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      • “She smiled at me, but I could not respond. I was filled with foreboding. An hour ago all had been well; we had stood together on the edge of immeasurable happiness, but now something dark and chilling had fallen between us – a shadow out of the past. I ought never to have brought Stella to this house. I” ― Dorothy Macardle, The Uninvited
      www.goodreads.com/author/quotes/550750.Dorothy_Macardle
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  2. Nov 24, 2021 · Wondering about it from without, I felt both suspicion and envy. That is a roundabout, even misguided, approach to the make-believe of The Uninvited (1944), a Paramount picture based on the novel Uneasy Freehold (1941) by the Irish writer and Republican activist Dorothy Macardle (1889–1958).

  3. As the trust between Macardle and de Valera developed, de Valera asked Macardle to travel to County Kerry to investigate and document what later became known as the Ballyseedy massacre of March 1923, in which a number of unarmed republican prisoners were reported to have been killed in reprisals.

  4. Dec 14, 2019 · Her book Children of Europe (1949) addressed themes of displacement, harm done to children (“appears immeasurable”) and the need for international solidarity. In preparing this book she ...

    • Leeann Lane
  5. Macardle herself suffered the erasure of her life achievements, literally through the burning of her papers on her death and symbolically as her literary works fell out of print and her participation in the republican cause fell out of memory since her death in 1958.

  6. Dorothy Macardle was born on 17th March 1889 and her address was recorded as Dublin St., Dundalk. She died on 23rd December 1958 in the Lourdes Hospital, Drogheda age 69 years. Her address at the time of her death was Widgate Road, Howth, Co. Dublin.

  7. Dec 2, 2015 · They subordinate the whole to the part. It is no longer life they are celebrating, nor nature, but some crude, fanatical party creed. I am afraid that doing things for their own sake will soon be a luxury for children and perhaps for freaks like you and me.” ― Dorothy Macardle, The Uninvited. Read more quotes from Dorothy Macardle.

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