Great Grandmother's Days: a Tale of the Irish Rebellion |
From inside the book
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Page 2
... things alone , and imagined they were happy enough - as happy as could be ex- pected . Who has brought about Ireland's misery ? he asks . Not Ireland herself ; that is an un- fair charge , he says . Things are better now than they have ...
... things alone , and imagined they were happy enough - as happy as could be ex- pected . Who has brought about Ireland's misery ? he asks . Not Ireland herself ; that is an un- fair charge , he says . Things are better now than they have ...
Page 7
... thing is sure , I cannot possibly ex- pect my step - mother to understand about the hopes and fears I have at heart in these days . Sometimes I wonder whether it would have been different had our own mother lived , would she have ...
... thing is sure , I cannot possibly ex- pect my step - mother to understand about the hopes and fears I have at heart in these days . Sometimes I wonder whether it would have been different had our own mother lived , would she have ...
Page 9
... things went wrong so long as his honour was not there to see them righted ? And father , with care - lined face , sat for many hours each day in the great lonely library over piles of papers and huge account books , and sent us children ...
... things went wrong so long as his honour was not there to see them righted ? And father , with care - lined face , sat for many hours each day in the great lonely library over piles of papers and huge account books , and sent us children ...
Page 12
... things like that , that I must never say them again . And he tried to explain a great deal about laws and about Parliament , but I could not understand any- thing he said , and told him I liked Honor's stories best . And father sighed ...
... things like that , that I must never say them again . And he tried to explain a great deal about laws and about Parliament , but I could not understand any- thing he said , and told him I liked Honor's stories best . And father sighed ...
Page 17
... thing about it , but Roderick and Kevin ended by making me nearly as disaffected as them- selves . I was inclined to think it must be nice to have a mother - but my brothers frightened me by telling me how hard- hearted step - mothers ...
... thing about it , but Roderick and Kevin ended by making me nearly as disaffected as them- selves . I was inclined to think it must be nice to have a mother - but my brothers frightened me by telling me how hard- hearted step - mothers ...
Common terms and phrases
answer arms asked Bally Ballycarrig cave began better boat BODLEIAN LIBRARY brought by-and-bye called Captain Dudley Castle Knocklara Castlebar Charlie craythur cried dared dark Denis Dooncandra door Douay Dublin English Eveleen f'what face fancy father fear feel Geraldine glad gone gorse guessed hand hear heard heart Honor hope Ireland Kevin Killala King's knew Lara laughed Lilian Trevor listen looked Lord Edward Lord Edward Fitzgerald Masther Dinis morning mother never night O'Rossa once Oran passed post chaise prisoner rebels rest Roche Roderick sake Saxon Says the Shan secret seemed Shan van Voght Shane shure side silence soldiers sorry sound speak spoke stairs stay strange sure talk tell Terry thing thought to-day told true trute turned turret uncon Union Star United Irishmen voice wait wish wonder words
Popular passages
Page 301 - And I will make them one nation in the land upon the mountains of Israel; and one king shall be king to them all: and they shall be no more two nations, neither shall they be divided into two kingdoms any more at all...
Page 40 - Herein is love, not that we loved God, but that He loved us, and sent His Son [to be} a propitiation for our sins.
Page 37 - ... by day and by night; avail yourselves of the natural advantages of your country, which are innumerable, and with which you are better acquainted than they. " Where you cannot oppose them in full force, constantly harass their rear and their flanks, cut off their provisions and magazines, and...
Page 46 - What have you got in your hand? A green bough. Where did it first grow? In America. Where did it bud? In France.
Page 36 - Rouse all the energies of your souls ; call forth all the merit and abilities which a vicious Government consigned to obscurity ; and under the conduct of your chosen leaders, march with a steady step to victory ! Heed not the glare of a hired soldiery, or aristocratic yeomanry — they cannot stand the vigorous shock of freemen.
Page 36 - ... being in the country is restored to those equal rights which the God of nature has given to all men ; until an order of things shall be established in which no superiority shall be acknowledged among the citizens of Erin but that of virtue and talents.
Page 36 - Your country is free, and you are about to be avenged. That vile government, which has so long and so cruelly oppressed you, is no more...
Page 66 - 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 40 - Christ in the heart of every man who thinks of me, Christ in the mouth of every man who speaks to me, Christ in every eye that sees me, Christ in every ear that hears me.
Page 115 - Excellency the Lord- Lieutenant full powers to put down the rebellion, and to punish rebels in the most summary manner, according to martial law, does hereby give notice to all his Majesty's subjects, that he is determined to exert the powers...