■:%■:■ : LIBRARY OF CONGRESS. I ^d 6 /f JfclJL t\ ! UNITED STATES OF AMERICA.! s n ° #littstrete£ of €rm, OR POEMS LYRICAL, PASTORAL, AND DESCRIPTIVE. BY MATTHEW WELD HARTSTONGE, Esq. " Ilia canenda mihi est, Utinam modo dicere postern " Carmina digna!" Ovid. EDINBURGH: Printed by James Ballantyne and Co. FOR JOHN BALLANTYNE AND CO. EDINBURGH! LONGMAN AND CO. LONDON ; AND J. CUMMING, AND WU N. MAHON, DUBLIN. 1812. .0 TO WALTER SCOTT, Esg. 1 o thee shall Erin's lay belong, Inspired by raptures of thine own ; Be thine my introductive song, Though from a bard to fame unknown. Deign yet in Yarrow's bow'r to dwell, Awake the bard's intrepid lyre ; Pour forth thy manly war-note's swell, A patriot's and a poet's fire ! Thus, while on Lomond's height you roam, Or range on Katrine's lonely strand, Be thine each bright reward at home, The friend, the pride of Scotia's land ! Yet once again thy battle-trump resume ! To deeds of glory arm the martial throng ; Awake, call forth the valiant from the tomb, With all thy magic force and fire of song ! Matthew Weld Hartstonge. CONTENTS. PAGE* On landing at Penrose Ivylun, including the Tale of Hoel and Kozelle 3 Lines written at the Lake of Killarney 23 I love a grey October Morn ! - 27 The Sun hath sunk in Thetis' Bed 30 Autumn, or Reflexions on Human Life 32 Written at the Rocks of Kilcarrick, County of Carlow, Ireland 36 Lines written at an Inn ^ . . . 41 Stanzas on seeing a Cock-fight within the Walls of the ruined Castle of Carlow, Province of Leinster, Ireland 43 The Trumpet and Church-bell 4T A Rural Scene, Ireland 53 On standing before the Monument of the great and ex* alted Philanthropist, John Howard, in St Paul's Cathedral 5T Why droops my Love, Maria fair ? 59 Written on the Summit of Mount Leinster, Ireland .... 61 Come, wilt thou roam with me the Lawn ? 65 On seeing the celebrated Painting of the Death of Ge- neral Wolfe, by Benjamin West, Esq. at his House in Newman Street 67 V1 CONTENTS. ™. « «. PAGE. The Bower of Laura , m Stanzas to Genius 72 Pastoral Elegiac » 6 Britannia to War, since thy Trident is hurl'd i ' * 7T Carrol of Coleraine, a Romantic Tale 79 To the Memory of Lieutenant Standish Weld, who fell storming the Fort of Luft, in Persia, near the Gulph of Bassora o~ Stanzas written during Indisposition 89 On my Laura fond Smiles used to Dwell, a Pastoral s °ng 91 A Monumental Inscription 92 Sage Conclusions p~ Anacreontic—Euterpe, come my Song inspire * 95 Can a cruel Tyrant's Arm, a Song . . [[['[ 9T Pastoral Song, From Home in sad Exile I stray . \\ . 98 On the Death of the Right Hon. Charles James Fox 100 On seeing his Grave . Q . Written on the Banks of the Laune, Killarney, County of Kerry, Ireland 10 g Anacreontic— Bacchus, to thee doth Mirth belong! ! ! 1 1 1 Morning " U3 Prologue to a Tragedy ......!! [ 1 15 On the Death of a beloved Friend .*..' {}S Written at Douglas, Isle of Man 12 o ToHealth! "' 122 Mock-Heroic Invocation to Mercury, the God of Gain 123 The Widow'd Mother 128 Welcome, Rosy Morn! [ 134 Lines on the late George Washington, General in Chief," and President of the United States of America . . 1 35 The Stag-Hunt. Scene, Killarney I39 Song on seeing a Fairy Ring 143 CONTENTS. mi PAGE. Preference of a Country Life, written in Winter .... 145 Wallace of Renfrew, a Historical Ballad 148 William and Susan, a Romantic Ballad 151 Notes to the Minstrelsy • • . . 161 MINSTRELSY OF ERIN. ON LANDING AT PENROSE IVYLUN, 1 ISLE OF ANGLESEA, NORTH WALESJ INCLUDING THE TALE OF HOEL AND ROZELLE. XVomantic Mona, rocky isle,* Where Nature, with a step-dame's smile, Scarce sheds a summer ray ! 5 1 The very dangerous little creek of Penrose Iyylun is situated to the north-east, and about three miles distant from Holyhead. It is here spelt as it is usually pronoun- ced. The orthography I believe to be Penchrose Iflywn; the letter F sounding in the Welsh similar to the letter V in the English language. Some pronounce it Pentis Avild. z This island is noticed by Caesar in his Commentaries De Bello Gallico, L. V. xiiu " In hoc medio cursu est insula qua appellator Mona," 3 Mona is called, in the language of the country, Ynys Dowyll, the Dark Island. See notes to Madoc, a poem by Robert Southey, p. 45$. 4? MINSTRELSY Hail yet thy bold and classic shore, Renowned seat of bards of yore, And many a minstrel grey ! II. Here erst beneath the spreading oak, Their prophecies the Druids spoke ; That stone their holy shrine. They held blest converse with the sky, Saw sights conceal'd from mortal eye ; And from their temple, nature's grove, Sung glory to their God above, And utter'd truths divine. III. But long these mystic tones have fled, And low is laid each patriot head ! The harp no more, with friendly call, Invites the stranger to the hall Of Cambria's social shore. These days of triumph long are past, And mourns the isle, with gloom o'ercast, Her regal tow'rs no more !* 4 " Her regal tow'rs no more !"— The palace of Aberfraw* OP ERIN. Here Cambrians made a noble stand, Contending for their native land, And burst the Roman yoke ; O'erthrew the Saxons, quell'd the Danes, Fair freedom crown'd their happy plains, When hostile chains were broke. V. No trace remains of grandeur past, Thy oaks have bow'd beneath the blast ; Each Druid-relique razed. No Gothic structure here is shewn, Save the rude massive altar-stone, By rustic wonder praised ! VI. No more with oaken cincture prest, Nor in his snow-white raiment drest, of which barely a vestige now remains, was, in A. D. 873> the palace and the seat of the government of the kings of North Wales. 6 MINSTRELSY While chains of gold his neck surround, His arms with golden bracelets bound, Shall Pontiff-Druid * come : No voice, no patriot wish prevail, Ev'n beauty's winning smile shall fail, To call him from the tomb ! VII. These days are past, nor grieve we thence ; Truths, since reveal'd, expand the sense Of mortals here below. Religion's mild redeeming ray Illumes sojourners on their way, And holy themes can shew ; * The Druids had one chief, or Arch-Druid, in every na- tion, who acted as High Priest, or Pontifex Maximus.— Vide Caesar's Commentaries de Bello Gallico, L. 6. c. 13.— The residence of the Arch-Druid of Britain was in the isle of Anglesea.— -See Rowland's Mona Antiqua, p. 83.— And for a more minute detail of the religion, learning, laws, &c. of the Druids, see the " History of Druidism," in Dr Hen- ry's History of England, contained in chap. 2. vol. I. p. 89. —See also Toland's History of the Druids. OF ERIN. From earth to Heaven directs the road, And leads unto the blest abode, Where shines eternal day. VIII. Hail, Mona ! though thy bards are fled, And all thy rev'rend Druids dead, Thy former greatness past ! Hail, land beloved in poet's song, While rolls Menai 6 his tide along, Thy fame shall ever last ! IX. The waves that break on GwynedV shore, Returning with the tide, Are heard by sullen Penman-maur, And wake cold Snowden's side, Till distance lulls the roar ; While the silvery moon-light sheen, Sleeping on midnight lake is seen Some cavern'd rock beside. 6 The Straits of Menai. ' Gwyned, u e. North Wal s. 8 MINSTRELSY X. How vain these stormy cliffs to brave, Whose frowning brows o'erhang the wave, And awe the stranger eye ! What plaintive strains arrest mine ear, Sure doleful notes of woe I hear, Of wretch condemn'd to die ! XL Behold ! from yon tremendous surge, A more than earthly form emerge, While viewless harps breathe solemn dirge, From azure depths below ! Prophetic, as from wizard caves, Re-echoing o'er caerulean waves, Is heard the voice of woe ! XII. He comes, he comes, in snow-white vest, Beneath the weight of years opprest, A bard, or troubadour ! His brow entwined with oaken band, His harp resounds o'er Cambria's strand, 'Tis some magician sure ! OP ERIN. XIII. While rising from the buoyant main, He tunes a melancholy strain; His boding voice is heard meanwhile, To warn you from this fatal isle, Where howling tempests roar. With anguish deep he smites his breast, In mournful cadence then exprest, " Avoid his stormy shore ! XIV. " Though here luxuriant valleys smile, And rocks romantic fence the isle, Destruction still your crew awaits ; Rash stranger, fly these stormy straights," Exclaims the hoary bard ! " For many a hapless bark here lost, Resounding death-shrieks fright the coast— My warning, oh regard ! Shun the portentous shore ! Trust not the calm's deceitful smile, But shun the horrors of this isle, Before the tempest roar ! 