The Black Baronet; or, The Chronicles Of Ballytrain. William Carleton

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Название The Black Baronet; or, The Chronicles Of Ballytrain
Автор произведения William Carleton
Жанр Языкознание
Серия
Издательство Языкознание
Год выпуска 0
isbn 4064066212520



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href="#ulink_4bea110a-4fc4-5573-9f2b-c1c170d8f8e9">CHAPTER XXVIII. Innocence and Affection overcome by Fraud and Hypocrisy

       —Lucy yields at Last.

       CHAPTER XXIX. Lord Dunroe's Affection for his Father

       —Glimpse of a new Character—Lord Gullamore's Rebuke to his Son, who greatly refuses to give up his Friend.

       CHAPTER XXX. A Courtship on Novel Principles.

       CHAPTER XXXI. The Priest goes into Corbet's House very like a Thief

       —a Sederunt, with a Bright look up for Mr. Gray.

       CHAPTER XXXII. Discovery of the Baronet's Son

       —Who, however, is Shelved for a Time.

       CHAPTEK XXXIII. The Priest asks for a Loan of Fifty Guineas

       —and Offers “Freney the Robber” as Security.

       CHAPTER XXXIV. Young Gourlay's Affectionate Interview with His Father

       —Risk of Strangulation—Movements of M'Bride.

       CHAPTER XXXV. Lucy's Vain but Affecting Expostulation with her Father

       —Her Terrible Denunciation of Ambrose Gray.

       CHAPTER XXXVI. Contains a Variety of Matters

       —Some to Laugh and some to Weep at.

       CHAPTER XXXVII. Dandy's Visit to Summerfield Cottage

       —Where he Makes a most Ungallant Mistake—Returns with Tidings of both Mrs. Norton and Fenton—and Generously Patronizes his Master

       CHAPTER XXXVIII. An Unpleasant Disclosure to Dunroe

       —Anthony Corbet gives Important Documents to the Stranger—Norton catches a Tartar.

       CHAPTEE XXXIX. Fenton Recovered—The Mad-House

       CHAPTER XL. Lady Gourlay sees her Son.

       CHAPTER XLI. Denouement.

       Table of Contents

      The incidents upon which this book is founded seem to be extraordinary and startling, but they are true; for, as Byron says, and as we all know, “Truth is strange—stranger than Fiction.” Mr. West, brother to the late member from Dublin, communicated them to me exactly as they occurred, and precisely as he communicated them, have I given them to the reader, at least, as far as I can depend upon my memory. With respect, however, to his facts, they related only to the family which is shadowed forth under the imaginary name of Gourlay; those connected with the aristocratic house of Cullamore, I had from another source, and they are equally authentic. The Lord Dunroe, son to the Earl of Cullamore, is not many years dead, and there are thousands still living, who can bear testimony to the life of profligacy and extravagance, which, to the very last day of his existence, he persisted in leading. That his father was obliged to get an act of Parliament passed to legitimize his children, is a fact also pretty well known to many.

      At first, I had some notion of writing a distinct story upon each class of events, but, upon more mature consideration, I thought it better to construct such a one as would enable me to work them both up into the same narrative; thus contriving that the incidents of the one house should be connected with those of the other, and the interest of both deepened, not only by their connection, but their contrast. It is unnecessary to say, that the prototypes of the families who appear upon the stage in the novel, were, in point of fact, personally unknown to each other, unless, probably, by name, inasmuch as they resided in different and distant parts of the kingdom. They were, however, contemporaneous. Such circumstances, nevertheless, matter very little to the novelist, who can form for his characters whatsoever connections, whether matrimonial or otherwise, he may deem most proper; and of this, he must be considered himself as the sole, though probably not the best, judge. The name of Red Hall, the residence of Sir Thomas Gourlay, is purely fictitious, but not the description of it, which applies very accurately to a magnificent family mansion not a thousand miles from the thriving little town of Ballygawley. Since the first appearance, however, of the work, I have accidentally discovered, from James Frazer's admirable. “Hand-book for Ireland,” the best and most correct work of the kind ever published, and the only one that can be relied upon, that there actually is a residence named Red Hall in my own native county of Tyrone. I mention this, lest the respectable family to whom it belongs might take offence at my having made it the ancestral property of such a man as Sir Thomas Gourlay, or the scene of his crimes and outrages. On this point, I beg to assure them that the coincidence of the name is purely accidental, and that, when I wrote the novel, I had not the slightest notion that such a place actually existed. Some of those coincidences are very odd and curious. For instance, it so happens that there is at this moment a man named Dunphy actually residing on Constitution Hill, and engaged in the very same line of life which I have assigned to one of my principal characters of that name in the novel, that of a huckster; yet of this circumstance I knew nothing. The titles of Cullamore and Dunroe are taken from two hills, one greater than the other, and not far asunder, in my native parish; and I have heard it said, by the people of that neighborhood, that Sir William Richardson, father to the late amiable Sir James Richardson Bunbury, when expecting at the period of the Union to receive a coronet instead of a baronetcy, had made his mind up to select either one or the other of them as the designation of his rank.

      I think I need scarcely assure my readers that old Sam Roberts, the retired soldier, is drawn from life; and I may add, that I have scarcely done the fine old fellow and his fine old wife sufficient justice. They were two of the most amiable and striking originals I ever met. Both are now dead, but I remember Sam to have been for many years engaged in teaching the sword exercise in some of the leading schools in and about Dublin. He ultimately gave this up, however, having been appointed to some comfortable situation in the then Foundling Hospital, where his Beck died, and he, poor fellow, did not, I have heard, long survive her.

      Owing to painful and peculiar circumstances, with which it would be impertinent to trouble the reader, there were originally