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قراءة كتاب My Lords of Strogue, Vol. 2 (of 3) A Chronicle of Ireland, from the Convention to the Union
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My Lords of Strogue, Vol. 2 (of 3) A Chronicle of Ireland, from the Convention to the Union
Transcriber's Notes:
1. Page scan source:
http://books.google.com/books?id=qecBAAAAQAAJ
MY LORDS OF STROGUE.
MY LORDS OF STROGUE.
A CHRONICLE OF IRELAND, FROM THE CONVENTION
TO THE UNION.
BY
HON. LEWIS WINGFIELD,
AUTHOR OF 'LADY GRIZEL,' ETC.
IN THREE VOLUMES.
VOL. II.
LONDON:
RICHARD BENTLEY AND SON,
Publishers in Ordinary to Her Majesty the Queen.
1879.
[All Rights Reserved.]
'God of Battles! aid us;
Let no despot's might
Trample or degrade us,
Seeking this our right!
Arm us for the danger;
Keep our craven fear
To our breasts a stranger--
God of Battles! Hear!'
CONTENTS OF VOL. II.
CHAPTER | |
I. | A NIGHT AT CROW STREET. |
II. | DOREEN'S PLANS. |
III. | THE CLOVEN FOOT. |
IV. | WE PIPED UNTO YOU. |
V. | AWAY TO DONEGAL. |
VI. | GLAS-AITCH-É. |
VII. | SMITTEN WITH SERPENTS. |
VIII. | MR. CURRAN LEAVES PARLIAMENT. |
IX. | THE DUEL. |
X. | THE BIRD AND THE FOWLER. |
XI. | THE RISING OF THE TEMPEST. |
XII. | DANGER. |
XIII. | THE HURRY. |
XIV. | VAE VICTIS! |
MY LORDS OF STROGUE.
CHAPTER I.
A NIGHT AT CROW STREET.
The dowager's words produced their effect upon Doreen, despite her virtuous indignation. She no longer committed herself by indiscreet communings with the 'scatter-brained young men.' She seemed to be growing lukewarm to the cause as the decisive moment approached, shirking responsibility in a way her character belied, to the surprise of the patriots, amongst whom we must count Cassidy. The giant remarked with pained astonishment that she gave him no grateful look when he whispered about the pikes, when he hinted with dark nods that Phil and Biddy had been busy in the night; and he reflected with self-upbraiding that this change must be due to his ill-timed wooing. No doubt it was presumptuous in a 'half-mounted' to aspire to an heiress, but sure she should accept as a compliment a piece of bungling for which her own charms were entirely responsible. He resolved to be more careful in the future, striving to bridge the breach by a nimble deference tempered by judicious sadness; and let no opportunity pass of making himself useful to the young earl. His hands were pretty full, thanks to my Lords Clare and Camden, who pursued the stormy tenor of their way with an edifying steadiness of purpose. He gladly rode errands for Lord Glandore, did shopping for the countess, drank bumpers in the Castle-yard in company with Major Sirr, waited about in my Lord Clare's anteroom; became a ubiquitous, faithful, and generally useful personage. He brought news sometimes of the gravest moment to the mysterious resorts where Dublin 'prentices were pretending to play ball; which hints resulted more frequently than not in a message smuggled in a loaf to the prisoners at Kilmainham and a courier sent galloping far away into the country.
The electric cloud loomed near on the horizon. Lord Clare watched the threatening vapour as it rolled, increasing hourly in volume, and, laughing, showed his gums. The ranks of the yeomanry were swelling day by day, thanks to the exertions of large proprietors whose interest it was to be well with the court; thanks to the complaisant alacrity of the squireens who acted at the beck of the great landowners. Small riots took place both in the capital and in the provinces, tussles between browbeaten peasants and a soldiery who grew hourly more insolent, which originated for the most part in taunts at the old faith. Rumours floating vaguely, none knew whence, became current gossip, hints of a French invasion, of a landing somewhere in the north, which should set free the enslaved Catholics--of a Republican crusade in favour of liberty of conscience. The Orange societies of the north took the alarm. 'Liberty of conscience indeed!' they cried. 'We remember what happened in King James's time, when the national religion was for a brief space triumphant; how Protestants were massacred and their property destroyed. We will repel such an invasion with all our might, and will just prick these presuming slaves a little as a warning of what may follow.' There were excesses in Armagh and the cities of the