Disturbed Ireland, by Bernard H. 
Becker 
 
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Title: Disturbed Ireland Being the Letters Written During the Winter of 
1880-81. 
Author: Bernard H. Becker 
Release Date: September 2, 2006 [EBook #19160] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 
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DISTURBED IRELAND *** 
 
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DISTURBED IRELAND: 
BEING THE LETTERS WRITTEN DURING THE WINTER OF 
1880-81. 
BY BERNARD H. BECKER, SPECIAL COMMISSIONER OF THE 
"DAILY NEWS." 
WITH ROUTE MAPS. 
London: MACMILLAN AND CO. 1881. 
 
LONDON: R. CLAY, SONS, AND TAYLOR, BREAD STREET 
HILL. 
 
PREFACE. 
Having been most cordially granted permission to republish these 
letters in a collected form, it is my duty to mention that my mission 
from the Daily News was absolutely unfettered, either by instructions 
or introductions. It was thought that an independent and impartial 
account of the present condition of the disturbed districts of Ireland 
would be best secured by sending thither a writer without either Irish 
politics or Irish friends--in short, one who might occupy the stand-point 
of the too-often-quoted "intelligent foreigner." Hence my little book is 
purely descriptive of the stirring scenes and deeply interesting people I
have met with on my way through the counties of Mayo, Galway, Clare, 
Limerick, Cork, and Kerry. It is neither a political treatise, nor a 
dissertation on the tenure of land, but a plain record of my experience 
of a strange phase of national life. I have simply endeavoured to reflect 
as accurately as might be the salient features of a social and economic 
upheaval, soon I fervently hope, to pass into the domain of history; and 
in offering my work to the public must ask indulgence for the errors of 
omission and commission so difficult to avoid while travelling and 
writing rapidly in a country which, even to its own people, is a complex 
problem. 
B.H.B. 
ARTS' CLUB, January 6th, 1881. 
 
CONTENTS. 
PAGE I. AT LOUGH MASK 1 
II. AN AGRARIAN DIFFICULTY 18 
III. LAND MEETINGS 26 
IV. MISS GARDINER AND HER TENANTS 52 
V. FROM MAYO TO CONNEMARA 70 
VI. THE RELIEF OF MR. BOYCOTT 120 
VII. MR. RICHARD STACPOOLE 153 
VIII. PATRIOTS 160 
IX. ON THE FERGUS 166 
X. PALLAS AND THE PALLADIANS 191 
XI. GOMBEEN 207
XII. THE RETAINER 215 
XIII. CROPPED 225 
XIV. IN KERRY 232 
XV. THE "BOYCOTTING" OF MR. BENCE JONES 262 
XVI. A CRUISE IN A GROWLER 279 
XVII. "BOYCOTTED" AT CHRISTMASTIDE 307 
XVIII. CHRISTMAS IN COUNTY CLARE 328 
* * * * * 
[Illustration: (foldout Map of Ireland, showing author's route.)] 
[Illustration: (foldout detail map of western Ireland, showing author's 
route.)] 
* * * * * 
 
DISTURBED IRELAND. 
I. 
AT LOUGH MASK. 
WESTPORT, CO. MAYO, Oct. 24. 
The result of several days' incessant travelling in county Mayo is a very 
considerable modification of the opinion formed at the first glance at 
this, the most disaffected part of Ireland. On reaching Claremorris, in 
the heart of the most disturbed district, I certainly felt, and not for the 
first time, that as one approaches a spot in which law and order are 
supposed to be suspended the sense of alarm and insecurity diminishes, 
to put it mathematically, "as the square of the distances." Even after a
rapid survey of this part of the West I cannot help contrasting the state 
of public opinion here with that prevailing in Dublin. In the 
capital--outside of "the Castle," where moderate counsels prevail--the 
alarmists appear to have it all their own way. I was told gravely that 
there was no longer any security for life or property in the West; that 
county Mayo was like Tipperary in the old time, "only more so;" and 
that if I would go lurking about Lough Mask and Lough Corrib it was 
impossible to prevent me; but that the chances of return were, to say the 
least, remote. It was in vain that I pointed out that every stone wall did 
not hide an assassin, and that strangers and others not connected either 
directly or indirectly with the land    
    
		
	
	
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