EXCERPT
The Great Shame
And the Triumph of the Irish in the English-Speaking
World
By THOMAS KENEALLY
Nan A. Talese/Doubleday
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Up to the moment we write, there have been about thirty unfortunate
individuals convicted under the Whiteboy Act, and therefore destined
to spend the remainder of their lives in a clime far, far distant from
their native homes from the land which holds all that is dear to them
in the world. --Galway Free Press, 31 March 1832
For English and Anglo-Irish noblemen, the post of Lord
Lieutenant of Ireland was both a challenge and a reward. The
Lord Lieutenant was chief executive of Britain's most ungovernable
kingdom but also the British monarch's representative, and the centre
and apogee of Irish society. In the bright July of 1833, the
Lord Lieutenant happened to be a friendly and reckless 73-year-old
womaniser named Richard Colley Wellesley, 2nd Earl of Mornington. He
had the benefit of being the elder brother of the Duke of Wellington,
conqueror of Napoleon and former Tory Prime Minister. For the mass of
Irish peasants, it did not matter a great deal who held the
post. The known face of their landlord or his agent, how much land
they had to live off, how secure was their tenure, and what they could
sell their labour for these were the intimate and recurrent concerns
of their lives. People of quality though, in towns or on their estates
in the west of Ireland, wanted to know about the Lord
Lieutenant's movements, levees and recreation. They read, for example,
accounts of that summer's Kingstown (now Dun Laoghaire) Regatta.
"After the morning sailing races, all the Dublin establishment
attended a splendid lunch in a huge marquee pitched in the
Commissioner's store yard." Then the Lord Lieutenant and Lord Paget
returned to Dublin in separate vehicles, and in Mount Street Paget's
horses and vehicle ran into a Dublin urchin. His Lordship reined in
the horses to prevent his carriage crushing the child, and footmen
carried the bloodied child to Mr Burrowe's, apothecary, Lower Merrion
Street. There were hopes for the survival of the little sufferer. The
Lord Lieutenant might have enjoyed the opportunity to be of direct
effectiveness. He could not have indulged such simple hopes for the
health of Ireland as he did for the health of the Mount Street
urchin. For in describing the ills of the kingdom of Ireland,
commentators of that period rarely knew where to start. In that very
same summer of the Lord Lieutenant's encounter with "the incautious
child," a peasant cottier and farm labourer from East Galway named
Hugh Larkin was waiting in the county gaol in Galway city. He was to
be judged for a gesture of discontent against his landlord, and so
against the system represented and protected by the Lord Lieutenant,
Dublin Castle and the Parliament at Westminster.
Hugh was twenty-four years old, married, blue-eyed, robust, and 5
feet 7 1/2 inches tall. According to his East Galway descendants, he
was the intense, lively, likeable son of a widowed mother. Then or
later he became hard-drinking, yet his record would not imply he was
reckless or utterly headstrong.
Larkin came from a scatter of houses at a crossroads known as
Lismany. This name for the landscape in which he had spent his
childhood and youth bespoke pre-British ownership. The Irish
name was Lios Maine, the fort of Maine, long-ago king of the
region called Hy Many. This kingdom was made up of parts of modern
Galway, Roscommon and a small slab of modern Tipperary. The Gaelic
lords of the region had been dispossessed after the victory of the
forces of England's King William III over the Irish at Aughrim,
a village north-west of Lismany, in 1691.
During Hugh's childhood people had believed that the old Gaelic
system was likely to be reasserted by God in some day of jubilation,
but that day now seemed too remote to save him. Hugh's depression in
Galway gaol arose chiefly from homesickness for Lismany, his two
infant sons, and his wife Esther Tully, whom he had married three
years before in the chapel of the Catholic parish of Clontuskert.
That very name, Clontuskert, showed that Hugh's kind of
Irish walked the earth with two competing addresses in their
heads. For administrative reasons, Dublin Castle had divided the
country into Church of Ireland parishes, the smallest local
unit, and then into larger baronies, somewhat akin to municipalities.
So Larkin's official and English-language address as a member of the
United Kingdom was (Church of Ireland) parish of Clontuskert,
barony of Longford, County Galway. His emotional and native address,
however, was (Catholic) parish of Clontuskert, diocese of Clonfert, Hy
Many. Perhaps this double geography the peasants carried in their
heads was one of the reasons those in power saw them as sly and
duplicitous.
Esther and Hugh, living virtually in the midlands of
Ireland, spoke English, the language of government and
commerce, when they talked to their landlord or went to market, but
courted, sang, praised and mourned in Irish. The courtship of
Hugh and Esther had been, if at all characteristic of their society,
particularly ardent and poetic, driven by furious longing, observed by
an entire rural community which did not countenance fornication, but
put a premium on flirtation as an art, and on the extravagant use of
the images of desire. Gaelic love verses and songs which have come to
us in translation indicate the style of eloquent persuasion Hugh would
have been required to use with Esther.
(C) 1999 Thomas Keneally All rights reserved. ISBN:
0-385-47697-3