189 2 AYS 10 CHES USH 3.04/01 Harvard College Library CADEMIAE VARDIANAE VE RI לפורד" ON FROM THE GIFT OF WILLIAM ENDICOTT, JR. (Class of 1887) OF BOSTON BOUND BY ALWEY&CO 1 Kirkwood & Son. sculp Dublin. Marriage. its enjoyments are qualified by sorrows! like every other sublunary Blessing ESSAYS, AND SKETCHES OF IRISH LIFE AND CHARACTER; CONTAINING THE VARIOUS ARTICLES WHICH APPEARED IN THE WREATH FROM THE EMERALD ISLE;" WITH 66 THE HERMIT OF THE LAKES, &c. &c. "From grave to gay; from lively to severe.".. Pope. DUBLIN: WM. CURRY, JUN. & CO. SACKVILLE-STREET. GEORGE B. WHITTAKER, LONDON. OLIVER & BOYD, EDINBURGH. 1827 204.12.9.8 n HARVARD COLLEGE LIBRARY OCT 211919 GIFT OF WILLIAM ENDICOTT, JR. Moni, Philips Pixon TO THE READER. MOST of the following articles appeared in "A WREATH FROM THE Emerald ISLE ;" which I pub- lished last year, as "A New Year's Gift," but as I was unable to get it out at the time when the other "Christmas Presents" made their appear- ance, it of course had not that fair opportunity of circulation or sale, which it might otherwise have had. In offering the present edition to the Public, I have only to observe, that the title it now bears will be found exactly descriptive of the contents-that I have added "The Hermit of the Lakes,"-and that" The Sketches of Irish Cabins," &c. are from life, and are given from a desire of exciting more general attention to the comforts of the Irish Cottier; for, in general, while Irish Gentlemen go to great expense in erecting stables and pig-styes for their horses and swine, their tenantry are condemned to hovels that would disgrace the inhabitants of Caf- fraria, and compared with which, the wigwams of the North American Indians are comfortable dwellings. PHILIP DIXON HARDY. 24, Eustace-street, Dublin. Z 1 CONTENTS. On the Choice of a Wife, POETRY-Give me the Maid whose gentle Mien, A Party of Pleasure, or a Trip to the Dargle, POETRY-Dickey Daw, a True Story, On Matrimony, POETRY-The Bachelor and the Husband, Amelia and Amandis, or a Cure for Love, POETRY-To Laura, on Parting, ... A Water Party, or a Voyage to Howth, Memoranda of Timothy Timmons, incorporated with his .... .... .... Pedestrian, POETRY-Echoes of Killarney, .... .... .... .... .... Log-Book, POETRY-Lucy Hill, a Sailor's Letter, Jane Fitz-Charles, or the Effects of Indiscretion, (writ- ten by a friend,) POETRY-A Mother to her Infant Daughter, Wedding of Benjamin Brimmigem, Gentleman, contain- ing some Particulars of a Matrimonial Excursion to the County of Wicklow, POETRY-The Faithful Dog, suggested by an Incident 59 related in Pratt's Gleanings, Scenes in Ireland-Journal of an Excursion Aquatic and .... .... .... .... .... .... .... Page. .... 60112822 15 17 23 27 29 37 41 43. 58 71 p 74 102 ii. CONTENTS. .... Hints for Promoting Genuine Conversation, POETRY-The Retrospect, - A Fragment, On Poetic Composition-containing Remarks on the Plagiarisms of Lord Byron, POETRY-The Feeling Heart On Novel Writing, POETRY-To the Reader, Synonyme, Music-Irish Melodies, .... A Medical Prescription, Requisites for a Governess, French Epigram, Infidelity, .... .... .... POETRY-Character of an Irish Melody, .... .... .... POETRY-To the New Year, The Hermit of the Lakes, .... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... POETRY-Lines presented to his Majesty, on his Visit to this Country, The Nervous and Sentimental, On Dreams, POETRY-The Stranger's Pillow, Anecdote of Napoleon Bonaparte, Autumn, .... .... .... .. .... .. .... ·· .... .... .... .... ... Page. 104 110 111 ... ... 112 122 123 127 129 133 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 146 147 149 150 151 * *In page 74, in title, for equatic,' read' aquatic.' * The wood engraving, in p. 74, should have been pre- fixed to the Wedding of Benjamin Brimmigem, p. 59. ESSAYS, AND SKETCHES OF IRISH LIFE, &c. On the Choice of a Wife. THAT Marriage is a state in which felicity may ost certainly be found, is a truth which affection and experience combine to confirm; but, like every other sublunary blessing, its enjoyments are quali- fied by sorrows, anxieties, and disappointments, which they who enter that state under the happiest auspices should be prepared to encounter. Those considerations, therefore, should certainly operate to a judicious choice of the individual with whom we associate ourselves in the arduous task of care and duty-and who for the remainder of life is to be the partner of our joys and our sorrows. It has been said, that 'the purest flames burn the longest and the brightest,' and by an analogy which experience seldom contradicts, it is found that the love of woman is not only more lasting than that of B 2 A WREATH man, but more devoted: poverty increases its in- tensity, and exile only makes it strike its roots the deeper; nor time nor place can alter or diminish it. It dwells by the bed of sickness with a tender per- severance, and crowns the humble board with a luxury that wealth could never purchase. Of the various attractive elements of natural excellence, the greater number and the more frequent occur- rences are found in woman;-the mild eye-the smooth and gentle brow-the lip that tells of inward. quiet, are all indications of that serene spirit which is so well calculated to soothe to peace the mind of man, continually agitated by the cares and anxie- ties of life. Where domestic happiness is the object in view, the inducements to marriage should not be found in the splendor of fortune or the bloom of freshness, riches make unto themselves wings, and flee away,' and although beauty holds out temptations which many are unable to resist, still it must be re- membered that its tenure is proverbially frail, and they who sacrifice to its fascinations should be thoroughly prepared for its decay. Nor should the inducement proceed from the pride of rank or the scintillations of genius. Powers of talent or bril- liancy of imagination can never effect the stated purposes of domestic vigilance; they generally out- strip the slow march of circumspection, and soar FROM THE EMERALD ISLE. 3 into regions where parental superintendance has never yet penetrated. True feeling and strong affection, cheerfulness and activity of disposition, soundness of sense and sweetness of temper, seem to be those qualities which afford the surest promise of domestic feli- city, and the best protection against the incursions of misfortune, especially where the mind of the individual is thoroughly imbued with genuine reli- gious feeling. Such qualities as these impart the keenest zest to happiness, and most effectually dis- arm the poignancy of affliction. While the sky is se- rene, they clothe pleasure with a warmer glow, and deck felicity with brighter colours; and should the storms of adversity gather in gloom, or the clouds of sickness overshadow our path, an individual possessing such qualifications will be most likely to speak the language of fortitude and encourage- ment, evinced in acts of self-sacrifice and genuine attachment:- Did I but purpose to embark with thee On the smooth surface of a summer's sea, While gentle zephyrs play with prosperous gales, 'And fortune's favours fill the swelling sails- But would forsake the ship, and make the shore, When the winds whistle and the tempests roar ! It would be unnecessary to adduce authorities to prove that hearts rightly touched enter into a moral compact, which is binding on their affections and 4 A WREATH dispositions: nor let it be supposed that this inte- grity, this fervour of feeling, is alone the privilege of the higher and more cultivated classes;—it burns as faithfully in the breast of the peasant as of the prince; nay, perhaps operates more strongly in bosoms which are uncontaminated by luxurious indulgence. To such the comforts of a home, and of that genuine attachment which is never found out of it, more than compensate the dreams of aggrandizement and the vanities of display, by which the minds of others are kept in a state of feverish excitement. Those more refined delights which spring from a conviction of the excellence of the object—the sensation experienced on beholding the grateful blush mantling in the cheek of an affectionate wife, on witnessing the deference paid to her husband in society, or on hearing him spoken of in terms of approbation, by the worthy and intellectual-the mere sensualist or money-hunter can never hope to experience. In the intimacy of matrimonial life hypocrisy is quickly detected; and selfishness and dissimulation soon stand confessed in all their de- formity, and invariably engender a complete alien- ation of the affections, if not a perfect hatred and contempt of the individual. Indeed wherever a matrimonial connection takes place in which affec- tion for the object is not the dominant feeling, a FROM THE EMERALD ISLE. 5 forced obedience is all that can be expected, and care and anxiety will consequently usurp the place of that bland and pure enjoyment which might otherwise have smoothed the current of domestic life. The true criterion of real conjugal affection is CALAMITY—and it is delightful to think, that altho' the trial is frequently severe, many have endured it with unshaken loyalty. It is no doubt consolatory to the mind of man to feel persuaded that there are individuals to be met with in life who would brave the extreme of danger for the objects of their attach- ment-would cling to them in poverty, and follow them into exile; whose only solicitude is their hap- piness, and whose only terror is the fear of surviving them; but the man who aspires to be loved by such an object, must bring a better title than any which can be found in mere rank and fortune- such advantages may and do influence the gene- rality of females, while superior endowments can alone attract and fix the heart and ensure the blessings which flow from the attachment of a woman of exalted mind and genuine feeling. In choosing a partner for life, therefore, unless such considerations as those alluded to are permit- ted to have their proper influence, real happiness cannot possibly be expected. If the exertion be merely to figure in life-to weave perpetual schemes B 2 6 A WREATH of grandeur, and to bustle forward in the tortuous path of worldly splendor; disappointment and vex- ation will assuredly be the consequence, and that which was intended as the solace, will become the torment of existence. THE CHOICE. . GIVE me the maid whose gentle mien, And winning smile, and look serene, Bespeak the calmness of her soul, Where no fierce varying passions roll; Whose lively taste and glowing mind. The charms of science have refin'd; Who, free from every female art, With generous, candid, feeling heart, In all life's cares would bear her part; Who, if she saw my mind distress'd, Or with an anxious thought oppress'd, Would by some soft endearing spell The gathering storm of feeling quell; Or, if elate with mirth, would join, And seek her happiness in mine; FROM THE EMERALD ISLE. Who, with polite and graceful ease, Would study every guest to please— And still content with sweets of home, Would feel nor slightest wish to roam. If but her bright though timid eye Be touch'd with sensibility,- And if but in her form there be, An air of native dignity- I care not if the roseate streak Which mantles on her virgin cheek, Be light as that soft beam which glows At evening-tide on Alpine snows!- With such an one, come wo or weal, Methinks I still should happy feel; For sure the summit of life's bliss Is to possess a friend like this! 00 A WREATH WHI ant A Party of Pleasure,77 OR A TRIP TO THE DARGLE. "MEN," said Mrs. Borem to her husband, as they were sitting at breakfast," Men," said she, pouring out a dish of very weak tea, "have all the enjoyments and amusements of this world exclu- sively to themselves. While you, Mr. Borem, are at your office from nine till four o'clock, diverting yourself over your accounts, I have to dress, bathe, and whip the children-go to market, regulate the dinner, scold Mary the cookmaid, draw the beer and butter, and have every thing ready for you exactly at five, when you return to your com- fortable meal. After that is dispatched, you know how I study to amuse you with all the little occur- FROM THE EMERALD ISLE. rences of the day, and every other interesting cir- cumstance that I can, till you go to sleep, or to the club, or to that bane of all domestic comfort, the Dublin Library, where men fly from their agreeable homes and loving wives, to talk politics and such non- sense, or to read reviews and other kinds of stuff, instead of staying within of an evening, and playing a game of spoiled-fives or beggar-my-neighbour.- In short, Mr. Borem, I think slavery is the lot of woman! Some, to be sure, are happier than others; -there's hardly a week passes over Mrs. Daw's head, whose husband is only a Salesmaster, that she doesn't go some where or other-to Howth or to Bullock, or to some pretty rural spot in the country, by way of recreation and breathing the fresh air ; while I, poor Grizzle, never taste a breeze that has not passed over half a dozen breweries, anatomy- houses and tan-yards; or see any more of fields than the little consumptive grass-plot behind the house, that I try to bleach my small clothes upon." During this harangue, which touched upon every feeling of Mr. Borem's mind, he came to a resolu- tion of indulgence, and accordingly gave full per- mission to his wife to arrange a party of pleasure for the succeeding Tuesday, and the Dargle was appointed for the scene of action. In the interim, as may be supposed, dreadful was the note of preparation';-ham, cold beef, chickens, and five 10 A WREATH or six agreeable friends were provided; the drivers of the landau and sociable received sixteen distinct messages to be at the door exactly at seven o'clock in the morning; and the cider and great coats, the hampers and the umbrellas, were all ranged in the hall the preceding evening. At length the long- expected, the awful Tuesday morning arrived. "My love," said Mrs. Borem, long prior to the rising of the sun-" My love," said she, assailing his ribs with her pretty little sharp elbow, which she insinuated between them" what do you think of the day? I think it looks dark!". "No wonder it should, Mrs. Borem, when the night is but just off the sky! But I see it is vain to think of sleep, so I'll get up presently and shave myself." From this moment the bustle was incessant: every cloud that passed over the heavens was questioned, and every gust of wind analysed. At length the car- riages drove up to the door; and upon mustering the party, only two were found wanting-but such a two! Mr. and Miss Tomkins, a vocal brother and sister, Arcades ambo!-but, alas! not cantare pa- rati a sudden fit of the mumps had disabled the lady, while the gentleman's enchanting accompani- ment on the flute was impeded by a disaster which had happened to his forefinger, but, whether by a burn or a cut was not clearly ascertained. Still, however, Ned Noodle, the pleasantest fellow in the FROM THE EMERALD ISLE. 11 world, was forthcoming: he was quite the fiddle of a company-he could crow like a cock, and cackle like a goose; then he was such an admirable mimic, and told such delightful stories! So it was resolved that Ned Noodle was to work double tides, and thus the sad disappointment of the Tomkinses would be in some measure compensated. The children and the rest of the luggage being now stored, the cavalcade moved forward though Baggot-street, and along the Black Rock road, (for they had determined to go by the shore, and return by the Scalp,) and the usual routine of remarks which occur daily and hourly on that frequented thoroughfare, was duly observed. "Howth is a fine mountain: but then the harbour will never answer! And what can be the possible use of the Martello Towers, Ned?" asked Mr. Borem. Why to overawe the cockle-women, to be sure, in case they attempted an insurrection," was the reply of the wit. This first shot from Ned's battery was followed by many more' upon bathing. boxes, and the bang-up ladies in green shifts, and jingles, and the inconvenience of the dusty road, and at the same time the inexpediency of going to expense to water any thing in Ireland. 66 Upon arriving at Cabinteely, two unforeseen cir- cumstances occurred, which were but the harbingers of more serious misfortunes; one of the horses lost 12 A WREATH a shoe, and a dozen bottles of porter exploded in regular succession. The first of these disasters was soon remedied the second being irreparable; with- out any other event worth recording, the party stopped at last at the Dargle gate. The inhabitants of the lodge were immediately put in requisition for boiling potatoes;-and points of view and the tour were commenced under a slight, though con- tinued mizzle. In a hasty progress to the Moss- house where they were not merely destined to obtain refection, but shelter-on turning an abrupt angle of the road, Miss Bridget Bodkin's bonnet was blown into the water by a sudden gust of wind; and as she was not only pretty, but had a real five hundred pounds to her fortune, Ned Noodle determined to pursue the fugitive covering of her lovely, though red ringlets. By stepping from one rock upon another, he had just placed his hand on the prize, when unluckily his foot glanced on a mossy stone, and he was precipitated over head and ears into the water. All dripping and drowned,' he slowly scrambled up the bank, and presented himself in a truly wo-begone con- dition. Upon few occasions more conspicuously than upon this, was it ever demonstrated how radically benevolence is the characteristic of the Irish heart. After the enjoyment of a hearty laugh, the company immediately proceeded to a liberal 6 FROM THE EMERALD ISLE. 13 subscription of covering and condolence-and Ned, under the shelter of an umbrella, quickly availed himself of their liberality;-Mr. Borem contributed a great coat-Mrs. Borem a silk handkerchief-Miss Bodkin (the lovely but innocent cause of the dis- tress,) divested herself of a sans-paroitre, which was soon converted into a flannel waistcoat;-the great difficulty was inexpressibles. Here the ladies, however humanely inclined, could not assist,- and the gentlemen were singularly accommodated. In this dilemma, Miss Bodkin's ingenuity, sharp- ened naturally by her feeling of gratitude towards the deliverer of her bonnet, supplied the defect: she made a formal requisition for newspapers, which had been brought for the amusement of the party, and out of two Evening Posts, an Evening Mail, a Morning Post, and a Morning Register, she com- posed extempore a very decorous pair of pantaloons, which, considering they were fabricated pro re nata, fitted well, and answered the purpose of the exi- gency to admiration. Harmony being thus restored, and the temporary damp which was thrown over Ned's facetiousness effectually removed, one would have thought that pleasure was to have been the order of the day ;— but, alas! the day was gone-the shades of a Sep- tember evening were advancing, and gave a me- lancholy summons to departure. A detachment с 14 A WREATH of gentlemen were sent in quest of drivers and servants, some of whom were drunk, and others missing; while the remainder staid behind, to pack the ladies into the carriages, and the dinner equi- page into the hampers; and after a hasty meal, and a brief enjoyment of punch, puns, and porter, the party set off on their return to the city. But the horses became tired before they reached Ennis- kerry; and from thence, through the Scalp to Dundrum, they were urged forward at an immense expense of execration and whip-cord; but here they made a full stop, and neither threats, promises, nor pommelling, could compel them to move a step farther. The party were obliged to dismount, and amidst mud and mizzle, lamentation, argument, stumbling, regret, vows and determinations against country excursions, arrived in Dublin, and repaired to their several habitations, in a very different hu- mour from that in which they had quitted them in the morning. FROM THE EMERALD ISLE. 15 DICKY DAW. A True Story. ONE Dicky Daw, (as stories go,) A grocer, lived in Merrion-row; His wife, in true domestic style, Poor Dicky Daw would oft revile; For ever wanting something new, She'd cry, "Now, Dick, I wish that Would do as other people do." 66 you "There's Mistress Brown-they keeps a car, And drives about both near and far- To Donnybrook, the Rock, and stay Just now and then a night at Bray; Then, since we all want something new, Dear Dicky Daw, I wish that you Would do as other people do." "What now," says Dick, "What want you next?” Nay, Dick, my love, now don't be vex'd- You know we live in dirt and filth; A country house would save my health, And here's a spot with charming view; Dear darling Dick, I know that you Will do as other people do." 16 A WREATH The house was bought-a gardener hired, And friends of coming never tired; Dinners and suppers, port and punch- And droppers-in must have a lunch! And when poor Daw impatient grew, 66 Dicky, my love," she cried, "sure you Must do as other people do !" But now Dick's cash ran very brief, And so he turned another leaf; The gardener went, the car was sold; When this to Mistress Daw they told, "Oh, Dick," she scream'd, "what shall we do ?” Indeed," says Dick, "you know that Must do as other people do." you 66 Poor Dicky Daw, from change of life, Soon lost his angel of a wife! And now, retrieving his affairs, Most Christian-like his loss he bears; And when you ask him, "How d'ye do?” Dick cries, "Indeed, to tell you true, I do as other people do." FROM THE EMERALD ISLE. 17 On Matrimony. POUR ET CONTRE. THAT many a man would for ever roam like an outlaw on the skirts of the social world, did not the impulses of affection prompt him to increased ex- ertion, and interest him in the service of beings dear to his heart, is a fact which cannot be contro- verted. Indeed it has been proved by experience that the strongest incentive to virtuous industry is frequently founded in the desire of providing for the wants or comforts of a wife and family. While, therefore, many of the arguments advanced in favor of PRUDENCE, as a governing regulation in forming matrimonial connexions, are wise and judicious, it would appear that even such considerations are c 2 18 A WREATH arged too far, when they enjoin the actual pos- session of competence previous to marriage. This would indeed prescribe the comforts and privileges of a home to a very limited circle. It is the common cant to exaggerate the expenses which are inevitably connected with matrimony; but it should be recollected that celibacy has also its expenditure; that frequently what is lavished on self, by proper management might suffice for more than one; that the very self-denials of the husband and wife are favourable to virtue, while the waste of the unmarried degenerates either into 'selfishness or vice. The prime characteristic of rational love is self- denial. In the very passion there is a provision made for its restraint; for its aliment is constancy, and deviation would be esteemed a treason against that loyalty of attachment, which is but another name for unparticipated tenderness. Shakspeare finely describes this in the address of Coriolanus to his wife :- "That kiss I carried from thee, dear; and my true lip Hath VIRGINED IT E'ER SINCE." How many are the human beings, at this moment far removed from those they hold dear, whose affection for the cherished object charms away fa- tigue, and reconciles privation; who, but for such FROM THE EMERALD ISLE. 19 a resting place for their affections, would, in all probability be running into every excess of riot and dissipation." • If, therefore, the parties are satisfied to sacrifice pride and figure-making, and prefer the home-bred happiness of connubial and parental love, to the tinsel and frippery of what is termed the world of fashion, there can be little doubt that they will always find enough to spread the plain and hospita- ble board, to educate their children, and to make provision for their suitable establishment in life. However, in entering into a matrimonial state, it should always be recollected that he who identi- 、 fies his fate with another's, must, while he partici- pates in her joys, become also the partner in her sorrows;-but that such a consideration should deter from marriage, would be to consider too deeply the vicissitudes of existence; for if some have been obliged to drink the bitter waters of affliction, others have in such a state experienced the most delightful enjoyments which earth is ca- pable of affording; they have been prosperous in their circumstances, and instead of following their children to the grave, have lived to see them re- spectably and happily settled in life, and have been cheered by their affectionate attentions at that period when affection and attention are most required. 20 A WREATH It would appear, therefore, that whenever there is a fair probability of competence, arising out of the possession of talents combined with industry, the young should unite in matrimony. The reasons should indeed be strong and clear, that would influence an opposition to what so directly contributes to individual and social hap- piness-in fact nothing short of absolute inability to support a family. The reciprocity of tenderness appears to be the ordinance of Providence, and late marriages effectually interrupt this most beneficial regulation. FROM THE EMERALD ISLE. 21 THE BACHELOR AND THE HUSBAND. I HATE old bachelors on system, I always have and will resist them. Ladies attend!—your cause I plead; And if, while these brief lines you read, A blush of approbation rise, Or a bright tear bedew your eyes, That blush-that tear, I proudly claim, For they to me are more than fame. What-wed! and be a slave for life! Fetter'd by fondness-vexed by strife? Yes-better 'tis, in marriage bound, Pace e'en in chains its narrow round, Or peep through iron bars of home, Than celibacy's desart roam,- Where barren boundless heaths extend, Without a comfort or a friend! - Comforts!