10 MINSTRELSY XV. " My war-toned harp in days of old, To fight has roused each baron bold, And oft beguiled the midnight hour, While strains of love, in lady's bow'r, Could the blithe feast prolong."-— To yonder rock the bard retires, He tunes his voice and strikes the wires — Hark ! wild and mournful measures flow, While warbling forth a tale of woe, Resounds the minstrel-song. XVI. HOEL AND ROZELLE : A TALE. Full long has closed the lofty day, W'hen Gwyned held imperial sway. Two lovers of that happy time, The bard would now extol in rhyme, And of their virtues tell. The gallant youth was Hoel named, Rozelle, the maid, for beauty framed, For worth was famed as well. OF ERIN. 11 XVII. Hoel, the pride of Cambrian swains ; Rozelle, the boast of Erin's plains, Though born of Welch degree. Pledged was their faith, from early youth, He knew her constancy and truth, And long'd his bride to see. XVIII. To meet her mother's race beloved, On Mona's darkling shore, From Erin's coast, Rozelle removed, Her absence all deplore. The bark careering mounts the tide, As LifFey's streams to ocean glide. Sailors exalt the spreading sail, The canvas swelling in the gale, Light favouring breezes blow : While Erin's banners raised on high, All proudly streaming to the sky, In splendid blazon shew. 12 MINSTRELSY Thence shone the harp, on field of green, Gold, strung with argent chords between ; The radiate crown surmounted seen, Sent far its golden glow. XIX. The galley's oars impetuous sweep With rapid course the dark-blue deep : Now oft was heard the faint " adieu !" And oft the fond « farewell !" As less'ning sunk the land to view, Where friendship loves to dwell. Oh, Erin ! much loved natal spot. Adored from infant youth ; Thou ne'er by me shalt be forgot, Thy virtue, valour, truth ! Erin ! on thy loved plain to die, Where brave and honour'd patriots lie, Grant Heaven it be my lot ! Could I from other regions see, (When I reluctant part from thee,) Or hear some heavenly voice Proclaim, dear Country, thou wert free, My spirit should rejoice ! OF ERIN. 13 XX. Portentous see yon gath'ring cloud, The wide horizon's bounds enshroud, Precursor of dire storms : The proud wave rears his heightened crest, Pale horror freezes every breast, And darkness day deforms. Now the fierce angry blast arose, And the firm main-top-mast o'erthrows, Which, harshly snapping, bursts in twain, And, crashing in the roaring main, Dismays the silent crew. Each of his home despairing thinks, Inward the heart-faU'n spirit shrinks, No rescuing hand in view. XXL Hoel, as oft returned the tide, Wander'd wild Penrose* creek beside, In hopes a sail to see ; 14 MINSTRELSY And, musing on the ocean's roar, Beheld the billows roll to shore, With fond expectancy ; Assured Rozelle, green Erin's boast, Would soon approach the Cambrian coast, Dear seat of ancestry ! And lo ! a maid of lovely form, Vainly contending with the storm, All breathless is the fair ; Grasping a plank with desp'rate hand, Haply might waft her to the land, But ah 'tis all despair ! To rescue from a wat'ry grave, See Hoel plunge, her life to save ; Love only thus could dare ! That morn he stood, while raged the gale, Oh ! listen to my mournful tale ! While waved the streaming flag to view, Green Erin's standard well he knew, As silently he gazed. 10 OF ERIN. 15 What can escape a lover's eye ? When the expected fair is nigh, Exposed minutest objects lie, And to the sight are raised ! XXII. A fisher's bark on that same day, Perchance arrived in Penrose bay, And happily I ween. e-balls : And thy air, Thou other gold-bound brow, is like the first : A third is like the former : Filthy hags! Why do you shew me this ? a fourth ? start eyes ! What will the line stretch out to the crack of doom I Another yet ? A seventh ? I'll see no more ! 1 See note on Magitlicuddy's reeks. 3 O'Sullivan's cascade, on Tomies mountain. * Yon verdant isle,] The luxuriant island of Innisfallen. 108 MINSTRELSY It seems sure some mysterious pow'r Must gild those scenes from Dunloh's tow'r ; Whence looking down the steep descent, From this commanding battlement, Delighted far the eye will rove, Retrace each glade, or glen, or grove. Mark now the gazing deer on high, Then hear sweet warbling melody ; Whistles the thrilling blackbird's throat, Resounds the throstle's varied note. The lark with song assails the sky, The cuckoo's woodland notes reply; Repeat the rocks and tangled dells, While on mine ear each tone melodious swells. I could consume the live-long day Coasting the shores of Glena Bay ; When Luna's silver orb arose On Glena's wave I would repose ; While cuts our keel the rapid foam, Think not the while of friends or home ; Now view in slow meandring maze, Where Laune his mighty flood displays. OF ERIN. 109 See, gently wafted by the gale, The bark in which the anglers sail ! While woods, that countless years have seen, 5 With giant arms o'ershade the green ; In the horizon's fading ray Awe-struck the lofty reeks survey. Lo ! in yon wide extended range, The lively prospects constant change ; Now lighted by the sun's bright gleam, Now darken'd when withdrawn his beam. Now I behold each cavern'd glen, Then trace the dusky mounts again ; Now mark the gold-illumined peaks, Then faintly view the mist-clad reeks. Alas ! too soon I must depart, But long these scenes shall charm the heart ; While Memory retains her pow'r, Shall fancy roam each lake and bow'r ; Still fondly linger to retrace The beauties of this matchless place; 5 Woods that countless years have seen,] The woods of Gre- nagb, the seat of Major Bland, situated on the banks of the river Laune. 110 MINSTRELSY When oft with toil, with care opprest, I'll clasp thine image to my breast ! Here let the graphic pencil glow, The muse's sweetest numbers flow ! Calm Meditation, from her shrine, Proclaims the forming hand divine ! OF ERIN. Ill ANACREONTIC. ANAKPEON. Bacchus ! to thee doth mirth belong, Thou rosy god of wine and song. 6 The sparkling goblet, wreathed with vine, And Thyrsus' wand shall grace thy shrine! How dim the oriental gem To Bacchus' brilliant diadem! 7 Or what the lustre of the mine, To thy bright rubies, sparkling wine ! 6 Thou rosy god of wine and song,'] it appears, from Pau- sanias, that the Athenians considered Bacchus to preside over both wine and song. 7 To Bacchus' brilliant diadem,} Bacchus is said to be the first who ever wore a diadem* 112 MINSTRELSY Hail, Bacchus ! friend of lively youth, Source of pleasure and of truth, Sprightly ever, ever free, Youthful god of jollity ! Let old Silenus quaff his bowl, We'll taste the pleasures of the soul ! When Love, when sacred Friendship call, Devoted at their fane we fall. Ah, none would shrink, should beauty ask, Much less decline the glorious task ! Who would refuse to aid a friend ? On him no blessing may attend. Young Bacchus, haste ! I love the eye That sparkles truth, and hates a lie; Love too the lip that friendly pours Enchantment o'er the heavy hours. Hail, cheerful god of song and wine, Hail ! all the social joys are thine. ©K EHIN. 113 MORNING. O'er yon empurpled mountain, now behold, In redd'ning majesty, the sun ascend His fiery car of day, and heav'n illume ! To renovation warm'd rejoicing Nature wakes. At early morn how I delight to rove Amid the dewy mountain-path, when scared A zephyr breathes, but balmy sweets around Perfume the air, and charm the raptured sense. To hear the cattle lowing in the shade, The hum of early bee, round some wild-flow'r Hovering; or sweet lark in aerial regions sing ! While list ! his brother warblers of the grove, Fearless of man, unite their matin hymn, Sacred to love, to liberty, and Heav'n ! H 114 MINSTRELJSY O bounteous Nature I at sight of thee aroused, From crowded towns, and pomp and pride remote, My soul expands, as silently I view Sylvan scenes so fair, O holy Pow*r divine ! OF ERIN. 1J5 PROLOGUE TO A TRAGEDY WRITTEN BY THE AUTHOR, 1803. Once more the drum discordant beats alarms, Aroused again by war's dread clang of arms ! Peace Britain sought, though victor in the field, Each triumph willing ev'ry boast to yield; For peace could charm a state with freedom blest, Freedom, long dear to ev'ry Briton's breast i But wild Ambition raged on Gallia's plains, Shaking base fetters and tyrannic chains, Enslaved by traitors, anxious to oppress, France madly dared to circumscribe our press. Britons, arise ! your sacred rights uphold, Be thus your fame in Glory's annals told ; With blades unsheath'd, behold the gallant band, Their war-cry, ' God, their king, and native land !' 