by William Williams
University of Wisconsin Press, 2007
Cloth: 978-0-299-22520-9 | eISBN: 978-0-299-22523-0 | Paper: 978-0-299-22524-7
Library of Congress Classification DA969.W55 2008
Dewey Decimal Classification 914.15047

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ABOUT THIS BOOK

Picturesque but poor, abject yet sublime in its Gothic melancholy, the Ireland perceived by British visitors during the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries did not fit their ideas of progress, propriety, and Protestantism. The rituals of Irish Catholicism, the lamentations of funeral wakes, the Irish language they could not comprehend, even the landscapes were all strange to tourists from England, Wales, and Scotland. Overlooking the acute despair in England’s own industrial cities, these travelers opined in their writings that the poverty, bog lands, and ill-thatched houses of rural Ireland indicated moral failures of the Irish character.