FOX'S BOOK OF MARTYRS
CHAPTER XVII
Rise and Progress of the Protestant Religion
in Ireland;
with an Account of the Barbarous Massacre of 1641
The gloom of popery had overshadowed
Ireland from its first establishment there until
the reign of Henry VIII when the rays of the Gospel
began to dispel the darkness, and afford that light
which until then had been unknown in that island.
The abject ignorance in which the people were held,
with the absurd and superstitious notions they entertained,
were sufficiently evident to many; and the artifices
of their priests were so conspicuous, that several
persons of distinction, who had hitherto been strenuous
papists, would willingly have endeavored to shake
off the yoke, and embrace the Protestant religion;
but the natural ferocity of the people, and their
strong attachment to the ridiculous doctrines which
they had been taught, made the attempt dangerous.
It was, however, at length undertaken, though attended
with the most horrid and disastrous consequences.
The introduction of the Protestant
religion into Ireland may be principally attributed
to George Browne, an Englishman, who was consecrated
archbishop of Dublin on the nineteenth of March,
1535. He had formerly been an Augustine friar, and
was promoted to the mitre on account of his merit.
After having enjoyed his dignity about
five years, he, at the time that Henry VIII was
suppressing the religious houses in England, caused
all the relics and images to be removed out of the
two cathedrals in Dublin, and the other churches
in his diocese; in the place of which he caused
to be put up the Lord's Prayer, the Creed, and the
Ten Commandments.
A short time after this he received
a letter from Thomas Cromwell, lord-privy seal,
informing him that Henry VIII having thrown off
the papal supremacy in England, was determined to
do the like in Ireland; and that he thereupon had
appointed him (Archbishop Browne) one of the commissioners
for seeing this order put in execution. The archbishop
answered that he had employed his utmost endeavors
at the hazard of his life, to cause the Irish nobility
and gentry to acknowledge Henry as their supreme
head, in matters both spiritual and temporal; but
had met with a most violent opposition, especially
from George, archbishop of Armagh; that this prelate
had, in a speech to his clergy, laid a curse on
all those who should own his highness' supremacy:
adding, that their isle, called in the Chronicles
Insula Sacra, or the Holy Island, belonged to none
but the bishop of Rome, and that the king's progenitors
had received it from the pope. He observed likewise,
that the archbishop and clergy of Armagh had each
despatched a courier to Rome; and that it would
be necessary for a parliament to be called in Ireland,
to pass an act of supremacy, the people not regarding
the king's commission without the sanction of the
legislative assembly. He concluded with observing,
that the popes had kept the people in the most profound
ignorance; that the clergy were exceedingly illiterate;
that the common people were more zealous in their
blindness than the saints and martyrs had been in
the defence of truth at the beginning of the Gospel;
and that it was to be feared that Shan O'Neal, a
chieftain of great power in the northern part of
the island, was decidedly opposed to the king's
commission.
In pursuance of this advice, the following
year a parliament was summoned to meet at Dublin,
by order of Leonard Grey, at that time lord-lieutenant.
At this assembly Archbishop Browne made a speech,
in which he set forth that the bishops of Rome used,
anciently, to acknowledge emperors, kings, and princes,
to be supreme in their own dominions; and, therefore,
that he himself would vote King Henry VIII as supreme
in all matters, both ecclesiastical and temporal.
He concluded with saying that whosoever should refuse
to vote for this act, was not a true subject of
the king. This speech greatly startled the other
bishops and lords; but at length, after violent
debates, the king's supremacy was allowed.
Two years after this, the archbishop
wrote a second letter to Lord Cromwell, complaining
of the clergy, and hinting at the machinations which
the pope was then carrying on against the advocates
of the Gospel. This letter is dated from Dublin,
in April, 1538; and among other matters, the archbishop
says, "A bird may be taught to speak with as much
sense as many of the clergy do in this cvountry.
These, though not scholars, yet are crafty to cozen
the oor common people and to dissuade them from
following his highness orders. The country folk
here much hate your lordship, and despitefully call
you, in their Irish tongue, the Blacksmith's Son.
As a friend, I desire your lordship to look well
to your noble person. Rome hath a great kindness
for the duke of Norfolk, and great favors for this
nation, purposely to oppose his highness."
A short time after this, the pope
sent over to Ireland (directed to the archbishop
of Armagh and his clergy) a bull of excommunication
against all who had, or should own the king's supremacy
within the Irish nation; denouncing a curse on all
of them, and theirs, who should not, within forty
days, acknowledge to their confessors, that they
had done amiss in so doing.
