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 tervened to prevent the deportation of the children. Tom completely won him over with the original argument "that the priests were acting as members of a spiritual trade union." Writing of the great Catholic poet, Francis Thompson, he puts in a lyric plea for his religion: "The superiority of the Catholic poet is that he reinforces the natural will by waters falling an infinite height from the infinite ocean of spirit. He has two worlds against one. If we place our Fortunate Islands solely within the walls of space and time, they will dissolve into a mocking dream; for there will always be pain that no wisdom can assuage. They must lie on the edge of the horizon with the glimmer of a strange sea about their shores and their mountain peaks hidden among the clouds." He had a wonderful spiritual humility. What he found admirable in Russian literature was "an immense and desolating sob of humility and self-reproach." He abjured the self-righteous who, he used to say, went round as if they were "live monuments erected by God in honour of the Ten Commandments." He was, indeed, over generous in the praise of qualities in others which he had superlatively himself. Anyone with a gift, a "plus" man at golf, a Feis Gold Medallist, an expert gardener—just the distinguishing cachet of excellence won his admiration. Witness how he lauds the valour of his Dublin Fusiliers, and yet his courage was no newly acquired virtue. I re