|
Life [ top ] Notes Barbara Hayley, A Reading and Thinking Nation: Periodicals as the Voice of Nineteenth-century Ireland, in Hayley and Enda McKay, ed., Three Hundred Years of Irish Periodical (Assoc. of Irish Learned Journals: Gigginstown, Mullingar 1987), 29-48: Another penny magazine of this kind was the Shamrock (a national weekly journal of Irish history, literature, arts, &c.), started in 1866 by Richard Pigott, who forged the Parnell letters in the Times in 1887. This too was a well-designed quarto production, with a very high standard of illustration by Gustave Doré, Montbard, the Grey Brothers and Edward Shiel. Its Noctes Dublinienses described contemporary Dublin; it was full of Irish reminiscences and anecdotes. It had romantic fiction (Ella, the Dancing Girl) and Irish comic dialect stories such as John F. ODonnells Tim Hogans Adventures in Fairyland, and Captain William Lynams famous Mick McQuaid the Evangeliser. The Shamrock went on under Pigott until 1879 when he sold it with his other papers, the Flag of Ireland and The Irishman, to the Irish National Newspaper and Publisher Company, owned by Parnell and the Land League. (pp.45-46.)
D. J. Doherty and J. E. Hickey, A Chronology of Irish History since 1500 (Gill & Macmillan 1989), notes that Pigott paid for the education of the sons of ODonovan Rossa while the latter was in America, and contributing to The Irishman, his paper; note also that Capt. William OShea was coincidentally in Madrid at the time of his suicide [DIH under OShea]. Seamus Deane, gen. ed., Field Day Anthology of Irish Writing (Derry: Field Day 1991), Vol. 2, 309n, When The Times newspaper published a series of articles on Parnellism and Crime in 1887-88, Lord Carnavon proposed a special commission to investigate the allegations; this eventually established that the letters attributed to Parnell were forgeries, the work of Richard Pigott (1829-89). Pigotts court-room misspelling of hesitancy as hesitency confirmed the forgeries. This minute detail of Parnells career makes its way into Joyces Finnegans Wake. Belfast Central Public Library holds (biog.), D. Donovan, Crime of the Century, Life of Richard Pigott (1904). ALSO Sir James OConnor, Recollections of Richard Pigott (1889).
in Joyces Finnegans Wake his is remembered in the phrase that defines HCE as being unhesitent in his unionism but a piggoted [sic] nationalist, and other occurrences of the misspent word in the form hesitency in Finnegans Wake [also piggotry], and a novel about Pigotts son, Identity Papers, by Anthony Cronin. NOTE, study by Henry Harrison [author of Parnell Vindicated, RX] secured emendation to the account of the Pigott forgery in The History of the Times; see also his Parnell Vindicated, the Lifting of the Veil (1931). Michael Davitts bailsman was the editor of the extreme Nationalist and physical force newspaper, The Irishman - a man called Pigott. (See Francis Sheehy-Skeffington, Michael Davitt, 1908). T. P. OConnor, The Irish Question, being the History of the Irish Question from the Death of OConnell to the Suicide of Pigott (London: T. Fisher Unwin [1886]). [ top ] Princess Grace Irish Library (Monaco) |