PREFACE.
The following dramatic romance consists of two acts, with an interval of five years between them. The time and action of the first part, the scene of which is placed in the south of Ireland, are comprised in something less than three days; that of the second, the scenes of which are laid in New-York Bay and on its adjacent shores, embraces a somewhat longer space of time, the two comprising the most prominent crises of the hero's life—one giving the colouring to the whole of his subsequent career, which in the other is brought to its close.
Natchez, Miss., Jan., 1839.
BOOK I.
THE CAUSE.
"A lady should not scorn
One soul that loves her, howe'er lowly it be."
Barry Cornwall.
"'Twere idle to remember now,
Had I the heart, my thwarted schemes.
I bear beneath this alter'd brow
The ashes of a thousand dreams—
Some wrought of wild Ambition's fingers,
Some colour'd of Love's pencil well—
Ambition has but foil'd my grasp,
And Love has perish'd in my clasp."