Ireland: Historical and Statistical, Volume 2Whittaker, 1847 - Ireland |
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Page 2
... England , where he was carried off with com- parative ease , was a fortunate event for the approaching com- monwealth . Had he remained in Ireland , his destruction and the prostration of the monarchy would have been a more difficult ...
... England , where he was carried off with com- parative ease , was a fortunate event for the approaching com- monwealth . Had he remained in Ireland , his destruction and the prostration of the monarchy would have been a more difficult ...
Page 5
... England . He kept this end constantly in view , and accomplished it with unbending severity in some instances , but in others with meritorious ability . He was almost the first chief governor who deserved the praise of pro- tecting and ...
... England . He kept this end constantly in view , and accomplished it with unbending severity in some instances , but in others with meritorious ability . He was almost the first chief governor who deserved the praise of pro- tecting and ...
Page 9
... England , to strengthen the royal arm in that country . A cringing parliament , instigated , no doubt , by his ... England , and pursued him with accusations ; but these were so unskilfully THE CONNECTION WITH ENGLAND . 9.
... England , to strengthen the royal arm in that country . A cringing parliament , instigated , no doubt , by his ... England , and pursued him with accusations ; but these were so unskilfully THE CONNECTION WITH ENGLAND . 9.
Page 11
... England that he was supported by the purse of some foreign enemy of the crown , and was a Roman Catholic at heart . Boyle was preparing to leave Ireland , and vindicate himself from these charges before the queen , when the Munster wars ...
... England that he was supported by the purse of some foreign enemy of the crown , and was a Roman Catholic at heart . Boyle was preparing to leave Ireland , and vindicate himself from these charges before the queen , when the Munster wars ...
Page 13
... public affairs and the patronage of the government , by the strength of family com- pacts . To the weight possessed by his own and his sons ' peerages , we must add the influence possessed by his THE CONNECTION WITH ENGLAND . 13.
... public affairs and the patronage of the government , by the strength of family com- pacts . To the weight possessed by his own and his sons ' peerages , we must add the influence possessed by his THE CONNECTION WITH ENGLAND . 13.
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Common terms and phrases
acres administration amongst amount appear appointed arms army authority Belfast bill Broghill canal Carrick-on-Suir Charles Clonmel Commissioners considerable Cork court crown debt declared Drogheda Dublin duke earl effect ejectment England English established estates execution favour Fitz gent grants Grattan honour House of Commons improvement interest Ireland Irish parliament James Kilkenny king king's kingdom labour land landlord late lease liberty Limerick Lord Broghill Lord Charlemont lord lieutenant lords justices Lough Neagh majesty majesty's measures ment miles minister navigation O'Neil occasion Ormonde Papist parlia parliament of England parliament of Ireland parliamentary party passed pension period persons political possession principle private enterprise proceedings produced Protestant railway rebellion rent respect revenue Roger Moore Roman Catholics session Shannon spirit statute tenant tion tolls took town treaty of Limerick Ulster undertaking voted Waterford whole
Popular passages
Page 118 - All the penal laws of that unparalleled code of oppression, which were made after the last event, were manifestly the effects of national hatred and scorn towards a conquered people ; whom the victors delighted to trample upon, and were not at all afraid to provoke.
Page 262 - The statesman who should attempt to direct private people in what manner they ought to employ their capitals, would not only load himself with a most unnecessary attention, but assume an authority which could safely be trusted, not only to no single person, but to no council or senate whatever, and which would nowhere be so dangerous as in the hands of a man who had folly and presumption enough to fancy himself fit to exercise it.
Page 429 - It would be impossible for language to convey an idea of the state of distress to which the ejected tenantry have been reduced, or of the disease, misery, and even vice, which they have propagated in the towns wherein they have settled ; so that not only they who have been ejected have been rendered miserable, but they have carried with them and propagated that misery.
Page 184 - I am now to address a free people : ages have passed away, and this is the first moment in which you could be distinguished by that appellation. I have spoken on the subject of your liberty so often, that I have nothing to add, and have only to admire by what heaven-directed steps you have proceeded until the whole faculty of the nation is braced up to the act of her own deliverance. I found Ireland on her knees, I watched over her with an...
Page 180 - ... consummation of everything, are yet to come. Without them the work is imperfect, the foundation is wanting, the capital is wanting, trade is not free, Ireland is a colony without the benefit of a charter, and you are a provincial synod without the privileges of a parliament. I...
Page 180 - The British minister mistakes the Irish character: had he intended to make Ireland a slave, he should have kept her a beggar; there is no middle policy; win her heart by the restoration of her right, or cut off the nation's right hand ; greatly emancipate, or fundamentally destroy. We may talk plausibly to England, but so long as she exercises a power to bind this country, so long are the nations in a state of war; the claims of the one go against the liberty of the other, and the sentiments of the...
Page 180 - ... reject that good which not a minister — not a Lord North — not a Lord Buckinghamshire — not a Lord Hillsborough, but a certain providential conjuncture, or, rather, the hand of God, seems to extend to you.
Page 180 - ... baize, serges, and kerseys, and you may bring back again directly from the plantations sugar, indigo, specklewood, beetle-root, and panellas. But liberty, the foundation of trade, the charters of the land, the independency of Parliament, the securing, crowning, and the consummation of everything, are yet to come. Without them the work is imperfect, the foundation is wanting, the capital is wanting, trade is not free, Ireland is a colony without the benefit of a charter, and you are a provincial...
Page 117 - So that the whole of your island has been confiscated, with the exception of the estates of five or six families of English blood, some of whom had been attainted in the reign of Henry VIII., but recovered their possessions before Tyrone's rebellion, and had the good fortune to escape the pillage of the English republic inflicted by Cromwell ; and no inconsiderable portion of the island has been confiscated twice, or perhaps thrice, in the course of a century.
Page 171 - Ireland from the enjoyment and use of her own resources ; to make the kingdom completely subservient to the interests and opulence of this country, without suffering her to share in the bounties of nature, in the industry of her citizens, or making them contribute to the general interests and strength of the empire.