Those who have seen Lord Clare in his visitorial capacity never will forget him — the hatchet sharpness of his countenance, the oblique glance of his eye, which seemed to read what was passing in the mind of him to whom it was directed. Ireland Sixty Years Ago - Page 126by John Edward Walsh - 1851 - 155 pagesFull view - About this book
| University magazine - 1846 - 780 pages
...of the corporation ; then the graduate and undergraduate students ; and lastly the inferior officers and porters of the college. The great door -was closed...portentous sound, and shut in many an anxious heart; I fell mine, r, quite liée from care or apprehension. Those who have seeu Lord Clare in his visitorial... | |
| Our own country - 1878 - 714 pages
...the Corporation ; then the graduates, undergraduates, and students, and lastly the inferior officers and porters of the College. The great door was closed...portentous sound, and shut in many an anxious heart. . . . Those who have seen Lord Clare in his visitorial capacity will never forget him : the hatchet... | |
| William Macneile Dixon - 1902 - 354 pages
...the society. ' Those who have seen Lord Clare in his visitorial capacity,' wrote an eye-witness,* ' never will forget him — the hatchet sharpness of...passing in the mind of him to whom it was directed.' Whitley Stokes, a Junior Fellow, and a former member of the Society of United Irishmen, was early examined.... | |
| Patrick M. Geoghegan - Biography & Autobiography - 2002 - 388 pages
...of the corporation; then the graduate and undergraduate students; and lastly, the inferior officers and porters of the college. The great door was closed...portentous sound and shut in many an anxious heart. 164 Robert Emmet was not present. Ignoring the provost's refusal to allow him to withdraw, he scorned... | |
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