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Poems / 12 a penny
IE CA CP/3/18/46 · Item · 1911
Part of Irish Capuchin Archives

D.L. Kelleher, ‘Poems / 12 a penny’ ([Liverpool: Printed at “The Liverpool Courier” printing-works, for the author, 1911]).

Poems
IE CA DL/7/21 · File · c.1995
Part of Irish Capuchin Archives

Two poems by Eddie McClafferty titled ‘Doe Chapel’ and ‘The Sand Eel Strand on Sheephaven Bay’.

Poem on Ard Mhuire
IE CA DL/7/10 · Item · Feb. 1936
Part of Irish Capuchin Archives

Transcript of a poem titled ‘Ard Mhuire’ by Peter Kelly published in 'Ireland’s Own', 20 Feb. 1936, at p. 17. The poem refers to the presence of the Capuchin friars in Donegal.

Poem for Frances Woodlock
IE CA CP/3/7/1/9 · Part · 12 June 1877
Part of Irish Capuchin Archives

A poem written by William Woodlock (1801-1803) for his grand-daughter Frances Woodlock 'on receiving from her a lock of her hair'. The poem is dated 12 June 1877 at Bruges, Belgium. This William Woodlock was the father of William Woodlock (1832-1890), the barrister and Dublin Police Court Magistrate.

Poem by William Allingham
IE CA CP/3/21/32 · Item · 1 Oct. 1849
Part of Irish Capuchin Archives

A poem by William Allingham titled ‘The Frightful Child of Ballyshannon’ and dated 1 October 1849. As noted in Allingham’s introduction, the poem refers to a story that a ghostly apparition (taking the form of a child) haunted Robert Stewart, better known as Lord Castlereagh (1769-1822), a leading Anglo-Irish statesman and politician, probably best remembered for his role in suppressing the 1798 Rebellion and in securing the passage of the Act of Union in 1800.

The verse recounts a local tradition that Stewart was visited by the spectre while inspecting a military barracks in Ballyshannon in County Donegal. Allingham suggests that Stewart was subject to an ‘unusual gloom and melancholy for a period after the spectral visit’. Stewart was known to be susceptible to paranoia and later severe mental health problems. It is likely that Allingham’s poem was also influenced by the fact that Stewart was a widely reviled figure in Ireland.

The last stanza of Allingham’s poem reads:

Then, through the Holy Island still
Were nests of goblins left, to fill
Each mouldy nook & corner close,
Like spiders in an ancient house:
And this one read within the face
Intruding on it’s dwelling-place,
Lines of woe, despair, & blood;
By Spirits only understood;
As mortals now can read the same
In the letters of his name
Who in that haunted chamber lay,
When we call him — Castlereagh.

Poem by Thomas Ashe
IE CA CP/3/17/9/1 · Part · 1917
Part of Irish Capuchin Archives

A leaflet with the text of a poem written by Thoams Ashe while in Lewes Prison. Printed by Curtis, 12 Temple Lane, Dublin.