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" 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... "
The Real State of Ireland in 1827 - Page x
1827 - 100 pages
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The Quarterly Review, Volume 38

William Gifford, Sir John Taylor Coleridge, John Gibson Lockhart, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, William Smith, Sir John Murray (IV), Rowland Edmund Prothero (Baron Ernle) - English literature - 1828 - 646 pages
...peasantry whose condition he describes ; he speaks to facts of which he has been an eye-witness. ' Notwithstanding the wilderness of words, oral and...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...
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The Quarterly review, Volume 38

1828 - 636 pages
...peasantry whose condition he describes ; he speaks to facts of which he has been an eye-witness. ' Notwithstanding the wilderness of words, oral and...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...
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The New quarterly review, and digest of current literature, Volume 1

1852 - 454 pages
...quadrature of the eircle in scicnce. " Notwithstanding," says the anthor of " The Real State of Ireland," " the wilderness of words, oral and written, which has...the perpetual discussion of her misfortunes and her fanlts, I am gricved to think that the people of England are still greatly uninformed, or, what is...
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