O'Hara; Or, 1798Andrews, 1825 |
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... DEAR LORD , & c . & c . & c . THESE Volumes have amused some of my " hours of idleness ; " for this I am beholden to them : they have , however , done more , by affording me the pleasure of addressing them to you , and acknowledging the ...
... DEAR LORD , & c . & c . & c . THESE Volumes have amused some of my " hours of idleness ; " for this I am beholden to them : they have , however , done more , by affording me the pleasure of addressing them to you , and acknowledging the ...
Side xxxviii
... dear Bridgworth , ever faithfully your friend , ROBERT ASHWORTH . Banville , Nov. 28th , 1815 . My dear Bridgworth , I RECEIVED your letter of the tenth , and shall feel great happiness in making one of your Christmas circle . I am ...
... dear Bridgworth , ever faithfully your friend , ROBERT ASHWORTH . Banville , Nov. 28th , 1815 . My dear Bridgworth , I RECEIVED your letter of the tenth , and shall feel great happiness in making one of your Christmas circle . I am ...
Side xl
... Dear Bridgworth , ever yours , ROBERT ASHWORTH . Gresham's Hotel , Nov. 30th , P. S. I detained my letter until this post in order to fix my departure with certainty . I am to leave Dublin this evening in the Holyhead Packet , and may ...
... Dear Bridgworth , ever yours , ROBERT ASHWORTH . Gresham's Hotel , Nov. 30th , P. S. I detained my letter until this post in order to fix my departure with certainty . I am to leave Dublin this evening in the Holyhead Packet , and may ...
Side 32
... dear Ireland , will you abandon this terrible pro- fession ? Your property suffers by the ab- sence of its master ; for my sake , for the sake of your expected infant , leave , when you can with honour , a profession which destroys the ...
... dear Ireland , will you abandon this terrible pro- fession ? Your property suffers by the ab- sence of its master ; for my sake , for the sake of your expected infant , leave , when you can with honour , a profession which destroys the ...
Side 38
... dear Mrs. O'Hara , these unmannerly guns are noisy , but fear nothing , here you are in security . " Leading the way to his apart- nents , he welcomed his fair guest , and telling her he would go to learn the extent of the general alarm ...
... dear Mrs. O'Hara , these unmannerly guns are noisy , but fear nothing , here you are in security . " Leading the way to his apart- nents , he welcomed his fair guest , and telling her he would go to learn the extent of the general alarm ...
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acquainted Alice American appeared arms beauty Boston brother called Captain carriage Castle Carra character cheek Clifford Colonel command cried dear death devil Doctor door Dublin Dublin Castle endeavoured entered father feelings fortune Frederic O'Hara frigate gallant gentle gentleman gloomy Glossin grenadier hand heard heart Henry O'Hara honour horse hour Ireland Irish Irish Brigade Lady Constantia Lady Sarah lative leave Loftus looked Lord Edward Lord Fitzwilliam M'Cullogh M'Greggor Mahony Major Malowney melancholy Melange ment military Miss Carney Molloy morning Mystic River never Newbridge night Nugent Ommadawn Orange Orange party party passed person Peter Martin Pheahen pink pistols political Pompeii poor racter regiment replied Republican retired says scene Serjeant servant smile soldier soon sorbed sorrow spot stranger tain tion trifling truder turned United Irishmen wife wounded young O'Hara Zounds
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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 121 - 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 113 - To Mr. Forbes and Mr. Ponsonby he said, " In spite of every wicked machination, we had the mass of the people with us last New Year's Day, and, if we do not make some exertion, next Christmas Day may see them in the hands of the United Irishmen.
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 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.
Side 114 - ... we had the mass of the people with us last New Year's Day, and, if we do not make some exertion, next Christmas Day may see them in the hands of the United Irishmen.'' That Lord Fitzwilliam's Viceroyalty would have banished all discontent I cannot suppose ; but that, if the Catholic claims had then been settled, or some parliamentary reform taken place, rebellion would not have reared its head, I am willing to believe. To arrange a Catholic question, and a reform...