Disturbed Ireland
Bernard Henry Becker
21 chapters
7 hour read
Selected Chapters
21 chapters
PREFACE.
PREFACE.
Having been most cordially granted permission to republish these letters in a collected form, it is my duty to mention that my mission from the Daily News was absolutely unfettered, either by instructions or introductions. It was thought that an independent and impartial account of the present condition of the disturbed districts of Ireland would be best secured by sending thither a writer without either Irish politics or Irish friends—in short, one who might occupy the stand-point of the too-of
1 minute read
Read Chapter
Read Chapter
I.ToC AT LOUGH MASK.
I.ToC AT LOUGH MASK.
Westport, Co. Mayo , Oct. 24. The result of several days' incessant travelling in county Mayo is a very considerable modification of the opinion formed at the first glance at this, the most disaffected part of Ireland. On reaching Claremorris, in the heart of the most disturbed district, I certainly felt, and not for the first time, that as one approaches a spot in which law and order are supposed to be suspended the sense of alarm and insecurity diminishes, to put it mathematically, "as the squ
19 minute read
Read Chapter
Read Chapter
II.ToC AN AGRARIAN DIFFICULTY.
II.ToC AN AGRARIAN DIFFICULTY.
Westport, Co. Mayo , Oct. 25th. "Tiernaur, Sorr, is on the way to Claggan Mountain, where they shot at Smith last year, and—if I don't disremember—is just where they shot Hunter last August eleven years. Ye'll mind the cross-roads before ye come to the chapel. It was there they shot him from behind a sod-bank." This was the reply I received in answer to my question as to the whereabouts of a public meeting to be held yesterday morning, with the patriotic object of striking terror into the hearts
8 minute read
Read Chapter
Read Chapter
III.ToC A LAND MEETING.
III.ToC A LAND MEETING.
Westport, Co. Mayo , Oct. 27th. The way from this place to Tiernaur is through a country, as a Mayo man said to me, "eminently adapted to tourists." Not very far off lies Croagh Patrick, the sacred mountain from which St. Patrick cursed the snakes and other venomous creatures and drove them from Ireland. I was assured by the car-driver that the noxious animals vanished into the earth at the touch of the Saint's bell. "He just," said this veracious informant, "shlung his bell at 'um, and the bell
30 minute read
Read Chapter
Read Chapter
IV.ToC MISS GARDINER AND HER TENANTS.
IV.ToC MISS GARDINER AND HER TENANTS.
Westport, Co. Mayo , Nov. 1st. A trip into the northern part of this county, which has occupied me for the last three days, has hardly reassured me as to the condition of the country around Ballina and Killala. The last-named place is famous for its round tower and that invasion of the French in '98, which led to "Castlebar Races." Ballina is a town of about six thousand inhabitants, situate on the river Moy—an excellent salmon stream which debouches into Killala Bay, the most important inlet of
20 minute read
Read Chapter
Read Chapter
V.ToC FROM MAYO TO CONNEMARA.
V.ToC FROM MAYO TO CONNEMARA.
Leenane , Tuesday, Nov 2. The meeting which took place on Sheehane Hill was only remarkable as affording an additional proof of the extraordinary faculty of selection possessed by Western Irishmen. Whether they intend to shoot a landlord or merely to hold a meeting to bring him to his bearings, they choose their ground with equal discrimination. In the former case a spot is selected at the descent or ascent of a hill, so that the carriage of the victim cannot be going at a sufficient pace to def
58 minute read
Read Chapter
Read Chapter
VI.ToC THE RELIEF OF MR. BOYCOTT.
VI.ToC THE RELIEF OF MR. BOYCOTT.
Ballinrobe, Co. Mayo , Wednesday, Nov. 10th. Finding that despite all the influence brought to bear upon it the Boycott Brigade was actually going to invade Lough Mask, I came from Galway to-day by the route preferred by Mr. Boycott himself, just before I met him and Mrs. Boycott herding sheep more than a fortnight ago. The steam packet Lady Eglinton conveyed an oddly assorted freight. Among the passengers were Mrs. Burke, the wife of Lord Ardilaun's agent, two commercial travellers, the represe
36 minute read
Read Chapter
Read Chapter
VII.ToC MR. RICHARD STACPOOLE.
VII.ToC MR. RICHARD STACPOOLE.
