Reminiscences of Daniel O'Connell

Reminiscences of Daniel O'Connell

Author: William Cooke Taylor

Publisher:

Published: 2005

Total Pages: 172

ISBN-13:

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"This 'instant life' of Daniel O'Connell, written within weeks of his death, synthesises personal observation and contemporary literature to describe the Liberator's career from a liberal Irish Protestant perspective. Taylor shows personal sympathy for O'Connell as leader of a downtrodden people, but sees his talents as distorted by oppression and by a conservative upbringing and concludes that his abusive and truculent oratory did as much to retard Catholic Emancipation as his tactical leadership did to advance it. Taylor's critique, and its limitations, provide valuable insights on the ambivalent and mistrustful alliance between O'Connell and the Whig Party." "This edition also includes Taylor's Atheaeum article on 'Repeal Songs of Munster', a wry look at O'Connellite street ballads and Young Ireland patriotic verse from a Whig-Unionist perspective, and a controversial review of Carleton's Famine novel, The Black Prophet, in which Taylor defends the Whig free-market approach to Famine relief."--BOOK JACKET.