116 MINSTRELSY Where Valour bled, where Glory won the prize, On Afric's land Britannia's heroes rise. * Proud foe/ they say, c in vain you seek our state, 1 $Io Gaul survives to weep th' invader's fate.' Britons ! forget not when Iberia's boast, Far-famed, the Armada dared to reach our coast, O'erwhelming billows foil'd the daring foe, The Almighty arm hurl'd down the avenging blow ; Far, far immersed, beneath the roaring tide, Her navies shatter'd, sunk Iberia's pride. May Heav'n, whose might such mark'd protection bore, For ever guard Britannia's happy shore ! O let one heart, one soul unite the land, Beneath our country's banner let us stand. Hence, hence far be all party spirit hurl'd, Britons united dare defy the world ; While hearts of oak triumphant rule the waves, The sons of Freedom never shall be slaves ! » Could the bold task to-night we vent'rous try Call forth soft tears from Beauty's feeling eye, OF ERIN. 117 Inspire the ardent partriot spark to gleam, And Britain glorious emulate the theme, Forgotten then all labour of the page, In the proud plaudits of Britannia's stage ! Now lend a hand! applause like your's has pow'r To make to-night the author's happiest hour ! 118 MINSTRELSY ON THE DEATH OF A BELOVED FRIEND. £2 sroio-HV Kttvcc vrXiov kpi-fy Ws $c. near Holyhead, Isle of Anglesea. — P. 3. I am sufficiently aware that, in strict topography, Holy- head is considered an island, which, however, is connected at Four-mile Bridge with Anglesea-isle. At ebb of tide there is, independent of the bridge, a communication with Anglesea, and Holyhead must indisputably be considered as included in the map within the county of Anglesea, the An- cient Mona, and it is so designated in all the iters 1 have seen. Although Penrose Ivylun may not possess the awful elevation of Penman- M aw r, much less exalt itself with the towering grandeur of Snowden, nor possess the rich and va- ried scenery of Conway* much less the romantic beauties of Capel-Kerrig, it is, notwithstanding, one of the wildest and most impressive scenes that I have witnessed, and a seclu- sion so savage and retired, as would have well assorted with the genius of a Salvator Rosa. It was evening when we landed at Penrose Ivylun ; the great luminary of the crea- tion was retiring beneath the western wave, whose peace- ful bosom still glowed with the fiery tints of his departing 162 NOTES. rays. The scene was tranquillity itself, uninterrupted ex- cept by the screaming of sea-fowl retiring to rest, or the echo of the hollow-sounding oar reverberating from the projecting rocks which we now approached; or by the gabble of Welch peasants and their children, who anxiously awaited our arrival on the beach, to convey our luggage, &c. to Holyhead. Our landing was undoubtedly a very grotesque scene, and would have afforded a fertile subject for the pencil of a Hogarth, a Ro wlandson, or a Wil kie. The females were carried to shore (the consequence of the tide having ebbed was, that the boat could not reach near enough to shore for passengers to land) on the backs of strong-boned Welch women. The males of the cargo as- cended from the boat into a cart, which also conveyed the luggage to shore. Meanwhile, we were entertained by be- holding a tall elderly man, most ludicrous in appearance and dress; he was one of the king's messengers, who, like the hero of Sweden, had reposed in his boots, aud, more- over, in his spurs! and who, ogling the grey-hound badge appendant from his neck, at one bound darted up on the back of a bony Welchman, while was extended, in terro* rem, a monstrous horse-whip from his dexter arm. No ! not victorious Alexander, when he had passed the Granic flood, could seem more elated than did this enterprizing chief, mounted astride upon the shoulders of an athletic peasant, who thus, in triumph, rode to the shores of Anglesea ! It would be difficult to depict the scene to which this bold and truly romantic assemblage of rocks should be compared. They somewhat, at a distance, apparently resemble basaltic columns, divested, however, of their regularity, and entirely fretted and indented by the continual conflict with contend- ing billows. Perhaps the supposition of trunks of gigantic oaks rent by time, and shattered by overpowering storms, and then changed by some powerful operation of nature to NOTES. 163 one continued petrified mass, rooted in the rocks from whence their broken trunks arise, with dark and frequent caverns at their base ; this conception might convey some feeble image to the painter's eye of this wild and savage scene. Throughout all the north-east coast of Anglesea, there is but one very small creek or inlet, that of Amlock ex- cepted, which, by possibility, can afford refuge to vessels, and this is Penrose Ivylun, and so very circumscribed in space, that, to all appearance, it is but sufficiently wide to admit a single vessel a refuge from the storm. This creek is terrific to view, being defended on each side by formid- able barriers of massive rock. During the prevalence of a storm from the south, or south-west, destruction to vessels cruising near the coast is nearly inevitable. In the winter of 1 804, a merchant-vessel bound from Ireland for the West Indies, (the pilot being totally unacquainted with the Welch coast) and not having the precaution to keep sufficient sea- room, encountered a dreadful storm, and struck upon a rock in this harbour,, undiscoverable at high-water, when, in the same instant, her rudder was borne away, and, astonishing to relate, conducted, as if by the miraculous and protecting hand of Providence, they were instantaneously wafted by the tide into this very narrow creek, and happily both crew and cargo were saved. While I mention this fortunate and singular occurrence, I am sorry to state that many and frequent are the ship» wrecks on this coast, fatal to the vessels and cargo, as also to the crew. Would not the interference of the legislature, by causing beacons to be erected on this coast, prevent a re- currence of these calamities so injurious to the trade, and destructive of the lives of British subjects ? 164? NOTES. Note II. Written at the Lake of Killarney. But when the dread tempest tremendously roars, How frightful thy waters and billowy shores, P. 24, 1. 23, 24. " In this, as in most mountainous regions, storms are fre- quent, and when the lake is exposed to their fury, its waves become so boisterous, that skill and strength are requisite to resist their impetuosity. The danger arising from the waves upon a basin of water not more than six miles in extent, may be regarded perhaps with contempt; but the lower lake sometimes presents the most frightful images of ele- mental warfare." — Illustrations of the Scenery of Killarney, $c. By Isaac Weld, Esq. Page 69. In corroboration of these facts stated by ray friend Mr Isaac Weld, I happened to meet with an officer of the roy- al navy at Killarney, who had been there some time re- siding, and he assured me that, in the winter season, it was really terrific to behold the lakes agitated by storm ; and that he had frequently seen the waters of the lower lake precipitated in dreadful grandeur over the summit of a lofty rock, or island, called, from traditionary records, O'Donaghoe's Prison, which rises upwards of twenty per- pendicular feet above the surface of the lake. Note III. Poem on Killarney. While Echo repeats from her cave in thy hills.— P. 24. 1. 1 . It is not, perhaps, within compass of language to convey to the imagination the rapturous impression the mind re- ceives from the echoes at Killarney. I counted beyond eleven seconds, while the enchanting sounds of the French- NOTES. 