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JOHN BOYLE O'REILLY.
broken mother and family, while he lay in Arbor Hill prison, I quote:
In the same letter, while expressing his belief that his sentence would be less severe if the threatened Fenian uprising should fail to occur, he writes in confident expectation and hope that it will take place:
When the suspense was ended, he sent these brave words of comfort to his loved ones:
God bless you!
John.
"God's holy will be done!" That was the key-note of his character. "It is the will of God, or I'd not get a day," he wrote when speaking of his sentence. His faith was as simple as the life which it inspired was upright and honorable. "It would hardly appear to some people," writes his close friend, Mr. Moseley, "but the great thing that impressed me in Boyle's character was bis manliness, his