THE TWO BUTLERS OF KILKENNY
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 29 August 2010
Summary
In all countries and all languages we have the story of Il Bondocani. May I tell one from Ireland?
It is now almost a hundred years ago—certainly eighty—since Tom—I declare to Mnemosyne I forget what his surname was, if I ever knew it, which I doubt,—It is at least eighty years since Tom emerged from his master's kitchen in Clonmell, to make his way on a visit to foreign countries.
If I can well recollect dates, this event must have occurred at the end of the days of George the Second, or very close after the accession of George the Third, because in the course of the narrative it will be disclosed that the tale runs of a Jacobite lord living quietly in Ireland, and that I think must have been some time between 1740 and 1760,—or say '65. Just before the year of the young Pretender's burst, a sharp eye used to be kept upon the “honest men” in all the three kingdoms; and in Ireland, from the peculiar power which the surveillance attendant on the penal laws gave the government, this sharp eye could not be surpassed in sharpness,—that is to say, if it did not choose to wink. Truth, nevertheless, makes us acknowledge that the authorities of Ireland were ever inclined at the bottom of their hearts to countenance lawlessness, if at all recommended by anything like a noble or a romantic name.
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- Shakespeare PapersPictures Grave and Gay, pp. 329 - 346Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2009First published in: 1859