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The Lawns of Curraghmore Oh, Granny, here’s a present and it comes a distance too, A cushla, let me feel them, little darling is it true? I see as once I saw them when a little girl I stood. I see as once I saw them when a little girl I stood. I have travelled since my childhood, I have travelled near and far,
The village of Portlaw is bounded by Lord Waterford's demense
of Curraghmore, and brings lots of visitors to the area. "The Irish," wrote the Elizabethan antiquary Camden some what acidly in his Britannia, "are so wedded to their own customs, that they not only retain themselves, but corrupt the English that come among them." It was certainly curious how soon the Anglo-Normans Who conquered most of Ireland in the 12th century was obsorbed by the people they had overrun. The same process can be watched to a greater or less degree, in a multitude of families-in the Fitzgeralds, Fitzmaurices, Butlers, Burkes, Nugents and Barry’s, among others –but nowhere more completely than in the Powers or Le Poers of Curraghmore and the country-side around. Curraghmore is very much a little world on it’s own,
sealed off from out side by it’s woods and hills, and by the ten-mile ring of
it’s demesne wall: only on the west is the visual barrier broken, and the
country opens out until the Comeragh Mountains run a long rising and falling
wall along the horizon. South of the house the Clodagh river winds for four
miles through the demesne, in a deep and secret valley lined with ancient trees,
where pink martens are still occasionally found. The approach from Waterford is
a long valley: one does not see the house until one suddenly emerges from the
woods, and finds oneself spinning down straight into the courtyard and between
long rows of pink chestnuts and stable buildings, to the front door, with the
stag of St. Hubert, silhouetted against the sky above it. ( Left ) Japanese Gardens |
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