The Project Gutenberg EBook of St. Patrick's Eve, by Charles James Lever
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Title: St. Patrick's Eve
Author: Charles James Lever
Illustrator: Phiz.
Release Date: April 21, 2010 [EBook #32083]
Language: English
Character set encoding: ASCII
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ST. PATRICK'S EVE ***
Produced by David Widger
ST. PATRICK'S EVE
By Charles James Lever
Illustr. by Phiz.
London:
Chapman And Hall, 186 Strand.
MDCCCXLV.
TO MY CHILDREN
MY DEAR CHILDREN,
There are few things less likely than that it will ever be your lot
to exercise any of the rights or privileges of landed property. It may
chance, however, that even in your humble sphere, there may be those
who shall look up to you for support, and be, in some wise, dependent
on your will; if so, pray let this little story have its lesson in your
hearts, think, that when I wrote it, I desired to inculcate the truth,
that prosperity has as many duties as adversity has sorrows; that those
to whom Providence has accorded many blessings are but the stewards of
His bounty to the poor; and that the neglect of an obligation so sacred
as this charity is a grievous wrong, and may be the origin of evils
for which all your efforts to do good through life will be but a poor
atonement.
Your affectionate Father,
CHARLES LEVER.
Templeogue, March 1, 1845.
[Illustration: 012]
FIRST ERA.
IT was on the 16th of March, the eve of St. Patrick, not quite twenty
years ago, that a little village on the bank of Lough Corrib was
celebrating in its annual fair "the holy times," devoting one day to
every species of enjoyment and pleasure, and on the next, by practising
prayers and penance of various kinds, as it were to prepare their minds
to resume their worldly duties in a frame of thought more seemly and
becoming.
If a great and wealthy man might smile at the humble preparations for
pleasure displayed on this occasion, he could scarcely scoff at the
scene which surrounded them. The wide valley, encircled by lofty
mountains, whose swelling outlines were tracked against the blue sky, or
mingled gracefully with clouds, whose forms were little less fant
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