A History of England in the Eighteenth Century, Bind 7D. Appleton, 1890 |
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Side vi
... condition of the country , and to pronounce with real confidence between opposing state- ments . Such a method of inquiry tends greatly to lengthen a book and to impair its symmetry and its artistic charm ; but in the particular period ...
... condition of the country , and to pronounce with real confidence between opposing state- ments . Such a method of inquiry tends greatly to lengthen a book and to impair its symmetry and its artistic charm ; but in the particular period ...
Side xii
... Ulster at the end of 1796 · 227 228 Influence of foreign affairs on Ireland Condition of Europe 229 • Failure of Lord Malmesbury's negotiation at Paris 231 THE SEVENTH VOLUME . xiii PAGE Proceedings of Wolfe Tone xii CONTENTS OF.
... Ulster at the end of 1796 · 227 228 Influence of foreign affairs on Ireland Condition of Europe 229 • Failure of Lord Malmesbury's negotiation at Paris 231 THE SEVENTH VOLUME . xiii PAGE Proceedings of Wolfe Tone xii CONTENTS OF.
Side xv
... condition of the central counties Illustrations of the panic about the Orangemen Troubles near Dublin . - State of Tipperary . Cork and Bandon • · Mallow . - Reports about the Methodists Appalling spread of crime Connaught less tainted ...
... condition of the central counties Illustrations of the panic about the Orangemen Troubles near Dublin . - State of Tipperary . Cork and Bandon • · Mallow . - Reports about the Methodists Appalling spread of crime Connaught less tainted ...
Side 1
... condition of the country . In Parliament the Govern- ment , at the outbreak of the great French war , was supported with an almost absolute unanimity . Grattan had declared in the strongest terms that it was both the duty and the ...
... condition of the country . In Parliament the Govern- ment , at the outbreak of the great French war , was supported with an almost absolute unanimity . Grattan had declared in the strongest terms that it was both the duty and the ...
Side 3
... condition of Ulster in the spring of Madden's United Irishmen , i . 234-237 . Tone's Life , i . 268 . Report from the Secret Com- mittee of the House of Lords , 1793 . See Tone's comments on the report , i . 108 . 1793 was so serious ...
... condition of Ulster in the spring of Madden's United Irishmen , i . 234-237 . Tone's Life , i . 268 . Report from the Secret Com- mittee of the House of Lords , 1793 . See Tone's comments on the report , i . 108 . 1793 was so serious ...
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Almindelige termer og sætninger
appears arms Bantry Bantry Bay Belfast believed Beresford Bill British Burke Cabinet Camden to Portland Catholic emancipation Catholic question considered Correspondence county of Armagh danger Defenders disaffection districts Dublin Duke of Portland England English Government establishment evidence favour Fitzgibbon fleet France French gentry Grattan House influence insurrection Insurrection Act invasion Ireland Irish Government Irish history Irish Parl Irish Parliament King kingdom land landlord leaders leases letter Lord Camden Lord Carhampton Lord Fitzwilliam Lord Lieutenant Lord Westmorland loyalty magistrates McNally measure ment military militia Ministers murder never North oath object opinion Orange Orangemen organisation outrages party Pelham persons Pitt political Ponsonby priests probably Protestant rebellion religious rent Revolution Roman Catholic society soldiers speech spirit tenants tion tithes Tone Tone's Ulster union United Irishmen Whig whole Wolfe Tone wrote XXVI XXVII yeomanry
Populære passager
Side 88 - England (other than such clauses in the said Acts or either of them as have been repealed or altered by any subsequent Act or Acts of Parliament) and all and singular other Acts of Parliament now in force for the establishment and preservation of the Church of England and the doctrine worship discipline and government thereof shall remain and be in full force for ever...
Side 127 - Bill than that the college was to be 'for^ the better education of persons professing the Popish or Roman Catholic religion.
Side 180 - It is no secret, that a persecution, accompanied with all the circumstances of ferocious cruelty which have in all ages distinguished that dreadful calamity, is now raging in this county.
Side 399 - Great Britain would be ruined by the Separation of Ireland. But, as there are degrees even in ruin, it would fall the most heavily on Ireland. By such a Separation, Ireland would be the most completely undone country in the world, the most wretched, the most distracted, and, in the end, the most desolate part of the habitable globe.