Archbishop Browne gave notice of this
in a letter dated, Dublin, May, 1538. Part of the
form of confession, or vow, sent over to these Irish
papists, ran as follows: "I do further declare him
or here, father or mother, brother or sister, son
or daughter, husband or wife, uncle or aunt, nephew
or niece, kinsman or kinswoman, master or mistress,
and all others, nearest or dearest relations, friend
or acquaintance whatsoever, accursed, that either
do or shall hold, for the time to come, any ecclesiastical
or civil power above the authority of the Mother
Church; or that do or shall obey, for the time to
come, any of her, the Mother of Churches' opposers
or enemies, or contrary to the same, of which I
have here sworn unto: so God, the Blessed Virgin,
St. Peter, St. Paul, and the Holy Evangelists, help
me," etc. is an exact agreement with the doctrines
promulgated by the Councils of Lateran and Constance,
which expressly declare that no favor should be
shown to heretics, nor faith kept with them; that
they ought to be excommunicated and condemned, and
their estates confiscated, and that princes are
obliged, by a solemn oath, to root them out of their
respective dominions.
How abominable a church must that
be, which thus dares to trample upon all authority!
How besotted the people who regard the injunctions
of such a church!
In the archbishop's last-mentioned
letter, dated May, 1538, he says: "His highness'
viceroy of this nation is of little or no power
with the old natives. Now both English and Irish
begin to oppose your lordship's orders, and to lay
aside their national quarrels, which I fear will
(if anything will) cause a foreigner to invade this
nation."
Not long after this, Archbishop Browne
seized one Thady O'Brian, a Franciscan friar, who
had in his possession a paper sent from Rome, dated
May, 1538, and directed to O'Neal. In this letter
were the following words: "His Holiness, Paul, now
pope, and the council of the fathers, have lately
found, in Rome, a prophecy of one St. Lacerianus,
an Irish bishop of Cashel, in which he saith that
the Mother Church of Rome falleth, when, in Ireland,
the Catholic faith is overcome. Therefore, for the
glory of the Mother Church, the honor of St. Peter,
and your own secureness, suppress heresy, and his
holiness' enemies."
This Thady O'Brian, after further
examination and search made, was pilloried, and
kept close prisoner until the king's orders arrived
in what manner he should be further dispposed of.
But order coming over from England that he was to
be hanged, he laid violent hands on himself in the
castle of Dublin. His body was afterwards carried
to Gallows-green, where, after being hanged up for
some time, it was interred.
After the accession of Edward VI to
the throne of England, an order was directed to
Sir Anthony Leger, the lord-deputy of Ireland, commanding
that the liturgy in English be forthwith set up
in Ireland, there to be observed within the several
bishoprics, cathedrals, and parish churches; and
it was first read in Christ-church, Dublin, on Easter
day, 1551, before the said Sir Anthony, Archbishop
Browne, and others. Part of the royal order for
this purpose was as follows: "Whereas, our gracious
father, King Henry VIII taking into consideration
the bondage and heavy yoke that his true and faithful
subjects sustained, under the jurisdiction of the
bishop of Rome; how several fabulous stories and
lying wonders misled our subjects; dispensing with
the sins of our nations, by their indulgences and
pardons, for gain; purposely to cherish all evil
vices, as robberies, rebellions, thefts, whoredoms,
blasphemy, idolatry, etc., our gracious father hereupon
dissolved all priories, monasteries, abbeys, and
other pretended religious houses; as being but nurseries
for vice or luxury, more than for sacred learning,"
etc.
On the day after the Common Prayer
was first used in Christchurch, Dublin, the following
wicked scheme was projected by the papists:
In the church was left a marble image
of Christ, holding a reed in his hand, with a crown
of thorns on his head. Whilst the English service
(the Common Prayer) was being read before the lord-lieutenant,
the archbishop of Dublin, the privy-council, the
lord-mayor, and a great congregation, blood was
seen to run through the crevices of the crown of
thorns, and trickle down the face of the image.
On this, some of the contrivers of the imposture
cried aloud, "See how our Savior's image sweats
blood! But it must necessarily do this, since heresy
is come into the church." Immediately many of the
lower order of people, indeed the vulgar of all
ranks, were terrified at the sight of so miraculous
and undeniable an evidence of the divine displeasure;
they hastened from the church, convinced that the
doctrines of Protestantism emanated from an infernal
source, and that salvation was only to be found
in the bosom of their own infallible Church.
This incident, however ludicrous it
may appear to the enlightened reader, had great
influence over the minds of the ignorant Irish,
and answered the ends of the impudent impostors
who contrived it, so far as to check the progress
of the reformed religion in Ireland very materially;
many persons could not resist the conviction that
there were many errors and corruptions in the Romish
Church, but they were awed into silence by this
pretended manifestation of Divine wrath, which was
magnified beyond measure by the bigoted and interested
priesthood.
We have very few particulars as to
the state of religion in Ireland during the remaining
portion of the reign of Edward VI and the greater
part of that of Mary. Towards the conclusion of
the barbarous sway of that relentless bigot, she
attempted to extend her inhuman persecutions to
this island; but her diabolical intentions were
happily frustrated in the following providential
manner, the particulars of which are related by
historians of good authority.
Mary had appointed Dr. Pole (an agent
of the bloodthirsty Bonner) one of the commissioners
for carrying her barbarous intentions into effect.
