>petite bourgeoisie</i> of Galway—the vulgar and showy Mrs. Heffernan
-with her absurd accent, the match-making Mrs. Flanagan (an inimitable
-portrait), the mischief-making Peter Harry Joe, Considine the Butler, the
-consequential Captain O’Connor, and the endless flirtations of the marriageable
-young ladies. The peasantry are well drawn, but it is quite an outside view
-of their life. The conversations are clever, but sometimes tediously long,
-as are also the Author’s reflections.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>BANIM, Michael.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ CROHOORE OF THE BILLHOOK. (<i>Duffy</i>). [1825].</p>
-
-<p>Has been a very popular book. The action lies in one of the darkest
-periods of Irish history, when the peasantry, crushed under tithe-proctor,
-middleman, and Penal laws, retorted by the savage outrages of the secret
-societies. One of these latter was the “Whiteboys,” with the doings of
-which this book largely deals. The Author does not justify outrage, but
-explains it by a picture of the conditions of which it was an outcome. A
-dark and terrible story. The scene is Kilkenny and neighbourhood. It must
-be added that most of the characters savour strongly of what is now known
-as the “stage Irishman.”</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE CROPPY. Pp. 420. (<i>Duffy</i>). 2<i>s.</i> Still reprinted. [1828].</p>
-
-<p>Opens with a long and serious historical introduction. There follow
-many pages of a love story of the better classes which is, perhaps, not very
-convincing. Samples of the outrages by which the people were driven to
-revolt are given. Then there are many scenes from the heart of the rebellion
-itself, some of them acquired from conversation with eye-witnesses. The
-attitude is that of a mild Nationalist, or rather Liberal, contemplating with
-sorrow not unmixed with contempt the savage excesses of his misguided
-countrymen. The rebellion is shown in its vulgarest and least romantic
-aspect, and there are harrowing descriptions of rebel outrages on Vinegar
-Hill and elsewhere. The one noble or even respectable character in the book,
-Sir Thomas Hartley, is represented as in sympathy with constitutional
-agitation, but utterly abhorring rebellion. The other chief actors in the
-story are unattractive. They have no sympathy with the insurgents, and
-the parts they play are connected merely accidentally with the rebellion.
-There is much movement and spirit in the descriptive portions.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE MAYOR OF WINDGAP. Pp. 190. (<i>Duffy</i>). [1834].</p>
-
-<p>Romantic and sensational—attempted murders, abductions, &amp;c. Not
-suitable for the young. Interest and mystery well sustained. Scene:
-Kilkenny in 1779. There was a Paris edition, 1835.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_21"></a>[21]</span></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE BIT O’ WRITING.</p>
-
-<p>This is the title-story of a volume of stories. First published in London,
-1838. It may be taken as typical of Michael Banim’s humour at his best.
-It is a gem of story-telling, and, besides, a very close study of the ways and the
-talk of the peasantry. The “ould admiral,” with his sailor’s lingo, is most
-amusing. It was republished along with another story, <i>The Ace of Clubs</i>,
-by Gill, in a little volume of the O’Connell Press Series, pp. 144, cloth, 6<i>d.</i>,
-1886. The original volume, with twenty stories, is still published by Kenedy,
-New York.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ FATHER CONNELL. Pp. 358. [1840].</p>
-
-<p>The scene is Kilkenny. The hero is an Irish country priest. The character,
-modelled strictly (see Pref.) on that of a priest well known to the author,
-is one of the noblest in fiction. He is the ideal Irish priest, almost childlike
-in simplicity, pious, lavishly charitable, meek and long-suffering, but terrible
-when circumstances roused him to action. Interwoven with his life-story
-is that of Neddy Fennell, his orphan protégé, brave, honest, generous, loyal.
-Father Connell is his ministering angel, warding off suffering and disaster,
-saving him also from himself. The last scene, where, to save his protégé
-from an unjust judicial sentence, Father Connell goes before the Viceroy, and
-dies at his feet, is a piece of exquisite pathos. There is an element of the
-sombre and the terrible. But the greater part of the book sparkles with a
-humour at once so kindly, so homely, and so delicate, that the reader comes
-to love the Author so revealed. The episodes depict many aspects of Irish
-life. The character-drawing is masterly, as the best critics have acknowledged.
-There is Mrs. Molloy, Father Connell’s redoubtable housekeeper; Costigan,
-the murderer and robber; Mary Cooney, the poor outcast and her mother,
-the potato-beggar; and many more. The Author faithfully reproduces
-the talk of the peasants, and enters into their point of view. Acknowledged
-to be the most pleasing of the Banims’ novels.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE GHOST HUNTER AND HIS FAMILY. (<i>Simms &amp; M’Intyre</i>).
-[1833]. 1852.</p>
-
-<p>Still published by P. J. Kenedy, New York: 75 cents. An intricate plot
-skilfully worked out, never flagging, and with a mystery admirably sustained
-to the end. Gives curious glimpses of the life of the times (early nineteenth
-century), as seen in a provincial town (Kilkenny). But the style often
-offends against modern taste. The book soon turns to rather crude, if
-exciting, melodrama. Moreover, though the Author is always on the side of
-morality, there is too much about abduction, &amp;c., and too many references
-to the loose morals of the day to make it suitable reading for certain classes.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE TOWN OF THE CASCADES. Two Vols. Pp. 283 + 283.
-(<i>Chapman &amp; Hall</i>). 1864.</p>
-
-<p>Scene: sea-board town in West. A powerful story in which the chief
-interest is a tragedy brought about by drink. The town seems to be Ennistymon,
-Co. Clare. The characters belong to the peasant class, and of course
-are drawn with thorough knowledge. The work could easily go in one not
-very large volume.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>“BAPTIST, Father”</b> <a href="#OBRIEN"><i>see</i> <b>Mgr. R. B. O’BRIEN</b></a>.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>BARBOUR, M. F.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE IRISH ORPHAN BOY IN A SCOTTISH HOME. Pp. 87.
-(<span class="smcap">London</span>). [1866]. 1872.</p>
-
-<p>“A sequel to ‘The Way Home,’ &amp;c.” A little religious tract (Protestant)
-in story form.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_22"></a>[22]</span></p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>BARDAN, Patrick.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE DEAD-WATCHERS. Pp. 83. (<span class="smcap">Mullingar</span>: <i>Office of</i> <span class="smcap">Westmeath
-Guardian</span>). 1891.</p>
-
-<p>“And other Folk-lore Tales of Westmeath.” The author is a member of
-the Royal Society of Antiquaries. Intended as a contribution to folk-lore.
-But the title-story (54 pp.) is a fantastic story told in melodramatic modern
-English, and has little or no connexion with folk-lore. The remainder consists
-of ghost stories, spirit-warnings, superstitions, chiefly of local interest.
-Appended are a few explanatory notes of some value.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>BARLOW, Jane.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ IRISH IDYLLS. Pp. 284. (<i>Hodder &amp; Stoughton</i>). 6<i>s.</i> [1892].
-Ninth ed. (N.Y.: <i>Dodd &amp; Mead</i>). 2.00. 1908.</p>
-
-<p>Doings at Lisconnell, a poverty-stricken little hamlet, lost amidst a waste
-of unlovely bogland. These sketches have been well described as “saturated
-with the pathos of elementary tragedy.” Yet there is humour, too, and even
-fun, as in the story of how the shebeeners tricked the police. The illustrated
-edition contains about thirty exceptionally good reproductions of photographs
-of Western life and scenery.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ KERRIGAN’S QUALITY. Pp. 254. (<i>Hodder &amp; Stoughton</i>). 6<i>s.</i>
-Eight Illustr. [1893]. (N.Y.: <i>Pratt</i>). 1.75. Second edition.</p>
-
-<p>In this story the peasants only appear incidentally. The main characters
-are Martin Kerrigan, a returned Irish-Australian; the invalid Lady O’Connor;
-her son, Sir Ben; and her niece, Merle. The story is one of intense, almost
-hopeless, sadness, yet it is ennobling in a high degree. It is full of exquisite
-scraps of description.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ STRANGERS AT LISCONNELL. Pp. 341. (<i>Hodder &amp; Stoughton</i>).
-6<i>s.</i> [1895]. (N.Y.: <i>Pratt</i>). 1.75.</p>
-
-<p>A second series of Irish Idylls, showing the Author’s qualities in perhaps
-a higher degree even than the first. A more exquisite story than “A Good
-Turn” it would be hard to find. Throughout there is the most thorough
-sympathy with the poor folk. The peasant dialect is never rendered so as
-to appear vulgar or absurd. It is full of an endless variety of picturesqueness
-and quaint turns. No problems are discussed, yet the all but impossibility
-of life under landlordism is brought out (see p. 15). There are studies of
-many types familiar in Irish country life—the tinkers; Mr. Polymathers,
-the pedagogue (a most pathetic figure); Mad Bell, the crazy tramp; and
-Con the “Quare One.” It should be noted that, though there is in Miss
-Barlow’s stories much pathos, there is an entire absence of emotional gush.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ MAUREEN’S FAIRING. Pp. 191. (<i>Dent</i>). Six Illustr., of no great
-value. [1895]. (N.Y.: <i>Macmillan</i>). 0.75.</p>
-
-<p>Eight little stories reprinted from various magazines in a very dainty
-little volume. Like all of Jane Barlow’s stories, they tell of the “tear and
-the smile” in lowly peasant lives, with graceful humour or simple, tender
-pathos. The stories are very varied in kind.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ MRS. MARTIN’S COMPANY. (<i>Dent</i>). Uniform with <i>Maureen’s
-Fairing</i>. [1896]. (N.Y.: <i>Macmillan</i>). 0.75.</p>
-
-<p>“Seven stories, chiefly of a light and humorous kind, very tender in their
-portrayal of the hearts of the poor. There is a touching sketch of child-life
-and a police-court comedy.”—(<i>Baker</i>).</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_23"></a>[23]</span></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ FROM THE EAST UNTO THE WEST. Pp. 342. (<i>Methuen</i>). 1<i>s.</i>
-8vo. Cloth. First ed., 1898; new ed., 1905.</p>
-
-<p>The first six of this collection of fifteen stories are tales of foreign lands—Arabia,
-Greece, and others. The remainder deal with Irish peasant life. They
-tell of the romance and pathos that is hidden in lives that seem most commonplace.
-“The Field of the Frightful Beasts” is a pretty little story of childish
-fancies. “An Advance Sheet” is weird and has a tragic ending.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ FROM THE LAND OF THE SHAMROCK. Pp. 318. (<i>Methuen</i>). 5<i>s.</i>
-(N.Y.: <i>Pratt</i>). 1.75. 1900. (N.Y.: <i>Dodd &amp; Mead</i>). 1.50.</p>
-
-<p>Fourteen stories, some humorous, some pathetic, including some of the
-author’s best work. There is the usual sympathetic insight into the eccentricities
-and queernesses of the minds of the peasant class, but little about the
-higher spiritual qualities of the people, for that is not the author’s province.
-Among the most amusing of the sketches is that which tells the doings of a
-young harum-scarum, the terror of his elders.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE FOUNDING OF FORTUNES. Pp. 335. (<i>Methuen</i>). 1<i>s.</i> Cloth.
-8vo. [1902]. New ed. 1906.</p>
-
-<p>The tale of how Timothy Galvin, a ragged urchin living in a mud cabin
-and remarkable only for general dishonesty and shrewd selfishness, is given
-a start in life by an ill-gotten purse, and rises by his mother wit to wealth.
-The study of the despicable character of the parvenu is clever and unsparing.
-Other types are introduced, the landlord of the old type, and two reforming
-landlords, who appear also in <i>Kerrigan’s Quality</i>. The book displays Jane
-Barlow’s qualities to the full.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ BY BEACH AND BOGLAND. Pp. 301. (<i>Fisher Unwin</i>). 6<i>s.</i> One
-Illustr. 1905.</p>
-
-<p>Seventeen stories up to the level of the author’s best, the usual vein of
-quiet humour, the pathos that is never mawkish, the perfect accuracy of the
-conversations, and the faithful portrayal of characteristics. The study in
-“A Money-crop at Lisconnell,” of the struggle between the Widow M’Gurk’s
-deep-rooted Celtic pride and her kind heart, is most amusing. As usual,
-there are delightful portraits of children.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ IRISH NEIGHBOURS. Pp. 342. (<i>Hutchinson</i>). 1907.</p>
-
-<p>Seventeen stories of Irish life, chiefly among the peasantry. They have
-all Miss Barlow’s wonted sympathy and insight, her quiet humour and cheerful
-outlook.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ IRISH WAYS. Pp. 262. (<i>George Allen</i>). 15<i>s.</i> Sq. demy 8vo. Sixteen
-Illustr. in colour. Headpieces to chapters. 1909.</p>
-
-<p>Chapter I., “Ourselves and Our Island,” gives the author’s thoughts about
-Ireland, its outward aspect, the peculiarities of its social life, its soul. It
-includes an exquisite pen-picture of Irish landscape beauty. The remaining
-fourteen sketches are “chapters from the history of some Irish country
-folk,” whom she describes as “social, pleasure-loving, keen-witted,” but
-“prone to melancholy and mysticism.” The last sketch is a picture, almost
-photographic in its fidelity, of a little out-of-the-way country town and its
-neighbourhood. The illustrations are pretty, and the artist, who, unlike
-many illustrators of Irish books, has evidently been in Ireland, has made a
-great effort to include in his pictures as much local colour as possible. Yet
-it seems to us that un-Irish traits often intrude themselves despite him.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ FLAWS. Pp. 344. (<i>Hutchinson</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1911.</p>
-
-<p>Embroidered upon an exceptionally involved plot—four times we are
-introduced to a wholly new set of characters—we have the author’s usual
-qualities, minute observation and depiction of curious aspects of character,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_24"></a>[24]</span>
-snatches of clever picturesque conversation, an occasional vivid glimpse of
-nature. But in this case the caste is made up of spiteful, petty, small-minded
-and generally disagreeable personages. They are nearly all drawn from
-the middle and upper classes in the South of Ireland, Protestant and Anglicized.
-The snobbishness, petty jealousies, selfishness of some of these people is set
-forth in a vein of satire. The incidents include an unusually tragic suicide.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ MAC’S ADVENTURES. (<i>Hutchinson</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1911.</p>
-
-<p>Eight stories in which Mac, or rather Macartney Valentine O’Neill Barry,
-who is four years old in the first and six in the last, plays a leading part.
-Indeed he is quite a little <i>deus ex machina</i>, or rather a good fairy in the affairs
-of his elders. Mac is neither a paragon nor a youthful prodigy. He is just a
-natural child, with a child’s love of mischief and “grubbiness,” and full of
-quaint sayings. Bright and genial in tone.—(<i>Press Notices</i>).</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ DOINGS AND DEALINGS. Pp. 314. (<i>Hutchinson</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1913.</p>
-
-<p>Thirteen stories, all but one (the longest) dealing with peasant life in the
-author’s wonted manner. Perhaps scarcely so good as some of her earlier
-collections.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ A CREEL OF IRISH STORIES. (<i>Methuen</i>). 1<i>s.</i> Cloth. 8vo. (N.Y.:
-<i>Dodd &amp; Mead</i>). 1.25.</p>
-
-<p>The first of these, “The Keys of the Chest,” is a curious and original conception,
-showing with what strange notions a child grew up in a lonely mansion
-by the sea. The story of the suicide is a gem of story-telling. “Three Pint
-Measures” is a comic sketch of low Dublin life.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ ANOTHER CREEL OF IRISH STORIES. Published, I believe, in
-U.S.A. (On sale by <i>Pratt</i>: N.Y.). 1.75.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>[BARRETT, J. G.], “Erigena.”</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ EVELYN CLARE; or, The Wrecked Homesteads. Pp. viii. + 274.
-(<span class="smcap">Derby</span>: <i>Richardson</i>). 1870.</p>
-
-<p>“An Irish story of love and landlordism.” Crude melodrama with all the
-usual accessories—a landlord, “Lord Ironhoof,” and an agent, “Gore”—eviction,
-agrarian murders, a disguised priest, and secret Mass, a poteen still,
-an elopement, a changeling brought up in wealth, a lover supposed drowned,
-and an innocent man unjustly convicted. No sense of reality. Scene:
-West of Ireland, <i>c.</i> 1850. Several anachronisms.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>BARRINGTON, F. Clinton.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ FITZ-HERN; or, The Irish Patriot Chief. Pp. 122. (<span class="smcap">Glasgow</span>:
-<i>Cameron &amp; Ferguson</i>). <i>n.d.</i></p>
-
-<p>Scene: Galway Bay. Crude melodrama, without historical significance.
-Wicked married bishops, scheming foreign monks, and coarse fat friars are
-the villains of the piece. But the hero, a smuggler of noble birth, always
-escapes from their clutches, and finally marries the heroine. Specimen of
-dialect:—“Arrah, gorrah, avic, father John, it’s the Pope o’ Rome ye bate,
-out and out.” (p. 13).</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>BARRON, Percy.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE HATE FLAME. Pp. 382. (<i>Hodder &amp; Stoughton</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1908.</p>
-
-<p>The story of a noble life wrecked by racial hatred. The hero, a young
-Englishman, Jack Bullen, fights a duel, in Heidelberg, with an Irish student,
-and kills him. This deed comes in after years between him and the Irish
-girl (cousin of the slain student, and pledged against her will to vengeance by
-his father) whom he was to marry—and this through the plotting of her
-rejected lover and a priest. Bullen had, for the upraising of the Irish people,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_25"></a>[25]</span>
-started a great peat factory in Ireland, and it had prospered. This work is
-wrecked by the same agency that ruins his private happiness. Throughout
-the book the Author attacks all the cherished ideas of Irish Nationalism and
-of the present Irish revival, and sets over against them the ideals of England
-and his personal views. Much bitterness is shown against the priests of
-Ireland. The scene-painting and the handling of situation and of narrative
-are very clever. There is nothing objectionable from a moral point of view.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>BARRY, Canon William, D.D.</b> Born in London, 1849. Educated at Oscott
-and Rome. He is a man of very wide learning, a theologian and a man-of-letters,
-known in literature both by his novels (<i>The New Antigone</i>, &amp;c.)
-and by important historical and religious works. Is now Rector of
-St. Peter’s, Leamington.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE WIZARD’S KNOT. Pp. 376. (<i>Unwin</i>). 6<i>s.</i> Second ed. (N.Y.:
-<i>Pratt</i>). 3.00. 1900.</p>
-
-<p>Dedicated to Douglas Hyde and Standish Hayes O’Grady. Scene: coast
-of South-west Cork during famine times, of which some glimpses are shown.
-There is a slight embroidery of Irish legend and a good deal about superstition,
-but the incidents, characters, and conversations have little, if any, relation
-to real life in Ireland. It is mainly a study of primitive passions. It might
-be described as a dream of a peculiarly “creepy” and morbid kind. It is
-wholly unlike the Author’s <i>New Antigone</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>BAYNE, Marie.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ FAIRY STORIES FROM ERIN’S ISLE. Pp. 131. (<i>Sands</i>). 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>
-net. Illustr. by Mabel Dawson and John Petts. 1908.</p>
-
-<p>Pretty and attractive picture-cover. Six little stories told in pretty,
-poetic style, one about a fairy changeling, another about the mermaids.
-The “Luck of the Griddle Darner” is in pleasant swinging verse. So is the
-“Sleep of Earl Garrett.” Though intended for small children, none of the
-stories are silly.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>BENNETT, Louie.</b> Born in Dublin, educated there by private tuition and
-in London. Has done some journalistic work, but is chiefly interested
-in social questions, in particular the woman’s movement and pacifism.
-Resides near Bray, Co. Wicklow.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE PROVING OF PRISCILLA. Pp. 303. (<i>Harper</i>). 1902.</p>
-
-<p>Scene: varies between Mayo and Dublin. Story of an ill-assorted
-marriage. The wife, daughter of a Protestant rector, is a Puritan of the
-best type, simple, religious, and sincere. The husband is a fast man of
-fashion, who cannot understand her “prejudices.” After much bickering
-they part. Troubles fall on both. In the end his illness brings them together
-again—each grown more tolerant. Quiet and simply but well written,
-with nothing objectionable in the treatment.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ PRISONER OF HIS WORD, A. Pp. 240. (<i>Maunsel</i>). 6<i>s.</i>
-Handsome cover. 1908. New edition. 1s. 1914.</p>
-
-<p>“A tale of real happenings” (sub-title). Opens at Ballynahinch, Co.
-Down, in June, 1797. A pleasant, exciting romance, written in vigorous
-and nervous style. A young Englishman joins the Northern rebellion. He
-pledges himself to avenge his friend taken after the fight at Ballynahinch,
-and hanged as a rebel. The story tells how he carries out the pledge. The
-only historical character introduced is Thomas Russell. His pitiful failure
-in 1803 to raise another rebellion in Ulster is related. The little heroine,
-Kate Maxwell, is finely drawn.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_26"></a>[26]</span></p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>BERENS, Mrs. E. M.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ STEADFAST UNTO DEATH. Pp. 275. (<i>Remington</i>). Frontisp. by
-Fairfield. 1880.</p>
-
-<p>“A tale of the Irish famine of to-day.” Period: 1879-80. Place:
-Ballinaveen, not far from Cork. Black Hugh, a kind of outlaw of the mountains
-is the hero. He had loved Mrs. Sullivan before she married the drunken,
-worthless Pat. He promises her when she is on her deathbed to care for
-the children she is leaving, and the worthless husband. Hugh takes the
-blame of the latter’s crime, and is hanged in Dublin. The family is rescued
-by benevolent English people. A well-told, but very sad story. The people’s
-miseries are feelingly depicted. Standpoint of a kind-hearted Englishwoman
-who pities, but does not in the least understand Ireland.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>BERTHET, Elie.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ DERNIER IRLANDAIS, LE. Three Vols. 16mo. (<span class="smcap">Bruxelles</span>:
-<i>Meline</i>). 1851.</p>
-
-<p>Ireland in the eighteen forties. Abortive rising under one of the O’Byrnes
-of Wicklow (<i>Le dernier Irlandais</i>). O’Connell looms in the background as
-the opponent of all this. The rebellion, which at once fizzles out, is the result
-of an insult to O’Byrne’s sister by a <i>roué</i> named Clinton. O’B. flies to
-Cunnemara (<i>sic</i>) with Nelly Avondale, daughter of the landlord of Glendalough,
-is besieged there in a fortress. Nelly returns to marry the above-mentioned
-<i>roué</i> and O’B. flies. The Author is evidently not consciously hostile to
-Ireland, but he is totally ignorant of it. The peasants are travestied. They
-are all drunkards, slovenly, sly, mean, lawless. Some descriptions of scenery
-in Wicklow and Connemara.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>BERTHOLDS, Mrs. W. M.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ CONNOR D’ARCY’S STRUGGLES. (N.Y.: <i>Benziger</i>). 2<i>s.</i> 1914.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>BESTE, Henry Digby, 1768-1836.</b> Son of the prebendary of Lincoln.
-Became a Catholic 1798. An interesting biographical sketch of him
-(largely autobiographical) is prefixed to the novel here noticed. It
-includes a full account of his conversion.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ POVERTY AND THE BARONET’S FAMILY: An Irish Catholic
-Novel. Pp. xxxii. + 415. (<span class="smcap">London</span>: <i>Jones</i>). 1845.</p>
-
-<p>Bryan O’Meara, son of a poor Irish migratory labourer, is educated as a
-gentleman by Sir Cecil Foxglove, of Denham, near Grantham, in gratitude
-for the rescue of his child by Bryan’s father. Coming to man’s estate,
-and being refused by the Baronet’s daughter he returns to his father’s people
-at Athlone, where for some time he plays at being a farmer’s lad—and at
-rebellion. But a fortunate chance puts great wealth into his hands, and he
-returns to marry the Baronet’s daughter. Interesting glimpses of Catholic
-life in penal days (the story opens in 1805) when Catholicism was at the
-lowest ebb in England. The <span class="smcap">Dublin Review</span> says (1848, Vol. xxiv., p. 239):
-“The hero is a pious pedant, a truculent fellow, and a self-conceited proser.
-The story itself is purposeless; bitter in sentiment, and swamped in never-ending
-small-talk.” The “small-talk,” however is, if anything, over-serious
-and moral.</p>
-
-<p class="author" id="BIRMINGHAM"><b>“BIRMINGHAM, George A.”</b> Rev. James Owen Hannay, <span class="allsmcap">M.A.</span>, Canon of
-St. Patrick’s Cathedral (1912). Born 1865, son of Rev. Robert Hannay,
-vicar of Belfast. Educated at Temple Grove, East Sheen; Haileybury;
-T.C.D. Curate of Delgany, Co. Wicklow. Rector of Westport, 1892-1913.
-Has resigned this cure in order to devote himself to literature.
-Is a member of the General Synod of the Church of Ireland. He has
-shown himself equally at home in political satire, humorous fiction
-and historical fiction. He is in sympathy with the ideals of the Gaelic
-League, and has actively shown this sympathy. He seems on the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_27"></a>[27]</span>
-whole Nationalist in his views, but has nothing in common with the
-Parliamentary Party. His earlier books showed strong aversion for
-the Catholic Church, but, except perhaps in <i>Hyacinth</i>, he has never
-striven to represent it in an odious light, and he is an enemy of all intolerance.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE SEETHING POT. Pp. 299. (<i>Arnold</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1904.</p>
-
-<p>Main theme: the apparently hopeless embroilment of politics and ideas in
-Ireland. Many aspects of Irish questions and conditions of life are dealt with.
-Many of the characters are types of contemporary Irish life, some are thinly
-disguised portraits of contemporary Irishmen, <i>e.g.</i>, Dennis Browne, poet,
-æsthete, egoist; Desmond O’Hara, journalistic freelance (said to be modelled
-on Standish O’Grady); Sir Gerald Geoghegan, nationalist landlord; John
-O’Neill, the Irish leader, who is deserted by his party and ruined by clerical
-influence; and many others. All this is woven into a romance with a love
-interest and a good deal of incident.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ HYACINTH. (<i>Arnold</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1906.</p>
-
-<p>An account, conveyed by means of a slight plot, of contemporary movements
-and personages in Ireland. Most of these are satirized and even
-caricatured, especially “Robeen” Convent, by which seemed to be meant
-Foxford Mills, directed by the Sisters of Charity (see <span class="smcap">New Ireland Review</span>,
-March, 1906). A grasping, unscrupulous selfishness is represented to be one
-of the chief characteristics of the Catholic Church in Ireland.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE BAD TIMES. Pp. 312. (<i>Methuen</i>). 6<i>s.</i> [1907]. New
-edition, 1<i>s.</i> 1914.</p>
-
-<p>Period: chiefly Isaac Butt’s Home Rule movement. Stephen Butler,
-representative of a landlord family of strong Nationalist sympathies, determines
-to work for Ireland. He joins the Home Rule Party, but he hates
-agrarian outrage, and so, through the Land League, becomes unpopular in
-his district in spite of all he has done. The author introduces types of nearly
-every class of men then influential in Ireland: a priest who favours and a
-priest who opposes the new agrarian movement, an incurably narrow-minded
-English R.M., an old Fenian, and so on. The impression one draws from the
-whole is much the same as that of the <i>Seething Pot</i>. The Author’s views are
-strongly National, and there is no bitter word against any class of Irishmen,
-<i>except</i> the present Parliamentary Party.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ BENEDICT KAVANAGH. Pp. 324. (<i>Arnold</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1907.</p>
-
-<p>Dedication in Irish. Foreword in which the Author states that by
-“Robeen” Convent he did not intend Foxford (cf. <i>Hyacinth</i>). A criticism
-of Irish political life, free from rancour, and from injustice to any particular
-class of Irishmen, showing strong sympathy for the Gaelic League, and all it
-stands for. The hero is left at the parting of the ways, with the choice
-before him of “respectability” and ease, or work for Ireland. The book
-should set people asking why is it that Irishmen—no matter what their creed
-or politics—cannot work together for their common country?</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE NORTHERN IRON. Pp. 320. (<i>Maunsel</i>). Bound in Irish linen.
-1907. New ed. at 1<i>s.</i>, 1909. Cheap ed. (<i>Everett</i>), 7<i>d.</i>, 1912.</p>
-
-<p>Scene: Antrim; a few incidents of the rising woven into a thrilling and
-powerful romance. Splendid portraits—the United Irishmen James Hope,
-Felix Matier, and Micah Ward, the loyal Lord Dunseverick, chivalrous and
-fearless, Finlay the Informer, and others. Vivid presentment of the feelings
-and ideas of the time, without undue bias, yet enlisting all the reader’s
-sympathies on the side of Ireland.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_28"></a>[28]</span></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ SPANISH GOLD. (<i>Methuen</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1908. Cheap ed., 1<i>s.</i> (N.Y.:
-<i>Doran</i>). 1.20.</p>
-
-<p>A comedy of Irish life, full of the most amusing situations. Scene: a
-lonely island off the coast of Connaught, in which treasure is hidden. The
-action consists of the adventures of various people who come to the island—an
-Irish chief secretary, a retired colonel, a baronet, a librarian, a Catholic
-priest, and a Protestant curate. This last, the Rev. J. J. Meldon, is a most
-original creation. There are touches of social satire throughout, but without
-bitterness or offensiveness.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE SEARCH PARTY. Pp. 316. (<i>Methuen</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1909. (N.Y.:
-<i>Doran</i>). 1.20.</p>
-
-<p>“How a mad Anarchist made bombs in a lonely house on the west coast
-of Ireland, and imprisoned the local doctor for fear lest he should reveal the
-secret. Mr. Birmingham’s irresponsible gaiety and the knowledge of Irish
-character revealed in his more serious fiction carry the farce along at a fine
-pace.”—(<span class="smcap">Times Lit. Suppl.</span>).</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ LALAGE’S LOVERS. Pp. 312. (<i>Methuen</i>). 6<i>s.</i> (N.Y.: <i>Doran</i>).
-1.20. 1911.</p>
-
-<p>The main idea—in so far as the book is serious—may be stated thus:—How
-much can one young person (aetat 14 <i>sqq.</i>) of perfect candour and fearlessness
-do to upset the peace of comfortable people, who are jogging along
-in the ruts of convention and compromise. Lalage begins with her governess,
-then tries the bench of bishops, but causes most consternation by disturbing
-an election with her Association for the Suppression of Public Lying. The
-whole is full of fun and laughter. L. has been well described as “an
-especially enterprising and slangy schoolboy in skirts.”</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE MAJOR’S NIECE. Pp. 302. (<i>Smith, Elder</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1911.</p>
-
-<p>Rev. J. J. Meldon in new situations. Major Kent expects from Australia
-a grown-up niece, who turns out to be a naughty little girl of ten. Mr. Meldon
-had made innumerable plans for the reception and treatment of the young
-lady. How does he face the new situation? There are capital minor
-characters—Doyle the hotel keeper, and Father MacCormack, and the housekeeper,
-Mrs. O’Halloran.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE SIMPKINS PLOT. Pp. 384. (<i>Nelson</i>). 2<i>s.</i> net. (N.Y.:
-<i>Doran</i>). 1.20. 1911.</p>
-
-<p>Scene: “Ballymoy.” Problem: how to get rid of Simpkins, a meddlesome
-busybody. The interest of the plot mainly turns on the amusing
-manœuvres of Rev. J. J. Meldon (the hero of <i>Spanish Gold</i>) to marry Simpkins
-to a mysterious “Miss King,” a lady supposed to be identical with a Mrs.
-Lorimer, recently acquitted, against the opinion of the Judge, of the murder
-of her husband. Full throughout of fun, clever talk, and deftly sketched
-character study. Sabina Gallagher, Sir Gilbert Hawksby, and Major Kent
-are all well done, and there is no mistaking the nationalities.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE INVIOLABLE SANCTUARY. Pp. 370. (<i>Nelson</i>). 2<i>s.</i> 1912.</p>
-
-<p>How Frank Mannix comes for vacation to Rosnacree (in the wildest west
-of Ireland) in all the glory and dignity of a Haileybury prefect. How, owing
-to a sprained ankle, he is obliged to spend the time sailing in the bay with
-Priscilla, his fifteen-year-old madcap cousin. How various exciting adventures
-follow, including the finding, in most unexpected and comical circumstances,
-by a Cabinet Minister of his daughter, who had eloped with a clergyman,
-and how Frank and Priscilla were responsible for the reconciliation.
-Told with all the Author’s sense of fun and <i>flair</i> for comic situations. But
-why must <i>all</i> Irish peasants appear as liars?</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_29"></a>[29]</span></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE RED HAND OF ULSTER. Pp. 318. (<i>Smith, Elder</i>). 6<i>s.</i>
-Cheap ed., 6<i>d.</i> 1912.</p>
-
-<p>How an Irish-American millionaire runs a revolution in Ireland, sweeping
-into his plans the rabid Orangemen, who are in deadly earnest, the Tory M.P.
-who only meant to bluff, and members of the Irish Tory aristocracy who
-meant nothing in particular. Of this class is poor Lord Kilmore, who tells
-the story, and was an unwilling actor in the whole business. The book is a
-mixture of shrewd satire (<i>e.g.</i>, Babberley, M.P., the Dean, and McConkey) in
-which all parties receive their share, and of Gilbertian extravaganza. The
-<i>dénouement</i> is both amusing and unexpected.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ DOCTOR WHITTY. Pp. 320. (<i>Methuen</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1913.</p>
-
-<p>Types and humours of a west Connaught village—the P.P., the Protestant
-Rector, Colonel Beresford, Thady Glynn, proprietor of “The Imperial Hotel,”
-chairman of the League, and popular demagogue, J.P., general philosopher,
-and “ipse dixit” of the village, and then the Doctor himself, genial, sociable,
-“all things to all men” to an extent that gets him into fixes, and that is
-not easily reconcilable with the moral order. There are broadly comical
-situations from which the Doctor extricates himself, and emerges radiant as
-ever. The seamy side of Irish life is depicted in the Author’s usual vein of
-satire.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ GENERAL JOHN REGAN. Pp. 324. (<i>Hodder &amp; Stoughton</i>)
-6<i>s.</i> Second ed., 1913.</p>
-
-<p>A very slight plot, centering in the erection of a statue to an imaginary
-native of Ballymoy. The real interest lies in the Author’s satirical
-pictures of Irish life, and in his humorous delineations of such types as Dr.
-O’Grady, Doyle the dishonest hotel-keeper, Major Kent, whom we have met in
-<i>Spanish Gold</i>, Thady Gallagher, the editor of the local paper, and a rather
-undignified and not wholly honest P.P. The thesis, if there be any, would
-seem to be that the Irishman is so clever and humorous that he will allow
-himself to be gulled, and will even gull himself for the pleasure of gulling
-others.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ MINNIE’S BISHOP, and Other Stories of Ireland. Pp. 320. (<i>Hodder &amp;
-Stoughton</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1915.</p>
-
-<p>Not all of these stories deal with Ireland, and those that do are very varied
-in character. Some are in the Author’s most humorous vein, others are more
-serious in tone. In several he pokes fun at Government methods in the
-West, and some show the comic side of gun-running, despatch-riding, and
-other Volunteer activities. In the background, at times, is a vision of the
-hopeless poverty of the Western peasant’s lot.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>BLACK, William.</b> Born in Glasgow, 1841. One of the foremost of English
-nineteenth century novelists. Published his first novel 1864; thirty-three
-others appeared before his death in 1898, at Brighton, where he
-had long resided.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ SHANDON BELLS. Pp. 428. (<i>Sampson, Low</i>). 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> [1883].
-(N.Y.: <i>Harper</i>). 0.80. New and revised ed. 1893.</p>
-
-<p>Scene: partly in London, partly in city and county of Cork. A young
-Irishman goes to London to make his fortune. Disappointed in his first love,
-he turns to love of nature. The book has all the fine qualities of W. Black’s
-work. Sympathetic references to Irish life and beautiful descriptions of Irish
-scenery in Cork. Willy Fitzgerald, the hero, had for prototype William
-Barry, a brilliant young Corkman and a London journalist.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_30"></a>[30]</span></p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>“BLACKBURNE, E. Owens.”</b> Elizabeth O. B. Casey, 1848-1894. Born at
-Slane, near the Boyne. Lived the first twenty-five years of her life in
-Ireland; then went to London to take up journalistic work. In 1869
-her first story was accepted, and in the early seventies her <i>In at the
-Death</i> (afterwards published as <i>A Woman Scorned</i>) appeared in <span class="smcap">The
-Nation</span>. To the end she used the pen-name “E. Owens Blackburne.”
-Other works of hers were <i>A Modern Parrhasius</i>, <i>The Quest of the Heir</i>,
-<i>Philosopher Push</i>, <i>Dean Swift’s Chest</i>, <i>The Love that Loves alway</i>. “Her
-stories are mostly occupied with descriptions of Irish peasant life, in
-which she was so thoroughly at home that she has been compared to
-Carleton. They are for the most part dramatic and picturesque; and
-she understood well the art of weaving a plot which should hold the
-reader’s interest.”—(<i>Irish Lit.</i>).</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ A WOMAN SCORNED. Three Vols. (<i>Tinsley</i>). [1876]. Also
-one Vol. (<i>Moxon</i>). 1878.</p>
-
-<p>Out-at-elbows Irish household—upper class—brother, sister, and young
-step-sister (the heroine) Katherine. Captain Fitzgerald falls in love with
-Katherine. The elder sister (the woman scorned) filled with jealousy plots
-to marry K. to a rich elderly suitor. The plot miscarries, and she dies a
-miserable death. Scene: near the Boyne. Some good descriptions of
-river scenery.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE WAY WOMEN LOVE. Three Vols. (<i>Tinsley</i>). 1877.</p>
-
-<p>Hugh O’Neill, a Donegal man, after an unsuccessful career as an artist in
-London, settles near Weirford (Waterford). He has two daughters—Moira,
-handsome, proud of her ancient lineage and a poet, and Honor, plain and
-domestic. The story is concerned with the loves of these two. Local
-society cleverly hit off. Local newspapers and their editors come in for a
-good deal of banter; several real characters, thinly disguised, being introduced.
-Brogue very well done.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ A BUNCH OF SHAMROCKS. Pp. 306. (N.Y.: <i>Munro</i>: “<i>Seaside
-Library</i>”). [1879]. 1883.</p>
-
-<p>A collection of tales and sketches, illustrating for the most part the gloomier
-side of the national character, viewed, apparently, from a Protestant standpoint.
-In one, “The Priest’s Boy,” there is much pathos.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ MOLLY CAREW. Three Vols. (<i>Tinsley</i>). <i>n.d.</i> (1879).</p>
-
-<p>A tale of the unrequited love of an Irish girl of talent, but of humble
-origin, for a selfish and ruffianly English author named Eugene Wolfe. She
-falls in love with him as a child and then, in young womanhood, falls still
-more deeply in love with the ideal of him which she forms from his books.
-Nothing can kill or even daunt this love, and for its sake she undergoes the
-supremest sacrifices, but all in vain. The two chief characters are carefully
-and consistently drawn, and there are some dramatic scenes. The action
-passes chiefly in London, whither Molly Carew had followed her ideal.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE GLEN OF SILVER BIRCHES. Two Vols. (<i>Remington</i>).
-1880. (N.Y.: <i>Harper</i>). 1881.</p>
-
-<p>Nuala O’Donnell’s extravagant father has mortgaged his estate in the
-Donegal Highlands, near Glenvich (The Glen of Silver Birches). A scheming
-attorney tries to get the family into his toils, and to marry N. The scheme
-is defeated, and N. marries Thorburn, an English landlord, who has bought
-the neighbouring estate. Some good characters, <i>e.g.</i>, kindly old Aunt Nancy
-and N.’s nationalist poet cousin.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_31"></a>[31]</span></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE HEART OF ERIN: An Irish story of To-day. Three Vols.
-(N.Y.: <i>Munro</i>: “<i>Seaside Library</i>”). [1882]. 1883.</p>
-
-<p>Standish Clinton, a clever speechmaker, raises himself to a foremost position
-in Parliament. Getting into higher social circles he breaks with his faithful
-Mary Shields. The mystery of his birth is cleared up in the end, and he
-succeeds as lawful heir to the family mansion of the Hardinges. The campaign
-of the Land League, with which the Author is in sympathy, forms the background.
-The famous letter of Dr. Nulty, of Meath, is cited as an argument
-for land reform. Interesting picture of the peasantry.</p>
-
-<p class="author" id="BLAKE-FORSTER"><b>BLAKE-FORSTER, Charles Ffrench.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ A COLLECTION OF THE OLDEST AND MOST POPULAR
-LEGENDS OF THE PEASANTRY OF CLARE AND GALWAY.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE IRISH CHIEFTAINS; or, A Struggle for the Crown. Pp. 728,
-demy 8vo. (<i>M’Glashan &amp; Gill</i>). 1872.</p>
-
-<p>An account, in the form of a tale, of the Williamite Wars, from the landing of
-James II. at Kinsale to the surrender of Galway, with all the battles and sieges
-(except Derry). Into this is woven large sections of the family history of
-the O’Shaughnessy and Blake-Forster clans of Co. Galway. This latter story
-is carried past the Treaty of Limerick down to the final dispossession of the
-O’Shaughnessys in 1770. It includes many episodes in the history of the
-Irish Brigade in France and of the history of the period at home (including
-the Penal Laws and the doings of the Rapparees). A surprising amount of
-erudition drawn from public and private documents is included in the volume.
-The notes occupy from p. 429 to 573. An Appendix, pp. 574 to end, contains
-many valuable documents, relating largely to family history, but also to
-political history. The standpoint is Jacobite and national.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>“BLAYNEY, Owen,” Robert White.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE MACMAHON; or, The Story of the Seven Johns. Pp. x + 351.
-(<i>Constable</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1898.</p>
-
-<p>Founded on a County Monaghan tradition. Colonel MacMahon escaping
-from the defeat at the Boyne entrusts his infant son to John M’Kinley, a
-settler. The boy grows up, falls in love with M’Kinley’s daughter, and after
-unsuccessfully pleading his cause with the father, abducts her. M’Kinley
-calls to his aid six other settlers of the name of John, pursues the fugitives,
-seizes them, and hangs MacMahon on the windmill at Carrickmacross. A
-powerful story giving a faithful picture of the times. Ulster dialect good.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>[BLENKINSOP, A.]</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ PADDIANA; or, Scraps and Sketches of Irish Life, Past and Present.
-Two Vols. (<i>Bentley</i>). [1847]. Second ed. 1848.</p>
-
-<p>By the Author (an Englishman, <i>see</i> p. 2) of <i>A Hot Water Cure</i>. Contents:—1.
-“Mr. Smith’s Irish Love.” 2. “Mick Doolan’s Head.” 3. “Still-Hunting.”
-4. “A Mystery among the Mountains.” 5. “The Adventure of Tim Daley.”
-6. “Mrs. Fogarty’s Tea Party.” 7. “A Quiet Day at Farrellstown.” 8.
-“A Duel.” 9. “Mr. H⸺.” 10. “The Old Head of Kinsale.” 11.
-“Barney O’Hay.” 12. “Headbreaking.” 13. “Cads, Fools, and Beggars.”
-14. “The Mendicity Association.” 15. “The Dog-Fancier.” 16. “Dublin
-Carmen.” 17. “Horses.” 18. “Priests: Catholic and Others.” 19. “An
-Irish Stew.” Vol. II.—1. “Executions.” 2. “Ronayne’s Ghost.” 3.
-“The Last Pigtail.” 4. “The Green Traveller.” 5. “Larry Lynch.” 6.
-“Potatoes.” Then (pp. 142-275) follows “Irish History”—scraps from
-various Irish annals and histories, told in a facetious and anti-Irish spirit.
-All the old calumnies are raked up and set down here. The Author concludes
-that the Irish are an uncivilized people, and that their national character is
-“a jumble of contradictions.” The stories are told with considerable verve.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_32"></a>[32]</span></p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>BLESSINGTON, Countess of.</b> Marguerite Power, born near Clonmel,
-1789, daughter of Edmund Power and Ellen Sheehy. In 1818 she
-married the Earl of Blessington, and became a leader of society in London,
-afterwards in Paris, and then again in London. Wrote upwards of thirty
-books—novels, travel, reminiscences, &amp;c. Died 1849.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE REPEALERS; or, Grace Cassidy. (<span class="smcap">London</span>). [1833].</p>
-
-<p>“Contains scarcely any plot and few delineations of character, the greater
-part being filled with dialogues, criticisms, and reflections. Her ladyship
-is sometimes sarcastic, sometimes moral, and more frequently personal. One
-female sketch, that of Grace Cassidy, a young Irish wife, shows that the Author
-was most at home among the scenes of her early days.”—(<i>Chambers’</i> <span class="smcap">Cyclopædia
-of English Literature</span>).</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ COUNTRY QUARTERS. Three Vols. (<span class="smcap">London</span>: <i>Shoberl</i>). [1850].
-Port. Second ed. 1852.</p>
-
-<p>In Vol. I., pp. iii.-xxiii., memoir of Author by M. A. P. Scene: South of
-Ireland (descriptions of Glanmire and references to Waterford and to the
-Blackwater), among county and garrison people. There is a great deal about
-their courtships and marriages, much small talk and pages of reflections.
-Grace, the heroine, is loved by two officers, friendly rivals. Mordaunt makes
-Vernon propose. V. is refused, but M. is too poor to marry. However,
-after many vicissitudes, Grace is united to M. Full of sentimentality.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>BLOOD SMITH, Miss</b>, <a href="#CONYERS"><i>see</i> <b>“DOROTHEA CONYERS.”</b></a></p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>BODKIN, M. M’Donnell, K.C.</b>; County Court Judge of Clare since 1907.
-Born 1850. Son of Dr. Bodkin, of Tuam, Co. Galway. Educated at
-Tullabeg Jesuit College; Catholic University. Was for some years
-Nationalist M.P. for North Roscommon. Besides works of fiction, has
-published an historical work on Grattan’s Parliament. Resides in
-Dublin.—(<span class="smcap">Who’s Who</span>).</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ POTEEN PUNCH. (<i>Gill</i>). 1<i>s.</i> 1890.</p>
-
-<p>“After-dinner stories of love-making, fun, and fighting,” supposed to be
-told in presence of Lord Carlisle, one of the Viceroys, in a house at Cong,
-whither he had been obliged to go, having been refused a lodging at Maam
-by order of Lord Leitrim. The stories are of a very strong nationalist flavour,
-some humorous, some pathetic.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ PAT O’ NINE TALES. (<i>Gill</i>). 1894. (N.Y.: <i>Benziger</i>). 0.90.</p>
-
-<p>Stories of various kinds, all pleasantly told. The first and longest is a
-pathetic tale, introducing an eviction scene vividly described. Among other
-stories there is “The Leprachaun,” humorous, and told in dialect; a “ghost”
-story; a story of unlooked for evidence at a trial; a tale of Fontenoy, &amp;c.
-The last, “The Prodigal Daughter,” is, from its subject, hardly suitable for
-certain classes of readers.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ LORD EDWARD FITZGERALD. Pp. 415. (<i>Chapman &amp; Hall</i>). 1896.</p>
-
-<p>The story of the earlier years of Lord Edward is woven into the love-story
-of one Maurice Blake. Pictures Irish social life at the time in a lively, vivid
-way. Hepenstal, the “walking gallows,” Beresford and his riding school, the
-infamous yeomanry and their doings, these are prominent in the book. The
-standpoint is strongly national. “History supplies the most romantic part
-of this historical romance. The main incidents of Lord Edward’s marvellous
-career, even his adoption into the Indian tribe of the Great Bear, are absolutely
-true. Some liberties have, however, been taken with dates.”—(Pref.).</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE REBELS. Pp. 358. (<i>Duffy</i>). 2<i>s.</i> [1899]. (N.Y.: <i>Benziger</i>).
-0.60. 1908.</p>
-
-<p>Sequel to <i>Lord Edward</i>. Later years of Lord Edward’s life. Shows Castlereagh
-and Clare planning the rebellion. Shows us Government bribery and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_33"></a>[33]</span>
-dealings with informers. Some glimpses of the fighting under Father John
-Murphy, also of Humbert’s invasion and the Races of Castlebar. A stirring
-and vigorous tale, strongly nationalist.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ SHILLELAGH AND SHAMROCK. (<i>Chatto</i>). 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> 1902.</p>
-
-<p>Short stories dealing mainly with the wild scenes of old election days.
-Pictures of evictions and the old-time fox-hunting, whiskey-drinking landlord.
-Always on the peasants’ side. Tales full of voluble humour and “go.” The
-peasants’ talk is faithfully and vividly reproduced.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ IN THE DAYS OF GOLDSMITH. Pp. 309. (<i>Long</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1903.</p>
-
-<p>A panegyric of Goldsmith, dealing with the part of his life spent in England.
-Conversations introducing Reynolds, Beauclerk, Johnson, etc., the latter’s
-talk recorded with Boswellian fidelity. A picture, too, of the life and manners
-of the day drawn with such frankness as to render the book unfit for the
-perusal of certain classes of readers.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ PATSY THE OMADHAUN. Pp. 260. (<i>Chatto</i>). 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> (N.Y.:
-<i>Benziger</i>). 0.60. 1904.</p>
-
-<p>A dozen short stories, in which the village tailor recounts the exploits of
-Patsy, who proves to be by no means the fool he seems, and extricates himself
-and his friends from all kinds of comical situations. All told in broadest
-brogue. Somewhat farcical comicality.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ TRUE MAN AND TRAITOR. (<i>Duffy</i>). 1910.</p>
-
-<p>The career of Robert Emmet from his Trinity days to his tragic end, told
-in the Author’s usual spirited fashion. Emmet is represented as an able and
-practical organizer, but the story of his love for Sarah Curran is not neglected.
-The historical facts are thoroughly leavened with romance—Emmet’s perilous
-voyage to France in a fishing-hooker, the detailed accounts of his interviews
-with Napoleon, the character of Malachi Neelin, the traitor: these and
-many other things are blended with the narrative of real events.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>[BOLES, Agnes], “J. A. P.”</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE BELFAST BOY. Pp. 464. (<i>Nutt</i>). 5<i>s.</i> 1912.</p>
-
-<p>Opens in Belfast during the great riots of twenty-five years ago. The
-hero, falsely accused of murder, flees to South Africa, where he becomes a
-millionaire, and is known as “The Belfast Boy.” The heroine, when she is
-going out to marry him, omits to mention that she is leaving a son and his
-father (the villain) in Belfast. These are conveniently got rid of, one by
-lightning, the other by lightning-like small-pox. Several real persons are
-introduced as personages in the story. Many of the incidents are sensational,
-there is much dialect, and the style in places is far from refined. An intense
-love for Belfast and its surroundings pervades the book.—(<i>Press Notices</i>).</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>BOVET, Madame.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ TERRE D’EMERAUDE.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>BOWLES, Emily.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ IRISH DIAMONDS: A Chronicle of Peterstown. Pp. 219. (<i>Richardson</i>).
-1864.</p>
-
-<p>A story of landlord and tenant, of illicit distilling, and of proselytising.
-A Bible reader, an agent, and the sister of a landlord are the villains of the
-piece. Tone strongly Catholic and anti-Protestant. There is a love interest
-and a certain amount of adventure, which are not made subordinate to the
-pictures of Souperism. In 1878 a writer in the <span class="smcap">Dublin Review</span> said of it:
-“It has not been surpassed since it was written.... The characters are so
-well drawn that even those in barest outline are interesting and individual....
-Told in the brightest, most natural, and most quietly humorous way.”
-Miss B. published more than a dozen other books, largely translations.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_34"></a>[34]</span></p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>BOYCE, Rev. John, D.D.</b> [From <i>Inishowen and Tirconnell</i>, by W. J.
-Doherty]. Born in Donegal, 1810. Ordained, Maynooth, 1837. Emigrated
-to U.S.A., 1845. Died 1864. Besides the three novels mentioned
-in the body of this work, he published lectures on the Influence of
-Catholicity on the Arts and Sciences, Mary Queen of Scots, Queen
-Elizabeth, Charles Dickens, Henry Grattan, &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ SHANDY MAGUIRE; or, Tricks upon Travellers. (N.Y.: <i>Pratt</i>).
-1.75. [1848]. Also (<i>Richardson</i>) 1855, and <i>Warren</i>, Kilmainham, <i>n.d.</i></p>
-
-<p>“First appeared in a Boston periodical, with the pen-name of Paul Peppergrass.
-It attracted at once the attention of Bishop Fenwick of Boston. Dr.
-Brownson, in his <span class="smcap">Quarterly Review</span>, pronounced upon the book the highest
-eulogium, and assigned to the writer a place equal if not superior to any
-writers of Irish romance. <i>Shandy Maguire</i> was recognised by the London
-Press and the <span class="smcap">Dublin Review</span> as a work of great merit. It has been successfully
-dramatized and translated into German” (from <i>Inishowen and Tirconnell</i>,
-by W. J. Doherty).</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE SPAEWIFE: or, The Queen’s Secret. [1853]. Still in print.
-(<span class="smcap">Boston</span>: <i>Marlier</i>). 1.50.</p>
-
-<p>Begins at Hampton Court. The facility with which Father Boyce makes
-Nell Gower, the Scotch Spaewife (a woman gifted with second sight), discourse
-in broad Scotch dialect, in contrast with the stately and imperious language
-of Elizabeth, displays an unusual power of transition. No finer character
-could be depicted than Alice Wentworth, daughter of Sir Geoffrey Wentworth,
-the representative of an old English Catholic baronetage, who suffered persecution
-under Elizabeth; whilst Roger O’Brien, attached to the Court of
-Mary Queen of Scots, affords an opportunity of presenting the high-spirited
-and brave qualities that ought to belong to an Irish gentleman. Elizabeth
-appears in anything but a favourable light.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ MARY LEE; or, The Yankee in Ireland. (U.S.A.). (N.Y.: <i>Pratt</i>).
-1.75. (<span class="smcap">Baltimore</span>: <i>Kelly &amp; Piet</i>). 1864. Pp. 391. Frontisp. by J.
-Harley.</p>
-
-<p>The last story written by this Author, for whom see General Note. It is
-considered to display an intimate knowledge of Irish character and to contain
-an excellent description of the typical Yankee. The scene is Donegal. Time
-185-.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>BOYLE, William.</b> Born in Dromiskin, Co. Louth, 1853; educated St. Mary’s
-College, Dundalk. Has written many poems, songs, and plays, including
-some of the best of modern Irish comedies. The atmosphere of his stories
-is thoroughly Irish and their humour and pathos are genuine.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ A KISH OF BROGUES. (<i>O’Donoghue</i>). Pp. 252. 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> 1899.</p>
-
-<p>The humour and pathos of country life, Co. Louth. The Author knows the
-people thoroughly, and understands them. There is much very faithful
-character-drawing of many Irish peasant types and a few good poems.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>BOYSE, E. C.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THAT MOST DISTRESSFUL COUNTRY. Three Vols. (<i>F. V.
-White</i>). 1886.</p>
-
-<p>A tale of love and marriage. Scene: first in Wexford, opening with
-pleasant pictures of country-house life and merry-making. Then there is an
-account of some minor incidents of the rebellion, viewed from loyalist standpoint,
-with insistence on savage cruelty of rebels. Then the scene shifts to
-London, and thence to Dublin, where we have pictures of life in military
-society. Finally, the scene is transferred to Tuam, where word is brought of
-Humbert’s campaign in the West. Pleasant style, but the conversations,
-full of chaff and nonsense, are long drawn out. Author says in preface that
-the incidents are taken from private letters or accounts of eye-witnesses.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_35"></a>[35]</span></p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>BRAY, Lady.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ EVE’S PARADISE. (<i>Wells, Gardner</i>). 6<i>s.</i> Etched frontispiece and
-title-page.</p>
-
-<p>“Lady B.’s descriptions of child life are admirable, well-observed, and
-cleverly done.”—(<span class="smcap">Pall Mall Gazette</span>).</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ A TROUBLESOME TRIO; or, Grandfather’s Wife. (<i>Wells, Gardner</i>).
-2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> Second ed.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>BRERETON, F. S.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ IN THE KING’S SERVICE. Pp. 352. (<i>Blackie</i>). Attractive cover.
-Eight Illustr. by Stanley L. Wood. (N.Y.: <i>Scribner</i>). 1.50. <i>n.d.</i> (1901).</p>
-
-<p>Exciting adventures, abounding in dramatic climaxes, of an English cavalier
-during Cromwell’s Irish campaign. Chief scenes of latter described from
-English cavalier standpoint. Burlesque brogue. Juvenile.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>BREW, Margaret W.</b> Wrote much for the <span class="smcap">Irish Monthly</span> and other Irish
-periodicals.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE BURTONS OF DUNROE. Three Vols. Pp. 934. (<i>Tinsley</i>).
-1880.</p>
-
-<p>Scene: Munster <i>c.</i> 1810, also Dublin and (in third vol.) Spain, when the
-hero, William Burton, takes part in the Peninsular War. Robert marries
-beneath him, and is disinherited by disappointed father, who had meant
-him for his cousin Isabella. Rose, Robert’s wife dies. Robert goes to the
-wars, and returns covered with glory to marry Isabel and settle down in
-respectable prosperity. Conventional and a little dull. Much brogue as
-comic relief to the prevailing appeal to the tender feelings.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ CHRONICLES OF CASTLE CLOYNE. Three Vols. (<i>Chapman
-&amp; Hall</i>). 1886.</p>
-
-<p>Highly praised by the <span class="smcap">Times</span>, the <span class="smcap">Standard</span>, the <span class="smcap">Morning Post</span>, the <span class="smcap">Scotsman</span>,
-&amp;c., &amp;c. The <span class="smcap">Irish Monthly</span> says: “It is an excellent Irish tale, full
-of truth and sympathy, without any harsh caricaturing on the one hand, or
-any patronizing sentimentality on the other. The heroine, Oonagh M’Dermott,
-the Dillons, Pat Flanagan, and Father Rafferty are the principal personages,
-all excellent portraits in their way; and some of the minor characters are
-very happily drawn. The conversation of the humbler people is full of wit
-and common sense; and the changes of the story give room for pathos sometimes
-as a contrast to the humour which predominates. Miss Brew understands
-well the Irish heart and language; and altogether her “Pictures of
-Munster Life” (for this is the second title of the tale) is one of the most
-satisfactory additions to the store of Irish fiction from <i>Castle Rackrent</i> to
-<i>Marcella Grace</i>.”</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>[BRITTAINE, Rev. George].</b> Was Rector of Kilcormack, Diocese of
-Ardagh. Died in Dublin, 1847. The <span class="smcap">Athenæum</span> of December 14,
-1839, said of the first three works mentioned below: “The sad trash
-which is here put forward as a portraiture of the social condition of the
-Irish peasantry needs no refutation; in his ardour to calumniate, the
-Author has forgotten that there are limits to possibility, and that when
-they are overstepped the intended effect of the libel is lost in its absurdity.”
-All this writer’s books seem to have appeared anonymously.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ CONFESSIONS OF HONOR DELANY. Pp. 86. (<span class="smcap">Dublin</span>: <i>Tims</i>).
-1<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> [1830]. Third ed., 1839.</p>
-
-<p>She admits getting a pension as a reward for “turning.”</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ IRISH PRIESTS AND ENGLISH LANDLORDS. Pp. 249.
-(<span class="smcap">Dublin</span>: <i>Tims</i>). [1830]. Second ed., 1839; others 1871, 1879.</p>
-
-<p>“By the author of <i>Hyacinth O’Gara</i>.” A priest has authority from a
-bishop to marry a girl to a man against her will. She refuses, and subsequently
-dies—a martyr for the Protestant faith.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_36"></a>[36]</span></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ RECOLLECTIONS OF HYACINTH O’GARA. Pp. 64. (<span class="smcap">Dublin</span>:
-<i>Tims</i>). 6<i>d</i>. Fifth ed., 1839.</p>
-
-<p>The above three books were originally written by Rev. Geo. Brittaine,
-Rector of Kilcormack, Co. Limerick. They were “re-written and completely
-revised” by Rev. H. Seddall, Vicar of Dunany, Co. Louth, and published by
-Hunt, London, 1871. They are frankly proselytising tales designed “to
-give a true picture of the Irish peasantry, and how priestcraft has wound
-itself into all their concerns.” (Pref.) The peasantry are represented as
-exceedingly debased, the priesthood as conscienceless and selfish tyrants.
-Religion is practically the sole theme throughout. There is practically
-no reference to contemporary questions. One reviewer says: “There is
-nothing more graphic in all the pages of <i>The Absentee</i>, or <i>Castle Rackrent</i>
-than the account of Kit M’Royster’s disclosures to his brother, the
-Popish Bishop, about the heretical purity of their niece; or the description
-of Priest Moloney’s oratory about the offerings at the funeral of old Mrs.
-O’Brien.”—<span class="smcap">Christian Examiner.</span></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ IRISHMEN AND IRISHWOMEN. Pp. 219. (<span class="smcap">Dublin</span>: <i>Tims</i>). 1831.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ JOHNNY DERRIVAN’S TRAVELS. Pp. 36. (<span class="smcap">Dublin</span>: <i>Tims</i>).
-6<i>d.</i> [1833]. Second ed., 1839.</p>
-
-<p>Not religious in subject. Deals with Irish amusements, drinking, &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ MOTHERS AND SONS. Pp. 297. (<span class="smcap">Dublin</span>: <i>Tims</i>). 1833.</p>
-
-<p>A lady turns Methodist at the age of 44. The Author thereby takes
-occasion to condemn dyed hair and wigs, and many other things. The story
-includes a murder of which a Curate is the victim. The murderer dies
-howling for the priest.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ NURSE M’VOURNEEN. Pp. 33. (<span class="smcap">Dublin</span>: <i>Tims</i>). Second ed.,
-<i>c.</i> 1839.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE ELECTION. Pp. 331. (<span class="smcap">Dublin</span>: <i>Tims</i>). 1840.</p>
-
-<p>Election manœuvres described. There is a murder in the story. Tone
-very anti-Catholic.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>[BRONTE, Rev. Patrick, B.A.].</b> 1777-1861. A county Down man, father of
-the famous novelists.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE MAID OF KILLARNEY; or, Albion and Flora. Pp. 166.
-(<i>Baldwin</i>). [1818]. 1898.</p>
-
-<p>Albion, an Englishman, visits Killarney, and falls in love with Flora
-Loughlean. The tale exhibits the anti-Catholic bias of the time.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>BROOKE, Richard Sinclair, D.D.</b> (1802-1882). Incumbent of Mariners’
-Church, Kingstown, afterwards Rector of Eyton. Published several
-volumes of verse and prose. Father of Stopford Brooke.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE STORY OF PARSON ANNALY. Pp. 429. (<i>Drought</i>). 1870.</p>
-
-<p>A long, rather involved story, in part reprinted from <span class="smcap">Dublin University
-Magazine</span>. It contains some excellent descriptions of Donegal scenery—Glenveagh
-and Barnesmore.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>BROPHY, Michael</b>, ex-Sergeant, R.I.C.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ TALES OF THE ROYAL IRISH CONSTABULARY. Pp. xx. + 192.
-(<span class="smcap">Dublin</span>: <i>Bernard Doyle</i>). 2<i>s.</i> [1888]. 1896.</p>
-
-<p>Intended as the first volume of a series. Introduction gives a condensed
-history of the Force. This is followed by a long story founded on facts—“The
-Lord of Kilrush, Fate of Marion, and Last Vicissitudes of Lord Edward
-Fitzgerald’s Estate.” This tells how Sub-Constable Butler, a real
-“character,” bought in the Encumbered Estates Court the property of Lord
-Edward near the Curragh of Kildare, but was subsequently dispossessed—a
-curious tale, containing much out-of-the-way information, including an
-enquiry into the parentage of Pamela. Then follow “Episodes of ’48”
-(Ballingarry, &amp;c.), and “The Story of a Sword,” (8 pp.) Sub-Constable
-Butler and Sub-Inspector Tom Trant are amusing personages.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_37"></a>[37]</span></p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>BROWN, Rev. J. Irwin.</b> Minister of the Scottish Church in Rotterdam,
-and son of Rev. Dr. Brown, of Drumachose, Derry, in his time a well-known
-public speaker, and a defender of the Irish tenant farmers.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ IRELAND: Its Humour and Pathos. (<span class="smcap">Rotterdam</span>: <i>J. M. Bredee</i>).
-1910.</p>
-
-<p>The book contains some racy stories, and is bright and readable throughout.—I.B.L.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>BRUEYRE, Loys.</b> Born in Paris, 1835. A French folk-lorist, Vice-President
-of the <i>Société des Traditions Populaires</i>. A frequent contributor to
-French folk-lore periodicals.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ CONTES POPULAIRES DE LA GRANDE BRETAGNE. Pp. 382.
-(<span class="smcap">Paris</span>: <i>Hachette</i>).</p>
-
-<p>Contains 100 tales. A very few are English (chiefly Cornish), none are
-Welsh. The majority are Scotch (largely from Campbell’s collection) but
-there are a good many Irish, taken from Croker and Kennedy. The book is
-entirely in French.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>BUCHANAN, Robert</b>, 1841-1901. Born in Staffordshire, son of Robert B.,
-“Socialist, Missionary, and Journalist.” Educated at Glasgow. Published
-many volumes of poetry and several plays, among others a dramatised
-version of Harriett Jay’s <i>Queen of Connaught</i> (<i>q.v.</i>). In 1876
-published his first novel—<i>The Shadow of the Sword</i>. Many others
-followed. In 1874 he settled at Rosspoint, Co. Mayo, but left Ireland in
-1877. <i>Father Anthony</i> was written during this period, but not published
-till later. <i>See</i> the notice in D.N.B., and the <span class="smcap">Life</span>, published in 1903,
-by Harriet Jay, his adopted daughter.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ FATHER ANTHONY. (<i>Long</i>). 6<i>s.</i> Sixteen illustr. Many editions.
-1903. New edition, 6<i>d.</i> 1911.</p>
-
-<p>Scene: a country village in the West of Ireland. Father Anthony is a
-young priest, who for his brother’s sake has sacrificed a career in the world to
-devote himself to God’s poor. He finds himself called upon in virtue of his
-sacred office to keep the secret of the confessional when by a word he could
-save his brother from the hangman’s hands. The pathos of the young
-priest’s agony of mind is depicted with great power and sympathy. The
-other priest, Father John, is drawn as the true parish priest of the old type,
-blood and bone of the people, jovial, homely, lovable and beloved. The
-Author, though alien in faith and race, tells us that he knew intimately and
-loved both priests and people during his stay in Ireland.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE PEEP-O’-DAY BOY: A Romance of ’98. (<i>Dicks</i>). 6<i>d.</i> <i>n.d.</i></p>
-
-<p>A conventional sensational tale, little above the “shilling shocker,” with
-oath-bound societies meeting in under-ground caverns, abductions, informers,
-an absentee landlord, the Earl of Dromore, whose daughter loves the expatriated
-owner, The O’Connormore, and soforth. The three chapters on the
-insurrection are from Cassell’s <i>History of Ireland</i>. The story is scarcely
-worthy of this Author.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>BUCKLEY, William.</b> Born in Cork, and educated there at St. Vincent’s
-Seminary and the Queen’s College. His first literary work appeared in
-<span class="smcap">MacMillan’s Magazine</span>. Resides in Dublin.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ CROPPIES LIE DOWN. Pp. 511. (<i>Duckworth</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1903.</p>
-
-<p>Scene: Wexford, the year of the rising. The Author banishes all romance
-and artistic glamour, and deals with the horrors of the time in a spirit of
-relentless realism. Quite apart from historical interest, the book is thrilling
-as a story of adventure. The tone is impartial, but the writer clearly means
-the events and scenes described to tell for the Irish side. The <span class="smcap">New Ireland<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_38"></a>[38]</span>
-Review</span> says that “it sketches the origin and course of the Wexford insurrection
-with a conscientious accuracy which would do credit to a professed
-historian”; and it praises the Author’s “exceptional literary ability” and
-the “intense reality of his characters.” “Rather more than justice is done
-to the English authorities (<i>e.g.</i>, Castlereagh), to the Irish Protestants, and
-even to the government spies.”—(<i>Baker</i>, 2).</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ CAMBIA CARTY AND OTHER STORIES. Pp. 230. (<i>Maunsel</i>).
-1<i>s.</i> 1907.</p>
-
-<p>Close descriptions of lower and middle classes in modern Youghal. In
-places will be unpleasant reading for the people of Youghal. Picture of
-Cork snobbery decidedly unfavourable to Cork people, and on the whole
-disagreeable and sordid.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>BUGGE, Alexander</b>, Professor in University of Christiania, ed.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ CATHREIM CELLACHAIN CAISIL: The Victorious Career of Cellachain
-of Cashel. Pp. xix. + 171. (<i>Christiania</i>). 1905.</p>
-
-<p>The original Irish text, from the Book of Lismore, is edited in a scholarly
-way and accompanied with an English translation, notes, and index. There
-is an interesting introduction. It is a story of the struggles of Cellachan and
-the Danes in the tenth century.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>BULLOCK, Shan F.</b> Born Co. Fermanagh, 1865. Son of a Protestant
-landowner on Lough Erne. Depicts with vigour and truth the country
-where the Protestant North meets the Catholic and almost Irish-speaking
-West. There is at times a curious dreariness in his outlook which mars
-his popularity. But his work is “extraordinarily sincere, and at times
-touched with a singular pathos and beauty.... He writes always
-with evident passion for the beauty of his country, and an almost pathetic
-desire to assimilate, as it were, national ideals, of which one yet perceives
-him a little incredulous.”—(<i>Stephen Gwynn</i>).</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE AWKWARD SQUADS. (<i>Cassell</i>). 5<i>s.</i> 1893.</p>
-
-<p>The Author’s first book. Has all the qualities for which his subsequent
-books are remarkable. It is a study of the people of his native country—the
-borders of Cavan and Fermanagh—their political ideas, general outlook,
-humours and failings, their peculiar dialect and turns of thought. Four
-stories in all:—“The title story,” “The White Terror,” “A State Official,”
-“One of the Unfortunates.”</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ BY THRASNA RIVER. Pp. 403. (<i>Ward, Lock)</i>. 6<i>s.</i> Illustr. 1895.</p>
-
-<p>The experiences of two lads on an Ulster farm in the district where the
-Author lays nearly all his scenes. There are many clever studies of peasant
-types. The hero is an Englishman, an amusing character. The story of his
-unsuccessful love-affair with the “Poppy Charmer” is told by one of the
-lads familiar to us as Jan Farmer. There is no approach to anything objectionable
-in the book. Chapter XXI., “Our Distressful Country,” is good
-reading.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ RING O’ RUSHES. Pp. 195. (<i>Ward, Lock</i>). 1<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> (<span class="smcap">Chicago</span>:
-<i>Stone</i>). 1.00. 1896.</p>
-
-<p>A cycle of eleven stories dealing with various aspects of Ulster life in the
-neighbourhood of Lough Erne. In “His Magnificence” an enriched peasant
-returns to his native village and tries to show off his grandeur. “Her Soger
-Boy” recounts a mother’s innocent fraud and her soldier lad’s savage retaliation.—(<i>Baker</i>,
-2).</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_39"></a>[39]</span></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE BARRYS. Pp. 422. (<i>Methuen</i>). 1<i>s.</i> Full-sized cloth. 1899.
-(N.Y.: <i>Doubleday</i>). 1.25.</p>
-
-<p>Book I. has its scene on Innishrath, an island in Lough Erne. Frank Barry,
-on a visit from London to his uncle, betrays a peasant girl named Nan. In
-Book II. we find Nan in London. She discovers Frank’s treachery. So does
-Frank’s wife, and the nemesis of his deeds overtakes him. But Nan finds
-consolation with her still faithful lover, Ted. A study in temperaments.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ IRISH PASTORALS. Pp. 308. (<i>Grant Richards</i>). 6<i>s.</i> (N.Y.:
-<i>McClure</i>). 1.50. 1901.</p>
-
-<p>A series of pictures—the Planters, the Turf-cutters, the Mowers, the Haymakers,
-the Reapers, the Diggers, &amp;c.—forming an almost complete view of
-life among the rural classes in Co. Cavan. These pictures are the setting for
-country idylls, humorous, pathetic, or tragic. In all there is the actuality,
-the minute fidelity that can be attained only by one who has lived the life
-he describes and has the closest personal sympathy with the people. The
-descriptions of natural scenes, the weather, &amp;c., are admirable.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE SQUIREEN. Pp. 288. (<i>Methuen</i>). 1<i>s.</i> Cloth, full-sized.
-(N.Y.: <i>McClure</i>). 1.50. 1903.</p>
-
-<p>A study of Ulster marriage customs. Jane Fallon is practically sold to
-the Squireen by her family, and, after long resistance, yields, and marries him.
-Tragic consequences follow. Most of the characters are Ulster Protestant
-peasants. “The Squireen” is a study of the old type of fox-hunting
-gentleman-farmer.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE RED LEAGUERS. Pp. 315. (<i>Methuen</i>). 6<i>s.</i> (N.Y.: <i>Pratt</i>).
-0.75. 1904.</p>
-
-<p>Scenes from an imaginary rebellion in Ireland, purporting to be related by
-a Protestant who has sided with the rebels and captains the men of Armoy,
-a barony a little to the north of the Woodford River (the Thrasna of the
-story), which enters Lough Erne about two miles to the west of where the
-River Erne flows into the same. England having left Ireland almost without
-a garrison, the Protestants are all (except in a few places) killed or taken,
-the Irish Republic triumphs. Then the country gives itself up to an orgy of
-thoughtless rejoicing and more or less drunken revelling. In “a handful
-of weeks” the “land is hungry, wasted, lawless, disorganized, an Ireland
-gone to wrack.” The story closes with the news of English troops landing
-in Cork and Derry and Dublin. The author does not write simply from the
-standpoint of the dominant class, much less is he merely anti-Catholic and
-anti-Irish. He merely lacks faith in the wisdom and staying power of Irish
-character. He tries to show the actualities of the rebellion in their naked
-realism, eschewing all romance. He succeeds in being strangely vivid and
-realistic without apparent effort. Of the leaders on the Irish side one is a
-coward and a swaggerer, another is bloodthirsty, all are selfish and vulgar.
-The heroes are in the opposite camp.</p>
-
-<p>N.B.—The scene of this story is also the scene of the Author’s other North
-of Ireland studies and sketches.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE CUBS. Pp. 349. (<i>Werner Laurie</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1906.</p>
-
-<p>A story of life in an Irish school, recognized by old schoolfellows of the
-Author as bearing a strong resemblance to the Author’s old school of Farra,
-near Mullingar. It is naturally thought to be partly autobiographical. It
-is the history of a great friendship. It includes also some scenes of home
-life.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_40"></a>[40]</span></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ DAN THE DOLLAR. (<i>Maunsel</i>). 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> [1906]. New edition. 1908.</p>
-
-<p>A study of national character and of human nature in which the touch is
-delicate, sure, and true. The whole study is concentrated on five persons.
-First there is the picture of the neglected farm of the happy, easy-going Felix.
-His wife is a contrast with him in all, yet they agree perfectly. Then there
-is Mary Troy, a Catholic girl living with them, a beautifully-drawn character,
-and Felim, the dreamer of dreams. Into their lives suddenly comes Dan,
-who after years of hard, sordid striving in the States, has made his pile.
-He brings his hard, practical American materialism to bear on the improvement
-of “this God-forsaken country,” with what result the reader will see.
-There is a love story of an exceptional kind, handled with much subtlety and
-knowledge of human nature. There is much pathos and moral beauty in the
-story.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ MASTER JOHN. Pp. 281. (<i>Werner, Laurie</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1909.</p>
-
-<p>Master John is a strong man, who makes his way in the world and returns
-wealthy to settle in Fermanagh. The place he buys has a curse upon it, and
-strange things happen. The story is told by an old retainer—now a car-driver—whose
-verbosity and ramblingness are very quaint and amusing.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ HETTY: The Story of an Ulster Family. Pp. 322. (<i>Laurie</i>). 6<i>s.</i>
-1911.</p>
-
-<p>Essentially what the sub-title suggests, a domestic story, with careful
-delineation of character for its chief interest. Old Dell is perhaps the central
-figure, an old Northern farmer, reserved, silent, conservative, with his love of
-the land and his unwillingness to part with his authority, even to the end.
-Then there is the contrast between Hetty, quiet, retiring, peace-loving, and
-her wilful, wayward younger sister Rhona, lively, quick of tongue, and beautiful.
-The coming of Rhona makes shipwreck of poor Hetty’s happiness and
-well-nigh brings tragedy into the family life. A quiet, slow-moving story,
-intensely faithful to reality. “Problems” are in the background but are
-not wearisomely worked out. There is an occasional gleam of humour,
-but there is much true pathos.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>BUNBURY, Selina.</b> Daughter of Rev. Henry Bunbury. Born about
-1804, probably in Kilsaran House, County Louth, and lived at Beaulieu.
-First work published in 1821, and for fifty years she was a prolific author,
-her last appearing in 1870. After the death of her parents, she began
-to travel, and visited every country in Europe except Turkey, recording
-her adventures in many volumes. Her most successful work was <i>Coombe
-Abbey</i>: an Historical Tale of the Days of James 1st. (<i>Curry</i>, Dublin,
-1843). She died at Cheltenham sometime in “the seventies,” and
-some of her works are still reprinted.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ CABIN CONVERSATIONS AND CASTLE SCENES. Pp. 173.
-(<i>Nisbet</i>). One illustr. 1827.</p>
-
-<p>Period 1815, but public events are not dealt with.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ MY FOSTER BROTHER. Pp. 134. (<i>Tims</i>). [1827]. Second edition,
-1833.</p>
-
-<p>Alick, foster-brother to Mr. Redmond’s boy, converts the latter, Bible in
-hand. The boy dies a pious death.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE ABBEY OF INNISMOYLE: A Tale of another Century.
-Pp. 336. (<i>Curry</i>). [1828]. Second edition, 1829. Engraved frontisp.</p>
-
-<p>Consists largely of the history of the Abbey from its foundation in the
-twelfth century. The story is very rambling and obscure. Introduces,
-incidentally, a “cold, ambitious plotting Jesuit,” and inveighs against the
-“monstrous creed of Jesuitism.” The Abbey is in “an unfrequented part
-of the north-western coast of Ireland.” We take leave of it in Protestant
-hands.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_41"></a>[41]</span></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ TALES OF MY COUNTRY. Pp. 301. (<i>Curry</i>). 1833.</p>
-
-<p>Viz. 1. “A visit to Clairville Park, and the Story of Rose Mulroon.”
-2. “An Arrival at Moneyhaigue, and the Doctor’s Story of Eveleen O’Connor.”
-3. “A Tale of Monan-a-gleena.” 4. “Six Weeks at the Rectory.” In 3
-the Irish are represented as cherishing a diabolical thirst for vengeance.
-4 is a long lecture. 1 is a ’98 story.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ SIR GUY D’ESTERRE. Two Vols. (<i>Routledge</i>). 1858.</p>
-
-<p>Sir Guy is a young soldier in the train first of Sir Philip Sidney, then of
-Essex. Before the latter he comes to Ireland—“the cursedest of all lands,”
-in his opinion—where he is captured, and taken to the Castle of the O’Connors.
-Here he falls in love, and here begin his troubles. Enemies plot his ruin.
-He is thrown into the Tower, but is released by Essex, and goes with him to
-Ireland on his fatal campaign. Careful and vivid portraits of Elizabeth,
-Essex, Hugh O’Neill, and other historical characters. A vigorously-written
-and interesting historical novel, not Nationalist, but fair and even sympathetic
-to Ireland. No religious bias. Essex meeting with O’Neill, V. II.,
-p. 151.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>BURKE, Edmund.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ A CLUSTER OF SHAMROCKS. Pp. 312. (<i>Lynwood</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1912.</p>
-
-<p>“Very pleasing and human tales of humble life, Swiss, Breton, Norwegian,
-English, &amp;c.; some of them rather in the school of Hans Anderson.”—(<span class="smcap">T. Lit.
-Suppl.</span>). “Pleasantly-written short stories drawn from many sources,
-home and Continental. There is a purity of feeling about them which
-renders them exceptionally suitable for young people.”—I.B.L. The Author
-shows himself a lover of flowers and of nature generally. Press notices
-speak of him as Mr. E. Burke, of Liverpool, an M.A. of T.C.D.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>BURKE, John.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ CARRIGAHOLT: a Tale of Eighty Years ago. Pp. 77. (<i>Hodges
-Figgis</i>), 1<i>s.</i> 1885.</p>
-
-<p>A story of Ireland (S.W.) in early days of 19th century. Shows us the
-goodnatured spendthrift landlord, the gombeenman, the nice young ladies
-whose education has been “finished” in Belgium, the young men of property
-whose objects in life are sport and attentions to the young ladies;
-and the scapegrace youth, who narrowly escapes being hanged for forgery.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>BURROW, Charles Kennett.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ PATRICIA OF THE HILLS. Pp. 330. (<i>Lawrence &amp; Bullen</i>). 6<i>s.</i>
-1902.</p>
-
-<p>A love story of which the incidents take place during the Famine years
-and the Young Ireland movement. With the latter the hero, who tells the
-story, is clearly in sympathy, though no controversial matter is introduced.
-The characters (exceptionally well drawn) are types, but also very live personalities.
-Locality not indicated. An interesting and uncommon tale.
-By same author: <i>The Lifted Shadow</i>, <i>The Way of the Wind</i>, &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>BURTON, J. Bloundelle.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE LAND OF BONDAGE. (<i>F. V. White</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1904.</p>
-
-<p>Ireland and England in 1727; then the colony of Virginia, adventures
-with Indians, &amp;c. The last pages bring us to 1748.—(<i>Nield</i>).</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>BUTLER, A.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ SHAMROCK LEAVES. (<i>Sealy, Bryers</i>). Pp. 84. 1<i>s.</i> 1886.</p>
-
-<p>“The (five) stories are founded—not upon unreliable, secondhand information—but
-<i>bona fide</i> facts.”—(<i>Preface</i>). “A kindly Irish spirit runs through
-these Tales.”—<span class="smcap">Nation.</span></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_42"></a>[42]</span></p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>BUTLER, Mary E.</b> Mrs. O’Nowlan. Daughter of Peter Lambert Butler,
-and granddaughter of William Butler, of Bunnahow, Co. Clare. Educated
-privately, and at Alexandra College, Dublin. Married (1907)
-the late Thomas O’Nowlan, Professor of Classics and Irish in University
-College, and at Maynooth. Lives in Dublin.—(<span class="smcap">Cath. Who’s Who</span>).</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ A BUNDLE OF RUSHES. Pp. 150. (<i>Sealy, Bryers</i>). 1<i>s.</i> 1899.</p>
-
-<p>A little volume of short stories, pleasantly written; Irish in tone and
-poetic. Well received by the Press, and by the public—(<i>Press Notice</i>). Fifteen
-stories in all. Six are prose idyls of ancient Celtic inspiration, nine are lively
-little modern sketches in which he and she get happily married in the end.—(<i>I.M.</i>).</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE RING OF DAY. Pp. 360. (<i>Hutchinson</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1906.</p>
-
-<p>A romance the interest of which centres in the aspirations of the Irish
-Ireland movement. Highly idealized, but full of intense earnestness and
-conviction. The characters are types and talk as such. Eoin, however,
-is a strong personality.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>BUTT, Isaac.</b> Born in Glenfin, Co. Donegal, 1813. Son of Rev. Robert
-Butt, Rector of Stranorlar. Educated Royal School, Raphoe, and
-T.C.D. Helped to found the <span class="smcap">Dublin University Magazine</span>, 1833,
-and was editor from 1834-38. Was called to the Bar and distinguished
-himself there. Opposed O’Connell and Repeal. Defended Smith
-O’Brien, 1848, and the Fenian prisoners in 1865-9. Became a Home
-Ruler, practically founded the party in 1870, and worked strenuously
-for it. Died 1879. Wrote important works on many subjects, Irish
-and other.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ IRISH LIFE IN COURT AND CASTLE. Three Vols. (<span class="smcap">London</span>). 1840.</p>
-
-<p>Story of a young barrister named Tarleton, who while studying in London
-forms a firm friendship with Gerald MacCullagh (really O’Donnell), who
-becomes a nationalist leader. The latter, in spite of himself, sees the national
-movement drift into one of incendiarism and robbery, resulting, among other
-things, in a night attack (fully described) on Merton Castle, somewhere in
-Co. Clare. Tarleton refusing to give up his friend is disowned by his father,
-and comes to live in a Dublin boarding house. There are good pictures of
-Dublin life, the amusing foibles of a peculiar section of the upper classes
-being well hit off. The Author gives his views on the various questions of
-the day. Shows how the Bar was injured by the prevalent jobbery. There
-are a good many incidents, but perhaps they scarcely rescue the book from
-being dull.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE GAP OF BARNESMORE. Three Vols, each about 335 pp.
-(<span class="smcap">London</span>). 1848.</p>
-
-<p>“A tale of the Irish Highlands and the Revolution of 1688.” Appeared
-without the author’s name. An attempt to portray, without partisan bias,
-the events of the time and the heroism of both sides in the Williamite Wars.
-The whole question at issue between the colonists and the native Irish is well
-discussed in a conversation between Father Meehan, representing the latter,
-and Captain Spencer, representing the former. Every word of it applies,
-as it was meant to apply, to modern times.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ CHAPTERS OF COLLEGE ROMANCE. Pp. 344. (<span class="smcap">London</span>). 1863.</p>
-
-<p>A reprint of stories that first appeared in the <span class="smcap">Dublin University Magazine</span>,
-some of them as far back as 1834. The purpose and character of these
-stories is well described in Preface:—“When I say that these pages are the
-romance of truth, I mean that they are true.... I am very sure that if I
-succeed in simply bringing before the reader’s eyes the life and the death of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_43"></a>[43]</span>
-many whom I myself remember gay and light-hearted.... I shall have done
-something towards impressing on his mind the lesson, ‘remember thy
-Creator.’” He tells us also, “I was much, very much longer an inmate of
-Alma Mater than falls to the average of her sons.” Five Stories, tragic for
-the most part, viz. I. “The Billiard Table” (ruinous results of gambling.)
-II. “Reading for Honours” (a harrowing story of the fatal results of
-jealousy). III. “The Mariner’s Son.” IV. “The Murdered Fellow; an
-incident of 1734.” V. “The Sizar,” “a story of a young heart broken in the
-struggle for distinction.”</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ CHILDREN OF SORROW.</p>
-
-<p>An obituary notice in, I think, the <span class="smcap">Irish Times</span> describes this as Butt’s
-first essay in fiction, but the book is not in the British Museum Library, and
-I have been unable to trace it.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>BUXTON, E. M. Wilmot-</b>, <a href="#WILMOT-BUXTON"><i>see</i> <b>WILMOT-BUXTON</b></a>.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>[BYRNE, E. J.].</b> Author of <i>Without a God</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ AN IRISH LOVER. Pp. 271. (<i>Kegan Paul</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1914.</p>
-
-<p>A melodrama full of plot and murder and hair-breadth escape, in which
-the hero wins his way to the heroine through unheard of perils from swindlers,
-assassins, jealous rivals, and all the other <i>dramatis personæ</i> of melodrama.
-Yet the hero and heroine start with a peaceful youth in Tipperary as members
-of the small farmer class. Parents oppose the match, and the hero goes to
-Dublin, where he falls into the hands of a gang of desperadoes. Then the
-scene shifts to America, to return to Ireland only for the wedding bells of the
-close. The Irish peasant at home is appreciatively described, his intense
-spirit of faith being dwelt on.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>CADDELL, Cecilia Mary</b>, 1814-1877.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ NELLIE NETTERVILLE; or, One of the Transplanted. (N.Y.:
-<i>Catholic Publication Co.</i>). 1878.</p>
-
-<p>“A tale of Ireland in the time of Cromwell.”</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>CALLWELL, J. M.</b> Mrs. Callwell, a member of the famous family, the
-Martins of Ross, Galway, is a frequent contributor to <span class="smcap">Blackwood’s
-Magazine</span>, and Author of <i>Old Irish Life</i>, 1912.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ A LITTLE IRISH GIRL. Pp. 240. (<i>Blackie</i>). 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> Four good
-pictures by Harold Copping. (N.Y.: <i>Pratt</i>). 1.25. 1908.</p>
-
-<p>Scene: West of Ireland. The doings and adventures of a lot of very
-natural and “human” children, particularly the bright, wild little heroine,
-and Manus, a typical English-reared schoolboy. Peasants seen in relation to
-better class, but treated with sympathy and understanding. No moralizing.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>CAMPBELL, Frances.</b> A county Antrim woman.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ LOVE, THE ATONEMENT. Pp. 345. (<i>Digby, Long</i>). 6<i>s.</i> Second
-edition. 1902.</p>
-
-<p>A very pretty and highly idealized little romance of marriage, with a
-serious lesson of life somewhere in the background all the while. It opens—and
-closes—in an old baronial mansion somewhere in the West of Ireland,
-but the chief part of the action passes amid vice-regal society in Australia.
-Two quaint Australian children furnish delightful interludes.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_44"></a>[44]</span></p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>CAMPBELL, J[Iain] F., of Islay.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ POPULAR TALES OF THE WEST HIGHLANDS. Four Vols.,
-containing in all cxxxi. + 1743 pp. (<span class="smcap">Paisley</span>: <i>Gardner</i>). [1861]. New
-edition, an exact reprint of first, 1890. Handsome binding.</p>
-
-<p>Ranks among the world’s greatest collections of folk-lore. Of great scientific
-value to the folk-lorist, for each tale is “given as it was gathered in the
-rough.” (Preface). Moreover, the table of contents gives, besides title of
-story, name of teller and of collector, date and place of telling. Most, if not
-all of the stories are in origin Irish. The Gaelic text is given along with
-translation. Exceptionally interesting Introduction—untechnical, pleasantly
-written, and full of curious information.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>CAMPBELL, J. F.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE CELTIC DRAGON MYTH. Pp. li. + 172. (<span class="smcap">Edinburgh</span>:
-<i>Grant</i>). 6<i>s.</i> net. Good illustr. in colour by Miss R. A. Grant-Duff.
-1911.</p>
-
-<p>The Author set down the whole Celtic Dragon legend—perhaps the most
-important and widespread of myths, and the basis of the state-myth of
-England, Russia, and Japan—in English, on the authority of many oral
-sources accessible between 1862 and 1884. To this is here added “The Geste
-of Fraoch and the Dragon” in Gaelic, with translation by G. Henderson,
-Lecturer in Celtic at Glasgow University. Also Gaelic text of “The Three
-Ways,” and “The Fisherman.” Introduction, 40 pp., and Notes. Full of
-Irish names, references, and incidents. The English of the translation is
-simple and pleasant. The whole book is very well turned out.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>CAMPBELL, John Gregorson, of Tiree.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE FIANS. Pp. xxxviii. + 292. (<i>Nutt</i>). 7<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> net. One illustr.
-by E. Griset. 1891.</p>
-
-<p>Introduction by A. Nutt treats of nature and antiquity of Gaelic folk-tales,
-theories about the Fenian cycle, and the classification of texts composing
-it, and makes some interesting remarks about its value and import.
-His notes at the end chiefly consist of references to D’Arbois de Jubainville’s
-<i>List of Irish Sources</i>, and to Campbell of Islay’s <i>Leabhar na Féinne</i>. The
-book collects a mass of floating and fragmentary oral tradition about the
-Fians. Sources entirely oral, many of the translators knowing no word
-of English. Through the greater part of the book the collector gives the
-substance of what he heard, but he gives also verbatim in Gaelic, with an
-English translation, many tales, poems, ballads. Nature-myth, God-myth,
-folk-fancy and hero tale, prose and poetry, are mingled. Naturally the
-quality varies a good deal. Some of the tales are extravagant and even silly.
-Many are so corrupted in oral transmission as no longer to be intelligible.
-Some are very archaic, some modern. A few are noble heroic legends in
-verse, but the literal prose translation makes them somewhat obscure.
-Index.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>CAMPION, Dr. J. T.</b> Born in Kilkenny, 1814. Contributed much verse and
-some prose stories to National papers, such as <span class="smcap">The Nation</span>, <span class="smcap">United
-Irishman</span>, <span class="smcap">The Irish Felon</span>, <span class="smcap">Irish People</span>, <span class="smcap">Shamrock</span>, &amp;c., &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE LAST STRUGGLES OF THE IRISH SEA SMUGGLERS.
-Pp. 119. (<span class="smcap">Glasgow</span>: <i>Cameron &amp; Ferguson</i>). 1869.</p>
-
-<p>Scene: Wicklow coast, around Bray head, “about 50 years ago.” Struggles
-between smugglers and Government officials, with a love interest, and a
-moral. Has the elements of a very good story, but is long drawn out, and is
-told in a turgid style repugnant to modern taste.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_45"></a>[45]</span></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ MICHAEL DWYER, THE INSURGENT CAPTAIN. Pp. 128.
-(<i>Gill</i>). 1<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> Very cheap paper and print. <i>n.d.</i></p>
-
-<p>A reprint of a book first published many years ago. An account of the life,
-exploits, and death of a Wicklow outlaw, 1798-1805. The anecdotes are for
-the most part given as handed down among the Wicklow peasantry. They
-are not arranged in any special order. Many of them are so wonderful as to
-be scarcely credible, yet most of them are, in the main, well authenticated.
-The style is turgid and highflown to the verge of absurdity.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>CANNING, Hon. Albert S.</b>, D.L. for Counties Down and Derry. Born 1832,
-second son of 1st Baron Garvagh. Resides in Rostrevor, Co. Down.
-Has published about thirty works, chiefly on Scott, Macaulay, Dickens,
-and Shakespeare. Also religious works, and two books about Ireland.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ BALDEARG O’DONNELL: a Tale of 1690. Two Vols. (<i>Marcus
-Ward</i>). 1881.</p>
-
-<p>This O’Donnell was for a short time an independent, half-guerilla, leader
-on the Irish side. Afterwards, on the promise of a pension, he deserted to
-the English. “He had the shallowness, the arrogance, the presumption,
-the want of sincerity and patriotism of too many Irish chiefs”—(D’Alton:
-<i>History of Ireland</i>).</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ HEIR AND NO HEIR. Pp. 271. (<i>Eden Remington</i>). 5<i>s.</i> 1890.</p>
-
-<p>The scene opens in Dalragh (Garvagh, Co. Derry), shifts to London and
-back again. Time: the eve of the outbreak of ’98. The people, with their
-sharply divided religious and political opinions are well described, and the
-northern accent and idiom ring true. Two priests, Father O’Connor and his
-curate, O’Mahony, the one imbued with loyalist principles, the other leaning
-towards the United Irishmen, are naturally and sympathetically drawn.
-The plot is founded on the well known story of the disinheritance of George
-Canning, the father of the Prime Minister, here called Randolph Stratford,
-a good-hearted and popular scapegrace, easily led astray. It is a pleasant,
-healthy, and well told tale.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>CANNON, Frances E.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ IERNE O’NEAL. Pp. 446. (<i>Whitcomb &amp; Tombs</i>). 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> net.
-1911.</p>
-
-<p>A long, gentle, and pleasing tale of an Irish girl of good family, from her
-childhood with her grandfather in Ireland to her life in London society
-(including a little turn as factory girl) and her marriage.—(<span class="smcap">Times Lit. Suppl.</span>).</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>“CARBERY, Ethna”; Anna Macmanus.</b> Mrs. Macmanus, wife of Seumas
-Macmanus, was a Miss Johnston. She was born in Ballymena, Co.
-Antrim, in 1866. Her early death in 1902 robbed her friends of a most
-lovable personality, and Ireland of one of the most promising of her
-poets. Her poems in <i>The Four Winds of Erinn</i> are full of passionate
-love of Ireland. A short notice of her life will be found prefixed to the
-volume just mentioned.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE PASSIONATE HEARTS. Pp. 128. (<i>Gill</i>). 2<i>s.</i> 1903.</p>
-
-<p>Studies of the heart, tender, passionate, and deep, told in language of
-refined beauty. No one else has written, or perhaps ever will write, like this,
-of pure love in the heart of a pure peasant girl. These are prose poems,
-as perfect in artistic construction as a sonnet. They are full too of the love
-of nature, as seen in the glens and coasts of Donegal. They are all intensely
-sad, but without morbidness and pessimism.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_46"></a>[46]</span></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ IN THE CELTIC PAST. Pp. 120. (<i>Gill</i>). 1904.</p>
-
-<p>Contents: “The Sorrowing of Conal Cearnach”; “The Travelling
-Scholars;” “Pursuit of Diarmuid and Grainne;” “The Death of Diarmuid
-O’Dubhine;” “The Shearing of the Fairy Fleeces;” “How Oisin convinced
-Patric the Cleric,” &amp;c. Told in refined and poetic language.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>CAREY, Mrs. Stanley.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ GERALD MARSDALE: a Tale of the Penal Times. (N.Y.: <i>Benziger</i>).
-1.50, 0.30, 0.63.</p>
-
-<p>Sub-title:—or, “The Out-Quarters of St. Andrew’s Priory: a Tale of
-the reign of Queen Elizabeth.” This story was announced for serial publication
-in <span class="smcap">Duffy’s Hibernian Magazine</span>, 1861, and ran through the Vols. for
-1862-63 under its sub-title.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>CARLETON, William.</b> Born in Prillisk, Clogher, Co. Tyrone, 1794. His
-father, a tenant farmer, who supported fourteen children on as many
-acres, was remarkable for his extraordinary memory and had a thorough
-acquaintance with Irish folk-lore. The family was bilingual. Carleton was
-chiefly educated at hedge-schools and at a small classical school at Donagh
-(Co. Monaghan). Somewhere about 1814 Carleton made the Lough
-Derg Pilgrimage, afterwards described in a story with that title written
-for the <span class="smcap">Christian Examiner</span>. About the same period he seems to have
-gradually lost his faith, and subsequently he became a Protestant,
-but for most of his life was indifferent to all forms of religion. After
-many vicissitudes he came to Dublin, where he had very varied and
-painful experiences in the effort to make a living. He wrote for the
-<span class="smcap">Christian Examiner</span>, the <span class="smcap">Family Magazine</span>, the <span class="smcap">Dublin University
-Magazine</span>, &amp;c. He also wrote for the <span class="smcap">Nation</span>, though, as Mr.
-O’Donoghue says, “Carleton never was a Nationalist, and was quite
-incapable of adopting the principles of the Young Irelanders.” What
-he wrote from the Nationalist standpoint was written through the need
-of earning his bread. For, though famous long before his death, he
-never freed himself from money troubles. Died 1869. <i>See</i> D. J.
-O’Donoghue’s <i>Life of Carleton</i>, two vols., which includes Carleton’s
-Autobiography.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ AMUSING IRISH TALES. Two Series in One. Fourth edition. 256 pp.
-(Published 5<i>s.</i>).</p>
-
-<p>Not to be confounded with <i>Traits and Stories of the Irish Peasantry</i>, by
-the same Author. This is an entirely different work. Contains:—“Buckram
-Back, the Country Dancing Master”; “Mary Murray, the Irish Matchmaker”;
-“Bob Pentland, the Irish Smuggler”; “Tom Gressley, the Irish
-Sennachie”; “Barney M’Haigney, the Irish Prophecy Man,” and ten
-others.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ ANNE COSGRAVE.</p>
-
-<p>“A vigorous attempt to exhibit the manners and customs, and especially
-the religious feelings, of the Ulster people. Some of the chapters are very
-graphic, and there is no lack of Carleton’s peculiar humour.”—(<i>O’Donoghue</i>).</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ FATHER BUTLER AND THE LOUGH DERG PILGRIM: Sketches
-of Irish Manners. Pp. 302. (<i>Curry</i>). 1829.</p>
-
-<p>Published anonymously. Two of Carleton’s most virulently anti-Catholic
-writings. The second, in particular, contains passages which, for Catholics,
-are blasphemous.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE POOR SCHOLAR; and other Tales. Pp. 252. (<i>Duffy</i>). 1<i>s.</i>
-Still in print. [1830].</p>
-
-<p>Selections, comprising some of Carleton’s best work, and quite free from
-religious and political rancour. <i>The Poor Scholar</i> is full of human interest.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_47"></a>[47]</span>
-Carleton works powerfully upon all our best feelings in turn. Particularly
-touching is his picture of the depth and tenderness of family affections (he
-was himself a doting father). The pictures of the hedge-schoolmaster’s
-brutalities, and of the days of the pestilence are vivid. He is in this story
-altogether on the side of the peasant. This little volume contains also eight
-other stories, humorous for the most part, all excellent.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ TALES OF IRELAND. [1834].</p>
-
-<p>Contains: “The Death of a Devotee;” “The Priest’s Funeral;” “Lachlin
-Murray and the Blessed Candle;” “Neal Malone;” “The Dream of a
-Broken Heart,” &amp;c. This last has been described as one of the purest and
-noblest stories in our literature; but the remainder are among Carleton’s
-feeblest efforts, and are full of rank bigotry.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ FARDOROUGHA THE MISER. Pp. 280. (<i>Downey</i>). [1839]. <i>n.d.</i>
-(N.Y.: <i>Haverty</i>). 0.50.</p>
-
-<p>Prefaces by the Author and by D. J. O’Donoghue. A powerful novel,
-full of strong character study, and of deep and tragic pathos, relieved by
-humorous scenes. Carleton tells us that all the characters save one are
-drawn from originals well known to himself. The original of the miser’s wife,
-a perfect type of the Catholic Irish mother, was his own mother. Una O’Brien
-is one of the loveliest of Carleton’s heroines. Honor O’Donovan is scarcely
-less admirable. The mental struggles of the miser, torn between the love
-of his son and the love of his money, are finely depicted.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE FAWN OF SPRINGVALE; THE CLARIONET, AND OTHER
-TALES. Two Vols. 1841.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ PADDY GO EASY AND HIS WIFE NANCY. (<i>Duffy</i>), 1<i>s.</i> [1845].
-Still reprinted.</p>
-
-<p>Racy sketch of humorous and good-natured but lazy, thriftless, good-for-nothing
-Irishman, drawn with much humour and with the faithfulness of a
-keen observer. But the book leaves on the reader the absurd impression
-that this character is typical of the average peasant. The story is a prototype
-of the famous <i>Adventures of Mick M’Quaid</i>. The first title of this book was
-originally <i>Parra Sastha</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ VALENTINE M’CLUTCHY. (<i>Duffy</i>). 2<i>s.</i> [1845]. Numerous editions
-since. Still reprinted. (N.Y.: <i>Sadleir</i>). 1.50.</p>
-
-<p>A detailed study of the character and career of an Irish land agent of the
-worst type. It puts the reader on intimate terms with the prejudices, feelings,
-aims, and manners of the Orangemen of the day, and bitterly satirizes them.
-It gives vivid pictures of both Anglican and Dissenting proselytizing efforts.
-Written from a strongly national and even Catholic standpoint. Contains
-several remarkable character studies. There is Solomon M’Slime, “the
-religious attorney,” sanctimonious, canting, hypocritical; Darby O’Drive,
-M’Clutchy’s ruffianly bailiff, a converted Papist; the Rev. Mr. Lucre, a very
-superior absentee clergyman of the Establishment, and an ardent proselytizer;
-the old priest, Father Roche, very sympathetically drawn. The bias throughout
-is very strong and undisguised. There are some grotesquely and irresistibly
-comic scenes, but there are also fine scenes of tragic interest. “Nothing in
-literature,” says Mr. O’Donoghue, “could be more terrible than some of the
-scenes in this book.” He calls it “one of Carleton’s most amazing efforts.”
-Of the book as a whole, Mr. Krans says: “It is one of the most daring pictures
-of Irish country life ever executed.” And Mr. G. Barnett Smith speaks of the
-eviction scene as “unexampled for its sadness and pathos.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_48"></a>[48]</span></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ RODY THE ROVER. (<i>Duffy</i>). 1<i>s.</i> [1845]. Still in print.</p>
-
-<p>Study of the origin of Ribbonism, and of its effects upon countryside.
-The hero is an emissary of the Society. The latter is represented as organized
-and worked by a set of self-interested rascals who deluded the peasantry
-with hopes of removing grievances, whilst they themselves pursued their
-personal ends, and were often at the same time in the pay of the Castle.
-The Government spy system is denounced.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ DENIS O’SHAUGHNESSY GOING TO MAYNOOTH. Pp. 200.
-(<i>Routledge</i>). 1845. Illustrated by W. H. Brooke.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ ART MAGUIRE. (<i>Duffy</i>). 1<i>s.</i> [1847]. Still reprinted. (N.Y.:
-<i>Sadleir</i>). 0.15.</p>
-
-<p>The story of a man ruined by drink. Conventional and obviously written
-for a purpose, yet enlivened by scenes of humour and pathos, written in
-Carleton’s best vein. Dedicated in very flattering terms to Father Theobald
-Mathew, and irreproachable from a Catholic point of view. Incidentally
-there is an interesting picture of one of Father Mathew’s meetings. Father
-Mathew himself thought highly of the book.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE BLACK PROPHET. Pp. 408. (<i>Lawrence &amp; Bullen</i>). [1847].
-Introd. by D. J. O’Donoghue, and Illustr. by J. B. Yeats. 1899. (N.Y.:
-<i>Sadleir</i>). 1.50.</p>
-
-<p>The plot centres in a rural murder mystery, but there are many threads
-in the narrative. As a background there is the Famine and typhus-plague
-of 1817, described with appalling power and realism. Of this the Author himself
-was a witness, and he assures us that he has in no wise exaggerated the
-horrors. All through there are passages of true and heart-rending pathos,
-lit up by the humorous passages of arms between Jemmy Branigan and his
-master, the middleman, Dick o’ the Grange. Many peculiar types of that
-day appear: Skinadre the rural miser, Donnell Dhu the Prophecyman.
-There is not a word in the book that could hurt Catholic or national feeling.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE EMIGRANTS OF AHADARRA. [1847]. (<i>Routledge</i>). 1<i>s.</i>
-(N.Y.: <i>Sadleir</i>). 1.50.</p>
-
-<p>A story of rural life, depicting with much beauty and pathos the sadness
-of emigration. The book is first and foremost a love story and has no didactic
-object. It contains one of Carleton’s most exquisite portraits of an Irish
-peasant girl. The struggle between her love and her stern and uncompromising
-zeal for the faith is finely drawn. O’Finigan, with his half-tipsy
-grandiloquence, is also cleverly done. A kindly spirit pervades the book,
-and it is almost entirely free from the bad taste, coarseness, and rancour
-which show themselves at times in Carleton.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE TITHE-PROCTOR. (<span class="smcap">Belfast</span>: <i>Simms &amp; M’Intyre</i>). [1849].</p>
-
-<p>Founded on real events, the murder of the Bolands, a terrible agrarian
-crime. Written in a mood of savage resentment against his countrymen.
-D. J. O’Donoghue says of this book: “It is a vicious picture of the worst
-passions of the people, a rancorous description of the just war of the peasantry
-against tithes, and some of the vilest types of the race are there held up to
-odium, not as rare instances of villainy, but as specimens of humanity quite
-commonly to be met with.” Yet there are good portraits and good scenes.
-Among the former are Mogue Moylan, the Cannie Soogah, Dare-devil O’Driscoll,
-Buck English, and the Proctor himself. The latter, hated of the
-people, is painted in dark colours. “As a study of villainy,” says Mr.
-O’Donoghue, “the book is convincing. There is one touching and fine
-scene—that in which the priest stealthily carries a sack of oats to the starving
-Protestant minister and his family.” “As a study of Irish life,” says Mr.
-O’Donoghue again, “even in the anti-tithe war time it is a perversion of
-facts, and a grotesque accumulation of melodramatic horrors.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_49"></a>[49]</span></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ JANE SINCLAIR; or, The Fawn of Springvale. [1849].</p>
-
-<p>A melancholy story of middle-class life, with many truthful touches, but
-overcharged with a sentiment that to modern taste appears somewhat strained
-and somewhat insipid. Contains a highly eulogistic portrait of a dissenting
-minister, John Sinclair—Calvinistic, didactic, but warm-hearted and truly
-charitable.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ TALES AND SKETCHES OF IRISH LIFE AND CHARACTER.
-(<span class="smcap">Dublin</span>). Plates by Phiz. 1845. This is the original 1<i>s.</i> edition of the
-following and <i>Amusing Irish Tales</i>, <i>ante</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ TALES AND SKETCHES OF THE IRISH PEASANTRY. 1851.</p>
-
-<p>Is as good as the <i>Traits</i>, and has, moreover, little that is objectionable.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE SQUANDERS OF CASTLE SQUANDER. [1852]. Two Vols.
-Pp. 326 + 311. Illustr.</p>
-
-<p>An attempt to present the life of the gentry, a task for which Carleton
-was imperfectly qualified. “It reminds one,” says Mr. O’Donoghue, “at a
-superficial examination, of Lever, but is far inferior to any of that writer’s
-works. It is full of rancour and rage, and makes painful and exasperating
-reading: the best that can be said for it is that there are pages here and
-there not unworthy of the Author’s better self. The latter part of the book
-is an acrid political argument.” There is an amusing story of a trick played
-upon a gauger.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ WILLY REILLY AND HIS DEAR COLLEEN BAWN. (<i>Duffy</i>).
-2<i>s.</i> [1855]. 1908.</p>
-
-<p>Introduction by E. A. Baker, M.A., LL.D., who included this in his series,
-“Half-Forgotten Books.” (<i>Routledge</i>). 2<i>s.</i> 1904. The most popular of
-Carleton’s works, having passed through more than fifty large editions. A
-pleasant, readable romantic melodrama, founded on the famous ballad,
-“Now rise up, Willy Reilly,” which refers to an episode of the Penal days, <i>c.</i>
-1745-52. It is practically free from political and religious bias, but is greatly
-inferior to his earlier works.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE BLACK BARONET. Pp. 476, close print. (<i>Duffy</i>). 2<i>s.</i> [1856].
-Still reprinted.</p>
-
-<p>A tragedy of upper-class society life. The interest lies chiefly in the intricate
-plot, which, however, is distinctly melodramatic. There is little attempt
-to portray the manners of the society about which the book treats, and there
-is little character-drawing. The tragedy is relieved by humorous scenes
-from peasant life. In the Preface the Author tells us that the circumstances
-related in the story really happened. Contains a touching picture of an
-evicted tenant, who leaves the hut in which his wife lies dead and his children
-fever-stricken to seek subsistence by a life of crime. “There is nothing,”
-says G. Barnett Smith in <span class="smcap">The XIXth. Century</span> (Author of notice of C. in
-D.N.B.), “more dramatic in the whole of Carleton’s works than the closing
-scene of this novel.” And he rates it very high.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE EVIL EYE; or, the Black Spectre. (<i>Duffy</i>). 2<i>s.</i> [1860]. Still
-reprinted.</p>
-
-<p>“Probably the weakest of his works.” Perilously near the ridiculous in
-style and plot.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ REDMOND O’HANLON. Pp. 199. 16mo. (<i>Duffy</i>). 1<i>s.</i> [1862].
-Still reprinted.</p>
-
-<p>The exploits of a daring Rapparee. A fine subject feebly treated. From
-National point of view the book is not inspiring. Very slight plot, consisting
-mainly in the rescue by O’Hanlon of a girl who had been abducted. Moral
-tone good. An appendix (32 pages) by T. C. Luby gives the historical facts
-connected with the hero.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_50"></a>[50]</span></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE RED-HAIRED MAN’S WIFE. Pp. viii. + 274. (<i>Sealy,
-Bryers</i>). 1889.</p>
-
-<p>Exploits of one Leeam O’Connor, a notorious “lady-killer.” One of the
-chief characters Hugh O’Donnell is implicated in the Fenian movement.
-Father Moran and Rev. Mr. Bayley, the priest and the rector, bosom friends,
-are finely portrayed. There are flashes here and there of Carleton’s old
-powers. Mr. O’Donoghue (<i>Life of Carleton</i>, ii., p. 321) states that part of the
-original MS. was destroyed in a fire, and that the missing portions were supplied
-after Carleton’s death by a Mr. MacDermott and published, first in the
-<span class="smcap">Carlow College Magazine</span> (1870), then in book form as above.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ TRAITS AND STORIES OF THE IRISH PEASANTRY. Many
-editions, <i>e.g.</i> (<i>Routledge</i>). One Vol. 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> N.Y.: (<i>Dutton</i>). 1.50.</p>
-
-<p>Perhaps the best is that edited in four volumes, 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> net each, by D. J.
-O’Donoghue, and published in 1896 by Dent. Its special features are:
-handsome binding, print, and general get-up; reproduction of original
-illustrations by Phiz; portraits of Carleton; inclusion of Carleton’s Introduction;
-biography and critical introduction by Editor. The original
-edition first appeared in 1830-33. Contents: (1) “Ned M’Keown;” (2)
-“Three Tasks;” (3) “Shane Fadh’s Wedding;” (4) “Larry M’Farland’s
-Wake;” (5) “The Station;” (6) “An Essay on Irish Swearing;” (7)
-“The Battle of the Factions;” (8) “The Midnight Mass;” (9) “The
-Party Fight and Funeral;” (10) “The Hedge School;” (11) “The Lough
-Derg Pilgrim;” (12) “The Donagh, or the Horse Stealers;” (13) “Phil
-Purcel, the Pig Driver;” (14) “The Leanhan Shee;” (15) “The Geography
-of an Irish Oath;” (16) “The Poor Scholar;” (17) “Wildgoose Lodge;”
-(18) “Tubber Derg;” (19) “Dennis O’Shaughnessy going to Maynooth;”
-(20) “Phelim O’Toole’s Courtship;” (21) “Neal Malone.”</p>
-
-<p>This work constitutes the completest and most authentic picture ever given
-to us of the life of the peasantry in the first quarter of the last century. It
-is the more interesting in that it depicts an Ireland wholly different from the
-Ireland of our days, a state of things that has quite passed away. Speaking
-of the <i>Traits</i>, Mr. D. J. O’Donoghue says that, “taken as a whole, there is
-nothing in Irish literature within reasonable distance of them for completeness,
-variety, character-drawing, humour, pathos and dramatic power.” And
-most Irishmen would be at one with him. About the absolute life-like
-reality of his peasants there can be no doubt. But reserves must be made
-as to his fairness and impartiality. To the edition of 1854 he prefixed an
-introduction, in which he states his intention “to aid in removing many
-absurd prejudices ... against his countrymen,” and in particular the conception
-of the “stage Irishman.” He then enters into a vindication and a
-eulogy of the national character which is fully in accord with national sentiment.
-But many of the stories were originally written for a violently anti-national
-and anti-Catholic periodical. Some of the <i>Traits</i> were consequently
-marred by offensive passages, some of which the author himself afterwards
-regretted. He frequently betrays the rancour he felt against the religion
-which he had abandoned. The Catholic clergy in particular he never treated
-fairly, and in some of the <i>Traits</i> ridicule is showered upon them, <i>e.g.</i>, in “The
-Station.” Yet in others, <i>e.g.</i>, “The Poor Scholar,” things Catholic are treated
-with perfect propriety. In 1845 Thomas Davis wrote for the <span class="smcap">Nation</span> a very
-appreciative article on Carleton. The illustrations by Phiz are very clever,
-but many of them are simply caricatures of the Irish peasantry.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ STORIES FROM CARLETON, with an Introduction by W. B. Yeats.
-Pp. xvii. + 302. (<i>Walter Scott</i>), 1<i>s.</i> <i>n.d.</i></p>
-
-<p>Contains: “The Poor Scholar;” “Tubber Derg;” “Wildgoose Lodge;”
-“Shane Fadh’s Wedding;” “The Hedge School.” Mr. Yeats says of
-Carleton: “He is the greatest novelist of Ireland, by right of the most Celtic
-eyes that ever gazed from under the brows of storyteller.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_51"></a>[51]</span></p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>CARMICHAEL, Alexander.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ DEIRDRE AND THE LAY OF THE CHILDREN OF UISNE.
-Pp. 146. (<i>Gill</i>, &amp;c.). 1905.</p>
-
-<p>Orally collected in 1867 from the recital of John MacNeill (aged 83), of
-the Island of Barra. Scotch-Gaelic and English on opposite pages. Differs
-from the average Irish version in numerous details.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>CARROLL, Rev. P. J.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ ROUND ABOUT HOME: Irish Scenes and Memories. Pp. 234.
-(U.S.A.: <i>Notre Dame, Ind.</i>). $1. 1915.</p>
-
-<p>Idylls of Irish country life (West Limerick), told with simplicity and genuine
-sympathy in language charged with feeling, and often of much beauty.
-Memory has no doubt cast a golden haze over the scenes and persons, idealizing
-them somewhat, yet they are very real for all that. They are nearly all in
-the form of stories, and are told with zest. Some are sad enough, but with a
-sadness that is softened by the kindly genial spirit of the teller. The writer
-is of course in complete sympathy with the people. Many queer types
-(Micky the Fenian, the bell-man, Mad Matt the tramp, the polite beggar,
-the believer in ghosts, &amp;c.) are studied in these sketches. “There is not one
-of the twenty-six sketches that is not in its way a masterpiece.”—(C.B.N.).</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>CASEY, W. F.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ ZOE: a Portrait. Pp. 376. (<i>Herbert &amp; Daniel</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1911.</p>
-
-<p>A study from the life of an exceedingly unpleasant Dublin girl, an inveterate
-society flirt. The plot is chiefly concerned with her treatment of her various
-suitors, including a loveless marriage, contracted with one of them in order
-to spite another. Incidentally there are other clever character studies—Major
-Delaney, Barry Conway, Maurice Daly. Some are doubtless studies
-from life. Incidentally there is a clever and accurate picture of the Dublin
-middle-class, with its golf, its bridge, and its theatres. The Author has
-written successful plays for the Abbey Theatre.—(<i>Press Notices</i>).</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>CASSIDY, Patrick Sarsfield.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ GLENVEAGH; or, The Victims of Vengeance. (<span class="smcap">Boston</span>). 1870.</p>
-
-<p>First appeared in the <span class="smcap">Boston Pilot</span>; afterwards in book form. The
-Author was born at Dunkineely, Co. Donegal, 1852. In 1869 or so he
-emigrated to America, where he became a journalist. Deals with the
-celebrated Glenveagh trials, arising from difficulties between landlord and
-tenant, at which the author had been present in boyhood. He wrote also
-<i>The Borrowed Bride</i>: a Fairy Love Legend of Donegal. Pp. 255. (N.Y.:
-<i>Holt</i>). 1892. A long story in verse.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>CAWLEY, Rev. Thomas.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ AN IRISH PARISH, ITS SUNSHINE AND SHADOWS. Pp. 189.
-(<span class="smcap">Boston</span>: <i>Angel Guardian Press</i>). 1911.</p>
-
-<p>Stories collected from magazines in which they first appeared (“Irish
-Rosary,” “C.Y.M.,” “Irish Packet”). Giving pictures drawn with knowledge
-and skill, and considerable humour of local celebrities and their political
-careers. Satirises the shady side of local politics, and depicts the ruin wrought
-by drink. But the moral is not too much obtruded. Father Cawley is a
-curate in Galway City.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ LEADING LIGHTS ALL: a Contentious Volume. Pp. 129. (<span class="smcap">Galway</span>:
-<i>The Connaught Tribune</i>). 6<i>d.</i> 1913.</p>
-
-<p>Reprinted from “An Irish Parish,” <i>q.v.</i></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_52"></a>[52]</span></p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>[CHAIGNEAU, William].</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE HISTORY OF JACK CONNOR. Two Vols. 12mo. (<span class="smcap">Dublin</span>).
-Plates. [1751]. Fourth edition. 1766.</p>
-
-<p>Dedicated to Lord Holland (then Henry Fox). A series of adventures of
-Jack Connor alias Conyers. Born 1720, son of a Williamite soldier. Though
-affecting to be on the side of morality, the writer describes minutely a long
-series of scandalous adventures in Dublin, London, Paris, &amp;c., of the hero.
-The intervals between these are filled up by disquisitions of various kinds,
-<i>e.g.</i>, the schemes of benevolent landlords, &amp;c. Facetious tone affected
-throughout. No real description of contemporary manners or of politics.
-The foreword to this edition gives us to understand that the previous edition
-contained still more objectionable matter. Gives fairly accurately the
-average Protestant’s views of priests and “popery” at the time.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>CHARLES, Mrs. Rundle.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ ATTILA AND HIS CONQUERORS. Pp. 327. (S.P.C.K.). 2<i>s.</i></p>
-
-<p>Episodes of the inroad of the Huns and their contact with Christianity,
-chiefly in the person of St. Leo, from whose writings much of the matter is
-borrowed. Two young Irish converts of St. Patrick are carried off by
-British pirates. The story tells of their adventures on the Continent. St.
-Patrick’s historical Epistle to Coroticus is introduced. The story is somewhat
-in the conventional Sunday School manner, being obviously intended
-solely for the conveyance of moral instruction. Has no denominational bias.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>CHISHOLM, Louey.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ CELTIC TALES. Pp. 113. 12mo. (<i>Jack</i>). 1<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> (N.Y.: <i>Dutton</i>).
-Eight coloured pictures by K. Cameron. [1905]. 1911, &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p>In “Told to the Children” series. Three tales:—“The Star-eyed
-Deirdre,” “The Four White Swans,” “Dermat and Grauna.” Moderately
-well told.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>CHRISTINA, Sister M.</b>, a native of Youghal, and now a member of the
-Community of Loreto Convent, Fermoy, Co. Cork. Her only published
-volume hitherto is the book noted below, but she has written serials both
-in French and in English for various periodicals, “Kilvara,” “The
-Forbidden Flame,” “A Modern Cinderella,” “Sir Rupert’s Wife,”
-“A Steel King” (all Irish in subject), “Yolanda,” “A Royal Exile,”
-“Une gerbe de lis,” “Mis à l’épreuve,” are some of the titles. She is
-an enthusiast in the cause of a literature which, while genuinely Irish,
-should be also Catholic in spirit.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ LORD CLANDONNELL. Pp. 166. (<i>Washbourne</i>). 2<i>s.</i> 1914.</p>
-
-<p>An ingenious and pious little story, pleasantly written, with abundance
-of incident (secret marriage, lost papers, rightful heir restored to his own in
-wonderful manner), and many characters. The scene shifts between Donegal,
-Italy, America, and Rostrevor. The Clandonnell family, in spite of the bigoted
-old Lord, is brought back into the Catholic Church.—(I.B.L. and C.B.N.).</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>CHURCH, Samuel Harden.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ JOHN MARMADUKE. (<i>Putnam</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 0.50. [1889]. Fifth edition,
-1898.</p>
-
-<p>Opens 1649 at Arklow. Captain M., who tells the story, is an officer under
-the Cromwellian General Ireton. Closes shortly after massacre of
-Drogheda. The author says in his <i>Oliver Cromwell, a History</i> (p. 487): “He
-(Cromwell) had overthrown a bloody rebellion in Ireland, and transformed
-the environment of that mad people into industry and peace.” Elsewhere he
-speaks of Cromwell’s “pure patriotism, his sacrifice to duty, his public
-wisdom, his endeavour for the right course in every difficulty.” The novel is
-written in the spirit of the history, a panegyric of Cromwell. It is full of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_53"></a>[53]</span>
-battles, sieges, and exciting adventures. The Author tells us that he “went
-to Ireland, traced again the line of the Cromwell Invasion, and gave some
-studious attention to the language and literature of the country” (Pref.).
-Anti-Catholic in tone.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>CLARK, Jackson C.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ KNOCKINSCREEN DAYS. Pp. 308. (<i>Methuen</i>). 6<i>s.</i> Illustr.
-1913.</p>
-
-<p>Episodes in a Lough Neagh-side village conceived in a vein of broad comedy,
-in which Mr. Peter Carmichael, a young squire on the look-out for amusement
-and his irresponsible—and resourceful—friend Billy Devine are the chief
-characters. How the two of them defeated the Nationalist candidate for the
-dispensary, and how two members of the Force arrested the County Inspector
-on a charge of Sunday drinking. The local colour and the dialect are perfect,
-and the local types well sketched.</p>
-
-<p class="author" id="CLARKE"><b>CLARKE, Mrs. Charles M.; “Miriam Drake.”</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ STRONG AS DEATH. Pp. 538. (<span class="smcap">Aberdeen</span>: <i>Moran</i>). 6<i>s.</i></p>
-
-<p>The scene is laid in Ulster: the personages are Irish Presbyterians. The
-Author’s sympathies are with the rebels, but she does justice to the men on the
-loyalist side. The book contains many stirring adventures, but is far removed
-from mere sensationalism (Publ.).</p>
-
-<p class="author" id="CLERY"><b>CLERY, Arthur E.; “A. Synan.”</b> Born in Dublin, 1879. Educated at
-Clongowes Wood College, Catholic University School. Professor of
-Law in University College, N.U.I., since 1910. Author of <i>The Idea of a
-Nation</i>, and of some books on law. Usual pen-name “Chanel.”</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE COMING OF THE KING: a Jacobite Romance. Pp. 143.
-(<i>C.T.S. of Ireland</i>). 1<i>s.</i> Pretty binding. 1909.</p>
-
-<p>Deals with an imaginary landing of James II. to head a rising in Ireland.
-Scene: first on shores of Bantry Bay, then in Celbridge. A plot to seize
-Dublin Castle, in which the King is aided by Swift, fails through divisions
-caused by sectarian hatred. A rapidly moving story with many exciting
-situations. Though no elaborate picture of the times is attempted, innumerable
-small touches show the Author’s thorough acquaintance with
-their history and literature. The style is pleasant, and the conversations
-seldom jar by being too modern in tone.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>COATES, H. J.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE WEIRD WOMAN OF THE WRAAGH; or, Burton and Le
-Moore. Four Vols. Pp. 1224. (<span class="smcap">London</span>: <i>Newman</i>). 1830.</p>
-
-<p>Wild adventures in 1783 <i>sqq.</i> The Wraagh is a cave near Baltinglass.
-The scene frequently shifts from one part of Ireland to another—Cork,
-Wicklow, Kilkenny, Cashel (historical sketch given), &amp;c. Kidnappings,
-hairbreadth escapes from robbers, a duel, love story of Walter (whose identity
-is long a mystery) with Lena Fitzgerald, and their final marriage. Several
-long stories are sandwiched in here and there. Tone quite patriotic. Well-written
-on the whole.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ LUCIUS CAREY; or, The Mysterious Female of Mora’s Dell. Four
-Vols. Pp. 1007. (<span class="smcap">London</span>: <i>Newman</i>). 1831.</p>
-
-<p>Dedicated to O’Connell. Lucius goes over to England with his followers,
-fights in the Royalist cause, and finally returns to Ireland. Sympathies:
-Royalist, and Irish. But the noble characters are for the most part English,
-some of the Irish characters being little better than buffoons. The book is
-full of Astrology. There are some interesting allusions to Irish heroic legend.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_54"></a>[54]</span></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE WATER QUEEN; or, The Mermaid of Loch Lene, and other
-Tales. Three Vols. (<span class="smcap">London</span>: <i>Newman</i>). 1832.</p>
-
-<p>A very romantic story of Killarney in the days of Elizabeth’s wars with
-Hugh O’Neill. Sir Bertram Fitzroy, a gallant young Englishman, comes
-over with Essex, and is sent down to Killarney. He becomes friendly with
-the Irish and falls in love with the “Mermaid” Eva, a young lady who chose
-this disguise for greater safety. She wins him to love Ireland. They are
-kept apart by the schemes of the villain O’Fergus, standard bearer to O’Neill.
-But, after a scene of considerable dramatic power in which O’Fergus is slain,
-they are united again. There are many adventures, and much fighting.
-Killarney well described. In sympathy with Ireland. No religious bias.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>COGAN, J. J.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ OLD IRISH HEARTS AND HOMES: A Romance of Real Life.
-Pp. 271. (<span class="smcap">Melbourne</span>: <i>Linehan</i>). 3<i>s.</i> [<i>n.d.</i>]. New edition, 1908.</p>
-
-<p>A series of episodes, somewhat idealised by memory, from the annals of
-an Irish Catholic family of the well-to-do farmer class. There is not much
-literary skill, but this is made up for by the evident faithfulness and the
-intrinsic interest of the pictures. Old de Prendergast is admirably drawn.
-Brings out well how thoroughly penetrated with religious spirit many such
-families in I. are. A sad little boy-and-girl love story runs through the
-book. Scene: Dublin (election of Alderman well described) and West
-Wicklow.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>COLLINS, William.</b> (1838-1890). A Tyrone man who emigrated to Canada
-and U.S.A.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ DALARADIA. (N.Y.: <i>Kenedy</i>). 36 cents net.</p>
-
-<p>“A tale of the days of King Milcho,” the time of St. Patrick.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>COLTHURST, Miss E.</b> “A Cork lady of marked poetical ability. She
-wrote also some prose works, such as <i>The Irish Scripture Reader</i>, <i>The
-Little Ones of Innisfail</i>, &amp;c. Most of her works were publ. anon. She
-was associated with the Rev. E. Nangle’s mission to Achill” (D. J.
-O’Donoghue, <i>Poets of Ireland</i>).</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE IRISH SCRIPTURE READER.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ IRRELAGH: or, The Last of the Chiefs. Pp. 448. (<span class="smcap">London</span>: <i>Houlston
-&amp; Stoneman</i>). 1849.</p>
-
-<p>Dedication dated from Danesfort, Killarney. Scene: Killarney. Time:
-towards the close of 17th century, but there is no reference to historical
-events, and the tone and the atmosphere are quite modern. A Waldensian
-pastor comes to live in the family of the O’Donoghue, and converts that
-family and some of the neighbouring chieftains’ families. A great deal of
-Protestant doctrine is introduced; Catholic doctrines (<i>e.g.</i>, the Rosary, p. 49)
-are referred to with strong disapproval. There is a slight love interest and
-some vague descriptions of scenery. The style is somewhat turgid.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE LITTLE ONES OF INNISFAIL.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>COLUM, Padraic.</b> Born in Longford, 1881. Has published several plays,
-which have been acted with success in the Abbey Theatre and elsewhere;
-a volume of verse; and a very interesting social study of Ireland, <i>My
-Irish Year</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ A BOY IN EIRINN. Pp. 255. (N.Y.: <i>Dutton</i>). Frontisp. in colour
-and four Illustr. by Jack B. Yeats. 1913. New ed. (<i>Dent</i>), 1915.</p>
-
-<p>Third volume in “Little Schoolmate Series.” Adventures of peasant lad,
-Finn O’Donnell at home in the Midlands and on his way to Dublin by Tara
-in the time of the Land War. Charming pictures of the world as seen with<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_55"></a>[55]</span>
-the wondering eyes of a child. Finn learns Irish legend and history from
-stories told by his grandfather, a priest, and others. The pictures of things
-seen and lived in Ireland are what one might expect from the Author of
-<i>My Irish Year</i>—literal reality vividly but very simply presented. This boy
-is not idealised; he is very life-like and natural. The Author does not
-“write down” to children.</p>
-
-<p>N.B.—In this case at least the reader would do well to take the book <i>before</i>
-the Preface, which latter is by the general editor of the series.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>CONCANNON, Mrs., <i>née</i> Helena Walsh.</b> Born in Maghera, Co. Derry, 1878.
-Educated there and at Loreto College, St. Stephen’s Green, Dublin;
-also at Berlin, Rome, and Paris. M.A. (R.U.I.) with Honours in Mod.
-Lit. Besides the story mentioned below, she has published <i>A Garden
-of Girls</i> (Educational Co. of Ireland), and is about to publish a Life of
-St. Columbanus which won against noteworthy competitors a prize
-offered by Dr. Shahan of the Catholic University of America. Has
-contributed to Catholic magazines. Resides in Galway. Her husband
-is prominently connected with the Gaelic League, and she herself reads
-and speaks Irish.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE SORROW OF LYCADOON. 12mo. Pp. 150. (C.T.S.I.: <i>Iona
-Series</i>), 1<i>s.</i> 1912.</p>
-
-<p>Story of the life and martyrdom (1584) of Dermot O’Hurley and of the
-first mission of the Jesuits to Ireland. The author has an “historic
-imagination” of exceptional vividness. The incidents and the colouring
-are both solidly based on historic fact. But erudition is never allowed to
-obtrude itself on the reader. The characters are flesh and blood, and the
-story has a pathetic human interest of its own. It is told with much charm
-of style.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>CONDON, John A., O.S.A.</b> Born in Dungarvan, Co. Waterford, in 1867.
-Educated locally at the Augustinian Seminary and at Castleknock
-College. Became an Augustinian 1883. Has studied in Rome and
-travelled in U.S.A. and Canada. He has resided in various parts of
-Ireland—New Ross, Cork, Dublin. Has held positions of special trust
-in his Order.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE CRACKLING OF THORNS. Pp. 175. (<i>Gill</i>). 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> Six
-Illustr. by M. Power O’Malley. 1915.</p>
-
-<p>Ten stories of various types. The majority are of the high-class magazine
-type and very up-to-date in subject and treatment, but here and there one
-comes upon bits of real life observed at first hand and pictured with genuine
-feeling. Several are Irish-American, and their interest turns on the sorrow
-and hardship of emigration. The last, “By the Way,” in which Sergeant
-Maguire, R.I.C., spins yarns, is full of the most genuine Irish humour (dialect
-perfect), and is a fine piece of story-telling.</p>
-
-<p class="author" id="CONYERS"><b>CONYERS, Dorothea.</b> Born 1871. Daughter of Colonel J. Blood Smyth,
-Fedamore, Co. Limerick. Has published, besides the works here
-mentioned, <i>Recollections of Sport in Ireland</i>. Resides near Limerick.
-It may be said of her books in general that they are humorous, lively
-stories of Irish sport, full of incident, with quick perception of the surfaces
-and broad outlines of character. Her <i>dramatis personæ</i> are hunting
-people, garrison officers, horse dealers, and the peasantry seen more or
-less from their point of view.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE THORN BIT. Pp. 332. (<i>Hutchinson</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1900.</p>
-
-<p>An earlier effort, with the Author’s qualities not yet developed. Society
-in a small country town, days with the hounds, clever situations.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_56"></a>[56]</span></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ PETER’S PEDIGREE. Pp. 326. (<i>Arnold</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1904.</p>
-
-<p>Perhaps the best of the lot. Hunting, horse-dealing, and love-making in
-Co. Cork.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ AUNT JANE AND UNCLE JAMES. Pp. 342. (<i>Hutchinson</i>). 6<i>s.</i>
-1908.</p>
-
-<p>A sequel to the last, with the same vivid descriptions of “runs” and
-“deals.” A murder trial enters into the plot.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE BOY, SOME HORSES, AND A GIRL. Pp. 307. (<i>Arnold</i>). 6<i>s.</i>
-1908.</p>
-
-<p>Of the same type as the last and scarcely inferior. Irish peasants and
-servants are described with much truth as well as humour. Full of glorious
-hunts and pleasant hunting people.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THREE GIRLS AND A HERMIT. Pp. 328. (<i>Hutchinson</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1908.</p>
-
-<p>Life in a small garrison town. Many droll situations.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE CONVERSION OF CON CREGAN. Pp. 327. (<i>Hutchinson</i>). 6<i>s.</i>
-1909.</p>
-
-<p>Thirteen stories, dealing mostly with horses and hunting. Full of shrewd
-wit and kindly humour. Shows a good knowledge of Irish life and character,
-and an understanding of the relations between the classes. One of the
-stories is a novel in itself.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE STRAYINGS OF SANDY. Pp. 362. (<i>Hutchinson</i>). 6<i>s.</i> and 1<i>s.</i>
-1909.</p>
-
-<p>The externals of Irish country life as seen by a London business man on a
-holiday. Study of Irish character as seen chiefly in sporting types—needy,
-good-natured, spendthrift—as contrasted with the Englishman, wealthy,
-businesslike, and miserly. Contact with Irish life softens the Englishman’s
-asperities. Full of genuinely humorous and amusing adventures of Sandy
-with race-horses and hounds, and other things. The brogue is not overdone
-and we are not, on the whole, caricatured. Scene: West coast.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ TWO IMPOSTORS AND TINKER. Pp. 344. (<i>Hutchinson</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1910.</p>
-
-<p>One impostor is Derrick Bourke Herring who, under his namesake cousin’s
-name, took up the Mullenboden hounds, and the other was his sister Jo who,
-in man’s clothes, acted as whip. Tinker is a yellow mongrel who does many
-wonderful things in the course of the story. The main interest centres in the
-doings of these three, chiefly in the hunting field. A melodramatic element
-is introduced by the attempt of the father of the wealthy heiress Grania
-Hume to steal her jewels. Of course there are love affairs also. A breezy
-story, with much lively incident and pleasant humour.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ SOME HAPPENINGS OF GLENDALYNE. (<i>Hutchinson</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1911.</p>
-
-<p>Eve O’Neill is under the guardianship of The O’Neill, an eccentric, rapidly
-growing into a maniac. His mania is religious, he has a passion for horse-racing,
-and keeps the heir Hugh O’Neill (supposed to be dead) shut up in a
-deserted wing of the old mansion. Here this latter is accidentally discovered
-by Eve, and then there are thrilling adventures. Atmosphere throughout
-weird and terrifying in the manner of Lefanu. Peasantry little understood
-and almost caricatured.—(<i>Press Notice</i>).</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE ARRIVAL OF ANTONY. Pp. 348. (<i>Hutchinson</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1912.</p>
-
-<p>Anthony Doyle, brought up from childhood in Germany, and with the
-breeding of a gentleman, comes home to help his old uncle, a horsedealer
-living in an old-fashioned thatched farmhouse in a remote country district<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_57"></a>[57]</span>
-in Ireland. Tells of the wholly inexperienced Antony’s adventures among
-horse-sharpers, of his devotion to his old uncle, and of the social barriers
-that for long keep him aloof from his own class and from his future wife.
-The backwardness and slovenliness of Irish life are a good deal exaggerated,
-but the story is very cleverly told, with a good deal of dry humour. The
-Author’s satire is not hostile.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ SALLY. Pp. 307. (<i>Methuen</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1912.</p>
-
-<p>How Sally Stannard charms the hero from his melancholia more efficaciously
-than the hunting in Connemara on which he was relying for his cure. Has
-all the appearances of a story dashed off carelessly and in haste for the publishers.
