In the Irish Brigade eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 460 pages of information about In the Irish Brigade.

In the Irish Brigade eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 460 pages of information about In the Irish Brigade.

“And now, sir, please to give me an outline of your case, as to the nature of which I am, at present, entirely ignorant.”

“I have put it down in writing, sir,” Gerald said, handing him the third copy of his statement.

“It will take me some time to read this, Mr. O’Carroll, and I would rather do so alone, and ask you any question that may occur to me afterwards.  Will you therefore call upon me again, in an hour’s time?”

Upon Gerald’s return, the counsellor said: 

“It is a strange story, Mr. O’Carroll, and a very disgraceful one.  You allude, I see, to testimonies of Irish officers in the French service as to your likeness to the late Mr. James O’Carroll.  Will you please let me see them?”

“Here they are, sir, together with a sworn statement by my nurse.”

The lawyer read the documents through carefully.

“The testimony of the Duke of Berwick, and of the other honourable and well-known Irish gentlemen, as to the striking likeness between yourself and Mr. James O’Carroll, cannot but carry immense weight in the minds of all unprejudiced persons.  They prove too, conclusively, that James O’Carroll left an infant boy behind him, and the statement of the nurse goes a long way to prove you are that son; and I think that this is substantiated by the conduct of John O’Carroll; first in receiving you and undertaking your care; secondly, in the neglect, and I should almost say the dislike, he manifested towards the child he had sheltered; and thirdly, in the extraordinary step that he, a professedly loyal subject of Her Majesty, took in sending you off to enlist in the brigade composed of the devoted adherents of the son of James the Second.

“No doubt, at any rate, can arise that you are the child brought by this Mrs. Rooney to Kilkargan.  That can be proved beyond all question; and the fact that your nurse was sent off without having any conversation save with John O’Carroll himself, would show how anxious he was that no one but himself should know her errand.

“I must say that you have shown great acumen in mustering evidence, of all kinds, that would bear upon the question.  I say frankly that, without this royal rescript, and the influence of these two noblemen, your chance, as James O’Carroll’s son, of wresting your patrimony from the hands of your uncle would be small indeed.  Politics have, much more than facts, to do with decisions here; but with such powerful credentials, and with the chief minister of England interfering on your behalf, I think that there is no great doubt that you will secure a judgment in your favour.  When the facts are known, the feeling of the greater portion of the population will run strongly with you, and against this unnatural uncle of yours.”

“I should be desirous, if possible, sir, of avoiding a public trial that would bring discredit upon the name of my family, and would, in the eyes of the supporters of the present Government, act prejudicially to myself.”

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In the Irish Brigade from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.