[The Tithe-Proctor by William Carleton]@TWC D-Link book
The Tithe-Proctor

CHAPTER III
8/13

As soon as the moon, after having gained a greater elevation in the sky, began to diffuse a clearer lustre on the earth, we may justly say that it would be difficult to witness so strange and appalling a spectacle.

The white appearance of their persons, caused by the shirts which they wore in the manner we have stated, for this peculiar occasion, when contrasted with their blackened visages, gave them more the character of demons than of men, with whom indeed their strange costume and disfigured faces seemed to imitate the possession of very little in common, with the exception of shape alone.

The light was not sufficiently strong to give them distinctness, and as a natural consequence, there was upon them a dim gleamy look--a spectral character that was frightful, and filled the mind with an impression that the meeting must have been one of supernatural beings, if not an assemblage of actual devils, in visible shape, coming to perpetrate on earth some deed of darkness and of horror.
Among the whole six hundred there might have been about one hundred muskets.

Pistols, blunderbusses, and other arms there were in considerable numbers, but these were not available for a portion, at least, of the purposes which had brought them together.
After some preliminary preparation a light was struck, a candle lit, around which a certain number stood, so as to expose it to as little chance of observation as possible.

A man then above the middle size, compact and big-boned, took the candle in one hand, and brought it towards a long roll which he held in the other.


<<Back  Index  Next>>

D-Link book Top

TWC mobile books