165 horn, on ether borne, loud as the " pealing organ's" swell, seemed from the elevated promontory of the Eagle's Nest to respond " To the full-voiced choir below, " In service high, and anthems clear, " As may with sweetness through mine ear, " Dissolve me into extasies." From Mr Isaac Weld's excellent description, and his drawings, which so faithfully represent the scenes they so beautifully pourtray, we instantly recognized every view as it presented itself. But the more we gazed, the more we were enchanted with delight; and here let me appeal to those who have visited Killarney, if this be hyperbole ? Note IV. Thou royal seat of Erin 9 s king. — P. 45. 1. 1. This ruined fortress is supposed to have been built about the reign of King John ; but by some it is asserted that this castle was raised by Isabel, the daughter of Strongbow, Earl of Pembroke. It is, however, certain, that it remain- ed for a number of years in the possession of M'Murrough, King of Leinster, and his descendants, (who assumed the name of Kavanaoh,) until about the period of the reign of Queen Elizabeth. The plan, or construction of the castle, appears to have been of an oblong square area, with large round towers, which flank the four angles of the square. The walls of the castle, and of the angular towers, are of massive strength and dimensions, and remain in good preser- vation. It is said the castle has been purchased by govern- ment, and that they are going to repair it. Carlow, which gives name to the capital town, and also designates the 166 NOTES. county, was anciently called Catherlogh, that is, the city or fort on the river. Note V. Shall Erin's sea-green standard fly* — P. 45. 1. 14. This is partly in allusion to her national colour, and partly to the general epithet bestowed upon Ireland, of " the green-island." Gibbon the historian, speaking of Ireland, says, " a spacious island, which obtained, from its luxuriant vegetation, the epithet of green; and has preser- ved, with a slight alteration, the name of Erin, or Ierne, or Irland." — Gibbon's Decline and Fall of the Roman Em- pire. Dublin edition, A.D. 1787, vol. IV. p. 264. In the beautiful poem of " Scenes of Infancy," by the late ingenious, learned, and lamented Dr Leyden, (who fell a victim to intense study at Batavia, and of whom most ho- nourable mention is made by Dr Buchanan, in his Chris- tian Researches in India,) we find the following charming passage, which gives a similar epithet to our favourite isle : — " Erin, whose waves a favoured region screen I " Green are her vallies, and her mountains green; " No mildews hoar the soft sea-breezes bring, M Nor breath envenomed blasts the flowers of spring; " But rising gently, o'er the wave she smiles, " And travellers hail the emerald queen of isles." Scenes of Infancy, part IV. p. 135* Note VI. Pondering his much-loved country's deep decay, Mute Erin's harp, unheard the patriot-song* — P. 46. 1.10, 11; Among the Irish bards there were three modes or species of musical composition, which may be thus distinguished r < NOTES. 167 I. The Martial and Sprightly. II. The Pathetic and Dolorous. III. The tranquillizing. See Mr Cooper Walker's Historical Memoirs of Irish Bards, page 67 , et scq. " After the invasion of the English, the Irish were very much confined to the second species of music, though, (add9 Mr Walker) the English, during the middle ages, (the pe- riod to which we have now brought down our enquiries) kept the natives in a state of absolute anarchy, refused them the privileges of subjects, and only left them the lands they could not subdue ; yet did our music and poetry still flou- rish. So deeply rooted in the minds of the Irish was the passion for the arts, that even the iron hand of tyranny could not eradicate it ; the despondency, indeed, occasioned by the loss of their liberty, damped in some degree their ardour."— Walker's Irish Bards, page 106. Mr Walker resumes the subject (page 125,.) " Thus we see that music maintained its ground in this country even af- ter the invasion of the English ; but its style suffered a change, for the sprightly Phrygian (to which, says Selden, the Irish were wholly inclined) gave place to the grave Doric, or soft Lydian measure. Such was the nice sensi- bility of the bards, such was their tender affection for their country, that the subjection to which the country was re- duced affected them with the heaviest sadness ; sinking be- neath the weight of sympathetic sorrow, they became a prey to melancholy : hence the plaintiveness of their mu- sic.' ' Mr Cooper Walker mentions an Irish harper who had this distich engraven on his harp : " Cur Lyra funestas edit percussa sonores ? " Sicut amissum sors diadema gemit." Walker's Irish Bards, page 127. 168 NOTES. It may here be observed, that many of our national airs are of a mournful or plaintive measure, asGradh Ma Chree, (or " Love of my Heart ;") Dhreinan Don, (or " Brown Thorn;"} " Sa Murneen Deelish," (or «« My Faithful Pear;") and " Eibhlin A-Ruin," (or " Ellen, my Secret Love,*') and many other touching melodies, as harmonized by Sir John Stevenson, Mus. D., and graced by the poetic genius of my distinguished countryman, Mr Thomas Moore. There is an anecdote connected with the last national air, so striking, that the reader will not be displeased if informed of it, and also of the origin of a song whose touching sweet- ness was so transcendant in its effects. A distinguished Italian singer, Signior Tenducci, who had assisted at the Italian operas in Dublin, was so enchanted with the music, and also with the words of" Ellen, my Se- cret Love," or Eibhlin A-Ruin, that he resolved upon im- mediately learning the Irish language, which he indefatig- ably cultivated until he became a complete master of the language. So powerful were the Orphean strains of Irish music I Origin of Eibhlin A-Ruin, " Ellen, my Secret Love." " Caroll Moore O'Daly was brother to the cele brated Donogh, a turbulent chieftain in Connaght, in the reign of Queen Elizabeth. He was one of the most accom- plished gentlemen of his day, and particularly excelled in poetry and music. He paid his addresses to Ellen, daugh- ter of M. Kavanagh, a lovely and amiable lady, who return- ed his affections more favourably than her friends wished, who disapproved of the connexion. It happened that an affair of consequence drew O'Daly to another part of Ire- land, and the friends of Ellen seized the opportunity of his absence to promote the suit of a rival. By a variety of re- ports, artfully conveyed to her, she was induced to suspect NOTES. 169 the attachment of her lover, and was finally persuaded he had left the country to be married to another. The afflict- ed Ellen, indifferent now to every object, was prevailed on by her friends to acquiesce in their choice. His rival was favourably received, and a day was fixed for their nuptials, which were to be as splendid as the hospitable manners of the times, and the social propensities of the Irish called for on such an occasion. The report of these preparations soon reached the ears of the unfortunate O'Daly ; he has- tened his return, and arrived in Connaght on the evening before the appointed day. Under the impression of his" feelings, he sought with his harp a wild and sequestered spot on the sea- shore, and, inspired by theenthusiasm of the occasion, he composed the song of " Eibhlin A-Ruin" which remains to this time an exquisite memorial of his skill and sensibility. Disguised as a gleeman or minstrel, he$ next day, gained easy access among the crowd of company that thronged to the wedding ; and, after exercising his ta- lents in a variety of ways for the amusement of the guests* he was called upon by Ellen herself to play. It was then that, touching his harp with all the pathetic sensibi- lity this deeply interesting occasion inspired, he infused his own feelings into the song he had composed, and breathed into his * softened strain' the very soul of pensive melody. The sympathetic heart of Ellen instantly felt its force ; she recognized her lover in his disguise, and, by that secret communication of sentiment that needs not the aid of words to convey it, intimated her unalterable attachment, and her readiness to fly with him from this reluctant engagement. The plan of escape was instantly concerted; the guests were more liberally supplied with usquebagh than even the festivity of the occasion called for ; they were reduced to a state of insensibility, and the happy lovers easily effected their escape." 