A Cold Rain In Killarney, 1845
The title refers to the hardship, suffering, hunger and death that began that year and continued for four more heartbreaking years. The title refers to the insensitivity and lack of control on English absentee landlords who took full advantage of the British government's policy to "let them do as they very well please," and they did. Often, an Irish family was evicted from their cottage without notice and for no apparant reason. The book's cover depicts a barran landscape. They are all gone, gone on the ships to Canada, to America to avoid, in many cases, starvation. They were evicted, their homes destroyed, the grounds cleared of rubble to convert pasture to farm land for crops. The British called it "clearance improvements." A land of plenty had not the care or compassion to provide adequate measures to insure the health and the satisfaction of their hunger, their own citizens. The barran landscape depicts the emptiness felt when a son or daughter left for a new life in a foreign land, never to be seen again.
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A Cold Rain In Killarney, 1845
The title refers to the hardship, suffering, hunger and death that began that year and continued for four more heartbreaking years. The title refers to the insensitivity and lack of control on English absentee landlords who took full advantage of the British government's policy to "let them do as they very well please," and they did. Often, an Irish family was evicted from their cottage without notice and for no apparant reason. The book's cover depicts a barran landscape. They are all gone, gone on the ships to Canada, to America to avoid, in many cases, starvation. They were evicted, their homes destroyed, the grounds cleared of rubble to convert pasture to farm land for crops. The British called it "clearance improvements." A land of plenty had not the care or compassion to provide adequate measures to insure the health and the satisfaction of their hunger, their own citizens. The barran landscape depicts the emptiness felt when a son or daughter left for a new life in a foreign land, never to be seen again.
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A Cold Rain In Killarney, 1845

A Cold Rain In Killarney, 1845

by Rob Collins
A Cold Rain In Killarney, 1845

A Cold Rain In Killarney, 1845

by Rob Collins

Paperback

$22.00 
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Overview

The title refers to the hardship, suffering, hunger and death that began that year and continued for four more heartbreaking years. The title refers to the insensitivity and lack of control on English absentee landlords who took full advantage of the British government's policy to "let them do as they very well please," and they did. Often, an Irish family was evicted from their cottage without notice and for no apparant reason. The book's cover depicts a barran landscape. They are all gone, gone on the ships to Canada, to America to avoid, in many cases, starvation. They were evicted, their homes destroyed, the grounds cleared of rubble to convert pasture to farm land for crops. The British called it "clearance improvements." A land of plenty had not the care or compassion to provide adequate measures to insure the health and the satisfaction of their hunger, their own citizens. The barran landscape depicts the emptiness felt when a son or daughter left for a new life in a foreign land, never to be seen again.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781475284829
Publisher: CreateSpace Publishing
Publication date: 09/28/2012
Pages: 382
Product dimensions: 5.98(w) x 9.02(h) x 0.79(d)

About the Author

Rob Collins was raised in a small Irish Catholic community where he grew up listening to his elders discuss the future of their country and debate the partitioning of their home nation. He is an Irish Historian and a student of the Gaelic language. Married to a retired teacher, he is the proud father of an elementary school principal and a grandfather of three. He was inspired to write after three trips to Ireland in the early 2000s. He became enchanted by the nation's many gifted poets, playwrights and writers and the stories they told of their countrymen's fight to free themselves from the yoke of British religious and political domination
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