A Memoir on Ireland ; Native and Saxon, Volume 1 |
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Page 3
... King James the First . The success of the forces of Queen Eliz . abeth was achieved by means the most horrible ; treachery , murder , wholesale massacre , and de- liberately created famine . Take the last instance : the growing crops ...
... King James the First . The success of the forces of Queen Eliz . abeth was achieved by means the most horrible ; treachery , murder , wholesale massacre , and de- liberately created famine . Take the last instance : the growing crops ...
Page 4
... King James in Ulster was never before seen in Christendom save in Ire- land . In the Christian world there never was a people so cruelly treated as the Irish . § 6. The jurisdiction of Parliament being now extended all over Ireland , King ...
... King James in Ulster was never before seen in Christendom save in Ire- land . In the Christian world there never was a people so cruelly treated as the Irish . § 6. The jurisdiction of Parliament being now extended all over Ireland , King ...
Page 8
... King's counsel - they could be attorneys and solicitors - they could be freemen of the lay corporations - the Grand Jury box and the magistracy were opened to them- they were allowed to attain the rank of Colonel in the army - and still ...
... King's counsel - they could be attorneys and solicitors - they could be freemen of the lay corporations - the Grand Jury box and the magistracy were opened to them- they were allowed to attain the rank of Colonel in the army - and still ...
Page 13
... King of Thomond , who had a grant , but only of their Government . If the English people were during King Henry the Third's minority ; and not influenced by a bigotry , violent as it is un- Roderick O'Connor , King of Connaught , to ...
... King of Thomond , who had a grant , but only of their Government . If the English people were during King Henry the Third's minority ; and not influenced by a bigotry , violent as it is un- Roderick O'Connor , King of Connaught , to ...
Page 14
... King , ought to enjoy and use the English liber- ties , and for freemen to be reputed in law . * 6 " The defendant rejoineth : that the plaintiff ' is not of the O'Neiles of Ulster - nec de quin- que sanguinibus , [ nor of the five ...
... King , ought to enjoy and use the English liber- ties , and for freemen to be reputed in law . * 6 " The defendant rejoineth : that the plaintiff ' is not of the O'Neiles of Ulster - nec de quin- que sanguinibus , [ nor of the five ...
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Common terms and phrases
anno barbarity Bishop blood British Captain castle chap Church clergy command committed Connaught court crime Cromwell Crown cruelty death Drogheda Dublin Earl enemies England English Government English Protestant estates executed faith famine franchise garrison give hanged Henry Hibernia Hist horrible horrors illustrious inhabitants instance Ireland Irish Catholics Irish nation Irish Reb Irishman Island Magee James John Perrot jurors Kilkenny killed King King's kingdom land Leland letter Limerick Lords Justices Majesty Majesty's martial law massacre ment mercy Munster murder nation never O'Brien oath oath of Supremacy officers oppression Ormond Papist parliament passage perpetrated persecution persons plunder priests prison Protestant party Protestantism province punished quarter Queen quod rebellion rebels Reform reign religion says sent Sir Charles Coote Sir John Davies slaughter soldiers specimen statute Strafford subjects sword taken thousand tion town treason Tyburne Ulster Union women
Popular passages
Page 27 - 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 6 - It was a machine of wise and elaborate contrivance ; and as well fitted for the oppression, impoverishment, and degradation of a people, and the debasement, in them, of human nature itself, as ever proceeded from the perverted ingenuity of man.
Page 80 - These Irish (anciently called anthropophagi, man-eaters) have a tradition among them, that when the Devil showed our Saviour all the kingdoms of the earth, and their glory, that he would not show him Ireland, but reserved it for himself. It is, probably, true; for he hath kept it ever since for his own peculiar...
Page 26 - Should we exert ourselves", said they, "in reducing this country to order and civility, it must soon acquire power, consequence, and riches. The inhabitants will be thus alienated from England; they will cast themselves into the arms of some foreign power, or perhaps erect themselves into an independent and separate State. Let us rather connive at their disorders; for a weak and disordered people never can attempt to detach themselves from the crown of England.
Page 28 - 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 46 - May graces (so they were termed), by which, in addition to ^' the removal of many minor grievances, it was provided that the recusants should be allowed to practise in the courts of law, and to sue the livery of their lands out of the court of wards, on taking an oath of civil allegiance in lieu of the oath of supremacy ; that the undertakers in the several plantations should have time allowed them to fulfil the conditions of their leases ; that the claims of the crown should be confined to the last...
Page 48 - PROJECT WAS NOTHING LESS THAN TO SUBVERT THE TITLE TO EVERY ESTATE IN EVERY PART OF CONNAUGHT, and to establish a new plantation through this whole province ; a project which, when first proposed in the late reign, was received with horror and amazement.
Page 76 - Bladen; wherein the act of the 27th of Elizabeth was made of force in Ireland, and ordered to be most strictly put in execution. By this act, " every Romish priest, so found, was deemed guilty of rebellion, and sentenced to be hanged until he was half dead ; then to have his head taken off, and his body cut in quarters ; his bowels to be drawn out and burnt ; and ,his head fixed upon a pole in some public place.
Page 15 - ... sureties, to continue a loyal subject. Whereby it is manifest, that such as had the government of Ireland, under the crown of England, did intend to make a perpetual separation and enmity between the English and Irish, pretending, no doubt, that the i.nglish should in the end root out the Irish...
Page 56 - England, had declared there in a speech that the conversion of the papists in Ireland was only to be effected by the Bible in one hand and the sword in the other ; and Mr.