| Charles Joseph Kickham was born and educated at Mullinahone, County Tipperary. At thirteen he was involved in a gunpowder accident which permanently injured his sight and hearing. Soon after he founded the Young Ireland Confederate Clubin Mullinahone. Kickham contributed articles to James Stephens’ The Irish People and later became that paper’s editor in which capacity he was arrested in 1865 for writing ‘treasonous’ articles. Kickham, nearly blind and almost completely deaf, was tried and sentenced to fourteen years penal servitude. He was imprisoned in Portland and Woking prisons where he wrote his first novel Sally Kavanagh (1869). Kickham was released, due to ill-health, in 1870 and lived in Blackrock, County Dublin where he continued to write poetry and novels. His Knocknagow; or The Homes of Tipperary (1879) was a phenomenal success, making Kickham the most popular Irish novelist of the 19th century. |
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| Kickham’s funeral procession was one of the largest ever witnessed in Ireland when he died in 1882 with over 150,000 mourners in attendance. A novel For the Old Land (1886) and Poems of Charles J Kickham (1931) were published posthumously. | |||||
Sliabh Na mBan by Charles J. Kickham 1828 -1882 Alone, all alone, by the wave-washed strand All alone in the crowded hall, The hall it is gay and the waves they are grand It was not the grace of her queenly air In the festive hall and the wave-washed shore |
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| Charles J. Kickham Books For Sale at Amazon.com | |||||
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