The English in Ireland in the Eighteenth Century, Volume 3Scribner, Armstrong, and Company, 1874 - British |
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Page 34
... cause of complaint . But in the unguarded freedom of a private conversation the 1 Dundas to Westmoreland , January 29 , 1792 . Private . S. P. O. Ministers had evidently gone further than Dundas acknowledged . They 34 THE ENGLISH IN ...
... cause of complaint . But in the unguarded freedom of a private conversation the 1 Dundas to Westmoreland , January 29 , 1792 . Private . S. P. O. Ministers had evidently gone further than Dundas acknowledged . They 34 THE ENGLISH IN ...
Page 36
... cause the conviction which it is your object to prevent . The Catholic body can only act against the Protestant by outrage and intimidation , and you will be obliged by the necessary principles of government to spill the blood of the ...
... cause the conviction which it is your object to prevent . The Catholic body can only act against the Protestant by outrage and intimidation , and you will be obliged by the necessary principles of government to spill the blood of the ...
Page 42
... cause . ' The Address would commit Parliament before the subject had been discussed . ' Instead of the relaxation of the penal laws having tended to unite Protestants and Catholics , ' wrote Westmoreland , as if it was something to be ...
... cause . ' The Address would commit Parliament before the subject had been discussed . ' Instead of the relaxation of the penal laws having tended to unite Protestants and Catholics , ' wrote Westmoreland , as if it was something to be ...
Page 58
... causes the present bustle . I am as sensible i as they can be that it is good policy that the Catholics should be attached to the English Government , but we must take care that in the flirtation we do not lose our power . If the ...
... causes the present bustle . I am as sensible i as they can be that it is good policy that the Catholics should be attached to the English Government , but we must take care that in the flirtation we do not lose our power . If the ...
Page 64
... caused . This letter being among the Secret Irish Papers , was evidently for- warded by Doctor Hussey to Dun- das .'- Irish MSS . , October 2 , 1792 . ' Major Hobart to Evan Ne- pean , October 20. Secret . ' S.P.O. 2 Lord Moira may , if ...
... caused . This letter being among the Secret Irish Papers , was evidently for- warded by Doctor Hussey to Dun- das .'- Irish MSS . , October 2 , 1792 . ' Major Hobart to Evan Ne- pean , October 20. Secret . ' S.P.O. 2 Lord Moira may , if ...
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The English in Ireland in the Eighteenth Century, Volume 3 James Anthony Froude No preview available - 2015 |
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agitation Arklow arms army arrest assassination Bagenal Harvey Belfast Bill BOOK VIII British Burke Cabinet Camden to Portland Castle Catholic Committee concession Cork dangerous disaffection disarm Dublin Duke Duke of Portland Emancipation England English Enniscorthy Father John February Fitzgerald Fitzgibbon Fitzwilliam fleet force France French friends gentlemen gentry George Ponsonby Government Grattan Hobart Hoche House of Commons insurgents insurrection Ireland Irish Parliament January John Sheares June Keogh land laws leaders Leinster letter liberty Lord Camden Lord Edward Lord Edward Fitzgerald Lord Fitzwilliam Lord Moira magistrates Major Hobart March ment militia murder Napper Tandy nation officers opinion Orangemen party patriots Pelham persons pikes Pitt political Ponsonby present priests prisoners Protestant Protestant ascendency rebellion rebels Reform regiment Revolution secret sent soldiers spirit thousand tion told Tone's town treason troops Ulster United Irishmen Viceroy Vinegar Hill Volunteers Wexford Wolfe Tone wrote Yeomanry СНАР
Popular passages
Page 253 - We have offered you our measure, you will reject it; we deprecate yours; you will persevere; having no hopes left to persuade or dissuade, and having discharged our duty, we shall trouble you no more, and AFTER THIS DAY SHALL NOT ATTEND THE HOUSE OF COMMONS ! Lord Castlereagh alter complimenting Mr.
Page 344 - 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 ; some of its most atrocious monsters have already paid the forfeit of their lives, and the rest are in our hands.
Page 16 - My unalterable opinion is that the bane of Irish prosperity is in the influence of England: I believe that influence will ever be extended while the connection between the countries continues ; nevertheless, as I know that opinion is, for the present, too hardy, though a very little time may establish it universally, I have not made it a part of the resolutions...
Page 63 - August 16. — Damn the Aristocrats ! Mug a quantity of mulled wine. Generally drunk. Union of Irishmen, with three times three. ' August 17. — Eise as sick as a dog. Breakfast with Lord Moira, and ask leave to introduce Gog, which he grants with much civility.
Page 13 - The greatest happiness of the greatest number in this island, the inherent and indefeasible claim of every free nation to rest in this nation - the will and the power to be happy to pursue the common weal as an individual pursues his private welfare, and to stand in insulated independence, an imperatorial people.
Page 491 - How I long to kick those whom my public duty obliges me to court!' ' My occupation is now of the most unpleasant nature, negotiating and jobbing with the most corrupt people under heaven. I despise and hate myself every hour, for engaging in such dirty work, and am supported only by the reflection, that without an Union the British Empire must be dissolved.
Page 15 - When the Aristocracy come forward, the People fall backward; when the People come forward, the Aristocracy, fearful of being left behind, insinuate themselves into our ranks, and rise into timid leaders, or treacherous auxiliaries.
Page 119 - Turn thee unto me, and have mercy upon me; for I am desolate and afflicted.
Page 345 - The national flag, the sacred green, is at this moment flying over the ruins of Despotism ; and that capital which a few hours past witnessed the debauchery, the plots and crimes, of your tyrants, is now the citadel of triumphant patriotism and virtue. Arise, then, United Sons of Ireland ! arise like a great and powerful people, determined to live free or die.
Page 125 - 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 lower orders is universally admitted (though the violences now committed from time to time are not the violences arising from disaffection or political causes, but merely the outrages of banditti, fostered, however, under that pretended cause).