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  • June 1, 1794
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    Article ACCOUNT OF A TOUR TO KILLARNEY, &c. ← Page 4 of 5 →
Page 20

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Account Of A Tour To Killarney, &C.

parochial provision made for the indi gent as in England . Potatoesand butter-milk is the constant and almost invariable food of the poor people in this part of Ireland , therefore a scarcity of potatoes amounts to a scarcity of every thing ; and , when it is considered that many of the cabins contain a large family , a forcible diminution of their little stock is a species of oppression very forcibl y felt . A class of peasants to

superior these keeps a cow , or a horse , and sometimes both , the , maintenance of ivhich has been much derived from public lands , or commonage , enjoyed by the poor from one generation to another ; but , since English manners and English improvements have been introduced into Ireland , commons have been inclosed and made into deerparks , and the poor shut out from what they deem the spontaneous gift of nature , or right by prescription . On this subject Dr . Goldsmith , in his sweet poem of The Deserted Village , justl y says ,

" Those fenceless fields the sons of wealth divide , " And e ' en the bare-worn common is deny'd . " The poor creatures being thus distressed by the proctor and the incloser of land , against whom no redress can be obtained by a process " of law , they rose up in support of a cause , to which they were urged by resentment and the common feelings of human nature : proctors were

dragged out of their beds at midni g ht , and frequently buried up to their necks in earth ; newly erected park-walls were levelled to the ground , and several other kinds of outrage and violence committed . The country was soon alarmed , and revenge followed with great severity , many of the poor wretches being taken and executed in different parts of the provinces of Munster and Leinsterand ( in order to render

, much evidence unnecessary ) an act of parliament was passed , which declared it felony for any person to be seen in the White Boy uniform *' . In consequence of this sanguinary and impolitic act , many hundreds have been hanged in different places , yet the White Boys are by no . . means extirpated or totally silenced ; nor , indeed , is it likely that the effect should cease before the cause is removed .

In the act of parliament I have just mentioned they are termed deluded wretches , as though the framers of that act were desirous of proclaiming their own ignorance , by declaring that delusion and . wretchedness were crimes deserving of death . No generous Briton would allow the Corsican opposition to the yoke of Genoa to be stiled rebellion , nor did our king fail to afford a ' comfortable asylum to their illustrious

Paoli , when he could stand no longer in the cause of freedom ; yet will the _ same people permit this shameful oppression in a distant part of their own empire ; and nobody thinks about liberty and patriotic resistance when he talks of a "White Boy . Of my journey thus far I have now g iven you the best account in my power , in which I hope I have avoided a tedious minuteness on the one hand , or slipping into negligent omission on the other . Other travellers , as they are differently affected , will express themselves dif-

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1794-06-01, Page 20” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 25 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01061794/page/20/.
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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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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Account Of A Tour To Killarney, &C.

parochial provision made for the indi gent as in England . Potatoesand butter-milk is the constant and almost invariable food of the poor people in this part of Ireland , therefore a scarcity of potatoes amounts to a scarcity of every thing ; and , when it is considered that many of the cabins contain a large family , a forcible diminution of their little stock is a species of oppression very forcibl y felt . A class of peasants to

superior these keeps a cow , or a horse , and sometimes both , the , maintenance of ivhich has been much derived from public lands , or commonage , enjoyed by the poor from one generation to another ; but , since English manners and English improvements have been introduced into Ireland , commons have been inclosed and made into deerparks , and the poor shut out from what they deem the spontaneous gift of nature , or right by prescription . On this subject Dr . Goldsmith , in his sweet poem of The Deserted Village , justl y says ,

" Those fenceless fields the sons of wealth divide , " And e ' en the bare-worn common is deny'd . " The poor creatures being thus distressed by the proctor and the incloser of land , against whom no redress can be obtained by a process " of law , they rose up in support of a cause , to which they were urged by resentment and the common feelings of human nature : proctors were

dragged out of their beds at midni g ht , and frequently buried up to their necks in earth ; newly erected park-walls were levelled to the ground , and several other kinds of outrage and violence committed . The country was soon alarmed , and revenge followed with great severity , many of the poor wretches being taken and executed in different parts of the provinces of Munster and Leinsterand ( in order to render

, much evidence unnecessary ) an act of parliament was passed , which declared it felony for any person to be seen in the White Boy uniform *' . In consequence of this sanguinary and impolitic act , many hundreds have been hanged in different places , yet the White Boys are by no . . means extirpated or totally silenced ; nor , indeed , is it likely that the effect should cease before the cause is removed .

In the act of parliament I have just mentioned they are termed deluded wretches , as though the framers of that act were desirous of proclaiming their own ignorance , by declaring that delusion and . wretchedness were crimes deserving of death . No generous Briton would allow the Corsican opposition to the yoke of Genoa to be stiled rebellion , nor did our king fail to afford a ' comfortable asylum to their illustrious

Paoli , when he could stand no longer in the cause of freedom ; yet will the _ same people permit this shameful oppression in a distant part of their own empire ; and nobody thinks about liberty and patriotic resistance when he talks of a "White Boy . Of my journey thus far I have now g iven you the best account in my power , in which I hope I have avoided a tedious minuteness on the one hand , or slipping into negligent omission on the other . Other travellers , as they are differently affected , will express themselves dif-

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