-Nothing in it is studied or finished.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ OLD ANDY. Pp. 309. (<i>Methuen</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1914.</p>
-
-<p>Peasant life in Co. Limerick.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ A MIXED PACK. Pp. 296. (<i>Methuen</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1915.</p>
-
-<p>A collection of stories of very various type—hunting sketches, the strange
-experience of an engine driver, the adventures of a traveller for a firm of
-jewellers.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ MEAVE. Pp. 336. (<i>Hutchinson</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1915.</p>
-
-<p>Here the scene is laid in England, and the characters are English, all but
-a wild little Irish girl, Meave, who plays one of the chief parts. The story is
-full of hunting scenes.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>CONYNGHAM, Major David Power, LL.D.; “Allen H. Clington.”</b> Born in
-Killenaule, Co. Tipperary. Took part, along with his kinsman Charles
-Kickham, in the rising of 1848. Fought in the American Civil War in
-the ’Sixties, after which he engaged in journalism until his death in 1883.
-Wrote many works on Irish and American subjects.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ FRANK O’DONNELL: a Tale of Irish life; edited by “Allen H.
-Clington.” Pp. 370. (<i>Duffy</i>). 5<i>s.</i> 1861.</p>
-
-<p>Tipperary in the years before (and during) the Famine of 1846. Glimpses of
-Tipperary homes, both clerical and lay. Almost every aspect of Irish life at
-the time is pictured—the Famine, Souperism, an Irish agent and his victims
-(ch. xii.), how St. Patrick’s Day is kept, Irish horse races (ch. ii.), &amp;c. “I
-have shewn how the people are made the catspaw of aspiring politicians
-[elections are described] and needy landlords.” Author says the characters
-are taken from real life. They are for the most part very well drawn, <i>e.g.</i>,
-Mr. Baker, “a regular Jack Falstaff,” full of boast about wonderful but
-wholly imaginary exploits; and Father O’Donnell. A pleasant little love-story
-runs through the book. The whole is racy of the soil. The dialect is
-good, but the conversations of the upper class are artificial and scarcely true
-to life. Introduces the episode of the execution of the Bros. C⸺ in N⸺.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ SARSFIELD; or, The Last Great Struggle for Ireland. (<span class="smcap">Boston</span>:
-<i>Donahue</i>). Port. of Sarsfield. 1871.</p>
-
-<p>The Author calls this a historical romance, but the element of romance
-is very small. Ch. I. gives a backward glance over Ireland’s national struggle
-in the past. The nominal hero is Hugh O’Donnell and the heroine Eveleen,
-granddaughter of Florence McCarthy, killed on the Rhine. But Sarsfield is
-the central figure, and the Author contrives to give us his whole career.
-There is plenty of exciting incident, partly fictitious—forays of the Rapparees,
-captures, escapes. In spite of the schemes of the villain rival, Saunders,
-hero and heroine are united. The historical standpoint seems fair if not
-quite impartial.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_58"></a>[58]</span></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE O’DONNELLS OF GLEN COTTAGE. Pp. 498. (N.Y.: <i>Kenedy</i>).
-<i>n.d.</i> (1874). Still in print.</p>
-
-<p>Scene: Tipperary during the Famine years. The fortunes of a family in
-the bad times. Famine and eviction and death wreck its peace, and things
-are only partially righted after many years. The author, whose view-point
-is nationalist and Catholic, vividly describes the evils of the time—the terrible
-sufferings of the Famine, eviction as carried out by a heartless agent, souperism
-in the person of Rev. Mr. Sly, judicial murder as exemplified by the execution
-of the M’Cormacks.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE O’MAHONY, CHIEF OF THE COMERAGHS. Pp. 268. (N.Y.:
-<i>Sadlier</i>). 1879.</p>
-
-<p>A tale of Co. Waterford in 1798, written from a strongly Irish and Catholic
-standpoint. Depicts the tyranny of the Protestant gentry, the savagery of
-the yeomanry. Typical scenes are introduced, <i>e.g.</i>, a flogging at the cart’s
-tail through the streets of Clonmel, seizures for tithes, the execution of Father
-Sheehy (an avowed anachronism), &amp;c. Chief historical personages: Sir
-Judkin Fitzgerald, the “flogging” Sheriff, and Earl Kingston. A vivid
-picture, though obviously partisan, and marred by some inartistic melodrama.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ ROSE PARNELL, THE FLOWER OF AVONDALE. Pp. 429.
-(N.Y.: <i>Sadlier</i>). 1883.</p>
-
-<p>A tale of the rebellion of ’98.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>COSTELLO, Mary.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ PEGGY THE MILLIONAIRE. (<i>C.T.S. of Ireland: Iona Series</i>). 1<i>s.</i>
-1910.</p>
-
-<p>The story of an Irish girl living in “Loughros,” in the West of Ireland,
-some fifty years ago. She is the third and plain daughter of a disappointed
-“fine lady,” who has married a country doctor out of pique, and rues her
-fate for the rest of her life, as she cannot appreciate her husband’s good heart
-and he cannot give her luxuries and grandeur. To this home Peggy comes
-from school. And the book tells us, with plenty of good fun in the telling,
-how she made her fortune and how she scattered happiness and blessings
-around her.—(<i>Press Notice</i>).</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>COTTON, Rev. S. G.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE THREE WHISPERS, AND OTHER TALES. Pp. 256.
-(<span class="smcap">Dublin</span>: <i>Robertson</i>). <i>c.</i> 1850.</p>
-
-<p>In the title story we have two attempted suicides of parents distraught
-with grief, the return of a former convict, and an inheritance for the people
-who were dying with hunger. Dublin is the scene. The next story, “Grace
-Kennedy,” takes place in the Queen’s Co.: a mother murders her boy, the
-sister holds the corpse to the fire and “nestles beside him.” In “The
-Foundling” the mother drowns herself, but some charitable Protestants
-rescue her child and bring him up in their religion. “Ellen Seaton” tells
-how Ellen’s father goes off to be a priest and her mother to be a nun, and
-deals with the efforts made by priests and nuns to get hold of her. Finally
-she converts her nun jailer and both escape. In some of these stories the
-Author introduces very vulgar brogue, with coarse expressions.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>CRAIG, Richard Manifold</b>, 1845-1913. Born in Dublin, and educated there.
-He entered the army as surgeon, and retired with the rank of Lieut.-Colonel.
-His other works of fiction—<i>A Widow Well Left</i>, <i>All Trumps</i>,
-<i>A Sacrifice of Fools</i>, &amp;c.—do not deal with Irish subjects.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_59"></a>[59]</span></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE WEIRD OF “THE SILKEN THOMAS.” Pp. 230. (<span class="smcap">Aberdeen</span>:
-<i>Moran</i>). 1900.</p>
-
-<p>The story of how Lord Thomas Fitzgerald was drawn into revolt by the
-treachery of a private enemy. Purports to be a narrative written at the
-time by Martyn Baruch Fallon, “scrivener and cripple,” a loyal inhabitant
-of Maynooth, with some account of the latter’s private affairs. Written in
-quaint, antique language difficult to follow, especially at the outset of the
-book. It seems of little value from an historical point of view.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ LANTY RIORDAN’S RED LIGHT.</p>
-
-<p>I am not certain whether this story appeared in book form. It is not in
-the B. Museum Library.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>CRAIG, J. Duncan, D.D.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ BRUCE REYNALL, M.A. Pp. 271. (<i>Elliot Stock</i>). 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> 1898.</p>
-
-<p>Author of “Real Pictures of Clerical Life in Ireland,” and of several learned
-works. A story of an Oxford man who came to Ireland as <i>locum tenens</i> in
-the most disturbed time, and found life a good deal more exciting than at
-his English curacy. The Orangemen are very favourably represented. In
-the preface to the following work the Author says of this, “The Reign of
-Terror which prevailed in Ireland while the horrors of the Land League were
-brooding over the land, and a picture of which I have endeavoured to
-delineate in <i>Bruce Reynall</i>.”</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ REAL PICTURES OF CLERICAL LIFE IN IRELAND. Pp. 351.
-(<i>Elliot Stock</i>). [1875]. 1900.</p>
-
-<p>The first six chapters are autobiographical, the remaining sixty-five are a
-series of anecdotes and stories in which the Catholic clergy and the doctrines
-of the Church appear to great disadvantage. The lawlessness and brutality
-of the peasantry are also much insisted on, and the conversion of Ireland to
-Protestantism seems to obsess the writer. Some of the incidents related are
-improbable in the extreme, and it is not clear from the Preface to what extent
-the Author intended them as narratives of actual fact. At all events they
-are told in the form of fiction. There are also gruesome reminiscences of
-agrarian disturbances and of the Fenian outbreak, and a chapter against
-Home Rule. The Author was born in Dublin in the twenties, of Scottish
-parents. He went to T.C.D. in 1847. He was long Vicar of Kinsale. He was
-remarkable as the author of several important works on the Provençal
-language and literature. He died in 1909.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>CRANE, Stephen, and BARR, Robert.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE O’RUDDY. (<i>Methuen</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1904.</p>
-
-<p>Has been well described as a fairy story for grown-ups, with plenty of
-humorous incident—love affairs, duels, &amp;c. The O’Ruddy is a reckless,
-rollicking, lovable character. There is little or no connexion with real life.—(<span class="smcap">The
-Academy</span>).</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>CRAWFORD, Mrs. A.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ LISMORE. Three Vols. (<span class="smcap">London</span>: <i>Newby</i>). 1853.</p>
-
-<p>A rambling and sentimental tale, the scene of which is Southern Ireland
-(Lismore and Ardmore) and Italy in 1659-60. It is in no sense historical,
-nor does the Author seem to have any knowledge of the period dealt with.
-The personages live in “suburbs” and ring the “breakfast-bell.” An
-amusing ignorance of Catholic matters is evidenced. The plot is confused
-and without unity.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_60"></a>[60]</span></p>
-
-<p class="author" id="CRAWFORD"><b>CRAWFORD, Mary S.; “Coragh Travers.”</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ HAZEL GRAFTON. Pp. 350. (<i>Long</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1911.</p>
-
-<p>Hazel leaves Bournemouth and her school days and two rejected suitors—both
-curates—to live with her adoring parents in the W. of Ireland. She
-and Denis Martin fall in love, but the course of love does not run smooth.
-The two are kept apart by their parents, who are intent on other matches.
-A quarrel completes the breach, but all comes right in the end by help of a
-divorce and a death. Trips to Dublin and to Bundoran and the performances
-of a genuine stage-Irishman are introduced to enliven the tale.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>CRAWFORD, Michael George.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ LEGENDARY STORIES OF THE CARLINGFORD LOUGH
-DISTRICT. Pp. 201, close print. (<span class="smcap">Newry</span>: <i>Offices of “The Frontier
-Sentinel”</i>). 1<i>s.</i> 1914.</p>
-
-<p>Thirty-four stories, embodying the legends of a district exceptionally rich
-in memories of old Gaelic Ireland—Cuchulain and the Red Branch—and also
-with great Irish-Norman families like the De Courcys and De Burgos. By a
-writer thoroughly acquainted with the district.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>CRICHTON, Mrs. F. E.</b> Born in Belfast, 1877; educated at a private
-school near Richmond. Travelled much in Italy, Switzerland, and
-Germany. Besides the three novels noted below she publ. some short
-stories, a little book <i>The Precepts of Andy Saul</i>, based on the character of
-an old gardener, and some books for children.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE SOUNDLESS TIDE. Pp. 328. (<i>Arnold</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1911.</p>
-
-<p>Life of country gentry and peasantry in County Down. With the latter
-the Author is particularly effective, bringing out their characteristics with
-quiet “pawky” humour. Especially, there is Mrs. M’Killop and her wise
-saws. But the Colonel and his wife are also very well drawn. There is
-pathos as well as humour. Noteworthy also are the descriptions of sea-coast
-scenery, and the story of the fight on the “twalth”—(I.B.L.). It is a
-simple tale of lover’s misunderstandings. Religious strife is pictured with
-perhaps undue insistence.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ TINKER’S HOLLOW. Pp. 336. (<i>Arnold</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1912.</p>
-
-<p>A charming and delicately-told love story, with a background of life among
-the Presbyterians (both the better class, and the peasantry and servants)
-near a small town in Co. Antrim. Shows an intimate and sympathetic
-knowledge of the people that furnishes the characters of the story. The
-dialect is perfectly reproduced. There is a pleasant picture of the bright
-and sunny Sally Bruce growing from girlhood into womanhood amid the dull
-austerity of Coole House, in the society of her two maiden aunts and her
-bachelor uncle. There are pleasant gleams of Northern humour, not a few
-gems of rustic philosophy, and vignettes of Antrim scenery. The human
-interest is, however, strongest of all.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE BLIND SIDE OF THE HEART. Pp. 299. (<i>Maunsel</i>). 6<i>s.</i>
-1915.</p>
-
-<p>The story of Dick Sandford’s choice between his cousin Betty—English like
-himself—bright, charming, wholly of this world, and Ethne Blake whom he
-meets while on a visit to Ireland. The book is really a study, or rather an
-imaginative presentment of this strange, almost unearthly, figure as typifying
-the mystic, faery side of the Celtic temperament, and of the background of
-haunted Irish landscape and peasant fairy-lore, against which she moves.
-The vital difference in the two temperaments, Celt and Saxon, is
-suggested throughout. The peasantry of the remote mountain glens are
-pictured with sympathy and insight.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_61"></a>[61]</span></p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>CROKER, Mrs. B. M.</b>, wife of Lieut.-Col. Croker, late Royal Munster
-Fusiliers; daughter of Rev. W. Sheppard, Rector of Kilgefin, Co.
-Roscommon; educated at Rockferry, Cheshire. She spent fourteen years
-in the East, whence the Eastern subjects of some of her novels. These
-number nearly forty. She resides for the most part in London and
-Folkestone.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ A BIRD OF PASSAGE. Pp. 366. (<i>Chatto &amp; Windus</i>). [1886.]
-New edition. 1903.</p>
-
-<p>A love story, beginning in the Andamans. There is a lively picture of
-garrison life, including the clever portrait of the “leading lady” (and tyrant),
-Mrs. Creery. The lovers are separated by the scheming of an unsuccessful
-rival. The girl first lives a Cinderella life, with disagreeable relations in
-London, then is a governess, and finally (p. 256) goes to a relation in Ireland.
-Then there are amusing studies of Irish types—carmen (Larry Flood, with
-his famous “Finnigan’s mare”), and servants, and a family of broken-down
-gentry. Things come right in the end.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ IN THE KINGDOM OF KERRY. (<i>Chatto &amp; Windus</i>). 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>
-1896.</p>
-
-<p>“Seven sketchy little stories of poor folk, written in light and merry style.”—(<i>Baker</i>).</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ BEYOND THE PALE. (<i>Chatto &amp; Windus</i>). 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> and 6<i>d.</i> (N.Y.:
-<i>Fenno</i>). 0.50. 1897.</p>
-
-<p>Story of an Irish girl of good family, who is obliged to train horses for a
-living, but ends successfully. Scene: a hunting county three hours’ journey
-from Dublin. Much stress is laid on the feudal spirit of the peasantry,
-who are viewed from the point of view of the upper classes, but sympathetically.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ TERENCE. Pp. 342. (<i>Chatto &amp; Windus</i>). 6<i>s.</i> Six illustr. by
-Sidney Paget. (N.Y.: <i>Buckles</i>). 1.25. 1899.</p>
-
-<p>Scene: an anglers’ hotel in Waterville, Co. Kerry, and the neighbourhood,
-which the Author knows and describes well. A tale of love and foolish
-jealousy. The personages belong to the Protestant upper classes. The
-chief interest is in the working out of the plot, which is well sustained all
-through. “Contains comedy of a broad and sometimes vulgar kind, turning
-on jealousy and scandal.”—(<i>Baker</i> 2).</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ JOHANNA. Pp. 315. (<i>Methuen</i>). 1903.</p>
-
-<p>The story of a beautiful but very stupid peasant girl who, forced by a
-tyrannical stepmother to fly from her home in Kerry, sets off for Dublin. On
-the way she loses the address of the house she is going to, is snapped up by
-the keeper of a lodging-house, and there lives as a slavey a life of dreadful
-drudgery and of suffering from unpleasant boarders.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ A NINE DAYS’ WONDER. Pp. 310. (<i>Methuen</i>). 6<i>s.</i> [1905].</p>
-
-<p>How Mary Foley, brought up for twenty-one years in an Irish cabin,
-is suddenly claimed as his daughter by an English peer, and becomes Lady
-Joseline Dene. How she gives Society a sensation by her countrified speech
-and manners, and by her too truthful and pointed remarks, but carries it by
-storm in the end, and marries her early love. The writer has a good knowledge
-of the talk of the lower middle classes. There is no bias in the story, which
-is a thoroughly pleasant one.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ LISMOYLE: an Experiment in Ireland. Pp. 384. (<i>Hutchinson</i>).
-6<i>s.</i> 1914.</p>
-
-<p>The six months’ visit of a young English heiress to the stately, dilapidated
-mansion of Lismoyle, in the Co. Tipperary, involving a comedy of courtship,
-many amusing situations, and some description of the small social affairs
-of the county. No Irish “problem” is touched upon.</p>
-
-<p>The Scenes of some others of her novels are laid partly in Ireland, <i>e.g.</i>,
-TWO MASTERS (<i>Chatto</i>), 1890; and INTERFERENCE (<i>Chatto</i>), 1894.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_62"></a>[62]</span></p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>CROKER, T. Crofton.</b> Born in Cork, 1798; died in London, 1854. Was
-one of the most celebrated of Irish antiquaries, folk-lorists, and collectors
-of ancient airs. He helped to found the Camden Society (1839), the Percy
-Society (1840), and the British Archæological Association (1843). Was
-a Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries, and of many Continental societies.
-Wrote or edited a great number of works. His leisure hours were spent
-in rambles in company with a Quaker gentleman of tastes similar to his
-own. In these excursions he gained that intimate knowledge of the
-people, their ideas, traditions, and tales, which he afterwards turned to
-good account.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ LEGENDS OF THE LAKES. [1829]. Illustr. by Maclise.</p>
-
-<p>Killarney. A series of stories, similar to those in the <i>Fairy Legends</i>, of
-fairies, ghosts, banshees, &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ KILLARNEY LEGENDS. Pp. 294. 16mo. (<span class="smcap">London</span>: <i>Fisher</i>).
-Some steel engravings (quite fanciful). [1831]. Second edition, 1879.</p>
-
-<p>An abbreviated ed. of <i>Legends of the Lakes</i>. Second ed. was edited by
-Author’s son, T. F. D. Croker. Topographical Index.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ FAIRY LEGENDS AND TRADITIONS OF THE SOUTH OF
-IRELAND. New and complete edition. Illustr. by Maclise &amp; Green.
-1882.</p>
-
-<p>First appeared 1825; often republished since. Classified under the
-headings:—The Shefro; the Cluricaune; the Banshee; the Phooka;
-Thierna na oge (<i>sic</i>); the Merrow; the Dullahan, &amp;c. “I make no pretension
-to originality, and avow at once that there is no story in my book which has
-not been told by half the old women of the district in which the scene is laid.
-I give them as I found them” (Pref.). This is the first collection of Irish
-folk-lore apart from the peddler’s chap-books. Dr. Douglas Hyde (Pref. to
-<i>Beside the Fire</i>) calls this a delightful book, and speaks of Croker’s “light
-style, his pleasant parallels from classics and foreign literature, and his
-delightful annotations,” but says that he manipulated for the English market,
-not only the form, but often the substance, of his stories. Scott praised
-the book very highly in the notes to the 1830 ed. of the <i>Waverley Novels</i>, as
-well as in his <i>Demonology and Witchcraft</i>. The original ed. was trans. into
-German by the Bros. Grimm, 1826, and into French by P. A. Dufour, 1828.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>CROKER, Mrs. T. Crofton.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ BARNEY MAHONEY. [1832].</p>
-
-<p>“Has for a hero an Irish peasant, who conceals under a vacant countenance
-and blundering demeanour shrewdness, quick wit, and, despite a touch of
-rascality, real kindness of heart.”—(<i>Krans</i>).</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>CROMARTIE, Countess of; Sibell Lilian Mackenzie, Viscountess of Tarbat,
-Baroness of Castlehaven and Macleod.</b> Born 1878. Lives at Castle
-Leod, Strathpeffer, N.B. Publ. <i>The End of the Song</i>, 1904, <i>The Web of
-the Past</i>, <i>The Golden Guard</i>, &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ SONS OF THE MILESIANS. Pp. 306. (<i>Eveleigh, Nash</i>). 1906.</p>
-
-<p>Short stories, some Irish, some Highland Scotch, somewhat in the manner
-of Fiona MacLeod’s beautiful <i>Barbaric Tales</i>. The stories deal with various
-periods from the time of the Emperor Julian to the present day, and they
-are vivid pictures of life and manners at these different epochs. The standpoint
-is thoroughly Gaelic, and there is much pathos and much beauty in the
-tales.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE DAYS OF FIRE. Pp. 114. (<i>Wellby</i>). Artistic cover in white
-and gold. 1908.</p>
-
-<p>The scene is laid in Ireland in the days of the first Milesians, but does not
-deal with historical events. Tells of the love of Heremon the King for a
-beautiful slave. Full of sensuous description in a smooth, dreamy style.
-Frankly pagan in spirit.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_63"></a>[63]</span></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE GOLDEN GUARD. Pp. 407. (<i>Allen</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1912.</p>
-
-<p>“A tale of ‘far off things and battles long ago,’ when King Heremon the
-Beautiful, who reigned at Tara over Milesian and Phoenician ..., fought
-with his Golden Guard against the Northern Barbarians. Lady Cromartie
-gives fire and passion to the shadowy figures, filling her imaginative pages
-with crowded hours of love and fighting, toil, pleasure, and vigorous life.”—(<span class="smcap">T.
-Lit. Suppl.</span>).</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>CROMIE, Robert.</b> Born at Clough, Co. Down, the son of Dr. Cromie. Was
-on the staff of Belfast <span class="smcap">Northern Whig</span>, and died suddenly about ten
-years ago.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE SHADOW OF THE CROSS. Pp. 326. (<i>Ward &amp; Locke</i>). 6<i>s.</i>
-1902.</p>
-
-<p>A sympathetic study of Ulster Presbyterian life is the background for the
-romance, ending in tragedy, of a young minister. Besides the occasional
-dialect (well handled) there is little of Ireland in the book, but the story is
-told with much skill, and never flags. Bromley, an unbeliever, almost a
-cynic, but a true man and unselfish to the point of heroism, is a remarkable
-study. The author has also published <i>The Crack of Doom</i>, <i>The King’s Oak</i>,
-<i>For England’s Sake</i>, &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>CROMMELIN, May de la Cherois.</b> Born in Ireland. Daughter of late S.
-de la Cherois Crommelin, of Carrowdore Castle, Co. Down, a descendant
-of Louis Crommelin, a Huguenot refugee, who founded the linen trade
-in Ulster. Educated at home. Early life spent in Ireland; resided
-since in London; has travelled much. Publ. more than thirty novels.—(<span class="smcap">Who’s
-Who</span>). <i>Queenie</i> was the Author’s first novel. <i>A Jewel of a
-Girl</i> deals with Ireland and Holland.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ ORANGE LILY. Two Vols., afterwards One Vol. (<i>Hurst &amp; Blackett</i>).
-1879.</p>
-
-<p>The story of Lily Keag, daughter of a Co. Down Orangeman, who, to the
-disgust of her social circle, falls in love with her father’s servant boy. The
-latter goes to America, and thence returns, a wealthy man, to claim Lily.
-The scenery is well described and the dialect well rendered. A healthy and
-high-toned novel.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ BLACK ABBEY. Pp. 447. (<i>Sampson, Low</i>). [1880]. 1882.</p>
-
-<p>We are first introduced to a delightful circle, the three children of Black
-Abbey (somewhere in Co. Down) and those about them, their German governess
-and Irish nurse and their playmate Bella, born in America, granddaughter
-of the old Presbyterian minister. The picture of their home-life is pleasant
-and life-like, with a vein of quiet humour. Then they grow up and things
-no longer run smoothly. Bella, by her marriage, well-nigh wrecks four lives,
-including her own, but things seem to be righting themselves as the story closes.
-The dialect of the Northern servants is very well done. The tone of the book
-is most wholesome though by no means “goody-goody.”</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ DIVIL-MAY-CARE; alias Richard Burke, sometime Adjutant of the
-Black Northerns. Pp. x. + 306. (<i>F. V. White</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1899.</p>
-
-<p>A series of humorous and exciting episodes, forming the adventures of an
-officer home from India on sick leave. Most of them are located in Antrim.
-No religious or political bias, but a tinge of the stage Irishman.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE GOLDEN BOW. (<i>Holden &amp; Hardingham</i>). 6<i>s.</i> <i>c.</i> 1912.</p>
-
-<p>Story of the sorrows and suitors, from her unhappy childhood to a happy
-engagement, of an Irish girl, who is poor, proud, and pretty. A lovable
-character is Judith’s crippled sister Melissa. Scene: N. of Ireland. There
-is a good deal of dialect, and the ways of the peasantry are faithfully depicted.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_64"></a>[64]</span></p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>CROSBIE, Mary.</b> Born in England. Educated privately and at various
-English schools. Has frequently visited and stayed in Ireland. Her
-first novel, <i>Disciples</i>, was publ. in 1907; but it was the second that
-was most successful, three editions being called for within a short time.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ KINSMEN’S CLAY. Pp. 389. (Close print). (<i>Methuen</i>). 6<i>s.</i> First
-and second editions. 1910.</p>
-
-<p>Main theme: wife and lover waiting for invalid and impossible husband to
-die. The treatment of this theme and that of a minor plot makes the book
-unsuited for certain classes of readers. Moreover, the tone is alien to religion.
-God is “perhaps the flowering of men’s ideals under the rain of their tears.”
-But the tone is not frankly anti-moral. The personages are all of the country
-Anglo-Irish gentry, except one peasant family, and this shows up badly.
-The types are drawn with much skill, and there is constant clever analysis of
-moods and emotions. The story brings out in a vague way the transmission
-through a family of ancestral peculiarities.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ BRIDGET CONSIDINE. Pp. 347. (<i>Bell</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1914.</p>
-
-<p>Bridget’s father is the son of a broken-down shopkeeper somewhere beyond
-the Shannon, but clings to aristocratic notions. She grows up in London
-along with “Lennie-next-door,” but her mind outgrows his. She goes to
-stay W. of the Shannon as secretary to a rich lady. There she becomes
-engaged to Hugh Delmege, a young landowner. All her yearnings seem
-fulfilled, yet somehow it is not what she had expected; a short separation
-from Hugh still further opens her eyes, and she returns disillusioned. This
-is the bare skeleton: it does not do justice to the philosophy and the style
-of the book, both of which are remarkable.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>CROSBIE, W. J.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ DAVID MAXWELL. (<i>Jarrold</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1902.</p>
-
-<p>’98 from the loyalist standpoint, and adventures in Mexico and South
-Texas, &amp;c. “David” is “Scotch-Irish.”—(<i>Baker</i>, 2).</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>CROSFIELD, H. C.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ FOR THREE KINGDOMS. Pp. 241. (<i>Elliott Stock</i>). 1909.</p>
-
-<p>“Recollections of Robert Warden, a servant of King James.” By a series
-of accidents the teller finds himself on board one of the ships that raises the
-blockade of Derry; he escapes and goes to Dublin, where he has exciting
-adventures. Tyrconnell is introduced—a very unfavourable portrait; and
-the hero goes through the Boyne Campaign. Told in lively style, with plenty
-of incident.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>CROTTIE, Julia M.</b> Born in Lismore, Co. Waterford. Educated privately
-and at the Presentation Convent, Lismore. Contributed to the <span class="smcap">Catholic
-World</span>, N.Y., and to other American Catholic periodicals, also to the
-<span class="smcap">Month</span>, the <span class="smcap">Rosary</span>, &amp;c. She resides in Ramsay, Isle of Man.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ NEIGHBOURS. Pp. 307. (<i>Unwin</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1900.</p>
-
-<p>Pictures of very unlovely aspects of life in a small stagnant town. Twenty
-separate sketches. Wonderfully true to reality and to the petty unpleasant
-sides of human nature. The gossip of the back lane is faithfully reproduced,
-though without vulgarity. The stories are told with great skill.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE LOST LAND. Pp. 266. (<i>Fisher Unwin</i>). 6<i>s.</i> [1901]. 1907.</p>
-
-<p>“A tale of a Cromwellian Irish town [in Munster]. Being the autobiography
-of Miss Annita Lombard.” A picture of the pitiful failure of the United
-Irishmen to raise and inspirit a people turned to mean, timid, and crawling
-slaves by ages of oppression. Thad Lombard, sacrificing fortune, home,
-happiness, and at last his life for the Lost Land, is a noble figure. The book
-is a biting and powerful satire upon various types of anglicized or vulgar or<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_65"></a>[65]</span>
-pharisaical Catholicism (the author is a Catholic). The whole is a picture of
-unrelieved gloom. The style, beautiful, and often poetic, but deepens the
-sadness. Thad Lombard, a hundred years before the time, pursues the ideals
-of the Gaelic League. Period: <i>c.</i> 1780-1797.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>CROWE, Eyre Evans</b>, 1799-1868. Though born in England, this distinguished
-historian and journalist was of Irish origin, and was educated
-at Trinity. In <span class="smcap">Blackwood</span> he first published several of his Irish novels.
-Though imperfectly acquainted with the art of a novelist this writer is
-often correct and happy in his descriptions and historical summaries.
-Like Banim he has ventured on the stormy period of 1798, and has been
-more minute than his great rival in sketching the circumstances of the
-rebellion.—(Chambers’s <i>Cyclopædia of English Literature</i>).</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ TO-DAY IN IRELAND. Three Vols. (<span class="smcap">London</span>: <i>Knight</i>). 1825.</p>
-
-<p>Four stories:—1. “The Carders.” 2. “Connemara.” 3. “Old and New Light.”
-4. “The O’Toole’s Warning.” The scene of 1 is “Rathfinnan,” on Lough Ree,
-not far from Athlone. It is a very dark picture of the secret societies and
-of the peasants in general, but an equally merciless picture of certain types
-of the Ascendancy class, notably a Protestant curate and Papist-hunter
-named Crosthwaite. The hero Arthur Dillon (a true hero of romance) is
-a young Catholic student of T.C.D., who narrowly escapes being implicated
-in the secret societies. He dreams of rebellion, and is nearly caught in the
-meshes of a villainous-plotting Jesuit. There is a love story, with a happy
-ending. 2. Is a burlesque story telling how M’Laughlin, a sort of King
-of Connemara, escaped his debtors in a coffin. Some smuggling episodes.
-Description of the fair of Ballinasloe, p. 196. Much about wild feudal
-hospitality and lawlessness. 3. Is a satirical study of Protestant religious
-life at “Ardenmore,” Co. Louth. “Sir Starcourt Gibbs” seems obviously
-intended as a portrait of Sir Harcourt Lees, an Evangelical Orange leader
-in Dublin in the twenties and thirties.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ CONNEMARA OU UMA ELEIÇÃO NA IRLANDA: Romance
-Irlandez tradusido por C[amillo] A[ureliano] da S[ilva] e S[ousa]
-(<span class="smcap">Porto</span>). 1843.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ YESTERDAY IN IRELAND. Three Vols., containing two long
-stories, viz.: 1. “Corramahon.” Pp. 600. Large loose print.</p>
-
-<p>O’Mahon, an Irish Jacobite soldier of fortune, is the hero. The plot
-consists mainly of the intertwined love stories of men and women separated by
-barriers of class, creed, and nationality. Good picture of politics at the
-time. Hardships of Penal days illustrated (good description of Midnight
-Mass). Ulick O’More, the Rapparee, is a fine figure. Interest sustained
-by exciting incidents. Scene laid near town of Carlow.</p>
-
-<p>2. “The Northerns of ’98.” Pp. 367.</p>
-
-<p>Scene: Mid-Antrim. Adventures of various persons in ’98 (Winter and
-Orde are the chief names). Feelings and sentiments of the times portrayed,
-especially those of United Irishmen. Battle of Antrim described. Author
-leans somewhat to National side.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>[CRUMPE, Miss].</b> Daughter of Dr. Crumpe (1766-1796), a famous physician
-in Limerick. According to the Madden MSS., she wrote several other
-novels.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ GERALDINE OF DESMOND; or, Ireland in the Reign of Queen
-Elizabeth. Three Vols. (<span class="smcap">London</span>: <i>Colburn</i>). 1829.</p>
-
-<p>Dedicated to Thomas Moore. A story of the Desmond Rebellion 1580-2,
-(battle of Monaster-ni-via, the massacre of Smerwick, &amp;c.) with, as personages
-in the story, the chief historical figures of the time:—the Desmonds
-and Ormonds, Fr. Allen, <span class="allsmcap">S.J.</span>, Sanders, Sir Henry Sidney, Sir William Drury,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_66"></a>[66]</span>
-Dr. Dee the Astrologer, Queen Elizabeth herself. The Author has worked
-into the slight framework of her story an elaborate and careful picture of
-the times, the fruit, she tells us, of years of study and research. As a result
-the romance is overlaid and well-nigh smothered with erudition, apart even
-from the learned notes appended to each volume. The Author is obviously
-inspired by a great love and enthusiasm for Ireland, and takes the national
-side thoroughly. The book is ably written, but resembles rather a treatise
-than a novel.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE DEATH FLAG; or, The Irish Buccaneers. Three Vols.
-(<span class="smcap">London</span>). 1851.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>CUNINGHAME, Richard.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE BROKEN SWORD OF ULSTER: A brief relation of the Events
-of one of the most stirring and momentous eras in the Annals of Ireland.
-Crown 8vo. (<i>Hodges &amp; Figgis</i>). 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> 1904.</p>
-
-<p>Account of chief events. Not in form of fiction. Tone somewhat anti-national
-(<i>cf.</i> authorities chiefly relied on). Moral: Ireland’s crowning need
-is to accept the teaching of St. Paul on charity. This is “the God-provided
-cure for all her woes.” This Author wrote also <i>In Bonds but Fetterless</i>, 1875.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>CURTIN, Jeremiah</b>, 1840-1916. Born in Milwaukee, educated at Harvard.
-A distinguished American traveller, linguist, and ethnologist. Has
-translated great numbers of books from the Russian and the Polish, and
-has published many works on the folk-lore of the Russians, Magyars,
-Mongols, American Aborigines, &amp;c. Visited Ireland in 1887 and 1891.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ MYTHS AND FOLK-LORE OF IRELAND. (<i>Sampson, Low</i>). 9<i>s.</i>
-Etched frontispiece. 1890.</p>
-
-<p>“Twenty tales” says Douglas Hyde (Pref. to <i>Beside the Fire</i>), “told
-very well, and with much less cooking and flavouring than his predecessors
-employed.” The tales were got from Gaelic speakers through an interpreter
-(Mr. Curtin knowing not a word of Gaelic). Beyond this fact he
-does not tell us where, from whom, or how he collected the stories. Dr.
-Hyde says again, “From my own knowledge of Folk-lore, such as it is, I
-can easily recognise that Mr. Curtin has approached the fountain-head more
-nearly than any other.”</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ HERO TALES OF IRELAND, collected by. Pp. lii. + 558. (<i>Macmillan</i>).
-7<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> 1894.</p>
-
-<p>Learned introduction speculates on origin of myths of primitive races.
-Compares Gaelic myths with those of other races, especially North American
-Indians. Contends that the characters in the tales are personifications of
-natural forces and the elements, and that the tales themselves in their
-earliest form give man’s primitive ideas of the creation, &amp;c. The volume
-consists of twenty-four folk-lore stories dealing chiefly with heroes of the
-Gaelic cycles. Not interesting in themselves, and with much sameness in
-style, matter, and incident. There is some naturalistic coarseness here and
-there, and the tone in some places is vulgar. The stories were told to the
-Author by Kerry, Connemara, and Donegal peasants, whose names are given
-in a note on p. 549.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ TALES OF THE FAIRIES AND OF THE GHOST WORLD. Pp.
-ix. + 198. (<i>Nutt</i>). 1895.</p>
-
-<p>Preface by Alfred Nutt. This collection supplements the two previous
-collections. It is collected from oral tradition chiefly in S.-W. Munster.
-Illustrates the present-day belief of the peasantry in ghosts, fairies, &amp;c. There
-are thirty tales, many of them new. A good number of them are, of course,
-grotesque and extravagant. They contain nothing objectionable, but
-obviously are hardly suitable for children.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_67"></a>[67]</span></p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>CURTIS, Robert.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE IRISH POLICE OFFICER. Pp. vii. + 216. (<i>Ward, Lock</i>). 1861.</p>
-
-<p>Six short stories, reprinted from <span class="smcap">Dublin University Magazine</span>, entitled
-“The Identification,” “The Banker of Ballyfree,” “The Reprieve,” “The
-Two Mullanys,” “M’Cormack’s Grudge,” “How ‘The Chief’ was Robbed.”
-They deal chiefly with remarkable trials in Ireland. “They are all founded
-upon facts which occurred within my own personal knowledge; and for the
-accuracy of which not only I, but others, can vouch.”—(Pref.). Author
-was Inspector of Police, and published (1869) <i>The History of the R.I.C.</i> and
-<i>The Trial of Captain Alcohol</i>. Pp. 48. (<i>McGlashan &amp; Gill</i>). 1871.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ RORY OF THE HILLS. Pp. 356. Post 8vo. (<i>Duffy</i>). 2<i>s.</i> [1870].
-Still in print.</p>
-
-<p>A faithful and sympathetic picture of the peasant life and manners at the
-time (early nineteenth century). The Author, a police officer, has drawn on
-his professional experiences. The tale, founded on fact, is an edifying one
-despite the unrelieved villainy of Tom Murdock. The influence of religion is
-felt throughout, especially in the heroic charity of the heroine even towards
-the murderer of her lover. Peasant speech reproduced to the life.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>CURRAN, H. G.</b> (1800-1876). Natural son of John Philpot Curran, and a
-barrister.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ CONFESSIONS OF A WHITEFOOT. Pp. 306. (<i>Bentley</i>). (Edited
-by G. C. H., Esq., B.L.). 1844.</p>
-
-<p>The supposed teller began as a supporter of “law and order,” but the
-conviction of the abuses of landlordism is forced upon him by experience and
-observation, and he ends by joining the secret society of the Whitefeet.
-He makes no secret of the crimes of this body, and many of them are described
-in the course of the narrative.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>CUSACK, Mary Frances</b>, known as “The Nun of Kenmare.” Originally a
-Protestant, she became a Catholic and a Poor Clare. From her convent
-in Kenmare she issued quite a library of books on many subjects—Irish
-history, general and local, Irish biography, stories, poems, works
-of piety and of instruction. Subsequently she left her convent, went
-to America, and reverted to Protestantism. Died Leamington, 1899,
-aged 70. She has published her autobiography.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ NED RUSHEEN; or, Who Fired the First Shot? Pp. 373. (<i>Burns &amp;
-Oates.</i> <span class="smcap">Boston</span>: <i>Donahoe</i>). Four rather mediocre Illus. 1871.</p>
-
-<p>A murder mystery. The hero is wrongly accused, but is acquitted in the
-end. The real culprit (scapegrace son of the victim, Lord Elmsdale) confesses
-when dying. The mystery is well kept up to the end. Indeed, the
-explanation of it is by no means clear, even at the close. The moral purpose
-is kept prominently before the reader throughout. Tone strongly religious
-and Catholic, the Protestant religion being more than once compared, to its
-disadvantage, with the Catholic.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ TIM O’HALLORAN’S CHOICE; or, From Killarney to New York.
-Pp. 262. (<span class="smcap">London</span>: <i>Burns</i>). [1877]. 1878.</p>
-
-<p>“This little story gives a strong picture of the heroic faith, sufferings, and
-native humour of the Irish poor.”—(<i>Press Notice</i>). When Tim is dying a
-priest and a “Souper” contend for possession of his boy Thade. Tim is
-faithful to his Church, but after his death the boy is kidnapped by the proselytisers.
-He escapes, and is sheltered by a good Catholic named O’Grady.
-Subsequently he finds favour with a rich American, who takes him off to
-New York.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_68"></a>[68]</span></p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>D’ARBOIS DE JUBAINVILLE, Henri.</b> Born in Nancy, 1827. Died 1910.
-Educated in École des Chartes. A biographical notice of him, followed
-by a bibliography of his works, will be found in the <i>Revue Celtique</i> (Vol.
-32, p. 456, 1911), which he edited for many years. The list of his works
-contains 238 items, the greater number of which concern Celts. Perhaps
-rather more than half deal with Ireland. They include a <i>Cours de
-Littérature Celtique</i> in 12 vols., a history of the Celts, a work on the
-Irish mythological cycle, and a catalogue of the epic literature of Ireland.
-That on the Irish mythological cycle has been well translated by R. I.
-Best (<i>Hodges &amp; Figgis</i>). 1903. Pp. xv. + 240.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>D’ARCY, Hal.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ A HANDFUL OF DAYS. Pp. 319. (<i>Long</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1914.</p>
-
-<p>“How John O’Grady left his irritating wife and selfish children to revisit
-the home of his fathers in I. for a short time; how he met ... Mary O’Connor
-...; how he fell in love, and told her so—forgetting to mention the irritating
-wife, &amp;c.... The picture of the old Irish priest, Mary’s uncle, is the one
-redeeming feature of a mawkish, unsatisfactory tale.”—(<span class="smcap">T. Litt. Suppl.</span>).
-This fairly describes the story. Non-Catholic, but not prejudiced. Scene:
-Glendalough.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>DAMANT, Mary.</b> The Author is a daughter of General Chesney, the Asiatic
-explorer.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ PEGGY. Pp. 405. (<i>Allen</i>). 1887.</p>
-
-<p><i>Domestic</i> life in North Antrim previous to, and during, the Rebellion of
-1798. “Many of the facts of my little tale were told me in childhood by those,
-whose recollection of the rising was rendered vivid by desolate homes, loss
-of relations, &amp;c.”—(Pref.). Eschews historical or political questions.
-Favourable to “poor deluded peasants.” Thinks little of United Irishmen
-who are “imbued with the poison of revolutionary principles.” Well and
-pleasantly written in autobiographical form.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>DAUNT, Alice O’Neill</b>, 1848-1915. Was the only daughter of W. J. O’Neill
-Daunt. Contributed to <span class="smcap">The Lamp</span>, <span class="smcap">Ireland’s Own</span>, and other magazines.
-She wrote many little stories, as serials or in book form, for the
-most part religious (Catholic) and didactic.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ EVA; or, as the Child, so the Woman. Pp. 107. 16mo. (<i>Richardson</i>).
-1<i>s.</i> 1882.</p>
-
-<p>One of a little series of Catholic Tales for the young. A sad little story,
-full of piety. Scene in Ireland, but the story is not specially Irish in any way.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>DAUNT, W. J. O’Neill.</b> Born in Tullamore, 1807. Son of Joseph Daunt,
-of Ballyneen, Cork. Became a Catholic about 1827. Was in Repeal
-Association from the first, and remained to the end one of O’Connell’s
-most loyal co-operators. Died 1894. His biography has been published
-under the title, <i>A Life Spent for Ireland</i>, 1896.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ SAINTS AND SINNERS. Two Vols. aftds. One Vol. (<i>Duffy</i>). (N.Y.:
-<i>Pratt</i>). 0.50. 1843, &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p>“The reader who expects in this narrative what is commonly called the
-plot, or story, of a novel will, we fairly warn him, be disappointed. Our
-object in becoming the historian of Howard is merely to trace the impressions
-produced on his mind by the very varied principles and notions with which
-he came in contact” (beginning of chap. xiii.). The book is, besides, a very
-satirical study of various types of Ulster Protestantism, and a controversial
-novel, reference to Scripture and to various Catholic authorities being frequently
-given in footnotes. The story, a slight one, moves slowly, but the
-situations have a good deal of humour.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_69"></a>[69]</span></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ HUGH TALBOT. Pp. 473. (<i>Duffy</i>). 1846.</p>
-
-<p>“A Tale of the Irish confiscations of the 17th century,” <i>i.e.</i>, the reign of
-James I. Scene varies between England, Ireland, and Scotland. Opens in
-1609. Portrait of James I. No other historical personage. Persecution,
-arrest, and adventures of Father Hugh Talbot. Chief interest lies in the
-picture of the times, which is carefully drawn. The story, however, is well
-told, the conversations clever and fairly natural, the character-drawing
-good. The Author is strongly opposed to religious persecution. The Irish
-localities are not specified.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE GENTLEMAN IN DEBT. Pp. 339. (<i>Cameron &amp; Ferguson</i>).
-1<i>s.</i> (N.Y.: <i>Pratt</i>). 1.50. [1848]. 1851, &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p>Adventures of a penniless young gentleman trying to get a position. Depicts
-(after Lever), first life in Galway, among impecunious, fox-hunting, hard-drinking,
-duelling squires (Blakes, Bodkins, and O’Carrolls); then the vapid
-life of Castle aristocracy in the Dublin of the time, with its place-hunting
-and ignoble time-serving. Incidentally (for the author does not
-moralise) we have glimpses of the working of the Penal laws. The story is an
-unexciting one of rather matter-of-fact courtship and of domestic intrigue.
-There are not a few amusing scenes, nothing objectionable, and little bias.
-A striking character study is that of the Rev. Julius Blake, who is of the tribe
-of Pecksniff, but with quite distinctive features.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>[DEACON, W. F.].</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE EXILE OF ERIN; or, the Sorrows of a Bashful Irishman.
-Two Vols. (<i>Whittaker</i>). 1835.</p>
-
-<p>Early 19th century. Adventures of a villain of the worst type in Ireland,
-England, and on the Continent. Commits almost every conceivable crime,
-including bigamy and embezzlement. Acts every part from strolling player
-to journalist and political partisan. Tells all this in first person. Incidentally
-the book is a bitter satire on Ireland, Irish priests, Irish politicians. Represents
-the “O’Connellite rabble” as capable of any outrage and O’Connell himself
-(under the name of O’Cromwell) as a political adventurer. Author admits
-not being Irish.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ ADVENTURES OF A BASHFUL IRISHMAN. (<span class="smcap">London</span>). 1862.</p>
-
-<p>This is a new ed. of <i>The Exile of Erin; or, the Sorrows of a Bashful Irishman</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>DEASE, Alice.</b> Daughter of J. A. Dease, of Turbotstown, Co. Westmeath.
-Lives Simonstown, Coole, Co. Westmeath.—(<span class="smcap">Cath. Who’s Who</span>).</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE BECKONING OF THE WAND. Pp. 164. (<i>Sands</i>). 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>.
-Very tastefully bound. 1908. (N.Y.: <i>Benziger</i>). 1.00. Cheap edition,
-1<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> 1915.</p>
-
-<p>We are used to having depicted with painful realism all our faults, all the
-defects of Irish life on the material side. This little book denies none of
-these, but it shows another side of the Irish character, the deep-rooted,
-intense Catholic faith, the union with the supernatural, that brightens even
-the most squalid lives. The anecdotes, which are true, are related with
-delicate insight by one who knows and loves the people. There is a vivid
-sketch of a Lough Derg pilgrimage.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ OLD-TIME STORIES OF ERIN. Pp. 215. (<i>Browne &amp; Nolan</i>). 2<i>s.</i>
-Illustr. by C. A. Mills. 1908.</p>
-
-<p>Sixteen old Gaelic hero legends retold in simple, lucid style for children.
-Most of them are well known: “The Wise Judgment of Cormac Mac Art;”
-“The Neck Pin of Queen Macha;” “The Chivalry of Goll Mac Morna,” &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_70"></a>[70]</span></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ GOOD MEN OF ERIN. (<i>Browne &amp; Nolan</i>). 2<i>s.</i> Six Illustr. 1910.</p>
-
-<p>Stories of a quaint legendary kind connected with nine Irish Saints. Prettily
-told.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE MARRYING OF BRYAN; and Other Stories. Pp. 83. (<i>Sands</i>).
-7<i>d.</i> Coloured frontisp. (N.Y.: <i>Benziger</i>). 0.50. Second edition. 1911.</p>
-
-<p>Six little tales, slight in theme, but delicately wrought. They are the
-poetry of real life, mostly Irish peasant life. A moral may be gleaned from
-each, but there is no irritating insistence on it. One tells how, through his
-love for birds and his fear of frightening them, a good old P.P. loses his chance
-of a canonry. Another tells of the beautiful neighbourly charity of the Irish
-peasant. Four are love stories. They are perfect of their kind.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ SOME IRISH STORIES. Pp. 96. (<i>C.T.S.</i>). 6<i>d.</i> Stiff wrapper.
-1912.</p>
-
-<p>Eight little stories similar in character and qualities to <i>Down West</i>, <i>q.v.</i></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE LADY OF MYSTERY. Pp. 159. (<i>Duffy</i>). 2<i>s.</i> 1913.</p>
-
-<p>Better class Catholic family life somewhere in the West—O’Malleys, Dillons,
-Burkes. Two interwoven love-stories, a mystery of identity, and the
-story of a philanthropic enterprise, the Drinagh Mills. Thoroughly Catholic
-atmosphere and moral purpose.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ DOWN WEST, and Other Sketches of Irish Life. Pp. 119. (<span class="smcap">Roehampton</span>:
-<i>The Catholic Library</i>). 1<i>s.</i> Preface by Sir H. Bellingham.
-1914.</p>
-
-<p>Glimpses of real life in Connemara and Aran (described p. 48 <i>sq.</i>), dealing
-less with outward incidents than with the beauty of the people’s faith, the
-hardness of their lot, the joys and sorrows of their lives. Told with a very
-delicate suggestiveness, full of touches of humour and of feeling, without
-preaching or moralising, by one in thorough sympathy with the people, and
-alive, too, to all the influences of nature. The dialect is reproduced with
-great fidelity.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>DEASE, Charlotte.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ CHILDREN OF THE GAEL. Pp. 196. (<i>Washbourne</i>). 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>
-(N.Y.: <i>Benziger</i>). 0.75. 1911.</p>
-
-<p>Eight little studies—vignettes—of Irish peasant types, evidently drawn
-direct from real life. They are in narrative form, but in most the incident is
-slight. They give curiously vivid glimpses of the life of the poor, of which the
-Author has intimate knowledge. The tone is Catholic and “Gaelic.” The
-Author avoids phonetic renderings of peasant dialect.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>DEBENHAM, Mary H.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ CONAN THE WONDER WORKER. Pp. 302. (<i>National Society</i>).
-3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> Four or five illustr. (N.Y.: <i>Whittaker</i>). 1902.</p>
-
-<p>Norway, <i>c.</i> 912-3. Conan is a Christian Scot (<i>i.e.</i>, Irishman) who is
-captured by a Viking, and brought to Norway. In time he converts the Viking
-and his family. A good story for children and even for grown-ups.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE SHEPHERD PRIOR; and other Stories for Sunday Evenings.
-Pp. 252. (<i>National Society</i>). 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> Four illustr. by Violet M. Smith.
-(N.Y.: <i>Whittaker</i>). 1907.</p>
-
-<p>Written for children in a religious vein, with a moral attached. Only one
-story deals with Ireland, “The Great Handwriting.” In it the conversion
-of the King’s daughters by St. Patrick is prettily told. Protestant, but not
-unsuited to Catholic children.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_71"></a>[71]</span></p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>DEENEY, Daniel.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ PEASANT LORE FROM GAELIC IRELAND. Second edition.
-Pp. 80. (<i>Nutt</i>). 1<i>s.</i> Stiff wrapper. 1901.</p>
-
-<p>Relates to the Donegal Highlands and Connemara, in the latter of which
-(at Spiddal, I believe) the writer taught Irish. Consists of illustrations of
-the peasants’ belief in the preternatural world of spirits and fairies and
-influences, with examples of common superstitious practices. The writer,
-if he does not share these beliefs, at least is very far from despising them.
-“The majority of them [the items included] were related to me in the broken
-English of a Western peasant”—(Introd.). The book is chiefly interesting to
-folk-lorists.</p>
-
-<p>The same Author’s <i>Tales and Superstitions of the Connaught Peasants</i>.
-(<i>Nutt</i>), 1<i>s.</i>, 1901, is a collection similar to the preceding.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>DENANCE, L. V.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ O’SULLIVAN, DERNIÈRE INSURRECTION DE L’IRLANDE.
-Pp. 130. (<span class="smcap">Limoges</span>: <i>Ardant et Thibant</i>). 1874?</p>
-
-<p>Historical introd. very favourable to Ireland. Scene of story: Cork.
-Relates incidents of ’98, including French expedition. Told by O’S. himself,
-part of whose adventures take place in Africa. The last page brings him back
-to Ireland.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>DENNY, Madge E.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ IRISH TOWN AND COUNTRY TALES. Pp. 232. (<i>Sealy, Bryers</i>).
-1<i>s.</i> An ugly cover.</p>
-
-<p>Pleasant little tales, some of them humorous, written in a light, breezy
-style. Many of them deal with love and courtship, and are sentimental
-enough, but not in the least objectionable.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>DENVIR, John.</b> Born 1834. Lived nearly all his life in England (Liverpool,
-London, and Birmingham). Throughout his long career has never
-ceased to work for Ireland. Conducted for some years the <span class="smcap">Catholic
-Times</span>. Publ. <i>The Irish in England</i> and his own autobiography, <i>The
-Life Story of an Old Rebel</i> (1910), new ed., 1914. He is still living in
-London. He has publ. there a considerable number of popular books
-about Ireland, including “Denver’s Irish Library,” booklets at a penny
-each.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE BRANDONS: a Story of Irish life in England. Pp. 153.
-(<i>Denver’s Irish Library</i>). 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> Paper 1<i>s.</i> 1903.</p>
-
-<p>An Italian carbonaro tragedy that by a strange combination of circumstances
-comes into a peaceful back water of Liverpool, Homer’s Gardens,
-and mingles with the lives of its Irish inhabitants. A romantic interest is
-added by the love of Hugh and Jack Brandon for Rose Aylmer. Jack’s self-sacrifice
-is rewarded in the end. There are several pleasant Irish characters
-besides Hugh and Jack—Father MacMahon, genial, generous, and fatherly;
-Mick Muldowney and his wife, rough customers enough, but always cheery,
-and willing to share their last crust with anyone in need.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ OLAF THE DANE. Pp. 103. (<i>Sealy, Bryers</i>). 6<i>d.</i> Paper.</p>
-
-<p>Scene: Donegal. Extraordinary story, full of sensational incidents.
-It turns chiefly on a prophecy made in the ninth century about men then
-living, which is fulfilled in their descendants of the nineteenth century. One
-of these latter is endowed with supernatural powers. There are some pretty
-faithful pictures of the peasantry.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_72"></a>[72]</span></p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>[DERENZY, M. G.].</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE OLD IRISH KNIGHT: a Milesian Tale of the Fifth Century.
-Pp. 186. (<span class="smcap">London</span>: <i>Poole &amp; Edwards</i>). 1828.</p>
-
-<p>By the Author of <i>A Whisper to a Newly-married Pair</i>, <i>Parnassian Geography</i>,
-&amp;c. In spite of an apparent effort to be archæologically correct the book is
-full of rather absurd anachronisms. There are already in Ireland abbeys
-with long lines of arches, there is talk of the finest organ in Europe being
-purchased for one of them, and so on. The story does not hang together. It
-is merely a string of disjointed incidents, most of them wholly improbable.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>D’ESPARBÈS, Georges.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ LE BRISEUR DE FERS. Pp. 316. (<span class="smcap">Paris</span>: <i>Louis-Michaud</i>). 3<i>fr.</i>10.
-[1908]. New edition, 1911.</p>
-
-<p>Dedication (to Colonel Arthur Lynch), and Preface (telling about the
-erection of the Humbert Memorial at Ballina). Humbert’s invasion told in
-impassioned and somewhat high-flown language. Describes some of the
-episodes with extraordinary vividness. Based mainly on reliable works, but
-not strictly historical. The Author is a distinguished writer, and very prolific,
-having produced a long series of novels, volumes of verse, &amp;c. Born 1863 in
-the department of Tarn-et-Garonne.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>DEVINE, D. C.</b> Is a native of Tubbercurry, Co. Sligo, where at present
-he is a National School Teacher. Is a man of about 45.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ FAITHFUL EVER, and Other Tales. Pp. 280. (<i>Duffy</i>). 2<i>s.</i> 1910.</p>
-
-<p>Eleven stories of Sligo peasant life. The Author has thorough sympathy
-with the aspects of life about which he writes. Three of the tales are love
-stories, one is a story of ’67, others are humorous, <i>e.g.</i>, “Meehaul M’Cann’s
-Wooing.” We have a glimpse of the dance, the pattern, rustic courtship,
-lake and mountain scenery. The Author avoids politics, but the Catholic
-atmosphere is pronounced, throughout. The literary standard is, perhaps,
-not of a high order.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ BEFORE THE DAWN IN ERIN. Pp. 308. (<i>Duffy</i>). 2<i>s.</i> [1913].
-Second edition. 1914.</p>
-
-<p>A story of landlord, agent, and tenant in the County Sligo, about the
-eighteen thirties or forties, bringing out what a hostile agent can do to make
-the lot of the peasants a very hard one, and showing how in the end his
-machinations are brought to nought thanks to Father Pat. This latter and
-Father Tom are fine types of Irish priests. The Author has a good eye for
-characters and a keen sense of humour.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>DILLON, Patricia.</b> Born in Dublin. Educated chiefly in France. Has lived
-most of her life in London. Has written for periodicals on historical
-subjects for the most part.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ EARL OR CHIEFTAIN. Pp. 140. (<i>C.T.S. of Ireland</i>). 1<i>s.</i> 1910.</p>
-
-<p>The opening career of Hugh O’Neill looked at on its romantic side, including
-his marriage with Mabel Bagenal. Other historic characters appear in the
-tale, notably Feagh MacHugh O’Byrne.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>DODGE, W. P.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE CRESCENT MOON. Pp. 125. (<i>Long</i>). 1<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> 1911.</p>
-
-<p>A little love story, told skilfully enough in letters from Sir Desmond Fitzgerald
-to his brother in S. Africa.—[<span class="smcap">T. Lit. Suppl.</span>].</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>DOLLARD, Rev. J. B.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE GAELS OF MOONDHARRIG. Pp. 124. (<i>Sealy, Bryers</i>). 6<i>d.</i></p>
-
-<p>A collection of pleasant, breezy tales of the exploits, especially in hurling,
-of the young men of Moondharrig (South Kilkenny), showing an intimate
-knowledge and love of the people of the author’s native place. An unobtrusive
-spirit of piety runs through it.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_73"></a>[73]</span></p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>DORSEY, Anna Hanson.</b><a id="FNanchor_3" href="#Footnote_3" class="fnanchor">[3]</a> Born Georgetown, D.C., 1815. Received into
-the Catholic Church, 1840. She is a pioneer of Catholic light literature
-in the States. Nearly all her stories—there are more than thirty of
-them—have a religious purpose, but as a rule this is not too much forced
-on the reader. She was a Laetare medallist, described as the highest
-honour the Church in America can bestow. Some titles of her books
-are—<i>Tears on the Diadem</i>, <i>Dummy</i>, <i>Tangled Paths</i>, <i>Warp and Woof</i>, and
-her last <i>Palms</i>, which was by many considered her best.</p>
-
-<div class="footnotes">
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_3" href="#FNanchor_3" class="label">[3]</a> Her daughter, Ella Loraine Dorsey, has written even more than Mrs. A.
-H. Dorsey, and is one of the most prominent figures in American Catholic
-literature.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE HEIRESS OF CARRIGMONA. Pp. 381. (<span class="smcap">Boston</span>: <i>Murphy</i>).
-Third thousand. (<i>Washbourne</i>). 4<i>s.</i> 1910.</p>
-
-<p>Scene: Co. Wicklow and Western U.S.A. Chiefly concerned with the
-fortunes of an Irish peasant family named Travers, especially the son, who
-goes to America, gets into trouble, is rescued, and then⸺. A strong
-warning against emigration is conveyed in this latter part of the story. Mrs.
-Dorsey’s peasants here, as usual, are lifelike and interesting. Their best
-qualities—trust in Providence, resignation under trial, piety, self-sacrifice—are
-well brought out. The brogue is not overdone. Anti-Irish characters
-are represented as mean and hypocritical.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ MONA THE VESTAL. Pp. 163-324. (N.Y.: <i>Christian Press Association
-Publishing Co.</i>). <i>n.d.</i></p>
-
-<p>Bound in same vol. as “Norah Brady’s Vow” and under latter title. An
-endeavour to place the heroic virtues of new Christians in contrast with the
-decaying Druidic paganism. The writer claims the Abbé McGeoghegan’s
-authority (also that of Mooney and Carey) for her descriptions of the Ireland
-of the time. But, with the exception of the incident of Patrick’s arrival at
-Tara, the story and its setting are purely imaginary and ideal. The Druids
-worship in vast temples with long corridors and fine carvings. Tara is a
-great city of marble palaces.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ NORA BRADY’S VOW. Pp. 160. (N.Y.: <i>Christian Press Association
-Publishing Co.</i>). 0.50. <i>n.d.</i></p>
-
-<p>Nora is only a servant girl, but is, without suspecting it, a true heroine.
-But she is no saint, and has a sharp tongue in her head. Her witty sallies
-are cleverly reproduced. The author tells us that Nora was a “real and
-living person.” John Halloran takes part in the rising of ’48, and is obliged to
-fly to America. Nora vows not to settle down in life until the fortunes of
-the Hallorans are restored. She goes to America, works to support the
-family, which has been ruined by an informer, and at length finds Halloran and
-reunites the family once more. Scene: near Holy Cross Abbey on the Suir;
-afterwards Boston. On the whole the tone and style are very emotional,
-but with an emotion that rings true. This is relieved by not a few gleams
-of pleasant humour. Irish dialect well done. Sympathy strongly national.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE OLD HOUSE AT GLENARAN. (N.Y.: <i>Benziger</i>). 0.80. In
-print. (<i>Washbourne</i>). 4<i>s.</i></p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>DOTTIN, Henry Georges.</b> Born 1863 in France. Prof. of Greek Lit. (1905)
-at the University of Rennes. Has contributed to learned reviews and
-has published several learned works, <i>La religion des Celtes</i>, 1903; <i>La
-Bretagne et le Culte du passé</i>, 1903.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ CONTES IRLANDAIS TRADUITS DU GAËLIQUE. Pp. 274.
-(<i>Rennes</i>). 1901.</p>
-
-<p>Tales, thirty-five in number, collected in Connaught and republished from
-the “Annales de Bretagne,” tome x.</p>
-
-<p>N.B.—A book with the title of “Contes Irlandais” was published by Messrs.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_74"></a>[74]</span>
-Gill, of Dublin, 70 pp., 4to, 7<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> It consists of extracts from the untranslated
-portion of Douglas Hyde’s “Leabhar Sgeuluigheachta” translated into
-French by M. Georges Dottin, with the original Irish text in Roman letters
-on the opposite page.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ CONTES ET LÉGENDES D’IRLANDE. Pp. 218. (<i>Le Havre</i>). 3<i>fr.</i> 50.
-1901.</p>
-
-<p>See previous item. Thirty-eight tales translated from Irish texts, published
-without translation in the Gaelic Journal since 1882. Collected in all parts
-of Ireland, <i>e.g.</i>, Les exploits de Fion MacCumhail et de son géant Seachrin.
-Fion MacCumhail et son pouce de science. Le Gobán Saor et Saint Moling.
-La belle fille rusée du Gobán Saor. Le trèfle à quatre feuilles, &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>DOUGLAS, James.</b> Born in Belfast of a Tyrone family. Is assistant editor
-and literary critic of the London <span class="smcap">Star</span>. Author of <i>The Man in the Pulpit</i>,
-<i>Adventures in London</i>, &amp;c. Contributes to <span class="smcap">Athenæum</span>, <span class="smcap">Bookman</span>, &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE UNPARDONABLE SIN. Pp. x + 418. 6<i>s.</i> (<i>Grant Richards</i>).
-1907.</p>
-
-<p>Falls into two parts. Part I. describes upbringing of a boy in Belfast
-(Bigotsborough). Pictures sectarian hatred leading to riots, in one of which,
-vividly described, the hero loses a little brother. Other characters finely
-portrayed are “Jane the Nailor” and the then Head Master of the Model
-School (“the Castle”). In Part II. the boy has become a great preacher.
-All London flocks to hear him, but he is beset with doubts and difficulties.
-W. B. Yeats and Miss Maud Gonne are introduced under thinly disguised
-names. The first part has been called by editor of I. B. L. “the finest delineation
-of Belfast boyhood ever penned.” The second part has been not inaptly
-described as “the dream of an opium-eater.”</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>DOWLING, Richard.</b> Born in Clonmel, Co. Tipperary, 1846. Educated St.
-Munchin’s, Limerick. Much of his life was passed in journalistic work,
-first for the <span class="smcap">Nation</span>, then for London papers. He edited the short-lived
-comic papers <span class="smcap">Zozimus</span> and <span class="smcap">Yorick</span>, and was a leading spirit in another,
-<span class="smcap">Ireland’s Eye</span>. In 1879 came his Irish romance, <i>The Mystery of
-Killard</i>; but he found that there was no public at the time for Irish
-novels, so he devoted himself to writing sensational stories for the English
-public. He published some delightful volumes of essays, <i>Ignorant
-Essays</i> and <i>Indolent Essays</i>. These deal with all kinds of subjects in a
-quaint, humorous, fanciful vein. Other novels—<i>The Sport of Fate</i>,
-<i>Under St. Paul’s</i>, <i>The Weird Sisters</i>, &amp;c., seventeen or so in all.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE MYSTERY OF KILLARD. Pp. 357. (<i>Tinsley Bros.</i>) [1879].
-New edition, 1884.</p>
-
-<p>A tale of the Clare coast and its fishing population (drawn with much skill
-and fidelity) half a century back. The story centres in a mysterious and
-romantic rock unapproachable by sea and connected with the land by a
-single rope only. There is a mysterious owner, or rather a series of them,
-and mysterious gold. But the central idea of the book (one of the most
-original in literature, it has been justly called) is the study of a deaf-mute who,
-by brooding on his own misfortune, grows to envy and then to hate his own
-child, because the child can hear and speak.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ SWEET INNISFAIL. Three Vols. (<i>Tinsley</i>). 1882.</p>
-
-<p>Scene: chiefly the neighbourhood of Clonmel. The interest is mainly
-in the plot, which is full of dramatic adventure and of movement, without any
-very serious study of Irish character.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_75"></a>[75]</span></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ OLD CORCORAN’S MONEY. Pp. 310. (<i>Chatto &amp; Windus</i>). Crown
-8vo. Cloth. 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> 1897.</p>
-
-<p>Money is stolen from an old miser. The interest of the complicated plot
-centres in the detection of the thief. Clever sketches of life in a southern
-town. Characters carefully and faithfully drawn, especially Head-Constable
-Cassidy, R.I.C.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ ZOZIMUS PAPERS. (N.Y.: <i>Kenedy</i>). 38 cents net. 1909.</p>
-
-<p>“A series of comic and sentimental tales and legends of Ireland.” The
-title is most misleading. There are six pages of an introduction dealing
-with Michael Moran, a famous Dublin “character,” nicknamed Zozimus.
-The rest of the book consists of a series of stories by Carleton, Lover, Lever,
-Barrington, &amp;c. The contents have nothing to do with Dowling nor with
-the famous periodical <span class="smcap">Zozimus</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>DOWNE, Walmer.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ BY SHAMROCK AND HEATHER. Pp. 325. (<i>Digby, Long</i>). 1898.</p>
-
-<p>Scene: mainly in Ards of Down, near Strangford Lough, but shifts to
-Edinburgh, London, and Capetown. Theme: an American girl visiting her
-father’s native place in Ireland. Consists largely of gossip about the characters
-introduced, not rising above this level. The writer likes Ireland and
-the Irish, but knows little of them. There is an air of unreality and improbability
-about the whole book. Some prejudice against Church of Ireland
-clergymen is displayed.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>DOWNEY, Edmund; “F. M. Allen.”</b> Born (1856) and educated in Waterford.
-Being the son of a shipbroker, he came to know well the various sea
-types that frequent a port. Went to London at twenty-two, and became
-partner in the firm of Ward and Downey. Retired in 1890, and in 1894
-founded Downey &amp; Co. Both of these firms, especially the latter, did
-a great deal for the publishing of Irish books. His writings are many
-and varied. They include humorous sketches, extravaganzas, sea
-stories, fairy tales, sensational stories, a biography of Lever, a volume
-of reminiscences, and a history of Waterford, and the two novels, <i>Clashmore</i>
-and the <i>Merchant of Killogue</i>. He at present carries on a publishing
-business in Waterford.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ IN ONE TOWN. (<i>Ward &amp; Downey</i>). 2<i>s.</i> [1884].</p>
-
-<p>A seafarer’s life ashore. Scene: a port not unlike Waterford. Many
-portraits of old salts, &amp;c., drawn from life. Some descriptions of scenery.
-“By turns romantic, pathetic, and humorous”—(Review).</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ ANCHOR WATCH YARNS. Pp. 315. (<i>Downey</i>). [1884]. Seventh
-edition. <i>n.d.</i></p>
-
-<p>Yarns told in a quaint nautical lingo by old salts around the inn fire in a
-seaport town. The characters of the tellers are very cleverly brought out
-in the telling. Full of humour without mere farce.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THROUGH GREEN GLASSES. (<i>Ward &amp; Downey</i>). Various prices
-from 6<i>s.</i> to 6<i>d.</i> [1887]. Many editions since.</p>
-
-<p>This now famous book belongs to the same class as the <i>Comic History of
-England</i>, but its humour is much superior in quality. It consists of a series
-of historical or pseudo-historical episodes purporting to be related by a
-humorous Waterford countryman, Dan Banim, as seen from his point of
-view. Kings and princes, saints and ancient heroes, all play their parts
-in the delightful comedy, and talk in the broadest brogue. “From Portlaw to
-Paradise,” one of the best known, may be taken as a type. King James’s
-escape after the Boyne is also admirably done.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_76"></a>[76]</span></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE VOYAGE OF THE ARK. (<i>Ward &amp; Downey</i>). 1<i>s.</i> [1888].
-Several editions since.</p>
-
-<p>The scriptural narrative of Noah and the Ark is made the basis for a series
-of farcical episodes related in brogue.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ FROM THE GREEN BAG. (<i>Ward &amp; Downey</i>). 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> and 1<i>s.</i> 1889.</p>
-
-<p>More stories by “Dan Banim,” like those in <i>Through Green Glasses</i>. The
-Pope and St. Patrick, Horatius and Julius Cæsar figure in the stories. We
-cannot see that these stories are “irreverent” in any serious sense, though
-they have sometimes been taxed with irreverence.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ BRAYHARD. (<i>Ward &amp; Downey</i>). 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> 1890.</p>
-
-<p>Extravaganza founded on legends of the Seven Champions of Christendom.
-Full of jokes, repartees, and comic situations.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ CAPTAIN LANAGAN’S LOG. (<i>Ward &amp; Downey</i>). 2<i>s.</i> (N.Y.: <i>Pratt</i>).
-1.75. 1891, and since.</p>
-
-<p>Story of an Irish-Canadian lad who runs away to sea, and goes through
-all sorts of adventures full of excitement and fun.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ GREEN AS GRASS. (<i>Chatto &amp; Windus</i>). 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> (N.Y.: <i>Pratt</i>).
-1.75. 1892.</p>
-
-<p>More “Dan Banim” stories. The first, running to 160 pages, is a humorous
-account of Dermot MacMurrough’s love affair with Devorgilla, and his
-betrayal of Ireland. Another tells how the Earl of Kildare found out that
-Lambert Simnel was an imposter by the latter’s skill in cooking griddle cakes.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE ROUND TOWER OF BABEL. (<i>Ward &amp; Downey</i>). 1<i>s.</i>
-Several editions; first, 1892.</p>
-
-<p>Further adventures in foreign parts of descendants of the Co. Waterford
-voyagers in the Ark.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE LAND-SMELLER. (<i>Ward &amp; Downey</i>). [1892], and several
-editions since.</p>
-
-<p>Yarns of sea-captains.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE MERCHANT OF KILLOGUE: a Munster Tale. Three Vols.
-(<i>Heinemann</i>). 1894.</p>
-
-<p>The Author’s first attempt at serious fiction, and one of his finest works.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ BALLYBEG JUNCTION. Pp. 276. (<i>Downey</i>). Very well illustr. by
-John F. O’Hea. (N.Y.: <i>Pratt</i>). 1.75. 1895.</p>
-
-<p>A comedy of southern Irish life, full of fun, without farcical exaggeration,
-and true to reality.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ PINCHES OF SALT. Pp. 246. (<i>Downey</i>). 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> 1895.</p>
-
-<p>Nine Irish tales, mostly humorous, not told in dialect; full of keen observation
-of Irish life.—(Review). “The Eviction at Ballyhack,” and “The
-Viceroy’s Visit” are among the best.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ GLIMPSES OF ENGLISH HISTORY. (<i>Downey</i>). 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> Illustr.
-by J. F. Sullivan. 1901.</p>
-
-<p>Versions of episodes in English History told by “Dan Banim” in his usual
-dialect.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE LITTLE GREEN MAN. Pp. 152. (<i>Downey</i>). Illustr. very
-tastefully by Brinsley Lefanu.</p>
-
-<p>The pranks of the Leprechaun and his dealings with his human friend
-Denis. A delightful fairy-tale, told with a purpose, which does not take
-anything from its interest.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_77"></a>[77]</span></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ CLASHMORE. Pp. 406. (<span class="smcap">Waterford</span>: <i>Downey</i>). 1<i>s.</i> [1903].
-New edition. 1909.</p>
-
-<p>A tale of a mystery centering in the strange disappearance of Lord Clashmore
-and his agent. The story is healthy in tone, and never flags. There
-is a pleasant love interest. The dénouement is of an original and unexpected
-kind. The scene is the neighbourhood of Tramore and Dunmore, Co. Waterford.
-There is little or no study of national problems or national life, but
-some shrewd remarks about things Irish are scattered here and there in the
-book. The characters are not elaborately studied, but are well drawn.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ DUNLEARY: Humours of a Munster Town. Pp. 323. (<i>Sampson,
-Low</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1911.</p>
-
-<p>Fourteen capital yarns told with great verve and go just for the sake
-of the story. They are all humorous, just avoiding uproarious farce. The
-personages of the stories are the various queer types to be met with in a small
-southern port:—the convivial spirits in the local semi-genteel club, those
-of lower degree who foregather in the bar parlour of the “Dragon,” the
-rival editors of the local papers, the candidates for the harbour mastership,
-the skippers of the Dunleary steam-packet company, the professional jail-bird—Micky
-Malowney, and the “general play boy” Jeremiah Maguire.
-There is no stage Irishism, and no politics. Dunleary is, of course, W—rf—d.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>DOYLE, J. J.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ CATHAIR CONROI, and other Tales. (<i>Sealy, Bryers</i>). 6<i>d.</i></p>
-
-<p>Written for the Oireachtas, 1902, and now translated by the Author from
-his own Irish original. They are for the most part Munster folk-lore.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>“DOYLE, Lynn”; Leslie A. Montgomery.</b> Born Downpatrick, Co. Down.
-Educated at Educational Institution, Dundalk. Has written a successful
-play, “Love and Land.” Is a bank-manager, residing at Skerries, Co.
-Dublin.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ BALLYGULLION. Pp. 249. (<i>Maunsel</i>). 6<i>s.</i> Handsome cover. 1908.
-Cheap edition. 1<i>s.</i> 1915.</p>
-
-<p>A dozen stories supposed to be told by one Pat Murphy, in the humorous
-brogue affected by country story-tellers. Comic character and incident in
-neighbourhood of Northern town. Considerably above the usual books of
-comic sketches. A good example of the humour is “The Creamery Society”—the
-visit of the Department’s expert, and his failure to make butter from
-whitewash, and the difficulties that arise incidentally between Nationalists
-and Orangemen, followed by Father Connolly’s famous speech. Perhaps
-“Father Con’s Card-table” ought to have been omitted.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>[DOYLE, M.]; “M. E. T.”</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ EXILED FROM ERIN. Pp. 266. (<i>Duffy</i>). <i>n.d.</i> (N.Y.: <i>Benziger</i>).
-0.45.</p>
-
-<p>A homely, pleasant tale relating the pathetic life-story of two brothers of the
-peasant class. The scene of the first part of the tale is laid in Shankill,
-Vale of Shanganagh, Co. Dublin, afterwards it changes to Wales, and then
-to America. The Author tells us that his story is a true one, and that his
-endeavour throughout has been to draw a faithful and sympathetic picture
-of the life of the humbler classes. The sorrow and misfortune of emigration
-is feelingly rendered.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>“DRAKE, Miriam”</b>; <b>Mrs. Clarke</b>, <i>née</i> <b>Marion Doak</b> (<a href="#CLARKE"><i>q.v.</i></a>). Born Dromard,
-Co. Down.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_78"></a>[78]</span></p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>DREISER, Theodore.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ JENNIE GERHART. (<i>Harper</i>). 6<i>s.</i> $1.35. 1911.</p>
-
-<p>“A piece of industrial realism, inartistic and undramatic, but thoroughly
-honest and full of serious thought. The fortunes of two immigrant families,
-German and Irish, are contrasted. Jennie is the daughter of the unsuccessful
-German, and falls a victim to the pleasure-loving son of the enterprising
-Irishman, who illustrates the dangers of our ... social organization.”—(<i>Baker</i>
-2).</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>DROHOJOWSKA, Mme. la Comtesse.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ RÉCITS DU FOYER, LÉGENDES IRLANDAISES, SCÈNES DE
-MŒURS. Pp. 208. (<span class="smcap">Paris</span>: <i>Josse</i>). 1861.</p>
-
-<p>Introd. very favourable to Ireland, but based on insufficient and not first-hand
-information. It dwells chiefly on Irish religious faith; also on superstition
-in Ireland. Then come the legends—King Laura Lyngsky, Glendalough
-(King O’Toole’s Goose), Donaghoo (a learned schoolmaster, who found
-a gold mine); King O’Donoghue (Killarney), Grace O’Malley and Queen
-Elizabeth, The King of Claddagh, John O’Glyn (a fisherman who marries a
-mermaid, and joins her in the sea), James Lynch, &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>DUFF GORDON, Lady.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ STELLA AND VANESSA. Trans. (<i>Ward, Lock</i>). [1850: <i>Bentley</i>].
-1859.</p>
-
-<p>Days of Swift, <i>c.</i> 1730. From the French of Léon de Wailly. The scene is
-laid entirely in Ireland. The story opens at Laracor. Swift is, of course,
-one of the central figures.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>DUGGAN, Ruby M.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ ONLY A LASS. Pp. 169. (<i>Sealy, Bryers</i>). 6<i>d.</i> Paper.</p>
-
-<p>A sensational story with nothing really Irish about it. The only Irish
-character is almost a caricature.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>DUNBAR, Aldis.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE SONS O’ CORMAC; an’ Tales of other Men’s Sons. Pp. x. +
-240. (<i>Longmans</i>). 6<i>s.</i> Eight illustr. by Myra Luxmoore. 1904.</p>
-
-<p>“Some of the old heroic legends retold by a humorous Irishman for children.”—(<i>Baker</i>).
-The stories (there are twelve) are very clever, picturesque,
-and, like all good tales of faërie, full of unconscious poetry.—<i>I.E.R.</i></p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>DUNN, Joseph.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE ANCIENT IRISH EPIC TALE: TÁIN BO CUALGNE,
-THE CUALGNE CATTLE RAID. Now for the first time done entire
-into English out of the Irish of the Book of Leinster and allied Manuscripts.
-Pp. xxxvi. + 382. Demy 8vo. (<i>Nutt</i>). 25<i>s.</i> 1914.</p>
-
-<p>Pref., on Irish Epic in general, and on the Táin in particular. The Editor
-calls it “the wildest and most fascinating saga tale, not only of the entire
-Celtic world, but even of all Western Europe.” The work is a scholarly one,
-the various MSS. being carefully collated by means of marginal- and foot-notes.
-The Irish text is not given. Index of place and personal names.
-A somewhat archaic style is adopted, but this is not overdone. “The
-Táin,” says the Ed. truly, “is one of the most precious monuments of the
-world’s literature.” The Ed. is a professor in the Catholic University of
-Washington, D.C., U.S.A.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_79"></a>[79]</span></p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>[DUNN, N. J.].</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ VULTURES OF ERIN: a Tale of the Penal Laws. Pp. 530
-(N.Y.: <i>Kenedy</i>). 1.50. One woodcut. 1884.</p>
-
-<p>Edward Fitzgerald is robbed of his property by his enemy, Templeton, who
-accuses him falsely of a murder instigated by himself. Shemus M’Andrew
-plots and plans to save Fitzg., but the latter is nevertheless condemned to
-death, and his wife loses her reason. He escapes, however, and after many
-years returns with proof of T.’s guilt. The wife recovers, and all ends
-happily. Scene: between Slieve Bouchta and Lough Derg. Religion not
-formally introduced, but Catholic bias very strong. Penal laws denounced,
-and scripture-readers appear in unfavourable light.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>DUNNE, Finley Peter.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE DOOLEY BOOKS:—</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="hanging">1. MR. D. IN PEACE AND WAR. (<i>Routledge</i>). Seventh edition, 1906.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">2. MR. D.’S PHILOSOPHY. (<i>Heinemann</i>). 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> Illustr. 1901.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">3. MR. D.’S OPINIONS. (<i>Heinemann</i>). 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> 1905.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">4. MR. D. IN THE HEARTS OF HIS COUNTRYMEN. 1909.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">5. OBSERVATIONS BY MR. D. (<i>Heinemann</i>). 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
-
-<p class="hanging">6. DISSERTATIONS BY MR. D. (<i>Harper</i>). 6<i>s.</i></p>
-
-<p class="hanging">7. MR. DOOLEY SAYS. (<i>Heinemann</i>). 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> 1910.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>A series of fictitious conversations purporting to take place over the counter
-of his bar in Archey Road, a seedy Irish quarter of New York, between Mr.
-Dooley, “traveller, historian, social observer, saloon-keeper, economist, and
-philosopher,” who has not been out of his ward for twenty-five years “but
-twict,” and his friend Hennessy. From the cool heights of life in the Archey
-Road Mr. Dooley muses, philosophizes, moralizes on the events and ideas of
-the day. He talks in broad brogue (perhaps overdone), but his sayings are
-full of dry humour, and the laugh is always with him. Many of these sayings
-have the point and brevity of epigrams. No ridicule is cast on Irish character,
-with which the Author, himself an Irishman, obviously sympathizes. The
-view of politics, &amp;c., is wholly at variance with that which comes to us from
-the English Press.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>DUNNE, F. W.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE PIRATE OF BOFINE: an historical romance. Three Vols.
-12mo. (<span class="smcap">London</span>). 1832.</p>
-
-<p>A strange medley of melodramatic episodes. The story jumps from place to
-place in the most bewildering way, and wholly without warning to the reader.
-Scene laid in various parts of the W. of I. (Boffin, Galway, Bantry, &amp;c.) in
-reign of Henry VIII. Historical characters are introduced, but without
-historical background. Style: “Know you aught of my maternal parent.”
-(Vol. III., p. 15). “Fire flashed from his eyes, and death sat upon his gleaming
-blade,” and soforth.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>“EBLANA,”</b> <a href="#ROONEY"><i>see</i> <b>ROONEY</b></a>.</p>
-
-<p class="author" id="ECCLES"><b>ECCLES, Charlotte O’Connor; “Hal Godfrey.”</b> Died 1911. Was a daughter
-of A. O’C. Eccles, of Ballingard Ho., Co. Roscommon. She wrote first
-for Irish periodicals. Later she went to London, and became a prominent
-lady journalist there. Her <i>The Rejuvenation of Miss Semaphore</i>
-is a very clever and witty novel.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ ALIENS OF THE WEST. Pp. 351. (<i>Cassell</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1904.</p>
-
-<p>Six stories reprinted from the <span class="smcap">American Ecclesiastical Review</span> (Catholic),
-and the <span class="smcap">Pall Mall Magazine</span>. Scene: “Toomevara,” an Irish country town
-of about 2,000 inhabitants, near Shannon estuary. Life in this town is<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_80"></a>[80]</span>
-depicted in a realistic and objective way, without moralizing, and without
-obtrusive religious or political bias. Yet there are lessons—the miseries
-of class distinctions and of social and religious cleavage; the disasters of
-education above one’s sphere (even in a convent). There is much pathos in
-the death of the peasant boy-poet, and in the faithfulness of the servant
-girl to the fallen fortunes of the family. A serious and earnest book.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>EDELSTEIN, Joseph.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE MONEYLENDER. Pp. 110. (<span class="smcap">Dublin</span>: <i>Dollard</i>). Illustr. by
-Phil Blake. 1908.</p>
-
-<p>A strangely realistic story of Jewish life in Dublin, told with rude power.
-Written by a Jew, it gives a dreadful picture of the life of the poor in Dublin
-slums, and of the misery wrought by the Jewish moneylender, who grows rich
-on their misery. The Jew, Levenstein, who is driven on in his evil course by
-desire to avenge the sufferings of his persecuted race is a revolting, yet a
-pathetic figure.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>EDGE, John Henry, M.A., K.C.</b> Born 1841. Son of late John Dallas Edge,
-<span class="allsmcap">B.L.</span> Lives in Clyde Road, Dublin.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ AN IRISH UTOPIA. Pp. 296. (<i>Hodges &amp; Figgis</i>). 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> Frontisp.,
-View of Glendalough. 1906 and 1910. Fourth ed. (<i>Cassell</i>), with
-fine portraits and interesting autobiographical introduction, 1915.</p>
-
-<p>“A Story of a Phase of the Land Problem.” Scene: Wicklow County
-and Shropshire, England. A slender plot, telling of the abortive attempt
-of a younger twin to oust the rightful heir from title and property, ending
-with a lawsuit in which some well known lawyers are introduced under
-slightly disguised names. Father O’Toole is a very pleasant character
-study. The famous “J.K.L.” Dr. Doyle, Bishop of Kildare and Leighlin,
-figures in the story. The standpoint is that of an Irish Conservative, without
-religious bias, and sympathizing with certain Irish grievances. Humour,
-pathos, and brogue are absent.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE QUICKSANDS OF LIFE. Pp. 392. (<i>Milne</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1908.</p>
-
-<p>Scene: first half in England, portion of second half on an estate somewhere
-in the South of Ireland. The interest centres chiefly in the plot, which is complicated,
-a great many of the personages passing through quite an extraordinary
-number of vicissitudes. Though the Author is never prurient, a
-considerable number of dishonest “love” intrigues are introduced, treated
-in a matter-of-fact way as every-day occurrences. Of Ireland there is not
-very much. The land troubles furnish incidents for the story, but are not
-discussed. The Irish aristocracy shows up somewhat badly in the book.
-Some tributes are paid to the virtues of the Irish peasantry.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>EDGEWORTH, Maria.</b> Scott, in his Preface to <i>Waverley</i> (1829), speaks
-of “the extended and well-merited fame of Miss Edgeworth, whose
-Irish characters have gone so far to make the English familiar with the
-character of their gay and kind-hearted neighbours of Ireland.” And
-he continues: “Without being so presumptuous as to hope to emulate
-the rich humour, the pathetic tenderness, and admirable tact, which
-pervade the works of my accomplished friend, I felt that something
-might be attempted for my own country, of the same kind as that which
-Miss Edgeworth has so fortunately achieved for Ireland.” She came
-of an old County Longford family, but was born in England in 1767;
-her father was a landed proprietor at Edgeworthstown, Co. Longford,
-whose life she afterwards wrote. Most of her long life was spent in
-Ireland. She came to know the Irish peasantry very well, though from
-outside, and also the country life of the nobility and gentry. She had
-much sympathy for Ireland, but was unable to understand that radical
-changes were needful if the grievances that weighed upon the country<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_81"></a>[81]</span>
-were to be removed. She died in 1849. The circulation of her books
-has been enormous, and they are still frequently reprinted both in these
-countries and in America.<a id="FNanchor_4" href="#Footnote_4" class="fnanchor">[4]</a></p>
-
-<p>Uniform editions of her works: (1) Macmillan, with excellent illustrations,
-2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> and 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> each; pocket edition, 2<i>s.</i>, and leather, 3<i>s.</i>
-(2) Dent, in twelve vols., 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> each, very tasteful binding, etched
-frontisp., ed. by W. Harvey. Messrs. Routledge also publish <i>Stories of
-Ireland</i>; introduction by Professor Henry Morley; 1<i>s.</i></p>
-
-<div class="footnotes">
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_4" href="#FNanchor_4" class="label">[4]</a> An able and certainly not over-enthusiastic estimate of Miss Edgeworth
-will be found in the <span class="smcap">Dublin Review</span>, April, 1838, p. 495, <i>sq.</i></p>
-
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ WORKS, collected in eighteen Vols. 1832.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ TALES AND MISCELLANEOUS PIECES. Nine Vols. (<span class="smcap">London</span>).
-1848.</p>
-
-<p>These were received with a chorus of praise by critics, such as Lord Jeffery,
-Lord Dudley, and Sir James Mackintosh. Scott called them “a sort of
-essence of common sense.”</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ CASTLE RACKRENT. (<i>Macmillan, &amp;c.</i>). (N.Y.: <i>Pratt</i>). 0.75.
-[1800].</p>
-
-<p>A picture of the feudal gentry in the latter half of the seventeenth century,
-in the form of reminiscences by an old retainer of the glories of the family he
-had served. One after another, he tells the careers of his various masters,
-the wild waste and endless prodigality of one, the skinflint exactingness of
-another. There is no religious bias nor discussion of problems, the chief
-interest being the ingenuous and unquestioning devotion of the old servant
-and his quaint observations. The literary merits of the book are usually
-rated very high.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE ABSENTEE. (<i>Macmillan, &amp;c.</i>). (N.Y.: <i>Pratt</i>). 0.75. [1809].</p>
-
-<p>A vivid impression of the Irish nobility trying to dazzle London society,
-and to prove itself more English than the English themselves, while the
-English great ladies mock at their parvenu extravagance and outlandish
-ways. The fine lady spends her days in social emulation, while her lord
-sinks to the company of toadies and hangers-on, until the conscience of the
-young heir is aroused by a tour in Ireland, and he brings the family back
-to their estates. The peasants are drawn purely in their relation of grateful
-and patient dependents.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ ENNUI. [1809].</p>
-
-<p>The Earl of Glenthorn, an English-bred absentee landlord, is afflicted with
-<i>ennui</i>. He determines to attempt a cure by a visit to Ireland, and the cure
-is effected in a very unlooked for way. The Author draws in an amusing
-and vivid way the contrast, as felt by Lord Glenthorn, between English
-tastes, prejudices, and decorum and the strange Irish ways, which surprise
-him at every turn.—(<i>Krans</i>).</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ ORMOND. Pp. 379. (<i>Macmillan, Dent, &amp;c.</i>) [1817].</p>
-
-<p>Pictures of the scheming, political, extravagant gentry, especially of a type
-of the Catholic country gentleman, the good-natured, happy-go-lucky
-Cornelius O’Shane, known to his worshipping tenantry as King Corny.
-There is also a sketch of Paris society, to which Ormond, the attractive,
-impulsive young hero, is introduced by an officer of the Irish Brigade.
-Generally thought the most interesting, gayest, and most humorous of Miss
-Edgeworth’s books.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_82"></a>[82]</span></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ TALES FROM MARIA EDGEWORTH. (<i>Darton</i>). 10<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> Illustr.
-by Hugh Thomson. 1912.</p>
-
-<p>Introd. by Austin Dobson.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ MISS EDGEWORTH’S IRISH STORIES (A Selection).</p>
-
-<p>Ed. by Malcolm Cotter Seton, <span class="allsmcap">M.A.</span>, in <i>Every Irishman’s Library</i> (The
-Talbot Press). [In preparation].</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>“EDWARDES, Martin”; E. L. Murphy.</b> Son of Mr. W. M. Murphy, of Dartry.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE LITTLE BLACK DEVIL. Pp. 190. (<i>Everett</i>). 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>, and
-1<i>s.</i> 1910.</p>
-
-<p>A first novel by a new Irish writer. Scene: Bantry and London. The
-story of a young Irishman who, badly treated at home by his guardian, goes
-to London to make his fortune. His heart is broken by an adventuress, but
-in the end he marries a true woman. A little immature, but pleasant, and
-suitable for any class of readers.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>EDWARDS, R. W. K.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ UNCHRONICLED HEROES. Pp. 119. (<span class="smcap">Derry</span>: <i>Gailey</i>). 1<i>s.</i>
-1888.</p>
-
-<p>A rather feeble story of the Siege of Derry. Walker and Mackenzie are
-introduced, the former highly lauded, the latter disparaged. Appendix
-(filling nearly half the book) gives extracts from scarce documents relating
-to the siege.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE MERMAID OF INISH-UIG. Pp. 248. (<i>Arnold</i>). 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>
-1898.</p>
-
-<p>To Inish-Uig, a western island with a primitive people, comes a new lighthouse
-keeper, a scoundrel and a hypocrite, who leads “Black Kate” astray.
-He tries to turn to account the illicit stilling propensities of the people, but is
-foiled in an amusing way. Father Tim and a Presbyterian minister on the
-mainland are two finely drawn characters. The islanders are well described,
-and their dialect well rendered.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>EGAN, Maurice Francis, M.A., LL.D.</b> Born Philadelphia, 1852. Educated
-La Salle Coll., Philadelphia and Georgetown Coll., Washington. Was
-Prof. of English Literature in Catholic University of Washington till his
-appointment as American Ambassador at Copenhagen. Has edited
-several periodicals, and has contributed to most of the noteworthy
-periodicals in the States. Has published many books on a great variety
-of subjects. His father was from Tipperary.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE SUCCESS OF PATRICK DESMOND. Pp. 400. (<span class="smcap">Notre
-Dame, Indiana</span>: <i>Office of Ave Maria</i>). 1893.</p>
-
-<p>A novel with a purpose. “The Author does not waste much space on
-descriptions or impersonal reflections, nor does he trust to sensational incidents.
-The development of feeling and character, very often as revealed in
-natural conversation, seems to be his strong point. He knows his own people
-best, but we are sorry that he considers Miles and Nellie to be typical of the
-manners and dispositions of that class of the Irish race in the United States.
-The book is so cleverly written that one might cull from its pages a very
-respectable collection of epigrams.”—(<i>I. M.</i>).</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE WILES OF SEXTON MAGINNIS. Pp. 380. (N.Y.: <i>Century
-Co.</i>). Illustr. by A. J. Keller. 1909.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_83"></a>[83]</span></p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>[EGAN, Pierce].</b> (1772-1849).</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ REAL LIFE IN IRELAND; or, the Day and Night Scenes, Rovings,
-Rambles, and Sprees, Bulls, Blunders, Bodderation and Blarney, of
-Brian Boru, Esq., and his elegant friend Sir Shawn O’Dogherty, exhibiting
-a Real Picture of Characters, Manners, &amp;c., in High and Low Life, in
-Dublin and various parts of Ireland, embellished with humorous coloured
-engravings from original designs by the most eminent Artists, “by a
-real Paddy.” [1821].</p>
-
-<p>Messrs. Methuen in 1904 reprinted the book from the fourth ed. which
-was publ. by Evans &amp; Co. The title-p. well describes the book. Brian
-and his friend were what were then called bucks and bloods. There is
-much absurdity, and extreme exaggeration. The follies and vagaries of the
-two heroes are told in a facetious and roistering style. There is not a little
-coarseness. But the book is interesting for its side-lights on the period,
-1820-1830. Geo. IV.’s visit is described in a vein of burlesque. The
-illustrations are even more vulgar than the text, but have a similar interest.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>EGAN, P. M.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ SCULLYDOM: an Anglo-Irish Story of To-day. Pp. 360. (<i>Maxwell</i>).
-2<i>s.</i> Picture boards. 1886.</p>
-
-<p>Scene: Kilkenny. Time: 1880-84. Lucifer Scully, moneylender, by
-degrees becomes possessed of much land, and grinds down the tenants. They
-revolt, and this gives opportunity for good descriptions of evictions and
-reprisals. Fred O’Brien, a fine character whose sweetheart is spirited away
-by the villainy of Scully, goes in pursuit of her, and has many adventures and
-disappointments before all ends happily. Mickey Crowe and his love episodes
-supplies the comic relief. The tone is strongly National, and the dialect
-well done. The Author has also written “A History and Guide to Waterford.”</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>ELIZABETH, Charlotte.</b> [Mrs. Charlotte Elizabeth Tonna, 1790-1846].</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE ROCKITE. [1832].</p>
-
-<p>The Tithe War (<i>c.</i> 1820) from Protestant standpoint. Captain Rock
-was a famous leader of Whiteboys during the anti-tithe war. The <i>Memoirs
-of Captain Rock</i> were published anonymously, 1824, in Paris, by Thomas
-Moore.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ DERRY: A Tale of the Revolution. Pp. xxiv. + 317. (<i>Nisbet</i>).
-[1839]. Sixth edition. 1886, and since.</p>
-
-<p>Story of the Siege of Derry, written from ultra-Protestant standpoint.
-The proceeds of the sale of the book are to be devoted to teaching the Protestant
-religion “in their own tongue to the Irish-speaking aborigines of the
-land.”—(Pref.). The Author says elsewhere that “Popery is the curse of
-God upon a land.” And the expression of similar views is very frequent
-in the book.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>ELRINGTON, H.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ RALPH WYNWARD. Pp. 310. (<i>Nelson</i>). 2<i>s.</i> Attractive binding.
-Good illustr. <i>n.d.</i> (1902).</p>
-
-<p>Youghal in the days of Queen Elizabeth. A tale of adventure in wild
-times, ending in the sack of Youghal during the Desmond Wars. Without
-bias. Told by Ralph himself, a descendant of the 8th Earl of Desmond, who
-runs away from his home in England. The 16th Earl and Sir Richard Boyle
-(afterwards the Great Earl of Cork) appear in the story. Juvenile.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_84"></a>[84]</span></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE SCHOOL-BOY OUTLAWS. Pp. 266. (<i>Simpkin</i>). 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>
-Six illustr. 1905.</p>
-
-<p>Life at a school in the South of Ireland “for the sons of the gentry.”
-Incidents of resistance to masters attempting a reform. Two of the boys
-Jerry and Fitzgerald (who tells the story, and is “the son of a well-known
-Dublin clergyman),” run away, and live as outlaws. The accession of Queen
-Victoria (1837) is the means of obtaining their pardon. A pleasant tale for
-boys, free from religious or political bias.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>ENNIS, Alicia Margaret.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ IRELAND; or, The Montague Family.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>ENSELL, Mrs.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE PEARL OF LISNADOON. Pp. 126. (<i>Elliot Stock</i>). 1886.</p>
-
-<p>Scene: Killarney in the time following O’Connell’s imprisonment. Aims
-to prove that the landlords were extremely ill-treated, and that the Irish are
-uncivilised, and more or less savage. Strong Protestant bias. Usual
-pictures of agrarian crime.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>ERVINE, St. John G.</b> Born Belfast, 1883. Has published four plays,
-three of which have been successfully acted at the Abbey Theatre. Hopes
-to publish a new novel, <i>Changing Winds</i>, in the near future.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ EIGHT O’CLOCK, and Other Stories. Pp. 128. (<i>Maunsel</i>). 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>
-1913.</p>
-
-<p>Reprinted from various periodicals. Six out of the seventeen are Irish
-in subject. There is the sketch of Clutie John, a queer old North of Irelander,
-whose profession is “fin’in’ things.” “The Well of Youth,” a fantastic and
-humorous story about the Well of St. Brigid in the Vale of Avoca—told
-in North of Ireland dialect! In “The Fool,” John O’Moyle, a little “astray
-in his mind,” gives an English tourist some eye-opening facts about the
-condition of peasant farms (Catholic and Protestant) in Donegal. “The
-Match” is a satire on match-making. In “Discontent” a young Antrim
-boy on Lurigedan tells of the hunger of the country-bred for the excitements
-of town life. “The Burial” is concerned with life in Ballyshannon. Clever
-and finished. The remainder deal with English life.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ MRS. MARTIN’S MAN. Pp. 312. (<i>Maunsel</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1915.</p>
-
-<p>Theme: the triumph of an injured wife over a situation that would have
-finally wrecked the lives of most women—her desertion by an unfaithful
-husband, and, still harder to face, his return after sixteen years, a worthless
-drunken lout, to live with her again. Mrs. Martin is the book, which is both
-a careful character study and a page of life-philosophy. But the minor
-characters are good—the Presbyterian clergyman, verbose and self-sufficient
-(a very unfavourable portrait), the canting and narrow-minded Henry
-Mahaffy, and Mrs. Martin’s Man himself. There is a somewhat drab background
-of lower middle-class life in Ulster (Ballyreagh (= Donaghadee) and
-Belfast). A very remarkable book that has had a deservedly great success.
-As for its moral aspect, the Author is against cant, hypocrisy, and intolerance;
-he is somewhat contemptuous towards religion: he is never salacious, but
-there is an occasional sensuousness in his treatment of a painful subject.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>ESLER, Mrs. Erminda Rentoul.</b> Daughter of Rev. Alexander Rentoul,
-M.D., D.D., of Manor Cunningham, Co. Donegal. Lives in London,
-and contributes to <span class="smcap">Cornhill</span>, <span class="smcap">Chambers’s</span>, <span class="smcap">Quiver</span>, <span class="smcap">Sunday at Home</span>,
-and many other periodicals. Author of <i>The Way of Transgressors</i> (1890),
-<i>Youth at the Prow</i>, <i>The Awakening of Helena Thorpe</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE WAY THEY LOVED AT GRIMPAT: Village Idylls. (<i>Sampson
-Low</i>). 1893.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_85"></a>[85]</span></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ A MAID OF THE MANSE. Pp. 315. (<i>Sampson, Low</i>). 1895.</p>
-
-<p>A story of Presbyterian clerical life in Co. Donegal forty years ago. A
-pleasant, readable story, with a well wrought plot. There is both pathos
-and humour in the book, and as a picture of manners it is true to life, if somewhat
-idyllic.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE WARDLAWS. (<i>Smith</i>). 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> 1896.</p>
-
-<p>“A grave domestic story worked out on a basis of character, laid in an
-Irish rural district.”—(<i>Baker</i>).</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE TRACKLESS WAY. Pp. 465. (<i>Brimley Johnson</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1903.</p>
-
-<p>“The story of a man’s quest for God.” (Sub-t.). Scene: chiefly
-“Garvaghy, Co. Innismore,” in Ulster. The book is a searching study of
-the inward religious and outward social life of a Presbyterian minister, Gideon
-Horville, his difficulties, aspirations, friendships, disappointment in marriage.
-He is dismissed by his Church for teaching erroneous doctrines, begins to
-write, and subsequently helps his great friend Lord Tomnitoul in his religious
-and socialistic schemes. The Author’s religious attitude is equally opposed
-to Catholicism, to Calvinism, and, indeed, to Christianity. The background,
-Horville’s social circle, with its meannesses, spites, and petty jealousies, is
-not a pleasant one. The Author writes with thorough knowledge. There
-are no politics.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>“ESMOND, Henry.”</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ A LIFE’S HAZARD: or, The Outlaw of Wentworth Waste. Three
-Vols. (<i>Sampson, Low</i>). 1878.</p>
-
-<p>Scene: N. Co. Dublin. A sensational tale—abducted heir, forged will,
-usurped title, jealousy, revenge, attempted murders, perjury, &amp;c. The
-outlaw, O’Grady, a T.C.D. man and a barrister, heads a popular rising, twice
-escapes execution, and performs wonderful deeds, always appearing in the
-nick of time to rescue beauty in distress, or upset the schemes of the false
-lord. There is much brogue—of a sort. The supernatural is frequently
-introduced.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>FABER, Christine.</b> This is said to be a pen-name. An American Catholic
-writer. Other novels—<i>An Original Girl</i> (1901), <i>Ambition’s Contest</i>,
-<i>A Fatal Resemblance</i>, <i>Reaping the Whirlwind</i> (1905), <i>A Chivalrous Deed</i>,
-<i>The Guardian’s Mystery</i>, <i>A Mother’s Sacrifice</i>. All of these are published
-by P. J. Kenedy of New York.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ CARROLL O’DONOGHUE; a Tale of the Irish Struggles of 1866
-and of recent times. Pp. 501. Pretty cover. (<i>Duffy</i>). 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> 1903.</p>
-
-<p>Scene laid chiefly in Kerry, at the time of the Fenian movement, though
-it is not a narrative of the latter. A very dramatic story finely wrought out.
-Full of local colour, humour, and pathos.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>“FALY, Patrick C.”; John Hill.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ NINETY-EIGHT: being the Recollections of Cormac Cahir O’Connor
-Faly (late Col. in the French Service) of that awful period. Collected
-and edited by his grandson, Patrick C. Faly, Attorney-at-Law, Buffalo,
-N.Y. (<i>Downey</i>). Illustr. A. D. M’Cormick. 1897.</p>
-
-<p>Cormac is heart and soul with the rebels. Life in Dublin, 1798, described.
-Then we are brought all through the scenes of the rising.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>FARADAY, Winifred, M.A.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE CATTLE RAID OF CUALNGE. (Táin bó Cuailnge). An ancient
-Irish prose epic [Grimm Library, No. 16]. Pp. xxi. + 141. (<i>Nutt</i>). 4<i>s.</i>
-(N.Y.: <i>Scribner</i>). 1.25. 1904.</p>
-
-<p>A close student’s translation from the <i>Leabhar na h-Uidhri</i> and the <i>Yellow
-Book of Lecan</i>. No notes, but interesting and scholarly introduction.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_86"></a>[86]</span></p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>FENNELL, Charlotte and J. P. O’CALLAGHAN.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ A PRINCE OF TYRONE. Pp. 363. (<i>Blackwood</i>). 1897.</p>
-
-<p>The amours of Seaghan O’Neill. Seems worthless from an historical point
-of view. O’Neill appears as little better than a villain of melodrama.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>FERGUSON, R. Menzies, D.D.</b> Author of <i>Rambles in the Far North</i>, &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE OCHIL FAIRY TALES. Pp. 157. (<i>Nutt</i>). 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> Illustr.
-1913.</p>
-
-<p>Most of the Tales related in this Book are founded on local tradition: they
-are the echoes of that Celtic folk-lore which is fast dying out. The western
-spurs of the Ochill hills and the country lying between the Allan Water and
-the River Forth form the scenes of the curious cantrips of the Wee Folk,
-once so firmly believed in by the people of a former generation. The purpose
-of the Author is to preserve some of those curious tales which are still floating
-in the popular mind. In another generation it will be too late.—(<i>Publ.</i>).</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>FERGUSON, Sir Samuel.</b> Born Belfast, 1810. Son of John Ferguson,
-of Collen House, Co. Antrim. Educated Academical Institution, Belfast,
-and T.C.D. Was first deputy keeper of the public records in Ireland.
-Was a noted antiquarian, but is best known as one of the best of our
-Irish poets. Most of his poetry deals with the heroic period of early
-Ireland. Died 1886. See <i>Sir Samuel Ferguson in the Ireland of his
-Day</i>, by Lady Ferguson. Besides the <i>Hibernian Nights</i>, Sir Samuel
-wrote also a very amusing if not very reverent sketch, “Father Tom
-and the Pope,” which had the unique distinction of being reprinted in
-<span class="smcap">Blackwood’s Magazine</span>, 1910.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ HIBERNIAN NIGHTS ENTERTAINMENTS. Three Vols. Pp. 146
-and 184 and 278. (<i>Sealy, Bryers</i>). 1<i>s.</i> each, paper; 2<i>s.</i> cloth. [1887].
-Still in print.</p>
-
-<p>Written by the Author in early youth. Supposed to be told in 1592 by
-Turlough O’Hagan, O’Neill’s bard, to Hugh Roe O’Donnell and his companions
-imprisoned in Dublin Castle. They are almost entirely fictitious, but give
-many details of locality and of the contemporary manners, customs, and
-modes of fighting. There is an historical introduction. Contents: “Children
-of Usnach,” “The Capture of Killeshin,” “Corby MacGillmore,” “An
-Adventure of Seaghan O’Neill’s,” and the “Rebellion of Silken Thomas.”
-Popular in style and treatment.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE “RETURN OF CLANEBOY.” Pp. 43-98.</p>
-
-<p>Relates how Aodh Duidhe O’Néill regained (<i>c.</i> 1333) his territory of Claneboy
-in Antrim on the death of William de Burgh, Earl of Ulster. The story is
-rather an ordinary one—fighting and intrigues. There is some description
-of men and manners and of County Antrim scenery.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE “CAPTURE OF KILLESHIN.” Pp. 98-146.</p>
-
-<p>A tale of the struggle of the Leinster Clans—chiefly the O’Nolans—with
-the English settlers. Full of stirring incidents, including a battle most
-vividly described. Period: end of 14th century.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ “CORBY MACGILLMORE.” Pp. 140.</p>
-
-<p>Scene: North Antrim at the beginning of the fifteenth century. A Franciscan
-preaches Christianity to the MacGillmores, who had relapsed into
-barbarism and paganism. There is a very warlike and un-Christian abbot
-in the story. The chief interest is the enmity between the Clan Gillmore and
-the Clan Savage of North Down, and the events, dark and tragic for the
-most part, that result from it.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE “REBELLION OF SILKEN THOMAS.” Pp. 278.</p>
-
-<p>The main features of the rebellion are told in form of romance. The real
-hero is Sir John Talbot, who first joins Lord Thomas but afterwards leaves
-him. The story of Sir John’s private fortunes occupies a large part of the
-narrative. The author is, of course, perfectly acquainted with the history
-of the time.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_87"></a>[87]</span></p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>FIELD, Mrs. E. M.</b> This Author (born 1856) is daughter of J. Story, J.P.,
-D.L., of Bingfield, Co. Cavan. Besides <i>Ethne</i>, she has published several
-other novels, <i>e.g.</i>, <i>At the King’s Right Hand</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ DENIS. Pp. viii. + 414. (<i>Macmillan</i>). 2<i>s.</i> [1896]. Still in print.</p>
-
-<p>A story of the Famine. Interesting portrait of Young Ireland leader.
-Standpoint rather anti-national. Dedicated “to my kinsfolk and friends
-among the landowners of Ireland.”</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ ETHNE. Pp. 312. (<i>Wells, Gardner</i>). 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> Three or four good
-Illustr. [1902]. Third edition. 1911.</p>
-
-<p>A tale of Cromwell’s transplantation of the Irish to Connaught. Purports
-to be taken partly from the diary of Ethne O’Connor, daughter of one of the
-transplanted, and partly from the “record” of Roger Standfast-on-the-Rock.
-The former is converted to the religion of the latter by a single reading
-of the Bible. The interest of the book is mainly religious.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>FIGGIS, Darrell.</b> Born Gleann-na-Smol, Co. Dublin, 1882. Was taken
-to India in infancy and remained there till he was ten years old. Was
-put into a London business house, and did not abandon this walk of life,
-in which his fortunes were sometimes low enough, till about 1909, the
-date of his first volume of poems, <i>A Vision of Life</i>. Since then he has
-been engaged in journalism and literature. He has taken an active part
-in the national movement in Ireland. For the past five years he has
-spent every winter in Achill, where he now lives permanently. Has,
-among other works, two novels, <i>Broken Arcs</i> and <i>Jacob Elthorne</i>, and is
-now engaged on an Irish story.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>FILDES, H. G.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ “TRIM” AND ANTRIM’S SHORES. Pp. 312. (<i>Greening</i>). 6<i>s.</i>
-1904.</p>
-
-<p>Account of holiday trip, supposed to be taken by the writer (an Englishman)
-and his friend, “Trim,” to the coast of Antrim, also Lough Neagh, and a few
-other places. Consists mainly of humorous incidents treated more or less in
-the <i>Three Men in a Boat</i>, or rather the <i>Three Men on the Bümmel</i> style, but
-much inferior. Little or no description of Antrim.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>FINLAY, T. A., S.J., M.A.; “A. Whitelock.”</b> Born 1848. Educated at
-Cavan College, at Amiens, and at the Gregorian University, Rome.
-Entered Irish Province S.J., 1866. Commissioner of Intermediate
-Education, 1900; Vice-President of Irish Agricultural Organisation
-Society; Ex-Fellow of Royal Univ. of I.; Editor, <span class="smcap">The Lyceum</span> and then
-<span class="smcap">The New Ireland Review</span> (1894-1910); President of Univ. Hall,
-Dublin, since 1913.—(<span class="smcap">Cath. Who’s Who</span>).</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE CHANCES OF WAR. (<i>Gill</i>). [1877]. New edition, 1908,
-and (<i>Fallon</i>), 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> 1911.</p>
-
-<p>Aims (cf. Preface) to indicate the causes that led to failure of Confederation
-of Kilkenny. Represents in the characters introduced the aims and motives
-of the chief actors in the events of the period, such as Owen Roe O’Neill,
-Rinuccini, Sir Charles Coote, &amp;c. There is a spirited description of the
-first relief of Derry, the Battle of Benburb, Ireton’s siege of Limerick. The
-hero is an exile returned from a continental army. Between him and the
-heroine the villain Plunkett interposes his schemes. Scene: chiefly an
-island in Lough Derg. Though the main aim is historical, this fact in no
-way detracts from the interest and excitement of the romance. Written in
-a style above that of the majority of Irish historical novels. Standpoint:
-Catholic and national, but free from violent partisanship.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_88"></a>[88]</span></p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>FINN, L. A.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ BARNEY THE BOYO.<a id="FNanchor_5" href="#Footnote_5" class="fnanchor">[5]</a> Pp. 180. (<i>Ireland’s Own Library</i>). 6<i>d.</i> <i>n.d.</i></p>
-
-<p>How B. is, with many sighs of relief, sent forth by his native village to
-found his fortune on a subscribed capital of £4 2<i>s.</i> 10<i>d.</i> How he is involved
-in the Castle Jewels mystery, wins the “Ardilveagh Cup” at the Horse
-Show, swims the Channel, and has many other topical adventures, succeeding
-always by his native wit. Plenty of broad popular humour, somewhat in
-the vein of Mick McQuaid.</p>
-
-<div class="footnotes">
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_5" href="#FNanchor_5" class="label">[5]</a> A Midland word for the Western “playboy” or general wag and practical
-joker.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="author"><b>FINN, Mary Agnes.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ NORA’S MISSION. Pp. 268. (<i>Washbourne</i>). 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> (N.Y.:
-<i>Benziger</i>). 1.75. [1911]. Second edition. 1914.</p>
-
-<p>The mission was to bring back her uncle, who had settled in Australia,
-both to his Church and to his country, and she successfully carried it out:
-his wife and daughters, too, “adapted themselves speedily to Irish manners
-and customs.” And her visit to Australia unravelled some mysteries which
-we shall not reveal. Scene laid in I. and most of characters Irish. The
-“brogue” is avoided, but the conversation is somewhat stilted and unnatural.
-The book is nicely printed and prettily bound.—(<i>C.B.N.</i>).</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>FINNEY, Violet G.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE REVOLT OF THE YOUNG MACCORMACKS. Pp. 227.
-(<i>Ward &amp; Downey</i>). Illustr. by Edith Scannell. (N.Y.: <i>Pratt</i>). 1.50.
-1896.</p>
-
-<p>A story written for children and much appreciated by them. The four
-young MacCormacks are very live and real children. Their delightfully novel
-pranks are told in a breezy, natural style. Many a “grown-up” will find
-interest in the book. Scene: partly in Dublin, partly in West of Ireland.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ A DAUGHTER OF ERIN. Pp. 224. (<i>Blackie</i>). 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> Well illustr.
-by G. Demain Hammond.</p>
-
-<p>A bright little story, free from “problems,” “morals,” morbidness, and
-prejudice. It tells how Norah’s hostility and dislike to her cousin, John
-Herrick, gradually changes to love in spite of herself. Her old lover accepts
-the inevitable like a brave man, and loses his life in trying to do a service,
-for her sake, to the favoured suitor. The Irish characters are capitally
-sketched—Mrs. Ryan and Judy, the Rector’s housekeeper. Bertie, the
-spoilt little invalid, is drawn to the life. So, too, is the somewhat sententious
-old Rector.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>FITZGERALD, John Godwin.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ RUTH WERDRESS, FATHER O’HARALAN, AND SOME NEW
-CHRISTIANS. Pp. 340. (<i>Blackwood</i>). 6<i>s.</i></p>
-
-<p>An argument in narrative form against the celibacy of the Catholic priesthood.
-Ruth W., flying from a home made unhappy by evangelicalism,
-takes refuge with Fr. O’H., P.P. of Blossomvale, who receives her into the
-Catholic Church. Fr. O’H. falls madly in love with her, and there are a
-series of situations, compromising and equivocal in appearance. Under
-extraordinary circumstances the two are forced into a merely formal marriage.
-We need not reveal the sequel. There is a great deal about Catholic usages,
-priests, nuns, &amp;c., with which the Author shows considerable superficial
-acquaintance. The Author is cautiously fair in detail, but the general impression
-produced is sometimes distinctly unfavourable to Catholicism. The
-New Christians are a sect of latter-day evangelicals whom the Author satirises
-severely. One scene we consider particularly offensive to Catholic feeling
-and highly improbable into the bargain.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_89"></a>[89]</span></p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>[FITZGERALD, M. J.].</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE MAKING OF JIM O’NEILL. Pp. 140. 16mo. (<i>C.T.S.I.:
-Iona Series</i>). 1910.</p>
-
-<p>The story of the course of a young man’s vocation to the priesthood, of his
-life at a typical Irish provincial seminary, and of his vacations at home.
-The doings of the seminarians are described frankly, not being at all idealised.
-The tale is pleasantly and plainly told, without much analysis of motive
-or of emotion. It is a vivid glimpse of the making of a priest.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>FITZGERALD, Rev. T. A., O.F.M.</b> Born Callan, Co. Kilkenny, 1862.
-Brought up in Thurles; ed. at Christian Bros. Schools and St. Patrick’s
-College. Became a Franciscan in 1879. Spent five years in Rome,
-and twenty in Australia. Since his return to Ireland has learned the
-Irish language, and has taken part in the revival movement. Witness
-his <i>Stepping Stones to Gaeldom</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ HOMESPUN YARNS: WHILE THE KETTLE AND THE
-CRICKET SING. Pp. 222. (<i>Gill</i>). 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> Illustr. 1914.</p>
-
-<p>Eighteen tales and sketches of Irish life—at home and in exile. For the
-most part humorous, with genuine and spontaneous humour. But pathos is
-often not far off, and edification is to be got, though it is not thrust upon
-the reader. The sketches of life in the slums and back streets of Dublin
-show the Author at his best, for his errands of mercy have made him know
-them thoroughly.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ FITS AND STARTS. (<i>Gill</i>). 1915.</p>
-
-<p>Another series of sketches similar to the previous, but here, besides making
-the acquaintance of Cook Street, Great Britain Street, and Chancery Lane,
-we have glimpses of Dalkey, Kingstown, Rathmines, and even Lower Leeson
-Street. “The Adventures of Black Pudden” is an exceptionally comic
-story.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>FITZPATRICK, Kathleen.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE WEANS AT ROWALLAN, Pp. 234. (<i>Methuen</i>). 6<i>s.</i> Illustr.
-Second edition. 1905.</p>
-
-<p>“We think it is one of the best books about children published since the
-days of Mrs. Ewing.”—(<i>Speaker</i>). “Amusing and pleasant. Some of the
-fun is tinged with the unconscious pathos of child-life, and the mixed mirth
-and melancholy of the Irish peasantry.”—(<i>Athenæum</i>).</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>FITZPATRICK, Mary; Mrs. W. C. Sullivan.</b> Born in Barony of Farney,
-Co. Monaghan, but belongs to the Fitzpatricks of Ossory. Educated in
-Dublin and Paris. In 1894 married Dr. W. C. Sullivan, son of the late
-Dr. W. K. Sullivan, President of the Queen’s College, Cork. Has contributed
-a good deal to periodicals in Ireland and in America. Her
-writings are marked by love for Ireland, and faith in Her future.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE ONE OUTSIDE. Pp. 245. (<i>Maunsel</i>). 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> 1914.</p>
-
-<p>Eight stories, six of which are Irish in subject. Seven of the stories are
-tragedies. “The Doctor’s Joke” is the only comedy. The title story
-tells how the father, after sixteen years of absence, bread-winning in England,
-comes home to find that the wife and children of the reality are far other
-than what his dreams had pictured, and his wife has a similar disillusionment.
-He is an outsider, and he realises it bitterly. Painful tragedy is the outcome.
-The 2nd is a tragedy of blighted hopes. The 3rd a lighter story laid in
-Fenian times. 4. W. of Ireland. Love’s young dream destroyed by the
-plotting of an ambitious and masterful old woman. Atmosphere of loneliness
-and terror given to the whole. 5. A London slum tragedy, with Irish
-characters. 6. A study in character, and a peasant love-tale. All are told
-in beautiful and refined language, often charged with pathos. The situations
-are dramatic. The whole manner, the atmosphere, and the sentiment are
-Irish.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_90"></a>[90]</span></p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>FITZPATRICK, T., LL.D.</b> Born, 1845, in Co. Down. Became a teacher in
-early life. He was attached successively to Blackrock Coll., Dublin; St.
-Malachy’s, Belfast; Athenry, Galway, and Birr schools. Of the last
-he was headmaster in 1876. Was author of a serious historical work—<i>The
-Bloody Bridge and other Studies of 1641.</i> Died 1912 in Dublin.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ JABEZ MURDOCK, by “Banna Borka.” Two Vols. Pp. 300 + 335.
-(<i>Duffy</i>). 1<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> (Two vols. in one). [1887]. 1888 still in print.</p>
-
-<p>Scene: South Co. Down. The central figure is a rascally Scotch settler
-who dabbles in poetry, and attains to wealth as “ajint” by unscrupulous
-means. Between the episodes of his life are interlarded scenes illustrating
-nearly every aspect of peasant life at the time, all minutely and vividly
-described, and conversations in which the problems of the times are discussed.
-A good deal of humorous incident and character. The Author evidently
-writes from first-hand knowledge. He is on the Catholic and popular side.
-Period: first quarter of nineteenth century.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE KING OF CLADDAGH. Pp. 249. (<i>Sands</i>). Frontisp.
-ancient map of Galway in 1651. 1899.</p>
-
-<p>Galway City and County during Cromwellian period. Atrocities of the
-eight years’ rule of the Roundheads. Forcible and vivid. Point of view:
-National and Catholic.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>FITZSIMON, Miss E. A.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE JOINT VENTURE: A Tale in Two Lands. Pp. 327. (N.Y.:
-<i>Sheehy</i>). 1878.</p>
-
-<p>Scene: opens in a valley of the Knockmealdowns, passes to U.S.A. in ch. 7
-(p. 109). Was a first novel, and so somewhat immature. High moral and
-Catholic tone (perhaps somewhat aggressive at times). Attacks Protestant
-divorce laws. One of the best incidents, perhaps, is Mrs. Ned O’Leary’s
-conversion to Catholicism.—(<i>Press Notices</i>). This was republ. in 1881 under
-title <i>Gerald Barry; or, The Joint Venture</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>“FLOREDICE, W. H.”</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ MEMORIES OF A MONTH AMONG THE “MERE IRISH.”
-Pp. xxix. + 321. (<i>Keegan, Paul</i>). [1881]. Second edition, 1886.</p>
-
-<p>A record of conversations held and things seen, but especially of legends,
-stories, and anecdotes heard from the peasantry during a stay made by the
-Author when a youth at Doe Castle, near the head of Sheephaven, Co. Donegal.
-Owen Gregallah (Gallagher?), an old water-bailiff, with whom the Author
-used to go fishing, tells many of these latter, in the local dialect, which is
-faithfully reproduced. The stories are interesting in themselves, and very
-well told. Dr. Mahaffy referred in the <i>Academy</i> to one of them as the
-funniest Irish story in print. There is no condescension in the Author’s
-tone. He likes and respects, as well as enjoys, his peasant companions.
-He seems to be an American. The Preface to the second ed. gives a humorous
-account of the difficulties of travel in Donegal in those days. N.B.—The title
-on the cover is “‘Mere Irish’ Stories.”</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ DERRYREEL. Pp. vi. + 184. (<span class="smcap">London</span>: <i>Hamilton, Adams</i>). 1886.</p>
-
-<p>“A collection of stories from N.W. Donegal.” This writer published also a
-volume entitled <i>Floredice Stories</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>FLYNN, T. M.</b> Was living at Carrick-on-Shannon at the time of writing
-these sketches.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ A CELTIC FIRESIDE: Tales of Irish Rural Life. (<i>Sealy Bryers</i>).
-1<i>s.</i> 1907.</p>
-
-<p>Nine little tales—tragedies and comedies—of Irish life in country and city.
-Many little touches show how well the Author knows Irish life. He has a
-power, too, of making the truth of his pictures go home to our hearts.—(<i>N.I.R.</i>).</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_91"></a>[91]</span></p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>FOREMAN, Stephen.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE OVERFLOWING SCOURGE, Pp. 335. (<i>Alston Rivers</i>). 6<i>s.</i>
-1911.</p>
-
-<p>Career of an unprincipled lawyer, who gains judgeship by a series of crimes
-and keeps it by crimes even more heinous. A greatly overdrawn picture
-of a dark and unpleasant side of life. Such incidents as a packed jury condemning
-unjustly the presiding judge’s son (with the judge’s own approbation)
-to penal servitude seem wholly improbable. The parson and his wife afford
-a gleam of humour. Although some of the worst of the characters are
-Protestants, there are several apparent sneers at things Catholic. “It is
-not written virginibus puerisque.”—(<i>I.B.L.</i>). The career of Blanco Hamilton
-seems to be founded on that of Judge Keogh, and the incidental references
-are to the latter’s times. Other novels of this writer, a Corkman, living in
-Cork, are <i>The Errors of the Comedy</i>, <i>The Fen Dogs</i>, <i>The Terrible Choice</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>FORSTER, C. F. Blake-</b>, <a href="#BLAKE-FORSTER"><i>see</i> <b>BLAKE-FORSTER</b></a>.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>FRANCILLON, Robert E.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ UNDER SLIEVE BÁN: a Yarn in Seven Knots. Pp. 275. (N.Y.:
-<i>Holt</i>). 1881. It originally appeared as a Christmas Annual with Coloured
-Illustrations. Pp. 128. (<i>Grant</i>). 1<i>s.</i></p>
-
-<p>A story of faithful love laid (at least its opening and closing scenes) in
-Wexford (“Dunmoyle”). Period about 1798. Michael and Phil both
-love Kate Callan. Kate loves P. best, and M. goes away. Returning after
-three years, he finds Kate mourning P., said to be lost at sea. M. and Kate
-are married, but on the evening of the marriage M. meets P. M. “disappears,”
-but in foreign parts meets P.’s French wife. The two couples are united
-again. Kate is shot in the rebellion, but survives to discover that M. was
-the best man after all. Dialect natural but refined.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>“FRANCIS, M. E.”; Mrs. Blundell.</b> Born at Killiney Park, near Dublin.
-Is the daughter of Mr. Sweetman, of Lamberton Park, Queen’s County;
-and was educated there and in Belgium. In 1879 she married the late
-Francis Blundell, of Liverpool. This home of her married life is the
-background of many of her stories—(<i>Ir. Lit.</i>). Among her books are:
-<i>Whither</i> (1892), <i>In a North Country Village</i>, <i>A Daughter of the Soil</i>, <i>Among
-Untrodden Ways</i>, <i>Maimie o’ the Corner</i>, <i>Pastorals of Dorset</i>, <i>The Manor
-Farm</i>, <i>The Tender Passion</i> (1910), and several others, besides those
-noticed in this book—about thirty in all. All Mrs. Blundell’s writings
-are noted for their delicacy of sentiment, deftness of touch, pleasantness
-of atmosphere. They are saved from excessive idealism by close observation
-of character and manners. Her Irish stories show sympathy and
-even admiration for the peasantry.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE STORY OF DAN, (<span class="smcap">London</span>: <i>Osgood, M’Ilvaine</i>). (<span class="smcap">Boston</span>:
-<i>Houghton</i>). 0.50. 1894.</p>
-
-<p>“A brief tale, told with directness and tragic simplicity of a magnanimous
-peasant, who adores with infatuation a worthless girl, and sacrifices himself
-uselessly and blindly. Friendly portraits of Irish country people are among
-the minor characters.”—(<i>Baker</i>).</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ FRIEZE AND FUSTIAN. (<i>Osgood</i>). 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> 1896.</p>
-
-<p>The book is in two parts—the first a reflection or picture of the mind and
-soul of the Irish peasant, the second of that of the English peasant. The
-comparison or contrast is not elaborated nor insisted upon. The pictures are
-there, the reader judges. A series of short stories or studies form the traits
-of the pictures, bringing out such points as the kindness of the poor to one
-another, a mother’s love, a mother’s pride in her son become priest, a servant’s
-fidelity, and various stories of love. All told with delicate feeling and insight.
-The Author has lived among both peoples. There is a good deal of dialect.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_92"></a>[92]</span></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ MISS ERIN. Pp. 357. (<i>Methuen</i>). 6<i>s.</i> [1898]. Included in Benziger’s
-(N.Y.) series of Standard Catholic Novels at 2<i>s.</i>; also $1.00.</p>
-
-<p>The story of a girl who, brought up as a peasant, afterwards becomes a
-landowner. She tries to do her best for her tenants, and her difficulties in
-the task are well depicted, the Author fully sympathizing with Irish grievances.
-There are some sensational scenes—among them an eviction. The love
-interest is well sustained, and the character-drawing very clever.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ NORTH, SOUTH, AND OVER THE SEA. Pp. 347. (<i>Country Life,
-and Newnes</i>). Charming Illustr. by H. M. Brock. 1902.</p>
-
-<p>Somewhat on the plan of <i>Frieze and Fustian</i> by the same Author, <i>q.v.</i>
-Three parts, each containing five stories or sketches. The first part deals
-with North of England life, the second with South of England, the third with
-Ireland. Humble life depicted in all. In last part the subject of the first
-sketch (an amusing one) is a rustic courtship of a curious kind; 2, an old
-woman dying in the workhouse; 4 and 5, a rural love-story. Studies rather
-of the minds and hearts of poor Irish folk than of their outward ways. The
-author has reproduced almost perfectly that brogue which is not merely
-English mispronounced, but practically a different idiom expressing a wholly
-different type of mind.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE STORY OF MARY DUNNE. Pp. 312. (<i>Murray</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1913.</p>
-
-<p>The love story of Mat, “the priest’s boy,” for Mary, beginning as a sweet
-and tender idyll in the home in Glenmalure, ending in the tragedy of a law-court
-scene, where the hero is on trial for murder and Mary faces worse than
-death in telling the story of her wrongs—she has been an innocent victim of
-the white slave traffic. Full of exquisite scenes, with touches of humour
-as well as pathos. But in the main the book is a tragedy. Its purpose
-seems clearly to be a warning and an appeal. The poignant consequences
-of Mary’s undoing are not suitable for every class of reader, but there is
-nothing approaching to prurient description.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ DARK ROSALEEN. Pp. 392. (<i>Cassell</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1915.</p>
-
-<p>The story of a “mixed marriage” between Norah, a Connemara peasant
-girl, and Hector, a young engineer of Belfast origin. They go to live at
-Derry. Bitterness and misunderstanding come to blight their love, and
-the end is tragedy. The two points of view, Protestant and Catholic, are
-put with impartiality.—(<span class="smcap">T. Lit. Suppl.</span>).</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>FREDERIC, Harold.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE RETURN OF THE O’MAHONEY: a Romantic Fantasy.
-Pp. 279. (<i>Heinemann</i>). 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> Three Illustr. 1893.</p>
-
-<p>Scene: South-west Cork in Fenian times. The O’M., who comes to Muirisc
-is not the real O’M. at all, but a Mr. Tisdale, who has managed to secure the
-papers of the real O’M., who is not aware of his own origin and real name.
-T. becomes a model landlord, and is beloved of all. Tries his hand at
-Fenianism, but soon abandons it and goes abroad to foreign wars. O’Daly,
-left as manager, thrusts himself into his master’s place. But a young American
-engineer (the real O’M. of course) turns up and spoils his plans, but does
-not reveal his own identity till after Tisdale’s death. Besides this there are
-numerous exciting incidents and several mysteries. The characters are
-well drawn. The Author is distinctly favourable to Ireland, and seems to
-have a good knowledge of the country.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_93"></a>[93]</span></p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>FREMDLING, A.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ FATHER CLANCY. Pp. 358. (<i>Duckworth</i>). 1904.</p>
-
-<p>Father Clancy is an unselfish devoted country parish priest, beloved of his
-people, unworldly and simple to a fault. His virtue serves to throw into
-deeper shadow the character of his curate, Father O’Keeffe, who is an abandoned
-and vicious ruffian. The purpose of the book is not at all clear to the
-average reader.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>FROST, W. H.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ FAIRIES AND FOLK OF IRELAND. Pp. xvi. + 290. (N.Y.:
-<i>Scribner’s</i>). Ill. by Sidney Richmond Burleigh. 1900.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>FROUDE, James Anthony.</b> 1818-1894. This celebrated writer had already
-published his <i>History of England</i> when, in 1869, he came to live (for
-the summer) at Derreen, Kenmare, Co. Kerry, where he began his <i>The
-English in Ireland in the Eighteenth Century</i> (first vol. appeared 1872).
-Like most of F.’s books, it provoked numerous answers, among others
-that of Father Thomas Burke, O.P., <i>Froude on Ireland</i>. The novel
-mentioned below embodies his chief ideas on Ireland.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE TWO CHIEFS OF DUNBOY, Pp. 456. (<i>Longmans</i>). 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>
-[1889]. Several editions since.</p>
-
-<p>Scene: the O’Sullivan’s country in south-west Cork. Period: 1750-98.
-The ideas expressed in the Author’s <i>The English in Ireland</i> put into the form
-of fiction. Thesis: if the English had from the first striven to replace the
-hopeless Celt by Anglo-Saxon and Protestant colonists she would have avoided
-her subsequent troubles in Ireland, and all would have been well. The
-English character (Colonel Goring) is throughout contrasted with the Irish
-(Morty Sullivan), the whole forming a powerful indictment of Ireland and the
-Irish as seen by Froude.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>FULLER, J. Franklin; “Ignotus.”</b> Born 1835. Is a native of Derryquin,
-near Sneem, Co. Kerry. In his young days he was a close friend of the
-priest (Fr. Walsh) who was the original of A. P. Graves’s “Father
-O’Flynn.” As architect to the Ecclesiastical Commissioners and to the
-Church Representative Body he has travelled extensively through
-Ireland and has lived in various parts of it—North, South, East, and
-West—always on friendly terms with his Catholic neighbours. He
-resides in Dublin.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ CULMSHIRE FOLK. Pp. 384. (<i>Cassell</i>). [1873]. Third edition, <i>n.d.</i></p>
-
-<p>The plot is concerned with Sidney Bateman, heir of a family that has come
-down in the world, his struggles against misfortune, and his eventual attainment
-of fortune and happiness. But the chief interest is the kindly, thoughtful
-study of character and motive, of human nature in fact, also in the picture of
-the ways of the little society (largely clerical, <i>e.g.</i>, the egregious Mr. M’Gosh) of
-Culmshire. Lady Culmshire, woman of the world, but with a warm and true
-heart within, is the central figure and is a very pleasant, happily drawn
-portrait. The Irish interest is (1) the excellent description of the homecoming
-of Sidney Bateman to the ancestral castle of Rathvarney, in the wilds of
-Kerry, which are well described; (2) the doings of Tim Conroy, a sort of
-Mickey Free, and the Leveresque stories told of him by Capt. Howley; (3)
-the portrait of the old P.P. of Rathvarney, Fr. Walsh (the original of Graves’s
-“Father O’Flynn”).</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ JOHN ORLEBAR, CLERK. Pp. 293. (<i>Cassell</i>). [1878]. Second
-edition, <i>n.d.</i></p>
-
-<p>The plot of a villainous attorney, Joe Twinch, and his clerk, an absconding
-Fenian, to cheat the rightful heiress out of the Arderne estates. Dr. Packenham,
-a personal friend of Orlebar, who had married the heiress, suspects foul<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_94"></a>[94]</span>
-play and comes to Kerry, where the first Lady Arderne had for some time
-resided, to make enquiries. He puts up at Rathvarney (see <i>Culmshire Folk</i>),
-meets Tim and Fr. Walsh (who helps to unravel the mystery), and sees something
-of Ireland in the sixties (pp. 240-274). This something, it must be
-confessed, is chiefly squalor, described, however, in a humorous and not
-unsympathetic way.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>FURLONG, Alice.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ TALES OF FAIRY FOLKS, QUEENS, AND HEROES. Pp. 212.
-(<i>Browne &amp; Nolan</i>). 2<i>s.</i> Four or five Illustr. by F. Rigney. Pretty cover.
-1909.</p>
-
-<p>Stories from ancient Gaelic Literature simply and pleasantly told.
-Contents:—“Illan Bwee and the Mouse;” “Country under Wave;”
-“The Step Mother;” “The Fortunes of the Shepherd’s Son;” “The
-Golden Necklet;” “The Harp of the Dagda Mor;” “The Child that went
-into the Earth;” and several others.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>GALLAHER, Miss Fannie; “Sydney Starr.”</b> Daughter of Frederick
-Gallaher, one time Ed. of <span class="smcap">Freeman’s Journal</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ KATTY THE FLASH. (<i>Gill</i>). 1880.</p>
-
-<p>Very low life in Dublin, with no attempt to idealise the rags and filth
-and squalor; but clever and realistic.—(<i>I.M.</i>).</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THY NAME IS TRUTH. Three Vols. (<i>Maxwell</i>). 1884.</p>
-
-<p>Incidentally describes the Hospice for the Dying, Harold’s Cross, and
-the inner working of a daily newspaper office. Cleverly written. The conversations
-are natural, and the human interest strong. The politics of the
-time (1881) are discussed, but they are not the main interest.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>GAMBLE, Dr. John.</b> I take the following account of this writer from a
-note on him contributed by Mr. A. A. Campbell, of Belfast, to the <span class="smcap">Irish
-Book Lover</span> (September, 1909): Dr. Gamble was born in Strabane, Co.
