[Willy Reilly by William Carleton]@TWC D-Link book
Willy Reilly

CHAPTER VIII
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These were Mr.Brown, the clergyman, and Mr.Hastings, the actual and legal proprietor of all that had been considered Reilly's property.

Both of them observed that Sir Robert was the busiest man among them, and upon making inquiries from the party, they were informed that they acted by his orders, and that, moreover, he was himself the very first individual who had set fire to the premises.

The clergyman made his way to Sir Robert, on whose villainous countenance he could read a dark and diabolical triumph.
"Sir Robert Whitecraft," said Mr.Brown, "how conies such a wanton and unnecessary waste of property ?" "Because, sir," replied that gentleman, "it is the property of a popish rebel and outlaw, and is confiscated to the State." "But do you possess authority for this conduct ?--Are you the State ?" "In the spirit of our Protestant Constitution, certainly.

I am a loyal Protestant magistrate, and a man of rank, and will hold myself accountable for what I do and have done.

Come you, there," he added, "who have knocked down the pump, take some straw, light it up, and put it with pitchforks upon the lower end of the stable; it has not yet caught the flames." This order was accordingly complied with, and in a few minutes the scene, if one could dissociate the mind from the hellish spirit which created it, had something terribly sublime in it.
Mr.Hastings, the gentleman who accompanied the clergyman, the real owner of the property, looked on with apparent indifference, but uttered not a word.


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