CHAPTER XX.--M'Mahon is Denounced from the Altar
--Receives his Sentence from Kathleen, and Resolves to Emigrate.
Whatever difficulty Bryan M'Mahon had among his family in defending the
course he had taken at the election, he found that not a soul belonging
to his own party would listen to any defense from him. The indignation,
obloquy, and spirit of revenge with which he was pursued and harassed,
excited in his heart, as they would in that of any generous man
conscious of his own integrity, a principle of contempt and defiance,
which, however they required independence in him, only made matters far
worse than they otherwise would have been. He expressed neither regret
nor repentance for having voted as he did; but on the contrary asserted
with a good deal of warmth, that if the same course lay open to him he
would again pursue it.
"I will never vote for a scoundrel," said he, "and I don't think that
there is anything in my religion that makes it a duty on me to do so. If
my religion is to be supported by scoundrels, the sooner it is forced
to depend on itself the better. Major Vanston is a good landlord, and
supports the rights of his tenantry, Catholic as well as Protestant; he
saved me from ruin when my own landlord refused to interfere for me,
an' Major Vanston, if he's conscientiously opposed to my religion, is an
honest man at all events, and an honest man I'll ever support against
a rogue, and let their politics go where they generally do, go to the
devil.
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