He having arrived at Chester with his commission,
the mayor of that city, being a papist, waited upon
him; when the doctor taking out of his cloak bag
a leathern case, said to him, "Here is a commission
that shall lash the heretics of Ireland." The good
woman of the house being a Protestant, and having
a brother in Dublin, named John Edmunds, was greatly
troubled at what she heard. But watching her opportunity,
whilst the mayor was taking his leave, and the doctor
politely accompanying him downstairs, she opened
the box, took out the commission, and in its stead
laid a sheet of paper, with a pack of cards, and
the knave of clubs at top. The doctor, not suspecting
the trick that had been played him, put up the box,
and arrived with it in Dublin, in September, 1558.
Anxious to accomplish the intentions
of his "pious" mistress, he immediately waited upon
Lord Fitz-Walter, at that time viceroy, and presented
the box to him; which being opened, nothing was
found in it but a pack of cards. This startling
all the persons present, his lordship said, "We
must procure another commission; and in the meantime
let us shuffle the cards."
Dr. Pole, however, would have directly
returned to England to get another commission; but
waiting for a favorable wind, news arrived that
Queen Mary was dead, and by this means the Protestants
escaped a most cruel persecution. The above relation
as we before observed, is confirmed by historians
of the greatest credit, who add, that Queen Elizabeth
settled a pension of forty pounds per annum upon
the above mentioned Elizabeth Edmunds, for having
thus saved the lives of her Protestant subjects.
During the reigns of Elizabeth and
James I, Ireland was almost constantly agitated
by rebellions and insurrections, which, although
not always taking their rise from the difference
of religious opinions, between the English and Irish,
were aggravated and rendered more bitter and irreconcilable
from that cause. The popish priests artfully exaggerated
the faults of the English government, and continually
urged to their ignorant and prejudiced hearers the
lawfulness of killing the Protestants, assuring
them that all Catholics who were slain in the prosecution
of so pious an enterprise, would be immediately
received into everlasting felicity. The naturally
ungovernable dispositions of the Irish, acted upon
by these designing men, drove them into continual
acts of barbarous and unjustifiable violence; and
it must be confessed that the unsettled and arbitrary
nature of the authority exercised by the English
governors, was but little calculated to gain their
affections. The Spaniards, too, by landing forces
in the south, and giving every encouragement to
the discontented natives to join their standard,
kept the island in a continual state of turbulence
and warfare. In 1601, they disembarked a body of
four thousand men at Kinsale, and commenced what
they called "the Holy War for the preservation of
the faith in Ireland;" they were assisted by great
numbers of the Irish, but were at length totally
defeated by the deputy, Lord Mountjoy, and his officers.
This closed the transactions of Elizabeth's
reign with respect to Ireland; an interval of apparent
tranquillity followed, but the popish priesthood,
ever restless and designing, sought to undermine
by secret machinations that government and that
faith which they durst no longer openly attack.
The pacific reign of James afforded them the opportunity
of increasing their strength and maturing their
schemes, and under his successor, Charles I, their
numbers were greatly increased by titular Romish
archbishops, bishops, deans, vicars-general, abbots,
priests, and friars; for which reason, in 1629,
the public exercise of the popish rites and ceremonies
was forbidden.
But notwithstanding this, soon afterwards,
the Romish clergy erected a new popish university
in the city of Dublin. They also proceeded to build
monasteries and nunneries in various parts of the
kingdom; in which places these very Romish clergy,
and the chiefs of the Irish, held frequent meetings;
and from thence, used to pass to and fro, to France,
Spain, Flanders, Lorraine, and Rome; where the detestable
plot of 1641 was hatching by the family of the O'Neals
and their followers.
A short time before the horrid conspiracy
broke out, which we are now going to relate, the
papists in Ireland had presented a remonstrance
to the lords-justice of that kingdom, demanding
the free exercise of their religion, and a repeal
of all laws to the contrary; to which both houses
of parliament in England solemnly answered that
they would never grant any toleration to the popish
religion in that kingdom.
This further irritated the papists
to put in execution the diabolical plot concerted
for the destruction of the Protestants; and it failed
not of the success wished for by its malicious and
rancorous projectors.
The design of this horrid conspiracy
was that a general insurrection should take place
at the same time throughout the kingdom, and that
all the Protestants, without exception, should be
murdered. The day fixed for this horrid massacre,
was the twenty-third of October, 1641, the feast
of Ignatius Loyola, founder of the Jesuits; and
the chief conspirators in the principal parts of
the kingdom made the necessary preparations for
the intended conflict.
In order that this detested scheme
might the more infallibly succeed, the most distinguished
artifices were practiced by the papists; and their
behavior in their visits to the Protestants, at
this time, was with more seeming kindness than they
had hitherto shown, which was done the more completely
to effect the inhuman and treacherous designs then
meditating against them.
The execution of this savage conspiracy
was delayed until the approach of winter, that sending
troops from England might be attended with greater
difficulty. Cardinal Richelieu, the French minister,
had promised the conspirators a considerable supply
of men and money; and many Irish officers had given
the strongest assurances that they would heartily
concur with their Catholic brethren, as soon as
the insurrection took place.