170 NOTES. Note VII. Immortal Howard, at thy honoured shrine, #c. — P. 57. I. \ . John Howard, Esq., the ever-respected philanthropist* He devoted a long and active life to ameliorate the suffer- ings of his fellow- creatures, and diffuse happiness around him. His humanity was not confined to persons of a parti- cular persuasion or country; it nobly embraced all his fel- low-creatures of every sect and every clime, untainted with -the proud intolerance of the bigot, or the self-arrogance of the sectary. He visited, with unexampled patience and attention, all the prisons in England, Wales, Scotland, and Ireland. No expense, no personal consideration, no privation, no dif- ficulty, not danger from disease, not the loathsomeness of the dungeon, not even the frowns of tyranny, could deter him from his glorious purpose ! Nor were his humane and godlike exertions confined to his own country. He visited, at three different periods, the Prussian and Austrian domi- nions, and the free cities of Germany. He next went to Italy, Flanders, Holland, Denmark, Sweden, Russia, Poland, Por- tugal, Spain, and France ; in which latter country he was very near becoming an inhabitant of the infamous Bastile, from his manly representation of the horrors of its despot- ism. He next proceeded to Smyrna and Constantinople, 11 where that most dreadful of human distempers, the plague^ prevailed, pleasing himself (as he expressed it) with the idea of not only learning, but of being able to communicate somewhat to the inhabitants of those distant regions." While in Turkey, in the fulfilment of his humane designs, he caught the plague, of which, however, he recovered, and immediately visited various hospitals and prisons. Once more he went to Scotland and to Ireland, and having re- turned to England again, departed thence with the intent NOTES. 171 ©f revisiting Prussia, Turkey, &c. In 1789 he left his na- tive land to accomplish his benevolent intentions for the me- lioration of human misery ; one of his chief objects was the administering of Dr James's powder, as an efficacious me- dicine for the plague. It was on this expedition in Rus- sian Tartary that the exalted Howard fell a victim to his humanity. He died of a malignant fever at Cherson, in the dominions of Russia, towards the northern extremity of the Black Sea, near Oczakow. Thus perished a man who devoted his time, his fortune,, his strength, his leisure, and, ultimately, his valued life, for the good of his fellow-creatures ! A glorious close to a glo- rious existence ! Note VIII. The rose of Shir at with fragrance spring. — P. 88. 1. 2. Kaempfer, speaking of Shiraz, says, " No spot on the globe can equal it in the excellence or rich produce of it9 vines and roses : and, as the rose gardens of Persia are the most copious and sweetest in the world, so those of Shiraz are the most fertile and fragrant in Persia." Note IX. The glittering diamond decomposed is coal. — P. 93. 1. 14. It has been fully ascertained, by modern experiments in chemistry, that the diamond, the hardest, as well as the most precious of all the gems, on its decomposition, becomes mere carbon, or coal. Carbon is susceptible of crystalliz- ation, and in that state is called Diamond. — See Philoso- phical Transactionsy A. D. 1797, p. 123. 172 notes. :NoteX. And tell her not those pearly drops that fall, Aroused at Sympathy's and Beauty's call, Are mere secretions of organic pow^r, Shed from the glands, as yield the clouds a shower, P k . 94. 1. 7—10. It is meant here to expose the absurd doctrine of some metaphysicians, who wish to consider the human race as mere automata, insisting that the various passions, feelings, and noble qualities which dignify human nature, arise not from the generous motives that inspire them, but that they are simply mere mechanical operations ; which mischievous proposition would degrade man, " the paragon of animals," and noblest of the Creator's works ; classify him with the brute or plant creation, and place his thoughts, motives, and actions, on a level with the contraction of the sun- flower, or the collapsion and expansion of the sensitive plant. Note XI. With Garnerin go / ascend the stary sphere, — P. 94. 1. 21. Monsieur Garnerin, the celebrated French aeronaut, who has made aerial excursions in France and in England. Note XII. Now view, in slow meandring maze, Where Laune his mighty flood displays. — P. 108. 1. 21, 22. The river Laune is the grand outlet of the lakes; in a de- vious course of seven or eight miles it winds along, until its confluence with the river Main, when their tributary streams are received into the bay of Castlemain, whence they pro- ceed to join the waters of the Atlantic ocean. The river Laune is navigable for small craft. NOTES. 273 Note XIII. O luckless Mono, ! #c— P. 120. 1. i. The Isle of Man, as well as Anglesea, is called Mona, the latter being so called by Caesar in his Commentaries, which has been already noticed. All passports from the Isle of Man have inscribed in the margin, " Insula Monte" And, in a work published in that island, entitled " The Statutes and Ordinances of the Isle of Man. By T. Stowel, advocate. Douglas, printed by Briscoe, 1792," page 13, Man is like- wise called, in a marginal reference, u Insula Monae." From this work it appears that their " statutes" are equivalent to our lex scripta, or statute law, and their " ordinances" to our lex non scripta, or common law. The laws, or acts of the Isle of Man become such when they are passed by the lord of the isle, by his governor and council, and twen- ty-four keys, (the representatives of the people,) these being the three estates that compose the legislature of the island. But these acts do not become operative, nor have the force of laws, until, pursuant to immemorial usage, they are promulgated from the Tynwald Hill, which evi- dently appears to be a Danish mount, and is situated in the centre of the island : in the same manner Kenneth the Se- cond, upon his conquest of the Picts in the 9th century, de-* livered his laws from a tumulus called the Mote Hill of Scone, where afterwards the Scottish kings were crowned. Note XIV. Unawed the soldier climbs o'er heaps of slain, Stoutly bearing his manly breast opposed 'Gainst each conflicting woe of wasteful war, 174 NOTES. Falls the warrior amid the bravely slain. His meed the glory of Britannia's arms ! Page 123. 1. 14—20. " What I said Perdiccas to Alexander the Great, whose generosity had bereft him of every acquisition, all of which he had bestowed upon his friends ; what, said Perdiccas, have you left yourself? ' My hopes!' replied the hero. * Then', exclaimed Perdiccas, ' you will not take it ill if we who are to share with you in your dangers, desire to share with you also in your hopes." — Plutarch's Life of Alex- finder, Note XV. though, like Danae, won By molten gold pervading lofty towers, Pervious to nought but Jove's almighty will. P. 126. 1. 16—18. " Inclusam Danae turris ahenea," &c. Hor. Car. XVI. 1. III. And Ovid. Amor. Lib. 3. Eleg. IV. v. 29. " Jupiter admonitus nil esse potentius auro, " Corruptee pretium virginis ipse fuit." I forget in what author the following line occurs, that even the gates of hell are not proof against its influence .' as gold opens every thing. 81 Xgucroq avoiysi Ttavra, tc al$u speaks of the incomparable musical skill of the NOTES. 175 Irish beyond every other nation he had observed. His words are : " In musicis instruments commendabilem in- venio istius gentis diligentiam ; in quibus prse omni natione quam vidimus incomparabiliter est instructa." This superior musical skill in the Irish nation is still fur- ther confirmed by Polydore Virgil, Camden, and others. Vide Wynne's History of Wales, page 159; Powel's His- tory of Cambria, page 191 ; and Camden's Britannia, where is told a curious anecdote respecting the finding of buried treasure, discovered by means of the song of an Irish harper; folio edition, A. D. 1095, page 1222. See also Mr Cooper Walker's Irish Bards, p. 69, DrLeland, in his preliminary discourse to his History of Ireland, page 15, observes, that the Irish " to verse and mu- sic are peculiarly addicted." Dr Warner, likewise, in his History of Ireland, vol. I. page 72, says, tfi the aits of po- etry and music were encouraged to a degree of extrava- gance." And Mr O'Connor, in his " Dissertations on the History of Ireland, and on the Irish Colonies established in Britain," pages 57 and 67, goes over the same groui.d. He observes, that " a modern composer, one of the best musi- cal judges in Europe, (it was Geminiani,) was so struck with the harmony of our airs, that he declared he found none of so original a turn on this side of the Alps." — O'Connor's History of Ireland, page 58. And, in a note, Mr O'Connor observes, that " Handel declared he would rather have been the composer of Eiblin A-roon (or M Ellen, my Secret Love," of which I have already taken notice) than of all the music he had ever composed !" I cannot refrain from here giving an authentic anecdote of one of the most distinguished of our bards, the blind and venerable minstrel, Carolan, conveying, as it does, so powerful a testimony of his unequalled musical genius. " Geminiani, the most celebrated musician of his day,. 