Children of the Dead End: The Autobiography of an Irish Navvy. Patrick MacGill

Читать онлайн.
Название Children of the Dead End: The Autobiography of an Irish Navvy
Автор произведения Patrick MacGill
Жанр Языкознание
Серия
Издательство Языкознание
Год выпуска 0
isbn 4057664574763



Скачать книгу

tion>

       Patrick MacGill

      Children of the Dead End: The Autobiography of an Irish Navvy

      Published by Good Press, 2019

       [email protected]

      EAN 4057664574763

       FOREWORD

       CHAPTER I A NIGHT IN MY FATHER'S HOUSE

       CHAPTER II OLD CUSTOMS

       CHAPTER III A CORSICAN OUTRAGE

       CHAPTER IV THE GREAT SILENCE

       CHAPTER V THE SLAVE MARKET

       CHAPTER VI BOYNE WATER AND HOLY WATER

       CHAPTER VII A MAN OF TWELVE

       CHAPTER VIII OLD MARY SORLEY

       CHAPTER IX A GOOD TIME

       CHAPTER X THE LEADING ROAD TO STRABANE

       CHAPTER XI THE 'DERRY BOAT

       CHAPTER XII THE WOMAN WHO WAS NOT ASHAMED

       CHAPTER XIII THE MAN WITH THE DEVIL'S PRAYER BOOK

       CHAPTER XIV PADDING IT

       CHAPTER XV MOLESKIN JOE

       CHAPTER XVI MOLESKIN JOE AS MY FATHER

       CHAPTER XVII ON THE DEAD END

       CHAPTER XVIII THE DRAINER

       CHAPTER XIX A DEAD MAN'S SHOES

       CHAPTER XX BOOKS

       CHAPTER XXI A FISTIC ARGUMENT

       CHAPTER XXII THE OPEN ROAD

       CHAPTER XXIII THE COCK OF THE NORTH

       CHAPTER XXIV MECCA

       CHAPTER XXV THE MAN WHO THRASHED CARROTY DAN

       CHAPTER XXVI A GREAT FIGHT

       CHAPTER XXVII DE PROFUNDIS

       CHAPTER XXVIII A LITTLE TRAGEDY

       CHAPTER XXIX I WRITE FOR THE PAPERS

       CHAPTER XXX WINTER

       CHAPTER XXXI THE GREAT EXODUS

       CHAPTER XXXII A NEW JOB

       CHAPTER XXXIII A SWEETHEART OF MINE

       CHAPTER XXXIV UNSKILLED LABOUR OF A NEW KIND

       CHAPTER XXXV THE SEARCH

       CHAPTER XXXVI THE END OF THE STORY

       Table of Contents

      "I wish the Kinlochleven navvies had been thrown into the loch. They would fain turn the Highlands into a cinderheap," said the late Andrew Lang, writing to me a few months before his death.

      In the following pages I have endeavoured to tell of the navvy; the life he leads, the dangers he dares, and the death he often dies. Most of my story is autobiographical. Moleskin Joe and Carroty Dan are true to life; they live now, and for all I know to the contrary may be met with on some precarious job, in some evil-smelling model lodging-house, or, as suits these gipsies of labour, on the open road. Norah Ryan's painful story shows the dangers to which an innocent girl is exposed through ignorance of the fundamental facts of existence; Gourock Ellen and Annie are types of women whom I have often met. While asking a little allowance for the pen of the novelist it must be said that nearly all the incidents of the book have come under the observation of the writer: that such incidents should take place makes the tragedy of the story.

      Patrick MacGill.

      The Garden House,

       Windsor.

       January, 1914.

      CHILDREN

       OF

       THE

       DEAD

       END

      CHILDREN OF

       THE DEAD END

       Table of Contents

      "The wee red-headed man is a knowing sort of fellow,

      His