-Tyrone, in the early ’seventies of the eighteenth century. He was
-educated in Edinburgh. He devoted most of his life to a study of the
-people and characteristics of Ulster. He used to make frequent journeys
-on foot, or by coach, through the country, chatting with everyone
-he met, picking up story and legend and jest, and noting incidents.
-All his writings were imbued with a deep sympathy for his fellow-countrymen.
-As a vivid picture of the Ulster of his day his books
-are invaluable. They did much to produce in England a kindly feeling
-for his countrymen. He died in 1831.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ SARSFIELD. Three Vols. 12mo. (<span class="smcap">London</span>). 1814.</p>
-
-<p>The hero is a young Irishman who, under the name of Glisson, is a French
-prisoner of war at Strabane. Aided by the daughter of the postmaster he
-escapes, and wanders all over Ulster, where the wildest excitement about
-the threatened French invasion prevailed. Thence he goes to Scotland,
-England, and abroad. He fights with Thurot at the Siege of Carrickfergus,
-and eventually returns to Strabane, where he meets with a tragic ending.
-The Author embodies in the story many local traditions and much of his own
-observation and experience. Well worthy of republication.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ HOWARD. Two Vols. 12mo. (<span class="smcap">London</span>). 1815.</p>
-
-<p>“The subject of the following tale was born in a remote part of Ireland
-... my principal character is not altogether an imaginary one.”
-The hero of this autobiography is Irish. The scene is London. The central
-incident is his seduction of a young lady who after attempting suicide dies
-of remorse and chagrin.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_95"></a>[95]</span></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ NORTHERN IRISH TALES. Two Vols. 8vo. (<span class="smcap">London</span>). 1818.</p>
-
-<p>“Stanley,” the first tale tells the adventures of a young profligate, son of
-a Derry Alderman, chiefly in Dublin. After life of debauch he gets
-married, but goes bankrupt. His wife dies, he attempts suicide, is rescued,
-and plunges once more into vice. The rest of the story tells of his determined
-pursuit of a young lady, ending in a murder for which he is tried and
-hanged. It is founded on a romantic episode well known in Ulster, the
-courtship and murder of Miss Knox, of Prehen, near Derry, by Macnaughton,
-and his subsequent execution for the crime. “Nelson” is a story of the
-American Revolutionary War. Vol. II. contains only one tale, “Lesley.”
-The hero is a North of Ireland man, whose travels and love adventures on
-the Continent and at home are described. The Author indulges in a good
-deal of moralizing.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ CHARLTON; or, Scenes in the North of Ireland. Three Vols. 12mo.
-(<span class="smcap">London</span>). [1823]. New edition, 1827.</p>
-
-<p>Depicts, with sympathy for the views of the United Irishmen, the state
-of Ireland during the years that immediately preceded the rebellion. The
-hero is a young surgeon in a N. of Ireland town who is tricked into becoming
-a United Irishman, and leads the rebels at Ballynahinch. Under the name
-of Dimond the Rev. James Porter is introduced, and many quotations are
-made from his satire “Billy Bluff.” Northern dialect very well done.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>GAUGHAN, Jessie.</b> Born in Shropshire; one parent Irish, the other Scotch.
-Educated in Paisley and in Ursuline Convent, Sligo. Besides the book
-here mentioned she has publ. serially in I.M. <i>The Brooch of Lindisfarne</i>,
-and has in preparation a story dealing with Ireton’s days in Limerick.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE PLUCKING OF THE LILY. Pp. 220. (<i>Washbourne</i>). 1912.</p>
-
-<p>Reprinted from I.M. 1911-2. A charming little story of Elizabethan
-times in Ireland (<i>c.</i> 1589-94), telling the love-story of Eileen daughter of
-Earl Clancarthy and Florence M’Carthy. Their love is crossed by the policy
-of Elizabeth, who, for State purposes, wants an English husband for Eileen,
-and not till the end are the two lovers united again. The historical setting
-and colouring are accurate, but never interfere with the story. The tone is
-Catholic, but not obtrusively so. Good portrait of Elizabeth. Burleigh
-(in a favourable light), Sir Warham St. Leger, and other historical personages
-appear.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>GAY, Mrs. Florence, <i>née</i> Smith.</b> Born in Molong, N.S.W., Australia. Is
-an ardent imperialist, but proud of the strain of Celtic blood in her
-family, and sympathetic towards Ireland. Resides in Surrey.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ DRUIDESS, THE. Pp. 195. (<i>Ouseley</i>). 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> 1908.</p>
-
-<p>Cormac, a youth of Pictish royal blood, has a mission from his dying
-father to rescue from the Saxons the mother of his intended bride. His
-adventures in carrying out this mission bring him from Damnonia (between
-the Yeo and the Axe) to Ireland (Glendalough, Tailltenn, Donegal). He is
-present at the half-pagan festival of Beltaine, and at the Convention of
-Drumceat. At the latter he meets St. Columba, who is sympathetically
-described. The story deals largely with the lingerings of Paganism in Ireland.
-Several battles between Saxons and Britons are described. The savage
-manners of the time are pictured with realistic vividness. The wild scenes of
-adventure follow one another without a pause. Intended for “boys and
-others.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_96"></a>[96]</span></p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>[GETTY, Edmund].</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE LAST KING OF ULSTER. Three Vols. (<span class="smcap">London</span>: <i>Madden</i>).
-1841.</p>
-
-<p>Ostensibly a tale, in reality a kind of historical miscellany of Elizabethan
-times, containing memoirs, anecdotes, family history, &amp;c., of the O’Neills,
-O’Donnells, and other Irish chiefs. The Author was one of the best of
-our Northern antiquaries.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>GIBBON, Charles.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ IN CUPID’S WARS. Three Vols. (<i>F. V. White</i>). 1884.</p>
-
-<p>The scene is laid in Kilkenny in 1798 or thereabouts, but both the topographical
-and historical settings are of the vaguest—there is very little local
-colour, and practically no depiction of historical events, though there is
-much about rebellion and secret societies. The story is thoroughly melodramatic:
-it has no serious purpose, but the tone is wholesome. The
-characters of the story are all represented as Catholics. This Author wrote
-upwards of thirty other novels.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>[GIBSON, Rev. Charles Bernard].</b> (1808-1885). Was chaplain at Spike
-Island, and sometime minister of the Independent congregation at
-Mallow, Co. Cork, but afterwards joined the Church of England. He was
-made M.R.I.A. in 1854. He wrote a <i>History of Cork City and County</i>
-(1861), and five or six other works, including <i>Historical Portraits of
-Irish Chieftains and Anglo-Norman Knights</i>, 1871.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE LAST EARL OF DESMOND. Two Vols. (<i>Hodges &amp; Smith</i>).
-1854.</p>
-
-<p>Extensive pref., introd. (summarising history of Earls of Desmond), and
-notes. Scene: Mallow, various parts of Munster, and the Tower of
-London. All the great personages of the time, English and Irish, figure in
-the story, but several fictitious characters are introduced, and many fictitious
-episodes are throughout the story mingled with the facts of history. The
-main plot turns on the Sugán Earl’s love for, and marriage with, Ellen Spenser
-(an imaginary daughter of the poet). The bias is strongly anti-Catholic.
-Fr. Archer, <span class="allsmcap">S.J.</span>, is the villain of the piece, stopping at no crime to gain his
-ends. It is also, though not to the same extent, anti-Irish. He relies for
-his facts entirely on <i>Pacata Hibernia</i> (point of view wholly English). The
-Irish chiefs are made to speak in vulgar modern-Irish dialect (“iligant,”
-“crattur,” “yr sowls to blazes,” &amp;c., &amp;c.). The humour is distinctly
-vulgar, as in the case of the Author’s other novel. Raleigh is one of the
-personages.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ DEARFORGIL, THE PRINCESS OF BREFFNY. Pp. 287.
-(<span class="smcap">London</span>: <i>Hope</i>). [1857]. Second edition (<i>Longmans</i>). 1884. Pp.
-xxiv. + 284.</p>
-
-<p>Story of Diarmuid MacMurrough’s abduction of the wife of O’Ruairc of
-Breffni, and subsequent events, including an account of the Norman Invasion.
-The tone throughout is anti-National and most offensive to Catholic feeling.
-The frequent humorous passages are nearly always vulgar, and in some
-instances coarse. There are many absurdities in the course of the narrative.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>GIBSON, Jennie Browne.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ AILEEN ALANNAH. Pp. 86. (<i>Stockwell</i>). 1<i>s.</i> net. One good illustr.
-1911.</p>
-
-<p>Desmond Fitzgerald and Aileen have been sweethearts from childhood,
-D. has to go to America. Percy Gerrard intercepts their letters, and tries
-to marry Aileen. She is broken-hearted, and goes as nurse to a London
-hospital. Percy at the point of death confesses his wickedness, and No. 27
-in one of the wards turns out to be⸺. Scene: at first Donegal. A very
-pleasant story, full of kindly Irish people, entirely free from bigotry, and with
-an excellent though unobtruded moral purpose.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_97"></a>[97]</span></p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>“GILBERT, George;” Miss Arthur.</b> Has written also <i>In the Shadow of
-the Purple</i> (1902), and <i>The Bâton Sinister</i> (1903).</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE ISLAND OF SORROW. Pp. 384. (<i>Long</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1903.</p>
-
-<p>Deals, in considerable detail, with political and social life in the Ireland of
-the time. The circles of Lord Edward and Pamela Fitzgerald (centering in
-Leinster House), of the Emmet family (at the Casino, Milltown), and of the
-Curran family (at the Priory, Rathfarnham) are fully portrayed and neatly
-interlinked in private life. The whole romance of Emmet and Sarah Curran
-is related. There are many portraits—Charles James Fox, Curran (depicted
-as a domestic monster), many men of the Government party, above all,
-Emmet. This portrait is not lacking in sympathy, though the theatrical
-and inconsiderate character of his aims is insisted on. The whole work
-shows considerable power of <i>dramatizing</i> history, and is made distinctly
-interesting. “The author,” says Mr. Baker, “tries to be impartial, but cannot
-divest himself of an Englishman’s lack of sympathy with Ireland.” The
-book is preceded by a valuable list of authorities and sources.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>GILL, E. A. Wharton.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ AN IRISHMAN’S LUCK. (<i>Hodder &amp; Stoughton</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1914.</p>
-
-<p>“A domestic tale of young folk in a British settlement in Manitoba, and of
-the Canadian contingent in the Boer War.”—(<span class="smcap">T. Lit. Suppl.</span>).</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>GODFREY, Hal</b>, <a href="#ECCLES"><i>see</i> <b>CHARLOTTE O’C. ECCLES</b></a>.</p>
-
-<p class="author" id="GOODRICH"><b>GOODRICH, Samuel Griswold; “Peter Parley.”</b> Born 1793 in Connecticut.
-Author of 170 volumes, the list of them, with notes, occupying 7½ columns
-of Allibone, of which 116 appeared under pseud. “Peter Parley.” Seven
-millions had, according to the Author, been sold at date of Allibone.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ TALES ABOUT IRELAND AND THE IRISH. 16mo. Pp. 300.
-(<span class="smcap">London</span>: <i>Berger</i>). [1834]. 1836, 1852, 1856. <i>n.d.</i> <i>c.</i> 1865.</p>
-
-<p>In Ch. I. there is a short account of the physical features, climate, etc., of I.
-Pages 20-140 give a popular account of Irish history from the English point of
-view, but on the whole not unfair to Ireland. At p. 150 commences a pleasant
-little description of a tour round I., with some little account of antiquities
-seen on the way; also occasional legends and stories connected with places.
-Illustrated by a number of small nondescript woodcuts of no value. The
-above work seems to be a portion of the Author’s <i>Tales about Great Britain</i>.
-First publ. Baltimore, 1834.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>GRANT, John O’Brien; “Denis Ignatius Moriarty.”</b> The former of these
-two names is signed to a dedication in <i>The Wife Hunter</i>, one of the “Tales
-by the Moriarty Family.” I am not sure that it is not as fictitious as
-the second.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE HUSBAND HUNTER. Three Vols. 1839.</p>
-
-<p>A society novel. Scene: Kerry, <i>c.</i> 1830. There is very little plot, and
-the matrimonial complications (a Russian prince and a German baron are
-involved) of the lady who gives to the story its title form by no means the
-central episode. The conversations are rather artificial and the humour a
-little insipid. Pleasant portrait of a priest of the old sporting type. Nothing
-objectionable.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ INNISFOYLE ABBEY. Three Vols. (<span class="smcap">London</span>). 1840.</p>
-
-<p>A story dealing with the religious question in Ireland, as seen from a
-Catholic standpoint. It is full of able controversy and shows keen observation.
-The hero Howard’s Protestant and anti-Irish prejudices are made to
-give way as the real situation of things is forced in on him. The restoration
-of Innisfoyle Abbey is one of the main incidents. Some of the incidents
-are taken from facts, <i>e.g.</i>, the Rathcormac tithe massacre. These incidents<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_98"></a>[98]</span>
-are related with energy and pathos. But in general the story is of a lighter
-character, full of broad Irish humour, and placing the sayings and doings
-of our Orange fellow-countrymen in a point of view as ludicrous as it is
-horrible. “A rambling, spirited, and racy tale, eccentric and even absurd
-sometimes, but very original and entertaining.” “This writer is known as
-the author of several amusing and clever novels.”—(<i>D. R.</i>).</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>GRAVES, Alfred Perceval.</b> Born in Dublin, 1846, but his family resided
-in Kerry. Son of late Dr. Graves, Bp. of Limerick. Educated at Windermere
-Coll. and T.C.D. Was Inspector of Schools from 1875-1910. For
-eight years Hon. Sec. of Irish Literary Society. Publ. upwards of
-seventeen books, nearly all on Irish subjects—poems, songs (including
-the famous “Father O’Flynn”), translations from the Irish, essays.
-Resides in Wimbledon.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE IRISH FAIRY BOOK. (<i>Fisher Unwin</i>). Illustr. by George
-Denham. 1909. A new ed. at 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>, with fresh introd., is forthcoming.</p>
-
-<p>A collection of fairy, folk, and hero-tales, nearly all selected from books
-already published, together with poems by Mangan, Tennyson, Nora Hopper,
-&amp;c. Also tales from Standish H. O’Grady, Brian O’Looney, Thomas Boyd,
-Mrs. M’Clintock, Mrs. Ewing, Douglas Hyde, O’Kearney, &amp;c. All are inspired
-by Gaelic originals. “The book is one to delight children for its simple,
-direct narratives of wonder and mystery,” while the fairy mythology will
-interest the student of the early life of man. The illustrations are as fanciful
-and elusive as the beings whose doings are told in the tales. Mr. Graves’s
-Preface is a popular review of the origin and character of fairy lore.—(<i>Press
-Notice</i>).</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>GREER, James.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THREE WEE ULSTER LASSIES; or, News from our Irish Cousins.
-(<i>Cassell</i>), 1<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> Illustr. by old blocks. 1883.</p>
-
-<p>The three lassies are Bessie Strong, the Ulster-Saxon, a landlord’s daughter;
-Jennie Scott, the Ulster-Scot, a farmer’s daughter; and Nelly Nolan, the
-Ulster-Kelt, a peasant girl. The Author insists throughout on the vast
-superiority of the English and Scotch elements of the population—“the grave,
-grim, hardy, sturdy race.” Interlarded with texts and hymns. In the end
-Nelly, after an encounter with the priest and stormy interviews with the
-neighbours, is converted and goes to America. The Author died in Derry in
-1913 at an advanced age. He edited a <i>Guide to Londonderry and the Highlands
-of Donegal</i>, 1885, which went through several editions.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>GREER, Tom.</b> Was born at Anahilt, Co. Down, a member of a well known
-Ulster family. Ed. at Queen’s College, Belfast. M.A. and M.D., Queen’s
-University, and practised in Cambridge. Unsuccessfully contested
-North Derry as a Liberal Home Ruler, 1892, and died a few years afterwards.
-The central idea of this tale was suggested by the old Co. Derry
-folk tale of Hudy McGuiggen. See HARKIN, Hugh.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ A MODERN DÆDALUS. Pp. 261. (<span class="smcap">London</span>: <i>Griffith, Farran</i>, &amp;c.).
-1885.</p>
-
-<p>The introd. is signed John O’Halloran, Dublin, 30th Feb., 1887! A curious
-story, told in first person, of a Donegal lad who learned the secret of aerial
-flight by watching the sea-birds. He flies over to London. Is in the House
-of Commons for a debate. Parnell is well described. The way Parliament
-and the Government and the Press dealt with the new invention is cleverly
-and amusingly told. Jack, the hero, is imprisoned but escapes, and on his
-return there is a successful rising in Ireland, who establishes her independence
-by her air fleet. The book is full of politics (Nationalist point of view). An
-eviction scene in Donegal—“The Battle of Killynure”—is described. Shrewd
-strokes of satire are aimed at the Tories throughout.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_99"></a>[99]</span></p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>GREGORY, Lady.</b> Daughter of Dudley Persse, D.L., of Roxborough, Co.
-Galway. She has identified herself with the modern Irish literary
-movement. Besides the books here noted she has written a great many
-plays for the Abbey Theatre. Her home is Coole Park, Gort, Co. Galway.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ CUCHULAIN OF MUIRTHEMNE. Pp. 360. (<i>Murray</i>). 6<i>s.</i> Pref.
-by W. B. Yeats. (N.Y.: <i>Scribner</i>). 2.00. 1902.</p>
-
-<p>The Cuchulain legends woven into an ordered narrative. The translation
-for the most part is taken from texts already published. Lady Gregory has
-made her own translation from them, comparing it with translations already
-published. “I have fused different versions together and condensed many
-passages, and I have left out many.” The narrative is not told in dialect,
-but in the idiom of the peasant who speaks in English and thinks in Gaelic.
-“I have thought it more natural to tell the stories in the manner of thatched
-houses, where I have heard so many legends of Finn, &amp;c. ... than in the
-manner of the slated houses where I have not heard them.” The matter also
-is often such as the peasant Seanchuidhe might choose; the clear epic flow being
-clogged with garbage of the Jack-the-Giant-killer type. Fiona MacLeod
-says very well of the style that it is “over cold in its strange sameness of
-emotion, a little chill with the chill of studious handicraft,” and speaks elsewhere
-of its “monotonous passionlessness” and its “lack of virility.” Yet
-to the book as a whole he gives high, if qualified, praise. W. B. Yeats, in his
-enthusiastic Preface, speaks of it as perhaps the best book that has ever come
-out of Ireland. All these remarks apply also to the following work.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ GODS AND FIGHTING MEN. Pp. 476. (<i>Murray</i>). 6<i>s.</i> Pref. by
-W. B. Yeats. (N.Y.: <i>Scribner</i>). 2.00. 1906.</p>
-
-<p>Treats of: Part I. “The Gods” (Tuatha De Danaan, Lugh, The Coming
-of the Gael, Angus Og, the Dagda, Fate of Children of Lir, &amp;c.); II. “The
-Fianna” (Finn, Oisin, Diarmuid, and Grania). The Finn Cycle is treated
-as being wholly legendary.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ A BOOK OF SAINTS AND WONDERS. (<i>Murray</i>). 5<i>s.</i> 1907.</p>
-
-<p>A series of very short (half page or so) and disconnected stories of fragmentary
-anecdotes. Told in language which is a literal translation from the Irish,
-and in the manner of illiterate peasants. First, there are stories of the saints,
-all quite fanciful, of course, and usually devoid of definite meaning. Then
-there is the Voyage of Maeldune, a strange piece of fantastic imagination often
-degenerating into extravagance and silliness. The book is not suitable for
-certain readers owing to naturalistic expressions.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE KILTARTAN WONDER-BOOK. Pp. 103. 9 in. + 7. (<i>Maunsel</i>).
-3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> net. Illustr. by Margaret Gregory. Linen cover. 1910.</p>
-
-<p>Sixteen typical folk-tales collected in Kiltartan, a barony in Galway, on
-the borders of Clare, from the lips of old peasants. “I have not changed a
-word in these stories as they were told to me.”—(Note at end). But some
-transpositions of parts have been made. It does not appear whether the
-stories were told to Lady Gregory in Irish or in English. Nothing unsuited to
-children. All the tales are distinctly <i>modern</i> in tone if not in origin. The
-illustrations are quaint and original, with their crude figures vividly coloured
-in flat tints.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>GRIERSON, Elizabeth.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE CHILDREN’S BOOK OF CELTIC STORIES. Pp. 324.
-(<i>Black</i>). 6<i>s.</i> Twelve very good illustrations in colour from drawings by
-Allan Stewart. 1908.</p>
-
-<p>Sixteen fairy, folk, and hero-tales, partly Irish, partly Scotch, dealing,
-among other things, with wonderful talking animals that prove to be human
-beings transformed, adventures of king’s sons amid all kinds of wonders, &amp;c.
-One is “The Fate of the Children of Lir,” and there are five or six about Fin.
-There is little or no comicality. The style is simple and refined, free from the
-usual defects of folk-lore. The book is beautifully and attractively produced.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_100"></a>[100]</span></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE SCOTTISH FAIRY BOOK. Pp. 384. (<i>Fisher Unwin</i>). 6<i>s.</i>
-100 Ill. by M. M. Williams. 1910.</p>
-
-<p>Same series as Mr. A. P. Graves’s <i>Irish Fairy Book</i>, <i>q.v.</i> Illustr. in a
-similar way. Not all of these tales will be new to Irish children.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>GRIERSON, Rev. Robert.</b> Resides at 41 Ormond Road, Rathmines. His
-two books are long out of print. I have been unable to obtain information
-about them. They are not in the British Museum Library.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE INVASION OF CROMLEIGH: a Story of the Times.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ BALLYGOWNA. (<span class="smcap">Aberdeen</span>: <i>Moran</i>). 1898.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>GRIFFIN, Gerald.</b> Is one of our foremost novelists of the old school. Born
-1803, died 1840. Brought up on the banks of the Shannon, twenty-eight
-miles from Limerick, at twenty he went to London, where all his writing
-was done. Two years before his death he became a Christian Brother.
-“He was the first,” says Dr. Sigerson, “to present several of our folk
-customs, tales, and ancient legends in English prose.” P. J. Kenedy, of
-New York, publishes an edition of his works in seven volumes, and
-Messrs. Duffy have an edition in ten vols. at 2<i>s.</i> each.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ HOLLAND TIDE. Pp. 378. (<i>Simpkin &amp; Marshall</i>). 1827.</p>
-
-<p>First series of <i>Tales of the Munster Festivals</i>, <i>q.v.</i> Often published separately.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE COLLEGIANS; or, The Colleen Bawn. (<i>Duffy</i>). 2<i>s.</i> [1828].
-Still reprinted. (N.Y.: <i>Benziger</i>). 0.75. A new ed. forthcoming (<i>Talbot
-Press</i>). 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
-
-<p>Pronounced the best Irish novel by Aubrey de Vere, Gavan Duffy, and
-Justin M’Carthy. Its main interest lies in its being a tragedy of human
-passion. The character of Hardress Cregan, the chief actor, is powerfully
-and pitilessly analysed. Eily O’Connor is one of the most lovable characters
-in fiction. Danny Man, with his dog-like fidelity; Myles, the mountainy
-man, simple yet shrewd; Fighting Poll of the Reeks; Hardress Cregan’s
-mother, are characters that live in the mind, like the memories of real persons.
-There are pictures, too, of the life of the day, the drunken, duelling squireen,
-the respectable middle-class Dalys, the manners and ways of the peasantry,
-whose quaint, humorous, anecdotal talk is perfectly reproduced, but who are
-shown merely from without. The scene is laid partly in Limerick and partly
-in Killarney. Dion Boucicault’s drama “The Colleen Bawn” is founded
-on this story, which itself is founded on a real murder-trial in which O’Connell
-defended the prisoner and which Griffin reported for the press.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ CARD-DRAWING, &amp;c. 1829.</p>
-
-<p>Second series of <i>Tales of the Munster Festivals</i>, <i>q.v.</i></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE CHRISTIAN PHYSIOLOGIST. Tales illustrative of the Five
-Senses. Pp. xxvi. + 376. (<i>Bull</i>). 1830.</p>
-
-<p>The tales are:—1. <i>The Kelp Gatherers</i>; 2. <i>The Day of Trial</i>; 3. <i>The
-Voluptuary Cured</i>; 4. <i>The Self Consumed</i>; and, 5. <i>The Selfish Crotarie</i>.
-All are clever little stories of ancient and modern Ireland, several of which
-have been reprinted separately.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE INVASION. Very long. (<i>Duffy</i>). 2<i>s.</i> [1832]. Still reprinted.
-(N.Y.: <i>Benziger</i>). 0.75.</p>
-
-<p>Scene: chiefly the territory of the O’Haedha sept on Bantry Bay. The
-story deals chiefly with the fortunes of the O’Haedhas, but there are many
-digressions. The innumerable ancient Irish names give the book a forbidding
-aspect to one unacquainted with the language. The narrative interest is
-almost wanting, the chief interest being the laborious and careful picture of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_101"></a>[101]</span>
-the life and civilization of the time, the eve of the Danish Invasions. The
-archæology occasionally lacks accuracy and authority, but these qualities
-are partly supplied in the notes, which are by Eugene O’Curry. The invasion
-referred to is an early incursion on the coasts of West Munster by a Danish
-chief named Gurmund. Some of the characters are finely drawn, <i>e.g.</i>, the
-hero, Elim, and his mother and Duach, the faithful kerne.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE RIVALS. 1832.</p>
-
-<p>Third series of <i>Tales of the Munster Festivals</i>, <i>q.v.</i></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ TALES OF THE MUNSTER FESTIVALS. (N.Y.: <i>Pratt</i>). 0.50.</p>
-
-<p>Scene: the wild cliffs and crags of Kerry and West Clare. Theme: the
-play of passions as wild and terrible as the scenes; yet there are glimpses
-of peasant home-life and hospitality, and many touches of humour. The tales
-appeared in three series, 1827, 1829, and 1832. The first (Holland Tide)
-contained the <i>Aylmers of Ballyaylmer</i>, a story about a family of small gentry
-on the Kerry coast, with many details of smuggling; <i>The Hand and Word</i>,
-<i>The Barber of Bantry</i>, with its picture of the Moynahans, a typical middle-class
-family, like the Dalys in <i>The Collegians</i>, and several shorter tales. The
-second series contains <i>Card-drawing</i>, <i>The Half-Sir</i>, and <i>Suil Dhuv the Coiner</i>,
-which deals with the “Palatines” of Limerick. The third series contains
-<i>The Rivals</i> and <i>Tracy’s Ambition</i>. These are sensational stories. The first
-has an interesting picture of a hedge-school, the second brings out the people’s
-sufferings at the hands of “loyalists” and government officials. They contain
-several instances of seduction and of elopement. Perhaps the best of
-these is <i>Suil Dhuv the Coiner</i>. The characters of the robbers who compose
-the coiner’s gang are admirably discriminated, and the passion of remorse
-in <i>Suil Dhuv</i> is pictured with a power almost equal to that of <i>The Collegians</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ TALES OF MY NEIGHBOURHOOD. Three Vols. (<i>Saunders &amp;
-Otley</i>). 1835.</p>
-
-<p>Vol. 1 contains <i>The Barber of Bantry</i>. Vol. 2. Three sketches and the
-dramatic ballad <i>The Nightwalker</i>. Vol. 3. Eight short sketches and the
-poems <i>Shanid Castle</i> and <i>Orange and Green</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE DUKE OF MONMOUTH. Pp. 423. (<i>Maxwell</i>). 1842.</p>
-
-<p>A clever historical novel, dealing with this unfortunate nobleman and
-the battle of Sedgmoor. Two Irish soldiers, Morty and Shemus Delany,
-supply the comic relief. The fine ballad, <i>The Bridal of Malahide</i>, first appears
-here, and the song, “A Soldier, A Soldier.”</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ TALES OF A JURY ROOM. Pp. 463. (<i>Duffy</i>). 2<i>s.</i> [1842]. Still
-reprinted.</p>
-
-<p>The scenes of three of these tales are in foreign lands—Poland, the East,
-France in the days of Bayard. The remaining ten are Irish. Among them
-are fairy tales, tales of humble life, an episode of Clontarf, a story of the days
-of Hugh O’Neill, and several, including the Swans of Lir, that deal with
-pre-Christian times. All are well worth reading, especially “Antrim Jack”—Macalister,
-who died to save Michael Dwyer.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>GRIFFITH, George.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE KNIGHTS OF THE WHITE ROSE. Pp. 311. (<i>J. F. Shaw</i>).
-3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> Several good illustr. by Hal Hurst. 1908.</p>
-
-<p>The adventures of three young soldiers, an Englishman (the hero), an Irishman,
-and a Scotchman, in a Royalist crack regiment. Lively descriptions
-of fighting before Derry and at the Boyne. Good outline of the campaign
-but little historical detail or description. Told in pleasant style with plenty
-of go. For boys.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_102"></a>[102]</span></p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>GRIMSHAW, Beatrice.</b> An Irish Authoress, born in Cloona, Co. Antrim.
-Hitherto her novels do not deal directly with Ireland, but some of her
-chief characters are Irish. Thus Hugh Lynch, a Co. Clare man, is the
-hero of her <i>When the Red Gods Call</i> (Mills &amp; Boon), 1910, and Geo. Scott,
-a typical Belfastman, plays a prominent part in <i>Guinea Gold</i> (Mills &amp;
-Boon), 1912. These novels deal with New Guinea life.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>GRINDON, Maurice.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ KATHLEEN O’LEOVAN: a Fantasy. Pp. 107. Two illustr.
-(<i>Simpkin, Marshall</i>). 1896.</p>
-
-<p>Levan, grandson of an O’Leovan who had settled in England, visits the
-home of his ancestors, Castle Columba, Kilronan, and meets the heroine.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>GUINAN, Rev. Joseph.</b> Father Guinan is P.P. of Dromod, in Co. Longford.
-Before his appointment to an Irish parish he passed five years in Liverpool.
-This gave him “the fresh eye,” the power to see things which,
-had he remained in Ireland, he might never have observed. His books
-deal with two things—the life of the poorest classes in the Midlands
-and the life of the priests. Of both he has intimate personal knowledge,
-and for both unbounded admiration. He writes simply and earnestly.
-To the critic used only to English literature, his work may seem wanting in
-artistic restraint, for he gives free vein to emotion. But this is more
-than atoned for by its obvious sincerity.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ SCENES AND SKETCHES IN AN IRISH PARISH; or, Priests
-and People in Doon. (<i>Gill</i>). 2<i>s.</i> Fourth edition. 1906.</p>
-
-<p>A faithful picture of typical things in Irish life: the Station, the Sunday
-Mass, the grinding of landlordism, the agrarian crime, the eviction, the
-emigration-wake. See especially the chapter “Sunday in Doon.” This is
-the Author’s first novel and is somewhat immature.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE SOGGARTH AROON. (<i>Gill &amp; Duffy</i>). 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> (N.Y.: <i>Benziger</i>).
-1.00. Second edition, 1907. Third, 1908.</p>
-
-<p>Pathetic experiences of a country curate in an out-of-the-way parish,
-where the people’s faith is strong and their lives supernaturally beautiful.
-The Soggarth shares the few joys and the many sorrows of their lives.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE MOORES OF GLYNN. Pp. 354. (<i>Washbourne</i>). 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>
-(N.Y.: <i>Pratt</i>). 2.00. [1907]. Third edition. 1915.</p>
-
-<p>The fortunes of a family of four children whose mother is a beautiful and
-lovable character. The book is full of pictures of many phases of Irish life,
-the relations between landlord and tenant, priests and people, evictions,
-emigration, a “spoiled priest.” A typical description is the realistic picture
-of the pig fair. Full of true pathos, with an occasional touch of kindly humour.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE ISLAND PARISH. Pp. 331. (<i>Gill</i>). 1908.</p>
-
-<p>The work of an ideal young priest in Ballyvora, a kind of Sleepy Hollow
-where all is stagnation, poverty, and decay. The picture of these squalid
-conditions of life is one of photographic and unsparing exactness. Yet with
-loving insight the Author shows the peasant’s quiet happiness, beauty of soul,
-and downright holiness of life in the midst of all this. There is no plot, the
-book is a series of pictures loosely strung together. There is a chapter on
-Lisdoonvarna.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ DONAL KENNY. (<i>Washbourne</i>). 1910. (N.Y.: <i>Benziger</i>). 1.10.</p>
-
-<p>Donal tells his own story—his mother’s early death, followed by his father’s
-rapid fall into habits of drink; his own early struggles; his love for Norah
-Kenny; his search for traces of her real identity; and the happy ending
-of it all. Displays all the Author’s knowledge of Irish life in sketches of
-priests and people. Especially good is the character study of the faithful
-old nurse, Nancy, with her quaint sayings.—(<i>Press Notice</i>).</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_103"></a>[103]</span></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE CURATE OF KILCLOON. Pp. 282. (<i>Gill</i>). 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> 1913.</p>
-
-<p>Labours, sorrows, and consolations of a young priest in a very out of the
-way country parish. He had been very distinguished at Maynooth and
-seemed thrown away on such a place as Kilcloon, but he finds that there is
-work there worth his doing—temperance to be promoted, the Gaelic League
-to be established, industries to be fostered. The story has the same qualities
-as the Author’s former books, and in fact differs little from them.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>GWYNN, Stephen.</b> Born in Donegal, 1864. Eldest son of Rev. John
-Gwynn of T.C.D. Is a grandson of William Smith O’Brien. Educated
-St. Columba’s College, Rathfarnham, and Oxford, where he read a
-very distinguished course. Since 1890 he has published a great deal—literary
-criticism, translations, Irish topography, journalism, novels,
-politics. Has been Nationalist M.P. for Galway City since 1906, and
-is one of the most active members of the Irish Parliamentary Party.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE OLD KNOWLEDGE. (<i>Macmillan</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1901.</p>
-
-<p>A book quite unique in conception. Into the romance are woven fishing
-episodes and cycling episodes and adventures among flowers. There are
-exquisite glimpses, too, of Irish home life, and the very spirit of the mists
-and loughs and mountains of Donegal is called up before the reader. But
-above all there is the mystic conception of Conroy, the Donegal schoolmaster,
-whose soul lives with visions, and communes with the spirits of eld, the nature
-gods of pagan Ireland.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ JOHN MAXWELL’S MARRIAGE. (<i>Macmillan</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1903.</p>
-
-<p>Scene: chiefly Donegal, <i>c.</i> 1761-1779. A strong and intense story. Interesting
-not only for its powerful plot, but for the admirably painted background
-of scenery and manners, and for its studies of character. It depicts
-in strong colours the tyranny of Protestant colonists and the hate which
-it produces in the outcast Catholics. One of the main motives of the story is
-a forced marriage of a peculiarly odious kind. In connexion with this marriage
-there is one scene in the book that is drawn with a realism which, we
-think, makes the book unsuitable for certain classes of readers. The hero
-fights on the American side in the war of Independence, and takes a share
-in Nationalist schemes at home.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE GLADE IN THE FOREST. Pp. 224. (<i>Maunsel</i>). 1<i>s.</i> Cloth.
-1907.</p>
-
-<p>Seven short stories, chiefly about Donegal, five of them dealing with peasant
-life, of which the Author writes with intimate and kindly knowledge. “The
-Grip of the Land” describes the struggles of a small farmer and the love of
-his bleak fields that found no counterpart in his eldest boy, who has his heart
-set on emigration. Compare Bazin’s <i>La Terre qui Meurt</i>. All the stories
-had previously appeared in such magazines as the <span class="smcap">Cornhill</span> and <span class="smcap">Blackwood’s</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ ROBERT EMMET. (<i>Macmillan</i>). 6<i>s.</i> Map of Dublin in 1803. 1909.</p>
-
-<p>An account of the Emmet rising related with scrupulous fidelity to fact
-and in minute detail. The Author introduces no reflections of his own, leaving
-the facts to speak. His narrative is graphic and vivid, the style of high
-literary value. The minor actors in the drama—Quigley, Russell, Hamilton,
-Dwyer—are carefully drawn. Though he gives a prominent place in the story
-to Emmet’s romantic love for Sarah Curran, Mr. Gwynn has sought rather to
-draw a vivid picture of the event by which the young patriot is known to
-history than to reconstruct his personality.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>HALL, E.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE BARRYS OF BEIGH. Pp. 394. (<i>M’Glashan &amp; Gill</i>). [1875.]</p>
-
-<p>Scene: banks of Shannon twenty miles below Limerick. Story opens
-about 1775.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_104"></a>[104]</span></p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>HALL, Mrs. S. C.</b> Born in Dublin, 1800. Brought by her mother (who
-was of French Huguenot descent) to Wexford in 1806. Here she lived,
-mixing a good deal with the peasantry, until the age of fifteen, when she
-was taken away to London, and did not again return to Wexford. Wrote
-nine novels, and many short stories and sketches. Besides the works
-noticed here, she and her husband produced between them a very large
-number of volumes. See his <i>Reminiscences of a Long Life</i>. Two vols.
-London. 1883. A reviewer in <span class="smcap">Blackwood’s</span> describes her work as
-“bright with an animated and warm nationality, apologetic and
-defensive.” She died in 1881.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ SKETCHES OF IRISH CHARACTER. Pp. 443. (<i>Chatto &amp; Windus</i>).
-7<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> With Sixty-one Illustrations by Maclise, Gilbert, Harvey, George
-Cruikshank, &amp;c. [1829]. 1854 (5th), 1892, &amp;c., &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Hall intends in these sketches to do for her village of Bannow, in
-Wexford, what Miss Mitford did for her English village. This district, she
-says, “possesses to a very remarkable extent all the moral, social, and natural
-advantages, which are to be found throughout the country.” The author
-proclaims (cf. Introduction) her intention “so to picture the Irish character
-as to make it more justly appreciated ... and more respected in England.”
-She applies to the peasantry the saying “their virtues are their own; but
-their vices have been forced upon them.” Again she says, “the characters
-here are all portraits.” Yet it must be confessed that the standpoint is,
-after all, alien, and something strangely like the traditional stage Irishman
-appears occasionally in these pages. There is, however, not a shadow of
-religious bias. The “Rambling Introduction” makes very pleasant reading.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ LIGHTS AND SHADOWS OF IRISH LIFE. Three vols. (long).
-(<i>Colburn</i>). 1838.</p>
-
-<p>In five parts:—1. “The Groves of Blarney” (whole of Vol. I.). 2.
-“Sketches on Irish Highways during the Autumn of 1834” (whole of Vol. II.).
-3. “Illustrations of Irish Pride” (two stories). 4. “The Dispensation.”
-5. “Old Granny.” No. 1 “derives its title from an occurrence ... in ...
-Blarney ... about the year 1812.”—(<i>Pref.</i>). It is a thoroughly good story,
-telling how Connor in order to win the fair widow Margaret, his early love,
-takes an oath against drinking, flirting, and faction-fighting for a year, and
-how a vengeful old tramp woman makes him break it on the very last day.
-Amusingly satirical portrait of the little Cockney, Peter Swan. Author’s
-sympathies thoroughly Irish. Contents of Vol. II.:—“The Jaunting Car,”
-“Beggars,” “Naturals,” “Servants,” “Ruins” [or stories told <i>a propos</i>
-of them], &amp;c. The dialect is very well done, full of humour and flavour.
-Characters all drawn from peasant class.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ STORIES OF THE IRISH PEASANTRY. Pp. 302, (close print).
-(<i>Chambers</i>). [1840]. 1851, &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p>Aims to reconcile landlords and peasantry. To this end tries to show each
-to what their enmity is due and how they may remedy the evil. The stories
-are to show the peasantry that their present condition is due to defects in
-the national character and in the prevailing national habits—chiefly drink,
-early marriages, laziness, conservatism, superstition. The Authoress has a
-good grasp of the ways of the people, but her reasoning is peculiar. When a
-peasant, driven to desperation by a cruel eviction, swears vengeance, this is
-put down to innate lawlessness, sinfulness, and a murderous disposition.
-Twenty stories in all, some melodramatic, some pastoral.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE WHITEBOY. (<i>Ward, Lock, Routledge</i>). 2<i>s.</i>, and 6<i>d.</i> [1845].
-Several eds. since. (N.Y.: <i>Pratt</i>). 0.50.</p>
-
-<p>In the height of the Whiteboy disturbances, which are luridly described,
-a young Englishman comes to Ireland with the intention of uplifting the
-peasantry and bettering their lot. After some terrible experiences he at
-length succeeds to a wonderful extent in his benevolent purposes. The
-book is of a didactic type.—(<i>Krans</i>).</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_105"></a>[105]</span></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE FIGHT OF FAITH: a Story of Ireland. Two Vols. (<i>Chapman
-&amp; Hall</i>). [1862]. 1869.</p>
-
-<p>Opens at Havre in 1680 with a Huguenot family about to fly from persecution.
-Their ship is wrecked off the Isle of Wight, where the little girl Pauline
-is rescued and adopted by an old sea-captain. The scene then changes to
-Carrickfergus, then held by Schomberg. Geo. Walker is introduced, and
-the story ends with the battle of the Boyne (the fight of faith). View-point
-strongly Protestant.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ NELLY NOWLAN, and Other Stories. Popular Tales of Irish Life
-and Character. Seventh edition, with numerous Illustr. Demy 8vo.
-(<span class="smcap">London</span>). 1865.</p>
-
-<p>Contains twenty-five delightful tales of Irish life, with numerous illustrations
-by Maclise, Franklin, Brooke, Herbert, Harvey, Nichol, and Weigall; “Sweet
-Lilly O’Brian,” “Mary Ryan’s Daughter,” “The Bannow Postman,” “Father
-Mike,” and twenty-one other tales. As a graphic delineator of Irish life and
-character, no other writer has dealt with the subject so delightfully and truly
-as Mrs. Hall. She wrote many volumes on the subject, of which this is the
-best.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ TALES OF IRISH LIFE AND CHARACTER. (<i>T. N. Foulis</i>). 5<i>s.</i>
-With Sixteen Illustr. in colour from the famous Irish paintings of Erskine
-Nichol, R.S.A. 1909.</p>
-
-<p class="author" id="HALPINE"><b>HALPINE, Charles Graham; “Private Myles O’Reilly.”</b> Born in Oldcastle,
-Co. Meath, 1829. Son of Rev. N. J. Halpin (<i>sic</i>). Ed. T.C.D. Took
-up journalism and went first to London, where he came to know some
-of the young Irelanders, and thence to America. Became a well-known
-journalist. Fought through the Civil War. His songs became very
-well-known throughout the Union. D. 1868. Publ. also a series of
-prose sketches, <i>Baked Meats of the Funeral</i>, and a vol. of reminiscences.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ MOUNTCASHEL’S BRIGADE; or, The Rescue of Cremona. Pp. 151
-(close print). (<span class="smcap">Dublin</span>: <i>T. D. Sullivan</i>). Fifth ed., 1882.</p>
-
-<p>Episodes in the story of the Irish Brigade in the service of France. The
-narrative is enlivened with love affairs, duels, and exciting adventures very
-well told.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE PATRIOT BROTHERS; or, The Willows of the Golden Vale.
-(<span class="smcap">Dublin</span>). Sixth ed. 1884. One ed., pp. 173 (small print), <i>n.d.</i>, was
-publ. by A. M. Sullivan.</p>
-
-<p>Sub-title: A page from Ireland’s Martyrology. A finely written romance
-dealing with the fate of the brothers Sheares, executed in 1798. Their story
-is followed with practically historical exactitude, a thread of romance being
-woven in. A good account of the politics of the time, especially of the
-elaborate spy-system then flourishing, is given, but not so as to interfere with
-the interest of the tale. There are fine descriptions of the scenery of Wicklow,
-in which the action chiefly takes place, and especially of the Golden Vale
-between Bray and Delgany.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>HAMILTON, Catherine J.</b> Born in Somerset of Irish parents, her father
-being from Strabane and her mother from Queen’s Co. Ed. chiefly by
-her father, a vicar of the Ch. of England. At his death, in 1859, removed
-to Ireland and lived there more than thirty years. Publ. at twenty-five
-her first story, <i>Hedged with Thorns</i>. Wrote verse for the <span class="smcap">Argosy</span> and
-Irish stories for the <span class="smcap">Graphic</span>; contributed regularly to <span class="smcap">Weekly Irish
-Times</span> and <span class="smcap">Ireland’s Own</span>, including several serials. At present resides
-in London. Author of <i>Notable Irishwomen</i> (1904), <i>Women Writers, their
-Works and Ways</i> (1892), &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_106"></a>[106]</span></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ MARRIAGE BONDS; or, Christian Hazell’s Married Life. Pp. 439.
-(<i>Ward, Lock</i>). <i>n.d.</i> (1878).</p>
-
-<p>First appeared in <span class="smcap">The Englishwoman’s Domestic Magazine</span>. An unhappy
-marriage of a sweet, loving, sensitive nature to a man of a hard, selfish
-character, who treats his wife with studied neglect and discourtesy. Christian
-comes from her native English manor house to live with Alick Hazell in an
-ugly, ill-managed Irish country house, among disagreeable neighbours somewhere
-on the S.E. coast of Ireland. He hates the people, and is a bad landlord.
-She has no friend until the arrival of his brother Eustace, whose mother
-was Irish and who loves Ireland. Almost unawares they fall in love, but
-E. is a man of honour, and C. is faithful to her husband to the very end.
-The author is on Ireland’s side, though somewhat apologetically and vaguely.
-Good picture of bitterly anti-Irish narrow-minded type of minor country
-gentry.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE FLYNNS OF FLYNNVILLE. Pp. 250. (<i>Ward, Lock</i>). 1879.</p>
-
-<p>A story of the sensational kind, founded on the murder of a bank-manager
-by a constabulary officer called Montgomery, and the subsequent trial, which
-many years ago excited considerable interest. Scene: S. of Ireland.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ TRUE TO THE CORE: a Romance of ’98. Two Vols. (<i>F. V. White</i>).
-1884.</p>
-
-<p>The story of the love of a Kerry peasant girl for the ill-fated John Sheares.
-The interest is that of plot, history being quite of minor importance, and
-centres in the scheming of his various enemies to compass the destruction
-of John Sheares in spite of all the efforts of his guardian angel, Norah Nagle.
-There is not one really sympathetic character. Sheares is a mere dreamer;
-Norah is generous and faithful, but lies and “barges” on occasion; almost
-all the rest, except Norah’s peasant lover, are fools or villains of the blackest
-sort. Disagreeable picture of the Dublin of the day. The story is told with
-considerable verve and carries one along. The Author is not at all hostile,
-but seems unstirred to any feeling of enthusiasm for the cause of Ireland.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ DR. BELTON’S DAUGHTERS. Pp. 169. (<i>Ward, Lock</i>). 1890.</p>
-
-<p>Alice the second marries a curate in the W. of Ireland and struggles to
-keep up on small means a good appearance. Her husband is an incurable
-optimist.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE LUCK OF THE KAVANAGHS. (<i>Sealy, Bryers</i>). 6<i>d.</i> 1910.</p>
-
-<p>Strange adventures of an emigrant Irish boy.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>HAMILTON, Edwin, M.A., B.L., M.R.I.A.</b> Born 1849. Resides at Donaghadee,
-Co. Down. Author of <i>Dublin Doggerels</i> (1880), <i>The Moderate Man</i> (1888,
-<i>Downey</i>). The two following books are not in the British Museum
-Library.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ BALLYMUCKBEG. 1885.</p>
-
-<p>Political satire.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ WAGGISH TALES. (<i>Sealy, Bryers</i>). 1897.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>HAMILTON, John, of St. Ernan’s. “An Irishman” [N.M.].</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE THREE FENIAN BROTHERS. (<i>Macmillan</i>). 18mo. 1866. 1<i>s.</i></p>
-
-<p>Paul, Mark, and Ned Ryan, sons of a well-to-do farmer, were enticed into
-joining the Brotherhood, the two former by Patrick Mahoney, the village
-schoolmaster. Ned had served in the Federal Army (U.S.A.), and was sent
-back to Ireland as a captain. “The characters and careers of the brothers are
-vividly depicted in an interesting tale, the dialogue is pointed, often witty....
-In the unfolding of the story much light is incidentally thrown on the state
-of feeling in Ireland in 1865-6.” The Author has told his life-story in <i>Sixty
-Years’ Experience as an Irish Landlord</i>, and given his views in <i>Thoughts on
-Ireland by an Irish Landlord</i> (1886).</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_107"></a>[107]</span></p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>“HAMILTON, M.”; Mrs. Churchill-Luck</b>, <i>née</i> <b>Spottiswoode-Ashe</b>. Is
-a native of Co. Derry. Publ. also <i>The Freedom of Harry Meredith</i>,
-<i>M’Leod of the Camerons</i>, <i>A Self-denying Ordinance</i>, <i>Mrs. Brett</i>, <i>The
-Woman who Looked Back</i>, &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ ON AN ULSTER FARM. Pp. 143. (<i>Everett</i>).</p>
-
-<p>A realistic sketch of the life of a workhouse child sent out to service to a
-particularly unlovable set of hard Scotch Ulster folk. Interesting as a study
-of character and as an exposure of the misery attendant on the working of
-certain parts of the workhouse system. This subject is also treated in Rosa
-Mulholland’s <i>Nanno</i>, <i>q.v.</i></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ ACROSS AN IRISH BOG. (<i>Heinemann</i>). 1896.</p>
-
-<p>An ugly, but very powerful, tale of seduction in Irish peasant life. The
-study of the ignominious aspirations of the seducer, a Protestant clergyman,
-after social elevation forms the pith of the book. The difficulty of his position,
-technically on a level with the gentry, though he is wholly unequal to them in
-breeding, is brought out.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ BEYOND THE BOUNDARY. Pp. 306. (<i>Hurst &amp; Blackett</i>). 1902.</p>
-
-<p>Scene: first in London, afterwards among Ulster peasantry (dialect
-cleverly reproduced). Theme: a curiously ill-assorted marriage. Brian
-Lindsay, son of Presbyterian Ulster peasants, had during a panic deserted
-his men in action. Afterwards he had been decorated mistakenly, instead
-of the man who had died to save him. In London he meets this man’s
-sister, a solitary working girl, but a lady. They are married, and he takes
-her home. Disillusionment on the wife’s part follows, and Brian is threatened
-with the discovery of his secret. What came of it all is told in a beautiful
-and convincing story. Not gloomy nor morbid. Running through the main
-plot is the story of poor little French Pipette, deserted by the foolish, selfish,
-mother, whom she adores. Old Lindsay, dour and godly, is very well done.
-An element of humour is found in the characters of Miss Arnold of the
-venomous tongue; fat little Mr. Leslie, who loves his dinners; and Maggie,
-the Lindsay’s maid-of-all-work.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>HANNAY, Rev. James Owen</b>, <a href="#BIRMINGHAM"><i>see</i> <b>“GEORGE A. BIRMINGHAM.”</b></a></p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>HANNIGAN, D. F.</b> Was born at Dungarvan, 1855. Ed. at St. John’s,
-Waterford, and Queen’s College, Cork. Called to Irish bar, and formerly
-a journalist in Dublin; is now in America. Contributed a long serial,
-<i>The Moores of Moore’s Court</i>, to the <span class="smcap">Monitor</span>, 1879, and other stories
-to the Dublin press.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ LUTTRELL’S DOOM. Pp. 76. (<span class="smcap">Aberdeen</span>: <i>Moran</i>). 1<i>s.</i> 1896.</p>
-
-<p>Purports to be extracts from an Irish gentlewoman’s diary kept between
-1690 and 1726.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>HANNON, John.</b> Born at Isleworth, 1870. Son of John Hannon, of
-Kildorrery, Co. Cork. Ed. at St. Edmunds, England. For long
-engaged in educational work, he afterwards took up journalism. He
-resides in Isleworth.—(<span class="smcap">Cath. Who’s Who</span>).</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE KINGS AND THE CATS: Munster Fairy Tales. Pp. 78.
-Size 6¾ × 9¾ (<i>Burns &amp; Oates</i>). 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> Thirteen illustr. by Louis
-Wain. 1908.</p>
-
-<p>Handsomely produced. Preface by Father M. Russell, S.J. Introductory
-verse by Katharine Tynan. Stories gleaned from old Irish peasants in England.
-Full of quaint, amusing turns of expression.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>HANRAHAN, P. R.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ EVA; or, the Buried City of Bannow.</p>
-
-<p>Mentioned in the notice of this Author in O’Donoghue’s <i>Poets of Ireland</i>.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_108"></a>[108]</span></p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>[HARDY, Miss].</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ MICHAEL CASSIDY; or, The Cottage Gardener: a tale for small
-beginners. (<i>Seeley</i>). [1840]. 1845.</p>
-
-<p>By the Author of “The Confessor: a Jesuit tale of the times founded on
-fact” [viz., Miss Hardy]. Cushing. The 1845 ed. has a Pref. by C. B.
-Tayler. It is an attempt to urge people to small allotments, green crops,
-rotation, economy, and hard work.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>HARDY, Philip Dixon.</b> <i>c.</i> 1794-1875. Was a bookseller and editor of
-various Dublin periodicals. Publ. several volumes of verse, some
-books on Irish topography, and some religious works of a strongly anti-Catholic
-character.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ LEGENDS, TALES, AND STORIES OF IRELAND. Pp. 328.
-(<span class="smcap">Dublin</span>: <i>John Cumming</i>). 1837.</p>
-
-<p>Dedicated to Sir W. Betham. Hardy was the first editor of the <span class="smcap">Dublin
-Penny Journal</span>. His tales of Irish life deal with fairies, faction-fights,
-smugglers, and burlesque or tragic adventures in a manner by no means without
-vivacity and cleverness, though the trail of the “stage-Irishman” is over
-most of his work. This edition was illustrated in a somewhat coarse and
-stage-Irish fashion. Other works of this Author were:—<i>Essays and Sketches
-of Irish Life and Character</i>; <i>Ireland in 1846-7, considered in reference to the
-rapid growth of Popery</i>, and several works on Irish topography.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>HARKIN, Hugh</b> (1791-1854). For good account of this writer supplied by
-his son, see O’Donoghue’s <i>Poets of Ireland</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE QUARTERCLIFT: or, the Adventures of Hudy McGuiggen.
-(<span class="smcap">Belfast</span>), <i>c.</i> 1841. In shilling monthly parts. Illustrated.</p>
-
-<p>An amusing story founded on the old Co. Derry folk tale of a “gommeral”
-named Hudy McGuiggin, who didn’t see why he couldn’t fly. So he made
-himself wings out of the feathers of a goose. Arrayed in these, he jumped
-off a high mountain (still shown by the peasantry), and of course came to
-grief. Strange to say, he recovered and lived to be an old man. This and
-other incidents are related with great verve and truth, and many well pourtrayed
-characters are introduced. See GREER, Tom.</p>
-
-<p class="author" id="HARRIS"><b>[HARRIS, Miss S. M.]; “Athene.”</b> Fourth daughter of a Co. Down
-farmer, the late William Harris, of Ballynafern, Banbridge. The family
-has been long resident in Belfast.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ IN THE VALLEYS OF SOUTH DOWN. Pp. viii. + 155. (<span class="smcap">Belfast</span>:
-<i>M’Caw, Stevenson, &amp; Orr</i>). 1898.</p>
-
-<p>Rupert Stanwell is kept apart from Mabel Mervyn, for his parents want
-him to marry a rich American heiress; but the two are joined in the end,
-and all is well. Conventional and unobjectionable, without any special local
-colour.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ GRACE WARDWOOD. Pp. 269. (<i>Duffy</i>). 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> Tasteful
-binding. 1900.</p>
-
-<p>A domestic tale of middle class folk in Co. Down. Several love stories
-intertwined. Gracefully written but “feminine,” and not very mature in
-style. Contains little that is characteristically Irish, except some legends
-introduced incidentally.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ DUST OF THE WORLD. Pp. vi. + 293. (<i>Allen</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1913.</p>
-
-<p>Sub-t.: “An historical romance of Belfast in the 17th century.” Introduces
-the Earl of Donegall, the lord of the soil; Lady Donegall who, to the
-annoyance of Bp. Jeremy Taylor, has hankerings after Presbyterianism;
-George Macartney, the Sovereign or Mayor; and other Belfast townsfolk
-of the day. Swift is an anachronism in this story, and there are no grounds
-in history for the portrait given of Patrick Adair, an early Presbyterian
-minister. Lord Donegall is made to talk with a brogue, while a butcher’s
-wife talks in the best of English.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_109"></a>[109]</span></p>
-
-<p class="author" id="HARTLEY"><b>HARTLEY, Mrs.</b>, <i>née</i> <b>May Laffan</b>. Born in Dublin. Widow of the late
-W. N. Hartley, <span class="allsmcap">F.R.S.</span> Her brother William Laffan was at the head
-of Laffan’s Agency. For some considerable time past she has done no
-literary work.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ HOGAN, M.P. Pp. 491. (<i>Macmillan</i>). 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> [1876]. New ed.
-1882.</p>
-
-<p>Picture of Dublin society, showing how Catholics are handicapped by their
-want of education and good breeding, due, in the Author’s view, to wholly
-wrong system of Catholic education. Discursive and garrulous. Full of
-social manœuvres, petty intrigues, gossip, and scandal. Convent education
-from within.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE HON. MISS FERRARD. [1877]. (<i>Macmillan</i>). 1882. 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
-
-<p>The Hon. Miss F. is the only daughter of the ancient and broken-down
-house of the Darraghmores. The father squanders his income faster than he
-gets it, and has to keep moving from place to place, living chiefly on credit.
-Miss F. is brought up in this inconsequent, semi-gipsy family, with wild
-harum-scarum brothers. The Author does not blink the consequent shortcomings
-of the heroine. Amusing things happen when she goes to live with
-her maiden aunts at Bath—an unsuccessful experiment. Her choice between
-her Irish farmer lover and the admirable English Mr. Satterthwaite—we
-shall not reveal. Good minor characters—Cawth, the old servant of the
-family; Mr. Perry, the family lawyer. “The Author represents the interiors
-of all Irish households of the middle classes as repulsive in the extreme....
-There is in them an innate vulgarity of thought, with an atmosphere of
-transparent pretension.”—(<span class="smcap">Saturday Rev.</span>, xliv., 403).</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ FLITTERS, TATTERS, AND THE COUNSELLOR. (<i>Macmillan</i>).
-3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> [1879]. New ed., 1883.</p>
-
-<p>Four stories: (1) Three little Dublin street arabs, nicknamed as in title.
-Lively and realistic portraits. Poignant and sympathetic picture of slum
-misery and degradation. (2) Deals with the same subject. (3) Glasgow
-slum life. (4) Lurid and revolting story of conspiracy and murder in a
-country district. There are those who consider No. 1 quite the most perfect
-thing that has been written about Dublin life.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE GAME HEN. (<span class="smcap">Dublin</span>). 1880.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ CHRISTY CAREW. Pp. 429. (<i>Macmillan</i>). 2<i>s.</i> [1880]. New
-ed., 1883; still in print.</p>
-
-<p>Written in spirit of revolt against Catholic discouragement of mixed marriages,
-showing the social disabilities which it draws upon Catholics. Several
-portraits of priests, <i>e.g.</i>, a collector of old books and a model priest. Studies
-of various aspects of Catholic life.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ ISMAY’S CHILDREN. (<i>Macmillan</i>). 2<i>s.</i> [1887].</p>
-
-<p>Tale of Fenian times, little concerned with political aims, but rather with
-personal fortunes of the lads who are drawn into the midnight drillings.
-Little political bias, but sympathies with “the quality.” Close studies of
-Irish middle-class domestic life. Scene: Co. Cork. The <span class="smcap">Athenæum</span> pronounced
-this novel to be “the most valuable and dispassionate contribution
-towards the solution of that problem [the Irish character] which has been
-put forth in this generation in the domain of fiction.”</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>HATTON, Joseph.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ JOHN NEEDHAM’S DOUBLE. Pp. 208. 16mo. (<i>Maxwell</i>).
-1<i>s.</i> Paper. <i>n.d.</i> (1885)</p>
-
-<p>“A story founded on fact,” viz., John Sadleir’s career, his fraud on the
-Tipperary Bank, &amp;c. An exciting and melodramatic story. Needham
-poisons his “double,” Joseph Norbury, and deposits his body on Hampstead
-Heath, then escapes to America, is tracked and arrested, but dramatically
-takes poison when under arrest. Told with considerable verve. Thirty of
-this Author’s books are enumerated by Allibone.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_110"></a>[110]</span></p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>HARVEY, W.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ IRISH LIFE AND HUMOUR. Pp. 221. (<span class="smcap">Stirling</span>: <i>Eneas
-Mackey</i>). 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> 1906.</p>
-
-<p>A collection of short, witty anecdotes and jokes, four or five to a page.
-Source: not indicated, but they are obviously culled from periodicals, or
-from previous collections of the kind. A few seem to be taken from serious
-biographies. They are given without comment, exactly as he found them,
-says the Author (Pref.). They exhibit no religious nor racial bias (witness
-the last chapter on Priest and People), but throughout you have the “Paddy”
-of the comic paper, and in many places the traditional Stage-Irishman whirls
-his shillelagh and “hurroos for ould Oireland” in a wholly impossible brogue.
-The stories are classified under various heads, but for convenience only.
-They do not illustrate national traits nor phases of national life. The above
-is an abridgment of a larger work [1st ed., 1904, without illustr.] with the same
-title, of which a new edition, pp. 488, twelve illustrations in colour, 5<i>s.</i> net,
-has been issued (August, 1909) by Simpkin, Marshall, &amp; Co. More recently
-a cheap ed. has been issued at 1<i>s.</i>, pp. 206, paper covers, with some poor
-illustr.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>“HASLETTE, John.”</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ DESMOND ROURKE: Irishman. (<i>Sampson, Low</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1911.</p>
-
-<p>Scene: South America. The hero is intended to be typically Irish. The
-story is described as racy and dashing, and has received high praise from the
-Press. We understand that the Author’s real name is Vahey, and that he
-lives at the Knock, near Belfast (1911); see I. B. L., Vol. IV., p. 73. He had
-before this novel already published two others. He is of Huguenot descent,
-but was b. and ed. in Ireland.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>HAYENS, Herbert.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ AN AMAZING CONSPIRACY. Pp. 247. (S.P.C.K.). 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> Illustr.
-by Adolf Thiede. <i>n.d.</i> (1914).</p>
-
-<p>An exciting boys’ adventure story, opening in an island of the W. coast
-of Ireland, where mysterious events take place, but passing chiefly in Guatemala,
-where the hero goes through thrilling adventures in various revolutions.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>HEALY, Cahir.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ A SOWER OF THE WIND. Pp. 168. (<i>Sealy, Bryers</i>). 6<i>d.</i> Paper.
-<i>c.</i> 1910.</p>
-
-<p>Scene: the Donegal coast. A sensational and romantic story. Local Land
-League doings described. The author writes of the people with knowledge
-and sympathy.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE ESCAPADES OF CONDY CORRIGAN. (N.Y.: <i>Benziger</i>).
-0.50 net.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>[HEMPHILL, Barbara].</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE PRIEST’S NIECE. Three Vols. (<i>Hurst &amp; Blackett</i>). 1855.</p>
-
-<p>In the first two volumes there is nothing about Ireland. In the third
-the scene shifts to Cashel, and there are some attempts to picture Irish life.
-The Author is not anti-Catholic nor anti-Irish: she is amusingly ignorant
-of Catholic matters and is not interested in Ireland. P. 37—a scene of Irish
-lawlessness (capture of a private still). P. 40—unpleasant description of a
-wake. The plot hinges mainly on the strife in the hero’s mind between his
-love for Ellen, the penniless peasant girl, to whom he owes several rescues
-from the Shanavests, and the heiress to marry whom would be to save his
-father from ruin.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_111"></a>[111]</span></p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>HENDERSON, George.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE FEAST OF BRICRIU: an Early Gaelic Saga. (<i>Irish Texts
-Society</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1899.</p>
-
-<p>Belongs to Cuchullin cycle. C. contends in a series of competitive feats
-with Conall and Loigare for the championship of Ulster ... the origin of
-the contest being the desire of B. to stir up strife among his guests. Introd.
-and notes.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ SURVIVALS IN BELIEF AMONG THE CELTS. Pp. 340. Demy 8vo.
-(<span class="smcap">Edinburgh</span>: <i>MacLehose</i>). 10<i>s.</i> net. 1911.</p>
-
-<p>The Author is Lecturer in Celtic language and literature in the University
-of Glasgow. The book consists of the substance of a series of lectures on
-Folk Psychology. It is a study in Celtic “psychical anthropology”—practically
-a study of magic, superstitions, and other survivals of primitive
-paganism. Deals chiefly with the Scottish Highlands, but there are frequent
-allusions to Irish folklore and legend. Highly technical in conception and
-language.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>[HENDERSON, Rev. Henry]; “Ulster Scot.”</b> Was for many years a
-Presbyterian minister in Holywood, Co. Down, and wrote for <span class="smcap">Belfast
-Weekly News</span> <i>Woodleigh Hall, a Tale of the Fenians</i>, and <i>The Moutrays
-of Clonkeen</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE TRUE HEIR OF BALLYMORE. Pp. 80. Demy 8vo. (<span class="smcap">Belfast</span>).
-1<i>s.</i> Wrappers. 1859.</p>
-
-<p>Sub-t.:—“Passages from the history of a Belfast Ribbon Lodge.” Frontisp.—the
-insignia of Ribbonism. An anti-Ribbon pamphlet in the form of a story.
-Relates the machinations of a certain Ribbon lodge for the destruction of
-Protestantism, and, in particular, the scheme whereby a Catholic widow is
-made to inveigle Col. Obrey into marriage. The latter drives out his sister
-and nephew, and Ballymore is invaded by a low-class drinking set of Catholics,
-who finally bring the poor Colonel to his grave. Subsequently it transpires
-that Mrs. Connor’s husband was alive all the time, and the Colonel’s nephew
-comes into his own. The book is full of the awful crimes of Ribbonism,
-and closes thus:—“No statesmanship, no good government will ever deliver
-our land from Ribbon disloyalty, outrages, and savage assassinations until
-Romanism is extirpated from the country. Ribbonism is the offspring of
-Romanism.”</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE DARK MONK OF FEOLA: Adventures of a Ribbon Pedlar.
-(<i>Office of</i> <span class="smcap">Belfast News Letter</span>). c. 1859.</p>
-
-<p>“The first part contains a very affecting episode illustrative of the evils
-which are certain to follow the union of Protestant women with men who
-belong to the Roman Catholic faith. To all Protestants the story cannot
-fail to be interesting; and Orangemen, especially, will peruse it with peculiar
-pleasure.”—(<span class="smcap">Downshire Protestant</span>).</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE SANDY ROW CONVERT.</p>
-
-<p class="author" id="HENRY-RUFFIN"><b>HENRY-RUFFIN, Mrs. M. E.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE NORTH STAR. Pp. 356. (<span class="smcap">Boston</span>: <i>Little, Brown</i>). $1.50 net.
-Six good Ill. by Wilbur D. Hamilton. [1904]. 1908.</p>
-
-<p>Scene: Norway and Ireland. The story of how Olaf Trygvesson, the
-exiled king of Norway, returned as a Christian champion, and overthrew his
-pagan rival. The wild brutal paganism of the time is depicted with realism.
-There is an interesting account of a great gathering in Dublin, and a sketch
-of Olaf’s life in exile amid his Irish hosts. There is also a love interest. Mrs.
-Henry-Ruffin is the only daughter of the late Thomas Henry, of Mobile,
-Alabama.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_112"></a>[112]</span></p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>HENTY, G. A.</b> Born 1832, in Cambridgeshire. He spent some time in
-Belfast in his capacity of Purveyor to the Forces. D. 1902. One of the
-greatest, perhaps quite the greatest, of writers for boys. His eighty-six
-or more published stories deal with almost all countries and every period
-of history. All his stories are sane and healthy and told in the manner
-that boys love. Their historical side is carefully worked out.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ FRIENDS THOUGH DIVIDED. (<i>Frowde and Hodder &amp; Stoughton</i>).
-3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> Excellent coloured Illustr. Attractive binding and general
-get-up. (N.Y.: <i>Burt</i>). 1.00. [1883]. New eds.</p>
-
-<p>A fine boys’ adventure-story of the Civil War. Scene: mainly Great
-Britain, but at end shifts to Ireland for the Siege of Drogheda, which is well
-described. Good account of Cromwell, the two Charles, Argyll. Sympathies
-of writer clearly royalist. Ireland represented to be in state of semi-barbarism.
-Juvenile.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ ORANGE AND GREEN. (<i>Blackie</i>). 5<i>s.</i> Handsome binding; eight
-Illustr. by Gordon Browne. (N.Y.: <i>Burt</i>). 1.00. [1887]. 1907.</p>
-
-<p>Adventures of two boys (one a Protestant, the other a Catholic) in the
-Williamite Wars. Battles of Boyne, Aughrim, sieges of Athlone, Cork, and
-Limerick, described. Impartial. Williamite excesses condemned. Sarsfield’s
-action after Limerick severely dealt with.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ IN THE IRISH BRIGADE. Pp. 384. (<i>Blackie</i>). 6<i>s.</i> Twelve excellent
-illustr. by Chas. M. Sheldon. (N.Y.: <i>Scribner</i>). 1.50. 1901.</p>
-
-<p>Adventures of Desmond Kennedy, officer of the Irish Brigade, in the
-service of France, during the War of the Spanish Succession—chiefly in
-Flanders and Spain. The facts are based on O’Callaghan’s <i>History of the
-Irish Brigade</i> and Boyer’s <i>Annals of the Reign of Queen Anne</i>. No Irish
-Nationalist could quarrel with the views expressed in the Author’s Preface.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>HEYGATE, W. E.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ WILD SCENES AMONG THE CELTS. Pp. 114. (<i>Parker</i>). 6<i>d.</i>
-1859.</p>
-
-<p>One of a series “Tales for Young Men and Women” (Church of England).
-This volume contains the two following tales:—</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The Penitent.</span>—How Shossag, a prince of S. Leinster, was accessory to
-his brother’s murder. How punishment overtook him, and how he ended
-his life as a penitent at the feet of St. Piran of Cornwall. Period <i>c.</i> 410 A.D.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The Fugitive.</span>—A story of crime, and its punishment in the person of
-a Pictish chief. St. Columba has a prominent place in the story. Of
-him a sympathetic and appreciative picture is drawn. Scene: Scottish
-mainland, Iona, and N. Connaught, <i>c.</i> 590-597. This Author has written
-a dozen other historical stories. See NIELD. The two above noted are
-quite suitable for Catholic children.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>HICKEY, Rev. P.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ INNISFAIL. Pp. 284. (<i>Gill</i>). 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> [1906]. (N.Y.: <i>Pratt</i>). 1.75.
-Third ed. 1907.</p>
-
-<p>Life-story of a young priest from early youth to departure for Australia,
-largely told in letters from college, with verse interspersed. Sketches of
-life in Tipperary (fox-hunt, school scenes, &amp;c.).</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>HINKSON, H. A.</b> Born in Dublin, 1865. Married Katharine Tynan,
-1893 (<i>q.v.</i>). Ed. Dublin High School, T.C.D., and in Germany. Called
-to the English Bar, 1902. Until the last few years he has resided in
-England. He now lives in Claremorris, Co. Mayo, for which county he
-is R.M.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ GOLDEN LADS AND GIRLS. Pp. 312. (<i>Downey</i>). 1895.</p>
-
-<p>A love story of the upper middle classes. Pictures of western (Galway)
-county family life, and of student life in Trinity, both strongly reminiscent<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_113"></a>[113]</span>
-of Lever. Good portraits of Irish types, the country doctor, the unpopular
-agent, the reforming landlord (English and a convert to Catholicism); the
-Protestant country clergyman, &amp;c. This latter portrait is rather satirical.
-The tone on the whole is nationalist and Catholic.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ FATHER ALPHONSUS. Pp. 282. (<i>Unwin</i>). 1898.</p>
-
-<p>The life-story of two young seminarians. One of these, finding he has
-no vocation, leaves before ordination, and has no reason to repent the step.
-The other, ignoring uneasy feelings that trouble may come of it later, becomes
-a priest. Afterwards he meets with a certain lady, a recent convert from
-Protestantism. A mutual attachment springs up, and eventually they are
-married. The circumstances, as arranged by the novelist, are so strange
-as almost to seem to palliate this sin, were it not for his omission of one factor,
-viz., that particular form of divine help towards the doing of duty which
-Catholics call the <i>gratia status</i>. The erring priest ends his life in a Carthusian
-monastery. The tone throughout is almost faultless from a Catholic standpoint.
-Indeed, though there are several passionate scenes, rendering the
-book unfitted for certain readers, the moral tone is high. Some of the characteristics
-of Irish social life are admirably portrayed.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ UP FOR THE GREEN. Pp. 327. (<i>Lawrence &amp; Bullen</i>). 6<i>s.</i>
-1898.</p>
-
-<p>“For several of the incidents related in this story, the Author is indebted
-to the narrative of Samuel Riley, a yeoman [Quaker] of Cork, who was captured
-by the rebels, while on his way to Dublin, in September, 1798.” This worthy
-man discovers the rebels to be very different from what he had taken them to
-be. A healthy, breezy tale with more adventure than history. Standpoint:
-thoroughly national. There is quiet humour in the quaintly told narrative
-of the Quaker. Castlereagh, Major Sirr, Grattan, Lord Enniskillen figure
-in the story.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ WHEN LOVE IS KIND. Pp. 320. (<i>Long</i>). 1898.</p>
-
-<p>A wholesome Irish love-story of the present day. The hero, Rupert
-Standish, is a soldier and a soldier’s son. The story brings out the comradeship
-which may exist between father and son. The page-boy, Peter, with his
-gruesome tales, is a curious study. There are many passages descriptive of
-scenes and incidents in Ireland.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE KING’S DEPUTY. Pp. 236. (<i>Lawrence &amp; Bullen</i>). 6<i>s.</i>
-(<span class="smcap">Chicago</span>: <i>M’Clurg</i>). 1.25. 1899.</p>
-
-<p>Period: the days of Grattan’s Parliament, of which a vivid picture is
-drawn, and of the viceroyalty of the Duke of Rutland. The interest is
-divided between a love story and the story of a plot of the Protestant aristocracy
-to establish an independent Irish Republic on the Venetian model.
-Grattan, Curran, Napper Tandy, Sir John Parnell, Sir Boyle Roche, Father
-Arthur O’Leary, &amp;c., are introduced. Descriptions (historically accurate)
-of the Hell-Fire Club and the Funny Club.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ SIR PHELIM’S TREASURE. Pp. 255. (S.P.C.K.) 1<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>
-Illustr. W. S. Stacey. <i>n.d.</i> (1901).</p>
-
-<p>A boy’s adventure-story of search for treasure. No “moral” or lesson.
-Good description of Crusoe-life on a little island off the Irish coast. Pleasant
-style; no tediousness nor dullness.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE POINT OF HONOUR. (<i>Lawrence &amp; Bullen</i>). 6<i>s.</i> (<span class="smcap">Chicago</span>:
-<i>M’Clurg</i>). 1.50. 1901.</p>
-
-<p>“Stories about the quarrelsome, bottle-loving, duelling gentry of the
-eighteenth century.”—(<i>Baker</i>).</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_114"></a>[114]</span></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ SILK AND STEEL. Pp. 336. (<i>Chatto &amp; Windus</i>). 6<i>s.</i> Picture
-cover. 1902.</p>
-
-<p>Adventures of an Irish soldier of fortune at the Court of Charles I., in the
-Netherlands, and in Ireland. Brisk and picturesque in style. Sketch of
-Owen Roe and description of Benburb. The hero is Daniel O’Neill, a nephew
-of Owen Roe. Full of historical incidents and personages, <i>e.g.</i>, the Earl of
-Essex, Father Boethius Egan, Lord Antrim. Point of view: national.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ FAN FITZGERALD. Pp. 340. (<i>Chatto &amp; Windus</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1902.</p>
-
-<p>Young Dick Burke, brought up in England, feels the call of the Celt, and
-returns to his inherited estates with intent to be a model landlord. We are
-told in a lively and amusing style how he succeeds or fails. The Author
-is nationalist, but by no means a bitter partisan.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE WINE OF LOVE. 1904.</p>
-
-<p>Deals mainly with the upper classes in the West of Ireland. Abuses of
-landlordism not spared. Picture of horse-dealing, fox-hunting, and card-playing
-lives. Also picture of typically good landlords. Standpoint on
-the whole national and even Catholic. Style: breezy and vigorous. Good
-knowledge shown of inner lives and feelings of all classes.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE SPLENDID KNIGHT. Pp. 262. (<i>Sealy, Bryers</i>). Illustr.
-by Lawson Wood. 1905.</p>
-
-<p>Adventures of an Irish boy in Sir Walter Raleigh’s expedition up the
-Orinoco. A brisk and entertaining narrative.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ GOLDEN MORN. Pp. 303. (<i>Cassell</i>). Frontisp. 1907.</p>
-
-<p>Tells the strange adventures in Ireland, London, and France of Captain
-O’Grady. At Leopardstown Races his mare breaks her neck, just at the
-finish; the Captain loses a fortune, and is fain to depart on his travels—but
-“all is well that ends well,” and it is so with Captain O’Grady.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ O’GRADY OF TRINITY. (<i>Lawrence &amp; Bullen</i>). 6<i>s.</i> Re-issued by
-C. H. White at 6<i>d.</i> 1909.</p>
-
-<p>Fun, frolic, and love in a student’s career. A gay and wholesome novel.
-Sympathetic picture of Trinity College life. Highly praised by Lionel
-Johnston.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE CONSIDINE LUCK. Pp. 300. (<i>Swift</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1912.</p>
-
-<p>It was popularly believed that the estate could not pass from Considine
-hands. Sir Hugh C. dies, and lo! the estate is found to be mortgaged to
-Mr. Smith, of London. Mr. Smith arrives, and brings with him his English
-notions which he proceeds to carry out to the disgust of the locality. He
-refuses all attempts to buy him out, but the Considine luck comes to the
-rescue, and the estate falls once more into the hands of a Considine. Pleasant,
-light style.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>HOARE, Mrs.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ SHAMROCK LEAVES; or, Tales and Sketches of Ireland. Pp. 237.
-(<i>M’Glashan</i>). 1851.</p>
-
-<p>If one could abstract from the bits of gossipy anecdote intended as links
-to the principal stories, this book consists of several studies, touching and
-true to the reality, of the lives of the poor, and in particular of their sufferings
-during and after the Famine years. Written with much sympathy for the
-lowly, and a vivid sense of actuality. Most of the tales have a moral, but
-it does not spoil the story.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_115"></a>[115]</span></p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>HOBHOUSE, Violet.</b> Born 1864. Eldest daughter of Edmund McNeill,
-<span class="allsmcap">D.L.</span>, of Craigdunn, Co. Antrim. Married Rev. Walter Hobhouse, second
-son of Bishop Hobhouse. She was devoted to Irish traditions, folklore,
-&amp;c., and could speak Irish, but was a keen Unionist, and in 1887
-and the following years spoke much against Home Rule on English
-platforms. After her death in 1902 a small volume of poems, serious
-and deeply religious, <i>Speculum Animae</i> was printed for private circulation.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ AN UNKNOWN QUANTITY. Pp. 382. (<i>Downey</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1898.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ WARP AND WEFT. (<i>Skeffington</i>). 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> 1899.</p>
-
-<p>“A conscientious rendering of homely aspects of life in Co. Antrim.”—(<i>Baker</i>).</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>HOCKING, Rev. Joseph.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ ROSALEEN O’HARA. Pp. 352. (<i>Hodder &amp; Stoughton</i>). 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>
-and 1<i>s.</i> Two illustr. 1913.</p>
-
-<p>A product of the Home Rule controversy. The Author is a noted anti-Catholic
-writer, but he is also a Liberal, and desirous of defending Liberalism
-from the charge of seeking to establish Rome Rule in Ireland. Home Rule,
-so reads the story, would mean Rome Rule for some years, but would ultimately
-lead to the emancipation of the Irish from the thralldom of priestcraft
-and dogma. The story tells of Denis who unexpectedly discovers that
-he is heir to an Irish estate, and neighbour of Elenore Tyrone, whom he had
-seen and loved. A quarrel and the attractions of the beautiful “Fenian,”
-Rosaleen, separate the two for a time. The Author clearly knows little or
-nothing of Ireland, but he would like to be benevolent in tone to “dear old
-beautiful Erin.” By the same Author: <i>Follow the Gleam</i>, <i>The Wilderness</i>,
-<i>The Jesuit</i>, <i>The Scarlet Woman</i>, and some thirty other novels.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>HOEY, Mrs. Cashel</b>, <i>née</i> <b>Sarah Johnston.</b> Born at Bushy Park, Co. Dublin,
-1830. Wife of the well-known Irish journalist, John Cashel Hoey
-(d. 1892). Has published more than twenty-seven volumes, <i>e.g.</i>, <i>The
-Question of Cain</i> (1882), <i>The Lover’s Creed</i>, <i>No Sign</i> (1876), <i>The Queen’s
-Token</i>, <i>A Stern Chase</i>, &amp;c., &amp;c. She became a Catholic in 1858. D. 1908.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>HOLLAND, Denis.</b> A well-known Irish journalist. Born in Cork about
-1826. He founded <span class="smcap">The Irishman</span>, 1858. <i>See</i> Pigot’s <i>Recollections of
-an Irish Journalist</i>, and D. J. O’Donoghue’s <i>Poets of Ireland</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ DONAL DUN O’BYRNE: A Tale of the Rising in Wexford in 1798.
-Pp. 224. (<i>Gill</i>). 1<i>s.</i> <i>n.d.</i></p>
-
-<p>The story of the rising (including Oulart, Tubberneering, Gorey, and Ross,
-and the guerilla warfare after Vinegar Hill) from an insurgent’s point of view.
-The book is full of scenes of blood, and breathes a spirit of vengeance. The
-narrative is not remarkable. Some of the scenes border on indelicacy.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ ULICK O’DONNELL: an Irish Peasant’s Progress. 1860.</p>
-
-<p>A romantic and pleasant story. Adventures in Liverpool and elsewhere
-in England of a clever peasant lad from Newry. He wins his way by his
-sterling qualities, and returns prosperous to his native Co. Down. Author
-tries to bring out contrasting characteristics of English and Irish.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>HOLT, Emily S.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ UNDER ONE SCEPTRE; or, Mortimer’s Mission. (<i>Shaw</i>). 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>
-1884.</p>
-
-<p>Career of Roger Mortimer, Earl of March and Ulster (1374-98) in Monmouthshire,
-Ireland, and London. He was lieutenant of Ulster, Connaught,
-and Meath. Richard II. declared him heir to the throne, but later grew
-jealous of his popularity. He was slain at Kells in battle with Art
-McMurrough Kavanagh. Juvenile.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_116"></a>[116]</span></p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>HOPKINS, Tighe.</b> Born 1856. Son of Rev. W. R. Hopkins, Vicar of
-Moulton, Cheshire. Besides the work mentioned here this Author ed.
-Carleton’s <i>Traits and Stories</i> in the “Red Letter Library,” and wrote
-<i>Kilmainham Memories</i>, several novels, and various other works. Resides
-at Herne Bay. Has written many other novels:—<i>For Freedom</i>, <i>The
-Silent Gate</i>, <i>Tozer’s</i>, <i>’Twixt Love and Duty</i>, &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE NUGENTS OF CARRICONNA. Three Vols., afterwards one
-Vol. (<i>Ward &amp; Downey</i>). 1890.</p>
-
-<p>Main theme: an old impoverished family suddenly enriched by Australian
-legacy. Interwoven there is an interesting love-story. Anthony Nugent,
-eccentric, of astronomical tastes, has on his housetop a telescope which plays
-a prominent part in the story. Brogue well done. The dramatic interest
-centred in an Inspector of Police, a type probably very rare in Irish fiction.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>HOPPER, Nora; Mrs. W. H. Chesson.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ BALLADS IN PROSE. Pp. 186. (<i>Lane</i>). 5<i>s.</i> Beautifully
-bound and printed. 1894.</p>
-
-<p>Strange, wayward tales of far-off pagan days in which one moves as in a
-mist of dreams. Soaked with Gaelic fairy and legendary lore. The prose
-pieces, all very short, are interspersed with little poems, that are slight and
-frail as wreaths of vapour. Some of the stories are symbolical. They are
-told in simple and graceful prose.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>HUDSON, Frank.</b> This Author, after many years’ work for Dublin
-periodicals, went to London early in the ’eighties. He wrote a few
-Irish sporting novels of a light and humorous kind.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE ORIGIN OF PLUM PUDDING, and other Irish Fairy Tales.
-Illustr. by Gordon Browne. 1888.</p>
-
-<p>Only one of these five stories is genuinely Irish—“Shaun Murray’s
-Challenge,” the scene of which is Dalkey. The title-story tells how a drunken
-man one evening threw his sack of groceries into a pot on the fire, and in the
-morning found a plum-pudding.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE LAST HURDLE: a Story of Sporting and Courting. Pp. 304.
-(<i>Ward &amp; Downey</i>). 1888.</p>
-
-<p>Life in an Irish county family of the old stock, with sympathy for the poor
-around them. Good idea of refined Irish country life and its easy-going
-ways. A story full of sport, gaiety, and dramatic incidents, turning mainly
-on the winning of the heroine by the hero in spite of the plots of the rival.
-Good and bad landlords are contrasted. An eviction scene is described,
-with full sympathy for the victims. Shamus-the-Trout, a poacher, is a very
-picturesque figure.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ RUNNING DOUBLE: a Story of Stage and Stable. Two Vols.
-(<i>Ward &amp; Downey</i>). 1890.</p>
-
-<p>Scene: varies between England, Dublin, and “Ennisbeg.” There are
-remarks on Irish life, scenery, and customs, but the chief interest is sporting—fishing,
-racing, betting. The stage part is in England. There is very little
-plot. All ends in a double wedding.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>HUGHES, Mrs. Kate Duval.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE FAIR MAID OF CONNAUGHT: and other Tales for Catholic
-Youth. Pp. 178. (N.Y.: <i>Kenedy</i> and <i>Benziger</i>). 1.25, 0.60, 0.30.
-1889.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>HULL, Eleanor.</b> Born in Ireland of a Co. Down family. Daughter of
-Prof. Edward Hull, the eminent geologist, long Director of the Geological
-Survey of Ireland. Ed. at Alexandra Coll., Dublin, and in Brussels.
-Has written much—chiefly on Irish literature, folk-lore, and history—for<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_117"></a>[117]</span>
-various periodicals. Is the Author of eight important books on
-Irish subjects:—<i>Pagan Ireland</i>, <i>Early Christian Ireland</i>, <i>A Text-Book
-of Irish</i> [Gaelic] <i>Literature</i>, <i>The Poem-Book of the Gael</i>. Has for many
-years studied Old Irish under the best professors, and it is her chief
-pleasure and interest. Founded in 1899 the Irish Texts Society, and
-has been its Hon. Secretary ever since. Is President of Irish Literary
-Society in London.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE CUCHULLIN SAGA IN IRISH LITERATURE. Pp. lxxx. +
-316. (<i>Nutt</i>). 1898.</p>
-
-<p>A collection of fourteen stories relating to Cuchulin, translated from the
-Irish by various scholars (Meyer, O’Curry, Stokes, Windisch, O’Grady, Duvan,
-&amp;c.). A more valuable work, says Fiona MacLeod (in substance), for students
-of Gaelic legend and literature than the more recent works by Lady Gregory.
-The book is not cast in an artistic mould. It merely contains the rude
-materials from which epic and lyric inspiration may be drawn. Important
-and valuable Introduction deals with literary qualities of the Saga, its historical
-aspects and its mythology. Map of Ireland to illustrate Cuchulin Saga.
-Appendix contains chart of Cuchulin Saga. Notes pp. 289-297.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ CUCHULAIN, THE HOUND OF ULSTER. Pp. 279. (<i>Harrap</i>).
-5<i>s.</i> net. Illustr. in colour by Stephen Reid. [1909].</p>
-
-<p>Intended for young, but not very young readers. Told in modern
-language, free from Gaelicisms, archaisms, and difficult names. The story
-is continuous, not told in detached episodes. The style, though without the
-strange wild grandeur of Standish O’Grady, is on the whole beautiful. The
-story itself is full of the spirit of heroism and chivalry. It is selected and
-adapted from many sources (indicated in Appendix), and the epic narrative
-is not mixed with puerile or absurd episodes. Some of the illustrations are
-excellent, others tend, perhaps, too much to quaintness.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>HUME, Martin.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ TRUE STORIES OF THE PAST. Pp. xi. + 226. (<i>Eveleigh Nash</i>).
-5<i>s.</i> net. 1911.</p>
-
-<p>Ed. with introd. by R. B. Cunningham Grahame. Eight stories from
-History. i. “How Rizzio was Avenged;” ii. “A Rebellious Love-match;”
-iii. “Prince and Pastry Cook;” iv. “The Revenge of John
-Hawkins;” v. “The Scapegoat;” vi. “Sir Walter [Raleigh]’s Homecoming;”
-vii. “Cloth of Gold and Frieze.” Some of these treat of the
-amours of great personages. Their standpoint is, of course, English and Protestant.
-viii. “The Last Stand of the O’Sullivans” is told with much
-spirit, and with sympathy for the Irish cause. It does not include the
-famous retreat of the O’Sullivans.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>HUNGERFORD, Mrs.</b> Born 1855. Daughter of Canon Hamilton, Rector of
-Ross, Co. Cork. Ed. in Ireland. Her early home was St. Brenda’s,
-Co. Cork. Wrote upwards of forty-six novels dealing with the more
-frivolous aspects of modern society. They had a great vogue in their
-day. The most popular of all was, perhaps, <i>Molly Bawn</i> (1878). Most
-of her books appeared Anon. Her plots are poor and conventional,
-but she possessed the faculty of reproducing faithfully the tone of contemporary
-society. She died at Bandon 1897.—(D.N.B.).</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ MOLLY BAWN. (<i>Smith, Elder</i>). 6<i>s.</i> and 2<i>s.</i> (<span class="smcap">Boston</span>: <i>Caldwell</i>).
-0.75. [1878].</p>
-
-<p>“A love tale of a tender, but frivolous and petulant Irish girl, who flirts
-and arouses her lover’s jealousy, and who offends against the conventions in all
-innocence. A gay and witty story spiced with slang, and touched with
-pathos.”—(<i>Baker</i>).</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_118"></a>[118]</span></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ A LITTLE IRISH GIRL; and other Stories. (<span class="smcap">London</span>: <i>Whitefriars
-Libr.</i>). 1891.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE O’CONNORS OF BALLYNAHINCH. Pp. 261. (<i>Heinemann</i>).
-1<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> 1896.</p>
-
-<p>A domestic story of love and marriage in the Author’s lightest vein. The
-characters belong chiefly to the landlord class, a local carman being the only
-peasant introduced. There is no expression of political views. The scene
-is laid in Cork.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ NORA CREINA. Pp. 328. (<i>Chatto &amp; Windus</i>). 1903.</p>
-
-<p>A love-story from start to finish, without pretence of the study of character.
-The story of how Norah is won from dislike to love is pleasantly told. No
-politics. Peasants hardly mentioned. Scene not specified.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>HUNT, B.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ FOLK TALES OF BREFFNY. Pp. viii. + 197. (<i>Macmillan</i>).
-3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> 1913.</p>
-
-<p>Breffny, <i>i.e.</i>, Cavan and Leitrim. Many of these stories—there are twenty-six
-of them, all very short—“were told by an old man, who said he had
-more and better learning nor the scholars,” and are a curious mixture of literary
-language, and a very peculiar and picturesque peasant dialect. They are
-somewhat off the ordinary lines of folk-lore stories, and are told in a quaint
-drily-humorous vein.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>HYDE, Dr. Douglas, LL.D., D.Litt.; “An Craobhin Aoibhinn.”</b> Son of
-late Rev. Arthur Hyde, Frenchpark, Co. Roscommon. Ed. T.C.D.
-Has been President of the Gaelic League since its foundation in 1893.
-Is Professor of Modern Irish in the National University of Ireland.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ BESIDE THE FIRE. Gaelic Folk-stories. Collected, ed. (Irish
-text facing English), and trans. by D. H. With Introd., Notes on
-Irish text, and Notes on tales, by Ed. and Alfred Nutt. Pp. lviii. + 204.
-(<i>Nutt</i>). 7<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> 1891.</p>
-
-<p>Extremely interesting and valuable Preface (50 pages) by the Author, in
-which he reviews what had been hitherto done for Irish folk-lore, remarks
-on the genesis of the folk-tale, its affinities with the Scotch folk-tale, and tells
-us where and from whom and in what circumstances he got his stories, ending
-by some explanations of the style of his translations. The preface is followed
-by some critical remarks on it by Alfred Nutt. The English of the translations
-is that of the peasants. This is the first really scientific treatment
-of Irish folk-lore.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE ADVENTURES OF THE LAD OF THE FERULE.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE ADVENTURES OF THE CHILDREN OF THE KING OF
-NORWAY. (<i>Irish Texts Society</i>). 1899.</p>
-
-<p>Two Irish romantic tales of the 16th and 17th centuries, ed. and transl.
-for the first time with introd., notes, and glossary. The “Lad” is a mysterious
-being who appears to Murough, son of Brian Boru, and carrying
-home for him the spoils of a miraculous hunting, demands as reward a certain
-ferule that lies at the bottom of a lake. Murough slays a serpent, and delivers
-the land of the Ever Young, which lies at the bottom of the lake. The
-second is a long story of enchantment and marvellous adventures.—(<i>Baker</i>, 2).</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ An Sgéalaidhe Gaedhealach: Connaught Folk Tales. Three Parts.
-With French Trans. by Georges Dottin. (<i>Rennes</i>). Parts 1 and 2, 10<i>s.</i>;
-Part 3, 2<i>s.</i> 1901.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_119"></a>[119]</span></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ LEGENDS OF SAINTS AND SINNERS. Pp. xiv. + 295. (<i>Talbot
-Press: Every Irishman’s Library</i>). 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> 1915.</p>
-
-<p>Forty-six stories described by the Author as Christian folk-lore, all translated
-for the first time from the Irish, and for the most part gathered from
-the lips of the people by the Author himself, who has been gathering folklore
-for twenty-five years. Each tale is preceded by a preface giving all the
-details of its collection, origin, character, &amp;c., that are of interest to the
-folk-lorist as well as to the general reader. The tales are compared with
-similar tales occurring in foreign countries.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>INGELOW, Jean. 1820-1897.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ OFF THE SKELLIGS. Three Vols. (<i>Keegan Paul.</i> <span class="smcap">Boston</span>:
-<i>Roberts</i>). [1872]. Second ed., <i>c.</i> 1881.</p>
-
-<p>Has no other connection with Ireland than the episode of the picking up
-near the Skellig Island, off Waterville, Co. Kerry, of a boat’s crew that had
-escaped from a burning ship.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>IRVINE, Alexander.</b> B. in town of Antrim of very poor parents. Was
-a newsboy in Antrim, a coal-miner in Glasgow, a Marine. Began again
-at the bottom in N.Y. 1888, and went through extraordinary experiences.
-Is a Socialist. Lives in Peekskill, N.Y. See his autobiography <i>From
-the Bottom Up</i>. (<i>Heinemann</i>). 1910.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ MY LADY OF THE CHIMNEY CORNER. Pp. 224. (<i>Nash</i>).
-3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> net. Eight eds. in three or four months. 1914.</p>
-
-<p>Sub-t.:—“A story of love and poverty in Irish peasant life.” The central
-figure—almost the only figure in the book—is Anna Gilmore, a poor woman
-living in Pogue’s Entry, in the town of Antrim. Brought up as a pious
-Catholic by Catholic parents, she marries a Protestant against their wish.
-Henceforth she has renounced Catholicism, having chosen, as she says,
-love instead of religion. To show that her choice was of the better part
-seems to be the purpose of the Author. The book is a lovingly-drawn
-portrait, with slight incidents, and the many wise sayings of Anna as traits.
-There is a strong evangelical religious atmosphere throughout. The story
-is largely in dialect. It is laid in Famine times; yet there are several
-mention of Fenians, which seems to spell Catholic. The book would be better
-understood by a reading of the Author’s autobiography, <i>From the Bottom Up</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>IRVINE, G. Marshall, B.A., M.B.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE LION’S WHELP. Pp. 406. (<i>Simpkin</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1910.</p>
-
-<p>Introd. (by J. Campbell, <span class="allsmcap">M.A., M.D., F.R.C.S., LL.D.</span> (<i>Hon. Causa</i>)) says,
-“In writing <i>The Lion’s Whelp</i> Dr. Irvine has set before himself two main
-objects. He desires to inculcate on the medical profession the necessity
-which exists for the education of the public in all that pertains to the
-maintenance of health ... and he wishes to impress upon the public
-all that is summed up in the time-worn adage—‘Prevention is better than
-cure.’” Incidentally, the book is also a satire against professional make-believe.
-Scene varies between Belfast, the North of England, and Denver
-City, U.S.A. The hero, Dan Nevin, starts his career as a doctor, with high
-ideals—too high, as he discovers, for real life. The story is concerned with
-his love-affair and various other adventures. A fine plot, well worked out,
-with several striking characters. Moral tone high. Religion scarcely
-touched upon. There are interesting descriptions of Co. Down scenery
-and of life in Queen’s College, Belfast. The Author is a doctor, practising in
-Co. Armagh.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>IRWIN, Madge.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE DIAMOND MOUNTAIN; or, Flowers of Fairyland. (<span class="smcap">Dundalk</span>:
-<i>The Dundalgan Press</i>). 1<i>s.</i> Illustr. by A. Donnelly. 1908. Cover in
-white and gold.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_120"></a>[120]</span></p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>IRWIN, Thomas Caulfield.</b> 1823-1892. Is better known as a poet than
-as a prose-writer. Yet he wrote one hundred and thirty tales of various
-length, essays on many subjects, and an historical romance “From
-Cæsar to Christ.” He was of unsound mind for a number of years
-before his death.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ WINTER AND SUMMER STORIES AND SLIDES OF FANCY’S
-LANTERN. Pp. 252. Close print. (<i>Gill</i>). 1879.</p>
-
-<p>Contents: 1. “Old Christmas Hall;” 2. “The First Ring”; 3. “An
-Irish Fairy Sketch”; 4. “The Miser’s Cottage”; 5. “By Moonlight”;
-6. “By Gaslight”; 7. “A Visit to a Great Artist”; 8. “Falstaff’s
-Wake”; 9. “A Scene in Macbeth’s Castle”; 10. “Julio”; 11. “A
-Death”; 12. “Visions of an Old Voyage from Rome to Asia”; 13.
-“The Shores of Greece”; 14. “Theocritus”; 15. “A Glimpse of
-Arcadia”; 16. “A Ballad of Old Dublin” (verse); 17. “Corney
-McClusky” (verse); 18. “Ethel Maccara”; 19. “Pausias and Glycera”;
-20. “Manon and her Spirit Lover”; 21. “An Ancient Aryan
-Legend”; 22. “A Florentine Fortune”; 23. “Insielle’s Dimple and
-Fan.”</p>
-
-<p>Miscellaneous sketches and stories. Several are literary <i>jeux-desprit</i>
-(<i>e.g.</i>, 8, 9, 10). Others slight studies of curious little aspects of life, rather
-imaginary than real. For the most part, however, they are peculiar, weird
-tales, several touching the preternatural, but not morbid. The prose is
-poetic, imaginative, and of high literary qualities—at times comparable with
-those of de Quincey, <i>e.g.</i>, in No. 4, p. 72, <i>sq.</i> Here and there are exquisite pen-pictures.
-Several of the tales have Irish settings. No. 4 has curious pictures
-of old Dublin, <i>c.</i> 1770.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>JACOBS, Joseph.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ CELTIC FAIRY TALES. Pp. xvi. + 274. (<i>Nutt</i>). 6<i>s.</i> Complete
-edition. [1891]. Third, 1902.</p>
-
-<p>Eight full-page plates and numerous illustrations in the text by J. D.
-Batten. The pictures are exquisite, and could scarcely be more appropriate.
-Interesting and valuable Notes and References at end, about 30 pages, giving
-the source of each tale and parallels. The tales are drawn mainly from
-previous printed collections. The twenty-six tales include some Scotch
-and Welsh. Some are hero-tales, as “Deirdre,” and “The Children of
-Lir”; some folk-tales; some drolls, <i>i.e.</i>, comic anecdotes of feats of stupidity
-or cunning. There are practically no fairy-tales properly so called. The tales
-are admirably selected, and are told in simple, straightforward language.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ MORE CELTIC FAIRY TALES. Pp. xvi. + 234. (<i>Nutt</i>). 6<i>s.</i>
-Complete edition.</p>
-
-<p>All that has been said of the first series can be applied to the second, which
-is in every way worthy of its predecessor. Twenty stories. The two volumes
-may fairly be said to constitute the most representative and attractive collection
-of Celtic tales ever issued.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ CELTIC FAIRY TALES. By Joseph Jacobs and J. D. Batten.
-(<i>Nutt</i>). 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ MORE CELTIC FAIRY TALES. By the same Authors. (<i>Nutt</i>).
-3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
-
-<p>The above are children’s editions of these well-known books. The text is
-practically the same as in the complete edition, but there are two or three
-illustrations omitted, as well as the Introduction and Notes. The tales are
-well known to be admirably suited to children.</p>
-
-<p>N.B.—The same writers have edited <i>English Fairy Tales</i>, <i>More English
-Fairy Tales</i>, <i>Indian Fairy Tales</i>, and <i>The Book of Wonder Voyages</i>, which
-includes the voyage of Maelduin.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_121"></a>[121]</span></p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>“JAMES, Andrew”; James Andrew Strahan, LL.D.</b>, a Belfast man, Prof.
-of Jurisprudence in the Queen’s Univ. there.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ NINETY-EIGHT AND SIXTY YEARS AFTER. (<i>Blackwood</i>).
-3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> 1911.</p>
-
-<p>In two parts. Part I. (four short stories) is told in dialect (correctly
-rendered) by an old schoolmaster, and relates incidents of the rebellion in
-Presbyterian Ulster, in which the narrator’s father had played a part on the
-loyalist side. Shows thorough understanding of the political and social
-conditions of the time, and is written in evident sympathy with the rebels,
-though with no blind partisanship. Part II. (four chapters of a longer
-story) introduces the supernatural, ghosts of ’98 returning to influence events
-sixty years after. A book of much power and truth.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>JARROLD, Ernest.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ MICKEY FINN IDYLLS. Pp. 281. (N.Y.: <i>Harper</i>). 1899.
-Introd. by Charles A. Dana (N.Y. <i>Sun</i>).</p>
-
-<p>Reprinted from the <span class="smcap">Sunday Sun</span>, <span class="smcap">Leslie’s Weekly</span>, &amp;c. Micky is a
-youngster of 9 or 10, born of Irish parents, settled at Coney Island, where
-the scene of the idylls is laid. A good deal of humour and some pathos. A
-goat figures largely in the sketches.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ MICKY FINN’S NEW IRISH YARNS. N.Y. 1902.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>JAY, Harriett.</b> A sister-in-law and adopted daughter of the late Robert
-Buchanan, Scottish poet and novelist. She lived for some years in
-Mayo, and the result of her observations was two good novels. She
-wrote also <i>Madge Dunraven</i>, and some other novels.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE QUEEN OF CONNAUGHT. (<i>Chatto &amp; Windus</i>). Picture
-boards. 2<i>s.</i> <i>n.d.</i> (1875).</p>
-
-<p>How an Englishman, John Bermingham, fell in love with and married the
-descendant of an old western family. How he tried, but failed, to reform
-with English ideas the Connaught peasantry. Told with considerable
-power and insight. Note especially the description of a police hunt over
-the mountains in the snow. Has been dramatised.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE DARK COLLEEN. Three Vols. (<i>Bentley</i>). 1876.</p>
-
-<p>Scene: an island off the W. coast. Morna Dunroon finds a French sailor,
-survivor of a shipwreck. She afterwards marries him, but he abandons her
-and goes back to France. She follows him, and passes through strange
-adventures, but he is still false to her. Nemesis follows in the end. Father
-Moy is a fine portrait of a priest. The dialect and the scenery are both true
-to the reality, the description of the storm at the close is particularly well
-done.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE PRIEST’S BLESSING; or, Poor Patrick’s progress from this
-world to a better. Pp. 308. (<i>F. V. White</i>). Two eds. 1881.</p>
-
-<p>A most objectionable book from a Catholic point of view. Very hostile
-picture of priesthood of Ireland who keep the people in “bovine ignorance.”
-The two specimens that appear in the story are villains of the worst type.
-One is 25, and has been seven years a priest! He drinks heavily, and works
-miracles. By another a respectable peasant is incited to murder. The
-views of politics can only be described as “Orange.”</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ MY CONNAUGHT COUSINS. Three Vols. (<i>F. V. White</i>). 1883.</p>
-
-<p>Jack Kenmare goes to his uncle’s place in Connaught, and has a pleasant
-time in company with his cousins. He becomes engaged to one of them,
-who writes stories. Several of these are given. An excellent moral tale, and
-a glimpse of happy Irish life in a country house. The political point of view
-is not Nationalist: neither is it hostile to Ireland.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_122"></a>[122]</span></p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>JEBB, Horsley.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ SPORT ON IRISH BOGS. Pp. 192. (<i>Everett</i>). 1<i>s.</i> Paper. 1910.</p>
-
-<p>Farcical Irish stories by a Londoner who occasionally shoots and fishes
-in Ireland. Peasants made grotesque, but Author has no hostile intentions.
-Nondescript dialect. “A Home in Calery” is quite different, and makes
-very pleasant reading. “Sister Eugenia” is an agreeable, melodramatic
-story.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>JESSOP, George H.</b> B. in Ireland; ed. at Trinity. Went to U.S.A., 1873.
-Edited <span class="smcap">Judge</span> (1884), and contributed to other humorous papers. Wrote
-some very successful plays. He died in 1915 at Hampstead. Another
-of his novels is <i>The Emergency Men</i>, a novel in which he pictures the land
-troubles in Ireland from the anti-popular point of view.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ GERALD FRENCH’S FRIENDS. Pp. 240. (<i>Longmans</i>). Well
-illustr. 1889.</p>
-
-<p>Six stories reprinted from the <span class="smcap">Century Magazine</span>, 1888. Gerald, a spendthrift
-son of good family, takes to journalism, and goes to San Francisco.
-There he meets various types of his fellow-countrymen, and the stories are
-about these. “All the incidents related in this book are based on fact, and
-several of them are mere transcripts from actual life.... The purpose is
-to depict a few of the most characteristic types of the native Celt of the
-original stock, as yet unmixed in blood, but modified by new surroundings and
-a different civilization.” An excellent work, and perhaps the Author’s best.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ WHERE THE SHAMROCK GROWS. (<i>Murray &amp; Evenden</i>).
-3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> 1911.</p>
-
-<p>A rather commonplace story. The characters are mostly of the squireen
-class, notably the drunken Mat O’Hara. There are two love stories, both
-having happy conclusions, to which the racehorse Liscarrick largely contributes.
-“The paper is poor and the binding tawdry.”—(I.B.L.) “The
-writer has only put on record that part of his experience which can be reconciled
-with conceptions derived from Lever.”—(<span class="smcap">Irish Times</span>).</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ DESMOND O’CONNOR. Pp. 320. (<i>Long</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1914.</p>
-
-<p>The “Wild Geese” in Flanders. Desmond is the “Lion of the Irish
-Brigade.” A love story that moves through camps and courts, siege, battle,
-adventure, misunderstanding, to a happy ending, under the aegis of the
-<i>Grand Monarque</i>. Told with spirit and verve.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>JOHNSTON, Miss.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ ELLEN: A Tale of Ireland. Pp. 139. 16mo. (<span class="smcap">London</span>). 1843.</p>
-
-<p>A curious and rather meaningless little story. Ellen O’Rorick, daughter
-of a drunken tavern keeper, of Leixlip, goes to England, and mixes in high
-society. Forgotten and looked down upon by her childhood’s friend, whom
-she loves, she marries in succession two elderly, rich men, and then settles
-in Ireland to a life of philanthropy, having meanwhile become a Protestant.
-A good deal of moralising.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>JOHNSTON, M. L.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ MAVOURNEEN; or, The Children of the Storm. Pp. 233. (<i>Walter
-Scott</i>). 1904.</p>
-
-<p>Kitty O’Neill on her way to her aunt at Lostwin, in England, is saved
-from a wreck by Ralph Whitteridge, of that place. Kitty grows up, and has
-several suitors, but meets Ralph again, and marries him in spite of the aunt
-who wishes her to marry Edward, the Squire. Some of the action takes place
-at Malhay, in the S. of Ireland, Kitty’s native place. Kitty dies, and Ralph
-takes to drink, but is rescued by a former rival, and on the voyage out to S.
-Africa proves his sterling worth, but is drowned in a storm along with his
-little boy, Curly. Author’s knowledge of Ireland very slight. Brogue
-poor. No anti-Catholic bias.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_123"></a>[123]</span></p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>JOHNSTON, William</b>, of Ballykilbeg, 1829-1902. Was in his day one of
-the most strenuous opponents of Home Rule, a leader of Orangemen,
-and Unionist M.P. for Belfast during many years. His novels reflect
-his political opinions.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ NIGHTSHADE. (<span class="smcap">Belfast</span>: <i>Aicken</i>). 2<i>s.</i> Portrait. [<i>c.</i> 1870].
-Many editions; the last <i>c.</i> 1902.</p>
-
-<p>The hero, Charles Annandale, a young Ulster landlord and an Oxfordman,
-returns to Ireland in the thick of the agrarian agitation. His agent is shot
-by Ribbonmen, who had been previously absolved by the priest. He is an
-unsuccessful candidate for Parliament. The election is well described, the
-Author probably drawing on his experiences at Downpatrick in 1857. Among
-the characters is Rev. Mr. Werd (Dr. Drew, of Belfast). The sister of
-Charles’s betrothed is entrapped by a Jesuit, who poses as her guardian, and
-immured in a Paris convent, but is released after a lawsuit. There is much
-denunciation of “prowling Jesuits,” “Liberal Protestants,” and “Puseyite
-Traitors.”</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ UNDER WHICH KING. Pp. 308. (<i>Tinsley</i>). 1873.</p>
-
-<p>A plain historical narrative, with little plot, and no character drawing
-of the various events of 1688-91—Derry, the Boyne, &amp;c. Very strong
-Williamite bias.</p>
-
-<p class="author" id="JONES"><b>JONES, T. Mason.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ OLD TRINITY: a Tale of real life. Three Vols. 1867.</p>
-
-<p>Period, <i>c.</i> 1850. Scene: T.C.D., Ossory, and Co. Limerick. Career, told
-by himself of a brilliant young Trinity man, including a love story. A fine
-piece of narrative. But the chief source of interest, perhaps, is the account
-of the land troubles of the day, as the very sympathetic picture of the
-sufferings of the peasantry during and after the Famine years. It includes
-portraits, drawn with feeling and admiration, of an Ossory P.P., and of a
-dissenting minister. There are pointed criticisms of educational methods
-and a study, none too favourable, of life in T.C.D. The Author ran <span class="smcap">The
-Tribune</span> in Dublin in the fifties, and was afterwards well-known in England
-as a lecturer of the Reform League.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>JOYCE, James A.</b> B. of Galway parentage about thirty years ago. Was
-a student of Clongowes Wood College and of University Coll., Dublin.
-Published some years ago a small book of verse that has been much
-admired, entitled <i>Chamber Music</i>. Is at present in Trieste.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ DUBLINERS. Pp. 278. (<i>Grant, Richards</i>). 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> 1914.</p>
-
-<p>Seventeen <i>genre</i> studies in the form of stories picturing life among the
-Dublin lower-middle and lower classes, but from one aspect only, viz., the
-dark and squalid aspect. This is depicted with almost brutal realism,
-and though there is an occasional gleam of humour, on the whole we move,
-as we read, in the midst of painful scenes of vice and poverty. His characters
-seem to interest the author in so far as they are wrecks or failures in one way
-or another. He writes as one who knows his subject well.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>JOYCE, Patrick Weston, M.A., LL.D.</b> 1827-1914. B. at Ballyorgan, Co.
-Limerick. Ed. at private schools; graduated at T.C.D. In 1845 he
-entered the service of the Commissioners of National Education. He
-rose to be principal of the Marlborough Street Training Schools, Dublin.
-Elected M.R.I.A., 1863; President of Royal Society of Antiquaries.
-Wrote several histories of Ireland, of one of which 86,000 copies were
-sold. Publ. works on Irish place-names, Irish music, a grammar of the
-Irish language, a social history of Ancient Ireland, &amp;c., &amp;c. D. Jan.,
-1914. He was writing practically up to the day of his death.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ OLD CELTIC ROMANCES. Pp. xx. + 474. (<i>Longmans</i>). [1879].
-Third ed., revised and enlarged. 1907.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_124"></a>[124]</span></p><p>Thirteen tales, selected and translated from the manuscripts of Trinity
-College and of the Royal Irish Academy. Some had been already published,
-but in a form inaccessible to the public, and in <i>literal</i> translations made chiefly
-for linguistic purposes. The author justly claims that this is “the first
-collection of the old Gaelic prose romances that has ever been published in
-fair English translation.”—(<i>Pref.</i>). The translations are, as the Author
-says, in “simple, plain, homely English.” He has made little or no attempt
-to invest them with the glamour of poetry. The text is preceded by some
-particulars concerning these tales and their origin, and followed by notes
-and a list of proper names. The tales are: “The Fates of the Children of
-Lir, Tuireann and Usnach”; “The Voyages of Mailduin and of the Sons of
-O’Corra”; “The Pursuit of the Gilla Dacker and of Dermat and Grania”;
-“Connla of the Golden Hair”; “Oisin in Tir-na-nOge,” &amp;c. “I would
-bring out,” said Dr. Richard Garnett, Librarian of the British Museum
-“Joyce’s <i>Irish Romances</i> in the cheapest possible form and place them in the
-hands of every boy and girl in the country.”</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>JOYCE, Robert Dwyer.</b> Brother of the preceding. B. Glenosheen, Co.
-Limerick, 1830. Graduated in Queen’s Coll., Cork. Went to U.S.A. in
-1866, where he was very successful as a doctor. Returned to Ireland,
-1883, and died the same year. He is perhaps better known as a poet than
-as a prose writer.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ LEGENDS OF THE WARS IN IRELAND. Pp. 352. (<span class="smcap">Boston</span>:
-<i>Campbell</i>). 1868.</p>
-
-<p>Thirteen historical and semi-historical legends, told by a thoroughly good
-story-teller, with plenty of colour and exciting incident and without clogging
-erudition. “A Batch of Legends” includes the story of the monks of Kilmacluth
-and the wonderful bird, a story of love in the ’45 (Culloden, &amp;c.),
-a legend about Murrough of the Burnings, <i>c.</i> 1663, how Patrick saved the
-life of his servant Duan, Black Hugh Condon’s vengeance on the English,
-<i>c.</i> 1601; and another, “The Master of Lisfinry,” the takings and retakings
-of Youghal during the Desmond rebellion, story of a lost child found. “The
-Fair Maid of Killarney”—the taking of Ross Castle by Ludlow during Cromwellian
-wars. “An Eye for an Eye”—knightly combats during the Bruce
-invasion, 1315. “The Rose of Drimnagh”—abduction of Eleanora de
-Barneval of Drimnagh (near Inchicore) by the O’Byrnes. “The House of
-Lisbloom,” a legend of Sarsfield and the Rapparees, an exciting story. “The
-Whitethorn Tree,” a strange tale of Rapparees and Puritans, abductions and
-rescues and fights. “The First and Last Lords of Fermoy,” 1216 and 1660
-(the faithless Charles II.) “The Little Battle of Bottle Hill” is another
-Rapparee story. “The Bridal Ring,” a story of Cahir Castle. “Rosaleen;
-or, the White Lady of Barna”—end of 18th century.</p>
-
-<p>P.S.—Some of these Legends were publ. without the name of the Author
-in cheap paper ed. by Cameron &amp; Ferguson, of Glasgow, under title, <i>Galloping
-O’Hogan, and other tales</i>, <i>n.d.</i></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ IRISH FIRESIDE TALES. Pp. 376. (<i>Boston</i>). 1871.</p>
-
-<p>Sixteen stories, some historical (or pseudo-historical), some legendary,
-some serious, some comic. The scenes are laid in various parts of Ireland, and
-at various periods. Told in very pleasant if somewhat old-fashioned style.
-Contents—“The Geraldine and his Bride Fair Ellen”; “The Pearl Necklace”
-(a love story of Kilmallock); “The Building of Mourne” (Cork—Legend);
-“A Little Bit of Sport” (four comic stories); “Madeline’s Vow”
-(modern); “The Golden Butterfly” (Co. Clare); “Creevan, the Brown
-Haired”; “Mun Carberry and the Phooka”; “a story of Dublin life in
-the days of Queen Ann,” &amp;c. Very little dialect.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_125"></a>[125]</span></p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>JUBAINVILLE, H. d’Arbois de.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ TÁIN BO CUALNGE. ENLÈVEMENT DU TAUREAU DIVIN ET
-DES VACHES DE COOLEY. Pp. 190. (<span class="smcap">Paris</span>: <i>Champion</i>). En
-livraisons. 1907-9.</p>
-
-<p>“La plus ancienne épopée de l’Europe occidentale traduite par H. d’A.
-de J., Membre de l’Institut, Prof. au College de France, avec la collaboration
-de MM. Alexandre Smirnoff et Eugène Bibart.”</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>KAVANAGH, Rev. M.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ SHEMUS DHU; the Black Pedlar of Galway. (<i>Duffy</i>). 2<i>s.</i> [<span class="smcap">London</span>:
-1867]. Very many editions. Still in print. (N.Y.: <i>Benziger</i>).
-0.60.</p>
-
-<p>Life in and about Galway during Penal times. The peasantry are portrayed
-as well as the citizens and the upper classes. The plot is somewhat
-rambling, yet the book is interesting. In Allibone this is said to be by
-Maurice Dennis Kavanagh, <span class="allsmcap">LL.D.</span>, called to the Bar at the Middle Temple,
-1866.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>KEARY, Miss Annie.</b> B. at Bilton Rectory, nr. Wetherby, Yorkshire, 1825.
-Her father, a Galway man, was rector of the parish. She wrote many
-novels, <i>Early Egyptian History</i>, <i>The Nations Around</i>, <i>Heroes of Asgard</i>,
-&amp;c. She had very little personal knowledge of Ireland. D. 1879.—(D.N.B.).
-<i>See</i> Memoir of Annie Keary, by her sister, 1882.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ CASTLE DALY: The Story of an Irish House thirty years ago. Pp.
-576. (<i>Macmillan</i>). 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> [1875]; often reprinted. Fourth ed.,
-1889. (<span class="smcap">Philadelphia</span>: <i>Porter</i>). 1.00.</p>
-
-<p>Period: the Famine years and Smith O’Brien rising. The sufferings of the
-people sympathetically described. The Young Ireland movement dwelt on
-both from an English and an Irish standpoint. All through the book constant
-contrast between English and Irish characters, showing their incompatibility,
-and on the whole the superiority of the English; yet the book shows sympathies
-with Home Rule, to which one of the chief characters is converted.
-There are some descriptions of scenery in Connemara.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>KEEGAN, John.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ LEGENDS AND POEMS. Pp. 552. (<i>Sealy, Bryers</i>). 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> 1907.</p>
-
-<p>Memoir of Author by D. J. O’Donoghue, pp. v.-xxxiii. He was a self-educated
-Midlands peasant, who lived in the first half of the last century.
-This miscellany consists of (<i>a</i>) Six tales of the Rockites, the brutal doings
-of a secret society that flourished about 1830; (<i>b</i>) Legends and tales of the
-peasantry of Queen’s County and North Munster; (<i>c</i>) Pp. 289-446,
-“Gleanings in the Green Isle,” a series of letters written in 1846 to <span class="smcap">Dolman’s</span>,
-a London Catholic magazine, which deals with Irish country life, and are
-interspersed with stories; (<i>d</i>) Pp. 493-552, Poems.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>KEIGHTLEY, Sir Samuel R.</b> B. Belfast, 1859. Son of S. Keightley, of
-Bangor, Co. Down. Ed. Queen’s Coll., Belfast. Contested Antrim as
-Indep. Unionist (1903), and S. Derry as Liberal (1910). Member of
-Senate of Queen’s Univ. Resides in Lisburn, Co. Antrim. Other
-works:—<i>A King’s Daughter</i>, <i>The Cavaliers</i>, <i>Heronford</i>, &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE CRIMSON SIGN. Pp. 189. (<i>Hutchinson</i>). 6<i>s.</i>, and 6<i>d.</i>
-(N.Y.: <i>Harper</i>). 1.50. [1894].</p>
-
-<p>Adventures of a Mr. Gervase Orme, “sometime lieutenant in Mountjoy’s
-(Williamite) regiment of foot,” previous to and during the siege of Derry.
-The story is told with great verve, and is full of romantic and exciting adventure.
-There is little or no discussion of politics, and no bitter partisan
-feeling.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_126"></a>[126]</span></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE LAST RECRUIT OF CLARE’S. (<i>Hutchinson</i>). (N.Y.:
-<i>Harper</i>). 1.50. [1897]. 1908.</p>
-
-<p>A stirring and exciting story of the Irish Brigade in Jacobite days, told in
-bold, dashing style. Strong pro-Jacobite feeling. Part of the story takes
-place at Kilmallock, Co. Limerick, the rest on the Continent—Tournay,
-Fontenoy, &amp;c. Madame de Pompadour is one of the historical personages.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE PIKEMEN. Pp. viii + 311. Well illustrated. (<i>Hutchinson</i>).
-6<i>s.</i> 1903.</p>
-
-<p>The supposed “narrative of Rev. Patrick Stirling, <span class="allsmcap">M.A.</span>, of Drenton, Sangamon
-Co., Ill., U.S.A., formerly of Ardkeen, Co. Down,” telling his experiences
-in the Ards of Down (district between Strangford Lough and the sea) during the
-rising. Presbyterian-Nationalist bias. Strong character study. Faithful
-descriptions of scenery. The study of the Government spy is especially
-noteworthy.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ A BEGGAR ON HORSEBACK. Pp. 319. (<i>Long</i>). 1906.</p>
-
-<p>A swaggering young bravo—a faint imitation of Barry Lyndon—tells his
-adventures in Dublin and on the Continent in the days of the drinking,
-gambling, out-at-elbows squireens (end of eighteenth century). The hero
-is thus described:—“I should like to have seen the man who at cards,
-drinking punch, riding or selling a horse, deludhering a woman, or winging
-his man had any advantage of Rody Blake” (p. 12). A facetious, swashbuckler
-tone is adopted throughout.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ RODY BLAKE.</p>
-
-<p>The preceding book seems to have been publ. also under this title, or
-possibly this is a sequel, but I failed to come across it, in spite of much research.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>KELLY, Eleanor F.</b> Resides in Dublin. She is a constant contributor
-to Catholic periodicals here and in the States.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ BLIND MAUREEN; and other Stories. Pp. 160. (<i>Washbourne</i>).
-2<i>s.</i> <i>n.d.</i> (1913).</p>
-
-<p>Ten short stories reprinted from <span class="smcap">The Catholic Fireside</span>, and other
-Catholic magazines. High moral tone, characterisation good, dialogue
-(often in dialect) natural. St. Antony plays a prominent part. “The
-Fate of the Priest Hunter” is a tale of 18th century persecution in Ireland.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ OUR LADY INTERCEDES. Pp. 210. (<i>Washbourne</i>). 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>
-1913.</p>
-
-<p>Twelve stories, several of which are Irish, devoted to showing the care of
-the Blessed Virgin for those who invoke her. One relates to Cromwellian
-times, but for the most part the stories relate to the present time.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE THREE REQUESTS; and other Stories. Pp. 192. (<i>Duffy</i>).
-3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> 1914.</p>
-
-<p>Twelve little stories, Irish in subject. The interest of the story is always
-quite subordinate to the religious and moral interest. The tales deal with
-answers to prayer (two of them are about prayers to St. Antony), the evils
-of emigration, and of proselytism, the reward of charity, &amp;c., one is a ghost-story.
-They are told with great simplicity.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>KELLY, Peter Burrowes.</b> 1811-1883. B. Stradbally, Queen’s Co. Took
-an active part in politics, and was a noted speaker. Died in Dublin.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE MANOR OF GLENMORE; or, The Irish Peasant. Three Vols.
-(<span class="smcap">London</span>: <i>Ed. Bull</i>). 1839.</p>
-
-<p>Scene: Stradbally, in the Queen’s County. Most of the personages of the
-tale and many of its incidents are real. The country is very well described;<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_127"></a>[127]</span>
-the book has many interesting incidents; peasant life is pictured with
-knowledge and sympathy. The last year of the agitation for Catholic
-Emancipation is the period dealt with. The famous Clare election is described,
-and there is a character sketch of Dr. Doyle (“J.K.L.”). It criticised
-strongly the Protestant ascendancy and landlord party, dwells upon the doings
-of Orangemen and of Whiteboys, and the attempts to reconcile the two
-factions.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>KELLY, William Patrick.</b> B. 1848. Son of John Kelly, of Mount Brandon,
-Graigue, Co. Kilkenny. Ed. Clongowes Wood College and R.M.A.
-Woolwich. Late R. Artillery. Lives in Harrogate. Has written
-seven or eight other stories, chiefly semi-historical adventure stories.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ SCHOOLBOYS THREE. Pp. 320. (<i>Routledge</i>). 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> Eight
-illustr. (good). [1895]. Several new eds.</p>
-
-<p>A story of school-boy life at Clongowes Wood College in the early ’sixties,
-told in a pleasant and picturesque style, and, almost all through, with frank
-fidelity to reality. It is full of lively incident. Was highly praised by the
-leading literary reviews.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>[KEMBLE, Ann]; “Ann of Swansea.”</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ GERALD FITZGERALD; an Irish Tale. Five Vols (!). (<span class="smcap">London</span>:
-<i>Newman</i>). 1831.</p>
-
-<p>Gerald, whose Catholic wife has deserted him, lives in an old half-ruined
-family castle, near Armagh. The book is an interminable (1698 pp.) series
-of petty scandals and flirtations, gossip, and matchmaking among the titled
-persons living in “Doneraile Castle,” and “Lisburn Abbey.” The insipid
-affairs of an out-of-date <i>beau monde</i>. This Author also wrote <i>Uncle Peregrine’s
-Heiress</i>, <i>Conviction</i>, <i>Guilty or not Guilty</i>, and many other stories.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>KENNEDY, Patrick; “Harry Whitney.”</b> Born in Co. Wexford, 1801. In
-1823 he removed to Dublin, and for the greater part of his life he kept
-a bookshop in Anglesea Street. His sketches of Irish rural life as he
-had known it are told with spirit, and with a kind of photographic literalness
-and exactness. They are very free from anything objectionable.
-Dr. Douglas Hyde, speaking of his folk-lore, says that “many of his
-stories appear to be the detritus of genuine Gaelic folk-stories filtered
-through an English idiom and much impaired and stunted in the process.
-He appears, however, not to have adulterated them very much.” In
-the Pref. to <i>Evenings in the Duffrey</i> he says (and the remarks apply to his
-other books), “On all other points [viz., than the matrimonial fortunes
-of his hero and heroine] there is not a fictitious character, nor incident
-in the mere narrative, nor legend related, nor ballad sung, which was
-not current in the country half a century since. The fireside discussions
-were really held, and the extraordinary fishing and hunting adventures
-detailed, as here set down.” He died in 1873.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ LEGENDS OF MOUNT LEINSTER. Pp. 283. 16mo. (<i>Dublin</i>).
-1855.</p>
-
-<p>Title of a miscellany published under pseudonym of “Harry Whitney.”
-Contains: “Three Months in Kildare Place,” “Bantry and Duffrey
-Traditions,” “The Library in Patrick Street”; in all nine sketches, four of
-which are stories supposed to be told at fireside of Wexford farm-house.
-Careful picture of manners and customs. No. 1 is a story of the time of
-Brian, <i>c.</i> 1001 A.D. 3. A love-tale of the days of Sarsfield. 6. Penal days,
-a hunted priest.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ FICTIONS OF OUR FOREFATHERS. 1859.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_128"></a>[128]</span></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ LEGENDARY FICTIONS OF THE IRISH CELTS. (<i>Macmillan</i>).
-[1866]. Several eds. since.</p>
-
-<p>Over 100 stories, given, for the most part, “as they were received from
-the story-tellers with whom our youth was familiar.” They are derived from
-the English-speaking peasantry of County Wexford. They include
-“Household Stories” (wild and wonderful adventures), “Legends of the
-Good People” or fairies, witchcraft, sorcery, ghosts and fetches, Ossianic,
-&amp;c., legends, and “Legends of the Celtic Saints.” All these are in this book
-published for the first time. All through there is an interesting running
-comment, introductory and connective. The book is hardly suitable for
-children.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE BANKS OF THE BORO. Pp. 362. (<i>M’Glashan &amp; Gill</i>). 2<i>s.</i>
-[1867]. New ed., 1875, &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p>Into the tissue of a pleasant and touching story of quiet country life in
-North-west Wexford the Author has woven a collection of tales, ballads, and
-legends, some of which are of high merit. They contain a wealth of information
-on local customs and traditions. Incidentally, Irish peasant character
-is truthfully painted in all its phases—grave, gay, humorous, and grotesque.
-The moral standard is very high throughout. There are many vivid descriptions
-of scenery. The whole is told in a simple, pleasant, genial style. The
-Author tells us that the chief incidents, circumstances, and fireside conferences
-mentioned in the book really occurred.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ EVENINGS IN THE DUFFREY. Pp. 396. (<i>M’Glashan &amp; Gill</i>). 2<i>s.</i>
-1869.</p>
-
-<p>A kind of sequel to the <i>Banks of the Boro</i>. The adventures of the hero,
-Edward O’Brien, are continued, the story being, as before, interspersed with
-legends and ballads. It has the same good qualities as the earlier book,
-the tone being again thoroughly healthy.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE FIRESIDE STORIES OF IRELAND. Pp. 162. 32mo.
-(<i>M’Glashan &amp; Gill</i>). 1<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> 1870.</p>
-
-<p>“A good book” (Douglas Hyde in <i>Beside the Fire</i>). Fifty tales, chiefly
-fairy and folk-lore, but of very varied types, full of local colour and interest.
-Many of them are of the kind found in the folk-tales of all nations, but have
-an unmistakably Irish (not stage-Irish) savour. Moreover, they are told
-with vivacity, quaintness, and sly humour. A good selection, suitable for
-readers of any age or class.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE BARDIC STORIES OF IRELAND. Pp. 227. (<i>M’Glashan &amp;
-Gill</i>). 2<i>s.</i> [1871].</p>
-
-<p>Fifty-eight stories, founded, some on pagan myth, others on historical
-traditions of great families. All were originally found in poetic form, and
-many of them retain much of their poetic qualities. Many are told with a
-singular humorous naïveté. In all the language is simple but very adequate
-and dignified. They are free from anything that would make them unsuitable
-for the young.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE BOOK OF MODERN IRISH ANECDOTES. Pp. 192. 12mo.
-New ed. (<i>Gill</i>). 6<i>d.</i> Has passed through several editions and is still
-in print. 1913.</p>
-
-<p>“Has no higher ambition than that of agreeably occupying a leisure hour.”—(<i>Pref.</i>).
-“It has entered into the present writer’s purpose to draw the
-attention of his readers to the principal events in the history of his country
-since the Revolution of 1691.”—(<i>Pref.</i>). Anecdotes of Swift, Sheridan,
-Curran, Moore, O’Connell, &amp;c. Stories of duelling, gaming, hunting, shooting,
-acting, electioneering, drinking. Taken from such Authors as R. R. Madden,
-W. J. Fitzpatrick, Sir John Gilbert, Sir Jonah Barrington, Hon. Edward
-Walsh, &amp;c., &amp;c. Free from coarseness, and practically free from the Stage-Irishman.
-In the new ed. there are about 200 proverbs transl. from the
-Irish and an Index.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_129"></a>[129]</span></p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>KENNEDY, Rev. John J.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ CARRIGMORE; or, Light and Shade in West Kerry. Pp. 128. (<i>Office
-of Chronicle</i>: <span class="smcap">Wangaratta</span>). 1909.</p>
-
-<p class="author" id="KENNY"><b>KENNY, Mrs. Stacpoole.</b> D. of J. R. Dunne, of Ennistymon, Co. Clare,
-and wife of T. H. Kenny, of Limerick, near which city she resides.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ JACQUETTA. Pp. 227. (<i>Washbourne</i>). 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> (N.Y.: <i>Benziger</i>).
-0.75. 1910.</p>
-
-<p>Scene: Kilrush, Co. Clare, and London. The story of an Irish-Australian
-girl who comes to live in Ireland with her uncle, Dr. Desmond. She had
-contracted an unhappy marriage, but believed her husband dead. The
-story tells how she finds him, and the fate that overtakes him. There is also
-the love-story of Dr. Desmond. In the end all is well with uncle and niece.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ LOVE IS LIFE. Pp. 317. (<i>Greening</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1910.</p>
-
-<p>The heroine, Iseult Dymphna Macnamara, whose mother was French,
-lives at the Court of Louis XIV. at the time when James II. held his exiled
-Court at St. Germain. She loves the son of Sarsfield, but is forced by circumstances
-into a loveless marriage with a noble and chivalrous Frenchman, St.
-Amand, whom the king had chosen for her. St. Amand goes off to the wars
-(Steenkirk and Landen), and meantime the king pursues Iseult with amorous
-attentions. To avoid them she flies to Ireland. Here we get a glimpse of
-the Penal days in Co. Clare. All comes right when Iseult comes to love her
-husband. Brightly and entertainingly told.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ CARROW OF CARROWDUFF. Pp. 331. (<i>Greening</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1911.</p>
-
-<p>Scene: West County (obviously Clare). The hero, son of an unpopular
-landlord, whose cattle have been houghed and otherwise maimed, goes, in
-spite of warnings, to a wake among the tenantry. This wake is described as
-a scene of savagery. On his return he is “shot at” and wounded, and
-there comes to nurse him a young nun with whom, before her entrance into
-religious life, he had fallen in love. It turns out that she had entered the
-convent in a moment of pique. The hero accordingly proposes, and they
-are married by the death-bed of his father, who has fallen a victim to the
-League.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE KING’S KISS. Pp. 288. (<i>Digby, Long</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1912.</p>
-
-<p>A kind of sequel to <i>Love is Life</i>. How Iseult, who tells the story, buys the
-life of her cousin Harry Macnamara by a kiss given to Louis XIV. This,
-though innocent on her part, was the beginning of her troubles. Her enraged
-husband rides post-haste to Versailles to tell Louis what he thinks of him.
-St. Armand disappears, and Iseult almost dies of fever; but through a whole
-series of plots and court intrigues and exciting adventures things right themselves
-at last. James II., the Duchess of Tyrconnell, and many other
-historical persons play a part in the romance.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ OUR OWN COUNTRY. Pp. 142. (<i>Duffy</i>). 2<i>s.</i> 1913.</p>
-
-<p>Sequel to <i>Carrow of Carrowduff</i>, with same personages. Several interwoven
-love stories—in particular that of an English Protestant gentleman (converted
-in the course of the tale) with Mrs. Monsel, a widow, mother-in-law to Corona
-Carrow, who tells part of the story. The <i>dénouement</i> has a deep religious
-interest, which indeed is the chief interest of the whole book.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ DAFFODIL’S LOVE AFFAIRS. Pp. 320. (<i>Holden &amp; Hardingham</i>).
-6<i>s.</i> 1913.</p>
-
-<p>A story of life among gentlefolk. Scene: near Carlingford and in London.
-D.’s mother, of a good but impoverished family, has five daughters on her
-hands, and the way in which these are married off, partly owing to her matchmaking
-exertions, forms the burden of the story. For the most part it is
-a light and vivacious story of social life and flirtations, but an element of
-tragedy is introduced in one of the subsidiary love-stories, that of D.’s sister
-Kit, who was thus punished for a flirtation carried on with Sir Dermot de
-Courcy while his wife was still alive.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_130"></a>[130]</span></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ MARY: A Romance of West County. Pp. 273. (<i>Washbourne</i>). 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>
-1915.</p>
-
-<p>On leaving her convent school in Dublin, Mary goes home to realise for
-the first time that her father not only cares little for her but dislikes her
-(her birth had cost her mother’s life). But in the long run she wins his love.
-There is a double love story—her own and that of her madcap, slangy, tomboy
-cousin Benigna. The Author is persistently vivacious and sprightly (calling
-in slang to her assistance) in a way that might irritate. There is no repose
-or quiet beauty about the style.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>KENNY, Louise.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE RED-HAIRED WOMAN: Her Autobiography. Pp. 400.
-(<i>Murray</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1905.</p>
-
-<p>The interest centres in an old county family of Thomond, the O’Currys.
-Characters typical of various conditions of life in Ireland: an unpopular,
-police-protected landlord, a landowner with an encumbered estate, an upstart
-usurer, faithful retainers, evicted tenants, etc. (<i>N.I.R.</i>, Dec., 1905).</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>KENNY, M. L.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE FORTUNES OF MAURICE CRONIN. Three Vols. (<i>Tinsley</i>).
-1875.</p>
-
-<p>A very long novel with a very complicated plot and without a trace of
-brightness or of humour. The plot turns chiefly on a case of mistaken identity.
-Maurice returns from soldiering in India to find that he is really heir to the
-estates of the Grace family, and can marry Mary Grace, his cousin, whom
-his putative mother had thought to be his sister. No national interest.
-Date 184-. Places such as Deverell’s Chase, Desmond’s Tower, Rathcroghan,
-are mentioned.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>KERR, Eliza.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ SLIEVE BLOOM. Pp. 153. (<i>Wesleyan Conference Office</i>). Three illustr.
-1881.</p>
-
-<p>A little non-controversial Methodist story for young people. Tells (in the
-present tense throughout) how May and Willie lived a very poor life with
-their maternal grandmother, but by the coming of their father’s mother
-were raised to better circumstances. Nice descriptions of Mountmellick,
-the Bog of Allen, and Slieve Bloom.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ KILKEE. Pp. 193. (<i>Wesleyan Methodist School Union</i>). Third ed.