-we're free-we do not need 'em! But your's is the mere outlaw's freedom; Snatching the fierce unsocial joys Of Cherokees or Chickesaws. Behold the faithful wedded pair, Struggling along the stream of care; 22 A WREATH While you, upon its banks forlorn, And rooted like the withering thorn, By flood of autumn undermin'd, And blighted by the wintry wind, Object of cold neglect remain- Victim of solitary pain. Such are the men-well earned their fate- Who justify their right to hate; Spleen rules them with unchecked control, And shuts the wicket of their soul; Like toad immured for many a year, Breathing self's sullen atmosphere. But he, whom social feelings warm, Whose bosom home-bred raptures charm- Who knows one dear companion shares His happiness, and soothes his cares— And reads, while tears delicious rise, His history in his children's eyes— Feels what poor wealth can ne'er impart The peaceful calmness of a heart Mellowed by pity, touched by love; And should he e'en be called to prove The loss of friends, the chill of wo, Still unrestrained his feelings flow; In home's pure pleasures he can find Joys which give solid peace of mind. FROM THE EMERALD ISLE. 23 Amelia and Amandis, OR A CURE FOR LOVE. AMELIA was a lovely girl of eighteen, when Amandis, the only son of a wealthy Nobleman, saw and loved her. Having early studied the sciences of physiognomy and craniology, the youthful lover endeavoured, by a minute inspection of the countenance, and a close observation of the form and prominences of the cranium, to make himself acquainted with the natural disposition and temper of the lovely fair one; and so fully did the lines of feature and expression, and the contour and fashion of the face and head, accord with those characteristics which are said to indicate cheerful- ness of disposition, serenity of mind, and a supe- 24 A WREATH riority in every moral excellence-that Amandis, after a very short acquaintance, came to the reso- lution of making her his own for ever, convinced in his mind that she of all others he had ever beheld was the most calculated to make him happy in do- mestic life. With this impression, he lost not a moment in stating his wishes to an indulgent parent, imploring his permission to ask her in marriage. Notwithstanding a disparity in rank and fortune, that would, to the generality of the world, have fully justified his refusal, the old Earl, after a little hesitation, promised his consent, provided his son would defer his proposal until one year of absence and six months of acquaintance had proved the sincerity and stability of his attachment. After a painful effort on the part of the young Nobleman, this arrangement was acceded to; and having torn himself from the object of his affections, with a heavy heart he proceeded on a journey to a far-distant land. In the course of his travels, he was introduced at the courts of several European Princes; but the splendor of youth and beauty, which under other circumstances might have en- gaged much of his attention, was altogether un- heeded by him. He thought but of the dear indi- vidual whom he had left behind; her lovely image remained firmly fixed in the sanctuary of his heart, FROM THE EMERALD ISLE. 25 adorned in every grace which imagination could conceive: The fairest faces only recalled the re- collection of one, the brightness of whose beauty, like the rays of the sun reflected from the surface of an unruffled lake, appeared still more lovely, as the reflection of a soul at peace with itself and with the world. There was such a cheerfulness in her smile, such sweetness in her accent, that in her society he promised to himself a perennial spring of domestic felicity:-but the visions of fancy are delusive! Twelve lingering moons having performed their monthly circuit, he returned to his native country, flushed with hope; his mind buoyed up with the most pleasing anticipations,- in fact, deeming the fair prize already in his pos- session. - As lovers, whilst in love, are scarcely ever in possession of their reasoning faculties, especially on the eve of meeting or separation, Amandis determined to make his return first known to his beloved Amelia, altho' he had never yet appeared to her in any other character than that of a friend, under the injudicious idea that her pleasure would be increased by seeing him unexpectedly. In pur- suance of this project, he resolved on scaling the garden wall, and concealing himself in an arbour to which he knew his beloved one daily resorted, and which fond fancy had often visited during his D 26 A WREATH absence. No sooner had the resolution been formed than it was carried into effect. Having gained the enchanted spot, he placed himself on the seat which was usually occupied by his beloved, and in breathless suspense awaited her arrival. After a short interval-every moment of which appears an age-the door opens.-'Tis Amelia! No 'tis a decrepid old weeding-woman, who begins her daily task. But she is followed by the radiant form of Amelia, with a countenance, not indeed beaming in smiles, but dreadfully con- torted and beclouded by the influence of the foul fiend, PASSION. That moment she had discovered that the unfortunate old woman had pulled by mis- take, and sent to another young lady as a present, a curious exotic, designed to deck Amelia's luxu- riant tresses for an approaching race-ball. The lover, mute and motionless from astonishment, hears a storm of coarse reproach and energetic scolding, in tones now sharp, now rough, varied through all the notes of the gammut-from those lovely lips which seemed to have opened hitherto only to breathe music and perfume; and the scene concludes with the final dismission of the poor woman. Amelia retired. The lover put a bank- note into the hand of the astonished weeder, whom he regarded as the instrument of his deliverance from the greatest evil to which earth is heir- FROM THE EMERALD ISLE. 27 releaped the wall, and returned for another year to Italy-came home restored to himself, and grateful to his father for having persuaded him to conceal his attachment, till confirmed by time and intimate acquaintance. ; TO LAURA. On Parting. LAURA-farewell-this faithful heart Bleeds at the thought we now must part Unbless'd-yet though it thus must be, Oh! think on him who thinks of thee. Laura when 'neath more southern skies, When distant hills between us rise, Should wealthier suitors try to move By suasive arts thy constant love, Say wilt thou then still faithful be To him who ever thinks of thee? 28 A WREATH Say, Laura, when gay scenes invite, When youthful hearts are warm and light, Wilt thou amid the merry throng Join the brisk dance, and raise the song, Or wilt thou midst their revelry, Still think on him who thinks of thee? Say wilt thou with the noontide ray By some soft murmuring streamlet stray, Or, as the lengthening sunbeams fade, Oft lonely seek some neighbouring glade, That thus thine every thought may be With him who ever thinks of thee? Yes, Laura, if this heart can guess One mark of woman's faithfulness, If the suppressed, though bursting sigh Hath not deceived this searching eye, This bosom feels thou still wilt be Thinking on him who thinks of thee. Then fare thee well-though this firm heart Bleeds at the thought we thus must part, To know that thou dost think of me, Shall soothe my soul when far from thee. FROM THE EMERALD ISLE. 29 1 TKells Delt A Water Party, OR A VOYAGE TO HOWTH. THE works at Howth had long been an object of curiosity to Mr. Figsby's family-and to combine a short voyage with the inspection was the order of the day. Miss Caroline Figsby's lover, Mr. Brimmigem, a partner in an eminent hardware concern, and who was shortly to be blessed with the possession of her fair hand, was of course the prominent person of the party. Mr. Timmins, a young gentleman, whose views in life were dis- tracted between an attorney's office, chemical lec- tures, diplomacy, poetry, and the violoncello, acted the second part; and Mr. Foley, a gentleman who had made two or three trips to Liverpool, was deemed D 2 30 A WREATH an essential addition to the party, especially by Mrs. Figsby, whose attempts at navigation had been limited to crossing the ferry. At an early hour in the morning the packing up of the sea-store commenced. Mrs. Figsby, who anticipated sickness, had provided six bottles of chicken broth, some saline mixture, and a phial of brandy, which she observed she always found a specific in calming the stomach. Mr. Timmins produced an ingenious apparatus for converting salt water into fresh, in case the supply should fail; and as Mr. Figsby's great coat stuck out in a singular manner, one of the company could not help asking him the reason; when it appeared that he had slipped on a life-preserver, which had been made on poor Sadler, the æronaut's model, and which rendered his mind easy on the subject of any ac- 'cident from "the perilous flood." Two hams, a side of mutton, a fillet of veal, and six loaves, with wine, cider, whiskey, and porter-tea, sugar, chocolate, and cocoa, were stowed in a hamper; and by way of supplement, a small firkin of pickled pork, a quartern loaf, and a bag of biscuits, were added, which were to be resorted to should the stock of dressed food fall short. Before stepping into the boat, Mr. Foley was 'invested with the command; and the entire party solemnly pledged themselves that, in case of dis- FROM THE EMERALD ISLE. 31 tress, they would cheerfully accede to any allowance he should recommend. As Mr. Brimmigem was too much occupied with that passion which absorbs all others, to attend to any thing else, the log-book was committed to the care of Mr. Timmins, who was requested to add any remarks which his excursive reading and inge- nious observation might suggest. After a hearty breakfast at Kingstown, the party got under weigh, with a fair, though rather brisk wind, but had scarcely cleared the pier, when poor Mrs. Figsby became ill. Mr. Brimmigem, whom interest and affection both prompted to pay her attention, in endeavouring to assist her, dropped his telescope into the sea, and to our great disappointment, it sunk to the bottom. The chicken broth and saline mixture both proved ineffectual; but the brandy produced its never-failing effect-Mrs. F. became immediately tranquil; but for fear of accidents a bed of great coats was made for her in the bottom of the boat, where she was settled as comfortably as the nature of the circumstances would permit. Having now got a league from land, Mr. Timmins determined to take an observation, and ascertained the latitude and longitude with a precision which did him infinite credit. But here an unfortunate accident occurred;-Mr. Figsby, with his usual precaution, having requested Mr. Foley to sound, that gentleman, in heaving out the lead, by some 32 A WREATH means entangled the cord in Mr. Figsby's wig, which, notwithstanding every exertion to save it, was, with his hat, carried over board, and having proceeded N. by E. towards Ireland's Eye, in a few minutes, within view of the astonished party, "sunk to rise no more," The old gentleman bore his misfortune with the greatest good humour, and to the no small amusement and satisfaction of the young people, pulled his red night-cap out of his pocket, and gave it the place so lately occupied by his lost wig. The vessel keeping its course due East, the lovers were employed in making little paper boats, which they alternately committed to the smooth surface of the water: they looked happy, and they were so-little aware of the change which was about to take place. But such are the alter- nations of terrestrial joys!-misery treads upon the heels of happiness; and as surely as every thing treads upon the heels of something else,' adversity invariably succeeds to prosperity. " As the vessel was running along pretty rapidly at the rate of about four knots an hour, Mr. Figsby became apprehensive of their getting into the At- lantic, and requested Mr. Foley to tack and bear away for the Martello Tower at Williamstown.- That gentleman assented; but in making the at- tempt Miss Caroline was thrown from her station, and precipitated on the top of her dear mamma, who, awaking suddenly, screamed out in the most ter- - -- FROM THE EMERALD ISLE. 33 rified manner, supposing of course that "chaos was come again ;" and poor Mr. Brimmigem, in springing instinctively forward to the assistance of his interesting intended, unfortunately touched the trigger of a fowling piece which had been lying beside him, and which went off with a tremendous explosion. Words cannot describe the sensations of the party on beholding the bottom of the boat where lay Mrs. Figsby and her daughter, flowing with a crimson stream. "I'm shot, I'm shot," were the only expressions which escaped the lovely lips of Caroline, as she sunk beside the apparently life- less body of her mother. On raising the ladies up, however, it was discovered, to the great joy of the whole party, that the red stream was occasioned by the demolition of some bottles of port wine which had been packed in a hamper, in which providen- tially the contents of the piece had lodged. As soon as Mrs. Figsby and Miss Caroline could be con- vinced that they were neither killed nor wounded, every thing was speedily set to rights, and the voy. agers in a measure resumed their wonted gaiety. Mr. Foley was now preparing to tack again, and to bear away for Howth; but fright had discom- posed poor Mrs. Figsby's stomach; and upon ex- amining the stores, it was found that there was an absolute deficit in the brandy department. She, therefore, peremptorily insisted on landing, and her fair daughters joining in the demand, he made 34 A WREATH for Kingstown, and reached the port in safety, after a very eventful voyage of five hours, twenty-three minutes, and forty-six seconds. The custom-house officers behaved with their usual urbanity; and the governor of the castle, when undeceived respecting the bulk of Mr. Figsby, whom he took for a smuggler, shewed the party the most marked attention. While the jingle was preparing, he insisted on their partaking of a cold collation of mutton-pie, and gin and water, after which they departed under the salute of a pistol, a blunderbuss, and two fowling pieces. The ladies bowed, and Mr. Figsby waved his red night-cap, and all proceeded forward with mixed emotions of joy at their deliverance, and gratitude for their dis- tinguished treatment. They soon reached Booterstown, and crossing slowly the ascent of Ball's-bridge, Mr. Brimmigem could not help remarking how picturesque the scenery was ;-the combined vapours of the distil- lery and printing works reminded him of his native forges; while to the imagination of Miss Caroline they brought the recollections of Etna and Vesuvius. Mr. Timmins had just entered on an elaborate dis- sertation on the waste of smoke, when out flew the linch-pin, one of the wheels rolled off, and the jingle discharged its contents into the middle of the road. Mrs. Figsby first reached the ground, and her husband, by the combined force of sympathy and FROM THE EMERALD ISLE. 35 gravity, fell into her arms. Mr. Brimmigem and Mr. Foley did their utmost to break the descent of the young ladies; and Mr. Timmins landed safely in the mud astride upon the hamper. Irish good-nature is proverbial—and they were quickly extricated by the surrounding spectators, several of whom seemed highly to enjoy the misfortune. Mr. Figsby was the only person seriously hurt; he was conveyed to a neighbouring public-house, where every humane means were taken to recover him; his night-cap and life-preserver were taken off, his temples chafed with vinegar, and feathers burned under his nose. By these means he was quickly resuscitated, (as Miss Caroline afterwards elegantly expressed it,) and staring wildly around him, talked about the boat, asked whether they had not gone to the bottom, and began to throw out his arms, as in the act of swimming; when perceiving his wife, he burst into a flood of tears. A hackney-coach at that moment passing by, the interesting group, with the exception of Mr. Foley, were crammed into it-that gentleman mounting the box, drove them safely into town, having pre- viously put the coachman, who had got drunk at a funeral, into the boot; and at half past eight safely deposited the entire party in the noble mansion of Mr. Figsby, at the corner of Pill-lane. 36 A WREATH MEMORANDA OF TIMOTHY TIMMINS, ESQ. INCORPORATED WITH HIS LOG-BOOK. SET sail at twenty minutes past ten A. M. wind south and by north,-fine amphitheatrical bay,- Sugar-loaf a very high hill, and if blessed with a volcano, would, I suppose, greatly resemble Mount Etna. Pleasing tone of mind from remembrance of many pleasant walks in the neighbourhood- Cold bones at the Dargle,-snacks at Bray,-the sun musing sweetly on the Martello Towers,-fine air and prospect,-cockles and cold bath. At twenty five minutes past ten our telescope (a very ingenious instrument calculated to discover invisible objects to the naked eye,) dropped into the sea; a serious loss, as I had intended to correct some of Herschel's errors with regard to Jupiter's satellites. At two minutes and a half past eleven, a lame curlew lighted on the mast-land, of course, at no great distance. At twelve precisely a hat and wig fell over board, threw out the hen-coop to save them, but in vain, as it is to be feared both went to the bottom, no other sail being at the moment in sight. -a most Within a quarter of one, neared Howth- interesting mountain,-mind raised and softened FROM THE EMERALD ISLE. 37 by the recollection of Columbus's feelings upon a similar occasion. First sight of land excites very interesting emotions. An epic poem on Howth! why not?—and an essay on light houses! At half-past one approached so near to Howth as accurately to distinguish the natives and their dwellings, men and women very like the inhabi- tants of Bullock, from whence, probably, at a remote period Howth was colonized,-little boys without breeches in both places strongly confirm this opi- nion,-nothing so decisive on this point as a simi- larity of customs,-saw pigs, geese, lamp-lighters, dogs, asses, tourists, goats, and other marine ani- mals,- an old woman darning a black worsted stocking is a highly picturesque object,-wonder it has never been depicted by Wordsworth or any of the 'poets of the lake,' who are blessed with so happy a knack of describing trivialities,-for in- stance a small pool at the top of a hill: "I measured it from side to side, 'Twas three feet long and two feet wide." Vide Wordsworth's poems in quarto, gilt-passim. At twenty minutes to two a heavy shower of rain, -wind rising,-sea swelling hillock-high,-opened my umbrella for the first time. Tempests are grand and awful, particularly when there is but little dan- ger. Vessel rather crazy,-made some water, but nothing to signify,-baled it out with Mr. Brim- E 38 A WREATH migem's water-proof beaver,-After the rain, felt the sun intensely hot,-examined the thermome- ter, and found I was right-our butter, which was stowed at the bottom of the boat, under Mrs. Figs- by, melted at this moment,-Captain thought it necessary to tack,-commanders of vessels under great responsibility, and so they should, for altho they may be able to swim, the passengers may not. Dreadful accident-Miss Figsby thrown aft upon her mamma, and shot by Mr. Brimmigem, out of kindness no doubt-rather an Irish way of evincing one's love. Much joy-on examination found Mrs. Figsby and her daughter had only conceited them. selves kilt,-difficult to convince them that they were still alive and well. Mem.-Great precaution necessary for gentlemen deeply in love, upon med- dling with fire-arms. Half-past two. Examined our stock of provi- sions; no more brandy; Mrs. Figsby clamorous to land. Just now perceived a strange sail; every thing prepared for action, supposing her to be a pirate, and had an engagement taken place, there is no doubt we should have given a good account of her; unfortunately the vessel proved a collier. How the heart palpitates in the expectation of an engagement! Nobody who has once experienced such feelings will ever forget them. FROM THE EMERALD ISLE. 39 Four o'clock. Landed on the pier at Kings- town; placed my foot on the very same stone on which his Majesty last stepped when he visited this country,-exchanged our barrel of herrings with the Captain of a smack, for two bottles of Cogniac; Mrs. Figsby's spirits greatly revived.-- Two roads from Kingstown to the Rock; we only took one of them; chose that which his Majesty travelled.-Ladies' bathing-places at Williamstown remarkably convenient,-public and promiscuous; well suited for married couples, who can dip within three yards of each other. Bathing-women interesting, though old, as much in the water as the Gentoos, but from different motives. Twenty minutes to five.-Tumbled out of a jingle; good preparation for being secretary to an embassy, which is liable to many accidents. Very odd that Mr. Figsby should be the only person hurt, as he was the only individual of the party who had on a life-preserver perhaps only calculated for being drowned in,-a feather bed would have been of greater use. The elder Pliny is said to have put a pillow under his wig when he went out to observe an eruption of Vesuvius,-a wise precaution, and one that should be adopted by all philosophers who are in danger of stones falling on their heads. At three quarters past six, got into a hackney- coach; sat by Julia, an interesting girl,-lovely hi 40 A WREATH eyes, with a most scientific and bewitching cast in one of them. The windows being up on account of Mr. Figsby, the discourse naturally fell upon caloric and mephitic air,-I found she was quite up to the subject; has a radical knowledge of botany, evinced by her frequent allusions to the pistil and carolla; also a proficient in French, but not quite so well versed in English. Observed that the oc- currences of that day would form a poker in her life-meaning epocha, I presume; and on passing a gentleman's domain, remarked that the reproach to the house was rather too straight, too perpen- dicular; that if a fistula of about thirty or forty feet wide were cut through the trees, the parlour window would command a prospect of unapparalled extent and munificence, At half past eight o'clock landed safely in Pill- lane. After helping poor Mr. Figsby to bed, and taking a dish of weak tea with Mrs. Figsby, (to which, for my stomach's sake, a little brandy was added,) returned to my lodgings to meditate on the occurrences of the day. FROM THE EMERALD ISLE. 41 LUCY HILL. A Sailor's Letter to his Sister. This comes, dear Ann, far o'er the sea, To know if it fares well with thee, And what kind friends our cottage seek, To cheer thee, and of comfort speak. Those foolish tears, be sure to say, Didst thou soon dry them all away; But Ann, forget not, tell me true, Has Lucy Hill been oft with you. I thought to join our gallant crew Shouting to shore our last adieu; But some pale form the deep beside I saw, and the vain accents died. Thro' balmy climes and blooming isles, Where ruin lurks in beauty's smiles, We've pass'd, and dauntless hearts complain Of cruel love, and cureless pain. What mean those cruel pains of love, Those glances which so fatal prove? Or why in dreams behold I still Some form resembling Lucy Hill? 42 A WREATH Yes one there is, smile has she none, Pale is her brow as marble stone, As wintry ice-dewed blossoms chill, Yet still she looks like Lucy Hill. Tell all our village neighbours kind, I call them and past hours to mind,— But mark you, Ann, does Lucy wear The twisted ring with braided hair? Ann, fare thee well- I think of thee, Though angry tempests raging be; And when they slumber calm and still, Remember me to Lucy Hill. FROM THE EMERALD ISLE. 43 1333 Jane Fitz-Charles, 9/11 101 91290 OR THE EFFECTS OF INDISCRETION. JAMES FITZ-CHARLES was the descendant of a distinguished and once affluent family; but various circumstances had led to the annihilation of their wealth, and all that his parents could bequeath to him was the name of gentleman, and a moderate education. For many years he struggled hard to attain the station which he imagined his birth en- titled him to fill; and it was not until after a severe contest with his adverse fortunes, that religion: taught him the wisdom of submitting to dispensa- tions which he could not control. He obtained a situation in the Custom-house of Dublin, and altho' his emoluments were small, yet he was thankful and content. 44 A WREATH He had married in early life, and became a widower a few years after. Of several children, one daughter only survived; but he frequently observed that she more than compensated him for the loss of all. He loved her, indeed, with more than a father's fondness, and having been disappointed in all his other expectations of enjoyment, he appeared to cling to this last source of earthly happiness with a fervour of affection which no pen can properly de- scribe. It was not a selfish feeling; it was a sincere desire for the welfare of his child; "And all his wish on earth was now, To see her blest, and die." Jane was in many respects a good girl; but having been so soon deprived of her mother, and her father's attention to the duties of his office prevent ing that oversight which is necessary for the welfare of young people, and ought to be highly accounted. of by those who are favoured to possess it-her education had not been a sufficiently guarded one; she was volatile and thoughtless, and too fond of using to its full extent the liberty with which her father indulged her, and which is so congenial to the vivacity of the youthful imagination. She was about eighteen years of age, when one of her acquaintances, a young and giddy widow, invited her to accompany her to the Fair of Rath- farnham. The invitation was cheerfully accepted, FROM THE EMERALD ISLE. 45 and they enjoyed in anticipation the scenes of rustic revelry which they expected to witness, but in which they had no intention of participating. The evening was fine, and after a short time spent in observing the various sports that were going for- ward, and the beauty of the surrounding scenery, they were joined by two young men, who endea- voured to attract their attention by lively and witty observations on the scene before them. In such a place, and under such circumstances, an acquaint- ance is easily formed, and the time passed so agree- ably in the company of their new friends, that they were easily persuaded to meet them again on the following evening. It is not our intention to moralize on the various errors which this young woman was induced to commit, but simply to relate the events which occurred, and to let those events speak for them- selves. We would only observe, that there is no lesson which it is of more importance to impress upon the minds of young people—and we have no hesitation in saying, of young females in particular -than the impropriety of forming any acquaint- ance which they are afraid or ashamed of making known to their parents. Had poor Jane been properly instructed in this respect, from what misery and degradation might she not have been preserved! 