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THE STORY OF IRELAND

(By A. M. Sullivan.)

(Continued.) CHAPTER XXIX.— THE CIVIL WARS IN ENGLAND ; LEFT THE ANGLO-IRISH COLONY TO RUIN.' HOW THE IRISH DID NOT GRASP THE OPPORTUNITY OF EASY LIBERATION. Within the hundred years next succeeding the events we have just traced— . period embraced between 1420 and —England was convulsed by the great civil, war of the White and Red Roses, th© houses r of York and Lancaster, Irish history during the same period being chiefly a record of the contest for mastery between the two principal families of the Palethe But- : lers and the Geraldines. During this protracted civil struggle, which bathed England in blood, the colony in Ireland had, of course, to be left very much to its ownresources; and, as a natural consequence, its . diluent, sions gradually contracted, or rather it ceased to have any defined boundary at ; all, and the merest exertion on the part of the Irish must have sufficed to sweep it away completely. Here was, in fine, the opportunity of opportunities for the mative 1 population , had they but been in a position to - avail of it, or had . they ■ been capable of profiting by any opportunity,' to accomplish with scarcely an effort the complete deliverance of their country. England was powerless for aggression, torn, distracted, wasted, paralysed, by a protracted civil war. The Lords of the Pale were equally disunited and comparatively helpless. - ' One-hundredth part of • the exertion put forth so bravely, yet so vainly, by . the native princes in the time of Donald O’Neil and Robert Bruce would have more than sufficed them now to sweep from the land every vestige of foreign rule. The chain hung so loosely that they had but "to arise and shake it from their limbs. They literally needed but to will it, and they were free b 1 W , Yet; not an effort,; not a movement, not 7a motion;, during all this time—while this supreme opportunity was passing away' for everwas made by " the native Irish "to grasp the prize thus almost thrust into their hand —the prize of national freedom ! They had boldly and bravely striven for it before, when no such opportunity invited them : they were; subsequently to strive for it yet again with valor and daring as great, when every advantage would be arrayed against them. But now, at the moment when they had but to reach out their hand and grasp the object of all their endeavors, they seemed dead to all conceptions of duty or policy. The individual chiefs, north, south, east, and west, lived on in the usual way. They fought each other or the neighboring Anglo-Norman lord just as usual; or else they enjoyed as a pleasant diversification a spell of tranquility, peace, and friendship. In the relations between, the Pale and the Irish ground there was, for the time, no regular Government “policy” of any kind on either hand. Each Anglo-Norman lord, and each. Irish chieftain, did very much as ho himself pleased ; made peace or war with his neighbors,, or took any side he listed in the current conflicts of the ; period. Some of the Irish princes do certainly appear to have turned this time of respite to a good account, if not for national interests, for other not less sacred interests. Many of them employed their lives during this century in rehabilitating religion; and learning in all their pristine power and grandeur. Science and literature once more began to flourish; and the shrines of Rome and Compos)tello were thronged with pilgrim chiefs and princes, I J\JXX\S »» Vr VXiJ - I O “ “ - - - 1 .V. paying their vows, of faith, from the Western Isle. Within this period lived Margaret of Offaly, the beautiful and accomplished Queen of O’Carroll, King of Ely. --■She,- and her husband were munificent patrons of liter 1 ture, art, s and science. On Queen Margaret’s special invitation, -the literati of Ireland and Scotland, to the number of nearly 3000, held a “session” for the furtherance literary and scientific interests, - at her palace* l< near Killeagh, in Offaly, the entire, assemblage being, the s guests e of the King and Queen during their stay. i

“The nave of the great church >of Da Sinchell was converted for the occasion into a banqueting hall, where Margaret herself inaugurated the proceedings by placing two massive chalices of gold, as offerings, on the high altar, and committing two orphan children to the charge of nurses to be fostered at her charge. Robed in cloth of gold, this illustrious lady, who was as distinguished for her beauty as for her generosity, sat in , queenly state in one of the galleries of the church, surrounded by the clergy, the brehons, and her private friends, shedding a lustre on the scene which was passing below, while her husband, who had often encountered England’s greatest generals in battle, remained mounted on a charger outside the church to bid the guests welcome, and see that order was preserved. The invitations were issued, and the -guests arranged, according to a list prepared by O’Connor’s chief brehon ; and the second entertainment, which tctok place at Rathangan. was a supplemental one, to embrace such mean of learning as had not been brought together at the formal feast.” (To be continued.) ,

This article text was automatically generated and may include errors. View the full page to see article in its original form.I whakaputaina aunoatia ēnei kuputuhi tuhinga, e kitea ai pea ētahi hapa i roto. Tirohia te whārangi katoa kia kitea te āhuatanga taketake o te tuhinga.
Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/periodicals/NZT19190717.2.7

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

New Zealand Tablet, 17 July 1919, Page 7

Word count
Tapeke kupu
877

THE STORY OF IRELAND New Zealand Tablet, 17 July 1919, Page 7

THE STORY OF IRELAND New Zealand Tablet, 17 July 1919, Page 7

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