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" I shall not do my duty,' he wrote, ' if I do not distinctly state it as my opinion, that not to grant cheerfully on the part of Government all the Catholics wish, will not only be exceedingly impolitic, but perhaps dangerous. The disaffection among the... "
The English in Ireland in the Eighteenth Century - Page 125
by James Anthony Froude - 1874
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A Short History of the Kingdom of Ireland from the Earliest Times to the ...

Charles George Walpole - Ireland - 1882 - 668 pages
...every part of Ireland. " Not to grant cheerfully," wrote the new viceroy to the Duke of Portland, " all the Catholics wish, will not only be exceedingly impolitic, but perhaps dangerous. In doing this no time is to be lost. The disaffection among the lower orders is universal, though the...
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A History of England in the Eighteenth Century, Volume 7

William Edward Hartpole Lecky - Great Britain - 1890 - 504 pages
...do not distinctly state it as my opinion, that not to grant cheerfully on the part of Government all the Catholics wish, will not only be exceedingly impolitic,...dangerous. The disaffection among the lower orders is universally admitted (though the violences now committed from time to time are not the violences arising...
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A History of England in the Eighteenth Century, Volume 7

William Edward Hartpole Lecky - Great Britain - 1890 - 500 pages
...do not distinctly state it as my opinion, that not to grant cheerfully on the part of Government all the Catholics wish, will not only be exceedingly impolitic,...dangerous. The disaffection among the lower orders is universally admitted (though the violences now committed from time to time are not the violences arising...
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A History of Ireland in the Eighteenth Century, Volume 3

William Edward Hartpole Lecky - Ireland - 1892 - 600 pages
...do not distinctly state it as my opinion, that not to grant cheerfully on the part of Government all the Catholics wish, will not only be exceedingly impolitic,...dangerous. The disaffection among the lower orders is universally ad1 Fitzwilliam to Portland, Jan. Fitzwilliam on learning that 10, 15, 31, 1795. The Bishop...
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The English Historical Review, Volume 7

Mandell Creighton, Justin Winsor, Samuel Rawson Gardiner, Reginald Lane Poole, Sir John Goronwy Edwards - Electronic journals - 1892 - 906 pages
...be doing his duty if he did not distinctly state his opinion that ' not to grant cheerfully all that the catholics wish will not only be exceedingly impolitic, but perhaps dangerous.' And, after assuring the duke that no time was to be lost, and begging him not to delay to talk with...
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Viscount Castlereagh

Arthur Hassall - Great Britain - 1908 - 284 pages
...agitation. On the 15th, however, he wrote stating his opinion that, " not to grant cheerfully all that " the Catholics wish, will not only be exceedingly " impolitic, but perhaps dangerous." In the same despatch he urged Portland to discuss without delay the whole matter with Pitt. No reply...
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Ireland and Her People; a Library of Irish Biography: Together with a ...

Thomas W. H. Fitzgerald - Ireland - 1910 - 478 pages
...Protestant corporation of Deny. "Not to grant cheerfully," wrote the new lordlieutenant, "all that the Catholics wish, will not only be exceedingly impolitic but perhaps dangerous. In doing this no time is to be lost. The disaffection among the lower orders is universal." Fitzwilliam...
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