The day preceding that appointed for
carrying this horrid design into execution was now
arrived, when, happily, for the metropolis of the
kingdom, the conspiracy was discovered by one Owen
O'Connelly, an Irishman, for which most signal service
the English Parliament voted him 500 pounds and
a pension of 200 pounds during his life.
So very seasonably was this plot discovered,
even but a few hours before the city and castle
of Dublin were to have been surprised, that the
lords-justice had but just time to put themselves,
and the city, in a proper posture of defence. Lord
M'Guire, who was the principal leader here, with
his accomplices, was seized the same evening in
the city; and in their lodgings were found swords,
hatchets, pole-axes, hammers, and such other instruments
of death as had been prepared for the destruction
and extirpation of the Protestants in that part
of the kingdom.
Thus was the metropolic happily preserved;
but the bloody part of the intended tragedy was
past prevention. The conspirators were in arms all
over the kingdom early in the morning of the day
appointed, and every Protestant who fell in their
way was immediately murdered. No age, no sex, no
condition, was spared. The wife weeping for her
butchered husband, and embracing her helpless children,
was pierced with them, and perished by the same
stroke. The old, the young, the vigorous, and the
infirm, underwent the same fate, and were blended
in one common ruin. In vain did flight save from
the first assault, destruction was everywhere let
loose, and met the hunted victims at every turn.
In vain was recourse had to relations, to companions,
to friends; all connections were dissolved; and
death was dealt by that hand from which protection
was implored and expected. Without provocation,
without opposition, the astonished English, living
in profound peace, and, as they thought, full security,
were massacred by their nearest neighbors, with
whom they had long maintained a continued intercourse
of kindness and good offices. Nay, even death was
the slightest punishment inflicted by these monsters
in human form; all the tortures which wanton cruelty
could invent, all the lingering pains of body, the
anguish of mind, the agonies of despair, could not
satiate revenge excited without injury, and cruelly
derived from no just cause whatever. Depraved nature,
even perverted religion, though encouraged by the
utmost license, cannot reach to a greater pitch
of ferocity than appeared in these merciless barbarians.
Even the weaker sex themselves, naturally tender
to their own sufferings, and compassionate to those
of others, have emulated their robust companions
in the practice of every cruelty. The very children,
taught by example and encouraged by the exhortation
of their parents, dealt their feeble blows on the
dead carcasses of the defenceless children of the
English.
Nor was the avarice of the Irish sufficient
to produce the least restraint on their cruelty.
Such was their frenzy, that the cattle they had
seized, and by repine had made their own, were,
because they bore the name of English, wontonly
slaughtered, or, when covered with wounds, turned
loose into the woods, there to perish by slow and
lingering torments.
The commodious habitations of the
planters were laid in ashes, or levelled with the
ground. And where the wretched owners had shut themselves
up in the houses, and were preparing for defence,
they perished in the flames together with their
wives and children.
Such is the general description of
this unparalleled massacre; but it now remains,
from the nature of our work, that we proceed to
particulars.
The bigoted and merciless papists
had no sooner begun to imbrue their hands in blood
than they repeated the horrid tragedy day after
day, and the Protestants in all parts of the kingdom
fell victims to their fury by deaths of the most
unheard-of cruelty.
The ignorant Irish were more strongly
instigated to execute the infernal business by the
Jesuits, priests, and friars, who, when the day
for the execution of the plot was agreed on, recommended
in their prayers, diligence in the great design,
which they said would greatly tend to the prosperity
of the kingdom, and to the advancement of the Catholic
cause. They everywhere declared to the common people,
that the Protestants were heretics, and ought not
to be suffered to live any longer among them; adding
that it was no more sin to kill an Englishman than
to kill a dog; and that the relieving or protecting
them was a crime of the most unpardonable nature.
The papists having besieged the town
and castle of Longford, and the inhabitants of the
latter, who were Protestants, surrendering on condition
of being allowed quarter, the besiegers, the instant
the townspeople appeared, attacked them in a most
unmerciful manner, their priest, as a signal for
the rest to fall on, first ripping open the belly
of the English Protestant minister; after which
his followers murdered all the rest, some of whom
they hanged, others were stabbed or shot, and great
numbers knocked on the head with axes provided for
the purpose.
The garrison at Sligo was treated
in like manner by O'Connor Slygah; who, upon the
Protestants quitting their holds, promised them
quarter, and to convey them safe over the Curlew
mountains, to Roscommon. But he first imprisoned
them in a most loathsome jail, allowing them only
grains for their food. Afterward, when some papists
were merry over their cups, who were come to congratulate
their wicked brethren for their victory over these
unhappy creatures, those Protestants who survived
were brought forth by the White-firars, and were
either killed, or precipitated over the bridge into
a swift river, where they were soon destroyed. It
is added, that this wicked company of White-friars
went, some time after, in solemn procession, with
holy water in their hands, to sprinkle the river;
on pretence of cleansing and purifying it from the
stains and pollution of the blood and dead bodies
of the heretics, as they called the unfortunate
Protestants who were inhumanly slaughtered at this
very time.
