posed to grow beneath their heads. To the higher castes, however, they were known by the reputation of their prowess and their comeliness; and were noted by some of the poets of the day, alike for their invincible spirits and their lofty stature.* This romantic interest thrown round a race at once so brave and so unfortunate, so wild and yet so gallant in their bearing, might not have been without its effect, in influencing the policy of the coquettish queen, and drawing to her court those (as yet unseen) Thanists, the known admirers of her sex and contemners of her power. The restlessness of suffering, the enterprise of romantic valour, the partiality of the House of Tudor to the O'Neils, and other inducements which Elizabeth herself held out, determined the famous Shane O'Neil (by the prescriptive right of ages Thanist of his powerful sept, and by the patent of Henry VIII, to his father, Earl of Tyrone) to visit the court of England in the most perilous moment of his life. The sudden appearance of the representative of the ancient kings of Ulster in the antechambers of Whitehall excited a sensation in which the "lion-ported queen" is said to have deeply and obviously participated. He burst upon the guarded presence of her, whose acts against his religion and his rights "resembled the bloody mandates of a Turkish divan rather than the mild ordinance of a Christian queen," in all the fearless hardihood of one who "bore a charmed life," fresh from the lines of revolt, with the excitement of the fierce contest between the oppressor and the oppressed fluttering at his bold heart and fevering his manly brow, and robed in a costume new to the ribboned, and tagged chivalry of the British court. He is described as entering the presence-chamber at the head of a rude but imposing train, composed of his guard of honour, the Irish gallowglasses, who, armed with battler axes, their heads bare, their long hair flowing in locks on their broad shoulders, their yellow surplices with open sleeves trailing to the earth and surmounted by a military harness-formed a strange contrast to the groupings and tournure of the courtiers through whom they passed, and who in their own frippery euphucism of dress and manner must have looked upon these singular absentees as though they were the natives of some distant clime. Even the less refined "Londoners," says Spenser, "marvelled at this strange sight." O'Neil had come to plead his own cause at the foot of the throne. "The Queen," says one of the court historians, "received him with an affectation of tenderness; and after he had resided some time at court, the flattery of his address, which appeared artless and unstudied, and the speciousness of his allegations, so wrought upon her, that, at his) departure, she dismissed him with favour and presents." This absenteeism of O'Neil, though favourable to his pride, and flattering to his vanity while abroad, was injurious to his interests at home. His base-born brother, Matthew, availing himself of his absence, had usurped his rights, and assumed the chieftainship of his sept. The question was debated (as if it were debateable) by the Irish government, who, in defiance of all law, "ruled the point in favour of the bastard; prac "Then came the Irishmen of valiant hearts, And active limbs, and personages tall." Sir J. Harrington's Translation of Orlando Furioso. 2 tising (says Parnella policy that has governed them (the English) to the latest times in India, where it has been the custom tooraise to the throne, in violation of the customary mode of succession, a person who depended for his station on their power, who was strictly a dependent, and who might be set aside whenever a favourable opportunity occurred." The Sic jubeo of the Virgin Queen was, of course, decisive. The bastard was proclaimed the lawfuls heir; and the consequence was a rebellion on othe part of Shanes In this rebellion the chieftain was unfortunate, and the whole possessions, both of Shahe and Matthew, were confiscated. In order," says Parnell, to divert Shane, the territory, was reputed Matthews; and, in order to get rid of Matthew's claim, the territory was oconfiscated as Shane's. tron Meanwhile, however,, the Queen had won golden opinions in Ireland for her reception of the most popular of Irish chiefs The gates of absenteeism were now thrown mast seducingly open. The track was already beaten down which led from the desolated banks of the Shannon to the pavilioned ashores of the Thames. Men, whose national failing was a sanguine credulity not untouched with personal vanity, whose infirmity of temperament was a reckless, impetuosity, and whose weariness of suffering caught at every change as a relief, now first began to find new hopes for their country and themselves springing up in the "primrose path of dalliance" which! conducted them to the British court, and placed them in personal con tact with a woman and a queen-with one who, unlike her savage de legates in Ireland, received them" with tenderness, and dismissed them with favbur." The baubles given by a royal hand, and displayed att Shane's Castle, were pledges to the followers of O'Neil that the heart of the Queen was of another policy from the counsels of her ministers. A mandate, therefore got up in the form of a slight accusation, but consi dered by the accused as an invitation, brought the O'Rourke chief of prince of Brefny promptly and inconsiderately to the feet of the fair Sovereign who had issued it. Tiv tist and b91970-ib to This gallant Irishman, as renowned for his personal beauty as for his turbulence, had long been a favourites theme dofocomplaint ans the des patches of the Irish deputies. Even his personal influence, and the splendid endowments out of which it arose, were brought as damning proofs against him. These also induced, perhaps, the Queen to judge for herself, and the handsome absentee was received like O'Neil with a show of tenderness, though not, alas! like him, dismissed with vour. While history has briefly thrown the facts of his summons You montreal ben derail sagisan ods of awier sollet oved woy doide mort Apology, 58. Hoy doid bosom danst sved blode woy nosi od obositol pas en je vous mangerai en souris. Other