O'Hara; or, 1798 [by W.H. Maxwell].J. Andrews, and Miliken, Dublin, 1825 - 558 sider |
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Side 172
... Alice More ? " cried O'Hara , advancing and re- cognising the speaker ; " why sit you here , like a night raven , to damp my happy return with your croaking and foreboding - and how is it that first of all I light upon you , Alice ...
... Alice More ? " cried O'Hara , advancing and re- cognising the speaker ; " why sit you here , like a night raven , to damp my happy return with your croaking and foreboding - and how is it that first of all I light upon you , Alice ...
Side 173
... Alice More ; " I tell you , Harry , in your heart you feel a shudder . When the English broke into Shaun Rua's ( Red John's ) hall , and spilled his blood on his own hearth , did not the Far a Knuick ' cry ? When your grandfather ex ...
... Alice More ; " I tell you , Harry , in your heart you feel a shudder . When the English broke into Shaun Rua's ( Red John's ) hall , and spilled his blood on his own hearth , did not the Far a Knuick ' cry ? When your grandfather ex ...
Side 174
... Alice More , " said he , " do not gloom the hour of happiness , by anticipating what may never be fulfilled . I fear not what may be in fu- turity - my hour may be short and transient , but even you , Alice , shall never make me tremble ...
... Alice More , " said he , " do not gloom the hour of happiness , by anticipating what may never be fulfilled . I fear not what may be in fu- turity - my hour may be short and transient , but even you , Alice , shall never make me tremble ...
Side 175
... Alice coolly replied , " Un- grateful boy - am I a betrayer ? Need I have brought you to Glan Dullogh ' to sell or slay you ? When you lay exhausted on my own bed -when famine , fatigue , and fever made you unable to lift the cup of ...
... Alice coolly replied , " Un- grateful boy - am I a betrayer ? Need I have brought you to Glan Dullogh ' to sell or slay you ? When you lay exhausted on my own bed -when famine , fatigue , and fever made you unable to lift the cup of ...
Side 177
... Alice - heaven reward you for what you did to me and mine ; and when I am at the gallow's - tree , I will declare , as I did to judge and jury , that I never , in life or death , did injure Bryan M'Bride ( God take his soul ) , and as ...
... Alice - heaven reward you for what you did to me and mine ; and when I am at the gallow's - tree , I will declare , as I did to judge and jury , that I never , in life or death , did injure Bryan M'Bride ( God take his soul ) , and as ...
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Almindelige termer og sætninger
adieu alarm Alice appeared arms attention beautiful Belvue bless called carriage Castle Carra cheek Clifford Colonel command companion concealed Constance cried dark dear death desperate Doctor door Dublin Emily endeavoured entered exclaimed fate father feelings fell followed fortune frigate gallant Glossin go merry hand heard heart Henry O'Hara hill Holyhead honour horse hour Ireland Irish Lady Constantia Lady Sarah leaders leave Loftus Loftus Hall looked Lord Edward M'Cullogh Maguire Mahony Major O'Hara melancholy Melange ment military morning Mount Pleasant never Newbridge night Nugent O'Kelly Ommadawn party passed paused person political Pompeii poor racter RANDALSTOWN rebel regiment replied Republicans rest retired royalists scene servant sigh smile soldier soon Stamford stood stranger tears tell Thornton tion town turned United Irishmen voice Watchmen William Thornton young O'Hara Zounds
Populære passager
Side 191 - OR love me less, or love me more ; And play not with my liberty : Either take all, or all restore ; Bind me at least, or set me free ! Let me some nobler torture find Than of a doubtful wavering mind : Take all my peace ! but you betray Mine honour too, this cruel way.
Side 147 - Oh for a tongue to curse the slave, Whose treason, like a deadly blight, Comes o'er the councils of the brave, And blasts them in their hour of might...
Side 158 - I should be free to confess it, but, on the contrary, I glory in my innocence. I trust that all my virtuous countrymen will bear me in their kind remembrance, and continue true and faithful to each other, as I have been to all of them.
Side 155 - ... mercy; in return, I pray to God, if they have erred, to have mercy upon them. The Judge, who condemned me, humanely shed tears in uttering my sentence; but whether he did wisely, in so highly commending the wretched informer who swore away my life, I leave to his own cool reflection, solemnly assuring him and all the world, with my dying breath, that the informer was forsworn.
Side 50 - Few and short were the prayers we said, And we spoke not a word of sorrow ; But we steadfastly gazed on the face that was dead, And we bitterly thought of the morrow.
Side 129 - In each county he assembled the most respectable gentlemen and landholders in it, and having, in concert with them, examined the charges against the leaders of this banditti who were in prison, but defied justice, he, with the concurrence of these gentlemen, sent the most nefarious of them on board a tender stationed at Sligo, to serve in His Majesty's navy.
Side 50 - Three things a wise man will not trust, — The Wind, the Sunshine of an April day, And Woman's plighted faith.
Side 26 - Conduct vn. 1 A fair name is better than precious ointment,1 And the day of death than the day of one's birth. 2 It is better to go to the house of mourning Than to go to the banqueting-house ; Inasmuch as that2 is the end of all men, And the living should lay it to heart.
Side 156 - My comfortable lot and industrious course of life best refute the charge of being an adventurer for plunder ; but if to have loved my country, to have known its wrongs, to have felt the injuries of the persecuted Catholics, and to have united with them and all other religious persuasions in the most orderly and least sanguinary means of procuring redress : If those be felonies, I am a felon, but not otherwise.
Side 50 - No useless coffin enclosed his breast, Not in sheet or in shroud we wound him ; But he lay like a warrior taking his rest With his martial cloak around him.