Richard Lovell Edgeworth eBook

Richard Lovell Edgeworth
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 128 pages of information about Richard Lovell Edgeworth.

Richard Lovell Edgeworth eBook

Richard Lovell Edgeworth
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 128 pages of information about Richard Lovell Edgeworth.

Maria ends this exciting chapter of the Memoirs with these moral reflections:  ’At all times it is disadvantageous to those who have the reputation of being men of superior abilities, to seclude themselves from the world.  It raises a belief that they despise those with whom they do not associate; and this supposed contempt creates real aversion.  The being accused of pride or singularity may not, perhaps, in the estimation of some lofty spirits and independent characters, appear too great a price to pay for liberty and leisure; they will care little if they be misunderstood or misrepresented by the vulgar; they will trust to truth and time to do them justice.  This may be all well in ordinary life, and in peaceable days; but in civil commotions the best and the wisest, if he have not made himself publicly known, so as to connect himself with the interests and feelings of his neighbours, will find none to answer for his character if it be attacked, or to warn him of the secret machinations of his enemies; none who on any sudden emergency will risk their own safety in his defence:  he may fall and be trampled upon by numbers, simply because it is nobody’s business or pleasure to rally to his aid.  Time and reason right his character, and may bring all who have injured, or all who have mistaken him, to repentance and shame, but in the interval he must suffer—­he may perish.’

Chapter 9.

The British Government seem to have thought it best at this time to pursue a laissez faire policy in Ireland, in order to convince the Irish of their weakness, and to show them that, although a bundle of sticks when loosened allows each stick to be used for beating, and it may therefore be argued that sticks, being meant for fighting, should never be bound in a bundle, yet each single stick may easily get broken.  Of course the Government intended to intervene before it was too late, and to suggest to the Irish that it was time to think of a union with their stronger neighbours.

On this subject, Maria remarks:  ’It is certain that the combinations of the disaffected at home and the advance of foreign invaders, were not checked till the peril became imminent, and till the purpose of creating universal alarm had been fully effected.  As soon as the Commander-in-Chief and the Lord-Lieutenant (at the time joined in the same person) exerted his full military and civil power, the invaders were defeated, and the rebellion was extinguished.  The petty magisterial tyrants, who had been worse than vain of their little brief authority, were put down, or rather, being no longer upheld, sank to their original and natural insignificance.  The laws returned to their due course; and, with justice, security and tranquillity, were restored.

’My father honestly, not ostentatiously, used his utmost endeavours to obliterate all that could tend to perpetuate ill-will in the country.  Among the lower classes in his neighbourhood he endeavoured to discourage that spirit of recrimination and retaliation which the lower Irish are too prone to cherish, and of which they are proud.  “Revenge is sweet, and I’ll have it” were words which an old beggar-woman was overheard muttering to herself as she tottered along the road. . . .

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Richard Lovell Edgeworth from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.