176 NOTES. •wishing to put his [Cardan's] talents to the test, sent to him an Italian composition, which he had purposely muti- lated in such a way as to evade the detection of any per- son but one of the most nice and genuine musical discern- ment. Tt was played for Carolan, who admired the compo- sition, but remarked, in Irish, ' ta sa air chois baccaigh,' it limps like a lame man. He instantly took up his harp, and supplied what he said it wanted, and this being added to the tune, it was sent back to Geminiani ; to his astonish- ment, he found Carolan had inserted, by the natural force of his genius, the very passages which he had obliterated, and he ever after pronounced him a genuine son of song. From his report, the merit and reputation of our bard ex- tended even to Italy, where he is known at this day by the name of Carolonius !" — Sketch of the Life of Carolan, p. 3. Note XVII. The friend and succour of the poor, She oped the hospitable door. — P. 130. 1. 1,2. It is the uniform established custom throughout Ireland, that while the cottier and peasant are at their frugal meal, the hospitable door is flung open to the stranger, who, if he will enter, will be sure to find himself a welcome guest : speaking in unequivocal language, " here is comfort for the weary traveller, our pittance we will divide with the hun- gry and distressed !" " Blest that abode where want and pain repair, " Andev'ry stranger finds a ready chair." Goldsmith, It may gratify the reader here to mention some particu- lars relating to a supposed violation of this " unwritten law" of Irish hospitality, or usage of leaving the door open 5 NOTES. 177 during dinner-hour, on the part of one of the ancestors of the Earl of Howth, as it was accompanied with cir- cumstances eventful to the heir-apparent of the earldom, and has been subsequently attended with a remarkable usage, which exists to the present hour in that noble fami- ly. (1812,) Grace O'Maly, celebrated in Irish story, but better known by the popular appellation of " Grana Uile," was the daughter of a powerful chieftain on the coast of Mayo, who resided at Carigahooly Castle. Grace and her father both flourished in the reign of Queen Elizabeth ; O'Maly was powerful ingallies and seamen, and was considered so formidable for his numerous piracies, that the lord-deputy Sidney, in 1576, wrote to the council in England noticing the depredations which he had committed. Grace, or Grana Uile, was a very high-spirited lady, and having accompa- nied her father in many naval expeditions, imbibed a taste for nautical depredations; and, upon his death, became formidable for her piracies, which bein^ represented to Elizabeth, a large sum was ottered for apprehending her. t To make her peace, therefore, Grana Uile proceeded to the court of Britain, and having succeeded, returned to Ireland, and landed in a little creek near Howth. She approached the castle, and found the gates shut, the fa- mily being at dinner. After some enquiries, it was disco- vered that Lord Howth had a child nursing not far off; it was a boy, and heir to the title : she carried the youth on board her vessel, immediately set sail, and safely arrived at Carigahooly; nor was the child restored until the Earl paid a large ransom, as a punishment for his inhospitality. In the state bed-chamber of Howth Castle is shewn an ancient painting commemorative of this event : Grana is represented mounted on a grey horse, not in the most femi- nine attitude, and about to carry off the child along with M 178 NOTES, her. In consequence of the stipulation then entered into between this amazon pirate and the then Lord Howth, it is a positive fact that the gates of Howth Castle, and the door of the great hall, are still open, summer and winter, until ten o'clock at night ! so faithfully has the contract been ob- served. *' History informs us that the name of this ancient fami- ly, which is of English extraction, was originally Tristrem, till, on St Lawrence's day, Sir Almericus Tristrem being to command an army against the Danes near Clontarffe, made a vow to that saint, that, if he got the victory, he and his posterity, in honour of him, should bear the name of St Law- rence, which has so continued to this time ; and the sword wherewith he fought is now hanging up at the great hall of Howth, the seat of the present lord," — Kimber's Peer- age. London, 1762, page 116. The armour, or part of it, the helmet and breast-plate, are still shown in the hall of the castle, and also his sword. The point of the sword is broken. His tomb, which is very ancient, is within the ruined church of the abbey in Howth town. The promontory of Howth, which forms the northern en- trance of the bay of Dublin, is distant eight miles from that city. It was anciently called Ben-hedar, u e. the Bird's Promontory, or Cape ; and was celebrated for having been the spot where the roval palace of Criomthan had been erected. He had been chief, or king, of the district; and he is memorable for having made several successful descents on the coast of Britain against the Komans, in the time of Agricola. In the rolls office, Dublin, there is a grant from Edward the First of the lordship or seigniory of Howde to Almeric Saint Lawrence. Ben-hedar being the ancient name of this head-land, Hedar might easily be corrupted into Hade, NOTES. 179 Hade into Howde, and then the transition from Howde to Howth, the present name, is easy, and hence I conceive the etymology may be traced. Note.XVIII. For Nelson slain while sighs the gale, — P. 132. 1. 1. " The battle of Trafalgar was fought on the 21st of Oc- tober, 1805; on the 23d a violent gale of wind commenced, which continued unabated for nearly two days." — BriAT- tie's Account of the Last Moments of Lord Nelson, The intelligence of this glorious and important victory was conveyed to Dublin from Holyhead in Captain Skin- ner's vessel, in which I happened to be a passenger. We landed so early as six o'clock a. m., at the village of Dun- leary, which is distant only about six miles from Dublin ; but, most strange to relate, it was not until towards the af- ternoon the public were made acquainted officially with that most important communication. But it is presumed * c the sleepy grooms" had been previously instructed not to *' awaken" the drowsy secretary " with their knocking !" Note XIX. UneauaWd Washington, and art thou fed? — P. 136. 