The home life of the cruel, selfish upper class, the abject poverty of the poor tenants who labor from sunup to sunset, so that those who own the land may live in ease and luxury, the kind heart of a little colleen and the dashing wit of the young Irish officer, these are points that will make "Peggy, the Will o' the Wisp," a film of absorbing interest. (Print Ad-Hearst's Sunday American, ((Atlanta, Ga.)) 15 July 1917)