A Collection of Tracts and Treatises Illustrative of the Natural History, Antiquities, and the Political and Social State of Ireland: At Various Periods Prior to the Present Century, Volume 1 |
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Page 13
... English Pale : the principall townes of that Nation . I Sect . 1. Situation of Ireland . RELAND , by the Irish themselves called Erin , and by their neighbours the Welsh Yverdon , lieth in the North - west Ocean , having on the West ...
... English Pale : the principall townes of that Nation . I Sect . 1. Situation of Ireland . RELAND , by the Irish themselves called Erin , and by their neighbours the Welsh Yverdon , lieth in the North - west Ocean , having on the West ...
Page 14
... English Pilots to be of fortie leagues , or sixscore English miles . But Wales in two or three places commeth a great deal neerer to Ireland , and in some as neer again . For Holy - head , being the most Westerly corner of the ...
... English Pilots to be of fortie leagues , or sixscore English miles . But Wales in two or three places commeth a great deal neerer to Ireland , and in some as neer again . For Holy - head , being the most Westerly corner of the ...
Page 16
... English ones , three whereof make one League , or Holland mile , but of the Irish , the which are about one fifth part bigger , so as five Irish miles do amount to about six English . Sect . 4. Division of Ireland into Provinces and ...
... English ones , three whereof make one League , or Holland mile , but of the Irish , the which are about one fifth part bigger , so as five Irish miles do amount to about six English . Sect . 4. Division of Ireland into Provinces and ...
Page 17
... English Pale . There is yet another division of Ireland , whereby the whole land is divided into two parts , The English Pale , and the Land of the meer Irish . The English Pale comprehendeth only four Counties , one whereof is in ...
... English Pale . There is yet another division of Ireland , whereby the whole land is divided into two parts , The English Pale , and the Land of the meer Irish . The English Pale comprehendeth only four Counties , one whereof is in ...
Page 18
... English Pale , which in the old signification was now out of season , remained in use , and is so still , even since this last bloody rebellion , wherein the inhabitants of almost all the Pale , although all of them of English descent ...
... English Pale , which in the old signification was now out of season , remained in use , and is so still , even since this last bloody rebellion , wherein the inhabitants of almost all the Pale , although all of them of English descent ...
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Common terms and phrases
aliæ aliàs aliis amongst Angliæ Anglorum anno apud asserit Atque Augustini auncient betwixt Cæterùm called Canonicis Canonicorum circa annum cœnobii coenobium Conquest conventum County Crowne cujus cùm dicti dicto dictus doth Dublin Dubliniensis Dublinii Earle ecclesiæ ejus ejusdem England English eorum episcopus etiam Eudox filio filius fuerunt fuisse fuit fundavit generall Giraldus Giraldus Cambrensis graunt hæc hath Haven Henrico Hiberniæ Hibernicis Hibernorum Hibernos hîc hodiè hujus ibidem Iland Insula inter Ireland Iren Irenæus Irish JAMES WARE Johannes juxta King Edward King Henry Kingdome land Leinster loci Lord Lough Majesty Mariæ miles Minorum Munster obiit olim ordinis Ostmannis Patricii places porrò posteà prælio primus quæ quàm quibus quod raigne realme rege regem Regis Scythians Sect sedes severall sive Statutes of Kilkenny sunt suprà thereof Tredagh Ulster unto verò vulgò warre Waterford Wexford
Popular passages
Page 6 - ... godliness hath promise of the life that now is," as well as of that which is to come.
Page 419 - ... they say it is the fatal destiny of that land, that no purposes whatsoever which are meant for her good, will prosper or take good effect : which, whether it proceed from the very genius of the soil or influence of the stars, or that Almighty God hath not yet appointed the time of her reformation, or that He reserveth her in this unquiet state still, for some secret scourge, which shall by her come unto England, it is hard to be known, but yet much to be feared.
Page 499 - ... under his mantle, but used commonly to keep others waking to defend their lives, and did light his candle at the flames of their houses, to lead him in the darkness : that the day was his night, and the night his day, that he loved...
Page 495 - ... for, in his getting up, his horse is still going, whereby hee gayneth way. And therefore the stirrup was called so in scorne, as it were a stay to get up, being derived of the old English word sty, which, is, to get up, or mounte.
Page 476 - ... freebooting, it is his best and surest friend ; for lying, as they often do, two or three nights together abroad to watch for their booty, with that they can prettily shroud themselves under a bush or bankside till they may conveniently do their errand...
Page 437 - ... so commodiously, as that if some princes in the world had them, they would soon hope to be lords of all the seas, and ere long of all the world...
Page 499 - ... that the day was his night, and the night his day ; that he loved...
Page 19 - Irish thereby got the opportunity to recover now this, and then that part of the land, whereby and through the degenerating of a great many, from time to time, who, joining themselves with the Irish, took upon them their wild fashions and their language, the English, in length of time, came to be so much weakened, that at last nothing remained to them of the whole kingdom worth the speaking of...
Page 485 - And the cause of this use, was for ihat they, being bred in a hot countrey, found much haire on their faces and other parts to be noyous unto them : for which cause they did cut it most away, like as contrarily all other nations, brought up in cold...
Page 532 - Irish ; and also for terror to the Irish, who are much emboldened by those foreign succours, and also put in hope of more ere long, there was no other way but to make that short end of them as was made.