1. I. The character, talents, virtues, and moderation of this great patriot, warrior, and legislator, are generally known ; but it is only in reading his life that we become intimately acquainted with his persevering genius, his order, his regu- larity, and his never-failing presence of mind, (the true at- tribute of a hero,) and it is then we justly appreciate their value. Washington, indeed, had no common difficulties to contend with ; he had frequently to oppose a formidable exterior to his enemies, when, in reality, be had but a very scanty force to support him. How arduous, and how dis- piriting the task he had to carry on with the Congress to 180 NOTES. avoid their jealousy, procure their sanction of those mea* sures that imperious necessity prescribed, and, finally, to secure their unanimity ; thus the delays resulting from the above causes often proved nearly fatal to his plans. But these were not the only difficulties he had to encounter, there were others still more serious; he was under the ne- cessity of inoculating his army to diminish the fatal aspe- rity of a contagion (the small-pox) which had been import- ed from Europe. The short period of time for which the services of the militia were enrolled, was another evil which formidably tended to embarrass his operations. It often happened that Washington was unfortunately without ca- valry, and without commissaries; and, stranger still, some- times he was even without an army ! his mind still firm and unbending ; his genius and indefatigable industry supported him throughout, still the hero rallied his forces, and emer- ged from every difficulty with unshaken hope an ! dignified resolution. He saved his country; he gave her glory ; he gave her freedom ; he gave her peace ! And then, with the moderation and magnanimity of an exalted spirit, he resto- red to America, amid the blessings and applauses of the people, that power they had delegated to him in the hour of adversity, pure and unstained, as it had been received. Thus, surpassing all the characters we read of in Greek or Roman story, he retired, crowned with glory, into rural se- clusion ; and, when the enemies of America and freedom (the French) menaced his conntry, his old, but undaunted hand again seized the warrior's truncheon, he rallied the forces of his country, and awed her enemies once more, " Finem dignum et optimo viro, et opere." Having said thus much of this illustrious man, I cannot conclude this note without observing, that not only the glo- NOTES. 181 ry, but the morals of his country were dear to Washington, he having bequeathed a great part of his wealth for the public instruction of the youth of America. Note XX. Like the brave Roman, to thy native soil, — P. 136. 1. 10. T. Quintus Cincinnatus, a Roman senator, who being called from the plough, was made dictator of Rome, and having atchieved several glorious actions, laid down his high office. Livy the historian thus speaks of his exploits : * T. Quinctius, semel acie victor binis castris hostium, no- vem oppidis vi captis, Praeneste in deditionem accepto Ro- mam revertit ; triumphansque signum, Praeneste devec- tum, Jovis imperatoris in capitolium tulit. Dedicatum est inter cellam Jovis ac Minervae; tabulaque sub eofixamo- numentum serum gestarum, his ferme incisa Uteris fuit : Ju- piter atque divi omnes hue dederunt, ut T, Quinctius dicta- tor oppida novem caperet. Die vicessimo, quam creatus erat dictatura se abdicavit."— Livy, L. vi. c. xxix. Note XXI. The bird of Jove thy forky fasces bore, And hurVd defiance on the hostile shore, — P. 137. I. 5, 0. The armorial ensign of the United States of America is an eagle with expanded wings and open beak, in a protect- ing or defensive posture ; on his breast is borne the escut- cheon of the republic ; in the dexter talon an olive branch, to which the eagle's head inclines; in the sinister is held a fasces, or bundle of arrows, the motto, e pluribus unum. It may be recollected, that, in Roman antiquity, the fasces were axes tied up together with rods or staves, and carried before the Roman magistrates as a badge of their office and authority. According to Florus, the use of the fasces was 182 NOTES^ introduced by the elder Tarquin, the fifth king of Rome, and were then the designating mark of sovereign power. Note XXII. On seeing a Fairy Ring. — P. 143. The phenomena of fairy circles, or rings, which may be _ observed in old pastures, have been, by some, attributed to lightning. The popular belief in fairies, (or the good peo- ple, as they are respectfully termed in Ireland,) and that those circles are traced by them in their dances, is the idea assumed in this poem. The belief in the existence of fai- ries is very prevalent, not only in the remote parts of Ire- land, but even in the counties adjoining the metropolis. " The Irish, whose pregnant fancy teemed with inven- tion, had their traditional tales of fairies embellished with all the extravagance of curious fiction. Their mythology, like that of the Greeks and Romans, peopled every place witlv visionary inhabitants ; and every mountain, river, and wood, had its Dryad es, Naiads, and Hamadryads. The principal of those airy beings are comprised in the follow* ing Irish couplet : * s Meiv Seiv agus Dheerdhcra, not confining its rays to this country alone, but diffusing them on the surrounding na- tions ? Hither students from England and the continent re- sorted; here, too, the renowned Alfred imbibed that wis- dom and piety for which he was designated great ; from Ireland he procured professors for Oxford. Ireland also gave professors to the cities of distant lands, to Paris, and to Pavia. " When Europe groaned under the servitude of Gothic ignorance, Ireland became the prime seat of learning to all Christendom, Hither the sciences, such as they were in those ages, fled for protection ; and here their followeri and professors were amply supported. For the converted Saxons the nation erected, in the west, the College of Mayo, to this day called Mayo of the Saxons ; and here it was that the princes Alfred and Oswald received their educa- tion. In the city of Ardmacha, it is affirmed that no few- er than seven thousand scholars studied, at the same time, within its university, although the kingdom, at that time, contained several other academies, equally celebrated, if not equally numerous.'* — O'Connor's History of Ireland, p. 202-3. The celebrated Doctor Samuel Johnson, in a letter to the historian I have here quoted, recognizes this proud epoch in Irish history : his words are, " the ages which deserve an exact enquiry, are those times (for such times there were) when Ireland was the school of the west, the quiet habitation of sanctity and literature." Ireland, for arts aud arms renowned, ever dear to the sons of science and of song; not unregarded by the sono- rous reed of Tasso, and sweetly attuned to the fairy lyre of Spenser! While proudly vindicating the wounded charac ter of my country, I shall remain purposely silent on the NOTES, 101 merits of her native inhabitants, who have spoke, wrote, or fought in defence of the empire, and merely urge what has been said by strangers in her praise. I shall confine myself to four authorities, however distant in time they may have flourished, or however varying in profession or in lan- guage — Tacitus, Sir John Davis, Lord Coke, and Peter Lom- bard, Archbishop of Paris. The words of Tacitus are, — " Solum caelumque et ingenia cultus que hominum haud multum a Britannia differunt. Melius aditus portusque pe commercia et negociatores cogniti." — Julii Agricolce Vita, p. 579. Amstelodami, 1T01. Sir J. Davis, who was attorney-general, and speaker of the House of Commons in Ireland, says, in his " Historical Tracts," " the bodies and minds of the people [are] en« dued with extraordinary abilities of nature ;" and, in ano- ther place he says, " that no nation loves equal and impar- tial justice better than the Irish !" And Lord Coke, on the same subject, expresses himself thus : " There is no nation that are greater lovers of justice ; which virtue must neces- sarily be accompanied by many others." Peter Lombard, who was well known by the title of u The Master of the Sentences," the learned Archbishop of Paris, says, speaking of the Irish, " They are delighted with music and poetry ; are greatly inclined to a military life, and adapted for war in an equal degree with the bravest nations upon earth ; for they are, courageous, valiant, dexterous, and eminently qua- lified as well for the whole range of military science, as for the use and practice of all kinds of arms* They are very fond of the sciences, or liberal arts, and hold the learned in the greatest estimation. They are also, in general, men of acute and lively understandings, and, when opportunity of- fers, apply themselves willingly to studies, and prosecute them with diligence ; but they are more inclined to those kind of studies or sciences which demand subtlety of genius, 192 notes; than to those that demand no mental exertion." — Peter Lombard, de Hibern. p. 112, edit. Lovan. This account of Ireland I beg the reader to observe was written seven hundred years ago. What, Ireland " a rude country," and her "natives savages I" I can most truly assure the learn- ed conductors of the work alluded to, that so far from being rude, it is a country abounding with beautiful and diversi- fied scenery, far, very far more picturesque than England ; not so well wooded as when the epithet