Ennis, Co. Clare , Nov. 21st. At the seat of war by Lough Mask, I was informed that it would be sheer waste of time to go to Clare; that all was peaceful in the county which Daniel O'Connell formerly represented in Parliament; that at Ennis, under the shadow of the Liberator's statue, rebel commotion was unknown. All was quiet. It was true that people did not pay their rent, but that was all. I should waste my time, and so forth. But no sooner had I set foot in Ennis than I found that the jacque
7 minute read
Read Chapter
Read Chapter
VIII.ToC PATRIOTS.
VIII.ToC PATRIOTS.
Ennis, Co. Clare , Nov. 22nd. Ennis, on deliberate inspection, proves to be by far the most interesting western town I have yet visited. To paraphrase a familiar saying, its politics and its liquor are as strong as they are abundant. Ennis is famous for its electioneering fights, for its three bridges, for its public square "forenint" O'Connell's statue, said to have held thirty thousand people on a space which would not contain a fifth of that number, for its numerous banks, for its fine salmon
6 minute read
Read Chapter
Read Chapter
IX.ToC ON THE FERGUS.
IX.ToC ON THE FERGUS.
Ennis, Co. Clare , Friday, Nov. 26th. It is noteworthy that the only two persons who are doing much reclamation work in the West of Ireland are Manchester men. Mr. Mitchell Henry has awakened Connemara, and Mr. Drinkwater has performed a similar operation upon county Clare Nothing in connection with the Kylemore and Fergus Reclamation works, which have brought to and distributed a large sum of money in their respective districts, is more remarkable than the apathy of the surrounding proprietors
27 minute read
Read Chapter
Read Chapter
X.ToC PALLAS AND THE PALLADIANS.
X.ToC PALLAS AND THE PALLADIANS.
Limerick. In a previous letter I hinted that the well-to-do farmers of the West were not a whit more prompt in paying their rent than the starveling peasants of Mayo and Connemara, who, at the best, are barely able to keep body and soul together. Trusting far more to what I see than to what I hear, I become aware that in these troubled districts of Ireland, it is precisely the most favoured spots which are the most mutinous. Ballina, the most prosperous town in Mayo, is a stronghold of the anti-
17 minute read
Read Chapter
Read Chapter
XI.ToC GOMBEEN.
XI.ToC GOMBEEN.
Cork , December 2nd. Among the many spectres which haunt the sadly-vexed West and South of Ireland, there is one far more grim and real than the spectre vert who is either buried for ever and aye, or has undergone gradual transformation since '98 into Repeal of the Union, Young Ireland, Fenianism, Nationalism, and finally perhaps into Anti-Landlordism; albeit this latter avatar of an ancient and familiar spirit is by no means imbued with the poetic attributes of the original spectre. During my s
8 minute read
Read Chapter
Read Chapter
XII.ToC THE RETAINER.
XII.ToC THE RETAINER.
Cork , December 4th. In describing the character of the Western and Southern Irishman nothing would be more unfair than to leave out of the estimate his curious faithfulness to some persons, and the tenderness with which he cherishes the traditions of the past. In no country in the world is the superstition concerning the "good old times" more fervently believed in than in Western and Southern Ireland. And in the opinion of the mass of the people the good old times extended down to a recent date
11 minute read
Read Chapter
Read Chapter
XIII.ToC CROPPED.
XIII.ToC CROPPED.
Gortatlea, Co. Kerry , Monday, Dec. 6th. Having heard agrarian outrages reported one day and denied or explained away the next, I thought it worth while to ascertain the exact truth concerning the case of Laurence Griffin, of Kilfalliny, co. Kerry. It had been reported at Cork that Griffin had been taken out of his bed in his own house, that his ears had been slit, and that he had been otherwise maltreated by a band of ruffians, on the night of Monday last. Then it was roundly asserted that he h
8 minute read
Read Chapter
Read Chapter
XIV.ToC IN KERRY.
XIV.ToC IN KERRY.
Tralee, Co. Kerry , Wednesday, December 8th. The character of the principal estates in counties Cork and Kerry appears to be like that of their bacon and beef—streaky. There are to be seen some admirable specimens of skilful and liberal management, as well as instances of almost insane blundering on the part of both landlord and tenant. From Blarney to the Blaskets the distance is not that of a couple of counties, but the gap between Kylemore and Rinvyle between civilization and savagery. It wou
33 minute read
Read Chapter
Read Chapter
XV.ToC THE "BOYCOTTING" OF MR. BENCE JONES.