At Kilmore, Dr. Bedell, bishop of
that see, had charitably settled and supported a
great number of distressed Protestants, who had
fled from their habitations to escape the diabolical
cruelties committed by the papists. But they did
not long enjoy the consolation of living together;
the good prelate was forcibly dragged from his episcopal
residence, which was immediately occupied by Dr.
Swiney, the popish titular bishop of Kilmore, who
said Mass in the church the Sunday following, and
then seized on all the goods and effects belonging
to the persecuted bishop.
Soon after this, the papists forced
Dr. Bedell, his two sons, and the rest of his family,
with some of the chief of the Protestants whom he
had protected, into a ruinous castle, called Lochwater,
situated in a lake near the sea. Here he remained
with his companions some weeks, all of them daily
expecting to be put to death. The greatest part
of them were stripped naked, by which means, as
the season was cold, (it being in the month of December)
and the building in which they were confined open
at the top, they suffered the most severe hardships.
They continued in this situation until the seventh
of January, when they were all released. The bishop
was courteously received into the house of Dennis
O'Sheridan, one of his clergy, whom he had made
a convert to the Church of England; but he did not
long survive this kindness. During his residence
here, he spent the whole of his time in religious
exercises, the better to fit and prepare himself
and his sorrowful companions for their great change,
as nothing but certain death was perpetually before
their eyes. He was at this time in the seventy-first
year of his age, and being afflicted with a violent
ague caught in his late cold and desolate habitation
on the lake, it soon threw him into a fever of the
most dangerous nature. Finding his dissolution at
hand, he received it with joy, like one of the primitive
martyrs just hastening to his crown of glory. After
having addressed his little flock, and exhorted
them to patience, in the most pathetic manner, as
they saw their own last day approaching, after having
solemnly blessed his people, his family, and his
children, he finished the course of his ministry
and life together, on the seventh day of February
1642.
His friends and relations applied
to the intruding bishop for leave to bury him, which
was with difficulty obtained; he, at first telling
them that the churchyard was holy ground, and should
be no longer defiled with heretics: however, leave
was at last granted, and though the church funeral
service was not used at the solemnity, (for fear
of the Irish papists) yet some of the better sort,
who had the highest veneration for him while living,
attended his remains to the grave. At this interment
they discharged a volley of shot, crying out, Requiescat
in pace ultimus Anglorum, that is, "May the last
of the English rest in peace." Adding, that as he
was one of the best so he should be the last English
bishop found among them. His learning was very extensive;
and he would have given the world a greater proof
of it, had he printed all he wrote. Scarce any of
his writings were saved; the papists having destroyed
most of his papers and his library. He had gathered
a vast heap of critical expositions of Scripture,
all which with a great trunk full of his manuscripts,
fell into the hands of the Irish. Happily his great
Hebrew manuscript was preserved, and is now in the
library of Emanuel College, Oxford.
In the barony of Terawley, the papists,
at the instigation of the friars, compelled above
forty English Protestants, some of whom were women
and children, to the hard fate of either falling
by the sword, or of drowning in the sea. These choosing
the latter, were accordingly forced, by the naked
weapons of their inexorable persecutors, into the
deep, where, with their children in their arms,
they first waded up to their chins, and afterwards
sunk down and perished together.
In the castle of Lisgool upwards of
one hundred and fifty men, women, and children,
were all burnt together; and at the castle of Moneah
not less than one hundred were all pput to the sword.
Great numbers were also murdered at the castle of
Tullah, which was delivered up to M'Guire on condition
of having fair quarter; but no sooner had that base
villain got possession of the place than he ordered
his followers to murder the people, which was immeidately
done with the greatest cruelty.
Many others were put to deaths of
the most horrid nature, and such as could have been
invented only by demons instead of men. Some of
them were laid with the center of their backs on
the axle-tree of a carriage, with their legs resting
on the ground on one side, and their arms and head
on the other. In this position, one of the savages
scourged the wretched object on the thighs, legs,
etc., while another set on furious dogs, who tore
to pieces the arms and upper parts of the body;
and in this dreadful manner were they deprived of
their existence. Great numbers were fastened to
horses' tails, and the beasts being set on full
gallop by their riders, the wretched victims were
dragged along until they expired. Others were hung
on lofty gibbets, and a fire being kindled under
them, they finished their lives, partly by hanging,
and partly by suffocation.
Nor did the more tender sex escape
the least particle of cruelty that could be projected
by their merciless and furious persecutors. Many
women, of all ages, were put to deaths of the most
cruel nature. Some, in particular, were fastened
with their backs to strong posts, and being stripped
to their waists, the inhuman monsters cut off their
right breasts with shears, which, of course, put
them to the most excruciating torments; and in this
position they were left, until, from the loss of
blood, they expired.
Such was the savage ferocity of these
barbarians, that even unborn infants were dragged
from the womb to become victims to their rage. Many
unhappy mothers were hung naked in the branches
of trees, and their bodies being cut open, the innocent
offsprings were taken from them, and thrown to dogs
and swine. And to increase the horrid scene, they
would oblige the husband to be a spectator before
suffering himself.
