Friday, October 25, 2019
Personal Narrative - Mother Ireland :: Example Personal Narratives
      Mother Ireland           My family is proud to boast a long and rich history mothered by the Emerald  Isle of Erin, which is Gaelic for Ireland. My family's clan was first called the  O'Neills, and we inhabited the outskirts of a small village which now goes by  the name of County Cork. We were minstrels, actors and musicians in the courts  of our family's home for many generations. An interesting piece of recent  history about my family is that we are closely related to the Kennedys on my  father's side. My grandmother was one of the Davises, who in some way were  related intimately to the Fitzgeralds, who were John F. Kennedy's mother's close  family. And not too many people know this, but one of the young Kennedy ladies  had the good fortune of marrying the famous Mr. Arnold Schwartzenagger.           I wish to go even farther back, though, to the era of the Medieval  Renaissance on the Isle, when my family owned their own lands and estate, and  the head of our family was known as one of the first rulers of Ireland. Our  family's castle and lands remain standing to this day, but are inhabited by no  one for failure to pay twenty million dollars in back taxes over the past three  hundred years. So now our family's castle sits as a tourist attraction on the  coast of Erin, as a reminder of the rich and time-honored beauty it has brought  and will always bring to the Island.           Our family owes its debt of gratitude to one young man. The rule who was  living in our family's castle at the time had two sons. At the time, having two  sons meant that the ruler would have to entrust his lands and properties to one  of them when he died. Since the ruler could not decide whom to entrust the  castle to, he told them to have boat race around the shores of Roan Innish  ("Isle of the Seals, a small island off the coast of Ireland). So it was  determined that whoever was first to touch the shoreline on the other side of  the island would inherit all of his father's wealth. Well, the race was long and  hard, and the younger son grew so tired that he could not row one second longer  even though he was so close to the shoreline.  					    
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