Memoirs of the Life and Times of the Rt. Hon. Henry Grattan, Volume 3H. Colburn, 1841 - Catholic emancipation |
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Page vii
... received by the English - Attacked by General Luttrell Anecdote - General Luttrell - his character - Mr . Grattan's remarks on Mr. Flood Page 135 CHAPTER VI . The Lord - lieutenant refuses increase of salary - Letter to Lord North upon ...
... received by the English - Attacked by General Luttrell Anecdote - General Luttrell - his character - Mr . Grattan's remarks on Mr. Flood Page 135 CHAPTER VI . The Lord - lieutenant refuses increase of salary - Letter to Lord North upon ...
Page viii
... - Irish propositions , how received in England- Commercial jealousy Mr. Pitt's twenty propositions - His speech - Petition from the English manufacturing towns - Mr . Burke's · - letter to Sir John Tydd on the debate - Lord viii CONTENTS .
... - Irish propositions , how received in England- Commercial jealousy Mr. Pitt's twenty propositions - His speech - Petition from the English manufacturing towns - Mr . Burke's · - letter to Sir John Tydd on the debate - Lord viii CONTENTS .
Page ix
... received in Ireland - Angry debates thereon - Proposi- tions abandoned - Mr . Grattan to Mr. Day- Extracts from Mr. Grattan's speech Page 233 CHAPTER IX . Mr. Orde abandons his Commercial Bill - Mr . Curran's Speech - Mr Fitzgibbon's ...
... received in Ireland - Angry debates thereon - Proposi- tions abandoned - Mr . Grattan to Mr. Day- Extracts from Mr. Grattan's speech Page 233 CHAPTER IX . Mr. Orde abandons his Commercial Bill - Mr . Curran's Speech - Mr Fitzgibbon's ...
Page 13
... he strode along her paths , engrossed with the thoughts of some of his speeches , and stamping on the soil as if he would crush her enemies ! - ' Twas here he received the friends of his country CHAP . I. ] 13 OF THE DARGLE .
... he strode along her paths , engrossed with the thoughts of some of his speeches , and stamping on the soil as if he would crush her enemies ! - ' Twas here he received the friends of his country CHAP . I. ] 13 OF THE DARGLE .
Page 14
Henry Grattan. ' Twas here he received the friends of his country , of his youth , of his age ; and those whose eyes may glance perhaps across these pages , can well re- member the urbanity with which they were wel- comed - the warm ...
Henry Grattan. ' Twas here he received the friends of his country , of his youth , of his age ; and those whose eyes may glance perhaps across these pages , can well re- member the urbanity with which they were wel- comed - the warm ...
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Common terms and phrases
12 burgesses afterwards Lord appointed attack Attorney-general bill Bishop borough Britain British Catholics character clergy Colonel conduct constitution Convention corrupt court Crown Curran DEAR SIR debate declared Denis Daly Dublin Duke Duke of Portland duties Earl election electors England English exported favour Fitzgerald Fitzgibbon Flood freemen friends gentlemen George Government Grattan Henry HENRY GRATTAN honour House of Commons inhabitants Ireland Irish Parliament Isaac Corry John King King's kingdom letter liberty Lord Charlemont Lord Clare Lord Mornington Lord North Lord Northington Lord-lieutenant Majesty Majesty's manufacture Marquess measure ment Minister motion nation never object occasion opinion opposed Orde Parlia Parliament of Ireland Parliamentary party pension person Pitt plantations Ponsonby present Prince principles proceedings proposed propositions question reform repeal reply resolutions respect revenue rotten borough Royal settlement sincerely speech Stewart tion tithe trade Volunteers vote Whig William wish
Popular passages
Page 181 - That it is now necessary to declare, that to report any opinion, or pretended opinion of his Majesty upon any bill or other proceeding depending in either House of Parliament, with a view to influence the votes of the members, is a high crime and misdemeanour, derogatory to the honour of the Crown, a breach of the fundamental privileges of Parliament, and subversive of the Constitution of this country.
Page 283 - Consider the lilies of the field; they toil not, neither do they spin: yet Solomon in all his glory was not arrayed like one of these.
Page 419 - I am aware, my lords, that truth is to be sought only by slow and painful progress; I know also that error is in its nature flippant and compendious ; it hops with airy and fastidious levity over proofs and arguments, and perches upon assertion, which it calls conclusion.
Page 353 - The Prince of Wales learns from Mr. Pitt's letter that the proceedings in parliament are now in a train which enables Mr. Pitt, according to the intimation in his former...
Page 352 - Servants. I beg leave to add that their Ideas are formed on the supposition that His Majesty's Illness is only temporary, and may be of no long duration.
Page 503 - An act for granting certain duties in the British colonies and plantations in America ; for allowing a drawback of the duties of customs upon the exportation from this kingdom of 'coffee and...
Page 355 - The prince, however, holding as he does, that it is an undoubted and fundamental principle of this constitution, that the powers and prerogatives of the crown are vested there as a trust for the benefit of the people ; and that they are sacred...
Page 514 - ... thanks to Heaven, I am not a beggar!" "No kindred and no friends!" repeated the old man. "No father — no brother — no wife — no sister!'' "None! No one to care whether I live or die," answered the stranger, with a mixture of pride and sadness in his voice. " But, as the song has it : " ' I care for nobody— no, not I, For nobody cares for me...
Page 43 - I laid me down upon a bank, Bewailing my sad fate, That doomed me thus the slave of love And cruel Molly's hate; How can she break the honest heart That wears her in its core? Ah!
Page 502 - ... an Act passed in the twelfth year of the reign of King Charles the Second, intituled " An Act for taking away the Court of Wards and Liveries, and Tenures in capite and by Knights Service, and Purveyance, and for settling a Revenue upon His Majesty in lieu thereof...