At the town of Issenskeath they hanged
above a hundred Scottish Protestants, showing them
no more mercy than they did to the English. M'Guire,
going to the castle of that town, desired to speak
with the governor, when being admitted, he immediately
burnt the records of the county, which were kept
there. He then demanded 1000 pounds of the governor,
which, having received, he immediately compelled
him to hear Mass. and to swear that he would continue
to do so. And to complete his horrid barbarities,
he ordered the wife and children of the governor
to be hanged before his face; besides massacring
at least one hundred of the inhabitants. Upwards
of one thousand men, women, and children, were driven,
in different companies, to Portadown bridge, which
was broken in the middle, and there compelled to
throw themselves into the water, and such as attempted
to reach the shore were knocked on the head.
In the same part of the country, at
least four thousand persons were drowned in different
places. The inhuman papists, after first stripping
them, drove them like beasts to the spot fixed on
for their destruction; and if any, through fatigue,
or natural infirmities, were slack in their pace,
they pricked them with their swords and pikes; and
to strike terror on the multitude, they murdered
some by the way. Many of these poor wretches, when
thrown into the water, endeavored to save themselves
by swimming to the shore but their merciless persecutors
prevented their endeavors taking effect, by shooting
them in the water.
In one place one hundred and forty
English, after being driven for many miles stark
naked, and in the most severe weather, were all
murdered on the same spot, some being hanged, others
burnt, some shot, and many of them buried alive;
and so cruel were their tormentors that they would
not suffer them to pray before they robbed them
of their miserable existence.
Other companies they took under pretence
of safe conduct, who, from that consideration, proceeded
cheerfully on their journey; but when the treacherous
papists had got them to a convenient spot, they
butchered them all in the most cruel manner.
One hundred and fifteen men, women,
and children, were conducted, by order of Sir Phelim
O'Neal, to Portadown bridge, where they were all
forced into the river, and drowned. One woman, named
Campbell, finding no probability of escaping, suddenly
clasped one of the chief of the papists in her arms,
and held him so fast that they were both drowned
together.
In Killyman they massacred forty-eight
families, among whom twenty-two were burnt together
in one house. The rest were either hanged, shot,
or drowned.
In Kilmore, the inhabitants, which
consisted of about two hundred families, all fell
victims to their rage. Some of them sat in the stocks
until they confessed where their money was; after
which they put them to death. The whole county was
one common scene of butchery, and many thousands
perished, in a short time, by sword, famine, fire,
water, and others the most cruel deaths, that rage
and malice could invent.
These bloody villains showed so much
favor to some as to despatch them immediately; but
they would by no means suffer them to pray. Others
they imprisoned in filthy dungeons, putting heavy
bolts on their legs, and keeping them there until
they were starved to death.
At Casel they put all the Protestants
into a loathsome dungeon, where they kept them together,
for several weeks, in the greatest misery. At length
they were released, when some of them were barbarously
mangled, and left on the highways to perish at leisure;
others were hanged, and some were buried in the
ground upright, with their heads above the earth,
and the papists, to increase their misery, treating
them with derision during their sufferings. In the
county of Antrim they murdered nine hundred and
fifty-four Protestants in one morning; and afterwards
about twelve hundred more in that county.
At a town called Lisnegary, they forced
twenty-four Protestants into a house, and then setting
fire to it, burned them together, counterfeiting
their outcries in derision to the others.
Among other acts of cruelty they took
two children belonging to an Englishwoman, and dashed
out their brains before her face; after which they
threw the mother into a river, and she was drowned.
They served many other children in the like manner,
to the great affliction of their parents, and the
disgrace of human nature.
In Kilkenny all the Protestants, without
exception, were put to death; and some of them in
so cruel a manner, as, perhaps, was never before
thought of.
They beat an Englishwoman with such
savage barbarity, that she had scarce a whole bone
left; after which they threw her into a ditch; but
not satisfied with this, they took her child, a
girl about six years of age, and after ripping up
its belly, threw it to its mother, there to languish
until it perished. They forced one man to go to
Mass, after which they ripped open his body, and
in that manner left him. They sawed another asunder,
cut the throat of his wife, and after having dashed
out the brains of their child, an infant, threw
it to the swine, who greedily devoured it.
After committing these, and several
other horrid cruelties, they took the heads of seven
Protestants, and among them that of a pious minister,
all of which they fixed up at the market cross.
They put a gag into the minister's mouth, then slit
his cheeks to his ears, and laying a leaf of a Bible
before it, bid him preach, for his mouth was wide
enough. They did several other things by way of
derision, and expressed the greatest satisfaction
at having thus murdered and exposed the unhappy
Protestants.
It is impossible to conceive the pleasure
these monsters took in excercising their cruelty,
and to increase the misery of those who fell into
their hands, when they butchered them they would
say, "Your soul to the devil." One of these miscreants
would come into a house with his hands imbued in
blood, and boast that it was English blood, and
that his sword had pricked the white skins of the
Protestants, even to the hilt. When any one of them
had killed a Protestant, others would come and receive
a gratification in cutting and mangling the body;
after which they left it exposed to be devoured
by dogs; and when they had slain a number of them
they would boast, that the devil was beholden to
them for sending so many souls to hell. But it is
no wonder they should thus treat the innocent Christians,
when they hesitated not to commit blasphemy against
God and His most holy Word.
