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September 8, 1803, Irish patriot Robert Emmet, age 25, wrote a letter
from his cell in Kilmainham jail, Dublin. He addressed it to
"Miss Sarah Curran, the
Priory, Rathfarnham" and handed it to a prison warden, George Dunn,
whom he trusted to deliver it. Dunn betrayed him and gave the letter to
the government authorities, an action that nearly cost Sarah her life.
Emmet,
the son of a Dublin doctor, joined the United Irishmen, a mainly
Protestant militia opposed to British rule, while a student at Trinity
College, Dublin. In 1798 the militia made plans with the
post-revolutionary French government to expel the British forces and
establish an independent Ireland. Poor organization defeated them,
however, and for a while Emmet went into hiding in France, where he
failed to secure Napoleon's support.
Returning
to Ireland in October 1802, Emmet soon emerged as the leader of the United
Irishmen in Dublin. Plans were made to stage a major uprising in the fall
of 1803. Meanwhile, Emmet made a clear statement defining his political
goals in the Proclamation of the Provisional Government:
"...we
war not against property--we are against no religious sect--we war no
against past opinions or prejudice--we war against English
dominion."
How
well he knew Sarah before this time is unclear. Sarah's brother, Richard,
knew Robert well from Trinity College. Her father, John Curran, a
distinguished lawyer, defended various members of the United Irishmen who
came to trial after the failed 1798 rebellion. Emmet, in 1802 in a letter
to a friend, the Marquise de Fontenay, referred to the "tender
ties" he had at home. Once back in Ireland, Robert frequently visited
Sarah's family at Rathfarnham, even though Sarah's father did not welcome
him. Sarah and Robert became engaged, but kept it a secret because of her
father's disapproval. Sarah was enthusiastic about all Robert's
revolutionary plans. Her patriotism, youth, and great charm endeared her
to all the members of the activist's circle. Emmet's housekeeper, Ann
Devlin--whose father was imprisoned in 1798 for harboring rebels, and who
was herself tortured and imprisoned after the unsuccessful uprising of
1803--said when questioned by Dr. R. R. Madden (author of United
Irishmen) 40 years after the uprising:
"You
could not see Miss Curran and not help liking her...her look was the
mildest, and the softest, and the sweetest look you ever saw."
Following
another coup attention on July 23, 1803, Emmet again went into hiding. He
sent Sarah a message asking her to elope with him to the United States.
But the couple never left the country. He was arrested the following
month, with unsigned love letters from Sarah in his possession.
The
earliest letters were simply copies of poems. But the love letters, partly
in coded language, were full of information that could identify her as the
writer. Later letters expressed her fear of angering her father, and the
latest letter focused completely on her anxiety about Robert's safety:
"I
passed the house you are in twice this day, but did not see you. If I
thought you were in safety, I would be comparatively happy, at least. I
cannot help listening to every idle report...I cannot tell you how
uneasy I shall be until I know that you have got this. Let me know
immediately. I request you to burn it instantly...Goodbye my dear
friend, but not forever."
Emmet kept
all her letters inside his coat. On August 30, at the questioning after
his arrest, he was asked point blank, "By whom were these letters
written that were found upon your person?" He succeeded in
keeping Sarah's name out of the proceedings, mentioning only "a
delicate and virtuous female." He then protested, "I
would rather give up my own life than injure another person."
Nine
days later, Emmet wrote the letter extracted here, revealing her name, and
on September 9 the Curran house was searched. With British soldiers
downstairs, Sarah's sister Amelia only just succeeded in burning Emmet's
letters. John Philpot Curran, furious that Sarah had threatened their
lives and his career, ordered her out of the house. She took refuge with
friends a few hundred miles away in Cork. The authorities made an example
of Emmet, condemning him to be hanged, drawn, and quartered. His
final speech in court, an inspiration to generations of Irish
revolutionaries, is still widely quoted today:
"...Let
no man write my epitaph...Let my memory be left in oblivion and my tomb
remain un inscribed until other times and other men can do justice to my
character. When my country takes her place among the nations of the
earth, then, and not till then, let my epitaph be written. I have
done."
He had not
quite done. In a letter to Sarah's brother Richard, he wrote:
"I
have injured the happiness of a sister that you love...Oh Richard! I
have no excuse to offer, but that I meant the reverse; I intended as
much happiness for Sarah as the most ardent lover could have given her.
I never did tell you how much I idolised her..."
After
Emmet's death, abandoned by her family and living with friends in Cork, at
the southwestern tip of the country, she met a soldier named Robert
Sturgeon who offered her marriage and a home. They moved to Sicily, but
she never fully recovered from her grief. Her story inspired the Irish
poet, Thomas Moore, to write a sentimental ballad that ensured her a place
in popular Irish culture:
"She
is far from the land where her young hero sleeps,
And lovers around her are sighing,
But coldly she turns from their gaze, and weeps,
For her heart in his grave is lying."
From
Famous
Love Letters: Messages of Intimacy and Passion, Ronald Tamplin
(Editor)
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