Irish Tranquility Under Mr. O'Connell: My Lord Mulgrave, and the Roman PriesthoodW. Carson, 1838 - 126 Seiten |
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Seite iv
... possession of the privileges and emoluments of the Es- tablished Church will satisfy them , and they must be temporal as well as spiritual despots also . They habi- tually assume those temporal titles which the Crown alone has the ...
... possession of the privileges and emoluments of the Es- tablished Church will satisfy them , and they must be temporal as well as spiritual despots also . They habi- tually assume those temporal titles which the Crown alone has the ...
Seite x
... possession of those riches which his enterprise has wrung from the otherwise unproductive materials of nature , stimulates to industry and improvement . It creates all those useful arts which administer to our social and domestic ...
... possession of those riches which his enterprise has wrung from the otherwise unproductive materials of nature , stimulates to industry and improvement . It creates all those useful arts which administer to our social and domestic ...
Seite 3
... possession of the revenues of the Protestant church , and even this would not satisfy them , they must be temporal despots also . To attain these objects the peasantry are kept in their present frightful state of excitement , ruinous ...
... possession of the revenues of the Protestant church , and even this would not satisfy them , they must be temporal despots also . To attain these objects the peasantry are kept in their present frightful state of excitement , ruinous ...
Seite 8
... possession of the revenues of the estab- lished church . It is not civil liberty he seeks - his ob- jects are wealth and domination , spiritual as well as temporal , his agency is superstition , and he brutalises , and excites the ...
... possession of the revenues of the estab- lished church . It is not civil liberty he seeks - his ob- jects are wealth and domination , spiritual as well as temporal , his agency is superstition , and he brutalises , and excites the ...
Seite 31
... possession : of the rights they had obtained . Not so with Mr O'Connell and his supporters the priests . He sought personal aggrandizement , which he could only obtain by first becoming formidable as an agitator and then making his ...
... possession : of the rights they had obtained . Not so with Mr O'Connell and his supporters the priests . He sought personal aggrandizement , which he could only obtain by first becoming formidable as an agitator and then making his ...
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Irish Tranquility Under Mr. O'Connell: My Lord Mulgrave, and the Roman ... Anthony Meyler Keine Leseprobe verfügbar - 2016 |
Irish Tranquility Under Mr. O'Connell: My Lord Mulgrave, and the Roman ... Anthony Meyler Keine Leseprobe verfügbar - 2016 |
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
advocate agita amelioration amongst Archbishop of Tuam ascendancy avowed castle cause character Church of England Church of Rome civil constitution contributed dangerous degrading disturbances doctrines dominion dread effect effort egotism emancipation eminent degree endeavour England Established Church evince excited faction favourable formidable gentry holy hostility influence intolerant Irish laboured land landlord late lawless liberal liberty Lord Charlemont Lord Lieutenant Lord Mul Lord Mulgrave loyal measures ment moral motives never O'Connell O'Connell's objects obtained opinion opposed opposition orange party orderly portion parliament partizans peasant peasantry political Popery popish popularity position priesthood priestly priests principles Protestant Church Protestantism radical party rebellion reform relief bill religion religious render respectable result revolution revolutionary Roman Catholic Romish Royal Dublin Society santry selfish species speeches spirit subservient superstition system of agitation temporal testant tholics tion tithes tory party tranquillity turbulence unfortunately union Viceroy views whig
Beliebte Passagen
Seite 101 - tis a common proof, That lowliness is young ambition's ladder, Whereto the climber-upward turns his face; But when he once attains the upmost round, He then unto the ladder turns his back, Looks in the clouds, scorning the base degrees By which he did ascend: so Caesar may; Then, lest he may, prevent.
Seite 119 - Filipinos with the sword in one hand and the Bible in the other, or in South Africa allow children of the same Father to cut each other to pieces.
Seite 66 - ... the flame of liberty and the love of order — unassailable to the approaches of power, of profit, or of titles, he annexed to the love of freedom a veneration for order, and cast on the crowd that followed him the gracious shade of his own accomplishments, so that the very rabble grew civilized as it approached his person...
Seite 43 - These disturbances have been in every instance excited and inflamed by the agitation of the combined projects for the abolition of tithes and the destruction of the union with Great Britain.
Seite 49 - Association, and in many instances could not be convinced that they had recommended the suppression of all former divisions and discords, with any other view than to prepare the people for a general and united insurrectionary movement. When will he call us out...
Seite 50 - ... was simultaneously sent back, spoke volumes of dread and danger. The commission from the Marquess of Anglesey was forgotten; the if was forgotten ; they already imagined themselves in full pursuit. Nothing was remembered but O'Connell and his hundred thousand men.
Seite 49 - Oh, would to God that our excellent Viceroy Lord Anglesey, would but only give me a commission, and if those men of blood should attempt to attack the property and person of his Majesty's loyal subjects, WITH A HUNDRED THOUSAND OF MY BRAVE T1PPEHARY BOYS, I WOULD SOON DRIVE THEM INTO THE SEA BEFORE ME.
Seite 44 - I will never tell the man's name that made me, not the man's name that stood by making me a ribbonman or whitefoot, to any other under the canopy of heaven, not even to a priest, bishop, or any one in the church.
Seite 46 - I cannot recollect one instance in the experience of so many years, (and perhaps it is a formidable view of our situation) in which a man has been charged with an insurrectionary offence* whose crime could be traced to want and poverty.
Seite 43 - ... transactions, between the system of agitation and its inevitable consequence, the system of combination leading to violence and outrage : they are inseparably cause and effect : nor can I, after the most attentive consideration of the dreadful scenes passed under my view, by any effort of my understanding separate one from the other in that unbroken chain of indissoluble connection.