-1885.</p>
-
-<p>A moral and religious (but not controversial) tale. Adventures of two
-boys near the Pollock Hole Rocks, Kilkee, the scenery around which is well
-described. On all occasions the boys quote Scripture texts, and the piety of
-the personages concerned is constantly insisted on.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ KEENA KARMODY, &amp;c.: A Tale. Pp. 192. (<i>Wesleyan Methodist
-Sunday School Union</i>). 1887.</p>
-
-<p>Also <i>The Golden City</i>, <i>Hazel Haldene</i>, and four or five others.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>KETTLE, Rosa Mackenzie.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ ROSE, SHAMROCK, AND THISTLE. Pp. 286. (<i>Fisher, Unwin</i>).
-6<i>s.</i> 1893.</p>
-
-<p>“A Story of two Border Towers.” Rhoda Carysfort, an Irish girl, comes
-to live with her English cousins, and eventually marries a Scotch laird. Except
-for the heroine’s nationality there is nothing Irish about the story, though
-the Author’s sympathies are with Ireland. The tone is very “respectable”
-and somewhat prim. It seems intended as a book of instruction for girls.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_131"></a>[131]</span></p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>KICKHAM, Charles J.</b> B. Mullinahone, Co. Tipperary, 1828. Began early
-to write for nationalist papers—<span class="smcap">The Nation</span>, <span class="smcap">The Celt</span>, <span class="smcap">The Irishman</span>,
-<span class="smcap">The Irish People</span>. Most of his contributions were verse, but to <span class="smcap">The
-Shamrock</span> he contributed his chief novels. He threw himself into
-the Fenian movement, was arrested along with John O’Leary, and
-sentenced to fourteen years’ penal servitude. His health never recovered
-from this period of prison. He died in 1882 at Blackrock, near Dublin.
-See the short <i>Life</i> by J. J. Healy, publ. 1915 by Messrs. Duffy. Besides
-the novels mentioned below, Kickham wrote the following short stories:—“Poor
-Mary Maher” (a sad tale of ’98); “Never Give Up,” “Annie
-O’Brien,” “Joe Lonergan’s Trip to the Lower Regions” (Irish life in
-the fifties, dealing largely with land troubles); “White Humphrey of
-the Grange: A Glimpse of Tipperary fifty years ago”; “Elsie Dhuv”
-(a story of ’98, full of incident, much of it humorous). These tales have
-been collected for publication in the near future by Mr. William Murphy,
-of Blackrock. K. knew thoroughly and loved intensely his own place
-and people. He had wonderful powers of observation and a great fund
-of quiet humour.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ SALLY CAVANAGH. (<i>Duffy</i>). 2<i>s.</i> [1869]. (N.Y.: <i>Benziger</i>). 0.75.
-New ed. 1902.</p>
-
-<p>Kickham’s first story. Contains in germ all the great qualities of <i>Knocknagow</i>.
-We feel all through that it is the work of a man of warm, tender,
-homely heart—a man born and bred one of the people about whom he writes.
-It is a simple and natural tale of love among the small farmer class. Sally
-Cavanagh’s tragedy is due to the combined evils of landlordism and emigration.
-Some of the saddest aspects of the latter are dwelt upon. The book is quite
-free from declamation and moralizing, the events being left to tell their own
-sad tale. Perhaps the noblest characters in the book are the Protestant
-Mr. and Mrs. Hazlitt. There is no trace of religious bigotry. There are
-touches of humour, too—for example, the love affairs of Mr. Mooney and the
-inimitable scene between Shawn Gow and his wife.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ KNOCKNAGOW. Pp. 628. (<i>Duffy</i>). 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> [1879]. Upwards of 14 eds.
-since. (N.Y.: <i>Benziger</i>). 1.25.</p>
-
-<p>One of the greatest, if not the greatest, of all Irish novels. Yet it is not
-so much a novel as a series of pictures of life in a Tipperary village. We are
-introduced to every one of its inhabitants, and learn to love them nearly all
-before the end. Everything in the book had been not only seen from without
-but <i>lived</i> by the Author. It is full of exquisite little humorous and pathetic
-traits. The description of the details of peasant life is quite photographic
-in fidelity, yet not wearisome. There is the closest observation of human
-nature and of individual peculiarities. It is realism of the best kind. The
-incidents related and some of the discussions throw much light on the Land
-Question. The Author does not, however, lecture or rant on the subject.
-Occasionally there are tracts of middle-class conversation that would, I
-believe, be dull for most readers.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ FOR THE OLD LAND. Pp. 384. (<i>Gill</i>). 2<i>s.</i> [1886]. New ed.
-1914. (N.Y.: <i>Benziger</i>). 0.75.</p>
-
-<p>Main theme: the fortunes and the sufferings of an Irish family of small
-farmers under the old land system. The peasant’s love of home and the
-bitter sadness of emigration are brought out in the unfolding of the tale. All
-through there runs a love-tale told with the Author’s usual restraint, simplicity,
-and delicate analysis of motive. There is a humorous element, too,
-amusing bailiffs and policemen furnishing much of it. Constable Sproule
-driving home the pigs is capitally done. Rody Flynn is a grand old character,
-evidently sketched from life.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE PIG-DRIVING PEELERS.</p>
-
-<p>Appears in one of the “Knickerbocker Nuggets,” entitled “Representative
-Irish Tales.” Compiled, with Introd. and notes by W. B. Yeats. (N.Y.:
-<i>Putnam</i>). Two Vols. <i>n.d.</i></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_132"></a>[132]</span></p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>KING, Richard Ashe; “Basil,” “Desmond O’Brien.”</b> The Author is (1914)
-Staff Extension Lecturer of Oxford and London Universities.
-Has contributed a good deal to the <span class="smcap">Cornhill</span> and to the <span class="smcap">Pall Mall
-Gazette</span>, and is reviewer for <span class="smcap">Truth</span>. Has written, besides the books
-noticed here, <i>Love the Debt</i>, <i>A Drawn Game</i>, <i>A Coquette’s Conquest</i>, and
-many others. Also a life of Swift. B. Co. Clare. Ed. at Ennis Coll.
-and T.C.D. He gave up in the eighties his living in the Church of
-England and began contributing to <span class="smcap">Freeman’s Journal</span>, <span class="smcap">Truth</span>, &amp;c.
-“He is,” says W. P. Ryan in his <i>The Irish Literary Revival</i>, “intensely
-Celtic, but too candid to overlook the Celt’s failings.” For some time
-in the eighties he lived in Blackrock, Co. Dublin. See Mrs. Hinkson’s
-<i>Reminiscences of Twenty-five Years</i>, pp. 282-3.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE WEARING OF THE GREEN. Pp. 299. (<i>Chatto &amp; Windus</i>).
-2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> 1886.</p>
-
-<p>A story of the course of true love, in which the lovers are long kept apart
-by many untoward happenings. The writer’s sympathies and the characters
-of his story are Protestant, yet there is no hostility to Catholics, and one of
-the pleasantest characters in the book is Father Mac. One of the minor
-incidents of the story is connected with the Fenian conspiracy. The chief
-interest of the book lies, perhaps, in the drawing of the lesser characters. In
-his delineation of all the English personages the Author is unsparingly caustic.
-The book is brightly written; the conversation particularly good; there is
-a vein of sarcasm throughout, and plenty of incident. The author evidently
-sympathises with Irish grievances, and is proud of his country.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ BELL BARRY. (<i>Chatto</i>). 2<i>s.</i> 1891.</p>
-
-<p>“An exciting story, laid in I., then in Liverpool, and in part aboard a liner.
-The Irish servants and other minor characters ... provide a good deal
-of humorous talk.”—(<i>Baker</i>).</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ A GERALDINE. Two Vols. 1893. (<i>Ward &amp; Downey</i>).</p>
-
-<p>A story of almost contemporary life, largely concerned with land troubles
-in Ireland. The heroine, a very attractive character and a woman of great
-resourcefulness, is the daughter of a rack-renting squireen, and is a contrast
-to the remainder of the family, which is weak, idle, and selfish. Other unpleasant
-characters are a villainous attorney and a bigoted and pedantic
-clergyman. Some of the duties which the R.I.C. have to perform are severely
-commented upon. The Author takes the popular side. The incidents are
-related with spirit and humour.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>KING, Toler.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ ROSE O’CONNOR: A Story of the Day. Pp. 173. (<span class="smcap">Chicago</span>:
-<i>Sumner</i>). Second ed. 1881.</p>
-
-<p>Rose O’C. and Tim Brady love each other. Tim has to go to America.
-Meanwhile the famine years come in Ireland. Rose’s family is reduced to
-extremities, and she is compelled to promise marriage to Tim’s rival in order
-to save it. But Tim returns in the nick of time. Locality not indicated.
-Purpose, to contrast the tyranny of landlordism with the refinement and
-gentleness of the Irish peasantry. The tone is Catholic, but not aggressively
-so.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>KINGSTON, W. H. G.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ PETER THE WHALER. Pp. 252. (<i>Blackie: Library of Famous
-Books</i>). 1<i>s.</i> Full size. Cloth. One Illustr. At present in print.</p>
-
-<p>Peter associates with low company in his Irish home and gets into such
-scrapes that he has to be sent to sea. The rest is a fine series of adventures
-such as boys love. Here and there a good moral lesson is slipped in, not too
-obtrusively. K. was a great writer for boys. Allibone enumerates 161 of
-his works.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_133"></a>[133]</span></p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>KNOWLES, Richard Brinsley.</b> 1820-1882. B. Glasgow. Son of the dramatist,
-James Sheridan Knowles, a Cork man who ended as a Baptist preacher.
-Was at first a barrister, but took up journalism as a profession. In 1849
-he became a Catholic. In 1853 <i>sq.</i> ed. of <span class="smcap">Illustrated London Magazine</span>.
-<i>Glencoonoge</i> originally appeared as a serial in the <span class="smcap">Month</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ GLENCOONOGE. Three Vols. (<i>Blackwood</i>). 1891.</p>
-
-<p>Three threads of romance skilfully intertwined, the chief of which is the
-love story of an English girl of gentle birth and a splendid young Irish peasant.
-The scene is an inn in a valley somewhere on the South-west coast. The
-valley as described bears a strong resemblance to Glengarriff. The story
-is eminently sane and natural, reading like a record of real events. It is
-full of human interest, and is written in a style unaffected yet charmingly
-literary. There are some good portraits—the Protestant Rector, the lovable
-Father John, Conn Houlahan, the hero, Old Mr. Jardine, the O’Doherty.
-The description of an Irish Sunday is one of the most beautiful in fiction.
-The book shows understanding sympathy for Irish characteristics and ideals.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>[KNOX, Rev. J. Spencer]; “An Irish Clergyman.”</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ PASTORAL ANNALS. Pp. 397. (<span class="smcap">London</span>: <i>Seeley</i>). [1840]. Second
-ed., 1841.</p>
-
-<p>Contents:—“The Sick Parish,” “The First Death,” “The Sermon,”
-“The Warning,” “The Private Still,” “The Pluralist,” “The Inn,” “The
-School,” “Ribbonism” (a very unfavourable picture of bailiffs, process-servers.
-Very fair towards Catholics); “The Night,” “The Starving Family,”
-“The Birth,” “The Soup Shop” (Famine of 1817), “Death by Starvation,”
-“The Confessional” (a plea for private confession), “Family
-Worship,” “Tithe Setting,” “Lough Derg” (facetious in tone. Lough
-D. pilgrimage = “a scene of mockery and dissoluteness”). A series of
-studies—for the most part careful and sympathetic—of peasant life as
-seen by a liberal-minded and kindly Protestant Rector. The part of
-Ireland dealt with would appear to be Donegal.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>“LAFFAN, May,”</b> <i>see</i> <a href="#HARTLEY"><b>HARTLEY</b></a>.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>LALOR, Desmond.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ LOUGHBAR. Pp. 252. (<i>Stockwell</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1914.</p>
-
-<p>Adventures, not of a very remarkable kind, of a young doctor in the W.
-of Ireland, locality indefinite. He is presented with a practice, and a furnished
-house. There is a ghost, but he is not a real one, and rather commonplace.
-The whole thing is very <i>couleur de rose</i>, everybody being nicely married off,
-and the descriptions do not give the impression of things seen.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>LANE, Elinor Macartney.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ KATRINE. (<i>Harper</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1909.</p>
-
-<p>“An Irish-American love-story with scenes of planters’ life in South
-Carolina. The Authoress has a keen appreciation of the psychology of the
-Irish character, and in her portrayal of Dermott MacDermott and Katrine
-Dulany, she successfully indicates the lights and shades of that puzzling
-combination of mysticism and practicality.”—(<span class="smcap">Irish Times</span>).</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>LANGBRIDGE, Rev. Frederick.</b> Rector of St. John’s, Limerick. Chaplain
-district asylum. B. Birmingham, 1849. Ed. there, and at Oxford.
-D.Litt., T.C.D., 1907. Has publ. many volumes of poetry, and some
-plays.—(<span class="smcap">Who’s Who</span>).</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ MISS HONORIA. Pp. 216. (<span class="smcap">Warne</span>: <i>Tavistock Library</i>). 1894.</p>
-
-<p>Sub-t.: “A tale of a remote corner of Ireland,” viz., “Carrowkeel,” a
-seaside village. Miss Honoria, a woman of 32, full of piety and zeal, the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_134"></a>[134]</span>
-prop of the parish, has never known love till she meets Sebert, to whom she
-becomes engaged, Sebert writes beautiful letters from London. Miss H.
-goes there to find Sebert making love to her niece “Daisy.” H. stands
-aside, and S. marries Daisy. They return to Ireland, where S. makes love
-to a poor girl. She is drowned. H. dies, and S. becomes an East End
-missionary. There is much sentiment. Some pretty descriptions of
-scenery, and some good minor characters—“Kevin Kennedy” and “Corney
-the Post.”</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE CALLING OF THE WEIR. Pp. 304. (Large print). (<i>Digby,
-Long</i>). 1902.</p>
-
-<p>A love story of Protestant middle classes. Scene: near the Shannon
-Weir and Falls of Donass, Co. Limerick. Two girls become engaged to two
-men rather through force of circumstances than for love. Problem: are the
-circumstances such as to justify Mary in marrying the man she does not love.
-In a strange way it comes about that each girl marries the other’s fiancé,
-and finds happiness. Not without improbabilities, but lively and piquant
-in style. Irish flavour and humour provided by Mrs. Mack, the housekeeper,
-and Constable Keogh. By same Author: <i>The Dreams of Dania</i>,
-<i>Love has no Pity</i>, &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ MACK THE MISER. Pp. 125. (<i>Elliott Stock</i>). 1907.</p>
-
-<p>A tale of middle class Protestant life in Limerick, turning on the vindication
-of the supposed miser’s character by a young girl. The tendency of the book
-is moral and religious.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>LANGBRIDGE, Rosamond.</b> Dau. of preceding. B. Glenalla, Donegal.
-Brought up and ed. privately in Limerick. Has contributed short
-stories and articles to the <span class="smcap">Manchester Guardian</span> and to other periodicals.
-Her attitude towards Ireland has been expressed in a fine passage worthy
-to be quoted. “Nationalist by sympathy and inclination, but not by
-contact or association, and belonging to no particular party or clique she
-[the Author] believes in Ireland as the Land of Spiritual Happiness;
-as the Land which has kept itself innocent, religious, and vividly individualistic,
-in face of the wave of undistinguishable sameness which is
-engulfing all national idiosyncrasy, and tends towards becoming the
-Esperanto of the soul. Ireland she believes in as the Child-Soul amongst
-nations, not to be deceived or bought, but perceiving and desiring with
-incorruptible ingenuousness those things which alone make individual,
-as well as national life worth while: Faith and Freedom before Subordination
-and Sophistication, and the Traffic of the Heart to the Traffic
-of the Mart.” Their necessary brevity must give to the following notes
-an impression of want of sympathy. They scarcely do full justice to all
-the qualities of the books.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE FLAME AND FLOOD. Pp. xii. + 339. (<i>Fisher, Unwin</i>;
-<i>First Novel Library</i>). 1903.</p>
-
-<p>A love-story. The lovers marry other people <i>not</i> for love. It is only
-the presence of a child that prevents the heroine from leaving her husband for
-her lover. There are accordingly curious situations, but nothing positively
-immoral in the tone. The story is well constructed. Scene: partly in
-Ireland, partly in England.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE THIRD EXPERIMENT. Pp. 300. (<i>Fisher, Unwin</i>). 1904.</p>
-
-<p>The scene is laid amid very low class society in an Irish town. The
-interest centres in a young girl who is reared on charity, but finally marries a
-fairly respectable tradesman. The personages of the story seem to be
-Protestants, but religion is scarcely touched on. The brogue is very thick,
-but the stage Irishman humour is absent. There is a persistent attempt to
-study types and characters.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_135"></a>[135]</span></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ AMBUSH OF YOUNG DAYS. Pp. vii. + 344. (<i>Duckworth</i>). 1906.</p>
-
-<p>The scene is laid in a temperance hotel. The central character is a young
-girl, daughter of proprietor, who is given to telling out the truth in a most
-unnecessary and inconvenient manner. The lodgers come prominently
-into the story, and the heroine ends by marrying one of them.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE STARS BEYOND. Pp. vii. + 375. (<i>Nash</i>). 1907.</p>
-
-<p>A problem novel dealing with an ill-assorted marriage—the wife’s name
-(symbolic) is “Vérité,” the husband’s “Virtue”; hence the clash. Religion
-enters largely into the book. Types of Irish Protestant clergy. The writer’s
-sympathy seems to waver between Catholicism and Protestantism, but
-the heroine rejects both. The servants’ talk in conventional brogue.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ IMPERIAL RICHENDA. Pp. 313. (<i>Alston Rivers</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1908.</p>
-
-<p>Scene: a small watering-place near Dublin. A fantastic comedy, somewhat
-vulgar in places, but on the whole amusing, abounding as it does in
-bright dialogue, and in absurdly comical situations. Some shrewd strokes
-of satire are aimed at Dublin Society, and there are piquant sayings on other
-subjects. The central figure is a young lady who takes a situation as waitress
-in a small hotel. Her character is so equivocal that the book cannot be
-recommended for general reading.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>LARMINIE, William. B.</b> 1849, in Co. Mayo. D. at Bray, 1900. Was many
-years in the Civil Service. He is better known as a poet, Author of
-<i>Glanlua</i> and <i>Fand</i>, than as a folk-lorist.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ WEST IRISH FOLK-TALES AND ROMANCES. Pp. xxvi. + 258.
-(<i>Elliot Stock</i>). 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> 1898.</p>
-
-<p>Taken down, by the editor, between 1884 and 1898, word for word in Irish
-from peasants in Galway (Renvyle), Mayo (Achill), and Donegal (Glencolumbkille
-and Malinmore), and translated literally. Interesting introduction
-on the origin and sources of folk-lore. At the end are some remarks
-on phonetics, which do not show a deep knowledge of the Irish system of
-orthography, and specimens of the tales in Irish written phonetically. The
-book is primarily for folk-lorists and some naturalistic expressions render it
-unsuitable reading for the young. There are eighteen stories in all.</p>
-
-<p>N.B.—The Author tells us (introduction) that besides the tales in this
-book, he has in his possession many others not yet published. This collection,
-a large one, is preserved in safety, but still awaits publication.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>“LAUDERDALE, E. M.”; Mrs. Moore.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ TIVOLI. Pp. 278. (<span class="smcap">Cork</span>: <i>Guy</i>). 1886.</p>
-
-<p>A family story (landlord class) laid first at Deer Park, near Cork, afterwards
-in England, whither the family retires to be out of the Land League
-agitation. This last is referred to with evident aversion. The interest
-turns largely on a mystery of identity. The Author knows the Cork district
-well, and describes localities accurately. Her sympathies are clearly
-not nationalist. The religious attitude is one of tolerance.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>LAWLESS, Hon. Emily.</b> B. in Ireland, 1845. Eldest d. of Lord Cloncurry.
-Came to know the W. of Ireland through her associations with the
-home of her mother’s family. Her mother was a Miss Kirwan, of Castle
-Hackett, Co. Galway. <i>See</i> Miss Lawless’s <i>Traits and Confidences</i> for
-some memories of her childhood. She went a good deal among the
-people in her natural history excursions. She had wide knowledge of
-Irish history, as her volume on <i>Ireland</i> in the History of the Nations Series
-bears witness. She wrote several books besides those here noted.
-D. 1913. For a good article on her <i>see</i> <span class="smcap">Nineteenth Century</span>, July,
-1914.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_136"></a>[136]</span></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ HURRISH. Pp. 342. (<i>Methuen</i>). [1886]. 1902.</p>
-
-<p>Scene: a wild and poverty-stricken district in Clare. A view of the bad
-days of the ’eighties by one to whom the Land League stands for “lawlessness
-and crime.” The people are depicted as half-savage. The story is a gloomy
-one, full of assassinations and the other dark doings of the Land League.
-The picture it gives of an Irish mother will jar harshly on the feelings of most
-Irishmen. The Irish dialect is all but a caricature. Yet the story met
-with an immediate and extraordinary success. In a vol. publ. by Mr.
-Gladstone in 1892, <i>Special Aspects of the Irish Question</i>, he says of <i>Hurrish</i>,
-“She has made present to her readers, not as an abstract proposition, but as
-a living reality, the estrangement of the people of Ireland from the law....
-As to the why of this alienation, also, she has her answer (p. 309 of first ed.),
-‘The old long-repented sin of the stronger country was the culprit.’ She
-thinks there was a sin, a deep sin, and (so I construe her) an inveterate sin,
-but a sin now purged by repentance.”</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ WITH ESSEX IN IRELAND. Pp. 298. (<i>Methuen</i>). 6<i>s.</i> [1890].
-New ed., 1902.</p>
-
-<p>A narrative of Essex’s Irish expedition, 1599, purporting to be related by
-his private secretary. Pictures Elizabethan barbarity in warfare. It has a
-strange element of the uncanny and supernatural. Hints at the spell that
-Ireland casts over her conquerors. Written in quaint Elizabethan English
-which never lapses into modernness.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ GRANIA: the Story of an Island. (<i>Smith, Elder</i>). 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>, and 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>
-[1892].</p>
-
-<p>A sympathetic picture of life in the Aran Islands, where existence is a struggle
-against the elements. There are typical characters, such as Honor, the
-saintly and patient, with her eyes on the life beyond, and Grania, young and
-impetuous, and longing for joy as she battles with the endless privations of
-her stern lot, and the lover, Irish alike in his goodness and in his vices. The
-success of this book exceeded even that of <i>Hurrish</i>. Swinburne thought
-it “just one of the most exquisite and perfect works of genius in the language”
-(in a letter).</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ MAELCHO. Pp. 418. (<i>Methuen</i>). 1<i>s.</i> (N.Y.: <i>Appleton</i>). 1.50.
-[1895]. 1905.</p>
-
-<p>Gloomy picture of misery and devastation during the Desmond rebellion.
-An English boy escaping from a night attack finds refuge in a Connemara glen
-among the native Irish (O’Flaherties), hideous wretches of savage appearance
-and uncouth tongue. Then comes a confused account of the melodramatic
-struggles of Fitzmaurice and his wild followers against the English, noble,
-steady, and civilized. There is a vague impression throughout of an Irish
-race without ideals or religion, inevitably losing ground, moved by no impulse
-but love of strife and cringing superstition. But the cruelties of the English
-at the time are not in any way slurred over.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ TRAITS AND CONFIDENCES. Pp. 272. (<i>Methuen</i>) 6<i>s.</i> 1897.</p>
-
-<p>A volume of stories and sketches, founded for the most part on fact. Some
-are autobiographical episodes of childhood. There is an incident of ’98,
-an incident of the Land War, and two episodes of Irish history, the story of
-Geroit Mor, Earl of Kildare, and that of Art Macmurrough, told in vivid,
-romantic style without political bias. Again, there are extremely interesting
-“memories” of the Famine of 1846-7. On pages 142-150 is a remarkable
-description of Connemara. The story-telling is full of vivacity and
-picturesqueness, reminding one of French storytellers, such as Daudet. The
-book is filled from first to last with Ireland.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_137"></a>[137]</span></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE BOOK OF GILLY. Pp. 285. (<i>Smith, Elder</i>). Four illustr.
-by Leslie Brooke. 1906.</p>
-
-<p>Scene: a small island in Kenmare Bay. Gilly is an eight-year-old boy
-sent to Inishbeg for a few months by his father, Lord Magillicuddy, who is in
-India. The book makes a marvellous pen-picture of life and scenery in this
-remote corner of Ireland.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>LAWLESS, Emily, and Shan F. BULLOCK.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE RACE OF CASTLEBAR. Pp. 364. (<i>Murray</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1914.</p>
-
-<p>The story of Humbert’s invasion of Ireland in 1798, as seen by the narrator,
-an Englishman named Bunbury, fresh come to Ireland. B. is represented
-as an honest, unprejudiced, if somewhat phlegmatic personage. The historic
-events are presented with great vividness and vigour. The Authors aim at
-painstaking objectivity. On the one side the sufferings of the Catholics
-and the harsh treatment of the rebels are painted in strong colours. The
-portraits both of the rebel leaders and of the Orangemen are far from
-flattering. The narrative is largely based on that written at the time by
-Dr. Stock, the excellent Protestant Bishop of Killala. Bunbury is made to
-spend some weeks at his palace.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>LEAHY, A. H.</b> B. in Kerry in 1857. Is a Fellow of Pembroke Coll.,
-Cambridge.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE COURTSHIP OF FERB. Square 16mo. Pp. xxix. + 100.
-(<i>Nutt</i>). 2<i>s.</i> Two illustr. by Caroline Watts. 1902.</p>
-
-<p>Vol. I. of Irish Saga Library. Elegantly produced in every way. An
-English version of Professor Windisch’s German translation of an old Irish
-romance from the <i>Book of Leinster</i> (twelfth century). The verse of the
-original is translated here into English verse, the prose into prose. “In the
-verse-translations endeavour has been made to add nothing to a literal
-rendering except scansion and rhyme.”—(Pref.). The tale itself is a kind of
-preface to the great Tàin. It is not of very striking merit, but is told in
-simple, dignified language. The translation reads very well. A literal
-translation of all the poetry is given at the end.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ ANCIENT HEROIC ROMANCES OF IRELAND. Two Vols.
-Small 4to. Vol. I., pp. xxv. + 197. Vol. II. pp. ix. + 161. (<i>Nutt</i>). 8<i>s.</i> net.
-1905.</p>
-
-<p>Contents: Vol. I. “The Courtship of Etain”; “MacDatho’s Boar”;
-“The Death of the Sons of Usnach” (Leinster Version); “The Sick Bed of
-Cuchulainn”; “The Combat at the Ford” (Leinster Version). Vol. II.
-“The Courtship of Fraech”; “The Cattle Spoil of Flidias”; “The Cattle
-Spoil of Dartaid”; “The Cattle Spoil of Regamon.” The Preface deals with
-Irish Saga literature in general and in particular with the sagas here translated.
-Each piece is preceded by a special Introduction dealing with its
-sources and character. At the end of Vol. I. (pp. 163-197) are copious notes
-explaining difficulties and giving literal translations. At the end of Vol. II.
-is a portion of the Text of “The Courtship of Etain,” with interlinear translation.
-Elsewhere the Text is not inserted. The book is “an attempt to
-give to English readers some of the oldest romances, in English literary forms,
-that seem to correspond to the literary forms which were used in Irish to
-produce the same effect.”—(Pref.). The translation is partly in prose, partly
-in verse. The former is dignified and fully worthy of the subject, literal
-and yet in literary English. The verse does not seem to us to reach as high a
-level. It is very varied as to metre, yet the poetic spirit seems to be wanting.</p>
-
-<p>N.B.—The theme of “The Courtship of Etain,” though not coarse or
-prurient, is such as to render it unfit for the young.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_138"></a>[138]</span></p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>LEAHY, Walter T.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ COLUMBANUS THE CELT. Pp. 455. (<span class="smcap">Philadelphia</span>: <i>Kilner</i>).
-$1.50. 1913.</p>
-
-<p>The eventful career of the great St. Columbanus (d. 615) in the form of
-fiction. Father Leahy bases his story on the narrative of Jonas, a monk of
-Bobbio, who wrote the founder’s life about the middle of the seventh century.
-But some of the incidents (notably the incipient love story) are unhistorical.
-The Author does little to reproduce the colour and “atmosphere” of these
-distant times. He even falls into somewhat glaring anachronisms. Yet
-much is done to make the story interesting.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>LEAMY, Edmund.</b> B. Waterford, 1848, and educated there. Was for
-many years in Parliament as M.P. for Waterford and afterwards for
-Kildare. Was a kindly man and a delightful story-teller, beloved of
-children. He died in 1904.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ IRISH FAIRY TALES. Pp. xix. + 155. [1889]. New ed. (<i>Gill</i>).
-2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> With Introd. by Mr. John E. Redmond, M.P., and Note by
-T. P. G. Delightful Illustr. by George Fagan. Cr. 8vo. Handsome art
-linen binding. 1906. (N.Y.: <i>Benziger</i>). 0.90.</p>
-
-<p>Sources of inspiration: O’Curry and Joyce. Child audience aimed at
-throughout. Hence naïveté in style. At times there is a simple, sweet beauty
-of language, and some passages, especially in the last tale, of true prose
-poetry. Some useful notes at end.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE FAIRY MINSTREL OF GLENMALURE. Pp. 48. 4to.
-(<i>Duffy</i>). 1<i>s.</i> Cover design and many very pretty illustrations by C. A.
-Mills.</p>
-
-<p>Adventures of Irish children in an Irish fairyland of giants and little old
-men and little old women. Told in refined and graceful style, quite free from
-brogue, for very little children, with here and there an unobtrusive moral.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ BY THE BARROW RIVER, and Other Stories. Pp. 281. (<i>Sealy,
-Bryers</i>). 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> Portrait. 1907.</p>
-
-<p>Twenty dramatic, exciting stories, including several good ghost stories,
-tales of the exploits of the Irish Brigade, of early Ireland, of tragedy, and of
-comedy. By a capital story-teller. The book would make an excellent
-present or prize.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ GOLDEN SPEARS, and other Fairy Tales. (N.Y.: <i>Fitzgerald</i>). Cover
-design in colours by Corinne Turner. 1911.</p>
-
-<p>This is simply a new American ed. of <i>Irish Fairy Tales</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>LEE, Aubrey.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ A GENTLEMAN’S WIFE. Pp. 328. (<span class="smcap">Edinburgh</span>: <i>Morton</i>). 6<i>s.</i>
-1904.</p>
-
-<p>Part I. tells how a peasant girl is, after a week’s acquaintance, enticed
-from her home by a man who, it transpires, is already married. In Part II.
-their daughter, adopted by a saintly English clergyman, learns her parentage
-on the morrow of her engagement. She releases her betrothed; but a year
-afterwards marries a charming elderly baronet (the “gentleman” of the
-story). The first part is rather coarse. The book is witty, the plot well worked
-out, some of the characters most amusing; the end unexpected. By the
-same Author: <i>John Darker</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>LEFANU, J. Sheridan.</b> B. in Dublin, 1814. Ed. T.C.D. Contributed
-largely to <span class="smcap">Dubl. Univ. Magazine</span>, of which he became ed. and owner,
-as well as of the <span class="smcap">Dublin Evening Packet</span> and <span class="smcap">Evening Mail</span>. D. 1873.
-His chief power was in describing scenes of a mysterious or grotesque
-character, and in the manipulation of the weird and the supernatural.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_139"></a>[139]</span></p>
-
-<p>This Author also wrote <i>Uncle Silas</i>, <i>In a Glass Darkly</i>, <i>The Tenants of
-Malory</i>, <i>Willing to Die</i>, <i>The Rose and Key</i>, <i>The Evil Guest</i>, <i>The Room in
-the Dragon Volant</i>, <i>A Chronicle of Golden Friars</i>, <i>Checkmate</i>, <i>The Watcher</i>,
-<i>Wylder’s Hand</i>, <i>All in the Dark</i>, <i>Guy Deverel</i>, <i>Wyvern Mystery</i>, &amp;c. Nearly
-all published by Downey &amp; Co. Messrs. Duffy publ. a set of eight of
-his novels at 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> each.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE COCK AND ANCHOR: A Tale of Old Dublin. Pp. 358. (<i>Duffy</i>).
-3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> [1845]. 1909.</p>
-
-<p>A dreadful story of the conspiracy of a number of preternaturally wicked
-and inhuman villains to ruin a young spendthrift baronet, and to compel his
-sister to marry one of themselves. The threads of the story are woven with
-considerable skill. The tale, a gloomy one throughout, reaches its climax in
-a scene of intense and concentrated excitement. The time is the Viceroyalty
-of the Earl of Wharton, the story ending in 1710, but, except for the incidental
-introduction in one scene of Addison, Swift, and the Viceroy himself, the
-events or personages of the time are not touched upon. There are some slight
-pictures of the life of the people of the period, but of Ireland there is nothing
-unless it be the talk of some comic Irish servants.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE FORTUNES OF COL. TORLOGH O’BRIEN. Pp. 342. (<i>Routledge</i>).
-3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> Twenty-two Plates by Phiz. [<i>Anon.</i>: 1847]. Several
-other eds. 1904.</p>
-
-<p>Reckoned among the three or four best Irish historical novels. Main theme:
-the efforts of the hero, an officer in the Jacobite army, to regain possession of
-his estates in Tipperary, which are held by the Williamite, Sir Hugh Willoughby,
-whose daughter O’Brien loves. There are many minor plots and
-subordinate issues, among them the unscrupulous and nearly successful
-conspiracy against Sir Hugh. The history is not the main interest, but there
-is an account of the causes of Jacobite downfall, descriptions of James’s
-Court at Dublin, and a fine description of Aughrim. There are excellent
-pictures of scenery, and some skilful though roughly drawn character sketches.
-The action closes shortly after the Treaty of Limerick.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE HOUSE BY THE CHURCHYARD. (<i>Duffy</i>). 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> [1863].</p>
-
-<p>“A sensational story with a mystery plot based on a murder. Black
-Dillon, a sinister and ingenious ruffian, is a grim figure of melodramatic stamp.
-The setting gives scenes of social life in a colony of officers and their families
-near Dublin.”—(<i>Baker</i>, 2).—Chapelizod.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE PURCELL PAPERS. Three Vols. (<i>Bentley</i>). 1880.</p>
-
-<p>Short stories collected and ed. by Mr. A. P. Graves, with short memoir of
-the Author prefixed. For the most part they are either rollicking comic
-stories, told in broad brogue, or tales of mystery and terror in the vein of
-this Author’s longer novels. Examples of the former are:—“Billy Malowney’s
-taste of love and glory” and “The Quare Gander.” These are not meant
-as “stage-Irish” ridicule, but as pure fun. Examples of the latter type:—“Passages
-in the Secret History of an Irish Countess” and “A Chapter in
-the history of a Tyrone family.” There are also pure adventure stories,
-such as:—“An Adventure of Hardress Fitzgerald, a Royalist Captain.”
-All are admirably told. All but one are of Irish interest. They were originally
-contributed to the <span class="smcap">Dublin Univ. Magazine</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>LENIHAN, D. M.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE RED SPY: A Story of Land League Days. Pp. 236. (<i>Duffy</i>).
-3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> <i>n.d.</i> (in print).</p>
-
-<p>Appears to be largely autobiographical. A story of Land League days,
-full of incident. The interest chiefly turns on the interplay of plot and
-counterplot, in which the various parties—the moonlighters, the Castle, and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_140"></a>[140]</span>
-Parnell’s followers—figure. The centre of all the plots is McGowan, the
-“Red Spy,” a secret service agent of the Castle. The scene shifts from
-America to Ireland—Dublin, Kildare, the Kerry border (good description),
-Lisdoonvarna. Types well studied—the genial landlord Col. O’Hara; the
-sporting squire Sir Thady Monroe; the weak-minded oppressor Sir Richard
-A⸺; the American journalist, &amp;c. The “Red Spy” in real life was
-“Red Jim” McDermott.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>LEPPER, J. H.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ CAPTAIN HARRY. (<i>Sealy, Bryers</i>). 6<i>d.</i> 1908.</p>
-
-<p>“Tale of Parliamentary Wars, introducing the principal characters who
-took part on the Royalist and the Parliamentary sides.”</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ FRANK MAXWELL. (<i>Sealy, Bryers</i>). 6<i>d.</i> Paper.</p>
-
-<p>Adventures of an Irish Puritan planter’s son, who by an unlucky series
-of accidents finds himself on the royalist and Irish side just before
-the rebellion of 1641. The central incident of the story is the journey
-of one Hugh O’Donnell to Glasgow, where he meets Charles secretly,
-and is returning as Viceroy when he is wrecked, and Frank Maxwell along
-with him, on the coast of Antrim. The Irish are, on the whole, represented
-as rather bloodthirsty and barbaric, especially “Hugh O’Donnell.” A
-good “adventure” book.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>LESTER, Edward.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE SIEGE OF BODIKE: A Prophecy of Ireland’s Future. Pp.
-140. (<span class="smcap">London</span>: <i>Heywood</i>). 1886.</p>
-
-<p>A political skit written from a strongly Tory standpoint, in which the
-Author tells us how <i>he</i> would deal with the Irish question. The time is 188-,
-yet an imaginary Fenian rebellion is described. Kilkenny falls into the
-hands of the enemy, and a bomb is dropped from a balloon on Bodike, a
-village in Kilkenny. The whole is wildly improbable, but it is probably
-meant to be so.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>LETTS, W. M.</b> A granddaughter of Alexander Ferrier, Esq., of Knockmaroon
-Park, Co. Dublin, where she spent many summers. She resides
-in Blackrock, Co. Dublin. Ed. at St. Anne’s, Abbots Bromley, and
-Alexandra College, Dublin. Has written <i>Diana Dethroned</i>, <i>Christina’s
-Son</i>, <i>The Rough Way</i> (Wells, Gardner), short Irish stories for children
-in the <span class="smcap">Month</span> and other periodicals. She is coming to be very well
-known as a poet, and has written some plays for the Abbey Theatre.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE MIGHTY ARMY. Pp. 128. (<i>Wells, Gardner</i>). 5<i>s.</i> net. Ill.
-by Stephen Reid. 1912.</p>
-
-<p>Stories from the lives of saints, including St. Columba.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>LEVER, Charles.</b> Born (1806) in Dublin, of English parentage; graduated
-at T.C.D. Wrote much for the <span class="smcap">National Magazine</span>, the <span class="smcap">D.U. Magazine</span>,
-<span class="smcap">Blackwood’s</span>, the <span class="smcap">Cornhill</span>, &amp;c. Consul in Spezzia, 1858, and
-at Trieste, 1867. Here he died in 1872. Is by far the greatest of that
-group of writers who, by education and sympathies, are identified with
-the English element in Ireland. He was untouched by the Gaelic spirit,
-was a Tory in politics, and a Protestant. “His imagination,” says Mr.
-Krans, “did not enable him to see with the eyes of the Catholic gentry
-or the peasantry. He knew only one class of peasants well—servants
-and retainers, and he only knew them on the side they turned out to
-their masters. Most of his peasants are more than half stage-Irishmen.”
-He had no sympathy with the religious aspirations of Catholics, and his
-pictures of their religious life are sometimes offensive. These are his
-limitations. On the other hand, his books are invariably clean and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_141"></a>[141]</span>
-fresh, free from vulgarity, morbidness, and mere sensationalism. His
-first four books overflow with animal spirits, reckless gaiety, and fun.
-It has been well remarked by his biographer, W. J. Fitzpatrick, that his
-genius was much more French than English. After <i>Hinton</i> he is more
-serious, more attentive to plot-weaving, and to careful character-drawing.
-His books give a wonderful series of pictures of Irish life from the days of
-Grattan’s Parliament to the Famine of 1846. Many of these pictures,
-though true to certain aspects of Irish life, create a false impression by
-directing the eye almost exclusively to what is grotesque and whimsical.
-Lever’s portrait gallery is one of the finest in fiction. It includes the
-dashing young soldiers of the earlier books; the comic characters, an
-endless series; diplomatists, doctors, lawyers, politicians, usurers,
-valetudinarians, aristocrats, typical Irish squires, adventurers, braggarts,
-spendthrifts, nearly all definite and convincing. See Art, in <span class="smcap">Blackwood</span>,
-Apr., 1862, and in <span class="smcap">Dubl. Rev.</span>, 1872, Vol. 70, p. 379. Also Edmund
-Downey’s book, <i>Charles Lever: his Life and Letters</i>. Many of Lever’s
-novels were originally published in shilling monthly parts, with two
-illustrations by “Phiz” (Hablot K. Browne), and had as great a vogue
-as those of Dickens. There have been many editions since by <i>Routledge</i>
-(3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>) and <i>Chapman &amp; Hall</i> (2<i>s.</i>), with and without illustrations, but
-the finest ever issued is:—</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ COMPLETE NOVELS. Edited by the Novelist’s Daughter. Thirty-seven
-Vols. (<i>Downey</i>). Publ. £19 18<i>s.</i> Cloth. 1897-9.</p>
-
-<p>The only complete and uniform ed. of Lever. Contains all the original steel
-engravings and etchings by “Phiz” and Cruikshank, and many ill. by
-Luke Fildes and other artists. Ed. and annotated by means of unpublished
-memoranda found among Author’s papers. Lever’s prefaces are printed,
-and bibliographical notes appended to each story.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ HARRY LORREQUER. Pp. 380. (N.Y.: <i>Dutton</i>). 1.00. [1839].</p>
-
-<p>The first of Lever’s rollicking military novels. The hero is a dashing
-young English officer, who comes to Cork with his regiment, and there passes
-through what the Author calls “a mass of incongruous adventures. Such
-was our life in Cork, dining, drinking, riding steeplechases, pigeon-shooting,
-and tandem-driving.” The book abounds in humorous incidents, and is
-packed with good stories and anecdotes. All sorts of Irish characters are
-introduced. There are sketches of Catholic clerical life in a vein of burlesque.
-The latter part of the story takes the reader to the Continent (various parts
-of France and Germany), where we meet Arthur O’Leary, afterwards made
-the hero of another story. Mr. Baker describes the book well as “very
-Irish in the stagey sense, very unreal.”</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ CHARLES O’MALLEY. Pp. 632, close print. (N.Y.: <i>Putnam</i>).
-1.00. [1841].</p>
-
-<p>From electioneering, hunting, and duelling with the Galway country gentry,
-the scene changes to Trinity, where the hero goes in for roistering, larking, and
-general fast living with the wildest scamps in town. Then he gets a commission
-in the dragoons, and goes to the Peninsula (p. 147). There he goes
-through the whole campaign, and ends by viewing Waterloo from the French
-camp. Throughout, the narrative is enlivened by the raciest and spiciest
-stories. The native Irish, where they appear, are drawn in broad caricature.
-“Major Monsoon” was the portrait of a real personage, and so was the tomboy
-Miss “Baby Blake.” “Mickey Free” is the best known of Lever’s farcical
-Irish characters.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ JACK HINTON. Pp. 402. (<span class="smcap">Boston</span>: <i>Little, Brown</i>). 5.00. [1843].</p>
-
-<p>Adventures of a young English officer who arrives in Ireland during the
-Viceroyalty of the Duke of Grafton. The hero’s Irish experiences include<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_142"></a>[142]</span>
-steeplechasing, fox-hunting, “high life” in Dublin, a glimpse of society life
-in the Castle, love, duelling, and murder. But Lever wrote the book
-to show how Irish character and Irish ways differed wholly from English,
-and he represents Hinton as constantly having his prejudiced English eyes
-opened with a vengeance. This novel contains some of Lever’s most famous
-characters: Corny Delaney, Hinton’s body servant; Mr. and Mrs. Paul
-Rooney, parvenu leaders of Dublin society; Father Tom Loftus, Lever’s
-idea of the jolly Irish priest; Bob Mahon, the devil-may-care impecunious Irish
-gentleman; most of all Tipperary Joe. “For these,” says the Author (Pref.,)
-“I had not to call upon imagination.” Tipperary Joe was a real personage.
-For the last 100 pages the scene shifts to Spain, France, and Italy.
-Throughout, event succeeds event at reckless speed. There are some scenes
-of Connaught life, and a fine description of a meeting of “The Monks of the
-Screw.”</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ TOM BURKE OF “OURS.” Pp. 660. (N.Y.: <i>Dutton</i>). [1844].</p>
-
-<p>The early scenes (150 pp.) of Tom’s life (told throughout in the first person)
-take place in Ireland. Lever tells us (Pref.) that he tried to make Tom
-intensely Irish before launching him into French life. Tom enlists, but in
-consequence of a quarrel with a fatal ending has to fly the country. He goes
-to France, then under the First Consul, and joins the army. Military,
-civil, and political life at Paris is described with wonderful vividness and
-knowledge. These form a background to the exciting and dramatic adventures
-and love affairs of the hero. Then there is the Austerlitz campaign
-fully described; then life at Paris in 1806. Then the campaign of Jena.
-Finally, we have a description of the last campaign that ended with the
-abdication at Fontainebleau. The portrait of Napoleon is lifelike and
-convincing. Lever throws himself thoroughly into his French scenes.
-A pathetic episode is the love of Minette, the Vivandière, for Tom, and her
-heroic death at the Bridge of Montereau. Darby the Blast is a character
-of the class of Mickey Free and Tipperary Joe, yet quite distinct and original.
-The scene near the close where Darby is in the witness-box is a companion
-picture to Sam Weller in court, and is one of the best things of its kind in
-fiction.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ ARTHUR O’LEARY. Pp. 435. (N.Y.: <i>Dutton</i>). 1.00. [1844].</p>
-
-<p>Rather a collection of stories of adventure than a novel. Lever has
-worked into it many of his own experiences in Canada, and also at Göttingen.
-There is a good deal about Student life in Germany. Many stories (of the
-Napoleonic wars chiefly) are told by the various characters all through the
-book. Some contemporary critics thought this the best of Lever’s books.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ ST. PATRICK’S EVE. Pp. 203. (<i>Chapman &amp; Hall</i>). illustr. by
-“Phiz.” (N.Y.: <i>Harper</i>). [1845].</p>
-
-<p>A short and somewhat gloomy tale of a period that Lever knew well—the
-pestilence of 1832. Scene: borders of Lough Corrib. The life described
-is that of the small farmer and the peasant struggling to make ends meet.
-Faction-fighting is dealt with in the opening of the tale, and the relations
-between landlord and agent and tenantry, at the period, are described with
-insight. “When I wrote it, I desired to inculcate the truth that prosperity
-has as many duties as adversity has sorrows.” It is far the most national
-of Lever’s stories, and there is a depth of feeling and of sympathy in it that
-would surprise those acquainted only with <i>Charles O’Malley</i> and <i>Harry
-Lorrequer</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE O’DONOGHUE. Pp. 369. (<i>Routledge</i>). [1845].</p>
-
-<p>Scene: Glenflesk (between Macroom and Bantry) and Killarney. Period:
-from just before to just after the French expedition to Bantry. The
-O’Donoghue, poor and proud, is intended as a type of the decaying Catholic<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_143"></a>[143]</span>
-gentry of ancient lineage, living in a feudal, half-barbaric splendour, beset by
-creditors and bailiffs whom fear of the retainer’s blunderbuss alone kept at a
-distance. Mark O’Donoghue, proud, gloomy, passionate, filled with hatred
-of the English invader, wears a frieze coat like the peasants, sells horses,
-hunts and fishes for a livelihood. He joins the United Irishmen, who are
-represented as making an ignoble traffic of conspiracy, and takes part in
-Hoche’s attempted invasion. Other characters are: Kate O’Donoghue,
-educated abroad; Lanty Lawler, horse-dealer, who supplies plenty of humour;
-in particular Sir Marmaduke Travers, a well-meaning but self-sufficient
-Englishman, who, knowing nothing of Ireland, makes ludicrous attempts
-to better his tenants’ condition. “I was not sorry to show,” says Lever
-(Pref.), “that any real and effective good to Ireland must have its base in the
-confidence of the people.” For this book Lever was bitterly accused of
-Repeal tendencies.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE MARTINS OF CRO’ MARTIN. Pp. 625. (N.Y.: <i>Harper</i>).
-1856. [1847].</p>
-
-<p>Scene: chiefly Connemara; the novel opening with a fine picture of the
-old-time splendours of Ballynahinch Castle, the seat of the “Martins.” For
-awhile the scene shifts to Paris during the Revolution of 1830. The story
-illustrates the practical working of the Emancipation Act. Martin is a type
-of the ease-loving Irish landlord, “shirking the cares of his estates, with an
-immense self-esteem, narrow, obstinate, weak, without ideas, and with
-a boundless faith in his own dignity, elegance, and divine right to rule
-his tenants” (Krans). Rejected by his tenantry at an election he quits
-the country in disgust, leaving them to the mercies of a Scotch agent. Lever
-pictures vividly the sufferings of the people both from this evil and from the
-cholera, drawing for the latter upon his own experiences when ministering to
-cholera patients in Clare. He says of the people that “no words of his
-could do justice to the splendid heroism they showed each other in misfortune.”
-Mary Martin is one of Lever’s most admirable heroines. There is a fine
-study, also, of a young man of the people, son of a small shopkeeper in
-Oughterard, who, by his sterling worth, raises himself to the highest positions.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE KNIGHT OF GWYNNE. (<span class="smcap">Philadelphia</span>: <i>Peterson</i>). 1847.</p>
-
-<p>A close study, based on considerable knowledge, of the ways and means
-adopted by the English Government to destroy the Irish Parliament. Castlereagh
-figures in no flattering fashion. Con Heffernan is a type of his unscrupulous
-tools. The Knight himself is an engaging portrait of a lovable old
-Irish gentleman, frank, high-spirited, courteous, chivalrous. At first placed
-in ideal circumstances for the display of all his best qualities, he shows himself
-no less noble in meeting adversity. Other notable characters are Bagenal
-Daly (a portrait of Beauchamp Bagenal), the villainous attorney Hickman,
-and Mr. Dempsey, the story-telling innkeeper. In describing the coasts
-of Antrim and Derry and the country about Castlebar and Westport, Lever
-draws upon his own experiences.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ ROLAND CASHEL. Pp. 612. [1850]. (N.Y.: <i>Harper</i>). 1849.</p>
-
-<p>Opens with wonderfully vivid and picturesque description of life in the
-Republic of Columbia. A harum-scarum young Irish soldier of fortune
-almost promises marriage to the daughter of a Columbian adventurer. Then
-he learns he is heir to a large property in Ireland, and he immediately returns
-there. In Dublin the daughters of his lawyer, Mr. Kennyfeck, and others try
-to capture the young heir, but instead he falls in love with a penniless girl.
-Then there are exciting and romantic adventures. The villain, Tom Linton,
-with the intention of ruining Roland, introduces him to fast society, nearly
-implicates him with the young wife of Lord Kilgoff; the Columbian adventurer
-turns up to claim him; he is charged with murder; but eventually all is well.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_144"></a>[144]</span>
-Lady Kilgoff is an admirably drawn character, as also is the Dean of Drumcondra,
-a portrait of Archbishop Whately. In the last chapter there is a
-passage which seems to show how Lever realized that the anglicized society
-of the Pale is far from being the true Ireland. Incidentally, too, the evils
-of landlordism are touched upon.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE DALTONS; or, Three Roads in Life. Pp. 700. (N.Y.: <i>Pratt</i>).
-1.50. [1852].</p>
-
-<p>The longest and most elaborate of Lever’s novels. Subject: the careers
-of Peter Dalton, an absentee Irish landlord—needy, feckless, selfish,
-Micawberish—and his children, on the Continent in Germany, Austria, and
-Italy. Some of the leading characters are involved in the Austro-Italian
-campaign of 1848, and in the Tuscan Revolution. There is a study—a
-flattering one—to Austrian military life, and lively, amusing pictures of
-Anglo-Italian life in Florence. A noteworthy character is the Irish Abbé
-d’Esmonde, who towards the close of the book takes part in some dramatic
-incidents during a visit to Ireland, undertaken in the cause of the Church.
-There is in the book a good deal about “priest-craft.”</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ MAURICE TIERNAY. (N.Y.: <i>Harper</i>). 1.00. [1852].</p>
-
-<p>Adventures of a young Jacobite exile in many lands, 1793-1809. Opens
-with vivid description of “The Terror.” Later Maurice joins the Army
-of the Rhine, and then Humbert’s expedition to Ireland. The latter is fully
-related, and also the capture and death of Wolfe Tone. After some adventures
-in America, the hero returns to Europe, and is in Genoa during its siege by
-the Austrians. Taken prisoner by the latter, he escapes and joins Napoleon,
-of whose Austrian campaign a brilliant description is given. Napoleon and
-some of his great marshals loom large in the story, and the military life of
-the period on the Continent is described. But perhaps the best part of the
-book is the account of Humbert’s invasion of Ireland.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ CON CREGAN. Pp. 496. (<span class="smcap">Philadelphia</span>: <i>Peterson</i>). [1854].</p>
-
-<p>Lever describes his hero as the “Irish Gil Blas.” Born on the borders
-of Meath, Cregan goes to Dublin, where he has some exciting experiences,
-ending in his being carried off in the yacht of an eccentric baronet. He is
-wrecked on an island off the coast of North America. Here he meets a runaway
-negro slave, Menelaus Crick, one of the most striking characters in the
-book. There follow experiences (tragic and comic) in Quebec, and afterwards
-in Texas and Mexico, life in which is described with remarkable vividness
-and wealth of colour. At last Cregan returns to Ireland, and marries a
-Spanish lady whom he had met in Mexico.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ SIR JASPER CAREW. Pp. 490. (N.Y.: <i>Harper</i>). [1855].</p>
-
-<p>The early part (152 pages) deals with the career of the hero’s father, a
-wealthy Irish gentleman of Cromwellian stock, who has estates and copper
-and lead mines in Wicklow. He goes to Paris, allies himself by a secret
-marriage with the party of the Duke of Orleans, then returns to Ireland,
-where he kills a Castle official in a duel, receiving himself a mortal wound.
-His widow is deprived of the property, and left in poverty. She retires
-to Mayo, with her son, Jaspar. In this part there are elaborate pictures of
-politics in the early days of the Irish Parliament, and of the wild, extravagant
-social life of the period. Jasper goes to France, is involved in revolutionary
-plots, is sent to London as secret agent, and there has interviews with Pitt
-and Fox. Finally he returns to Ireland to claim his birthright. The story
-is told in the first person, and Lever intended the narrative to reveal the
-intimate character of the teller. The book is crammed with adventure.
-It was a favourite with the Author.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_145"></a>[145]</span></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE FORTUNES OF GLENCORE. Pp. 395. (N.Y.: <i>Pratt</i>).
-1.50. [1857].</p>
-
-<p>Intended (<i>see</i> Pref.) as an experiment to bear out (or the contrary) his
-conviction that “any skill I possess lies in the delineation of character and
-the unravelment of that tangled skein that makes up human motives.”
-The scene at first is in a castle on the shores of the Killaries, between Mayo
-and Galway; afterwards it is on the Continent. Lord Glencore is a passionate,
-proud, soured man, misanthropical and suffering from disease. A
-scandal connected with his wife has filled him with hatred and bitterness.
-He determines to disown his son, who, after a terrible scene, runs away
-from home. The book is largely taken up with the adventures in Italy
-and elsewhere of Sir Horace Upton, a distinguished diplomatist and a valetudinarian,
-together with the doings and sayings of his follower, Billy Traynor,
-formerly poor scholar, hedge-schoolmaster, fiddler, journalist, now unqualified
-medical practitioner—a strange character drawn from a real personage.
-Many of the characters are cosmopolitan political intriguers. In
-the end Lady Glencore’s innocence is established.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ DAVENPORT DUNN. (<span class="smcap">Philadelphia</span>: <i>Peterson</i>). 1859.</p>
-
-<p>The astonishing histories of two adventurers. Dunn is an ambitious,
-clever man who by shady means lifts himself into a high position as a financier
-and launches into immense financial schemes. This character was drawn
-from John Sadlier, Junior Lord of the Treasury, who was the associate of Judge
-Keogh in “The Pope’s Brass Band,” (so-called) and closed an extraordinary
-career by committing suicide on Hampstead Heath. Grog David, a blackleg,
-rivals Dunn in another sphere, his sporting cheats being as vast as the other’s
-financial swindles. Davis’ high-hearted daughter, Lizzie, is a finely-drawn
-character.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ ONE OF THEM. Pp. 420. (N.Y.: <i>Harper</i>). 0.50. (1861).</p>
-
-<p>Scene varies between Florence and the North of Ireland, many of the
-incidents described being real experiences of his own gone through in each
-of these places. Lever having been asked which of his novels he deemed
-best suited for the stage, replied that if a sensation drama were required,
-he thought <i>One of Them</i> a good subject. Deals largely with the adventures
-on the Continent of a queer type of Irish M.P.; but its outstanding character
-is Quackinboss, a droll specimen of Yankee.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ BARRINGTON. (N.Y.: <i>Pratt</i>). 0.50. [1862].</p>
-
-<p>A novel of social and domestic life in the middle classes. Scene: a queer
-little inn, “the Fisherman’s Home,” on the banks of the Nore, Co. Kilkenny.
-Here the Barringtons live. Among the striking characters are the fire-eating
-Major M’Cormack; Dr. Dill, an excellent study of a country medical
-man, and his lively daughter, Polly. The interest largely turns on the
-disgrace and subsequent vindication of Barrington’s son, George. In this
-Lever portrays his own son and his career.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ A DAY’S RIDE. Pp. 396. (N.Y.: <i>Pratt</i>). 1.50. [1863].</p>
-
-<p>The whimsical adventures of Algernon Sydney Potts, only son of a Dublin
-apothecary. An extravaganza in the vein of <i>Don Quixote</i>, and quite unlike
-Lever’s other works. Potts’s experiences begin in Ireland, but most of them
-take place on the Continent.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE DODD FAMILY ABROAD. Pp. 565. (N.Y.: <i>Pratt</i>). 0.50.
-[1863-65.]</p>
-
-<p>Humorous adventures on the Continent of an Anglo-Irish family filled
-with preposterously false ideas about the manners and customs of the countries
-they visit. Told in a series of letters in which the chief personages are made
-the unconscious exponents of their own characters, follies, and foibles, each<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_146"></a>[146]</span>
-character being so contrived as to evoke in the most humorous form the
-peculiarities of all the others. There are many acute reflections on Irish life,
-especially in the letters of Kenny Dodd to his friend in Bruff (Co. Limerick).
-Kenny Dodd is a careful and thoughtful character-study. The Author
-considered Kate Dodd to be the true type of Irishwoman. Biddy Cobb,
-servant of the Dodds, is one of Lever’s most humorous women characters.
-Lever held that he had never written anything equal to “The Dodds.”</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ LUTTRELL OF ARRAN. (N.Y.: <i>Pratt</i>). 1.50. [1865].</p>
-
-<p>Opens in Innishmore, Aran Islands, off the coast of Galway. Luttrell, a
-proud, morbid man of broken fortunes arrives there with his wife, the daughter
-of an Aran peasant. The latter dies, leaving an only son, Harry. Shortly
-afterwards Sir Gervais Vyner, a wealthy Englishman, calls at the island in
-his yacht, and renews acquaintance with Luttrell. Vyner then goes to
-Donegal, where he meets with and adopts a beautiful peasant girl. The
-interest turns largely on the success of Vyner’s experiment in making a fine
-lady out of the girl. She is one of Lever’s most charming heroines. After
-many vicissitudes she comes to Innishmore. Here she meets Harry, who
-had returned from an adventurous career at sea, and they are married. Tom
-O’Rorke, who keeps an inn in a wild part of Donegal, provides a good deal of
-the humour. His inveterate hatred of everything English, his wit and his
-audacity (not always commendable), mark him out for special mention.
-There is also an amusing American skipper.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ TONY BUTLER. (N.Y.: <i>Pratt</i>). 1.50. [1865].</p>
-
-<p>Scene: partly in North of Ireland, partly on the Continent. Tony gets a
-post in the diplomatic service, and has many adventures, strange, humorous,
-or stirring. Diplomatic life (Lever was a British Consul abroad for most
-of his days) is described with a cunning hand. Some of Tony’s experiences
-take place during the Garibaldian war. The most striking figure in the book
-is Major M’Caskey, the noisy, swaggering, impudent soldier of fortune. Skeff
-Damer, the young diplomat, is also interesting, and Dolly Stewart is a most
-pleasing study.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ SIR BROOKE FOSBROOKE. [1866]. (<i>Routledge, &amp;c.</i>). 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>
-(N.Y.: <i>Harper</i>). 0.50.</p>
-
-<p>“Reproduces much of the humour and frolic of his earlier tales, the mess-room
-scene in the officers’ quarters at Dublin, with which the drama opens, recalling
-the sprightly comedy of Harry Lorrequer. The vigorous story that follows
-contains much more serious characterization and portraiture of real life than
-the earlier books.”—(<i>Baker</i>).</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE BRAMLEIGHS OF BISHOP’S FOLLY. (N.Y.: <i>Harper</i>).
-0.50. [1868].</p>
-
-<p>Scene of first portion: North of Ireland, near Coleraine, Co. Londonderry;
-afterwards Italy. Deals with the experiences of a rich English banker and
-his family, who come to Ireland, but the central figure is the selfish old peer,
-Viscount Culduff, a neighbouring landowner, on whose estate coal is found.
-Much of the novel deals with the exploiting of the Culduff mine. Tom
-Cutbill, a bluff, vulgar, humorous engineer, who comes to work this mine,
-provides most of the fun, which is scattered through the story. All the
-characters are vividly drawn, among others that of a young Irish Protestant
-clergyman, the only one that appears prominently in Lever’s pages. The
-mystery that runs through the book is kept veiled with great cleverness to
-the very end. Finally, the book is packed with witty epigrammatic talk.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ LORD KILGOBBIN. (N.Y.: <i>Harper</i>). 1.00. [1872].</p>
-
-<p>Lever’s last novel. It pictures social and political conditions in Ireland
-about 1865, the days of the Fenians. The book is marked by almost nationalist
-sympathies, one of the finest characters being Daniel Donogan,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_147"></a>[147]</span>
-Fenian Head-Centre and Trinity College student, who while “on his keeping”
-is elected M.P. for King’s County. Matthew Kearney, styled locally Lord
-Kilgobbin, is a shrewd, good-natured, old-fashioned type of broken-down
-Catholic gentility, living in an old castle in King’s County. His daughter
-Kate, is a high-spirited, clever, and amiable girl, but the real heroine is the
-brilliant Nina Kostalergi, of mixed parentage (the mother Irish, the father a
-Greek prince and adventurer), who bewitches in turn Fenians, soldiers,
-politicians, and Viceregal officials. A remarkable creation is Joe Atlee, a
-kind of Bohemian student of Trinity, cynical, indolent, but miraculously
-clever and versatile. It teems with witty talk and dramatic situations.
-Throughout there is food for thought about the affairs of Ireland. Has been
-illustr. by Luke Fildes (Macmillan). 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ GERALD FITZGERALD. (N.Y.: <i>Harper</i>). 0.40. [First ed. in
-book form, 1899].</p>
-
-<p>The hero is a legitimate son of the Young Pretender, offspring of a secret
-marriage with an Irish lady. Recounts his surprising adventures and his
-relations with Mirabeau (whose death is powerfully described), the poet
-Alfieri, Madame Roland, the Pretender himself, whose court at Rome is
-described, &amp;c., &amp;c. There is little humour, the book being a sober historical
-or quasi-historical romance. There are some passages offensive to Catholic
-feeling.</p>
-
-<p>Lever also wrote:—<i>A Rent in a Cloud</i>; <i>That Boy of Norcott’s</i>; <i>Paul
-Goslett’s Confessions</i>; <i>Nuts and Nutcrackers</i>, 1845; <i>Tales of the Trains</i>, 1845;
-<i>Horace Templeton</i>, 1848; <i>Cornelius O’Dowd</i>, 1873.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>LIPSETT, Caldwell.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ WHERE THE ATLANTIC MEETS THE LAND. Pp. 268. (<i>Lane</i>).
-3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> net. 1896.</p>
-
-<p>Sixteen stories, many of them artistically constructed, and told with
-literary grace and finish. The Irish character is viewed from an unsympathetic
-and, at times, hostile standpoint. Only a few of the stories deal with the
-peasants or have any special bearing on Irish life. Two or three deal with
-seduction in rather a light manner.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>LIPSETT, E. R.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ DIDY. Pp. 301. (<i>Duckworth</i>). 6<i>s.</i> $1.30. Eight full-page Illustr. by
-Joseph Damon. 1912.</p>
-
-<p>Published in U.S.A. by the John Lane Co., N.Y., under the title of <i>The
-House of a Thousand Welcomes</i> (price 1.50), this being the name of a boarding
-house in New York opened by Mr. and Mrs. Dunleary and their daughter
-Didy, who have emigrated from Cork. The story is chiefly concerned with
-the lodgers in this house—the eccentric Dr. O’Dowd, a journalist, and the
-son of a big landlord in Ireland—all of whom fall in love with Didy. The
-last named is successful, and he makes the journalist, a Protestant named
-Healy (the remainder of the personages are Catholics), editor of the principal
-Irish Unionist paper, which he owns, in order “to make it a message of
-peace to all Ireland.” The author avoids religious or political bias, and tells
-a merry, good-humoured story.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>“LISTADO, J. T.”</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ MAURICE RHYNHART. Two Vols. (<i>Chapman &amp; Hall</i>). 1871.</p>
-
-<p>“Or, A few passages in the life of an Irish rebel.” The hero, descended from
-a Williamite soldier, “in every respect the very model of a respectable young
-Protestant,” is a clerk in Selskar (Wexford) and in love with Miss Rowan,
-socially much above him. An ardent young Irelander, he joins the local
-branch and works might and main for the movement. Soon he is “on his<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_148"></a>[148]</span>
-keeping,” but escapes to London. There he marries Miss Rowan. After
-many hardships they go to Australia, where he rises to be Premier and is
-knighted. Returns, and is made M.P. for Selskar. Reminds one of the
-career of Sir C. Gavan Duffy. Splendidly told, the interest never flagging.
-Protestant dissenting tea-parties hit off cleverly. The whole atmosphere
-of the critical summer of ’48 is reproduced with vividness and fidelity. Dialogue
-good and characterisation life-like.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>LOCHHEAD, A.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ SPRIGS OF SHILLELAH. Pp. 158. (<span class="smcap">Dundee</span>: <i>Leng</i>). 1907. 6<i>d.</i></p>
-
-<p>Sixteen humorous sketches, “founded on fact—more or less,” reprinted
-from the <span class="smcap">People’s Friend</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>LOGAN, J.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE McCLUSKY TWINS. Pp. 112. (<i>Drane</i>). 1912. 1<i>s.</i></p>
-
-<p>A tale of twin tomboys, who provide gossip for an Ulster countryside.
-Dialect well handled.—(I.B.L.).</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>LOUGH, Desmond.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE BLACK WING. (<i>“Ireland’s Own” Library</i>). 6<i>d.</i> <i>n.d.</i> (1914).</p>
-
-<p>A story of secret societies and of revenge. Scene: Kerry and Corsica.
-Unconvincing, but unobjectionable.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ RED RAPPAREE. Pp. 179. (<i>“Ireland’s Own” Library</i>). 6<i>d.</i> <i>n.d.</i></p>
-
-<p>Thrilling adventures and hairbreadth escapes of Cahir Ronayne, who has
-taken to the road in revenge for his father’s execution. A fair lady is involved,
-also a dissolute lord, and there are plenty of plots and counter plots, duels and
-combats.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>LOUGHNAN, Edmond Brenan.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE FOSTER SISTERS. Three Vols. (<i>Tinsley</i>). 1871.</p>
-
-<p>Opens in Sligo, near Lough Arrow. Largely concerned with an intricate
-family history and mysteries of identity. Scene soon shifts to Paris, where
-many of the personages have gone and where most of the action takes place.
-The chief interest is a very melodramatic murder in the secret room of the
-<i>Chat Noir</i>, and the subsequent tracing of the crime to the murderer, a typical
-stage villain. The story is pretty well told, but the conversations are most
-artificial.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>LOVER, Samuel.</b> B. in Dublin, 1797. Was not only a novelist but a
-musician, a painter, and a song-writer (he wrote some 300 songs, and
-composed the music for most of them). He ed. the <span class="smcap">Dublin National
-Magazine</span> and the <span class="smcap">Saturday Magazine</span>. D. 1868. <i>See</i> “Lives” by
-J. A. Symington and Bayle Bernard. “Lover,” says Mr. D. J.
-O’Donoghue, “is first and last an Irish humourist.” Readers should
-bear this fact in mind. His humour is of the gay, careless, rollicking
-type. He is sometimes coarse, but never merely dull. He does not
-caricature the Irish character, for his sympathies were strongly Irish;
-but wrote to amuse his readers, not to depict Irish life. He was often
-accused by his friends of exaggerating the virtues of his countrymen,
-and it may be admitted that he sometimes did so. “The chief defect of
-his novels,” says Maurice Francis Egan, <i>q.v.</i>, “is that they were written
-with an eye on what the English reader would expect the Irish characters
-to do.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_149"></a>[149]</span></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ RORY O’MORE. Pp. 452. (<i>Constable</i>). 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> [1837]. (N.Y.: <i>Dutton</i>).
-1.00. 1897.</p>
-
-<p>Introduction and notes by D. J. O’Donoghue, who considers this to be
-Lover’s best long story. A tale of adventure in 1798, with a slight historical
-background. National in sentiment, without being unfairly biased. Contains
-some of Lover’s best humour, especially the endless drollery and whimsicalities
-of the hero, Rory. Some of the types are very true to life. There are
-passages of genuine pathos. Tries to prove that the more heinous atrocities
-in ’98 were due to a few desperadoes.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ HANDY ANDY. Pp. 460. (<i>Constable</i>). 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> Portrait of Lover.
-[1842]. 1898. Critical Introd. and Notes by D. J. O’Donoghue. (N.Y.:
-<i>Dutton</i>). 1.00.</p>
-
-<p>A series of side-splitting misadventures of a comic, blundering Irishman.
-Does not pretend to be a picture of real Irish life, yet, though exaggerated, it
-is not without truth. Besides Andy’s adventures there are scenes from the
-life of the harum-scarum gentry, uproarious dinners, a contested election,
-practical jokes. The characters include peasants, duellists, hedge-priests,
-hedge-schoolmasters, beggars, and poteen distillers. There is a good deal
-of vulgarity.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ TREASURE TROVE; or, He Would be a Gentleman. Pp. 469.
-(<i>Constable</i>). 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> [1844]. Many since. (<span class="smcap">Boston</span>: <i>Little, Brown</i>).
-1.00. 1899.</p>
-
-<p>Critical introduction by D. J. O’Donoghue. Adventures of a somewhat
-stagey hero, Ned Corkery, with the Irish Brigade in the service of France
-and of the Young Pretender. Fontenoy, and the ’45 in Scotland, are introduced.
-The novel, says the editor, can only be called pseudo-historical.
-The writer had but imperfectly mastered the history, and treats it unconvincingly.
-The humour is below the author’s usual standard, but the
-interest is well sustained. It is coarse and vulgar in parts.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ LEGENDS AND STORIES OF IRELAND. Two Vols. Pp. xix. + 240,
-and xvi + 274. (<i>Constable</i>). 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> each. [1832 and 1834; many
-editions since]. 1899. (N.Y.: <i>Sadlier</i>). 1.50.</p>
-
-<p>Introductions by the Author and by the editor, D. J. O’Donoghue. A
-miscellany consisting chiefly of humorous stories with regular plots. It
-contains also some old legends told in comic vein, yarns told by guides and
-boatmen, and several serious stories. There is nothing to offend Catholic
-feeling. There is a most sympathetic sketch of a priest and a story about
-the secret of the confessional that any Catholic might have written. The
-peasantry are seen only from outside, though the author mixed much among
-them. They are not caricatured, though chiefly comic types are selected.
-There is plenty of brogue, faithfully rendered on the whole. The first volume
-contains a humorous essay on Street Ballads, with specimens. Lover is at
-his best in uproariously laughable stories such us “The Gridiron” and “Paddy
-the Sport.”</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ FURTHER STORIES OF IRELAND. Pp. 220. (<i>Constable</i>). 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>
-1899. Critical and biographical introduction (pp. xxviii.) by D. J.
-O’Donoghue.</p>
-
-<p>Chiefly very short, humorous sketches. Some are stories written around
-various national proverbs.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ IRISH HEIRS: A Novel. Pp. 173. (N.Y.: <i>Dick &amp; Fitzgerald</i>).
-Illustr. 187-.</p>
-
-<p>Mentioned in catal. of N. Y. Library. <i>Treasure Trove</i> bore on original
-title-page the announcement that it was “the first of a series of accounts
-of Irish Heirs.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_150"></a>[150]</span></p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>LOVER and CROKER.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ LEGENDS AND TALES OF IRELAND. Pp. 436. (<i>Simpkin,
-Marshall</i>, &amp;c.). <i>n.d.</i> Now in print.</p>
-
-<p>Contains:—Lover’s <i>Legends and Tales of Ireland</i> (twenty-four in all), and
-Croker’s <i>Fairy Legends of the South of Ireland</i>. “Croker and Lover,” says
-W. B. Yeats, “full of the ideas of harum-scarum Irish gentility, saw everything
-humourized. The impulse of the Irish literature of their time came
-from a class that did not—mainly for political reasons—take the people
-seriously, and imagined the country as a humorist’s Arcadia; its passion,
-its gloom, its tragedy they knew nothing of. What they did was not wholly
-false; they merely magnified an irresponsible type, found oftenest among
-boatmen, carmen, and gentlemen’s servants, into the type of a whole nation,
-and created the Stage-Irishman.”—(Introd. to <i>Fairy and Folk-tales of the Irish
-Peasantry</i>).</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>LOWRY, Frank M.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE DUBLIN STATUES “AT HOME”: A New Year’s Tale.
-4to. (<i>Sealy, Bryers</i>). Illustr. with Seven Cartoons. 1912.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>LOWRY, Mary.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE ENCHANTED PORTAL. Pp. 142. (<i>Sealy, Bryers</i>). 6<i>d.</i> Paper.
-<i>c.</i> 1910.</p>
-
-<p>Scene: Antrim coast, whose scenery is vividly pictured. A novel of
-romance, intrigue, and adventure, pleasant and healthy in tone, but fanciful
-and somewhat unreal.</p>
-
-<p>Author has also written <i>The Clans of Ireland</i>, <i>Old Irish Laws and Customs</i>,
-and <i>The Story of Belfast</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>“LYALL, Edna”; Ada Ellen Bayley.</b> Was born and educated at Brighton,
-and resided there and at Eastbourne. Her first story, <i>Won by Waiting</i>,
-appeared in 1879. Titles of eighteen of her books are to be found in
-Mudie’s <span class="smcap">List</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ DOREEN. Pp. 490. (<i>Longmans</i>). Various prices from 6<i>d.</i> to 6<i>s.</i> [1894].
-1902.</p>
-
-<p>Doreen, daughter of an old ’48 man and Fenian, and herself an ardent
-Nationalist, is a professional singer, but helps the Home Rule cause by her
-singing. The chief interest is a love story, but in the background there
-is the national struggle and a vivid picture is drawn of the feelings of those
-engaged on both sides. The author is on the nationalist side, and the most
-striking figure in the book is Donal Moore, a Nationalist member. The first
-ed. was dedicated to Gladstone.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>LYNAM, Col. William F.</b> Belonged to the 5th Royal Lancashire Militia.
-Lived at Churchtown Ho., Dundrum, 1863-87, and then at Clontarf
-till his death in 1894. He was a Catholic and a man of much piety. He
-lived a very retired life.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ MICK McQUAID.</p>
-
-<p>Magazine stories that have never been published in a volume do not come
-within the scope of this work. But I think an exception must be made
-in this case. The serial or series of serials centering in the character of
-Mick McQuaid has made a record in literature. It began in the pages of
-the <span class="smcap">Shamrock</span> on Jan. 19th, 1867. With short interruptions it has been
-running ever since in the pages of that periodical, and is running still, though
-the Author died in 1894. The following are some of the series that appeared:—1.
-“M. McQ.’s Conversion,” 1867; 2. “M. McQ., the Evangeliser,”
-1868-9; 3. “M. McQ. Under Agent,” 52 chapters, 1869-70; 4. “M. McQ.,
-<span class="allsmcap">M.D.</span>,” 28 ch., 1872; 5. “M. McQ., <span class="allsmcap">M.P.</span>,” 51 ch., 1872-3; 6. “M. McQ.,
-Solicitor,” 43 ch., 1873-4; 7. “M. McQ.’s Spa,” 91 ch., 1876-8; 8. “M. McQ.,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_151"></a>[151]</span>
-Alderman,” 61 ch., 1879-80; 9. “M. McQ., Moneylender,” 47 ch., 1880-1;
-10. “M. McQ., Gombeen Man,” 48 ch., 1881-2; 11. “M. McQ.’s Story,”
-1884; 12. “M. McQ., Workhouse Master,” 1885; 13. “M. McQ., Sub-Sheriff,”
-pt. 1, 47 ch., 1888-9; 14. “M. McQ., Sub-Sheriff,” pt. 2, 1889; 15.
-“M. McQ., Stockbroker,” 61 ch., 1889-90; 16. “M. McQ., Removable,” 1890.</p>
-
-<p>The Author himself tired of Mick McQuaid, and tried to put other creations
-in the field:—“Dan Donovan,” “Corney Cluskey,” “Japhet Screw,”
-“Sir Timothy Mulligan,” and so on. But after a few chapters the readers
-invariably demanded “Mick” again, and, if the Author had not new adventures
-ready, he had to reproduce the already published adventures.
-More than once editors tried to drop the series, but the circulation which was
-60,000 fell at once, and “Mick” had to appear again. Apart from their
-issue in the <span class="smcap">Shamrock</span> many of “Mick’s” adventures were reproduced in
-penny numbers, and sold far and wide. After the Author’s death the
-editors simply reproduced the series over again. Harry Furniss began his
-artistic career by illustrating <i>Mick McQuaid</i>. Besides <i>Mick McQ.</i> another
-humorous series, <i>Darby Darken, P.L.G.</i>, ran in the <span class="smcap">Irish Emerald</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>LYNCH, E. M.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ KILBOYLAN BANK; or, Every Man his own Banker. Pp. 240.
-(<i>Kegan Paul</i>). 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> 1896.</p>
-
-<p>Father O’Callaghan returning from Italy greatly impressed by what he has
-seen of the Raffeisen Banking System at work, tries to start a similar system
-in Kilboylan. The book is the story of his efforts, difficulties, and final
-success. The local types—landlord, strong farmer, miller, publican, schoolmaster,
-“pote,” and “chaney merchant” are cleverly hit off, and their
-conversation rings true. The book is primarily a lesson in economics, but
-the characters are well brought out, and a little love-story runs through the
-whole. Miss Lynch also wrote for Sir Charles Gavan Duffy’s “New Irish
-Library” a story adapted from the French—<i>A Parish Providence</i>. It was
-intended to teach certain economic lessons to Irishmen.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>LYNCH, Hannah.</b> B. in Dublin. Lived much in Spain, in Greece, and in
-France, publishing various articles and books about them, notably a
-book on Toledo and <i>French Life in Town and Country</i>. Among her
-novels are <i>Prince of the Glades</i>, <i>Dr. Vermont’s Fantasy</i>, <i>Daughters of Men</i>,
-<i>Jimmy Blake</i>, <i>Clare Monroe</i>. She was associated with Miss Anna
-Parnell in the Ladies’ Land League in the eighties. When <span class="smcap">United
-Ireland</span> was suppressed she carried the type to Paris, and the paper
-was issued there. Mrs. Hinkson says of her,<a id="FNanchor_6" href="#Footnote_6" class="fnanchor">[6]</a> “She was one of the few
-people I have known who eat, drink, and dream books, and not many
-can have given to literature a more passionate delight and devotion.”</p>
-
-<div class="footnotes">
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_6" href="#FNanchor_6" class="label">[6]</a> <i>Reminiscences</i>, p. 76-7.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THROUGH TROUBLED WATERS. Pp. 460. (<i>Ward, Lock</i>). 1885.</p>
-
-<p>Scene: chiefly Carantrila House, Dunmore (“Cardene”) near Tuam, Co.
-Galway. Opens with an impending lawsuit about the inheritance of “Cardene.”
-It is settled by Mrs. St. Leger giving it up to her brother-in-law
-for a large sum. Henceforth she plots to get it back for her son. In later
-years he comes on a visit to the place. He falls in love with Nora Dillon,
-but carries on an innocent flirtation with a peasant girl. He is accused of
-seduction, the real culprit being Nora’s brother, and denounced from the
-altar. This latter scene is well done. But the truth comes out, and all is
-well with Hartley and Nora. The portrait drawn of one of the two priests
-introduced is rather satirical, but the tone is Catholic throughout.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ AUTOBIOGRAPHY OF A CHILD. Publ. Anon. Pp. 306.
-(<i>Blackwood</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1899.</p>
-
-<p>Clearly genuine autobiography. Begins in little village in Kildare, but
-at five or six the child is taken to Dublin. Story of an unhappy childhood,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_152"></a>[152]</span>
-for she was treated with great harshness by sisters and mother. Had some
-friends, however, among them an old gentleman, who believed himself to be
-Hamlet and O’Donovan Rossa, then a young lad. (<i>See</i> p. 609 in <span class="smcap">Blackwood’s
-Magazine</span>, vol. 164, where the story appeared serially). Her unhappiness
-was continued at the convent school, near Birmingham, where
-she was educated. Everything is set down, including a flogging she received
-and an account of her first confession. A very curious book, very well
-written.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>LYON, Capt. E. D.</b> Late 68th Durham Light Infantry.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ IRELAND’S DREAM: a Romance of the Future. Two Vols.
-(<i>Sonnenschein</i>). 1888.</p>
-
-<p>A forecast of Ireland under Home Rule. Contains much about relations
-of Orangemen and Catholics, the National League, secret societies, emigration,
-and so on. Represents an Ireland hopelessly “gone to the dogs”—no
-security for life or property, murder rife, prosperity gone, &amp;c. Written
-in flippant style, betraying bitter contempt for Irish nationalism.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>LYSAGHT, Mrs.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ REX SINGLETON; or, The Pathway of Life. (<i>Wells, Gardner</i>). 2<i>s.</i>
-Illustr. Third ed., <i>c.</i> 1911.</p>
-
-<p>Thoroughly a boy’s book, full of the adventures and pranks of an Irish
-boy.—(Publ.).</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>LYSAGHT, Sidney Royse.</b> Eldest son of T. R. Lysaght, of Mintinna, Co.
-Cork. Has published three volumes of verse between 1886 and 1911.
-Lives in Somerset.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ HER MAJESTY’S REBELS. Pp. 488. (<i>Macmillan</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1907.</p>
-
-<p>In a prefatory note the Author tells us that though the career of his hero
-resembles that of Charles Stewart Parnell, Connor Desmond is not intended
-as a portrait of Parnell. “There is an historical basis for the structure of
-the story—not for the persons.” A political novel, written mainly about
-the course of national life in Ireland, 1875-1891. The central figure most
-obviously reproduces the career and even the personal characteristics of
-Parnell, who is well and even sympathetically portrayed. The writer’s
-view-point is free, on the whole, from party bias. He is convinced that a
-Royal residence in Ireland would be a sure antidote to seditious tendencies.
-There is a strong love interest. The Author depicts many scenes of Irish
-life among various classes. The hero is “involved in flagitious relations
-with several women.”—(<i>Baker</i>, 2).</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>LYTTLE, Wesley Guard; “Robin.”</b> Born, 1844, at Newtownards, Co.
-Down. Was successively a junior reporter, a school teacher, a lecturer
-on Dr. Corry’s <i>Irish Diorama</i>, a teacher of shorthand, an accountant,
-an editor. Started, in 1880, <span class="smcap">The North Down and Bangor Gazette</span>,
-a strong Liberal and Home Rule paper. Afterwards owned and edited
-<span class="smcap">The North Down Herald</span>. Died 1896.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ ROBIN’S READINGS. Eight Vols.</p>
-
-<p>Series of humorous stories, poems, and sketches in the dialect of a Co.
-Down farmer, of which he had a thorough mastery. Some verse as well as
-prose. The Author gave several thousand recitals in various parts of the
-three kingdoms. The success of the above books was immediate and remarkable.
-They have enjoyed great popularity ever since. The character
-of these readings may be seen from the following titles:—V. I. “Adventures
-of Paddy McQuillan”—“a simple country fellow”—“his trip tae Glesco”—“his
-courtships”—“his wee Paddy”—“his twins”—“his tay perty.”
-V. II. “The adventures of Robin Gordon”—“Peggy and how I courted her”—“Wee<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_153"></a>[153]</span>
-Wully”—“the fechtin’ dugs”—“Robin on the ice”—“dipplemassy.”
-V. III. “Life in Ballycuddy, Co. Down”—“my brither Wully”—“kirk
-music”—“the General Assembly of 1879” (exciting scenes, Robin’s
-oration)—“the royal visit to Ireland”—“the Ballycuddy Meinister”—“wee
-Paddy’s bumps,” &amp;c., &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ SONS OF THE SOD: a Tale of County Down. (<span class="smcap">Bangor</span>). 1<i>s.</i>
-Paper. 1886.</p>
-
-<p>A racy story dealing with the peasantry of North Down which the Author
-knew well, and could depict admirably. The tale gives a picture of their
-merry-makings, courtships, humours, joys, and sorrows—wakes, weddings,
-evictions, &amp;c., &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ BETSY GRAY. Pp. 116. (<span class="smcap">Bangor</span>). 1<i>s.</i> 3<i>d.</i> [1888]. New ed.
-(<span class="smcap">Belfast</span>: <i>Carswell</i>). Revised by F. J. Bigger. 1913.</p>
-
-<p>Betsy Gray, the heroine (founded on a real personage) takes part in the
-rebellion, and fights at Ballynahinch. A story of thrilling interest. Relates
-events that preceded rebellion, dwelling much on the atrocities of the
-yeomanry, then describes in full the chief incidents of the rebellion. Introduces
-Wm. Steele Dickson, William Orr, H. Joy McCracken, Henry Munro,
-and Mick Maginn—the informer. “The Author has gone over every inch of
-the ground, and has hunted up old documents and old traditions indefatigably.”
-In entire sympathy with rebels. There is a good deal of local
-dialect, and much local colour.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE SMUGGLERS OF STRANGFORD LOUGH.</p>
-
-<p>“A melodramatic romance of an old-fashioned type, founded on facts.
-What with murder, robbery, abduction, smuggling, secret societies, and
-underground caverns, the reader is carried breathlessly along from start to
-finish. The local dialect is well conveyed.”—(I.B.L.). The headquarters
-of the smugglers was Killinchy, and the period of the story the end of the
-eighteenth century.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ DAFT EDDIE. Pp. 162. (<span class="smcap">Belfast</span>: <i>Carswell</i>). 6<i>d.</i> 1914.</p>
-
-<p>A re-issue of <i>The Smugglers of Strangford Lough</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>MACALISTER, R. A. Stewart, M.A., F.S.A.</b> B. Dublin, 1870. At present
-Professor of Irish Archæology in the National University. Author of a
-series of learned works on Palestine exploration, the Philistines,
-Ecclesiastical Vestments, Irish Epigraphy and Archæology, &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ TWO IRISH ARTHURIAN ROMANCES. Pp. ix. + 207. (<i>Nutt,
-for Irish Texts Society</i>). 10<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> net. 1908.</p>
-
-<p>Text and transl. on opposite pages. Contains two stories:—The Story
-of the Crop-eared Dog and The Story of Eagle-Boy. They are of the Wonder-voyage
-type. Arthur plays a secondary part. “The dreamland of <i>gruagachs</i>
-and monstrous nightmare shapes is here as typically a creation of Irish fancy
-as in any of the stories of the Finn cycle.”... “Eagle-Boy is a striking
-story, displaying ... no small constructive ingenuity and literary feeling.”—(<i>Introd.</i>).</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>M’ANALLY, D. R., Jr.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ IRISH WONDERS. Pp. 218. (<i>Ward, Lock</i>). Illustr. (pen and ink),
-H. R. Heaton. 1888.</p>
-
-<p>“The ghosts, giants, pookas, demons, leprechawns, banshees, fairies,
-witches, widows, old maids, and other marvels of the Emerald Isle. Popular
-tales as told by the people. Collected during a recent lengthy visit, in the
-course of which every county in the Island was traversed from end to end.”—(<i>Title-page
-and Pref.</i>). Very broad brogue. Somewhat “Stage-Irish” in tone.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_154"></a>[154]</span></p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>“MACARTHUR, Alexander”; Mrs. Nicchia</b>, <i>née</i> <b>Lily MacArthur</b>. At
-present residing in New York.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ IRISH REBELS. Pp. 219. (<i>Digby, Long</i>). 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> <i>n.d.</i> (1893).</p>
-
-<p>“O’Donoghue,” the hero, a young Catholic T.C.D. student, is deputed
-by the secret societies to shoot a landlord. He escapes at the time, and
-has a successful career at the bar, in parliament, and also in love, for he
-marries the girl of his choice, a daughter of “Judge Kavanagh,” a bitter
-Orangeman. But years afterwards his crime becomes known to some of his
-friends, and the discovery kills his wife. The Author is entirely favourable
-to the national cause. Parnell is mentioned several times. The central
-figure is not O’D., but “Lowry,” a remarkable portrait, probably drawn
-from life.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>M’AULIFFE, E. F.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ GRACE O’DONNELL: A Tale of the 18th Cent. Pp. 220. (<span class="smcap">Cork</span>:
-<i>Guy &amp; Co.</i>). 1891.</p>
-
-<p>Ireland in Penal times, middle of 18th century (Fontenoy, 1745, is introduced).
-Period fairly well illustrated—sufferings of Catholics, tithe-proctors,
-hedge-schools, etc. Scene varies between Galway, Madrid, London, Dublin,
-and Paris. The characters all belong to the better class, and the tone of the
-story may be described as “genteel”: there is nothing specially national
-about it. Author wishes to show “how many claims each [Catholic and
-Protestant] has on the other for love and admiration.” Some poems are included.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>MACCABE, William Bernard.</b> B. in Dublin, 1801. Was a journalist for
-the greater part of his life, first in Dublin, then for fifteen years in London,
-and again in Dublin from 1852-57. Wrote many Catholic works. Died
-at Donnybrook, 1891.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ AGNES ARNOLD. Three Vols. (<span class="smcap">Lond.</span>: <i>Newby</i>). 1861.</p>
-
-<p>A well constructed plot, with many fine dramatic scenes and much truthful
-character drawing. Shows the courses by which the people were driven into
-rebellion in 1798. The Author tells us that much of the materials were gleaned
-from his conversations in his boyhood with Wm. Putnam MacCabe, one
-of the insurgent leaders. Scene: Wexford.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>M’CALL, Patrick J.</b> B. in Dublin, 1861, and ed. at Catholic University
-School, Leeson Street. Much better known as a poet by his <i>Irish Noinins</i>,
-<i>Songs of Erin</i>, <i>Irish Fireside Songs</i>, and <i>Pulse of the Bards</i> than as a
-prose writer. Resides in Patrick Street, Dublin.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ FENIAN NIGHTS’ ENTERTAINMENTS. Pp. 132. (<span class="smcap">Dublin</span>:
-<i>T. G. O’Donoghue</i>). [1895].</p>
-
-<p>Twelve evenings of story-telling at a Wexford fireside. The stories are
-mostly Ossianic legends, but there are a few fairy tales. They purport to
-be told by a farmer with all the arts of the shanachie—the quaintness, the
-directness, the pithy sayings, the delightful digressions, and the gay humour.
-They are, of course, in dialect.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>M’CALLUM, Hugh and John.</b> Ed. an original collection of the poems of
-Ossian, Orrann, Ullin, and other bards who flourished in the same age.
-(<i>Montrose</i>). 1816.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>M’CARTHY, Justin.</b> B. in Cork, 1830, and ed. there. Began there his
-literary career of over sixty years. In 1853 he went to Liverpool, and
-thence to London in 1860. From that time till his death in 1912 he
-lived almost exclusively in England. But he never lost touch with
-Ireland. For many years he was a Nationalist M.P., and from 1890-96
-was Chairman of the Party. His works number over forty, many of
-them dealing with Ireland—novels, history, biography, reminiscences,
-&amp;c.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_155"></a>[155]</span></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ A FAIR SAXON. Pp. 386. (<i>Chatto &amp; Windus</i>). 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> [1873];
-several since. New ed. about 1907.</p>
-
-<p>Main theme: the love of an English girl for Maurice FitzHugh Tyrone,
-an Irish M.P., famous in the House as a clever and insuppressible opponent
-of the Government. Much of the story (a complicated one) is concerned
-with the efforts of another lover of the Fair Saxon to supplant Tyrone, and
-also to get him to violate the conditions of a legacy. The latter are (1) that
-Tyrone shall not marry before forty; (2) that he shall not join the Fenians;
-(3) that he shall not fight a duel. His efforts meet with a wonderful succession
-of alternate success and failure. Incidentally we have glimpses of Fenian
-plotting, the Fenian movement being portrayed with little sympathy. The
-characters are nearly all insipid or vicious worldlings, drawn in a satirical
-and sometimes cynical vein. Such is Mrs. Lorn, the rich American widow,
-of fast life. The heroine, and to a certain extent the hero, are exceptions.
-The precocious young American, Theodore, is one of the best things in the
-book.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ MAURICE TYRONE. (<i>Benziger</i>). 0.75. The American ed. of <i>A Fair
-Saxon</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ MONONIA. Pp. 383. (<i>Chatto &amp; Windus</i>). 6<i>s.</i> [1901]. New edition,
-1902.</p>
-
-<p>Scene: a large Munster town, presumably Cork. Time: the attempted
-rising in 1848. The chief interest is the unfolding in action of the various
-characters. Some of these are strikingly and distinctively portrayed. The
-treatment of the love element is original, the course of true love being smooth
-from the start. Here and there are pleasant bits of description. The standpoint
-is Catholic and nationalist, but without anti-English feeling, several
-of the principal and most admirable characters being English. A happy love
-story runs through the book.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>M’CARTHY, Justin Huntley.</b> S. of preceding. B. 1860. Ed. University
-College School, London. Began writing 1881. Nationalist M.P. 1884-1892,
-during which period he was an ardent politician. Publ. <i>England
-under Gladstone</i> (1884), and in the same year a successful play, “The
-Candidate.” Then followed <i>Hours with Great Irishmen</i>, <i>Ireland since
-the Union</i>, <i>The Case for Home Rule</i>, &amp;c., and a number of books, poems,
-tales, &amp;c., on Oriental subjects. His knowledge of our myth and legend
-has been described as comprehensive and exhaustive. He has publ.
-many other novels and plays and volumes of verse. But of late
-years the theatrical world has claimed him wholly.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ LILY LASS. Pp. 150. (<i>Chatto &amp; Windus</i>). 1<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> 1889.</p>
-
-<p>Picture from nationalist point of view of Young Ireland movement, especially
-in Cork. Full of sensational incidents, told with much verve.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE ILLUSTRIOUS O’HAGAN. (<i>Hurst &amp; Blackett</i>). 1905. (N.Y.:
-<i>Harper</i>). 1.50, &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p>Melodramatic adventures of two cosmopolitan adventurers of Irish origin,
-in various parts of Europe and, in particular, among the courts of the petty
-German princes, where very fast living prevails. The picture we are given
-of these latter is frank enough. The colouring is brilliant, the style bright
-and swift. Copyrighted for the stage.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE O’FLYNN. Pp. 352. (<i>Hurst &amp; Blackett</i>). 1<i>s.</i> (N.Y.: <i>Harper</i>).
-1.50. 1910.</p>
-
-<p>O’Flynn is a swashbucklering, swaggering soldier of fortune, who has seen
-service in the Austrian army. The story tells of the varying fortunes of O’F.
-and of Lord Sedgemouth in their rivalry for the hand of the Lady Benedetta
-Mountmichael. Both suitors are in the service of King James, and the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_156"></a>[156]</span>
-scene varies between Dublin Castle and Knockmore, a castle “in the heart
-of the Wicklow hills.” Full of more or less burlesque plots and stratagems
-and surprises. Written in a pleasant but reckless and rattling style. Smacks
-strongly of the stage throughout, indeed it was originally a successful play
-before appearing in book form. Incidents not historical. <i>Not for young
-people.</i></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE FAIR IRISH MAID. Pp. 344. (<i>Mills &amp; Boon</i>). 6<i>s.</i> (N.Y.:
-<i>Harper</i>). 1.30. 1911.</p>
-
-<p>Ireland a few years after the Union; but not political. Mr. McC., in his
-usual vein of gay romanticism, takes his beautiful maiden from Kerry to
-London, where in the modish days of the Dandies she is for a time the reigning
-toast. But she is true to her Kerry lover, whom she finds in London lost
-and ruined, and whom she rescues and enables to produce his Irish play.
-Other characters are Lord Cloyne, the Irish ascendancy landlord, Mr. Rubie,
-the English M.P. who has come to visit and improve Ireland, and an antiquary
-who wants to buy a round tower and provides many amusing situations.—(<i>Press
-notices</i>).</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>M’CARTHY, Michael J. F.</b> B. Midleton, Co. Cork. Ed. Vincentian Coll.,
-Cork; Midleton College, Cork; T.C.D. After the appearance of <i>Five
-Years in Ireland</i> in 1901, “has written and spoken against the power
-exercised by the Roman Catholic Church in politics and in education.
-Started and conducted Christian Defence Effort in opposition to Home
-Rule, 1911-14.” Author of <i>Priests and People in Ireland</i>, <i>Rome in
-Ireland</i>, &amp;c.—(<span class="smcap">Who’s Who</span>).</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ GALLOWGLASS. Pp. 540. (<i>Simpkin, Marshall</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1904.</p>
-
-<p>Purports to portray the social and political life of various classes in a typical
-South of Ireland town (“Gallowglass”). Written in a vein of bitter satire.
-Peasant, shopkeeper, politician, and especially priest, are held up to unmeasured
-scorn. Aspersions are cast upon Catholic teachings and practices.
-Eviction scenes, the workings of a secret society, political meetings, a scene
-in Parliament, serve the writer for his purpose in various ways.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>M’CHESNEY, Dora.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ KATHLEEN CLARE. Pp. 286. (<i>Blackwood</i>). Six Illustr. by J. A.
-Shearman. 1895.</p>
-
-<p>Story of Wentworth, Earl of Strafford’s Viceroyalty in Ireland, told in
-form of diary purporting to be written by a kinswoman of Strafford’s, who
-sees him in his home life and acquires extraordinary love and reverence for
-him. The tale of his execution is pathetically told. Quaint Elizabethan
-English. Pretty Elizabethan love-songs interspersed.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>M’CLINTOCK, Letitia.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ A BOYCOTTED HOUSEHOLD. Pp. 319. (<i>Smith, Elder</i>). 1881.</p>
-
-<p>Period, <i>c.</i> 1880. Mr. Hamilton is a model as a man and landlord. His
-family is in very reduced circumstances owing to “No-Rent Campaign.”
-Then we have various incidents of the land war—threatening letters, burning
-of hay, and finally the eldest son is brutally murdered by tenants on whom
-favours had been heaped. The beautiful home life, sympathetic love affairs,
-&amp;c., of the Hamiltons are dwelt upon as pointing the contrast with the wickedness
-of the League and the meaningless ingratitude of the peasantry.
-Sympathies of Author wholly with landlords. The Hamilton boys were all
-educated at Rugby, and the general outlook of the family is English. Scene:
-King’s Co. and Donegal alternately.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_157"></a>[157]</span></p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>M’CLINTOCK, Major H. S.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ RANDOM STORIES; chiefly Irish. Pp. 147. (<span class="smcap">Belfast</span>: <i>Marcus
-Ward</i>). Illustr. <i>n.d.</i> <i>c.</i> 1885.</p>
-
-<p>A collection of unobjectionable smoke-room yarns, more or less original,
-and more or less humorous. Illustr. somewhat crude.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>M’CRAITH, L. M.</b> Mrs. L. M. M’Craith Blakeney, of Loughloher, Cahir,
-Co. Tipperary. B. 1870. Ed. in Ireland and at Cheltenham. Has
-written also <i>The Suir from its Source to the Sea</i>, <i>The Romance of Irish
-Heroines</i>, <i>The Romance of Irish Heroes</i>, &amp;c. In these and other writings
-her aim has been to popularise Irish local history and antiquities in
-the hopes of fostering a love of country, especially in the young.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ A GREEN TREE. Pp. 221. (<i>Sealy, Bryers</i>). 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> 1908.</p>
-
-<p>A pleasant family story with a sympathetically, though somewhat dimly-sketched,
-Irish background. All through there is the contrast between
-English and Irish ideals. One or two peculiar Irish types are well drawn.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>MACDERMOTT, S.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ LEIGH OF LARA: a Novel of Co. Wicklow. (<i>Gill?</i>). 1<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
-
-<p>A slight but pleasant tale, told in straightforward manner, without
-character-study, scene-painting, problems, or politics. Deals with the false
-and misunderstood position of a man who has been entrusted with the charge
-of his sister-in-law, while his brother is abroad “on his keeping,” and the
-complications that arise from this position.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>MACDERMOTT, W. R.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ FOUGHILOTRA: A Forbye Story. Pp. 326. (<i>Sealy, Bryers</i>). <i>c.</i> 1906.</p>
-
-<p>Sub-t.:—A memorial of the Ulster handloom weavers. A sociological study,
-in form of novel, of the history and development of a family. Scene: shore
-of Lough Neagh. Time: present day, though the family history goes back
-two hundred years. The forceful and pungent dialect in which it is written
-is quite natural and true to life. An unusual and noteworthy book—interesting
-alike for its plot, its clever character-study and the thoughtfulness that
-pervades it. Has considerable humour, and nothing in the least objectionable.
-This author also has published, under the pen name of “A. P. O’Gara,”
-<i>The Green Republic</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>MACDONAGH, Michael.</b> B. Limerick, 1862. Ed. Christian Bros.’ Schools.
-At twenty-two joined the staff of <span class="smcap">Freeman’s Journal</span>. From 1894 to
-the present has been on staff of <span class="smcap">Times</span>, and he lives in London. His
-father, Michael O’Doherty MacDonagh, was a Donegal man, a printer
-and poet. Has been writing about Ireland all his life in an immense
-variety of periodicals, and has published about a dozen books, many of
-them relating to Parliament, of great historic value.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ IRISH LIFE AND CHARACTER. Pp. 382. (<i>Hodder &amp; Stoughton</i>).
-6<i>s.</i> Many editions, the 5th being in 1905.</p>
-
-<p>Object: “To give a clear, full, and faithful picture of Irish life and character,
-illustrated by anecdotes and by my own experience during a twelve years’
-connexion with Irish journalism.” “I have admitted into my collection
-only anecdotes that are truly genuine, really humorous, and certainly characteristic
-of the Irish people.” “The face of Ireland as seen in these pages is
-always puckered with a smile.”—(<i>Pref.</i>). May be described as anecdotes,
-chiefly comic, classified and accompanied by a running commentary. Chapters:
-The Old Irish Squire; Duelling; Faction Fighting; Some Delusions about
-Ireland (<i>e.g.</i>, “Stage-Irishman”); Bulls; In the Law Courts; “Agin the
-Government”; Irish Repartee and Sarcasm; Love-making in Ireland (its
-matter-of-factness, &amp;c.); Humours of Politics In and Out of Parliament;
-The Ulster Irishman; The Jarvey; The Beggar; Sunniness of Irish Life,
-&amp;c. It is to be observed that the laugh is often against the Irish throughout,
-and perhaps our national failings are rather more prominent here than our
-national virtues, the serious side of Irish life being scarcely touched on at all.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_158"></a>[158]</span></p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>M’DONNELL, Randal William.</b> B. in Dublin, 1870. Son of Randal
-M’Donnell, Q.C. Ed. Armagh Royal School. B.A., T.C.D. Was
-for a time assistant librarian in Marsh’s Library, and now a L.G.B.
-inspector. Has published also three volumes of verse.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ KATHLEEN MAVOURNEEN. Pp. 270. (<i>Sealy, Bryers</i>). 2<i>s.</i>
-Frontisp. 1898.</p>
-
-<p>Pictures first the causes and events that led to the rebellion, Tone’s visit
-to America, his schemes, the French invasion. Then vivid description of the
-outbreak in Wicklow, the fight at Tubberneering, the battle of New Ross,
-the capture and death of Lord Edward Fitzgerald.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ WHEN CROMWELL CAME TO DROGHEDA. Pp. 147. (<i>Gill</i>).
-2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> Map of Drogheda and map of Ireland in time of Cromwell. (N.Y.:
-<i>Benziger</i>). 0.90. 1906.</p>
-
-<p>“Edited from the record of Clarence Stranger,” an officer in the army of
-Owen Roe O’Neill. Covers principal events from Cromwell’s landing to the
-Plantation, including defence of Clonmel.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ MY SWORD FOR PATRICK SARSFIELD. Pp. 201. (<i>Gill</i>). 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>
-1907.</p>
-
-<p>Adventures of Phelim O’Hara (character well drawn), a colonel in Sarsfield’s
-horse, who witnesses siege of Derry, battle of the Boyne, two sieges of Limerick.
-Much history, varied by startling adventures.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ ARDNAREE. Pp. 227. (<i>Gill</i>). 1911.</p>
-
-<p>“The story of an English girl in Connaught, told by herself.” Mainly a
-record of social life (tea-parties, military balls, &amp;c.), with a good deal of fairly
-mild love-making. The ’98 insurrection (landing of French at Killala, &amp;c.)
-forms a kind of background but is little spoken of. The Author hits off
-cleverly enough the outlook and language of a narrator such as the heroine.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>MACDOUGALL, Rev. J.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ CRAIGNISH TALES, collected by. Notes on the War Dress of the
-Celts by Lord A. Campbell. Pp. xvi. + 98. (<i>Nutt</i>). 5<i>s.</i> 20 plates. 1889.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ FOLK AND HERO TALES. Pp. xxx. + 311. Demy 8vo. (<i>Nutt</i>).
-7<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> net. Three Illustr. by E. Griset. 1891.</p>
-
-<p>Introduction by A. Nutt deals with aims of study of folk-lore, and various
-theories of the origin of this latter, and the value of Celtic folk-lore.</p>
-
-<p>Ten tales collected in district of Duror (Argyllshire) between Summer of
-1889 and Spring of 1890, obtained from a labouring man named Cameron,
-who had them in his boyhood from Donald MacPhie and others. As folk-lore
-they are thoroughly reliable and genuine, the Gaelic text given after each
-story being written at the narrator’s dictation with painstaking accuracy.
-The stories are typical folk-tales—a string of marvellous adventures of some
-hero with giants and enchanted castles and witches, &amp;c., &amp;c.—often grotesque
-and extravagant and devoid of moral or other significance beyond the mere
-narrative.... Free from coarseness. Finn is the hero in several of these
-tales. Good Index. 50 pp. of Notes, devoted chiefly to variant versions of
-the tales, explanations of terms and comparisons with other tales.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>M’DOWELL, Lalla.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE EARL OF EFFINGHAM. Pp. 280. (<i>Tinsley</i>). 1877.</p>
-
-<p>Time: the forties, in Ballyquin, Co. Galway. It is a kind of appeal in
-story form to the Irish landlords to stay at home and “right Ireland’s wrongs.”
-The good points in the Irish character are well brought out, the brogue is well
-reproduced, and there is much humour. There are some glimpses of Dublin
-society. The bias is somewhat Protestant.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_159"></a>[159]</span></p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>“MACEIRE, Fergus.”</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE SONS OF EIRE. Three vols. (<span class="smcap">Lond.</span>: <i>Newby</i>). 1872.</p>
-
-<p>Author styles himself “The last of the Sons of Eire,” an old broken-down
-Irish family living in Hampshire (Vol. II. brings them back to Ireland).
-A long autobiography, with a multitude of rather trifling incidents, much
-conversation, and a good deal of moralising. The portrait of the writer’s
-mother is interesting and curious. The Author seems Catholic and Irish in
-sympathies. In the end the teller marries the betrothed of his brother Brian,
-the real hero, who has been killed in a skating accident.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>MACGILL, Patrick.</b> “The Navvy Poet.” B. Glenties, Co. Donegal, 1891.
-Ed. at National school until he was twelve. At fourteen began to
-write verse for the <span class="smcap">Derry Journal</span>. Soon after set out for Greenock
-with 10<i>s.</i> in his pocket. “Since then I have done all sorts of things,
-digging, draining, farming, and navvying.” In 1912 was a plate-layer
-on the Caledonian Railway.—(I.B.L., III., p. 71). His poems are <i>Songs
-of a Navvy</i>, <i>Gleanings from a Navvy’s Scrap Book</i>, and <i>Songs of the Dead
-End</i>. Is now a soldier in the London Irish Rifles, and has written a
-good account of military life in <i>The Amateur Army</i>. A series of sketches
-from the firing line, entitled <i>The Red Horizon</i>, is in preparation.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ CHILDREN OF THE DEAD END. Pp. 305. (<i>Herbert Jenkins</i>).
-6<i>s.</i> 1914.</p>
-
-<p>“Most of my story is autobiographical.”—(<i>Foreword</i>). It opens in the
-Glenties with a faithful picture of the people and their hard life. The scene
-then shifts to Scotland and depicts the toils and temptations that beset the
-men, and especially the girls, in their sordid and insanitary surroundings.
-The hero goes on tramp with “Moleskin Joe,” a philosophic vagabond, finely
-described; and the shifts they are put to and the scenes they come through
-all bear the mark of truth, as does the wild life led by the navvies at Kinlochleven.
-The description of these scenes in a London newspaper led to his
-employment on the press. The hero’s love for Norah Ryan is purely and
-touchingly delineated, and, save for one unhappy gibe at the P.P., the book is
-unobjectionable.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE RAT PIT. Pp. 308. (<i>Jenkins</i>). 1915.</p>
-
-<p>The story of Norah Ryan, the heroine of <i>The Children of the Dead End</i>,
-from her childhood in Western Donegal to her death, a woman of the streets,
-in a Glasgow slum. A heartrending story from start to finish, with scarcely a
-gleam of cheer. The Author has exceptional powers of observation and
-gifts of description, and the book is extraordinarily realistic. But the realism
-and the sombreness being exclusive, the effect is exaggerated even to falseness.
-Farley McKeown is impossibly villainous, the picture of the wake revolting
-because undiscerning, Norah’s innocence overdrawn. Yet on the whole
-the Author’s claim that it is a transcript from life, life seen and lived by
-him, is doubtless well sustained. There are several needless sneers at the
-priests, <i>e.g.</i>, p. 286, which is wantonly unpleasant. The Author is not prurient,
-but he describes plainly and vividly scenes in Glasgow brothels. Good
-picture of the conditions of life of the Irish migratory labourers.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>[M’GOVERN, Rev. J. B.]; “J. B. S.”</b> Of St. Stephen’s Rectory, Chorlton-on-Medlock,
-Manchester. An enthusiast for Irish archæology and a
-frequent contributor on his favourite subject to N. &amp; Q., <span class="smcap">Cork Archaeol.
-Journal</span>, the <span class="smcap">Antiquary</span>, &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ IMELDA, or Retribution: a Romance of Kilkee. (<i>Tinsley</i>). 7<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>
-1883.</p>
-
-<p>Scene: varies between Kilkee and Meenahela on the one hand and Italy on
-the other. The story is concerned with the faithlessness of Imelda Lestrange,
-an Irish girl, to her affianced Florentine lover, Gasper Bicchieri, whom she
-had met at Kilkee, and the Nemesis that befalls her in the faithlessness of her<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_160"></a>[160]</span>
-new lover—and husband—Monckton, who deserts her for his cousin, Teresa
-Dempsey. Most of this happens at Kilkee. The end is tragedy. Forty
-years later Gasper returns to Kilkee to brood in the scene of the catastrophe
-of his life. There is little or no characterisation or study of motive. The
-story opens in 1829.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>M’HENRY, James, M.D.</b> B. Larne, Co. Antrim, 1785. Ed. Dublin and
-Glasgow. Lived 1817-1842 in U.S.A. From 1842 till his death in 1845
-he was U.S. consul at Derry. Publ. several volumes of verse (Mr.
-O’Donoghue enumerates nine) and several novels besides those mentioned
-below.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE INSURGENT CHIEF. Pp. 128, very close print. (<i>Gill</i>). Bound
-up with HEARTS OF STEEL. <i>n.d.</i></p>
-
-<p>Adventures of a young loyalist during the rebellion in the North, pleasantly
-told, but with improbabilities and a good deal of the <i>deus ex machina</i>. Gives
-the very best description of the scenes in Belfast and Larne leading up to
-the Battle of Antrim and the consequent defeat of the “United men,” many
-of whom were personally known to the Author. The leaders are referred to
-by name, and the heroic death of Willy Neilson pathetically described. The
-famous rebel ballad of “Blaris Moor” is put into the mouth of a ballad
-singer in Belfast, and the northern dialect is excellently rendered.</p>
-
-<p>The original title of this was <i>O’Halloran; or, The Insurgent Chief</i>, [1824],
-Philadelphia, three vols., and in same year London, one vol. Republ. frequently
-in Glasgow (<i>Cameron &amp; Ferguson</i>) and Belfast (<i>Henderson</i>).</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE HEARTS OF STEEL. (<i>Gill</i>). 6<i>d.</i> [1825]. Still in print.</p>
-
-<p>A story full of sensational adventure. There is a good deal about the
-Oak Boys and Steel Boys, Ulster Protestant secret societies which indulged
-in agrarian outrages as a protest against various abuses. The writer praises
-the Presbyterian religion somewhat at the expense of the Catholic. Some
-of the incidents related are rather coarse. Includes legends of Carrickfergus,
-also a good deal of verse.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>MACHRAY, Robert.</b> B. 1857. Formerly Prof. of Ecclesiastical History
-in St. John’s University College, Manitoba. War editor, <span class="smcap">Daily Mail</span>,
-1904-05. Between 1898 and 1914 has publ. a dozen novels, besides
-other works.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ GRACE O’MALLEY, Princess and Pirate. Pp. viii. + 338. (<i>Cassell</i>).
-6<i>s.</i> 1898.</p>
-
-<p>Purporting to be “Told by Ruari Macdonald, Redshank and Rebel, The
-same set forth in the Tongue of the English.” Scene: various points on
-the west coast from Achill to Limerick. To a dual love story—of Grace
-(= Grania Waile) and Richard Burke, Ruari (the hero) and Eva, Grace’s
-foster-sister—are added many stirring descriptions of sea-fights and escapes,
-sieges and hostings. Historical personages, such as Sir Nicholas Malbie, the
-Earl of Desmond, and Stephen Lynch of Galway, are introduced. The
-moral tone is entirely good. The point of view is Grace O’Malley’s.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>M’ILROY, Archibald.</b> B. Ballyclare, Co. Antrim, 1860. Entered first the
-banking and then the insurance business. Took part in public life in
-his native county and in Co. Down. For the last three years of his
-life, which was ended in the Lusitania disaster, 1915, he lived in Canada.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE AULD MEETIN’ HOOSE GREEN. Pp. 260. (<span class="smcap">Belfast</span>:
-<i>M’Caw, Stevenson &amp; Orr</i>). 1898.</p>
-
-<p>Stories of the Co. Antrim peasantry. Time: thirty or forty years ago.
-Imitative of the “Kailyard” school in England. An intimate picture
-of Ulster Presbyterianism and its ways of thought. Has both humour and
-pathos. Is offensive to no creed or class. Ulster-Scot dialect true to life.
-Titles of some of the stories:—“Two Little Green Graves,” “At Jesus’ Feet,”
-“The Old Precentor Crosses the Bar.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_161"></a>[161]</span></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ WHEN LINT WAS IN THE BELL. (<i>Unwin</i>). 1898.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ BY LONE CRAIG LINNIE BURN. Pp. 153. (<i>Unwin</i>). 1900.</p>
-
-<p>“Two series of local stories of the Scoto-Irish folk of Ulster, the chat of
-village gossips, character-sketches of doctor, minister, agent, and inn-keeper:
-quaint blends of Scottish and Irish traits. Most of the tales of idyllic kind.”—(<i>Baker</i>).
-The reviewer in the <span class="smcap">Irish Monthly</span> says of the second of the
-above: “It is a wonderfully realistic picture of various grades of social
-life in a little country town in the North ... giving amusing glimpses of the
-working of practical Presbyterian theology in the rustic middle class....
-Leaves on the reader a very remarkable impression of truthfulness and reality.”
-In this second novel there is some humour and a good deal of pathos. The
-same remarks apply here as to <i>The Auld Meetin’ Hoose Green</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ A BANKER’S LOVE STORY. Pp. 247. (<i>Fisher Unwin</i>). 1901.</p>
-
-<p>The story opens in “the Union Bank, Spindleton” (the Ulster Bank,
-Belfast), the various types of bank directors and clerks being cleverly described—the
-mischief-making Blake, the jolly Harry Burke, &amp;c. The scene shifts
-to “Craig Linnie” (Ballyclare), where George Dixon’s love story begins.
-He is transferred to Ballinasloe (good description of the big fair). Through
-no fault of his own he comes under a cloud, but eventually matters clear up
-and all ends happily. The Author knows his Ulster types thoroughly.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE HUMOUR OF DRUID’S ISLAND. Pp. 127. (<i>Hodges, Figgis</i>;
-and <i>Mullan</i>, <span class="smcap">Belfast</span>). 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> 1902.</p>
-
-<p>Scene: “Druid’s Island” is Islandmagee, Co. Antrim. A series of very
-short anecdotes told to one another by the Presbyterian country people,
-in their peculiar Scoto-Irish dialect, and full of the dry, “pawky” humour
-of the North. Gives glimpses of the manners and life of the place.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>MACINNES, Rev. D.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ FOLK AND HERO TALES. Collected, ed. (in Gaelic), and trans.
-by; with a Study on the Development of the Ossianic or Finn Saga,
-and copious Notes by Alfred Nutt. Pp. xxiv. + 497. (<i>Nutt</i>). 15<i>s.</i> net.
-Portrait of Campbell of Islay and two Illustr. by E. Griset. 1890.</p>
-
-<p>Gaelic and English throughout on opposite pages. The tales were taken
-down at intervals during 1881-2, chiefly from the dictation of A. MacTavish,
-a shoemaker of seventy-four, a native of Mull. The tales are typical folk-tales,
-full of giants, monsters, and other mythic and magic beings. They
-are often quaint, imaginative and picturesque, but abound in extravagance
-and absurdity. In Mr. Nutt’s notes (pp. 443 to end) he studies chiefly—(1)
-What relation, if any, obtains between the folk-tales current in Scotland
-and the older Gaelic literature; (2) what traces of early Celtic belief and
-customs do these tales reveal. They are very elaborate and scholarly. Good
-Index.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>M’INTOSH, Sophie.</b> Born at Kinsale, where she resided for many years,
-until her marriage with Rev. H. M’Intosh, of Methodist College, Belfast.
-In her sketches she describes faithfully and vividly the people of her
-native town.—(<span class="smcap">Irish Lit.</span>).</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE LAST FORWARD, and Other Stories. Pp. 152. (<i>Brimley
-Johnson</i>). Five Illustr. by Jack B. Yeats. 1902.</p>
-
-<p>Ten Irish school and football stories, with plenty of schoolboy language
-and slang, told in lively, stirring style, never dull.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_162"></a>[162]</span></p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>McKAY, J. G.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE WIZARD’S GILLIE; or, Gille A’Bhuidseir and Other Tales.
-Ed. and transl. by J. G. McKay. (<i>St. Catherine’s Press</i>). 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> 1915.</p>
-
-<p>A selection from the MS. collection of the tales gathered by the late J. F.
-Campbell, of Islay (<i>q.v.</i>), and preserved in the Advocates’ Library, Edinburgh.
-The Gaelic and the translation are given on opposite pages. Some of the
-titles are “Donald Caol Cameron,” “The Carpenter MacPheigh,” “The Sept
-of the Three Score Fools.”</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>MACKAY, William.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ PRO PATRIA: the Autobiography of a Conspirator. Two Vols.
-(<i>Remington</i>). 1883.</p>
-
-<p>The narrator, Ptolemy Daly, is a weak, conceited youth, given to hysterics
-and poetry. Full of visions of Robert Emmet, he joins the staff of “The
-Sunburst,” the organ of an insurrectionary movement led by Phil Gallagher,
-a fine character, evidently modelled on T. C. Luby. At the critical moment
-Daly plays the traitor and decamps to England. Isaac Butt and John
-Rea are introduced, under thinly disguised names. Scene: Dublin and
-Wicklow. Written in ironical vein: Daly’s only “Speech from the Dock”
-was on a charge of drunk and disorderly. The Author was one of three
-brothers, all well-known London journalists. He was born in Belfast in
-1846. Wrote also <i>A Popular Idol</i> and <i>Beside Still Waters</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>MACKENZIE, Donald A.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ FINN AND HIS WARRIOR BAND; or, Tales of Old Alban. Pp.
-248. (<i>Blackie</i>). 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> 1910.</p>
-
-<p>Stories, arranged in a connected series, of the Fenian cycle, adapted for
-children from twelve to fourteen or thereabouts. Told in picturesque language,
-but perfectly simple and direct. For the most part folklore, full of
-magic and wonder, nine-headed giants and fire-breathing dogs. But here
-and there the antique hero-tale appears, as in the Battle of Gavra and the
-death of Dermaid. Localities mostly Scotch. The illustrations (6 coloured,
-34 in black and white) are charming in every way. Picture cover.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>MACKENZIE, R. Shelton.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ BITS OF BLARNEY. (N.Y.: <i>Redfield</i>). [1854]. (N.Y.: <i>Alden</i>). 1884.</p>
-
-<p>“A series of Irish stories and legends collected from the peasantry,” familiar
-to the Author in youth (see pref.). It is a volume of miscellanies. Includes
-three stories of Blarney Castle told in serio-comic manner by a schoolmaster;
-some local legends of Finn McCool, &amp;c.; eccentric characters (the bard
-O’Kelly, Father Prout, Irish dancing masters, Charley Crofts, Buck English);
-Irish publicists; sketches of Grattan and O’Connell (the former enthusiastic,
-the latter not wholly favourable—O’C. “the greatest professor of Blarney
-these latter days have seen or heard”). He speaks of O’C. from personal
-knowledge. On the whole thoroughly nationalist in tone. The Author,
-b. in Co. Limerick, 1809, educated Cork and Fermoy, was a journalist in
-London, afterwards in New York, and wrote or edited many valuable works,
-historical and biographical. D. 1880.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>M’KEON, J. F.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ ORMOND IDYLLS. Pp. 144. (<i>Nutt</i>). 1<i>s.</i> Paper. 1901.</p>
-
-<p>Scene: Co. Kilkenny. Eight little sketches of peasant life, pathetic and
-sad. In one a glimpse is given with knowledge and sympathy of the work
-of a country priest.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_163"></a>[163]</span></p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>M’LENNAN, William.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ SPANISH JOHN. Pp. 270. (<i>Harper</i>). 6<i>s.</i> Eighteen v. g. Illustr. by
-F. de Myrbach. 1898.</p>
-
-<p>Adventures of Col. John McDonnell from the Highlands, when a lieutenant
-in the regiment Irlandia, in the service of the K. of Spain, operating in Italy
-(1744-6). At the Scots College in Rome, whither he had been sent to be made
-a priest, he had met a young student, a Mr. O’Rourke. This latter, now
-a chaplain in the Irish Brigade, saves McD.’s life on the field of Villetri.
-Subsequently the two are sent by the Duke of York to Scotland on a mission
-to Prince Charlie. They find that all is lost. Characters admirably drawn,
-notably the humorous, warm-hearted, heroic Father O’Rourke.</p>
-
-<p class="author" id="MACLEOD"><b>“MACLEOD, Fiona”; William Sharp.</b> B. Paisley, 1856. Ed. Glasgow
-Univ. Spent his boyhood in the West Highlands and Islands and
-became imbued with love for things Celtic. Even as late as 1899 it
-was positively stated that, in spite of conjectures to the contrary, William
-Sharp and Fiona MacLeod were not the same person, and Mrs. Hinkson
-says in her <i>Twenty-five Years’ Reminiscences</i> that she is not yet convinced
-that they were.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE LAUGHTER OF PETERKIN. Pp. 288. (<i>Constable</i>). Four
-Drawings by S. Rollenson. 1897.</p>
-
-<p>“A re-telling of old tales of the Celtic Wonder-World. Contains: ‘The
-Laughter of Peterkin’; ‘the Four White Swans (Sons of Lir)’; ‘the Fate
-of the Sons of Tuireann’; ‘Darthool and the Sons of Usnach.’” Told in
-language of great beauty and simplicity.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ SPIRITUAL TALES. (<span class="smcap">Edinb.</span>: <i>Geddes</i>). 1897.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ TRAGIC ROMANCES. (<span class="smcap">Edinb.</span>: <i>Geddes</i>). 1897.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ BARBARIC TALES. (<span class="smcap">Edinb.</span>: <i>Geddes</i>). 1897.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE DOMINION OF DREAMS. (<i>Constable</i>). 1899.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE SIN-EATER, and Other Tales. (<i>Constable</i>). 1899.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE WASHER OF THE FORD, and Other Tales. (<i>Constable</i>). 1899.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ The collected works written under the above pen-name (between 1894
-and 1905). Ed. by his widow, and publ. by <i>Heinemann</i> in seven Vols.,
-5<i>s.</i> net each. Three Vols. have appeared, viz.:—I. <i>Pharais; The
-Mountain Lovers</i>. II. <i>The Sin Eater; The Washer of the Ford</i> (April).
-Pp. 450. III. <i>The Dominion of Dreams; Under the Dark Star</i> (April).
-Pp. 438. The following are announced:—IV. <i>The Divine Adventure;
-Iona</i>, &amp;c. V. <i>The Winged Destiny.</i> VI. <i>The Silence of Amor; Where
-the Forest Murmurs.</i> VII. <i>Poems and Dramas.</i></p>
-
-<p>Some titles of the stories in these three vols.:—“Morag of the Glen,”
-“The Dan-nan-Ron,” “The Sin-Eater,” “The Flight of the Culdees,”
-“The Harping of Cravetheen,” “Silk o’ the Kine,” “Cathal of the Woods,”
-“St. Bride of the Isles,” “The Awakening of Angus Ogue,” “Three Marvels
-of Iona,” &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p>These books of Fiona Macleod’s are, for the most part, shadowy, elusive
-dream-poems in prose, wrought into a form of beauty from fragments of
-old Gaelic tales heard in the Western isles (where the Author lived for years)
-from fishermen and crofters. They are full of the magic of words subtly
-woven, of vague mystery, and of nature—wind and sea and sky. He strives
-to infuse into his stories the sadder and more mystic aspects of the Gaelic
-spirit, as he conceives it. “I have not striven to depict the blither Irish
-Celt.” But many of his stories are simply Irish legends, <i>e.g.</i>, <i>The Harping
-of Cravetheen</i>. The Author thus describes his work: “In certain sections
-are tales of the old Gaelic and Celtic Scandinavian life and mythology;
-in others there is a blending of paganism and Christianity; in others again
-are tales of the dreaming imagination having their base in old mythology,
-or in a kindred mythopæic source.... Many of these tales are of the grey<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_164"></a>[164]</span>
-wandering wave of the West, and through each goes the wind of the Gaelic
-spirit which turns to the dim enchantment of dreams.” On the other hand,
-some of these stories deal with life in modern Gaelic Scotland, <i>e.g.</i>, <i>The Mountain
-Lovers</i>, which, however poetically told, is after all a tale of seduction.
-<i>The Winged Destiny</i>, amid much matter of a different nature, contains several
-tales of Gaelic inspiration.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>MACLEOD and THOMSON.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ SONGS AND TALES OF ST. COLUMBA AND HIS AGE. By
-Fiona Macleod and J. Arthur Thomson. Third edition. Large paper 4to.
-(<span class="smcap">Edinb.</span>: <i>Patrick Geddes</i>). 6<i>d.</i> nett.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>M’MAHON, Ella.</b> Dau. of late Rev. J. H. MacMahon, Chaplain to the
-Lord-Lieutenant. Ed.: home. Has written much for various magazines
-and periodicals, and particularly on historical and archæological
-subjects. Has publ. about seventeen novels. Now resides in Chelsea.—(<span class="smcap">Who’s
-Who</span>).</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ FANCY O’BRIEN. (<i>Chapman &amp; Hall</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1909.</p>
-
-<p>A tragedy of city life centering in the betrayal and desertion of Bridgie
-Doyle by Fancy O’Brien. Full of human interest, careful and skilful study
-of character and motive. Catholic in sympathy. “In its minor details
-the book is true to life, photographic in its realism.” The story is of high
-dramatic and literary excellence. In the account of the Easter Monday
-excursion to Bray “the story of Bridgie’s undoing is told with a rare combination
-of poetry, force, and restraint.”—(N.I.R., Aug., 1909).</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE JOB. Pp. 383. (<i>Nisbet</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1914.</p>
-
-<p>Sir Thady, a Cromwellian-Irish baronet, grows interested in his Irish
-surroundings on his estate of Ballymaclashin. He ceases to haunt the Bath
-Club, Piccadilly, and takes to starting carpet factories (<i>The Job</i>). Many
-of the incidents are furnished by the difficulties that beset the task owing
-to the amateurish innocence of the baronet and the stupidity of his local
-helpers. And besides there are the love affairs of Sir Thady and the English
-Miss Devereux. The point of view is Anglo-Irish, the “mere” Irish being
-regarded <i>de haut en bas</i> as rather impossible, thriftless, poor people, in short,
-as a problem to be dealt with philanthropically. The style is easy and
-pleasant.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>MACMANUS, Miss L.</b> Holds a distinct place among Irish authors of to-day
-as being one of the very few writers of Irish historical fiction who write
-from a thoroughly national standpoint. Her books are straightforward,
-stirring tales, enthusiastically Irish, free from tedious disquisitions,
-but based on considerable historical research. She is a worker in the
-ranks of the Gaelic League, and in her Co. Mayo (Kiltimagh) home does
-much for the cause of Irish Ireland. She is interested in folklore, and
-some of the tales she has collected have recently been publ. in the <span class="smcap">Folklore
-Journal</span>. Some of her stories in the Dublin weeklies deal in the
-weird and the mysterious. The following have been publ. by The
-Educational Co. of Ireland as penny pamphlets:—<i>In the High King’s
-Camp</i>, <i>A Battle Champion</i>, <i>Felim the Harper</i>, <i>The Prince of Breffny’s Son</i>,
-<i>How Enda went to the Iceland</i>, <i>The Leathern Cloaks</i>. She has publ. two
-serials in <span class="smcap">Sinn Fein</span>: <i>The Professor in Erin</i> and <i>One Generation Passeth</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE SILK OF THE KINE. Pp. 282. (<i>Fisher Unwin</i>). 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>
-(N.Y.: <i>Harper</i>). 1.00. 1896.</p>
-
-<p>Scene: chiefly Connaught and south-west Ulster during the Parliamentary
-Wars. The heroine is a daughter of the Maguire of Fermanagh. Her capture
-by the Roundheads, her rescue from the man-hunters by a Parliamentarian
-officer, her condemnation to slavery in St. Kitt’s, and her escape, are told
-in vivid and thrilling style. It is a story for young readers especially.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_165"></a>[165]</span></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ LALLY OF THE BRIGADE. (<i>Duffy</i>). 2<i>s.</i> 1<i>s.</i> (<span class="smcap">Boston</span>: <i>Page</i>).
-25<i>c.</i> 1899.</p>
-
-<p>Adventures, during the War of the Spanish Succession, of a Colonel of the
-Brigade, who, after many thrilling experiences, distinguishes himself at
-Cremona, and marries a girl whom he had met during the war under romantic
-circumstances. The tale is lively and interesting, and makes one realize
-somewhat of the intrigues and dangers of war.... Young readers may
-derive a great deal of amusement and instruction from the book.—(N.I.R.).
-Lally is a young captain in the regiment of Dillon. “James III.,” Louis XIV.,
-Prince Eugène, Marshall Villeroy, and General O’Mahony all appear in the
-story.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ NESSA. Pp. 147. (<i>Sealy, Bryers</i>). 2<i>s.</i> (N.Y.: <i>Benziger</i>). 0.60. <i>n.d.</i>
-(1904).</p>
-
-<p>A tale of the Cromwellian Plantation, characterized by a simple unpretentious
-style and considerable power of description, both of character and
-scenery.—(<i>Press notices</i>). The little book was highly praised by the <span class="smcap">Academy</span>
-and by the <span class="smcap">Irish Times</span>. It is, of course, strongly national in sentiment.
-Scene: an old castle near Lough Conn, Co. Mayo.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ IN SARSFIELD’S DAYS. Pp. 306. (<i>Gill</i>). Illustr. 1907.</p>
-
-<p>“A Passage from the Memoirs of Brigadier Niall MacGuinness of Iveagh,
-sometime captain in Sarsfield’s Horse.” Scene: Limerick during Siege.
-Includes account of Sarsfield’s Ride and of the repulse of William’s assault.
-The plot hinges on the disappearance of Balldearg O’Donnell’s cross, which
-Iveagh is suspected of having stolen. The central figure is perhaps the
-wayward and imperious Ethna Ni Briain. The story moves rapidly, unencumbered
-by descriptions or digressions. The scenes are vivid and dramatic.
-The Author’s play, “O’Donnell’s Cross,” is founded on this novel. Publ.
-in U.S.A. (N.Y.: <i>Buckles</i>), 1.50, under title <i>The Wager</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ NUALA. Pp. 322. (<i>Browne &amp; Nolan</i>). 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> Four Illustr. by Oswald
-Cunningham. 1908.</p>
-
-<p>Tells how the only child, aged fifteen, of the head of the O’Donnells, then
-in the service of the Austrian Government, is entrusted by her father just
-before his death with the mission of obtaining the Cathach, or battle-book
-of the O’Donnells, from the monks at Louvain. On the way she passes through
-exciting adventures, being captured by some of Napoleon’s soldiers. Gen.
-Hoche figures in the story. Juvenile.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>MACMANUS, Seumas.</b> B. Mountcharles, Co. Donegal, 1870. Son of a
-peasant farmer. Was for some years a National School teacher, but
-subsequently turned entirely to journalism. Has written for most
-of the Irish papers and magazines and for many English and American
-periodicals. Is well known in the States, where he frequently goes on
-lecturing tours.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ SHUILERS FROM HEATHY HILLS. Pp. 102. (<span class="smcap">Mountcharles</span>:
-<i>G. Kirke</i>). 1893.</p>
-
-<p>The Author’s earliest poems and three prose sketches:—“Micky Maguire”
-(the last of the hedge schoolmasters), “How you bathe at Bundoran,” and
-“A Trip with Phil M’Goldrick.”</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE LEADIN’ ROAD TO DONEGAL. Pp. 246. (<i>Digby, Long</i>).
-3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> (N.Y.: <i>Pratt</i>). 2.00. [1896]. Second ed., 1908; others since.</p>
-
-<p>Twelve short stories of the Donegal peasantry, full of very genuine, if
-somewhat broad, humour and drollery. They are not meant as pictures of
-peasant life. The dialect is exaggerated for humorous purposes, and at
-times the fun goes perilously near “Stage-Irishism.” But they are never
-coarse or vulgar.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_166"></a>[166]</span></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ ’TWAS IN DHROLL DONEGAL. (<i>Gill</i>). 1<i>s.</i> Third ed., 1897.</p>
-
-<p>Eight tales dealing with the humorous side of the home-life of Donegal
-peasants. A few, however, are folk-tales of the Jack the Giant-killer type.
-Told with verve and piquancy and with unflagging humour, but the skill in
-story-telling is naturally not as developed in this as in the Author’s later
-work, drawing a good deal upon humorous padding to aid the intrinsic humour
-of the incidents.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE BEND OF THE ROAD. (<i>Gill, Duffy</i>). 2<i>s.</i>, 3<i>s.</i> (N.Y.: <i>Pratt</i>).
-1.75. [1897].</p>
-
-<p>This is a sequel to <i>A Lad of the O’Friels</i>,<a id="FNanchor_7" href="#Footnote_7" class="fnanchor">[7]</a> but consists of detached sketches,
-and is not told in the first person. Most of the sketches are humorous, notably
-“Father Dan and Fiddlers Four”; but there is pathos, too, as in “The
-Widow’s Mary,” a scene at a wake before an eviction. The Introduction is
-an admirable summing up of the peculiarities, emotions, and vicissitudes
-of life in an out-of-the-way Donegal countryside.</p>
-
-<div class="footnotes">
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_7" href="#FNanchor_7" class="label">[7]</a> Yet seems to have been publ. before it. I give the dates as they are given
-(doubtless by the Author) in the <i>Literary Year Book</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE HUMOURS OF DONEGAL. (<i>Unwin</i>). (N.Y.: <i>Pratt</i>). 1.50.
-[1898].</p>
-
-<p>Seven stories admirably told, and full of the richest and most rollicking
-humour. In the first only, viz., “When Barney’s Thrunk Comes Home,”
-is there a touch of the pathetic. It would be hard to beat “Shan Martin’s
-Ghost,” and “Why Tómas Dubh Walked,” and “How Paddy M’Garrity
-did not get to be Gauger.” “One St. Patrick’s Day” gives the humorous
-side of Orange and Green rivalry.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THROUGH THE TURF SMOKE. (<i>Fisher Unwin</i>). 2<i>s.</i> (N.Y.:
-<i>Doubleday</i>. <span class="smcap">Toronto</span>: <i>Morang</i>). 2.00. [1899]. 1901.</p>
-
-<p>Simple tales of the Donegal peasantry. There is both pathos and humour—the
-former deep, and at times poignant; the latter always rich and often
-farcical. The Author writes with all the vividness of one who has lived
-all he writes about. He has full command of every device of the story-teller,
-yet never allows his personality to show except, as it should, through the
-medium of the actors.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ IN CHIMNEY CORNERS. Pp. 281. (N.Y.: <i>Harper</i>). Illustr. by
-Pamela Colman Smith. 1899.</p>
-
-<p>“Subtle, merry tales of Irish Folk-lore.”—(<i>Pref.</i>). The stories are very
-similar in kind to the same Author’s <i>Donegal Fairy Tales</i>. There is the same
-quaint, humorous, peasant language, the same extravagances and impossibilities.
