This bloody but non-speculative story is an account (based on an actual incident) of a revenge-murder carried out by a secret society, in which an entire family is slaughtered. It was first published in the Dublin Literary Gazette, Jan 23 & Jan 30, 1830, under the title "Confessions of a Reformed Ribbonman." When it was included in the second series of Traits and Stories of the Irish Peasantry (1833), titled "Wildgoose Lodge," Carleton made only one significant change: in the first version, he had stated that the murdered family were the only Protestants in the region, adding an element of religious factional conflict to the story, whereas in the historical incident, they had been Catholics. He removed this element in the revised version.
| Date | Publication | Publisher | Type | Page | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1833 | Traits and Stories of the Irish Peasantry: Second Series: Vol. II | William Frederick Wakeman | Collection | 299 | |
| 1971 |
|
Irish Tales of Terror | Fontana | Anthology | 106 |
| 1976 |
|
Irish Tales of Terror | Fontana | Anthology | |
| October 1977 |
|
Reign of Terror: The 3rd Corgi Book of Great Victorian Horror Stories | Corgi Books | Anthology | 9 |
| January 1979 |
|
Psyco, January 1979 | Armenia Editore | MAGAZINE | 63 |
| December 1997 |
|
The Vampyre and Other Tales of the Macabre | Oxford University Press | Anthology | 33 |
| September 2008 |
|
The Vampyre and Other Tales of the Macabre | Oxford University Press | Anthology | 33 |