The English in Ireland in the Eighteenth Century, Volumen2Scribner, Armstrong, and Company, 1874 |
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Resultados 1-5 de 93
Página viii
... Viceroy's difficulties CHAPTER II . THE CONSTITUTION OF 1782 . I. League against England . The Protestant Colony of Ireland Grattan and Catholic Emancipation II . Progress of the war in America Lord Cornwallis in the Southern States ...
... Viceroy's difficulties CHAPTER II . THE CONSTITUTION OF 1782 . I. League against England . The Protestant Colony of Ireland Grattan and Catholic Emancipation II . Progress of the war in America Lord Cornwallis in the Southern States ...
Página 5
... Viceroys informed the Commons in the speech from the throne that his majesty would rec- ommend the application of the ... Viceroy understood the meaning of the vote . The great houses were affecting patri- otism for objects of their own ...
... Viceroys informed the Commons in the speech from the throne that his majesty would rec- ommend the application of the ... Viceroy understood the meaning of the vote . The great houses were affecting patri- otism for objects of their own ...
Página 6
... viceroy , was deafened with the clamors of the Irish servants of the Crown , and doubted the wisdom of his chiefs . The supporters of Government threatened apostacy . The ministers , Halifax thought , might be right in the abstract ...
... viceroy , was deafened with the clamors of the Irish servants of the Crown , and doubted the wisdom of his chiefs . The supporters of Government threatened apostacy . The ministers , Halifax thought , might be right in the abstract ...
Página 8
... Viceroy alarmed them . They were afraid to turn it out . They were afraid that if sent over it might be returned unopposed . They escaped from the difficulty by attaching to it a property qualifica- tion as a condition of eligibility so ...
... Viceroy alarmed them . They were afraid to turn it out . They were afraid that if sent over it might be returned unopposed . They escaped from the difficulty by attaching to it a property qualifica- tion as a condition of eligibility so ...
Página 22
... Viceroy when he undertook to speak for the Catholics as a whole . Coincidently with the intended invasion and the appearance on the coast of M. Thurot , began the celebrated Whiteboy disturbances in Tipperary . Many causes had combined ...
... Viceroy when he undertook to speak for the Catholics as a whole . Coincidently with the intended invasion and the appearance on the coast of M. Thurot , began the celebrated Whiteboy disturbances in Tipperary . Many causes had combined ...
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Términos y frases comunes
Absentee Tax absentees American arms army bishops Blaquiere Britain British Buckinghamshire Cabinet carried Castle Catholic Celt clergy colonies consent Constitution corruption Crown desired Dublin Duke of Leinster duty Earl Egremont England English estates Father favor Fitzgibbon Flood force friends gentlemen gentry Government Grattan Halifax Harcourt to Lord Hely Hutchinson honor House of Commons Ireland Irish Parliament King King's kingdom land landlords letters liberty Lord Harcourt Lord Hillsborough Lord North Lord Shannon Lord Shelburne Lord Sydney Lord Townshend Lord Weymouth Lords Justices majesty majesty's measure ment militia Money Bill never November once opposition Parlia Parliamentary passed patriots penal laws Pension List persons Pery political Ponsonby present Privy Council Protestant refused resolution revenue Rochford secret sent Septennial Bill servants session Sheehy Shelburne Speaker tion Tipperary trade troops Ulster Viceroy Volunteers vote Whiteboy wrongs wrote
Pasajes populares
Página 307 - That a claim of any body of men, other than the king, lords, and commons of Ireland to make laws to bind this kingdom, is unconstitutional, illegal, and a grievance.
Página 328 - to address a free people. Ages have passed away, and this is the first moment in which you could be distinguished by that appellation.
Página 230 - To widen the market and to narrow the competition is always the interest of the dealers. To widen the market may frequently be agreeable enough to the interest of the public ; but to narrow the competition must always be against it...
Página 376 - I have now done — and give me leave to say, if the gentleman enters often into this kind of colloquy with me, he will not have much to boast of at the end of the session.
Página 308 - That as men and as Irishmen, as Christians and as Protestants, we rejoice in the relaxation of the penal laws against our Roman Catholic fellow-subjects, and that we conceive the measure to be fraught with the happiest consequences to the union and prosperity of the inhabitants of Ireland.
Página 463 - This polyglot of wealth, this museum of curiosities, the pension list, embraces every link in the human chain, every description of men, women, and children, from the exalted excellence of a Hawke or a Rodney, to the debased situation of the lady who humbleth herself that she may be exalted.
Página 378 - The people cannot trust you. The ministers cannot trust you. You deal out the most impartial treachery to both. You tell the nation it is ruined by other men, while it is sold by you. You fled from the embargo; you fled from the sugar bill. I therefore tell you, in the face of the country, before all the world, and to your beard, you are not an honest man.
Página 125 - In the two years which followed the Antrim evictions, thirty thousand Protestants left Ulster for a land where there was no legal robbery, and where those who sowed the seed could reap the harvest.
Página 131 - Vexed with suits in the ecclesiastical courts, forbidden to educate their children in their own faith, treated as dangerous to a state which but for them would have had no existence, and associated with Papists in an Act of Parliament which deprived them of their civil rights, the most earnest of them at length abandoned the unthankful service.