46 A WREATH. The elder of the young men paid her particu- lar attention, and on their second interview pro- fessed the attachment with which she had inspired him. His name, he said, was Horace Wentworth : he was then pursuing his studies in the College, but was altogether dependant for his future esta- blishment in life on the will of his uncle, a man of great fortune, but of such pride that he thought no woman could be a suitable match for his nephew who was not in possession of both wealth and title. These reasons, he said, made him desirous that for the present his affection should be known only to herself by and by he would have completed his studies; he would then enter into orders, and as several rich livings were in the gift of his family, he made no doubt of obtaining one of them; and then how delightful it would be to avow his attachment, retire into the country with his Jane and her father, and in peaceful seclusion smile at the folly of those who barter happiness for grandeur, and prefer the ostentation of high life to the enjoyment which mutual affection only can bestow. It has been often and truly said, that what we wish for we are always willing to believe; and Jane, at least, was no sceptic. She had conceived a warm attachment for her admirer; she believed his professions to be sincere; and she loved to gaze upon the picture of future enjoyment which he ex- . FROM THE EMERALD ISLE. 47 hibited to her imagination. She thought, too, that by an union with Horace her affectionate father would be released from the drudgery to which he was now compelled to submit, and be advanced to his proper station in society-there was ecstacy in the idea; and she was only awakened from her dream of prospective felicity, to find herself a guilty and forsaken creature, and likely soon to become a mother. We cannot paint the anguish she now experienced -the deep, deep misery into which she was plunged. Often were her hands raised to heaven in frantic supplication, that God in his mercy would be pleased to deprive her of existence, and preserve her father from the shame and sorrow that awaited him. She was conscious that her situation could not much longer be concealed; and although she endeavoured to hide the affliction which preyed upon her, by an affected gaiety, yet the busy whisper had already circulated amongst her ac- quaintance, who began to regard her with coldness and suspicion. Her father was grieved and per- plexed at the change in her behaviour: her favorite geraniums were neglected, her usual avocations were forsaken; and oftentimes, when she appeared to be reading, he would notice the tears falling from her eyes upon the unturned page. At length, however, the direful secret burst upon him. The 48 A WREATH increased indisposition of his daughter induced him to apply for medical assistance; and a phy- sician being called in, her situation was at once revealed to him. For a moment the unfortunate father appeared petrified with horror, and the only expression which the bitterness of his grief per- mitted him to use, was one of thankfulness that his wife, at least, was not a partaker in it. With an affected calmness which ill concealed the agitation under which he laboured, he left his once peaceful habitation, as if in the noise and bustle of the streets he could effect an escape from his own feel- ings. The evening was fast closing in, and he wandered he knew not whither. On the following morning he was discovered by a sentinel at the Pigeon-house, lying beneath the wall in a state of insensibility, Happily he was well known there, as the duties of his office frequently led him to visit it, and he was immediately conveyed in a coach to his own house. The illness of her father seemed to recal Jane from the contemplation of her own misery; day and night she attended upon him with the most unwearied assiduity, and for three weeks was rarely absent from her station at his bed side. During all this time he remained insensible, and the fever had so far weakened him that the physicians who had been called in could hold out no hope of his reco- FROM THE EMERALD ISLE 49 very. At length, however, they announced the approach of returning reason, and the unhappy daughter had again the gratification of hearing her father call upon her. He held her hand, and gázed on her face with more than his usual fondness: "I think," said he, "I must have been a long time ill, and I have had a sad, sad dream ;-but surely it was only a dream.”“ "Alas! my father," exclaimed Jane, "would that it were indeed a dream. Can you, can you forgive me ?" "Can I forgive thee, my child? I can, I do forgive thee. Yea, as sin- cerely as I desire that my Father which is in heaven may forgive me my trespasses do I forgive thee thine. May he bless thee, my daughter, and be a father to thee, for I feel that thou wilt soon need one." These were the last words which he uttered, and in a few hours he was numbered with the dead. The exertions which Jane had made proved too much for her enfeebled constitution, and before the interment of her father she was attacked with the fever to which he had fallen a victim. They had only occupied part of a house, and the owner of it, alarmed for his own safety, deemed it the most pru- dent to have her removed to an hospital. Here she remained some time, and was then removed to an- other, where she became the mother of a son. Four months had elapsed from the period of her father's death to the time of her discharge from the F 50 A WREATH hospital, when she again entered upon the busy world, a destitute and friendless creature. She di- rected her steps towards her former abode, and with a weak and trembling hand ventured to rap at the door; a stranger opened it, and in reply to her en- quiry for Mr. and Mrs., informed her that they had quitted the house and removed to England; but they had left a letter to be given to Miss Fitz Charles, if that was her name. She received the let- ter, but had not courage to open it, and with a heavy heart turned away from the door. All day long she wandered about, or sought to rest herself in alleys and obscure corners, for her afflictions bore heavily upon her, and she was worn down both in body and mind. Doubtless many of her former friends would have received and sheltered her had she made known her situation to them, but she trembled least any of these should meet and recognize her, for whilst she accused herself of having been the cause of her fa- ther's death, she shrank from the idea of that accu- sation being made by another. The shades of evening had closed in, as she was slowly walking along the bank of the Liffey. A dreadful thought crossed her mind-she stopped and looked around; she thought that she was unobserved, and she fixed a steady gaze upon the water her forehead seemed burning with heat, but here was that which would cool it- here, at least, the houseless wanderer might repose, 1 FROM THE EMERALD ISLE. 51 and find a certain shelter from want, and sorrow, and disgrace. In a moment her purpose was fixed, and she leaned forward with the intention of executing it. Providence, however, interposed, and prevented the intended suicide, in the very act of its accom- plishment. Her infant was sleeping upon her bosom and when about to take the desperate plunge, she pressed him violently against the wall over which she was going to throw herself his cry uttered volumes in a moment the feelings of a mother were raised within her, and she burst into tears— the first which she had shed since the death of her father. At this instant a hand was laid upon her shoulder, and a coarse female voice exclaimed "You poor silly cratur what is it you're thinking about?" Jane made no reply, but turned her face, now bathed in tears, upon the speaker, a poor basket-woman, who had for some time been ob- serving her actions, and had become suspicious of her design. "Come, come," she continued, "don't fret so there's no sore but there's a cure for it- just tell me where you live now and I'll go home with you."" Indeed, I cannot-I have no home," was the reply." No home," said the inquirer, "musha, honey, but you're in a bad way then ; however, don't cry for that at all at all; sure I have a home of my own, and if I cannot go with you to your home you can come with me to mine, and 52 A WREATH that's all the same you know, barring the difference of it." The affectionate language of the poor wo- man revived Jane's drooping spirits, and inspired her with confidence. She quietly took her offered arm, and accompanied her to the place she called her home-a poor room in a mean house in the out- skirts of the city. A better night's rest than she had enjoyed for a long time so far recruited her strength and spirits, that the next morning she was enabled to reflect with more calmness upon her situation. Her first employment was to examine the letter she had received; it contained an account of the money that had been disbursed for her father's funeral ex- penses, and which had been procured by the sale of the furniture left in their landlord's possession; a small balance was due to her, and this, together with a chest containing her clothes, books, and papers, remained in the house, and would be de- livered to any person whom she might commission to receive them. We need scarcely inform our readers that the necessary application was imme- diately made, and the chest removed to the poor woman's apartment. The money amounted only to a few pounds, but it was sufficient to render their habitation more comfortable, and to afford such an accession to the trading capital of her hostess, and such a consequent increase in her profit, as, she said, more than compensated for FROM THE EMERALD ISLE. 53 the accommodation afforded to her guest; for whom, and for her baby, she felt an increasing attach- ment. In arranging her plans for the future, Jane hoped, when her health should be re-established, to be able to maintain herself and her infant by her skill at her needle; but sorrow and suffering had un- dermined her constitution, and she was rapidly approaching to the termination of her earthly pil- grimage. She was soon conscious that her disso- lution was at hand, and she awaited it in peaceful quietude. She had a broken and a contrite spirit, she possessed, also, a firm and undoubting assur- ance in the all-sufficiency of Him who came "to seek and to save that which was lost :"-She called upon him and he heard her, and delivered her out of all her troubles; and with her last breath she acknowledged his mercy, and praised him for his loving kindness. The poor woman was deeply affected at the de- cease of her guest, and promised to be a mother to her son. She mentioned his destitute situation to some of her customers, and procured amongst them a small subscription to send him to a country nurse, with whom he remained until he was six years old; he then returned to his kind friend in the city, who sold his mother's clothes, which she had hitherto preserved with the most scrupulous 54 A WREATH care, and was thus enabled to pay for his school- ing. Unhappily, however, for him, she died when he was about twelve years of age, and he was left to shift for himself in the best way that he could.— We will not follow him in the career of vice into which he was betrayed; it is sufficient to say, that before he had attained his twentieth year he was committed to prison on a charge of robbery and murder a gentleman and his servant had been attacked by a desperate gang, they made a power- ful resistance, and in the conflict the gentleman received wounds of which he soon after died; they succeeded, however, in securing the person of our hero, if so we may venture to call him, and who was shortly after brought to trial for the offence. The proceedings against him were conducted by a barrister of distinguished talent, who had lost, in the deceased gentleman, the friend and compa- nion of his earliest youth, and who was thus in- duced to bring to bear upon the unhappy culprit the whole weight of his eloquence, and to labour for his conviction with all the powers of his mind. The proofs of his guilt were irrefragable, and when called upon for his defence, the Judge warned him against attempting by any weak assertions to rebut the incontrovertible evidence that had been given against him. He replied, "My lord, it would be idle for me to persist in the plea which I have FROM THE EMERALD ISLE. £55 made, and to continue to say that I am not guilty of the crime of which I am accused: yet permit me, before the awful fiat be pronounced which shall tell me that my days are numbered, to plead in extenuation of my crimes the circumstances of my situation. My lord, I never knew a mother's af- fectionate care, I never partook of a father's coun- sel: abandoned by one parent, and deprived by death of the other, I was early thrown upon the stream of life without a friend and without a guide. I know that I have inflicted a deep injury upon society, yet, oh! be merciful, I beseech you, to my youth and ignorance, and allow me an oppor- tunity, by the rectitude of my future conduct, to make reparation for the crimes which I have com- mitted. I know that my mother was descended from an honorable family, and it is possible, that even in this court the son of a Fitz-Charles may not be without relations, who would, for the sake of their common ancestry, unite in the prayer for mercy which he is now offering. And O, my lord, the publicity which this day's proceedings will give to my unhappy name may even bear it to the author of my mother's death, the man whom I have to curse for my existence, and Horace Went- worth himself be made acquainted with the state to which his son has been reduced. Death is at all times awful to contemplate, but- X 56 A WREATH Here the prisoner was interrupted, and the court thrown into confusion, by the interference of the counsellor who had pleaded against him. When the young man stood forward to make his defence, his countenance, and the tone of his voice, im- pressed his learned antagonist in a manner that he could not account for; but when he pronounced his mother's name, and afterwards that of his father, with the accompanying malediction, his horror and astonishment were indescribable. Had a mine been sprung beneath his feet-had the whole cre- ation gone to wreck around him, and he alone sur- vived, his terror and amazement could not have been greater. He stood up-he extended his arms towards the bench,-he struggled for utterance. The court and all within it appeared to him to dis- tend to an amazing size; yet, at the same time, all, all was pressing upon his brain with the most torturing violence. He gasped with the agony of internal emotion, and it was only by a convulsive effort that he was able to exclaim, "My lord, my lord judge, acquit the prisoner-he is not guilty of the crime for which he is arraigned. I will prove his innocence, my lord; for I thus publicly avow that I only am the murderer. Aye, my lord, the blood of his mother is upon me-the blood of my friend is upon me—and if he suffers the penalty of the law, his blood also will be upon my head.” FROM THE EMERALD ISLE. 57 Here his emotion overcame him; he fainted, and was borne out of the court; the spectators attri- buting his conduct to sudden illness occasioned by the exertions that he had made. The judge proceeded to pass the awful sentence of the law, and in due time it was carried into effect. Some weeks elapsed before the counsellor recovered from the frenzy which had seized him— his first inquiry was after the unfortunate prisoner; he heard his fate with apparent indifference, but his insanity returned the same evening, and in despite of all the efforts of medicine, he sank into a state of melancholy madness, and ended his days in an asylum for lunatics. 58 A WREATH A Mother to her infant Daughter. Sweet baby, in thy beauteous face Mysterious are the charms I trace : Language may blush when looks so well, Can every shade of feeling tell. In the clear mirror of thine eye To read thy fate I sometimes try, And musing on thy future years, Dim the fantastic scene with tears; Thou wilt be woman, that alone Echoes to compassion's throne: Man may his destiny create, Woman is the slave of fate. Thou may'st be lovely-in that word Ten thousand sorrows are inferred; Adored when young-neglected old, By passion bought-by parents sold; Seduction masked in friendship's guise, Envy with sharp malignant eyes, Satire with poison'd poignant dart, May all conspire to pierce thine heart; And in thy short and brilliant reign, These fiends may give thee bitter pain. Yet when the sober evening grey Of life steals on, and charms decay, When time detaches one by one The blossoms of thy floral crown, Oft shalt thou sigh for youth again, With all its peril, all its pain. FROM THE EMERALD ISLE. 59 1 TK THE WEDDING OF Benjamin Brimmigem, gentleman. CONTAINING SOME PARTICULARS OF A MATRIMONIAL EXCUR- SION TO THE COUNTY OF WICKLOW. "Hail wedded love," was the exclamation which broke from me, as I passed along the Blind Quay, on my way to Pill-lane, where I was invited to an early breakfast on the auspicious 13th of June, a day long to be remembered, on which Venus and the Graces shed their choicest influences. I found assembled at the breakfast-table, Mr. and Mrs. Figsby, a large sally lun, Mr. Timmins, and Miss Julia Figsby, three cousins, two maiden aunts, a quantity of fresh eggs, and Mr. Brimmi- gem, the most interesting object, except one, of this 60 A WREATH eventful ceremony. His hair was neatly curled, and his whiskers were accurately adjusted-his coat was blue, with brass buttons of his own manu- facture; yellow Marseilles waistcoat, and Nankin trowsers. I had just commenced buttering my second muffin, when the lovely Caroline, the bride elect, entered the room-and never did a finer figure light on the floor of a back parlour; she was attired in white muslin-a deep trimming of point lace shaded her lovely bosom, while mam- ma's garnets sparkled on her snowy neck; and her hair of a bright auburn hue, was beautifully bur- nished with Russia oil, and tastefully disposed with four tortoise-shell combs, neatly set with Irish diamonds. But the exquisiteness of her appear- ance, merged in the sweet expression of her face; love chastened by awe and apprehension, possess- ed her brow, and every dimple appeared to be oc- cupied by a terrified cupid-she was, indeed, an object on which even a Don Cossack might have gazed with admiration; it may easily be conceived, therefore, what were the feelings of the individual who was that morning to be allowed to call her his own, as he rose to welcome her with a tender em- brace. Having received the hearty congratulations of all present, with a grace peculiar to herself, Miss Caroline took her seat; but she ate nothing, of course, nor ever once raised her eyes from the slop 1 FROM THE EMERALD ISLE. 61 bason, until the servant announced that the car- riages were in attendance. At half-past ten, the procession, which consisted of three hackney coaches, and a numerous retinue on foot, proceeded to St. Michan's Church; where the ceremony was to be performed. Here, how- ever, the proceedings were stayed, by a council which it was found necessary to hold, with respect to the name of the bride. Her father and Mr. Brimmigem, were both equally tenacious on this point, as they had each money to give, and a fa- mily consequence to support-and the question was, whether she should preserve in some mea- sure, her own name, or the bridegroom adopt hers -the former was eventually determined on, and in a few minutes she emerged, Caroline Figsby Brim- migem, to the very indecent merriment of the sex- ton and grave-digger, who should certainly, on such an occasion, have kept their countenances. The strong emotions which had been restrained during the service now broke out in full violence- the sisters rushed into each other's arms-the fa- ther and the son-in-law were for a long time locked in a strict embrace the aunts groaned, and the cousins whimpered—and not knowing well what to do, I shook Mr. Timmins' hand for an indefinite period, and then went out to read the epitaphs, till the feelings of the family had in some measure G 62 A WREATH subsided. At length they became calm, and we proceeded from the church gate into the carriages, which were to convey us to Quin's at Bray, where I had determined to spend the day with the hap- py pair; but to leave them the ensuing morning to that felicitous insulation which minds of refined sensibility so well know how to enjoy. As there is a reason for every thing that occurs, though some are not quite so clear and obvious as others, it may be worth enquiring why the inn at Bray is so generally selected as Hymen's caravan- sera, upon connubial occasions. As it is certainly by far the most public place of the kind, of any in the neighbourhood of the metropolis, it can only be accounted for by supposing that Cupid himself is a sleeping-partner in the concern, and therefore prompts his votaries to take up their residence there. Our dinner was excellent, and a long drive had enabled us to do ample justice to it. After par- taking of a few excellent tumblers of punch mix- ed for us by Mrs. Figsby, the youngsters of the party resolved on taking a stroll through the Dargle -and no time being lost we were quickly im- mersed in a sylvan wilderness, where every breeze was health, and every sound was harmony. Such a scene, combined with the invincible force of ex- ample, of course had their natural effect on the congenial minds of Julia and Mr. Timmins. The FROM THE EMERALD ISLE. 63 lovely Caroline and her beloved Benjamin were soon lost sight of in the thick mazes of the glen; and in a short time I found myself left to the undisturbed exercise of my own cogitations. Recollecting an old vulgar adage, that every two make a pair, I began to fear I might be considered an intruder, and, therefore, made no exertion to keep up with either party. And here I experienced the full force of the sentiment Moore has so beautifully versified in one of his melodies. Yet it is not that nature has shed o'er the scene Her purest of chrystal and brightest of green, 'Tis not the soft magic of streamlet or rill, Oh, no! it is something more exquisite still. I had thus wandered along for a considerable time, singing to myself, when on turning the point of a rock, I discovered Mr. Timmins and Miss Ju- lia very snugly seated beneath a horse-chesnut tree; and from the animated expression of his countenance, and the happiness depicted on that of his fair partner, I entertained little doubt that he was breathing in her ear "soft strains of love." The interesting Caroline at this moment appearing in sight, leaning on the arm of her beloved, it was mutually resolved that the party should retire to the inn; but, as I felt convinced that my absence could be dispensed with for a short time; and as I had at the moment worked up my mind to something 64 A WREATH of that feeling which animated the illustrious Carr, of tourifying memory, I resolved on exploring some of those rural abodes of wretchedness and misery, which even in this beautiful county, are allowed to disgrace the otherwise delightful scenery. Having wandered a considerable way, musing on the ruinous infatuation which keeps Irish proprie- tors in another country,, while their presence, is so indispensably necessary at home, I at length approached a very tolerable looking dwelling, and with the instinctive curiosity of a pedestrian tourist, poked my nose into an apartment which, from its being boarded, was I conceived originally intended for a parlour-I heard an odd rustling at the far- ther end of the room, and in a few minutes perceived the snout of a sow, maternally employed in arrang、 ing the litter for her numerous and interesting family. Though an Irishman, I confess I felt a little hurt at this subversion of all order in lodgement, and exclaimed to the man of the house, who just then came out of the kitchen, " Why, my good friend, in the name of common decency, do you put your pig in the parlour ?" 