
BRIAN OSWALD DONN-BYRNE - (1889-1928) - A NOTE ON THE AUTHOR OF MESSER MARCO POLO
MESSER MARCO POLO
CHAPTER I
CHAPTER II
CHAPTER III
CHAPTER IV
CHAPTER V
CHAPTER VI
CHAPTER VII
CHAPTER VIII
A weary rider on a New York‑to‑Florida train receives an unexpected summons to aid a centuries‑old countryman from Ulster. The journey drags through the industrial sprawl of Westchester, yet each mile pulls the narrator back into the emerald glens, the heather‑scented hills and the roaring surf of Antrim. As the landscape shifts, the voice of an ancient, blackthorn‑tough man—Malachi of the Long Glen—begins to echo in his mind.
Through lyrical flashbacks, the tale reveals the old man's tangled past—studies in Spanish monasteries, service with the Papal Zouaves, and a stint in the American Civil War—without ever settling on a single identity. His presence becomes a living bridge between the mythic folklore of the Irish countryside and the gritty modernity of the United States, urging the narrator to confront both personal loss and the weight of ancestral memory. The prose swirls with Gaelic chant, sea‑foam imagery, and the quiet melancholy of a world that seems to exist simultaneously in two continents.
Language
en
Duration
~1 hours (111K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Daniel A. Wentzell. HTML version by Al Haines.
Release date
2000-02-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1889–1928
An Irish-born storyteller with a gift for romance, adventure, and atmosphere, he became widely known in the 1920s for novels that mixed old-world charm with vivid emotion. His life was brief, but his fiction left behind a strong sense of Ireland, history, and dramatic human feeling.
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