In one place they burnt two Protestant
Bibles, and then said they had burnt hell-fire.
In the church at Powerscourt they burnt the pulpit,
pews, chests, and Bibles belonging to it. They took
other Bibles, and after wetting them with dirty
water, dashed them in the faces of the Protestants,
saying, "We know you love a good lesson; here is
an excellent one for you; come to-morrow, and you
shall have as good a sermon as this."
Some of the Protestants they dragged
by the hair of their heads into the church, where
they stripped and whipped them in the most cruel
manner, telling them, at the same time, that if
they came tomorrow, they should hear the like sermon.
In Munster they put to death several
ministers in the most shocking manner. One, in particular,
they stripped stark naked, and driving him before
them, pricked him with swords and darts until he
fell down, and expired.
In some places they plucked out the
eyes, and cut off the hands of the Protestants,
and in that manner turned them into the fields,
there to wander out their miserable existence. They
obliged many young men to force their aged parents
to a river, where they were drowned; wives to assist
in hanging their husbands; and mothers to cut the
throats of their children.
In one place they compelled a young
man to kill his father, and then immediately hanged
him. In another they forced a woman to kill her
husband, then obliged the son to kill her, and afterward
shot him through the head.
At a place called Glaslow, a popish
priest, with some others, prevailed on forty Protestants
to be reconciled to the Church of Rome. They had
no sooner done this than they told them they were
in good faith, and that they would prevent their
falling from it, and turning heretics, by sending
them out of the world, which they did by immediately
cutting their throats.
In the county of Tipperary upwards
of thirty Protestants, men, women, and children,
fell into the hands of the papists, who, after stripping
them naked, murdered them with stones, pole-axes,
swords, and other weapons.
In the county of Mayo about sixty
Protestants, fifteen of whom were ministers, were,
upon covenant, to be safely conducted to Galway,
by one Edmund Burke and his soldiers; but that inhuman
monster by the way drew his sword, as an intimation
of his design to the rest, who immediately followed
his example, and murdered the whole, some of whom
they stabbed, others were run through the body with
pikes, and several were drowned.
In Queen's County great numbers of
Protestants were put to the most shocking deaths.
Fifty or sixty were placed together in one house,
which being set on fire, they all perished in the
flames. Many were stripped naked, and being fastened
to horses by ropes placed round their middles, were
dragged through bogs until they expired. Some were
hung by the feet to tenterhooks driven into poles;
and in that wretched posture left until they perished.
Others were fastened to the trunk of a tree, with
a branch at top. Over this branch hung one arm,
which principally supported the weight of the body;
and one of the legs was turned up, and fastened
to the trunk, while the other hung straight. In
this dreadful and uneasy posture did they remain
as long as life would permit, pleasing spectacles
to their bloodthirsty persecutors.
At Clownes seventeen men were buried
alive; and an Englishman, his wife, five children,
and a servant maid, were all hanged together, and
afterward thrown into a ditch. They hung many by
the arms to branches of trees, with a weight to
their feet; and others by the middle, in which posture
they left them until they expired. Several were
hanged on windmills, and before they were half dead,
the barbarians cut them in pieces with their swords.
Others, both men, women, and children, they cut
and hacked in various parts of their bodies, and
left them wallowing in their blood to perish where
they fell. One poor woman they hanged on a gibbet,
with her child, an infant about a twelve-month old,
the latter of whom was hanged by the neck with the
hair of its mother's head, and in that manner finished
its short but miserable existence.
In the county of Tyrone no less than
three hundred Protestants were drowned in one day;
and many others were hanged, burned, and otherwise
put to death. Dr. Maxwell, rector of Tyrone, lived
at this time near Armagh, and suffered greatly from
these merciless savages. This person, in his examination,
taken upon oath before the king's commissioners,
declared that the Irish papists owned to him, that
they, at several times, had destroyed, in one place,
12,000 Protestants, whom they inhumanly slaughtered
at Glynwood, in their flight from the county of
Armagh.
As the river Bann was not fordable,
and the bridge broken down, the Irish forced thither
at different times, a great number of unarmed, defenceless
Protestants, and with pikes and swords violently
thrust about one thousand into the river, where
they miserably perished.
Nor did the cathedral of Armagh escape
the fury of those barbarians, it being maliciously
set on fire by their leaders, and burnt to the ground.
And to extirpate, if possible, the very race of
those unhappy Protestants, who lived in or near
Armagh, the Irish first burnt all their houses,
and then gathered together many hundreds of those
innocent people, young and old, on pretence of allowing
them a guard and safe conduct to Colerain, when
they treacherously fell on them by the way, and
inhumanly murdered them.
The like horrid barbarities with those
we have particularized, were practiced on the wretched
Protestants in almost all parts of the kingdom;
and, when an estimate was afterward made of the
number who were sacrificed to gratify diabolical
souls of the papists, it amounted to one hundred
and fifty thousand. But it now remains that we proceed
to the particulars that followed.