-The illustrations are very numerous. They are very brightly coloured,
-but for the most part extremely bizarre.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE BEWITCHED FIDDLE, and Other Irish Tales. Pp. ix. + 240.
-(N.Y.: <i>Doubleday and McClure</i>). 1900.</p>
-
-<p>Ten short stories, humorous for the most part, but one, “The Cadger Boy’s
-Last Journey,” moving and pathetic. They are an exact reproduction in
-dialect and phraseology of stories actually heard by the Author at Donegal
-firesides, and the fidelity of the reproduction is perfect.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ DONEGAL FAIRY STORIES. Pp. 255. (<i>Isbister</i>). 1902. (N.Y.:
-<i>McClure</i>).</p>
-
-<p>Dedication in Irish and English. Thirty-four full-page pen and ink
-drawings, signed “Verbeek.” These latter are quaint and amusingly grotesque.
-The stories are folk-tales, told just as the peasantry tell them,
-without brogue, but with all the repetitions, humorous extravagances and
-naïveté of the folk-tale. They are just the thing for children, and are quite
-free from coarseness and vulgarity.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_167"></a>[167]</span></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE RED POACHER. (N.Y.: <i>Funk &amp; Wagnalls</i>). 0.75. 1903.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ A LAD OF THE O’FRIELS. Pp. 318. (<i>Gill</i>; <i>Duffy</i>). 2<i>s.</i>, 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>, 3<i>s.</i>
-(N.Y.: <i>Pratt</i>). 2.00. [1903]. Third ed., 1906.</p>
-
-<p>In this book one actually seems to have been living among the childlike
-and quaint yet deep-natured, true, and altogether lovable little circle of
-Knocknagar, and to have shared its joys and sorrows. Every character
-described stands out altogether distinct, old Toal a’Gallagher the sententious;
-his wife, Susie of the sharp tongue; their son, Toal the “Vagabone,” with
-his wild pranks; the grandiloquent “Masther,” and all the rest. Through
-it all runs the simple love story of Dinny O’Friel and Nuala Gildea, companions
-from childhood. The book is full of deep, but quiet and restrained,
-feeling. The description of the pilgrimage to Lough Derg has much beauty.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ DOCTOR KILGANNON. (<i>Gill</i>). 1<i>s.</i> (Wrapper). Well illustr. 1907.</p>
-
-<p>A string of loosely-connected after-dinner stories chiefly about comic
-duelling and electioneering. Told with pleasant drollery.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ YOURSELF AND THE NEIGHBOURS. Pp. 304. (N.Y.: <i>Devin
-Adair Co.</i>). Five Illustr. by T. Fogarty. 1914.</p>
-
-<p>A picture by one who has lived it of the life of the Donegal peasant—not
-their outward life merely, but their most intimate thoughts and beliefs,
-hopes and joys, their whole outlook on things. The Author is discerning and
-sympathetic in a high degree. “Yourself and Herself” gives a Donegal
-man’s life story from “the barefoot time” through love and marriage to
-“evening’s quiet end.” Some of the remaining stories show the Author’s
-humour at its best—the Homeric struggles of the “priest’s boy” with the
-New Curate and the Tartar of a postmistress, the “come home Yankee,” and
-so on.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>M’NALLY, Mrs.</b><a id="FNanchor_8" href="#Footnote_8" class="fnanchor">[8]</a></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ ECCENTRICITY. Three Vols. (over 1,000 pp.). (<span class="smcap">Dubl.</span>: <i>Cumming</i>).
-1820.</p>
-
-<p>An endless series of love affairs between charming ladies and wealthy
-gentlemen, all of the upper classes, very proper, very stilted, and dull. The
-eccentricity is on the part of an old soldier who is a misanthrope and a hermit,
-but resolves to return to normal life and renew acquaintance with his daughter.
-He descends upon the friend’s family in which he has left her, carries off
-another by mistake, &amp;c. The plot never really moves on.</p>
-
-<div class="footnotes">
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_8" href="#FNanchor_8" class="label">[8]</a> So the name is given on the title-page, and it seems improbable that this
-Author is the same as the Author of the following item, first because there
-is a difference of thirty-four years between the dates, and secondly because
-the two books are wholly unlike. But the B. Museum Catal. assigns both
-to the same person.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="author"><b>M’NALLY, Louisa.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE PIRATE’S FORT. Pp. 210. (<i>Hodges &amp; Smith</i>). 1854.</p>
-
-<p>The fort is Dunalong, on Inisherkin, in Baltimore Bay, a stronghold of the
-O’Driscoll’s towards close of 16th cent. English ship captured. O’D.’s
-natural son, a ferocious pirate, falls in love with captain’s daughter. She is
-true to her English officer. The beautiful daughter of O’D. saves her from
-his fury. Vengeance of the English—destruction of the fort—double wedding
-of the two fair maids to two English officers. A prominent rôle is assigned
-to money-grabbing, idle, besotted Franciscan friar.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_168"></a>[168]</span></p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>MACNAMARA, Lewis.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ BLIND LARRY: Irish Idylls. (<i>Jarrold</i>). 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> 1897.</p>
-
-<p>“Artless records of life among the very poor in West of Ireland, the fruit
-of kindly observation, and, obviously, essays in the <i>Thrums</i> style. Larry is a
-poor blind fiddler, whose one joy in life is his son, and he turns out a reproach
-to his father. “Katty’s Wedding” is a very Irish bit of farce, and “Mulligan’s
-Revenge” expresses the vindictive passions of the Celt, an episode of jealousy
-and crime, alleviated at the close by repentance and reconciliation.”—(<i>Baker</i>).</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>MACNAMARA, Rachel Swete.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ SPINNERS IN SILENCE. Pp. 317. (<i>Blackwood</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1911.</p>
-
-<p>Fingal and Lutie are lovers somewhere in the wilds of Ireland. Enter
-an Interloper (a danseuse of doubtful reputation), who falls genuinely in
-love with F., and tries to win him. She fails, and exit. The atmosphere
-is very ideal and the language, especially the conversations, somewhat high-flown.
-Author writes well, and is clearly sympathetic to Ireland. The
-housekeeper cousin of “county family” status, with her genteel notions,
-is well sketched.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>M’NULTY, Edward.</b> B. 1856, Randalstown, Co. Antrim. Ed. in the
-Incorporated Society’s School, Aungier St., Dublin, where he was a schoolmate
-and intimate of G. B. Shaw. Contributes to various periodicals—<span class="smcap">Irish
-Society</span>, <span class="smcap">The Occult Review</span>, &amp;c., and has written a play, “The
-Lord Mayor,” for the Abbey Theatre. Satirizes Irish failings, but is
-proud of being an Irishman himself. Resides in Ranelagh, Dublin.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ MISTHER O’RYAN. Pp. 271. (<i>Arnold</i>). 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> 1894.</p>
-
-<p>A priest, squat, red-faced, whiskey-loving, unspeakably vulgar, and a
-ruffian to whom he is disgracefully related, organize a branch of the “Lague,”
-and boycott a farmer who will not join. The latter’s daughter dies tragically
-in consequence. The typical “pesint” is introduced as cringeing, priest-ridden,
-and wholly degraded. Impossible brogue throughout.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ SON OF A PEASANT. Pp. 342. (<i>Arnold</i>). 1897.</p>
-
-<p>A great advance on <i>Misther O’Ryan</i>, <i>q.v.</i> A tragic-comedy of life among
-lower middle class people in a small provincial town. The “son of a peasant”
-is Clarence Maguire, an obscure young schoolmaster, who in the end comes
-in for great wealth and all but wins the daughter of Sir Herbert O’Hara,
-an impoverished gentleman. A sub-plot is furnished by the love affairs of
-Constable Kerrigan and his determined efforts after promotion. The plot
-affords the Author scope for many genuinely humorous scenes, especially
-those in the Flanagan family, which are admirably done, and for the clever
-portrayal of some of the meaner aspects of human nature—class pride, servility,
-the worship of the moneyed man, time serving, &amp;c. The plot largely turns
-on an absurd superstition about changelings. This leads to the hideous
-tragedy of the close. The book is marred by a travesty of the brogue. Otherwise
-it is not anti-national.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ MAUREEN. Pp. 343. (<i>Arnold</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1904.</p>
-
-<p>Of the same type as <i>Misther O’Ryan</i>. One of the priests introduced trades
-with a miraculous statue on the superstition of the people; the other is a
-sleek, smooth fop, thoroughly and heartlessly vicious. There is little else
-besides this in the book.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ MRS. MULLIGAN’S MILLIONS. (<i>Hurst &amp; Blackett</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1908.</p>
-
-<p>A broad farce, with Irish people (of the worst stage-Irish type) as actors, and
-a small, vulgar Irish town for scene. Mrs. Mulligan is a very low species of
-tramp. She is supposed suddenly to come in for a fortune, and her relations
-tumble over one another in efforts to gain her favour—until the bubble
-bursts. There is much caricature of Irish traits and manners. Local journalism
-is specially ridiculed.—(<i>News cuttings</i>).</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_169"></a>[169]</span></p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>M’SPARRAN, Archibald.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE LEGEND OF M’DONNELL AND THE NORMAN DE
-BORGOS. Pp. 213, close print. 16mo. (<i>Gill</i>). 1<i>s.</i> [<span class="smcap">Belfast</span>, 1829].
-Still in print.</p>
-
-<p>Writer (1795-1850?) was a school-master in Derry, who emigrated to
-America in 1830, where he published <i>Tales and Stories of the Alleghenys</i> and
-<i>The Hermit of the Rocky Mountains</i>. A tale of the struggles between O’Neills,
-O’Donnells, O’Cahans, M’Quillans, M’Donnells, and other Ulster septs.
-Scene: northern portions of Antrim, Derry, and Donegal. The work of a
-half-educated man. A rambling story marked by frequent lapses from
-literary good taste and numerous grammatical mistakes. The peasantry
-talk in broad modern brogue, full of “arrah,” “musha,” “tare-an-ouns,” &amp;c.
-Shows a considerable though undigested knowledge of Irish history and
-topography. The book had considerable vogue both here and in U.S.A.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>MACSWEENEY, Rev. Patrick M., M.A.</b> One of the most erudite of Irish
-priests. Was Chancellor’s Gold Medallist in the Royal University.
-Was afterwards Professor of Mod. Lit. in Holy Cross College, Clonliffe.
-Is at present editor of the <span class="smcap">Irish Ecclesiastical Record</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE MARTIAL CAREER OF CONGHAL CLÁIRINGHNEACH.
-Pp. lxvii. + 225. (<i>Nutt, for Irish Texts Society</i>). 1904.</p>
-
-<p>Ed. for the first time with all the apparatus of scholarship—critical study
-of the Tale or Saga, literary study of the text, grammatical study, notes,
-glossary, and index. The story belongs to the pre-Cuchulainn stage of the
-Red Branch Cycle. Conghal is supposed to have reigned from 177 to 162
-B.C.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>MACWALTER, J. G., F.R.S.L., &amp;c.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ TALES OF IRELAND AND THE IRISH. Pp. 224. (<i>Farquhar
-Shaw</i>). 1854.</p>
-
-<p>Wrote also <i>The Irish Reformation Movement</i>, 1852; <i>Modern Mystery</i>, 1854,
-&amp;c. The object of these three stories is to point out the wickedness and
-the evil influence, especially in Ireland, of the Catholic Church. In “Betty
-Bryan’s Fortune,” Thady becomes a Protestant, and all goes well with him:
-the sign of the Cross is called a charm; and there is a description of Beltaine
-superstitions. In “The Terry Alt,” a girl is seized just after marriage and
-immured in a convent for life: the conspirators are a monk, a priest, and
-“Blackboys.”</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>MADDEN, M. S.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE FITZGERALD FAMILY. (R.T.S.). 2<i>s.</i> Three cold. ill. by
-Victor Prout. 1910.</p>
-
-<p>The family is left very poor on death of father, a C. of I. clergyman. Rich
-and vulgar relations adopt Barry and Moya, the former of whom becomes
-an unbearable bounder, the latter a heartless flirt. The rest of the family
-remains very poor, very good, and rather dull. There is an occasional mention
-of Irish peasants and the Irish language. Apart from this, the persons,
-their doings, and the atmosphere are wholly un-Irish. The story has a
-moral purpose that is good and not too obtrusive.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>MAGENNIS, Peter.</b> A retired National School teacher. B. near Derrygonnelly,
-Co. Fermanagh, in 1817, the son of a farmer. D. 1910, aged
-93, at his birth-place.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE RIBBON INFORMER: a Tale of Lough Erne. Pp. 158.
-(<span class="smcap">London</span>). 1874.</p>
-
-<p>An unskilfully constructed, rambling narrative, interspersed with indifferent
-verse. The Author says in his Preface: “This novel is founded on fact,
-almost every incident in it actually occurred, and many of them within the
-recollection of the writer. It contains local traditions and legendary lore.
-It treats of highway robbery, illicit distilling, rural manners, party feeling,
-and a rather disorganized state of society.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_170"></a>[170]</span></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ TULLY CASTLE: a Tale of 1641. Pp. 266. (<span class="smcap">Enniskillen</span>: <i>Trimble</i>).
-1877.</p>
-
-<p>A very crude, rambling tale, bringing in a few incidents of the Confederate
-War and several historic characters, but mainly taken up with private love
-affairs, abductions, &amp;c. No character study and no real portrayal of the
-times. Occasional vulgarity. Scene: chiefly the shores of Lough Erne.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>MAGINN, J. D.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ FITZGERALD, THE FENIAN. Two Vols. Pp. 576. (<i>Chapman &amp;
-Hall</i>). 1889.</p>
-
-<p>Deals with Fenian and Land League movements. The Author is unacquainted
-with the history and organization of Fenianism. The land agitation
-he represents as forced upon an unwilling peasantry by a kind of murder-club
-in America. Scene: mainly Co. Sligo. Parnell and Biggar are brought
-in under assumed names, and are broadly caricatured. The portrayal of
-Butt is truer to reality and less marred by bias. The Author is uninformed
-and, on the whole, uncomprehending: hence some absurd statements
-about things Irish, some objectionable (but evidently unintentionally so)
-references to the Catholic Church, and a quite impossible Irish brogue. But
-he is on the whole not unfriendly to Ireland.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>MAGINN, William.</b> B. Cork, 1793. Ed. T.C.D. Began early to write for
-the magazines (<span class="smcap">Blackwood’s</span>, &amp;c.), chiefly parodies and other <i>jeux
-d’esprit</i>. Went to London, 1823, where, in 1830, he established <span class="smcap">Fraser’s
-Magazine</span>, which with Carlyle, Thackeray, Maclise, Prout as contributors,
-for some years was at the head of English periodical literature. He
-fell more and more into habits of drunkenness, and engaged in disreputable
-journalism. Writing to the end, he died in 1842. Thackeray drew
-a portrait of him as Captain Shandon in <i>Pendennis</i>. Many memoirs
-of him have been written. His “Bob Burke’s Duel with Ensign Brady”
-is said to be the raciest Irish story ever written.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ MISCELLANIES: Prose and Verse. (<span class="smcap">London</span>). [First collection, 1840].
-Selections ed. by “R. W. Montagu.” 1885. (N.Y.: <i>Scribner</i>). 9.60.</p>
-
-<p>Contains “Bob Burke’s Duel,” “The Story without a Tail,” and other
-Irish stories, published in magazines between 1823 and 1842. These stories
-are told mostly in a vein of broad comedy. Their characters are roysterers
-and swaggerers. Maginn was a man of brilliant gifts. The fantastic humour
-and wild gaiety of his stories give them an original flavour. Maginn was a
-high Tory and an Orangeman.—(<i>Krans</i>). Dr. Mackenzie edited, in 1857,
-<i>The Miscellanies of William Maginn</i> (5 vols.), published in America. Contents:—Vols.
-I. and II. “The O’Doherty Papers.” III. “The Shakespeare
-Papers.” IV. “Homeric Ballads.” V. “The Fraserian Papers,” with a life
-of the Author.</p>
-
-<p class="author" id="MAHONY"><b>MAHONY, Martin Francis; “Matthew Stradling.”</b> B., Co. Cork, 1831.
-D. 1885. Was a nephew of “Father Prout.” Also wrote <i>Cheap John’s
-Auction</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE IRISH BAR SINISTER. Pp. 136. <span class="smcap">London.</span> 1872.</p>
-
-<p>“New ed. in four chapters.” The original was publ. by Gill, Dublin, 1871.
-Really a pamphlet showing up the place-hunting whiggery that prevailed
-in the Irish Bar at that time, and giving a picture of Irish politics after the
-Fenian insurrection, and at the outset of the Home Rule movement.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE MISADVENTURES OF MR. CATLYNE, Q.C. An Autobiography.
-Two Vols. (<i>Tinsley</i>). 1873.</p>
-
-<p>Elaborates the idea of the above-mentioned work. Depicts, under
-assumed names, well-known Irish lawyers of the day. Intrigues of the
-candidate for a small Irish borough, and his difficulty in placating all parties
-well described. This originally appeared in <span class="smcap">Fraser’s Magazine</span>. There is
-little plot, and no romantic interest.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_171"></a>[171]</span></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ JERPOINT. An ungarnished Story of the Time. Three Vols.
-(<i>Chapman &amp; Hall</i>). 1875.</p>
-
-<p>A satirical study of parvenus, snobs, and various curious types, very
-cleverly characterised. The story is chiefly concerned with the Courtneys,
-risen from the publichouse to county-family importance. P. 49 <i>sq.</i> gives
-an excellent picture of a meet, with a study of the personages present. Full
-of close observation and excellent descriptions. Among the best portraits
-are those of the Hanlon family, always shabby and out-at-elbows, yet ever
-struggling with fortune. We are not told the situation of “the Cathedral
-City of Jerpoint on the Sea.”</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>MALONE, Molly.</b> A Dublin lady, married to a Mr. Riordan, living in Carlow.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE GOLDEN LAD. 16mo. (<i>C.T.S. of Ireland: Iona Series</i>). 1<i>s.</i>
-1910.</p>
-
-<p>A study of Dublin slum-children, told with humour, insight, and sympathy,
-by one who thoroughly knows their ways. The dialect is faithfully rendered.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>MANNERS, T. Hartley.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ PEG O’ MY HEART. Pp. 320. (<i>Hodder &amp; Stoughton</i>). 1913.</p>
-
-<p>“Novelized” from a popular play. Peg is daughter of an Irish agitator
-of the eighties who goes to America in the troubled times. On the death
-of Peg’s mother her father returns to Ireland, and lives there for many years,
-till bright prospects call him back to America. But the main part of the
-action is taken up with Peg’s visit of a month to her English relations in
-Scarborough. The Author rather overdraws the contrast between English
-and Irish types. There is much clever dialogue. Ends with passing of second
-reading of Home Rule Bill, and the glorification of the one-time agitator.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>MANNIX, Mary E.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ MICHAEL O’DONNELL; or, The Fortunes of a Little Emigrant.
-(<span class="smcap">Boston</span>: <i>Flynn</i>). 0.60. [1900]. In print, 1910.</p>
-
-<p>“Michael, an honest, industrious youngster, not too good to use his fists
-when attacked by other boys, comes to the U.S., and steps into an excellent
-situation after three months of walking across the Continent. By a series
-of innocent misunderstandings, combined with hostile malice, he is made
-to appear guilty of theft; but the truth is soon manifest.... Told
-with much animation and liveliness.”—(<span class="smcap">American Eccles. Rev.</span>) Juvenile.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ PILGRIM FROM IRELAND. (<span class="smcap">Boston</span>: <i>Flynn</i>). 0.36. In print,
-1910.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>MAPOTHER, Mary J.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE DONALDS: an Irish Story (<i>Gill</i>). 6<i>s.</i> <i>c.</i> 1879.</p>
-
-<p>Not in British Museum Library.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>MARSH, Mrs.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE NEVILLES OF GARRETSTOWN. Three Vols. (<i>Saunders &amp;
-Otley</i>). 1860.</p>
-
-<p>The main plot is a somewhat slight story of a lost heir returning to claim
-his inheritance, which had been usurped by an intruder. But the chief
-interest lies in the numerous side incidents and digressions which are designed
-to portray various phases of the life of the times. Opens and closes at
-Clonmel, but the scene shifts to Dublin, Bantry, Paris, and other places. Introduces
-Jacobite conspiracies, street-rioting, hedge schools, city entertainments,
-political discussions, the working of the Penal laws, and historical
-personages, such as Primate Stone, Thurot, Prince Charles Edward, Archbishop
-Dillon, and many others. Is more or less on the side of the English
-colony, but is not unfair to any party. Has little or no character study,
-and not much human interest, but abounds in incident.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_172"></a>[172]</span></p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>MARTIN, Miss H. L.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ CANVASSING. (<i>Duffy</i>). Still in print. (N.Y.: <i>Kenedy</i>). [1832].</p>
-
-<p>Published as one of the O’Hara’s tales. An elaborate tale of matchmaking
-and marriage among the upper classes, written with a moral purpose. Incidentally
-there is a good picture of an election contest in the first quarter of
-the nineteenth century.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>MARTINEAU, Harriet.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ IRELAND: a Tale. Pp. 136. (<span class="smcap">London</span>: <i>Fox</i>). 1832.</p>
-
-<p>Appeared in a series of illustrations of political economy. Written in the
-cause of the Irish poor, aiming to show “how long a series of evils may befal
-individuals in a society conducted like that of Ireland, and by what a repetition
-of grievances its members are driven into disaffection and violence.”
-Shows three sources of evils—thriftlessness in tenants, rapacity in landlords,
-misplaced benevolence.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>MASON, Miss.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ KATE GEARY; or, Irish Life in London. (<span class="smcap">London</span>: <i>Dolman</i>).
-1853.</p>
-
-<p>“A Tale of 1849.” “The specific object of this work is to exemplify the
-various ways in which the poor are placed at a disadvantage, and the misery
-and, almost of necessity, the crime that ensue from their present crowded
-condition.” “Miss M. describes the life of one who might be called a Sister
-of Charity living in the world.... She tells us she has witnessed the
-incidents of her tale, which are described with vivacity.... The
-Author has entangled her heroine in a love affair, which, in itself, is very
-frigid and tedious.”—(D.R.).</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>MASON, A. E. W.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ CLEMENTINA. (<i>Methuen</i>). 2<i>s.</i> Eight illustr. by Bernard Partridge.
-[1901]. Second ed., 1903. (<i>Nelson</i>). New ed., 7<i>d.</i> 1911.</p>
-
-<p>The story of the romantic escape in 1720 of the Princess Clementina
-Sobieski from Austria, and how she was conducted to Rome to be married to
-the Pretender by the Chevalier Charles Wogan, member of an Anglo-Irish
-family of Clongowes Wood, in the County Kildare. Some glimpses of the
-Irish Brigade. A lively narrative. Mr. Baker calls it “a particularly close
-imitation of Dumas.”</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE FOUR FEATHERS. Pp. 338. (<i>Smith, Elder</i>). 6<i>s.</i> (<i>Nelson</i>).
-7<i>d.</i> [1903]. 1912.</p>
-
-<p>Scene varies between London, Devonshire, the Soudan, and Donegal
-(Ramelton and Glenalla), the scenery of which latter is finely described.
-The theme is original and striking. The hero, an English soldier, is all his
-life haunted by the fear of showing “the white feather” at a critical moment.
-He resigns his commission rather than risk in a campaign his reputation for
-courage. This action brings on him the dreaded imputation of cowardice.
-How he redeems his honour is finely told. A delicate soul-study. The
-heroic self-sacrifice of Jack Durance still further raises the moral worth of the
-book.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>MASON JONES</b>, <a href="#JONES"><i>see</i> <b>JONES</b></a>.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>MATHEW, Frank.</b> A grand-nephew of Father Mathew, the Apostle of
-Temperance. B. 1865; ed. Beaumont, King’s College School, and
-London University. The writer of the Preface to the New Ed. of the
-<i>Cabinet of Irish Literature</i> says: “A good many people of excellent
-judgment look upon Mr. Mathew as the Irish novelist we have been so
-long awaiting.... He does not write merely from the point of view of a
-sympathetic outsider. He has the true Celtic temperament, with the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_173"></a>[173]</span>
-advantage of education, inherited and otherwise, over the peasants of
-genius who have so long represented the Irish spirit.” Wrote also
-<i>Father Mathew, his Life and Times</i>, <i>One Queen Triumphant</i>, <i>The Royal
-Sisters</i>, &amp;c. Resides in London.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ AT THE RISING OF THE MOON. Pp. 240. (<i>M’Clure</i>). 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>
-Twenty-seven good Illustr. (N.Y.: <i>M’Clure</i>). 1.50. 1893.</p>
-
-<p>Twenty tales (memories of the old days, says the Author), picturing many
-phases of peasant life on the West coast: incidents of the moonlighting days,
-faction fights, the joke of the potheen-makers, the attachment of priests and
-people, the hardships of the poor, the days of sorrow, the love of home and
-country. Told with sympathy in simple but literary style. Dialogue clever
-and full of bright snatches of Celtic humour.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE WOOD OF THE BRAMBLES. (<i>Lane</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1896.</p>
-
-<p>Gives a grotesque picture, intended for vivid realism, of the rebellion.
-The rebels are comic savages, their leaders (the priests included) little better
-than buffoons. It is a burlesque ’98. It is well, however, to add the following
-estimate from the prefatory essay to the new edition of <i>The Cabinet of Irish
-Literature</i>: “A born critic here and there will find out that Mr. Frank
-Mathew’s <i>Wood of the Brambles</i> is as full of wit, wisdom, observation, and
-knowledge as genius can make it; but to the ordinary reader it is deliberately
-and offensively topsy-turvy, and there’s an end of it.”</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE SPANISH WINE. Pp. 180. (<i>Lane</i>). 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> 1898.</p>
-
-<p>A tale of Dunluce Castle, Co. Antrim, in the days when the MacDonnells
-from Scotland were Lords of Antrim, and Perrott was Elizabeth’s deputy.
-The story is told in form of reminiscence, the actual movement of the plot
-occupying only a few hours. Little attempt at description of scenes or times.
-The Author’s sympathies are with the MacDonnells, who were on the English
-side at the time. The book has been greatly admired, especially for the
-vividness of its historical atmosphere and its poetic and romantic glamour.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ LOVE OF COMRADES. (<i>Lane</i>). 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> 1900.</p>
-
-<p>“Ultra romantic. The sprightly daughter of a Wicklow squire, bosom
-friend of Lord Strafford (then Lord Lieutenant of Ireland), goes on a perilous
-journey disguised as a gallant, with a message of life or death to Strafford
-at Dublin.”—(<i>Baker</i>, 2).</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>MATURIN, Charles Robert.</b> 1782-1824. Born in Dublin, and educated
-at Trinity College. Was a clergyman of the Church of Ireland, and
-all his life the sworn enemy of Catholicism and of Presbyterianism, both
-of which, especially the latter, he treats unsparingly in some of his books.
-Besides his novels he wrote tragedies, such as “Bertram,” and bloodcurdling
-melodramas, such as “Fredolpho.” In his way of life he
-was somewhat of an oddity—the madness of genius, his admirers said—and
-this is reflected in his works. “His romances attracted Scott
-and Byron, and many critics have given them great though qualified
-praise. Bombastic extravagance of language, tangled plots, and impossible
-incidents characterize them all. A remarkable eloquence in
-descriptions of turbulent passion is his strong point.” Besides the
-novels mentioned below, he wrote <i>Melmoth, the Wanderer</i>, generally
-considered his masterpiece, and “<i>The Albigenses</i>, his last and best (1824),
-which was pronounced by <span class="smcap">Blackwood</span> to be ‘four volumes of vigour,
-extravagance, absurdity, and splendour’” (compiled from Krans and
-Read). It should be noted that this writer sometimes violates good
-morals by indecency. Mr. N. Idman, of Lotsgotan, Helsingfors, Finland,
-is at present engaged on a study of M. which he intends to publish. The
-1892 ed. of <i>Melmoth</i> contains an introductory memoir of M., a bibliography,
-and a criticism of each of his works.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_174"></a>[174]</span></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE WILD IRISH BOY. Three Vols. 12mo. (<span class="smcap">London</span>). [1808].
-1814, 1839.</p>
-
-<p>Republ. in “The Romancists’ and Novelists’ Library,” two vols. (<i>Clements</i>),
-1839. The original ed. was anon.—by the Author of “Montorio” [<i>i.e.</i>,
-“Dennis Jasper Murphy”]. Intended as an exposition of the unhappy
-condition of Ireland and as a picture of the life and manners of the time.
-The former is soon lost sight of, but the latter is well carried out. The hero
-is a strong Nationalist who works wholly for Ireland’s cause. Apart from
-this graver purpose, interest is sustained by a succession of exciting incidents
-and by good character drawing. There is little plot, a great deal of sentiment,
-and a great many disreputable intrigues, without, however, objectionable
-details. The scene varies between Dublin and the W. of Ireland—life in the
-family of a Protestant landowner and in that of a Catholic feudal chief.
-Period, <i>c.</i> 1806-8. The society depicted is that of the aristocratic classes.
-Author’s standpoint full of sympathy and even admiration for Ireland,
-strongly Protestant (Ch. of I.) and anti-“Roman.”</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ LE JEUNE IRLANDAIS. Four Vols. (<span class="smcap">Paris</span>). 1828.</p>
-
-<p>Traduction per Madame la Comtesse de Molé.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE MILESIAN CHIEF. Four Vols. 12mo. (<span class="smcap">London</span>). 1812.</p>
-
-<p>“Was generally well received by the critics. Even Talfourd, who had
-been rather hard on his first novel (<i>The Fatal Revenge</i>), said of this: ‘There is
-a bleak and misty grandeur about it which, in spite of all its glaring defects,
-sustains for it an abiding place in the soul.’”—(C. A. Read). Deals with the
-“prehistoric” Milesian invasion. Gustave Planche in his critique on M.
-says of this book, “C’est un livre où étincellent ça et là des pages magnifiques.”</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ CONNAL OU LES MILESIENS. Traduit de l’anglais par Madame
-la Comtesse [de Molé]. Four tom. (<span class="smcap">Paris</span>). 1828.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ WOMEN; or, Pour et Contre. Three Vols. [1818].</p>
-
-<p>Young de Courcy rescues Eva, who had been carried off to be made a
-Catholic of by a fanatical grandmother, and he falls in love. This brings
-him into Calvinistic Methodist circles in Dublin. These the Author describes
-minutely and with satire. The Methodist gloom and coldness drive the hero
-to the company of a brilliant actress (really Zaira, Eva’s mother). He is
-long torn between the two, but finally goes to Paris with Zaira. There he
-deserts her for another. There is a fine description of Z.’s despair. Eva
-dies of decline, and de Courcy, repentant, soon follows. “A moral and
-interesting tale.” “The full praise both of invention and of execution must
-be allowed to Mr. M.’s sketch of Eva.” As regards Methodism, Mr. M.
-“has used the scalpel, not, we think, unfairly but with professional rigour
-and dexterity.”—(From a review by Sir Walter Scott in the <span class="smcap">Edinb. Rev.</span>,
-xxx., 234).</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ EVA; ou, Amour et Religion. Traduit de l’anglais sur la 2e éd. par M.
-4 tom. (<span class="smcap">Paris</span>). 1818.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>MATURIN, Edward.</b> Son of the preceding.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE IRISH CHIEFTAIN; or, The Isles of Life and Death. Pp. 316,
-v. close print. 16mo. (<span class="smcap">Glasgow</span>: <i>Griffin</i>). 1848.</p>
-
-<p>A wild story, in which historical names (O’Ruarc of Breffny, Dermod
-MacMurrough, Strongbow, Eva, Devorgilla) are given to the personages,
-but which has no foundation in history. The incidents are supposed to take
-place some short time after the Norman invasion, but the book bristles with
-anachronisms. It is a series of thrilling adventures, fighting, revenge, murders,
-hairbreadth escapes, and so forth. Highly melodramatic, sentimental,
-and extravagant.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_175"></a>[175]</span></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ BIANCA: a Tale of Erin and Italy. Two Vols. 660 pp. (N.Y.:
-<i>Harper</i>). 1852.</p>
-
-<p>An outlandish sort of story, full of murders, perhaps a dozen, if not more.
-Nearly all the characters have some terrible secret connected with their past;
-hardly any of them are legitimate children. A duel between two brothers,
-and banshees, and mysterious ladies with dark prophesyings, etc., and all
-the fee-faw-fum of the times when all this was popular.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>MAXWELL, W. Hamilton.</b> 1792-1850. He was a clergyman of the Church
-of Ireland, with a parish at Ballagh, in the wilds of Connaught, but was
-largely relieved of pastoral duties by the absence of a flock. He divided
-his leisure between field sports of all kinds and the writing of books.
-<i>Wild Sports of the West</i>, <i>Stories of Waterloo</i>, and <i>The Bivouac</i> were the
-most successful of these; they are still much read. He tells a story
-capitally, with verve and spirit, and his situations are as exciting as
-those of any modern novelist. Maxwell was the first writer of military
-novels: he is the forerunner and even the inspirer of Lever. Mr. Baker
-describes his <i>Stories of Waterloo</i> as “A farrago of Irish stories, sensational,
-with a dash of Hibernian character and local colouring.” This book
-is still to be had (Routledge, 2<i>s.</i>), and a new ed. publ. by The Talbot
-Press, Dublin (Every Irishman’s Library), and ed. by Lord Dunraven,
-has recently (Sept., 1915) appeared of his <i>Wild Sports</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ O’HARA. Two Vols. (<i>Andrews</i>). [1825].</p>
-
-<p>A Protestant landowner casts in his lot with the United Irishmen. The
-Government attaints him of treason; he is tried by a jury of drunken bigots,
-and hanged as a traitor. His son, the hero of the tale, then throws himself
-heart and soul into the rebellion. The interest centres in the accounts of
-the fighting in the North. The hero is a leader at the battle of Antrim. Some
-light is thrown on the nature of the friction between the Catholic and the
-Protestant commanders, which constantly threatens the disruption of the
-rebel forces.—(<i>Krans</i>). Publ. anon.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE DARK LADY OF DOONA. [1836]. Also (<i>Smith, Elder</i>) 1837.
-Pp. 306. (<span class="smcap">Belfast</span>) 1846. (<span class="smcap">Lond.</span>) 1854. (<i>Warne</i>). 6<i>d.</i> 1891.</p>
-
-<p>“A weak historical novel, in Scott’s manner, which attempts a picture of
-sixteenth-century life.”—(<i>Krans</i>). The heroine is Grace O’Malley. The
-story opens in 1601, but there is a retrospective portion going back to tell
-the early life of the heroine. A tale of love and wild vengeance. In the
-story figure the heir of the Geraldines (who marries Grace’s granddaughter),
-Hugh O’Neill, and Sir Richard Bingham. Grace joins the latter against
-O’Neill. Well written on the whole.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ LA DAME NOIRE DE DOONA. Roman historique traduit par
-Pâquis. Two tom. (<span class="smcap">Paris</span>). 1834(!).</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ ADVENTURES OF CAPT. BLAKE; or, My Life. (<i>Routledge</i>). 6<i>d.</i>
-[<i>Bentley</i>, 1835]. 1838. Third ed., 1882.</p>
-
-<p>Really two practically independent stories, that of Major Blake and that
-of his son, the Captain. The former is far the more interesting, giving a good
-account of Gen. Humbert’s invasion and of the manners of the peasantry
-at the time (especially their open-hearted hospitality and kindliness), and
-some nice descriptions of Connaught scenery. But for an absurd scene of
-confession in a courthouse no religious bias is displayed. The remaining two
-volumes are a rambling series of miscellaneous adventures in Portugal, Paris,
-and London, consisting largely of amorous episodes not edifying, to say the
-least, and told in a facetious and somewhat vulgar strain.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_176"></a>[176]</span></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE ADVENTURES OF HECTOR O’HALLORAN AND HIS MAN,
-MARK ANTONY O’TOOLE. (<i>Warne</i>). 6<i>d.</i> Paper. (N.Y.: <i>Pratt</i>).
-0.30. [1842]. <i>n.d.</i> (recently reprinted).</p>
-
-<p>The hero is the son of a landlord and ex-soldier living in the South of Ireland.
-Beginning with an attack on the castle by local malcontents, Hector and
-his man pass through a series of adventures (some of which are described
-with considerable “go”), first in Dublin, then in London, and finally in the
-Peninsular War under Wellington. Most of the incidents take place amid the
-lowest society, and some of them are distinctly coarse. There is no character-drawing
-and little or no attempt to picture the life of the period. The military
-experiences in Spain form, perhaps, the best part of the book. There is no
-sympathy for Ireland, and there are some gibes at Catholicism.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE ADVENTURES OF CAPT. O’SULLIVAN. Three Vols.
-(<i>Colburn</i>). [1848]. 1855.</p>
-
-<p>“Or adventures civil, military, and matrimonial of a gentleman on half-pay.”
-Some of these take place near “Ballysallagh,” in Connaught, where
-the hero is stationed, his duties being mainly to keep down the Ribbonmen
-and to hunt for illicit stills. Attitude towards the former somewhat bloodthirsty.
-The two chief houses belong to the priest and the tithe-proctor,
-the task of the latter being described as the grinding of money “out of the
-wretched serfs.” Little plot, long and tedious conversations.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ ERIN GO BRAGH; or, Irish Life Pictures. Two Vols. (<i>Bentley</i>).
-Portrait. 1859.</p>
-
-<p>A posthumous collection of short stories originally contributed to <span class="smcap">Bentley’s
-Miscellany</span> and other magazines. Written in the light, rollicking, high-spirited
-vein characteristic of Maxwell. Many of them are recollections of
-actual experience. Prefaced by biographical sketch by Dr. Maginn.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ LUCK IS EVERYTHING; or, The Adventures of Brian O’Linn.
-Pp. 440. (<i>Routledge</i>). (N.Y.: <i>Pratt</i>). 3.00. 1860.</p>
-
-<p>An infant, child of a dying mother who had been abducted, is landed on
-Innisturk. He is adopted by the head man there, grows up, goes to England,
-and after many exciting adventures, love episodes, and hair-breadth escapes,
-finds out his own origin and succeeds to ancestral estates. Originally appeared
-as serial (with illustrations on steel by John Leech) under the title of <i>Brian
-O’Linn</i> in <span class="smcap">Bentley’s Miscellany</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>MAYNE, Thomas Ekenhead.</b> Son of a well-known bookseller of Belfast,
-was fast earning for himself a considerable literary reputation, but died at
-32, 1899.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE HEART O’ THE PEAT: Irish Fireside and Wayside Sketches.
-Pp. 214. (<span class="smcap">Belfast</span>: <i>W. Erskine Mayne</i>). 1<i>s.</i> Paper. 1899.</p>
-
-<p>“These are all Irish stories, written on the spot, with a faithfulness that
-can be felt in every line. There is no attempt at meretricious workmanship,
-no maudlin sentimentality, no mock heroics. They are simple tales, simply
-told; but occasionally the restraint, which is everywhere discernible, is
-relaxed for a moment, and the fire of the poet glows in half a dozen lines, as
-a landscape or a sea-piece is enthusiastically drawn, or some incident touches
-the gentle human heart of the writer.”—(James H. Cousins, in <span class="smcap">Sinn Fein</span>).</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>“MEADE, L. T.”; Elizabeth Thomasina Toulmin Smith.</b> She was a
-daughter of Rev. R. T. Meade, of Nohoval, Co. Cork. She was b. at
-Bandon. She lived in England from 1874 till her death in 1915. Mudie’s
-catalogue enumerates 185 of her novels, many of which were stories for
-school girls. Of these novels several, no doubt, besides those here
-mentioned, relate to Ireland.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_177"></a>[177]</span></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE O’DONNELLS OF INCHFAWN. (<i>Hatchards</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1887.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE WILD IRISH GIRL. Pp. 444. (<i>Chambers</i>). 6<i>s.</i> Eight
-coloured Illustr. by the well-known <span class="smcap">Punch</span> artist, Lewis Baumer. 1910.</p>
-
-<p>Warm-hearted, impulsive Patricia has been allowed to run wild at her own
-sweet will in Ireland. She is brought to London, finds the conventional
-restraints of society too narrow for her, and as a consequence gets into many
-amusing and harmless scrapes, and out of them again.—(<i>Press Notices</i>).</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ DESBOROUGH’S WIFE. Pp. 319. (<i>Digby, Long</i>). 6<i>s.</i> One Illustr.
-1911.</p>
-
-<p>Scene: near Tralee, in Kerry. Patrick D. contracts a runaway marriage
-with a beautiful peasant girl. He falls heavily in debt, finds that his mother,
-on whom he had relied, is even more heavily involved, and that the only way
-out is a marriage with a rich heiress. Patrick basely yields, and the poor
-wife consents to “disappear,” but in a strange way, connected with a certain
-“silent room” in the D. mansion, whose secret we shall not divulge, things
-right themselves at last. Peter Maloney, Patrick’s faithful foster-brother,
-is curiously similar to Griffin’s Danny Mann. The moral tone is high.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ PEGGY FROM KERRY. Pp. 330. (<i>Chambers</i>). 6<i>s.</i> Pretty cover
-and eight coloured Illustr. by Miss A. Anderson. 1912.</p>
-
-<p>Peggy is the daughter of a poor Irish peasant and of an officer. She is now
-an orphan, but has been adopted by an English friend of her father’s and sent
-to an English boarding school. The story is made up of plots and petty
-jealousies amongst the schoolgirls. Peggy, though much ridiculed for her
-dreadful brogue, triumphs over her special enemy and the latter’s followers
-and ends by being popular and happy.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ KITTY O’DONOVAN. Pp. 330. (<i>Chambers</i>). 5<i>s.</i> Six good coloured
-Illustr. by J. Finnemore. 1912.</p>
-
-<p>Doings in a select English boarding school, where the pretty heroine from
-Kerry comes scatheless through the spiteful plots of her jealous rivals, and is
-crowned Queen of the May. There is a pretty description of Kerry scenery,
-but most of the action takes place outside of Ireland.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE PASSION OF KATHLEEN DUVEEN. Pp. 284. (<i>Stanley
-Paul</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1913.</p>
-
-<p>“A tale of the novelette class about a young Irishman forced into crime
-and faithlessness to his young wife by his family’s need of money.”—[<span class="smcap">Times
-Lit. Suppl.</span>]. Another “Colleen Bawn” story. Brilliant young officer
-marries penniless girl. Financial straits. Murder; and nemesis.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ AT THE BACK OF THE WORLD. (<i>Hurst &amp; Blackett</i>). 6<i>s.</i> <i>n.d.</i></p>
-
-<p>Scene: “Arranmore,” on the sea coast of Cork. Sheila O’Connor is long
-sundered from her lover by the suspicion, shared by herself, that he is the
-murderer of her father, the Squire. Whether they are ever united again
-we leave the reader to discover. There are many scenes that show us the
-life of the peasantry, in particular their religious customs. The book seems
-free from bias, and the brogue is not exaggerated.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>[MEANY, Mary L.].</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ CONFESSORS OF CONNAUGHT; or, The Tenants of a Lord Bishop.
-Pp. viii. + 319. (<span class="smcap">Philadelphia</span>: <i>Cunningham</i>). [1864]. <i>n.d.</i> (still
-in print).</p>
-
-<p>Hardly a story: rather a relation of real incidents in which the names are
-thinly disguised. Turns chiefly on the proselytising efforts of Lord Plunkett,
-Protestant Archb. of Tuam, resulting in the Partry evictions. Archb.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_178"></a>[178]</span>
-MacHale, Father Patrick Lavelle, Mgr. Dupanloup, and J. F. Maguire play
-parts in the tale. Written with strong Catholic bias, but among the chief
-characters are a Protestant minister and his wife, who are represented as
-estimable in every way. Style lively, and at times humorous. Dialogue
-good and natural. The Author is a great admirer of William Smith O’Brien.
-She has also publ. <i>Grace Morton; or, The Inheritance</i>. <i>A Catholic Tale.</i></p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>MEANY, Stephen Joseph.</b> B. nr. Ennis, Co. Clare, 1825. A noted journalist,
-first in his native Clare, then in Dublin. In 1848 he was imprisoned for
-some months. Then he went to Liverpool, where he founded the first
-English Catholic paper outside London—<span class="smcap">The Lancashire Free Press</span>.
-Went to U.S.A., 1860. Returned to England, and was arrested on a
-charge of Fenianism, 1867, and sentenced to 15 years. D. N.Y., 1888.
-His “Life” has been written by John Augustus O’Shea.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE TERRY ALT: a Tale of 1831. Three Vols. 1841.</p>
-
-<p>The “Terry Alts” was a name adopted by the secret agrarian agitators
-in Munster, previously known as “Whiteboys.” Not in British Museum
-Library.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>[MEIKLE, James.]</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ KILLINCHY; or, The Days of Livingston. Pp. 156. 12mo.
-(<span class="smcap">Belfast</span>: <i>McComb</i>). 1839.</p>
-
-<p>Description of Presbyterian life in Ulster immediately after the Scottish
-Plantation, with biographical details concerning Rev. John Livingston, a
-Scot from Kilsyth, who was minister of Killinchy, Co. Down, from 1630-5.
-Story element slight. The Author was a schoolmaster in the district.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>MELVILLE, Theodore.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE IRISH CHIEFTAIN AND HIS FAMILY. Four Vols. Pp.
-910. (<span class="smcap">London</span>: <i>Lane, Newman</i>). 1809.</p>
-
-<p>The chieftain is The O’Donoghue of Killarney, dispossessed for loyalty to
-the Stuarts. His family, that of Lord Roskerrin, a Williamite, rewarded
-with an estate, and an exiled Venetian are the <i>dramatis personæ</i>. Scene:
-chiefly Killarney. Period, only vaguely indicated, 18th century. Conrad
-O’D. the hero, falls in love with the daughter of the hated Lord R. There
-are kidnappings and highly sensational adventures of all kinds, told in a
-romantic manner, among others how Conrad helps to reinstate the exiled
-Venetian grandee. Author’s sympathies thoroughly on the Irish side,
-but does not seem unfair to the English. He wrote also <i>The White Knight</i>,
-<i>The Benevolent Monk</i>, &amp;c. Good descriptions of Killarney.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>MEREDITH, George.</b> B. Portsmouth, 1828. He had, as he used to boast,
-both Welsh (from his father) and Irish blood (from his mother) in his
-veins. Ed. chiefly in Germany. The writer of his life in the <span class="smcap">Encyclopedia
-Brittanica</span> says of him, “In Meredith went the writer who
-had raised the creative art of the novel, as a vehicle of character and
-constructive philosophy, to its highest point.... The estimate
-of his genius formed by “an honourable minority,” who would place
-him in the highest rank of all, by Shakespeare, has yet to be confirmed
-by the wider suffrage of posterity.” He died in 1909.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ CELT AND SAXON. Pp. 300. (<i>Constable</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1910.</p>
-
-<p>Left unfinished, like Dickens’s <i>Edwin Drood</i>. The plot has hardly begun
-to work out. The chief interest lies in the purpose which was—the author tells
-us—to contrast English, as typified in John Bull, to the description of whose
-characteristics a whole chapter is devoted, with Celtic character and ideals.
-This purpose is manifest throughout the book. There is a set of Irish and a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_179"></a>[179]</span>
-set of English characters, and within these two sets are types differing widely
-from one another. One of the most pronounced types of Irishman is married
-to a lady of peculiarly English characteristics, and the resulting ménage
-affords the author scope for much dry humour. A romantic episode is just
-beginning to develop. The highly-wrought Meredithian style is as distinctive
-as in his former books, and there are stray glimpses of the Meredithian
-philosophy.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>“MERRY, Andrew”; Mrs. Mildred H. G. Darby</b>, <i>née</i> <b>Gordon-Dill</b>. B. 1869,
-in Sussex, d. of a North of Irelander, a cousin of Sir Samuel Dill, and of
-an English mother. Ed. at home. Married in 1889 J. C. Darby,
-Esq., <span class="allsmcap">D.L.</span> Her writings are noted for their impartial standpoint as
-regards Irish questions, and for their virile style. Never in the criticisms
-of her literary work has it been suggested that the pen-name hid a woman.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE GREEN COUNTRY. Pp. viii. + 378. (<i>Grant, Richards</i>). 1902.</p>
-
-<p>Little studies, humorous or pathetic, of the Irish people of to-day. Both the
-landlord class and the peasantry, Catholics as well as Protestants, figure
-in the tale. The Author makes (<i>c.f.</i> Pref.) her characters responsible for
-the views they express. She applies herself with insight and sympathy
-and without bias to a careful presentation of various aspects of the national
-character, its shadows no less than its lights. But there is no preaching.
-The story entitled “The love of God or Men” is full of true religious feeling.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ PADDY RISKY; or, Irish Realities of To-day. Pp. 367. (<i>Grant,
-Richards</i>). 1903.</p>
-
-<p>Seven stories dealing with aspects of Irish life from the landlord and
-Unionist point of view, yet tone not anti-Irish, nor unjust to any class. The
-spirit is that of Davis’ “Celt and Saxon,” quoted at outset:—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“What matter that at different times</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Your fathers won this sod?</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">In fortune and in name we’re bound</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">By stronger links than steel,” &amp;c.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>One story shows the hardship of compulsory sale of grass lands. Another
-deals (delicately) with seduction in peasant life. Most of the characters in
-the stories are peasants of the Midlands. Charming descriptions of Irish
-scenery.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE HUNGER: Being Realities of the Famine Years in Ireland,
-1845-1848. Pp. 436. (<i>Melrose</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1910.</p>
-
-<p>This is, in the form of fiction, a narrative of happenings in one district,
-with a plot and personal drama and talk proper to the novel, and all of these
-show the gifts of a practised and able novelist; but “every incident,” the
-writer assures us, “is fact, not fiction.” His matter is mainly derived from
-oral statements, helped and verified from books, records, and trustworthy
-private sources; and in an introduction Mr. Merry deals with the causes
-and characteristics of the famine, the horrors of which were such that even
-many of the incidents here selected had to be modified in their details to
-become publishable.—(<span class="smcap">Times Lit. Suppl.</span>).</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>MEYER, Kuno.</b> B. Hamburg, 1858. Ed. Hamburg and Leipzig. Lecturer
-in Teutonic Languages at Univ. Coll., Liverpool, 1884; Professor, 1895.
-Founded the <span class="smcap">Zeitschrift fur Celtische Philologie</span>, 1895, and, along
-with Whitley Stokes, the <span class="smcap">Archiv. fur Celtische Lexicographie</span>,
-1898; founded the School of Irish Learning in Dublin, 1903; Prof. of
-Celtic in Univ. of Berlin since 1911. Has publ. a long series of most
-valuable works on Celtic-Irish subjects.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_180"></a>[180]</span></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE VISION OF MACCONGLINNE: a Twelfth Century Irish
-Wonder-Tale. (<i>Nutt</i>). 7<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> net. 1892.</p>
-
-<p>“Transl. by K. Meyer, literary introd. by W. Woolner. A primitive tale
-combining two elements—satire of the Abbot and Monks of Cork, and the
-vision of the Lake of Milk, which reveals to the gleeman MacConglinne how
-King Cathal may be delivered from the demon of gluttony that has been
-the bane of his land. Full of extravagance and comic fancy.”—(<i>Baker</i>, 2).</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE VOYAGE OF BRAN, SON OF FERBAL, TO THE LAND
-OF THE LIVING. An old Irish saga, now first edited, with translation.
-Notes and Glossary by Kuno Meyer. With an Essay upon the Irish
-Vision of the Happy Otherworld, and the Celtic Doctrine of Rebirth by
-Alfred Nutt. [Grimm Library, Vols. 4 and 6].</p>
-
-<p>Vol. I. “The Happy Otherworld.” Pp. xviii. + 331. 1895.</p>
-
-<p>Vol. II. “The Celtic Doctrine of Rebirth.” Pp. xii. + 352. 1897.
-(<i>Nutt</i>). 10<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> each.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ LIADAIN AND CUIRITHIR. (<i>Nutt</i>). 1<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> 1902.</p>
-
-<p>An Irish love-story of the ninth century, partly in prose, partly in verse.
-Old Irish text and English translation. Introduction by Editor. Interesting
-chiefly to the student of Old Irish and the folk-lorist.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>MILLIGAN, Alice and W. H.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ SONS OF THE SEA KINGS. Pp. 404. (<i>Gill</i>). 6<i>s.</i> Ten illustr.
-by J. Carey. 1914.</p>
-
-<p>Based on the Scandinavian sagas—the Burnt Njal, Snorri Sturleson’s
-Saga of Olaf, Tryggvesons, the Heimskringla, &amp;c. Iceland is the centre of
-these sagas, but Ireland looms in the background, for the hero, Kiartain,
-comes of famous Irish-Danish stock. The Authors have vividly realised and
-vividly pictured these far times (end of 10th century). The tone and
-“atmosphere” of the sagas has been preserved with great fidelity, and the
-tale, told in language of much dignity and beauty, is of high dramatic force
-and interest. Miss Milligan is well known as poetess, journalist, and
-lecturer on Irish subjects. Resides in Bangor, Co. Down.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>[MILLINGEN, John Gideon].</b> B. Westminster, 1782. Son of a Dutch
-merchant. Served as Surgeon in Peninsular War under Wellington,
-1809-1814. Wrote many plays, a history of duelling, and other works.
-D. 1862. (Boase).</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ ADVENTURES OF AN IRISH GENTLEMAN. Three Vols.
-(<i>Colburn &amp; Bentley</i>). 1830.</p>
-
-<p>A very unpleasant book. Only the opening and closing scenes are in Ireland
-(neighbourhood of Bantry Bay, Skibbereen, and Tralee), the interval being
-filled by adventures in Portugal (where the Inquisition is held up to obloquy),
-and in Paris (where Freemasonry is praised and convents vilified). These
-adventures are, for the most part, more or less scandalous “love” affairs.
-At the outset there is a good deal about Irish disaffection and lawlessness. The
-Author seizes every occasion to drag in the confessional, the Pope, &amp;c., and to
-inveigh against them.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>MONTGOMERY, J. W.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ MERVYN GRAY; or, Life in the R.I.C. (<span class="smcap">Edinburgh</span>: <i>Cameron &amp;
-Ferguson</i>). 1<i>s.</i> <i>c.</i> 1875.</p>
-
-<p>The Author was a native of Virginia, Co. Cavan. He was a zealous antiquary,
-and wrote on antiquarian subjects. Published, besides the above,
-two volumes of verse and one of prose sketches. D. Bangor, Co. Down, 1911.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_181"></a>[181]</span></p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>MOORE, F. Frankfort.</b> B. in Limerick, 1855, but brought up and ed. in
-Belfast. Began to write at 16. For sixteen years worked on staff of
-<span class="smcap">Belfast News-Letter</span>. See his <i>Journalist’s Note Book</i>, 1894. All
-this time he was turning out at least one book a year. In 1893 he scored
-a great success with his <i>I Forbid the Banns</i>. Since then his output has
-been very large. He resides at Lewes.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE JESSAMY BRIDE. (<i>Hutchinson</i>). 6<i>s.</i> (N.Y.: <i>Fenno</i>). 50c.
-1897.</p>
-
-<p>The story of the last years and death of Goldsmith, told with all the Author’s
-well-known verve. Full of dialogue, witty and lively, yet not merely flashy,
-in which Johnson, Burke, Garrick, and other wits and worthies of the day
-take part. The central theme is Goldsmith’s attachment to the beautiful
-Mary Horneck, called the Jessamy Bride. There is much true pathos in the
-story, and not a word that could offend susceptibilities.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ CASTLE OMERAGH. (<i>Constable</i>). 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> (N.Y.: <i>Appleton</i>). 1.50.
-1903.</p>
-
-<p>Scene: the West of Ireland (Co. Clare) during Cromwell’s invasion. The
-central figures are the Fawcetts, a Protestant planter family, whose sympathies
-have become Irish. The eldest son is an officer in the army of O’Neill. The
-second, the hero, is literary and unwarlike, and inclined to Quakerism. A
-Jesuit friend of the family figures prominently in the story, and is presented
-in a very favourable light. The Drogheda massacre and Cromwell’s repulse
-at Clonmel are included.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE ORIGINAL WOMAN. Pp. 343. (<i>Hutchinson</i>). 1904.</p>
-
-<p>Thesis: whatever culture may have done for the modern woman, she
-reverts to the instincts of the original woman in the crisis of a life-decision.
-Scene: first, country house in Galway. The heroine is a typical modern girl
-of the best kind. The hero, who is also the villain, is a singularly attractive
-personality, the complicated workings of whose mind the Author delights to
-analyse. Later the scene changes to Martinique. Here an element of the
-supernatural and uncanny enters the story. The style is witty, the character-drawing
-very clever.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ CAPTAIN LATYMER. (<i>Cassell</i>). 6<i>s.</i> Also 6<i>d.</i> ed. 1908.</p>
-
-<p>A sequel to <i>Castle Omeragh</i>. The eldest Fawcett is condemned by Cromwell
-to the West Indies, but escapes along with the daughter of Hugh O’Neill,
-nephew of Owen Roe. There are exciting adventures. The book, as does
-<i>Castle Omeragh</i>, gives a faithful picture of the times.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE ULSTERMAN: a Story of To-day. Pp. 323. (<i>Hutchinson</i>).
-6<i>s.</i> 1914.</p>
-
-<p>A very candid, plainspoken, and judicious picture of life in North-East
-Ulster. Pictures what the <span class="smcap">Times Lit. Suppl.</span> calls “the unsympathetic
-materialism, the drab ugliness of a life which finds its chief recreation
-in religious strife, and much of its consolation in strong drink.” But dwells
-upon the sterling good qualities that go to counterbalance these others.
-Opens in a mid-Antrim town on the eve of “the 12th.” Story of a bigoted
-Ulster mill-owner whose sons eventually marry into Catholic families of a
-lower class. Not political.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE LADY OF THE REEF. Pp. 348. (<i>Hutchinson</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1915.</p>
-
-<p>A young English artist in Paris suddenly inherits a property in North Co.
-Down, and arrives to find himself in a puzzling environment. Cleverly
-sketched characters are introduced—MacGowan, the pushful attorney, the
-excellent parson Gilliland, and the dipsomaniac captain. Then there is a
-wreck, a rescue, and enter the “Lady of the Reef.” The sequel tells whether
-she accepts the artist or not.—(I.B.L. and <span class="smcap">T. Lit. Suppl.</span>).</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_182"></a>[182]</span></p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>MOORE, George.</b> A distinguished poet, novelist, dramatist, and art critic.
-Was born in Ireland, 1857, of a Catholic family of Co. Mayo, many of
-whose members were distinguished nationalists. He has produced
-some twenty books. Much of Mr. Moore’s education has been acquired
-in France, with the result that, as Dr. William Barry says, “he is excessively,
-provokingly un-English.” At the same time he has little but
-scorn for things Irish. He has, as he tells us in <i>Confessions of a Young
-Man</i>, abandoned the Catholic Church. He may be said to be at war
-with all prevailing types of religion and current codes of morality. His
-books bear abundant evidence of the fact. Many of them treat of
-most unsavoury topics, and that with naturalistic freedom and absence
-of reserve. They were consequently excluded from lending libraries
-such as Mudie’s and Smith’s. Many critics rank Mr. Moore very high
-as a psychologist and as a critic. An interesting article on him will be
-found in G. K. Chesterton’s <i>Heretics</i>. His non-Irish stories include
-<i>Evelyn Innes</i>, <i>Sister Theresa</i>, <i>Esther Waters</i>, <i>A Mummer’s Wife</i>, <i>Celibates</i>,
-<i>Vain Fortune</i>, <i>A Mere Accident</i>, &amp;c. Within the last two or three years
-he has published at intervals three vols. of reminiscences entitled <i>Ave,
-Salve, Vale</i>, in which no privacies are respected and which in other respects
-resemble his novels.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ A DRAMA IN MUSLIN. Pp. 329. (<i>Vizetelly</i>). 1886.</p>
-
-<p>Period: just before and just after the Phœnix Park murders. Some
-attention is given to Land League tyranny before, and coercion after. The
-interest centres in a party of girls educated at a convent school at St. Leonard’s,
-and their subsequent adventures in Irish society looking for husbands, and
-all eventually going to the bad, with two exceptions. Of these latter, one
-is a mad missionary and a Protestant, who becomes a Catholic and a nun,
-the other is a free-thinker and an authoress, a combination which the Author
-considers natural. For the Irish peasant the Author has only disgust. The
-picture of a Mass in an Irish chapel (pp. 70-72) would be offensive and painful
-to a Catholic. Re-issued as <i>Muslin</i>, 1915.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE UNTILLED FIELD. (<i>Unwin</i>). 6<i>s.</i> (<span class="smcap">Philadelphia</span>: <i>Lippincott</i>).
-1.50. [1903]. New ed. (<i>Heinemann</i>). 1914.</p>
-
-<p>A series of unconnected sketches of Irish country life, most of which deal
-with relations between priests and people—evil effects of religion on the
-latter, banishing joy, producing superstition, killing art. In some of the stories
-priests are depicted favourably. In the first the subject of the nude in
-artist’s models is treated with complete frankness. Another contains
-warnings against emigration. Some of the sketches are exquisite; most of
-them, religious bias apart, true to life. Has been transl. into Irish under
-title <i>An t-Ur Gort</i> by P. O’Sullivan.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE LAKE. Pp. 340. (<i>Heinemann</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1905. (N.Y.:
-<i>Appleton</i>). 1.50.</p>
-
-<p>“A vague and inchoate novel with some passionate and delightful descriptions
-of Nature. The theme, very indecisively worked out, is that of a
-young priest’s rebellion against celibacy, stimulated by the attractions of a
-girl whom he drove from the parish because she had gone wrong.”—(<i>Baker</i>).
-Scene: Connaught and Kilronan Abbey. The story seems meant to uphold
-the purely Hedonistic view of life.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>MOORE, Sidney O.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE FAMILY OF GLENCARRA: a Tale of the Irish Rebellion.
-Pp. 154. (<i>Bath</i>). Six illustr. of little value. <i>n.d.</i> (1858).</p>
-
-<p>Ninety-eight (Humbert’s Invasion) seen from the standpoint of the “Irish
-Society” (a proselytising organisation). The book is intended to set forth
-“the ignorance and degradation peculiar to the Romish districts of Ireland,”
-and tells how Aileen who was engaged to one of the rebels (a murderer) is<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_183"></a>[183]</span>
-converted, and endeavours to convert others, with varying success. The
-book is full of calumnies against, and grotesque misrepresentations of, the
-Catholic Church. It closes with an appeal to the “Daughters of England”
-for funds for the Irish Society.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>MORAN, D. P.</b> Editor since its inception of the <span class="smcap">Leader</span> (Dublin). A
-Waterford man.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ TOM O’KELLY. Pp. 232. (<i>Duffy</i>). 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> 1905.</p>
-
-<p>An ugly picture of lower middle class life in a small Irish provincial town.
-It depicts the vulgarity and shoneenism of this class, its drunkenness, its
-efforts to imitate the well-to-do Protestant better classes, &amp;c., &amp;c. Unsparing
-ridicule is showered upon Nationalist politics and politicians. The
-unpleasantness of the picture is somewhat relieved by the doings of Tom
-O’Kelly and the juvenile Ballytowners. Very slight plot.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>MORAN, J. J.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE DUNFERRY RISIN’. (<i>Digby, Long</i>). 1894.</p>
-
-<p>A study of the Fenian movement. The <span class="smcap">Evening Sun</span> of London devoted
-a two-column review to the book, written by an old participator in the Fenian
-movement (we understand that the writer was the late J. F. X. O’Brien, <span class="allsmcap">M.P.</span>),
-in which the story was described as one of the most vivid pictures of the
-Irish Republican Brotherhood and their movement that had yet been written.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ IRISH STEW. (<i>Digby, Long</i>). 1895.</p>
-
-<p>A collection of humorous stories. “Jack Arnold’s Tour,” the longest
-story, may be taken as typical. It relates the comical adventures of an
-English visitor at Bundoran. The stories are remarkable for their spirited
-and racy dialogue.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ STORIES OF THE IRISH REBELLION. (<span class="smcap">Aberdeen</span>: <i>Moran</i>).
-1<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
-
-<p>Short stories, noteworthy for vividness and dramatic power (for example,
-the story of Leonie Guiscard and Teeling). Humour and pathos alternate.
-Neither is overdone.—(Publ.).</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ TWO LITTLE GIRLS IN GREEN. (<span class="smcap">Aberdeen</span>: <i>Moran</i>). 6<i>s.</i>
-1898.</p>
-
-<p>Land League story—extreme popular point of view; gives vivid idea of
-feelings of people during hottest years of the agitation. Introduces amiable
-Englishman who sees justice done for his tenants. Clear and pleasant style.—(<span class="smcap">Irish
-Monthly</span>).</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ IRISH DROLLERIES. (<i>Drane</i>). 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> 1909.</p>
-
-<p>Ten comic stories such as “Pat Mulligan’s Love-making,” a bashful young
-man “proposing” by proxy; “Miss Mullan’s Mistake,” story of an elderly
-spinster who answers a matrimonial advertisement with amusing results.
-Others are: “Torsney’s Ghost,” “O’Hagan’s Golden Weddin’,” “Tim
-Mannion the Hero,” “The Wake at Mrs. Doyle’s,” and so on.—(<i>Press Notice</i>).
-“Mr. Moran has done much good work as a publisher of Irish books in Aberdeen.
-In his humorous sketches of Irish life he has ever striven to eschew
-the ‘Stage-Irishman’ type of vulgar comicality. He writes much for various
-papers. Besides the books noted here, he has published <i>A Deformed Idol</i>,
-&amp;c.”</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>MORGAN, Lady.</b> She was the daughter of a poor Dublin actor, named
-Owenson, and was born in 1777. Her self-reliance, gaiety, and accomplishments
-won her a prominent place in the literary and social life of
-Dublin. She married Sir T. C. Morgan, physician to the Lord Lieutenant.
-She protests energetically in her books against the religious<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_184"></a>[184]</span>
-and political grievances of Ireland. “Her books are a sign of the
-growth of a broader spirit of Irish nationality and reflect the growing
-interest in Irish history and antiquities.”—(<i>Krans</i>). She is said to have
-published more than seventy volumes. Her satires of the higher social
-life of Dublin are spirited and readable even to-day, but their tone is
-often sharp and bad-tempered. She caught well the outward drolleries
-of the lower classes: postillions, innkeepers, Dublin porters, &amp;c.; but
-she seldom looks beneath the surface. It has been well said that her
-novels are “thoroughly Irish in matter, in character, in their dry humour,
-and cutting sarcasm; no less than in their vehemence and impetuosity of
-feeling.” Twenty-two of her works are mentioned by Allibone. She
-died in 1859.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ ST. CLAIR; or, the Heiress of Desmond. [1803]. 1807, 1812.</p>
-
-<p>“<i>St. Clair</i>, in sentiment and situation a weak imitation of Werter, introduces
-an Irish antiquary, who discourses upon local legends and traditions,
-ancient Irish MSS., and Celtic history, poetry, and music.”—(<i>Krans</i>). Aims
-at upsetting the notion of the possibility of platonic love between the sexes
-without any approach to real attachment. Into the description of places
-and scenes the Authoress worked much of her Connaught experience.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ ST. CLAIR EN OLIVIA ... MET PLATEN. Dutch trans.
-by F. van Teutem. (<span class="smcap">Amsterdam</span>). 1816.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE WILD IRISH GIRL. [1806]. (N.Y.: <i>Haverty</i>). 1.50.
-(<i>Routledge</i>). <i>n.d.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
-
-<p>A love story of almost gushing sentiment. The scene is the barony of
-Tirerragh, in Sligo (where the book was actually written). Here the “Prince”
-of Inismore, though fallen on evil days, still keeps up all the old customs of
-the chieftains, his ancestors. He wears the old dress, uses the old salutations,
-has his harper and his shanachie, &amp;c. His daughter, Glorvina, is the almost
-ethereal heroine. The personages of the book frequently converse about
-ancient Irish history, legend, music, ornaments, weapons, and costumes.
-There is much acute political discussion and argument in the book. It is
-fervently on the side of Irish nationality. “Father John” is a fine character
-modelled on the then Dean of Sligo. It contains many other portraits drawn
-from real life. Its success at the time was enormous. In two years it passed
-through seven editions.—(Fitzpatrick, Krans, &amp;c.).</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ O’DONNEL. Pp. 288. (<i>Downey</i>). 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> [1814]. 1895.</p>
-
-<p>The central figure of this tale is a scion of the O’Donnells of Tyrconnell,
-proud, courteous, travelled, who has fought in the armies of Austria and of
-France, and finally that of England. He is a type of the old Catholic nobility,
-and his story is made to illustrate the working of the Penal laws.
-Nearly all the personages of the story are people of fashion, mostly titled.
-There is much elaborate character-study, and not a little social satire. The
-native Irish of the lower orders appear in the person of M’Rory alone, a
-humorous faithful old retainer, whose conversation is full of bulls. Lady
-Singleton, the meddling, showy, flippantly talkative woman of fashion, and
-Mr. Dexter, the obsequious, a West Briton of those days, are well drawn.
-The main purpose of the book, says the Author, was to exhibit Catholic
-disabilities. There are interesting descriptions of scenery along the Antrim
-coast and in Donegal. As fiction it is slow reading, yet Sir Walter Scott
-speaks highly of it.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ FLORENCE MACARTHY. (N.Y.: <i>Sadlier</i>). 1.50. 1816.</p>
-
-<p>Combines, as so many of Lady Morgan’s books do, political satire with a
-romantic love tale. A kidnapped heir asserts his claim to a peerage and
-estates and unwittingly woos the romantic Florence, to whom he had been
-betrothed in his youth. Mr. Fitzpatrick calls the book “an exceedingly<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_185"></a>[185]</span>
-interesting and erudite novel,” and tells us how, before attempting it, she
-had “saturated her memory with a large amount of reading which bore upon
-the subject of it.” The character of Counsellor Con Crawley constitutes a
-bitter attack on Lady Morgan’s unscrupulous enemy, John Wilson Croker.
-The half-mad schoolmaster, Terence Oge O’Leary, is a curious type.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE O’BRIENS AND O’FLAHERTYS. Three eds. in one year.
-[1827]. (N.Y.: <i>Haverty</i>).</p>
-
-<p>May be said to have for its object Catholic Emancipation, yet the author
-was no admirer of O’Connell, and in this book keen strokes of satire are aimed
-at the Jesuits, and even at the Pope. Mr. Fitzpatrick says that “though
-professedly a fiction it is really a work of some historical importance, and
-may be safely consulted in many of the details by statistic or historic writers.”
-He tells us also that it “contains a few coarse expressions; and, in common
-with its predecessors, exhibits a somewhat inconsistent love for republicanism
-and aristocracy.” The novel is the story of a young patriot who, expelled
-from Trinity College along with Robert Emmet and others, becomes a volunteer
-and a United Irishman, and is admitted to the councils of Tone, Napper
-Tandy, Rowan, and the rest. After ’98 (which is not described in detail) he
-goes to France, where he rises to be a General, and marries the heroine. The
-book depicts with vividness and fidelity the manners of the time (hence the
-occasional coarseness). There are lively descriptions of Castle society in
-the days of the Duke of Rutland. Lord Walter Fitzgerald was the original
-of “Lord Walter Fitzwalter.”</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ LES O’BRIEN ET LES O’FLAHERTY OU L’IRLANDE EN 1793 is
-the title of a French translation of the preceding by J. Cohen. Three
-Vols. (<span class="smcap">Paris</span>: <i>C. Gosselin</i>). 1828.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ DRAMATIC SCENES FROM REAL LIFE. Two Vols. (<i>Saunder’s
-&amp; Otley</i>). [1833].</p>
-
-<p>Contains a piece entitled “Mount Sackville.” “It possesses a great deal
-of her peculiar power, has much truth, and much good feeling, alloyed with
-some angry prejudice. There are some scenes inimitable for their racy
-humour, and the characters of Gallagher, the orange-agent, his ally the housekeeper,
-and Father Phil, are worthy the hand that sketched M’Rory and the
-Crawley family.... The Whiteboy scenes, though forcibly drawn, are
-perhaps too melodramatic. Shows much bitterness against the Repealers.”—(<span class="smcap">Dubl.
-Rev.</span>).</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>MORIARTY, Denis Ignatius.</b> Ed. by.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE WIFE HUNTER AND FLORA DOUGLAS. Three Vols.<a id="FNanchor_9" href="#Footnote_9" class="fnanchor">[9]</a>
-(<i>Bentley</i>). 1838.</p>
-
-<p>Prefatory notice signed by “John O’Brien Grant,” of Kilnaflesk, the teller
-of the story. K. is “situated in a remote corner of the kingdom,” near
-Bandon (vol. II., p. 186); it is an old rambling family mansion, dating from
-1713. We are introduced to a set of hard-drinking, Orange squireens.
-The hero, refused by his nurse’s daughter Mary, has a “go” at a rich heiress,
-merely to better himself. He also, in company with Morrough O’Driscoll,
-a “restless, blustering, dexterous, successful, ambitious, amusing and farcical
-genius,” throws himself into politics. Then there are a number of burlesque
-electioneering scenes. Duly elected, the hero goes to Dublin, meets Charlemont,
-&amp;c., in high society. Hero marries Mary after all; then, on her death,
-rescues an heiress and marries her.... A third matrimonial venture is unsuccessful.
-There is no seriousness in the book.</p>
-
-<div class="footnotes">
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_9" href="#FNanchor_9" class="label">[9]</a> The first two (pp. 342 + 332) are taken up by <i>The Wife Hunter</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_186"></a>[186]</span></p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>MORRIS, E. O’Connor.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ KILLEEN: a Study of Girlhood. Pp. 348. (<i>Elliot Stock</i>). 1895.</p>
-
-<p>Scene: “Killeen Castle,” Queen’s County. The plot turns on misunderstandings
-that keep lovers apart. The characters are of the Anglo-Irish
-and English upper classes. The book is religious and moral in tone, the
-standpoint Protestant. Peasant character sympathetically treated.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ CLARE NUGENT. Pp. 324. (<i>Digby, Long</i>). 1902.</p>
-
-<p>A rather sentimental tale of an Irish girl who goes to work in England, in
-order to retrieve the fallen fortunes of the family. This a particularly
-successful marriage enables her to do, and all ends most ideally. An ordinary
-plot, somewhat long drawn out. One or two charming descriptions of Irish
-scenery.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ FINOLA. Pp. 304. (<i>Digby, Long</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1910.</p>
-
-<p>Scene: chiefly Dublin at the present day. Murrough O’Brien is to get a
-great inheritance on condition of marrying Finola de Burgh. He gives his
-consent. Then he is ordered off to S. Africa. On his return he falls in
-love with a certain Kathleen Burke, and is resolved to lose his inheritance for
-her sake. The situation has been planned by the romantic Lady Mary
-Eustace. Her plans nearly turn out in an unforeseen way. The interest
-then settles on the identity of Kathleen Burke. Several of the characters
-are well sketched. Notably, Eleanor Butler, a sharp and amusing spinster.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>MORRIS, W. O’Connor.</b> B. 1824 at Kilkenny. Son of B. Morris, Rector
-of Rincurran, near Kinsale. Ed. in England. Became a County
-Court Judge. He devoted himself largely to politics; was a Liberal
-Unionist, strongly opposed to Home Rule, and especially to the land
-agitation. Was himself a good landlord, and an estimable man. D.
-1904. <i>See</i> his reminiscences, <i>Memories and Thoughts of a Life</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ MEMOIRS OF GERALD O’CONNOR. Pp. 311. (<i>Digby, Long</i>).
-1903.</p>
-
-<p>Reminiscences (told in the first person) of one Gerald O’Connor, an ancestor
-of the Author. “Compiled partly from old documents and papers in my
-possession, partly from reminiscences handed down from father to son during
-five generations, and partly from my own researches.”—(Pref.). But the
-Author has freely filled in gaps in the authentic records and supplied colouring,
-though there is practically no dialogue. O’Connor served in the Williamite
-Wars, 1689-91, emigrated to France with Sarsfield, and joined the staff of
-Marshal Villars. Was in all the great battles of the War of the Spanish
-Succession. The Author describes effects on Ireland of conquest and confiscation
-from point of view of O’Connor, but admits in Preface that he
-himself looks at modern Ireland from the landlord’s standpoint.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>MULHOLLAND, Clara.</b> Is a sister of Lady Gilbert. Was born in Belfast,
-but left it at an early age, and was educated at convents in England and
-Belgium. The style of her stories is simple and bright, their tone
-thoroughly wholesome. Even when there is nothing directly about
-religion, they breathe an atmosphere of Catholicism. All of them can
-safely and with profit be given to the young. Many of them are specially
-meant for young readers. Some of her non-Irish stories are <i>The Miser
-of Kingscourt</i>, <i>A Striking Contrast</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ PERCY’S REVENGE. (<i>Gill</i>). 1887.</p>
-
-<p>Irish and Catholic.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ LITTLE MERRY FACE AND HIS CROWN OF CONTENT. (<i>Burns
-&amp; Oates</i>). 1889.</p>
-
-<p>Stories for children. Irish and Catholic.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_187"></a>[187]</span></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ LITTLE SNOWDROP AND OTHER STORIES. Pp. 192. (<i>Washbourne</i>).
-2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> Illustr. 1889.</p>
-
-<p>The scene of the principal story, a great favourite with children, is laid in
-Killiney, near Dublin. It tells of a child kidnapped by gypsies.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE LITTLE BOGTROTTERS. Pp. 188. (<span class="smcap">Belfast</span>: <i>Ward</i>;
-<span class="smcap">Baltimore</span>, U.S.A.: <i>John Murphy</i>). Illustr. <i>n.d.</i></p>
-
-<p>The child heroine actually loves her prospective step-mother, and is delighted
-at the approaching marriage. During the honeymoon Elise visits her
-cousins the Sullivans in Ireland—a pleasant houseful of harum-scarum
-boys and girls, with whom Elsie has many adventures. “Father John” is a
-fine type of Irish priest.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ DIMPLING’S SUCCESS. Pp. 150. (N.Y.: <i>Benziger</i>). <i>n.d.</i></p>
-
-<p>Reminds one of <i>Little Lord Fauntleroy</i>, but Dimpling O’Connor not only
-wins her stern old grandfather’s heart, but wins him to the Catholic Church.
-There are plenty of adventures and a good deal of piety, not of the goody-goody
-description.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ KATHLEEN MAVOURNEEN. Pp. 143. (<span class="smcap">Baltimore</span>: <i>Murphy</i>).
-1890.</p>
-
-<p>A cruel Donegal landlord fearing that his son is becoming attached to
-Kathleen Burke, daughter of a poor tenant of one of his farms, evicts Mrs.
-Burke. This blow kills her. Kathleen goes as a governess to London,
-and there the lovers meet again. But the hero has seen the error of his
-father’s ways, and goes into Parliament. In the end he and his father too
-become Catholics, and all ends well. For young people.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ LINDA’S MISFORTUNES, AND LITTLE BRIAN’S TRIP TO DUBLIN.
-(<i>Gill</i>). (N.Y.: <i>Benziger</i>). 0.70 net. [<i>c.</i> 1892]. Still in print.</p>
-
-<p>Two stories, the first and longer not being concerned with Ireland. The
-second is a delightful little children’s story.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ IN A ROUNDABOUT WAY. Pp. 224. (<i>Washbourne</i>). 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> 1908.</p>
-
-<p>Main theme: a plot to defraud an orphan girl of inherited property, which
-in a strange manner fails, and all is well again. Scene: first, London, then
-Donegal, of the scenery of which the Author gives vivid descriptions. The
-life of the peasants and their relations with their priests are depicted with
-sympathy and feeling.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ TERENCE O’NEILL’S HEIRESS. Pp. 358. (<i>Browne &amp; Nolan</i>).
-3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> Illustr. by C. A. Mills. (N.Y.: <i>Benziger</i>). 1.35. 1909.</p>
-
-<p>A pleasant story of a young girl left an unprovided orphan, who is cared for
-by generous relatives, whom in their hour of need she strives to repay. Suspected
-of a theft, she is vindicated only after much sorrow and heart-burning.
-The heroine is a noble and beautiful character. Refined and sensitive, loving
-music and art, she is obliged to take service as a governess in an English family.
-There she meets the great trial of her life, but also the final crown of her
-happiness.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ SWEET DOREEN. (<i>Washbourne</i>). 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> 1915.</p>
-
-<p>Poverty and misery in Ballygorst have reached a climax. At the suggestion
-of the Agent, Father Ryan goes to Dublin to get the Landlord to do something.
-The latter is respectful, but will do nothing. Just as Father Ryan is going
-the Landlord’s daughter and her American friend Laura come in. They
-will go to Ballygorst, and Papa is persuaded to be of the party. The story
-tells how they came, met “Sweet Doreen” and her brothers and sister,
-and met with many adventures, pleasant and unpleasant, in the effort to do
-good.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_188"></a>[188]</span></p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>MULHOLLAND, Rosa; Lady Gilbert.</b> Born in Belfast, about 1855. She
-spent some years in a remote mountainous part of the West of Ireland.
-Of the rest of her life most has been passed in Ireland, where she still
-lives. In her early literary life she received much help and encouragement
-from Dickens, who highly valued her work. She has written
-much poetry of high literary quality and “marked by a thought and
-diction peculiar to herself.”—(<span class="smcap">Irish Lit.</span>). Her novels are intensely
-Catholic, though without anti-Protestant feeling, and intensely national.
-But their most striking quality is a literary style of singular purity and
-grace, and a quiet beauty very different from the flash and rattle of
-much recent writing. She has publ. several vols. of verse. Among her
-non-Irish novels may be mentioned <i>The Late Miss Hollingford</i>, <i>The
-Squire’s Granddaughter</i>, <i>The Haunted Organist</i>. Lady Gilbert has also
-written many children’s stories full of originality and playful fancy.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ DUNMARA. By “Ruth Murray.” Three Vols. (<i>Smith, Elder</i>). 1864.</p>
-
-<p>Wrecked on the coast Ellen, of mysterious antecedents, is taken into the
-family of Mr. Aungier, or Dunmara Castle, in the West. Strange household—the
-half-witted Miss Rowena, the dark, vindictive Miss Elswitha, with
-unpleasant family history in the background. A will is discovered making
-Ellen heiress of Dunmara, but revealing to her that she is the daughter of a
-man formerly slain by Mr. Aungier, who had asked her in marriage. This
-long keeps the two apart, but they are married in the end. Little Irish
-colour. Written in somewhat strained style and at times over-emotional.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ HESTER’S HISTORY. Pp. 237. (<i>Chapman &amp; Hall</i>). 1869.</p>
-
-<p>Pastoral life in the Glens of Antrim at the time of the Union, the main
-theme being a love story. Humour and tragedy alternate. Incidents of
-the rebellion of ’98, including an attack on a castle in the Glens by the English
-soldiery. Some historical characters are introduced. During part of the
-action the scene shifts to London. The story was written at the request of
-Charles Dickens, and he thought highly of it.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ ELDERGOWAN; and Other Tales (three). (<i>Marcus Ward</i>). Illustr.
-1874.</p>
-
-<p>“Eldergowan” is a very careful and clever study of a girl’s varying moods.
-“It is an excellent example of artistic work and perfect in its way.” “Mrs.
-Archie” is a comedy in which the chief actors are the antiquated family of the
-MacArthurs, dwelling in the glens of Antrim. The third story, “Little Peg
-O’Shaughnessy” is written in a lively style, with plenty of interest of a
-healthy “real” kind.—(I.M.).</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE WILD BIRDS OF KILLEEVY. Pp. 311. (<i>Burns &amp; Oates</i>).
-(N.Y.: <i>Benziger</i>). 1.10. [1883].</p>
-
-<p>An exquisite little tale, not of the realistic sort, but sweet and ideal. Kevin
-and Fanchea are little peasant playmates together in Killeevy. Kevin is
-dull at his books, but full of the love of nature. Fanchea is a fairy with a
-bird-like voice. One day she is stolen by gipsies, then by strange fortune
-gets into the upper stratum of society. Kevin goes out into the world to
-look for her. He gets education and becomes a poet. After long years they
-meet again and all is well. Killeevy is an Irish-speaking district where the
-people treasure religiously their Irish MSS. Here and there there are pen-pictures
-of much beauty. It is not of course a mere children’s book. It has
-been well said of the book: “It is our own world after all, seen through the
-crystal of pure language, artistic sense, and joyous perception of natural
-beauty.”</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE WALKING TREES; and Other Tales. Pp. 256. (<i>Gill</i>). 1885.</p>
-
-<p>Contains “The Girl from under the Lake,” an Irish fairy tale, occupying
-about one-third of the book. It is charmingly told.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_189"></a>[189]</span></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ MARCELLA GRACE: an Irish Novel. (<i>Kegan, Paul</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1886.</p>
-
-<p>A story with an elaborate plot, full of dramatic incident. Incidentally
-the evils of landlordism and Fenianism are dwelt upon, the former in the
-picture drawn of the hovels, the starved land, and the meek misery of the
-people—and here the author is at her best. The minor characters are clearly
-and sympathetically drawn, evidently from life. There is much sadness and
-even tragedy in the story. The Phœnix Park Murders are touched upon.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ A FAIR EMIGRANT. Pp. 370. (<i>Kegan, Paul</i>). 2<i>s.</i>, &amp;c. [1889].
-New ed., 1896, &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p>Period: about the ’seventies. Scene: at first in America (farming life),
-then in Ireland, north coast of Antrim. A love story. The heroine, one of
-those whom all must love, is an only daughter, whose mission in life is to clear
-her dead father’s reputation. Full of romantic incident. There is a picture
-of the landlord class of the time, and there are many good things about the
-vexed economic and social questions of the day. The book has the Author’s
-usual grace of diction, sincerity of thought, and fine descriptions of scenery.
-It was very highly praised in Irish, English, and Scotch literary journals.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ NANNO. Pp. 287. (<i>Grant Richards</i>). 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> 1899.</p>
-
-<p>A rural love-story. Scene: Dublin and Youghal and Ardmore. The
-heroine is a girl born in the workhouse, who is saved from its dangerous and
-degrading atmosphere, and raised, by true affection and by living among
-good country people, to high moral feeling and purpose and to the heights of
-self-sacrifice. The most realistic and the strongest of Lady Gilbert’s works.
-Esteemed by the literary critics and by herself to be the best of her novels.
-It is based on facts, and it occasioned the reform of certain abuses in workhouses.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ ONORA. Pp. 354. (<i>Grant Richards</i>). 1900.</p>
-
-<p>A story of country life in Waterford in the days of the Land League. Eviction
-scenes. Life in Land League huts on the Ponsonby Estate. Has a strong
-emotional interest, with much study of the family affections and of the interplay
-of character. Many touches of humour. Highly praised in English
-literary reviews. Incidentally there are glimpses of Mount Melleray and
-of the scenery on the Blackwater. The sterling goodness of obscure people
-is rendered with womanly sympathy. Interwoven with the main story is
-that of Norah’s little lame poet brother Deelan, a pathetic episode. Also
-folk-tales and ballads.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ TERRY. Pp. 112. (<i>Blackie</i>). Thirteen good illustr. by E. A. Cabitt.
-1902.</p>
-
-<p>Scene: West of Ireland. A story for children, about a girl and boy of an
-adventurous turn, relating their doings while living with their grandmother
-and their nurse, their parents being away in Africa.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE TRAGEDY OF CHRIS: The Story of a Dublin Flower-Girl.
-(<i>Sands</i>). [1903]. Second ed., 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> 1914.</p>
-
-<p>Sheelia, the little workhouse girl, is boarded out with Mary Ellen Brady,
-and lives a happy life with her in her cottage in the fold of the hills. But
-Mary Ellen dies, and Sheelia, to escape dependence on the worthless cousins
-of her dead “Mammy,” runs away to Dublin. Here she is friendless and
-penniless till she becomes a flower-girl under the tutorship of Chris. Tragedy
-comes when Chris disappears (she had been decoyed away to London and
-made a “white slave”), and Sheelia makes it her life work to find her again.
-She does so, but in the saddest circumstances. The pitiful story is told with
-perfect delicacy. Scene: Dublin, various other parts of Ireland, and London.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE STORY OF ELLEN. Pp. 434. (<i>Burns &amp; Oates</i>). 5<i>s.</i> 1907.</p>
-
-<p>This is a reprint of an earlier story entitled <i>Dunmara</i> (Smith, Elder), <i>q.v.</i></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_190"></a>[190]</span></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ OUR SISTER MAISIE. Pp. 383. (<i>Blackie</i>). 6<i>s.</i> Illustr. by G.
-Demain Hammond, R.I. 1907.</p>
-
-<p>Maisie, aged eighteen, comes from Rome to take charge of a whole family
-of step-brothers and sisters. She owns an island off the West coast. The
-family goes there. The children, after many vicissitudes, turn out clever,
-develope special aptitudes, and put these to use in helping the poor islanders
-in various ways. There is a pretty love-story towards the close.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ COUSIN SARA. Pp. 399. (<i>Blackie</i>). 6<i>s.</i> Eight fine illustr. by Frances
-Ewan. 1908.</p>
-
-<p>An ideal love-story woven into a strong plot. There is tragedy and humour
-with touches of heroism. High ideals are set forth. The scene varies between
-the North of Ireland, Italy, and London. The central idea of the story is
-this: Sara’s father, a retired soldier, has a talent for the invention of
-machinery. One of his inventions is stolen, and then patented by one whom
-he had trusted. Then Sara shows her true worth.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ A GIRL’S IDEAL. Pp. 399. (<i>Blackie</i>). Bound in solid gift-book
-style; cover attractive though not in perfect taste; many illustr.
-1908.</p>
-
-<p>Tells how an Irish-American girl comes to Ireland to spend a huge fortune
-to the greatest advantage of her country. There is also a love interest. Incidentally
-there is a description of the Dublin Horse Show; a number of folklore
-tales are told by Duncie, and there are good descriptions of Connaught
-scenery. The book is rather crowded with somewhat characterless personages,
-and there are improbabilities not a few.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE GIRLS OF BANSHEE CASTLE. Pp. 384. (<i>Blackie</i>). 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>
-Illustr. by John Bacon. <i>n.d.</i></p>
-
-<p>Three girls, brought up in poverty by a governess in London, migrate to
-Galway to occupy the castle, pending the discovery of the missing heir. The
-latter turns up, but is not what he was thought to be, and there are complications.
-The girls hear a great deal of folk-lore and legend from the servants
-and from the peasantry.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ CYNTHIA’S BONNET SHOP. (<i>Blackie</i>). 5<i>s.</i> Eight illustr. by G.
-Demain Hammond, R.I.</p>
-
-<p>“Cynthia, daughter of an impoverished Connaught family, wants to
-support a delicate mother. She and her star-struck sister go to London,
-where Cynthia opens a bonnet shop. How they find new interests in life
-is told with mingled humour and pathos.”—(<i>Publ.</i>).</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ GIANNETTA: A Girl’s Story of Herself. (<i>Blackie</i>). 3<i>s.</i> Six full-page
-illustr. by Lockhart Bogle.</p>
-
-<p>“The story of a changeling who is suddenly transferred to the position
-of a rich English heiress. She develops into a good and accomplished woman,
-and has gained too much love and devotion to be a sufferer by the surrender
-of her estates.”—(<i>Publ.</i>).</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE RETURN OF MARY O’MURROUGH. Pp. 282. (<i>Sands</i>). 2<i>s.</i>
-(N.Y.: <i>Benziger</i>). 0.75. [1908]. Cheap ed., 1915.</p>
-
-<p>Illustrated by twelve exceptionally good photos of Irish scenery and types.
-Scene: near Killarney. The girl comes back from the States to find her lover
-in jail, into which he had been thrown owing to the perjury and treachery
-of some of the police. We shall not reveal the sequel. The story is told with
-a simplicity and restraint which render the pathos all the more telling. It is
-faithful to reality, deeply Catholic, and wholly on the side of the peasantry,
-of whose situation under iniquitous laws a picture is drawn which can only
-be described as exasperating.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_191"></a>[191]</span></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE WICKED WOODS. Pp. 373. (<i>Burns &amp; Oates</i>). New ed. 1909.</p>
-
-<p>The hero is a scion of a family in which a curse, uttered against one of
-its founders by poor peasants whom he had dispossessed, had worked ruin for
-many generations. He is wholly unlike his ancestors, yet he, too, in a strange
-and tragic manner, falls under the influence of the curse—for a time. The
-story tells how he escapes from the terrible trial. Incidentally the best
-qualities of the peasantry are beautifully shown forth, especially the charity
-of the poor to one another.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE O’SHAUGHNESSY GIRLS. Pp. 383. (<i>Blackie</i>). 6<i>s.</i> Eight
-pleasant half-tone ill. by G. Demain Hammond. (N.Y.: <i>Benziger</i>). 1.50.
-1910.</p>
-
-<p>Scene: partly in London, partly by the Blackwater, in Munster, where
-live Lady Sibyl O’Shaughnessy and her two unmarried daughters. Of these
-latter, Lavender lives at home, takes an interest in things Gaelic, and has
-fireside ceilidhes. The other, Bell, runs away and goes on the stage. The
-search for Bell and the discovery of the identity of a mysterious boy on the
-O’S. farm constitute the main incidents of a delightful story. There is a
-love interest. The moral of the whole (not too obtrusive) is “Do the work
-that’s nearest, though it’s dull at times.”</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ FATHER TIM. Pp. 314 (large print). (<i>Sands</i>). 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> net. One
-coloured illustr. (<i>Benziger</i>). 0.90. 1910. Still in print.</p>
-
-<p>Father T. is a zealous curate, first in a Dublin mountain parish, afterwards
-in a parish among the Dublin slums. The interest centres in his influence and
-work among upper and lower classes alike. The story tells, too, of the varying
-fortunes of other people that come into his life. Harrowing pictures are
-drawn of the Dublin slums. Written with the Author’s habitual literary
-charm. The plot is slight, but the incidents follow one another rapidly
-and the interest does not flag.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ FAIR NOREEN: the Story of a Girl of Character. (<i>Blackie</i>). 6<i>s.</i>
-Illustr. by G. Demain Hammond. (N.Y.: <i>Benziger</i>). 1.50. 1911.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ TWIN SISTERS: An Irish Tale. Pp. 392. (<i>Blackie</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1912.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ NORAH OF WATERFORD. Pp. 251. (<i>Sands</i>). 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> 1915.</p>
-
-<p>A republication of <i>Onora</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>MURPHY, Con. T.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE MILLER OF GLANMIRE: an Irish Story. Pp. 227. (<span class="smcap">Chicago</span>:
-<i>Baker</i>). Illustr. 1895.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>MURPHY, James.</b> B. Glynn, Co. Carlow, 1839. Ed. locally. He entered
-the teaching profession, and was for some years Principal of the Public
-Schools at Bray, Co. Wicklow, being appointed in 1860. He was successively
-Town Clerk of Bray and Prof. of Mathematics in Cath. Univ.
-and in Blackrock Coll. He resides in Kingstown. He has written more
-than twenty-five novels, eleven of which have been published. Others
-he hopes to publish in the near future.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE HAUNTED CHURCH. (<span class="smcap">Lond.</span>: <i>Spencer Blackett</i>). 4 eds.</p>
-
-<p>The story of a treasure buried by buccaneers in an old graveyard near
-Dublin, telling how the chief characters of the tale, after many exciting
-adventures in Peru at the time of the revolution there, eventually find the
-treasure and also the heir to the earldom of Glenholme.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_192"></a>[192]</span></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE SHAN VAN VOCHT: a Tale of ’98. Pp. 347. (<i>Gill</i>). 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>
-<i>n.d.</i> [1883]. Several since.</p>
-
-<p>A melodramatic story, full of hairbreadth escapes, related with a good deal
-of dash, and at times of power. Tells of Tone’s negotiations in Paris leading
-to the various attempted French invasions of Ireland, with a detailed and
-vivid account of that in which Admiral Bompart was defeated in Lough
-Swilly and Tone himself captured, also details of the latter’s trial and execution.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE FORGE OF CLOHOGUE. Pp. 332. (<i>Sealy, Bryers, and Gill</i>).
-[1885]. 5th ed., 1912.</p>
-
-<p>The story opens on Christmas Eve, 1797, and ends with the battle of Ross,
-including very stirring descriptions of the battle there and at Oulart. As is
-usual with this Author, the plot is somewhat loose, there are improbabilities,
-and the love interest is of a stereotyped kind; yet the reader is carried along
-by the quick succession of exciting incident. Of course the standpoint is
-national. A good idea is given of the state of the country at the time.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE HOUSE IN THE RATH. Pp. 291. (<i>Sealy, Bryers</i>). 2<i>s.</i> [1886].
-Fifth ed., 1909.</p>
-
-<p>Has the usual qualities of this Author’s stories: plenty of exciting and
-dramatic incident, and stirring descriptions—among the latter the battle
-of Camperdown. Deals with Wolfe Tone’s efforts to obtain aid from France
-for the United Irishmen and with the plans of the latter at home. Lord
-Edward Fitzgerald and Oliver Bond appear. There are pictures, too, of the
-atrocities of the yeomanry. Interwoven with these events there is a romance
-of private life centering in the cleverly drawn characters of Teague, the
-Fiddler, and Kate Hatchman. As usual, the Author makes much use of
-“the long arm of coincidence.”</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ CONVICT No. 25; or, The Clearances of Westmeath. Pp. 324.
-(<i>Duffy</i>). 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> [1886]. Fifth ed., 1913.</p>
-
-<p>Depicts landlordism in its worst days and at its worst—about forty or
-fifty years ago. A complicated and somewhat melodramatic plot in which
-probability is a good deal strained. A slight love story runs through the
-book.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE FORTUNES OF MAURICE O’DONNELL. 1887, and two
-others since.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ HUGH ROACH, THE RIBBONMAN. (<i>Duffy</i>). 1<i>s.</i> [<i>c.</i> 1887]. Fourth
-ed., 1909.</p>
-
-<p>One of the most popular of the author’s stories. The leading incidents
-are founded on occurrences of the time. Full of thrilling and dramatic situations
-and historical pictures.—(<span class="smcap">Freeman</span>).</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ LUKE TALBOT. Pp. 278. (<i>Sealy, Bryers</i>). 1<i>s.</i> 1890. Sixth ed. in
-preparation.</p>
-
-<p>A sensational story, filled, without any interval of dullness, with exciting
-adventures—sea battles, wrecks, hairbreadth escapes, fighting under Wellington
-in Spain, &amp;c., &amp;c. The main theme is a murder committed by a wicked
-land agent in Ireland—Malcolm M’Nab—and of which Luke is suspected on
-strong circumstantial evidence. All through the book, until just the end,
-M’Nab is on top, but right finally triumphs. There is no attempt at character
-drawing and very little probability.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE FLIGHT FROM THE CLIFFS. Pp. 266. (<i>Duffy</i>). 1911.</p>
-
-<p>Author’s avowed intention—to present Irish and Catholic view of the
-Confederation War. With the political and military events of the time in<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_193"></a>[193]</span>
-mingled the romance of Walter Butler (the hero), who is on the Confederate
-side, and the daughter of Inchiquin. Owen Roe and Father Luke Wadding
-are prominent in the tale. Careful description of Benburb. Scene laid in
-many parts of Ireland (Dublin, Wicklow, Cork, Donegal, &amp;c.), and in Spain
-and Rome. Full of exciting adventures, battles, sieges, &amp;c. Illustr. very
-numerous. They are crude, but serve to enliven the narrative.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ LAYS AND LEGENDS OF IRELAND. (<i>Duffy</i>). 1912.</p>
-
-<p>Twelve in prose and five in verse. Includes two of Author’s best short
-stories—“Maureen’s Sorrow” and “At Noon by the Ravine,” as well as
-several of his best known ballads.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE INSIDE PASSENGER. (<i>Duffy</i>). 1913.</p>
-
-<p>The mail coach from Limerick is overtaken by a snow-storm near the
-old castle of Bullock, near Dalkey, and held up by a snowdrift. Passengers
-have to get out and shelter in the castle. To while away the time they tell
-stories each more weird and wonderful than the preceding, and all referring
-indirectly to the Inside Passenger. Towards morning the I. P., the coachman,
-and the six brass-bound boxes are found to have disappeared. The story
-tells what befell on the head of this and how the mystery was finally solved.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>MURPHY, Nicholas P.</b> D. 1914. Ed. Clongowes Wood College. Was a
-member of the English Bar.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ A CORNER IN BALLYBEG. Pp. 256. (<i>Long</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1902.</p>
-
-<p>A collection of short, humorous sketches of life in a midland village in
-Ireland at the present day. The dialect is well done. The book is not written
-in a spirit of caricature.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>MURRAY, John Fisher.</b> B. Belfast, 1811. Ed. there and T.C.D. Wrote
-much for Irish and English periodicals, including the <span class="smcap">Nation</span> and the
-<span class="smcap">United Irishman</span>. D. Dublin, 1865.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE VICEROY. Three Vols. (<span class="smcap">Lond.</span>). 1841.</p>
-
-<p>Deals with Dublin official life, satirizing it unmercifully. First appeared
-in <span class="smcap">Blackwood’s Magazine</span>. The Author was born in Belfast in 1811;
-died 1865. Wrote for the <span class="smcap">Nation</span>, the <span class="smcap">United Irishman</span> (1848), the <span class="smcap">Dublin
-University Magazine</span>, &amp;c. Graduated M.A. in T.C.D., 1832.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>NAUGHTON, William.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE PRIEST’S BOY: a Story of Irish Rural Life. (<span class="smcap">Dublin</span>: <i>Hunter</i>).
-1<i>s.</i> 1914.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>NEVILLE, Elizabeth O’Reilly.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ FATHER TOM OF CONNEMARA. (N.Y.: <i>Rand, McNally Co.</i>).
-$1.50. Illustr. [1902]. 1903.</p>
-
-<p>Rural life in W. of Ireland.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>NEVILLE, Ralph.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ LLOYD PENNANT: a Tale of the West. Two Vols. (<i>Chapman &amp;
-Hall</i>). 1864.</p>
-
-<p>First ran as a serial in “Duffy’s Hibernian Magazine,” 1863. Well-written
-and exciting melodrama, with a good plot, but very quiet and plain in style.
-The hero, who bears an assumed name, and is really heir of an old Anglo-Irish
-family, joins the British navy. He is unjustly accused of disloyalty and
-intimacy with Lord Edward Fitzgerald. But all ends well, including his
-love affair with Kate Blake, daughter of a family that plays a principal part
-in the story. The Humbert invasion is touched upon, especially the Castlebar
-“Races.” There is a good deal about the ways of gombeen men and middlemen
-in the West. Sympathies national. Wrote also <i>The Squire’s Heir</i>, 1881.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_194"></a>[194]</span></p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>NEWCOMEN, George.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ A LEFT-HANDED SWORDSMAN: a Romance of the Eighteenth
-Century. Pp. 239. (<i>Smithers</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1900.</p>
-
-<p>The life and doings of Cicely Grattan and of her adopted son Victor La
-Roche, a noble and generous youth, brave and skilled in sword-play—examples
-respectively of womanly virtue and manly character. The interest centres
-chiefly in Cicely’s wrecked love affairs and in Victor’s successful ones. Abundance
-of incident sustains the interest throughout, and the book gives a
-fairly good picture of society in the Dublin of the day, with not a little reference
-to its loose morals.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>NEWTON, W. Douglas.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE NORTH AFIRE. Pp. 204. (<i>Methuen</i>). 2<i>s.</i> 1914.</p>
-
-<p>Sub-t.: “A non-political story of Ulster’s war.” By a Catholic Conservative.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>NOBLE, Mrs. Nicholas; [Madge Irwin].</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ DRUIDEAN THE MYSTIC, and Other Irish Stories. Pp. 93. Sq.
-12mo. (<span class="smcap">Dundalk</span>: <i>W. Tempest</i>). 1<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> 1913.</p>
-
-<p>Three little stories, only the last of which has a definite plot, and a poem.
-They deal with peasant life. They are told in a dialect which is not very
-sure of itself nor very true to reality. The nine little illustrations by J. E.
-Corr and the excellent printing and general get-up make the book very dainty.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>NOBLE, E.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ AN IRISH DECADE. Pp. 110. (<i>Digby, Long</i>). <i>n.d.</i> (1891).</p>
-
-<p>Three stories:—1. “The O’Donol (<i>sic</i>) Rent,” 1879-80; 2. “Rosie,”
-1885; 3. “By Kerry Moonlight,” 1889. 1. How a thriftless young farmer
-went in for anti-rent agitation and brought ruin on himself and his young
-wife. 2. Story of a resisted eviction ending in tragedy. 3. The “moonlighter”
-phase of the land war. All three stories are written to show the
-wickedness and the uncalled for nature of the land agitation. They are nicely
-written and constitute a clever piece of special pleading. In 2, the priest is
-represented as “heartily sympathetic with the Cause but utterly unsympathetic
-with gratuitous demonstrations of mass violence.”</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>O’BRIEN, Charlotte Grace.</b> B. 1845. A dau. of William Smith O’Brien,
-the Young Ireland leader who in 1848 was condemned to death for
-high treason, a sentence afterwards commuted to transportation. Lived
-nearly all her life in Co. Limerick. Worked strenuously on behalf of
-Irish emigrants. Took active part in Nationalist politics and in the
-Gaelic League. Became a Catholic towards the end of her life. D. 1905.
-See <i>Charlotte Grace O’Brien, Selections from her Writings and Correspondence</i>,
-with a memoir by Stephen Gwynn [her nephew]. (<i>Maunsel</i>). 1909.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ DOMINICK’S TRIALS: an Irish Story. Pp. 120. (<i>Gall &amp; Inglis</i>).
-<i>n.d.</i> (1870).</p>
-
-<p>A little tract in story form, telling how Dominick was converted by his
-Bible, lost his job as farmer’s scarecrow, converts his sister Judy, and is sent
-with her to a Protestant orphanage in England, after which “they never
-lost an opportunity of turning any poor benighted Roman Catholic to the
-light of God’s truth.”</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ LIGHT AND SHADE. Two Vols. Pp. 287, 256. (<i>Kegan, Paul</i>). 1878.</p>
-
-<p>A tale of the Fenian rising by the daughter of William Smith O’Brien.
-A double love story runs through the book. The descriptions of the scenery
-of the Shannon and neighbouring districts are derived from livelong observations.
-Tone pure and healthy, dialect perfect. Of this story Stephen Gwynn
-says: “Violent, even melodramatic, in incident, it lacks the power of characterisation,
-but it has many passages of beauty.... She worked largely
-upon material gathered from the lips of men who had been actors in the
-Fenian rising.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_195"></a>[195]</span></p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>O’BRIEN, Dillon.</b> B. 1817, at Kilmore, Co. Roscommon. Ed. at St. Stanislaus
-Coll., Tullabeg. Went to U.S.A. and settled in St. Paul, Minn.
-Wrote a good deal of verse and several novels of Irish-American life.
-D. 1882. His serial <i>Dead Broke</i>, in the <span class="smcap">Irish Monthly</span> of 1882, is a good
-example of his pleasant, gay manner of telling a story.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE DALYS OF DALYSTOWN. (U.S.A., <span class="smcap">St. Paul</span>). 1866.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ FRANK BLAKE. (U.S.A., <span class="smcap">St. Paul</span>). 1876.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>O’BRIEN, FitzJames.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE POEMS AND STORIES OF FITZJAMES O’BRIEN. Pp.
-lxii. + 485. (<span class="smcap">Boston</span>: <i>Osgood</i>). 1881.</p>
-
-<p>Coll. and ed., with sketch of Author, by W. Winter. FitzJames O’Brien
-was one of the most distinguished of Irish-American writers. B. Limerick,
-1838. Ed. T.C.D. D. 1862. He is a master of the weird and eerie,
-after the manner of Lefanu (<i>q.v.</i>) and Poe. His prose works are little
-if at all concerned with Ireland.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE DIAMOND LENS, and Other Stories. (<span class="smcap">Lond.</span>). 1887.</p>
-
-<p>Sketch of Author prefixed. Contains no Irish stories.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>O’BRIEN, Hon. Georgina.</b> Eldest dau. of the late Lord O’Brien of Kilfenora,
-Lord Chief Justice of Ireland.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE HEART OF THE PEASANT, and Other Stories. Pp. 277.
-(<i>Sisley</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1908.</p>
-
-<p>Twelve stories of various types. Some have a slight meaning behind the
-mere tale. Four or five do not concern Ireland, and several others do not
-touch peasant life. The tone is on the whole sympathetic towards the external
-aspects of Catholicism. The stories do not deal in politics or in problems.
-They are chiefly little aspects of life and feeling. The last and longest is a
-very modern story of the love affair of Rev. Mark Dibbs and a certain Lady
-Glynn.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ A TWENTIETH CENTURY HERO. Pp. 308. (<i>Maunsel</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1913.</p>
-
-<p>The scene and most of the characters of this story are English. Some Irish
-interest, however, is afforded by Mr. and Mrs. Flanagan, the latter bright,
-thrifty, busy; the former of the happy-go-lucky type, content to let his
-wife do the bread-winning.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>O’BRIEN, Morrough.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE LEAGUE OF THE RING and TORN APART. (<i>Ireland’s
-Own Library</i>). 6<i>d.</i> <i>n.d.</i> (1914).</p>
-
-<p>Exciting stories of mysteries unravelled by the great Irish detective, Dermod
-O’Donovan. Villainy is defeated and couples are happily married. Quite
-healthy in tone, but very sensational. The scene is Belfast and neighbourhood.</p>
-
-<p class="author" id="OBRIEN"><b>O’BRIEN, Mgr. Richard Baptist; “Father Baptist.”</b> B. at Carrick-on-Suir,
-1809. D. 1885. A distinguished priest, who was Dean of Limerick.
-Was well-known in religious and philanthropic works. He wrote poems
-for the <span class="smcap">Nation</span> under the pen-name of “Baptist.”</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ AILEY MOORE. Pp. 311. (<i>Duffy</i>). 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> [1856]. Fifth ed. <i>n.d.</i>
-(N.Y.: <i>Benziger</i>). 0.60.</p>
-
-<p>Period: the years before and after ’48. Plot pleasant, but main interest
-abundance of side incidents, character studies and details of Irish life, introduced
-chiefly to picture the evils of misgovernment prevailing at the time.
-The style is agreeable, though there are rather lengthy moralizings. It was advertised
-by Dolman as “showing how Eviction, Murder, and such like pastimes
-are managed and Justice administered in Ireland.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_196"></a>[196]</span></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ JACK HAZLITT, A.M. Pp. 380. (<i>Duffy</i>). Third ed. <i>n.d.</i> Still in print.
-(N.Y.: <i>Benziger</i>). 0.60. [1875].</p>
-
-<p>The Preface tells us that Jack Hazlitt, whose fortunes are followed in
-this book, was a real person known to the Author, and that many of the
-adventures recorded are true. Scene: first, banks of Shannon (King’s
-County or Westmeath), then America. Story of sensational kind, but with
-many moral lessons, often verging on homilies, directed chiefly against free-thought
-and undenominational education.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE D’ALTONS OF CRAG. Pp. 283. (<i>Duffy</i>). 2<i>s.</i> 1882. (N.Y.:
-<i>Benziger</i>). 0.60. [1882].</p>
-
-<p>A tale laid in a time of helplessness and hopelessness, in which the Author
-gives “many illustrations of the beautiful and devoted love that has ever
-bound together the people and the priests of Ireland.”—(<i>Pref.</i>). The Author
-tells us that every one of the main incidents is based on fact, and that many
-of the characters are portraits of real persons. The story is told with great
-vigour, and is full of diversified incident of no humdrum or commonplace
-character.—(<span class="smcap">Irish Monthly</span>).</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>O’BRIEN, William.</b> B. Mallow, Co. Cork, 1852. Ed. Cloyne diocesan
-seminary and Queen’s Coll., Cork. Early engaged in journalism. He
-long edited <span class="smcap">United Ireland</span>, to which he contributed much prose
-and verse. He is one of the best known and most remarkable of modern
-Irish politicians. He has been prosecuted nine times for political offences,
-and spent more than two years in prison, where <i>When We Were Boys</i>
-was written. Has been Member of Parliament, except for short intervals,
-since 1883.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ WHEN WE WERE BOYS. Pp. 550. (<i>Longmans</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1890. Frequently
-republished.</p>
-
-<p>One of the most remarkable of Irish novels. A tale of Ireland in Fenian
-times. Scene: Glengarriff, Co. Cork. A very brilliant book, sparkling
-with epigram and metaphor. Full of criticism, argument, thought and dream
-about Ireland. The story itself is strong in romantic and human interest.
-The characterization is full of life and reality, yet many of the characters
-are types. In the course of the tale many aspects of Irish life, among all
-classes, pass in review. There are many touches of satire. Over all the
-characters and scenes the author’s exuberant imagination has cast a glare
-as of the footlights, making them stand out in vivid colours and clear outlines.
-Yet there is little or no distortion or misrepresentation. The Author’s sympathies
-are strongly nationalist and Catholic, yet national failings are not
-blinked, and some of the portraits of priests are distinctly satirical. The
-central interest, perhaps, is the romantic excitement, enthusiasm, and exaltation
-of an impending rising.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ A QUEEN OF MEN. Pp. 321. (<i>Unwin</i>). [1898]. Third ed., 1899.
-There is a cheap ed. in paper covers.</p>
-
-<p>Scene: Galway City, Clare Island, and the opposite coast, just before the
-great War of the Earls. A very highly-coloured romance, full of flashy
-and dramatic sensation, told with an exuberance of language that sometimes
-exceeds, but at times is very effective. Some of the descriptive pieces are
-quite above the common and attain remarkable vividness. The book was
-written in the midst of the scenes described. An effective device to secure
-colour is the frequent interjection of Gaelic phrases phonetically spelt. The
-heroine of the tale is the famous Gránia Ni Mháille, who appears not only
-as dauntless sea-queen of the O’Malleys, but above all in her womanly character.
-Fitzwilliam, Bingham, and Perrott also appear, the last as a hero.
-Though many of the incidents are quite fictitious and few happened exactly
-as narrated, yet some of those which might seem most incredible to anyone<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_197"></a>[197]</span>
-unacquainted with the State Papers could be paralleled by real happenings.
-Some of the incidents narrated are: the Composition of Connaught, the
-disgrace of Perrott, the wrecking of the Armada on the Connaught coast,
-Gránia’s visit to Elizabeth. With Gránia’s love story is entwined another,
-that of Cahal O’Malley and Nuala O’Donnell.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>O’BRIEN, Mrs. W.</b> Wife of preceding; <i>née</i> Sophie, dau. of Herman
-Raffalovich, of Paris. She is a convert to Catholicism, and a thoroughly
-naturalised Irishwoman for many years past. She has written also a
-book of reminiscences, <i>Under Croagh Patrick</i>. I have also seen mentioned
-as by her a book entitled <i>Amidst Mayo Bogs</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ ROSETTE: a Tale of Dublin and Paris. Pp. 266. (<i>Burns &amp; Oates</i>).
-1907.</p>
-
-<p>Diary of Rosette, only child of a Parisian bourgeois family. Deals chiefly
-with the life of this family in Paris, and afterwards in Dublin. There is no
-sensationalism. Rosette’s religious development is thoughtfully worked out,
-and there is good character-drawing (<i>e.g.</i>, Rosette’s artistically inclined
-mother and the old servant, Mélanie). The point of view is, of course, distinctly
-feminine. The style is pretty and graceful.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>O’BYRNE, Dermot.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ CHILDREN OF THE HILLS. Pp. 148. (<i>Maunsel</i>). 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> <i>n.d.</i>
-[1913].</p>
-
-<p>Seven stories reprinted from <span class="smcap">The Irish Review</span> and <span class="smcap">Orpheus</span> (an art
-periodical). They belong to the literary movement associated with the
-Abbey Theatre. They have the weird imaginativeness and the flavour
-of the occult and uncanny of Yeats’s prose stories, together with the vivid
-word-painting of “Fiona McLeod.” The Author delights in the portrayal
-of primitive and savage passions on the one hand, and on the other in the
-suggestion of the wild landscapes, rock-strewn and mist-shrouded, of Western
-Donegal (<i>e.g.</i>, Glencolumbcille, in “Ancient Dominions”). These stories
-of pure fancy are strangely interwoven with settings of extreme realism—drunken
-tinkers, peasants, &amp;c. Only here and there have we remarks like
-the following (p. 123):—“But those who are intimate with the soul of the
-Gaelic peasant know that the God of the Christian is only one amongst a
-Pantheon of hidden dominations lovely and terrible, though the priest at
-the altar may thunder anathemas from a fettered intelligence,” &amp;c. The
-reviewer in the <span class="smcap">Times Lit. Suppl.</span> pointed out the real defect of these stories—they
-are wanting in heart.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>O’BYRNE, D.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE SISTERS AND GREEN MAGIC. Pp. 76. (<i>Daniel</i>). 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>
-net. 1912.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>O’BYRNE, M. L.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE PALE AND THE SEPTS. Two Vols. (<i>Gill</i>). [1876].</p>
-
-<p>The design is to illustrate, in all its cruelty, treachery, greed, and unscrupulousness,
-the steady advance of the English settlement. Yet by no
-means all the English are painted as villains. We are shown the forces of
-government at work at home in the Castle. Careful portraits of Archbishop
-Loftus and the old Earl of Kildare. Descriptions of battle of Glenmalure,
-Hungerford’s massacre at Baltinglass, the capture and recapture of Glenchree,
-&amp;c., &amp;c. Fine description of scenery, <i>e.g.</i>, Gougane Barra. The religious
-persecutions are vividly portrayed. Highly praised by the <span class="smcap">Athenæum</span>.
-The original sub-title was “Or, The Baron of Belgard and the Chiefs of
-Glenmalure. A Romance of the 16th Century, by Emelobie de Celtis.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_198"></a>[198]</span></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ LEIXLIP CASTLE. Pp. 649. (<i>Gill</i>). [1883]. Others since.</p>
-
-<p>Period: years 1690 <i>sqq.</i> Deals with battle of Boyne, flight of James II.,
-sieges of Limerick and Athlone, the battle of Aughrim—all fully and vividly
-described. Standpoint: strongly national and Catholic. Gives pleasant
-insight into the private lives of some Catholic families at the time and their
-difficulties with Protestant neighbours. Narrative somewhat tedious and
-slow-moving.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ ILL-WON PEERAGES; or, An Unhallowed Union. Pp. 716. (<i>Gill</i>).
-1884.</p>
-
-<p>At the outset of this book we are introduced in a series of pictures to the
-homes of representative people of various parties, and long, imaginary political
-conversations between the prominent men of the time are given. Then
-there is a full account of the rebellion from the battle of Kilcullen to Vinegar
-Hill. Practically every noteworthy personage of the time is described in
-private and in public life. The romantic interest is entirely subservient to
-the historical, yet there is plenty of adventure. The bias is ultra-nationalist.
-The style, and especially the descriptions, were highly praised by a reviewer
-in the <span class="smcap">Tablet</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ ART MACMURROUGH O’KAVANAGH. Pp. 706. (<i>Gill</i>). [1885].</p>
-
-<p>A full account of the life and exploits of Art MacMurrough, with many
-adventures of fictitious characters, and much description of the manners
-and life of the times within and without the Pale. In the conversations
-the Author attempts to reproduce the spoken English of the time, with a
-lamentable result. They are full of <i>yclept</i>, <i>eftsoons</i>, <i>by my halidom</i>, <i>marry</i>, &amp;c.,
-&amp;c., so as to be unintelligible at times. The speech of the Irish characters is
-nearly as full of Gaelic expressions. “Many of the events narrated in this
-story are supplied from tradition,” says the Author. But she has been at
-much pains to utilize undoubtedly authentic sources. The style, on the
-whole, is pleasant.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE COURT OF RATH CROGHAN. Pp. 465. (<i>Gill</i>). 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>
-1887.</p>
-
-<p>The story of the Norman Invasion of Ireland, together with the series of
-events that led to it, and the consequences that followed, the central idea
-being that it was the treachery and disunion of her own princes that wrought
-the ruin of Ireland. All the chief men connected with the events narrated
-play prominent parts in the story. St. Laurence O’Toole is finely drawn.
-The last Ard Righ, Roderick, is shown weak and unfit to rule in perilous
-times. Strongbow is a leading character; his death is vividly described.
-Art MacMurrough is, of course, the villain. The style is somewhat highflown
-and often loaded with antiquated phrases and latinized expressions.
-Yet the story, apart from its historical value, which is considerable, has a
-strong interest of its own.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ LORD ROCHE’S DAUGHTERS OF FERMOY. Pp. 344. (<i>Sealy,
-Bryers</i>). (N.Y.: <i>Pratt</i>). 1.50. 1892.</p>
-
-<p>In the course of this romance the whole history of the Wars of the Confederation
-of Kilkenny and of the Cromwellian Invasion is related. The
-story is described by the Author as “a very encyclopædia of tragedies.” The
-Author is strongly on the side of Owen Roe O’Neill as against the Confederate
-Catholics of the Pale, and, of course, the Puritans. A fine series of adventures
-and of historical pictures, but spoiled by frequent lapses from literary good
-taste.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_199"></a>[199]</span></p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>O’BYRNE, W. Lorcan.</b> B. in Dublin, 1845. Son of Christopher O’Byrne,
-of Ballinacor, Co. Wicklow. Delighted from earliest youth in Irish lore
-of all kinds. Held a position in the Education Office during the greater
-part of his life. D. 1913. His books, though popular in style, were the
-result of much patient research.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ A LAND OF HEROES. Pp. 224. (<i>Blackie</i>). 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> Well illustr.
-by J. H. Bacon. (N.Y.: <i>Scribners</i>). 1.25. 1899.</p>
-
-<p>“Intended to reach the level of children.” Very interesting Introduction.
-The book is a series of Irish hero tales from various cycles, including the best-known
-(Sons of Tuirean, Lir, Usnach, &amp;c.), and the Romance of the early
-kings very much as in Miss Hull’s <i>Pagan Ireland</i>. The book contains a
-larger number of tales than any other except the most expensive. The bare
-story is told without any attempt to work up the materials into poetic or
-dramatic form.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ KINGS AND VIKINGS. Pp. 240. (<i>Blackie</i>). 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> Six illustr.
-by Paul Hardy. <i>n.d.</i> (1900). (N.Y.: <i>Scribners</i>). 1.25.</p>
-
-<p>Drawn from published translations of Gaelic MSS., <i>e.g.</i>, Standish H.
-O’Grady’s <i>Silva Gadelica</i>; Dr. Todd’s edition of the <i>Wars of the Gael and
-Gall</i>; Dr. O’Donovan’s <i>Battle of Magh Rath</i>, &amp;c. Contents: stories of
-early Christian times, chiefly from the lives of St. Patrick, St. Brigid, St.
-Columbkille, and St. Brendan; the trial of the Bards; the battles of Dunbolg,
-Moira, &amp;c.; stories of the Danish invasions and in particular of Brian
-Borumha. Full of good information, but not strong in narrative interest.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ CHILDREN OF KINGS. Pp. 240. (<i>Blackie</i>). 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> Illustr.
-by Paul Hardy. 1904.</p>
-
-<p>“The aim of this book is to present tales from Three Cycles of Romance, viz.,
-the Cuchulain, the Ossianic, and the Arthurian, interwoven after the manner
-of a Celtic design” (Introduction). The chief characters of the three cycles
-appear in various stories (there are thirty-one in all). A truly wonderful
-knowledge of the period embraced by these tales is displayed in the book, but
-the glamour of romance and the magic of words are wanting.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE KNIGHT OF THE CAVE; or, The Quest of the Pallium. Pp.
-248. (<i>Blackie</i>). 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> Six illustr. by Paul Hardy. 1906.</p>
-
-<p>A thin thread of narrative connecting much interesting and valuable information
-about historical events and about the life of the people at the period.
-The hero passes from England, then laid waste by the wars of Stephen’s
-reign, to Ireland, where we are shown in great detail the civil and ecclesiastical
-life of the day. Thence he accompanies St. Malachi to Clairvaux on a visit
-to St. Bernard. Then he visits Italy—Tivoli, Horace’s Sabine Farm, and
-Rome, whose antiquities are described at length. Finally, he returns to
-Ireland, whose state is again dwelt upon. The narrative is relieved by
-exciting adventures and by stories told incidentally. The Author’s erudition
-is extensive and accurate. The title refers to St. Patrick’s Purgatory, Lough
-Derg.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE FALCON KING. Pp. 240. (<i>Blackie</i>). 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> Six illustr.
-by Paul Hardy. Picture Cover. 1907.</p>
-
-<p>“A series of historical episodes (beginning in Wales, 1146), vignettes of
-contemporary life, and stories from Celtic and Icelandic sagas and Norman
-French <i>chansons de geste</i>, illustrating events, manners, and religion....
-Shows Henry II. and his barons engaged in the conquest of Ireland, and
-gives a good account of Dermot MacMurrough, and also of life in Dublin.”—(<i>Baker</i>,
-2).</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_200"></a>[200]</span></p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>[O’CONNELL, Mrs. K. E.]</b>, of Leenane, Co. Galway; <b>“Aroon.”</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ NOREEN DHAS. Pp. 62. (<i>Sealy, Bryers</i>). 1<i>s.</i> 1902.</p>
-
-<p>A pretty love-story of Connemara (the Killaries). The Author is for the
-language movement, and strongly opposed to the bargain marriages of the
-West.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ WHITE HEATHER. Pp. 62. (<i>Sealy, Bryers</i>). 1<i>s.</i> 1903.</p>
-
-<p>Three tales of Connemara. The first is a graceful little fairy story, the
-third a story of faithful love.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>O’CONNOR, Barry.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ TURF-FIRE STORIES, and Fairy Tales of Ireland. Pp. 405. (N.Y.:
-<i>Kenedy</i>). 0.63. Illustr. with woodcuts. 1890.</p>
-
-<p>“The greater number of the following sketches are original; the others
-have been transcribed, and in most cases materially altered, from the musty
-pages of some ‘Quaint and curious volumes of forgotten lore.’” (Pref.)
-Most of the stories are comic. The persons and incidents are mostly drawn
-from peasant life. Most of them are capitally told. A few are somewhat
-journalistic and hurriedly written. There is no caricaturing nor “Stage
-Irishism.” Some are legends of places, others typical fairy or folk
-tales. There are a large number of woodcuts, which, however, have no connection
-with the letter-press.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>[O’CONNOR, Joseph K.]; “Heblon.”</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ STUDIES IN BLUE. (<i>Sealy, Bryers</i>). 2<i>s.</i> Illustr. by C. A. Mills.
-<i>n.d.</i> (<i>c.</i> 1903).</p>
-
-<p>Sketches, true to life, and cleverly told, of the most disreputable side of
-Dublin slum-life, as seen, chiefly, in the Police Courts. Amusing, but at
-times verging on vulgarity.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>O’DONNELL, Lucy.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ ST. PATRICK’S CATHEDRAL. Pp. 86. (<span class="smcap">Dublin</span>: <i>Curry</i>). 1855.</p>
-
-<p>The fortunes of the house of Desmond in the 16th century, and chiefly those
-of Lord James Fitzgerald (son of the great Earl) who became a Protestant,
-and was therefore rejected by his people and retired to England. The story
-opens with a Protestant service in St. Patrick’s Cathedral in 1581. It contains
-interesting allusions to Glendalough, Dublin, and Adare. Author’s
-viewpoint Protestant.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>O’DONOGHUE, ⸺.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE PRINCE OF KILLARNEY. (<span class="smcap">London</span>).</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>O’DONOVAN, Gerald.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ FATHER RALPH. Pp. 494. (<i>Macmillan</i>). 6<i>s.</i> Six impressions
-within a few months. 1914.</p>
-
-<p>An anti-clerical and modernist novel by an Author with inside knowledge
-of the Catholic Church in Ireland. It is the story of a young priest from
-his birth until we take leave of him (<i>défroqué</i>) on board a ship leaving Ireland.
-In the course of the narrative there is presented a general view of Irish life
-as seen from the standpoint of such writers as M. J. F. M’Carthy, W. P.
-O’Ryan, and “Pat,” but clerical life is depicted with far more minute knowledge
-than by any of these. Sensational features such as the amours of
-priests, nuns, &amp;c., are avoided, though much innuendo is indulged in. All
-the estimable characters in the book are represented as either Modernists, or
-else voteens and people who avoid thinking on serious problems. The Bishop,
-Father Molloy, and Ralph’s mother, as depicted by the Author, are revolting
-in the extreme. Except in rare instances all the outward details of Irish life
-are true to reality, but seen with jaundiced eyes. It may fairly be said that
-there is scarcely a page of this book that does not appeal in one form or another
-to non-Catholic prejudice.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_201"></a>[201]</span></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ WAITING. Pp. 387. (<i>Macmillan</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1914.</p>
-
-<p>Maurice Blake is a young National Schoolmaster, an ideal teacher, an
-enthusiast for Irish Ireland and for industrial revival. He falls foul of
-Father Mahon, the P.P., who is made as odious as possible. Maurice cannot
-get a dispensation to marry Alice Barton, a Protestant, and is compelled
-to marry her in a registry office. Maurice is selected as candidate by his
-constituency but, through the agency of Fr. Mahon, is set aside in favour of a
-worthless drunkard, and a mission is preached by “Seraphists.” Ch. XXIII.,
-describing this mission, is most offensive and vulgar. Minor characters are
-Driscoll, the former Master; Breslin, editor and free-thinker; Fr. Malone, a
-lovable character; Dr. Hannigan with his “diffident, humble manner covering
-the pride of Lucifer”; Fr. Cafferley, fond of tea parties in publicans’ back
-parlours, &amp;c. <span class="smcap">The Church Times</span> says of the book, “It is much more angry
-and malevolent than its predecessor,” and the <span class="smcap">Times Lit. Suppl.</span>, in an
-article obviously written by a non-Catholic, “It is a bitter and, if true, a
-deadly attack on the priesthood, and an almost rancorous indictment of the
-practice and influence of the Roman Catholic Church in Ireland.”</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>O’DONOVAN, Michael.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ MR. MULDOON. Pp. 328. (<i>Greening</i>). 6<i>s.</i></p>
-
-<p>Scene: Dublin and suburbs. A book for an idle hour, recounting the
-whimsical adventures of the hero and his experiments with professions of all
-kinds. Humour broad, but not vulgar.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>O’DONOVAN ROSSA</b>, <a href="#ROSSA"><i>see</i> <b>ROSSA</b></a>.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>O’FLANAGAN, James Roderick, B.L., M.R.I.A.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ BRYAN O’REGAN. 1866.</p>
-
-<p>The Author was b. at Fermoy in 1814, and wrote some important works on
-Irish biography and topography, such as <i>The Blackwater in Munster</i>; <i>The
-History of Dundalk</i> (with John Dalton); <i>Lives of the Lord Chancellors of
-Ireland</i>; <i>The Munster Circuit</i>; <i>The Irish Bar</i>. Founded the <span class="smcap">Fermoy
-Journal</span>, and published his autobiography, <i>An Octogenarian Literary Life</i>,
-Cork, 1896.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ CAPTAIN O’SHAUGHNESSY’S SPORTING CAREER. Two Vols.
-1872.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ GENTLE BLOOD.</p>
-
-<p>A novel founded on the remarkable Yelverton Marriage Case at Killowen,
-Co. Down, mentioned in the Author’s Autobiography.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>[O’FLANAGAN, T.]; “Samoth.”</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ NED M’COOL AND HIS FOSTER BROTHER. Pp. 281. (<span class="smcap">Derry</span>:
-printed at Offices of <span class="smcap">Derry Journal</span>). 1871.</p>
-
-<p>Sub-t., “An Irish tale founded on facts.” The Author was a native of
-Castlefin, Co. Donegal. He wrote also <i>Strabane and Lifford</i>, <i>The Consequences
-of a Refusal</i>, &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>OGLE, Thomas Acres.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE IRISH MILITIA OFFICER. Pp. 314. 12mo. (<span class="smcap">Dublin</span>:
-no name of publ.). 1873.</p>
-
-<p>“The tale embraces the services of the old Wexford Regiment from 1810
-to its disbandment in 1816, and is a true picture of the rollicking and free
-life of that half-disciplined soldiery.” (Pref.). Full of stories, good, bad,
-and indifferent, told with considerable spirit. One chapter goes back to ’98,
-and gives some interesting personal reminiscences. There are a good many
-love affairs. The Author is a firm loyalist, and something of an Orangeman,
-but displays little bias. The scene is laid in various parts of Ireland.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_202"></a>[202]</span></p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>O’GRADY, Standish.</b> B. 1846, at Castletown Berehaven, on Bantry Bay,
-Co. Cork, of which his father was rector. Ed. at home and in Tipperary,
-and at T.C.D. Was called to the Bar, but his main occupations have
-been literary. Besides the works here mentioned he has written much
-on literary, political, and economic subjects, and is one of the most
-distinguished of living Irish writers.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ HISTORY OF IRELAND. The Heroic Period.<a id="FNanchor_10" href="#Footnote_10" class="fnanchor">[10]</a> Two Vols. Pp.
-xxii. + 267 + 348. (<i>Sampson, Low</i>). 1878.</p>
-
-<p>Described by the Author (Pref.) as “the reduction to its artistic elements of
-the whole of that heroic history taken together, viewing it always in the light
-shed by modern archæologians, frequently using the actual language of the
-bards, and as much as possible their style and general character of expression.”...
-“Through the loose chaotic mass ... I have endeavoured
-to trace the mental and physical personality of the heroes and
-heroines, and to discover the true order of events.” The chapter headings
-read like those of a novel—“Only a Name,” “Perfidy,” “In Vain,” “Swift
-Succour.” Vol. I. deals with the Fianna, Cuchulain, the Cattle-raid of
-Cuailgne. Vol. II. is entirely taken up (all but the first 88 pp.) with the
-Cuchulain cycle. The above work is carefully to be distinguished from the
-Author’s <i>History of Ireland, Critical and Philosophical</i>. Vol. I. (all publ.)
-pp. 468 (Sampson, Low), 1881. In the Pref. to this latter he says, “The
-books already published by me on this subject are portions of a work in which
-I propose to tell the History of Ireland through the medium of tales, epic
-or romantic.”</p>
-
-<div class="footnotes">
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_10" href="#FNanchor_10" class="label">[10]</a> This is not a work of fiction. But it seems well to mention it here
-for it is really an elaborate re-telling of the ancient Irish hero-myths and
-romances.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ RED HUGH’S CAPTIVITY. 1889.</p>
-
-<p>An early ed. of <i>The Flight of the Eagle</i>, <i>q.v.</i></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ FINN AND HIS COMPANIONS. Pp. 182. Size, 4 × 6½. (<i>Unwin,
-Children’s Library</i>). Illustr. by J. B. Yeats. 1892.</p>
-
-<p>Delightful tales of the heroic age of the Fianna told in poetic but very
-simple language. Will appeal not to children only but to all. Part IV.,
-“The Coming of Finn,” is particularly fine. “Most of these tales are, I think,
-quite new.”—(Preface).</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE BOG OF STARS. Pp. 179. (<i>Fisher Unwin, New Irish Library</i>).
-2<i>s.</i> 1893.</p>
-
-<p>Stories and pictures, nine in number, of Ireland in the days of Elizabeth
-“not so much founded on fact as in fact true.”—(Pref.). (1) How a drummer-boy
-saved Clan Ranal from destruction by the Deputy; (2) A sketch of
-Philip O’Sullivan, historian, soldier, and poet; (3) The destruction of the
-O’Falveys by Mac an Earla of the Clan M’Carthy; (4) The vengeance of
-the O’Hagans on Phelim O’Neill; (5) A sketch of Sir Richard Bingham,
-the infamous but mighty Captain of Connaught; (6) How the English
-surprised by treachery Rory Og O’More and his people; (7) The story of
-Brian of the Ramparts O’Rourke; (8) Don Juan del Aquila, the heroic
-defender of Kinsale; (9) Detailed and vivid description of the battle of
-the Curlew Mountains from the Irish point of view. These have all the great
-qualities of the <i>Flight of the Eagle</i>, and indicate the same views of history—the
-selfishness and frequent savagery of some of the Irish chieftains, their
-hatred of one another, their constant readiness to submit to the Queen’s
-grace when it suited—all this is brought out. Yet the Author is on the
-side of Ireland: he dwells on what is heroic in our history, he paints the
-Elizabethan deputies and their subordinates in dark colours.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_203"></a>[203]</span></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ COMING OF CUCHULAINN. Pp. 160. (<i>Methuen</i>). Six good illustrations
-by D. Murray Smith. 1894.</p>
-
-<p>The story of the hero’s boyhood told in epic language, full of antique colour
-and simile, and rising at times to wild grandeur. The great shadows of
-ancient De Danaan gods are never far from the mortal heroes who figure in
-the saga.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE GATES OF THE NORTH. New ed. Pp. 151. (<i>Sealy, Bryers</i>).
-3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> 1908.</p>
-
-<p>A sequel to the preceding, telling the heroic tale of how Cuchulainn held
-the fords of Ulster alone against the hosts of Maeve. It is even fuller than
-is the first book of the myth and lore of the primitive Gael. There is a very
-interesting introduction by the Author.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ LOST ON DHU CORRIG. Pp. 284. (<i>Cassell</i>). Nine good illustr.
-1894.</p>
-
-<p>Strange adventures among the caves and cliffs of the west coast, with
-a touch of the uncanny, and some interesting and curious things about seals.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE CHAIN OF GOLD. Pp. 304. (<i>Fisher Unwin</i>). Sixteen good
-illustr. Nice cover. 1895.</p>
-
-<p>A story of adventure on the wild west coast of Ireland. Curious and
-original plot, with an element of the supernatural.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ ULRICK THE READY. New ed. (<i>Sealy, Bryers</i>). 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> [1896].
