The Inquirer, Volumes 1-21822 |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 76
Page 25
... Ireland , whilst the greater number of its opponents , have about as clear an idea of an Irish Catholic as they have formed of the mammoth or the me- gatherion . Examples might also be shown of many who before they visited Ireland were ...
... Ireland , whilst the greater number of its opponents , have about as clear an idea of an Irish Catholic as they have formed of the mammoth or the me- gatherion . Examples might also be shown of many who before they visited Ireland were ...
Page 36
... Ireland ; though it may be fairly assumed , that every objection which exists in this island , becomes much stronger in its application to Ireland , and that many of the most serious objections to tythe in Ireland are exclusively of a ...
... Ireland ; though it may be fairly assumed , that every objection which exists in this island , becomes much stronger in its application to Ireland , and that many of the most serious objections to tythe in Ireland are exclusively of a ...
Page 319
... Ireland for its object : England had incurred a long debt to Ireland , which could not be better repaid than by affording them the benefits of religious and moral education , on the advantages of which His Royal Highness dilated at some ...
... Ireland for its object : England had incurred a long debt to Ireland , which could not be better repaid than by affording them the benefits of religious and moral education , on the advantages of which His Royal Highness dilated at some ...
Contents
VOL | 1 |
ESSAYS Page | 12 |
On ameliorating the Condition of the Poor | 14 |
56 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
abolition advantages afford African appears attended Barbadoes benevolent British Cape Coast capital punishments catholic cause character Christian church colonies committed Committee conduct considered court crime criminal cultivation duty effect emancipation employed endeavour England English established evil exertions existence Fairstead favour feelings formed friends gaol give Government Granville Sharp happiness Homel honour human important improvement India Indian slavery Institution instruction interest Ireland Irish island Joannina justice king labour land London Lord Lord Mansfield magistrates master means ment mind misery Missionary moral Myro nation natives nature Negroes object observe obtain occasion offences officer opinion parliament persons police poor present principle prison produce punishment purpose racter received religion religious rendered Report respect Samuel Romilly Scriptures Sharp ship Sierra Leone slave trade slavery Society Souliots South Wales sugar thing tion West Indies whole