The United Irishmen: Their Lives and TimesJ. Madden & Company, Leadenhall-Street., 1843 - Great Britain |
From inside the book
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Page 2
... passing observations on the duty which every man owed his country , there are no grounds for the injurious statements . The plain fact of the matter is , some of the leading members of the Whig club and of the opposition in Parliament ...
... passing observations on the duty which every man owed his country , there are no grounds for the injurious statements . The plain fact of the matter is , some of the leading members of the Whig club and of the opposition in Parliament ...
Page 17
... passing through London , on his return to Ireland . * Mackintosh's opinion of his talents we find some account of in the Memoirs of his Life , lately published by his son . * Life of Sir James Mackintosh , vol . i . p . 27 . CHAPTER III ...
... passing through London , on his return to Ireland . * Mackintosh's opinion of his talents we find some account of in the Memoirs of his Life , lately published by his son . * Life of Sir James Mackintosh , vol . i . p . 27 . CHAPTER III ...
Page 43
... passed some time between Dublin and Belfast , sowing the seeds of future combustion . " In the autobiography of A. H. Rowan , it is cer- tainly stated that about December , 1792 , an offer was sent from the French Convention , directed ...
... passed some time between Dublin and Belfast , sowing the seeds of future combustion . " In the autobiography of A. H. Rowan , it is cer- tainly stated that about December , 1792 , an offer was sent from the French Convention , directed ...
Page 60
... passed through the Raz , a difficult and dangerous navigation . Next day , to Tone's great mortification , saw only eighteen sail in company instead of forty - three - two of the ad- mirals and the general with the absent . Admiral ...
... passed through the Raz , a difficult and dangerous navigation . Next day , to Tone's great mortification , saw only eighteen sail in company instead of forty - three - two of the ad- mirals and the general with the absent . Admiral ...
Page 67
... passing for a Frenchman , with an English newspaper , and endeavouring to get into conversation with him ; on several other occasions succeeding in getting information from the secretaries and other functionaries , which ought not to ...
... passing for a Frenchman , with an English newspaper , and endeavouring to get into conversation with him ; on several other occasions succeeding in getting information from the secretaries and other functionaries , which ought not to ...
Other editions - View all
The United Irishmen, Their Lives and Times; Volume 1 Richard Robert Madden No preview available - 2023 |
The United Irishmen, Their Lives and Times, Volume 1 Richard Robert Madden No preview available - 2015 |
Common terms and phrases
America Antrim appointed Armagh arms arrested arrived Bantry Bay battle of Antrim Belfast British brother called Carrickfergus Castle Catholic cause character Colonel command communicated connexion countrymen death Donegore Dublin emancipation enemies England English executive exile father feelings force France French friends gentleman give Henry Joy M'Cracken honour II.-2ND SERIES insurrection interest Ireland Irish Government James John land letter liberty living Lord Castlereagh Lord Edward Fitzgerald Lord Moira Macneven March meeting memoir ment mind minister nation Neilson never oath object occasion officer opinion Parliament party patriotism person political possession present principles prisoners Protestant Protestant ascendency Randalstown rebels received reform residence revolution Sampson sent sister society taken Theobald Wolfe Tone thing Thomas Addis Emmet tion told Tone took town troops Union United Irish United Irishmen William WILLIAM JAMES MACNEVEN wish York
Popular passages
Page 195 - No matter where. Of comfort no man speak: Let's talk of graves, of worms, and epitaphs; Make dust our paper, and with rainy eyes Write sorrow on the bosom of the earth; Let's choose executors and talk of wills : And yet not so — for what can we bequeath Save our deposed bodies to the ground?
Page 372 - 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 4 - Emmett, before he came to the bar, knew more law than any of the Judges on the bench ; and if he had been placed on one side, and the whole bench opposed to him, he could have been examined against them, and would have surpassed them all ; — he would have answered better both in law and divinity than any judge or any bishop in the land.
Page 83 - I believe if it had not been for these arrests, it would not have taken place; for the people, irritated by what they suffered, had been long pressing the executive to consent to an...
Page 340 - I have before said, the moment the very name of Ireland is mentioned, the English seem to bid adieu to common feeling, common prudence, and common sense, and to act with the barbarity of tyrants, and the fatuity of idiots.
Page 107 - ... and to arrest and detain in custody all persons engaged in such rebellion, or suspected thereof; and to cause all persons so arrested...
Page 513 - Connaught, that was separated from the rest by a long and a large river, and which by the plague and many massacres remained almost desolate. Into this space and circuit of land they required all the Irish to retire by such a day, under the penalty of death ; and all who should after that time be found in any other part of the kingdom, man, woman, -or child...
Page 82 - Emmet, you have stated the views of the executive to be very liberal and very enlightened, and I believe yours were so ; but let me ask you, whether it was not intended to cut off (in the beginning of the contest) the leaders of the opposition party by a summary mode, such as assassination : my reason for asking you is, John Sheares's proclamation, the most terrible paper that ever appeared in any country : it says, ,that " many of your tyrants have bled, and others must bleed,
Page 90 - ... of the United Irish went to a republic and separation from England; but they would probably have compounded for a reform in parliament. Am I not right, however, in understanding that the object next their hearts was a separation and a republic? Emmet. Pardon me, the object next their hearts was a redress of their grievances...
Page 92 - I cannot pay so bad a compliment to the reasons which have convinced myself, as not to suppose they will convince others. As the human mind grows philosophic, it will, I think, wish for the destruction of all religious establishments, and therefore, in proportion as the catholic mind becomes philosophic, it will of course entertain the same wishes - but I consider that as the result of its philosophy, and not of its religion.