The Wearing of the Green eBook

A M Sullivan
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 146 pages of information about The Wearing of the Green.

The Wearing of the Green eBook

A M Sullivan
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 146 pages of information about The Wearing of the Green.
A couple of thousand young children stood quietly in the rain and slush for over an hour; while behind them, in close-packed numbers, were over two thousand young women.  Not the least blame can be attached to those who managed the affairs of the day, inasmuch as the throng must have far exceeded even their most sanguine expectations.  Every moment some overwhelming accession rolled down Abbey-street or Eden-quay, and swelled the already surging multitude waiting for the start.  Long before twelve o’clock, the streets converging on the square were packed with spectators or intending processionists.  Cabs struggled hopelessly to yield up the large number of highly respectable and well-attired ladies who had come to walk.  Those who had hired vehicles for the day to join the procession were convinced of the impracticable character of their intention; and many delicate old men who would not give up the design, braved the terrors of asthma and bronchitis, and joined the rain-defying throng.  Right across the spacious ground was one unmoving mass, constantly being enlarged by ever-coming crowds.  All the windows in Beresford-place were filled with spectators, and the rain and cold seemed to have no saddening effect on the numerous multitude.  The various bands of the trade were being disposed in their respective positions, and the hearses were a long way off and altogether in the back-ground, when, at a quarter to twelve, the first rank of men moved forward.  Almost every one had an umbrella, but they were thoroughly saturated with the never-ceasing down-pour.  As the steady, well-kept, twelve-deep ranks moved slowly out, some ease was given to those pent up behind; and it was really wonderful to see the facility with which the people adapted themselves to the orders of their directors.  Every chance of falling in was seized, and soon the procession was in motion.  The first five hundred men were of the artisan class.  They were dressed very respectably, and each man wore upon his left shoulder a green rosette, and on his left arm a band of crape.  Numbers had hat-bands depending to the shoulder; others had close crape intertwined carefully with green ribbon around their hats; and the great majority of the better sort adhered to this plan, which was executed with a skill unmistakably feminine.  Here and there at intervals a man appeared with a broad green scarf around his shoulders, some embroidered with shamrocks, and others decorated with harps.  There was not a man throughout the procession but was conspicuous by some emblem of nationality.  Appointed officers walked at the sides with wands in their hands and gently kept back the curious and interested crowd whose sympathy was certainly demonstrative.  Behind the five hundred men came a couple of thousand young children.  These excited, perhaps, the most considerable interest amongst the bystanders, whether sympathetic, neutral, or opposite.  Of tender age and innocent of opinions on any subject, they were being marshalled
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The Wearing of the Green from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.