-1908.</p>
-
-<p>Period: last years of Elizabeth’s reign. Scene: the country of O’Sullivan
-Beare, the south-west corner of Cork. Weaves the battle of Kinsale and
-the siege of Dunboy into the story of the young O’Sullivan, Ulrick. Full of
-vividly presented details of the public and private life of the time, and of
-novel and suggestive presentments of its political and social ideals. These
-it brings home to the reader as no history could do. Yet the story is not
-neglected. Standpoint: impartial, on the whole.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ IN THE WAKE OF KING JAMES. Pp. 242. (<i>Dent</i>). 4<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> 1896.</p>
-
-<p>A wild and nightmare-like tale. Scene: a lonely castle on the west coast
-inhabited by a gang of Jacobite desperadoes. Contains no historical incidents.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ FLIGHT OF THE EAGLE. Pp. 298. (<i>Sealy, Bryers</i>). 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> [<i>Lawrence
-&amp; Bullen</i>, 1897]. New ed., 1908. (N.Y.: <i>Benziger</i>). 1.10.</p>
-
-<p>The historical episode of the kidnapping of Hugh Roe O’Donnell and his
-escape from Dublin Castle evoked in a narrative of extraordinary dramatic
-power and vividness. The Author has breathed a spirit into the dry bones of
-innumerable contemporary documents and State Papers, so that the men of
-Elizabethan Ireland seem to live and move before us. The effect is greatly
-strengthened by the vigour and rush of the style, which reminds one of
-that of Carlyle in his <i>French Revolution</i>. The Author has peculiar and
-decided views about Elizabethan Irish politics. “The authorities for the
-story,” he tells us in his Preface, “are the <i>Annals of the Four Masters</i>, the
-<i>Historia Hiberniæ</i> of Don Philip O’Sullivan Beare, O’Clery’s <i>Life of Hugh
-Roe</i>, and the <i>Calendar of State Papers, Ireland</i>, from 1587 forward.”</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>O’GRADY, Standish Hayes.</b> B. 1832, Co. Limerick. Was a fluent Irish
-speaker, and his knowledge of the language and of Irish traditions was,
-according to those who knew him, unrivalled. Evidence of this will
-be found in his <i>Catalogue of the Irish MSS. in the British Museum</i>, never
-finished, but, as far as it goes, a mine of Gaelic lore. Was one of the
-founders of the Ossianic Society. D. 16th October, 1915.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_204"></a>[204]</span></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ SILVA GADELICA. Two Vols. Demy 8vo. (<i>Williams &amp; Norgate</i>).
-1892.</p>
-
-<p>Vol. I., pp. 416, contains Irish text (Roman letters); Vol. II., pp. xxxii. +
-604, contains Preface, Translation, and Notes. Thirty-one tales and other
-pieces, all taken from ancient MSS., such as the <i>Book of Leinster</i>, the <i>Leabhar
-Breac</i>, &amp;c. Fifteen are from MSS. in the British Museum. Out of the thirty-one,
-only six or seven had been published before. Ranged under four heads—(I.)
-Hagiology, or Stories of early Irish saints; (II.) Legend, historical or
-romantic; (III.) Ossianic lore; (IV.) Fiction, some of which is humorous.
-The Irish text is presented in a difficult and archaic dialect, much as if, says
-a critic, <i>Robinson Crusoe</i> and the <i>Anglo-Saxon Chronicle</i> were to be printed
-in the dialect of Chaucer. The Author in his Preface discusses and describes
-his sources most minutely. Forty years of study intervened between the
-Author’s previous publication, <i>Diarmaid and Grainne</i>, for the Ossianic Society
-(1853), and this. The English of his translation, though sometimes affected,
-is vigorous, rich, varied, often picturesque and on the whole thoroughly
-worthy of the subject. Twenty-eight pages of notes and corrections.
-Indexes: A, of personal and tribal names; B, of place-names.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>O’HANLON, Canon John; “Lageniensis.”</b> B. Stradbally, 1821. From
-1842-1857 he was in U.S.A., where he was ordained. He published
-eighteen important works dealing with Irish history, archæology, and
-especially hagiography, his great <i>Lives of the Irish Saints</i>, nine vols. of
-which appeared, being a lasting monument to his research. He died in
-1905.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ IRISH FOLK-LORE: Traditions and Superstitions of the Country:
-with Humorous Tales. (<i>Cameron &amp; Ferguson</i>). Pp. viii. + 312. 2<i>s.</i>
-1870.</p>
-
-<p>A miscellany containing folk-lore proper, studies in popular superstition
-viewed as remnants of paganism, historical episodes, tales, &amp;c., gathered
-from ancient MSS., with a great store of antiquarian and historical information
-about all periods of our annals and very many parts of Ireland. Much
-of all this is drawn from rare and not easily accessible sources. Contains
-chapters on Druidism, Legendary Voyages, Dungal the Recluse. A type of
-the humorous stories is the capital “Mr. Patrick O’Byrne in the Devil’s
-Glen.” The book is intended for the general public rather than for folklorists.
-It is pleasant and chatty in style. The source of the stories is
-not, as a rule, indicated by the Author.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE BURIED LADY: a Legend of Kilronan. (<span class="smcap">Dublin</span>). 1877.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ IRISH LOCAL LEGENDS. Pp. 133. (<i>Duffy</i>). 1<i>s.</i> First publ. 1896;
-still in print.</p>
-
-<p>A collection of thirty stories picked up by the Author during holidays in
-various parts of Ireland, and “received, mostly, from accidental and familiar
-intercourse with the peasantry.”—(Pref.). The place with which the legend
-is connected is indicated in each case. The legends are of a very miscellaneous
-nature, local incidents, fairy stories, ghost stories, old hero stories, &amp;c. A
-considerable number of counties are represented by one or more stories.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>O h-ANNRACHAIN, Michea.</b> B. New Ross, Co. Wexford. Ed. Christian
-Bros.’ Schools and Collegiate Academy, Carlow. Has written a good
-deal for the press. Is an ardent worker in the Language Movement.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ A SWORDSMAN OF THE BRIGADE. Pp. 231. (<i>Sands</i>). 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>
-1914.</p>
-
-<p>A fine stirring adventure story of the doings of one of the “Wild Geese” in
-Sheldon’s division of the Irish Brigade in the service of France. Scene:
-Flanders, Bavaria, Italy, and Dublin. <i>c.</i> 1703. Told in a breezy way and
-thoroughly Irish in spirit.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_205"></a>[205]</span></p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>O’HARE, Hardress.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ CONQUERED AT LAST: from Records of Dhu Hall and its Inmates.
-A Novel. Three Vols. 1874.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>O’HIGGINS, Brian; “Brian na Banban.”</b> B. Kilskyre (Cill Scire), Co. Meath,
-1882; ed. there. Came to Dublin about twelve years ago and threw
-himself into the work of the Gaelic League, for which he became a
-travelling teacher (múinteoir taistil) in Cavan and Meath. Has publ.
-two books in Irish. Has for years past been a frequent contributor to
-the Catholic and Irish press at home and in America and Australia.
-His songs are popular at Irish-Ireland concerts all over the country.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ BY A HEARTH IN EIRINN. (<i>Gill</i>), 1<i>s.</i> 1908.</p>
-
-<p>The gay and humorous side of the language movement seen from a League
-point of view—the Seonín, the Feis, the Gaelic Christmas hearth. One sketch
-gives a glimpse of the early years of John Boyle O’Reilly.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ GLIMPSES OF GLEN-NA-MONA. Pp. 115. (<i>Duffy</i>). 6<i>d.</i> Paper.
-1908.</p>
-
-<p>Sketches of peasant life in a remote glen (place not indicated). Almost
-wholly taken up with the sadness and the miseries of emigration. Simple,
-pathetic, and religious.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ FUN O’ THE FORGE. (<span class="smcap">Dublin</span>: <i>Whelan</i>). 1915.</p>
-
-<p>A collection of humorous stories.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>O’Kane, Rev. W. M.</b> B. 1872, at Millisle, Co. Down. Son of Capt. Francis
-O’Kane, of Weymouth and Millisle. Ed. Royal Academical Institution,
-Belfast, and at Queen’s Coll., Belfast; B.A. and LL.B., R.U.I. Was
-Curate in Banbridge and Belfast and is at Present Incumbent of Ashbourne,
-Derbyshire. Author of <i>The King’s Luck</i> and <i>Guppy Guyson</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ WITH POISON AND SWORD. Pp. 402. (<i>Mills &amp; Boon</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1910.</p>
-
-<p>Love story and adventures in 1561 or thereabouts of Cormac O’Hagan,
-follower and friend of Shane O’Neill, his escape from the Tower, his rescue
-of Marjorie Drayton, his share in the battle of Armagh where Shane defeats
-the Deputy, his going with Shane to visit Elizabeth, and many sensational
-adventures in consequence. He finally gives up Ireland altogether, settles
-in England, and he and his descendants ever after are good Englishmen.
-One of the chief characters is the ever resourceful Dickie Toogood.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>O’KEARNEY, Nicholas.</b> Trans.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE STORY OF CONN-EDA; or, The Golden Apples of Loch
-Erne, from the Irish. Pp. 17. (<span class="smcap">London</span>: <i>J. R. Smith</i>). 1855.</p>
-
-<p>Reprinted from the Proceedings of the “Cambrian Archæological Association.”</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>O’KEEFFE, Christopher M.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE KNIGHTS OF THE PALE. Pp. viii. + 263. (<span class="smcap">Glasgow</span>:
-<i>Cameron &amp; Ferguson</i>). 1857 and 1870.</p>
-
-<p>Sub-title, “Ireland 400 Years Ago.” First appeared in <i>The Celt</i>. The
-Author was sentenced about 1866 to penal servitude for Fenianism, was
-released about 1877, went to U.S.A., and died in Brooklyn about 1889. Wrote
-also a Life of O’Connell in two vols. “The object of the story is to give the
-impression which a prolonged study of Irish antiquities has produced on the
-Author’s mind.”—(Pref.). Interspersed with the narrative are several
-pieces of verse, some original, some translated by the Author from the
-Gaelic. The period is the middle of the 15th century.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_206"></a>[206]</span></p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>O’KELLY, Seumas.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ BY THE STREAM OF KILMEEN. (<i>Sealy, Bryers</i>). 6<i>d.</i> Paper.
-<i>c.</i> 1910.</p>
-
-<p>Ten short sketches of the little tragedies and comedies of the lives of the
-humbler classes. They are simple, true, and sincere. The scene is Clare or
-Galway.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>O’KENNEDY, Father Richard.</b> P.P. of Fedamore, Co. Limerick.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ COTTAGE LIFE IN IRELAND.</p>
-
-<p>“Father O’Kennedy was born in 1850, was educated in Limerick and in
-Maynooth. Has been for a long time contributor to various Irish and
-American magazines, notably the <span class="smcap">Irish Monthly</span>. He knows his people
-intimately, and knows how to interest us in the simple pains and pleasures
-of the poor.... His style is charming. He has an eye for the simplicities of
-life.”—(<span class="smcap">Irish Lit.</span>). His stories and sketches are known and appreciated
-in the U.S. even more than at home in Ireland.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>O’LEARY, C.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE IRISH WIDOW’S SON; or, The Pikemen of ’98. (<span class="smcap">Boston</span>).
-1869.</p>
-
-<p>Wrote also <i>The Last Rosary</i> (<span class="smcap">Boston</span>), 1869.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>O’MAHONY, Nora Tynan.</b> A sister of Katharine Tynan, <i>q.v.</i> Dau. of
-the late Andrew C. Tynan, of Whitehall, Clondalkin, Co. Dublin. Married
-John O’Mahony (d. 1904), a brilliant Irish barrister. She has written
-much for Irish and American periodicals and has just published a vol.
-of poems which has been highly praised. Her work is simple, gentle,
-with many touches of beauty. The atmosphere is always Irish and
-Catholic.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ UNA’S ENTERPRISE. Pp. 241. (<i>Gill</i>). Neat binding. 1907.</p>
-
-<p>Struggles of a young girl of good social position to maintain her widowed
-mother and little brother and sister. She eventually does this by means of
-poultry farming, of which much is said. There is little distinctively Irish in
-the story. The style is graceful and pleasing.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ MRS. DESMOND’S FOSTER CHILD. (<i>Browne &amp; Nolan</i>). 1<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>
-1912.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>O’MEARA, Graves.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ OWEN DONOVAN, Fenian. (<i>Sealy, Bryers</i>). 6<i>d.</i> Paper. 1909.</p>
-
-<p>Adventures of a Fenian in England, and of his lady-love, a <i>prima donna</i> at
-Covent Garden. Plenty of sensation, of a crude and improbable type. A
-“time-slayer,” as the Author calls it.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>O’MEARA, Kathleen; “Grace Ramsay.”</b> B. Dublin, 1839. Dau. of Dennis
-O’Meara, of Tipperary, and granddaughter of Barry O’M., Napoleon’s
-surgeon. She went with her parents to Paris at an early age, and it is
-doubtful whether she afterwards visited her native land. D. N. B.
-enumerates fifteen of her works, six of which were novels. D. 1888.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE BATTLE OF CONNEMARA. (<i>Washbourne</i>). 1878.</p>
-
-<p>A story of priests and people in Connaught in the days of the Soupers by
-an Author distinguished in other fields of literature. The scene is laid partly
-in Paris. Noteworthy characters are Mr. Ringwood, an English convert clergyman,
-and Father Fallon, an Irish country priest. The plot turns mainly on
-the conversion of an English lady who had married an Irishman and settled in
-Connaught. Controversy is avoided.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_207"></a>[207]</span></p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>O’MULLANE, M. J., M.A.</b> B. 1889 in Sligo. Gained an honours diploma
-in education in the National University. Is Principal of the National
-Examining Institute of Ireland, Professor of Mod. Languages in Christian
-Schools, Westland Row, and of Irish in Spiddal Summer Irish College,
-Galway. He has contributed serials on Irish historical subjects to <span class="smcap">Our
-Boys</span>. He has done much to spread among the people knowledge of
-and interest in the heroic period of early Gaelic Ireland by means of his
-excellent penny C.T.S.I. pamphlets, soon, we hope, to be given a more
-permanent form. The following are the titles:—</p>
-
-<p class="book"><i>Craobh Ruadh; or, the Red Branch Knights.</i> Two parts. 1910.</p>
-
-<p>This is partly a serious study of the subject, partly a retelling of the old
-sagas.</p>
-
-<p class="book"><i>The Tuatha de Danaan; or, the Children of Dana.</i> Two parts.</p>
-
-<p class="book"><i>Links with the Past.</i> Containing “Lug-na-Gall” (a legend of 1642), “Green
-are the Distant Hills,” “The Origin of Lough Gill,” “Melcha,” “The
-Wooing of Eithne.”</p>
-
-<p class="book"><i>The Coming of the Children of Miledh.</i></p>
-
-<p class="book"><i>Finn MacCoole.</i></p>
-
-<p class="book"><i>Biroge of the Mountain</i>, and Other Tales, viz.:—“The Recovery of the Táin
-Bo Cuailgne,” “The First Water-Mill in Ireland,” “The Wooing of
-Moriath,”—all tales of early Ireland.</p>
-
-<p class="book"><i>The Return of the Red Hand.</i> A story of Dunamase, fortress of the O’Moores
-in the year 1200.</p>
-
-<p>These nine pamphlets are very well but not pretentiously written. They
-are written with good knowledge of the period referred to, but are not overloaded
-with archæology. In footnotes the pronunciation of the Gaelic names
-is given phonetically. The first eight of these booklets, together with Fr.
-Skelly’s <i>Cuchulainn of Muirthemne</i> (<i>q.v.</i>) form an excellent introduction to
-Ireland’s Heroic Period and to our saga literature.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>O’NEILL, John.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ HANDRAHAN, the Irish Fairy Man; and Legends of Carrick[-on-Suir].
-Edited by Mrs. S. C. Hall and publ. 1854. (<span class="smcap">London</span>: <i>Tweedie</i>).
-Pp. 187.</p>
-
-<p>The Author was born in Waterford, 1777. Lived the last years of his
-chequered life in poverty in London. Published several volumes of verse,
-chiefly on Temperance subjects, and a drama entitled <i>Alva</i>. D. <i>c.</i> 1860.
-The above is a very good and original story. Handrahan is a kind of herb-doctor
-skilled in potions and in charms against the fairies.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ MARY OF AVONMORE; or, The Foundling of the Beach. Three
-Vols.</p>
-
-<p>N.B.—This is not in the British Museum Library or elsewhere that I know
-of, but is given a prominent mention in all his biographies.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>“O’NEILL, Moira,” Mrs. Skrine</b>, <i>née</i> <b>Nesta Higginson</b>. Author of the well-known
-<i>Songs of the Glens of Antrim</i>. Her home was long in Cushendun,
-Co. Antrim. She has also published <i>An Easter Vacation</i>, 1893. The
-scene laid in an English watering place. A frequent contributor to
-<span class="smcap">Blackwood’s Magazine</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE ELF ERRANT. Pp. 109. (<i>A. H. Bullen</i>). Seven illustr. by
-W. E. F. Britten. New ed., 1902.</p>
-
-<p>An excursion into Fairyland. A fanciful tale, told in exquisite and simple
-language, with elves and fairies for characters. All through there is a subtle
-comparison, which only the grown and thoughtful children will notice, of
-English and Irish character. This latter by no means interferes with the
-interest of the book for children, but makes it well worth reading by the
-grown-ups.</p>
-
-<p>Republished, Christmas, 1909, by <i>Sidgwick &amp; Jackson</i>. 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_208"></a>[208]</span></p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>O’REILLY, Gertrude M.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ JUST STORIES. Pp. 233. (N.Y.: <i>Devin-Adair Co.</i>). $1.00. 1915.</p>
-
-<p>The Author came to America from Ireland in 1907. Agnes Repplier says
-of the book: “These Irish stories are as good as good can be; gay, sad,
-amusing, pathetic, human. I like the stories themselves; I like the way
-they are told. They don’t suggest ‘plot,’ but bits of real life.” In the Pref.
-the Author says: “Thoughts go back to the long restful days beside Galway
-Bay, to the still evenings in the Cork hills.... These little stories are the fruit
-of these moments of retrospection.” There is much dialect, well reproduced.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>“O’REILLY, Private Myles,”</b> <a href="#HALPINE"><i>see</i> <b>HALPINE</b></a>.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>ORPEN, Mrs.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ CORRAGEEN IN ’98. (<i>Methuen</i>). 6<i>s.</i> (N.Y.: <i>New Amsterdam
-Book Co.</i>). Pp. 325. 1.50. 1898.</p>
-
-<p>“Written with sympathy for the loyalists. A realistic description of the
-more horrible features.”—(<i>Baker</i>).</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>O’RYAN, Julia and Edmund.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ <i>IN RE</i> GARLAND. (<i>Richardson</i>). 1873.</p>
-
-<p>Time: after Famine of 1846, when the Encumbered Estates Court was in
-full swing. Cleverly written, and showing intimate knowledge of Munster
-ways of speech and thought among the farming and lower classes. Good
-taste and strong faith in the people and in the people’s faith are everywhere
-discernible. The writers eschew all moralizing and also all description of
-scenery.—(<span class="smcap">Irish Monthly</span>).</p>
-
-<p class="author" id="ORYAN"><b>O’RYAN, W. P.; “Kevin Kennedy.”</b> B. near Templemore, Co. Tipperary,
-1867. Lived for several years in London, where he took an active share
-in the activities of the Southwark Irish Literary Club and the Irish
-Literary Society: he has written a history of their beginnings. Was
-editor of <span class="smcap">The Peasant</span> and of its successors, <span class="smcap">The Irish Peasant</span> and
-<span class="smcap">The Irish Nation</span>. In these he mingled anti-clericalism with much
-excellent writing strongly national in tone. <i>The Plough and the Cross</i>
-is largely autobiographical. Publ. 1912, <i>The Pope’s Green Island</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE PLOUGH AND THE CROSS. Pp. 378. (<i>The Irish Nation</i>).
-1<i>s.</i> 1910.</p>
-
-<p>A story, how much of which is fact we do not learn, woven round certain
-real events of recent date, and in particular the stopping of a paper of which
-the Author was editor. Many of the characters may be recognised as portraits
-of real personages, among others the Author himself, Mr. T. P. O’Connor,
-Geo. Moore, Mr. James McCann, Mr. Edward Martyn, and Mr. Sweetman.
-The book is largely taken up with conversations in which the Author gives
-expression to his peculiar views on many subjects. Many of these belong
-to the class of ideas known collectively to Catholics as Modernism. Throughout
-the book there is constant criticism of the Irish clergy, much of this criticism
-being put into the mouths of “progressive” priests. The personages and
-the series of events dealt with are highly idealized. Distinctly well written,
-but somewhat “exalté” in style. Scene: Dublin and the Boyne Valley.</p>
-
-<p><a href="#RYAN"><i>See</i> <b>RYAN, W. P.</b></a></p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>O’SHAUGHNESSY, Tom.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ TERENCE O’DOWD; or, Romanism To-day. Pp. 350. (<span class="smcap">Philadelphia</span>:
-<i>Presbyterian Board of Publication</i>). <i>n.d.</i></p>
-
-<p>“An Irish story founded on facts.” Scene near Mt. Nephin and the Deel,
-Co. Mayo. A long diatribe against the Catholic Church, representing it in
-the most odious light, in order, says the Introd., to warn Protestants that
-it is the same monstrously wicked system as ever. Ignorance, squalour,
-rudeness, and brutality are the terms constantly used to describe the Irish
-peasantry. The tone is often facetious and sarcastic. The peasants, including
-“Father McNavigan,” speak an extraordinary jargon. Appendices give
-extracts from Kirwan’s letter to Bishop Hughes.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_209"></a>[209]</span></p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>O’SHEA, James.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ FELIX O’FLANAGAN, an Irish-American. Pp. 206. (<span class="smcap">Cork</span>: <i>Flynn</i>).
-1902.</p>
-
-<p>The story of an Irish peasant lad, first in Ireland as clerk in a shop and
-commercial traveller in a small way, then in America as labourer, soldier,
-and business man. Good picture of farming and provincial town life in
-Ireland of the day. Point of view Catholic and strongly nationalist. The
-book almost a sermon against drink and emigration. Style and handling
-of plot somewhat immature.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>O’SHEA, John Augustus; “The Irish Bohemian.”</b> 1840-1905. B. Nenagh.
-Ed. Catholic Univ. Went to London, 1859. Was war correspondent
-and writer on <span class="smcap">The Standard</span> for twenty-five years. Was a man of
-extraordinary versatility—journalist, writer on continental politics,
-lecturer, dramatist, Irish politician. He was a member of the Southwark
-Irish Literary Club, 1885, <i>sqq.</i> Mr. W. P. Ryan speaks of him as drawing
-upon his own experiences of “merry and dashing life” in Tipperary
-for his stories—“Conal O’Rafferty” and others. See his <i>Leaves from
-the Life of a Special Correspondent</i> and <i>Random Recollections</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ MILITARY MOSAICS: a Set of Tales, &amp;c. Pp. viii. + 303. (<i>Allen</i>).
-1888.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>[O’SULLIVAN, Rev. P. P.]; “An Ulster Clergyman.”</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE DOWNFALL OF GRABBUM. Pp. 148. (<span class="smcap">Belfast</span>: <i>Carswell</i>).
-6<i>d.</i> Illustr. 1913.</p>
-
-<p>A political skit on the then situation in Ulster. Grabbum = the English
-Garrison in Ireland; Drudge, his devoted dupe = Orangeism. Farmer John
-Bull sends Grabbum over to Pat to help him, and is amazed at the result.
-The moral is the beneficial effects (including an Anglo-American alliance)
-of Home Rule. Irish public men—F. J. Bigger, Sir Roger Casement, Douglas
-Hyde, &amp;c., are introduced under thin disguises. The tone is, of course, light
-and facetious.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>OUTRAM, Mary Frances.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ BRANAN THE PICT. Pp. 356. (<i>R.T.S.</i>). 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> Coloured frontisp.
-1913.</p>
-
-<p>“An exceedingly well-written tale of the times of St. Columba, based
-on the ‘life’ by Adamnan. The hero and his associates are fictitious, but
-the setting of the story is worked out with remarkable care.”—(C.B.N.).
-<i>In the Van of the Vikings</i> is by the same Author.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>“PARLEY, Peter,”</b> <a href="#GOODRICH"><i>see</i> <b>GOODRICH</b></a>.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>[PARNELL, William, M.P.].</b> Wrote also <i>An Historical Apology for the Irish
-Catholics</i> (1807). He was knight of the shire for Wicklow and brother
-of Lord Congleton. He died 1821. (See Moore’s Memoirs, vii., 109).
-Charles Stewart Parnell came of the same family.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ MAURICE AND BERGHETTA; or, the Priest of Rahery. Pp.
-xxiv. + 213. (<span class="smcap">Boston</span> and <span class="smcap">London</span>). [1819]. Second ed., 1825.</p>
-
-<p>“Dedicated to the Catholic priesthood of Ireland.” “The character of
-Maurice is drawn from a person who not many years ago was a ploughman.
-The Author’s object is not to write a novel but to place his observations on
-the manners of the Irish peasantry in a less formal shape than that of a regular
-dissertation.”—(Introd.). Related by Father O’Brien. The love of Maurice
-O’Neal for Berghetta Tual, their marriage and subsequent fortunes, misfortunes,
-and romantic adventures, till they rise to be grandees of Spain.
-The coincidences are rather far-fetched and improbable and the characters
-not very real. Many moral lessons are inculcated.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_210"></a>[210]</span></p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>[PATRICK, Mrs. F. C.].</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE IRISH HEIRESS. (<span class="smcap">London</span>). 18—.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>PAUL, Major Norris.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ MOONLIGHT BY THE SHANNON SHORE. Pp. 312. (<i>Jarrold</i>).
-[1888].</p>
-
-<p>An anti-Land League novel, describing the terrorism of that organisation
-and the sufferings it entailed. The plot is the love-story of John Seebright,
-an Englishman, for the Irish Eveline Wellwood, who is persecuted by the
-League. Devoid of humour and almost of romance. The dialect is well
-handled, and the writer clearly knew well his Limerick and Clare. But the
-tone of the book is on the whole bitter and somewhat narrow-minded.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ EVELINE WELLWOOD. (<i>Jarrold</i>). 1892.</p>
-
-<p>This is simply another ed. of <i>Moonlight by the Shannon Shore</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>PECK, Mrs. F.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE LIFE AND ACTS OF THE RENOWNED AND CHIVALROUS
-EDMUND OF ERIN, commonly called Emun ac Knuck or Ned of
-the Hills, &amp;c. Two Vols. Pp. 345, 300. (<span class="smcap">Dublin</span>: <i>Tegg</i>). Other
-eds., 1841. Ten good illustr. by B. Clayton.</p>
-
-<p>Sub-title: “An Irish Historical Romance of the Seventh Century founded
-on facts and blended with a brief and pithy epitome of the origin, antiquity,
-and history of Ireland.” An extraordinary and rather eccentric production,
-written in a strain of exaggerated enthusiasm for Ireland. The facts are
-supposed to be taken mainly “from some very ancient documents found
-amongst the papers of the late Dr. Andrews, Provost of T.C.D.,” whose grandniece
-the Author was. To the novel she appends “a Circular Letter,” relating
-her matrimonial differences with her husband, Capt. P. She also wrote
-<i>Tales for the British People</i>, and became a Catholic.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>PELHAM, Gordon.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ SHEILA DONOVAN, a Priest’s Love-Story. Pp. 295. (<i>Lynwood</i>).
-1911.</p>
-
-<p>“Stephen Glynn loves Sheila D., and there is never the smallest reason
-why he should not marry her. Both are represented as sweet and good,
-and he is a clergyman. After their sin Stephen’s whole mind is set on religious
-atonement: he joins a religious order, leaving Sheila to struggle on alone
-with her child. He breaks his vows, and all is apparently to end happily
-when, acting under a misapprehension, he drowns himself.”—(<span class="smcap">T. Lit. Suppl.</span>)</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>PENDER, Mrs. M. T.</b>, <i>née</i> <b>O’Doherty</b>. B. Co. Antrim. Ed. at home, at
-Ballyrobin National School and Convent of Mercy, Crumlin Road, Belfast.
-Has contributed much prose and verse to various Irish periodicals.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE GREEN COCKADE. Pp. 380, close print. (<i>Sealy, Bryers</i>). 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
-
-<p>A love story, the scene of which is laid in Ulster during the rebellion. Full
-of romantic adventures. Historical characters introduced: Lord Edward
-Putnam M’Cabe, and especially Henry Joy M’Cracken. Battle of Antrim
-described, but remainder of incidents almost entirely fictitious. No attempt
-at impartiality. The Government side is painted in the darkest colours.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE LAST OF THE IRISH CHIEFS.<a id="FNanchor_11" href="#Footnote_11" class="fnanchor">[11]</a></p>
-
-<p>A sensational romance of the time of Sir Cahir O’Doherty’s rising and
-the governorship of Paulett in Derry. <i>c.</i> 1608.</p>
-
-<div class="footnotes">
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_11" href="#FNanchor_11" class="label">[11]</a> I have not been able to ascertain whether this novel was ever reprinted
-in volume form from the periodical in which it appeared as a serial.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_211"></a>[211]</span></p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>PENROSE, Mrs. H. H.</b>, <i>née</i> <b>Lewis</b>. B. Kinsale. Ed. at Rochelle School,
-Cork. Took honours in T.C.D. in German and English Literature. In
-addition to her novels she has written innumerable stories for the magazines,
-<i>e.g.</i>, <span class="smcap">Temple Bar</span> and the <span class="smcap">Windsor</span>. Resides in Surrey. Besides
-the novels mentioned below, <i>As Dust in the Balance</i> and <i>An Unequal
-Yoke</i> are partly concerned with Ireland.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ DENIS TRENCH. Pp. 432. (<i>Alston Rivers</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1911.</p>
-
-<p>Denis and his sister on their mother’s death are left in doubt about the
-character and identity of their father, whom they had seen only in their
-infancy, and who, as a matter of fact, had left his wife in order to become
-a Roman Catholic priest. This priest acts as a kind of providence to his
-two children, and reveals himself only on his death bed. The Authoress
-seems quite unacquainted with Catholic practice, but does not depict it in
-a hostile spirit. The scene is partly in Ireland, but the only trace of Irish
-interest is an occasional reference to a mysterious quality in the Celtic blood
-of the hero and heroine, and the character of the poor girl Stella Delaney,
-whom Denis marries.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ A FAERY LAND FORLORN. Pp. 312. (<i>Alston Rivers</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1912.</p>
-
-<p>Life among better-class Protestant folk in a little seaside town in the S. of
-Ireland. The main interest is furnished by the sad love story of Evelyn
-Eyre. Mr. Eyre, gentle and bookloving, and Capt. Donovan, given to drink
-and a tyrant in his family, are neighbours and close friends till a misunderstanding
-brings estrangement and leads to a tragedy, resulting in the separation—for
-ever, as it proves—of Evelyn and her lover Terence Donovan. The
-story is wholesome and human and free from religious or other bias. Aunt
-Kitty, a lovable old maid, provides an element of humour.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ BURNT FLAX. Pp. 319. (<i>Mills &amp; Boon</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1914.</p>
-
-<p>The Land League agitation from landlord standpoint. Excellent but
-over-firm landlord, hired agitator, attempt on landlord’s life. The
-rent-payers are brutally murdered by leaguers, who are represented as drunken
-and credulous. There is some good character drawing: Tinsy O’Halloran
-the half-witted boy, is original: Father O’Riordan is represented as a good
-sensible priest. The brogue is travestied.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>[PERCIVAL, Mrs. Margaret].</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE IRISH DOVE; or, Faults on Both Sides. Pp. 206. (<span class="smcap">Dublin</span>:
-<i>Robertson</i>). 1849.</p>
-
-<p>By the Author of <i>Rosa, the Work Girl</i>. Helen Wilson, whose mother was
-Irish, inherits an estate in Kerry. After years of residence in India and
-then in England, she comes to live in Ireland, grows to love the people, and
-spends what is left of her failing life in teaching the natives the New Testament
-in Irish. The interest of the book lies in its picture of and apology for, the
-attempt made (chiefly by “The Irish Society”) in the first half of the 19th
-century to convert the Irish to Protestantism through the medium of the
-Irish language. The witness it gives to the bitterly anti-Irish feeling prevailing
-in England at the time is interesting. The peasantry is represented
-as debased and priest-ridden, but their condition is ascribed in part to English
-hostility and to absenteeism.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>PETREL, Fulmar.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ GRANIA WAILE. Pp. 285, large print. (<i>Unwin</i>). Frontispiece and
-map. 1895.</p>
-
-<p>A fanciful story written around the early life and after-career of the
-O’Malley Sea-queen. Her robbing, when only a young girl, of the eagle’s
-nest, her desperate sea-fights, and her many other adventures make pleasant
-reading. The atmosphere of the period is well brought out. But few of the
-incidents narrated are historical facts.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_212"></a>[212]</span></p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>PICKERING, Edgar.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ TRUE TO THE WATCHWORD. Pp. 299. (<i>Warne</i>). 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> Eight
-illustr. 1902.</p>
-
-<p>A spirited account of the siege of Derry from the point of view of the
-besieged. Full of hairbreadth escapes and of desperate encounters with the
-Irishry, who are spoken of throughout as ferocious savages. Apart from
-this last point there is no noteworthy falsification of history. For boys.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>POLLARD, Eliza F.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE KING’S SIGNET. (<i>Blackie</i>, and U.S.A.: <i>Scribner</i>).</p>
-
-<p>France in the days of Madame de Maintenon, and Ireland during Williamite
-wars. B. of the Boyne described. Juvenile.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>POLSON, Thomas R. J.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE FORTUNE TELLER’S INTRIGUE. Three Vols. (<span class="smcap">Dublin</span>:
-<i>McGlashan</i>). 1847.</p>
-
-<p>“Or, Life in Ireland before the Union, a tale of agrarian outrage.” An
-unusually objectionable and absurd libel on the priests and people of Ireland.
-The latter are represented as slavishly submissive to the former, who are
-spoken of as “walking divinities.” The priests attend their dupes at their
-execution for agrarian crimes, telling them that they are martyrs for the
-faith. The scene is Co. Clare.</p>
-
-<p>The Author, an Englishman, and originally a private soldier, owned and
-edited the <span class="smcap">Fermanagh Mail</span> for about forty years.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>PORTER, Anna Maria.</b> Born, 1780, in Durham. Died 1832. Was daughter
-of a surgeon of the 6th Inniskilling Dragoons, of Ulster extraction, and a
-sister of Jane Porter, author of <i>The Scottish Chiefs</i>, &amp;c. She published
-more than nineteen books.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ HONOR O’HARA. Three Vols. (<i>Longmans</i>). [1826]. American ed.,
-<i>Harper</i>, 1827. Two Vols.</p>
-
-<p>The scene is laid in the N. of England, and the book has no relation to
-Ireland except that the heroine is supposed to be of Irish origin.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE LAKE OF KILLARNEY. Pp. 350. (<span class="smcap">London</span>). New ed.,
-1839.</p>
-
-<p>Described by the Author as “a harmless romance, which, without aiming
-to inculcate any great moral lesson, still endeavours to draw amiable portraits
-of virtue.”—(Pref.). An old-fashioned novel in the early Victorian sentimental
-manner. The plot is laid chiefly in Killarney (of which there is some
-description) and Dublin, at the time of the earlier Napoleonic wars, when
-Dublin had its parliament and was the centre of fashion. The plot is intricate,
-but turns chiefly on the mischances and misunderstandings that keep apart
-the hero, Felix Charlemont, and the heroine, Rose de Blaquière. This
-latter name was the title of later editions of this book, <i>e.g.</i> (<span class="smcap">London</span>: <i>C. H.
-Clare</i>), 1856.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>POWER, Marguerite A.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ NELLY CAREW. Two Vols. (<i>Saunders &amp; Otley</i>). Engraved frontisp.
-1859.</p>
-
-<p>The heroine, daughter of an Irish landlord, is driven by the scheming of
-a crafty French stepmother (once her governess) into marriage with an Irish
-roué, and leads a life of bitter humiliation. But her honour is stainless
-through it all, and there is a happy ending. Characters (<i>e.g.</i>, Larry McSwiggan)
-are for the most part capitally drawn. The moral is good. The brogue
-is well done. This Author, a niece of the Countess of Blessington, wrote
-also <i>Evelyn Forrester</i>, 1856, and <i>The Foresters</i>, 1857.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_213"></a>[213]</span></p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>POWER, V. O’D.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ BONNIE DUNRAVEN: a Story of Kilcarrick. Two Vols. (589 pp.).
-(<i>Remington</i>). 1881.</p>
-
-<p>A very sympathetic and pleasant love story of modern life in Co. Cork.
-The characters are thoroughly natural and human, and, moreover, thoroughly
-Irish. Conversations good. But perhaps the chief merit of the story is
-its faithful reproduction of South of Ireland “atmosphere,” especially by
-word-pictures of Southern scenes—the coasts, the Blackwater, Mount Mellaray.
-Was highly praised by <span class="smcap">The Athenæum</span>, <span class="smcap">The Academy</span>, and by the Catholic
-Press.—(I.M.).</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE HEIR OF LISCARRAGH. (<i>Art and Book Co.</i>). 1892.</p>
-
-<p>A story in which the romantic elements are very strong.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ TRACKED. (<i>“Ireland’s Own” Library</i>). 6<i>d.</i> Paper covers. 1914.</p>
-
-<p>A wholesome and pleasant story of unrequited love and of jealousy. Scene:
-Innishowen (Co. Donegal). A well-worked out plot, with good descriptions
-of scenery. Peasants depicted with sympathy and understanding.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>PRESTON, Dorothea.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ PADDY. (<i>Sealy, Bryers</i>). 1<i>s.</i> Twenty coloured illustrs.</p>
-
-<p>Paddy’s dreams and adventures in Celtic Fairyland.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>PREVOST, Antoine Francois</b>; called <b>Prevost d’Exiles</b>, 1697-1763.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ LE DOYEN DE KELLERINE. Histoire morale composée sur les
-mémoires d’une illustre famille d’Irlande; et ornée de tout ce qui peut
-rendre une lecture utile et agréable. (<span class="smcap">La Haye</span>: <i>P. Poppy</i>). 1744.</p>
-
-<p>A trans. of this under title <i>The Dean of Coleraine</i>. <i>A Moral History founded
-on the Memoirs of an Illustrious Family in Ireland</i>, was printed in London
-(Vol. I.) and Dubl. (Vols. II. and III.) in 1742; another ed. 1780. The
-work was originally publ. in Paris, 1735, and there were further editions in
-1750, 1821 (six vols.), &amp;c. The Author was a French abbé, and a very voluminous
-author, having published upwards of 200 vols. There is a selection
-of his works in 39 vols. in the Library of T.C.D. His chief title to fame is
-the romance <i>Manon Lescaut</i>. The present is a well written, though very
-long, story, showing how the teller of the tale, the Dean or P.P. of Coleraine,
-in Antrim, watched with more than a father’s anxious care over the fortunes
-of his two half-brothers and sister. Their several characters appear admirably
-in the telling, especially that of the poor good Dean, unworldly, unselfish,
-deeply affectionate, but over anxious and almost over conscientious. His
-efforts to keep his wayward charges in the straight path amid the allurements
-of Paris are very well told. There is nothing in the least objectionable.
-There is an air of reality about the whole, though the style is old-fashioned.
-Towards the close the Dean acts as a Jacobite agent in Ireland.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>PURDON, K. F.</b> B. in Enfield, Co. Meath, and has always resided there.
-Ed. at home, in England, and at Alexandra College, Dublin. Has
-written much for Irish and English periodicals, her first encouragement
-coming from the <span class="smcap">Irish Homestead</span>. She also owes much to the helpfulness
-of Richard Whiteing, the well-known writer.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ CANDLE AND CRIB. Pp. 42. 12mo. (<i>Maunsel</i>). 1<i>s.</i> Christmas,
-1914.</p>
-
-<p>Quietly but tastefully bound. Four good illustr. in colour by Beatrice
-Elvery. An exquisite little Christmas idyll telling of the strange way Art
-Moloney brought his new wife home to Ardenoo for Christmas.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_214"></a>[214]</span></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE FOLK OF FURRY FARM. Pp. 315. (<i>Nisbet</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1914.</p>
-
-<p>A story of life at Ardenoo, somewhere in the Midlands, depicting in
-the most intimate way the conversation, manners, humours, kindliness of
-the people. Told as if by one of themselves with the strange phraseology,
-the unexpected turns, the often poetic figurativeness of the best shanachies.
-Miss Purdon writes as one with close and accurate knowledge of the home-life,
-at least in its outward aspects, of the small farmer class to which the chief
-characters belong. The matrimonial affairs of Michael Heffernan and his
-sharp-tongued sister Julia are humorously told, and the Author is almost
-a specialist in tramps. Pref. by “Geo. Birmingham,” giving a sketch of the
-Irish Literary movement.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>QUIGLEY, Rev. Hugh; “A Missionary Priest.”</b> 1818-1883. B. in Co.
-Clare, studied in Rome, and was there ordained for the American
-Mission. Was Rector of the University of St. Mary, Chicago, but
-resigned and laboured among the Chippewa Indians and among miners
-in California. Died in Troy, N.Y.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE CROSS AND SHAMROCK. Pp. 240. (<i>Duffy</i>). 2<i>s.</i> (N.Y.:
-<i>Benziger</i>). 0.60. Still in print. [1853].</p>
-
-<p>Religious and moral instruction conveyed in the form of a story of the
-trials and sufferings (amounting at times to martyrdom) of a family of orphan
-children at the hands of various types of proselytisers. A harsh and satirical
-tone is adopted in speaking of American Protestantism. Incidentally there
-are sidelights on several phases of American life, notably rail-road construction.
-Full sub-t.:—“Or, how to defend the faith, an Irish-American Catholic
-tale of real life descriptive of the temptations, trials, sufferings, and triumphs
-of the children of St. Patrick in the great republic of Washington.”</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE PROPHET OF THE RUINED ABBEY; or, A Glance of the
-Future of Ireland. Pp. 247. (<i>Duffy</i>). 1863.</p>
-
-<p>“A narrative founded on the ancient ‘Prophecies of Culmkill’ and on other
-predictions and popular traditions among the Irish.”—(Title p.). To keep
-alive these traditions is the Author’s first aim, his second “to keep alive
-and kindle in the bosoms of the Irish Catholic people of this republic genuine
-sentiments both of patriotism and religion.”—(Pref.). Fr. Senan O’Donnell,
-under sentence of death in town of Cloughmore, Co. Waterford, at the hands
-of the British Government, is rescued by his brother. In the first part of
-the book there is abundance of stirring incident, thrilling escapes, &amp;c., but
-the latter part becomes more wildly improbable and unreal as it proceeds.
-Fr. Senan is wrecked off coast of Clare and lives for years in a cave in cliffs
-of Moher with a little boy, rescued from the eagles. Time: about 1750-1798.
-Bitterly anti-English sentiment throughout. Only by an incident
-in the last few pages are the title and sub-titles justified.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ PROFIT AND LOSS; or, the Life of a Genteel Irish-American. Pp.
-458. (N.Y.: <i>T. O’Kane</i>). 1873.</p>
-
-<p>Purpose: to teach Catholic piety and to guard youth from danger. The
-genteel Irish-American is Michael Mulrooney, who was driven out of Ireland
-by the tyranny of the landlord class. The first twenty-five pp. tell us of his
-troubles in Ireland.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>QUINLAN, May.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ IN THE DEVIL’S ALLEY. Pp. 262. (<i>Art and Book Co.</i>). 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>
-Illustr. very cleverly and humorously by the Author. 1907.</p>
-
-<p>Sketches of the lowest life in the East End of London, chiefly among the
-poorest Irish. Told with sympathy, close observation, and quiet humour.
-There is pathos too, but the Author never strains it nor forces the note.
-<i>Sunt lachrimae rerum.</i> The Author is the dau. of Judge Quinlan, late of
-Victoria, Australia.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_215"></a>[215]</span></p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>READ, Charles Anderson.</b> 1841-1878. Born near Sligo. Was for some
-years a merchant in Rathfriland, Co. Down. Went to London,
-1863. Was an industrious and able writer, and a man full of
-enthusiastic admiration for Ireland, its people, and its literature.
-Produced numerous sketches, poems, short tales, and nine novels,
-the most notable of the latter being <i>Love’s Service</i>; but better
-known are his <i>Aileen Aroon</i> and <i>Savourneen Dheelish</i>, of which the
-<span class="smcap">London Review</span> said: “We are presented with a view of agrarian
-crime in its most revolting aspect, and there is no false glamour thrown
-around any of the characters. Many of the incidents are highly dramatic,
-while the dialogue is bright and forcible.” The above notice is taken
-from an article by Mr. Charles Gibbon in the <i>Cabinet of Irish Literature</i>,
-edited by Mr. Read himself.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ SAVOURNEEN DHEELISH; or, One True Heart. 16mo. (<span class="smcap">London</span>:
-<i>Henderson</i>), 1<i>s.</i> [1869]. 1874, 7th ed.</p>
-
-<p>First appeared in <span class="smcap">The Weekly Budget</span>. A melodramatic but finely
-told story. The principal incident is the historic tragedy utilised by Carleton
-in his “Wild Goose Lodge.” Especially thrilling is the scene where Kate
-Costelloe gives the evidence which she knows will bring her brother and her
-lover to the gallows. Barney Fegan, a jovial pedlar, plays a conspicuous
-part. The usual devices of evictions, murders, Whiteboys, traitors, trials,
-secret caves, &amp;c. Scenery well described: brogue well done. The fair at
-Keady is a noteworthy piece of description. Scene: the district round
-Dundalk.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ AILEEN AROON; or, The Pride of Clonmore. (<span class="smcap">London</span>: <i>Henderson</i>).
-1<i>s.</i> [1870.]. Sixth ed. <i>n.d.</i></p>
-
-<p>First appeared in <span class="smcap">The Weekly Budget</span>. Garratt O’Neill is falsely accused
-of murder. His sweetheart Aileen on her way to Downpatrick to defend
-him is abducted by his enemy. Suspected of infidelity, she is driven from
-her home, but is befriended by Father Nugent, an unfrocked priest, and
-his Fenian band, who lurk in the Mourne Mountains. After many thrilling
-episodes and hairbreadth escapes the lovers are united at last. Sensational
-but well-told, and containing some good descriptions.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>READE, Amos.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ NORAH MORIARTY; or, Revelations of Irish Life. (<i>Blackwood</i>).
-Two Vols. 1886.</p>
-
-<p>“A romance bound up with the story of the Land League, its rise ... in
-1880, its development, and the outrages and bitter sufferings endured by
-the victims.”—(<i>Baker</i>).</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>READE, Mrs. R. H.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ PUCK’S HALL. Pp. 254. (<span class="smcap">Belfast</span>: <i>Charles W. Olley</i>). 1889.</p>
-
-<p>Scene: Newcastle, Co. Down. A pleasant story, told in a straightforward
-way, with good characterisation. By the same Author:—<i>Milly Davidson</i>,
-<i>Dora</i>, <i>Silver Mill</i>, &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>REED, Talbot Baines.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ SIR LUDAR. Pp. 343. (<i>R.T.S.</i>). Seven illustr. by Alfred Pearse.
-[1889]. Cheap reprints (<i>“Leisure Hour” Office</i>), 6<i>d.</i>, 1910, and (<i>Boys’
-Own Paper</i>). 1913.</p>
-
-<p>Adventures of an English ’prentice boy in company with Sir Ludar, who
-is a son of Sorley Boy MacDonnell of Dunluce Castle, Co. Antrim. There is a
-constant succession of exciting incidents. The retaking of Dunluce from the
-English is the most noteworthy. The heroes are on board the Armada<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_216"></a>[216]</span>
-during its fight with the English. The tone is not anti-Irish, but occasionally
-unfair to Catholics. It is a book for boys.</p>
-
-<p>The Author (1852-1893) was a son of Sir Chas. Reed, M.P., F.S.A., Deputy
-Governor of the Irish Society, and nephew of John Anderson, the Belfast
-bibliographer. He had a great love for Ireland and her people, and always
-delighted in visiting her shores.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ KILGORMAN. Pp. 420. (<i>Nelson</i>). Six illustr. (good). 1906.</p>
-
-<p>Scene: mainly in Donegal. Relates adventures of Donegal fisherboy,
-first at home, then in Paris during Reign of Terror, then at battle of Camperdown,
-then in Dublin, where he frequents meetings of United Irishmen and
-meets Lord Edward. Standpoint: not anti-Irish, but hostile to aims of
-United Irishmen. Full of exciting adventure. Juv.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>REID, Forrest.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE BRACKNELS: a Family Chronicle. Pp. 304. (<i>Arnold</i>). 6<i>s.</i>
-1911.</p>
-
-<p>This unpleasant and, we hope, abnormal family is that of a self-made
-Belfast merchant. The book is a study in temperaments; Mr. Bracknel
-himself, a harsh man, with little humanness, without affection, except a
-certain regard for an illegitimate child of past days; the daughter Amy, in
-love with Rusk, the tutor, and ready to go to any lengths to win him; the
-wilful, selfish, elder son; above all, Denis, the youngest, morbid, dreamy,
-the victim of delusions, engaging in strange pagan worship, yet with amiable
-traits. There is not a trace of religion in the chronicle of this family.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ FOLLOWING DARKNESS. Pp. 320. (<i>Arnold</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1912.</p>
-
-<p>A soul study in form of autobiography. The hero is a son of a Co. Down
-schoolmaster. He is brought up amid uncongenial people and in uncongenial
-circumstances, first amid the Mourne Mountains, then in sordid Cromac
-St., Belfast. His soul sickens with the dreariness of the education, and
-especially of the religion that is imposed on him, and the father, a hard,
-unresponsive man, is perversely blind to the genius (an artistic and somewhat
-moody temperament) and aspirations of the young man—with consequences
-almost fatal. He is thrown back on himself. Hence intense introspection
-and then an outlet sought in occult sciences. There is a love story, too,
-but it is of minor importance. The book is but a fragment, and has no real
-conclusion. The style is exceptionally good.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ AT THE DOOR OF THE GATE. Pp. 332. (<i>Arnold</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1915.</p>
-
-<p>“One needs no knowledge of Belfast and its people to appreciate nine-tenths
-of what Mr. Reid here describes; there can be no question that his
-characters are true to life: the small family at the combined post office
-and lending library; the hardworking, clean, and grim Mrs. Seawright,
-her two sons Martin and Richard, her adopted daughter Grace ... all this
-one thoroughly appreciates as one admires the sustained skill with which
-in a succession of small strokes Mr. Reid builds up his admirable story.”—(<span class="smcap">Times
-Lit. Suppl.</span>).</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>RHYS, Grace.</b> “Mrs. Rhys (<i>née</i> Little) was born at Knockadoo, Boyle, Co.
-Roscommon, 1865. She is youngest daughter of J. Bennett Little, and
-married, in 1891, Ernest Rhys, the poet.... Her novels deal with Irish
-life, which she knows well, and are written with sympathetic insight,
-tenderness, and tragic power.”—(<span class="smcap">Irish Lit.</span>).</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ MARY DOMINIC. Pp. 296. (<i>Dent</i>). 1898.</p>
-
-<p>The main theme is the seduction of a young peasant girl by the son of the
-landlord, and the nemesis that overtook the seducer after many years. The<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_217"></a>[217]</span>
-story is told with exceptional power and pathos. There is no prurient description,
-unless one half-page might be objected to on this score. The peasants
-are natural and life-like, but there is something strangely repellant in the
-pictures of the upper classes. There are incidents bringing out the darker
-aspects of the land-war. There is no anti-religious bias.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE WOOING OF SHEILA. (<i>Methuen</i>). 6<i>s.</i> [1901]. Second ed.,
-1908. (N.Y.: <i>Holt</i>). 1.50.</p>
-
-<p>A gentleman, from unnatural motives, deliberately brings up his son as a
-common labourer. The boy falls in love with and marries a peasant girl,
-whom he had saved from the pursuit of a rascally young squire. On her
-marriage morning she learns that her husband has killed her unworthy lover.
-She at once leaves her husband, but a priest induces her to return, and the
-crime is hushed up in a rather improbable manner. As in the Author’s other
-books, there is a subtle charm of style, delicate analysis of character, and
-fair knowledge of peasant life.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE PRINCE OF LISNOVER. (<i>Methuen</i>). 1904.</p>
-
-<p>Ireland in the early ’sixties. Has same qualities as <i>Mary Dominic</i>. Devotion
-of the people to the old and dispossessed “lord of the soil” is touchingly
-brought out. A pretty girl-and-boy love story runs through the whole.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE CHARMING OF ESTERCEL. Pp. 318. (<i>Dent</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1913.</p>
-
-<p>A love story of Ireland in the days of O’Neill and Essex. The main interest
-lies in the story of how Estercel is brought to love his cousin Sabia, and in
-the adventures of the former, an O’Neill and the envoy of the great Hugh,
-in Dublin and in Ulster. But the historical background is well painted
-and the historical personages carefully studied. The hero’s wonderful horse,
-Tamburlaine, is a strange and original “character” in the piece, and there
-is a splendid description of how he carried his master from Dublin home to
-the North. The Author writes with sympathy for Ireland. The charm of
-the style is enhanced by her sympathy with wild nature and delicate perception
-of its sights and sounds.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>RHYS, Rt. Hon. Sir John, M.A., D.Litt.</b> B. Cardiganshire, 1840. Ed. Bangor
-and Oxford. Also at the Sorbonne, College de France, Heidelberg,
-Leipsic, and Göttingen. Prof. of Celtic at Oxford since 1877. Member
-of innumerable learned societies and royal commissions. He has read
-many valuable papers on Celtic subjects before the R.I.A. Publ. a long
-series of works on Celtic subjects, <i>e.g.</i>, <i>Celtic Heathendom</i>, 1886.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ CELTIC FOLK-LORE, Welsh and Manx. Two Vols. Pp. xlvi. + 718.
-(<span class="smcap">Oxford</span>: <i>Clarendon Press</i>). 10<i>s.</i> 1901.</p>
-
-<p>Stories gathered partly by letter, partly <i>viva voce</i>, classified and critically
-discussed. The group of ideas, he concludes, connected with the fairies is
-drawn partly from history and fact, partly from the world of imagination
-and myth, the former part representing vague traditions of earlier races.
-Many subsidiary questions are raised, <i>e.g.</i>, magic, the origin of druidism,
-certain aspects of the Arthurian legends, &amp;c. Ch. x. deals with Difficulties of
-the Folk-lorist; Ch. xi. with Folk-lore Philosophy; Ch. xii. with Race in
-Folk-lore and Myth. Throughout constant references are made to and
-frequent parallels drawn with Irish folk-lore, <i>e.g.</i>, the Cuchulainn cycle.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>RIDDELL, Mrs.</b> <i>née</i> <b>Charlotte E. Cowan</b>. Born at Carrickfergus, 1832.
-Published her first book 1858, since when she has written nearly forty
-novels. All of these are remarkably clever, and some have been very
-popular. They deal chiefly with social and domestic life among the
-Protestant upper and middle classes. The scene is laid in London,
-Hertfordshire, Lincolnshire, Scotland, &amp;c. Few deal with Ireland.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_218"></a>[218]</span>
-We may mention <i>George Geith of Fen Court</i> (1864), <i>City and Suburb</i> (1861),
-<i>A Life’s Assize</i> (1870), <i>Above Suspicion</i> (1875), <i>Too Much Alone</i>, <i>Susan
-Drummond</i>, <i>Race for Wealth</i>, <i>Head of the Firm</i>. Her books are noteworthy
-for the intimate knowledge of the proceedings of law and the business
-world of London which they display. D. 1906.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ MAXWELL DREWITT. [1865]. New illustr. ed., 1869. (<i>Arnold</i>).</p>
-
-<p>A rather lengthy but well-told tale of adventures in Connemara, including
-an old-fashioned election (time, 1854) and a well-described trial for robbery
-on the Drogheda and Dundalk Railway. The plot is well constructed and
-the characters, mainly of the landlord class, sympathetically depicted. The
-peasantry are faithfully, if somewhat humorously, delineated. Dr. Sheen,
-the dispensary doctor, and his patients are well pourtrayed.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ A STRUGGLE FOR FAME. 1883. Several eds.</p>
-
-<p>Partly autobiographical. Describes a young girl and her father sailing
-from Belfast with her MS. to win her way in London. Her experiences of
-publishers and love affairs.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ BERNA BOYLE. Pp. 443. (<i>Macmillan</i>). 6<i>s.</i> [1884]. 1900, &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p>A love story of the Co. Down about fifty years ago. Deals mainly with
-the trials of a young lady, who suffers much from suitors with disagreeable
-relatives. The characters are mainly drawn from a rather uninspiring and
-unsympathetic type of Ulster folk. Perhaps the most striking feature is
-the character of Berna’s mother, a vulgar, pushful, foolish woman. There
-is humour not a little in the situations and characters. The story suffers
-from its great length.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE BANSHEE’S WARNING, and Other Tales. (<span class="smcap">London</span>: <i>Macqueen</i>).
-6<i>d.</i> Paper. 1903.</p>
-
-<p>Six stories, four having some concern with Ireland. The first tells how
-the Banshee goes to London to warn the scapegrace son of an Irish family,
-who is a clever surgeon, yet always plunged in debt. It is a study of a strange
-personality. “A Vagrant Digestion” humorously relates the journeyings
-of the hypochondriacal Vicar of Rathdundrum in search of health. “Mr.
-Mabbot’s Fright” and “So Near, or the Pity of It” both illustrate the
-honesty and the proper pride of the Irish. The latter is pathetic. The
-former is humorous, is full of life and movement, and contains fine descriptions
-of the coast-drive from Belfast to Larne in the old days, and of an exciting
-run-away.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>RIDDALL, Walter.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ HUSBAND AND LOVER. Pp. 304. (<i>Swift</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1913.</p>
-
-<p>The love affairs of a London journalist who comes to Ireland, marries Doris,
-and makes love to Laura.—(<span class="smcap">T. Lit. Suppl.</span>). The Author, who was the
-second son of the late Dean Riddall of Belfast, died in 1913, at the age of
-forty.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>“RITA”; Mrs. Desmond Humphreys.</b> Author of a great many novels:
-Mudie’s list enumerates 58, amongst them <i>Peg the Rake</i> and <i>Kitty the Rag</i>,
-both introducing Irish elements, and <i>The Masqueraders</i> describing the
-wanderings and social experiences of two Irish singers.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE SIN OF JASPER STANDISH. Pp. 342. (<i>Constable</i>). 1901.</p>
-
-<p>Scene: one of the midland counties. The story is founded on the Newtonstewart,
-Co. Tyrone, tragedy, where a scoundrelly inspector of police murders
-the local bank-manager, then himself conducts the investigation, but is
-unmasked and brought to justice by the English heroine and her housekeeper.
-A morbid and sensational type of book, with not a few traces of
-religious and national bias. The English characters are belauded, the Irish
-for the most part represented as fools. There is much “stage-Irish” dialogue.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_219"></a>[219]</span></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ A GREY LIFE. Pp. 347. (<i>Stanley Paul</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1913.</p>
-
-<p>Scene: a boarding-house in Bath kept by three reduced ladies, with whom
-Rosaleen O’Hara passes (in the later 1870’s) the three or four years covered
-by the story. The central figure is the Chevalier Theophrastus O’Shaughnessy,
-a charming, scholarly man, with sad stories of his past to tell.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>ROBINSON, F. Mabel.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE PLAN OF CAMPAIGN. Two Vols. (<i>Vizetelly</i>). 1888.</p>
-
-<p>Scene: Dublin, except for a chapter at Dromore and a visit to London.
-Deals with the famous agrarian “Plan of Campaign” in the eighties, viewed
-with Nationalist sympathies. Religion is not discussed. A number of men
-and women of the educated classes meet to talk politics. They go to see
-evictions, and vivid but heartrending pictures of these are drawn. A bad
-landlord is killed by a gentleman named Considine. The latter’s friend,
-Talbot, helps him to escape, but his daughter Stella dies of grief. Considine,
-who is an unbeliever, shoots himself. The story is a good one and skilfully
-worked out.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>ROCHE, Hon. Alexis.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ JOURNEYINGS WITH JERRY THE JARVEY. (<i>Smith, Elder</i>).
-6<i>s.</i> 1915.</p>
-
-<p>Two of these sketches first appeared in the <span class="smcap">Cornhill</span>. “One of the most
-mirth-provoking collection of sketches that has appeared for many a long
-day. There is a laugh in every page and a roar in every chapter. Yet it is
-all pure comedy: only once does the Author descend to farce.... a delightful
-book.”—(I.B.L.). The Author, son of 1st Baron Fermoy, was born in 1853,
-and died in 1915.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>ROCHE, Regina Maria.</b> 1765-1845. A once celebrated novelist. For many
-years before her death she lived in retirement at Waterford. Wrote
-also <i>The Vicar of Lansdowne</i> (1793), <i>Maid of the Hamlet</i>, <i>The Monastery
-of St. Columba</i>, &amp;c., &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE CHILDREN OF THE ABBEY. Four Vols. 12 mo. [1798].
-(<i>Mason</i>). Twelfth ed., 1835; others 1863, 1867.</p>
-
-<p>A sentimental story of a very old-fashioned type. The personages are chiefly
-earls and marquises, the heroines have names like Amanda, Malvina, &amp;c.
-Though in this novel Irish places (Enniskillen, Dublin, Bray) are mentioned,
-the book does not seem to picture any reality of Irish life. This is still on
-Mudie’s list. It was republ. in U.S.A. at Hartford, Exeter, Philadelphia,
-and N.Y.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE MUNSTER COTTAGE BOY. Four Vols. Pp. 1195. (<span class="smcap">London</span>:
-<i>Newman</i>). 1820.</p>
-
-<p>A little girl, Fidelia, grows up without knowing who her parents are. Bad
-people try to exploit her: a servant named Connolly tries to save her, but
-she falls from one misfortune into another, till finally she meets her father,
-and finds herself an heiress. Interminable conversations and intricacies of
-episode. A multitude of characters, who are for the most part English in
-Ireland. No humour, nor style.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE BRIDAL OF DUNAMORE. Pp. 888. (<span class="smcap">London</span>: <i>Newman</i>).
-1823.</p>
-
-<p>A character study of Rosalind Glenmorlie, beautiful but haughty and
-ambitious, and of the misery she caused to many and finally to herself. It
-is tragedy almost all through. The scene in “Dunamore,” on E. coast of
-Ireland. The character of the heroine is overdrawn and exaggerated, like
-most of the Author’s <i>dramatis personæ</i>.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_220"></a>[220]</span></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE TRADITION OF THE CASTLE; or, Scenes in the Emerald
-Isle. Four Vols. Pp. 1414. 1824.</p>
-
-<p>A very long story, with a multitude of characters. The aim seems to be
-to plead that Irishmen should reside in their own country and work for its
-welfare. Scenery of Howth, Artoir-na-Greine, a place near Dublin, and
-Killarney. Dialect good. No discussion of religious matters, but a good
-deal of politics. The story opens during last session of Irish Parliament, and,
-in a discussion between husband and wife, the Author’s nationalist sentiments
-appear. Donoghue O’Brien, the hero, is long kept apart from his Eveleen
-Erin, but they are united in the end.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE CASTLE CHAPEL. Three Vols. Pp. 963. (<span class="smcap">London</span>: <i>Newman</i>).
-1825.</p>
-
-<p>A story of a family of O’Neills of St. Doulagh’s Castle, somewhere in Ulster,
-early nineteenth century. Eugene falls in love with Rose Cormack, his
-sister’s companion, and they make vows of marriage in the chapel by moonlight.
-Eugene, who dabbles in phrenology and seems somewhat of a fool,
-goes away. On his return he is told that Rose has been killed in an accident.
-In reality she has been taken away by her father, a Mr. Mordaunt, former
-owner of the castle, who has poisoned his wife. Rose becomes an heiress,
-dies abroad, and leaves her fortune to the O’Neills, and an apology for her
-duplicity. A queer, outlandish sort of story.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>ROCHFORT, Edith.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE LLOYDS OF BALLYMORE. Two Vols. (<i>Chapman &amp; Hall</i>).
-1890.</p>
-
-<p>A domestic story, told with simplicity and feeling. The Lloyds belong to
-the Protestant landlord class, as do most of the personages in the tale. Period:
-1881: the Land League days. Scene: the Midlands and afterwards Dublin.
-The first part of the plot turns on the agrarian murder of Mr. Lloyd, the
-trial, and execution of the murderer; the second on Tom Lloyd’s being
-suspected of a bank-robbery when the Lloyds are living in very straitened
-circumstances. All through runs a delicately told and very sympathetic
-love story. The land question is viewed from the landlord standpoint, but
-discussed without excessive bitterness. Conversations natural and peasant
-dialect good.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>RODENBERG, Julius.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ DIE HARFE VON IRLAND: Märchen und dichtung in Irland.
-Pp. 299. 16mo. (<span class="smcap">Leipzig</span>: <i>Grunow</i>). 1861.</p>
-
-<p>Contains:—I. Thirteen Irish melodies, with music. II. Tales. III. Poems
-and songs transl. into German verse. At the end are useful notes, and at
-p. 283 a list of sources. These are chiefly the <span class="smcap">Dublin and London Magazine</span>
-for 1825-7. Two are given as “mündlich” (gathered orally). Titles such
-as:—The land in the sea, the wizard of Crunnaan, two stories of the Leprechaun,
-the land of the ever young (Tír na n-óg), the fairy handkerchief of
-the Phuka, the fair Nora, &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>ROGERS, R. D.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE ADVENTURES OF ST. KEVIN, and Other Irish Tales. (<i>Swan
-Sonnenschein</i>). Pp. 266. [1897]. 1907.</p>
-
-<p>A dozen humorous sketches, well told, giving the old legends in a modern
-comic setting, much in the vein of Edmund Downey’s <i>Through Green Glasses</i>.
-The brogue is faithfully rendered.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_221"></a>[221]</span></p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>ROLLESTON, T. W.</b> B. 1857, at Shinrone, King’s Co. His father was
-County Court Judge for Tipperary. Ed. St. Columba’s, Rathfarnham,
-and T.C.D. Lived some years on the Continent, but has since lived
-alternately in London and in Dublin. Has written much verse. Also
-several literary, philosophical, and biographical works. Was the first
-secretary of the Irish Literary Society, London.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ MYTHS AND LEGENDS OF THE CELTIC RACE. Pp. ix. + 457.
-(<i>Harrap</i>). 7<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> Sixty-four full-page illustr. by Stephen Reid—excellent.
-(N.Y.: <i>Crowell</i>). 2.50. 1911.</p>
-
-<p>A very handsome volume, beautifully printed and bound. Contents:—1.
-The Celts in ancient history. 2. The religion of the Celts. 3. The Irish
-invasion myths. 4. The early Milesian kings. 5. Tales of the Ultonian
-cycle. 6. Tales of the Ossianic cycle. 7. The voyage of Maeldun. 8. Myths
-and Tales of the Cymry. Elaborate Glossary and Index. From about p. 106
-onwards the legends, sagas, &amp;c., are not simply discussed but told as stories.
-The résumé of early Celtic history, with the customs, art, religion, and influence
-of the race, is very valuable; but the main interest lies in his complete
-survey of the cycles of Irish myth and legend. The editor claims that he
-has “avoided any adaptation of the material for the popular taste.” Some
-very unfortunate (to say the least) remarks about religion (see pp. 47 and 66)
-might well have been omitted.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE HIGH DEEDS OF FINN, and Other Bardic Romances of
-Ancient Ireland. Pp. lv. + 214. (<i>Harrap</i>). 5<i>s.</i> Sixteen illustr. by
-Stephen Reid. (N.Y.: <i>Crowell</i>). 1.50. 1910.</p>
-
-<p>Introduction long, but very interesting, by the well-known man of letters
-(author of nearly thirty volumes), Rev. Stopford Brooke. Deals with the
-relationships and contrasts between the various cycles of Irish bardic literature
-and their several characteristics—and this in a style full of literary
-charm. The stories told by Mr. Rolleston (than whom few more competent
-could be found for the work) are re-tellings in a style graceful and poetic,
-but simple and direct, of ancient Gaelic romances, some already told in
-English elsewhere, others now first appearing in an English dress. They are
-drawn from all three cycles above mentioned. Source for each mentioned
-at end of book. Some of these tales are already well known, such as Oisin
-in the Land of Youth, and the Children of Lir. The style, it may be added,
-has not the fire and the dramatic force of Standish O’Grady, but it has good
-qualities of its own.</p>
-
-<p class="author" id="ROONEY"><b>ROONEY, Miss Teresa J.; “Eblana.”</b> B. 1840. D. in 1911.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE LAST MONARCH OF TARA. Pp. 311. (<i>Gill</i>). 2<i>s.</i> [1880].
-(N.Y.: <i>Benziger</i>). 0.80. 1889, &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p>Period: reigns of Tuathal and Diarmaid O Cearbhail. Scene: chiefly
-the district around Tara. Aims to present a detailed picture of the daily
-life and civilization of Ireland at the time. Chief events: the murder of
-Tuathal, the judgment of Diarmaid against Columbkille, followed by the
-battle of Cooldrevne, and finally the Cursing and Abandonment of Tara.
-The story is slight and moves slowly; there is no love interest. The historical
-events are not all, perhaps, very certain, but the author has brought very
-great industry and erudition (from the best sources) to the portrayal of the
-life of the time. The edition (of 1889) was revised and corrected by Canon
-U. J. Bourke, M.R.I.A., and is admirably produced.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ EILY O’HARTIGAN, an Irish-American Tale. (<i>Sealy, Bryers</i>). 2<i>s.</i>
-1889.</p>
-
-<p>Time of the Volunteers. Chief incidents in tale: Battle of Bunker’s Hill,
-and Irish Declaration of Independence in 1782. A disagreeable person of
-the name of Buck Fox (the name under which the story originally appeared)
-takes up quite too large a space in this book; and he and his friends, with
-their <i>soi-disant</i> English accents, are most decided bores. The point of view
-is strongly national.—(I.M.).</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_222"></a>[222]</span></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE STRIKE. (<i>Sealy, Bryers</i>). 6<i>d.</i> 1909.</p>
-
-<p>“A stirring tale of Dublin in the eighteenth century, when Ireland stood
-well ahead in industrial activity, and the Dublin Liberties were the hub of
-Irish Industrialism.”</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>RORISON, E. S.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ A TASTE OF QUALITY. Pp. 319. (<i>Long</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1904.</p>
-
-<p>Family life among Protestant upper middle class folk in a country district—very
-pleasant and refined society. A kindly, human story, eminently true
-to life, without bias of any kind. One becomes quite familiar with the cleverly-drawn
-characters—the kindly, cultured Archdeacon and his sister; patient,
-crippled Larry, with his cheery slang; devoted Auntie Nell, bringing comfort
-and brightness where she goes; the Austrian countess; and the twins.</p>
-
-<p class="author" id="ROSSA"><b>ROSSA, Jeremiah O’Donovan.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ EDWARD O’DONNELL: a Story of Ireland of Our Day. Pp. 300.
-(N.Y.: <i>Green</i>). 1884.</p>
-
-<p>Scene somewhere near Fethard, Co. Tipperary, during Land League agitation.
-The Author’s sympathies are against the L.L. and for the physical
-force party, often called dynamiters at the time. The book is full of the
-agrarian question, viewed with bitterly anti-landlord bias. Eviction scenes,
-boycotting, midnight conspiracy. Satirical portrait of the pious landlord—Catholic
-attorney who battens on the miseries of the poor; also of various
-landlord types. In the case of “Father Tim” the portraits shows all the
-weak spots, but without bitterness or disrespect. See ch. 18, Fr. Tim’s
-sermon against the dynamiters. Good picture of a dispensary doctor’s life
-and difficulties. Well written, but rather a pamphlet than a story. It is
-believed in many quarters that Rossa did not write a word of this story;<a id="FNanchor_12" href="#Footnote_12" class="fnanchor">[12]</a>
-the edition I examined has on the title-page what purports to be a facsimile
-of Rossa’s signature. Rossa was b. in Rosscarbery, Co. Cork, 1831. Died in
-U.S.A., 1915, and was given a public funeral in Dublin. He was a well known
-Fenian leader, was condemned for treason-felony in 1865, and sentenced to
-perpetual imprisonment, but was subsequently released and went to New
-York, where he edited <span class="smcap">The United Irishman</span>.</p>
-
-<div class="footnotes">
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_12" href="#FNanchor_12" class="label">[12]</a> In a contribution to I.B.L. for Sept., 1915, Mr. Edmund Downey unhesitatingly
-assigns the book to the late Edward Moran, brother of the present
-Ed. of <span class="smcap">The Leader</span>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="author"><b>RUFFIN, Mrs. M. E. HENRY-</b>, <a href="#HENRY-RUFFIN"><i>see</i> <b>HENRY-RUFFIN</b></a>.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>RUSSELL, Maud M.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ SPRIGS OF SHAMROCK; or, Irish Sketches and Legends. Pp. 134.
-(<i>Browne &amp; Nolan</i>). 6<i>d.</i> 1900.</p>
-
-<p>“The little books show how full of charm and fascination the holiday
-resorts of Ireland really are.”—(<span class="smcap">Lady’s Pictorial</span>).</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>RUSSELL, T. O’Neill; “Reginald Tierney.”</b> B. near Moate, Co. Westmeath,
-1828. Son of Joseph Russell, a Quaker. Was devoted from about 1858
-till the end of his life to the revival of the Irish language. During the
-Fenian movement he was an object of suspicion. He emigrated, and
-spent thirty years in U.S.A. Returning in 1895, he threw himself heart
-and soul into the Gaelic Revival. D. 1908.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ TRUE HEART’S TRIALS. (<i>Gill</i>). 1<i>s.</i> and 1<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> Still in print,
-1910.</p>
-
-<p>A rather rambling tale of the troubles of a pair of lovers. Scene: first,
-the Lake district of Cavan and Westmeath, where we have a glimpse of
-squireen life. Afterwards the backwoods north of Albany, U.S.A. Both
-light and shade of American colonist life depicted. There are many laughable
-episodes in the book.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_223"></a>[223]</span></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ DICK MASSEY. Pp. 300. (<i>Gill</i>). 1<i>s.</i> 1860. New ed., poor print,
-1908.</p>
-
-<p>Famine in 1814 and following years, as background for a story full of
-incident, humour, and pathos, with faithful pictures of many sides of Irish
-life—the emigrant ship, a wedding, relations of good and bad landlords with
-tenants. Altogether on the side of the peasant. Original title:—<i>The Struggles
-of Dick Massey; or, the battles of a boy</i>, by “Reginald Tierney.”</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>RUSSELL, Violet.</b> Is the wife of George Russell, “A.E.,” Ed. of the <span class="smcap">Irish
-Homestead</span> and a well-known poet.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ HEROES OF THE DAWN. Pp. 251. (<i>Maunsel</i>). 5<i>s.</i> Sixteen
-black and white drawings and four coloured illustr. by Beatrice Elvery.
-<i>n.d.</i> [1913].</p>
-
-<p>Stories of the Fionn cycle, drawn from Standish O’Grady’s <i>Silva Gadelica</i>
-and from the <i>Transactions of the Ossianic Society</i>, and retold, with a pleasant
-simplicity and directness, for children. “I would have you see in them,”
-says the dedication, “a record of some qualities which the heroes of ancient
-times held to be of far greater worth than anything else—an absolute truthfulness
-and courtesy in thought and speech and action; a nobility and
-chivalry of mind, &amp;c....” But the Author leaves the reader to draw his own
-moral and does not force it on him. The illustrations are charming, and
-the whole book is produced with great artistic taste.</p>
-
-<p class="author" id="RYAN"><b>RYAN, W. P.</b>, <a href="#ORYAN"><i>see also</i> <b>O’RYAN, W. P.</b></a></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE HEART OF TIPPERARY. Pp. 256. (<i>Ward &amp; Downey</i>). 1893.</p>
-
-<p>A romance of the Land League, but not too much taken up with politics.
-Nationalist. Introd. by William O’Brien, M.P.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ STARLIGHT THROUGH THE ROOF. Pp. 240. (<i>Downey</i>). 1895.
-Under pseudonym “Kevin Kennedy.”</p>
-
-<p>Scene: an inland village of Munster (presumably in Co. Tipperary). A
-tale of peasant life—Utopian reforms realized by a returned emigrant, opposed
-by land agents and a landlord’s priest; partial conversion of the latter to
-the people’s side; arrest of reformer on false charge of murder; breaking
-open of prison, and rescue, &amp;c. An early and crude effort in fiction. Pleasant,
-emotional style. Very strong Nationalist bias.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>“RATHKYLE, M. A.”</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ FAREWELL TO GARRYMORE. Pp. 127. (<i>Sealy, Bryers</i>). 1<i>s.</i> net.
-1912.</p>
-
-<p>A simple little tale of life in an Irish village, showing knowledge of the
-country-folk and of their ways of thought and speech; also a thorough
-understanding of children. The Author is Miss M. Younge, of Upper Oldtown,
-Rathdowney.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>SADLIER, Mrs. James</b>,<a id="FNanchor_13" href="#Footnote_13" class="fnanchor">[13]</a> <i>née</i> <b>Madden</b>. Born at Cootehill, 1820. D. 1903.
-In 1844 she went to Canada, where the rest of her life was spent. Between
-1847 and 1874 she wrote frequently for the principal Catholic papers in
-America. In 1895 she received the Laetare Medal. “Each of her
-works of fiction had a special object in view, bearing on the moral and
-religious well-being of her fellow Irish Catholics.” She says: “It is
-needless to say that all my writings are dedicated to the one grand
-object: the illustration of our holy Faith by means of tales or stories.”
-Her sympathies are strongly nationalist. Besides the books here noticed,
-she also published <i>The Red Hand of Ulster</i>, and a large number of religious
-works. Flynn of Boston publishes a uniform ed. of her works at 0.60
-each vol. Many of them were, naturally, originally published by the
-firm of her husband, James Sadlier.</p>
-
-<div class="footnotes">
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_13" href="#FNanchor_13" class="label">[13]</a> <i>i.e.</i>, Mary A. Sadlier, to be carefully distinguished from Anna T. Sadlier,
-her daughter, born in Montreal. The latter has written nearly as much
-as her mother, but her works are not concerned with Ireland.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_224"></a>[224]</span></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE FATE OF FATHER SHEEHY. Pp. 178 + appendix 76. (<i>Duffy</i>).
-1<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> Still in print. [<i>c.</i> 1845]. (N.Y.: <i>Benziger</i>). 0.60.</p>
-
-<p>The story (true, though told in form of fiction) of how the heroic patriot-priest
-was judicially murdered at Clonmel in 1766 by the ascendancy faction,
-backed by the Government. Appendix by Dr. R. R. Madden, giving full
-details of the trial, depositions of witnesses, &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ WILLY BURKE. Pp. 224. (<i>Duffy</i>). 1<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> [<i>c.</i> 1850]. In print,
-1909.</p>
-
-<p>Story of two Irish emigrant boys left orphans in the States, and their
-struggles with temptations against their Faith. One is a model boy; the
-other goes off the track, but is brought back again. A moral and religious
-story, full of Catholic faith and feeling. It might, however, be not unreasonably
-considered somewhat “goody-goody.”</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ NEW LIGHTS; or, Life in Galway. Pp. 443. (N.Y.: <i>Sadlier</i>).
-[1853].</p>
-
-<p>Peasant life in Famine times. Written with a strong sympathy for the
-sufferings of the people, and with admiration for their virtues. There is a
-good deal about the proselytism or “souperism” that was rife at the time.
-The evils of landlordism, resulting in evictions, &amp;c., are depicted. There
-is no love interest.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE BLAKES AND FLANAGANS. Pp. 391. (N.Y.: <i>Kenedy</i>). 60
-cents. net; and (<i>Duffy</i>) 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> [1855]. 1909.</p>
-
-<p>Life among lower middle class Irish in New York, showing in a somewhat
-satirical way, evil effects of public school education. The moral purpose,
-though fairly evident, does not detract from the naturalness of the story.
-The conversation is particularly lifelike.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE CONFEDERATE CHIEFTAINS. Pp. 384. Demy 8vo. (<i>Gill</i>).
-4<i>s.</i> Many editions. [1859]. Still in print. (N.Y.: <i>Benziger</i>). 0.60 net.</p>
-
-<p>A romance of a popular kind, without great literary pretensions, giving a
-good picture of the events of the time, written from a Catholic standpoint,
-and sympathising with the Old Irish party led by O’Neill, who is the hero
-of the tale. All the chief men of the various parties figure in the narrative.
-Full expression is given to the Author’s sympathies and dislikes, yet without,
-we believe, historic unfairness.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ BESSY CONWAY; or, The Irish Girl in America. Pp. 316. (N.Y.:
-<i>Kenedy</i>). 60 cents. net. Print rather poor. <i>n.d.</i> [1861].</p>
-
-<p>Theme of story: influence of religion on character. Object (as stated in
-Pref.): to point out to Irish girls in America (especially servants) “the true
-and never-failing path to success in this life, and happiness in the next.”
-Bessy, daughter of Tipperary farmer, leaves for America. She finds when
-on board that Henry Herbert, son of her father’s landlord, a Protestant, is
-without encouragement from her, following her through love. The story
-tells how a change came over the wild young man, how he became a Catholic,
-and married Bessy; how the two of them made their fortunes in N. Y., and
-how Bessy came home just in time to stop the eviction of her father in the
-Famine year. Readable, with touches both of humour and of pathos. Highly
-moral and religious in tone.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE RED HAND OF ULSTER; or, the Fortunes of Hugh O’Neill.
-(<span class="smcap">London</span> and <span class="smcap">Dublin</span>), <i>c.</i> 1862.</p>
-
-<p>Mentioned in most lists of this Author’s works, but not in British Museum
-Library.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_225"></a>[225]</span></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE HERMIT OF THE ROCK. Pp. 320. (<i>Gill</i>). 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> <i>n.d.</i>
-[1863]. In print.</p>
-
-<p>Story of Irish society in the ’sixties. The “hermit,” who tends the graves
-and monuments on the Rock of Cashel, is a sort of Irish “Old Mortality,”
-and is a storehouse of legend and tradition. The story is by no means a tame
-one: there is a murder mystery, and sensation, though the latter does not
-degenerate into melodrama.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE DAUGHTER OF TYRCONNELL: a Tale of the Reign of
-James I. Pp. 160. (<i>Duffy</i>), 1<i>s.</i> (N.Y.: <i>Kenedy</i>). 60 cents, net. [1863].
-Still in print.</p>
-
-<p>Sufferings of Mary O’Donnell, daughter of the exiled Earl of Tyrconnell,
-at the hands of James I., who adopted her and wished her to marry a Protestant.
-She dresses as a man and escapes to the Continent, where she enters
-a convent. Founded on a tradition recorded in MacGeoghegan’s <i>History of
-Ireland</i>. James is painted in very dark colours; Mary is almost too good for
-real life.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ CON O’REGAN; or, Emigrant Life. Pp. 405. (N.Y.: <i>Kenedy</i>). 60
-cents. [1864]. 1909.</p>
-
-<p>A powerful anti-emigration novel, depicting the hardships of Irish emigrants
-in the New England states in the ’forties. Thoroughly Catholic and
-sympathetic to the Irish, but does not conceal their faults.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE OLD HOUSE BY THE BOYNE. Pp. 319. (<i>Gill</i>). 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>
-[1865]; also (<span class="smcap">London</span>) 1888. New ed., 1904. (N.Y.: <i>Benziger</i>). 0.60.</p>
-
-<p>Scene: Drogheda. Many descriptions of old historic spots, and much
-legendary lore. There is a love interest, also, but the book is hardly up to
-the Author’s usual standard. At the outset of the book Drogheda is well
-described.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE HEIRESS OF KILORGAN. Pp. vi. + 420. (N.Y.: <i>Kenedy</i>).
-60 cents. [1867]. New ed., 1909.</p>
-
-<p>“A slight and very simple thread of fiction connects throughout the series
-of historical sketches constituting these ‘Evenings with the old Geraldines.’”—(Pref.).
-The plan is similar to that of <i>Hibernian Nights Entertainments</i>
-(Ferguson), <i>q.v.</i> At Kilorgan, near the Maigue, in Co. Limerick, dwell a
-poor family of descendants of the Geraldines. They are visited by an Englishman,
-who has (without their knowledge) bought the old place in the courts.
-Every night of his stay a story is told, the intervals being filled in by somewhat
-insipid love episodes, long poems (by Mrs. Hernans, Longfellow, Gerald
-Griffin, &amp;c.), and songs. The stories are a series of episodes from Geraldine
-history from Gerald FitzWalter in Wales to the Sugán Earl, <i>c.</i> 1598, together
-with a few miscellaneous romantic stories. They are simply and interestingly
-told. Some are hardly for children. An Appendix gives some Geraldine
-documents.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ MACCARTHY MÓR. Pp. 277. (N.Y.: <i>Kenedy</i>). [1868]. At present
-in print. <i>n.d.</i></p>
-
-<p>Life and character of Florence MacCarthy Mór based on his <i>Life and Letters</i>
-by Daniel M’Carthy. M’Carthy is said by the Author (Pref.) almost to
-merit the name of the Munster Machiavelli. The book presents a striking
-picture of the struggles of the great families of the day to preserve faith
-and property amid the petty persecutions of the government and the intrigues
-of rivals. Chief events introduced: battles of Pass of Plumes, Curlew Mountains,
-and Bealanathabuidhe. Elizabeth, Cecil, Burleigh, the Northern
-Earls, the “Sugán” Earl, Sir Henry Power, &amp;c., appear incidentally. The<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_226"></a>[226]</span>
-scene varies between the Killarney district, West Carbery, the Council
-Chamber of Elizabeth, and the Tower. The episode of the marriage of the
-daughter of MacCarthy Mór to Florence MacCarthy Reagh forms the theme
-of Miss Gaughan’s <i>The Plucking of the Lily</i>, <i>q.v.</i></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ MAUREEN DHU. Pp. 391. (N.Y.: <i>Sadlier</i>). [1869].</p>
-
-<p>A tale of the Claddagh, the famous fishing village beside Galway city.
-Its manners and ways are described in detail and with fidelity. Tells how
-the beautiful daughter of the chief fisherman is wooed and won from all
-competitors by a wealthy young merchant of the city. The plot is well sustained
-and interesting, though somewhat complicated and hampered by
-digressions.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>SANBORN, Alvan Francis.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ MEG McINTYRE’S RAFFLE, and Other Stories. Two Vols. (<span class="smcap">Boston</span>:
-<i>Small &amp; Maynard</i>). $1.25 each. 1896.</p>
-
-<p>“Studies of the poorest classes in a great city, the pathos often ghastly in
-its intensity. The title-story is an Irish idyll.”—(<i>Baker</i>, 2).</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>SAVAGE, Marmion W.</b> 1805-1872. B. Dublin. Ed. T.C.D. He was a
-government official in Dublin for some years, and at that time wrote
-for <span class="smcap">Dubl. Univ. Magazine</span>. In 1856 he went to London, and there
-edited several periodicals. He was a witty and clever novelist, very
-popular in his day. Wrote also <i>Bachelor of the Albany</i>, <i>My Uncle the
-Curate</i>, <i>Reuben Medlicott</i>, <i>A Woman of Business</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE FALCON FAMILY. (<i>Chapman &amp; Hall</i>). [1845]. (<i>Ward, Lock</i>).
-New ed., 1854.</p>
-
-<p>“The best known and choicest of the author’s numerous stories. It is
-intended as a satire on the leaders of the Young Ireland Party; and some of
-the satire is very keen and amusing, but as political pictures his sketches are
-no better than caricatures.”—(<i>Read</i>). John Mitchel, reviewing it (<span class="smcap">The
-Nation</span>, 13th Decr., 1845), calls it “another of those pamphlet-novels that
-infest the literary world ... though too obviously the production of an
-Irishman, is as obviously intended and calculated for the English market....
-We have had some opportunities of acquaintance with the men the writer
-attempts to satirize, and do unfeignedly declare that we have never met (them)....
-In short, this book is a very paltry and ill-conditioned performance.”</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>SAVILE, Mrs. Helen.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ LOVE THE PLAYER. (<i>Sonnenschein</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1899.</p>
-
-<p>“A tragic plot, with sketches of Irish life, and unpleasant specimens of
-humanity in the rector and rector’s wife in the Protestant community of
-Tuleen. Old Micky Hogan, the sexton, is depicted with humour.”—(<i>Baker</i>,
-2). By the same Author: <i>The Wings of the Morning</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ MICKY MOONEY, M.P. Pp. 250. (<span class="smcap">Bristol</span>: <i>Arrowsmith</i>). Illustr.
-by Nancy Ruxton. 1902.</p>
-
-<p>Career of the hero from bog-trotter to M.P. As a background, a vulgar
-and absurd caricature of Irish life. Humour throughout of a very broad
-kind. Characters speak in an impossible brogue.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>SCHLICHTTRULL, Aline Von.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ DER AGITATOR VON IRLAND. Pp. 1043. (<span class="smcap">Berlin</span>: <i>Otto Janke</i>).
-1859.</p>
-
-<p>O’Connell is the hero, but there are a multitude of characters, chiefly of the
-ruling classes. Politics are much discussed, the Author’s sympathies being
-pretty clearly on the Catholic and Nationalist side. Scene partly in Ireland,
-partly in England, where the reader listens to speeches in the House of Lords.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_227"></a>[227]</span></p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>SCHOFIELD, Lily.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ ELIZABETH, BETSY, AND BESS. (<i>Duckworth</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1912.</p>
-
-<p>“The purport of the Author is to reveal the varied charm and grace of a
-delightful Irish girl’s character between the ages of thirteen and eighteen or
-so.... A vital, significant portrait.”—(<span class="smcap">T. Litt. Suppl.</span>). Scene: partly at
-“Castlemorne,” partly in a big English school near Liverpool.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>SCOTT, Florence, and HODGE, Alma.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE ROUND TOWER. Pp. 229. (<i>Nelson</i>). 1<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> Pretty picture
-cover. 1906.</p>
-
-<p>A very slight story centering in the landing of the French at Killala in 1798.
-Adventures of two small English boys. An interesting but one-sided glimpse
-of some of the episodes of the time. For boys.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>SENIOR, Dorothy.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE CLUTCH OF CIRCUMSTANCES; or, The Gates of Dawn.
-Pp. 333. (<i>Black</i>). Frontisp. 1908.</p>
-
-<p>An Arthurian romance, with Finola, daughter of Cormac, King of Leinster,
-as heroine. She is married to a brutal husband, but in the end is united to
-her true love. Not, however, without passing through a long series of adventures,
-rescues by knights errant, escapes, &amp;c. Has all the usual elements
-of the romantic <i>chanson de geste</i>—tourneys, rose-gardens, adventures in the
-green-wood. Told in highly romantic manner, but with the romance is blended
-a curious element of the modern problem novel.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>SEYMOUR, St. John D.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ IRISH WITCHCRAFT AND DEMONOLOGY. Pp. 256. (<i>Hodges &amp;
-Figgis</i>). 5<i>s.</i> net. 1914.</p>
-
-<p>A very competent piece of work from a scientific point of view. From the
-point of view of fiction it is full of weird and uncanny stories, gleaned from all
-sorts of sources.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>SEYMOUR, St. John D., B.D., and HARRY L. NELIGAN, D.I., R.I.C.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ TRUE IRISH GHOST STORIES. (<i>Hodges &amp; Figgis</i>). 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> 1914.</p>
-
-<p>Author says in Pref.: “For myself I cannot guarantee the genuineness of
-a single incident in this book—how could I, as none of them are my own
-personal experience. This at least I <i>can</i> vouch for, that the majority of
-the stories were sent to me as first or second-hand experiences by ladies and
-gentlemen whose statement on an ordinary matter of fact would be accepted
-without question.” The names of some contributors are mentioned. The
-stories are classified partly according to locality, partly according to the
-type of ghost in question. A final chapter gives a kind of Apologia for the
-book. Index of place names. The telling is, perhaps, a little monotonous
-and dull.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>SHAND, Alexander Innes.</b> 1832-1907. A Scotchman who interested himself
-in the Irish land question and wrote <i>Letters from the West of Ireland, 1884</i>.
-Other novels of his were <i>Against Time</i> and <i>Shooting the Rapids</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ KILCARRA. Three Vols. (<i>Blackwood</i>). 1891.</p>
-
-<p>The influence of a good and sweet-natured woman on selfish men, with the
-Land League agitation in Co. Galway for a background. The peasantry are
-depicted as wild and lawless and mere tools of the Land League, but as capable
-of much good. The shooting of landlords is sheer barbarism, no attempt
-being made by the Author to set forth its causes. The plot is furnished
-by the efforts of the hero, Capt. Martin Neville, to trace the murderer of a
-previous owner of the Kilcarra estate, and also by the story of his love for
-his cousin Ida, or rather hers for him. There is much about the relations
-between landlord and tenant.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_228"></a>[228]</span></p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>SHARP, William</b>, <a href="#MACLEOD"><i>see</i> <b>“FIONA MACLEOD.”</b></a></p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>SHEEHAN, M. F.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ NEATH SUNNY SKIES: Stories of the Co. Waterford. Pp. 123.
-(<i>Waterford News</i>). 6<i>d.</i> 1912.</p>
-
-<p>A series of simple tales well told and true to life.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>SHEEHAN, Canon Patrick A., D.D.</b> B. 1852. Educated at St. Colman’s,
-Fermoy, and Maynooth. Spent two years (1875-77) on English mission
-in Devonshire. Parish Priest of Doneraile from 1895 till his death in
-1913. His books deal chiefly with Catholic clerical life in Ireland—a
-subject which he was the first to deal with from within. He brought
-to bear on the features and problems of Irish life a deeply thoughtful
-and cultured mind. He did not indulge in thoughtless panegyric of
-Irish virtues, but touched firmly, though sympathetically, upon our
-national shortcomings and failings. His ideals are of the loftiest, yet
-never of an unsubstantial and airy, kind. His style is influenced too
-much perhaps in his earlier books by his very wide reading in many
-literatures, but particularly in Greek, German, Italian, and English.
-Besides the novels mentioned here, he has published two books of studies
-and reflections, viz., <i>Under the Cedars and the Stars</i>, and <i>Parerga</i>; also
-a book of poems, <i>Cithara Mea</i>, and a selection of <i>Early Essays and
-Lectures</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ GEOFFREY AUSTIN, STUDENT. (<i>Gill</i>). 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> Fifth ed., 1908.</p>
-
-<p>Story of life in a secondary school, near Dublin, nominally controlled by
-the clergy, but in reality left to the care of a grinder of more than doubtful
-character. A most uncatholic worldliness prevails at Mayfield, and the
-standards of conduct and of religion are very low. Geoffrey’s faith is
-weakened and well-nigh ruined. The curtain falls upon him as he goes out to
-face the world, and we are left to conjecture his fate. Has been transl. into
-French under title <i>Geoffroy</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE TRIUMPH OF FAILURE. Pp. 383. (<i>Burns &amp; Oates</i>). [1899].</p>
-
-<p>A sequel to the preceding. It is a close and sympathetic soul-study.
-Geoffrey loses all his worldly hopes and falls low indeed. He suffers the
-shipwreck of his faith. But in this valley of humiliation he learns strength
-to rise and conceives far different hopes, and we leave him on the heights of
-atonement and of regeneration. The book is philosophic in tone, and is enriched
-with many elevating thoughts from German, French, and English
-moralists. It is said to have been the Author’s favourite. It has been translated
-into many languages, <i>e.g.</i>, French, under title <i>Le succès dans l’échec</i>
-(1906), and German as <i>Der Erfolg des Misserfolgs</i> (<i>Press of the Missionaries
-of Steyl</i>), M. 6.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ MY NEW CURATE. Pp. 480. (<i>Art and Book Co.</i>). 6<i>s.</i> Eighteenth
-ed. Eighteen rather poor illustr. [1899]. New ed. (<i>Longmans</i>), 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>
-1914. (<span class="smcap">Boston</span>: <i>Marlier</i>). 1.50.</p>
-
-<p>Into a sleepy, backward, out-of-the-way parish comes a splendid young
-priest, cultured, energetic, zealous, up-to-date. He succeeds in many
-reforms, but the moral of the whole would seem to be, “Nothing on earth
-can cure the inertia of Ireland,” or rather, perhaps, “You cannot undo in a
-day the operations of 300 years.” The old parish priest tells the story. There
-is in the book intimate sympathy with, and love of, the people, their humours,
-and foibles, and virtues. There is plenty of very humorous incident. Delightful
-moralizings, like those in the Author’s <i>Under the Cedars and the Stars</i>. It
-is full of undidactic lessons for both priests and people. The religious life of the
-people is, of course, much dwelt on, and a good deal of light is thrown on the
-private life of the priests. Transl. into French (<i>Mon nouveau vicaire</i>), Dutch
-(<i>Mijn nieuwe kapelaan</i>, by M. van Beek, 1904), German (<i>Mein neuer Kaplan</i>,
-Bachem, M. 6.), Italian, Spanish (<i>Mi nuevo coadjutor</i>, Herder), Hungarian,
-Slovene, Ruthenian.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_229"></a>[229]</span></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ LUKE DELMEGE. Pp. 580. (<i>Longmans</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1901.</p>
-
-<p>The life-story of a priest. The main theme of this great novel is the setting
-forth of the spiritual ideals of the race and of the heights of moral beauty and
-heroism to which these ideals can lead. A strong contrast is drawn between
-the ideals which the hero sees at work around him during his stay in England,
-and those which he finds at work at home. Many phases and incidents of
-Irish life are shown—the home-life of the priest, the eviction, the funeral,
-scenes in Dublin churches, the beauty of Irish landscape. One of the best,
-if not the best, of Irish novels. Yet as a “problem” novel it is strangely
-inconclusive. Luke seems to die with his life-questions unanswered. Trans.
-into French, <i>Luke Delmege, âmes celtiques et âmes saxonnes</i>; German, <i>Lukas
-Delmege</i>, trans. Ant. Lohr. (<i>Habbel</i>), M. 6, 1906, sixth ed.; and Hungarian.
-Canon Sheehan used to say of this book that its central idea was the doctrine of
-vicarious atonement.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ GLENANAAR. Pp. 321. (<i>Longmans</i>). 6<i>s.</i> [1905]. New ed., 1915.
-2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
-
-<p>“Tainted blood, inherited shame, is a terrible thing amongst a people who
-attach supreme importance to these things.” This is, perhaps, the central
-theme of the story. The narrative opens in 1829 with the famous Doneraile
-Conspiracy trial in Cork, when O’Connell, summoned in hot haste from
-Derrynane, was just in time to save the lives of the innocent prisoners. The
-story traces to the third generation the strange fortunes of the descendants
-of one of the informers in this trial. There are glimpses of the famine of ’48
-and of the spirit of the men of ’67. The story of Nodlag is a touching and
-beautiful one, and the episode of the returned American is very well done.
-Trans. into German, <i>Das Christtagskind</i> (<span class="smcap">Steyl</span>: <i>Mission Press</i>), M. 2.50.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE SPOILED PRIEST, and Other Stories. Pp. 213. (<i>Gill</i> and
-<i>Burns &amp; Oates</i>). 5<i>s.</i> Nine illustr. by M. Healy. 1905.</p>
-
-<p>Eight stories. The title-story gives a glimpse of the workings of an ecclesiastical
-seminary, and also of the Irish peasants’ attitude towards a student who
-has been refused ordination. “Remanded” is the story, founded on fact,
-of a hero-priest of Cork. “The Monks of Trabolgan” is a curious, fanciful
-story of Ireland at some future period. The remaining tales, “Rita, the
-Street Singer,” “A Thorough Gentleman,” and “Frank Forest’s Mince-Pie,”
-&amp;c., do not deal with Ireland. Has been transl. into German and Dutch.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ LOST ANGEL OF A RUINED PARADISE. Pp. vi. + 168. (<i>Longmans</i>).
-3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
-
-<p>Three schoolgirls on leaving college take part in tableau as <i>Parcae</i> or Fates.
-They announce in make-believe the fates of their companions. A mysterious
-voice from the audience announces their own. The story tells how their
-fates worked out. The first part of the drama takes place in Dublin, but
-after a time the scene shifts to London. Transl. into French as <i>Ange égaré
-d’un paradis ruiné</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ LISHEEN; or, the Test of the Spirits. Pp. 454. (<i>Longmans</i>). 6<i>s.</i>
-1907. New ed., 1914, 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
-
-<p>The conception is that of Tolstoi’s <i>Resurrection</i>, with the scene transferred
-to Kerry. It is the story of how a young man of the Irish landlord class
-determines to put to the test of practise his ideals of altruism. To this end
-he abandons the society of his equals and lives the life of a labourer. He
-finds how full of pain and heartburning and disappointment is the way of
-the reformer. There are many reflections on the national character and its
-defects are not whittled down. The book has two main themes—the greed
-and callousness of Irish landlords, and the inability of the Englishman to
-understand Irish character.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_230"></a>[230]</span></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE BLINDNESS OF DR. GRAY; or, The Final Law. (<i>Longmans</i>).
-6<i>s.</i> 1909. New ed., 1914. 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
-
-<p>The interest of this novel centres partly in its pictures of clerical life, partly in
-a charming love story of an uncommon type. The central figure is drawn
-with care and thoroughness. He is a strict disciplinarian, a rigid moralist,
-who worships the law with Jansenistic narrowness and hardness. But as
-the story goes on we discover beneath this hard surface unsuspected depths of
-human kindness. He himself finds out before the end that it is love, not law,
-that rules the world. The story contains many beautiful and touching
-scenes, and some fine description, notably in the South African portion of the
-book. There is some incidental criticism of various features of Irish life—popular
-politics, religious divisions, the Gaelic League, the change in the
-mentality of the people, and there is in it food for thought about some of
-our besetting faults. Considered by many to be the Author’s most finished
-and most powerful work. Transl. into German, <i>Von Dr. Grays Blindheit</i>,
-with introductory sketch (<span class="smcap">Einsiedeln</span>: <i>Benziger</i>). M. 6. 1911.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ MIRIAM LUCAS. Pp. 470. (<i>Longmans</i>). 6<i>s.</i> [1912]. New ed.,
-1914. 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
-
-<p>Miriam is the daughter of wealthy Protestant parents in Glendarragh,
-in the W. of Ireland. Her mother, on becoming a Catholic, is driven by
-domestic persecution into evil ways, and subsequently disappears. Society
-ostracizes Miriam, who, in revolt against it, goes to Dublin, where, in alliance
-with a young visionary Trinity student, she flings herself into the Socialist
-movement. Her efforts end in a disastrous strike. For a time she staves
-off crime and tragedy, but it comes at last. Book III. brings her to New
-York in search of her mother, whom she discovers sunk to the lowest moral
-depths. The story hinges partly, too, on the lifting of the curse of Glendarragh
-by Miriam and the hero, who makes her happy in the end. There are not
-a few fine dramatic situations, but the plot does not hang together. The book
-is meant to deal with Irish social and religious problems and to picture certain
-phases of Irish life. The life pictured is chiefly that of the Protestant upper
-classes, of whom a severe and satirical portrait is drawn. There are just a
-few glimpses of peasant life. The Author raises more problems than he
-solves, and the prevailing impression left upon the reader is one of gloom.
-Has been transl. into German.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE GRAVES AT KILMORNA. Pp. 373. (<i>Longmans</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1915.</p>
-
-<p>An attempt to set forth the spirit of the Fenian movement of 1867, and
-even to contrast it with subsequent movements, to the great disadvantage
-of the latter; for the Author thought that the fire of Nationality has burned
-very low since ’67. The heroes are James Halpin (apparently intended
-for Peter O’Neill Crowley, who fell in ’67) and Miles Cogan, Fenians and
-unselfish patriots. There is some good character drawing, but the interest of
-plot and incident is slight, the chief interest being the vein of very ideal
-philosophy which runs through the book. The Author is gloomy and pessimistic
-about modern Ireland.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>SHERLOCK, J.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE MAD LORD OF DRUMKEEL. Pp. 199. (<i>Sealy, Bryers</i>).
-3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> 1909.</p>
-
-<p>“An unexciting chronicle of the solitary Lord Barnabweel, his quaint
-experiments with his Irish property and tenantry, and the story of his son
-who left him, married in a Dublin lodging-house, and became a famous
-musician.”—(<span class="smcap">Times’ Lit. Suppl.</span>).</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_231"></a>[231]</span></p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>SIDGWICK, Ethel.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ HERSELF. (<i>Sidgwick &amp; Jackson</i>). 1912.</p>
-
-<p>The story of an Irish girl in Paris and of her life and love affairs there.
-Pleasantly written, and giving a kindly account of the Irish character.
-(<i>Press Notice</i>).</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>SIGERSON, Hester.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ A RUINED RACE; or, the Last Macmanus of Drumroosk. (<i>Ward &amp;
-Downey</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1890.</p>
-
-<p>A very gloomy view of Ireland. The Author displays intimate knowledge
-of Irish scenes, idioms, and characteristics. Period: middle of nineteenth
-century. Pictures with painful fidelity and much power the misfortunes of
-a once happy and prosperous couple belonging to the well-to-do peasant
-class. Misery seems to dog their steps from one end of the book to the other.
-The girl dies in the workhouse, the man takes to drink and is killed in an
-accident. Seems to aim at picturing the difficulties and sufferings of the
-peasantry, especially under the old land system. The Author was the wife
-of Dr. Geo. Sigerson.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>SIME, William.</b> B. Wick, Caithness, 1851. D. Calcutta, 1895. Author of
-several other works of fiction—<i>King Capital</i>, <i>To and Fro</i>, <i>Boulderstone</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE RED ROUTE; or, Saving a Nation. Three Vols. (<i>Sonnenschein</i>).
-1884.</p>
-
-<p>Scene: West and South of Ireland, beginning with Galway, where the
-hero, Finn O’Brien, goes to college and suffers much both from collegians
-and peasantry. Finn becomes a Fenian, but falls in love with an English
-widow who had become a Catholic to escape the pursuit of bishops and parsons
-of her own Church. The heroine is a Claddagh girl, whose love for an English
-captain, Jeffrey, is crossed by the fact that she is a Fenian. One of the
-love affairs ends happily, the other tragically. The Author is not anti-Irish,
-but knows little about Ireland. He drags in priests “smelling strongly of
-whiskey” and nuns who have broken their vows.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>SIMPSON, John Hawkins.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ POEMS OF OISIN, Bard of Erin. Pp. 280. (<i>M’Glashan &amp; Gill</i>). 1857.</p>
-
-<p>Translated into English prose from Irish by the Author with help of native
-speakers. Contents: Oisin, Bard of Erin (introductory by the Author);
-Deardra; Conloch Son of Cuthullin (<i>sic</i>); The Fenii of Erin and Fionn
-MacCumhal; Dialogue between Oisin and St. Patrick (pp. 61-184); Mayo
-Mythology (various Fenian Tales); The Battle of Ventry.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>SKELLY, Rev. A. M., O.P.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ CUCHULAIN OF MUIRTHEMNE. Pp. 48. (C.T.S.I.). 1<i>d.</i> 1908.</p>
-
-<p>A paper read before the Catholic Literary Society, Tralee. The Cuchulain
-epic briefly but admirably related. Passages of verse from Ferguson and
-De Vere are skilfully interwoven. Excellent notes at the end explain difficulties
-and references.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>SMART, Hawley.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE MASTER OF RATHKELLY. (<i>F. V. White</i>). Fifth ed. 1890.</p>
-
-<p>A stirring story of love and sport in “Co. Blarney” in “the eighties.”
-Mr. Eyre, one of the “ould stock,” gets into difficulties with his tenants,
-who stop the “Harkhallow” hounds and boycott him. Written from the
-English and landlord standpoint. The dialect is wonderfully good and the
-“horsey” scenes well done. The Author was a well-known sporting novelist;
-1833-1893.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_232"></a>[232]</span></p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>SMITH, Agnes; Mrs. Lewis.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE BRIDES OF ARDMORE: A Story of Irish Life. Pp. 393.
-(<i>Elliott, Stock</i>). Frontisp.—view of Ardmore. 1880.</p>
-
-<p>Ardmore, Co. Waterford, in twelfth century. A few descriptions of
-scenery, but little local colour, and almost no historical <i>mise-en-scène</i>. The
-chief object of the story appears to be to picture forth a “primitive” Irish
-Church, unconnected with Rome, and resembling the modern Church of
-Ireland in many of its features. The priests are all married. Indeed their
-matrimonial affairs and the cruel interruption of these by decrees from Rome
-provide the greater part of the incidents. The tone is not bitter towards
-Catholicism, but innocently patronising and didactic.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>[SMITH, John].</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ IRISH DIAMONDS. Pp. 183. 16mo. (<i>Chapman &amp; Hall</i>). 1847.
-(<i>Gibbings</i>). Five Illus. by “Phiz.” 1890.</p>
-
-<p>Chapters:—On the Road, Young Ireland, Irish Wit, Irish Life, Irish
-Traits, The Latter End. Humorous Irish anecdotes, rather above the average
-“pigs, poteen, and praties” type, frankly meant to amuse, but showing not
-a little knowledge of and sympathy with Irish traits. When the book was
-written the Author was “one of the editors of the <span class="smcap">Liverpool Mercury</span>.”</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>SMYTH, Patrick G.</b> B. Ballina, Co. Mayo, about 1856. Was in early years
-a National School teacher. Besides his novels, he wrote verse for several
-Irish periodicals between 1876-1885. For some time he was engaged on
-a Chicago paper.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE WILD ROSE OF LOUGH GILL. Pp. 306. (<i>Gill</i>). 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>
-[1883]. Fifth ed., 1904. (<i>Benziger</i>). 0.85.</p>
-
-<p>Though nominally not the heroes, Owen Roe O’Neill and Miles the Slasher
-are the chief figures in this fine novel of the Wars of the Confederation. A
-love-story is interwoven with the historical events. The view-point is
-thoroughly national. The style abounds in imagery and fine descriptive
-passages. The novel is one of the most popular ever issued in Ireland.
-The story ends shortly after the fall of Galway in 1652. The scene is
-laid partly in Co. Sligo, where (near Lough Gill) one of the most thrilling
-episodes, founded on a still living tradition, takes place.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ KING AND VIKING; or, The Ravens of Lochlan. Pp. 200. (<i>Sealy,
-Bryers</i>). 1<i>s.</i> <i>n.d.</i> (1889).</p>
-
-<p>Tireragh (Co. Sligo) in 888, the date assigned by the Four Masters to a
-great battle fought between the men of Connaught and the Danes. The wars
-between Danes and Irish furnish the chief interest of the book, but there is
-also the story of the feud between Ceallach the tanist of Hy Fiachrach and
-Dungallach, a rival. Much information, drawn from reliable sources, is
-given regarding the Irish clans, their customs, and their territories.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>SOMERVILLE, Edith Œnone, and “MARTIN, Ross.”</b> Miss Violet Martin,
-of Ross, Co. Galway. Miss Somerville is dau. of the late Col. Somerville,
-of Drishane, Skibbereen, Co. Cork. Both Authors are granddaughters
-of Chief Justice Charles Kendal Bushe. Amongst their other works
-are <i>Naboth’s Vineyard</i>, <i>Beggars on Horseback</i>, and <i>Through Connemara
-in a Governess’ Cart</i> (illust.).</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ AN IRISH COUSIN. Pp. iv. + 306. (<i>Longmans</i>). 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> [First ed.,
-1889]; new ed., quite re-written, 1903. Ten illustr. by E. Œ. Somerville.</p>
-
-<p>Modern country-house life in Co. Cork. A serious study of the slow
-awakening of a young man to the realization that there are things in life
-more real to him than horses and dogs. His love for a clever cousin returned<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_233"></a>[233]</span>
-from Canada has a tragic ending. The characters of the tale are drawn
-from Protestant county society. Clever description of Durrus, the ramshackle
-home of the Sarsfields. Miss Jackson-Croly’s “At Home” and the
-run with the Moycullen hounds are said to be worthy of Lever.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE REAL CHARLOTTE. (<i>Longmans</i>). 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> [1894]. Three
-Vols. (<i>Ward &amp; Downey</i>).</p>
-
-<p>A dark tale of a world “weary, stale, flat, and unprofitable.” An unscrupulous
-woman works the ruin of a sweet-natured, ill-trained girl. Scene:
-Irish country neighbourhood. Characters, land agents, farmers, great
-ladies, drawn with impartial and relentless truth. Pronounced by many
-critics to be worthy of Balzac.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE SILVER FOX. Pp. 195. (<i>Longmans</i>). 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> [1898].
-(<i>Lawrence and Bullen</i>).</p>
-
-<p>The chief interest of this story lies in some sporting scenes in the West of
-Ireland. The peasantry are seen from an uncomprehending standpoint,
-and the chief figures are people of fashion, of no particular nationality.
-“Broadly speaking, the novel may be said to exhibit in a dramatic form the
-extraordinary hold which superstition still possesses on the minds of the
-Irish peasantry.”—(<i>Spectator</i>).</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ SOME EXPERIENCES OF AN IRISH R.M. Pp. iv. + 310. Thirty-second
-thousand. (<i>Longmans</i>). 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> Thirty-one illustr. (pen and ink
-sketches) by E. Œ. Somerville. 1899.</p>
-
-<p>Racy, humorous sketches of hunting and other episodes in the south and
-west. The Author’s most successful work originally appeared in <span class="smcap">The Badminton
-Magazine</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ ALL ON THE IRISH SHORE. Pp. iv. + 274. Eighteenth thousand.
-(<i>Longmans</i>). 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> Ten illustr. by E. Œ. Somerville. 1903.</p>
-
-<p>Sketches of fox-hunting, horse-dealing, racing, trials for assault between
-neighbours, petty boycotting, rural larking, full of sprightly and rollicking
-humour. Chief characters, the petty county gentry. The peasantry are
-drawn in caricature, usually friendly, and are shown in relation to their
-social superiors, not in their own life and reality. If these sketches were
-taken seriously, the peasantry would appear as drunken, quarrelsome, lying,
-dirty, unconsciously comical—with scarcely a single redeeming trait. The
-scene is south-western Cork.</p>
-
-<p><i>All on the Irish Shore</i> has been described (<span class="smcap">Irish Monthly</span>) as “a blend of
-Lover and Lever (in his coarser rollicking days) refined by some of the literary
-flavour of Jane Barlow, but with none of the insight and sympathy of <i>Irish
-Idylls</i>. The same may be said of the <i>Experiences of an Irish R.M.</i>, which
-moreover, contains here and there passages needlessly offensive to national
-feeling.” Titles of some chapters:—Fanny Fitz’s Gamble, A Grand Filly,
-High Tea at McKeown’s, A Nineteenth Century Miracle, &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p>N.B.—Messrs. Longmans have (April, 1910) issued a new uniform edition
-of the works of Somerville and Ross, at 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> per volume.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ FURTHER EXPERIENCES OF AN IRISH R.M. Pp. 315. (<i>Longmans</i>).
-3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> 1908.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ SOME IRISH YESTERDAYS. Eleventh thousand. (<i>Longmans</i>).
-3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> Fifty-one illustr. by E. Œ. Somerville. 1908.</p>
-
-<p>Admirable illustrations of Connemara scenery, clever sketches of “natives”
-(usually of the lowest type). Light magazine sketches written in clever, racy
-style. Subjects: Holidays in Aran and Connemara and Carbery, picnics,
-country house anecdotes, superficial studies of peasants in Connemara and
-Cork. “In Sickness and in Health” pays a tribute to the strength of the
-marriage bond in Ireland.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_234"></a>[234]</span></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ DAN RUSSELL, THE FOX. Pp. 340. (<i>Methuen</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1911.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Rowan comes over to Ireland and takes “Lake View,” in the midst
-of a hunting district in S. Munster. She falls in love—for the time—with
-John Michael, handsome, and the most valiant of huntsmen, but a child of
-nature whose whole mind is absorbed in hounds and horses. Hence complications.
-The Author’s usual pictures of hunting scenes and happy-go-lucky
-country gentry. Mrs. Delanty, the sharp and devious widow, is a
-curious portrait. Dan Russell is scarcely more than a minor character in
-the piece. It is a story about which we cannot speak favourably.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ IN MR. KNOX’S COUNTRY. (<i>Longmans</i>). 6<i>s.</i> Eight full-page
-illustr. in chalk. 1915.</p>
-
-<p>Eleven sketches of the same type as the <i>Experiences of an Irish R.M.</i>, with
-some new <i>dramatis personæ</i> in the old localities.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>SQUIRE, Charles.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE BOY HERO OF ERIN. Pp. 240. (<i>Blackie</i>). 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> Handsome
-cover. Four good illustr. by A. A. Dixon. 1907.</p>
-
-<p>The Cuchulainn Saga told in simple and clear, but somewhat unemotional
-and matter-of-fact, style. Sources: Miss Hull’s <i>Cuchulainn Saga</i> and Miss
-Winifred Faraday’s <i>Cattle Raid of Cuailgne</i> (<i>q.v.</i>). The Author holds
-Cuchulainn to be a hero “not less brave and far more chivalrous than any
-Greek or Trojan” (Pref.), and thinks that the ancient Gael “invented the
-noble system of conduct which we call courtesy.”</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ CELTIC MYTH AND LEGEND, Poetry and Romance. Pp. 450.
-(<i>Gresham Publishing Co.</i>). Four Plates in colour by J. H. F. Bacon;
-fourteen in monochrome by the same and others, and a few photos, <i>n.d.</i></p>
-
-<p>A kind of digest of the chief published translations of ancient Irish and
-Welsh saga and romance, preceded by four short essays on the interest
-of Celtic mythology, and the sources of our knowledge of it, the origin of
-the Britons and their religion (44 pp. in all). Pp. 47-248 are a summary of
-Gaelic myth, &amp;c., and pp. 250-395 of British ditto. Then there is an essay on
-survivals of Celtic paganisms, and an Append. giving brief bibliogr. Index.
-The myths and romances are not related as a tale is told; they are merely
-placed on record, almost stripped of their poetry, along with all the extravagances
-and absurdities that disfigure them, chiefly through modern corruptions.
-Of little or no interest for young people.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>STACE, Henry.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE ADVENTURES OF COUNT O’CONNOR in the Dominions of
-the Great Mogul. Pp. 343. (<i>Alston Rivers</i>). 1<i>s.</i> [1907]. 1909.</p>
-
-<p>A string of impossible situations and thrilling escapes, purporting to be
-the adventures of an Irish soldier of fortune in India about 1670, related by
-himself. The Count frequently discourses of the honour of an Irish gentleman,
-and never acts up to it. His character is that of a thorough rascal. The
-book contains many disreputable adventures in harems.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>STACPOOLE KENNY, Mrs.</b> <a href="#KENNY"><i>see</i> <b>KENNY</b></a>.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>STACPOOLE, H. de Vere.</b> Son of Rev. William Church Stacpoole, D.D.,
-of Kingstown, Co. Dublin. Ed. Malvern College, and St. Mary’s Hospital,
-London. Is a qualified medical man, but does not practise. Has travelled
-much. Resides near Chelmsford. Has publ. about twenty-two novels.—(<span class="smcap">Who’s
-Who</span>). Some of these have been very successful, <i>e.g.</i>, <i>The Blue
-Lagoon</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ PATSY. Pp. 362. (<i>Fisher Unwin</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1908.</p>
-
-<p>A gay and humorous story of a house-party in a country mansion somewhere
-in “Mid-Meath.” Full of amusing characters, cleverly sketched, <i>e.g.</i>,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_235"></a>[235]</span>
-the Englishman, Mr. Fanshawe, and the naughty and natural children. Above
-all there is Patsy, the page-boy, an odd mixture of soft-hearted simplicity
-and preternatural cuteness. He is the <i>deus ex machina</i> of the piece, causes
-all sorts of entanglements, and unravels them again in the strangest way.
-There is just a little study of national characteristics, but no politics nor
-problems.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ GARRYOWEN: The Romance of a Racehorse. Pp. 352. (<i>Fisher
-Unwin</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1910.</p>
-
-<p>“A rattling good story ... Moriarty the trainer is a gem—Mickey Free
-redivivus, as full of tricks as a bag of weasels. The Author knows his Irish
-peasantry inside and out, and the only blot on an exceptional book is a needless
-disquisition on the rights and wrongs of ‘cattle-driving.’”—(I.B.L.).</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ FATHER O’FLYNN. Pp. 245. (<i>Hutchinson</i>). 1<i>s.</i> 1914.</p>
-
-<p>The idea of the book, which is dedicated to Sir E. Carson and Mr. Redmond,
-is (see Pref.) to show the Catholic priest as the chief factor in present-day
-Irish life. The priest in question is represented in a favourable and friendly
-spirit, though perhaps hardly “at his best,” as the Author suggests. The
-chief interest is perhaps a love affair, conducted chiefly on horseback, which is
-told in a lively and spirited way.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>STAVERT, A. A. B.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE BOYS OF BALTIMORE. Pp. 212. (<i>Burns &amp; Oates</i>). 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>
-1907.</p>
-
-<p>A splendid boy’s story. Rich in the vein of adventure, of sport and fight
-by land, of war by sea, of captivity and slavery. With this there is a solid,
-but not too obtrusive, lesson of the value of faith and piety in a boy’s life.
-The piety of the young heroes has nothing mawkish about it. The tone is
-Catholic. The brogue is very badly imitated.—(N.I.R.). Scene changes
-from Cork to Africa, and thence to London. Strafford, Wentworth, Laud,
-and Charles I. appear in the story.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>STEPHENS, James.</b> B. Dublin, 1884. Worked for some years in a solicitor’s
-office, but has definitely taken to literature. His first published volume
-was <i>Insurrections</i>, since which two other volumes of verse have appeared,
-and a fourth is about to appear. Has resided principally in Paris for
-the past two years, but is now living in Dublin, where he holds the position
-of Registrar at the National Gallery of Ireland. His writings have met
-with an enthusiastic reception from the critics.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE CHARWOMAN’S DAUGHTER. Pp. 228. (<i>Macmillan</i>). 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>
-1912. Publ. in U.S.A. under title <i>Mary, Mary</i>.</p>
-
-<p>A study of the soul of a simple girl of the people and its development amid
-the surroundings of a Dublin tenement house and of the Dublin streets—her
-girlhood, her dreams for the future, her love affairs. The incidents are
-quite subordinate to the psychological interest. The atmosphere of the
-reality is carefully reproduced if somewhat idealised. There is nothing
-morbid nor sensational in the book. This, the Author’s first published novel,
-and many think his best, first appeared in <span class="smcap">The Irish Review</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE CROCK OF GOLD. Pp. 312. (<i>Macmillan</i>). Many reprints.
-1912.</p>
-
-<p>Described, accurately enough, by <span class="smcap">The Times</span> as “this delicious, fantastical,
-amorphous, inspired medley of topsy-turveydom.” A fantasy in which
-human beings with Irish names, Irish gods and fairies, and the god Pan are
-mingled to bewilderment. And the whole is leavened with what may or may
-not be the Author’s philosophy. “Love is unclean and holy” ... “Virtue
-is the performance of pleasant actions.” “Philosophy would lead to the
-great sin of sterility.” These sentences are isolated from the context, but
-they seem to indicate the general trend—the philosophy of Pan. However,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_236"></a>[236]</span>
-there is much besides this in the torrent of wayward thought and fancy that
-is here let loose. The pictures of nature are finely and delicately touched.
-And there is humour of a strange kind not easy to define.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ HERE ARE LADIES. Pp. 349. (<i>Macmillan</i>). 5<i>s.</i> 1913.</p>
-
-<p>Fragments of the Author’s peculiar philosophy of life conveyed in odds
-and ends of stories and sketches. Some are pure fancy, some are very closely
-observed bits of real life; some are humorous, with a kind of sardonic humour;
-some whimsical, some border on pathos. Many deal with various phases
-of married life. Little poems are sandwiched between the tales. The book
-is full of aphorisms, indeed the style is a riot of curious metaphor, flights of
-fancy, unexpected turns of phrase. The last piece (pp. 277-348) consists of
-a series of disquisitions by an old gentleman in the style of the Autocrat of
-the Breakfast Table. An Irish flavour is noticeable at frequent intervals.
-The idiom (not the brogue) of Anglo-Irish conversation is well reproduced.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE DEMI-GODS. Pp. 280. (<i>Macmillan</i>). 5<i>s.</i> 1914.</p>
-
-<p>The travels through Ireland of Patsy McCann, tinker and general rascal,
-and his daughter Mary, in company with three angels, become tinkers for
-the nonce. Patsy is a very human and a very real tinker, an ugly specimen
-of a disreputable class. The wanderings of this strange company form a
-thin thread on which is strung a medley of strange fancies, wayward comments,
-scraps of very excellent description, and glimpses of low life in its most sordid
-aspects (<i>e.g.</i>, the drab Eileen Cooley, who appears at intervals). There is an
-effort to picture not only the outward doings, experiences, and sensations
-of the tramps, but also their outlook, such as it is, upon life, their makings
-of a philosophy, and the morality of the roads.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>STEUART, John A.</b> Author (born 1861) of <i>A Millionaire’s Daughter</i>,
-<i>Self Exiled</i>, <i>In the Day of Battle</i>, <i>The Minister of State</i>, <i>Wine on the Lees</i>,
-<i>The Eternal Quest</i>, <i>A Son of Gad</i>, <i>The Rebel Wooing</i>, &amp;c., &amp;c. Was born
-in Perthshire; lived in Ireland, America, and England. Edited <span class="smcap">Publishers’
-Circular</span>, 1896-1900.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ KILGROOM. Pp. 228. (<i>Low</i>). 6<i>s.</i> and 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> [1890]. 1900.</p>
-
-<p>The interest of the story turns on incidents of the Land War in a southern
-county. The Author takes the popular side, and paints the evils of landlordism
-in the darkest colours. Most of the characters are humble folk, including an
-amusing Scotchman, Sandy M’Tear. The story tells how a thirst for vengeance,
-engendered by oppression, takes possession of the young peasant, Ned Blake,
-almost stifling his love for his betrothed and ruining his life.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>STEVENSON, JOHN.</b> Is a member of the printing and publishing firm of
-McCaw, Stevenson &amp; Orr, of Belfast. He made his first hit with <i>Pat
-McCarty, Farmer of Antrim: His Rhymes, with a Setting</i> (1903), in
-part reprinted from <span class="smcap">The Pen</span>, a magazine run by the employes of his
-company.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ A BOY IN THE COUNTRY. Pp. 312. (<i>Arnold</i>). 5<i>s.</i> Illustr. by
-W. Arthur Fry. 1913.</p>
-
-<p>A lad sent for his health to the care of an aunt in Co. Antrim tells his experiences
-and observations, his thoughts and dreams, and he tells them
-charmingly. Stories and anecdotes of the lives of the folk among whom he
-lives, told with insight and sympathy.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>STEWART, Agnes M.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ GRACE O’HALLORAN. (<i>Gill.</i> N.Y.: <i>Benziger</i>). 0.60 net. [1857].
-1884, &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p>Sub-title: “Ireland and Its Peasantry.” “Another of A. Stewart’s pious
-little stories.... The reader will fail to discover much originality or force;<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_237"></a>[237]</span>
-but in these days it is no small praise to say there is nothing to condemn.”—(D.R.).
-Miss S. wrote a great number of stories between 1846 and 1887. All
-are highly moral in aim and tone, a series of them having for titles the various
-moral virtues.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ FLORENCE O’NEILL; or, The Siege of Limerick. 1871.</p>
-
-<p>Also publ. under title <i>Florence O’Neill</i>, or, The Rose of Saint Germain.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE LIMERICK VETERAN; or, The Foster Sisters. (N.Y.:
-<i>Benziger</i>). 0.60 net. 1873.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>STEWART, Miss E. M.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ ALL FOR PRINCE CHARLIE; or, The Irish Cavalier. Pp. 270.
-(<i>Duffy</i>). 1<i>s.</i> Very cheap paper and print. <i>n.d.</i></p>
-
-<p>The ’45 from a strongly Catholic and Jacobite standpoint. The story
-opens in an old castle in Bantry Bay, where the hero and heroine meet before
-the former goes off to fight for Prince Charlie. Various adventures during
-the raid on England and the retreat, and a complicated plot turning on the
-close resemblance between the hero and a twin brother, supposed dead, but
-who plays the traitor and the spy. All is well in the end. Some glimpses of
-penal laws at work. A little comic relief is afforded by the talk of Paddy
-O’Rafferty. Dialect poor.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>STEWART, Rev. J.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE KILLARNEY POOR SCHOLAR. Pp. 164. 16mo. (<span class="smcap">London</span>).
-[1845]. Third ed., 1846. New ed., 1866.</p>
-
-<p>Sub-t.:—“Comprising the most remarkable features of the enchanting
-scenery of the Irish lakes, interspersed with sketches of real character.”
-In pref. Author claims thorough knowledge of places and people described.
-His object is to impress a high moral tone upon the mind. “A moral is
-deduced from every incident: a moral established by every dialogue.”
-This aim is fully carried out in the little story, which is merely a peg whereon
-to hang a moral, and is very sentimental.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>STOKER, Bram.</b> 1847-1912. B. in Dublin. Ed. T.C.D., where he had a
-distinguished career. Entered Civil Service and was called to the Bar,
-but subsequently for twenty-seven years secretary to Sir Henry Irving.
-Wrote also <i>Dracula</i>, <i>Miss Betty</i>, <i>The Mystery of the Sea</i>, <i>Snowbound</i>,
-&amp;c., &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE SNAKE’S PASS. Pp. 372. (<i>Collier</i>). 1<i>s.</i> New ed. [1891].
-(N.Y.: <i>Harper</i>). 0.40. 1909.</p>
-
-<p>A tale written around the strange phenomenon of a moving bog. Scene:
-the Mayo coast, which is finely described. Hidden treasure, prophetic
-dreams, attempted murder, and much love and sentiment are bound up
-with the story. The sentiment is pure and even lofty. There is no bigotry
-nor bias, and no vulgar stage-Irishism. Andy Sullivan, the carman, is drawn
-with much humour and kindliness, but we cannot consider “Father Pether”
-a true type of Irish priest.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>STOKES, Whitley.</b> Ed.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE DESTRUCTION OF DÁ DERGA’S HOSTEL. (<span class="smcap">Paris</span>:
-<i>Bouillon</i>). 1902.</p>
-
-<p>“Conary becomes king on condition that he abide by certain bonds (<i>geasa</i>)
-imposed on him by his fairy kinsfolk. Having transgressed these conditions,
-he comes to his death in a great affray with outlaws, who attack the hostel.
-Portents and marvels are characteristic of the story from beginning to end.”—(<i>Baker</i>,
-2).</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_238"></a>[238]</span></p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>“STRADLING, Matthew,”</b> <a href="#MAHONY"><i>see</i> <b>MAHONY, Martin F.</b></a></p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>STRAHAN, Samuel A. K., M.D.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE RESIDENT MAGISTRATE. (<span class="smcap">London</span>: <i>Alexander &amp; Shepherd</i>).
-1<i>s.</i> 1888.</p>
-
-<p>A tale of the “Jubilee Coercion days.” The leading character is founded
-on Captain Plunket of “Don’t hesitate to shoot” fame. With the doings
-of this personage (which look like clippings from the <span class="smcap">Star</span> newspaper of those
-days) is mingled the story of a persecuted heroine suffering from an uncommon
-form of mania (in which the Author was a specialist). Dr. Strahan was a
-Belfast man. The materials of the story are handled, we think, with but
-little skill. Another of his stories, <i>Dead yet Speaketh</i> (Arrowsmith), was founded
-on the sudden death in his chambers in the Temple of an Irish fellow-student
-of the Author.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>STRAIN, E. H.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ A MAN’S FOES. Pp. 467. (<i>Ward, Lock</i>). 6<i>s.</i> Illustr. by A.
-Forestier. (N.Y.: <i>New Amsterdam Book Co.</i>). 0.50. [1895.] Three
-Vols.</p>
-
-<p>A strongly conceived and vigorously written historical tale of the siege of
-Derry. Point of view aggressively English and Protestant. The personages
-in the story often express bitterly anti-Catholic sentiments, but only such as
-may reasonably be supposed to have been freely expressed at the period. The
-Author, a Scottish lady resident in Ayrshire, has also published four other
-works of fiction.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>“SWAN, Annie S.”; Mrs. Burnett Smith.</b> B. Mountskip, Goresbridge, N.B.
-Ed. Edinburgh. Has written a great many novels. Resides in England
-or at Kinghorn, Scotland.—(<span class="smcap">Who’s Who</span>).</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ A SON OF ERIN. Pp. 344. (<i>Hutchinson</i>). 6<i>s.</i> Six illustr. 1899
-and 1907.</p>
-
-<p>Scene: first Edinburgh, then chiefly Co. Wicklow. Period: just before
-retirement of Butt and rise of Parnell, who is one of the personages of the
-tale. The interest turns on the discovery of the identity of a child abandoned
-in Edinburgh when an infant. No love interest. Titles of over sixty of her
-novels will be found in Mudie’s list.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>SYKES, Jessica S. C.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE M’DONNELLS. Pp. 299. (<i>Heinemann</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1905.</p>
-
-<p>Aims at presenting picture of early Victorian manners and morals as seen
-in the life of this (rather unattractive) family, of Irish origin, but living in
-England, and in their surroundings. It was a period lacking in ideals and
-unstirred by new ideas, artistic, literary, or other. The Author paints it
-stupid, gross, and material, and seems to sum it up as “humbug” (from a
-review in the <span class="smcap">Athenæum</span>).</p>
-
-<p>Lord Charles Beresford, in a letter to the writer (see Pref.), acknowledges
-the book as “a true picture of English and Irish life in the upper circles of
-society five and forty years ago,” and that “it explains the idiocrasies (<i>sic</i>)
-of the Irish people, both Nationalist and Orange, and gives a clear explanation
-of the real causes of the unceasing discontent and strife existing in our sister
-isle.” “I have tried to give a description of the condition ... to which
-English females of position were reduced by a wave of Evangelical cant and
-exaggerated morality....”—(Pref.). Has written also <i>Algernon Casterton</i>
-and <i>Mark Alston</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>“SYNAN, A.,”</b> <a href="#CLERY"><i>see</i> <b>CLERY, A. E.</b></a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_239"></a>[239]</span></p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>TAUNTON, M.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE LAST OF THE CATHOLIC O’MALLEYS. (<i>Washbourne.</i>
-N.Y.: <i>Kenedy</i>).</p>
-
-<p>Scene: Western Mayo, about 1798, but no historical events are introduced.
-An unpretentious little story, telling how Grace is married at fifteen
-against her will to a disreputable young man. He grows fond of her, and
-dies penitent three years after. Their child is stolen by a too fond nurse.
-The child grows up and joins the navy. Years after, Grace, who has married a
-naval officer, gets her sailor son back.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>TAYLOR, Mary Imlay.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ MY LADY CLANCARTY. Pp. 298. (<i>Gay &amp; Bird</i>). Illus. by A. B.
-Stephens. 1905.</p>
-
-<p>“Being the true story of the Earl of Clancarty and Lady Elizabeth Spencer.”
-Donough McCarthy, a Jacobite nobleman, married in childhood to wealthy
-heiress of English Whig family, does not meet his bride again till many years
-later, and then in strange circumstances. Scene: England in days of
-William III., with glimpses of Ireland in the background. Appears to be
-founded on Tom Taylor’s play, <i>Clancarty</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>TEMPLETON, Herminie.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ DARBY O’GILL AND THE GOOD PEOPLE. (N.Y.: <i>McClure</i>).
-1.50. 1903.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>TENCH, Mary F. A.</b> Resides in London, and writes a good deal for the
-periodicals.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ AGAINST THE PIKES. Pp. 357. (<i>Russell</i>). <i>n.d.</i> (1903).</p>
-
-<p>How the sins of the fathers are visited upon the children to the third and
-fourth generation. Phil O’Brien, returning to Ireland after long years of
-sin and suffering in Australia, finds his first love unchanged in heart—only
-to see her taken from him by death. He foregoes for her sake revenge on
-the man who had wrecked his life, and dies to save his enemy. Though the
-characters are Irish, there is little about Irish life (nothing about pikes).
-The whole book is very sad, the pathos of the close is painful, “<i>navrant</i>.”
-By the same Author: <i>Where the Surf Breaks</i>, <i>A Prince from the Great Never-Never</i>,
-&amp;c.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>THACKERAY, William Makepeace.</b> The great novelist paid only one visit
-to Ireland (1842), the immediate outcome of which was his <i>Irish Sketch
-Book</i> (1843). The tone of this book gave great offence to Irishmen
-generally. Sir Samuel Ferguson severed his connection with the <span class="smcap">Dublin
-University Magazine</span> because Lever, then editor, accepted Thackeray’s
-dedication. He could speak of the Young Irelanders only in terms of
-ridicule—witness his ballad “The Battle of Limerick”—though he
-was a personal friend of Gavan Duffy. He derived some of the incidents
-of <i>Barry Lyndon</i> from the chap-book, <i>Life of Freney</i>, which he read
-one night in Galway. Many of the characters in his greater novels are
-Irish, <i>e.g.</i>, “The O’Mulligan,” said to be founded on W. J. O’Connell;
-“Capt. Shandon,” whose original was Dr. Maginn; “Capt. Costigan”
-and his famous daughter, “the Fotheringay,” said to be suggested by
-the dramatic triumph of Miss O’Neill, afterwards Lady Becher. “Ye
-hate us, Mr. Thackeray, ye hate the Irish,” said to him Anthony
-Trollope’s old Irish coachman. “Hate you? God help me, when all I
-ever loved on earth was Irish!” and his eyes filled with tears.—(<i>Trollope</i>).
-His wife was Irish.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_240"></a>[240]</span></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE MEMOIRS OF BARRY LYNDON, ESQ. [1844]. Many
-editions in all styles.</p>
-
-<p>The autobiography of a blackguard and a cad, a compound of every vice—meanness,
-mendacity, licentiousness, heartless selfishness. Add to these
-swagger, vulgarity, and a fire-eating audacity, which, however, is always
-on the safe side, and you have the portrait of the hero as painted by himself.
-All the characters are vicious or contemptible or both, the English and other
-foreigners no better than the Irish. Lyndon (real name Redmond Barry) belongs
-to an ancient and decayed family, once aristocratic. The story tells how he
-fights a duel at home in Ballybarry, falls in with swindlers in Dublin, deserts
-from the army, serves under Frederick the Great in the Seven Years’ War,
-becomes a professional but aristocratic gamester, marries (after a desperate
-struggle) the rich Lady Lyndon, blazes through a brief season in Dublin
-(1771), worries his wife into her grave, and finally runs through all his wealth.
