An Illustrated History of Ireland from AD 400 to 1800 eBook

Mary Frances Cusack
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 946 pages of information about An Illustrated History of Ireland from AD 400 to 1800.

An Illustrated History of Ireland from AD 400 to 1800 eBook

Mary Frances Cusack
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 946 pages of information about An Illustrated History of Ireland from AD 400 to 1800.
is not a committee of ladies, assisted by the neighbouring gentry, who distribute coals, blankets, and clothing in winter; and at all times, where there is distress, give bread, tea, and meat.  Well may the poor Irish come home discontented after they have been to work in England, and see how differently the poor are treated there.  I admit, and I repeat it again, that there are instances in which the landlord takes an interest in his tenantry, but those instances are exceptions.  Many of these gentlemen, who possess the largest tracts of land in Ireland, have also large estates in England, and they seldom, sometimes never, visit their Irish estates.  They leave it to their agent.  Every application for relief is referred to the agent.  The agent, however humane, cannot be expected to have the same interest in the people as a landlord ought to have.  The agent is the instrument used to draw out the last farthing from the poor; he is constantly in collision with them.  They naturally dislike him; and he, not unnaturally, dislikes them.

The burden, therefore, of giving that relief to the poor, which they always require in times of sickness, and when they cannot get work, falls almost exclusively upon the priests and the convents.  Were it not for the exertions made by the priests and nuns throughout Ireland for the support of the poor, and to obtain work for them, and the immense sums of money sent to Ireland by emigrants, for the support of aged fathers and mothers, I believe the destitution would be something appalling, and that landlords would find it even more difficult than at present to get the high rents which they demand.  Yet, some of these same landlords, getting perhaps L20,000 or L40,000 a-year from their Irish estates, will not give the slightest help to establish industrial schools in connexion with convents, or to assist them when they are established, though they are the means of helping their own tenants to pay their rent.  There are in Ireland about two hundred conventual establishments.  Nearly all of these convents have poor schools, where the poor are taught, either at a most trifling expense, or altogether without charge.  The majority of these convents feed and clothe a considerable number of poor children, and many of them have established industrial schools, where a few girls at least can earn what will almost support a whole family in comfort.  I give the statistics of one convent as a sample of others.  I believe there are a few, but perhaps only a very few other places, where the statistics would rise higher; but there are many convents where the children are fed and clothed, and where work is done on a smaller scale.  If such institutions were encouraged by the landlords, much more could be done.  The convent to which I allude was founded at the close of the year 1861.  There was a national school in the little town (in England it would be called a village), with an attendance of about forty children.  The

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An Illustrated History of Ireland from AD 400 to 1800 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.