In 1776 Girl Louisa Conolly wrote to her sister Emily of the success of her new lengthy gallery, within the palatial Castletown Home in county Kildare, serving its meant function because the social centrepiece of her home celebration, with the Lord Lieutenant of Eire as visitor of honour: “Lord Harcourt was writing, a few of us performed at whist, others at billiards, Mrs Gardiner on the harpsichord, others at work, others at chess, others studying, and supper at one finish… I’ve seldom seen twenty folks so simply disposed of.”
Home and Dwelling in Georgian Eire is an absorbing compendium of ten essays on design and life within the lengthy 18th century. Overlaying themes resembling The Service provider Home in Eighteenth-Century Drogheda (by Aisling Durkan), Entertaining Royalty after the Union (by Judith Hill, that includes Girl Conolly) and ‘A Style for Constructing’: Home Area in Elite Feminine Correspondence (by Priscilla Sonnier) maybe inevitably, the quantity devotes a lot area to the properties of the rich service provider and Anglo-Irish landlord courses, for which wealthy archival and materials proof survives in good-looking city terraces and opulent nation mansions.
Nonetheless, humbler lives do discover a place. In the identical yr as Louisa’s celebration, Arthur Younger (1741-1820), a farmer, author and inveterately curious traveller, set out on the primary of three years travelling round Eire. A startling drawing, entitled the “Irish Cabbin”, from the additional illustrations in Younger’s personal copy of A Tour in Eire with Basic Observations on the Current State of that Kingdom, the guide he revealed in 1780, reveals a constructing which couldn’t be farther from the whist gamers at Castletown if it had been constructed on the darkish facet of the Moon. It’s illustrated in Claudia Kinmonth’s excellent essay, Communality and Privateness in One or Two-Roomed Houses Earlier than 1830, which, for me, is the star of this essay assortment.
The “Irish Cabbin” is a windowless hovel with a decaying thatch, smoke pouring from the door. The household, together with three stark-naked youngsters, have understandably chosen to eat their massive pot of boiled potatoes within the open air. By the requirements of many small tenant farmers, this household was not poor: they’ve a cow and calf, a horse, a pig, sheep, geese, chickens and well-tended potato fields. However as reported by horrified English travellers who seen deprivation as fecklessness—whereas on the similar time being supplied and accepting hospitality—that they had virtually no different possessions.
Shadowy figures
Even because the horrible John FitzGibbon, a lawyer and future lord chancellor and Earl of Clare cited in Tony Barnard’s essay Baubles for Boudoirs, was laughing at his footmen burning their fingers on his silver plates, Younger’s “cabbin” household in all probability owned no cooking implements or tableware apart from that potato pot. Kinmouth brilliantly disinters the hardly recorded lives of nearly all of the folks of Eire from lean scraps of fabric and literary proof.
The guide’s editor Conor Lucey, an affiliate professor of architectural historical past at College Faculty Dublin, contributes the ultimate essay, targeted on one other (a lot wealthier) group from the shadows: the only males, largely skilled however together with some gentry, dwelling in city lodgings. There’s actually extra work to be carried out on a fair shadowier group, the “single Girl” talked about in a single commercial he illustrates, which guarantees rooms in a “fascinating neighbourhood” appropriate for singletons “or a small household that may not require a lot room”.
Among the essays are dryly educational however most shine flashes of sunshine on particular person lives: Dean Swift, the nice literary satirist, owned the primary recorded silver decanter labels, in addition to six china espresso cups. Because the century proceeded, the wealthy discovered new methods to indicate off their wealth and standing. In 1755 the invaluable Mrs Mary Delaney, later famed for her beautiful cut-paper collages, wrote of “my ‘dining-room’, vulgarly so-called”, and Patricia McCarthy (in A Male Area? The Eating Room Reconsidered) writes of the fortunes spent on imported glass, silver and china to furnish these newly modern areas, which she sees as basically male territory, the setting for ferociously heavy consuming as soon as the women eliminated to the drawing room.
Occasionally there have been no girls: in 1747 Lord Chancellor Robert Jocelyn gave a dinner in Dublin for 12 Friends, which apparently included a fricassée of frogs and a badger flambé—alas, there isn’t a illustration, not even a recipe.
Home and Dwelling in Georgian Eire: Areas and Cultures of Home Life by Conor Lucey (ed), 4 Courts Press, 216pp, 85 color illustrations, €50/£45 (hb)