-There is some humour in places, but it is grim and sardonic, and does not
-relieve the picture. Moral (see footnote near the close)—“Do not as many
-rogues succeed in life as honest men? More fools than men of talent?”
-Founded in part on the strange marriage of Andrew Bowes and the Countess
-of Strathmore at end of eighteenth century.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>THOMAS, Edward.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ CELTIC STORIES. Pp. 128. (<span class="smcap">Oxford</span>: <i>The Clarendon Press</i>). 1911.</p>
-
-<p>“The Boyhood of Cuhoolin,” “Father and Son,” “The Battle of the
-Companions” (C. and Ferdia), “The Death of C.,” “Deirdre and Naisi,”
-“The Palace of the Quicken Trees,” “The Land of Youth.” The rest (pp. 82-end)
-are Welsh tales. Told very plainly and briefly, yet not dully. The
-diction is quite modern and prosaic. The grotesquer folk-lore elements
-are not excluded. The Author has also publ. <i>Norse Stories</i> and many other
-works on a variety of subjects.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>THOMPSON, E. Skeffington.</b> Was a granddaughter of John Foster, last
-Speaker of the Irish House of Commons. She was an ardent Nationalist.
-About 1889 she and her sister Mrs. Rae founded the Southwark Junior
-Irish Literary Society.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ MOY O’BRIEN. Pp. 300. (<i>Gill</i>). 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> [1887]. New ed., 1914.</p>
-
-<p>Deals with the politics of the day, but not to the neglect of the story,
-which shows considerable literary power, though containing but little incident.
-Strongly patriotic in tone. There is no religious bias. Treats of
-social and political life in Ireland thirty or forty years ago. Ends with many
-happy marriages. First appeared in U.S.A. in <span class="smcap">Harper’s</span> (<span class="smcap">Irish Monthly</span>).</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>THOMSON, C. L.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE CELTIC WONDER WORLD. Pp. 155. (<i>Horace Marshall</i>). 1902.</p>
-
-<p>No. 2 of the <i>Romance Readers</i>. Irish, Welsh, and Breton stories edited
-for children. Very pretty and imaginative illustr. by E. Connor. The tales
-are taken from good sources—Whitley Stokes, Standish O’Grady, Crofton
-Croker, “Atlantis,” O’Curry, the Mabinogion, &amp;c. Contains “Deirdre,”
-“Ossian in the Land of Youth,” Cuchulainn stories, &amp;c., told in simple but
-not childish language.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>THURNEYSEN, Rudolf.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ SAGEN AUS DEM ALTEN IRLAND. Pp. 152. Demy 8vo. (<span class="smcap">Berlin</span>:
-<i>Wiegandt &amp; Grieben</i>). 1901.</p>
-
-<p>Short introd., then very briefly (in German, of course) the chief Irish sagas—the
-Courtships of Etain and of Fraoch, Mesgedra, Bricriu, episodes from
-the Cuchulainn cycle, the birth of Conachar, the Vision of MacConglinne, &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_241"></a>[241]</span></p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>THURSTON, E. Temple.</b> His novels are for the most part a series of studies
-or rather pamphlets on the action and influence of the Catholic Church
-on human nature. His conclusions are usually hostile to that Church.
-His writings give constant evidence of misconception of Catholic doctrine.
-Incidentally Irish types and scenes are introduced, and the writer is fond
-of comments on Irish life and character. Moreover, his first four books
-aim at “brutal” realism, or naturalism. His recent book, <i>The City
-of Beautiful Nonsense</i>, is a reaction to Idealism. Besides his Irish novels,
-noticed below, he has written <i>Sally Bishop</i>, <i>The Evolution of Katherine</i>,
-<i>The Realist</i>, and other tales (more or less anti-Christian in tendency),
-and <i>Mirage</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE APPLE OF EDEN. Pp. 323. (<i>Chapman &amp; Hall</i>). 1905.</p>
-
-<p>An argument against the celibacy of the clergy, conveyed in the story
-of a young priest—his childhood, inexperience, life at Maynooth, first experiences
-in confessional. Here he meets the woman whom he had loved.
-He tells her that, but for the fact that she is married, he would break all ties
-for her sake. There is much study of Irish life (in Waterford), but the Author
-has nothing good to say about anything Irish, country doctors and priests
-being especially attacked.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ TRAFFIC. Pp. 452. (<i>Duckworth</i>). 1906.</p>
-
-<p>Scene: Waterford and London. Has been well described by the
-<span class="smcap">Athenæum</span> as a pamphlet in guise of a story, the thesis being that the refusal
-of the right of divorce in the Catholic Church may lead in practice to results
-disastrous to morality. This is conveyed in the story of a girl who leaves
-an unworthy Irish husband, and goes to London, where, being obliged to
-refuse an offer of marriage from an honourable Protestant, she takes to
-the streets. Contains strange misconceptions of Catholic doctrine and
-morality.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE GARDEN OF RESURRECTION. Pp. 307. (<i>Chapman &amp;
-Hall</i>). 6<i>s.</i> [1911]. 1912.</p>
-
-<p>Sub-t.: “Being the love story of an ugly man”—viz., Bellairs, a confirmed
-bachelor, who tells his own story. Overhears in restaurant conversation of
-a young man, from which he learns that the latter is about to marry a young
-West Indian girl named Clarissa, but cares only for her money. Bellairs
-is struck with pity for her, and determines to tell Clarissa of the worthlessness
-of Harry. He goes to the W. of Ireland, where Harry had left her in charge
-of two maiden aunts. She will not believe him, and goes to London with
-Harry. He betrays and deserts her: she comes back forlorn to Bellairs,
-and they are married. The writer has a keen feeling for nature, and there
-is much description. The character study is careful and the style is full of
-pleasant whimsicalities. The “Cruikshank” and “Bellwattle” of <i>The
-Patchwork Papers</i> reappear here.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THIRTEEN. Pp. 279. (<i>Chapman &amp; Hall</i>). 1912.</p>
-
-<p>Short stories reproduced from magazines. Three of the thirteen are little
-bits of Irish—Wexford—life:—“The Little Sisters of Mercy,” “An Idyll
-of Science,” and “Holy Ann.” The rest deal with London. There is
-sentimentality and mannerism, but the literary craftsmanship is very good.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE PASSIONATE CRIME: a Tale of the Faerie. Pp. 311. 6<i>s.</i>
-(<i>Chapman &amp; Hall</i>). 1915.</p>
-
-<p>“The story of a strange murder—the murderer a poet—solitary among
-the romantic atmosphere of the lonely Irish hills.”—(<span class="smcap">Times Lit. Sup.</span>).</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_242"></a>[242]</span></p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>THURSTON, Katherine Cecil.</b> B. Cork in 1875. Dau. of Paul Madden, a
-friend of Parnell, and at one time nationalist mayor of Cork. She began
-to write only in 1903, and married E. Temple Thurston, <i>q.v.</i> Died at
-Cork, 1911. In this short period appeared six or seven novels. Of
-<i>John Chilcote, M.P.</i>, her greatest success, it is estimated that 200,000
-copies were sold in America alone.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE GAMBLER. (<i>Hutchinson</i>). 6<i>s.</i>, and 6<i>d.</i> <i>n.d.</i> (1906). (N.Y.:
-<i>Harper</i>). 1.50.</p>
-
-<p>A psychological study of an Irish woman’s character. Treats of Protestant
-upper middle class society, but questions of creed do not enter into the book.
-The scene for about the first third of the book is laid in Ireland, in an
-out-of-the-way country district. Then it shifts to Venice, and afterwards
-to London. In both places the heroine moves in a smart set, whose empty
-life and petty follies are well drawn. There is a problem of pathetic interest
-centering in two ill-assorted marriages. The part about Irish life, showing
-the foolish pride of some of the Irish gentry, is skilfully and sympathetically done.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE FLY ON THE WHEEL. Pp. 327. (<i>Blackwood</i>). 6<i>s.</i> (N.Y.:
-<i>Dodd &amp; Mead</i>). 1.50. 1908.</p>
-
-<p>Middle class Catholic society in Waterford, pictured, without satire, in its
-exterior aspects by one quite familiar with them. The heroine is an impulsive,
-self-willed girl in revolt against conventionality. With her Stephen Carey, a
-middle-aged man, conventionally married, falls in love and is loved in return.
-The theme on the whole is treated with restraint, yet there are passionate
-scenes. The complication is ended by the intervention of a priest, whose
-character is very sympathetically drawn. The end of all is the suicide of the
-girl.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>THYNNE, Robert.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ RAVENSDALE. Three Vols. (<i>Tinsley</i>). 1873.</p>
-
-<p>An attempt to represent the men and motives of the Emmet insurrection.
-Point of view Unionist. Free from caricature, vulgarity, patois, and conventional
-local colour. Scene at first in England, but mainly Dublin and Co.
-Wicklow. Deals with fortunes of a family named Featherstone—loyalists,
-with one exception, Leslie, who is a friend of Emmet. Michael Dwyer,
-Emmet, Lord Kilwarden, &amp;c., figure in the tale. Love, hatred, murder,
-incidents of 1803, Emmet’s trial, escape of Leslie and his ultimate restoration
-keep up the interest to the end, when the real murderer confesses.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ TOM DELANY. Three Vols. (<i>Tinsley</i>). [1873]. 1876.</p>
-
-<p>Begins with sale, in Encumbered Estates Court, of Mrs. Delany’s property
-in the West. The family then emigrate to Melbourne, where the rest of the
-story takes place. Most of the characters, however, are Irish, from Sergeant
-Doolan to Mr. Brabazon. There are various love-affairs, ending some brightly,
-others sadly; and there are pictures of life in the gold-diggings. Eventually
-the estate is restored, and the family comes back to Ireland.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ STORY OF A CAMPAIGN ESTATE. Pp. 429. (<i>Long</i>). 6<i>s.</i> Several
-editions. 1899.</p>
-
-<p>A tale of the Land League and the Plan of Campaign, written from the
-landlord’s point of view. The estate is placed near the Curragh of Kildare.
-The chief characters are nearly all drawn from the Protestant middle and
-upper classes. There is also a fanatical Land League priest, and a peacemaking
-one, of whom a favourable portrait is drawn. “More cruel,” says
-the hero, “more selfish, more destructive than our fathers’ loins is the little
-finger of this unwritten law of the land—this juggernaut before which the
-people bow, and are crushed.” The question is ably argued out in many
-places in the book. The Author seems to identify the Land League with
-the worst secret societies, such as the Invincibles. The tone is not violent;
-there is no caricaturing, and no brogue.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_243"></a>[243]</span></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ IRISH HOLIDAYS. Pp. 317. (<i>Long</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1898, 1906, &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p>Story of an Englishman who goes down to spend his holidays with the
-Rev. John Good, Curate of Coolgreany, somewhere in the Bog of Allen, six
-miles from Birr and six from Banagher. Chiefly concerned, apart from a
-few sporting incidents, with aspects of agrarian agitation. Traditional
-English Conservative standpoint, accentuated by ignorance of Irish history
-and present conditions, and by ludicrous misconceptions. Fanciful descriptions
-of moonlighting, in which the peasantry appear as a mixture of fools
-and ruffians. But little humour, and that unconscious. No objectionable
-matter from religious or moral standpoint.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ BOFFIN’S FIND. Pp. 324. (<i>Long</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1899 and 1906.</p>
-
-<p>An exciting tale of Australian life in the fifties. One of the characters is
-a stage-Irishman of the earlier Lever type, who in one chapter relates his
-experiences with the Ribbonmen.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ JOHN TOWNLEY. Pp. 346. (<i>Drane</i>). 1901.</p>
-
-<p>A political novel, “the last of a trilogy of Irish disaffection.”—(Pref.).
-J. T. is an Anglican clergyman who becomes a Catholic and, later, a priest.
-He comes to Ireland, where he finds the priests immersed in politics and
-using the confessional for political purposes. He is involved in circumstances
-of a tragic kind, and to escape from a disagreeable situation he goes
-to S. Africa, where he reverts to Protestantism. Dwells much on boycotting,
-moonlighting and murder. Describes the Phœnix Park murders, the subsequent
-trial, and the murder of the informer. The interest is exclusively
-political.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>TOTTENHAM, G. L.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ TERENCE McGOWAN, the Irish Tenant. Two Vols. (<i>Smith, Elder</i>).
-1870.</p>
-
-<p>Depicts, from the landlord’s point of view, the land struggle in the sixties.
-This view-point is, in general, that “poor backward, barbarous, benighted
-Ireland” owed whatever good it possessed to the landlord class: the influence
-of the priest was evil: and Ireland’s troubles due mainly to the lawlessness
-and unreasonableness of the people and the weakness of the government.
-But the writer is not without knowledge of the people, and his pictures of
-life are probably true enough in the main. The story is well told, and the
-love story of Terence and Kathleen O’Hara and their sad fate is feelingly
-related. The book brings out well the evil results of the rule of a thoroughly
-unsympathetic landlord in the person of the English Mr. Majoribanks. An
-idea is given of how elections were conducted at the time. This Author
-wrote also <i>Harry Egerton</i>, <i>Harcourt</i>, and other novels.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>TOWNSHEND, Dorothea.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE CHILDREN OF NUGENTSTOWN and their Dealings with the
-Sidhe.<a id="FNanchor_14" href="#Footnote_14" class="fnanchor">[14]</a> Pp. 176. (<i>Nutt</i>). 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> Eight good illustr. by Ruth Cobb.
-1911.</p>
-
-<p>The young Nugents, two boys and a girl, go to visit their Aunt in her
-tumbledown old family place near Cork. The children get into touch with
-the fairies, and as a result family papers are recovered and fortune smiles
-once more on the Nugents.</p>
-
-<div class="footnotes">
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_14" href="#FNanchor_14" class="label">[14]</a> i.e., Fairies.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="author"><b>“TRAVERS, Coragh,”</b> <a href="#CRAWFORD"><i>see</i> <b>CRAWFORD, Mary S.</b></a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_244"></a>[244]</span></p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>TRENCH, W. Stewart.</b> 1808-1872. Was land agent in Ireland to the
-Marquess of Lansdowne, the Marquess of Bath, and Lord Digby. Owing
-to his very admirable character he came to be respected by the people.
-His opinion of Irish character was very high. His views will be found
-set forth more fully in his <i>Realities of Irish Life</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ IERNE. (<i>Longmans</i>). Two Vols. 1871.</p>
-
-<p>“A study of agrarian crime ... in which the Author used material collected
-for a history of Ireland, which he refrained from publishing owing to the
-feeling occasioned by the controversy over the Irish Land Bill. He endeavours
-... to show the causes of the obstinate resistance by the Irish to measures
-undertaken for their benefit, and to show the method of cure.”—(<i>Baker</i>).</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>TROLLOPE, Anthony.</b> 1815-1882. Lived in Ireland, 1841-1859, at Banagher
-and at Clonmel. Finished in Ireland his first two novels, <i>The MacDermotts</i>
-(1844), and <i>The Kellys and O’Kellys</i> (1848), both failures with
-the public. He claims to have known the people, and was sympathetic
-but anti-nationalist. It would be out of place here to dwell on the
-place in English literature of the Author of <i>Barchester Towers</i> and <i>The
-Warden</i> and <i>Orley Farm</i>, and the rest. An admirable contemporary
-article on his novels will be found in <span class="smcap">Dublin Review</span>, 1872, Vol. 71,
-p. 393. The following deserves quotation: “This Englishman, keenly
-observant, painstaking, absolutely sincere and unprejudiced, with a
-lynx-like clearness of vision, and a power of literal reproduction of
-which his clerical and domestic novels, remarkable as they exhibit it,
-do not furnish such striking examples, writes a story as true to the
-saddest and heaviest truths of Irish life, as racy of the soil, as rich with
-the peculiar humour, the moral features, the social oddities, the subtle
-individuality of the far west of Ireland as George Eliot’s novels are true
-to the truths of English life.”</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE MACDERMOTTS OF BALLYCLORAN. (<i>Lane</i>). 1<i>s.</i> [1844].
-1909.</p>
-
-<p>Scene: Co. Leitrim. Chief characters: the members of a broken-down
-Catholic county family. Miss MacDermott is engaged to a Sub-Inspector
-of police. This latter, because of certain difficulties that stand in the way
-of their marriage, attempts to elope with her. Her brother comes on the
-scene, and there is an affray, in which the Sub-Inspector is killed. Young
-MacDermott is tried and publicly hanged. This is the mere outline. More
-interesting is the background of Irish rural life, seen in its comic and quaint
-aspect, by an observant and not wholly unsympathetic Englishman. The
-portrait of the grand old Father John M’Grath is most life-like and engaging,
-but the pictures of low life in the village and among the illicit stills is vulgar in
-tone and the humour somewhat coarse. The book is spoken of by a competent
-critic, Sir G. O. Trevelyan, as in some respects the Author’s best. The Author
-himself considers this his best plot. It has been spoken of as “one of the most
-melancholy books ever written.”</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE KELLYS AND THE O’KELLYS. (<i>Chapman &amp; Hall</i>). [1848].
-New ed., 1907. (<i>Lane</i>). 1<i>s.</i></p>
-
-<p>Scene: Dunmore, Co. Galway, at the time of O’Connell’s trial, 1844.
-Mainly a love story of the upper classes. Some clever portraits, <i>e.g.</i>, Martin
-Kelly, the Widow Kelly, and the hero, Frank O’Kelly, Lord Ballindine.
-Picture of hard-riding, hard-drinking, landlord class. A much more cheerful
-story than the preceding. It is fresh and genuinely humorous, and the
-human interest is very strong. The seventh London ed. appeared in 1867.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ CASTLE RICHMOND. Pp. 474. (<i>Harper, Ward, Lock</i>). 2<i>s.</i> [1860].
-Fifth London ed., 1867. Still in print.</p>
-
-<p>Scene: Co. Cork during the Famine years, 1847, and following, with
-which it deals fully. Tale of two old Irish families. The plot is commonplace
-enough but redeemed by great skill in the treatment, by admirable delineation<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_245"></a>[245]</span>
-of character, and by the drawing of the background. Absolutely cool and free
-from partisanship, he yet draws such a picture of those dreadful times as, in
-days to come, it will be difficult to accept as free from exaggeration. It
-is a graphic and terrible picture. The noble character of Owen Fitzgerald is
-finely drawn. There are touches of pleasant humour and of satire.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ PHINEAS FINN, the Irish Member. (<i>Bell</i>). 1866.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ PHINEAS REDUX. (<i>Bell</i>). 1874.</p>
-
-<p>A study of political personalities. The scene is London, and the story is
-little, if at all, concerned with Ireland.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE LAND LEAGUERS. Three Vols. (<i>Chatto &amp; Windus</i>). 1883.</p>
-
-<p>Story of an English Protestant family who buy a property and settle in
-Galway. The book was never finished, and has, perhaps, little interest as
-a novel. But the life and incidents of the period are well rendered, notably
-the trials of people who are boycotted. Much sympathy with the people is
-displayed by the Author, and, on the whole, fair views of the faults and
-misunderstandings on both sides are expressed. The plot turns on the
-enmity of a peasant towards his landlord, whom he tries to injure in every
-way. The landlord’s little son is the only witness against the peasant. The
-child is murdered for telling what he knows. There is some harsh criticism
-of Catholic priests.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>TROTTER, John Bernard.</b> 1775-1818. Of a Co. Down family, and brother
-of E. S. Ruthven, M.P. for Dublin. Ed. T.C.D.; B.A., 1795. Barrister,
-and private secretary to Charles James Fox. Died in great poverty in
-Cork. His <i>Walks in Ireland</i> is his best known work, though he wrote
-many other works, literary and political.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ STORIES FOR CALUMNIATORS. Two Vols. (<span class="smcap">Dublin</span>: <i>Fitzpatrick</i>).
-1809.</p>
-
-<p>“Interspersed with remarks on the disadvantages, misfortunes, and habits
-of the Irish.” Dedicated to Lord Holland. A remarkable book in many ways.
-Through the medium of three stories, largely based on fact, the Author sets
-forth instances of the sad aftermath of the rebellion, illustrating the tragic
-consequences that may ensue if those in authority listen to the voice of slander
-and condemn on suspicion. The stories are told to a Mr. Fitzmaurice by
-persons related to the victims, and Mr. F.’s own romance is interwoven with
-the tale. Incidentally the Author gives his own views on Irish politics,
-views full of the most kindly tolerance and of true patriotic feeling without
-<i>ráiméis</i>. He seems not a Catholic, but is most friendly towards Catholics.
-He is strongly in favour of the Irish language, of land reform, and of the
-higher education of women—astonishing views considering the period.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>TURK, S. A.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE SECRET OF CARRICFEARNAGH CASTLE. (<i>Washbourne</i>).
-2<i>s.</i> [1912]. Second ed., 1915.</p>
-
-<p>“It has a somewhat sensational plot; but it certainly displays the deep
-piety, patriotism, and Christian charity of Erin’s sons and daughters.”—(Publ.).</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>TYNAN, Katherine; Mrs. H. A. Hinkson.</b> Born in Dublin, 1861, ed. Dominican
-Convent, Drogheda. Lived for many years in England, but now resides
-in Co. Mayo. Her stories aim at the purely romantic. As they are not
-concerned with the seamy side of life, their atmosphere is almost entirely
-happy and ideal. They are never morbid nor depressing. They do
-not preach, and are not of the goody-goody type. The style is pleasant
-and chatty, with plenty of colour, often full of the poet’s vivid sense<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_246"></a>[246]</span>
-impressions. The tone is thoroughly Catholic, the sentiment Irish.
-Mrs. Hinkson is a very prolific writer. Besides the novels mentioned,
-and several volumes of poems, she has written several novels which are
-not concerned with Ireland, <i>e.g.</i>, <i>A Red Red Rose</i>, <i>The Luck of the Fairfaxes</i>,
-<i>Dick Pentreath</i>, <i>For Maisie</i>, <i>Mary Gray</i>, &amp;c. In choice of subject
-she has made a speciality of broken-down gentlefolk, and often introduces
-Quakers into her stories.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ A CLUSTER OF NUTS. Pp. 242. (<i>Lawrence &amp; Bullen</i>). 1894.</p>
-
-<p>Seventeen short sketches written for English periodicals. Subject: daily
-life of the peasantry—the village “characters,” a spoilt priest, the migrating
-harvesters, and a pathetic picture of a poor old village priest. Charming
-descriptions of scenery, not too long drawn out. Much tender and unaffected
-pathos.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ AN ISLE IN THE WATER. Pp. 221. (<i>Black</i>). 1895.</p>
-
-<p>Fifteen short pieces collected out of various English periodicals. The
-scene of about half of them is an unnamed island off the West coast. The
-scene of the other is Achill. The title does not cover the rest. Sketches
-chiefly of peasant life, in which narrative (sometimes told in dialogue) predominates.
-The stories are very varied. There are pathetic sketches of
-young girls: “Mauryeen,” “Katie,” “How Mary came Home”; tales of
-the supernatural, such as “The Death Spancel”; “A Rich Woman,” a
-racy story of legacy hunting; while heroic self-sacrifice is depicted in “The
-Man who was hanged” and “A Solitary.” The last two pieces in the book
-are not stories: they are musings or subjective impressions.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE WAY OF A MAID. Pp. 300. (<i>Lawrence &amp; Bullen</i>). 1895.</p>
-
-<p>Domestic and social life in Coolevara, a typical Irish country town, chiefly
-among Catholic middle class folk. It is a simple and pleasant story of love
-and marriage with a happy ending.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ A LAND OF MIST AND MOUNTAIN. Pp. 195. (<i>Catholic Truth
-Society</i>). 1895.</p>
-
-<p>Short sketches of Irish life written with the Author’s accustomed tenderness
-and simple pathos. Noteworthy are the tales that contain Jimmy, the
-Wicklow peasant lad, who loves all animals; the prodigal who returns after
-twenty years, and the exiles Giuseppe and Beppo, in their queer little Dublin
-shop. Real persons—Rose Kavanagh, Ellen O’Leary, and Sarah Atkinson—are
-introduced in a fictitious setting.</p>
-
-<p><i>The Land I Love Best</i> is another series of eight tales issued by the same
-publishers about 1898. 200 pages.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE DEAR IRISH GIRL. (<i>Smith, Elder</i>). 6<i>s.</i> (<span class="smcap">Chicago</span>: <i>McClurg</i>).
-1.50.</p>
-
-<p>Motherless, and an only child, Biddy O’Connor brings herself up in a big,
-lonely Dublin house. Dr. O’Connor lives amid his memories and his books.
-Biddy is a winsome girl, and keeps the reader’s heart from the time we first
-meet her with the homeless dogs of Dublin as her favourite companions to
-the day when she weds the master of Coolbawn. The chief charm of the
-book lies in the picture of life amid the splendid scenery of Connaught. The
-book has a pleasant atmosphere of bright simplicity and quick mirthfulness.
-The <span class="smcap">Spectator</span> calls it “fresh, unconventional, and poetic.”</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ SHE WALKS IN BEAUTY. Pp. 310. (<i>Smith, Elder</i>). (<span class="smcap">Chicago</span>:
-<i>McClurg</i>). 1.50. 1899.</p>
-
-<p>Three delightful girls of a class which the Author delights to picture—impoverished
-gentry and their love affairs. The minor characters, servants,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_247"></a>[247]</span>
-village people, &amp;c., are very humorous and true to life. In this story the
-course of true love is by no means smooth, but all is well at the last. The
-scene varies between “Carrickmoyle” and London.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ A GIRL OF GALWAY. (<i>Blackie</i>). 5<i>s.</i> Handsome gift-book binding.
-1900.</p>
-
-<p>She stays with her grandfather, a miserly old recluse living in the wilds of
-Connemara, seeing nobody but his agent, an unscrupulous fellow, in whom
-he has perfect confidence. A love affair is soon introduced. It seems hopeless
-at first, but turns out all right owing to a strange unlooked for event.
-Pleasant and faithful picture of Connemara life.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THREE FAIR MAIDS. Pp. 381. (<i>Blackie</i>). 6<i>s.</i> [1900]. (N.Y.:
-<i>Scribner</i>). 1.50. Twelve illustr. by G. Demain Hammond. 1909.</p>
-
-<p>The three daughters of Sir Jasper Burke are of the reduced county family
-class, about which the Author loves to write. The expedient of receiving
-paying guests results in matrimony for the three girls. With this simple plot
-there are all the things that go to make Katharine Tynan’s works delightful
-reading: insight into character, impressions of Irish life, lovable personalities
-of many types.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ A DAUGHTER OF THE FIELDS. (<i>Smith, Elder</i>). 6<i>s.</i> (<span class="smcap">Chicago</span>:
-<i>McClurg</i>). 1900.</p>
-
-<p>“Another gracious Irish girl. Well educated, and brought up to a refined
-and easy life, she applies herself to the drudgery of farm work rather than
-desert her toiling mother; but the novelist finds her a husband and a more
-fortunate lot.”—(<i>Baker</i>).</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ A UNION OF HEARTS. Pp. 296. (<i>Nisbet</i>). 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> and 1<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> <i>n.d.</i>
-[1900].</p>
-
-<p>A typical example of Mrs. Hinkson’s stories. The main plot is a simple,
-idyllic love-story. The hero, much idealized, is an Englishman who tries to
-do good to his Irish tenants in his own way, and hence incurs their hatred,
-for a time. The heroine is an heiress come of a good old stock. Several
-of the characters are cleverly sketched: old Miss Lucy Considine and her
-antiquarian brother, in particular. Scenes of peasant life act as interludes
-to the main action, which lies in county family society. All the chief persons
-are Protestants, but the religious element is quite eliminated from the book.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THAT SWEET ENEMY. (<i>Constable</i>). 6<i>s.</i> (<span class="smcap">Philadelphia</span>: <i>Lippincott</i>).
-1.50. 1901.</p>
-
-<p>“A sentimental story of two Irish girls, children of a decayed house;
-their love affairs, the hindrance to their happiness, and the matrimonial
-<i>dénouement</i>.”—(<i>Baker</i>).</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ A KING’S WOMAN. Pp. 155. (<i>Hurst &amp; Blackett</i>). 6<i>d.</i> [1902].
-1905.</p>
-
-<p>Told by Penelope Fayle, a young Quaker gentlewoman, a loyalist or King’s
-woman, but sympathetic to the Irish. Scene: a Leinster country house
-in 1798. No descriptions of the fighting, but glimpses of the cruelty of Ancient
-Britons, yeomanry, &amp;c., and of the dark passions of the time. Racy,
-picturesque style, with exciting incidents and dramatic situations.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE HANDSOME QUAKER. Pp. 252. (<i>A. H. Bullen</i>). 1902.</p>
-
-<p>Eighteen exquisite little stories and sketches dealing, nearly all, with the
-lives of the poorest peasantry. They have all the Author’s best qualities.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_248"></a>[248]</span></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ LOVE OF SISTERS. Pp. 344. (<i>Smith, Elder</i>). 6<i>s.</i> [1902]. Third
-ed. 1908.</p>
-
-<p>The scene varies between the West of Ireland and Dublin. A love-story, in
-which the central figures are Phillippa Featherstonhaugh and her sister,
-Colombe: a contrast in character, but each lovable in her own way. The plot
-turns on the unselfish devotion of the former, who, believing that her lover
-has transferred his affections to her sister, heroically stands aside. We shall
-not reveal the <i>dénouement</i>. The minor characters are capital, all evidently
-closely copied from life. There are the elderly spinsters, Miss Finola and Miss
-Peggy, and quite a number of charming old ladies, the country priest and
-the sisters’ bustling, philanthropic mother, always in a whirl of correspondence
-about her charities, and others equally interesting.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ A DAUGHTER OF KINGS. (<i>Nash</i>). 6<i>s.</i> (N.Y.: <i>Benziger</i>). 1.25.
-1903.</p>
-
-<p>The daughter of a broken-down aristocratic county family is obliged to
-take service as chaperon in an English family. Careful study of girl’s lovable
-character. Contrast between the pride and poverty of Witches’ Castle, Co.
-Donegal, and opulence of English home.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE HONOURABLE MOLLY. Pp. 312. (<i>Smith, Elder</i>). Second
-impression, 1903.</p>
-
-<p>The Honourable Molly is of mixed Anglo-Irish aristocratic (her father
-was a Creggs de la Poer) and Scoto-Irish middle class origin (her mother’s
-people were O’Neills and Sinclairs). She has two suitors, one is from her
-mother’s people, the other is the heir to Castle Creggs and the title. Both
-are eminently worthy of her hand. She finally chooses one, after having
-accepted the other. Has all the sweetness and femininity of Katherine
-Tynan’s work. Is frankly romantic but not mawkish. There is no approach
-to a villain. There is some quiet and good-natured satire of old-fashioned
-aristocratic class-notions. The portraits of the two old maiden aunts are
-very clever.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ JULIA. Pp. 322. (<i>Smith, Elder</i>). 6<i>s.</i> Second impression, 1904.</p>
-
-<p>How a baseless slander nearly ruined the life of Julia, the Cinderella of
-her family, how she was nearly lost to her lover, and by what strange turns
-of fortune she was restored. The chief characters belong to two branches of
-a Kerry family, whose history is that of many another in Ireland. Julia’s
-mother is a splendid type of the old-fashioned Irish matron. There is touching
-pathos in the picture of the Grace family (minor personages of the tale)—a
-mother’s absolute devotedness to a pair of thankless and worthless daughters.
-The old parish priest, too, is well drawn.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE ADVENTURES OF ALICIA. (<i>White</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1906.</p>
-
-<p>“A characteristically winning story of a poor young Irish girl, who had to
-serve English employers, but, in spite of all temptations, remained true to
-her Irish lover.”—(<i>Press Notice</i>).</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE STORY OF BAWN. Pp. 312. (<i>Smith, Elder</i>). 6<i>s.</i> (<span class="smcap">Chicago</span>:
-<i>McClurg</i>). 1.50. 1906.</p>
-
-<p>One of the Author’s prettiest stories. Family of high standing falls into
-the meshes of money-lender. The daughter consents to marry him—but
-the plot need not be revealed. The scene appears to be Co. Kerry in the early
-’sixties, but there seem to be some anachronisms.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ HER LADYSHIP. Pp. 305. (<i>Smith, Elder</i>). 6<i>s.</i> (<span class="smcap">Chicago</span>: <i>McClurg</i>).
-1.25. Second impression, 1907.</p>
-
-<p>Lady Anne Chute is mistress of a vast estate in Co. Kerry. From the
-moment of her succession to the property she resolves to act the part of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_249"></a>[249]</span>
-Providence in her people’s lives. She sets about improving their condition,
-founding industries, &amp;c., and with full success. This is the background to a
-love-story. Old Miss Chenevix, once a “lady,” but now living almost on the
-verge of starvation in an obscure quarter of Dublin, is a pathetic figure.
-Pathetic also is the devotion of her old servant to the fallen fortunes of the
-family. Then there is the picture, drawn with exquisite sympathy, of the
-poor girl dying of consumption, and of how her religion exalted and brightened
-her last days. The descriptions or rather impressions of nature which brighten
-the story are peculiarly vivid.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE HOUSE OF THE CRICKETS. (<i>Smith, Elder</i>). 1908.</p>
-
-<p>A story of Irish peasant farmer life. The heroine lives, with her brothers
-and sisters, a life of abject slavery, ruled by a tyrannical and puritanical
-father. In this wretched home she and her brother, Richard, develop noble
-qualities of character and mind. The members of the family are very life-like
-portraits, and the picture of Irish life is drawn with much care and skill.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ MEN AND MAIDS. Pp. 294. (<i>Sealy, Bryers</i>). 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> Illustr. by
-Dorothea Preston. 1908.</p>
-
-<p>A collection of short stories, chiefly thoroughly romantic love-stories.
-“A Big Lie” is, however, of a different character, and the Author has hardly
-ever written a more delightful story.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ PEGGY THE DAUGHTER. Pp. 335. (<i>Cassell</i>). 1909.</p>
-
-<p>A romance of Ireland in early Victorian days. A young spendthrift nobleman,
-a widower, runs away with Priscilla, a Quakeress, and also an heiress.
-The description of the pursuit is exciting and dramatic. The penalty of
-his deed is a long imprisonment, from which he issues a sadder and wiser
-man. Priscilla’s care of his little daughter, Peggy, in the meantime is a
-pathetic story. The plot suggested by the attempted abduction by Sir H.
-B. Hayes of the Quakeress, Miss Pike, of Cork.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ COUSINS AND OTHERS. Pp. 319. (<i>Laurie</i>). 1909.</p>
-
-<p>Eleven stories. The title story, the longest (there are nine chapters) tells
-how a shabby branch of an old Irish family finally won recognition by means
-of a marriage with the supposed heir and by the finding of certain old family
-papers. Contains some goodnatured satire on the snobbishness of Irish
-county society. One of the remaining stories is Irish in subject. All show
-the Author’s best qualities—freshness, charm, and cheerful optimism.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE HANDSOME BRANDONS. (<i>Blackie</i>). 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> New ed. Illustr.
-by G. Demain Hammond.</p>
-
-<p>How a marriage between scions of two ancient Irish houses heals a long-standing
-feud.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE HOUSE OF THE SECRET. Pp. 314. (<i>James Clarke</i>). 6<i>s.</i>
-1910.</p>
-
-<p>The story of Maeve Standish’s self-sacrifice in the sorrow-shadowed home
-of her father’s old friend, Miss Henrietta O’Neill, of her ultimate good fortune,
-and finally of her happy marriage. The setting is entirely Irish.—(<i>Press
-Notice</i>).</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ HEART O’ GOLD; or, The Little Princess. Pp. 344. (<i>Partridge</i>).
-3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
-
-<p>Story of how Cushla MacSweeney and her sister, left as orphans, are carried
-off from their tumbled-down Irish home and brought up at Tunbridge Wells.
-How Cushla returns at twenty-one full of dreams for the improvement of
-Ireland, and is aided in her plans by a young man whom she afterwards
-marries. Full of the Author’s interesting character-studies.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_250"></a>[250]</span></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE STORY OF CECILIA. Pp. 304. (<i>Smith, Elder</i>). 6<i>s.</i> (N.Y.:
-<i>Benziger</i>). 1.00. 1911.</p>
-
-<p>Scene: Kerry and Dublin. Two stories, of mother and daughter, Ciss and
-Cecilia, interwoven. Ciss’s fiancé is reported killed. She loses her reason
-and persuades herself that a Dr. Grace, who is of peasant extraction, is her
-lover come back. To save her from the asylum Lord Dromore, her cousin
-and guardian, has to consent unwillingly to the marriage. The absent lover
-returns, but she does not meet him for twenty years. Meanwhile Ciss’s
-mésalliance is causing trouble in the course of Cecilia’s love for Lord Kilrush.
-But all ends happily. The characters are mainly drawn from the
-denationalised Irish upper classes. The story is told with much charm.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ PRINCESS KATHARINE. Pp. 320. (<i>Ward</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1912.</p>
-
-<p>A girl educated much above her mother’s condition in life and mixing in
-upper class society.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ ROSE OF THE GARDEN. Pp. 312. (<i>Constable</i>). 1912.</p>
-
-<p>The story of Lady Sarah Lennox (1745-1826) in the form of fiction. A
-good many Irish members of the <i>beau monde</i> appear in the tale. It is not
-for young readers. See <i>The Life and Letters of Lady Sarah Lennox</i>, edited
-by the Countess of Ilchester and Lord Stavordale. Two vols. (<i>Murray</i>).</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ A SHAMEFUL INHERITANCE. Pp. 324. (<i>Cassell</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1914.</p>
-
-<p>“Katharine Tynan, in her gentle way, puts before us the growing up of
-the boy Pat in ignorance of the disgrace (a jewel robbery) of his mother and
-the suicide of his father, and the effect upon him of the disclosure. A lovable
-and spiritual Father Peter plays a leading part in it all.”—(<span class="smcap">T. Litt. Suppl.</span>).
-Pat finds his mother in time to comfort her deathbed, and in the end marries
-an old friend. Somewhat vague, and not free from inconsistencies.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ COUNTRYMEN ALL. Pp. 238. (<i>Maunsel</i>). 2<i>s.</i> 1915.</p>
-
-<p>A volume of stories and sketches, very varied in its contents, from well-told
-but rather unconvincing little melodramas like “The Fox Hunter” and “John
-’a Dreams” to very vivid glimpses of life, <i>choses vues et vécues</i>. These show
-various sides of Irish life and character; an unpleasant side in “The Ruling
-Passion” (a woman discussing her own funeral with her daughter), as
-well as the pleasant and lovable aspects. “The Mother” and “The Mother
-of Jesus” are little studies of exquisite tenderness. Several of the sketches
-are humorous, for instance the weird episode, “Per istam sanctam unctionem,”
-related by a priest. The scene of several seems to be the neighbourhood
-of Dublin.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE HOUSE OF THE FOXES. Pp. 307. (<i>Smith, Elder</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1915.</p>
-
-<p>The Turloughmores are overshadowed by a curse made long ago by an
-old woman wounded to death by the hounds of a former Lord T. when hunting.
-According to the curse, every head of the house must die a violent death, in
-forewarning of which foxes will be seen in twos and threes about the house
-for some time before. The actual Lord T. is expected home from his yachting
-cruise, his wife ever in dread of the doom. He is wrecked and apparently
-lost, but Meg Hildebrand, who is staying at the castle, discovers the almost
-dying lord in mysterious circumstances. He dies in his bed, his heir is married
-into a lucky house, and the curse is said to be lifted. Founded on a legend
-(still current) of a well-known Irish family. Many threads of various interest
-are woven into the tale.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ MEN, NOT ANGELS, and Other Tales told to Girls. (<i>Burns &amp; Oates</i>).
-3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> Many full-p. illustr. 1915.</p>
-
-<p>Dainty stories, healthy and pleasant in tone, not weakly sentimental,
-definitely Catholic in character. Laid in various countries—England, France,
-Switzerland, as well as Ireland. Sympathetic studies of priests.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_251"></a>[251]</span></p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>UPTON, W. C.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ UNCLE PAT’S CABIN. Pp. vi. + 284. (<i>Gill</i>). 1882.</p>
-
-<p>“Or life among the agricultural labourers of Ireland.” “All the facts
-relative to the agricultural labourer in these pages can be vouched for.”—(Pref.).
-Describes vividly the long struggle of a labourer against adversity,
-the evils arising out of the competition for the land. A graphic picture of
-the conditions of the poor. Scene: Co. Limerick in the years from 1847 to
-1880 or so. The writer was a carpenter working at Ardagh, who afterwards
-went to America. The chapters relating to a parliamentary contest are less
-valuable than the rest of the book. Lecky, in his “<i>History of Ireland in the
-Eighteenth Century</i>” (Vol. 3, ch. 8, pp. 413-14 in a footnote), speaks of the
-book as “one of the truest and most vivid pictures of the present condition
-of the Irish labourer.”</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>VAIZEY, Mrs. G. de Horne.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ PIXIE O’SHAUGHNESSY.</p>
-
-<p>Scene: first, a fashionable English girls’ school, afterwards a half-ruined
-castle in the West of Ireland. The book is taken up with the amusing scrapes
-and other adventures of a wild little Irish girl, and with the love affairs of
-her sisters. Gives a good, if somewhat overdrawn, picture of Irish character,
-especially of traditional Irish hospitality.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ MORE ABOUT PIXIE. (<i>R.T.S.</i>). 6<i>d.</i> 1910.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE FORTUNES OF THE FARRELLS. Pp. 190. (<i>Leisure Hour
-Library Office</i>). 6<i>d.</i> 1911.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>VANCE, Louis Joseph.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ TERENCE O’ROURKE, Gentleman Adventurer. Pp. 393. (<i>E.
-Grant Richards</i>). 1906.</p>
-
-<p>Thrilling adventures of a penniless soldier, who goes about Don Quixote-wise
-rescuing distressed damsels—each more beautiful than the last—fighting
-duels, and so forth. A good story of its class, and free from anything objectionable.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>VEREKER, Hon. C. S., M.A., F.G.S.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ OLD TIMES IN IRELAND. Three Vols. (<i>Chapman &amp; Hall</i>). 1873.</p>
-
-<p>The Author was commandant of the Limerick City Artillery Militia and
-son of Lord Gort. Chiefly heavy light-comedy, with conventional characters
-and an air of unreality about the whole. The humour, the dialect, the
-characteristics of the various personages, all are highly exaggerated. A
-Lord Lieutenant, a Duke, the absurd Mr. and Mrs. O’Rafferty, the still more
-absurd love-sick schoolmaster, ruffianly Terry Alts, figure, among many
-others, in the tale.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>VERNE, Jules.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ FOUNDLING MICK (P’tit Bonhomme). Pp. 303. (<i>Sampson, Low</i>).
-Seventy-six good illustr. 1895.</p>
-
-<p>The very varied and often exciting adventures of a poor waif. Rescued
-from a travelling showman at Westport, Co. Mayo, he is sent to a poor school
-in Galway, resembling the workhouse in <i>Oliver Twist</i>. Further adventures
-bring him to Limerick, and then to Tralee, and afterwards to many other
-parts of Ireland. The book is written in thorough sympathy with Ireland,
-and in particular with the sufferings of the poor under iniquitous Land Laws,
-though at times with a little exaggeration. There is a vivid description of
-an eviction. Other aspects of Irish life are touched on, and with considerable
-knowledge. Dublin, Belfast, Killarney, Bray, are some of the places described.
-The spirit is Catholic: witness the kindly words on page 8 about
-Irish priests.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_252"></a>[252]</span></p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>“WALDA, Viola.”</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ MISS PEGGY O’DILLON; or, the Irish Critic. (<i>Gill</i>). 1890.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>WALSHE, Miss E. H.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE FOSTER BROTHERS OF DOON. Pp. 394. (<i>R.T.S.</i>). Illustr.
-<i>n.d.</i> (<i>c.</i> 1865).</p>
-
-<p>The foster-brothers are Myles Furlong, a Co. Wexford blacksmith on the
-rebel side in the rising of ’98, and Capt. Butler, a loyalist. Their respective
-adventures amid the historic events of the time are very well told. The
-Captain’s election as M.P. for Doon is well described. Putnam McCabe,
-Hamilton Rowan, Tone, Curran, and Jackson appear in the tale. Dialect
-good. Leans to loyalist side. “Written from a decidedly Protestant standpoint.”—(<i>Nield</i>).</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ GOLDEN HILLS. (<i>R.T.S.</i>). 1865.</p>
-
-<p>The Famine.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE MANUSCRIPT MAN; or, the Bible in Ireland. Pp. 226. (<i>R.T.S.</i>).
-1869.</p>
-
-<p>In the biographical note prefixed to this story we are told that the Author
-was all her life interested and actively engaged in evangelical work. She
-was born in Limerick, 1835, died 1868. The story tells how a family of
-Protestant landowners succeeded in distributing among their Catholic
-tenantry copies of the Bible in Irish, and thereby converted a number of
-them to Protestantism. The converts afterwards emigrate and settle in
-America. Scene: apparently West Connaught. Throughout, “Romanism”
-and “Romish” practices are contrasted with Protestantism, greatly to the
-disadvantage of the former. The book is well and interestingly written.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>WARD, Mrs.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ WAVES ON THE OCEAN OF LIFE: a Dalriadian Tale. Pp. 322.
-(<i>Simpkin</i>). 1869.</p>
-
-<p>Domestic life, with glimpses of religious and political strife in Ulster at
-close of eighteenth century truthfully delineated. Scene: Lough Erne and
-Antrim, the scenery of Dunluce and the Causeway described, and some real
-incidents introduced. Sympathetic towards the people, and does not disparage
-the ’98 insurgents.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>WATSON, Helen H.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ PEGGY, D.O.: the Story of the Seven O’Rourkes. Pp. 312. (<i>Cassell</i>).
-3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> Four coloured plates from drawings by Gertrude Steele. 1910.</p>
-
-<p>The story told by a little lame girl of fourteen of a proud Irish family reduced
-to a cheap flat, and living in discomfort and anxiety without losing their
-cheerfulness of heart. There is both humour and pathos. We are introduced
-to some pleasant and lovable children.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>WENTZ, Walter Yeeling Evans.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE FAIRY-FAITH IN CELTIC COUNTRIES: Its Psychica
-Origin and Nature. (<span class="smcap">Rennes</span>: <i>Imprimerie Oberthur</i>). 1909.</p>
-
-<p>The Author is Docteur ès Lettres, France; A.M., Stanford College, California;
-Member of Jesus College, Oxford; an American, and a pupil of
-Sir John Rhys, <i>q.v.</i> An investigation and discussion of “that specialised
-form of belief in a subjective realm inhabited by subjective beings which
-has existed from prehistoric times until now in Ireland, Scotland, Man,
-Wales, Cornwall, and Brittany.” The Author, a believer in the existence
-of fairies, went himself through many parts of the countries above mentioned
-and spoke with and studied the peasantry. Divisions of work: I. The Living
-Fairy Faith Psychically Considered. II. The Recorded Fairy Faith Psychically
-Considered. III. The Cult of Gods, Spirits, Fairies, and the Dead. IV. The
-Fairy Faith Reconstructed.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_253"></a>[253]</span></p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>[WEST, Jane].</b> 1758-1852. B. in London; the wife of a farmer in Northamptonshire.
-Author of <i>A Gossip’s Story</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE HISTORY OF NED EVANS: A Tale of the Times. Two Vols.
-(<i>Dublin</i>). [1796]. 1805.</p>
-
-<p>Title-p.:—“Interspersed with moral and critical remarks; anecdotes
-and characters of many persons well known in the polite world; and incidental
-strictures on the present state of Ireland.” The hero is supposed to
-be the son of a Welsh parson. The story opens in 1779, and is the love story
-of the Lady Cecilia, daughter of Lord Ravensdale, and the hero, who turns
-out in the end to be the true Lord Ravensdale. The story is full of incident.
-Ch. xxii. brings the hero to Ireland. He has some adventures in Dublin,
-which is partly described; then goes down to Ravensdale, which is seventy-six
-miles from Dublin. He goes to the American war, and has many adventures
-with Indians, narrow escapes, &amp;c.; but finally returns to wed Cecilia.
-The story is highly moral and sentimental, with a religious tone. The
-characters are mainly of the Anglo-Irish gentry—Lord Rivers, Lord Squanderfield,
-&amp;c. The then state of Ireland is but slightly dwelt on.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>[WESTRUP, Margaret]; Mrs. W. Sydney Stacey.</b> Author of <i>Elizabeth’s
-Children</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE YOUNG O’BRIENS. Pp. 347. (<i>Lane</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1906.</p>
-
-<p>Doings of a family of Irish children left with an aunt in London during
-their father’s absence in India. With all their fun and pranks the children
-pine in London and long for the meadows and the woods of their home in
-Kilbrannan.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>WEYMAN, Stanley.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE WILD GEESE. (<i>Hodder &amp; Stoughton</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1908. (N.Y.:
-<i>Doubleday</i>). 1.50. New thin paper ed., pp. 384, 2<i>s.</i> 1911.</p>
-
-<p>Story of an abortive rising in Kerry in reign of George I., with exciting
-situations and a love interest. Style clear and vigorous. Irish characters
-nearly all vacillating, treacherous, and fanatical. Generally considered as
-giving an unreal idea of the times.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>WHISTLER, Rev. Charles Watts.</b> B. 1856. Author of a series of admirable
-stories for boys.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ A SEA QUEEN’S SAILING. (<i>Nelson</i>). 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> 1907.</p>
-
-<p>The Vikings about A.D. 935, time of Hakon the Good. Adventures of,
-among others, an Irish prince with the Vikings. Scene: northern and Irish
-coasts. Juvenile.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ A PRINCE ERRANT. (<i>Nelson</i>). 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> 1908.</p>
-
-<p>S.W. Wales, Cornwall, and Ireland about A.D. 792. Saxon, Briton, Norseman,
-and Dane. Juvenile.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>WHITE, Captain L. Esmonde.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ IRISH COAST TALES OF LOVE AND ADVENTURE. Pp. 307.
-(<i>Smith, Elder</i>). 1865.</p>
-
-<p>Contains two tales—(1) “The Black Channel of Cloughnagawn;” (2) “The
-Lovers of Ballyvookan.” Dr. Small goes to the west as a dispensary doctor,
-and meets the various types of character. The pursuit of a slave ship is
-well described, as are the men who man the western hookers, and know every
-turn of the dangerous Black Channel. The second deals with the wreck of
-H.M.S. Wasp and the love story of Norah Flynn. Both are exciting stories.
-The brogue is fairly good.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_254"></a>[254]</span></p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>[WHITTY, Michael James].</b> (1795-1873).</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ TALES OF IRISH LIFE. Two Vols. 12mo. (<span class="smcap">London</span>: <i>Robins</i>).
-Six illustr. by Cruikshank. 1824.</p>
-
-<p>“Illustrative of the manners, customs, and condition of the people.”
-Contents:—“Limping Mogue,” “The Rebel,” “The Absentee,” “The
-Robber,” “The Witch of Scollough’s Gap,” “The Informer,” “The Poor
-Man’s Daughter,” “Poor Mary,” “North and South, or Prejudice Removed”
-(showing, see especially pp. 29 <i>sq.</i>, V. II., the Author’s freedom from bigotry),
-“The Priest’s Niece,” “The Last Chieftain of Erin,” “Turn-coat Watt”
-(Proselytism), “Protestant Bill,” &amp;c. Intended “to disabuse the public
-mind and communicate information on a subject confessedly of importance.”
-Excellent stories by a journalist very well known in his day. B. Wexford,
-1795, he came to London in 1821. In 1823 he was appointed editor of the
-<span class="smcap">London and Dublin Magazine</span>, in which he published his work on Robert
-Emmet. From 1829 till his death he lived and worked in Liverpool. His
-<span class="smcap">Liverpool Daily Post</span>, 1855, was the first penny daily paper.—(D.N.B.).
-His son, E. M. Whitty (1827-1860), was a brilliant journalist, and wrote a
-novel: <i>Friends in Bohemia</i>, and <i>Parliamentary Portraits</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>WHYTE-MELVILLE, Major G. J.</b> (1821-1878). Had Irish connections
-and wrote many novels. Killed in hunting field—a death he had often
-described.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ SATANELLA: A story of Punchestown. Pp. 307. (<i>Chapman and
-Hall</i>). 1873. 2<i>s.</i> other eds.</p>
-
-<p>A racy story of sportsmen and soldiers. Opens in Ireland and scene
-shifts to London. The talk of grooms and trainers fairly well done. The
-fate of the heroine and the famous black mare, both called “Satanella,” is
-tragic.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>WILDE, Lady; “Speranza.”</b> Well known as a poet of the <span class="smcap">Nation</span>, one
-of the most passionately patriotic of them all. B. in Wexford, 1826.
-D. in London, 1896.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ ANCIENT LEGENDS OF IRELAND. Pp. 350. (<i>Ward &amp; Downey</i>).
-6<i>s.</i> 1888.</p>
-
-<p>A collection of fairy stories, legends, descriptions of superstitious practices,
-medicals cures and charms, robber stories, notes on holy wells, &amp;c., taken
-down from the peasantry, some in Gaelic, some in English. The legends, &amp;c.,
-are preceded by a learned essay on the origin and history of legend, and the
-book concludes with chapters on Irish art and ethnology and a lecture by
-Sir W. Wilde on the ancient races of Ireland. Contains a vast amount of
-matter useful to the folk-lorist, to the general reader, and even to the historian.
-The stories are rather pathetic and tender than humorous. Wrote also
-<i>Ancient Cures, Charms, and Superstitions of Ireland</i>, <i>Driftwood from Scandinavia</i>,
-<i>The American Irish</i>, &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>WILLIAMS, Charles.</b> B. Coleraine, 1838. D. London, 1904. The celebrated
-war correspondent of the <span class="smcap">Daily Chronicle</span> and <span class="smcap">Standard</span>; first editor
-of <span class="smcap">Evening News</span>, and founder of the Press Club. Wrote a <i>Life of Sir
-Evelyn Wood</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ JOHN THADDEUS MACKAY. Pp. 327. (<i>Burleigh</i>). (1889). 6<i>s.</i></p>
-
-<p>In this clever novel the Author draws upon his recollections of early days
-in Ulster. The hero, “a stickit minister,” goes out to India in company
-with a “Howley” father, so named after a famous Archbishop of Canterbury,
-and both learn charity and brotherly love and see the narrowness of their own
-views through mixing with the natives. Many real personages are introduced
-under thinly disguised cognomens, thus “Rev. Thomas Trifle” is the
-late Rev. Thomas Toye, of Belfast.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_255"></a>[255]</span></p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>WILLS, William Gorman.</b> B. Kilkenny, 1828. D. London, 1891. Poet,
-Painter, Dramatist, and Novelist. Ed. T.C.D. Son of Rev. James
-Wills, also a prolific writer. Wills is better known as a dramatist,
-having written no fewer than thirty-three plays, amongst the finest of
-them being <i>Charles I.</i>, <i>Olivia</i>, and <i>Faust</i>. Amongst his other novels
-are <i>Life’s Foreshadowings</i>, which first appeared as a serial in <span class="smcap">Irish
-Metropolitan Magazine</span>, 1857-8; <i>The Wife’s Evidence</i>, founded on
-an Irish tragedy, where a man named McLaughlin was hanged for a
-murder committed by his mother; <i>Old Times</i>, <i>Notice to Quit</i>, <i>David
-Chantry</i>, besides a long poem, <i>Melchior</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE LOVE THAT KILLS. Three Vols. (<i>Tinsley</i>). 1867.</p>
-
-<p>“It [the above novel] drew striking pictures of the relations between
-landlord and tenant in Ireland, the Irish Famine, and the Rebellion of 1848:
-and it showed a warm glow of sympathy with the Irish peasantry, which no
-one would have suspected in a man apparently so wholly out of touch with
-politics.” [From “Life of W. G. Wills” by Freeman Wills. <span class="smcap">London.</span> 1898].</p>
-
-<p class="author" id="WILMOT-BUXTON"><b>WILMOT-BUXTON, E. M.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ BRITAIN LONG AGO: Stories from Old English and Celtic Sources.
-(<i>Harrap</i>: <i>Told through the Ages</i> series).</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ OLD CELTIC TALES. Pp. 128, large clear type. (<i>Harrap</i>). 6<i>d.</i>
-1910.</p>
-
-<p>One of Harrap’s “All-Time Tales,” a series of supplementary readers for
-young children. The first tale is “The Children of Lir,” told in three-and-a-half
-pages. The rest are from the Mabinogion and other Welsh sources.
-Six or seven moderately good full page ill. (one col.). Neat cover. Remarkably
-cheap.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>WINGFIELD, Hon. Lewis Strange.</b> B. 1842. Son of 6th Lord Powerscourt.
-Ed. Eton and Bonn. Lived a very strange life, trying as experiments
-various rôles—actor, nigger minstrel, attendant in a mad-house, traveller
-in Algeria and China, painter, &amp;c., &amp;c. Wrote many novels and books
-of travel. D. 1891.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ MY LORDS OF STROGUE. Three Vols. (<i>Bentley</i>). 1879.</p>
-
-<p>“A Chronicle of Ireland from the Convention to the Union.” History
-and romance curiously intermingled, <i>e.g.</i>, Robert Emmet’s Insurrection is
-purposely ante-dated by two years and a half. “The prominence given to
-such unpleasant personages as Mrs. Gillin makes the book unsuitable at least
-for the lending libraries of convents.”—(I.M.). The Author is fair-minded
-and not anti-national.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>WOODS, Margaret L.</b> B. Rugby, 1856. Dau. of late Dr. Bradley, Dean of
-Westminster. Ed. at home and at Leamington. Lives in London.
-Author of about a dozen volumes—novels, poems, and plays.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ ESTHER VANHOMRIGH. Pp. 347. (<i>Murray</i>). 1891.</p>
-
-<p>A clever and interesting psychological study of the relations between
-Swift and the two Esthers, Johnson and Vanhomrigh, the latter being the
-chief centre of interest. The scene: partly in Ireland, partly in England.
-The political events and questions of the time are scarcely touched upon,
-but the atmosphere, language, and costume of the time have evidently been
-carefully studied, and are vividly reproduced. Swift’s relations to these
-two women are represented in a convincing and sympathetic manner. There
-is nothing objectionable in the tone of the book.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_256"></a>[256]</span></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE KING’S REVOKE. Pp. 334. (<i>Smith, Elder</i>). 6<i>s.</i> (N.Y.:
-<i>Dutton</i>). 1.50. Second impression. 1905.</p>
-
-<p>The strange adventures of Patrick Dillon, an officer in the Spanish army,
-in the course of his attempt to set free Ferdinand VII. of Spain, imprisoned
-in France by Napoleon I. Its pictures of Catholic life in Spain are not always
-flattering, though doubtless not intentionally offensive.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>[WRIGHT, E. H.].</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ ANDRÉ BESNARD. (<span class="smcap">Cork</span>). 1889.</p>
-
-<p>A tale of Old Cork, giving good descriptions of its people, buildings, &amp;c.
-Period: that preceding the times of the Volunteers. A tale of courtship and
-adventure. One of the chief characters is Paul Jones, the celebrated American
-admiral. Published under pen-name “G. O’C.”</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>WRIGHT, John, A.M.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE LAST OF THE CORBES: or, The MacMahon’s Country.
-Pp. 342. (<i>Macrone</i>). 1835.</p>
-
-<p>Described on title-p. as “a legend connected with Irish history in 1641.”
-A plain tale, devoid of description, excitement, and historical “atmosphere,”
-chiefly concerned with a family named Willoughby. The writer is anti-Puritan
-but not pro-Irish. He mentions the deed of the traitor O’Connolly
-with approval, and dwells much on the excesses of the insurgents. Heber
-Macmahon (afterwards Bishop of Clogher), Sir Phelim O’Neill, and Roger
-Moore are introduced into the story. The writer was rector of Killeevan,
-Co. Monaghan.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>WRIGHT, R. H.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ A PLAIN MAN’S TALE. Pp. 192. (<span class="smcap">Belfast</span>: <i>McCaw, Stevenson &amp;
-Orr</i>). 1904.</p>
-
-<p>Adventures of a young Yorkshireman who, about the ’98 period, sails for
-Ireland and lands at Island Magee, in Antrim. Exciting episodes—love-making,
-smuggling, &amp;c. Not concerned with the rising. For boys.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE SURPRISING ADVENTURES OF MY FRIEND PATRICK
-DEMPSEY. (<i>Sealy, Bryers</i>). 6<i>d.</i> 1910.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>WYNDHAM, Eleanor.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE WINE IN THE CUP. Pp. 380. (<i>Werner Laurie</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1909.</p>
-
-<p>Scene laid in Rathlin Island, but the book cannot be said to depict the life
-of the place with fidelity to real conditions. By same Author: <i>The Lily and the
-Devil</i>, 1908.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>WYNNE, Florence.</b></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE KING’S COMING. Pp. 489. (<i>Skeffington</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1904.</p>
-
-<p>The king is “Edward VII. of England and I. of Ireland” (<i>sic</i>). Nearly
-half the book is composed of minute descriptions of his reception in various
-parts of Ireland. The rest is chiefly made up of long discussions (mostly
-by the hero and heroine) on religion, divorce, loyalty, Irish history, the
-position of the Church of Ireland, and landlords. The Author seems to be
-strongly “loyal,” a High-Church member of the C. of I., an ardent Home-Ruler,
-and a Gaelic enthusiast. But no bias is displayed <i>against</i> any class
-or creed, though the Author does not seem partial to the landlord class,
-unpleasant specimens of whom are introduced. Written with obvious
-sincerity and earnestness.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_257"></a>[257]</span></p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>“WYNNE, May”; Miss N. W. Knowles.</b> Writes much for magazines, and
-has published some twenty books. Has much sympathy with Ireland
-and the Irish. Resides in Kent.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ LET ERIN REMEMBER. Pp. 312. (<i>Greening</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 1908.</p>
-
-<p>A sensational romance of the Norman invasion of Ireland, very similar in
-kind to the Author’s <i>For Church and Chieftain</i>, <i>q.v.</i> The Irish are depicted
-as a wild, passionate people, torn by murderous feuds, led by selfish, unscrupulous
-chieftains. The Normans, who appear in the story, Strongbow
-in particular, are represented as gentle and courteous knights.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ FOR CHURCH AND CHIEFTAIN. Pp. 314. (<i>Mills &amp; Boon</i>). 6<i>s.</i>
-1909.</p>
-
-<p>A romance of the thrilling and popular type. Full of wonderful coincidences
-and the still more wonderful escapes of the heroes from the clutches
-of their enemies. The story is little concerned with historical events and
-persons. The Earl of Desmond, Archbishop O’Hurley, Dowdall, and Zouch
-are introduced occasionally. The tone is healthy, the standpoint Irish and
-Catholic.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ FOR CHARLES THE ROVER. Pp. 324. (<i>Greening</i>). 6<i>s.</i> (N.Y.:
-<i>Fenno</i>). 1.50. Third ed., 1909.</p>
-
-<p>Scene: Cork city, and the neighbourhood of Kenmare. Adventures of
-Hugh Graham, a Scotchman, in recruiting for the Irish Brigade in company
-with Morty Oge O’Sullivan, a gay, reckless, debonnair type of Irish chieftain.
-On the other side are the brainless Whig fop, Sir Henry Morton, and
-O’Callaghan, a spy in King George’s pay. The unfortunate love-story of
-O’Callaghan’s beautiful sister and the happier love of the sister of Morty
-are interwoven with the narrative. The Author’s sympathies are Irish and
-Jacobite.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>WYNNE, George Robert, D.D.</b> Archdeacon of Aghadoe, Rector of St. Michael’s,
-Limerick, and Canon of St. Patrick’s, Dublin. Author of a number of
-religious works: <i>The Light of the City</i>, <i>Spiritual Life in its Advancing
-Stages</i>, &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ NOT PEACE BUT A SWORD. Pp. 190. (<i>R.T.S.</i>). <i>n.d.</i> (1897).</p>
-
-<p>Relates how Miss Sybil Marchant, a young English lady, succeeded in
-converting to Protestantism some members of a poor family of Joyces in
-Connemara. Is concerned chiefly with the trials of the new converts at the
-hands of friends and the clergy. Tone not bitter towards Catholicism, which
-however, is regarded from the Low Church, strongly Protestant, standpoint.
-The story is pleasantly told.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ BALLINVALLEY; or, A Hundred Years Ago. Pp. 244. (<i>S.P.C.K.</i>).
-2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> Two illustr. by J. Nash. 1898.</p>
-
-<p>Scene: Wicklow, whose scenery is well described. Rebellion seen from
-Protestant and loyalist standpoint. Rebels appear as recklessly brave
-savages. Battles of New Ross and Hacketstown described. Characters
-well brought out. Some aspects of the life of the times described, notably
-stage-coach travelling and illicit distilling. Brogue not well reproduced.
-Based, says the Pref., chiefly on Lecky, but also on Maxwell, Musgrave, and
-Hay. There is a good deal about gold-mining in Co. Wicklow.</p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>YEATS, William Butler.</b> B. 1865, at Sandymount, Co. Dublin. Son of
-J. B. Yeats, R.H.A., a distinguished Irish artist. Ed. Godolphin School,
-Hammersmith, and Erasmus Smith School, Dublin. Went to London
-in 1888, and there, in 1889, publ. his first volume of verse. Since then
-many others have appeared, and he is now known as one of the foremost
-poets of the day, perhaps the only Irish poet whose name is familiar
-to students of European literature outside of Ireland, and it is true to<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_258"></a>[258]</span>
-say with Mrs. Hinkson in her <i>Reminiscences</i>, “All the world that cares
-about literature knows of his work to-day.” He was for a number
-of years actively interested in spiritism and magic, and there is more
-of this than of genuine folk-lore in his writings. What there is of folklore
-in them seems to have been gleaned during visits to his mother’s
-people in Sligo. His prose is that of a poet full of changing colour
-and strange rhythm and vague suggestion.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ FAIRY AND FOLK-TALES OF THE IRISH PEASANTRY. Pp.
-326. (<i>W. Scott</i>). 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> and 1<i>s.</i> [1888]; often republ.</p>
-
-<p>Introd. and notes by Ed. The Tales, sixty-four in number, are selected
-from previously published collections (Croker, Lover, Kennedy, Wilde, &amp;c.),
-including several examples of poetry about the fairies. They are classed
-under these heads:—The Trooping Fairies, The Solitary Fairies, Ghosts,
-Witches, Tir na-n-óg, Saints and Priests, The Devil, Giants, &amp;c. Each
-class is introduced by some general remarks. There is nothing objectionable
-but it is hardly a book for children. The weird and grotesque element largely
-predominates.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ IRISH FAIRY AND FOLK-TALES. Twelve full page illustr. by
-James Torrance. (<i>W. Scott</i>). 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ JOHN SHERMAN, and DHOYA. Pp. 195. (<i>Fisher Unwin</i>). 1891.</p>
-
-<p><i>John Sherman</i> is not wild and fantastic like <i>The Secret Rose</i>, &amp;c., but a
-pleasant narrative dealing with life in Ballah (Sligo), the scene at times
-shifting to London. The descriptions both of scenery and character are full
-of quaint little touches of very subtle observation. The style is remarkable
-for a dainty simplicity, lit up now and then by a striking thought or a brilliant
-aphorism. <i>Dhoya</i> (last 25 pp.) is a wild Celtic phantasy.—(I.M.). Published
-under the pen-name of “Ganconagh.”</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ IRISH FAIRY TALES. Ed. with Introd. by. Pp. 236. 16mo.
-(<i>Fisher Unwin</i>). 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> Illustr. by J. B. Yeats. Third impress. 1892.</p>
-
-<p>A dainty little volume, very popular with children. None of the stories
-included in it are to be found in the same Author’s <i>Irish Fairy and Folk-tales</i>.—(<i>W.
-Scott</i>).</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE SECRET ROSE: Irish Folk-lore. Illustr. by J. B. Yeats.
-Pp. 265. (<i>Maunsel</i>). 3<i>s.</i> 1898. (N.Y.: <i>Dodd &amp; Mead</i>). 2.00.</p>
-
-<p>Wild, formless tales, altogether from the land of dreams, told with the
-Author’s accustomed magic of word and expression, but to the ordinary
-reader well-nigh meaningless. In one of these tales some monks solemnly
-crucify a wandering gleeman because he had dared complain of the filthy
-food and lodging which they had given him. This tale may fairly be taken
-as typical of much that is in the book.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE CELTIC TWILIGHT. Pp. 235. (<i>A. H. Bullen</i>). 3<i>s.</i> [1893].
-New ed., enlarged, 1902. (N.Y.: <i>Macmillan</i>). 1.50.</p>
-
-<p>Disconnected fragments of dim beliefs in a supernatural world of fairies,
-ghosts, and devils, still surviving among the peasantry. Told in a style
-often beautiful, but vague and elusive, by a latter-day “pagan,” who would
-fain share these beliefs himself. The talk of half-crazy peasants, the Author
-tells us, is set down as he heard it. To the ordinary reader the book cannot
-but seem full of puerilities. The peasants of whom the Author speaks are
-chiefly those of North-Eastern Sligo.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ STORIES OF RED HANRAHAN: The Secret Rose: Rosa Alchemica.
-Pp. 228. (<i>Bullen</i>). 6<i>s.</i> net. 1913.</p>
-
-<p>The first ed., 1897, had the general title <i>The Secret Rose</i>, <i>q.v.</i> In the present
-volume the revised ed., which appeared in Mr. Yeats’s collected works, 1908,
-has been followed.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_259"></a>[259]</span></p>
-
-<p class="author"><b>YOUNG, Ella.</b> B. 1867, at Fenagh, Co. Antrim. Is a graduate of the Royal,
-now the National, University. Is chiefly interested in the old tales of
-the Irish MS. collections and in folk-lore gathered directly from the people.
-Has published a volume of poems and many articles and tales in the
-<span class="smcap">Manchester Guardian</span>, <span class="smcap">The Irish Review</span>, <span class="smcap">Irish Year Book</span>, &amp;c.,
-and in American and New Zealand periodicals. Her writings are full of
-the influence of the Celtic Revival, in which movement she numbers
-many friends.</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ THE COMING OF LUGH. (<i>Maunsel</i>). 6<i>d.</i> net. 1909.</p>
-
-<p>“A Celtic Wonder-tale Retold” for the young. A dainty little volume
-in which is prettily told the story of Lugh Lamh Fada’s sojourn in Tir-na-nOg
-and his return to Erin with the Sword of Light to drive out the Fomorians.
-The illustrations by Madame Gonne-MacBride are very well done.—(<i>Press
-Notice</i>).</p>
-
-<p class="book">⸺ CELTIC WONDER TALES. Pp. 202. (<i>Maunsel</i>). 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> Illustr.
-by Maud Gonne. 1910.</p>
-
-<p>Tales of the ancient days of De Danaan gods and heroes—of Angus and
-Midyir and Lugh and the Gobhaun Saor. Told in rhythmic and musical
-language and with much beauty of expression, but most of the tales are
-altered quite out of their antique and primitive form by a strong flavour of
-modern mysticism and symbolism of the school of Yeats and A. E. “Conary
-Mor,” the finest (we think) of the tales, is perhaps freest from this. The
-first two or three are most influenced by it. Tales like “A Good Action,”
-“The Sheepskin,” strike a different and, as it seems to us, a discordant note,
-viz., broadly comical episodes, in which the actors are gods. Includes The
-Children of Lir and the Children of Turann (under title “The Eric Fine of
-Lugh”), and the Coming of Lugh. Original and artistic Celtic cover design,
-head-pieces, and tail-pieces. Four coloured illustr. The first two are mystic
-and symbolic. Most Catholics would consider them very much out of place
-here. The book is beautifully produced.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_260"></a>[260]</span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_261"></a>[261]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="APPENDIX_A">APPENDIX A.<br />
-<span class="smaller">SOME USEFUL WORKS OF REFERENCE.</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="inline-heading"><b>1. IRISH LITERATURE.</b> Ten Vols. 4126 pp., exclusive of introductory
-essays, which average over 20 pp.</p>
-
-<p>Originally published by John D. Morris &amp; Co. Afterwards taken over by
-the De Bower Elliot Co., Chicago, and brought out in 1904.</p>
-
-<p>Edited by Justin M’Carthy, M.P., with the help of an advisory committee,
-including Stephen Gwynn, M.P., Lady Gregory, Standish O’Grady, D. J.
-O’Donoghue, Douglas Hyde, LL.D., J. E. Redmond, M.P., G. W. Russell
-(“A. E.”), J. J. Roche, LL.D., of the <span class="smcap">Boston Pilot</span>, Prof. W. P. Trent,
-of Columbia University, Prof. F. N. Robinson, of Harvard, H. S. Pancoast,
-and W. P. Ryan; with Charles Welsh as Managing Director.</p>
-
-<p><i>Scope and Object</i>: To give a comprehensive, if rapid, view of the whole
-development of Irish Literature from its earliest days. In the words of the
-Editor, it is “an illustrated catalog of Ireland’s literary contributions to
-mankind’s intellectual store.”</p>
-
-<p><i>The Choice of Extracts</i> is determined by two canons: literary value and
-human interest. The Library gives examples of “all that is best, brightest,
-most attractive, readable, and amusing,” in the writings of Irish authors.
-There is no dry-as-dust. The extracts comprise mythology, legend, folklore,
-poems, songs, street-ballads, essays, oratory, history, science, memoirs,
-fiction, travel, drama, wit, and humour. The vast majority are chosen as
-being specially expressive of Irish nationality. Choice is made both from
-the Gaelic and the Anglo-Irish literatures, but the ancient Gaelic literature
-is given solely in translation. A volume (the tenth) is given to <i>modern</i> Gaelic
-literature, the Irish text and English translation being given on opposite
-pages. This volume also contains brief biographies of ancient Gaelic authors.
-The extracts are never short and scrappy, but nearly always complete in themselves.</p>
-
-<p><i>Other Special Features</i>: Three hundred and fifty Irish authors are represented
-by extracts. Of these one hundred and twenty are contemporaries,
-the great modern intellectual revival being thus very fully represented.</p>
-
-<p>The extracts are given under the name of the authors, and these names
-are arranged alphabetically, beginning in Vol. I. with Mrs. Alexander, and
-ending with W. B. Yeats in Vol. IX.</p>
-
-<p>To the extracts from each author there is prefixed a biographical notice,
-including, in many cases, a literary appreciation by a competent authority,
-and a fairly full bibliography.</p>
-
-<p>Each volume contains an article, by a distinguished writer, on some special
-department of Irish literature. Thus, the Editor-in-Chief gives a general
-survey of the whole subject. W. B. Yeats writes on Irish Poetry, Douglas
-Hyde on Early Irish Literature, Dr. Sigerson on Ireland’s Influence on European
-Literature, Maurice Francis Egan on Irish Novels, Charles Welsh on
-Fairy and Folk Tales, J. F. Taylor, K.C., on Irish Oratory, Stephen Gwynn
-on the Irish Theatre, &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p><i>Index</i> of authors, books quoted from, titles and subjects dealt with—exceptionally
-full and valuable (over 80 pp.).</p>
-
-<p><i>Publisher’s Work</i>: 1. Illustrations, over 100 (several in colour), consisting
-of facsimiles of ancient Irish MSS., and of ancient prints and street-ballads,
-portraits of Irish authors, views of places, objects, scenery and incidents of
-Irish interest.</p>
-
-<p>2. Letterpress—large and clear type.</p>
-
-<p>3. Binding—cloth, and half-morocco.</p>
-
-<p>4. Price—has varied a good deal since first publication.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_262"></a>[262]</span></p>
-
-<p class="inline-heading"><b>2. THE CABINET OF IRISH LITERATURE.</b> Four Vols. Super royal 8vo.
-Pp. 311 + 324 + 346 + 369. (<i>Gresham Publishing Co.</i>). 8<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> each. Illustrations
-in black and white by <span class="smcap">J. H. Bacon</span>, <span class="smcap">C. M. Sheldon</span>, <span class="smcap">W. Rainey</span>,
-&amp;c., and portraits. 1903.</p>
-
-<p><i>Editors</i>: Originally planned by C. A. Read, who collected matter for
-the first three volumes of the original edition. Completed and edited by
-T. P. O’Connor, M.P. New edition brought out by Mrs. Katharine Tynan
-Hinkson.</p>
-
-<p><i>New edition</i>: The original edition (1879) was published by Blackie. The
-new edition contains about the same quantity of matter, but large portions
-of the original edition have been omitted to make room for new matter,
-which occupies the whole of the fourth volume and a large part of the third.
-A new Introduction (pp. xi.-xxxiv.) has been prefixed. It is a general survey
-of Irish literature.</p>
-
-<p><i>Scope, arrangement, &amp;c.</i>: The authors are arranged chronologically. There
-is first a sketch (full and carefully done) of each author’s life and works;
-then follow extracts, as a rule very short, from his works. The principle of
-selection is to give such extracts as would best illustrate the author’s style,
-to avoid anything hackneyed, and “anything that would offend the taste
-of any class or creed.”</p>
-
-<p>In the original edition there was, perhaps inevitably, little of Irish Ireland,
-still less of Gaelic Ireland. That has been to a certain extent remedied in
-the new edition. But the old edition had the advantage of containing a
-mass of information about little known writers and of extracts from curious
-and rare books.</p>
-
-<p class="inline-heading"><b>3. BAKER, Ernest A., M.A., D.Lit., F.L.A.</b></p>
-
-<p class="inline-heading">⸺ A GUIDE TO THE BEST FICTION IN ENGLISH. Sq. 4to.
-Pp. 813. (<i>Routledge</i>). 21<i>s.</i> New ed., enlarged and thoroughly revised.
-[1902, <i>Sonnenschein</i>]. 1913.</p>
-
-<p>This new edition is a superb work, deserving the title of an Encyclopedia
-of English Fiction. It gives information in descriptive notes of between
-7,000 and 8,000 works of fiction, including particulars of publishers (both in
-England and in U.S.A.), prices, and date of publication. It comprises every
-description of novel, translations of important continental and even non-European
-fiction, and of early stories and sagas from the Norse and from
-Celtic languages. The Guide is selective—not everything in the novel line
-is included—but it is most comprehensive. The <i>arrangement</i> is first by
-nationalities (English, American, Celtic, pp. 517-521, French, &amp;c.). Each
-of these divisions is subdivided according to the century in which the book
-was published, and the entries under the various centuries are arranged
-alphabetically according to names of authors. The <i>Index</i>, which runs to
-170 pp., gives full reference to Authors, Titles, and Subjects. Every specific
-subject illustrated in the works is indexed with extraordinary accuracy and
-completeness.</p>
-
-<p class="inline-heading">4. ⸺ A GUIDE TO HISTORICAL FICTION. Pp. xii. + 566. 1914.</p>
-
-<p>A new ed. of the Author’s <i>History in Fiction</i>; a companion to the preceding
-and uniform with it in size, publisher, and price. As in the case of the former
-work, full bibliographical particulars and descriptive notes are given. The
-main <i>arrangement</i> is according to countries. Under each country it is chronological.
-The Index (140 pp.) gives information as full as in the preceding
-work. The standard of selection is “the extent to which a story illustrates
-any given period of history.”—(<i>Pref.</i>). Ireland is not dealt with separately,
-the history of the British Isles being taken as a whole.</p>
-
-<p class="inline-heading">5. ⸺ HISTORY IN FICTION. Two Vols. 16mo. Pp. 228 + 253.
-(Routledge). 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> each. <i>n.d.</i> (1906).</p>
-
-<p>“A kind of dictionary of historical romance from the earliest sagas to the
-latest historical novel.”—(<i>Pref.</i>). Aims to include “every good work of prose<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_263"></a>[263]</span>
-fiction dealing with past times.”—(<i>Pref.</i>). Full bibliographical particulars
-(date, price, publisher) are given about each book. In most cases a short
-descriptive note is added. The entries average seven on a page. The titles
-are arranged first in order of countries. Thus in Vol. I., pp. 1-128 deal with
-English History; pp. 129-154, with Scotch; pp. 155-167, with Irish, and
-so on. Vol. II., pp. 1-56, U.S.A.; pp. 61-117, France; pp. 118-131, Germany,
-and so on. The books dealing with the history of each particular country
-are arranged in order of date. A copious Author, Title, and Subject Index
-is appended to each volume. We retain the note on this book as, though
-now in a sense out of date, it is still in print, and its price makes it more
-generally available than is the new edition.</p>
-
-<p class="inline-heading"><b>6. NIELD, Jonathan.</b></p>
-
-<p class="inline-heading">⸺ A GUIDE TO THE BEST HISTORICAL NOVELS AND TALES.
-Pott 4to. Pp. xviii. + 522. (<i>Elkin Mathews</i>). 8<i>s.</i> nett. [1902, pp. viii. +
-124]. Fourth ed., rev. and enlarged. 1911.</p>
-
-<p>Introd. pp. 16 defends historical fiction. The work is in two parts—the
-main body as it appeared in the third ed., and a supplement nearly as large.
-Each is separately indexed. Each part is arranged in chronological order.
-The titles of the books, the author and publisher, the subject are arranged
-in three vertical columns. Prices are not given. On pp. 119 <i>sq.</i> there is a
-supplementary list of noteworthy semi-historical novels. On p. 129 a list
-of fifty representative historical novels. The Author appends suggested
-courses of juvenile reading and a valuable <i>Bibliogr.</i> The <i>Indexes</i> are (1)
-Author and title, (2) Title only. The former give the dates of publication of
-the books. The number of novels noted is about 3,000. Ireland is, of course,
-not dealt with separately, as the histories of the various countries are mingled
-in one chronological list.</p>
-
-<p class="inline-heading"><b>7. BUCKLEY, J. A., M.A., and W. T. WILLIAMS, B.A.</b></p>
-
-<p class="inline-heading">⸺ A GUIDE TO BRITISH HISTORICAL FICTION. Pp. 182. (<i>Harrap</i>).
-2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> 1912.</p>
-
-<p>Intended for teachers of Secondary and Elementary schools. Chronological
-order with author- and title-indexes. Neatly arranged for ready reference.
-Full notes on each novel. A good many Irish novels are included.</p>
-
-<p class="inline-heading"><b>8. KRANS, Horatio Sheafe.</b></p>
-
-<p class="inline-heading">⸺ IRISH LIFE IN IRISH FICTION. Pp. 338. (N.Y.: <i>Macmillan
-Co.</i>). 6<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> net. 1903.</p>
-
-<p>The Author is a Professor of Columbia University.</p>
-
-<p><i>Scope of work</i>: A survey and criticism of the leading Irish novelists of
-the first half of the nineteenth century in so far as give us a picture of the
-national life and character.</p>
-
-<p><i>Contents</i>: Chap. i. A general survey of Irish society during the period
-treated by the novelists, <i>e.g.</i>, 1782-1850, based on O’Neill Daunt’s <i>Eighty-five
-Years of Irish History</i>, Justin M’Carthy’s <i>Outline</i>, J. E. Walshe’s <i>Ireland
-Sixty Years Ago</i>, Barrington’s Reminiscences, &amp;c. Chap. ii. The novelists of
-the Gentry. Chap. iii. The novelists of the Peasantry. Chap. iv. Types
-met with in the novels and typical incidents taken from them. Chap. v.
-Literary estimate. Then there is a “list of the more important stories and
-novels of Irish life by Irish writers whose literary activity began before
-1850.” Throughout copious quotations are made.</p>
-
-<p><i>Treatment</i>: Wholly free from bias. Marked by broad-minded, judicial
-spirit, thorough interest in and sympathy with the subject, wide knowledge,
-and a remarkable gift of literary characterization. On the whole a work
-which I can scarcely praise too highly.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_264"></a>[264]</span></p>
-
-<p class="inline-heading"><b>9.</b> The following book may be mentioned as possibly useful to reviewers,
-teachers, and others:—</p>
-
-<p class="inline-heading"><b>WHITCOMB, Selden L.</b></p>
-
-<p class="inline-heading">⸺ THE STUDY OF A NOVEL. (<i>Heath</i>). 1906.</p>
-
-<p>It is “the result of practical experience in teaching the novel, and its aim
-is primarily pedagogical.”—(<i>Pref.</i>). Contents:—External Structure, Consecutive
-Structure, Plot, The Settings, The Dramatis Personæ, Characterization,
-Subject Matter, Style, Influence, Rhetoric, Æsthetics, Analysis.</p>
-
-<p class="inline-heading">10. THE IRISH BOOK-LOVER. Published by Salmond &amp; Co. Monthly.
-2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> per annum, post free.</p>
-
-<p>This excellent little periodical, edited by Dr. J. S. Crone, Kensal Lodge,
-Kensal Green, London, N.W., is entirely devoted to Irish books and their
-authors, and is the only publication of the kind. Beginning in August, 1909,
-and appearing monthly since then, its six volumes are a most valuable storehouse
-of Irish book lore of all kinds. As regards fiction, it reviews most of
-the Irish novels that appear, has many articles on Irish novelists past and
-present, and supplies a quarterly classified bibliography of current Irish
-literature, in which there is a section for fiction. The obligations of the
-present work towards it are very great.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="APPENDIX_B">APPENDIX B.<br />
-<span class="smaller">PUBLISHERS AND SERIES.</span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="inline-heading">1. The Principal Irish Publishers:—</p>
-
-<table summary="The Principal Irish Publishers">
- <tr>
- <td><span class="smcap">Dublin</span>:</td>
- <td><span class="smcap">Messrs. Browne &amp; Nolan</span>, Nassau Street.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td><span class="ditto">”</span> <span class="smcap">James Duffy &amp; Co.</span>, Westmoreland Street.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td><span class="ditto">”</span> <span class="smcap">The Educational Co. of Ireland</span>, Talbot Street.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td><span class="ditto">”</span> <span class="smcap">M. H. Gill &amp; Co.</span>, O’Connell Street.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td><span class="ditto">”</span> <span class="smcap">Hodges &amp; Figgis</span>, Grafton Street.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td><span class="ditto">”</span> <span class="smcap">Maunsel &amp; Co.</span>, Ltd., 96 Middle Abbey Street.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td><span class="ditto">”</span> <span class="smcap">Sealy, Bryers &amp; Walker</span>, Middle Abbey Street.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td><span class="ditto">”</span> <span class="smcap">Alex. Thom &amp; Co.</span>, Middle Abbey Street.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><span class="smcap">Belfast</span>:</td>
- <td><span class="smcap">Erskine Mayne.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td><span class="smcap">McCaw, Stevenson &amp; Orr.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><span class="smcap">Cork</span>:</td>
- <td><span class="smcap">Guy &amp; Co.</span></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Note.</span>—None of these publishers, with the exception of Messrs. Maunsel,
-has a London house. The London address of Messrs. Maunsel is 40 Museum
-Street, W.C.</p>
-
-<p class="inline-heading"><b>2. IRISH NATIONAL TALES AND ROMANCES.</b> Nineteen Vols. (<i>Colburn</i>).
-1833.</p>
-
-<p>By <span class="smcap">Lady Morgan</span> (<i>O’Briens and O’Flahertys</i>), <span class="smcap">J. Banim</span> (<i>The Anglo-Irish</i>),
-<span class="smcap">E. E. Crowe</span> (<i>Yesterday in Ireland</i>), <span class="smcap">Thomas Colley Grattan</span> (<i>Tales of
-Travel</i>), &amp;c. This series is occasionally to be met with on sale at second hand.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_265"></a>[265]</span></p>
-
-<p class="inline-heading"><b>3. DOWNEY &amp; CO.’S IRISH NOVELISTS’ LIBRARY.</b> <span class="smcap">Edmund Downey</span>,
-General Editor. Biographical sketch prefixed to each volume, and
-portrait of Author. Price, 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>, cloth.</p>
-
-<p class="center">Included:—</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">O’DONNEL. By <span class="smcap">Lady Morgan</span>. Biography by Mrs. Cashel Hoey.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">ORMOND. By <span class="smcap">Maria Edgeworth</span>. Biography by Mrs. Cashel Hoey.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">FARDOROUGHA THE MISER. By <span class="smcap">W. Carleton</span>. Biography by D. J.
-O’Donoghue.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">THE EPICUREAN. By <span class="smcap">Thomas Moore</span>. Biography by E. Downey.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">RORY O’MORE. By <span class="smcap">Samuel Lover</span>. Biography by Mrs. Cashel Hoey.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">THE COLLEGIANS. By <span class="smcap">Gerald Griffin</span>. Biography by E. Downey.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">THE O’DONOGHUE. By <span class="smcap">Charles Lever</span>. Biography by E. Downey.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">TORLOGH O’BRIEN. By <span class="smcap">J. Sheridan Lefanu</span>. Biography by E.
-Downey.</p>
-
-<p>Downey &amp; Co. issued, 1902, paper-covered, well printed, on good paper,
-a Sixpenny Library of Novels, many of which were by Irish authors such as
-Lever, Banim, Lady Morgan, Lover, and Carleton. Irish novels were included
-in several other series published by this firm.</p>
-
-<p class="inline-heading"><b>4. CHEAP POPULAR FICTION</b> published by <span class="smcap">Cameron &amp; Ferguson</span>, of
-Glasgow. The publications of this firm were taken over by <span class="smcap">Messrs.
-Washbourne</span>, who keep in print such of them as were of any value.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">THE GREEN AND THE RED; or, Historical Tales and Legends of
-Ireland. Picture boards, 1<i>s.</i></p>
-
-<p class="hanging">GERALD AND AUGUSTA; or, the Irish Aristocracy: A Novel, 1<i>s.</i></p>
-
-<p class="hanging">THE MISTLETOE AND THE SHAMROCK: a National Tale. 1<i>s.</i></p>
-
-<p class="hanging">BILLY BLUFF AND THE SQUIRE: a Picture of Ulster in 1796. 6<i>d.</i></p>
-
-<p class="hanging">THE IRISH GIRL; or, the True Love and the False. 6<i>d.</i></p>
-
-<p class="hanging">THE KNIGHTS OF THE PALE; or, Ireland 400 Years Ago. 256 pp. 6<i>d.</i></p>
-
-<p class="inline-heading"><b>5. SEALY, BRYERS &amp; WALKER’S SIXPENNY LIBRARY OF FICTION.</b></p>
-
-<p class="hanging">OWEN DONOVAN, FENIAN. By <span class="smcap">Graves O’Mara</span>. A Tale of the ’67
-Rising.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">CAPTAIN HARRY. By <span class="smcap">J. H. Lepper</span>. A Tale of the Royalist Wars.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">A SOWER OF THE WIND. By <span class="smcap">Cahir Healy</span>. A Tale of the Land League.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">OLAF THE DANE. By <span class="smcap">John Denvir</span>. A Story of Donegal.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">THE GAELS OF MOONDHARRIG. By <span class="smcap">Rev. J. Dollard</span>. A Tale of
-the Famous Kilkenny Hurlers.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">FRANK MAXWELL. By <span class="smcap">J. H. Lepper</span>. A Royalist Tale of 1641.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">PAUL FARQUHAR’S LEGACY. By <span class="smcap">J. G. Rowe</span>. A Thrilling Tale of
-Mining Life in South Africa.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">ONLY A LASS. By <span class="smcap">Ruby M. Duggan</span>. A Tale of Girl School Life.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">THE STRIKE. By <span class="smcap">T. J. Rooney</span>. A Tale of the Dublin Liberties.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">BULLY HAYES, BLACKBIRDER. By <span class="smcap">J. G. Rowe</span>. An Adventure Tale
-of the South Seas.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">THE ENCHANTED PORTAL. By <span class="smcap">Mary Lowry</span>. A Tale of the Giant’s
-Causeway.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">STORMY HALL. By <span class="smcap">M. L. Thompson</span>. A Thrilling Tale of Adventure.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">TOLD IN THE TWILIGHT. By <span class="smcap">Robert Cromie</span>. A Romance of the
-Norwegian Fjords.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_266"></a>[266]</span></p>
-
-<p class="hanging">BY THE STREAM OF KILMEEN. By <span class="smcap">Seamas O’Kelly</span>. Exquisite
-Sketches of Irish Life.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">THE MACHINATIONS OF CISSY. By <span class="smcap">Mrs. Pierre Pattison</span>. A Tale
-of a Sister’s Jealousy.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">WHEN STRONG WILLS CLASH. By <span class="smcap">Annie Collins</span>. A Tale of Love
-and Pride.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">THE HUMOURS OF A BLUE DEVIL IN THE ISLE OF SAINTS. By
-<span class="smcap">Alan Warrener</span>. A Tale of the Love Escapades of a certain Captain.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">THE HONOUR OF THE DESBOROUGHS. By <span class="smcap">Rita Richmond</span>.
-Concerns the Love Affairs of Honor Desborough, and a fight for an
-Estate.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">THE LUCK OF THE KAVANAGHS. By <span class="smcap">C. J. Hamilton</span>. Relates the
-extraordinary Adventures of an Emigrant Irish Boy.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">THE DOCTOR’S LOCUM-TENENS. By <span class="smcap">Lizzie C. Read</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">LADY GREVILLE’S ERROR. By <span class="smcap">Mrs. Watt</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">SWEET NELLIE O’FLAHERTY. By <span class="smcap">T. A. Brewster</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="inline-heading"><b>6. “IRELAND’S OWN” LIBRARY.</b></p>
-
-<p>This excellent popular periodical, the circulation of which in England
-and abroad as well as in Ireland is very considerable, is bringing out cheap
-reprints of stories and other features that have appeared in its pages. The
-following is a list of the Library to date:—</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">RED RAPPAREE. By <span class="smcap">Desmond Lough</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">BARNEY THE BOYO. By <span class="smcap">L. A. Finn</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">THE BLACK WING. By <span class="smcap">Desmond Lough</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">TRACKED. By <span class="smcap">V. O’D. Power</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">IRELAND’S OWN SONG BOOK.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">THE LEAGUE OF THE RING and TORN APART. By <span class="smcap">Morrough
-O’Brien</span>.</p>
-
-<p>Each price 6<i>d.</i> Address:—“<span class="smcap">The People</span>” <span class="smcap">Printing and Publishing
-Works</span>, Wexford; or, 11 Sackville Place, Dublin.</p>
-
-<p class="inline-heading"><b>7. DUFFY’S POPULAR LITERATURE.</b> Messrs. <span class="smcap">Duffy</span> publish and keep
-in print very cheap editions of the standard Irish novelists.</p>
-
-<p>(1) The following by Carleton: <i>The Black Baronet</i>, <i>The Evil Eye</i>, <i>Valentine
-M’Clutchey</i>, <i>Willy Reilly</i>, <i>Art Maguire</i>, <i>Paddy-go-Easy</i>, <i>The Poor Scholar</i>,
-<i>Traits and Stories</i> (1<i>s.</i>); <i>The Red Well</i>, <i>Rody the Rover</i>, <i>Redmond Count
-O’Hanlon</i>. (2) All Griffin’s works, at 2<i>s.</i> each. (3) All Kickham’s novels.
-(4) Banim’s <i>Boyne Water</i> and <i>The Croppy</i>, at 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> each. (5) Many stories
-by Lever, Mgr. O’Brien, Mrs. Sadlier, &amp;c., noticed in the body of this work.</p>
-
-<p>Besides these, Messrs. Duffy issue seven or eight series of popular fiction.
-The volumes of these series are neatly, in many cases tastefully, bound, and
-very cheap. Many, however, are old-fashioned in turn-out, and printed
-from old founts. The majority of the stories are moral and religious in
-tendency, but by no means all. The literary standard in some is not very
-high, but in many it is good. Of “Prize Library,” Series I. (42 titles), Mrs.
-Sadlier’s <i>Daughter of Tyrconnell</i> is an example; of II. (20 titles), the same
-author’s <i>Willy Burke</i>; of III. (24 titles), Curtis’s <i>Rory of the Hills</i>, and Anon.
-<i>The Robber Chieftain</i>. Series IV. has 16 titles, 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> each; V., 15 titles,
-at 3<i>s.</i>; VI., 9 titles at 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> There is also a “Popular Library” at 6<i>d.</i>,
-“for the instruction of youth,” and a “Juvenile Library,” with 24 stories,
-at 1<i>d.</i> each.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_267"></a>[267]</span></p>
-
-<p class="inline-heading"><b>8. MESSRS. M. H. GILL &amp; SONS.</b></p>
-
-<p>This firm (originally McGlashan, then McGlashan &amp; Gill) has behind it a
-long history of publication, most of the books issued by it being Irish in
-subject. At present the catalogue of its publications contains various popular
-series or “libraries” at more or less uniform prices. None of these consist
-exclusively of fiction. The “Green Cloth Library” is one of them.</p>
-
-<p class="inline-heading"><b>9. THE CATHOLIC TRUTH SOCIETY OF IRELAND (C.T.S.I.).</b><a id="FNanchor_15" href="#Footnote_15" class="fnanchor">[15]</a></p>
-
-<p>The main object of this Society is religious and moral propaganda, but it
-aims also at fostering among the people an interest in their country—its
-history, antiquities, ruins, scenery, &amp;c. Cheap popular fiction is one of the
-chief vehicles of this propaganda, and it has published in the fifteen years
-of its existence—it was founded in 1899—upwards of a hundred penny booklets,
-besides the shilling series mentioned below. Nearly all these stories are
-Irish in subject. Most of them are distinctively Catholic in tone, and a
-number of them aim directly or indirectly at religious instruction. But there
-are a fairly considerable number which simply tell tales of ancient Ireland
-in pagan as well as in Christian times. The importance of the work of this
-Society may be gathered from the fact that since its start it has distributed
-over seven million copies of its publications. All that can be done here is to
-give a list of the stories published by the C.T.S.I., indicating the nature of
-the contents of some of them.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">T. B. Cronin.</span>—THE COLLEEN FROM THE MOOR.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">⸺ THE BOY FROM OVER THE HILL.</p>
-
-<p class="note">These are two stories of Kerry life, deservedly popular.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Mary Maher.</span>—THE IRISH EMIGRANT’S ORPHAN.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Lady Gilbert (Rosa Mulholland).</span>—A MOTHER OF EMIGRANTS.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Nano Tobin.</span>—NANCY DILLON’S CHOICE and FROM TEXAS TO
-INCHRUE.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">A. Cunningham.</span>—PASSAGE TICKETS.</p>
-
-<p class="note">Four emigration stories.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">E. F. Kelly.</span>—KEVIN O’CONNOR.</p>
-
-<p class="note">Religious persecutions in 17th cent. at home and in convict settlements.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Alicia Golding.</span>—ELLEN RYAN.</p>
-
-<p class="note">Land troubles.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Patricia Dillon.</span>—IN THE WAKE OF THE ARMADA.</p>
-
-<p class="note">Home life of native Irish chiefs and their intercourse with continent, end
-of 16th century.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Mary T. McKenna.</span>—MAUREEN DOHERTY: the Story of a Trinket.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Anna M. Martin.</span>—MAHON’S LEAP.</p>
-
-<p class="note">S. Sligo in ’98.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Alice Dease.</span>—ON THE BROAD ROAD.</p>
-
-<p class="note">A Story of the White Slave Traffic.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">K. M. Gaughan.</span>—SHEELAH: the Story of a Mixed Marriage.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Myles V. Ronan, C.C.</span>—WOMAN’S INFLUENCE: a Dublin Hospital
-Romance.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">⸺ THE HOUSE OF JULIANSTOWN; or, a Flight for the Faith.</p>
-
-<p class="note">Days of the Volunteers. Historically true.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_268"></a>[268]</span></p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">M. Sullivan.</span>—THE DESERTER AND OTHER STORIES.</p>
-
-<p class="note">Very nicely told.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">MacDonagh (Mary L.)</span>, <i>née</i> <span class="smcap">Burroughs Parker</span>.—THREE TIPPERARY BOYS.</p>
-
-<p class="note">One of whom, a minister’s son, is converted and marries Delia.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Lady Gilbert.</span>—AVOURNEEN.</p>
-
-<p class="note">A waif cast up by the sea on the island of Inishglas, and his life among
-the islanders.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">⸺ THE GHOST IN THE RATH.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">⸺ MRS. BLAKE’S NEXT OF KIN.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Delia Gleeson.</span>—WHERE THE TURF FIRES BURN.</p>
-
-<p>Others by Lucy M. Curd, Nora F. Degidon, S. A. Turk, &amp;c., and a series
-of thirteen stories entitled <span class="smcap">The Emerald Library</span>.</p>
-
-<p>For M. J. O’Mullane’s stories, see in the body of the book under his name.</p>
-
-<p class="inline-heading"><b>TEMPERANCE STORIES.</b></p>
-
-<p class="hanging">A BATCH OF SACRIFICES. By Rev. <span class="smcap">Frederick C. Kolbe</span>, D.D.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">THE STRIKE; or, The Drunkard’s Fate.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">THE BROKEN HEART and THE MISER’S DEATH.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">DONAL’S EXTRAVAGANCE. By Rev. <span class="smcap">David McKee</span>, C.C.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">REAPING THE WHIRLWIND. By <span class="smcap">Molly Malone</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">HELENA’S SON. By <span class="smcap">Nora F. Degidon</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">THE CHILD OF HIS HEART. By <span class="smcap">Mary T. McKenna</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">MIKE HANLON’S MOTHER-IN-LAW. By <span class="smcap">K. Gaughan</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">MORE TEMPERANCE STORIES. By <span class="smcap">Alice Dease</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="inline-heading"><b>THE IONA SERIES.</b> A new venture of the Irish Catholic Truth Society.
-Consists of 16mo volumes, prettily bound in cloth, with frontispiece.
-Price 1<i>s.</i></p>
-
-<p class="hanging">THE COMING OF THE KING. A Jacobite Romance. By <span class="smcap">Arthur
-Synan</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">HIAWATHA’S BLACK ROBE. Father Marquette, S.J. By <span class="smcap">E. Leahy</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">PEGGY THE MILLIONAIRE. By <span class="smcap">Mary Costello</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">EARL OR CHIEFTAIN? The Romance of Hugh O’Neill. By <span class="smcap">Patricia
-Dillon</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">ISLE OF COLUMBCILLE. A Pilgrimage and a Sketch. By <span class="smcap">Shane
-Leslie</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">THE GOLDEN LAD. A Story of Child Life. By <span class="smcap">Molly Malone</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">A LIFE’S AMBITION. Ven. Philippine Duchesne. By <span class="smcap">M. T. Kelly</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">THE MAKING OF JIM O’NEILL. A Story of Seminary Life. By M. J. F.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">NICHOLAS CARDINAL WISEMAN. By <span class="smcap">Rev. Joseph E. Canavan</span>, S.J.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">THE SORROW OF LYCADOON. By <span class="smcap">Mrs. Thomas Concannon</span>, M.A.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">THE EMPEROR MARCUS AURELIUS. A Study in Ideals. By <span class="smcap">John
-C. Joy</span>, S.J.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">A GROUP OF NATION BUILDERS—O’DONOVAN, O’CURRY,
-PETRIE. By <span class="smcap">Rev. P. M. MacSweeney</span>, M.A.</p>
-
-<div class="footnotes">
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_15" href="#FNanchor_15" class="label">[15]</a> O’Connell Street, Dublin.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_269"></a>[269]</span></p>
-
-<p class="inline-heading"><b>10. THE CATHOLIC TRUTH SOCIETY.</b></p>
-
-<p>Address, 69 Southwark Bridge Rd., London, S.E. This is the original
-Society, founded in 1884, on the model of which the Irish, Scottish, and
-Australian bodies were founded. It has on its lists a few Irish stories. Lady
-Gilbert has written a certain number for it, <i>e.g.</i>, <i>Penal Days</i>, <i>Nellie</i>. Her
-sister Clara Mulholland has published through it a little shilling volume:
-<i>Some Stories</i> (also in penny parts); Katharine Tynan another shilling volume:
-<i>The Land I love best</i>; Alice Dease: <i>Some Irish Stories</i>, 6<i>d.</i> (and in penny
-parts); and “M. E. Francis” has also some stories.</p>
-
-<p class="inline-heading"><b>11. MESSENGER OFFICE.</b></p>
-
-<p>The Office of the little periodical <span class="smcap">The Irish Messenger of the S. Heart</span>,
-Gt. Denmark St., Dublin, publishes penny booklets of a kind similar to
-those of the Catholic Truth Societies. Here are some of the titles:—</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">JOE CALLINAN. (In its 20th thousand).</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">No. 18 BLANK ST. (85th thousand).</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">THE TRAIL OF THE TRAITOR. (35th thousand).
-A story of Cromwell’s sack of Wexford.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">KATHLEEN’S PILGRIMAGE. (25th thousand).
-A tale of Lough Derg.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">TEMPERANCE STORIES. By M. A. C. (15th thousand).</p>
-
-<p>The fiction in the <span class="smcap">Irish Messenger</span> itself and in the <span class="smcap">Madonna</span> is almost
-always of an Irish complexion. The circulation of the former of these is
-over 170,000 a month.</p>
-
-<p class="inline-heading"><b>12. EVERY IRISHMAN’S LIBRARY.</b></p>
-
-<p>A new (Autumn, 1915) enterprise of <span class="smcap">The Talbot Press</span>, 89 Talbot Street,
-Dublin. The aim is to bring out in a cheap (2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>) but worthy form both
-well-known works by Irishmen about Ireland and new works. The Editors-in-chief
-are Mr. Alfred Percival Graves, Prof. William Magennis, and Dr.
-Douglas Hyde. It hopes to include every department of Irish literature—poetry,
-fiction, oratory, sport and travel, history, wit and humour, essays
-and belles lettres, politics, biography, art, music and the drama. Each book
-is in the hands of a competent editor, so that none of the books in the series
-are mere reprints. The volumes have been designed, printed, and bound
-(cloth, Celtic design in green and gold) in Ireland. The publication has
-been greatly interfered with by the war. The first six volumes, which are as
-follows, do not include a work of fiction, but Griffin’s “Collegians” and
-Carleton’s Stories will be in the next batch.</p>
-
-<p class="center">Now Ready:—</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">THOMAS DAVIS. Selections from his Prose and Poetry. Edited by <span class="smcap">T. W.
-Rolleston</span>, M.A.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">WILD SPORTS OF THE WEST. By <span class="smcap">W. H. Maxwell</span>. Edited by the
-<span class="smcap">Earl of Dunraven</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">LEGENDS OF SAINTS AND SINNERS. From the Irish. Edited by
-<span class="smcap">Douglas Hyde</span>, LL.D.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">HUMOURS OF IRISH LIFE. Edited by <span class="smcap">Charles L. Graves</span>, M.A.
-(Oxon.).</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">IRISH ORATORS AND ORATORY. Edited by Professor <span class="smcap">T. M. Kettle</span>,
-National University of Ireland.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">THE BOOK OF IRISH POETRY. Edited by <span class="smcap">Alfred Perceval Graves</span>,
-M.A.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_270"></a>[270]</span></p>
-
-<p class="inline-heading"><b>13. MAUNSEL &amp; Co., Ltd.</b></p>
-
-<p>Has in course of publication two series of novels and stories by Irish writers,
-viz.:—</p>
-
-<p>(1). A series at 1<i>s.</i>, bound in red cloth, crown 8vo size, with excellent
-paper and printing. It includes the following books:—</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">THE NORTHERN IRON. By <span class="smcap">George A. Birmingham</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">BALLYGULLION. By <span class="smcap">Lynn Doyle</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">THE GLADE IN THE FOREST. By <span class="smcap">Stephen Gwynn</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">THE PRISONER OF HIS WORD. By <span class="smcap">Louie Bennett</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">CAMBIA CARTY. By <span class="smcap">William Buckley</span>.</p>
-
-<p>(2). A series at 2<i>s.</i>, crown 8vo., cloth; equal in get-up to the average 6<i>s.</i>
-novel. The following is a list of the books hitherto published in this series:—</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">MRS. MARTIN’S MAN. By <span class="smcap">St. John G. Ervine</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">THE BLIND SIDE OF THE HEART. By <span class="smcap">F. E. Crichton</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">COUNTRYMEN ALL. By <span class="smcap">Katharine Tynan</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">THE ONE OUTSIDE. By <span class="smcap">Mary Fitzpatrick</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="inline-heading"><b>14. AMERICAN PUBLISHERS OF IRISH BOOKS.</b></p>
-
-<p>A great many American publishers bring out books on Irish subjects:
-few specialize in this line. On the whole little new fiction of an Irish complexion
-is published in the States. On the other hand a large number of
-Irish tales and novels which have been allowed to go out of print in this
-country are still reprinted and sold on the “other side.” Many such books
-will be found in the catalogues of such firms as Benziger Bros., of New York;
-P. J. Kenedy, of the same city; Flynn, of Boston; John Murphy Co., of
-Baltimore; McVey, of Philadelphia, &amp;c. J. S. Pratt, of 161 6th Ave., nr.
-12th St., N.Y., publishes a catalogue containing Irish items exclusively.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="APPENDIX_C">APPENDIX C.<br />
-<span class="smaller">IRISH MAGAZINE FICTION.<a id="FNanchor_16" href="#Footnote_16" class="fnanchor">[16]</a></span></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>There is a wealth of Irish fiction buried in the volumes of long extinct Irish
-periodicals and others still existing. Most people will have pleasurable
-recollections of stories read by them in one or other of the magazines which
-they were accustomed to read in youth—recollections which are only occasionally
-confirmed on a second reading in after life. I can still recall with
-delight many stories of Irish and even of alien characters which appeared in
-<span class="smcap">The Shamrock</span>, <span class="smcap">Young Ireland</span>, <span class="smcap">The Lamp</span>, and other periodicals—not
-to speak of the numerous tales, serial and otherwise, which were a feature of
-the weekly editions of the ordinary Irish newspapers. Perhaps in some
-future edition of “A Guide to Irish Fiction” it may be possible to appraise
-some of the more notable of these stories and their authors. Meanwhile,
-it is worth recalling that in the old <span class="smcap">Dublin and London Magazine</span>, 1825-7,
-there is much admirable Irish fiction, chiefly by Michael James Whitty and
-Denis Shine Lawlor. The same may be said, in a more restricted sense,
-of that in <span class="smcap">The Dublin Penny Journal</span>, <span class="smcap">The Dublin Journal of
-Temperance, Science, and Literature</span>, <span class="smcap">The Irish Penny Journal</span>,
-<span class="smcap">The Irish Penny Magazine</span>, and, above all, in <span class="smcap">The Dublin University
-Magazine</span>, which in its forty odd years of existence added<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_271"></a>[271]</span>
-enormously to the general body of Irish literature. A good word must
-also be said for Duffy’s <span class="smcap">Hibernian</span> and <span class="smcap">Fireside</span> magazines, which carried
-on the work down to about the seventies. <span class="smcap">The Irish Monthly</span>, most
-valuable of all in its services to the literature of the country, encouraged
-a host of clever novelists and sketch writers, though, as in the case of <span class="smcap">The
-Dublin University Magazine</span>, much of its output has been gathered into
-volumes, there is still much to be gleaned. Much of the work already referred
-to is partly accessible in the libraries, but where is one to consult the stores
-of fiction—often charming and mostly interesting—which appeared first
-(and last) in the pages of <span class="smcap">The Shamrock</span>, <span class="smcap">Young Ireland</span>, <span class="smcap">The Irish
-Fireside</span>, <span class="smcap">The Lamp</span> (especially during John F. O’Donnell’s editorship),
-<span class="smcap">The Irish Emerald</span>, and other more recent magazines? So far as I know,
-there are no complete sets of these in any library. But some of our best writers
-began their literary career by writing for these humble periodicals, and even
-authors who had arrived did not deem it beneath their dignity to contribute
-their maturer work. But it is a large question how much of this fiction is of
-permanent value. I have no doubt myself that a judicious collector could
-make many discoveries if an enterprising publisher could be found to give
-the results to the public. But perhaps that is not even worth discussing in
-these stormy days.</p>
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">D. J. O’Donoghue.</span></p>
-
-<div class="footnotes">
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_16" href="#FNanchor_16" class="label">[16]</a> I have thought it best to insert Mr. O’Donoghue’s note as it stood,
-though my doing so involved certain repetitions in the following note.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<h3>IRISH FICTION IN PERIODICALS.<a id="FNanchor_17" href="#Footnote_17" class="fnanchor">[17]</a></h3>
-
-<h4>I.—DEFUNCT PERIODICALS.</h4>
-
-<p>I should have liked to include in this work the fiction, at least the serial
-fiction, that lies buried in the back numbers of Irish periodicals. I was
-obliged to make up my mind, regretfully enough, that this was impossible.
-All that I have found practicable is to insert here a general note giving the
-names and dates, with occasional remarks, of some of the more noteworthy
-of Irish periodicals, omitting of course such as contain no fiction.</p>
-
-<p>Of the eighteenth century literary periodicals, such as Droz’s <span class="smcap">Literary
-Journal</span> (1744-8) and Walker’s <span class="smcap">Hibernian Magazine</span> (1771-1811), it is
-unnecessary to say much, as the little fiction they contain is not of a very
-Irish character. But in Watty Cox’s famous <span class="smcap">Irish Magazine</span>, which began
-in 1807 and ran to 1815, there are excellent Irish stories. To <span class="smcap">The Dublin
-and London Magazine</span> (1825-27) M. J. Whitty and Denis Shine Lawlor,
-both noteworthy writers, contributed Irish tales of a sympathetic and national
-character. Whitty collected his into a volume, which is noted in the body
-of this work. A serial about Robert Emmet and another entitled “The
-Orangeman” ran in this periodical. Bolster’s <span class="smcap">Quarterly</span> (1826-31) and
-<span class="smcap">The Dublin Monthly Magazine</span> (1830), afterwards revived in 1842-3 as
-<span class="smcap">The Citizen or Dublin Monthly Magazine</span>, call for no special comment
-though they contain a certain amount of fiction. The latter, for instance,
-had a story of 1641, “Lord Connor of Innisfallen,” and, in the 1842 revival,
-“Gerald Kirby, a tale of ’98.” Some of Carleton’s <i>Traits and Stories</i> first
-saw the light in this magazine. <span class="smcap">The Dublin Penny Journal</span> (1832-6),
-first edited by Philip Dixon Hardy, contains a large proportion of Carleton’s
-stories, and many others signed McC., S. W., J. H. K., E. W., &amp;c. In fact,
-it is full of matter interesting from an Irish point of view.</p>
-
-<p>Then there was <span class="smcap">The Irish Penny Journal</span>, <span class="smcap">The Irish Penny Magazine</span>,
-and <span class="smcap">The Irish Metropolitan Magazine</span>, 1857 <i>sqq.</i> This last was not very
-Irish in tone; its eyes were upon the ends of the earth, but an occasional
-Irish story such as “Life’s Foreshadowings” is to be found in it.</p>
-
-<p>Much was done for Irish periodical literature by the firm of James Duffy.
-Duffy’s <span class="smcap">Irish Catholic Magazine</span>, 1847 <i>sq.</i>, contains much interesting Irish
-matter, but little fiction except a serial, “King Simnel and the Palesmen,”<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_272"></a>[272]</span>
-which, however, seems to have been dropped after the thirteenth chapter.
-Duffy’s <span class="smcap">Hibernian Magazine</span> appeared in the early sixties. It had many
-of Carleton’s stories<a id="FNanchor_18" href="#Footnote_18" class="fnanchor">[18]</a> and several serials, such as “Raymond de Burgh, or
-the Fortune of a Stepson, A Romance of the Exodus,” and “Winifred’s
-Fortune,” a story of Dublin in the days of Queen Anne.</p>
-
-<p>Other ventures of Duffy’s were <span class="smcap">The Illustrated Dublin Journal</span> (1862)
-and Duffy’s <span class="smcap">Fireside Magazine</span>.</p>
-
-<p>In the fifties came a periodical whose title seems a faint premonition of
-the Irish revival—<span class="smcap">The Celt</span>, 1857 <i>sq.</i> It had a curious series of articles on
-Ireland’s temptations, failings, and vices. There were sketches of the South
-of Ireland by Aymer Clington, and C. M. O’Keeffe’s “Knights of the Pale”
-ran in it as a serial.</p>
-
-<p>The sixties were, as we have seen, catered for by some of Duffy’s ventures.
-In the middle of the seventies appeared <span class="smcap">The Illustrated Monitor</span>, afterwards
-<span class="smcap">The Monitor</span>, published by Dollard, a Catholic magazine which
-ran for about eight volumes. Vol. I. contains two serials, “The Moores of
-Moore’s Court,” by D. F. Hannigan, and “High Treason,” which is not of
-Irish interest. Other serials that ran in subsequent volumes were “Julia
-Marron, a tale of Irish peasant life,” by “Celt,” and “The False Witness;
-or, the martyr of Armagh,” by A. M. S.</p>
-
-<p>In 1877 <span class="smcap">The Dublin University Magazine</span> reached its 89th volume and
-became <span class="smcap">The University Magazine</span>, losing thereby its distinctively Irish
-character. In the forty odd years of its existence this magazine collected
-a great body of first-rate Irish literature.</p>
-
-<p>Then there was <span class="smcap">Young Ireland</span>, <span class="smcap">The Irish Fireside</span>, and <span class="smcap">The Lamp</span>
-(especially during the editorship of John F. O’Donnell). In these and others
-such some of the best of our Irish writers began their literary careers.</p>
-
-<p>As we near our own times the number of periodicals of all kinds that have
-appeared and disappeared—most of them after a very brief career—becomes
-bewildering. But the fact that they have run their course within our own
-memory makes detailed reference to them the less necessary. It is not
-many years since <span class="smcap">The Irish Packet</span> closed its career, an excellent little popular
-periodical that was edited by Judge Bodkin. The Irish Literary movement
-produced several periodicals, for the most part perhaps somewhat exotic—<span class="smcap">Dana</span>,
-<span class="smcap">Samhain</span>, <span class="smcap">Beltaine</span>, &amp;c., &amp;c. Their latest successor, and to our
-way of thinking much the best of them—<span class="smcap">The Irish Review</span>—is only just
-deceased. The Gaelic movement, too, has produced its periodicals, but
-naturally most, if not all, of the fiction they contain is in the national language.
-The two best of these, <span class="smcap">The Gaelic Journal</span> and <span class="smcap">Gadelica</span>, have most unhappily
-come to an end, the former after quite a considerable career, the
-latter after a short one.</p>
-
-<p>I have said nothing of the provincial press, though there were excellent
-literary periodicals in Cork and Belfast,<a id="FNanchor_19" href="#Footnote_19" class="fnanchor">[19]</a> nor of the weekly editions of the
-ordinary daily papers, which sometimes contain fiction of very good quality.</p>
-
-<p>It would be impossible to give here even a bird’s-eye view of the fiction of
-the Irish-American press. I may, however, mention a very fine review, the
-<span class="smcap">Gael</span>, of New York, which reached its twenty-third and last volume in 1904.
-It has contributions from all our leading present day Irish writers.</p>
-
-<div class="footnotes">
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_17" href="#FNanchor_17" class="label">[17]</a> In the compilation of this short survey I am indebted for useful notes
-to Dr. J. S. Crone.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_18" href="#FNanchor_18" class="label">[18]</a> <i>E.g.</i>, “The Man with the Black Eye,” “The Rapparee,” and “The
-Double Prophecy.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_19" href="#FNanchor_19" class="label">[19]</a> Notably a periodical of fine national spirit which was run by Miss Alice
-Milligan and “Ethna Carbery,” <span class="smcap">The Shan Van Vocht</span> (1896-1899).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<h4>II.—CURRENT PERIODICALS.</h4>
-
-<p>The <span class="smcap">Irish Monthly</span> may fairly, I think, claim mention in the first place
-for, to the best of my knowledge, its forty-three years constitute a life longer
-than that of any other still surviving Irish literary review.<a id="FNanchor_20" href="#Footnote_20" class="fnanchor">[20]</a> In it, under the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_273"></a>[273]</span>
-sympathetic guidance and the kind encouragement of Father Matthew
-Russell, its founder and for forty years its editor, many authors well known
-to-day began the making of their literary reputations. It contains many
-serials, not a few of which have since appeared in book form. “The Wild
-Birds of Killeevy” first ran in its pages.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The Irish Rosary</span> is in its nineteenth volume. It is one of the very few
-Irish periodicals that has succeeded in maintaining itself as a well illustrated
-magazine, and it has done so at the exceptionally low price of fourpence.
-Fiction forms a large proportion of its contents, which are never stodgy nor
-yet what is called goody-goody.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The Catholic Bulletin</span> is comparatively a new-comer, but already
-quite a number of volumes, including Fr. Fitzgerald’s two books (<i>q.v.</i>), have
-been reprinted from its pages. Its tone is thoroughly Irish.</p>
-
-<p>Then there are innumerable little periodicals which, unlike the three just
-mentioned, contain stories of an almost exclusively religious or moral character,
-such as the <span class="smcap">Annals of St. Antony</span>, <span class="smcap">The Messenger of the Sacred Heart</span>,
-&amp;c.</p>
-
-<p>The excellent <span class="smcap">Ireland’s Own</span>, a popular weekly on the lines of <span class="smcap">Answers</span>
-and <span class="smcap">Tit-Bits</span>, deserves a word of mention. Its library of reprints is referred
-to elsewhere.</p>
-
-<p>Besides these there are the weekly numbers of the daily papers already
-referred to and the periodicals devoted to Gaelic literature, a list of which
-will be found in the section of this Appendix, entitled Gaelic Epic and Romantic
-Literature.</p>
-
-<p>In America many periodicals publish Irish fiction from time to time, but
-practically the only periodicals the contents of which are predominantly
-Irish are of an almost exclusively political character. <span class="smcap">The Catholic World</span>
-has published Irish serials, <i>e.g.</i>, in the seventies, “The Home Rule Candidate:
-a tale of New Ireland,” by the author of “The Little Chapel at Monamullin.”
-Several of Canon Sheehan’s novels first appeared in American periodicals.</p>
-
-<div class="footnotes">
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_20" href="#FNanchor_20" class="label">[20]</a> <span class="smcap">The Dublin Review</span> and <span class="smcap">The Irish Ecclesiastical Record</span>, which are
-older, not being, properly speaking, literary reviews.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="APPENDIX_D">APPENDIX D.</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<h3 id="APPENDIX_D_I">I.—IRISH HISTORICAL FICTION.</h3>
-
-<p>The following is a select list: it does not aim to include all the historical
-novels mentioned in the body of this work. But many novels that, as literature,
-are of very little value have been included in order to cover periods not
-otherwise dealt with in fiction.</p>
-
-<table summary="Irish historical fiction, arranged by period">
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td>DALARADIA. <span class="smcap">William Collins.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><i>c.</i> 500-1016.</td>
- <td>KINGS AND VIKINGS. <span class="smcap">Lorcan O’Byrne.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>500-507.</td>
- <td>THE LAST MONARCH OF TARA. <span class="smcap">T. J. Rooney.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><i>c.</i> 550-597.</td>
- <td>BRANAN THE PICT. <span class="smcap">Mary Frances Outram.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><i>c.</i> 560-615.</td>
- <td>COLUMBANUS THE CELT. <span class="smcap">Walter T. Leahy.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><i>c.</i> 584-592.</td>
- <td>THE DRUIDESS. <span class="smcap">Mrs. Florence Gay.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><i>c.</i> 650.</td>
- <td>THE LIFE AND ACTS OF EDMOND OF ERIN. <span class="smcap">Mrs. F. Peck.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td>THE INVASION. <span class="smcap">Gerald Griffin.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>888.</td>
- <td>KING AND VIKING. <span class="smcap">P. G. Smyth.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>935.</td>
- <td>A SEA QUEEN’S SAILING. <span class="smcap">C. W. Whistler.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><i>c.</i> 1130-1151.</td>
- <td>THE KNIGHT OF THE CAVE. <span class="smcap">W. Lorcan O’Byrne.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>1152-1172.</td>
- <td>DEARFORGIL, THE PRINCESS OF BREFFNY. <span class="smcap">C. B. Gibson.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2"><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_274"></a>[274]</span>The Invasion and After.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>1169.</td>
- <td>THE FALCON KING. <span class="smcap">Lorcan O’Byrne.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>1167-1198.</td>
- <td>THE COURT OF RATH CROGHAN. <span class="smcap">Miss M. L. O’Byrne.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td>LET ERIN REMEMBER. <span class="smcap">May Wynne.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>1333.</td>
- <td>THE RETURN OF CLANEBOY. <span class="smcap">Sir Samuel Ferguson.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>1373-1399.</td>
- <td>UNDER ONE SCEPTRE. <span class="smcap">Emily S. Holt.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>1375-1417.</td>
- <td>ART MURROUGH O’KAVANAGH. <span class="smcap">M. L. O’Byrne.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><i>c.</i> 1397.</td>
- <td>THE CAPTURE OF KILLESHIN. <span class="smcap">Sir Samuel Ferguson.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><i>c.</i> 1410.</td>
- <td>CORBY MacGILLMORE. <span class="smcap">Sir Samuel Ferguson.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2">The Geraldines.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td>THE HEIRESS OF KILORGAN. <span class="smcap">Mrs. J. Sadlier.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2">Silken Thomas.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>1533-7.</td>
- <td>THOMAS FITZGERALD THE LORD OF OFFALY.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>1532-1537.</td>
- <td>THE WEIRD OF “THE SILKEN THOMAS.” <span class="smcap">R. Manifold-Craig.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>1534-5.</td>
- <td>THE SIEGE OF MAYNOOTH.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>1534-5.</td>
- <td>THE REBELLION OF SILKEN THOMAS. <span class="smcap">Sir Samuel Ferguson.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2">Seaghan O’Neill.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>1559-1567.</td>
- <td>A PRINCE OF TYRONE. <span class="smcap">Charlotte Fennell and J. P. O’Callaghan.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2">The Desmond Wars.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><i>c.</i> 1560.</td>
- <td>THE PALE AND THE SEPTS. <span class="smcap">M. L. O’Byrne.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>1565.</td>
- <td>RALPH WYNWARD. <span class="smcap">H. Elrington.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><i>c.</i> 1577.</td>
- <td>FOR CHURCH AND CHIEFTAIN. <span class="smcap">May Wynne.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>1577-1582.</td>
- <td>MAELCHO. <span class="smcap">Emily Lawless.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>1580-2.</td>
- <td>GERALDINE OF DESMOND. <span class="smcap">Miss Crumpe.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2">Grania Ni Mhailie (Grace O’Malley).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><i>c.</i> 1585-1590.</td>
- <td>A QUEEN OF MEN. <span class="smcap">William O’Brien</span>, M.P.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><i>c.</i> 1579 <i>sq.</i></td>
- <td>GRACE O’MALLEY, PRINCESS AND PIRATE. <span class="smcap">Robert Machray.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><i>c.</i> 1585.</td>
- <td> GRANIA WAILE. <span class="smcap">Fulmar Petrel.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><i>c.</i> 1585.</td>
- <td> THE DARK LADY OF DOONA. <span class="smcap">W. H. Maxwell.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2">Elizabethan Persecutions.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td>THE SPAEWIFE. <span class="smcap">Rev. John Boyce, D.D.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>1584.</td>
- <td>THE SORROW OF LYCADOON. <span class="smcap">Mrs. T. Concannon.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2">Elizabethan Ireland.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>1585-1590.</td>
- <td>SIR LUDAR. <span class="smcap">Talbot Baines Reed.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td>HIBERNIAN NIGHTS ENTERTAINMENTS. <span class="smcap">Sir Samuel Ferguson.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td>THE BOG OF STARS. <span class="smcap">Standish O’Grady.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>1580-1600.</td>
- <td>THE SPANISH WINE. <span class="smcap">Frank Mathew.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2"><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_275"></a>[275]</span>The War of the Earls.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>1587.</td>
- <td>FLIGHT OF THE EAGLE. <span class="smcap">Standish O’Grady.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>1601-1602.</td>
- <td> ULRICK THE READY. <span class="smcap">Standish O’Grady.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td>EARL OR CHIEFTAIN. <span class="smcap">Patricia Dillon.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td>THE ADVENTURER.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td>THE RED HAND OF ULSTER. <span class="smcap">Mrs. Sadlier.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td>THE CHARMING OF ESTERCEL. <span class="smcap">Grace Rhys.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><i>c.</i> 1597.</td>
- <td>MacCARTHY MOR. <span class="smcap">Mrs. James Sadlier.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>1599-1603.</td>
- <td> LAST EARL OF DESMOND. <span class="smcap">C. B. Gibson.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td>THE BROKEN SWORD OF ULSTER. <span class="smcap">Richard Cuninghame.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td>SIR GUY D’ESTERRE. <span class="smcap">Selina Bunbury.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>1599.</td>
- <td>WITH ESSEX IN IRELAND. <span class="smcap">Emily Lawless.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2">Ireland under James I. and Charles I.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>1608.</td>
- <td>THE LAST OF THE IRISH CHIEFS. <span class="smcap">Mrs. M. T. Pender.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>1603.</td>
- <td>THE DAUGHTER OF TYRCONNELL. <span class="smcap">Mrs. James Sadlier.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>1609.</td>
- <td>HUGH TALBOT. <span class="smcap">W. J. O’Neill Daunt.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>1633.</td>
- <td>KATHLEEN CLARE. <span class="smcap">Dora McChesney.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>1640.</td>
- <td>FRANK MAXWELL. <span class="smcap">J. H. Lepper.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2">The Confederation and the Parliamentary Wars.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>1641-1652.</td>
- <td> THE CONFEDERATE CHIEFTAINS. <span class="smcap">Mrs. James Sadlier.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>1641-1652.</td>
- <td>THE WILD ROSE OF LOUGH GILL. <span class="smcap">P. G. Smyth.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>1642-1652.</td>
- <td>THE CHANCES OF WAR. <span class="smcap">Rev. T. A. Finlay</span>, S.J.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>1644.</td>
- <td>CAPTAIN HARRY. <span class="smcap">J. H. Lepper.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><i>c.</i> 1645.</td>
- <td>SILK AND STEEL. <span class="smcap">H. A. Hinkson.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>1645.</td>
- <td>FRIENDS THOUGH DIVIDED. <span class="smcap">G. A. Henty.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>1647-1654.</td>
- <td>LORD ROCHE’S DAUGHTERS OF FERMOY. <span class="smcap">M. L. O’Byrne.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td>THE FLIGHT FROM THE CLIFFS. <span class="smcap">James Murphy.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>1649.</td>
- <td>WHEN CROMWELL CAME TO DROGHEDA. <span class="smcap">Randal M’Donnell.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>1649.</td>
- <td>IN THE KING’S SERVICE. <span class="smcap">F. S. Brereton.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>1649.</td>
- <td>CASTLE OMERAGH. <span class="smcap">F. Frankfort Moore.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>1649.</td>
- <td>JOHN MARMADUKE. <span class="smcap">Samuel Harden Church.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><i>c.</i> 1649.</td>
- <td>THE SILK OF THE KINE. <span class="smcap">Miss L. MacManus.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2">Roundhead Rule.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>1652-1660.</td>
- <td>THE KING OF CLADDAGH. <span class="smcap">T. Fitzpatrick.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>1654.</td>
- <td>CAPTAIN LATYMER. <span class="smcap">F. Frankfort Moore.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>1654.</td>
- <td>ETHNE. <span class="smcap">Mrs. Field.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>1654.</td>
- <td>NESSA. <span class="smcap">L. MacManus.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2"><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_276"></a>[276]</span>The Williamite Wars.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>1671-1748.</td>
- <td>MEMOIRS OF GERALD O’CONNOR. <span class="smcap">W. O’Connor Morris.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>1680.</td>
- <td>THE FIGHT OF FAITH. <span class="smcap">Mrs. S. C. Hall.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>1685-1691.</td>
- <td>THE BOYNE WATER. <span class="smcap">J. Banim.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>1689.</td>
- <td>TRUE TO THE WATCHWORD. <span class="smcap">E. Pickering.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>1689-1690.</td>
- <td>A MAN’S FOES. <span class="smcap">E. H. Strain.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>1689.</td>
- <td>THE KNIGHTS OF THE WHITE ROSE. <span class="smcap">George Griffith.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>1689.</td>
- <td>DERRY. <span class="smcap">Charlotte Elizabeth.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>1690.</td>
- <td>IN SARSFIELD’S DAYS. <span class="smcap">Miss L. MacManus.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>1690.</td>
- <td>LEIXLIP CASTLE. <span class="smcap">M. L. O’Byrne.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>1689-91.</td>
- <td>THE FORTUNES OF COL. TORLOGH O’BRIEN. <span class="smcap">J. Sheridan Le Fanu.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>1689-1691.</td>
- <td>MY SWORD FOR PATRICK SARSFIELD. <span class="smcap">Randal M’Donnell.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>1689-1690.</td>
- <td>THE CRIMSON SIGN. <span class="smcap">S. R. Keightley.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>1689-1691.</td>
- <td>ORANGE AND GREEN. <span class="smcap">G. A. Henty.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td>BALDEARG O’DONNELL. <span class="smcap">Hon. Albert S. Canning.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td>THE HOUSE OF LISRONAN. <span class="smcap">Miriam Alexander.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>1689-1770.</td>
- <td>THE IRISH CHIEFTAINS. <span class="smcap">Charles Ffrench Blake-Forster.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2">The Eighteenth Century.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><i>c.</i> 1696.</td>
- <td>THE DENOUNCED. <span class="smcap">John Banim.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>1696.</td>
- <td>REDMOND O’HANLON. <span class="smcap">William Carleton.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>1690-1726.</td>
- <td>LUTTRELL’S DOOM. <span class="smcap">D. F. Hannigan.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><i>c.</i> 1698.</td>
- <td>THE COMING OF THE KING. <span class="smcap">Arthur Synan.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><i>c.</i> 1705-1710.</td>
- <td>THE COCK AND ANCHOR. <span class="smcap">J. Sheridan Le Fanu.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><i>c.</i> 1712.</td>
- <td>ESTHER VANHOMRIGH. <span class="smcap">Margaret L. Woods.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>1761-1764.</td>
- <td>THE HEARTS OF STEEL. <span class="smcap">James M’Henry</span>, M.D.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>1770.</td>
- <td>ANDRÉ BESNARD.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>1770.</td>
- <td>IN THE DAYS OF GOLDSMITH. <span class="smcap">M. M’D. Bodkin.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><i>c.</i> 1771.</td>
- <td>THE JESSAMY BRIDE. <span class="smcap">F. Frankfort Moore.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>1750-1798.</td>
- <td>THE TWO CHIEFS OF DUNBOY. <span class="smcap">J. A. Froude.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>1760.</td>
- <td>SARSFIELD. <span class="smcap">Dr. John Gamble.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>1766.</td>
- <td>THE FATE OF FATHER SHEEHY. <span class="smcap">Mrs. James Sadlier.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2">The Irish Brigade.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td>A SWORDSMAN OF THE BRIGADE. <span class="smcap">M. O’Hannrachain.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><i>c.</i> 1702.</td>
- <td>MOUNTCASHEL’S BRIGADE. <span class="smcap">Brigadier-Gen. C. G. Halpine.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><i>c.</i> 1702.</td>
- <td>LALLY OF THE BRIGADE. <span class="smcap">Miss L. MacManus.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>1703-1710.</td>
- <td>IN THE IRISH BRIGADE. <span class="smcap">G. A. Henty.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_277"></a>[277]</span>1719.</td>
- <td>CLEMENTINA. <span class="smcap">A. E. W. Mason.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td>SPANISH JOHN. <span class="smcap">William McLennan.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><i>c.</i> 1745.</td>
- <td>THE LAST RECRUIT OF CLARE’S. <span class="smcap">S. R. Keightley.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><i>c.</i> 1745.</td>
- <td>TREASURE TROVE. <span class="smcap">Samuel Lover.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2">Grattan’s Parliament and the Union.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><i>c.</i> 1785.</td>
- <td>THE KING’S DEPUTY. <span class="smcap">H. A. Hinkson.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>1780-1797.</td>
- <td>THE LOST LAND. <span class="smcap">Julia M. Crottie.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>1782-1803.</td>
- <td>MY LORDS OF STROGUE. <span class="smcap">Lewis Wingfield.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>1793-1798.</td>
- <td>THE O’BRIENS AND O’FLAHERTYS. <span class="smcap">Lady Morgan.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>1797-1801.</td>
- <td>ILL-WON PEERAGES. <span class="smcap">M. L. O’Byrne.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><i>c.</i> 1800.</td>
- <td>THE KNIGHT OF GWYNNE. <span class="smcap">Charles Lever.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2">Ninety-eight in the North.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td>THE INSURGENT CHIEF. <span class="smcap">James McHenry.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td>O’HARA. <span class="smcap">W. H. Maxwell.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td>THE NORTHERN IRON. <span class="smcap">George A. Birmingham.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td>THE GREEN COCKADE. <span class="smcap">Mrs. M. T. Pender.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td>STRONG AS DEATH. <span class="smcap">Mrs. Charles M. Clarke.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td>THE NORTHERNS OF ’98. <span class="smcap">Eyre Evans Crowe.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td>A PRISONER OF HIS WORD. <span class="smcap">Louie Bennett.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td>NINETY-EIGHT AND SIXTY YEARS AFTER. “<span class="smcap">Andrew James.</span>”</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td>BETSY GRAY. <span class="smcap">W. G. Lyttle.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td>THE PIKEMEN. <span class="smcap">S. R. Keightley.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2">Ninety-eight in Wexford.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td>THE FORGE OF CLOHOGE. <span class="smcap">James Murphy.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td>THE CROPPY. <span class="smcap">Michael Banim.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td>CROPPIES LIE DOWN. <span class="smcap">William Buckley.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td>AGNES ARNOLD. <span class="smcap">William Bernard MacCabe.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td>NINETY-EIGHT. “<span class="smcap">Patrick C. Faly</span>” (<span class="smcap">John Hill</span>).</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td>MAUREEN MOORE. <span class="smcap">Rupert Alexander.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td>KATHLEEN MAVOURNEEN. <span class="smcap">Randal M’Donnell.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td>THE IRISH WIDOW’S SON. <span class="smcap">C. O’Leary.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td>CORRAGEEN IN ’98. <span class="smcap">Mrs. Orpen.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td>ROSE PARNELL. <span class="smcap">D. P. Conyngham.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td>OLIVE LACY. <span class="smcap">Anna Argyle.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td>THE WOOD OF THE BRAMBLES. <span class="smcap">Frank Mathew.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td>UP FOR THE GREEN. <span class="smcap">H. A. Hinkson.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td>THE O’MAHONY, CHIEF OF THE COMERAGHS. <span class="smcap">D. P. Conyngham.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>1798-1805.</td>
- <td>MICHAEL DWYER, THE INSURGENT CAPTAIN. <span class="smcap">Dr. Campion.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2"><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_278"></a>[278]</span>Humbert in the West.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>1798.</td>
- <td>THE ROUND TOWER. <span class="smcap">Florence Scott</span> and <span class="smcap">Alma Hodge</span>.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>1793-1809.</td>
- <td>MAURICE TIERNAY. <span class="smcap">Charles Lever.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td>CONNAUGHT: A TALE OF 1798. <span class="smcap">M. Archdeacon.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>1798.</td>
- <td>LE BRISEUR DE FERS. <span class="smcap">Georges D’Esparbes.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td>THE RACE OF CASTLEBAR. <span class="smcap">Emily Lawless</span> and <span class="smcap">Shan F. Bullock</span>.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2">The United Irishmen.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td>TRUE TO THE CORE. <span class="smcap">C. J. Hamilton.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td>THE PATRIOT BROTHERS. <span class="smcap">Charles Graham Halpine.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>1798.</td>
- <td>THE SHAN VAN VOCHT. <span class="smcap">James Murphy.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><i>c.</i> 1796.</td>
- <td>LORD EDWARD FITZGERALD. <span class="smcap">M. M’Donnell Bodkin.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>1792-1798.</td>
- <td>KILGORMAN. <span class="smcap">Talbot Baines Reed.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>1796.</td>
- <td>THE REBELS. <span class="smcap">M. M’Donnell Bodkin.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>1796-1797.</td>
- <td>THE HOUSE IN THE RATH. <span class="smcap">James Murphy.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>1797.</td>
- <td>THE O’DONOGHUE. <span class="smcap">Charles Lever.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2">Emmet.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>1803.</td>
- <td>ROBERT EMMET. <span class="smcap">Stephen Gwynn.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td>TRUE MAN AND TRAITOR. <span class="smcap">M. M’D. Bodkin.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>1803.</td>
- <td>RAVENSDALE. <span class="smcap">Robert Thynne.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>1797-1803.</td>
- <td>THE ISLAND OF SORROW. <span class="smcap">George Gilbert.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2">The Nineteenth Century.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>1817.</td>
- <td>THE BLACK PROPHET. <span class="smcap">William Carleton.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>1829.</td>
- <td>GLENANAAR. <span class="smcap">Canon P. A. Sheehan.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>1830.</td>
- <td>HUGH ROACH THE RIBBONMAN. <span class="smcap">James Murphy.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><i>c.</i> 1830.</td>
- <td>THE MANOR OF GLENMORE. <span class="smcap">Peter Burrowes Kelly.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>1831.</td>
- <td>THE TERRY ALT. <span class="smcap">Stephen Joseph Meany.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td>IRISH LIFE IN COURT AND CASTLE. (<span class="smcap">Isaac Butt.</span>)</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>1843.</td>
- <td>THE KELLYS AND THE O’KELLYS. <span class="smcap">Anthony Trollope.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2">The Famine and Young Ireland.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td>THE HUNGER. <span class="smcap">Andrew Merry.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>1845-1848.</td>
- <td>CASTLE DALY. <span class="smcap">Miss Keary.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>1846-1847.</td>
- <td>CASTLE RICHMOND. <span class="smcap">Anthony Trollope.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>1848.</td>
- <td>MONONIA. <span class="smcap">Justin M’Carthy.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>1848.</td>
- <td>LILY LASS. <span class="smcap">Justin Huntly M’Carthy.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>1848.</td>
- <td>THE FALCON FAMILY. <span class="smcap">Marmion Savage.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>1848.</td>
- <td>MAURICE RHYNHART. <span class="smcap">J. T. Listado.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2"><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_279"></a>[279]</span>Fenianism.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>1865-6.</td>
- <td>THE THREE FENIAN BROTHERS. <span class="smcap">John Hamilton.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td>THE GRAVES AT KILMORNA. <span class="smcap">Canon P. A. Sheehan.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>1866.</td>
- <td>CARROLL O’DONOGHUE. <span class="smcap">Christine Faber.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>1865-1883.</td>
- <td>FITZGERALD, THE FENIAN. <span class="smcap">J. D. Maginn.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>1865.</td>
- <td>WHEN WE WERE BOYS. <span class="smcap">William O’Brien</span>, M.P.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>1866.</td>
- <td>RIDGEWAY. “<span class="smcap">Scian Dubh.</span>”</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>1867.</td>
- <td>THE DUNFERRY RISIN’. <span class="smcap">J. J. Moran.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>1867.</td>
- <td>LIGHT AND SHADE. <span class="smcap">Charlotte Grace O’Brien.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2">Home Rule, &amp;c.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>1870.</td>
- <td>THE BAD TIMES. <span class="smcap">G. A. Birmingham.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><i>c.</i> 1870.</td>
- <td>A SON OF ERIN. <span class="smcap">Annie S. Swan.</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>1875-1891.</td>
- <td>HER MAJESTY’S REBELS. <span class="smcap">S. R. Lysaght.</span></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<h3 id="APPENDIX_D_II">II.—GAELIC EPIC AND ROMANTIC LITERATURE.</h3>
-
-<p>I have thought it well to set apart from the mass of Anglo-Irish fictional
-literature and to put together in a list that portion of our national fiction
-which draws its inspiration from ancient Gaelic sources. To do this with any
-sort of completeness, it would be necessary, of course, to deal with the whole
-body of fiction that has been written in the Irish language. Reasons have
-been given in the Preface stating why this task was not undertaken. A
-further reason presented itself some two years ago, viz., the appearance of
-the magnificent work published in 1913 by the National Library—<i>Bibliography
-of Irish Philology and of Printed Irish Literature</i> (price 5<i>s.</i>). In this scholarly
-work the literature of Gaelic epic, saga, and romance is scientifically classified
-and described with the greatest bibliographical accuracy. For me to attempt
-that task over again would be little better than an impertinence. It might
-even be thought, and not unnaturally, that the present list is wholly superfluous.
