Page:Notes and Queries - Series 11 - Volume 12.djvu/383

 us. xii. NOV. is, 1915.] NOTES AND QUERIES.

375

and London I fell in with a party of the Oxford Blues, guarding a number of French prisoners. At the head of the detachment, two Officers, one in a phaeton, the other in a single-horse-chaise, (contrary to the rules of the road) drove their carriages abreast, and by that means left so narrow a space, that, in passing, my coachman was reduced to the alternative either of overturning me into the ditch, which was a pretty deep one, or of pressing upon them. As the least of the two evils, he chose the latter ; & tho' he cleared the carriage which was next to him, yet the two chaises belonging to the Officers, in the scuffle, it seems, were foul of each other ; and the shafts of that with the single horse (the strap which held them up being broken) fell to the ground. Of this circumstance I was totally ignorant, or I should have instantly alighted, and made the proper apology ; " tho' the Gentlemen had no occasion to be very angry, as my life was probably saved, and they had sustained no greater loss. In a few minutes, however, they came up with my chariot, which was ordered to stop ; the two Officers appeared on each side of it, one in the phaeton, the other on horseback ; and, without saying a syllable to me, or taking any more notice of me than if I had been a shoe-black, began to inflict on my coachman the discipline of the halberds, cutting him, with their long whips, about the back, the head, & the face. In as gentle a manner as possible I begged of them to desist, offering to make satisfaction for any injury they might have received (for I really did not know what it was) and promising to punish the man myself, in the proper way, when acquainted with the nature of the offence. But it availed not.

The whipping was renewed, as were also my intreaties ; till, at length, we were suffered to pursue our journey.

I returned from Canterbury hither on Saturday last, when I understood that the affair had been much talked of in this count ry, and that the Gentlemen in the neighbourhood, with whom I have the honour to be acquainted, were unanimously of opinion I should be wanting in justice to myself and to the Public, if I did riot take some step towards preventing anything of the kind in future ; for, to say the truth, my servants at present do not much care to venture themselves upon the Uxb ridge road.

I have stated the case fairly, to the best of my knowledge, & do not recollect any circumstance that I have omitted, except

that, soon after we had passed, the Officers. I believe, swore at my coachman, and he^ being a Welshman, I am afraid, swore at them again ; which was certainly wrong , and a provocation ; but not, I should humbly conceive, sufficient to justify the proceedings which followed. If the matter should appear worth the trouble of an enquiry*. audi alteram partem, is the invariable rule of justice.

When this shall have been done, it is my desire that the decision may rest entirely with you. I never was concerned in so untoward an affair before, & hope I never shall again ; being, as you well know, in disposition no less than in profession a man of PEACE.

I am, with perfect regard and respect,

Dear Sir, Your most obedient

and faithful Servant,

GEO. HORNE. E. H. FAIRBROTHER.

BIBLIOGRAPHY OF HISTORIES OF IRISH COUNTIES AND TOWNS.

(See 11 S. xi. 103, 183, 315 ; xii. 24, 276.) PART VI. G.

GrALWAY.

The Articles of Gahvay, Exactly Printed from the Letters Patent wherein they are Eatified and Exemplified by Their Majesties under the Great Seal of England. By S. D. Assigny. Dublin, 1692.

The History of the Town and County of the Town of Galway, from the Earliest Period to the Present Time, with Appendix containing the Principal Charters and other Original Docu- ments. By James Hardiman. Dublin, 1820.

Statistical and Agricultural Survey of the County of Galway. By Hely Dutton. Royal Dublin Society, Dublin, 1824.

The Tribes and Customs of Hy-Many, commonly Called O'Kelly's Country, in the Counties of Galway and Koscommon, with Notes and Map. By John O'Donovan. Dublin, 1843.

Handbook to Galway, Connemara, and the Irish Highlands. London, 1854.

The Warden of Galway, and other Poems. By Wm. Carleton, Jun. Melbourne, 1868.

Archives of the Town of Galway. By Sir J. T. Gilbert. Hist. MSS. Commission, 10th Report, vol. v. London, 1885.

History of Clare and the Dalcassian Clans of Tipperarv, Limerick, and Galwayl, By the Very Rev. P. White. Dublin, 1893.

Galway, Connemara, and Achill. Dublin, 1900.

Slack's Guide to Galway, Connemara, and the West of Ireland. London, 1905.

Blake Family History, 1600-1700. By Martin J. Hlak,-, lixfo. (Deals with this famous Galway family.)