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" Barrow, at the city of Waterford. Accursed be that day in the memory of all future generations of Irishmen, when the invaders first touched our shores ! They came to a nation famous for its love of learning, its piety, and its heroism. — they came when... "
The Jesuits: their moral maxims and plots - Page 113
by James Aitken Wylie - 1881
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The History of the Policy of the Church of Rome in Ireland: From the ...

William Phelan - Ireland - 1827 - 378 pages
...when the invading party entered the noble estuary formed by the conflux of the Suir, the Nore, and the Barrow, at the city of Waterford. Accursed be that...doomed Ireland to seven centuries of oppression." — Dublin Evening Mail, Friday, November 17th. With the slight mistakes of 1172 for 1171, and of August...
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The remains of William Phelan [ed. by M. Phelan]. With a biogr ..., Volume 2

William Phelan - 1832 - 378 pages
...when the invading party entered the noble estuary formed by the conflux of the Suir, the Nore, and the Barrow, at the city of Waterford. Accursed be that...doomed Ireland to seven centuries of oppression.' — Dublin Evening Mail, Friday, November 17th. With the slight mistakes of 1172 for 1171, and of August...
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Hugh Bryan: The Autobiography of an Irish Rebel

Hugh Bryan - Ireland - 1866 - 496 pages
...land, where the sunbeams played on the blue waters, reflecting the beauties of the surrounding country. They came to a nation famous for its love of learning,...sons, and wasted their energies. Internal traitors led in the invaders ; her sons fell in no fight ; her liberties were crushed in no battle, but domestic...
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History of the Scottish nation, Volume 2

James Aitken Wylie - Scotland - 1887 - 406 pages
...formed by the conflux of the Suir, the Nore, and Barrow at the city of Waterford. Accursed be lh.1t day in the memory of all future generations of Irishmen...— her sons fell in no fight, her liberties were cruahed in no battle ; but domestic treason and foreign invaders doomed Ireland to seven centuries...
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Joyce and the Anglo-Irish: A Study of Joyce and the Literary Revival, Volume 119

Len Platt - Literary Criticism - 1998 - 260 pages
...Joyce was precisely what the Literary Revival was determined to underplay.15 14 Accursed be the day ... when the invaders first touched our shores. They came...nation famous for its love of learning, its piety, its heroism [and] doomed Ireland to seven centuries of oppression .... In my daydreams 1 revive a brighter...
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