-Yet perhaps it may not be without its utility, owing to the fact
-that in the work just referred to descriptive notes are not provided. This
-list, then, is practically an excerpt from that work, with the addition of some
-notes that may be useful. The notes will be found in the body of the book.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">O’Grady, Standish Hayes.</span> SILVA GADELICA.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Faraday, Winifred</span>, M.A. THE CATTLE RAID OF CUAILNGE.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Meyer, Kuno.</span> THE VOYAGE OF BRAN, SON OF FERBAL, TO THE
-LAND OF THE LIVING.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">⸺ LIADAIN AND CUIRITHIR.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">⸺ THE VISION OF MACCONGLINNE.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Joyce, P. W.</span> OLD CELTIC ROMANCES.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Gregory, Lady.</span> CUCHULAIN OF MUIRTHEMNE.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">⸺ GODS AND FIGHTING MEN.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Skelly, Rev. A. M.</span>, O.P. CUCHULAIN OF MUIRTHEMNE.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">O’Mullane, M. FINN MacCOOLE</span>: His Life and Times, and other
-pamphlets published by the C.T.S. of Ireland. See under name
-O’Mullane.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Hull, Eleanor.</span> THE CUCHULLIN SAGA IN IRISH LITERATURE.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">⸺ CUCHULAIN THE HOUND OF ULSTER.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Rolleston, T. W.</span> THE HIGH DEEDS OF FINN, and other Bardic
-Romances of Ancient Ireland.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">⸺ MYTHS AND LEGENDS OF THE CELTIC RACE.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_280"></a>[280]</span></p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Russell, Violet.</span> HEROES OF THE DAWN (Stories of Finn and the
-Fianna).</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">O’Grady, Standish.</span> FINN AND HIS COMPANIONS.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">⸺ THE COMING OF CUCHULAINN.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">⸺ THE GATES OF THE NORTH.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">⸺ HISTORY OF IRELAND: Heroic Period.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Leahy, A. H.</span> THE COURTSHIP OF FERB.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">⸺ ANCIENT HEROIC ROMANCES OF IRELAND.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Squire, Charles.</span> THE BOY HERO OF ERIN.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">⸺ CELTIC MYTH AND LEGEND.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">O’Byrne, W. Lorcan.</span> CHILDREN OF KINGS.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">⸺ A LAND OF HEROES.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">MacLeod, Fiona.</span> THE LAUGHTER OF PETERKIN, etc.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Carbery, Ethna.</span> IN THE CELTIC PAST.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Hopper, Nora; Mrs. W. H. Chesson.</span> BALLADS IN PROSE.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Dease, Alice.</span> OLD-TIME STORIES OF ERIN.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Buxton, E. M. Wilmot.</span> OLD CELTIC TALES RETOLD.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">M’Call, P. J.</span> FENIAN NIGHTS’ ENTERTAINMENTS.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Young, Ella.</span> THE COMING OF LUGH.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">⸺ CELTIC WONDER TALES.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Simpson, John Hawkins.</span> POEMS OF OISIN, BARD OF ERIN.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Carmichael, Alexander.</span> DEIRDRE AND THE LAY OF THE CHILDREN
-OF UISNE.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Thomas, Edward.</span> CELTIC STORIES.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Chisholm, Louey.</span> CELTIC TALES.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Furlong, Alice.</span> TALES OF FAIRY FOLKS, QUEENS, AND HEROES.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Campbell, J. F.</span> THE CELTIC DRAGON MYTH.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Henderson, George.</span> THE FEAST OF BRICRIU.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">MacSweeney, P. M.</span> MARTIAL CAREER OF CONGHAL CLÁIRINGHNEACH.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Hyde, Douglas.</span> ADVENTURES OF THE LAD OF THE FERULE.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">⸺ ADVENTURES OF THE CHILDREN OF THE KING OF NORWAY.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Macalister, R. A. S.</span> TWO IRISH ARTHURIAN ROMANCES.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Stokes, Whitley.</span> THE DESTRUCTION OF DÁ DERGA’S HOSTEL.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Bugge, A.</span> CATHREIM CELLACHAIN CAISIL.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Thurneysen, Rudolf.</span> SAGEN AUS DEM ALTEN IRLAND.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Dottin, Georges.</span> CONTES ET LÉGENDES D’IRLANDE.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">D’Arbois de Jubainville.</span> COURS DE LITTÉRATURE CELTIQUE.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">⸺ TÁIN BO CUALNGE.</p>
-
-<p class="note">Owing to a mistake the note on this writer and his books will be found
-partly on <a href="#Page_68">p. 68</a> and partly on <a href="#Page_125">p. 125</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Dunn, Joseph.</span> THE ANCIENT IRISH EPIC, TÁIN BO CUALNGE.</p>
-
-<p>Many of our heroic legends and ancient sagas have been retold in English
-verse. Though fiction in verse does not come within the scope of the present
-Guide, yet it may be of interest to mention here a few of these poetic renderings
-of ancient Gaelic tales. Sir Samuel Ferguson’s <i>Congal</i>, <i>Conary</i>,
-<i>Lays of the Red Branch</i>, and <i>Lays of the Western Gael</i>; Aubrey de Vere’s<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_281"></a>[281]</span>
-<i>Foray of Queen Maeve</i>; Robert Dwyer Joyce’s <i>Blanid</i> and <i>Deirdre</i>; John
-Todhunter’s <i>Three Irish Bardic Tales</i>; Douglas Hyde’s <i>Three Sorrows of
-Story-telling</i>; Herbert Trench’s <i>The Quest</i>; Katharine Tynan’s “Diarmuid
-and Gráinne” in her <i>Shamrocks</i>; Mrs. Hutton’s stately blank verse translation
-of <i>The Táin</i>; and, last year, Dr. Geo. Sigerson’s <i>The Saga of King Lir</i>;
-also <i>The Red Branch Crests</i>, a trilogy by Charles L. Moore; <i>The Death of
-Oscar</i> by Alice Sargant. Hector MacLean has collected in the Highlands
-and presented in English verse <i>Ultonian Hero Ballads</i>, which, as the title
-implies, are of Irish origin. For notes and bibliographical particulars of
-the above see <i>A Guide to Books on Ireland</i>, Part I. (<i>Hodges &amp; Figgis</i>), 1912.</p>
-
-<p>For an introduction to Gaelic Literature the reader may be referred to:—</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Douglas Hyde.</span> STORY OF EARLY GAELIC LITERATURE.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Miss Hull.</span> PAGAN IRELAND.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">⸺ TEXT-BOOK OF IRISH LITERATURE.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Matthew Arnold.</span> INTRODUCTION TO THE STUDY OF
-CELTIC LITERATURE.</p>
-
-<p>It may be useful to subjoin here a list of publications (periodical and other)
-which contain, generally along with other matter, ancient Gaelic tales. I
-can give here only a bare list, but it will serve to give an idea of what has
-already been accomplished in this field.</p>
-
-<p class="inline-heading">(a) Publications of the following Societies:—</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">The Gaelic Society. 1808. One volume.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">The Ossianic Society. Six big volumes concerned exclusively with
-the Fenian Cycle. 1854-1861.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">The Irish Archæological Society and the Celtic Society, afterwards
-united as the Irish Archæological and Celtic Society. Twenty-seven
-volumes.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">The Royal Historical Archæological Association. Nine volumes.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">The Irish Texts Society. Thirteen volumes; five or six more in preparation.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">The Gaelic League. Oireachtas publications, &amp;c., &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">The Society for the Preservation of the Irish Language.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">The Celtic Society. 1847-55. Six volumes.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">The Iberno Celtic Society. 1820. One volume.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">The Royal Irish Academy. Transactions. 1786-1907.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="ditto">”</span> <span class="ditto">”</span> Proceedings, 1836-1915, in progress.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="ditto">”</span> <span class="ditto">”</span> Todd Lecture Series, 1889-1911.</p>
-
-<p class="inline-heading">(b) Periodicals:—</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Atlantis.</span></p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">The Gaelic Journal.</span></p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Eriu.</span> Organ of the School of Irish Learning; in progress.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">The Celtic Review</span> of Edinburgh. Seven volumes; in progress.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">La Revue Celtique.</span> Collected in thirty-six volumes; in progress.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Zeitschrift fur Celtische Philologie.</span> Collected in eight or nine
-volumes; in progress.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">The Celtic Magazine.</span> Thirteen volumes. 1876-88.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">The Gael</span> (N.Y.).</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Gadelica.</span> Three or four volumes.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Guth na mBliadhna</span> (Highland Gaelic and English); in progress.</p>
-
-<p class="inline-heading">(c) Various:—</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">Kuno Meyer’s <i>Anecdota Oxoniensia</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><i>Irische Texte</i> of Windisch and Whitley Stokes. Five volumes, 3793
-pp., exclusive of introductory matter.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">O’Curry: <i>Manuscript Materials of Ancient Irish History</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">⸺ <i>Manners and Customs of the Ancient Irish</i> (Appendices).</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">De Jubainville: <i>L’Epopée Celtique en Irlande</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">Windisch’s great edition of the <i>Táin</i>, pp. xcii. + 1120. Leipzig. 1905.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_282"></a>[282]</span></p>
-
-<h3 id="APPENDIX_D_III">III.—LEGENDS AND FOLK-TALES.</h3>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Croker, Thomas Crofton.</span> FAIRY LEGENDS AND TRADITIONS OF
-THE SOUTH OF IRELAND.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">⸺ KILLARNEY LEGENDS.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">⸺ LEGENDS OF THE LAKES.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Wilde, Lady; “Speranza.”</span> ANCIENT LEGENDS OF IRELAND.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Kennedy, Patrick.</span> LEGENDARY FICTIONS OF THE IRISH CELTS.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">⸺ THE FIRESIDE STORIES OF IRELAND.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">⸺ FICTIONS OF OUR FOREFATHERS.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">⸺ THE BARDIC STORIES OF IRELAND.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">⸺ LEGENDS OF MOUNT LEINSTER.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">O’Hanlon, Canon John; “Lageniensis.”</span> IRISH FOLK LORE:
-Traditions and Superstitions of the Country, with Humorous Tales.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">⸺ IRISH LOCAL LEGENDS.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Blake-Forster, Charles Ffrench.</span> A COLLECTION OF THE OLDEST
-AND MOST POPULAR LEGENDS OF THE PEASANTRY OF
-CLARE AND GALWAY.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Joyce, Robert Dwyer.</span> LEGENDS OF THE WARS IN IRELAND.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">⸺ FIRESIDE STORIES OF IRELAND.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Bardan, Patrick.</span> THE DEAD-WATCHERS.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Curtin, Jeremiah.</span> MYTHS AND FOLK-LORE OF IRELAND.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">⸺ HERO TALES OF IRELAND.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">⸺ TALES OF THE FAIRIES AND OF THE GHOST WORLD.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Hyde, Douglas.</span> BESIDE THE FIRE. Gaelic Folk-stories.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">⸺ AN SGÉALAIDHE GAEDHEALAC.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">⸺ LEGENDS OF SAINTS AND SINNERS.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Larminie, William.</span> WEST IRISH FOLK-TALES AND ROMANCES.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Yeats, W. B.</span> THE CELTIC TWILIGHT.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">⸺ THE SECRET ROSE: Irish Folk-lore.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">⸺ FAIRY AND FOLK-TALES OF THE IRISH PEASANTRY.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Gregory, Lady.</span> A BOOK OF SAINTS AND WONDERS.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Deeney, Daniel.</span> PEASANT LORE FROM GAELIC IRELAND.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Dunbar, Aldis.</span> THE SONS O’ CORMAC; an’ Tales of other Men’s
-Sons.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">M’Anally, D. R.</span>, Jr. IRISH WONDERS.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Kennedy, P. J.</span> IRISH FIRESIDE STORIES, TALES AND LEGENDS.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">⸺ LEGENDS AND FAIRY TALES OF IRELAND.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">O’Connor, Barry.</span> TURF FIRE STORIES AND FAIRY TALES OF
-IRELAND.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Lover and Croker.</span> LEGENDS AND TALES OF IRELAND.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Anon.</span>; C. J. T., ed. FOLK-LORE AND LEGENDS (IRELAND).</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">O’Neill, John.</span> HANDERAHAN, THE IRISH FAIRY MAN, and
-LEGENDS OF CARRICK-ON-SUIR.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Brueyre, Loys.</span> CONTES POPULAIRES DE LA GRANDE BRETAGNE.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Rhys, Prof. John.</span> CELTIC FOLK-LORE, WELSH AND MANX.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_283"></a>[283]</span></p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Wentz, Walter Yeeling Evans.</span> THE FAIRY-FAITH IN CELTIC
-COUNTRIES: Its Psychical Origin and Nature.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Hunt, B.</span> FOLK TALES FROM BREFFNI.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Andrews, Elizabeth.</span> ULSTER FOLKLORE.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Crawford, M. G.</span> LEGENDS OF THE CARLINGFORD LOUGH
-DISTRICT.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Doyle, J. J.</span> CATHAIR CONROI, &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Henderson, Geo.</span> SURVIVALS IN BELIEF AMONG THE CELTS.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Hardy, P. Dixon.</span> LEGENDS, TALES, AND STORIES OF IRELAND.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Drohojowska, Countess.</span> RÉCITS DU FOYER.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Keegan, John.</span> LEGENDS AND POEMS.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Rodenberg, Julius.</span> DIE HARFE VON IRLAND.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Seymour, St. John D.</span> IRISH WITCHCRAFT AND DEMONOLOGY.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">⸺ TRUE IRISH GHOST STORIES.</p>
-
-<p>It may be of interest to mention, as specimens, some of the chief collections
-of Scottish Gaelic folk-lore, for it is, at bottom, identical with that of Gaelic
-Ireland.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Campbell, J. F., of Islay.</span> POPULAR TALES OF THE WEST
-HIGHLANDS.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">WAIFS AND STRAYS OF CELTIC TRADITION. A Series initiated
-and directed by Lord Archibald Campbell. It comprises four volumes:—</p>
-
-<p class="note">Vol. I.—<span class="smcap">Craignish Tales.</span> Ed. by Rev. J. MacDougall.</p>
-
-<p class="note">Vol. II.—<span class="smcap">Folk and Hero Tales.</span> Ed. by Rev. D. MacInnes.</p>
-
-<p class="note">Vol. III.—<span class="smcap">Folk and Hero Tales.</span> Ed. by Rev. J. MacDougall.</p>
-
-<p class="note">Vol. IV.—<span class="smcap">The Fians.</span> Ed. by John Gregorson Campbell of Tiree.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Ferguson, R. M.</span> THE OCHIL FAIRY TALES.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">McKay, J. G.</span> THE WIZARD’S GILLIE.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Mackenzie, D. A.</span> FINN AND HIS WARRIOR BAND.</p>
-
-<h3 id="APPENDIX_D_IV">IV.—FAIRY TALES FOR CHILDREN.</h3>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Graves, Alfred Perceval.</span> THE IRISH FAIRY BOOK.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Bayne, Marie.</span> FAIRY STORIES FROM ERIN’S ISLE.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Hannon, John.</span> THE KINGS AND THE CATS: Munster Fairy Tales.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Grierson, Elizabeth.</span> THE CHILDREN’S BOOK OF CELTIC STORIES.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">MacManus, Seumas.</span> DONEGAL FAIRY STORIES.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">⸺ IN CHIMNEY CORNERS.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Leamy, Edmund.</span> THE FAIRY MINSTREL OF GLENMALURE.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">⸺ IRISH FAIRY TALES.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Yeats, W. B.</span> IRISH FAIRY TALES.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">IRISH FAIRY TALES. Illustr. by Geoffrey Strahan (<span class="smcap">Gibbings</span>).</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Downey, Edmund; “F. M. Allen.”</span> THE LITTLE GREEN MAN.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Furlong, Alice.</span> TALES OF FAIRY FOLKS, QUEENS, AND HEROES.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">O’Neill, Moira.</span> THE ELF ERRANT.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Irwin, Madge.</span> THE DIAMOND MOUNTAIN; or, Flowers of Fairyland.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Preston, Dorothea.</span> PADDY.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Thomson, C. L.</span> THE CELTIC WONDER WORLD.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Jacob, Joseph.</span> CELTIC FAIRY TALES.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">⸺ MORE CELTIC FAIRY TALES.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_284"></a>[284]</span></p>
-
-<h3 id="APPENDIX_D_V">V.—CATHOLIC CLERICAL LIFE.</h3>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Banim, Michael.</span> FATHER CONNELL.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Banim, John.</span> THE NOWLANS.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Neville, E. O’Reilly.</span> FATHER TOM OF CONNEMARA.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Carleton, William.</span> THE POOR SCHOLAR, and Other Tales.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">⸺ DENIS O’SHAUGHNESSY GOING TO MAYNOOTH. (In TRAITS
-AND STORIES).</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">⸺ FATHER BUTLER.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">McCarthy, M. J. F.</span> GALLOWGLASS.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Moore, George.</span> THE LAKE.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">McNulty, Edward.</span> MISTHER O’RYAN.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">⸺ MAUREEN.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Hinkson, H. A.</span> FATHER ALPHONSUS.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Buchanan, Robert.</span> FATHER ANTHONY.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Fremdling, A.</span> FATHER CLANCY.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Sheehan, Canon P. A.</span> MY NEW CURATE.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">⸺ LUKE DELMEGE.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">⸺ THE SPOILED PRIEST, and Other Stories.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">⸺ THE BLINDNESS OF DR. GRAY; or, The Final Law.</p>
-
-<p class="note">Most of Canon Sheehan’s books deal directly or indirectly with the
-priestly life.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Guinan, Rev. J.</span> SCENES AND SKETCHES IN AN IRISH PARISH;
-or, Priests and People in Doon.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">⸺ THE SOGGARTH AROON.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">⸺ THE ISLAND PARISH.</p>
-
-<p class="note">And, in fact, practically all his books.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Hickey, Rev. P.</span> INNISFAIL.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Thurston, E. Temple.</span> THE APPLE OF EDEN.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">O’Donovan, Gerald.</span> WAITING.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">⸺ FATHER RALPH.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Anon.</span> THE PROTESTANT RECTOR.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">⸺ THE ROMAN CATHOLIC PRIEST.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">⸺ THE IRISH PRIEST.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">⸺ FATHER JOHN; or, Cromwell in Ireland.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">⸺ PRIESTS AND PEOPLE.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Fuller, J. Franklin.</span> CULMSHIRE FOLK (“Father O’Flynn”).</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Jay, Harriett.</span> THE DARK COLLEEN.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">⸺ THE PRIEST’S BLESSING.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Archdeacon, Matthew.</span> SHAWN NA SOGGARTH.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Stacpoole, H. de Vere.</span> FATHER O’FLYNN.</p>
-
-<p>It would be easy to extend this list, as many novelists introduce Irish
-priests, at least incidentally.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_285"></a>[285]</span></p>
-
-<h3 id="APPENDIX_D_VI">VI.—HUMOROUS BOOKS.</h3>
-
-<p>The word “humour” is used here in a wide sense to cover wit and comicality
-or broad comedy, as well as humour in the strict sense of the word. The
-present list is not a selection of the best samples of Irish humour. It merely
-brings together a number of books which are entirely or mainly of a humorous
-character. Humour of a greatly superior order is often to be found here and
-there in books of a predominantly serious purpose—in <i>My New Curate</i>,
-for instance, or in <i>Knocknagow</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">O’Donoghue, D. J.</span> THE HUMOUR OF IRELAND.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">MacDonagh, Michael.</span> IRISH LIFE AND CHARACTER.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Harvey, W.</span> IRISH LIFE AND HUMOUR.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Kennedy, Patrick.</span> THE BOOK OF MODERN IRISH ANECDOTES.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Lever, Charles.</span> A DAY’S RIDE.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">⸺ THE DODD FAMILY ABROAD.</p>
-
-<p class="note">The rollicking novels of Lever’s earlier manner might all be included here.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Lover, Samuel.</span> HANDY ANDY.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">⸺ FURTHER STORIES OF IRELAND.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">MacManus, Seumas.</span> THE LEADIN’ ROAD TO DONEGAL.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">⸺ THE HUMOURS OF DONEGAL.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">⸺ ’TWAS IN DHROLL DONEGAL.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">⸺ DOCTOR KILGANNON.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Downey, Edmund.</span> THROUGH GREEN GLASSES.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">⸺ GREEN AS GRASS.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">⸺ FROM THE GREEN BAG.</p>
-
-<p class="note">And most of his other books; see <a href="#Page_75">pp. 75-77</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Bodkin, M. M’D.</span> PAT O’ NINE TALES.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">⸺ POTEEN PUNCH.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">⸺ PATSY THE OMADHAUN.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">“Heblon.”</span> STUDIES IN BLUE.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Dunne, F. P.</span> THE DOOLEY BOOKS.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Archer, Patrick.</span> THE HUMOURS OF SHANWALLA.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Doyle, Lynn.</span> BALLYGULLION.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">McIlroy, Archibald.</span> THE HUMOUR OF DRUID’S ISLAND.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Moran, J. J.</span> IRISH STEW.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">⸺ IRISH DROLLERIES.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Birmingham, G. A.</span> SPANISH GOLD.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">⸺ THE MAJOR’S NIECE.</p>
-
-<p class="note">And those of his books that are mentioned on <a href="#Page_28">pp. 28 and 29</a>.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Crane, Stephen</span>, and <span class="smcap">Barr, Robert</span>. THE O’RUDDY.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">O’Donovan, Michael.</span> MR. MULDOON.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_286"></a>[286]</span></p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Wright, R. H.</span> THE SURPRISING ADVENTURES OF MY FRIEND
-PATRICK DEMPSEY.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Gill, M. H.</span> &amp; Co., Publ. IRISH PLEASANTRY AND FUN.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Lyttle, W. G.; “Robin.”</span> ROBIN’S READINGS.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Maginn, Wm.</span> MISCELLANIES.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Fitzgerald, Rev. T. A.</span> HOMESPUN YARNS.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">⸺ FITS AND STARTS.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Harkin, Hugh.</span> THE QUARTERCLIFT.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Blenkinsop, A.</span> PADDIANA.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Conyers, Dorothea.</span> Most of her sporting novels are humorous. See <a href="#Page_55">pp.
-55 <i>sqq.</i></a></p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Rogers, R. D.</span> THE ADVENTURES OF ST. KEVIN.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Roche, Hon. Alexis.</span> JOURNEYINGS WITH JERRY THE JARVEY.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Langridge, Rosamund.</span> IMPERIAL RICHENDA.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Jebb, Horsley.</span> SPORT ON IRISH BOGS.</p>
-
-<p class="hanging">⸺ THE IRISH BUBBLE AND SQUEAK.</p>
-
-<p>There are some humorous stories in <span class="smcap">Lefanu’s</span> “Purcell Papers” that
-make us regret that he did not give us more in the same vein. <span class="smcap">Carleton’s</span>
-“Stories” are a miscellany containing episodes of the wildest fun amid
-much that is gloomy, and scenes of pleasant and kindly humour interspersed
-with traits of savagery and of fanaticism.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_287"></a>[287]</span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_288"></a>[288]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="INDEX">INDEX.</h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>This is, in the main, an index of <i>titles</i>. Some selected subjects have
-also been indexed, viz., the more important of those occurring in the notes.
-Subjects dealt with in the classified lists (<a href="#APPENDIX_D">Appendix D</a>) have not been
-indexed here.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_289"></a>[289]</span></p>
-
-<ul>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Abbey of Innismoyle, The; <a href="#Page_40">40</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Absentee, The; <a href="#Page_81">81</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Across an Irish Bog, <a href="#Page_107">107</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Adventurer, The; <a href="#Page_1">1</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Adventurers, The; <a href="#Page_1">1</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Adventures of a Bashful Irishman, <a href="#Page_69">69</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Adventures of an Irish Gentleman, <a href="#Page_180">180</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Adventures of Alicia, The; <a href="#Page_248">248</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Adventures of Capt. Blake, The; <a href="#Page_175">175</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Adventures of Capt. O’Sullivan, The; <a href="#Page_176">176</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Adventures of Count O’Connor, The; <a href="#Page_239">239</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Adventures of Felix and Rosarito, The; <a href="#Page_1">1</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Adventures of Hector O’Halloran, The; <a href="#Page_176">176</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Adventures of Mick Callighin, M.P., <a href="#Page_16">16</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Adventures of Mr. Moses Finegan, <a href="#Page_1">1</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Adventures of St. Kevin, and other Irish Tales, The; <a href="#Page_220">220</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Adventures of the Children of the King of Norway, <a href="#Page_118">118</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Against the Pikes, <a href="#Page_239">239</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Agitator von Irland, Der; <a href="#Page_226">226</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Agnes Arnold, <a href="#Page_154">154</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Agrarian Agitation</i>, <a href="#Page_1">1</a>, <a href="#Page_2">2</a>, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>, <a href="#Page_6">6</a>, <a href="#Page_7">7</a>, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>, <a href="#Page_10">10</a>, <a href="#Page_11">11</a>, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>, <a href="#Page_13">13</a>, <a href="#Page_18">18</a>, <a href="#Page_20">20</a>, <a href="#Page_24">24</a>, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>, <a href="#Page_33">33</a>, <a href="#Page_36">36</a>, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>, <a href="#Page_48">48</a>, <a href="#Page_49">49</a>, <a href="#Page_59">59</a>, <a href="#Page_67">67</a>, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>, <a href="#Page_123">123</a>, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>, <a href="#Page_136">136</a>, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>, <a href="#Page_148">148</a>, <a href="#Page_152">152</a>, <a href="#Page_154">154</a>, <a href="#Page_156">156</a>, <a href="#Page_169">169</a>, <a href="#Page_178">178</a>, <a href="#Page_194">194</a>, <a href="#Page_195">195</a>, <a href="#Page_210">210</a>, <a href="#Page_211">211</a>, <a href="#Page_212">212</a>, <a href="#Page_215">215</a>, <a href="#Page_220">220</a>, <a href="#Page_221">221</a>, <a href="#Page_227">227</a>, <a href="#Page_242">242</a>, <a href="#Page_243">243</a>, <a href="#Page_244">244</a>, <a href="#Page_245">245</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Aileen Alannah, <a href="#Page_96">96</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Aileen Aroon, <a href="#Page_215">215</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ailey Moore, <a href="#Page_195">195</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Albion and Ierne, <a href="#Page_1">1</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Aliens of the West, <a href="#Page_79">79</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">All for Prince Charlie, <a href="#Page_237">237</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">All on the Irish Shore, <a href="#Page_233">233</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Amazing Conspiracy, An; <a href="#Page_110">110</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ambush of Young Days, <a href="#Page_135">135</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>America, Irish in</i>; <a href="#Page_10">10</a>, <a href="#Page_11">11</a>, <a href="#Page_13">13</a>, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>, <a href="#Page_51">51</a>, <a href="#Page_55">55</a>, <a href="#Page_64">64</a>, <a href="#Page_73">73</a>, <a href="#Page_77">77</a>, <a href="#Page_79">79</a>, <a href="#Page_82">82</a>, <a href="#Page_110">110</a>, <a href="#Page_114">114</a>, <a href="#Page_144">144</a>, <a href="#Page_171">171</a>, <a href="#Page_189">189</a>, <a href="#Page_191">191</a>, <a href="#Page_196">196</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Amusing Irish Tales, <a href="#Page_46">46</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Anchor Watch Yarns, <a href="#Page_75">75</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ancient Heroic Romances of Ireland, <a href="#Page_137">137</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ancient Irish Epic Tale, The Táin, An; <a href="#Page_78">78</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ancient Legends of Ireland, <a href="#Page_254">254</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">André Besnard, <a href="#Page_256">256</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx" id="The_Anglo-Irish">Anglo-Irish of the Nineteenth Century, The; <a href="#Page_19">19</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Anna Reilly, the Irish Girl; <a href="#Page_1">1</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Anne Cosgrave, <a href="#Page_46">46</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Another Creel of Irish Stories, <a href="#Page_24">24</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Antrim</i>, <a href="#Page_6">6</a>, <a href="#Page_19">19</a>, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>, <a href="#Page_60">60</a>, <a href="#Page_63">63</a>, <a href="#Page_65">65</a>, <a href="#Page_68">68</a>, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>, <a href="#Page_87">87</a>, <a href="#Page_101">101</a>, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>, <a href="#Page_119">119</a>, <a href="#Page_150">150</a>, <a href="#Page_160">160</a>, <a href="#Page_161">161</a>, <a href="#Page_173">173</a>, <a href="#Page_184">184</a>, <a href="#Page_188">188</a>, <a href="#Page_189">189</a>, <a href="#Page_207">207</a>, <a href="#Page_210">210</a>, <a href="#Page_215">215</a>, <a href="#Page_236">236</a>, <a href="#Page_256">256</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Apple of Eden, The; <a href="#Page_241">241</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ardnaree, <a href="#Page_158">158</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Armagh</i>, <a href="#Page_94">94</a>, <a href="#Page_127">127</a>, <a href="#Page_205">205</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Arran Islands</i>, <a href="#Page_20">20</a>, <a href="#Page_70">70</a>, <a href="#Page_136">136</a>, <a href="#Page_146">146</a>, <a href="#Page_233">233</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Arrival of Antony, The; <a href="#Page_56">56</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Arthurian Romances, Two Irish; <a href="#Page_153">153</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Art Maguire, <a href="#Page_48">48</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Arthur O’Leary, <a href="#Page_142">142</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Art MacMurrough O’Kavanagh, <a href="#Page_198">198</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">At the Back of the World, <a href="#Page_177">177</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">At the Door of the Gate, <a href="#Page_216">216</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">At the Rising of the Moon, <a href="#Page_173">173</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Attila and his Conquerors, <a href="#Page_52">52</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Auld Meetin’ Hoose Green, The; <a href="#Page_160">160</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Aunt Jane and Uncle James, <a href="#Page_56">56</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Australia</i>, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>, <a href="#Page_28">28</a>, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>, <a href="#Page_88">88</a>, <a href="#Page_112">112</a>, <a href="#Page_116">116</a>, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Autobiography of a Child, <a href="#Page_151">151</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Awkward Squads, The; <a href="#Page_38">38</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Bad times, The; <a href="#Page_27">27</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Baldearg O’Donnell, <a href="#Page_45">45</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_290"></a>[290]</span>Ballads in Prose, <a href="#Page_116">116</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ballinvalley, <a href="#Page_257">257</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ballybeg Junction, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ballyblunder, <a href="#Page_1">1</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ballygowna, <a href="#Page_100">100</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ballygullion, <a href="#Page_77">77</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ballymuckbeg, <a href="#Page_106">106</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ballyronan, <a href="#Page_1">1</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Banker’s Love Story, A; <a href="#Page_161">161</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Banks of the Boro, The; <a href="#Page_128">128</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Banshee’s Warning and other Tales, The; <a href="#Page_218">218</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Barbaric Tales, <a href="#Page_163">163</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bardic Stories of Ireland, The; <a href="#Page_128">128</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Barney Mahoney, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Barney the Boyo, <a href="#Page_88">88</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Barrington, <a href="#Page_145">145</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Barry Lyndon, Memoirs of; <a href="#Page_240">240</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Barrys, The; <a href="#Page_39">39</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Barrys of Beigh, The; <a href="#Page_103">103</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Battle of Connemara, The; <a href="#Page_206">206</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Beckoning of the Wand, The; <a href="#Page_69">69</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Before the Dawn in Erin, <a href="#Page_72">72</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Beggar on Horseback, A; <a href="#Page_126">126</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Belfast</i>, <a href="#Page_33">33</a>, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>, <a href="#Page_74">74</a>, <a href="#Page_84">84</a>, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>, <a href="#Page_108">108</a>, <a href="#Page_119">119</a>, <a href="#Page_161">161</a>, <a href="#Page_195">195</a>, <a href="#Page_216">216</a>, <a href="#Page_218">218</a>, <a href="#Page_251">251</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Belfast Boy, The; <a href="#Page_33">33</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bell Barry, <a href="#Page_132">132</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bend of the Road, The; <a href="#Page_166">166</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Benedict Kavanagh, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Berna Boyle, <a href="#Page_218">218</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Beside the Fire, <a href="#Page_118">118</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bessy Conway, <a href="#Page_224">224</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Betsy Gray, <a href="#Page_153">153</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bewitched Fiddle and other Irish Tales, The; <a href="#Page_166">166</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Beyond the Boundary, <a href="#Page_107">107</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Beyond the Pale, <a href="#Page_61">61</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bianca, <a href="#Page_175">175</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bird of Passage, A; <a href="#Page_61">61</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bit o’ Writing, The; <a href="#Page_21">21</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bits of Blarney, <a href="#Page_162">162</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Black Abbey, <a href="#Page_63">63</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Black Baronet, The; <a href="#Page_49">49</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Black Monday Insurrection, <a href="#Page_1">1</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Black Prophet, The; <a href="#Page_48">48</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Black Wing, The; <a href="#Page_148">148</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Blakes and Flanagans, The; <a href="#Page_224">224</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Blind Larry, <a href="#Page_168">168</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Blind Maureen and other Stories, <a href="#Page_126">126</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Blindness of Dr. Gray, The; <a href="#Page_230">230</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Blind Side of the Heart, The; <a href="#Page_60">60</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bob Norberry, <a href="#Page_2">2</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Boffin’s Find, <a href="#Page_243">243</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bog of Stars, The; <a href="#Page_202">202</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bonnie Dunraven, <a href="#Page_213">213</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Book of Ballynoggin, The; <a href="#Page_15">15</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Book of Gilly, The; <a href="#Page_137">137</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Book of Modern Irish Anecdotes, The; <a href="#Page_128">128</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Book of Saints and Wonders, A; <a href="#Page_99">99</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Boycotted Household, A; <a href="#Page_156">156</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Boyne Water, The; <a href="#Page_19">19</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Boy Hero of Erin, The; <a href="#Page_234">234</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Boy in Eirinn, A; <a href="#Page_54">54</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Boy in the Country, A; <a href="#Page_236">236</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Boy, Some Horses, and a Girl, The; <a href="#Page_56">56</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Boys of Baltimore, The; <a href="#Page_235">235</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bracknells, The; <a href="#Page_216">216</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bramleighs of Bishop’s Folly, The; <a href="#Page_146">146</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Branan the Pict, <a href="#Page_209">209</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Brandons, The; <a href="#Page_71">71</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Brayhard, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bridal of Dunamore, The; <a href="#Page_219">219</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Brides of Ardmore, The; <a href="#Page_232">232</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bridget Considine, <a href="#Page_64">64</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bridget Sullivan, <a href="#Page_2">2</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Brigade, Irish</i>; <a href="#Page_15">15</a>, <a href="#Page_31">31</a>, <a href="#Page_50">50</a>, <a href="#Page_81">81</a>, <a href="#Page_105">105</a>, <a href="#Page_112">112</a>, <a href="#Page_122">122</a>, <a href="#Page_126">126</a>, <a href="#Page_138">138</a>, <a href="#Page_149">149</a>, <a href="#Page_163">163</a>, <a href="#Page_165">165</a>, <a href="#Page_204">204</a>, <a href="#Page_215">215</a>, <a href="#Page_253">253</a>, <a href="#Page_257">257</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Briseur de Fers, Le; <a href="#Page_72">72</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Britain Long Ago, <a href="#Page_255">255</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Broken Sword of Ulster, The; <a href="#Page_66">66</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">“Bruce Reynall, M.A.”; <a href="#Page_59">59</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bryan O’Regan, <a href="#Page_201">201</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bunch of Shamrocks, A; <a href="#Page_30">30</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bundle of Rushes, A; <a href="#Page_42">42</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Buried Lady, The; <a href="#Page_204">204</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Burnt Flax, <a href="#Page_211">211</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Burtons of Dunroe, The; <a href="#Page_35">35</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">By a Hearth in Eirinn, <a href="#Page_205">205</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">By Beach and Bogland, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">By Lone Craig Linnie Burn, <a href="#Page_161">161</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Byrnes of Glengoulah, The; <a href="#Page_2">2</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">By Shamrock and Heather, <a href="#Page_75">75</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">By the Barrow River and other Stories, <a href="#Page_138">138</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">By the Brown Bog, <a href="#Page_2">2</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">By the Stream of Kilmeen, <a href="#Page_206">206</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">By Thrasna River, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Cabin Conversations and Castle Scenes, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Calling of the Weir, The; <a href="#Page_134">134</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cambia Carty and other Stories, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Cameron and Ferguson’s Publications</i>. <a href="#Page_265">Append. B., 265</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Canvassing, <a href="#Page_172">172</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Candle and Crib, <a href="#Page_213">213</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Captain Harry, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Captain Lanagan’s Log, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Captain Latymer, <a href="#Page_181">181</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Captain O’Shaughnessy’s Sporting Career, <a href="#Page_201">201</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">“Capture of Killeshin, The”; <a href="#Page_86">86</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Card Drawing, <a href="#Page_100">100</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Carlow</i>, <a href="#Page_65">65</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Carrigaholt, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Carrigmore, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_291"></a>[291]</span>Carroll O’Donoghue, <a href="#Page_85">85</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Carrow of Carrowduff, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Castle Chapel, The; <a href="#Page_220">220</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Castle Daly, <a href="#Page_125">125</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Castle Omeragh, <a href="#Page_181">181</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Castle Rackrent, <a href="#Page_81">81</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Castle Richmond, <a href="#Page_244">244</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cathair Conroi, <a href="#Page_77">77</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Catholic Truth Societies.</i> <a href="#APPENDIX_B">Append. B.</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cathreim Cellachain Caisil, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cattle Raid of Cualnge, The; <a href="#Page_85">85</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Cavan</i>, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>, <a href="#Page_39">39</a>, <a href="#Page_118">118</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cavern in the Wicklow Mountains, The; <a href="#Page_3">3</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Celt and Saxon, <a href="#Page_178">178</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Celtic Dragon Myth, The; <a href="#Page_44">44</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Celtic Fairy Tales, <a href="#Page_120">120</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Celtic Fireside, A; <a href="#Page_90">90</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Celtic Folk-lore, Welsh and Manx, <a href="#Page_217">217</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Celtic Stories, <a href="#Page_240">240</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Celtic Tales, <a href="#Page_52">52</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Celtic Myth and Legend Poetry and Romance, <a href="#Page_234">234</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Celtic Twilight, The; <a href="#Page_258">258</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Celtic Wonder Tales, <a href="#Page_259">259</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Celtic Wonder World, The; <a href="#Page_240">240</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Chain of Gold, The; <a href="#Page_203">203</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Chances of War, The; <a href="#Page_87">87</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Changeling, The; <a href="#Page_20">20</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Chapters of College Romance, <a href="#Page_42">42</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Characteristic Sketches of Ireland and the Irish, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Charles Mowbray, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Charles O’Malley, <a href="#Page_141">141</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Charlton, <a href="#Page_95">95</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Charming of Estercel, The; <a href="#Page_217">217</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx" id="Charwoman">Charwoman’s daughter, The; <a href="#Page_235">235</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Children of Kings, <a href="#Page_199">199</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Children of Nugentstown, The; <a href="#Page_243">243</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Children of Sorrow, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Children of the Abbey, The; <a href="#Page_219">219</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Children of the Dead end, <a href="#Page_159">159</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Children of the Gael, <a href="#Page_70">70</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Children of the Hills, <a href="#Page_197">197</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Children’s Book of Celtic Stories, The; <a href="#Page_99">99</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Christian Physiologist, The; <a href="#Page_100">100</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Christy Carew, <a href="#Page_109">109</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Chronicles of Castle Cloyne, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Clare</i>, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>, <a href="#Page_74">74</a>, <a href="#Page_99">99</a>, <a href="#Page_101">101</a>, <a href="#Page_124">124</a>, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>, <a href="#Page_136">136</a>, <a href="#Page_181">181</a>, <a href="#Page_196">196</a>, <a href="#Page_206">206</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Clare Nugent, <a href="#Page_186">186</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Clashmore, <a href="#Page_77">77</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Clementina, <a href="#Page_172">172</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Clongowes Wood College</i>, <a href="#Page_53">53</a>, <a href="#Page_123">123</a>, <a href="#Page_127">127</a>, <a href="#Page_172">172</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cluster of Nuts, A; <a href="#Page_246">246</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cluster of Shamrocks, A; <a href="#Page_41">41</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Clutch of Circumstances, The; <a href="#Page_227">227</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cock and Anchor, The; <a href="#Page_139">139</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Collection of the Oldest and Most Popular Legends of the Peasantry of Clare and Galway, A; <a href="#Page_31">31</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Collegians, The; <a href="#Page_100">100</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Colonel Ormsby, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Columbanus the Celt, <a href="#Page_138">138</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Coming of Cuchulainn, <a href="#Page_203">203</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Coming of Lugh, The; <a href="#Page_259">259</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Coming of the King, The; <a href="#Page_53">53</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Conan the Wonderworker, <a href="#Page_70">70</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Con Cregan, <a href="#Page_144">144</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Confederate Chieftains, The; <a href="#Page_224">224</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Confessions of a Whitefoot, <a href="#Page_67">67</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Confessions of Con Cregan, <a href="#Page_144">144</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Confessions of Harry Lorrequer, <a href="#Page_141">141</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Confessions of Honor Delany, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Confessors of Connaught, <a href="#Page_177">177</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Conformists, The; <a href="#Page_19">19</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Connal ou les Milesiens, <a href="#Page_174">174</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Connaught, A Tale of 1798; <a href="#Page_17">17</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Connemara, <a href="#Page_65">65</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Connemara</i>, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>, <a href="#Page_20">20</a>, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>, <a href="#Page_57">57</a>, <a href="#Page_70">70</a>, <a href="#Page_71">71</a>, <a href="#Page_92">92</a>, <a href="#Page_125">125</a>, <a href="#Page_136">136</a>, <a href="#Page_143">143</a>, <a href="#Page_193">193</a>, <a href="#Page_200">200</a>, <a href="#Page_218">218</a>, <a href="#Page_233">233</a>, <a href="#Page_247">247</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Connor D’Arcy’s Struggles, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Con O’Regan, <a href="#Page_225">225</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Conquered at Last, <a href="#Page_205">205</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Considine Luck, The; <a href="#Page_114">114</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Contes et Légendes d’Irlande, <a href="#Page_74">74</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Contes Irlandais traduits du Gaëlique, <a href="#Page_73">73</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Contes Populaires de la Grande Bretagne, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Conversion of Con Cregan, The; <a href="#Page_56">56</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Convict No. 25, <a href="#Page_192">192</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Corby MacGillmore, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Cork</i>, <a href="#Page_1">1</a>, <a href="#Page_2">2</a>, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>, <a href="#Page_6">6</a>, <a href="#Page_11">11</a>, <a href="#Page_13">13</a>, <a href="#Page_16">16</a>, <a href="#Page_20">20</a>, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>, <a href="#Page_31">31</a>, <a href="#Page_32">32</a>, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>, <a href="#Page_56">56</a>, <a href="#Page_71">71</a>, <a href="#Page_92">92</a>, <a href="#Page_93">93</a>, <a href="#Page_100">100</a>, <a href="#Page_104">104</a>, <a href="#Page_113">113</a>, <a href="#Page_118">118</a>, <a href="#Page_124">124</a>, <a href="#Page_135">135</a>, <a href="#Page_141">141</a>, <a href="#Page_155">155</a>, <a href="#Page_177">177</a>, <a href="#Page_180">180</a>, <a href="#Page_191">191</a>, <a href="#Page_196">196</a>, <a href="#Page_198">198</a>, <a href="#Page_203">203</a>, <a href="#Page_113">113</a>, <a href="#Page_229">229</a>, <a href="#Page_232">232</a>, <a href="#Page_233">233</a>, <a href="#Page_243">243</a>, <a href="#Page_244">244</a>, <a href="#Page_249">249</a>, <a href="#Page_256">256</a>, <a href="#Page_257">257</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Corner in Ballybeg, A; <a href="#Page_193">193</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Corrageen in ’98, <a href="#Page_208">208</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cottage Life in Ireland, <a href="#Page_206">206</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Countrymen All, <a href="#Page_250">250</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Country Quarters, <a href="#Page_32">32</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Court of Rath Croghan, The; <a href="#Page_198">198</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Courtship of Ferb, The; <a href="#Page_137">137</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cousin Isabel, <a href="#Page_16">16</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cousins and Others, <a href="#Page_249">249</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cousin Sara, <a href="#Page_190">190</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Crackling of Thorns, The; <a href="#Page_55">55</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Craignish Tales, <a href="#Page_158">158</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Creel of Irish Stories, A; <a href="#Page_24">24</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Crescent Moon, The; <a href="#Page_72">72</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Crimson Sign, The; <a href="#Page_125">125</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Crock of Gold, The; <a href="#Page_235">235</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Crohoore of the Billhook, <a href="#Page_20">20</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Croppies Lie Down, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Croppy, The; <a href="#Page_20">20</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cross and Shamrock, The; <a href="#Page_214">214</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cubs, The; <a href="#Page_39">39</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_292"></a>[292]</span>Cuchulain of Muirthemne (Gregory), <a href="#Page_99">99</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cuchulain of Muirthemne (Skelly), <a href="#Page_231">231</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cuchullin Saga in Irish Literature, <a href="#Page_117">117</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cuchulain, the Hound of Ulster, <a href="#Page_117">117</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Culmshire Folk, <a href="#Page_93">93</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Curate of Kilcloon, The; <a href="#Page_102">102</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cynthia’s Bonnet Shop, <a href="#Page_190">190</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Daffodil’s Love Affairs, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Daft Eddie, <a href="#Page_153">153</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dalaradia, <a href="#Page_54">54</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">D’Altons of Crag, The; <a href="#Page_196">196</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Daltons, The; <a href="#Page_144">144</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dalys of Dalystown, The; <a href="#Page_195">195</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dame Noire de Doona, La; <a href="#Page_175">175</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dan Russell, the Fox, <a href="#Page_234">234</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dan the Dollar, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Darby O’Gill and the good people, <a href="#Page_239">239</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dark Colleen, The; <a href="#Page_121">121</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dark Lady of Doona, The; <a href="#Page_175">175</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dark Monk of Feola, The; <a href="#Page_111">111</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dark Rosaleen, <a href="#Page_92">92</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Daughter of Erin, A; <a href="#Page_88">88</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Daughter of Kings, A; <a href="#Page_248">248</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Daughter of the Fields, A; <a href="#Page_247">247</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Daughter of Tyrconnell, The; <a href="#Page_225">225</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Davenport Dunn, <a href="#Page_145">145</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">David Maxwell, <a href="#Page_64">64</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Days of Fire, The; <a href="#Page_62">62</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Day’s Ride, A; <a href="#Page_145">145</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dead-Watchers, The; <a href="#Page_22">22</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dearforgil, the Princess of Breffny, <a href="#Page_96">96</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dear Irish Girl, The; <a href="#Page_246">246</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Death Flag, The; <a href="#Page_66">66</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Deirdre and the Lay of the Children of Uisne, <a href="#Page_51">51</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Demi-Gods, The; <a href="#Page_236">236</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Denis, <a href="#Page_87">87</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Denis O’Shaughnessy going to Maynooth, <a href="#Page_48">48</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Denis Trench, <a href="#Page_211">211</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Denounced, The; <a href="#Page_19">19</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dernier Irlandais, Le; <a href="#Page_26">26</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Derry</i>, <a href="#Page_39">39</a>, <a href="#Page_45">45</a>, <a href="#Page_82">82</a>, <a href="#Page_83">83</a>, <a href="#Page_87">87</a>, <a href="#Page_92">92</a>, <a href="#Page_101">101</a>, <a href="#Page_108">108</a>, <a href="#Page_128">128</a>, <a href="#Page_125">125</a>, <a href="#Page_143">143</a>, <a href="#Page_158">158</a>, <a href="#Page_212">212</a>, <a href="#Page_238">238</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Derry, <a href="#Page_83">83</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Derryreel, <a href="#Page_90">90</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Desborough’s Wife, <a href="#Page_177">177</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Desmond O’Connor, <a href="#Page_122">122</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Desmond Rourke, <a href="#Page_110">110</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Destruction of Dá Derga’s Hostel, The; <a href="#Page_237">237</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Diamond Lens and other Stories, The; <a href="#Page_195">195</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Diamond Mountain, The; <a href="#Page_119">119</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dick Massey, <a href="#Page_223">223</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx" id="Didy">Didy, <a href="#Page_147">147</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dimpling’s Success, <a href="#Page_187">187</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Divil-May-Care, <a href="#Page_63">63</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Doctor Kilgannon, <a href="#Page_167">167</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Doctor Whitty, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dodd Family Abroad, The; <a href="#Page_145">145</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Doings and Dealings, <a href="#Page_24">24</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dominick’s Trials, <a href="#Page_194">194</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dominion of Dreams, The; <a href="#Page_163">163</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Donalds, The; <a href="#Page_171">171</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Donal Dun O’Byrne, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Donal Kenny, <a href="#Page_182">182</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Donegal</i>, <a href="#Page_17">17</a>, <a href="#Page_30">30</a>, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>, <a href="#Page_36">36</a>, <a href="#Page_45">45</a>, <a href="#Page_51">51</a>, <a href="#Page_66">66</a>, <a href="#Page_74">74</a>, <a href="#Page_85">85</a>, <a href="#Page_90">90</a>, <a href="#Page_98">98</a>, <a href="#Page_103">103</a>, <a href="#Page_110">110</a>, <a href="#Page_133">133</a>, <a href="#Page_146">146</a>, <a href="#Page_159">159</a>, <a href="#Page_165">165</a>, <a href="#Page_166">166</a>, <a href="#Page_167">167</a>, <a href="#Page_172">172</a>, <a href="#Page_184">184</a>, <a href="#Page_187">187</a>, <a href="#Page_193">193</a>, <a href="#Page_213">213</a>, <a href="#Page_216">216</a>, <a href="#Page_248">248</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Donegal Fairy Stories, <a href="#Page_166">166</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dooley Books, <a href="#Page_79">79</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Doreen, <a href="#Page_150">150</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Down</i>, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>, <a href="#Page_60">60</a>, <a href="#Page_63">63</a>, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>, <a href="#Page_90">90</a>, <a href="#Page_108">108</a>, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>, <a href="#Page_119">119</a>, <a href="#Page_126">126</a>, <a href="#Page_152">152</a>, <a href="#Page_153">153</a>, <a href="#Page_181">181</a>, <a href="#Page_201">201</a>, <a href="#Page_215">215</a>, <a href="#Page_218">218</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx" id="Downey">Downey &amp; Co. <a href="#Page_265">Appendix, 265</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Downfall of Grabbum, The; <a href="#Page_209">209</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Down West, and other sketches of Irish Life, <a href="#Page_70">70</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Doyen de Kellerine, Le; <a href="#Page_213">213</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Drama in Muslin, A; <a href="#Page_182">182</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dramatic Scenes from Real Life, <a href="#Page_185">185</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dr. Belton’s Daughters, <a href="#Page_106">106</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx" id="Drink"><i>Drink</i> (see <a href="#Temperance">Temperance</a>), <a href="#Page_8">8</a>, <a href="#Page_11">11</a>, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>, <a href="#Page_48">48</a>, <a href="#Page_181">181</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dromina, <a href="#Page_18">18</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Druidean the Mystic and other Irish Stories, <a href="#Page_194">194</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Druidess, The; <a href="#Page_95">95</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Dublin</i>, <a href="#Page_1">1</a>, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>, <a href="#Page_10">10</a>, <a href="#Page_11">11</a>, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>, <a href="#Page_14">14</a>, <a href="#Page_16">16</a>, <a href="#Page_17">17</a>, <a href="#Page_24">24</a>, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>, <a href="#Page_42">42</a>, <a href="#Page_51">51</a>, <a href="#Page_54">54</a>, <a href="#Page_61">61</a>, <a href="#Page_69">69</a>, <a href="#Page_75">75</a>, <a href="#Page_85">85</a>, <a href="#Page_89">89</a>, <a href="#Page_95">95</a>, <a href="#Page_106">106</a>, <a href="#Page_109">109</a>, <a href="#Page_116">116</a>, <a href="#Page_118">118</a>, <a href="#Page_123">123</a>, <a href="#Page_124">124</a>, <a href="#Page_126">126</a>, <a href="#Page_139">139</a>, <a href="#Page_144">144</a>, <a href="#Page_146">146</a>, <a href="#Page_156">156</a>, <a href="#Page_171">171</a>, <a href="#Page_173">173</a>, <a href="#Page_190">190</a>, <a href="#Page_191">191</a>, <a href="#Page_193">193</a>, <a href="#Page_194">194</a>, <a href="#Page_197">197</a>, <a href="#Page_201">201</a>, <a href="#Page_208">208</a>, <a href="#Page_219">219</a>, <a href="#Page_222">222</a>, <a href="#Page_235">235</a>, <a href="#Page_242">242</a>, <a href="#Page_246">246</a>, <a href="#Page_248">248</a>, <a href="#Page_250">250</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dublin Statues “At Home,” The; <a href="#Page_150">150</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Dublin University</i>, see <a href="#Trinity"><i>Trinity College</i></a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dubliners, <a href="#Page_123">123</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Duchess, The; <a href="#Page_17">17</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Duffy and Sons.</i> <a href="#Page_266">Appendix, 266</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Duke of Monmouth, The; <a href="#Page_101">101</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dunferry Risin’, The; <a href="#Page_183">183</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dunleary, <a href="#Page_77">77</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dunmara (Mulholland), <a href="#Page_188">188</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dunmore, <a href="#Page_244">244</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dunsany, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dust of the World, <a href="#Page_108">108</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Earl of Effingham, The; <a href="#Page_158">158</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Earl or Chieftain, <a href="#Page_72">72</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Early Gaelic Erin, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_293"></a>[293]</span>Eccentricity, <a href="#Page_167">167</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Edmond of Lateragh, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Edmund O’Hara, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Edward O’Donnell, <a href="#Page_222">222</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Eight O’Clock and other stories, <a href="#Page_84">84</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Eily O’Hartigan, <a href="#Page_221">221</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Eldergowan and other Tales, <a href="#Page_188">188</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Election, The; <a href="#Page_36">36</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Elf Errant, The; <a href="#Page_207">207</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Elizabeth, Betsy, and Bess, <a href="#Page_227">227</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ellen, <a href="#Page_122">122</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ellmer Castle, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>England, Irish in</i>; <a href="#Page_12">12</a>, <a href="#Page_30">30</a>, <a href="#Page_33">33</a>, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>, <a href="#Page_57">57</a>, <a href="#Page_80">80</a>, <a href="#Page_92">92</a>, <a href="#Page_107">107</a>, <a href="#Page_114">114</a>, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>, <a href="#Page_116">116</a>, <a href="#Page_119">119</a>, <a href="#Page_122">122</a>, <a href="#Page_134">134</a>, <a href="#Page_171">171</a>, <a href="#Page_177">177</a>, <a href="#Page_186">186</a>, <a href="#Page_206">206</a>, <a href="#Page_227">227</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Emerald Gems, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Emergency Men, The; <a href="#Page_122">122</a> (Jessop).</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Emigrants of Ahadarra, The; <a href="#Page_48">48</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Enchanted Portal, The; <a href="#Page_150">150</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Enlèvement du taureau divin, <a href="#Page_125">125</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ennui, <a href="#Page_81">81</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Erin-go-bragh, <a href="#Page_176">176</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Escapades of Condy Corrigan, The; <a href="#Page_110">110</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Essence of Life, The; <a href="#Page_14">14</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Esther Vanhomrigh, <a href="#Page_255">255</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ethne, <a href="#Page_87">87</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Eva, or Buried City of Bannow, <a href="#Page_107">107</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Eva. Daunt (Alice O’Neill), <a href="#Page_68">68</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Eva. Maturin (C.R.), <a href="#Page_174">174</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Eveline Wellwood, <a href="#Page_210">210</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Evelyn Clare, <a href="#Page_24">24</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Evenings in the Duffrey, <a href="#Page_128">128</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Eve’s Paradise, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Evil Eye, The; <a href="#Page_49">49</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Exiled from Erin. Doyle (M.), <a href="#Page_77">77</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Exile of Erin, The; <a href="#Page_68">68</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Faery Land Forlorn, A; <a href="#Page_211">211</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Fair Emigrant, A; <a href="#Page_189">189</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Fairies and Folk of Ireland, <a href="#Page_93">93</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Fair Irish Maid, The; <a href="#Page_156">156</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Fair Maid of Connaught, <a href="#Page_116">116</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Fair Noreen, <a href="#Page_191">191</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx" id="Saxon">Fair Saxon, A; <a href="#Page_155">155</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Fairy and Folk Tales of the Irish Peasantry, <a href="#Page_258">258</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Fairy-Faith in Celtic Countries, The; <a href="#Page_252">252</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Fairy Legends and Traditions of the South of Ireland, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Fairy Minstrel of Glenmalure, The; <a href="#Page_138">138</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Fairy Stories from Erin’s Isle, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Fairy Tales.</i> <a href="#APPENDIX_D_IV">Append. D. IV.</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Faithful Ever and other Tales, <a href="#Page_72">72</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Falcon Family, The; <a href="#Page_226">226</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Falcon King, The; <a href="#Page_199">199</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Family of Glencarra, The; <a href="#Page_182">182</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Fancy O’Brien, <a href="#Page_164">164</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Fan Fitzgerald, <a href="#Page_114">114</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Fardorougha the Miser, <a href="#Page_47">47</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Farewell to Garrymore, <a href="#Page_223">223</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Fate of Father Sheehy, The; <a href="#Page_224">224</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Father Alphonsus, <a href="#Page_113">113</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Father Anthony, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Father Butler, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>, <a href="#Page_46">46</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Father Clancy, <a href="#Page_93">93</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Father Connell, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Father John, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Father O’Flynn, <a href="#Page_235">235</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Father Ralph, <a href="#Page_200">200</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Father Tim, <a href="#Page_191">191</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Father Tom of Connemara, <a href="#Page_193">193</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Favourite Child, The; <a href="#Page_4">4</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Fawn of Springvale, etc., <a href="#Page_47">47</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Feast of Bricriu, The; <a href="#Page_111">111</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Felix O’Flanagan, an Irish-American, <a href="#Page_209">209</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Fenian Nights’ Entertainments, <a href="#Page_154">154</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Fenians</i>, <a href="#Page_11">11</a>, <a href="#Page_13">13</a>, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>, <a href="#Page_50">50</a>, <a href="#Page_51">51</a>, <a href="#Page_59">59</a>, <a href="#Page_89">89</a>, <a href="#Page_92">92</a>, <a href="#Page_106">106</a>, <a href="#Page_109">109</a>, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>, <a href="#Page_119">119</a>, <a href="#Page_132">132</a>, <a href="#Page_146">146</a>, <a href="#Page_150">150</a>, <a href="#Page_154">154</a>, <a href="#Page_155">155</a>, <a href="#Page_162">162</a>, <a href="#Page_170">170</a>, <a href="#Page_183">183</a>, <a href="#Page_189">189</a>, <a href="#Page_194">194</a>, <a href="#Page_196">196</a>, <a href="#Page_206">206</a>, <a href="#Page_215">215</a>, <a href="#Page_230">230</a>, <a href="#Page_231">231</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Fermanagh</i>, <a href="#Page_13">13</a>, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>, <a href="#Page_164">164</a>, <a href="#Page_169">169</a>, <a href="#Page_212">212</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Fetches, The; <a href="#Page_18">18</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Fians, The; <a href="#Page_44">44</a>, <a href="#Page_94">94</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Fictions of our Forefathers, <a href="#Page_127">127</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Fight of Faith, The; <a href="#Page_105">105</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Finn and His Companions, <a href="#Page_202">202</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Finn and His Warrior Band, <a href="#Page_162">162</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Finn MacCoole, <a href="#Page_207">207</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Finola, <a href="#Page_186">186</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Fireside Stories of Ireland, The; <a href="#Page_128">128</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Fits and Starts, <a href="#Page_89">89</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Fitzgerald Family, The; <a href="#Page_169">169</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Fitzgerald, The Fenian; <a href="#Page_170">170</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Fitz-Hern, <a href="#Page_24">24</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Flame and Flood, The; <a href="#Page_134">134</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Flaws, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Flight from the Cliffs, The; <a href="#Page_192">192</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Flight of the Eagle, <a href="#Page_203">203</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Flitters, Tatters and the Counsellor, <a href="#Page_109">109</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Florence Macarthy, <a href="#Page_184">184</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Florence O’Neill, <a href="#Page_237">237</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Flynns of Flynnville, The; <a href="#Page_106">106</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Fly on the Wheel, The; <a href="#Page_242">242</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx" id="Folk-Lore"><i>Folk-Lore and Legends.</i> <a href="#APPENDIX_D_III">Append. D. III.</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Folk of Furry Farm, The; <a href="#Page_214">214</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Folk Tales</i>, see <a href="#Folk-Lore">Folk-Lore</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Folk and Hero Tales (Macdougall), <a href="#Page_94">94</a>, <a href="#Page_158">158</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Folk and Hero Tales (MacInnes), <a href="#Page_161">161</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Folk Tales of Breffny, <a href="#Page_118">118</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Following Darkness, <a href="#Page_216">216</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">For Charles the Rover, <a href="#Page_257">257</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">For Church and Chieftain, <a href="#Page_257">257</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ford Family in Ireland, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_294"></a>[294]</span>Forge of Clohogue, The; <a href="#Page_192">192</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">For the Old Land, <a href="#Page_131">131</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">For Charles the Rover, <a href="#Page_257">257</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">For Three Kingdoms, <a href="#Page_64">64</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Fortunes of Col. Torlogh O’Brien, The; <a href="#Page_139">139</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Fortunes of Glencore, The; <a href="#Page_145">145</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Fortunes of Maurice Cronin, The; <a href="#Page_130">130</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Fortunes of Maurice O’Donnell, The; <a href="#Page_192">192</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Fortunes of the Farrells, The; <a href="#Page_251">251</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Fortune-Teller’s Intrigue, The; <a href="#Page_212">212</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Foster Brothers of Doon, The; <a href="#Page_252">252</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Foster Sisters, The; <a href="#Page_148">148</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Founding of Fortunes, The; <a href="#Page_23">23</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx" id="Foundling_Mick">Foundling Mick, <a href="#Page_251">251</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Foughilotra, <a href="#Page_157">157</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Four Feathers, The; <a href="#Page_172">172</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Frank Blake, <a href="#Page_195">195</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Frank Maxwell, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Frank O’Donnell, <a href="#Page_57">57</a> (Conyngham).</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Frank O’Meara, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Frieze and Fustian, <a href="#Page_91">91</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Friends though Divided, <a href="#Page_112">112</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">From the East unto the West, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">From the Green Bag, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">From the Land of the Shamrock, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Fugitive, The; <i>see</i> <a href="#Scenes">Wild Scenes among the Celts</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Fun o’ the Forge, <a href="#Page_205">205</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Further Experiences of an Irish R.M., <a href="#Page_233">233</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Further Stories of Ireland, <a href="#Page_149">149</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Gaels of Moondharrig, The; <a href="#Page_72">72</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Galloping O’Hogan, <a href="#Page_19">19</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gallowglass, <a href="#Page_156">156</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Galway</i>, <a href="#Page_20">20</a>, <a href="#Page_24">24</a>, <a href="#Page_31">31</a>, <a href="#Page_51">51</a>, <a href="#Page_69">69</a>, <a href="#Page_90">90</a>, <a href="#Page_112">112</a>, <a href="#Page_125">125</a>, <a href="#Page_141">141</a>, <a href="#Page_146">146</a>, <a href="#Page_151">151</a>, <a href="#Page_158">158</a>, <a href="#Page_159">159</a>, <a href="#Page_160">160</a>, <a href="#Page_190">190</a>, <a href="#Page_196">196</a>, <a href="#Page_226">226</a>, <a href="#Page_227">227</a>, <a href="#Page_231">231</a>, <a href="#Page_232">232</a>, <a href="#Page_244">244</a>, <a href="#Page_245">245</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gambler, The; <a href="#Page_242">242</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Game Hen, The; <a href="#Page_109">109</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gap of Barnesmore, The; <a href="#Page_42">42</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Garden of Resurrection, The; <a href="#Page_241">241</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Garryowen, <a href="#Page_235">235</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gates of the North, The; <a href="#Page_203">203</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">General John Regan, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gentle Blood, <a href="#Page_201">201</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gentleman in Debt, The; <a href="#Page_69">69</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gentleman’s Wife, A; <a href="#Page_138">138</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Geoffrey, Austin, Student, <a href="#Page_228">228</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gerald and Augusta, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gerald Fitzgerald. (Kemble), <a href="#Page_127">127</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gerald Fitzgerald. (Lever), <a href="#Page_147">147</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gerald Ffrench’s Friends, <a href="#Page_122">122</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Geraldine, A; <a href="#Page_132">132</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gerald Marsdale, <a href="#Page_46">46</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Geraldine of Desmond, <a href="#Page_65">65</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Ghost Stories, Irish</i>; <a href="#Page_14">14</a>, <a href="#Page_16">16</a>, <a href="#Page_153">153</a>, <a href="#Page_166">166</a>, <a href="#Page_227">227</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ghost Hunter and his Family, The; <a href="#Page_21">21</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Giannetta: Girl’s Story of Herself, A; <a href="#Page_190">190</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Girl of Galway, A; <a href="#Page_247">247</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Girl’s Ideal, A; <a href="#Page_190">190</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Girls of Banshee Castle, The; <a href="#Page_190">190</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Glade in the Forest, The; <a href="#Page_103">103</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Glenanaar, <a href="#Page_229">229</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Glencoonoge, <a href="#Page_133">133</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Glen of Silver Birches, The; <a href="#Page_30">30</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Glenveagh, <a href="#Page_51">51</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Glimpses of English History, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Glimpses of Glen-na-Mona, <a href="#Page_205">205</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gods and Fighting Men, <a href="#Page_99">99</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Golden Bow, The; <a href="#Page_63">63</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Golden Guard, The; <a href="#Page_63">63</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Golden Hills, <a href="#Page_252">252</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Golden Lad, The; <a href="#Page_171">171</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Golden Lads and Girls, <a href="#Page_112">112</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Golden Morn, <a href="#Page_114">114</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Golden Spears and other Fairy Tales, <a href="#Page_138">138</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Good Men of Erin, <a href="#Page_70">70</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Grace O’Donnell, <a href="#Page_154">154</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Grace O’Halloran, <a href="#Page_236">236</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Grace O’Malley, Princess and Pirate, <a href="#Page_160">160</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Grace Wardwood, <a href="#Page_108">108</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Grania, <a href="#Page_136">136</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Grania Waile, <a href="#Page_211">211</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Graves at Kilmorna, The; <a href="#Page_230">230</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Green as Grass, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Green Cockade, The; <a href="#Page_210">210</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Green Country, The; <a href="#Page_179">179</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Green Tree, A; <a href="#Page_157">157</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Grey Life, A; <a href="#Page_219">219</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Guide to British Historical Fiction, A; <a href="#Page_263">263</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Hamper of Humour, A; <a href="#Page_5">5</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Handrahan, The Irish Fairy Man, <a href="#Page_94">94</a>, <a href="#Page_207">207</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Handful of Days, A; <a href="#Page_68">68</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Handsome Brandons, The; <a href="#Page_249">249</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Handsome Quaker, The; <a href="#Page_247">247</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Handy Andy, <a href="#Page_149">149</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Harfe von Erin, Die; <a href="#Page_220">220</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Harry Lorrequer, <a href="#Page_141">141</a>, <a href="#Page_144">144</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Harry O’Brien, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hate Flame, The; <a href="#Page_24">24</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Haunted Church, The; <a href="#Page_191">191</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hazel Grafton, <a href="#Page_60">60</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Heart of the Peasant and other Stories, The; <a href="#Page_195">195</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Heart of Erin, The; <a href="#Page_31">31</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Heart of a Monk, The; <a href="#Page_14">14</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Heart o’ Gold, <a href="#Page_249">249</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Heart o’ the Peat, The; <a href="#Page_176">176</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hearts of Steel, The; <a href="#Page_160">160</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_295"></a>[295]</span>Heart of Tipperary, The; <a href="#Page_223">223</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Heiress of Carrigmona, The; <a href="#Page_75">75</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Heiress of Kilorgan, The; <a href="#Page_225">225</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Heir and no Heir, <a href="#Page_45">45</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Heir of Liscarragh, The; <a href="#Page_213">213</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Here are Ladies, <a href="#Page_236">236</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Her Ladyship, <a href="#Page_248">248</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Her Majesty’s Rebels, <a href="#Page_152">152</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hermite en Irland, L’; <a href="#Page_5">5</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hermit of the Rock, The; <a href="#Page_225">225</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Heroes of the Dawn, <a href="#Page_223">223</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Hero Tales.</i> <a href="#APPENDIX_D_II">Append. D. II.</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hero Tales of Ireland, <a href="#Page_66">66</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Herself, <a href="#Page_231">231</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hester’s History, <a href="#Page_188">188</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hetty, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hibernian Nights’ Entertainments, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">High Deeds of Finn and other Bardic Romances of Ancient Ireland, The; <a href="#Page_221">221</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">History in Fiction, <a href="#Page_87">87</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">History of Ireland, Heroic Period, <a href="#Page_202">202</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">History of Jack Connor, The; <a href="#Page_52">52</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">History of Ned Evans, The; <a href="#Page_253">253</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hogan, M.P., <a href="#Page_109">109</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Holland-Tide, <a href="#Page_100">100</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Homespun Yarns, <a href="#Page_89">89</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Honor O’Hara, <a href="#Page_212">212</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hon. Miss Ferrard, The; <a href="#Page_109">109</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Honor O’More’s Three Homes, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Honourable Molly, The; <a href="#Page_248">248</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Honour of the Desboroughs, The. <a href="#APPENDIX_B">Appendix B.</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">House by the Churchyard, The; <a href="#Page_139">139</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">House in the Rath, The; <a href="#Page_192">192</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">House of a Thousand Welcomes, The. <i>See</i> <a href="#Didy">Didy</a>, <a href="#Page_147">147</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">House of Lisronan, The; <a href="#Page_15">15</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">House of the Crickets, The; <a href="#Page_249">249</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">House of the Foxes, The; <a href="#Page_250">250</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">House of the Secret, The; <a href="#Page_249">249</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Howard, <a href="#Page_94">94</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hugh Bryan, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hugh Roach the Ribbonman, <a href="#Page_192">192</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hugh Talbot, <a href="#Page_69">69</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Humour, Irish.</i> <a href="#APPENDIX_D_VI">Append. D. VI.</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Humour of Druids Island, The; <a href="#Page_161">161</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Humours of Donegal, The; <a href="#Page_166">166</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Humours of Shanwalla, The; <a href="#Page_17">17</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hunger, The; <a href="#Page_179">179</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hurrish, <a href="#Page_136">136</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Husband and Lover, <a href="#Page_218">218</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Husband Hunter, The; <a href="#Page_97">97</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hyacinth, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Ierne, <a href="#Page_244">244</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ierne O’Neal, <a href="#Page_45">45</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Island of Sorrow, The; <a href="#Page_97">97</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Island Parish, The; <a href="#Page_102">102</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Illustrious O’Hagan, The; <a href="#Page_155">155</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ill-won Peerages, <a href="#Page_198">198</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Imperial Richenda, <a href="#Page_135">135</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">In a Glass Darkly, <a href="#Page_139">139</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">In Chimney Corners, <a href="#Page_166">166</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Imelda, <a href="#Page_159">159</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">In a Roundabout Way, <a href="#Page_187">187</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">In Cupid’s Wars, <a href="#Page_96">96</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">In Mr. Knox’s Country, <a href="#Page_234">234</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Innisfail, <a href="#Page_112">112</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Innisfoyle Abbey, <a href="#Page_97">97</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">In one Town, <a href="#Page_75">75</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>In Re</i> Garland, <a href="#Page_208">208</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx" id="Sarsfield">In Sarsfield’s Days, <a href="#Page_165">165</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Inside Passenger, The; <a href="#Page_193">193</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Interference, <a href="#Page_61">61</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">In the Celtic Past, <a href="#Page_46">46</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">In the Days of Goldsmith, <a href="#Page_33">33</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">In the Devil’s Alley, <a href="#Page_214">214</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">In the Irish Brigade, <a href="#Page_112">112</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">In the Kingdom of Kerry, <a href="#Page_61">61</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">In the King’s Service, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">In the Valleys of South Down, <a href="#Page_108">108</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">In the Wake of King James, <a href="#Page_203">203</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Inside Passenger, The; <a href="#Page_193">193</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Insurgent Chief, The; <a href="#Page_160">160</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Invasion, The; <a href="#Page_100">100</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Invasion of Cromleigh, The; <a href="#Page_100">100</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Inviolable Sanctuary, The; <a href="#Page_28">28</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ireland: Its Humour and Pathos, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ireland, a Tale, <a href="#Page_172">172</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ireland; or, The Montague Family, <a href="#Page_84">84</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ireland’s Dream, <a href="#Page_152">152</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Ireland’s Own Library</i>, <a href="#Page_68">68</a>, <a href="#Page_88">88</a>, <a href="#Page_105">105</a>, <a href="#Page_148">148</a>, <a href="#Page_195">195</a>, <a href="#Page_213">213</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Irish Bar Sinister, The; <a href="#Page_170">170</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Irish Bubble and Squeak, <a href="#Page_6">6</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Irish Coast Tales, <a href="#Page_253">253</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Irish Chieftain, The; <a href="#Page_174">174</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Irish Chieftain and his family, The; <a href="#Page_178">178</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Irish Chieftains, The; <a href="#Page_31">31</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Irish Coquette, The; <a href="#Page_6">6</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Irish Cousin, An; <a href="#Page_232">232</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Irish Decade, An; <a href="#Page_194">194</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Irish Diamonds. (Smith, John), <a href="#Page_232">232</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Irish Diamonds. (Bowles, Emily), <a href="#Page_33">33</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Irish Dove, The; <a href="#Page_211">211</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Irish Drolleries, <a href="#Page_183">183</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Irish Excursion, The; <a href="#Page_6">6</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Irish Fairy Book, The; <a href="#Page_98">98</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Irish Fairy Tales. (Yeats), <a href="#Page_258">258</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Irish Fairy and Folk Tales, <a href="#Page_258">258</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Irish Fairy Tales. (Strahan), <a href="#Page_6">6</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Irish Fairy Tales. (Leamy), <a href="#Page_138">138</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Irish Fireside Stories, Tales and Legends, <a href="#Page_6">6</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Irish Fireside Tales, <a href="#Page_124">124</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_296"></a>[296]</span>Irish Folk-lore, <a href="#Page_204">204</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Irish Girl, The; <a href="#Page_6">6</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Irish Guardian, The; <a href="#Page_6">6</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Irish Heirs, <a href="#Page_149">149</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Irish Heiress, The; <a href="#Page_210">210</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Irish Holidays, <a href="#Page_243">243</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Irish Idylls, <a href="#Page_22">22</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Irish Life and Character, <a href="#Page_157">157</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Irish Life in Irish Fiction, <a href="#Page_87">87</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Irish Life in Court and Castle, <a href="#Page_42">42</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Irish Life and Humour, <a href="#Page_110">110</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Irish Local Legends, <a href="#Page_204">204</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Irish Lover, An; <a href="#Page_43">43</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Irish Love Tales, <a href="#Page_6">6</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Irishman at Home, The; <a href="#Page_7">7</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Irishman, The; <a href="#Page_7">7</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Irishman’s Luck, An; <a href="#Page_97">97</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Irishmen and Irish Women, <a href="#Page_36">36</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Irishmen, The; <a href="#Page_7">7</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Irish Militia Officer, The; <a href="#Page_201">201</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Irish National Tales and Romances, <a href="#Page_264">264</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Irish Neighbours, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Irish Orphan Boy in a Scottish Home, The; <a href="#Page_21">21</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Irish Parish, its Sunshine and Shadows, An; <a href="#Page_57">57</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Irish Pastorals, <a href="#Page_39">39</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Irish Pearl, The; <a href="#Page_7">7</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Irish Police Officer, The; <a href="#Page_67">67</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Irish Pleasantry and Fun, <a href="#Page_7">7</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Irish Priest, The; <a href="#Page_7">7</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Irish Priests and English Landlords, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Irish Rebels, <a href="#Page_154">154</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Irish Scripture Reader, The; <a href="#Page_54">54</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Irish Stew, <a href="#Page_183">183</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Irish Town and Country Tales, <a href="#Page_71">71</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Irish Utopia, An; <a href="#Page_80">80</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Irish Ways, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Irish Widow, The; <a href="#Page_8">8</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Irish Widow’s son, The; <a href="#Page_206">206</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Irish Witchcraft and Demonology, <a href="#Page_227">227</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Irish Wonders, <a href="#Page_153">153</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Irrelagh, <a href="#Page_54">54</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Island of Sorrow, The; <a href="#Page_97">97</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Island Parish, The; <a href="#Page_102">102</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Isle in the Water, An; <a href="#Page_246">246</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ismay’s Children, <a href="#Page_109">109</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Jabez Murdock, <a href="#Page_90">90</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Jack Hazlitt, <a href="#Page_195">195</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Jack Hinton, <a href="#Page_141">141</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Jacquetta, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Jane Sinclair, <a href="#Page_49">49</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Jennie Gerhart, <a href="#Page_78">78</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Jerpoint, <a href="#Page_171">171</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Jessamy Bride, The; <a href="#Page_181">181</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Jeune Irlandais, Le; <a href="#Page_174">174</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Jim Eagan, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Job, The; <a href="#Page_164">164</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Johanna, <a href="#Page_61">61</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">John Doe, <a href="#Page_18">18</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">John Marmaduke, <a href="#Page_52">52</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">John Maxwell’s Marriage, <a href="#Page_103">103</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">John Needham’s Double, <a href="#Page_109">109</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">John Thaddeus Mackay, <a href="#Page_254">254</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Johnny Derrivan’s Travels, <a href="#Page_36">36</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">John Orlebar, Clk.; <a href="#Page_93">93</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">John Sherman, and Dhoya, <a href="#Page_258">258</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">John Townley, <a href="#Page_243">243</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Joint Venture, The; <a href="#Page_90">90</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Journeyings with Jerry the Jarvey, <a href="#Page_219">219</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Jubainville, D’Arbois de, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>, <a href="#Page_68">68</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Julia, <a href="#Page_248">248</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Just Stories, <a href="#Page_208">208</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Kate Geary, <a href="#Page_172">172</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Kate Kavanagh, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Kathleen Clare, <a href="#Page_156">156</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Kathleen Mavourneen. (Mulholland), <a href="#Page_187">187</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Kathleen Mavourneen. (M’Donnell, Randal William), <a href="#Page_158">158</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Katrine, <a href="#Page_133">133</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Katty the Flash, <a href="#Page_94">94</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Keena Karmody, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Kellys and the O’Kellys, The; <a href="#Page_244">244</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Kerrigan’s Quality, <a href="#Page_22">22</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Kerry</i>, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>, <a href="#Page_61">61</a>, <a href="#Page_85">85</a>, <a href="#Page_94">94</a>, <a href="#Page_97">97</a>, <a href="#Page_101">101</a>, <a href="#Page_106">106</a>, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>, <a href="#Page_148">148</a>, <a href="#Page_156">156</a>, <a href="#Page_177">177</a>, <a href="#Page_211">211</a>, <a href="#Page_229">229</a>, <a href="#Page_248">248</a>, <a href="#Page_250">250</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Kilboylan Bank, <a href="#Page_151">151</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Kilcarra, <a href="#Page_227">227</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Kildare</i>, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>, <a href="#Page_53">53</a>, <a href="#Page_59">59</a>, <a href="#Page_136">136</a>, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>, <a href="#Page_151">151</a>, <a href="#Page_172">172</a>, <a href="#Page_197">197</a>, <a href="#Page_242">242</a>. [Tynan (K.), <i>passim</i>].</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Kilgorman, <a href="#Page_216">216</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Kilgroom, <a href="#Page_236">236</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Kilkee, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Kilkenny</i>, <a href="#Page_18">18-21</a>, <a href="#Page_72">72</a>, <a href="#Page_83">83</a>, <a href="#Page_96">96</a>, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>, <a href="#Page_162">162</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Killarney</i>, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>, <a href="#Page_36">36</a>, <a href="#Page_54">54</a>, <a href="#Page_78">78</a>, <a href="#Page_84">84</a>, <a href="#Page_100">100</a>, <a href="#Page_124">124</a>, <a href="#Page_178">178</a>, <a href="#Page_212">212</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Killarney Legends, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Killarney Poor Scholar, The; <a href="#Page_237">237</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Killeen, <a href="#Page_186">186</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Killinchy, <a href="#Page_178">178</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Kiltartan Wonder-Book, The; <a href="#Page_99">99</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">King of Claddagh, The; <a href="#Page_90">90</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Kings and the Cats, The; <a href="#Page_107">107</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Kings and Vikings, <a href="#Page_199">199</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">King and Viking, <a href="#Page_232">232</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">King’s Coming, The; <a href="#Page_256">256</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>King’s Co.</i>, <a href="#Page_156">156</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">King’s Deputy, The; <a href="#Page_113">113</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">King’s Kiss, The; <a href="#Page_129">129</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">King’s Revoke, The; <a href="#Page_256">256</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">King’s Signet, The; <a href="#Page_212">212</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">King’s Woman, A; <a href="#Page_247">247</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Kinsmen’s Clay, <a href="#Page_64">64</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_297"></a>[297]</span>Kish of Brogues, A; <a href="#Page_34">34</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Kitty O’Donovan, <a href="#Page_177">177</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Knight of Gwynne, The; <a href="#Page_143">143</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Knight of the Cave, The; <a href="#Page_199">199</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Knights of the Pale, The; <a href="#Page_205">205</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Knights of the White Rose, The; <a href="#Page_101">101</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Knockinscreen Days, <a href="#Page_53">53</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Knocknagow, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Lad of the Ferule, The; <a href="#Page_118">118</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lad of the O’Friels, A; <a href="#Page_167">167</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lady of Mystery, The; <a href="#Page_70">70</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lady of the Reef, The; <a href="#Page_181">181</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lake, The; <a href="#Page_182">182</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx" id="Lake">Lake of Killarney, The; <a href="#Page_212">212</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lalage’s Lovers, <a href="#Page_28">28</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lally of the Brigade, <a href="#Page_165">165</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Land I love best, The; <a href="#Page_242">242</a> (Tynan).</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Land League</i>, <a href="#Page_10">10</a>, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>, <a href="#Page_31">31</a>, <a href="#Page_59">59</a>, <a href="#Page_110">110</a>, <a href="#Page_112">112</a>, <a href="#Page_135">135</a>, <a href="#Page_136">136</a>, <a href="#Page_139">139</a>, <a href="#Page_170">170</a>, <a href="#Page_182">182</a>, <a href="#Page_183">183</a>, <a href="#Page_189">189</a>, <a href="#Page_210">210</a>, <a href="#Page_211">211</a>, <a href="#Page_215">215</a>, <a href="#Page_220">220</a>, <a href="#Page_222">222</a>, <a href="#Page_223">223</a>, <a href="#Page_227">227</a>, <a href="#Page_242">242</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Land Leaguers, The; <a href="#Page_245">245</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Land of Bondage, The; <a href="#Page_41">41</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Land of Heroes, A; <a href="#Page_199">199</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Land of Mist and Mountain, A; <a href="#Page_246">246</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Land-Smeller, The; <a href="#Page_76">76</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lanty Riordan’s Red Light, <a href="#Page_59">59</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Last Drop of ’68, The; <a href="#Page_8">8</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Last Earl of Desmond, The; <a href="#Page_96">96</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Last Forward, The; <a href="#Page_161">161</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Last Hurdle, The; <a href="#Page_116">116</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Last King of Ulster, The; <a href="#Page_96">96</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Last Monarch of Tara, The; <a href="#Page_221">221</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Last of the Catholic O’Malleys, The; <a href="#Page_239">239</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx" id="Corbes">Last of the Corbes, <a href="#Page_256">256</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Last of the Irish Chiefs, <a href="#Page_210">210</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Last of the O’Mahonys, The; <a href="#Page_8">8</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Last Recruit of Clare’s, The; <a href="#Page_126">126</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Last Struggles of the Irish Sea Smugglers, The; <a href="#Page_44">44</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Laughter of Peterkin, The; <a href="#Page_163">163</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lays and Legends of Ireland, <a href="#Page_193">193</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Leading Lights All, <a href="#Page_51">51</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Leadin’ Road to Donegal, The; <a href="#Page_165">165</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">League of the Ring, The; <a href="#Page_195">195</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Le Briseur de Fers, <a href="#Page_72">72</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Left-handed Swordsman, A; <a href="#Page_194">194</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Legendary Fictions of the Irish Celts, <a href="#Page_128">128</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Legendary Stories of the Carlingford Lough District, <a href="#Page_60">60</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Légendes irlandaises, <a href="#Page_78">78</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Legend of M’Donnell and the Norman de Borgos, The; <a href="#Page_169">169</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Legends and Poems, <a href="#Page_125">125</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Legends and Stories of Ireland, <a href="#Page_149">149</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Legends and Fairy Tales of Ireland, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Legends and Tales of Ireland, <a href="#Page_150">150</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Legends of Connaught, <a href="#Page_16">16</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Legends of Mount Leinster, <a href="#Page_127">127</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Legends of Saints and Sinners, <a href="#Page_119">119</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Legends of the Lakes, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Legends of the Wars in Ireland, <a href="#Page_124">124</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Legends, Tales and Stories of Ireland, <a href="#Page_108">108</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Leitrim</i>, <a href="#Page_118">118</a>, <a href="#Page_244">244</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Leigh of Lara, <a href="#Page_157">157</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Leixlip Castle, <a href="#Page_198">198</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Let Erin Remember, <a href="#Page_257">257</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Liadain and Cuirithir, <a href="#Page_180">180</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Life and Acts of the Renowned and Chivalrous Edmund of Erin, The; <a href="#Page_210">210</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Life in the Irish Militia, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Life’s Hazard, A; <a href="#Page_85">85</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Light and Shade, <a href="#Page_194">194</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lights and Shadows of Irish Life, <a href="#Page_104">104</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lily Lass, <a href="#Page_155">155</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Limerick</i>, <a href="#Page_1">1</a>, <a href="#Page_2">2</a>, <a href="#Page_13">13</a>, <a href="#Page_19">19</a>, <a href="#Page_31">31</a>, <a href="#Page_51">51</a>, <a href="#Page_57">57</a>, <a href="#Page_87">87</a>, <a href="#Page_100">100</a>, <a href="#Page_101">101</a>, <a href="#Page_112">112</a>, <a href="#Page_126">126</a>, <a href="#Page_134">134</a>, <a href="#Page_139">139</a>, <a href="#Page_158">158</a>, <a href="#Page_165">165</a>, <a href="#Page_193">193</a>, <a href="#Page_198">198</a>, <a href="#Page_210">210</a>, <a href="#Page_215">215</a>, <a href="#Page_251">251</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Limerick Veteran, <a href="#Page_237">237</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Linda’s Misfortunes and Little Brian’s Trip to Dublin, <a href="#Page_187">187</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lion’s Whelp, The; <a href="#Page_119">119</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lisheen, <a href="#Page_229">229</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lismore, <a href="#Page_59">59</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lismoyle, <a href="#Page_61">61</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Little Black Devil, The; <a href="#Page_82">82</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Little Bogtrotters, The; <a href="#Page_187">187</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Little Green Man, The; <a href="#Page_76">76</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Little Irish Girl, A; <a href="#Page_43">43</a> (Callwell).</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Little Irish Girl, <a href="#Page_118">118</a> (Hungerford).</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Little Merry Face and his Crown of Content, <a href="#Page_186">186</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Little ones of Innisfail, The; <a href="#Page_54">54</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Little Snowdrop and other Stories, <a href="#Page_187">187</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lloyd Pennant, <a href="#Page_193">193</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lloyds of Ballymore, The; <a href="#Page_220">220</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>London, Irish in</i>; <a href="#Page_5">5</a>, <a href="#Page_19">19</a>, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>, <a href="#Page_30">30</a>, <a href="#Page_39">39</a>, <a href="#Page_42">42</a>, <a href="#Page_75">75</a>, <a href="#Page_81">81</a>, <a href="#Page_82">82</a>, <a href="#Page_89">89</a>, <a href="#Page_98">98</a>, <a href="#Page_107">107</a>, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>, <a href="#Page_134">134</a>, <a href="#Page_148">148</a>, <a href="#Page_154">154</a>, <a href="#Page_156">156</a>, <a href="#Page_172">172</a>, <a href="#Page_175">175</a>, <a href="#Page_176">176</a>, <a href="#Page_187">187</a>, <a href="#Page_191">191</a>, <a href="#Page_218">218</a>, <a href="#Page_229">229</a>, <a href="#Page_242">242</a>, <a href="#Page_245">245</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Longford</i>, <a href="#Page_54">54</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lord Clandonnell, <a href="#Page_52">52</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lord Clangore, <i>see</i> <a href="#The_Anglo-Irish">The Anglo-Irish</a>, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lord Edward Fitzgerald, <a href="#Page_32">32</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lord Kilgobbin, <a href="#Page_146">146</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lord Roche’s Daughters of Fermoy, <a href="#Page_198">198</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lost Angel of a Ruined Paradise, <a href="#Page_229">229</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lost Land, The; <a href="#Page_64">64</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lost on Dhu Corrig, <a href="#Page_203">203</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Loughbar, <a href="#Page_133">133</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Louth</i>, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>, <a href="#Page_65">65</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Love is Life, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_298"></a>[298]</span>Love of Comrades, <a href="#Page_173">173</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Love of Sisters, <a href="#Page_248">248</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Love that Kills, The; <a href="#Page_255">255</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Love, the Atonement, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Love, the Player, <a href="#Page_226">226</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lucius Carey, <a href="#Page_53">53</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Luck is everything, <a href="#Page_176">176</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Luck of the Kavanaghs, <a href="#Page_106">106</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Luke Delmege, <a href="#Page_229">229</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Luke Talbot, <a href="#Page_192">192</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Luttrell of Arran, <a href="#Page_146">146</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Luttrell’s Doom, <a href="#Page_107">107</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Mack the-Miser, <a href="#Page_134">134</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">MacCarthy Mor, <a href="#Page_225">225</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">McCluskey Twins, The; <a href="#Page_148">148</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">MacDermotts of Ballycloran, The; <a href="#Page_244">244</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">M’Donnells, The; <a href="#Page_238">238</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Macmahon, The; <a href="#Page_31">31</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Macmahon’s Country; <i>see</i> <a href="#Corbes">Last of the Corbes</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mac’s Adventures, <a href="#Page_24">24</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mad Lord of Drumkeel, The; <a href="#Page_230">230</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mad Minstrel, The; <a href="#Page_8">8</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Maelcho, <a href="#Page_136">136</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Maid of the Manse, A; <a href="#Page_85">85</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Maid of Killarney, The; <a href="#Page_36">36</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Major’s Niece, The; <a href="#Page_28">28</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Making of Jim O’Neill, The; <a href="#Page_89">89</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Manor of Glenmore, The; <a href="#Page_126">126</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Man’s Foes, A; <a href="#Page_238">238</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Manuscript Man, The; <a href="#Page_252">252</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Marcella Grace, <a href="#Page_189">189</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Marriage Bonds, <a href="#Page_106">106</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Marrying of Bryan, and other Stories, The; <a href="#Page_70">70</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mary, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mary Dominic, <a href="#Page_216">216</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mary Lee, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mary, Mary; <i>see</i> <a href="#Charwoman">The Charwoman’s Daughter (Stephens)</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mary of Avonmore, <a href="#Page_207">207</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Martial Career of Conghal Cláiringhneach, <a href="#Page_169">169</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Martins of Cro’ Martin, <a href="#Page_143">143</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Master John, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Master of Rathkelly, The; <a href="#Page_231">231</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Maureen, <a href="#Page_168">168</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Maureen Dhu, <a href="#Page_226">226</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Maureen Moore, <a href="#Page_16">16</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Maureen’s Fairing, <a href="#Page_22">22</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Maurice and Berghetta, <a href="#Page_209">209</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Maurice Rhynhart, <a href="#Page_147">147</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Maurice Tiernay, <a href="#Page_144">144</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Maurice Tyrone, <i>see</i> <a href="#Saxon">A Fair Saxon</a>, <a href="#Page_155">155</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mavourneen, <a href="#Page_122">122</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Maxwell Drewitt, <a href="#Page_218">218</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Maynooth</i>, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>, <a href="#Page_206">206</a>, <a href="#Page_241">241</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Mayo</i>, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>, <a href="#Page_135">135</a>, <a href="#Page_165">165</a>, <a href="#Page_251">251</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mayor of Windgap, The; <a href="#Page_20">20</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Meath</i>, <a href="#Page_31">31</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Meave, <a href="#Page_57">57</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Meg McIntyre’s Raffle, <a href="#Page_226">226</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Memoirs of Barry Lyndon, Esq., The; <a href="#Page_240">240</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Memoirs of Gerald O’Connor, <a href="#Page_186">186</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Memories of a Month among the “Mere Irish,” <a href="#Page_90">90</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Men and Maids, <a href="#Page_249">249</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Men, Not Angels, <a href="#Page_250">250</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Merchant of Killogue, The; <a href="#Page_76">76</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mermaid of Inish-uig, The; <a href="#Page_82">82</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mermaid of Loch Lene (sub-t. of <i>The Water Queen</i>, <i>q.v.</i>), <a href="#Page_54">54</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mervyn Gray, <a href="#Page_180">180</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Methodists</i>, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>, <a href="#Page_161">161</a>, <a href="#Page_174">174</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Michael Cassidy, <a href="#Page_108">108</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Michael Dwyer, The Insurgent Captain, <a href="#Page_45">45</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Michael O’Donnell, <a href="#Page_171">171</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mickey Finn Idylls, <a href="#Page_121">121</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mick McQuaid, <a href="#Page_150">150</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mick Tracy, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Micky Mooney, M.P., <a href="#Page_226">226</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Midlands</i>, <a href="#Page_179">179</a>, <a href="#Page_214">214</a>, <a href="#Page_218">218</a>, <a href="#Page_220">220</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mighty Army, The; <a href="#Page_140">140</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Migratory Labourers</i>, <a href="#Page_159">159</a> (The Rat Pit), <a href="#Page_26">26</a> (Poverty, &amp;c.).</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Milesian Chief, The; <a href="#Page_174">174</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Military Mosaics, <a href="#Page_209">209</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Miller of Glanmire, The; <a href="#Page_191">191</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Minnie’s Bishop, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Miriam Lucas, <a href="#Page_230">230</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Miscellanies, <a href="#Page_170">170</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Misadventures of Mr. Catlyne, Q.C., <a href="#Page_170">170</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Miss Erin, <a href="#Page_92">92</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Miss Honoria, <a href="#Page_133">133</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Miss O’Corra, M.F.H., <a href="#Page_15">15</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Miss Peggy O’Dillon, <a href="#Page_252">252</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Misther O’Ryan, <a href="#Page_168">168</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mistletoe and the Shamrock, The; <a href="#Page_9">9</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mixed Pack, A; <a href="#Page_57">57</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Modern Daedalus, A; <a href="#Page_98">98</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Molly Bawn, <a href="#Page_117">117</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Molly Carew, <a href="#Page_30">30</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Monaghan</i>, <a href="#Page_31">31</a>, <a href="#Page_89">89</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mona the Vestal, <a href="#Page_73">73</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Moneylender, The; <a href="#Page_80">80</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mononia, <a href="#Page_155">155</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Moonlight by the Shannon Shore, <a href="#Page_210">210</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Moores of Glynn, The; <a href="#Page_102">102</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">More about Pixie, <a href="#Page_251">251</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mothers and Sons, <a href="#Page_36">36</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mountcashel’s Brigade, <a href="#Page_105">105</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Moy O’Brien, <a href="#Page_240">240</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Mr. Dooley</i>, <a href="#Page_79">79</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mr. Dooley says, <a href="#Page_79">79</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mr. Muldoon, <a href="#Page_201">201</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mrs. Desmond’s Foster Child, <a href="#Page_206">206</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_299"></a>[299]</span>Mrs. Martin’s Company, <a href="#Page_22">22</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mrs. Martin’s Man, <a href="#Page_84">84</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mrs. Mulligan’s Millions, <a href="#Page_168">168</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Munster Cottage Boy, The; <a href="#Page_219">219</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">My Connaught Cousins, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">My Foster Brother, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">My Lady Clancarty, <a href="#Page_239">239</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">My Lady of the Chimney Corner, <a href="#Page_119">119</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">My Lords of Strogue, <a href="#Page_255">255</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">My New Curate, <a href="#Page_228">228</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">My Own Story, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mystery of Killard, The; <a href="#Page_74">74</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">My Sword for Patrick Sarsfield, <a href="#Page_158">158</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Myths and Folk-lore of Ireland, <a href="#Page_66">66</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Myths and Legends of the Celtic Race, <a href="#Page_221">221</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Nanno, <a href="#Page_189">189</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">National Feeling, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Neath Sunny Skies in Waterford, <a href="#Page_228">228</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ned McCool and his Foster Brother, <a href="#Page_201">201</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ned Rusheen, <a href="#Page_67">67</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Neighbours, <a href="#Page_64">64</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Nellie Carew, <a href="#Page_212">212</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Nelly Netterville, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Nelly Nowlan, and other Stories, <a href="#Page_105">105</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Nessa, <a href="#Page_165">165</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Nevilles of Garretstown, The; <a href="#Page_171">171</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">New Lights, <a href="#Page_224">224</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Nice Distinctions, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Night Nurse, The; <a href="#Page_14">14</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Nightshade, <a href="#Page_123">123</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Nine Days’ Wonder, A; <a href="#Page_61">61</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ninety-Eight, <a href="#Page_85">85</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ninety-Eight and Sixty Years after, <a href="#Page_121">121</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Nora Creina, <a href="#Page_118">118</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Nora Brady’s Vow, <a href="#Page_73">73</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Nora Moriarty, <a href="#Page_215">215</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Norah of Waterford, <a href="#Page_191">191</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Nora’s Mission, <a href="#Page_88">88</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Noreen Dhas, <a href="#Page_200">200</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">North Afire, The; <a href="#Page_194">194</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Northern Irish Tales, <a href="#Page_95">95</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Northern Iron, The; <a href="#Page_27">27</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Northerns of ’98, The; <a href="#Page_65">65</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">North, South and over the Sea, <a href="#Page_92">92</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">North Star, The; <a href="#Page_111">111</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Not Peace but a Sword, <a href="#Page_257">257</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Nowlans, The; <a href="#Page_19">19</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Nuala, <a href="#Page_165">165</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Nugents of Carriconna, The; <a href="#Page_116">116</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Nurse M’Vourneen, <a href="#Page_36">36</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">O’Briens and O’Flahertys, The; <a href="#Page_184">184</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ochil Fairy Tales, The; <a href="#Page_86">86</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">O’Connors of Ballynahinch, The; <a href="#Page_118">118</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">O’Donel, <a href="#Page_184">184</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">O’Donnells of Glen Cottage, The; <a href="#Page_58">58</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">O’Donnells of Inchfawn, The; <a href="#Page_177">177</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">O’Donoghue, The; <a href="#Page_142">142</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Off the Skelligs, <a href="#Page_119">119</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">O’Flynn, The; <a href="#Page_155">155</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">O’Grady of Trinity, <a href="#Page_114">114</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">O’Hara, <a href="#Page_175">175</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Olaf the Dane, <a href="#Page_71">71</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Old Andy, <a href="#Page_57">57</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Old Celtic Romances, <a href="#Page_123">123</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Old Celtic Tales, <a href="#Page_255">255</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Old Celtic Tales Retold, <a href="#Page_255">255</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Old Corcoran’s Money, <a href="#Page_75">75</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Old Country, The; <a href="#Page_9">9</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Old House at Glenaran, The; <a href="#Page_73">73</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Old House by the Boyne, The; <a href="#Page_225">225</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Old Irish Hearts and Homes, <a href="#Page_54">54</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Old Irish Knight, The; <a href="#Page_72">72</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Old Knowledge, The; <a href="#Page_103">103</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Old Times in Ireland, <a href="#Page_251">251</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Old-Time Stories of Erin, <a href="#Page_69">69</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Old Trinity, <a href="#Page_123">123</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Olive Lacy, <a href="#Page_17">17</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">O’Mahony, The; <a href="#Page_58">58</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">On an Ulster Farm, <a href="#Page_107">107</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">One of Them, <a href="#Page_145">145</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">One Outside, The; <a href="#Page_89">89</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Only a Lass, <a href="#Page_78">78</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Only an Irish Boy, <a href="#Page_16">16</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Onora, <a href="#Page_189">189</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Orange and Green, <a href="#Page_112">112</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Orange Lily, <a href="#Page_63">63</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Orangemen</i>, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>, <a href="#Page_47">47</a>, <a href="#Page_59">59</a>, <a href="#Page_63">63</a>, <a href="#Page_65">65</a>, <a href="#Page_77">77</a>, <a href="#Page_111">111</a>, <a href="#Page_123">123</a>, <a href="#Page_127">127</a>, <a href="#Page_152">152</a>, <a href="#Page_154">154</a>, <a href="#Page_166">166</a>, <a href="#Page_185">185</a>, <a href="#Page_209">209</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Original Woman, The; <a href="#Page_181">181</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Original Collection of the Poems of Ossian, Orann, Ullin, An; <a href="#Page_154">154</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Origin of Plum Pudding, The; <a href="#Page_116">116</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ormond, <a href="#Page_81">81</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ormond Idylls, <a href="#Page_162">162</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">O’Ruddy, The; <a href="#Page_59">59</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">O’Shaughnessy Girls, The; <a href="#Page_191">191</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">O’Sullivan, dernière insurrection, etc., <a href="#Page_71">71</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Our Lady Intercedes, <a href="#Page_126">126</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Our Own Country, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Our Sister Maisie, <a href="#Page_190">190</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Outcast, The; <i>see</i> <a href="#Scenes">Wild Scenes among the Celts</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Overflowing Scourge, The; <a href="#Page_91">91</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Owen Donovan, <a href="#Page_206">206</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Paddiana, <a href="#Page_31">31</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Paddy, <a href="#Page_213">213</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx" id="Paddy-go-Easy"><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_300"></a>[300]</span>Paddy go Easy and his Wife Nancy, <a href="#Page_47">47</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Paddy Risky, <a href="#Page_179">179</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pale and the Septs, The; <a href="#Page_197">197</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Parish Providence, A; <a href="#Page_151">151</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Parra Sastha, <i>see</i> <a href="#Paddy-go-Easy">Paddy-go-Easy</a>, <a href="#Page_47">47</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Passion and Pedantry, <a href="#Page_10">10</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Passionate Crime, <a href="#Page_241">241</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Passionate Hearts, The; <a href="#Page_45">45</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Passion of Kathleen Duveen, The; <a href="#Page_177">177</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pastoral Annals, <a href="#Page_133">133</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pat, <a href="#Page_18">18</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pat o’ Nine Tales, <a href="#Page_32">32</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Patricia of the Hills, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Patriot Brothers, The; <a href="#Page_105">105</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Patsy, <a href="#Page_234">234</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Patsy the Omadhaun, <a href="#Page_33">33</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pearl of Lisnadoon, The; <a href="#Page_84">84</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Peasant Lore from Gaelic Ireland, <a href="#Page_71">71</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Peas-Blossom, <a href="#Page_10">10</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Peep-o’-Day Boy, The; <a href="#Page_37">37</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Peggy, <a href="#Page_68">68</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Peggy, D.O., <a href="#Page_252">252</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Peggy from Kerry, <a href="#Page_177">177</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Peggy the Daughter, <a href="#Page_249">249</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Peggy the Millionaire, <a href="#Page_58">58</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Peg o’ my Heart, <a href="#Page_171">171</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Penal Laws</i>, <a href="#Page_31">31</a>, <a href="#Page_65">65</a>, <a href="#Page_125">125</a>, <a href="#Page_127">127</a>, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>, <a href="#Page_171">171</a>, <a href="#Page_184">184</a>, <a href="#Page_237">237</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Penitent, The; <i>see</i> <a href="#Scenes">Wild Scenes among the Celts</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Percy’s Revenge, <a href="#Page_186">186</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Peter of the Castle, <a href="#Page_19">19</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Peter’s Pedigree, <a href="#Page_56">56</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Peter the Whaler, <a href="#Page_132">132</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Philip O’Hara’s Adventures, <a href="#Page_10">10</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Phineas Finn, <a href="#Page_245">245</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pig-Driving Peelers, The; <a href="#Page_131">131</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pikemen, The; <a href="#Page_126">126</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pilgrim from Ireland, <a href="#Page_171">171</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pinches of Salt, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pirate of Bofine, The; <a href="#Page_79">79</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pirate’s Fort, The; <a href="#Page_167">167</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pixie O’Shaughnessy, <a href="#Page_251">251</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Plain Man’s Tale, A; <a href="#Page_256">256</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Plan of Campaign, The; <a href="#Page_219">219</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Plough and the Cross, The; <a href="#Page_208">208</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Plucking of the Lily, The; <a href="#Page_95">95</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Poems and Stories of FitzJames O’Brien, <a href="#Page_195">195</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Poems of Oisin, Bard of Erin, <a href="#Page_231">231</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Point of Honour, The; <a href="#Page_113">113</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Poor Paddy’s Cabin, <a href="#Page_10">10</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Poor Scholar and other Tales, The; <a href="#Page_46">46</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Popular Tales of the West Highlands, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Popular Tales and Legends of the Irish Peasantry, <a href="#Page_10">10</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Port of Dreams, The; <a href="#Page_15">15</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Poteen Punch, <a href="#Page_32">32</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Poverty and the Baronet’s Family, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Presbyterian Peasantry</i>, <a href="#Page_39">39</a>, <a href="#Page_60">60</a>, <a href="#Page_63">63</a>, <a href="#Page_84">84</a>, <a href="#Page_107">107</a>, <a href="#Page_160">160</a>, <a href="#Page_161">161</a>, <a href="#Page_209">209</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Priests, Irish.</i> <a href="#APPENDIX_D_V">Append. D. V.</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Priests and People, <a href="#Page_10">10</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Priest’s Blessing, The; <a href="#Page_121">121</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Priest’s Boy, The; <a href="#Page_193">193</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Priest’s Niece, The; <a href="#Page_110">110</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Prince Errant, A; <a href="#Page_253">253</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Prince of Killarney, The; <a href="#Page_200">200</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Prince of Lisnover, The; <a href="#Page_217">217</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Prince of Tyrone, A; <a href="#Page_86">86</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Princess Katharine, <a href="#Page_250">250</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Prisoner of his Word, A; <a href="#Page_25">25</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Profit and Loss, <a href="#Page_214">214</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pro Patria, <a href="#Page_162">162</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Prophet of the Ruined Abbey, The; <a href="#Page_214">214</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Proselytism</i>, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>, <a href="#Page_6">6</a>, <a href="#Page_7">7</a>, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>, <a href="#Page_11">11</a>, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>, <a href="#Page_33">33</a>, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>, <a href="#Page_47">47</a>, <a href="#Page_54">54</a>, <a href="#Page_70">70</a>, <a href="#Page_87">87</a>, <a href="#Page_177">177</a>, <a href="#Page_254">254</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Protestant Rector, The; <a href="#Page_11">11</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Proving of Priscilla, The; <a href="#Page_25">25</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">P’tit Bonhomme (<i>see</i> <a href="#Foundling_Mick">Foundling Mick</a>), <a href="#Page_251">251</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Puck’s Hall, <a href="#Page_215">215</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Purcell Papers, The; <a href="#Page_139">139</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Puritan, The; <a href="#Page_11">11</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Quarterclift, The; <a href="#Page_108">108</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Queen of Connaught, The; <a href="#Page_121">121</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Queen of Men, A; <a href="#Page_196">196</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Queen’s County</i>, <a href="#Page_58">58</a>, <a href="#Page_126">126</a>, <a href="#Page_186">186</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Quicksands of Life, The; <a href="#Page_80">80</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Race of Castlebar, The; <a href="#Page_137">137</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ralph Wynward, <a href="#Page_83">83</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Rambling Rector, The; <a href="#Page_14">14</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Random Stories, <a href="#Page_157">157</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Rathlin Island</i>, <a href="#Page_256">256</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Rathlynn, <a href="#Page_17">17</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Rat-Pit, The; <a href="#Page_159">159</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ravensdale, <a href="#Page_242">242</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Real Charlotte, The; <a href="#Page_232">232</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Real Life in Ireland, <a href="#Page_83">83</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Real Pictures of Clerical Life in Ireland, <a href="#Page_59">59</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Rebellion of Silken Thomas, The; <a href="#Page_86">86</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Rebels, The; <a href="#Page_32">32</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Récits du Foyer, <a href="#Page_78">78</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Recollections of Hyacinth O’Gara, <a href="#Page_36">36</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Red-Haired Man’s Wife, The; <a href="#Page_50">50</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Red-haired Woman, The; <a href="#Page_130">130</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Red Hand of Ulster, The (Birmingham), <a href="#Page_29">29</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Red Hand of Ulster, The (Sadlier), <a href="#Page_224">224</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_301"></a>[301]</span>Red Hugh’s Captivity, <a href="#Page_202">202</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Red Leaguers, The; <a href="#Page_39">39</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Redmond O’Hanlon, <a href="#Page_49">49</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Red Poacher, The; <a href="#Page_167">167</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Red Rapparee, <a href="#Page_148">148</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Red Route, The; <a href="#Page_231">231</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Red Spy, The; <a href="#Page_139">139</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Repealers, The; <a href="#Page_32">32</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Resident Magistrate, The; <a href="#Page_238">238</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Return of Claneboy, The; <a href="#Page_86">86</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Return of Mary O’Murrough, The; <a href="#Page_190">190</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Return of the O’Mahoney, The; <a href="#Page_92">92</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Revolt of the Young MacCormacks, The; <a href="#Page_88">88</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Rex Singleton, <a href="#Page_152">152</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ribbon Informer, The; <a href="#Page_169">169</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ridgeway, <a href="#Page_11">11</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ring of Day, The; <a href="#Page_42">42</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ring O’ Rushes, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ripple, The; <a href="#Page_15">15</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Rivals, The; <a href="#Page_101">101</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Robber Chieftain, The; <a href="#Page_11">11</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Robert Emmet, <a href="#Page_103">103</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Robin’s Readings, <a href="#Page_152">152</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Rockite, The; <a href="#Page_83">83</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Rody Blake, <a href="#Page_126">126</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Rody the Rover, <a href="#Page_48">48</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Roland Cashel, <a href="#Page_143">143</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Roman Catholic Priest, The; <a href="#Page_11">11</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Rory of the Hills, <a href="#Page_67">67</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Rory O’More, <a href="#Page_149">149</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Rosaleen O’Hara, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Roscommon</i>, <a href="#Page_195">195</a>, <a href="#Page_216">216</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Rose de Blaquière; <i>see</i> <a href="#Lake">The Lake of Killarney (Porter)</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Rose O’Connor, <a href="#Page_132">132</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Rose of the Garden, <a href="#Page_250">250</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Rose Parnell, <a href="#Page_58">58</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Rose, Shamrock, and Thistle, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Rosette, <a href="#Page_197">197</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Round about Home, <a href="#Page_51">51</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Round Tower, The; <a href="#Page_227">227</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Round Tower of Babel, The; <a href="#Page_76">76</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ruined Race, A; <a href="#Page_231">231</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Running Double, <a href="#Page_116">116</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ruth Werdress, <a href="#Page_88">88</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Sagen aus dem alten Irland, <a href="#Page_240">240</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Saint Patrick, <a href="#Page_11">11</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Saints and Sinners, <a href="#Page_68">68</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sally, <a href="#Page_57">57</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sally Cavanagh, <a href="#Page_131">131</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sandy Row Convert, The; <a href="#Page_111">111</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sarsfield (Gamble), <a href="#Page_94">94</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sarsfield (Conyngham), <a href="#Page_57">57</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Satanella, <a href="#Page_254">254</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Savourneen Dheelish, <a href="#Page_215">215</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Scenes and Sketches in an Irish Parish, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Schoolboys Three, <a href="#Page_127">127</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">School-Boy Outlaws, The; <a href="#Page_84">84</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Scotland, Irish in</i>; <a href="#Page_21">21</a>, <a href="#Page_64">64</a>, <a href="#Page_94">94</a>, <a href="#Page_159">159</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Scottish Fairy Book, The; <a href="#Page_100">100</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Scullydom, <a href="#Page_83">83</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sea Queen’s Sailing, A; <a href="#Page_253">253</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Search Party, The; <a href="#Page_28">28</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sea Stories; <i>see</i> <a href="#Downey">Downey</a>, <a href="#Page_75">75-77</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Secret of Carrickfearnagh Castle, The; <a href="#Page_245">245</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Secret Rose, The; <a href="#Page_258">258</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Seething Pot, The; <a href="#Page_27">27</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Separatist, The; <a href="#Page_12">12</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sgéalaidhe Gaedhealach, An; <a href="#Page_118">118</a> (Hyde).</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Shadow of the Cross, The; <a href="#Page_63">63</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Shameful Inheritance, A; <a href="#Page_250">250</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Shamrock Leaves (Butler), <a href="#Page_41">41</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Shamrock Leaves (Hoare), <a href="#Page_114">114</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Shandon Bells, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Shandy Maguire, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Shan Van Vocht, The; <a href="#Page_192">192</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Shawn na Saggarth, <a href="#Page_17">17</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sheila Donovan, <a href="#Page_210">210</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Shemus Dhu, <a href="#Page_125">125</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Shepherd Prior, The; <a href="#Page_70">70</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">She Walks in Beauty, <a href="#Page_246">246</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Shillelagh and Shamrock, <a href="#Page_33">33</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Shuilers from Heathy Hills, <a href="#Page_165">165</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Siege of Bodike, The; <a href="#Page_140">140</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Siege of Maynooth, The; <a href="#Page_12">12</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Silk and Steel, <a href="#Page_114">114</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Silk of the Kine, The; <a href="#Page_164">164</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Silva Gadelica, <a href="#Page_204">204</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Silver Fox, The; <a href="#Page_233">233</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Simpkins Plot, The; <a href="#Page_28">28</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sin of Jasper Standish, The; <a href="#Page_218">218</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sin-Eater, The; <a href="#Page_163">163</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sir Brooke Fosbrooke, <a href="#Page_146">146</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sir Guy d’Esterre, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sir Jasper Carew, <a href="#Page_144">144</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sir Ludar, <a href="#Page_215">215</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sir Phelim’s Treasure, <a href="#Page_113">113</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sir Roger Delaney of Meath, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sisters and Green Magic, The; <a href="#Page_197">197</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sketches of Irish Character, <a href="#Page_104">104</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Slieve Bloom, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Sligo</i>, <a href="#Page_72">72</a>, <a href="#Page_232">232</a>, <a href="#Page_258">258</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Smith of the Shamrock Guards, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Smugglers of Strangford Lough, The; <a href="#Page_153">153</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Snake’s Pass, The; <a href="#Page_237">237</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Soggarth Aroon, The; <a href="#Page_102">102</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Some Experiences of an Irish R.M., <a href="#Page_233">233</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Some Happenings of Glendalyne, <a href="#Page_56">56</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Some Irish Stories, <a href="#Page_70">70</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Some Irish Yesterdays, <a href="#Page_233">233</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_302"></a>[302]</span>Songs and Tales of St. Columba and his Age, <a href="#Page_164">164</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Son of a Peasant, <a href="#Page_168">168</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Son of Erin, A; <a href="#Page_238">238</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sons o’ Cormac, The; <a href="#Page_78">78</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sons of Eire, <a href="#Page_159">159</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sons of the Milesians, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sons of the Sea Kings, <a href="#Page_180">180</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sons of the Sod, <a href="#Page_153">153</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sorrow of Lycadoon, The; <a href="#Page_55">55</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Soundless Tide, The; <a href="#Page_60">60</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Soupers</i>, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>, <a href="#Page_33">33</a>, <a href="#Page_57">57</a>, <a href="#Page_133">133</a>, <a href="#Page_167">167</a>, <a href="#Page_206">206</a>, <a href="#Page_224">224</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sower of the Wind, A; <a href="#Page_110">110</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Spaewife, The; <a href="#Page_34">34</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Spanish Gold, <a href="#Page_28">28</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Spanish John, <a href="#Page_163">163</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Spanish Wine, The; <a href="#Page_173">173</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Spinners in Silence, <a href="#Page_168">168</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Spiritual Tales, <a href="#Page_163">163</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Splendid Knight, The; <a href="#Page_114">114</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Spoiled Priest, The; <a href="#Page_229">229</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Sporting Novels</i>, <a href="#Page_56">56</a>, <a href="#Page_57">57</a>, <a href="#Page_61">61</a>, <a href="#Page_69">69</a>, <a href="#Page_88">88</a>, <a href="#Page_114">114</a>, <a href="#Page_116">116</a>, <a href="#Page_141">141</a>, <a href="#Page_146">146</a>, <a href="#Page_161">161</a>, <a href="#Page_231">231</a>, <a href="#Page_233">233</a>, <a href="#Page_235">235</a>, <a href="#Page_254">254</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sport on Irish Bogs, <a href="#Page_122">122</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sprigs of Shamrock, <a href="#Page_222">222</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sprigs of Shillelagh, <a href="#Page_148">148</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Squanders of Castle Squander, The; <a href="#Page_49">49</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Squireen, The; <a href="#Page_39">39</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Starlight through the Roof, <a href="#Page_223">223</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Stars Beyond, The; <a href="#Page_135">135</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Steadfast unto Death, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Stella and Vanessa, <a href="#Page_78">78</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Stories for Calumniators, <a href="#Page_245">245</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Stories from Carleton, <a href="#Page_50">50</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Stories of Irish Life, Past and Present, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Stories of Red Hanrahan, <a href="#Page_258">258</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Stories of the Irish Peasantry, <a href="#Page_104">104</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Stories of the Irish Rebellion, <a href="#Page_183">183</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Story of a Campaign Estate, <a href="#Page_242">242</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Story of Bawn, The; <a href="#Page_248">248</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Story of Cecilia, The; <a href="#Page_250">250</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Story of Conn-Eda, The; <a href="#Page_205">205</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Story of Dan, The; <a href="#Page_91">91</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Story of Ellen, The; <a href="#Page_189">189</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Story of Mary Dunne, The; <a href="#Page_92">92</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Story of Nellie Dillon, The; <a href="#Page_12">12</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Story of Parson Annaly, <a href="#Page_36">36</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">St. Clair, <a href="#Page_184">184</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">St. Patrick’s Cathedral, <a href="#Page_200">200</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">St. Patrick’s Eve, <a href="#Page_142">142</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Strangers at Lisconnell, <a href="#Page_22">22</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Strayings of Sandy, The; <a href="#Page_56">56</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Strike, The; <a href="#Page_222">222</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Strong as Death, <a href="#Page_53">53</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Struggle for Fame, A; <a href="#Page_218">218</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Studies in Blue, <a href="#Page_200">200</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Success of Patrick Desmond, The; <a href="#Page_82">82</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Surprising Adventures of my Friend Patrick Dempsey, The; <a href="#Page_256">256</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Survivals in Belief among the Celts, <a href="#Page_111">111</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sweet Doreen, <a href="#Page_187">187</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sweet Innisfail, <a href="#Page_74">74</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Swordsman of the Brigade, A; <a href="#Page_204">204</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Táin Bo Cualgne (de Jubainville), <a href="#Page_125">125</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Do., (Windisch). <a href="#APPENDIX_D_II">Append. D. II.</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tales about Great Britain. <i>See</i> <a href="#Tales">Tales about Ireland and the Irish</a>, <a href="#Page_97">97</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tales and Legends of Ireland, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tales and Sketches of the Irish Peasantry, <a href="#Page_49">49</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tales and Superstitions of the Connaught Peasants, <a href="#Page_71">71</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tales from Maria Edgeworth, <a href="#Page_81">81</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tales of a Jury Room, <a href="#Page_101">101</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tales of Fairy Folk, Queens and Heroes, <a href="#Page_94">94</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tales of my Country, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tales of Ireland, <a href="#Page_47">47</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tales of Ireland and the Irish (MacWalter), <a href="#Page_169">169</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx" id="Tales">Tales about Ireland and the Irish, <a href="#Page_97">97</a> (Goodrich).</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tales of Irish Life (Whitty), <a href="#Page_254">254</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tales of Irish Life and Character, <a href="#Page_105">105</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tales and Sketches of Irish Life and Character, <a href="#Page_49">49</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tales of the Royal Irish Constabulary, <a href="#Page_36">36</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tales of the Fairies and of the Ghost World, <a href="#Page_66">66</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tales of my Neighbourhood, <a href="#Page_101">101</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tales of the Munster Festivals, <a href="#Page_101">101</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Taste of Quality, A; <a href="#Page_222">222</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx" id="Temperance"><i>Temperance</i> (<i>see</i> <a href="#Drink">Drink</a>), <a href="#Page_8">8</a>, <a href="#Page_11">11</a>, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>, <a href="#Page_48">48</a>, <a href="#Page_121">121</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Terence, <a href="#Page_61">61</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Terence McGowan, the Irish Tenant, <a href="#Page_243">243</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Terence O’Dowd, <a href="#Page_208">208</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Terence O’Neill’s Heiress, <a href="#Page_187">187</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Terence O’Rourke, Gentleman Adventurer, <a href="#Page_251">251</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Terre d’Emeraude, <a href="#Page_33">33</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Terry, <a href="#Page_189">189</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Terry Alt, The; <a href="#Page_178">178</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">That Most Distressful Country, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">That Sweet Enemy, <a href="#Page_247">247</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Third Experiment, The; <a href="#Page_134">134</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Thirteen, <a href="#Page_241">241</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Thomas Fitzgerald, the Lord of Offaley, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Thorn Bit, The; <a href="#Page_55">55</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_303"></a>[303]</span><i>Tipperary</i>, <a href="#Page_57">57</a>, <a href="#Page_58">58</a>, <a href="#Page_61">61</a>, <a href="#Page_109">109</a>, <a href="#Page_131">131</a>, <a href="#Page_222">222</a>, <a href="#Page_223">223</a>, <a href="#Page_224">224</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tivoli, <a href="#Page_135">135</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Three Fair Maids, <a href="#Page_247">247</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Three Fenian Brothers, The; <a href="#Page_106">106</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Three Girls and a Hermit, <a href="#Page_56">56</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Three Requests, The; <a href="#Page_126">126</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Three Wee Ulster Lassies, <a href="#Page_98">98</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Three Whispers, The; <a href="#Page_58">58</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Through Green Glasses, <a href="#Page_75">75</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Through the Turf Smoke, <a href="#Page_166">166</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Through Troubled Waters, <a href="#Page_151">151</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Thy Name is Truth, <a href="#Page_94">94</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tim Doolin, <a href="#Page_13">13</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tim O’Halloran’s Choice, <a href="#Page_67">67</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tinker’s Hollow, <a href="#Page_60">60</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tithe-Proctor, The; <a href="#Page_48">48</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">To-day in Ireland, <a href="#Page_65">65</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tom Burke of “Ours,” <a href="#Page_142">142</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tom Delaney, <a href="#Page_242">242</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tom O’Kelly, <a href="#Page_183">183</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tony Butler, <a href="#Page_146">146</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Torn Apart, <a href="#Page_195">195</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Town of the Cascades, The; <a href="#Page_21">21</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tracked, <a href="#Page_213">213</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Trackless Way, The; <a href="#Page_85">85</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tradition of the Castle, The; <a href="#Page_220">220</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Through Troubled Waters, <a href="#Page_151">151</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Traffic, <a href="#Page_241">241</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tragedy of Chris, The; <a href="#Page_189">189</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tragic Romances, <a href="#Page_163">163</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Traits and Confidences, <a href="#Page_136">136</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Traits and Stories of the Irish Peasantry, <a href="#Page_50">50</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Treasure Trove, <a href="#Page_149">149</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">“Trim” and Antrim’s Shores, <a href="#Page_87">87</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx" id="Trinity"><i>Trinity College</i>, <a href="#Page_33">33</a>, <a href="#Page_112">112</a>, <a href="#Page_114">114</a>, <a href="#Page_123">123</a>, <a href="#Page_141">141</a>, <a href="#Page_146">146</a>, <a href="#Page_147">147</a>, <a href="#Page_154">154</a>, <a href="#Page_185">185</a>, <a href="#Page_230">230</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Triumph of Failure, The; <a href="#Page_208">208</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Troublesome Trio, A; <a href="#Page_35">35</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">True Heart’s Trials, <a href="#Page_222">222</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">True Heir of Ballymore, The; <a href="#Page_111">111</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">True Irish Ghost Stories, <a href="#Page_227">227</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">True Man and Traitor, <a href="#Page_33">33</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">True Stories of the Past, <a href="#Page_117">117</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">True to the Core, <a href="#Page_106">106</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">True to the Watchword, <a href="#Page_212">212</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tully Castle, <a href="#Page_170">170</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Turf-Fire Stories and Fairy Tales of Ireland, <a href="#Page_200">200</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">’Twas in Dhroll Donegal, <a href="#Page_166">166</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Twentieth Century Hero, A; <a href="#Page_195">195</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Twin Sisters, <a href="#Page_191">191</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Two Chiefs of Dunboy, The; <a href="#Page_93">93</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Two Impostors and Tinker, <a href="#Page_56">56</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Two Irish Arthurian Romances, <a href="#Page_153">153</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Two Little Girls in Green, <a href="#Page_183">183</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Two Masters, <a href="#Page_61">61</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Tyrone</i>, <a href="#Page_46">46</a>, <a href="#Page_54">54</a>, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>, <a href="#Page_139">139</a>, <a href="#Page_155">155</a>, <a href="#Page_218">218</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Ulick O’Donnell, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ulrick the Ready, <a href="#Page_203">203</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ulster Folklore, <a href="#Page_16">16</a>, <a href="#Page_94">94</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ulsterman, The; <a href="#Page_181">181</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Una’s Enterprise, <a href="#Page_206">206</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Unchronicled Heroes, <a href="#Page_82">82</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Uncle Pat’s Cabin, <a href="#Page_251">251</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Uncle Silas, <a href="#Page_139">139</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Unconventional Molly, <a href="#Page_14">14</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Under one Sceptre, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Under Slieve Ban, <a href="#Page_91">91</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Under Which King? <a href="#Page_123">123</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Union of Hearts, A; <a href="#Page_247">247</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">United Irishman, The; <a href="#Page_13">13</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>United States, Irish in</i>; <a href="#Page_10">10</a>, <a href="#Page_13">13</a>, <a href="#Page_119">119</a>, <a href="#Page_121">121</a>, <a href="#Page_133">133</a>, <a href="#Page_143">143</a>, <a href="#Page_144">144</a>, <a href="#Page_147">147</a>, <a href="#Page_207">207</a>, <a href="#Page_214">214</a>, <a href="#Page_221">221</a>, <a href="#Page_223">223</a>, <a href="#Page_224">224</a>, <a href="#Page_225">225</a>, <a href="#Page_253">253</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Unknown Quantity, An; <a href="#Page_115">115</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Unpardonable Sin, The; <a href="#Page_74">74</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Untilled Field, The; <a href="#Page_182">182</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Up for the Green, <a href="#Page_113">113</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Valentine M’Clutchy, <a href="#Page_47">47</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Vertue Rewarded, <a href="#Page_13">13</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Veuve Irlandaise, La; <a href="#Page_13">13</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Viceroy, The; <a href="#Page_193">193</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Victorious Career of Cellachain of Cashel, The; <a href="#Page_38">38</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Vision of MacConglinne, The; <a href="#Page_180">180</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Voyage of Bran, Son of Ferbal, to the Land of the Living, The; <a href="#Page_180">180</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Voyage of the Ark, The; <a href="#Page_76">76</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Vultures of Erin, <a href="#Page_79">79</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Wager, The; <i>see</i> <a href="#Sarsfield">In Sarsfield’s Days (MacManus)</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Waggish Tales, <a href="#Page_106">106</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Waiting, <a href="#Page_201">201</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Walking Trees, The; <a href="#Page_188">188</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wardlaws, The; <a href="#Page_85">85</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Warp and Weft, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Washer of the Ford, <a href="#Page_163">163</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Waterford</i>, <a href="#Page_32">32</a>, <a href="#Page_58">58</a>, <a href="#Page_75">75</a>, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>, <a href="#Page_83">83</a>, <a href="#Page_177">177</a>, <a href="#Page_189">189</a>, <a href="#Page_207">207</a>, <a href="#Page_214">214</a>, <a href="#Page_228">228</a>, <a href="#Page_241">241</a>, <a href="#Page_242">242</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Water Queen, The; <a href="#Page_54">54</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Waves on the Ocean of Life, <a href="#Page_252">252</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Way of a Maid, The; <a href="#Page_246">246</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Way they loved at Grimpat, The; <a href="#Page_84">84</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Way Women Love, The; <a href="#Page_30">30</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Weans at Rowallan, The; <a href="#Page_89">89</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wearing of the Green, The; <a href="#Page_132">132</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Weird of “The Silken Thomas,” The; <a href="#Page_59">59</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Weird Tales, <a href="#Page_13">13</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Weird Woman of the Wraagh, <a href="#Page_53">53</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">West Irish Folk-tales and Romances, <a href="#Page_135">135</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_304"></a>[304]</span><i>West Meath</i>, <a href="#Page_2">2</a>, <a href="#Page_22">22</a>, <a href="#Page_192">192</a>, <a href="#Page_222">222</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Wexford</i>, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>, <a href="#Page_16">16</a>, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>, <a href="#Page_91">91</a>, <a href="#Page_104">104</a>, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>, <a href="#Page_128">128</a>, <a href="#Page_147">147</a>, <a href="#Page_154">154</a>, <a href="#Page_241">241</a>, <a href="#Page_252">252</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">When Cromwell came to Drogheda, <a href="#Page_158">158</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">When Lint was in the Bell, <a href="#Page_161">161</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">When Love is Kind, <a href="#Page_113">113</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">When we were Boys, <a href="#Page_196">196</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Where the Atlantic meets the Land, <a href="#Page_147">147</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Where the Shamrock Grows, <a href="#Page_122">122</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Whiteboy, The; <a href="#Page_104">104</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">White Heather, <a href="#Page_200">200</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Whitethorn Tree, The; <a href="#Page_124">124</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wicked Woods, The; <a href="#Page_191">191</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Wicklow</i>, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>, <a href="#Page_17">17</a>, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>, <a href="#Page_45">45</a>, <a href="#Page_53">53</a>, <a href="#Page_73">73</a>, <a href="#Page_80">80</a>, <a href="#Page_105">105</a>, <a href="#Page_144">144</a>, <a href="#Page_156">156</a>, <a href="#Page_157">157</a>, <a href="#Page_162">162</a>, <a href="#Page_173">173</a>, <a href="#Page_209">209</a>, <a href="#Page_242">242</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wife Hunter, The; <a href="#Page_185">185</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wild Birds of Killeevy, The; <a href="#Page_188">188</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wild Geese, The; <a href="#Page_253">253</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wild Irish Boy, The; <a href="#Page_174">174</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wild Irish Girl, The; (“Meade”), <a href="#Page_177">177</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wild Irish Girl, The; (Morgan), <a href="#Page_184">184</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wild Rose of Lough Gill, The; <a href="#Page_232">232</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx" id="Scenes">Wild Scenes among the Celts, <a href="#Page_112">112</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wiles of Sexton Maginnis, The; <a href="#Page_82">82</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">William and James, <a href="#Page_13">13</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Willy Burke, <a href="#Page_224">224</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Willy Reilly and his Dear Colleen Bawn, <a href="#Page_49">49</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wine in the Cup, The; <a href="#Page_256">256</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wine of Love, The; <a href="#Page_114">114</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Winter and Summer Stories, and Slides of Fancy’s Lantern, <a href="#Page_120">120</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">With Essex in Ireland, <a href="#Page_136">136</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">With Poison and Sword, <a href="#Page_205">205</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wizard’s Gillie, The; <a href="#Page_162">162</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wizard’s Knot, The; <a href="#Page_25">25</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Woman Scorned, A; <a href="#Page_30">30</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Women, <a href="#Page_174">174</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wood of the Brambles, The; <a href="#Page_173">173</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wooing of Sheila, The; <a href="#Page_217">217</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Young O’Briens, The; <a href="#Page_253">253</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Yourself and the Neighbours, <a href="#Page_167">167</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Yesterday in Ireland, <a href="#Page_65">65</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Zoe: A Portrait, <a href="#Page_51">51</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Zozimus Papers, <a href="#Page_75">75</a>.</li>
-
-</ul>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:4em'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK IRELAND IN FICTION ***</div>
-<div style='text-align:left'>
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