The Glories of Ireland

A collection of essays on Ireland compiled by Joseph Dunn and PJ Lennox. As stated in the Preface to the books "...we have been forced to the conclusion that the performances of the Irish race in many fields of endeavor are entirely unknown to most people, and that even to the elect they are not nearly so well known as they deserve to be. Hence there came to us the thought of placing on record, in an accessible, comprehensive, and permanent form, an outline of the whole range of Irish achievement during the last two thousand years."


By : Joseph Dunn (1872 - 1951) and Patrick Joseph Lennox (1862 - 1943)

00 - Preface



01 - The Romance of Irish History



02 - The Islands of Saints and Scholars



03 - Irish Monks in Europe



04 - The Irish and the Sea



05 - Irish Love of Learning



06 - Irish Men of Science



07 - Law in Ireland



08 - Irish Music



09 - Irish Metal Work



10 - Irish Manuscripts



11 - The Ruins of Ireland



12 - Modern Irish Art



13 - Ireland at Play



14 - The Fighting Race, Part 1



15 - The Fighting Race, Part 2



16 - The Sorrows of Ireland



17 - Irish Leaders



18 - Irish Heroines



19 - Irish Nationality



20 - Famous Irish Societies



21 - The Irish in the United States, Part 1



22 - The Irish in the United States, Part 2



23 - The Irish in Canada



24 - The Irish in South America



25 - The Irish in Australasia



26 - The Irish in South Africa



27 - Irish Language and Letters



28 - Native Irish Poetry



29 - Irish Heroic Sagas



30 - Irish Precoursors of Dante



31 - Irish Influence on English Literature



32 - Irish Folklore



33 - Irish Wit and Humor



34 - The Irish Theatre



35 - Irish Journalists



36 - The Irish Literary Revival



37 - Irish Writers of English, Part 1



38 - Irish Writers of English, Part 2


We had at first intended that this should be a book without a preface, and indeed it needs none, for it speaks in no uncertain tones for itself; but on reconsideration we decided that it would be more seemly to give a short explanation of our aim, our motives, and our methods.

As a result of innumerable inquiries which have come to us during our experience as educators, we have been forced to the conclusion that the performances of the Irish race in many fields of endeavor are entirely unknown to most people, and that even to the elect they are not nearly so well known as they deserve to be. Hence there came to us the thought of placing on record, in an accessible, comprehensive, and permanent form, an outline of the whole range of Irish achievement during the last two thousand years.

In undertaking this task we had a twofold motive. In the first place, we wished to give to people of Irish birth or descent substantial reason for that pride of race which we know is in them, by placing in their hands an authoritative and unassailable array of facts as telling as any nation in the world can show. Our second motive was that henceforward he who seeks to ignore or belittle the part taken by men and women of Irish birth or blood in promoting the spread of religion, civilization, education, culture, and freedom should sin, not in ignorance, but against the light, and that from a thousand quarters at once champions armed with the panoply of knowledge should be able to spring to his confutation.

To carry out in a satisfactory manner over a field so immense our lawfully ambitious aim was, as we realized at the outset, not possible to any two men who are primarily engaged, as we are, in other work of an exacting nature. Therefore, to render feasible the execution of our undertaking, we decided to invite the collaboration of many scholars and specialists, each of whom could, out of the fullness of information, speak with authority on some particular phase of the general subject. We are glad to say that the eminent writers to whom we addressed ourselves answered with promptitude and alacrity to our call, and have supplied us with such a body of material as to enable us to bring out a book that is absolutely unique.

From each contributor we asked nothing but a plain verifiable statement of facts, and that, we think, is exactly what they have given us, for, while we do not make ourselves personally responsible for everything set down in the following pages, we believe that what stands written therein bears every mark of careful research and of absolute reliability.

Although on many of our subjects little more remains to be said than what appears in the text, yet the treatment on the whole does not claim to be exhaustive, and therefore each writer has, at our request, appended to his contribution a short and carefully selected bibliography, so that those who are interested may have a guide for further reading. For our part, we consider these lists of works of reference to be a highly useful feature.

It is a glorious thing for us, who are proud, one of us of his Irish descent and the other of his Irish birth, to think that the sons and daughters of mother Erin have so conspicuously distinguished themselves in such varied spheres of activity in every age and in so many lands, and that we were privileged to make public the record of their achievements in a form never before attempted.

We have other works in contemplation, and some actually in preparation, which will go far to strengthen the claims put forward in this book. In the meantime, we trust that the reception accorded to it will be such as to encourage us to persevere in making still better known the Glories of Ireland.

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