The call to prison

Dublin Core

Title

The call to prison

Subject

Lough Derg--Pilgrimage--Description--William Carleton

Description

"I was just on the point of enjoying a little rest, when a man ringing a large hand-bell, came round, crying in a low, supernatural growl, which could be hear double the distance of the loudest shout - 'waken up, waken up, and come to prison.'..."

Creator

William Carleton, 1794-1869

Source

Carleton, William, 'The Lough Derg Pilgrim', in Traits and Stories of the Irish Peasantry, pp. 258

Publisher

W. Curry, jr. and Co., Dublin; W. S. Orr and Co., London

Date

1843

Contributor

Digitised by archive.org, sponsored by University of California Libraries

Rights

Public domain

Format

Monograph

Language

English

Type

Description of Ireland
Text

Identifier

DD_0057

Coverage

54.609058,-7.871014

References

http://archive.org/details/traitsstoriesofi01carlrich

Text Item Type Metadata

Text

"I was just on the point of enjoying a little rest, when a man ringing a large hand-bell, came round, crying in a low, supernatural growl, which could be hear double the distance of the loudest shout - 'waken up, waken up, and come to prison.' The words were no sooner our of his mouth, than there was a sudden start, and a general scramble in the dark for our respective garments. When we got dressed, we proceeded to the waters of the lake, in which we washed our face and hands, repeating prayers during the ablution. This to me was the most impressive and agreeable part of the whole station."

Citation

William Carleton, 1794-1869, “The call to prison,” Digital Derg: A Deep Map, accessed April 16, 2024, https://digitalderg.eu/items/show/57.

Geolocation