XV.ToC THE "BOYCOTTING" OF MR. BENCE JONES.
Cork , Friday, Dec. 17th. The present condition of Mr. W. Bence Jones, of Lisselan, whom I called upon to-day, illustrates most vividly the advance made in the art of "Boycotting" since its invention. Early attempts in any artistic direction are apt to be crude, and when "Boycotting" was first practised at Lough Mask it put on the guise of a general strike of the country side against an individual, but its effect was purely local. Since that time great progress has been made in shaping and finis
18 minute read
Read Chapter
Read Chapter
XVI.ToC A CRUISE IN A GROWLER.
XVI.ToC A CRUISE IN A GROWLER.
Cork , December 21. Just before starting towards the scene of the last case of Boycotting I had returned from a tour in Kerry, undertaken mainly with the object of collecting facts and ideas concerning the fiercely-debated question of peasant propriety. There are other great estates in Kerry besides that of Lord Kenmare, which is twenty-six miles long, and covers 91,080 acres. There are Lord Lansdowne's still greater estate of 94,983 acres, and the large property held by Trinity College, both of
31 minute read
Read Chapter
Read Chapter
XVII.ToC "BOYCOTTED" AT CHRISTMASTIDE.
XVII.ToC "BOYCOTTED" AT CHRISTMASTIDE.
Kilfinane, Co. Limerick , Christmas Eve. The fox-terrier sits blinking on the hearth-rug in the pretty drawing-room as nightfall approaches, and a servant appears with a message that a woman has come with a big cake from Mrs. O'Blank, a sympathising neighbour. There is no mistake about the size and condition of the cake; it is a yard and a quarter in circumference; it has a shining holiday face, like that of the fabled pigs who ran about ready roasted, covered with delicately-browned "crackling,
23 minute read
Read Chapter
Read Chapter
XVIII.ToC CHRISTMAS IN COUNTY CLARE.
XVIII.ToC CHRISTMAS IN COUNTY CLARE.
Ennis , Monday. In a picture exhibited a few years ago, and since engraved, was powerfully and pathetically portrayed a scene of the early life of the Pilgrim Fathers of New England. It was winter time, and the day was Sunday. Clad in raiment of quaint severity, the head of the house led his Puritan family and servants across the snow-clad fields to worship. Living in the midst of a hostile population, the little band of worshippers was armed to the teeth. The father carried his "plain falling b
12 minute read
Read Chapter
Read Chapter
MESSRS. MACMILLAN & CO.'S PUBLICATIONS. NEW BOOKS ON IRELAND.
MESSRS. MACMILLAN & CO.'S PUBLICATIONS. NEW BOOKS ON IRELAND.
NEW VIEWS ON IRELAND, OR IRISH LAND GRIEVANCES AND REMEDIES. By Charles Russell , Q.C., M.P. Crown 8vo, cloth. 2 s. 6 d. "They should be studied by every one who desires to understand the existing crisis in Ireland."— Spectator . "Mr. Russell has undoubtedly done his best by careful observation to arrive at the prevalent evils and their causes, and he has honestly and sincerely propounded his remedial scheme. His work is worthy of careful perusal."— Examiner . THE LIFE'S WORK IN IRELAND OF A LAN
2 minute read
Read Chapter
Read Chapter
MESSRS. MACMILLAN & CO.'S PUBLICATIONS. BY THE RIGHT HON. HENRY FAWCETT, M.P.
MESSRS. MACMILLAN & CO.'S PUBLICATIONS. BY THE RIGHT HON. HENRY FAWCETT, M.P.
THE ECONOMIC POSITION OF THE BRITISH LABOURER. Extra fcap. 8vo. 5 s. SPEECHES ON SOME CURRENT POLITICAL QUESTIONS. 8vo. 10 s. 6 d. Contents :—Indian Finance—The Birmingham League—Nine Hours Bill—Election Expenses—Women's Suffrage—Household Suffrage in Counties—Irish University Education, &c. FREE TRADE and PROTECTION. An Inquiry into the Causes which have retarded the general adoption of Free Trade since its Introduction into England. Third Edition. 8vo. 7 s. 6 d. A PLEA for PEASANT PROP
1 minute read
Read Chapter
Read Chapter