'Why then, in troth, I'll tell you that honey," replied O'Shea, "I put the pig in the parlour because there's every con- veniency in it for a pig." As this was the lite- ral truth, I had nothing further to say on the subject, but followed my host into the kitchen, 66 FROM THE EMERALD ISLE. 65 where his wife and family were just about to sit down to their supper; but as I was advancing to take a seat in the chimney corner, my stomach came in very unpleasant contact with a hard, sub- stance, which, upon investigation, I found to be the horn of a cow-“Why, what brings the cow here?" I demanded, "Why, our little Sally, please your honor! she brings it in every evening, now that the evenings are growing long and could-for my woman says how nothing makes a cow fall off sooner than her being out under the could-and I never gainsay Peggy, as there's no better milker in the country." As I had no reason to question Peggy's talents in the 'milky way,' I sat down quietly on a three legged stool, and while she was busied in preparing some rashers of bacon and eggs, which I afterwards found were intended for the use of her illustrious guest, I began to rumi- nate on the strange fatality which converts every cabin into a Noah's ark-I had just turned up my face to the roof in the act of ejaculating my wonder, when, to my infinite surprise, I felt a warm sub- stance descending on my nose, which, upon further and more accurate investigation, I found reason to attribute to a cock and six hens, who were poising themselves upon a tie of the rafters for the enjoy- ment of a comfortable nap during the night. I own I was a little provoked at the accident, and G 2 63 A WREATH expostulated sharply with Mrs. O'Shea upon the subject; but the same argument of heat that was submitted in favour of the cow, was urged in favor of the hens, to whose regular laying, I was informed, warmth was essentially necessary. This argument being also unanswerable, I proceeded to search for my pocket-handkerchief, in order to wipe off the unpleasant topic of our conversation; when to my still further dismay, my hand in its progress to my pocket, popped into the mouth of the calf, who, mistaking it for the accustomed fist of Miss Molly O'Shea, began to suck it with the most indefatiga- ble perseverance. From this last and most alarm- ing dilemma I at length extricated myself, and hav- ing partaken of the provision so kindly prepared for me, and in vain offered some pecuniary remune ration for my entertainment, I departed with a high sense of the hospitality of my host and hostess, and with a genuine concern that they were not better accommodated. Having made the best of my way to the inn,. I found the young people regaling themselves on a delicious collation of strawberries and cream, while the elder part of the company were comfortably feasting on a fine savoury dish of ducks and green peas, served up in Quin's best style. A Welch harper was in attendance, and the greatest hilarity prevailed; but it was perfectly innocent-none of FROM THE EMERALD ISLE. 67 those coarse and offensive jokes were hazarded, which distress the modest ear and crimson the female cheek with the painful blush of confusion or shame. The bride was led away at the appointed hour, and after a short interval the other ladies vanished. Timmins, Figsby, and myself remained behind, over a bottle of Calcavella; and among a variety of topics which we discussed, the impor- tance of encouraging our woollen manufactures was particularly insisted on; and Timmins, who is persuaded that there is an immense cluster of islands at the south pole, inhabited by men who must, from their situation, be in the greatest want of warm clothing, proposed forming a joint stock company, for the purpose of supplying the natives with Irish cloths, and suggested that he and a friend of his, a Mr. Flinchy, should be appointed Secretaries, at a salary of five hundred pounds per annum. Mr. Figsby having fallen asleep during the disquisition, and it having also been discovered that the decan- ters were empty, the further consideration of the sub- ject was postponed until that day three months. Having retired to my chamber, I was just prepar- ing for bed, when my ears were assailed by several violent screams evidently from a female voice, ac- companied with a considerable degree of confusion in some of the adjoining apartments. Having slipped on my dressing gown, I hurried forth to 69 A WREATH discover the cause of the tumult. After tumbling over the sweeping brush, which the chamber maid had left ready for the morning's duty, in the middle of the passage, I at length arrived at the door of the room occupied by Miss Julia, which I was grieved and shocked to find had been the theatre of all this commotion. ; By the stupidity of the house-maid, or some other mistake, the gentlemen had been shewn to the wrong apartments :- Mr. Timmins to that of Miss Julia, and Mr. Brimmigem to that of the lovely bride! The noise of opening her room door having awakened the younger lady, who had just been dreaming of a plan being laid by a gentleman to run away with her against her will, on beholding a man entering her room, she uttered several dread- ful shrieks, at the same time ringing the bell with the greatest violence. In a moment, the various lodgers and servants in the house were assembled. in the lobby; and it was not until after a consider- able time that the matter was sufficiently explained to induce the parties again to retire to rest. Every thing having been now arranged to the mutual sa- tisfaction of all parties, I again sought my couch, and slept soundly till six o'clock next morning. But, as I had determined to return to town, I ordered an outside seat on the mail coach which passes through Bray, and at seven, seated myself very comfortably FROM THE EMERALD ISLE. 69 between a something, which appeared to be "half monkey half a man," carefully rolled up in a tra- velling cloak, buttoned a la militaire over his nose -and a well dressed middle aged female, who, from the complete rotundity of her figure, and her face having much the resemblance of a good kitchen fire, I suspected to belong to the lower re- gions of some of the once noble mansions of our city, but which are now in common parlance yeelped hotels. As we had good horses, and a steady driver, nothing particular occurred till our arrival at the Black Rock, where we stopped to take up some additional live lumber, with the exception of our progress being impeded, for a short time, by a long line of cars fully laden with women and children. On inquiry from my female companion, it appeared they were pooreens and their nurses going to the Foundling Hospital to be paid their wages. On further inquiry, I discovered that the term pooreen signifies a small potato, and in this instance meant that the children were fed on that article. The reply was very satisfactory, as it served to explain the reason why the term potato-face is so frequently applied to the Irish, who are exclusively fed on that vegetable, which, by the way, from a learned note on the passage in Shakspear's Merry Wives of Windsor, "let the sky rain potatoes," ap- pears to possess many excellent qualities. While we 70 A WREATH. sat waiting for a passenger who we saw making all speed towards us, my female companion observ- ing that the morning was extremely cold, drew from her pocket a pint bottle of something which appeared uncommonly transparent, and placing the neck of it in her mouth, much in the way that a farrier would were he administering medicine to a horse, in a moment about half of the contents disappeared; then, carefully replacing the cork, she was about to return the precious relic to its former station, when, unfortunately, it came in contact with one of the rails of the coach, and in a moment strewed the road with a thousand fragments! Moore, in alluding somewhere to a vase in which roses had been dis- tilled, observes, "You may break, you may ruin the vase if you will, But the scent of the roses will hang round it still." Although it is more than probable that genuine poteen would not produce so great an effect on glass bottles, in the instance just mentioned the perfume was very powerful; indeed so sensible was its effects on the nervous temperament of our military a-la- mode, that he had nearly fallen off the coach in a swoon; but, fortunately, on applying his highly scented kerchief to his olfactory aperture, he seemed to revive, and turning to the poor woman, very piously wished that Old Nick had her and her bottle. FROM THE EMERALD ISLE. 71 The sound of the bugle having, at this moment, sounded a kind of response to the hearty ejaculation of the man of war, we again proceeded on our way, and arrived in time for an early breakfast at the hotel in Dawson-street. The Faithful Dog. SUGGESTED BY AN INCIDENT RELATED IN PRATT'S GLEANINGS. A MERCHANT Once his homeward way, With weighty bags of gold, pursued; His faithful dog the livelong day Alone companion of his road. The sun-beam from meridian sky Fierce on the fainting traveller glows; Beneath a greenwood shelter nigh, He seeks refreshing short repose. What might have been the slumberer's dream, The simple legend mentions not; Behind him-whatsoe'er the theme- The glittering treasure was forgot. 72 "A WREATH But mark the dumb spectator's part: He sees the unheeded treasure lie, And acts with mute persuasive art Each sign that zealous love can try. The steed's impatient feet before He barks, he crosses, leaps, and wheels, And, whining, looks where lies the ore; And wounds with bitter bites his heels. The merchant deems the burning beam Has parched the brain with fev'rish heat; That he is mad-but yonder stream Shall try the truth, and seal his fate. The dog declines the limpid rill And trampled, chidden, perseveres, Each importuning effort still But more confirms his master's fears. Duty and safety now demand The faithful favourite to die; The merchant with reluctant hand Aims trembling with averted eye. Fatal that trembling aim, and true, Tho' lingering life awhile remains, Nor brooks the merchant's heart to view The long lov'd favourite's dying pains. FROM THE EMERALD ISLE. 73 Onward with many a sigh he fared, And sadly musing, thus he cried, "Rather had I this treasure spared Than thou dumb duteous friend had died." The treasure-where-'tis gone, forgot! Then all the truth flashed o'er his mind; And back he journeys to the spot, Where lay the golden heap behind. What new awakening anguish wrung That self-accusing master's breast, When all the devious way along He by his favourite's life-blood traced. It still awaits him to behold Returned and watchful in the shade, As guardian true, beside the gold, His faithful dog expiring laid. The look of joy awaits him still, Of love that death could not o'ercome, The dying effort he must feel, To lick the hand that sealed his doom. When cares assail, when ill befals, When negligence her trusts betrays, That image mem'ry oft recals, And o'er that dying look delays. 74 A WREATH 田 ​Scenes in Freland. ht MEER JOURNAL OF AN EXCURSION EQUATIC AND PEDESTRIAN. Having acceded to the request of some English friends, to accompany them in a tour of pleasure and information, to the southern parts of our island, it was suggested that we should go by sea to Cork or Kinsale, and return by land, incedere pedibus; visiting in our homeward journey, the Lakes of Killarney and any other places which might be deemed worthy of notice. My kind friends hav- ing at once concurred in this arrangement, a suffi- cient number of births were engaged for our ac- commodation in a steam-packet about to proceed southward on a coasting voyage; and with stream- ers floating in a fair wind, on a lovely evening in FROM THE EMERALD ISLE. 75 the month of May, we set sail from the Pigeon- house, tide and steam combining their powerful exertions in our favor. From the point of embark- ation, and at the moment we quitted the land, the city scenery looked really beautiful, nor did its interest or splendor decrease as we receded from the shore, and approached the opening of the bay. It was the evening hour, and the gilded sun- beams resting on the spires of the churches and on the roofs of the houses, glittered in ten thou- sand refracted reflections from the windows of the more distant buildings on the southern side, throw- ing a soft and mellowed radiance around the scene, and giving to the public edifices the appearance of towers and battlements, and castles, "With domes fantastically set, Like cupola or minaret." As we moved along the liquid element, our at- tention was alternately arrested by objects of a very different character. Here a merchantman, deeply laden, lay quietly at anchor, waiting for a flood tide; while before us, on either hand, the har- bours of Kingstown and Howth, extended their sheltering arms, offering to the tempest-tost mari- ner a safe asylum from the fury of the storm- yonder a pleasure boat, crowded with the thought- less and the gay, was seen lightly skimming the surface of the billow; while at a little distance, the - 76 A WREATH care-worn fisherman, all lonely and alone," sat pondering on the probable success which the re- turning tide would afford to his exertions. The scene was beautiful, yet it was not the magnificent appearance which the city presented- the broad and extended expanse of waters-nor yet the variety of the vessels which surrounded us, gaily decked in their many-coloured streamers— that called forth our unbounded admiration. With all this varied combination of gaiety and grandeur, the prospect would have only afforded an idea of sterile greatness. The softer shading would still have been wanting, had the jutting rock, the breeze-extended sail, or the dark blue sea, been the only objects on which the eye could rest; but when all along on either side the bay, the whitened cottage and the noble mansion alternately presented themselves to the gazer's view, encircled with a carpet of emerald green, or peeping from the bosom of a waving forest-while the eye could range untired along an amphitheatre of hills, cloth- ed in nature's richest foliage; or trace the mazy windings of a deeply indented shore, by the rich- ness and the beauty of its verdure, the mind appeared anxious to linger over the prospect; and the unbidden wish escaped us, that our vessel might bear us less rapidly away from a scene so pleasing. . FROM THE EMERALD ISLE. 77 So completely absorbed were we in the pleasures of contemplation, and so varied were the objects we passed, that before we were at all aware of it, we had reached that point when, from the course which it was necessary the vessel should take, we were about to lose sight of the scenery on which we had gazed so intensely with so much delight. -The sun was just about to set-a last ray still lingered on the summit of the hills; and gave to Howth and Bray a most interesting and majestic appearance, as we turned the point, and were in- troduced to a scene of a very different character: the widely extended ocean, bounded on the one side by the distant horizon, and on the other by rocks of granite towering to the skies, and covered with sea fowl, screaming the dirge of the departed day. The shades of evening were fast descending, and as the rising breeze had considerably agitated the ocean wave, and we began to feel somewhat disposed to be squeamish, it was resolved that we should retire to our births; but just as we had turned to descend into the cabin, our attention was attracted by the simultaneous appearance of several of those Ruddy gems of changeful light Bound on the dusky brow of night, which Scott has so well described in some lines written in an album. Several of the lights to be G 2 78 A WREATH seen from this point in the bay served to give a finish to the picture, without which, altho' grand in the extreme, it would not have been sufficiently picturesque. Having retired to rest, we were in a short time rocked to sleep by the motion of the vessel; and to our infinite surprise, on awaking we found ourselves within a few miles of our place of desti- nation. Something having gone wrong with a part of the machinery, and the vessel having in con- sequence been unable to proceed for a short time, we availed ourselves of the circumstance, and having requested the captain to put us on shore at a little cove or creek opposite to which we then lay at anchor, we were soon again placed on terra firma, about mid-way between Dungarvan and Youghal: and without a moment's delay set for- ward on our pedestrian tour, each of us having a small travelling bag across his shoulder, a flask of the native* in his pocket, and a tolerable sized shi- lelah for a walking stick. Being determined on seeing whatever was to be seen, and to make our- selves acquainted as much as possible with the manners and habits of the people residing in this corner of the island, we proceeded straight forward towards the best looking of a number of small huts or cabins which we observed at a little distance • Irish whiskey. FROM THE EMERALD ISLE. 79 from us, and which certainly bore a much greater resemblance to the descriptions of the habitations of the Esquimaux or the Greenlander sketched in the journals of travellers, than to the dwelling-places of a civilized people, a part and parcel of the great- est nation in the world. Having reached the en- trance of this miserable looking place, we found it partially closed by some pieces of board rudely fastened together, in the shape of a door. Nor was there any thing like a window, save a small hole in the side of the building, into which the crown of an old hat had been stuffed by way of a shutter; and which we naturally conjectured to have been designed for admitting light. Having pulled a string which we observed hanging at the door, and which, as it afterwards appeared, we had correctly supposed to be the 'open cessame' of the habita- tion, a scene presented itself which bespoke a far greater degree of wretchedness and misery than we could even have anticipated from the cold and comfortless appearance of the outside. The entire of the hut contained but one apartment; the walls were of mud, and so low, that on entering the door -which by the way we observed had to serve the double purpose of an entrance to the inhabitants, and a ventilator for the smoke, there being no chimney—we were obliged to stoop considerably -the roof was formed of branches of trees laid 80 A WREATH transversely, and covered with sods, through which the rain appeared to have made its way in seve- ral places, as the floor, which was of clay, was completely saturated, evidently with the falling drop -ceiling it had none, with the exception of a plen- tiful supply of chickweed which was growing spon, taneously from the sods with which the branches were covered, and which were so much bulged in, that we could scarcely stand erect. At the one end of this miserable abode, half naked, and bent nearly double, over a few expiring turf embers, sat an aged female, on whose emaciated frame, and smoke japanned countenance, wretchedness and poverty had indelibly engraved their names in the most legible characters-she looked like the anato- my of death; and labouring under the combined effects of cold, of want, and of disease induced by the dampness of her dwelling, was unable to move out of the position in which she had been placed, without inflicting upon herself the most excruciat- ing agony. At the moment we made our appearance she was busily engaged with a string of podreens or beads, over which, as we afterwards learned, she had been saying her prayers. Our abrupt entrance seemed to occasion considerable surprise, but hav- ing devoutly crossed herself, and muttered one or two sentences in a language which we did not un- derstand, she most cordially invited our honours to FROM THE EMERALD ISLE. 81 sit down; at the same time hoping we would excuse her rising, as she had not been able to support herself without help for the last ten years. Much pleased with the courtesy of the poor invalid, and wishing to know something more of the man- ners and habits of the inhabitants of the hut, we were about to accept of her invitation, when on looking around us, we could discover nothing on which to seat ourselves, with the exception of a couple of pieces of flag or stone and an old box or chest without a lid or covering-these, with an old iron pot, and a large wicker basket containing a few small potatoes, appeared in fact to constitute the entire furniture and contents of the cot-in one corner of which, lying on a bundle of moss or heath thinly strewed over the damp clay floor, and which ap- peared to have been used as a bed, we descried a well featured and rather good looking infant boy, per- fectly naked, and sleeping as tranquilly as if he were reposing on a bed of down-beside him sat a small lurcher dog, watching apparently with the greatest solicitude his sleeping charge. We had just seated ourselves by the side of the old woman, who was explaining to us that the in- fant and the cabin were the property of her daughter and her son-in-law, that the former had gone to the bog for some turf, and would be back in a short time, and that the latter was helping to set praties 82 A WREATH for the squire, for which he got six pence per day, and which was to be allowed in the quarter's rent of the cabin and potato ground-when a tall, ema- ciated, toil-worn female of about five and twenty years of age, whose only covering was an old chemise, a few rags of an old petticoat, and the remains of an old red cloth cloak thrown about her shoulders, entered the hut, heavily laden with a bundle of peat or turf, which she carried on her head; and followed by five or six half-naked, half-starved children, the oldest of whom could not have been more than ten years of age, each bearing a load proportioned to its strength. Having deposited their burdens in the middle of the floor, and stared upon us for some time as apparently unaccustomed to the visits of decent looking strangers, the mother of the flock, who from seeing us in possession of her cabin, appeared anxious to know with what intent we had entered it, dropping a curtesy to the ground, broke the silence by observing, "I suppose gentlemen, yese are guagers, and that yese are on the hunt for patteen; but, in troth, and I think as how it is that yere honours need not have given yerselves the trouble of coming all this length of way about such a business, for as sure as the blessed Virgin's in heaven you would'nt find the full of your tooth of any kind o' liquor that ever was made or malted, from the one end of the town- FROM THE EMERALD ISLE. 83 land to the other, save and except in his honour the Squire's house on the Hill; and sure, agra, if there were a barrel full of it to be got for the axin, Denis O'Donoho 's the last man in the parish who would be after letting a drap of it see the inside of his cabin, since poor Paddy O'Shaughnessy was transported to Botomy Bay, just for helpin widow O'Dogherty to make a thimble full for their own private drinkin'-och, gentlemen, and sure if yese had but another tear to cry in the whole world yese would have cried it to see him dragged away from his poor wife and helpless wee things, all for having helped to make a bare pint of the cratur from the widow's own corn-and may bad luck attend y' Lary O'Brien, you cowld hearted informer, every day that the sun shines upon you; may y' yet want a penny to buy nails for your brogues, and may there not be a pipe full of tobacco to smoke at your wake-but I ax your honour's pardons for in- terrupting you so, for sure my heart bleeds sore for the poor woman thrown on the wide world with her half dozen helpless childer." Having assured Mrs. O'Donoho that we were neither guagers nor excise- men of any kind, she looked rather more pleasantly upon us, and turning with a significant grin or smile towards one of our party, observed, " Arrah, then, honey, if yese be neither guagers nor excise- men, and ma-be ye're some of those folk who rents 84 A WREATH the tithes from the clargy, and who grows fat and fair on the hardships of us poor hard-working, half-fed miserable craters; and who, as father Pat tould us, last Sunday was a week, are striving to get his Majesty (the Lord be merciful to his sowl, and grant that he may yet die a member of the true church) to make the poor pay tithes for their bit pratie ground; but why should I suppose that such handsome nice looking gentlefolk as yese are should belong to such a set of varmint, and yet what else could have brought yese to the cabin of Denis O'Donoho; but indeed I thinks as how yere mis- taken; for the blessed Virgin be good to me if ther's a thing in the parish worth tithing, save and except what belongs to his Honour on the Hill, for God help us, the praties have run short, and ther's hardly as much left as will keep us alive till the next crap are ready for diggin-but ther's the gorsoons,* yere ho- nour, and ma-be ye'd like to take a tithe of them— ther's plenty of them, agra, more than we can get praties to fill their mouths wi'." As we found it impossible to edge in a word of explanation, in our defence, until the good woman had concluded her suppositions, we were obliged, in our turn, to make a formal reply, setting forth briefly who and what we were, and by what train of circumstances • Children. T FROM THE EMERALD ISLE. 85 we had been led to visit her cottage. Our explana- tion having fully satisfied Mrs. O'Donoho that we were neither excisémen nor tithe proctors, she took the greatest pains imaginable to give us all the in- formation we desired; and by way of making us more comfortable, proceeded to place some turf on the hearth; but having, for want of better bellows, applied her mouth to the embers, unfortunately the poor woman's kindness was lost upon us, as quite a contrary effect was produced to that which she intended, the quantity of ashes blown about by her puffing having made us white as millers, while the smoke which was ascending in volumes, and which could only find an exit by the door, had so powerfully affected o ur eyes, that the tears were' beginning to flow, and we were obliged to prepare for decamping. On our rising to go away, Mrs. O'Donoho, (who had just commenced washing some potatoes,) with an expression of real hospitality on her countenance, observed, "and sure if yere ho- nours would but just stay a bit longer, and ate a pratie with Denis O'Donoho, who will be in from the squire's in less than no time, he would be the proud man to see such fine gentlefolk seated in his poor cabin-but sure, acushla, I takes great liber- ties in speaking so to your honours, only as I know how it is that Denis O'Donoho, (the Lord be good to him,) never likes to be after letting any traveller H 86 A WREATH leave his bit of a cabin without breaking his fast; not to spake of such gentlefolk as yese are." Having excused ourselves on the ground of being obliged to pursue our journey, and having distri- buted a few shillings among the children, we took our leave of this genuine specimen of the hut of an Irish peasant, followed with the blessings of Mrs. O'Donoho and her family, and their most ardent prayers that all the saints and angels in heaven would be merciful to us; at the same time having our feelings deeply touched with the wretchedness and misery by which the poor people were sur- rounded, and with no little surprise that persons suffering so many hardships and privations, should appear to think so lightly of them, and should feel so grateful for any trifling act of kindness. Having learned from Mrs. O'Donoho that the fes- tival of St. Eglon was to take place that day at Ardmore, a few miles distant, at which various acts of penance would be performed by pilgrims and voteens, we resolved on making the best of our way to it without farther delay. We had not proceeded far until we overtook a number of per- sons-some halt, some lame, and some blind-all moving forward as fast as the circumstances of their various cases would permit them, to celebrate the festival of the Saint. Joining company with an old man and his wife, who were trotting along at the FROM THE EMERALD ISLE. 87 rate of about two miles an hour, on a high-backed shelty, apparently nearly as old as themselves-we commenced our inquiries as to the inhabitants, &c. The old man was not only very communicative, but very intelligent, and being occasionally helped out in a sentence by his better half, was to us a source of great entertainment. He was well acquainted with every individual resident within the compass of twenty miles; knew to whom the land of the neighbourhood belonged of right if the real owner had it; and withal, old as he was, hoped he would never die till he should see the right owner in pos- session. His own great-grandfather, he informed us, had been a prince of the country, and his wife was descended from a line of kings. He dwelt with seeming pleasure and delight on the days which were; and contrasted them with the wretchedness that now every where prevailed; and summed up the whole by laying the entire blame on the intro- duction of the Protestant religion into the country. As it