times," they say, " bring other manners;" and it is not impossible that men, restrained by the manners of our own times, may avail themselves of the circumstance of their enforced moderation, to reproach the writer who thus recalls a fact disreputable to the English government, with ripping old sores. The fact, however, is germane to the matter; for it was such forfeitures that sowed the first seeds of that permanent absenteeism which modern ministers affect to deplore: and it was these flagrant violations of common justice, that first nurtured the lawless disposition in the peasantry, which is made an excuse for the suspension of all constitutional rights, and which is most unjustly charged on the Catholic religion. Besides," long as the system is continued, which withholds emancipation, and gives over the land to the tyranny and plunder of churchmen and their inherents, the "ripping up old sores" is both useful and justifiable. to court, his detention, and his unexpected execution, tradition has 1 woven his story in the many-coloured web of her own romantic loom and though the catastrophe of the tale, which still circulates in the neighbourhood of his auined castle, attests the ignorance or the love of the marvellous of those who invented and circulated it; stilk there is Radovetailing of the old Irish Shanaos with historic record, which shews that sisvela n'étoit pas vrai, c'étoit bien vraisemblable stoor £ A wild story concerning O'Rourke," says the author of the History R. of the Irish Bards, ffwanders about the County of Leitrimlor O'Rourkes was a powerful and turbulent chieftain of this country in the reign of Elizabeth. The Queen invited him to London, making him, at the same time, warm professions of Honours and service, though she only intended, by this invitation, to lead him into a kind of exile, in order to sedure his abedience. The ingenuous O'Rourke, duped by the Queen'starts, pro-[ mised to comply. Before his departure, he assembled his vassals and neighbours in the great hall of his castle, and entertained them with all the splendour sofothes times. This is the feast so humorously del scribed by Mac Gauran. Om O'Rourke's arrival at Whitehall, the Queen was ready to receive him. The elegant symmetry of his person, and his noble aspect, struck her Majesty, and she secretly determined to rank him with her choicest favourites. A sumptuous apartment was allotted him in the palace, and a train of domestics were ordered to attend him. One night, a female tapped at his door, and was readily admitted; but she retired before the morning broke. The lady continued her visits! for several nights, always retiring about the same hour. "O'Rourke's curiosity was awakened, and he often urged her, but in vain, to disclose Her name. At length he discovered, by the light of the moon, a ring on one of her fingers, which he observed with strict care, in the hope that it would lead to a discovery. Next day espying the identical ring on her Majesty's finger, he unfortunately insinuated to her that he had discovered his fair visitor. The following night an hassassin was Tem ployed to punish him for his idle curiosity." The public execution of O'Rourke is however on historical record. † adi bus nului lavozroq and an M The only crime of which O'Rourke could be accused, was his having some shipwrecked Spaniards under his roof. Men, says O'Connor, whom the most hardened barbarity could scarcely consider as enemies. It is remarkable that O'Rourke previously to his execution was denied a priest of his own persuasion. But Miles Macgrath, the converted archbishop of Cashel, was was sent to prevail on him to conform. No, O'Rourke firmly, but do you remember the dignity from which you have fallen; return to the ancient Church, and learn from my fortitude the lesson you should have taught me, and which you ought to have been disavow." If there is a shadow of truth in this wild story of Leitrim, and Rourke did not betray the lady, he deserves canonization. Essex, however, who shared the same fate, preserved the same honourable secrecy; and the purity of the Virgin Queen remains intact of O'Rourke's castle still existu JOB OUT 29702 quanian diiw Jasnog deiland odt The ruins of They are sublimely situated on a rock that hangs and frowns over a rapid river, near Manor Hamilton, in the county of Leitrim. A few trees, are scattered immediately about the castle, and around are heathy mountains rising to the clouds. O'Rourke's noble feast" has been rendered immortal by the translation of Dean Swift. the translation of Dean Swiftiau seo ai doid basedgir s: 1970 g berousers ebloddtiw didw Jogaitno ai te groot 27.997 demisiar oft has unday de lo sborty bus vAL 171 alisatur bus inserted 2 THE CONQUEROR'S SLEEP. SLEEP midst thy banners furl'd hoinos v. 0 Yes thou art there, upon thy buckler lying, A With the soft wind unfelt around thee sighing & Thou chief of hosts! whose trumpet shakes the world ! Sleep while the babe sleeps on its mother's breast— -Oh! strong is night--for thou, too, art at rest!} Stillness has smooth'd thy brow, womb • I Perchance some lovely dream aut og Ą A Dream on, thou Conqueror!-be a child again. A But thou wilt wake at morn, With thy strong passions to the conflict leaping, And thy dark troubled thoughts all earth o'ersweeping, "And put thy terrors on-till none may dare Why, so the peasant sleeps I Beneath his vine !—And man must kneel before thee, Forget that thou, e'en thou, Hast feebly shiver'd when the wind pass'd o'er thee, F. H. THE WISH. OH! dews of morning, mild salubrious air, J. M.C. A TRIP TO LISLE. ; We love roast beef, Old England, and our home, From those French fellows, fond of revolution: To drink champaigne, buy gloves, or something so: Or can't conveniently discharge a debt- And then in Calais you a lodging get, For if a jaunt, dear creatures, can amuse them, Could well to pay the difference afford. All that we saw and did upon our route, For prose wants wit, which verse can do without, And that you lengthen every stanza out Our party was not numerous; we were four,- Sagacious, watchful, keen in sight and smell; That nothing for a constancy can please : The Surrey hills, through Kent, and down to Dover. VOL. X. NO. XLII. 2 L |