| Nicholas Patrick Wiseman - 1848 - 570 pages
...constituted themselves judges of this new species of delinquency, and the sentence they have denounced is equally concise and terrible ! It is nothing less than a confiscation of all property, and an immodiate banishment. It would be extremely painful, and surely unnecessary, to detail the horrors... | |
| Philip Harwood - Ireland - 1848 - 264 pages
...— it is simply a profession of the Roman Catholic faith. A lawless banditti allproperty, necessary, to detail the horrors that attend the execution of so wide and tremendous a * Charles Teeling's " Observations on the History and Consequences of the Battle of the Diamond" (quoted... | |
| William Hamilton Maxwell - Emmet's rebellion, 1803 - 1854 - 552 pages
...constituted themselves judges of this new species of delinquency, and the sentence they have denounced is equally concise and terrible — it is nothing less than a confiscation of all property, and an immediate banishment. It would be extremely painful, and surely unnecessary, to detail the horrors... | |
| 1868 - 838 pages
...have constituted themselves judges of this species of delinquency, and the sentence they pronounce is equally concise and terrible ; it is nothing less...execution of so wide and tremendous a proscription, which certainly exceeds, in the comparative number of those it consigns to ruin and misery, every example... | |
| Mary Francis Cusack - Ireland - 1868 - 642 pages
...have constituted themselves judges of this species of delinquency, and the sentence they pronounce is equally concise and terrible ; it is nothing less...confiscation of all property and immediate banishment — a prescription that has been carried into effect, and exceeds, in the number of those it consigns... | |
| Edward Isidore Sears, David Allyn Gorton, Charles H. Woodman - Periodicals - 1869 - 434 pages
...of delinquency, and the sentence they pronounce is equally concise and terrible ; it is nothing loss than a confiscation of all property, and immediate...execution of so wide and tremendous a proscription, which certainly exceeds, in the comparative number of those it consigns to ruin, and misery, every... | |
| Margaret Anna Cusack - 1870 - 488 pages
...have constituted themselves judges of this species of delinquency, and the sentence they pronounce is equally concise and terrible ; it is nothing less...confiscation of all property and immediate banishment — a prescription that has been carried into effect, and exceeds, in the number of those it consigns... | |
| William Nassau Molesworth - Great Britain - 1871 - 564 pages
...delinquency, and the sentence they pronounce is equally concise and terrible: it is nothing less than n confiscation of all property and immediate banishment....and surely unnecessary, to detail the horrors that attended the execution of so wide and tremendous a proscription, which certainly exceeds, in the comparative... | |
| Thausing - 1872 - 496 pages
...have constituted themselves judges of this species of delinquency, and the sentence they pronounce is equally concise and terrible : it is nothing less...and surely unnecessary, to detail the horrors that attended the execution of so wide and tremendous a proscription, which certainly exceeds, in the comparative... | |
| William Nassau Molesworth - Great Britain - 1874 - 444 pages
...sentence they pronounce is equally concise and terrible : it is nothing 1835.] THE CHANGE LODGES. 377 less than a confiscation of all property and immediate...and surely unnecessary, to detail the horrors that attended the execution of so wide and tremendous a proscription, which certainly exceeds, in the comparative... | |
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