English misrule and Irish misdeeds, 4 letters |
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Page 12
... require , in the case of young men without families , that a portion of the wages earned should be reserved as a fund to assist emigration at the con- clusion of the work . In the third place , where the pressure from without is great ...
... require , in the case of young men without families , that a portion of the wages earned should be reserved as a fund to assist emigration at the con- clusion of the work . In the third place , where the pressure from without is great ...
Page 48
... requires . The reluctance with which I make them is , however , mitigated by the con- sideration , that what you imagine to be our complete and final condemnation is by far the strongest part of our case against you . Unhappy the ...
... requires . The reluctance with which I make them is , however , mitigated by the con- sideration , that what you imagine to be our complete and final condemnation is by far the strongest part of our case against you . Unhappy the ...
Page 55
... up to dissensions as they are now ; but an ' appropriation ' of the whole country on the grand scale projected by Henry II . requiring a pretext , that sovereign betook himself to an LET . II . ] 55 AND IRISH MISDEEDS .
... up to dissensions as they are now ; but an ' appropriation ' of the whole country on the grand scale projected by Henry II . requiring a pretext , that sovereign betook himself to an LET . II . ] 55 AND IRISH MISDEEDS .
Page 56
Aubrey De Vere (calling himself earl of Oxford.) requiring a pretext , that sovereign betook himself to an English pope , who conferred Ireland upon the English king , as a fief held from himself , together with the title of " lord ...
Aubrey De Vere (calling himself earl of Oxford.) requiring a pretext , that sovereign betook himself to an English pope , who conferred Ireland upon the English king , as a fief held from himself , together with the title of " lord ...
Page 91
... require to be sharpened into sarcasm before they can make their way amid the press of modern thought ; and they fall flat on those who think an expedient a much cleverer thing than a principle . You carried the union by corruption ; and ...
... require to be sharpened into sarcasm before they can make their way amid the press of modern thought ; and they fall flat on those who think an expedient a much cleverer thing than a principle . You carried the union by corruption ; and ...
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Common terms and phrases
agriculture amongst become believe better British called capital Catholic Emancipation cause Celt century charity CHARLES LYELL colonies common confiscation course danger duty effect emigration empire England English English law evil exists famine farmers faults gift govern gratitude heard honour hope improvement increase interest Ireland Irish character Irish mob Irish peasant Irish proprietors justice labour land landlords lawlessness legislation less Lord measure ment moral nation necessary never once opinion Parliament particle of truth passion past pauperism peace penal laws perhaps period persons Philip Van Artevelde political Poor Law population possess potato poverty prejudices present principle proportion prosperity Protestant Ascendancy prove race relief religion remember reverence Roman Catholic ruin Sir John Davies social suffer thing tion trade truder truth tyranny Union virtues Whiteboys whole
Popular passages
Page 71 - English interest was settled with as solid a stability as any thing in human affairs can look for. All the penal laws of that unparalleled code of oppression, which were made after the last event, were manifestly the effects of national hatred and scorn towards a conquered people ; whom the...
Page 59 - Out of every corner of the woods and glens they came creeping forth upon their hands, for their legs could not bear them; they looked like anatomies of death ; they spake like ghosts crying out of their graves...
Page 58 - This, then, I note as a great defect in the civil policy of this kingdom, in that, for the space of 350 years at least after the conquest first attempted, the English laws were not communicated to the Irish, nor the benefit and protection thereof allowed unto them, though they earnestly desired and sought the same.
Page 59 - ... after, insomuch as the very carcasses they spared not to scrape out of their graves ; and if they found a plot of watercresses or shamrocks, there they flocked as to a feast for the time, yet not able long to continue there withal; that in short space there were none almost left, and a most populous and plentiful country suddenly left void of man and beast...
Page 58 - ... years at least after the conquest first attempted, the English laws were not communicated to the Irish, nor the. benefit and protection thereof allowed unto them, though they earnestly desired and sought the same.
Page 87 - Colonies, limiting the supply to their own consumption ; but even this measure was negatived upon a division. Towards the close of that year, the events of the war in North America, and the state of things in Ireland, produced a different feeling in the British Parliament. State necessity, acting under a sense of political danger, yielded, without grace, that which good .sense and good feeling had before recommended in vain...
Page 73 - Cromwell and his powerful army after several years, with such bloodshed and rigour that, in the opinion of lord Clarendon, the sufferings of that nation, from the outset of the rebellion to its close, have never been surpassed but by those of the Jews in their destruction by Titus.
Page 76 - England in reducing the rebels of 1688, and the sale introduced into Ireland a new set of adventurers. It is a very curious and important speculation to look back to the forfeitures of Ireland incurred in the last century. The superficial contents of the island are calculated at 11,042,682 acres.
Page 93 - ... means of relief are not in our power, what is the remedy that reason and policy point out ? It is to identify them with us ; it is to make them a part of the same community, by giving them a full share of those accumulated blessings which are diffused throughout Great Britain ; it is, in a word, by giving them a full participation of the wealth, the power, and the stability of the British empire.
Page 92 - I hope I feel, as becomes a true Irishman, for the dignity and independence of my country, and therefore I would elevate her to her proper station in the rank of civilised nations.