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When I had been about ten
days at my uncles house, a young man named Morgan Byrne, who was to have been married to
one of my school fellows, came on horseback with three other rebels of the better class,
to demand from us the fine young horse which they had been unable to carry off before on
account of his legs being fettered, lest he should have strayed away. They said they
wanted him to mount their General, and ordered me to unlock the fetters. In all our
troubles, I had happened to preserve my mothers keys, though now totally useless, so I
went with them to the field where the horse grazes, and when I had taken off the fetters,
in a fit of careless anger at seeing this last act of plunder, I shook them at him and the
fine young beast fled at full speed. The rebels cursed me heartily, but galloped off to
catch him, in which they did not succeed `till he had run more than three miles, when they
caught him as he attempted to swim the Slaney. Many weeks afterwards, when the rebellion
had been completely quelled, my mother heard he was in the possession of a Protestant
gentleman in Wexford. He had instantly armed himself, rode thither, walked into the stable
where the horse stood and, without exchanging a word with the man in whose possession he
was and who was present, unloosed him from the stall, and brought him off without the
slightest opposition having been made.
The rebel power now begun to decline and we lived
some weeks in dread, both of them and the struggling parties of military sent in pursuit
of them. From the first time we were protected by the female beggar and by Martins
mother who still lived with us and neither of whom were ever afterwards deserted by our
two families; but, the last either not knowing that we were suffering loyalists, or not
caring, often behaved with great insolence. The smaller the party was the more in dread we
were of them; and more than once myself and a few more young girls, fearing to pass the
night in the house, slept in the centre of a large holly-bush at some distance from it.
But, after the rebels were repulsed from Newtown Barry, and after the battle of Vinegar
Hill, then they were totally routed, a regular camp was formed within a fields length of
my uncles house; we were then protected, for the soldiers were kept under better
discipline, and we found an excellent market for our milk and butter, which enabled us to
purchase a few indispensable articles of furniture and clothing, and to fit up the out
house for the dwelling-house. Lord Tyrone, too, who commanded these men, sent every day a
bakers cart to distribute bread to the families of the suffering loyalists, and we
frequently bought two loaves each day from it. On Vinegar Hill, being carried by assaults,
he sent to our mother desiring her to look if there was any of her furniture amongst the
immense amount of plunder that was on it; she went to thank him, but, she need not look
for all hers was burned in Enniscorthy. He smiled, and called her a simple woman, and then
asked her what she wanted most, for he would give it to her; she said if he could spare a
feather-bed, she would be forever grateful, and he immediately ordered two of the beat to
be given to her. I shall never forget the joy we felt at being once more enabled to sleep
in comfort for, `till then, we had only loose straw thrown on the ground to sleep on. The
latter end of July, a field of our barley, which had escaped the plundering, ripened;
Mr.Grimes, the miller, who had saved both his life and property, gave us back our oats
ready ground; our new potatoes were fit for use, and we never afterwards knew what want
was. He did hot, however, build a house `till the next summer, and the blackened ruins of
our little factory which - as he managed it was gone - we never rebuilt, are yet to be
seen.
A few nights after Vinegar Hill was taken by the
Kings forces, I went with a lantern to an unfrequented outhouse, to bring in some straw.
Martins mother, when she perceived where I was going, followed me, much agitated, but, I
had already reached the little building, and as I removed the sheaves, I was dreadfully
shocked to see thy concealed three or four ghastly creatures who, on seeing me, entreated
in the most piteous manner that I would not betray them. They were the rebels who had been
badly wounded in the battle, and the women who had sheltered them there and who had
supplied them with food from my uncles house, now joined her entreaties to theirs, and I
promised faithfully I would be silent. In four days more one died and was buried privately
by the two poor women, and the rest were able to remove. I have since been blamed for not
giving them up, but, I have never repented for it.
It was just six weeks from the beginning of our
troubles that, as I was passing near the ruins of our house, I was startled at hearing
within it the deep sobs and surpressed cries of some person in sorrow. I ventured to look
and found they descended from a man who was sitting on a low part of the fallen wall, with
his head sinking in his knees. When he heard my steps he arose and I saw my brother, but,
if it had not been for the strong likeness he yet bore to my father, I should never have
known him. From a fair, ruddy, robust boy, he had become a tall, haggard, subharmed man,
so thin that his waist might have been spanned; and yet he was not seventeen, this change
had been wrought in him by hardship and war in the space of little more than ten months,
for it was just so last since we had last met. He immediately stared when he saw me, and
fled from me at utmost speed. In three days, however, returned to us again, more composed,
and able to meet my poor mother with at least an appearance of calmness. He afterwards got
occasional leave of absence to assist in forming business, but, he never was able to
settle entirely with us `till the winter was past.
In one of his short visits, sitting alone with
him one night after all were gone to bed, I ventured to ask him how soon he knew of my
fathers death. He looked at me with a sterness and solemnity that awed me and said, "
I knew of it long before I was told of it; I knew of it when I was on guard at Duncannon
Fort on the third night after the Battle of Enniscorthy, for I saw him as plainly as I now
see you. Overpowered with hunger and fatigue, I slept on my post, when he stood beside me
and awakened me and, when I opened my eyes, I saw him clearly in the bright moonlight, and
he passed away from before me; and I knew by what I felt that he was no living man"
This may have been but a dream yet who can say that he was not permitted to save his son
from the death that inevitably awaited him if caught sleeping on his post.
I have now related the principal circumstances that fell under my own eye
in the fearful Summer of 1798, during which, beside my father, I lost fourteen uncles,
cousins, and other near relations, but were I to tell all I saw and all I heard, I could
fill volumes. Yet, before I conclude I must mention one evil, not generally known,
that.... from the rebellion, but, the ill effects of which may be said still to continue.
The yeomanry was composed mostly of fine boys, the sons of farmers, some of whom had
scarcely attained the age of sixteen. Those removed from the eyes of their parents, with
weapons placed in their hands, raised to the rank of men before they had discretion to
behave as such, and exposed to all the temptations of idleness, intoxication and bad
companions, when peaceful times returned were totally unable to settle to their farms and
others, by their farmers death, left to them alone - but, continued the same careless;
early life, `till they became quite unable to pay their rents. They then emigrated to
America and on the very ground which, thirty years ago, was in possession of old
Protestant families, there now live the descendants of those rebels, who may be said to
have been the origin of all this evil.
This, thank God, has not been the case with our
family. Clovass is still in my brothers hands. My mother, now an aged woman lives with him
and all the rest of the family have been married and settled in their own houses. But,
fears still remain in the hearts of both parties in the County Wexford and, until the
present generation and their children after them shall have passed away, it will never be
otherwise.; for those who, like me, have seen their houses in ashes, their property
destroyed, and their nearest and dearest dead at their feet, though they must forgive,
they can never forget.
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