An Historical Apology for the Irish Catholics |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 35
Page 5
... Deputy attack- ing the Irish chieftains , O'Moore and O'Reyly . In 1516 , the Deputy slew Shane O'Tuathal , besieged Lemevan Castle , took Clonmel , invaded Ulster , took the Castle of Dundrum , conquered Fylemy M'Gennis , and ( as it ...
... Deputy attack- ing the Irish chieftains , O'Moore and O'Reyly . In 1516 , the Deputy slew Shane O'Tuathal , besieged Lemevan Castle , took Clonmel , invaded Ulster , took the Castle of Dundrum , conquered Fylemy M'Gennis , and ( as it ...
Page 6
... Deputy was too weak to re- venge the injury , but withheld O'Connor's pension ; O'Connor , in return , took the Deputy prisoner . In 1529 , Kildare , by means of his daugh- ter , Lady Slane , raised a great confede- racy among the Irish ...
... Deputy was too weak to re- venge the injury , but withheld O'Connor's pension ; O'Connor , in return , took the Deputy prisoner . In 1529 , Kildare , by means of his daugh- ter , Lady Slane , raised a great confede- racy among the Irish ...
Page 22
... Deputy . " Sir Anthony St. Leger made it his business to break the dependencies of the Irish , and to that end upon all references to him , he took care that the weaker party might depend on the government for protection ; and that he ...
... Deputy . " Sir Anthony St. Leger made it his business to break the dependencies of the Irish , and to that end upon all references to him , he took care that the weaker party might depend on the government for protection ; and that he ...
Page 24
... Deputy made the award on a reference to him ; but it is plain , that the reference was made only by the one party ; by the weaker who knew he should be supported , not by the stronger who knew he should be crushed . We repeat again ...
... Deputy made the award on a reference to him ; but it is plain , that the reference was made only by the one party ; by the weaker who knew he should be supported , not by the stronger who knew he should be crushed . We repeat again ...
Page 25
... Deputies made use of no precipitate measures of violence against the Roman Catholics ; and , in con- sequence the Reformation proceeded with- out exciting any marked public discontent . Later Protestant writers could not conceive this ...
... Deputies made use of no precipitate measures of violence against the Roman Catholics ; and , in con- sequence the Reformation proceeded with- out exciting any marked public discontent . Later Protestant writers could not conceive this ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
acknow adopted appear arms army bigot bigotry Brehon law cause of rebellion chief Con O'Neil confiscated considered Coyne and Livery Earl of Desmond Edward VI effect elected encreased enemy England English government English power fact favour feelings force granted Henry VIII Hugh O'Neil independence influence injuries insurrection interest Ireland Irish Catholics Irish chieftains Irish princes Irish Protestants Irish Roman Catholics James justice King lands Leix Leland lics lish Lord Deputy Lord Mountjoy loyalty measures ment Munster nation never O'Brien O'Donnel O'Moor Offaly old Irish oppression Pale papists persecution petty political popish possessed prerogatives pride principal produced Queen rebel reformation reign of Elizabeth religious Richard Cox Roman Catholic religion Roman Catholics sect Shane O'Neil sheriffs shew sidered Sir Richard Cox spirit subjects submission succeeding rebellion sufficient surrender tains tanist tanistry territory tholics tion tives took Ulster whole sept zeal
Popular passages
Page 116 - And no spectacle was more frequent in the ditches of towns, and especially in wasted countries, than to see multitudes of these poor people dead with their mouths all coloured green by eating nettles, docks, and all things they could rend up above ground.
Page 180 - N 2 storm, to all the jibes and jobs of Protestant ascendancy. Not only a Protestant lord looks down upon a Catholic lord, and a Protestant gentleman on a Catholic gentleman, but a Protestant peasant on a Catholic peasant ; and in proportion as the degrading scale descends, the expression of contempt becomes more marked and gross.
Page 178 - Catholic suffers the three most poignant feelings than can touch the human heart. The government of his country passes a vote of censure on him. • His fellow-citizen expresses his contempt for him, and expresses it with impunity. The child of his affection blushes for him, and mourns for himself, when he learns that he necessarily inherits from his father a blot and a reproach, which no private virtues, or mental endowments, can obliterate or conceal.
Page 45 - ... the Irish Roman Catholics must be bigots and rebels, from the very nature of their religion, and who have advanced this falsehood in the very teeth of fact, and contrary to the most distinct evidence of history. The Irish Roman Catholics bigots ! The o Irish Roman Catholics are the only sect that ever resumed power, without exercising vengeance.
Page 181 - Catholic religion, without ever taking into consideration, the injustice with which the professors of that religion have been treated? ."'•' • The Protestants, in their terror of persecution, have become persecutors ; their alarm at Catholic atrocities has made them atrocious ; to hear them speak, one would imagine that they had been the patient and uncomplaining sufferers, from the reign of William till George...
Page 178 - O hearts of barbarians, of zealots, of Protestants! the flames which made the name of Bonner accursed, the hideous night of St. Bartholomew, are not so great a disgrace to the character of man, as your cold contriving bigotry.
Page 179 - These men merely made a mistake ; they worshipped a demon, and thought him God. But you, with perfect possession ofyour faculties, with a calm pulse, and minds unaffected by the slightest emotion, perpetuate statutes, to gall the best and most honourable feelings of many millions of men, whose sensations of pleasure and pain are exactly of the same nature with those from which your own happiness or misery is derived.
Page 44 - Brown had made, to the injury of the See of Dublin; and certainly this step was full as agreeable to the rules of law and equity, as to popish zeal. " The assertors of the reformation during the preceding reigns were every way unmolested, or as the Protestant historian chooses to term it, were allowed to sink into obscurity and neglect. " Such was the general spirit of toleration that many English families, friands to the reformation, took refuge in Ireland, and there enjoyed their opinions and worship...