was not our object to dispute either the old man's claims to ancient greatness, or his opinions on religious matters, we were very good friends; and with all his notions, we could discover that he was of a humane and benevolent disposition. In the course of our discourse we learned from him that the generality of the cabins in the country were exactly the same as the one in which we had been, 88 A WREATH with the exception that some of them had a kind of chimney, formed of wattles and ozier slips, plaster- ed with clay, which sloped up gradually till they met in a hole in the roof, and thus suffered the smoke to escape; that in general in each of those wretched hovels, furnished as before described, from five to ten persons kennelled together, whose only food was potatoes and salt, one scanty meal of which in a day had often to suffice, when the head of the family could not obtain employment, which was very frequently the case; two meals in the day, he said, were the most the poor people ever got—of flesh meat many of them knew not the taste, and even the luxury of a little buttermilk they were seldom indulged with, the price of it being far be- yond their means. "Och, Sir," said the old man, wiping the big tear from his aged eyes," if ye had been in this part of the country at the time the typhus raged in it, yere hearts must have been hard indeed if ye could ha' borne the sights which were seen every day amangst us. Whenever disorder entered a cabin its effects were dreadfu’— as, from being obliged to sleep thegether, and to breathe the same unwholesome air, scarcely one of a family escaped; and when the disorder left the house, than those it left behind ye could not find greater objects of compassion in any corner of his majesty's empire." FROM THE EMERALD ISLE. 89 Having now reached Ardmore, which we found thronged with devotees, our fellow-travellers im- mediately began to prepare themselves for the ce- remonies of the day, by throwing off their shoes and stockings, and tucking up their clothes consi- derably above their knees. They commenced their devotions by walking three times round a tower, which they told us was built by St. Eglon in a night; saying their prayers on their beads, and kneeling four times each circuit. From this they resorted to a vault or cave, where a woman sold to each pilgrim or voteen a handful of earth, assuring the purchaser that it was the real ashes of the Saint, and that no evil could befal the individual who was possessed of it. After approaching on their knees an image set up in the vault, and embracing it with great reverence, they next proceeded to the ruins of an old chapel, and after encompassing it three times, all the while repeating a certain num- ber of prayers, they entered and went from one end to the other on their bare knees, praying as they pro- ceeded, and embracing the chancel of the chapel when they had done. They next washed their feet in a pond of holy water in the vicinity of the chapel, and after purchasing a draught of water from a holy well close by the entrance, they proceeded to the last act of their devotion, which consisted in passing three times under a great stone by the sea-shore. H 2 90 A WREATH This stone, we were informed, came from Rome, on the surface of the water, and landed on the spot where it now rests. In passing round and under this stone, one followed another in the way that children play hide and go seek ;' the devotees were on their bare knees, and as the ground is filled with sharp stones, many of them were cut. They pleased themselves, however, with the idea, that the merit of their devotion was enhanced by the severity of the pains they endured. After having gone through their various evolu- tions, they then sat down together in parties, and 'laughed a little, and sang a little, and joked a little, and sported a little, and courted a little-and (those who had it) swigged the flowing can.' Won- derful are the cures which the virtues of the holy well are said to perform-the blind are enabled to see, the deaf to hear, and the lame to dance and caper;-while those who are not cured eagerly en- quire "Who has got the blessing?" Having remained at Ardmore until it was too far advanced in the evening to think of proceeding any distance, we determined on putting the hospitality of some squire in the neighbourhood to the test, and accordingly trudged on our weary way until we came to a house, the owner of which we con- cluded, from its appearance, must at least be above the middle rank in life—and putting as much brass FROM THE EMERALD ISLE. 91 into our faces as we were able, rapped at the door just as the gloom of night had thrown its shadows across the horizon. It was opened by an elderly gentleman, who, on our mentioning to him that we were strangers in the country, and requesting to know if he could direct us to the nearest place where we could obtain lodging for the night, most courteously invited us in, assuring us that he should feel truly happy in being favoured with the pleasure of our company. Nothing loth, we cheer- fully availed ourselves of the kind offer; and never did we enjoy a pleasanter evening than we spent in the hospitable mansion of He was a perfect specimen of what is called a real Irish gentleman--and the best of every thing his house could afford was produced for our use. My English friends were not able for some time to throw off their natural reserve; but our kind host having after supper plied them pretty well with his moun- tain-dew, which he assured them had not a head- ache in a gallon of it, they soon became social as any of the party, and enjoyed in a high degree the pleasantry of the squire, who continued to amuse us with anecdotes connected with his hunting and shooting excursions. We retired to rest much pleased with our hospitable reception; and arose with the morning's sun, determined to start forward • A name for illicit whiskey. · 92 A WREATH on our journey. Here, however, we found that our good fortune the evening before was only a foretaste of what was to follow-the gallant squire perempto- rily insisting on our remaining with him for at least two or three days. As no excuse would avail us, we at length agreed to accept his friendly invitation, and he promised we should not repent having com- plied with his request, for he had two or three as good dogs and guns as were to be met with in the country, and plenty of powder and shot, which were completely at our service. Happening, how- ever, accidentally to cast my eye on a newspaper that arrived while we were at breakfast, I disco- vered an advertisement relative to a circumstance of such consequence to me, that I had at once to make up my mind to proceed homewards without a moment's delay-leaving my young friends to pur- sue their course as they thought proper. Having previously obtained from one of them a promise to keep a correct journal of their proceedings, and having sincerely thanked our hospitable entertainer for his polite attention, I was about to proceed on foot to the nearest town in which I could procure a chaise; but here again Irish good-nature shone conspicuous; a pair of saddle-horses and a servant were instantly got in readiness, and I was sent forward on my journey in as great style as if I had been the son of an Irish king. FROM THE EMERALD ISLE. 93 EXTRACTS FROM THE JOURNAL OF CONTINUATION. 2 IN Castle Rack-Rent, May 20th, 1825, These Irish are an extraordinary set-very hospi- table no doubt, but would as soon shoot a man as give him his dinner-all alike to them. Just discovered that our kind host, who has entertained us so sump- tuously, on account of a number of small debts, dares not shew his nose off his own estate, upon the confines of which it seems no bailiff would think himself safe to venture, as the Squire would certainly be rescued by his tenantry, probably at the expense of the bailiff's life. Quere-on what principle, or from what motive do the peasantry protect individuals under whom they drag out an existence by no means so comfortable as the slaves in the colonies ?-presumptive proof that if well treated the Irish peasant would make a kind and affectionate tenant. Would it not be something more rational in the Irish gentry to pay their debts, and improve the condition of the cottiers, than to spend all they are worth, and more, in entertaining those who scarcely thank them for it? For the benefit of speculators wishing to see Ireland, have ascertained that it is only necessary to get an Irish gentleman into your debt, in order to procure prime 94 A WREATH. good quarters and the best of good cheer, free of all expense, as long as you wish to stay, provided always you do not ask for payment of your account -no debt paid by an Irish gentleman until a few pounds of law costs be added. Ireland fine soil for multiplying population, as, amid all their misery, no cabin is without ten or a dozen brats. Mem.- mention this to my wife, when I get one. May 21. Just parted our new friend, with a promise to spend a month with him the next summer!—well mounted-determined to proceed by the Black- water river, along the banks of which, during our excursions, we perceived an infinite variety of the most delightful scenery-old castles, old churches, and old monasteries, finely diversified with wood and water, and gentlemen's seats in modern archi- tecture. Reminded of a scene in the Lady of the Lake by a girl rowing a cot or skiff across, and keeping time to her paddles with an Irish ditty. Fermoy, May 26. Detained so long at Castle Rack-rent, and by the beauties of the Blackwater, that we were obliged to post it here in a return chaise. Roads near this place remarkably good-travelling in Ireland much improved since Miss Edgeworth painted her Cari- catures-no red hot pokers now used for starting FROM THE EMERALD ISLE. 95 the horses. Note-When horses are well fed they generally work well-Propose to the Secretary of State for the Home Department to recommend some plan which would enable the refractory Irish to procure themselves food and clothing-have no doubt, if well fed, they would work well also-and as this would save the Government the expense of keeping up a standing army in the country to op- pose Captain Rock, as well as that of transporting so many of the bold peasantry* to North America and Botany Bay, it might be worth consideration. Mem.-To publish a concise History of Ireland for the benefit of the Government and the people of England generally, who seem to know less of the real character and condition of the Irish peasantry than they do of the customs and manners of the Chinese. Wonderful improvement in the state of the lower order in this part of the country, said to be effected by the public spirit of a single indivi- dual, a Mr. Anderson. Quere If his example were generally followed by the landlords of Ire- land, besides benefitting the poor, would not the amount of their own rent-rolls be greatly increased? • "Princes and lords may flourish or may fade, A breath can make them as a breath hath made; But a bold peasantry, their country's pride, When once destroyed, can never be supplied." DESERTED VILLAGE. 96 A WREATH Killarney, June 1. Delightful scenery-nothing like it to be seen in England or Scotland-to attempt describing it were an idle effort, unless indeed to me " "Were given To dip my brush in dyes of heaven." -Must be visited and inspected, in order to form the most distant idea of its beauty and grandeur.- What stronger proof of the miserable recreancy of the Irish gentry than their desertion of this enchanting place at the present propitious sea- son-some spending their summer at an English watering-place, where they are fleeced without mercy, and laughed at without measure; others in Paris, where the exchange is in every sense of the word against them. Thus the vain and frivo- lous portion of the gentry and nobility flit about from place to place, leaving to poverty and neglect the country which gave them birth, and whence they derive their whole support; for destitute, in- deed, would they be without the labour and sweat of the Irish peasant, who in return obtains a hovel not fit for a pig, and rags that would disgrace a beggar. Abbey of Mucruss a very picturesque ob- ject; perhaps that which most interests you' in the course of your peregrinations, from its contrasting the recollections of the past and the present.- Within its precincts numerous devotees saying FROM THE EMERALD ISLE. 97 their prayers, and weeping and howling over the graves of departed friends. The cloister is small, and the branches of an immense ycw tree which grows in the centre of it would effectually prevent a monk of the present day from reading his breviary, if he were so inclined.-In the cemetery, skulls, bones, and coffins, strewed about in careless pro- fusion-fine place for nervous people to do penance. N. B.—About five-and-forty years ago a man of the name of Drake took up his residence in the abbey, where he remained for seven years; sleep- ing every night in a bed formed of coffin boards in one of the recesses of the windows, the walls being immensely thick. His beard was of an enor- mous length, and his dress, something half pilgrim half hermit, corresponded. His food he procured by calling from time to time at the houses of gentle- men in the neighbourhood, with all of whom he soon became well acquainted, yet to none of them would he divulge the particulars of the former part of his life, nor the secret cause which induced him to impose upon himself such an extraordinary penance. Having, however, in the course of my perigrinations, accidentally met with an old man, who had been particularly intimate with the hermit, and who had in his possession a bundle of pa- pers which belonged to that eccentric non-descript, shall probably on some future occasion give the I 98 A WREATH eventful story of his life to the world. On his first taking up his residence in the Abbey, the young people made several attempts to frighten him from his purpose, but the hermit being found proof against all their devices, he was ever afterwards permitted to enjoy his self-chosen retirement un- molested. On our return to the inn where we had stopped during the night, had a fine opportu- nity of hearing a specimen of that mother wit for which the Irish are so renowned-one of my young friends seeing a fine looking young girl washing a basket of potatoes at a cabin door, addressed her with, "how d' ye do, my dear; how is mamma and papa, and how are the little pigs ?" to which the good-natured girl, with a look full of arch-expres-. sion, instantly replied, "thanks to yer honour, I'm very well, and mamma and papa are very well, and the little pigs sent their compliments to you." By. the way, the bon mot ascribed to an Irish peasant, who, on being asked why he kept his pig in his cabin,' replied, "arrah, honey, who has a better, right to it, isn't it he who pays the rent?" while it is literally true, may be taken as a fair specimen of that gaieté de cœur, that peculiar trait in the Irish character, which enables the individual possessing it to jest even with his own misfortunes. We had. also a practical exemplification of that sagacity pro- verbial in the Irish character: a crowd had gathered 6 FROM THE EMERALD ISLE. 99 — round a post-chaise at the extremity of the town- having enquired the cause, we were informed that a constable had arrived in it with a prisoner; but it being the nature of a post-chaise to have two doors, in getting out each had taken a different one, and the culprit had consequently escaped, to the great joy of the spectators.-This inhe- rent love of justice is also, it seems, a prominen' feature in the Irish character, and must greatly tend to the due execution of the law, which is the perfection of reason. This principle was finely ex- emplified in these two instances,-the constable being of a superior order, took natural precedency of his companion, and walked into the parlour this was the perfection of reason in point of eti- quette. The prisoner, on the other hand, instead of following the bailiff, ran away as fast as his legs could carry him—and this nobody can deny was also the perfection of reason on his part, which leads, or rather perhaps drives us into those mea- sures which contribute most to our well-being. Clogheen, June 1st, In the course of our peregrinations arrived at the caves of Clogheen, which I strongly recommend to the attention of all curious gentlemen, particularly to such of our modern poets as are skilled in the bathos, or noble art of sinking. 100 A WREATH Caves are generally found under ground-at least those we visited are in this predicament.- The entrance is a fissure between two masses of stone about two feet and a half wide-very awful— particularly to corpulent people. Through this you descend by means of a ladder about thirty feet, and are landed on a quantity of wet mud at the bottom of the precipice. Note-Ladders in Ireland are of two descriptions, those that have rungs, and those without them-that furnished to me and my companions by the Cicerone of the caves, was of a mixed description, every second rung wanting -a circumstance calculated to excite a very great degree of nervousness in irritable constitutions— notwithstanding, effected our descent, and by the aid of guides and tallow candles, explored those in- teresting regions to a considerable extent-under- stand, however, that a complete examination has never yet been effected-the long passages, in the words of Gray, being found to lead to nothing, cer- tainly nothing that can be called a termination; not that I would have it inferred from this that they are interminable-whoever puts such a construction on the words, certainly imposes a forced one. The droppings of the water from the roofs of these caverns being impregnated with lime, have formed pillars, which are, however, said to be by no means as brilliant as the Stalactites of Antipa- FROM THE EMERALD ISLE. 101 ros, which as I never saw I cannot decide. After traversing several of the subterranean apartments for about three quarters of an hour, emerged into day-light, much pleased with my excursion, though not a little chagrined at the situation of my pan- taloons, which had suffered considerably in the course of the perambulation. Apropos-The term pantaloon has hitherto exceedingly puzzled ety- mologists, who are men generally of great labour, but of little ingenuity. The word is evidently a compound of Greek and French-Pan in the former language signifying every thing, applies most ap- positely to this article of dress, which answers the combined purposes of breeches and stockings-the French, who had it no doubt from the Athenians, have added talon, Anglice heel, alluding to its reaching that part in the animal economy. Should this derivation meet the eye of any individual about to give a new edition of Johnson's Dictionary, hope he will acknowledge from whence he derived such valuable information. Strongly advised to return to Dublin by Cunne- mara and the Bog of Allan-fine idea for a book- maker!-If it be true, as a late author has said, that a man might write a book on what a single street in London would suggest, what might be expected from the hints to be derived from the Bog of Allan or the wilds of Cunnemara-districts which I 2 102 A WREATH exceed in extent many thousand times the surface occupied by all the capital cities in Europe. Ima- gination sinks under the idea, and the press groans at the bare mention of such an exhaustless fund of materials. [Cætera desunt.] ECHOES OF KILLARNEY. UPON Killarney's silver waves No more the nightly star-beams rest; As yet the shamrock's folded leaves Were not expanded to the east. So still the early morning was, So hushed the scene-so slumbering all, That from the early summer rose The silent leaf was heard to fall. I saw a bark glide o'er the lake, Her sails to morning breath were given; And now Killarney's echoes wake, Prolonging sounds that swell to heaven. FROM THE EMERALD ISLE. 103 'Twas not the bugle's blast return'd, No mimic thunder mock'd the sky; But all the lovely echoes learn'd A gentler voice to lift on high. 'Twas the poor peasant's hymn of morn, Responding over lakes and lands; Sweeter than tutor'd pipe or horn, Or symphonies of hidden bands. 'Twas solemn, in that twilight dim, To hear the fearful cliff and cave Reverberate the holy hymn In thousand voices o'er the wave. It seem'd as, waked from long repose, Now wondering nature first adored, And glorying as the day-star rose, Herself the loud hosannas poured. Ye echoes from recesses lone, Did not your lingering voice repeat Some harmonies, than earthly tone More true, more lasting, and more sweet? 104 A WREATH HINTS FOR PROMOTING Genuine Conversation. As an incalculable quantity of good or evil is de- rivable from conversation, it is to be regretted that what is at present generally substituted for this prime ingredient of social felicity, possesses scarce- ly a single characteristic of the genuine article.- What now passes current under the name, is chiefly composed of petty and contemptible scandal-de- tails which reflect discredit on the retailers, and which cannot possibly serve any purpose but to pander to the evil propensities of impertinent curi- osity. In this way evening after evening is now spent, and what are termed social parties, break up without any individual carrying away a single idea that could contribute either to pleasure or profit— that could enrich the fancy, or improve the under- standing. At a period when so much time and money are lavished on the education of females, it is rather surprising that so little stress has been laid on the necessity of gathering materials for an accomplish- ment which certainly yields to none other in con- stant and delightful pleasure. And it may here be observed, en nassant, in regard to females, that by FROM THE EMERALD ISLE. 105 of the right employment of their time, not only in reading, but in reflecting on what they read, they might render themselves much more companion- able to men of sense and information, than many them are at present; besides rendering it unneces- sary, when in their society, for want of a subject more suited to their capacities and understand- ings, to introduce such subjects as the weather, the fashions, or the theatre. Combined with a general knowledge of the hu- man mind, good nature, good temper, and good sense are indispensable ingredients in the character of the individual who purposes taking a full share in general conversation. It is also essential that the memory be stored with pleasant topics-that there be in fact an adequate reservoir of agreeable and useful information. Amusement is requisite; but it should be sustained by an interchange of mind, and not by an unmeaning tissue of common-place observations. In general conversation, every subject which might in the most remote degree be calculated to wound the feelings of any individual present, should carefully be abstained from; or where the matter in discussion may appear at all irksome or unplea- sant, it should not be pressed, and even a favorite topic should not be urged beyond the bounds of entertainment. It should also be remembered that 106 A WREATH real wit never wounds: the scintillations of genius and spirit resemble in their brilliancy alone the sparks emitted in the collision of flint and steel- and the materials on which they fall must indeed- be inflammable, wherever they kindle the fire of contention or ill-will. Egotism, it is presumed, need scarcely be noticed -it is too notorious an evil to need observation. The destructive effects of mendacity are, however, worthy of notice: No man is justified on any ac- count in saying what is false, or in supporting for the sake of triumph in argument what he feels to be untrue. A great many plume themselves upon their skill in paradoxes, and urge them with an earnestness but too apt to impose on those who are timid or ignorant. It has been sometimes proposed to resist this abuse by opposing paradox to paradox, and by drawing the long bow as liberally as your opponent. But this is a bad remedy, for the exer- tion frequently habituates to the offence it is in- tended to punish; and he who begins the redresser of the marvellous in this way, may end in becoming a finished gasconader. To support what is false or wrong, merely as an engine to display a flippant smartness or superficial ingenuity, is to suborn the faculties to the execution of very dangerous and disgusting work, which may injure, and must tire, and which no person of clear judgment, and pro- FROM THE EMERALD ISLE. 107 per principle will attempt. Silence, or a sudden change of the conversation, is the most effectual mode of repressing this enormity. Obscenity and swearing are gradually giving way, especially in the company of the fair sex; and double entendre is on its last legs, if it be not resuscitated in respect to French taste and fashion. No man with the smallest pretensions to good breed- ing would now venture to insult a modest female, by allusions even of ingenious grossness; and all attempts of this kind should, therefore, be consi- dered as personal affronts by females of respectabi- lity. If women would in this way only assert their own dignity, the animals who could thus attempt to insult them would speedily be extirpated. Tellers of long stories, especially if they take snuff, should now and then get such a gentle hint from those who can make free with them, as may induce them to correct the error. Where it is per- severed in, a nap or a fit of sneezing will be found an effectual remedy-this, however, is recommended as a dernier resort. It may often be observed that good sense without fluency has but little chance with leathern lungs and brazen faces; and that many a modest man, whose head is exceedingly well ap- pointed with useful information, is every day put down by voluble garulity. Loud and long talking acts as an absolute embargo on the stock of know- 108 A WREATH ledge, which persons under the influence of mo- desty are generally well able to supply; it is there- fore absolutely necessary to affix some peculiar mark of disapprobation upon such engrossers, who seize upon every topic, and endeavour to forestal all that much wiser heads could bring forward upon the occasion; and whose only qualifications are assurance and verbosity. At all events, it should be made imperative upon those who talk much, to acquire a tolerable knowledge of the Eng- lish language, and not to disgust their hearers with such intolerable solecisms as many of our men of taste and fashion, so called, are commonly guilty of. Variety is necessary; and he who understands the theory of conversation, can sustain interest and amusement in a way which, to those who are igno- rant of the art, appears quite incomprehensible. A variety of topics, independent of the positive plea- sure it produces, has the additional advantage of calling into activity the minds of others, and of in- ducing them to subscribe whatever portion of in- formation they possess. The prevalence of one subject, or one talker, therefore, infallibly pre- vents this, and closes up the avenues of instruction, which it is the province of genuine conversation to open. Another mischief should also be studiously avoided; and that is debate. This can be best pre- FROM THE EMERALD ISLE. 109 vented by never introducing subjects which tend materially to arouse or irritate the feelings or pre- judices of society;-the social hour is not the time suited to any thing like altercation. If this should ever occur, the conversation should immediately be turned into another channel, and this the person of sense and information will always endeavour to do. By attending to the foregoing simple rules, con- versation might, in small circles especially, be rendered the instrument of very superior gratifica- tion. It is to be lamented, however, that but few persons possess that spring of mind which flows always abundantly, and sometimes to waste, with knowledge, temper, and discretion, in the perfection essential to conversation ;-few possess the happy art of repressing themselves and of exciting others -of preserving harmony, and at the same time of promoting discussion of keeping back disagreeable subjects, and of making the best selection of those that are agreeable-and of sustaining pleasantry, without stumbling into rudeness or personality.