The Letters of "Norah" on Her Tour Through Ireland by Margaret Moran Dixon McDougall
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page 23 of 342 (06%)
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think the land is too dear, the large majority blame the improvidence of
the poor. "They eat bacon and drink tea where potatoes and milk or porridge and milk used to be good enough for them." It is difficult to imagine the extravagance. I went through part of the poor-house in Ballymena. It is beautifully clean and sweet, and in such perfect order out and in that one is glad to think of the sick or suffering poor having such a refuge. What fine, patient, intelligent faces were among the sufferers in the infirmary. The children in the school-room looked rosy and well-fed, and the babies were nursed by the old women. So many of them--it was a sad sight indeed. V. ONE RESULT OF THE COERCION ACT--THE AGRICULTURAL LABORERS IN DOWN AND ANTRIM--WHISKEY--RAIN IN IRELAND--A DISCUSSION ON ORANGEISM. It is the eighth of March. The weather remains frightfully inclement; the snow and sleet is succeeded by incessant rain storms. The Coercion bill has become law and even in the north there seems a difference in the people. There is a carefulness of expressing an opinion on any subject as if a reign of governmental terror had begun. The loyalty always so fervent is now intense and loud. The people here think that there is an epidemic of unreasonableness and causeless murmuring raging at the south and west. |
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