The works of Thomas Moore, Volume 181832 |
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Page 10
... tion would be unacceptable if it kept me at home , and deprived me of that pleasure . I do not think it un- likely but that the Foudroyant may convoy us , as we shall have , I believe , the grand fleet till we get out of the Channel ...
... tion would be unacceptable if it kept me at home , and deprived me of that pleasure . I do not think it un- likely but that the Foudroyant may convoy us , as we shall have , I believe , the grand fleet till we get out of the Channel ...
Page 27
... fool ! all imagina- tion ! -by heavens ! you will be the ruin of that boy . ' My dear mother , if you mind him , and do not write me pleasant letters , and always say something of pretty 1786 . 27 LORD EDWARD FITZGERALD . " ...
... fool ! all imagina- tion ! -by heavens ! you will be the ruin of that boy . ' My dear mother , if you mind him , and do not write me pleasant letters , and always say something of pretty 1786 . 27 LORD EDWARD FITZGERALD . " ...
Page 60
... tion of republican principles is to be traced back to the period when he first served in America ; and that it was while fighting against the assertors of liberty in that country he imbibed so strong a feeling of sympathy with their ...
... tion of republican principles is to be traced back to the period when he first served in America ; and that it was while fighting against the assertors of liberty in that country he imbibed so strong a feeling of sympathy with their ...
Page 77
... tion of a woodsman . I was out on an excursion the other day , and steered the whole way , and though I traversed a great deal in between thirty and thirty - five miles , out and in , I was not a half - mile out of my course where I ...
... tion of a woodsman . I was out on an excursion the other day , and steered the whole way , and though I traversed a great deal in between thirty and thirty - five miles , out and in , I was not a half - mile out of my course where I ...
Page 112
... tion , he had never , till the time of his present visit to Paris , seen her . It could hardly have been more than an evening or two before the date of the above letter , that , being at one of the theatres of Paris , he saw , through a ...
... tion , he had never , till the time of his present visit to Paris , seen her . It could hardly have been more than an evening or two before the date of the above letter , that , being at one of the theatres of Paris , he saw , through a ...
Common terms and phrases
affectionate appear arms army attainder believe bill bill of attainder brother Castletown Catholic cause Celbridge course dear mother dearest mother Dublin Duchess Duchess of Leinster Duke of Leinster Duke of Richmond enemies England favour fear feel France French French Directory Frescati friends give Grattan happy hear heart honour hope innocent Ireland Irish journey justice Kildare king Lady Edward LADY LOUISA CONOLLY land letter living Lord Carhampton Lord Castlereagh Lord Cornwallis Lord Edward Fitzgerald LORD HENRY FITZGERALD lordship Majesty Majesty's ment military mind morning nature never night noble object officer Parliament party passed persons pleasant poor present prison reason rebellion regiment royal highness sister soldier soon spirit sure taken tell thing thought tion told trust United Irishmen whole WILLIAM OGILVIE wish wound write
Popular passages
Page 188 - I have but one request to ask, at my departure from this world; it is the charity of its silence. Let no man write my epitaph; for, as no man who knows my motives dare now vindicate them, let not prejudice or ignorance asperse them.
Page 358 - The forfeiture of lands has relation to the time of the fact committed, so as to avoid all subsequent sales and incumbrances; but the forfeiture of goods and chattels has no relation backwards; so that those only which a man has at the time of conviction shall be forfeited.
Page 164 - it would be a means of doing a greater good to the British empire than it had been capable of receiving since the Revolution, or, at least, since the Union.
Page 104 - ... wit, eloquence, and the most refined good-fellowship could invest them. Neither was it to be expected, while thus imbibing the full spirit of the new doctrines, that he would attend much to those constitutional guards and conditions with which the Whig patriots, at that time, fenced round even their boldest opinions, — partly from a long-transmitted reverence for the forms of the constitution, and partly, also, from a prospective view to their own attainment of power, and to the great inconvenience...
Page 159 - ... honeysuckles, and Spanish broom. I have got all my beds ready for my flowers ; so you may guess how I long to be down to plant them. The little fellow will be a great addition to the party. I think when I am down there with Pam and child, of a blustering evening, with a good turf fire, and a pleasant book, — coming in, after seeing my poultry put up, my garden settled, — flower-beds and plants covered for fear of frost,— the place looking comfortable, and taken care of, I shall be as happy...
Page 93 - I, David Hill, Chief of the. Six Nations, give the name of Eghnidal to my friend Lord Edward Fitzgerald, for which I hope he will remember me as long as he lives. " The name belongs to the Bear Tribe}' " Michilimackinack, July 9, 1789.
Page 53 - The contrast of all this, which had passed during the day, with the quietness of the evening, when the spirits of the old people had a little subsided and began to wear off with the day, and with the fatigue of their little work, sitting quietly at their door, on the same spot they had lived in thirty years together ; the contented thoughtfulness of their countenances, which was increased by their age and the solitary life they had led ; the wild quietness of the place — not a living creature or...
Page 108 - Paris in the autumn of 1792, he had eagerly imbibed the new Republican doctrines. This appears the less surprising when we find who was his host. He writes of himself as follows, in October: ' I lodge with my friend Paine; we breakfast, dine, and sup together. The more I see of his interior the more I like and respect him.
Page 169 - In the awful presence of God, I, AB, do voluntarily declare, that I will persevere in endeavouring to form a brotherhood of affection among Irishmen of every religious persuasion, and that I will also persevere in my endeavours to obtain an equal, full, and adequate representation of all the people of Ireland.
Page 66 - ... thoughts assumed. But the principle, thus admitted, retained its footing in his mind after the reveries through which it had first found its way thither had vanished ; and though it was some time before politics, — beyond the range, at least, of mere party tactics, — began to claim his attention, all he had meditated and felt among the solitudes of Nova Scotia could not fail to render his mind a more ready recipient for such doctrines as he found prevalent on his return to Europe ; — doctrines...