Jack Hinton: The Guardsman - Charles James Lever

Jack Hinton: The Guardsman

Very few words of preface will suffice to the volume now presented to my readers. My intention was to depict, in the early experiences of a young Englishman in Ireland, some of the almost inevitable mistakes incidental to such a character. I had so often myself listened to so many absurd and exaggerated opinions on Irish character, formed on the very slightest acquaintance with the country, and by persons, too, who, with all the advantages long intimacy might confer, would still have been totally inadequate to the task of a rightful appreciation, that I deemed the subject one where a little “reprisal” might be justifiable.
Scarcely, however, had I entered upon my story, than I strayed from the path I had determined on, and, with very little reference to my original intention, suffered Jack Hinton to “take his chance amongst the natives,” and with far too much occupation on his hands to give time for reflecting over their peculiarities, or recording their singular traits, I threw him into the society of the capital, under the vice-royalty of a celebrated Duke, all whose wayward eccentricities were less marked than the manly generosity and genuine honesty of his character. I introduced him into a set where, whatever purely English readers may opine, I have wonderfully little exaggerated; and I led him down to the West to meet adventures which every newspaper, some twenty-five years ago, would show were by no means extravagant or strange.
As for the characters of the story, there is not one for which I did not take a “real sitter;” at the same time, I have never heard one single correct guess as to the types that afforded them. To Mrs. Paul Rooney, Father Tom Loftus, Bob Mahon, O'Grady, Tipperary Joe, and even Corny himself, I have scarcely added a touch which nature has not given them, while assuredly I have failed to impart many a fine and delicate tint far above the “reach of—' my —art,” and which might have presented them in stronger light and shadow than I have dared to attempt. Had I desired to caricature English ignorance as to Ireland in the person of my Guardsman, nothing would have been easier; but I preferred merely exposing him to such errors as might throw into stronger relief the peculiarities of Irishmen, and, while offering something to laugh at, give no offence to either. The volume amused me while I was writing it,—less, perhaps, by what I recorded, than what I abstained from inditing; at all events, it was the work of some of the pleasantest hours of my life, and if it can ever impart to any of my readers a portion of the amusement some of the real characters afforded myself, it will not be all a failure. That it may succeed so far is the hope of the reader's

Charles James Lever
Содержание

JACK HINTON,


THE GUARDSMAN.


PREFACE.


JACK HINTON, THE GUARDSMAN


CHAPTER I. A FAMILY PARTY


CHAPTER II. THE IRISH PACKET


CHAPTER III. THE CASTLE


CHAPTER IV. THE BREAKFAST


CHAPTER V. THE REVIEW IN THE PHOENIX


CHAPTER VI. THE SHAM BATTLE


CHAPTER VII. THE ROONEYS.


CHAPTER VIII. THE VISIT


CHAPTER IX. THE BALL


CHAPTER X. A FINALE TO AN EVENING


CHAPTER XI. A NEGOTIATION


CHAPTER XII. A WAGER


CHAPTER XIII. A NIGHT OF TROUBLE


CHAPTER XIV. THE PARTING


CHAPTER XV. THE LETTER FROM HOME


CHAPTER XVI. A MORNING IN TOWN


CHAPTER XVII. AN EVENING IN TOWN


CHAPTER XVIII. A CONFIDENCE


CHAPTER XIX. THE CANAL-BOAT


CHAPTER XX. SHANNON HARBOUR


CHAPTER XXI. LOUGHREA


CHAPTER XXII. A MOONLIGHT CANTER


CHAPTER XXIII. MAJOR MAHON AND HIS QUARTERS


CHAPTER XXIV. THE DEVIL'S GRIP


CHAPTER XXV. THE STEEPLECHASE


CHAPTER XXVI. THE DINNER-PARTY AT MOUNT BROWN


CHAPTER XXVII. THE RACE BALL


CHAPTER XXVIII. THE INN FIRE


CHAPTER XXIX. THE DUEL


CHAPTER XXX. A COUNTRY DOCTOR


CHAPTER XXXI. THE LETTER-BAG


CHAPTER XXXII. BOB MAHON AND THE WIDOW


CHAPTER XXXIII. THE PRIEST'S GIG


CHAPTER XXXIV. THE MOUNTAIN PASS


CHAPTER XXXV. THE JOURNEY


CHAPTER XXXVI. MURRANAKILTY


CHAPTER XXXVII. SIR SIMON


CHAPTER XXXVIII. ST. SENAN'S WELL


CHAPTER XXXIX. AN UNLOOKED-FOR MEETING


CHAPTER XL. THE PRIEST'S KITCHEN


CHAPTER XLI. TIPPERARY JOE


CHAPTER XLII. THE HIGHROAD


CHAPTER XLIII. THE ASSIZE TOWN


CHAPTER XLIV. THE BAD DINNER


CHAPTER XLV. THE RETURN


CHAPTER XLVI. FAREWELL TO IRELAND


CHAPTER XLVII. LONDON


CHAPTER XLVIII. AN UNHAPPY DISCLOSURE


CHAPTER XLIX. THE HORSE GUARDS


CHAPTER L. THE RETREAT FROM BURGOS


CHAPTER LI. A MISHAP


CHAPTER LII. THE MARCH


CHAPTER LIII. VITTORIA


CHAPTER LIV. THE RETREAT


CHAPTER LV. THE FOUR-IN-HAND


CHAPTER LVI. ST. DENIS


CHAPTER LVII. PARIS IN 1814


CHAPTER LVIII THE RONI FÊTE


CHAPTER LIX. FRESCATI'S


CHAPTER LX. DISCLOSURES


CHAPTER LXI. NEW ARRIVALS


CHAPTER LXII. CONCLUSION

О книге

Язык

Английский

Год издания

2010-07-05

Темы

Soldiers -- Great Britain -- Fiction; Veterans -- Great Britain -- Fiction; Dublin (Ireland) -- Social life and customs -- 19th century -- Fiction; Ireland -- Social life and customs -- 19th century -- Fiction

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