Fidh-Inis, " the Woody Island,'' was bestowed upon it ; nor as it was in the days of Elizabeth, when Sir Walter Raleigh objected to it on that account ; nor so highly cultivated as Hampshire, yet it commands attention and admiration too, from its great, bold, and striking outlines, sublime and lofty moun- tains, overtopping, .undulating hills, and luxuriant vales; where the " ivy mantled tower," the ruined monastery, or the castle's mouldering pile, grand and maguificent even in decay; and those round towers, peculiar to Ireland, irre- sistibly arrest the traveller's enquiring eye, while his me^ lancholy admiration, elicited in unison with the scene, wan- ders back to the grandeur of the days that are past. So far remote, I must observe, are the natives from being " sa- vages," that the very humblest peasant or labourer will sa- lute you as you pass, and give you a valediction. " The paths/' so very far from being" dangerous,". are carefully kept in excellent repair ; indeed the very cross- roads, although inferior to the direct or great public roads, are superior to those in England. This, it is presumed, arises from the abundance and cheapness of convenient ma- terials, namely, flint-stone, granite, gravel, and limestone rock, these being very abundant throughout Ireland. The Irish inns, with some exceptions, are not inferior to those of England ; their charges very moderate, the civility great, the entertainment excellent, the wines genuine. So very NOTES. 193 remote are the Irish from being " savages," I must say, that the very peasantry are an unoffending, hospitable, civil, and humane race of people ; even the most wretched indi- vidual amongst them never " Against the houseless stranger shuts the door." And still, H Though poor the peasant's hut, his feasts though small," yet will he, with heartfelt pleasure* divide his frugal meal and share his humble roof with the way-worn traveller. This is universal throughout Ireland. That the cottages of the Irish peasants are, in many places, poor and miserable, is not to be wondered at, when, on inquiry, you find that the lord of the soil is an ennobled absentee, who has never permitted his presence to cheer the face of that country from whence the supplies of his extravagance in the metro- polis of the empire are extracted, who most readily pockets the remittances, but who is solicitous never to be bored by even mention being made of his savage tenantry, and consi- ders the mere necessary signatures of renewal as an intoler- able effort of animal exertion ! In the summer of 1 80T I took a tour through a great extent in Ireland, in distance about five hundred Irish miles, (which are equal to 650 English,) and during an excursion of two. months, I was abroad early and late, yet never met writh any molestation whatever ; and, in subsequent jour- neys since, at all hours, by day and by night, I have travel- led without any impediment or stoppage whatever. The return to Dublin from the tour of 1807 lay chiefly by the sea shore, through parts of the western, southern, and east* N 194? NOTES. ern coasts of Ireland. One summer evening, travelling in the county of Wicklow, I arrived somewhat late at an inn, •which was crowded with parties from Dublin, &c. to view the romantic and picturesque beauties of that county, the scene of the " Sweet Vale of Avoca, " The Meeting of the Waters," &c. This assemblage is ever usual in summer time, attracted by the beauteous scenery of Wicklow, at once wild, picturesque, aud romantic, and the vicinity of this county to the Irish metropolis. In consequence of an unusual pressure of guests, I was obliged to proceed onward in the dark, though late the hour, for some miles, and, ar- riving unseasonably at the next stage, where the inn hap- pened to be also equally crowded, was then informed that no bed was to be obtained ; the horses being accommoda- ted, however, I determined to sit up all night ; to this re- solve the proprietor of the inn would by no means agree* and a bed was politely relinquished to me. Such was the attention and hospitality with which an utter stranger was received. " The Athenians understand what is right, but the Lacedaemonians practise it." , While breaking a spear in the lists of my country, the hospitality of the Irish gentry must not be passed over ; in- deed, it was most kind, attentive, and endearing ; and, had we acceded to the various pressing invitations we received, we should have had little occasion certainly to have so- journed at any inn throughout this extended tour; and I ne- ver can think of the civilities I received but with the most grateful recollections. While engaged in this singu- larly interesting circuit, viewing the lofty mountains, the varied scenery of lull and vale, the broad and rapid rivers, the princely seats and magnificent demesnes, the luxuriant islands, lakes, and groves, NOTES. 195 " So wond'rous wild, the whole might seem " The scenery of a fairy dream £* shores the most bold, and bays the most expansive and se- cure, with a hardy and a virtuous peasantry ; I could not but often (in the words of the distinguished bard of Caledo- nia) exclaim to myself exultingly, — *' This is my own, my native land!" We were much pleased with the becoming dress of the pea- santry of the county of Kerry ; and that of the lower class of female peasants of Killarney, we observed as being re- markably neat and graceful. But I was most forcibly struck with the beauty of the peasantry of the county of Wexford: The peasants, of each sex, are a comely race, possessing lively and expressive features, fair complexions, fine hair, and good persons. Their costume might grace an Arcadian landscape; both males and females wore beco- ming yellow straw hats, the remainder of their dress ap- propriate, if not elegant, while they were seen busily em- ployed at the sickle, where " Unbounded harvests hung the heavy head." I cannot conclude this hasty tribute to my country with- out noticing, with pleasure, that the love of science and the belles lettres is rapidly increasing in Ireland; annually se- veral thousand volumes, in the various modern languages of Europe, &c. are imported into Dublin, Cork, Belfast, &c. Do " savages" cultivate letters ? If common sense did not point out, we might quote Ovid, who says, in a well-known line, that science refines manners, not permitting them to be savage, ** emollit mores, necsinct essefcros" Indeed, where- 196 NOTES. ever science is cultivated, we may deduce it as certainly as a corollary to any mathematical proposition, that there too will the fine arts and manufactures flourish ; for science may be considered as the centre, the arts are only the radii of the circle* POSTSCRIPT. Subsequent to these notes being written, I discovered, upon perusing Sir Richard Colt Hoare's Tour in Ireland, that, in the passage selected from the Annual Review, and commented on in these notes, that the words are those of Sir R. C. Hoare, and that the last line only,, marked in Ita- lics, belongs to the Reviewers; I was led into this mistake by not having at that time read the volume reviewed, the work of a gentleman and a scholar, who is liberal as he is learned ; and, further, I was deceived from the passage not being marked with inverted commas, which is usual when quotations are extracted. No doubt, there still may be many other faults, (although no pains has been spared to detect them,) which possibly have escaped the author's diligence and research; for indeed, what Horace has said of man- kind in general, may be applied to literary productions-* " Vitiis nemo sine nascitur : optimus Hie est, " Qui minimis urgetur." These remarks shall now finally close with Sir Richard C. Hoare's character of the peasantry of Ireland : — '* Nei- ther is the heart of the poorest cottier a stranger to these generous feelings [of hospitality ;] his jug of milk and plate 198 POSTSCRIPT. of potatoes are charitably offered alike to the errand-boy and to the mendicant who appears before his door ; in short, v charity throughout the whole island supplies the want of poor law s."-— " Englishman ! do thou likewise." — Journal of a Tour in Ireland, A. D. 1806. By Sir Richard Colt Hoare, Bart. F.R.S. F.A.S. Lond. 1807, pp. 329, 330. THE END. Edinburgh : Printed by James Ballantyne and Co. LIBRARY OF CONGRESS 014 150 990 1 §