The Real State of Ireland in 1827 |
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Page 8
... supposed influence of the priests over their flocks is greatly over - rated . In matters uncon- nected with religion or with politics , I certainly know it does not exist . The priest of our parish , for example , who seems a coarse and ...
... supposed influence of the priests over their flocks is greatly over - rated . In matters uncon- nected with religion or with politics , I certainly know it does not exist . The priest of our parish , for example , who seems a coarse and ...
Page 14
... supposed ; that compared with the hard- ships endured by the population of England its excess is not so very great , and that this excess , such as it is , will gradually diminish till it vanish altogether , even without the aid of any ...
... supposed ; that compared with the hard- ships endured by the population of England its excess is not so very great , and that this excess , such as it is , will gradually diminish till it vanish altogether , even without the aid of any ...
Page 39
... supposed , and that if there be , as undeniably there are , very many things which we have yet to learn from England , we are willing to profit by the example of our elder and wiser sister , and yet by no means deficient in great and ...
... supposed , and that if there be , as undeniably there are , very many things which we have yet to learn from England , we are willing to profit by the example of our elder and wiser sister , and yet by no means deficient in great and ...
Page 46
... supposed meritoriousness of human works . * Possibly , however , it would be more just as well as more charitable to ascribe much of the good , and somewhat less of the evil , of the Irish character to the influence of their religious ...
... supposed meritoriousness of human works . * Possibly , however , it would be more just as well as more charitable to ascribe much of the good , and somewhat less of the evil , of the Irish character to the influence of their religious ...
Page 60
... supposed . If the lease contained ever so strict a covenant against releasing without the land- lord's consent , yet if he did consent in any one instance , or if , without having consented , he in any way recognized the third person to ...
... supposed . If the lease contained ever so strict a covenant against releasing without the land- lord's consent , yet if he did consent in any one instance , or if , without having consented , he in any way recognized the third person to ...
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Common terms and phrases
acquainted acres afford amongst appearance assert better bread Brownlow called capital Catholic Association Catholic Emancipation certainly Charles the Second cheese circumstances common cultivation dition Dublin Duke of York effect enactments England English evil exercise exist fact farm farmer favourable forty-shilling freeholders gentleman Ginkle greatly ground honour House House of Peers important improvement Irish peasantry kingdom labour land in Ireland landlord legislative legislature less Limerick live Lord lower orders manual labour matter means measure ment mind nation natural neral oath oats opinion panegyric Parliament peated persons plase your honor pledge political population possess potatoes present priests principle privilege produce Protestant question reason reign religion religious rent respect rience Roman Catholic Shiel speak suffer sure tenant tenantry things tillage tion true truth ture uncon undeniably United Kingdom vernment Whig whilst White-Boys words
Popular passages
Page 78 - Catholics of this kingdom shall enjoy such privileges in the exercise of their religion, as are consistent with the laws of Ireland : or as they did enjoy in the reign of king Charles the Second : and their majesties, as soon as their affairs will permit them to summon a parliament in this kingdom, will endeavour to procure the said Roman Catholics such further security in that particular, as may preserve them from any disturbance upon the account of their said religion.
Page 80 - The oath to be administered to such Roman Catholics as submit to their Majesties' Government, shall be the oath abovesaid, and no other.
Page ix - I have not in any place found any such labour or difficulty, but that it was undertakable by a man of very mean, that is, of my abilities. And the reason is, because it is truth I plead for ; which is so strong an argument for itself, that it needs only light to discover it ; whereas it concerns falsehood and error to use disguise and shadowings, and all the fetches of art and sophistry...
Page x - Notwithstanding the wilderness of words, oral and written, which has of late years been wasted on the affairs of Ireland, and the paroxysm of legislation under which we have laboured, arising out of the perpetual discussion of her misfortunes and her faults, I am grieved to acknowledge that the proceedings even of the present session of parliament compel me to think that the people of England are greatly uninformed, or, what is worse, greatly misinformed as to our real condition.
Page 86 - Catholic relief appeared to me and some of my colleagues to be indispensable, finding we could not propose it from government we thought it inconsistent with our duty and our honour to remain in office.
Page 15 - ... selves. In truth, like Ajax in the fight, we ask but for light and fair play; give us these and a clear stage, and in all brotherly affection will we try a fall with merry England ; nor let it be forgotten, whilst we improve each other's strength and skill in the friendly contest, that should we at any time avail ourselves of the Rosicrucian privilege, so longed for by Celia, to take the strong fellow by the leg, we mean no harm by it, but only follow our national method of displaying love and...