[Castle Richmond by Anthony Trollope]@TWC D-Link bookCastle Richmond CHAPTER X 2/22
These are the feelings rather than the opinions of the most Protestant of Irish Protestants, and it is intelligible that they should have been produced by the close vicinity of Roman Catholic worship in the minds of men who are energetic and excitable, but not always discreet or argumentative. One of such was Mr.Townsend, and few men carried their Protestant fervour further than he did.
A cross was to him what a red cloth is supposed to be to a bull; and so averse was he to the intercession of saints, that he always regarded as a wolf in sheep's clothing a certain English clergyman who had written to him a letter dated from the feast of St.Michael and All Angels.
On this account Herbert Fitzgerald took upon himself to say that he regarded him as a bad clergyman: whereas, most of his Protestant neighbours looked upon this enthusiasm as his chief excellence. And this admiration for him induced his friends to overlook what they must have acknowledged to be defects in his character.
Though he had a good living--at least, what the laity in speaking of clerical incomes is generally inclined to call a good living, we will say amounting in value to four hundred pounds a year--he was always in debt.
This was the more inexcusable as he had no children, and had some small private means. And nobody knew why he was in debt--in which word nobody he himself must certainly be included.
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