John O'Donovan catches a cold

Dublin Core

Title

John O'Donovan catches a cold

Subject

Lough Derg--Ordnance Survey--Description--John O'Donovan

Description

"I visited the far famed terrestrial purgatory of Lough Derg, but received no benefit from my turas except a severe cold, which I attribute more to the wet mountain bogs that surround the lake, and to the chillyness (chilliness) of the wind than to any lack of devotion in myself..."

Creator

John O'Donovan, 1806-1861

Source

Letter from John O'Donovan, Ballyshanny, 1st of November, 1835, p. 243-44, O’Donovan, John, Ordnance Survey Letters, Donegal: Letters Containing Information Relative to the Antiquities of the County of Donegal Collected during the Progress of the Ordnance Survey in 1835s, pp. 120-21

Publisher

Four Masters Press, Dublin

Date

1835 [2000]

Contributor

Transcribed and edited by Michael Herity, MRIA

Rights

Citation for the purposes of criticism

Format

Edited edition of letters

Language

English with Irish text in Celtic script

Type

Ordnance Survey Letters

Identifier

DD_0172

Coverage

54.6083, -7.8714

Text Item Type Metadata

Text

"I visited the far famed terrestrial purgatory of Lough Derg, but received no benefit from my turas except a severe cold, which I attribute more to the wet mountain bogs that surround the lake, and to the chillyness (chilliness) of the wind than to any lack of devotion in myself, for I viewed Station Island with a good deal of veneration, not on account of its antiquity, but for its preserving a sort of model of the sacred crosses and penitential beds, which anciently existed on St Daveog's Island, which was visited by not many half centuries ago by French and Spanish knights, and other men of distinction."

Original Format

Hand written letters held in Royal Irish Academy

Citation

John O'Donovan, 1806-1861, “John O'Donovan catches a cold,” Digital Derg: A Deep Map, accessed April 16, 2024, https://digitalderg.eu/items/show/190.

Geolocation