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'...As she came out of the churchyard to the road again, she noticed a stranger on the footpath opposite, glancing through the hedge into the coppice. As he heard the gate open, he turned and saw Ursula. At that moment she made an enchanting picture standing there, tall and slim, in her pretty summer frock, a shady hat covering her dark hair. He stared at her, and she stared at him. There was some indefinite quality in the man which arrested her attention...' The Weldons of Tibradden follows the fortunes of three generations of the Weldon family beginning in the 1870s and ending in 1935. It is…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
'...As she came out of the churchyard to the road again, she noticed a stranger on the footpath opposite, glancing through the hedge into the coppice. As he heard the gate open, he turned and saw Ursula. At that moment she made an enchanting picture standing there, tall and slim, in her pretty summer frock, a shady hat covering her dark hair. He stared at her, and she stared at him. There was some indefinite quality in the man which arrested her attention...' The Weldons of Tibradden follows the fortunes of three generations of the Weldon family beginning in the 1870s and ending in 1935. It is a fascinating story of success, courage, love and betrayal. Annie M.P. Smithson was the most successful of all Irish romantic novelists and all of her books were bestsellers. The Weldons of Tibradden is reprinted here for the benefit of the new generations who did not have the opportunity to read it.
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Autorenporträt
ANNIE M. P. SMITHSON (1873-1948) was the most successful of all Irish romantic novelists. Her nineteen books, including The Walk of a Queen, Her Irish Heritage, The Marriage of Nurse Harding and The Weldons of Tibradden were all bestsellers, with their wholesome mix of old-fashioned romance, spirited characters and commonsense philosophy. She was born in Sandymount, Co Dublin, and reared in the strict Unionist tradition. On completion of her training as a nurse in London and Edinburgh, she returned to Dublin and was posted north as a Queen's Nurse in 1901. Here, for the first time, she experienced the divide between Irish Nationalists and Unionists, and it appalled her. She converted to Catholicism at the age of 34 and was subsequently disowned by most of her family. She immersed herself in the Republican movement - actively can-vassing for Sinn Fein in the 1918 General Election, nursing Dubliners during the influenza epidemic of that year, instructing Cumann na mBan on nursing care and tending the wounded of the Civil War in 1922. She was arrested and imprisoned, and threatened to go on hunger-strike unless released. Forced to resign her commission in the strongly Loyalist Queen's Nurses Committee, she took up private work and tended the poor of Dublin city until she retired in 1942. During her long career, she did much to improve the lot of the nursing profession and champic, med its cause as Secretary of the Irish Nurses Union. In later years, she devoted herself to her writing and was an active member of WAAMA, PEN and the Old Dublin Society. Her autobiography, Myself-and Others, was completed in 1944, four years before her death at the age of 75.