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Saturday, May 12, 2012, 8:15 AM

Father John Coigley was standing with his hands bound on a scaffold in Kent about to be executed for treason in connection with the 1798 Irish rebellion when, with his wrists still tied, he pulled a knife from his pocket. The crowd gasped for two reasons. First, it was surprising that Coigley had smuggled a knife past his jailers. Second, the crowd had some reason to worry that Coigley would pull a Wolfe Tone and spite his captors by slashing his own throat, as other Catholic rebels had done.

With perfect sangfroid, Father Coigley produced from his other pocket . . . an orange. He peeled it, ate it, and was hanged.


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