— When it is recollected that there is a time of life in which the interchange of well-regulated and culti- vated minds becomes the greatest gratification which earth can afford, it would surely appear worth an exertion to render fashionable such a ra- tional mode of spending time in the younger years of existence. H K 110 A WREATH THE RETROSPECT. Does the wave of the ocean soft flowing, A trace of the vessel retain ? Does ought of the night zephyr blowing, On the hill-flower at morning remain ? The red ray of eve on the billow, Will its mutable loveliness stay? Or the beam on the sick mourner's pillow, It cheers him-but will it delay? Does the wing of the dove as she passes, Leave a record behind on the air? Does the sweet dream that melody raises, Abide in the soul of despair? Ye moments of youth that have fleeted, What traces have ye left behind? Oh! where are your wild dreams repeated, On the sun-beam, the wave, or the wind? Recollections, around ye may hover, And sigh your cold sepulchre o'er; With pain the dear relic recover, But the life charm, alas, is no more! FROM THE EMERALD ISLE. 111 In his chains the poor maniac sleeping, Holds the sceptre of liberty's throne; Redresses the pale captive weeping; Tears wake him—his kingdom is gone. So I, when remembrance has crown'd me With the rose of the past that she feigns, Am waked from the Eden around me, By the wound of the briar which remains. A FRAGMENT. Cold, cold, and joyless is the heart Which frowning fate has doom'd to part From home endeared, from friends beloved, Yet leaves them careless and unmoved. Oh! let me share the anguish'd sigh, And feel the sad and scalding tear, Which rend the heart, and dim the eye, When losing those we hold so dear, Rather than be the wretch to own That cold and senseless heart of stone. 112 A WREATH On Poetic Composition. It is the remark of a judicious critic, that Poetry has latterly been obliged to submit itself to fashion; -mannerism has become the substitute for charac- ter, oddity for meaning, the infinite and indefinite of description for thought, and a grotesque jingle for harmony of numbers. This latter excellence, which is the very soul of poetry, and without which the term has no meaning, has, in many instances, been voluntarily abandoned by such men as Crabbe and Scott, and still more wantonly by Southey and Wordsworth, and the other flaccid Lake Poets, whose nerves seem completely relaxed by the influ- ence of a damp climate; and they have again courted a barbarism from which the roughness of a northern language had rendered it so very difficult to emerge. Such attempts at reviving ancient un- couthness, like the cements which are at present invented in imitation of stone, may answer their purpose for a period, but a few rains succeeded by a few frosts, eventually lay open the imposition in the edifice; and such will no doubt be the fate of the new fangled tales of chivalry which have of late years appeared at the root and stem of the poetical tree. The author who aspires to after FROM THE EMERALD ISLE. 113 ages should not be the mere pliant slave of what- ever bad literary taste may be prevalent in the age in which he lives, nor furbish up old spears and helmets, or rake in hospitals, or hash up the cold leavings of a comfortless philosophy, or condescend to any of the tricks that are practised by thorough- going literary jugglers, who vend their nostrums through the aid of extensive advertising, and the puffing of some merry-andrew critic, who helps to tow his friends forward down the stream of oblivion. Formerly it was only the mob of gentlemen who wrote with ease-but now authors by profession, and some who possess what Dryden says is the lawful title to authorship," the vocation of pover- ty," are as lax as their betters, and only go nine months with an epic poem. Some are no doubt excited to this monstrous fecundity by the hope of gain; but in acting thus they must relinquish all claim to immortality. In poetical compositions, whether long or short, it should ever be remem- bered that no exuberance of imagination, or co- piousness of diction, will atone for toil, pains, and scrupulous-nay, almost fastidious attention to the nice adaptation of each word to the impression intended to be made to the exclusion of syno- nymes-to the application of the rare and happy epithet-to the fine and delicate turn which embel- lishes a thought trivial and familiar-and above K 2 114 A WREATH all to the cultivation of that virtue which modern English writers utterly explode, conciseness. No doubt the vulgar and illiterate love a length and train of circumstances in narration; and this is not confined to the little and to the low, but to the great and rich vulgar and illiterate tribe. It fixes their attention-keeps their expectation in suspense, supplies the defect of their minute and lifeless imaginations, and keeps pace with the slow motion of their own thoughts. Tell them a story as you would tell it to a man of wit, it will appear to them as an object seen in the night by a flash of light- ning; but when you have placed it in its various lights and various positions, they will come at last to see and feel it as well as others. It is not for such, however, that the author who aspires to im- mortality should write. " Gray, in one of his letters, observes "there is a tout ensemble of sound as well as of sense in poeti- cal composition always necessary to its perfection. What is gone before still dwells upon the ear, and insensibly harmonizes with the present line, as in that succession of fleeting notes which is called melody." And surely this is not to be disregarded by any who are capable of understanding the effect which such an arrangement produces. The greatest perfection in poetry is that ease which proceeds from or is the consequence of labour and attention; and FROM THE EMERALD ISLE. 115 which resembles that strength and activity in the natural body which is attained by proper exercise, where the elastic and well defined muscles prove that they have been wrought to the true tone of vigour. This is the prime characteristic of the French madrigal and of the Greek epigram-and it is this that so highly distinguishes the lighter poems of Gray, Goldsmith, Collins, and Moore, which are so remarkable for their grace and sym- metry. It is this vigorous principle which is also the peculiar characteristic of the writings of a late Noble Bard. It is to be hoped, however, that in striving to imitate the beauties of his style, future writers may not be infected with that spirit of doubt and despondency and libertinism which so fre- quently disfigure his Lordship's productions. It is worthy of remark, that although the lives of the Greek lyric and amatory poets of whose productions Lord Byron was passionately fond, were devoted to pleasure, in general their writings are of a melan- choly cast-filled with complaints of the ills of age, poverty, and distress, and uncomfortable reflections on the shortness and misery of life; and it is urged as an excuse for the gloominess of some of his Lordship's poems, and the profligacy of others- that they were written under the impression made upon his mind by the perusal of these authors.- Indeed it is certain that the writings of many indi- 116 A WREATH · 6 viduals have been deeply tinged with the spirit of the authors to whose works they were most partial. This circumstance should operate strongly, there- fore, on the minds of young aspirants to poetic fame, in inducing them to form a just estimate of the authors on whom they would feed their imagi- nation. Milton enriched his fancy from the pages of Holy Writ; and it is said of Gray, that he never sat down to write without having previously de- voted a short portion of time to the perusal of Spenser's Fairie Queen.' Certain it is, that all our truly sublime poets incline to hope, and to cheer- ful contemplations of futurity; and there is little doubt that when time has given the writings of the Noble Bard a fair and impartial trial, the general voice will prefer the splendors of Milton to the dark lantern and stiletto of Lord Byron. And here, by the way, as we have alluded to the writings of Lord Byron, it may not be deemed an uninter- esting conclusion to these cursory observations on points not sufficiently attended to by the generality of writers, to advert for a moment to a few of the various imitations of other authors which are to be met with in his Lordship's writings. It has been asserted by some that many of his Lordship's poems are mere English translations of oriental originals, or at best a versification of stories common in the East. Supposing this to be the case, we would not FROM THE EMERALD ISLE. 117 feel disposed to think the less of Lord Byron's poetical talent. We would just think as highly of Macpherson, were he the mere translator of Ossian, as though the beautiful poems bear- ing that title had been written by himself. There is a wide difference between being an imitator and a copyist. Some of the best writers have been successful imitators of the style of others: thus, as it is well known, Virgil, in imitating his master, Thocritus, surpassed him in an eminent degree. But Lord Byron, whether from careless- ness or inadvertency, or some other cause, has certainly been guilty of several manifest plagia- risms, not only of the ideas, but of the very words of several living authors. In proof we shall only adduce the examples furnished in two of his his Lordship's most highly-finished shorter poems, 'the Bride of Abydos' and the Corsair.' 6 C In the Bride of Abydos,' the very first line is evidently a literal translation from M. de Staël's • De l'Allemagne,' where she mentions a German romance, Wilhelm Meister,' by Goethe, in which she says there are some charming verses, 'que tout le monde sait par cœur en Allemagne,' commenc- ing with "Connois-tu le terre où les citronniers fleurissent." Every reader will immediately recognise in this the original of "Knowest thou the land where the cypress and myrtle." 118 A WREATH How much further his Lordship's plagiarisms may extend in this case is not ascertained, as M. de Staël has not translated the entire of Goethe's poem. The description of Zuleika, beginning "Who hath not proved how feebly words essay To fix one spark of beauty's heavenly ray," &c. will also at once bring to the mind of the English reader the opening of the second canto of the Pleasures of Hope,' "Who hath not paused while beauty's pensive eye," &c. In the same part of this beautiful poem, the line "The power of grace-the magic of a name," will remind him of the description of Conrad, in the Corsair,' line 184, "The power of thought-the magic of the mind." For the expression in the Bride of Abydos,' line 179, "The music breathing from her face," his Lordship has expressed his obligation to M. de Staël; and in the description of Leander cross- ing the Hellespont in the fourth line of the second canto of the same excellent poem, "The beautiful, the brave," is only altered from Lady Randolph's lamentation over the dead body of her son, in 'Douglas,' by substituting the article for the pronoun, "My beautiful, my brave." FROM THE EMERALD ISLE. 119 In the Corsair,' line 359, "Then give me all I ever asked, a tear," bears a striking resemblance to the expression in Gray's Elegy, "He gave to misery all he had, a tear." · In the last canto of the Corsair,' Conrad's feel- ings when he thinks of Gulnere, strongly remind the reader of Marmion's remorse, when the remem- brance of Constance crosses his mind, "And he was free-and she for him had given Her all on earth, and more than all in heaven." Corsair, line 696. "And I the cause for whom were given Her all on earth, and more than all in heaven." Marmion. 6 Many of the most beautiful similes in the Cor- sair, the Bride of Abydos, and the Giaour, are taken from the History of the Caliph Vatheck,' and the notes to that extraordinary tale. The idea of the three-winged butterfly of Kashmere; and the allusions to the eye of the Gazelle and the blos- soms of the pomegranate are also mentioned by Sir William Jones to be almost universal in all the poetry of the East. The idea in Childe Harold,' "Deep in yon cave Honorius long did dwell, In hope to merit heaven by making earth a hell." also owes its origin to the eastern world. The Ca- liph Omer Ben Abdalaziz declared that "to merit heaven it was necessary to make earth a hell.” 120 A WREATH We remember the advice of the "de mor- sage, tuis nil nisi bonum;" but we also recollect that although Lord Byron is dead, he still lives in his works, and although we feel every disposition to preserve the spirit of the motto in our observations, we have considered it only just thus to notice the carelessness (we will not use a harsher term) evinced by a genius whose greatness should have distained any borrowed assistance: and would to heaven that such trivial faults as those we have noticed, and which, with the microscopic eye of a critic, can be observed throughout every produc- tion of his Lordship, were all that we had to charge upon the memory of the Noble Bard. But we much fear, that when the grave shall have closed upon the writer of this article, and upon all who are now able to peruse or to admire the productions of Lord Byron's pen, the poison which they contain will not have ceased to produce the most pernicious effects;-would to heaven that before his Lordship had given them to the world, he had paused under the solemn conviction of his responsibility, and had remembered that such writings as those he has left behind him may yet influence the peace and happiness of thousands now unborn. We make the observation, not so much from a wish to throw any unpleasant reflections over his Lordship's memory, as to warn others, who may take the C FROM THE EMERALD ISLE. 121 writings of his Lordship as a model; and we are bold to say that it was a weak and foolish pride which induced the Noble Bard to become the cham- pion of opinions completely at variance with the established sentiments of others, merely because they were singular. Indeed we conceive that no language can be too strong to express the indigna-. tion which every good man must feel against any individual, who, from the mere love of singularity, can promulgate sentiments calculated either to se- ver those social and endearing engagements which are the alone so urce of happiness that many enjoy -or to bereave man of that hope of an hereafter, the contemplation of which is the only pleasure left to thousands who have proved fortune fickle and friends insincere. The following quotation from an early edition of one of his Lordship's works,* will at once prove the correctness of our observations, and serve as an apology for an humble individual venturing to throw a shade over the remains of this Goliah of literary fame :- ― • "The unquestionable possession of considerable genius by several of the writers here censured," says his Lordship, "renders their mental prosti- tution more to be regretted. Imbecility may be pitied-or at most laughed at and forgotten; per- English Bards and Scotch Reviewers. L 122 A WREATH verted powers demand the most decided reprehen- sion. No one can wish more than the author that some known and able writer had undertaken this exposure; but in the absence of the regular physi- cian a country practitioner may, in cases of abso- lute necessity, be allowed to prescribe his nostrum -to prevent the extension of so deplorable a ma- lady"!! - THE FEELING HEART. How happy they whose envied lot Hath placed them far from sorrow's voice, In some sequestered rural spot, With those attached by taste and choice; Yet happier he whose fate has been To roam through many an adverse scene, Long for each absent joy to mourn, But bless'd at length with sweet return; To feel unmix'd the magic spell, Which bids his bosom wildly swell, As each long-cherish'd spot is traced, Which first in infant sport he paced, And ecstacy supreme!-to meet The heart with pleasure fondly glowing, The bosom heaving sighs so sweet, The eye with tears of joy o'erflowing- FROM THE EMERALD ISLE. 123 To know this radiant cloudless beam Of perfect bliss is felt for him!— This is the moment that o'erpays The feeling heart for countless days Of sorrow past, of danger o'er, Remembered now-but felt no more. On Novel Writing. Ir is much to be wished that some adept in light reading would make out for young people such a catalogue of entertaining books as would have the effect of amusing, without either stimulating or relaxing the mind beyond its wholesome tone; for it cannot be questioned that much of the folly and fastidiousness of the present day is imbibed from the sentimental whining or ardent impulses of the Lady Louisas and Lord Henry Adolphuses of this scribbling age and as so much of happiness de- pends upon correct and rational views of human life, every thing should be put away from the pe- rusal of the young which would mislead them in 124 1 A WREATH essential points, or prematurely awaken feelings which should be suffered as long as possible to lie dormant in the breast, that reason and judgment may have time to mature their strength, and prove sufficiently vigorous to cope with their antagonists, the imagination and the passions. With regard to novels, it may be remarked, that very few novel writers draw from life, from high life especially-though the characters are generally represented as of exalted rank, by way of heighten- ing the interest, and striking awe into the mob of readers. Indeed, wherever real descriptions of fashionable persons have been given, they are such as do not considerably increase a rational desire to be more intimately acquainted with them. The distress of at least one of the parties is always ex- aggerated, and the difficulties multiplied beyond the usual quantity which falls to the lot of human creatures; and what renders such descriptions still more dangerous, they are so drawn as to enfeeble the minds of readers, and to deceive them as to the real exigencies of sorrow and disease. Another bad effect of novel reading is that it pro- duces an evident neglect of the homely and the old ; young and beautiful heroes and heroines are alone deemed worthy of attention or regard by those whose time is much occupied in the study of novels. Plain women, and people of both sexes FROM THE EMERALD ISLE. 125 advanced in years, are left very quietly to shift for themselves, altho' near relatives-while the most common-place acquaintances are allowed to mono- polize the whole stock of admiration and attention. " Novels generally end in a wedding. The parties are conducted through hair-breadth difficulties to this welcome haven; and rétire very lovingly to the possession of every comfort peculiar to the state of matrimony. But this is a very false view of the course of events, and may lead the young and in- experienced to expect more from marriage than it is capable of affording. Connubial happiness, like every thing terrestrial, is eminently liable to change; and to detail these vicissitudes, and teach their readers how to support them might prove a task full as useful and worthy of an author's pains; as representing, in colours however glowing, the hopes and fears, the quarrels and reconciliations, the repinings against parental authority, and plans of suicide meditated by two despairing lovers, who are dying to rush into one another's arms, fre- quently in despite of prudence, honour, and com- mon sense. Let novelists, therefore, enlarge the field of their descriptions; let them pourtray the estimable self-denial of individuals, who love one another so much better than themselves, as to la- bour for independence before they broaden their mark to calamity; and earn something to subsist L 2 126 A WREATH on prior to engaging in a connexion which must in- crease their expenses, and create new calls on their support. This is indeed effected in romances very summarily, by some convenient uncle, who comes from the East Indies with several lacs of rupees, which he showers down upon the disconsolate pair, three or four pages before the termination of the novel, raising them at least to a situation of elegant competency; though it often happens that the heroic nephew is put into Parliament; nay, perhaps ob- tains a coronetcy, if he be not already the heir of an Earl in disguise, who concealed his rank from his son, in order chiefly to forward the scheme of the author. It is not to be wondered at, therefore, that with such erroneous views of domestic life, indeed of life in general, fixed upon their imagina- tion, that more than one half of those who enter into the married state should be dissatisfied and unhappy-nor can it be expected that any great change for the better will take place until the minds of youth be supplied with more wholesome nourishment than the trash with which young peo- ple now so generally surfeit their imaginations. FROM THE EMERALD ISLE. 127 TO THE READER. As from some gay and glowing scene, With pang of anguish twofold keen, The outcast turns and sighs, And feels his gloomy lot more drear, For having viewed the vision fair That mocks his hopeless eyes- So comfortless, and so forlorn, The reader from the page must turn, Where fiction pens her dreams; Where poor humanity is given Perfections which belong to heaven, And bliss that earth disclaims. Better the page of real life, Error, adversity, or strife, Such as the heart may own; And still its changeless language hear, And hope, lament, and doubt and fear, And truth forbear to frown. Thou perfect maid that fiction draws, Did never secret self-applause, Or joy elate thy breast, When slander's record was unroll'd, And error's deep disgrace was told, Or beauty's fate o'ercast? 128 A WREATH Thy heart did never envy pain, Thy lip no idle flattery feign; Was vanity so dead, As ne'er the triumphs of the ball,“ With exultation to recal, O'er some bright rival maid ? Then, if thou art so good-so blest, Earth is no more thy place of rest; The changeful climate leave To us who may rejoice an hour- To-morrow feel misfortune's power, Fear-err-decay and grieve. O simple reader, cease to sigh, And fling the o'er-charged fable by, Ere rising murmurs crowd; Experience, with his tresses grey, angry from the page away,” Unwitness'd-disallow'd. Turns And let the wanderer too believe Those dazzling scenes he saw deceive; There borrowed bliss alone To many a languid heart is lent, That has no gladness or content, Or refuge of its own. FROM THE EMERALD ISLE. 129 Synonyme. As it is essential to the thorough knowledge of any language, to be able to distinguish accurately between words generally considered synonymous ; and as upon this, strength, perspicuity, and ele- gance of style, materially depend, it would be a great acquisition, if some individual, possessing the various mental qualifications requisite for such a task, would lay his mind to the subject, and give to the English reader a work similar to the Abbé Girard's celebrated "Synonymes Français."-The following may perhaps serve as an example:- TO IMITATE-TO COPY. The first is generally a mark of quickness of mind-the second of barrenness. Imitation is employed upon useful subjects-copying on com- paratively trifling ones. We may imitate a man's virtues, or his style, or his politeness-but we copy his foibles or his eccentricities, or the peculia- rities of his dress. Imitation often terminates in improvement-copying in still inferior mediocrity; and places the individual in the abject class of mimics, nine in ten of whom go out of themselves without going into the real character of other peo- ple. On the stage, no mimic except Garrick ever 130 A WREATH was a good actor. It is said that he sought in Bedlam for many of his traits in Lear, while Foote abused the hospitality of a Welch gentleman's fa- mily, to glean the absurdities of Cad-walader-a tolerably fair indication of the minds of the two men-the latter of whom never could free himself from the trammels of buffoonery, though he had received a liberal education, while Garrick reached the summit of his profession. The Chinese are servile copyists; and are behind" every other na- tion in proficiency in the arts and sciences. The savages of Botany Bay, are most expert mimics, yet the greatest savages on the face of the earth; without religion, or even the vestige of a social în- stitution. RESEMBLANCE-CONFORMITY. These are terms which designate the existence of the same qualities in different subjects; but the first refers chiefly to corporeal coincidences, the latter to intellectual-there is a resemblance be- tween features, and a conformity between minds. JOY GAIETY. These terms signify an agreeable state of mind, arising from the possession of good, or the enjoy- ment of pleasure. The first springs from the heart, and is enrolled among the passions, and like them can rise to an excess;—whilst the latter, gaiety, belongs rather to the temperament of the body, and FROM THE EMERALD ISLE. 131 is often the consequence of a healthy well-balanced constitution, in which the blood circulates cheerily, and the animal spirits feel no obstruction from the invasion of pain, or the minings of chronic dis- ease. Joy must be acted upon and excited; gaiety, on the contrary, is spontaneous, and diffuses a sunshine over society-which is much more in- debted to the cheerful than to the joyous. Vanity is generally the companion of gaiety. Joy is op- posed to sorrow-gaiety to melancholy. RECREATION-AMUSEMENT-DIVERSION. Recreation implies an interval of cessation from the anxieties of business, to which we must again return. Amusement is the pursuit and enjoyment of light pleasure.