5Windele, John. “Cahir Conri.” Ulster Journal of Archaeology 8 (1860): 116.
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Many years later, in his "Tribute to Frank Mitchell," Michael Ryan wrote, "Much has been made of Frank's often repeated wish to sell his soul for a few more years of life just to see how things were going to turn out. In The Way that I Followed, I believe he unwittingly wrote his own best epitaph. On the Dingle peninsula is Caherconree, a great inland promontory fort 600m above sea-level. Frank tried three times to climb up to it and three times he was foiled by the Kerry mist. He wrote that perhaps he should have stayed around until the fog cleared and tried again, but he added that 'a capacity to sit around is just not part of my nature'. It wasn't: but there are many people who wish, as I do, that he had curbed his impatience for just a little longer." (Ryan, Michael. “A Tribute to Frank Mitchell.” Archaeology Ireland, Vol. 12, No. 1 (Spring, 1998), pp. 40-41.)