INTRO — CASTLE RACKRENT I
The story of the Edgeworth Family,
if it were properly told, should be as long as the
Arabian nights themselves; the thousand and
one cheerful intelligent members of the circle, the
amusing friends and relations, the charming surroundings,
the cheerful hospitable home, all go to make up an
almost unique history of a county family of great parts
and no little character. The Edgeworths were
people of good means and position, and their rental,
we are told, amounted to nearly L3000 a year.
At one time there was some talk of a peerage for Mr.
Edgeworth, but he was considered too independent for
a peerage.
The family tradition seems to have
been unconventional and spirited always. There
are records still extant in the present Mr. Edgeworth’s
possession, papers of most wonderful vitality
for parchment, where you may read passionate
remonstrances and adjurations from great-grandfathers
to great-great-grandfathers, and where great-great-grandmothers
rush into the discussion with vehement spelling and
remonstrance, and make matters no better by their interference.
I never read more passionately eloquent letters and
appeals. There are also records of a pleasanter
nature; merrymakings, and festive preparations, and
12d. for a pair of silk stockings for Miss Margaret
Edgeworth to dance in, carefully entered into the family
budget. All the people whose portraits are hanging
up, beruffled, dignified, calm, and periwigged, on
the old walls of Edgeworthstown certainly had extraordinarily
strong impressions, and gave eloquent expression to
them. I don’t think people could feel quite
so strongly now about their own affairs as they did
then; there are so many printed emotions, so many
public events, that private details cannot seem quite
as important. Edgeworths of those days were farther
away from the world than they are now, dwelling in
the plains of Longford, which as yet were not crossed
by iron rails. The family seems to have made little
of distances, and to have ridden and posted to and
fro from Dublin to Edgeworthstown in storm and sunshine.