-Diversion is accompanied by livelier feelings of delight, and a keener relish of entertainment. FRAIL-FRAGILE. Both these terms denote weakness-the first in subjects which can be bent, the second in those that can be broken. We speak of the frailty of the support of the reed, and compare it, not unaptly, to the general run of friendship-and of the fra- gility of glass and of promises. SELF-SUFFICIENT-IMPORTANT-ARROGANT. The self-sufficient man goes a step beyond the self-possessed, and is consequently more apt to fall 132 A WREATH into error; his judgment may be strong, but is seldom well regulated, and is generally dashed with vanity. The important man superadds some- what of pride to an overweening estimate of his own powers, and is something like gold lace upon an old-fashioned scarlet waistcoat. The arrogant man has almost always some spice of badness of heart in his disposition, which betrays itself in the des- potism of his opinions. We avoid the self-suffi- cient-laugh at the self-important-and detest the arrogant. The first are found in considerable abundance in the professions called liberal-the second in public offices-and the third amongst the race of minute philosophers, particularly of the Scotch school, who moot inconceivable points-of which I shall give a specimen, more for the sake of recording Doctor Johnson's opinion, than of stating the subject matter of discussion-which was no less an important inquiry, than whether so many human creatures would now be on the face of the earth, if existence, instead of being imposed upon them, had been at their option: on which Johnson, with his usual acuteness, observed, that much of this would depend upon the place of birth -and that he believed if that spot were Scotland, the option would be easily decided, and the ranks of the human race thinned beyond all possible con- ception. FROM THE EMERALD ISLE. 133 MUSIC-IRISH MELODIES. MUSIC is a very delightful thing-but at large parties it is seldom enjoyed. It is, however, the order of the day; though it cannot be doubted that of the number of persons who collect together to listen to it, there is not one in twenty calculated to judge even of vocal, much less of instrumental music. Indeed it would often appear as if les- son of a first-rate composer, played with exquisite taste and execution, were regarded as the signal for a general dechainement of tongues; even those who were silent before, commence talking then, as tho' impelled to it by the same sort of secret sympathy which swells the notes of the Canary-bird in his cage, to overpower conversation. Were a foreigner to judge by the conduct he may frequently see practised during an evening's entertainment, he would be led to form no very exalted idea of the musical taste of this country or England; nor could he, when he would witness the sublimest compositions of Handel, Haydn, and Mozart, in- terrupted and drowned by the buzzing of a thou- sand tongues, and listened to or received with all the ungrateful symptoms of stretching, yawning, &c. By the way, I must confess that I myself do M 134 A WREATH not experience much pleasure in listening to some of those Italian singers of Italian airs, the excel- lence of whose performance is to warble out a note to the length of a league-although they are so highly applauded by many pretenders to musical science, and in deference to public opinion are so much extolled by that prodigious multitude of all ranks, who resign their sensations to the keeping of others, and dare neither see nor hear for them- selves. For my part, I must candidly own it af- fords me much greater satisfaction to hear one of our national melodies sung with feeling and pathos, than to listen to such experiments upon the human voice. They may certainly excite wonder; but can never affect the feelings. Indeed I have always considered our national melodies as very charming things. Whether me- lancholy or gay-martial or pastoral, they possess the raciness of originality, and are most feelingly expressive of all the passions, from the sweetest to the most terrible-they speak the genuine language of emotion, and bring us back to the times when they were breathed-the old times, which the heart, disgusted with what it sees of hypocrisy, selfish- ness, and vanity, loves to recur to, with probably an exaggerated opinion of the simplicity and truth which belonged to them; and which, perhaps, although an error of the mind, is one of the most FROM THE EMERALD ISLE. 135 grateful in which it can indulge. Although I think melodies and the simpler the better-are very pleasing things, they have perhaps little to boast of as to mechanical harmony; but they more than compensate for this, at least to untutored ears, by being the appropriate organ of the affections. They are, besides, very easy to execute, provided there be sensibility in the singer; they require neither great compass, strength, or inflection of voice-all that is essential is expression. Now, as young ladies have hearts, they have only to keep them in unison with those sentiments which it is to be hoped are most congenial to nature, to be enabled to convey "that sober certainty of waking bliss," which the virtuous and accomplished lady, de- scribed by Milton, extorted even from Comus, à very sensual fellow, and who was then, perhaps for the first time in his life, recalled from his in- dulgences to any thing like a pure and virtuous emotion. It may hence be fairly inferred, that if to reform rakes be the greatest triumph of female dominion, such means as melody affords may be employed with some probability of success. At least I can say from experience, that "Hope told a Flattering Tale," and other long, elaborate, and to Irish throats, nearly impracticable airs, have never yet produced any effect, but to make these incorrigible fellows laugh in their sleeves all 136 A WREATH the time they were paying the most extravagant compliments, both to the fair warblers and their delighted mammas, who were simpering and re- joicing at the value received for the many guineas given to professors, who no doubt smile internally now and then themselves, at the ideas so prevalent at present on the subject of teaching misses to sing, whether their talents lie in that way, or whether they do not. The fact is, that those who sing most to the feel- ings have always had the least teaching. No teacher can impart expression;-he may tell where the emphasis is to be laid, and where the turn is to be introduced; but without natural tenderness and spirit, the directions become an absolute dead letter. Many instructors have candour enough to state this to parents; but it is almost unnecessary to add that they are generally discredited-most fathers and mothers arrogating to their children the possession of musical powers, as well as what they term genius, "As if these grew in common hedges.' در while the truth is, that a sprig of the genuine species of either is of all things the hardest to meet with; and where it is found, it will always thrive. best in proportion as it is least tampered with. FROM THE EMERALD ISLE. 137 1 Z 2 CHARACTER OF AN IRISH MELODY. Loud is the note of Erin's song, In mournful modulation long ;- Like grief half quell'd, half pass'd away, Or welcome, if it will, to stay. As if, on lonely cliff reclin'd, Her pale cheek offered to the wind, The pensive genius of the land Awaked her harp with aimless hand; And while to her reverted eyes Past times and images arise- The plains of peace-the fields of fight, The widow's woe-the warrior's might, The achievements of the buried brave, The form wild gazing on his grave, In tones despairing, tender, bold, The unbidden strings the vision told— Now like a thought escaped from pain, In doubtful joy steals forth the strain; Or as by desolated pile, Thro' mouldering arch and echoing aisle, It poured wild revel numbers there, In praise of ruin and despair; Again, like that dark spirit's cry, That bodes of death and anguish nigh, It seems with howling night-blasts join'd, That dies away, in sighs resign'd- 138 A WREATH If all thy darkening prospects fade- If faithless friendship have betrayed- Go and beguile the wretched day Where yon pale matron pours the lay ;— It may not make thy sorrows less, It may not change thy heart's distress; But yet with wild untutor'd speech, Thy hidden grief's recess 't will reach; "Twill seem to say, Thy grief is mine- "I mourn a misery like thine! "Than beauty's grace-than happier hour- “Than friendship's faith-than wealth or power, 66 Longer than these it may delay; "But fled a sweeter trace shall stay." 66 A MEDICAL PRESCRIPTION. TRANSLATED FROM THE FRENCH OF LA MARTINIERE. Would you wish to get well without failing Of I know not what ill, which, I know not for why, For this fortnight has made you look feeble and ailing! I prescribe you to buy, How much I can't say, of a root I know not, To mix of I know not what simples a potion, Pound I know not what herbs, and of them make a lotion; Which applied piping hot, Will for aught that I know Make you eat, drink, and sleep, as a fortnight ago But this I can venture for certain to say, Half the doctors in London prescribe the same way. FROM THE EMERALD ISLE. 139 C REQUISITES FOR A GOVERNESS. It would be a curious and useful point to ascer- tain-for the benefit of many meritorious women, who seek for the situation of governess-what is really expected from them for forty, and sometimes thirty pounds per annum, with diet not unfre- quently embittered by mortification, and lodging in the attic story. Independent of all the moral virtues, (religion is seldom insisted on,) they must be able to teach French grammatically; history, geography, and the use of the globes; writing and arithmetic ;-they must also be proficients in music and needle-work. These are some few of the requisites, and many more are silently un- derstood to be given into the bargain: such as - an extraordinary power of enduring the noise of spoiled children, and the caprice and ill-humour of spoiled parents-insurmountable good humour, always ready to laugh with and be laughed at― a digestion equal to the drumsticks of turkeys and outside slices of sirloins of roast beef, &c. &c. The Americans, who are but a half civilized people, are much more candid upon such occa- sions than the English or Irish are; they openly confess what they expect for their money, and leave no sting of disappointment in their bar- gain for education, as would appear by the follow- 140 A WREATH ing advertisement which appeared some time since in one of the transatlantic newspapers:-" Wanted, a genteel, well-informed woman, whose patience is inexhaustible—whose vigilance is unwinking- whose tongue is tireless-whose expedients to please are boundless-whose foresight is unequalled- whose industry is matchless-and whose neatness is unparalleled!!" And such, we verily believe, are the qualifications frequently expected from in- dividuals in those countries, although the require- ments may not be expressed in so many words. FRENCH EPIGRAM. THE provincial courts of justice in France, it would appear by the following epigram, are like some of our own Quarter Sessions, very noisy- although certainly none of our Judges have ever yet been betrayed into such a candid confession as the following: Crier, call solemn silence in the court! These Goths of justice think to make a sport ; But she shall not be thus derided :'. Silence, I say-such talking is absurd; I do declare I have not heard one word The last ten causes I decided, So loud and various are the brawls and fury Of lawyers, agents, witnesses, and jury! FROM THE EMERALD ISLE. 141 INFIDELITY. THE last century is remarkable for having fur- nished an unprecedented number of attacks on re- vealed religion, through the medium of science ;- nor is it less remarkable for having derived much support to divine revelation, and much valuable illustration of the sacred writings, from the enqui- ries of the philosopher, and the observations of the traveller. In the Indian desert the church of God meets the eye, and the vestiges of the Saviour ap- pear, after the lapse of centuries, fresh and con- vincing-in Nazareth, where he was cradled in a manger-and in Jerusalem, where he expired on the cross. Every sober and well-directed enquiry into the natural history of man, and the globe we inhabit, has been found to authenticate the Mosaic account of the creation, the fall, the deluge, the dispersion, and other important events recorded in sacred history. Never was there a period of the same extent in which so much light and evidence in favour of revelation were drawn from the enqui- ries of philosophy; nor was it ever rendered so ap- parent that the information and the doctrines con- tained in the sacred volume, perfectly harmonize with the most authentic discoveries, and the sound- est principles of science: 142 A WREATH Were this wide waste alone the lot of man, Were his hopes bounded by life's narrow span, Well might he envy the unthinking brute, And calmly cease from every fair pursuit To make the mind more noble-all were vain, The finest feelings yield the keenest pain; The warmest heart bleeds most—the steadiest friend Feels the severest sorrow in the end: To meet no more the tenderest ties must part, Death unrelenting severs heart from heart. THE FOLLOWING LINES WERE PRESENTED TO HIS MAJESTY ON HIS VISIT TO THIS COUNTRY. Hail, Monarch of Britain! the Emerald Isle Invites thy approach to her shores with a smile As pure, bright, and warm as the sunbeam that gilds The crags of her cliffs and the flow'rs of her fields. Hail, Prince of these Islands! reflected in thee, The virtues, the worth of thy father we see; The pleasure which springs from thy visit shall give A tone to our hearts that shall last while we live. Then welcome to Erin-her sons you will find, Tho' frank in their manner, are courteous and kind; Like the star of the west, lo! the light of their smile Invites thee to visit the Emerald Isle. FROM THE EMERALD ISLE. 143 THE NERVOUS AND SENTIMENTAL. WHEN the mind becomes restless, and threatens to be too much for the body, the latter has a way of mustering up its strength by starts or snatches, or of wrestling with its inhabitant by means of some violent action. Hence the various tricks that are called nervous, such as convulsive movements of the face and hands, extraordinary gestures, biting the nails to the quick, playing the knife-grinder with your foot and leg, beating a regular tattoo with your fingers on the table, thumping the knee, and whistling-with a number of other extravagant va- garies, which those individuals commonly called nervous, are in the daily habit of performing. In many instances, however, such capers are merely the effect of bad habit or irregular living. Many a fine lady or sentimental miss would be shocked to find the quantity of vulgar materials which go to the composition of what she so much values. herself upon, under the name of sensibility: To the indolence of a lazy day, or a ham supper, may often be traced the wakeful melancholy of a whole night; a long expostulation with for- tune, to being heaped with indulgences; or a pre- possessing flood of tears at a tragedy, to the pre- vious mastication of a score of living oysters. In- 144 A WREATH deed we are afraid that among the few nervous or sentimental persons who have been wise, we shall not be able to find any of the very wisest. The cheerfulness of Socrates is proverbial; Newton was calmness itself; Locke delighted in quizzing affected gravity; and we would lay any wager that Alfred the Great was a pleasant fellow; and even Galileo, in spite of his imprisonment by the Inquisition, for differing with the generally received notions relative to astronomy, was particulary facetious, and re- markable for his fondness of Ariosto. By far the greater number of nervous and sentimental great names are to be found among bigots, bad livers, and dealers in blood shed-such as Nero and Caligula, Philip the Second, or Frederick of Prussia, whose spirits were in general dreadfully tormented thro'- the night, yet could not leave off his hot suppers, or conform to a regular mode of living. ON DREAMS. Of dreams the theories have been as various as they are inconclusive: the credulous, the sanguine, and the melancholy, have each their different sys- tems. Many suppose that the future is shadowed out through the agency of dreams, and not a few apparently well attested instances are adduced to FROM THE EMERALD ISLE. 145 prove such an interposition. Those who are inclined to repose confidence in dreams should consider, however, that while the vision lasts the memory lies completely torpid, and the understanding is employed only about such objects as are then pre- sented to the imagination, without any comparison of the present with the past. When we dream, we frequently hold converse with a friend who is either dead or absent, without remembering that the ocean or the grave are between us. Nor are we shocked at the violations of the laws of nature which occur, nor experience surprise at the scene being so suddenly shifted before us. The moral sense appears to be totally perverted, since we not only reason, but act upon principles highly absurd and extravagant. It may also be observed, that dreams, at least such as leave any impression on the memory, belong rather to a diseased, than to a healthy state of mind and body, and that they are generally the accom- paniment of grief or remorse ;-in the first case probably to soothe affliction by a change of images, and in the other to compel guilt into confession, by the constant recurrence of the same object. Dreams may also sometimes operate to admonish us of inci- pient derangement of the faculties, particularly when they are vivid and distressing; for what is madness but a dream, full of disjointed fancies, and unconsequential reasoning. N P 146 A WREATH U THE STRANGER'S PILLOW. Smooth be the stranger's pillow spread, And soft the down beneath his head, And strew the scarlet blossom there, That steals from memory half her care; Let no intruding step or sound Disturb the midnight stillness round, Nor banish from his slumbering eyes Fancy's fair visions as they rise. Haply by her sweet error swayed, His steps from home have never strayed; Or once should troubled thoughts intrude, By slumber only half subdued, Of forms and scenes left far behind, And farewell parting accents kind; Perchance the tear thro' slumber's spell Then on the stranger's pillow fell. "Twas but a momentary pain,- "Tis past and all is well again; Again the phantom scenes appear More sunny bright-more doubly dear; With shadowy forms, thro' endless ways, He converse holds, and careless strays, Thro' vistas and o'er arching bowers,→ Marks his paternal ancient towers.— FROM THE EMERALD ISLE. 147 An hour, and all is faded-gone! And memory's mournful tear alone, While she the vision sweet recals, Upon the stranger's pillow falls- Remoter regions must divide, And separating waters wide, Ere to the wandering stranger's eyes Shall home's regretted mansions rise! Smooth be the stranger's pillow spread, Low be the voice and soft the tread; Nor violate with gentlest sound The midnight stillness reigning round; Thou hast no treasure to atone For those delusive moments gone. ANECDOTE OF NAPOLEON BONAPARTE. AN eminent artist who visited Paris during the period in which Napoleon Bonaparte filled the of- fice of First Consul, among other places went to the room where the Senate assembled. There was a chair of state at one end of it; and the person who shewed the room pointed to one of the arms of it, which was new. "Do you see, Monsieur," 148 A WREATH said he, "that new arm ?"—" Yes; but what is there remarkable in a new arm? I suppose it was broken by accident." "No, Monsieur; the re- markable thing about that arm is, that it is re- newed once in so many weeks."- — For what, pray, Sir ?"—" Why, Monsieur, when the First Consul sits in that chair, he has a trick, while the senators are speaking or deliberating, of taking a penknife from off the table, and hacking the right arm of the chair with it until the surface is reduced to splin- ters. Every now and then we renew it without saying any thing; and when the First Consul has repeated his operation sufficiently, we make him another!" AUTUMN. Autumn, "the eventide of the year," brings with it the most salutary reflections—the winds arise, the leaves fall, and all nature sinks into decay. It is not the solitary tree-but the whole forest which must yield to the inevitable law prescribed by nature; and thus it is with the human race. Every being we have ever known; the friend we loved, and the FROM THE EMERALD ISLE. 149 1 enemy who persecuted and maligned us, must alike lose the foliage of their strength, and pass into the grave. Before such a reflection, hatred, revenge, and malice, and all the tribe of scorpions which so frequently sting the human bosom, must cease to exist. The very atmosphere of such an idea is fatal to their being; and in their place, charity springs up to prompt forgiveness of injuries and an oblitera- tion of every unkindness. The leaf of autumn gradually declines-nor does the winter's wind at once sweep it into oblivion— beautiful even in decay, it still clings to the branches, and seems to enjoy the last gleams of the sun, and the parting visit of the western breeze—at length it is disengaged, and even then it lingers, buoyant on its native element, and gracefully descends at last to its destined repose-a striking emblem of the de- cay of the good man, who quietly sinks into the grave, with a well-founded hope of a glorious resur- rection. The winter is not to continue for ever-tho' the leaf of autumn perishes, the grave is the portal to a region where the happy spirit shall for ever flourish in renovated youth and perennial freshness. A WREATH 150 TO THE NEW YEAR. The mists of morning disappear, Loud ring the merry bells and clear, The new-born year to hail; And with its sweet and solemn tone Peals to the peaceful one that's gone, A long, a last farewell. With lingering gaze we view the scene, Till rock and mountain intervene, Where some loved friend may stray; And number all his virtues o'er, And sigh to think that never more May he retrace that way. So may we for a moment's space The year's past lovely seasons trace, And mourn departed hours With trophies crowned, and laurel leaves, And ruddy fruits, and golden sheaves, And evanescent flowers. Thou infant year, ere thou art past, May all those clouds which overcast Our lives, dissolve in peace; And ere the merry bell to you, Peals forth a long, a last adieu, May all our joys increase. FROM THE EMERALD ISLE. 151 The Hermit of the Lakes. It is to be presumed that few persons have visit- ed and viewed the delightful scenery of Killarney, -have climbed its mountains, or skirted its lakes, without having heard something of the extraordina- ry ascetic, who some years since took up his abode in the deserted and mouldering ruins of the abbey of Mucruss, and who, for reasons known but to himself, became the companion of the lonely dead, relinquishing for ever the society of the living, save when compelled by the cravings of pinching hunger to ask an alms from some neighbouring peasant. Having in early life visited those delightful scenes, whose varied beauties mock alike the boldest efforts of the pencil and the pen, while ranging along its 152 A WREATH lakes, or climbing the mountain's ridge, I was ac- companied by a youth, whom, although in the cos- tume of the country, sans hat or shoes, I found to be extremely intelligent, and well informed in le- gendary lore, and who, as we sauntered along, by way of amusing me, recounted many a wonderful story of the doings of the good people, or fairies, who, he averred, were at one period the only in- habitants of which Glena and Mangerton* could boast. Even now, he assured me, on many a clear moonlight night, troops of them were frequently seen cantering down from the mountains on horses not bigger than hares, or sailing on the lakes in vessels made of cockle-shells; while at other times they would join together in the sportive dance on the beautiful green sward with which Mucruss and the surrounding islands were covered. The evening was fine; the last sunbeam still lin- gered on the Eagle's Nest; and in order to obtain a more extensive view of the delightful scenery around us, we had left the beaten path, and were endea- vouring to gain the summit of Glena mountain, by scrambling up its precipitous sides with the help of the tough roots and impending boughs which sprung from the crevices of the rocks; when on a sudden I observed my guide to start, as if affrighted; * Very high mountains in the neighbourhood of Killarney. FROM THE EMERALD ISLE. 153 and hastily crossing himself, and pointing to a lit- tle shallop or boat, which had just issued from at cove that lay beneath us, and contained a being of most extraordinary appearance, he exclaimed, "the blessed Vargin preserve us from harm, but I fear me there is some bad luck before us; for there's the Hermit of the Lakes, and whoever first sees him after his being at yonder mountain, which, yer honour, they calls the Devil's Punch Bowl,* is sure to meet with some accident. He has been about no good, I'll warrant him; he goes yonder to con- verse with a little black man, who they say is the ould boy, though I would not like to wrong him, any how." Scarcely had he uttered these words, when the root by which he was hanging gave way, and not being able to recover his hold, he was pre- cipitated a considerable way down the mountain- side, his progress being at length arrested by the branches of an aged oak, which hung midway in the descent to the bottom. However, not having received any serious injury, he soon regained his former position, exclaiming as he approached me, "And sure, isn't it I that ought to be thankful to the blessed Virgin, that didn't let him do his worst on me; for, sure as she's in heaven, but for her merciful interposition, the best bone in my body The name of a mountain in the neighbourhood of Killarney, in which there is an extinct volcano. 