| Great Britain. Parliament - Great Britain - 1868 - 1110 pages
...mild and excellent Bishop of Kilmorc. Sit mea anirna cum Bcdtllo .' When Irishmen consent to let tho past become indeed history, not party politics, and...respect and tolerance, instead of endless bitterness nnd enmity, then, at last, this distracted land •hall see the dawn of hope and peace, and begin to... | |
| John Mitchel - Ireland - 1845 - 266 pages
...imprisonment within its walls of the mild and excellent Bishop of Kilmore. Sit mea anima cum Bedello ! When Irishmen consent to let the past become indeed...rear her head amongst the proudest of the nations. THE LIFE OF HUGH O'NEILL. CHAPTER I. CON THE LAME, AND HIS TIMES. AD 1535—1550. WHEN Con O'Neill,... | |
| 1848 - 596 pages
...imprisonment within its walls of the mild and excellent Bishop of Kilmore. Sit mea anima cum Bedelía ! " When Irishmen consent to let the past become indeed...begin to learn from it the lessons of mutual respect und tolerance, instead of endless bitterness and enmity, then, at last, this distracted land shall... | |
| Great Britain. Parliament - Great Britain - 1868 - 1112 pages
...imprisonment within its walls of the mild and excellent Bishop of Kilmorc. Sit mea anima cum Bedelía ! When Irishmen consent to let the past become indeed...politics, and begin to learn from it the lessons of mutual reepect and tolerance, instead of endless bitterness and enmity, then, at last, this distracted land... | |
| 1908 - 730 pages
...centuries, he could not shut his heart to any one who he felt was acting conscientiously. It is only when Irishmen consent to let the past become indeed history, not party politics, that they will be united. Alfred Webb's studies in Irish history led to the production of a work to... | |
| Richard Southwell Bourke Mayo (6th Earl of.) - India - 1873 - 582 pages
...imprisonment -within Its walls of the mild and excellent BISHOP of KILMORE. sit mea anima cum Bedallo ! When Irishmen consent to let the past become indeed...from it the lessons of mutual respect and tolerance, insted of endless bitterness and enmity, then, at last, this dis25 290 SPEECHES OF EARL MAYO. [ tracted... | |
| Great Britain. Parliament - Great Britain - 1875 - 1160 pages
...had gratified him to read in The Times of that morning the following generous and noble words : — "When Irishmen consent to let the past become indeed...her youth and rear her head amongst the proudest of nations." These wore the words of John Mitchel — De tnortuis nil nisi bonum. He ventured to think... | |
| Ellen Webley Parry - Great Britain - 1879 - 530 pages
...the murmuring Logan, lie buried the bones of Jeremy Taylor—Usher was Irish—and Berkeley of Derry. When Irishmen consent to let the past become indeed history, not party polities, and begin to learn from it the lessons of mutual respect and tolerance, instead of bitterness... | |
| Charles Anderton Read - 1880 - 390 pages
...disavows all sectarian and party feeling, and denounces it as the bane of Ireland ; he affirms that only "when Irishmen consent to let the past become indeed history, not party polities, and begin to learn from it the lessons of mutual respect and tolerance, instead of endless... | |
| 1881 - 692 pages
...to John Mitchel's first piece of writing, his vivid and picturesque " Life of Hugh O'Neill :" — " When Irishmen consent to let the past become indeed...rear her head amongst the proudest of the nations." * * We have paired John Ruskin and John Mitchel, in order to quote a parallel passage from the preface... | |
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