These desperate wretches, flushed
and grown insolent with success, (though by methods
attended with such excessive barbarities as perhaps
not to be equalled) soon got possession of the castle
of Newry, where the king's stores and ammunition
were lodged; and, with as little difficulty, made
themselves masters of Dundalk. They afterward took
the town of Ardee, where they murdered all the Protestants,
and then proceeded to Drogheda. The garrison of
Drogheda was in no condition to sustain a siege,
notwithstanding which, as often as the Irish renewed
their attacks they were vigorously repulsed by a
very unequal number of the king's forces, and a
few faithful Protestant citizens under Sir Henry
Tichborne, the governor, assisted by the Lord Viscount
Moore. The siege of Drogheda began on the thirtieth
of November, 1641, and held until the fourth of
March, 1642, when Sir Phelim O'Neal, and the Irish
miscreants under him were forced to retire.
In the meantime ten thousand troops
were sent from Scotland to the remaining Protestants
in Ireland, which being properly divided in the
most capital parts of the kingdom, happily exclipsed
the power of the Irish savages; and the Protestants
for a time lived in tranquillity.
In the reign of King James II they
were again interrupted, for in a parliament held
at Dublin in the year 1689, great numbers of the
Protestant nobility, clergy, and gentry of Ireland,
were attainted of high treason. The government of
the kingdom was, at that time, invested in the earl
of Tyrconnel, a bigoted papist, and an inveterate
enemy to the Protestants. By his orders they were
again persecuted in various parts of the kingdom.
The revenues of the city of Dublin were seized,
and most of the churches converted into prisons.
And had it not been for the resolution and uncommon
bravery of the garrisons in the city of Londonderry,
and the town of Inniskillin, there had not one place
remained for refuge to the distressed Protestants
in the whole kingdom; but all must have been given
up to King James, and to the furious popish party
that governed him.
The remarkable siege of Londonderry
was opened on the eighteenth of April, 1689, by
twenty thousand papists, the flower of the Irish
army. The city was not properly circumstanced to
sustain a siege, the defenders consisting of a body
of raw undisciplined Protestants, who had fled thither
for shelter, and half a regiment of Lord Mountjoy's
disciplined soldiers, with the principal part of
the inhabitants, making it all only seven thousand
three hundred and sixty-one fighting men.
The besieged hoped, at first, that
their stores of corn and other necessaries, would
be sufficient; but by the continuance of the siege
their wants increased; and these became at last
so heavy that for a considerable time before the
siege was raised a pint of coarse barley, a small
quantity of greens, a few spoonfuls of starch, with
a very moderate proportion of horse flesh, were
reckoned a week's provision for a soldier. And they
were, at length, reduced to such extremities that
they ate dogs, cats, and mice.
Their miseries increasing with the
siege, many, through mere hunger and want, pined
and languished away, or fell dead in the streets.
And it is remarkable, that when their long-expected
succors arrived from England, they were upon the
point of being reduced to this alternative, either
to preserve their existence by eating each other,
or attempting to fight their way through the Irish,
which must have infallibly produced their destruction.
These succors were most happily brought
by the ship Mountjoy of Derry, and the Phoenix of
Colerain, at which time they had only nine lean
horses left with a pint of meal to each man. By
hunger, and the fatigues of war, their seven thousand
three hundred and sixty-one fighting men were reduced
to four thousand three hundred, one fourth part
of whom were rendered unserviceable.
As the calamities of the besieged
were great, so likewise were the terrors and sufferings
of their Protestant friends and relations; all of
whom (even women and children) were forcibly driven
from the country thirty miles round, and inhumanly
reduced to the sad necessity of continuing some
days and nights without food or covering, before
the walls of the town; and were thus exposed to
the continual fire both of the Irish army from without
and the shot of their friends from within.
But the succors from England happily
arriving put an end to their affliction; and the
siege was raised on the thirty-first of July, having
been continued upwards of three months.
The day before the siege of Londonderry
was raised the Inniskillers engaged a body of six
thousand Irish Roman Catholics, at Newton, Butler,
or Crown-Castle, of whom near five thousand were
slain. This, with the defeat at Londonderry, dispirited
the papists, and they gave up all farther attempts
to persecute the Protestants.
The year following, viz. 1690, the
Irish took up arms in favor of the abdicated prince,
King James II but they were totally defeated by
his successor King William the Third. That monarch,
before he left the country, reduced them to a state
of subjection, in which they have ever since continued.
But notwithstanding all this, the
Protestant interest at present stands upon a much
stronger basis than it did a century ago. The Irish,
who formerly led an unsettled and roving life, in
the woods, bogs, and mountains, and lived on the
depredation of their neighbors, they who, in the
morning seized the prey, and at night divided the
spoil, have, for many years past, become quiet and
civilized. They taste the sweets of English society,
and the advantages of civil government. They trade
in our cities, and are employed in our manufactories.
They are received also into English families; and
treated with great humanity by the Protestants.
Chapter XVIII
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