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  • June 1, 1794
  • Page 17
  • ACCOUNT OF A TOUR TO KILLARNEY, &c.
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Account Of A Tour To Killarney, &C.

ACCOUNT OF A TOUR TO KILLARNEY , & c .

IN A LETTER TO J . AND E . FRY . BY . CAPPER LLOYD , ESQ ^

[ Concludedfrom Page 340 . ] ALTHOUGH we did not leave Killarney without feeling the regret natural on quitting scenes of pleasure , yet our anxiety ivas not such as to repress that hilarity which , during our whole journey , had been promoted amongst us with great earnestness . We lodged that ni g ht in Mill-street , which , though an inconsiderable

place , afforded us good accommodation . We had a plentiful supper , accompanied with rural elegance , and some excellent claret at two shillings a bottle . Next morning we pursued our journey through a country more lonesome and dreary than I had ever seen before , as we sometimes travelled for several miles successively without seeing a single hut to convince us that we had not wandered into regions uninhabited by the children of men . But , perhaps , 1 speak too lightly of a country that was once the seat of the muses : our . great Spenser

wrote several books of his Fairy Queen during his residence in this lonesome part of the county of Cork . The person who gave us this literary anecdote humorously observed , that it was a very suitable situation for a poet , as the appearance of the country would continually remind him of Parnassus , which many a modern bard has found unfertile . The latter part of his observation I believe to be true enough , but I differ with him in respect to the former ; for though

loneliness may be favourable to study , yet such a country as this could furnish but few images for Spencer ' s pastoral muse ; it must , however , be granted that , in such a verbose work as the Fairy Queen , even this situation might have been of service ; it was necessary to draw a picture of dreariness in order to introduce several of his characters—his hermit , for instance , must surely have resided here ; I mean the old reverend

father of whom he thus says , " At length they chaunct to meet upon tbe way " An aged sire in long blacke weedes yclad ; " His feete all bare , his beard all hoarie gray , " And by his belt his booke he hanging had . "

I quote from memory and probabl y not with correctness . ¦ Not far from Blarney we overtook a funeral procession , and learned that the person about to be interred had died the ' day before . —To see a fellow-creature thus hastened , to the grave a few'hours after his der cease shocked me much , and ! could not help expressing my abhorrence of a practice both indecent and dangerous .- This led to a conversation

on the subject of premature interment , and I found my companions in possession of several anecdotes of persons being consigned to their last habitation before they had ( in earnest ) paid the great debt of nature . VOL . II . 3 F

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1794-06-01, Page 17” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 24 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01061794/page/17/.
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
LONDON: Article 1
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 2
THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE, OR GENERAL AND COMPLETE LIBRARY. Article 3
PRESENT STATE OF FREE MASONRY. Article 4
A SPEECH Article 9
LITERATURE. Article 14
LETTER THE FIRST. Article 14
ANECDOTES OF THE LAST CENTURY. Article 16
ACCOUNT OF A TOUR TO KILLARNEY, &c. Article 17
THE LIFE OF MRS. ANNE AYSCOUGH, OR ASKEW. Article 21
ACCOUNT OF DRUIDISM. Article 28
MASONIC ANECDOTE Article 33
REFUTATION Article 35
A SERMON Article 36
JOHN COUSTOS, FOR FREEMASONRY, Article 40
A DESCRIPTION OF ST. GEORGE'S CAVE AT GIBRALTAR. Article 45
SHORT ABSTRACT OF THE HISTORY OF GUADALOUPE. Article 46
NATURAL HISTORY OF THE JACKALL. Article 49
SPEECH OF A CREEK INDIAN, Article 50
THE USE AND ABUSE OF SPEECH. Article 52
ON SUICIDE . Article 55
PARLIAMENTARY PROCEEDINGS. Article 57
STRICTURES ON PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 61
POETRY. Article 63
VERSES Article 64
BY MR. TASKER. Article 66
ODE TO A MILITIA OFFICER. Article 66
TRUE GREATNESS. Article 67
A MASONIC SONG. Article 68
MASONIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 69
MONTHLY CHRONICLE. Article 69
PREFERMENTS. Article 74
Untitled Article 75
Untitled Article 76
BANKRUPTS. Article 77
INDEX TO THE SECOND VOLUME. Article 78
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Page 17

Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Account Of A Tour To Killarney, &C.

ACCOUNT OF A TOUR TO KILLARNEY , & c .

IN A LETTER TO J . AND E . FRY . BY . CAPPER LLOYD , ESQ ^

[ Concludedfrom Page 340 . ] ALTHOUGH we did not leave Killarney without feeling the regret natural on quitting scenes of pleasure , yet our anxiety ivas not such as to repress that hilarity which , during our whole journey , had been promoted amongst us with great earnestness . We lodged that ni g ht in Mill-street , which , though an inconsiderable

place , afforded us good accommodation . We had a plentiful supper , accompanied with rural elegance , and some excellent claret at two shillings a bottle . Next morning we pursued our journey through a country more lonesome and dreary than I had ever seen before , as we sometimes travelled for several miles successively without seeing a single hut to convince us that we had not wandered into regions uninhabited by the children of men . But , perhaps , 1 speak too lightly of a country that was once the seat of the muses : our . great Spenser

wrote several books of his Fairy Queen during his residence in this lonesome part of the county of Cork . The person who gave us this literary anecdote humorously observed , that it was a very suitable situation for a poet , as the appearance of the country would continually remind him of Parnassus , which many a modern bard has found unfertile . The latter part of his observation I believe to be true enough , but I differ with him in respect to the former ; for though

loneliness may be favourable to study , yet such a country as this could furnish but few images for Spencer ' s pastoral muse ; it must , however , be granted that , in such a verbose work as the Fairy Queen , even this situation might have been of service ; it was necessary to draw a picture of dreariness in order to introduce several of his characters—his hermit , for instance , must surely have resided here ; I mean the old reverend

father of whom he thus says , " At length they chaunct to meet upon tbe way " An aged sire in long blacke weedes yclad ; " His feete all bare , his beard all hoarie gray , " And by his belt his booke he hanging had . "

I quote from memory and probabl y not with correctness . ¦ Not far from Blarney we overtook a funeral procession , and learned that the person about to be interred had died the ' day before . —To see a fellow-creature thus hastened , to the grave a few'hours after his der cease shocked me much , and ! could not help expressing my abhorrence of a practice both indecent and dangerous .- This led to a conversation

on the subject of premature interment , and I found my companions in possession of several anecdotes of persons being consigned to their last habitation before they had ( in earnest ) paid the great debt of nature . VOL . II . 3 F

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