| 1820 - 590 pages
...from all public, and almost all private rights. ' The law, ' it was publicly stated from the Bench, * did not presume a Papist to exist in the kingdom ; nor could * they breathe but by the sufferance of the Government. ' The House of Commons, of course, was a mere Committee of... | |
| Francis Plowden - Ireland - 1805 - 482 pages
...with a high hand; Mr. Saul was prosecuted ; and he was publicly assured from the bench, that the laivs did not presume a Papist to exist in the kingdom, nor could they breathe without the connivance of government.* The publication of Dr. Curry's Historical Memoirs of the Irish rebellion .of l641f though... | |
| Francis Plowden - Ireland - 1805 - 486 pages
...with a high hand; Mr. Saul was prosecuted ; and he was publicly assured from the bench, that the laws did not presume a Papist to exist in the kingdom, nor could they breatlte without the connivance of government.* The publication of Dr. Curry's Historical Memoirs of... | |
| Francis Plowden - Ireland - 1812 - 678 pages
...taken up with a high hand. Mr. Saul was prosecuted, and publicly assured from the bench, that the laws did not presume a Papist to exist in the kingdom, nor could they breathe without the connivance of government f. The publication about % ยป Mr. Charles O'Connor of Ballenagare, the celebrated Irish... | |
| Francis Plowden - Ireland - 1812 - 566 pages
...Government, AD 1759, when Mr. Saul was assured from the Bench, that ths laws did not presume a Pc/pist to exist in the kingdom / nor could they breathe without the connivance of Goveanment, The sentence alluded to is: "The probability, or " even certainty, that truth will be ill... | |
| William Henry Curran - Lawyers - 1819 - 468 pages
...protestants, to exercise religious worship ; in short, by a kind of constructive annihilation, " the laws did not presume a papist to exist in the kingdom, nor could they breathe without the connivance of government *." This state of national humiliation lasted almost a century. Viceroy succeeded viceroy... | |
| Thomas Moore - Botany Bay (N.S.W.) - 1824 - 404 pages
...converters were laying siege to rather violently, it was stated gravely from the bench that " the laws did not presume a Papist to exist in the kingdom, nor could they breathe without the connivance of Government." This is one of those sublime and daring fictions, in which Law leaves Poetry so very far... | |
| English literature - 1819 - 606 pages
...Protestants, to exercise religious worship ; in short, by a kind of constructive annihilation, l the laws did not presume a papist to exist in the kingdom, nor could they breathe without the connivance of government.' " This state of national humiliation lasttil almost a century. Viceroy succeeded viceroy... | |
| Thomas Moore - 1832 - 346 pages
...converters were laying siege to rather violently, it was stated gravely from the bench that " the laws did not presume a Papist to exist in the kingdom, nor could they breathe without the connivance of Government." This is one of those sublime and daring fictions, in which Law leaves Poetry so very far... | |
| 1838 - 804 pages
...force ; and whose guiding principle was, as at one time stated publicly from the bench, "that the law did not presume a Papist to exist in the kingdom, nor could they breathe but by the sufferance of government." On this subject we shall say a few words hereafter. He was descended... | |
| |