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[Rt. Rev.] Thomas M. Johnstone
   
Life
1876- ?[Thomas McGimpsey Johnstone]; ed. QUB; minister of St James, Ballymoney,
and of Newington Church, Belfast; Convener of Presbyterian Temperance
Soc.; Moderator of Gen. Ass. of Presbyterian Church in Ireland; works
include Ulsterman, Their Fight for Fortune; Faith and Freedom,
et al. A novel, Where the Foxglove Glows (Belfast: Quota 1946),
deals with Ireland passing from Druidism to Christianity viewed sympathetically
by a modern Ulsterman; set in monastery at Nendrum, romantic plot concerns
Duirtlechet and Eithne, the former a lay brother who falls out with the
abbot and leaves - but returns from abroad, so that they are married in
the Royal Chapel at Tara. IF2
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Works
Newington Presbyterian Church, Belfast : These Fifty Years, 1876-1926
(Belfast: The Witness Office 1926); Northern Ireland: The Crisis
In Industry (Belfast: Graham & Heslip 1930); The Vintage Of
Memory (Belfast: Quota 1942); Where the Foxglove Glows
(Belfast: Quota 1946);
Sunset Soliloquy (Belfast:
News-Letter1956); Ulsterman, Their Fight for Fortune; Faith
and Freedom [q.d.]
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Notes
Where the Foxglove Glows (Belfast: Quota Press 1946), 282pp.; a
discursive novel on Ireland, with epigraphs on the significance of national
history from Thomas Davis [front page] and Arthur Quiller Couch [chap.],
incl., Davis: This country of ours is no sandbank thrown up by some
recent caprice of earth. It is an ancient land, honoured in the archives
of civilisation, traceable into antiquity by its piety, its valour, and
its sufferings. Every great European race has sent its stream to the rivers
of the Irish mind. Long wars, vast organisations, subtle codes, beacon
crimes, leading virtues, and self-mighty men were here. If we live influenced
by wind, and sun, and tree, and not by the passions and deeds of the past,
we are a thriftless and hopeless people.
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Princess Grace Irish Library (Monaco)
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