OLIVE LACEY: A TALE OF THE IRISH REBELLION OF 1798.
BYANNA ARGYLE,
AUTHOR OF "THE CECILIAS," "THE GENERAL'S DAUGHTER," ETC. "I too shall be gone; but my name shall be spoken When Erin awakes and her fetters are broken." CALLANAN.PHILADELPHIA: J. B. LIPPINCOTT & CO. 1874.
Entered, according to Act of Congress, in the year 1874, by J. B. LIPPINCOTT & CO., In the Office of the Librarian of Congress, at Washington.
CONTENTS.
- CHAPTER I. Early Scenes 7
- CHAPTER II. New Friends 14
- CHAPTER III. A Holiday 24
- CHAPTER IV. Adventures 30
- CHAPTER V. Old Acquaintance 48
- CHAPTER VI. A Leaf from Ireland's History 55
- CHAPTER VII. Life at Greyton Hall 61
- CHAPTER VIII. An Old Castle, and its Inmates 71
- CHAPTER IX. Youthful Patriotism 77
- CHAPTER X. The Signs of the Times—Lord Castlereagh 91
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- CHAPTER XI. A Lowly Revolutionist 108
- CHAPTER XII. The Return 124
- CHAPTER XIII. Love 144
- CHAPTER XIV. A Few Irish Celebrities 151
- CHAPTER XV. Old Lady Betty 162
- CHAPTER XVI. Festive Preparations 168
- CHAPTER XVII. The Young Heir 177
- CHAPTER XVIII. Gay Scenes in Dublin 194
- CHAPTER XIX. Florence 207
- CHAPTER XX. An Unexpected Invitation 218
- CHAPTER XXI. Mrs. Flanagan's Ball 226
- CHAPTER XXII. The Under-Current 236
- CHAPTER XXIII. After-Thoughts—Florence—Patrician and Plebeian 244
- CHAPTER XXIV. The Hiding-Place—The Flight for Life 256
- CHAPTER XXV. Arthur's Departure 267
- CHAPTER XXVI. Tried and Convicted 279
- CHAPTER XXVII. Afterward 296
- CHAPTER XXVIII. The Death of Florence 311
- CHAPTER XXIX. The Uprising 328
- CHAPTER XXX. War and Rumors of War 334
- CHAPTER XXXI. The Battle 341
- CHAPTER XXXII. Conclusion 357