0 2 154 A WREATH would have been broken. I knew well I should meet with some accident-St. Mary grant the worst may be over." Having by this time gained a position where I could with safety turn round and view the indivi- dual who had been the cause of such alarm and danger to my guide and companion; I could per- ceive that there was apparently some ground for the terror expressed. A cap of a conical form covered his head, while a long, black, bushy beard gave to a sharp, haggard, dark countenance an expression of savage gloominess, which even the distance could not obliterate. He was wrapped in a long loose garment, drawn tight at the middle by a belt, from which were suspended several articles, that my guide informed me were dead men's bones with which he was used to work his incantations, and practise his black art. "Do you see that boat, Sir ?" said the boy, "that boat was made without the help of human hands, yer honour; it is formed of the coffins of those whose souls are now doing penance; sorra a nail would ye find in it from beginnin' to end, nor was there ever a hammer raised over it-I seed it often with my own eyes, yer honour, and I can go bail for the truth of what I say; in fact, he is not saun- cy, for he can both raise the dead, and make the Ould Boy appear in the likeness of a man." FROM THE EMERALD ISLE. 155 "And where did he come from, or where does he now live?" I enquired." And sure, yer ho- nour, nobody knows where he came from, or who he is, and it's I that knows very little about him that 's good, only that the neighbours says there is no fear of his being hanged for being a Christhin; and if there was no harm in saying it [here he ve- ry devoutly crossed himself,] I believe myself that he's no very distant relation to the Ould Boy him- self-though, yer honour, I would not for the best horse in yer stable, that he should hear me saying so." Having, on further enquiry, learned that the much-dreaded individual had taken up his resi- dence in the Abbey of Mucruss, which my guide informed me was 66 an illegant ould ruin that every body visited," and which had for many years been a favourite burying place, in the true spirit of ju- venile knight-errantry, I resolved on exploring it the next morning, and if possible finding out some further particulars relative to the more than mortal who had taken up his abode within its walls. We had by this time wandered a considerable distance, and lost no time in regaining the pathway, in hopes to arrive at the inn (if it might be so called) which I had made my head-quarters, before the shades of night had completely surrounded us. As the even- ing advanced, fear appeared to lend additional 0 3 156 A WREATH swiftness to the legs of my companion, with whom I was scarcely able to keep pace, and who every now and then looked behind him, as though he feared some one was pursuing us. It was late when we arrived, and the evening being somewhat cold, we found that several travellers, who were stopping at the same place, had assembled round a blazing fire of turf and bog-wood, and were, with some neighbouring cottiers beguiling an idle hour in listening to various spirit-stirring tales of terror with which the courteous landlord was endeavour- ing to entertain them. Having taken my seat on a three-legged stool, and Paddy M'Kew, my guide, having also posted himself in the hob or chimney-corner, appeared on thorns until he got an opportunity to communicate the par- ticulars of our adventure. It was quite à propos, and drew forth many a story 'learned and long' of the wonderful doings of the Hermit of the Lakes; nor did the miraculous escape of Paddy pass un- noticed. "And sure, avourneen, it was you that was in good luck, that you belonged to the true church," observed an old grey-headed man, "the blessed Lady is always good to her own; had you been a heretic, as sure as the hermit's a conjuror there would not have been a whole bone in your skin at this blessed moment." "Arrah, hould yer long tongue, Denis O'Don- FROM THE EMERALD ISLE. 157 nel, with your politics about religion and the true church," said the landlord angrily; "if you don't like to be civil to the gentlefolks who have the kind- ness to stop at my house, and who have the good- nathur to come and sit down beside the likes of you and me, and to listen to our ould stories, why then you may take yourself and your small-talk off to your own cabin, Denis O'Donnel, and not be after doing me an injury." "And sure it's I that wouldn't be after offending any gintleman, no matter what profession he might be of; but if you think so much of a blaze of your peat, good night, and bad luck to you, Paddy O'Rourke; for its myself that thinks ye'd sell yer sowl and yer religion any time for a good customer. Its you and the likes of you that brings disgrace on the holy Catholic Church, and may the curse of the Church rest upon you and your's, Paddy O'Rourke." Denis O'Donnel having thus unceremoniously taken his leave; and our worthy host having made every apology to those who he conceived might have been offended by the plain speaking of the old man, the conversation relative to the hermit was again resumed. "And sure it's I that could tell yes a story relating to the auld carle that wad mak the hair o' yer head stand upright," said a bluff looking country fellow, whom, from his north- 158 A WREATH ern accent, I deemed, I believe justly, a native of the sister kingdom" Maister O'Rourke himsel was the very ane on whom the auld lad played his pranks. One Mr. O'Mulligan was after getting in his harvest, and he proposed to give some of the boys wha helped him a bit o' a treat; and so he gathered some o' the neighbours together in the gude auld way, and he gied them plenty o' the na- tive to wash it down wi'. So, d'ye see, when they were a' a wee thing hearty, so that they cared nae mair for seeing the Auld Boy than they wad for seeing ane o' their ain sels, Weel,' says Billy M'Comisky, it is I that wish we had his Reve- rence the auld Hermit here, we would gar him play some o' his strange tricks, just to enliven us a bit; and as he's fond o' a drap o' the cratur,* why it's how I think he would have little objection.' And so it was, as it is aye said, 'spaek o' the Deil, and he'll mak his appearance ;' wha should just come round the hill but his reverence-we spied him out o' the window where we sat. So out boults Bill, and accosts him wi', 'I hope yer Reverence is weel; may be yer Reverence wad like to be after wetting yer Reverence's whistle?' 'I thank ye, Bill; but I'll take none the night.' However, after a good deal o' pressing, his Reverence at length • The Hermit of the Lakes was latterly greatly addicted to drink. FROM THE EMERALD ISLE. 159 consented; and so when he came, there he stood, like a statute, or a spectre, with his eyes fixed on the ground, neither saying aye nor no to ane or other o' the company; and having drank off a glass o' the native, was about to retire, when Bill again accosted him, wi', 'May it please yer Re- verence's grace, as we are all a wee thing hearty, and up for a bit o' fun, we have been after thinking that maybe yer Reverence would condescind to shew us some specimen of your great larning and your supernatheral powers-as we understand yer Reverence is well acquainted wi' the black art.'- So his Reverence, wi' a great frown, replied, 'Young man, ye know na what ye seek for-could ye stand to see the dead raised?' Ay, deed, could I-or the Deil himsel,' quoth Bill. But I am nae gude at telling a story, genteels; and maybe you yoursel, Maister O'Rourke, wad hae the kind- ness just to tell the gentlefolks the story as it occur- red, as sure you hae the best right to mind it, you wha were so near losing your life by the doings o' the auld carle." 6 "And sure, Master Magregor, it is you that could tell a story with a grace; but as you are so condescindin, why I will do my best to tell it to the company. So, d'ye see, genteels, as Master Magregor has just informed you, Bill M'Comisky was after asking his Reverince to shew them some 160 A WREATH • If · < of his tricks. So says his Reverince to Bill, you have a great desire, I will let you see some of your ould acquaintances.'-To be sure he spoke in far more larned and nater language than I can remimber. But,' says he, mind ye, my lads, if the Ould Boy runs away with one of you, while trying the experiment, you must not blame me for it, but your own curosity. Deil a fear,' says Bill. So to work they went; and the boys all com- menced, and swept one end of the barn quite clean. And then, d'ye see, his Reverince axed me could I get him a Bible and a pair of candles; and so says I, it's I that could get you as many candles as there are days in the week, if ye wanted them; but I think it is as how there is not a Bible or a Testament in the parish, save and except what is to be found in the Protestant Church-since the time Father Pat laid his conjunctions upon the peo- ple not to let them inside their cabins; for, d'ye see he tould us they were not saunsy, that neither luck nor grace would attend people while they did so.' But after bethinking myself a bit, thinks I, and maybe Master Fitzhenry, the minister's nephee, would slip us the lend of one for a bit. So off I cuts, yer honours; and faith maybe it was I that wasn't long bringing it to the boys, who by the time I came back had two mowld candles nately sated upon a table, which they had placed right in • FROM THE EMERALD ISLE. 161 6 · 6 the middle of the barn, d'ye see, and all round about which the ould boy (that's the ould hermit I mane) had drawn a ring or circle with a piece of chalk. But I should hae tould you they had also a chair placed beside the table, inside the ring, mind ye; and so taking the Bible from me, he open- ed it at a sartain varse, and layin' it on the table, he asked Bill if he could read? By the powers, I never spelt a letter in my life,' said Bill. Och, then you won't do,' said his Reverince; Is there any one here that can read ?' So says I, Here am I, your Reverince; and I could read I may say since the day I was born:' for yer honours must know, although I am only a poor man now, I'm come of a good sort, d'ye see-there's some of the thick blood of the country in my veins after all; and although 1 say it myself, that oughtn't to say it, I got the best larning of any boy within ten miles of my father's house, d'ye see. But as I was after telling ye, when I told him I could both read and write, his Reverince axes me, Young man,' says he-for I was young then, yer honours- 'young man,' says he-at the same time looking at me with both his eyes, as though he would have pierced them through my very heart-" d'ye think you could stan' to hould a conversation with an ould friend of your's, who has been dead awhile, if I were to bring him to life again?' And I'm the 6 162 A WREATH C boy that could,' says I; for at that time I was nei- ther afeard of ghost or hobgoblin, and besides that, I had taken a hearty sup of the cratur, d'ye see: so down he sets me on the chair, and he gives me a couple of verses to read; and he says to me, 'Now Paddy O'Rourke, I know you are not a bad sort of a boy, and I would not wish that any acci- dent should happen to ye; but as you value your life and sowl, do not on any account come outside of that ring that I have chalked on the floor. Ne- ver fear me,' says I-although I am bowld to con- fess I did feel a little twitter of terror come across my mind, just at the moment they all began to leave me alone, with the Bible and the two mowld candles; but out they went, and sure enough, as soon as they got out, what does his Reverence do but very carefully locks the door on the outside- part of the ceremony I did not much like, d'ye see; but may be it was as how he did not wish to let his black majesty run away with me body and bones; but there I was left; and sure enough I continued reading mighty attentively, when all of a sudden I hears three great knocks upon the barn door, and just liftin' up my eyes a bit, what d'ye think does I see, but the figure upon the wall of a man that I knew right well, who was one of the greatest ould devils about the whole country, and who would have been just three months dead, had he lived -a FROM THE EMERALD ISLE. 163 till the Friday following. The sight of the Ould Boy himself, with his club foot, could not have frightened me more; and had I been the owner of the squire's great grand estate, which to be sure I may say was mine by right, for it formerly belong- ed to my great grand-uncle; but never mind that now, times may change again, when things will all go to their right owners- -as I was saying, if I had been the owner of it at the time, I would wil- lingly have given it to have been at the right side of the door; for I was sure and sartain that he would never let me out a livin' man, for having disturbed him from his quiet grave;-but what was I to do? His Reverince had laid his biddin' upon me not to stir outside the ring-and besides I had heard him lockin' me in; so I continued with my eyes fixed upon the Bible, though sorra a word could I see of what was before me, and strange it was, I never once thought of axing help of our blessed Lady; but just as I was thinking about what I had best be after doin', what should I hear but three other great loud knocks, and again lookin' up-och, gen- teels, the blood runs could in my ould veins as I think of it-I sees the ould lad as large as life, standing with his back against the wall, dressed in his winding sheet, and his brogues on his feet,* and * Formerly it was, and is still, the custom among the Roman P 164 A WREATH his teeth grinning, and shaking his fist as though he would tear me to pieces. So it was I that didn't know what to do any how-my very knees knocked together with downright terror-when behould you, all of a sudden I hears other three great knocks! and over bounces ould Trevor to the very edge of the ring! exclaiming, 'I'm Trevor, come to tear you!" What followed I know not; all I recollect is, that in a kind of phrenzy I whipped up one of the can- dlesticks, and after throwin' it at him, I suppose I fainted and fell, as they tould me afterwards they heard a great clatter, and on commin' in, found me lying on the floor, as dead as a door nail; and many a time since have I thanked the blessed Var- gin that I had the good luck to fall inside the ring, for had but the black of my nail been on the out- side, I would not have been now here to tell the tale. So my story is finished, genteels; and all that I say is, that I would not undergo the same again for twice as much goold as the whole wide world is worth." As a kind of finale to the story, Magregor had just mentioned that he could vouch for the truth of all Mr. O'Rourke had said—and was telling us how after they had left him inside the barn, the old her- mit commenced his incantations by walking round Catholics in many parts of the country to bury deceased relations, with a pair of strong shoes or brogues fastened on their feet. FROM THE EMERALD ISLE. 165 the barn three times, at the end of which he gaveth e three knocks, at the same time muttering some gib- berish to himself, that they could not understand— when, in a moment, without any apparent cause, we were all thrown into the most dreadful confusion and dismay, by a tremendous explosion, which seemed to shake the house about us to its very foundation. The large fire around which we were seated was hurled about the floor in a thousand di- rections, the lights were extinguished, the women and children in the other end of the house uttered a dreadful scream, and several of the company, among whom were the landlord and the Scotchman, were stretched sprawling on the floor. An in- stant invocation for the blessing of the Virgin was simultaneously poured forth; and by the light of some pieces of wood which still remained blazing, I perceived two or three on their knees, busily en- gaged in their devotions, and crossing themselves with great fervor. The consternation having a little subsided, and the fire having been again gathered into its place, one and another once more ven- tured to look about them and to speak; some ima- gined they had been making too free with the cha- racter of the old Hermit, and that he or his familiar had thus hoped to be revenged; while others whis- * • There are no grates in many of the houses in the country; large piles of turf and wood are heaped on the ground. 166 A WREATH pered it was the curse of Denis O'Donnel that had taken effect, and that Mr. O'Rourke had got a de- cent warning not to be so inhospitable to a true member of the Catholic Church at another time. Leaving the matter to be adjusted among them- selves, I was quietly slipping off to my bed, not well knowing what to think of the matter, when one of the company, a young gentleman who was stop- ping at the place, beckoned me to follow him to his room, where, in the greatest glee, he informed me the explosion was altogether a contrivance of his- that it had been caused by a small quantity of gun- powder, which he had put into a turf that had been previously bored for the occasion; that he and his companion had purposely introduced the stories relative to ghosts and hobgoblins, in order to give greater effect to the contrivance which he had form- ed to frighten the simple ones. While I could not but condemn in my own mind the impropriety of a measure which might have been productive of se- rious consequences, I confess I heartily enjoyed the joke, and could not but give the young traveller considerable credit for having so successfully at- tained his object; for never did I see a company on any other occasion so completely panic-struck as they appeared to be-and I certainly was enabled by the ecclaircissement to retire to rest in a much more pleasant mood than I otherwise should have FROM THE EMERALD ISLE. 167 done; for the whole affair had previously been a mystery to me, and no doubt appeared rather un- accountable. Having recommended myself to the protection of Him who neither slumbers nor sleeps,' I lay down, fully resolved not to believe in ghosts or hobgoblins, or to credit any of the marvellous stories which had been related, until I had at least further confirma- tion of their reality; but at the same time equally determined to visit Mucruss Abbey with the ris- ing sun, and if possible to find out who or what the individual was who had taken up his abode within the confines of its dreary ruins. I was as good as my purpose; for just as the grey dawn of twilight had streaked the eastern skies, I was on my road towards Mucruss, and ere the sun had topped the opposing mountain, I had gain- ed a view of the spire of the Abbey, as it peeped from amidst a grove of tall and stately trees, by which it was surrounded on every side. Even now I well remember I could not but frequently pause to contemplate the grandeur and loveliness of the scenery around me. Chased by the rising sun- beams, the mists of the morning appeared fast flit- ting away, as if anxious again to mingle in the wa- ters of their great parent, the Atlantic. Before me lay the lovely lake, richly embroidered with innu- merable islands, and reflecting from its azure sur- P 3 168 A WREATH face the beautifully-diversified scenery around-the waving forest, and the more sombre-shaded moun- tain from whose stupendous sides the stunted oak or the aged holly, festooned with ivy, sprung sponta- neous. My path lay alongside and partly through a wood, and the scenery which frequently burst upon my view was really enchanting;-at one mo- ment the cerulean heaven, which had been for a time obscured, appeared through some opening vista, as reflected in the broad expanse of water which lay beneath me; while at the next step my eye rested on richly planted lawns, or was borne along the hanging woods which boldly swept along the mountain's side. Wrought by the stillness and solemnity of the scene into a kind of sublime contemplation, and al- most forgetting the object of my excursion, I had strolled along to within a very short distance of the Abbey. It was at that time a fine old ruin--a pic- turesque emblem of greatness in decay-situated on an eminence rising over the lake, and complete- ly surrounded by trees of various growth and spe- cies. A pointed door-way, ornamented with va- rious mouldings, shewed the entrance to the inte- rior; while innumerable relics of mortality, piled in fantastic groupes on either side the aisle, as- sured me of the truth of what I had been told by my guide on the preceding day, that it was the FROM THE EMERALD ISLE. 169 aomum ultimum (until the resurrection) of many who had at one time given life and animation to the scenery around. As I advanced into the interior of the choir, a feeling of peculiar solemnity appeared to steal over my soul: I experienced a kind of involuntary shud- der. The place was gloomy and awful; and the idea that the only being it contained was one whose mysterious character rendered him rather an object of dread than otherwise, created an appre- hension in my mind that all my efforts to the con- trary could not suppress. I could almost have wished myself exhumed, and once more among those who lived and breathed. Nor were my ap- prehensions allayed on proceeding towards the cloister, a dismal area of considerable extent, in the midst of which spread an immense yew, whose stem appeared to be thirty or forty feet in height, and the branches of which formed a canopy so com- plete, as to render the place gloomy to a degree; the light being scarcely sufficient to point out the mouldering tombstones which lay beneath its shade. Scarcely knowing whither I went, I still proceeded forward; when, on turning the angle of a corridor, which, from the information I had received from my guide, I conjectured might lead to the chamber in which the Hermit had taken up his abode, I ob- served at the farther end a dim sepulchral light, which seemed as though it proceeded from an ex- 170 A WREATH piring lamp or taper. With a palpitating heart I advanced towards it, when in an instant a sudden flash seemed to pass me by, and I was left in al- most total darkness. I hastily turned, and was en- deavouring to retrace my steps with that expedition which is prompted by fear, when I heard the sound of footsteps quickly following me; but unfortunate- ly in my hurry to regain the cloister, having kept too much to the one side of the aisle, my foot was tripped by some relic of mortality, and ere I could recover myself, I fell violently forward, and tum- bling over a coffin, which, from having been par- tially decayed, burst beneath my weight, in an in- stant I found myself as if in the strict embrace of a lifeless body. Whether from the effect of the fright or the fall I cannot say, but one thing is cer- tain, I was so stunned that I lay for a moment mo- tionless as the corpse beside me, and was only roused from my stupor by feeling myself rudely raised from my position by a gaunt and grisly hand, which I could at the moment scarcely think human, so fierce was the grasp with which I was seized, but which, on approaching the cloister, I perceived to be that of the very person I had seen the evening before in the boat-who, fixing his eyes upon me with a fiend-like scowl, enquired, in a voice which thrilled through every nerve in my body, what had brought me thither?-and ere I could reply, seizing me by the shoulder, and FROM THE EMERALD ISLE. 171 shaking me violently, he exclaimed in terrific ac- cents, "Presumptuous wretch, begone! and know that thou hast done to me an irreparable injury. The spell is broken-I am undone." Then strik- ing his hand violently on his forehead, as if in agony, "Oh, eternity, eternity! am I now to real- ize thy horrors?-fearful foreboding! sad reality! lost-lost-lost!" Here clenching his hands in evident distraction, he remained a moment silent, as if lost in thought; and so petrified was 1, that I really felt unable to move from the spot on which 1 stood. Apparently subdued in feeling, he again addressed me in a much milder mood: " Young man, I forgive your rashness. By your coming here this morning you have fulfilled an augury— you have sealed my doom: but beware! Behold in me the effects of unbounded curiosity, of scepti- cism and impiety! God is just-and I deserve my doom; I myself made the bargain-I bartered my soul but I will not recal past thoughts-My days are numbered-the future only remains. for me." Then again, as if in the most dreadful de- spair, he exclaimed, "Lost-lost-lost!" As he pronounced these words, whether it was reality or the conjuration of fancy, from the state in which my mind was at the moment, I cannot tell-but I thought I perceived something again flit by me, as if in a flash of fire, and I imagined I heard the word "Away, away!" distinctly repeated. At 172 A WREATH that moment the Hermit hurried towards the en- trance of the Abbey: I followed as fast as my trembling limbs would carry me, and having gain- ed the door, I saw him gliding rapidly along towards the lake, where he leaped into a boat-in which sat a little black man. In a momont they had gained the middle of the lake-the next they were lost to my view for ever. Deeply musing on the extraordinary occurrences I had witnessed, and scarcely believing their reali- ty, though evidenced by so many of my senses, I returned to the inn; and but for an injury which I had sustained from the fall I got, could almost have persuaded myself, that the entire was a vision of my brain. This much, however, I certainly ascer- tained, that the Hermit had at one time been a Priest; that he had lived many years in Italy; had been a man of very depraved and dissolute charac- ter, and it was supposed had retired to the desert- ed Abbey, in hopes, by a severe penance, to make amends for former transgressions. I have since learned it was never known by those in the neigh- bourhood what had become of him; nor was his boat ever afterwards seen on the lake. FINIS. en my ain ards sat ined st to nces eali. es, I ch I have of Scer- en a had rac sert make since eigh s his This book should be returned to the Library on or before the last date stamped below. A fine of five cents a day is incurred by retaining it beyond the specified time. Please return promptly. 20412.9.8 Essays, and sketches of Irish life Widener Library 003074501 3 2044 086 803 988