The Centenary Life of O'Connell |
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... occasion to publish such a biography of him as would give the Irish people , at home and abroad , an adequate idea . of his life - long services . There are many amongst us yet who know these services from memory , and from the fact of ...
... occasion to publish such a biography of him as would give the Irish people , at home and abroad , an adequate idea . of his life - long services . There are many amongst us yet who know these services from memory , and from the fact of ...
Page 2
... occasion , expressed annoy- ance with a writer who said he was of humble origin . The O'Connells are a very ancient and important family in Kerry . Gaelic genealogists trace the sept , or clan O'Connell , back to Conary the 1st ...
... occasion , expressed annoy- ance with a writer who said he was of humble origin . The O'Connells are a very ancient and important family in Kerry . Gaelic genealogists trace the sept , or clan O'Connell , back to Conary the 1st ...
Page 4
... occasion to say , that " from a long series of unshaken loyalty the Irish were entitled to every encouragement which good and faithful subjects could deserve , and a wise and grateful government could give . " He ended by a motion for ...
... occasion to say , that " from a long series of unshaken loyalty the Irish were entitled to every encouragement which good and faithful subjects could deserve , and a wise and grateful government could give . " He ended by a motion for ...
Page 8
... occasion . On the 14th of the same month , just one fortnight after the decla- ration of war , Mr. Hobart , the Irish Secretary , presented a petition from a body of Catholics , and took the opportunity of describing a " Relief Bill ...
... occasion . On the 14th of the same month , just one fortnight after the decla- ration of war , Mr. Hobart , the Irish Secretary , presented a petition from a body of Catholics , and took the opportunity of describing a " Relief Bill ...
Page 9
... occasion , that he learned the alphabet in an hour . Mr. John O'Connell , in his Memoirs of " A his father , says , 66 an hour and a half . " His account of this early success is full and interesting . poor old hedge schoolmaster , by ...
... occasion , that he learned the alphabet in an hour . Mr. John O'Connell , in his Memoirs of " A his father , says , 66 an hour and a half . " His account of this early success is full and interesting . poor old hedge schoolmaster , by ...
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Common terms and phrases
agitation amongst Attorney-General bill called calumny Catholic Association Catholic Board Catholic body Catholic cause Catholic Rent Catholics of Ireland Charles Saxton cheers Clare committee Cork court Crown D'Esterre Daniel O'Connell declared Doherty Dublin Evening Post Duke election Emancipation England favour feelings freeholders gave gentleman Grattan heard held honour House of Commons House of Lords Ireland Irish Catholics Irish Famine James Murphy John John Magee jury justice King King's letter Liberator Lidwell Lord Cloncurry Lord George Beresford Lord Lieutenant Magee Majesty meeting Memoirs ment never O'Connell's oath Oath of Supremacy occasion Orange Parliament party Peel persons petition political present proceedings proposed prosecution Protestant question received Repeal Repeal Association reply resolutions Roman Catholic Sheil Sheriff Sir Charles Saxton Sir Thomas Esmonde Solicitor-General speech Tara tion told took trial Union Veto vote witness words
Popular passages
Page 243 - Three poets, in three distant ages born, Greece, Italy, and England did adorn. The first in loftiness of thought surpassed, The next in majesty, in both the last. The force of Nature could no farther go ; To make a third she joined the former two.
Page 142 - We tread the land that bore us. Her green flag glitters o'er us, The friends we've tried Are by our side, And the foe we hate before us.
Page 270 - I do declare, that I do not believe that the Pope of Rome, or any other foreign prince, prelate, person, state, or potentate, hath or ought to have any temporal or civil jurisdiction, power, superiority or pre-eminence, directly or indirectly, within this realm.
Page 213 - You will consider whether the removal of those disabilities can be effected consistently with the full and permanent security of our establishments in Church and State, with the maintenance of the reformed Religion established by law, and of the rights and privileges of the Bishops and of the Clergy of this Realm, and .of the Churches committed to their charge.
Page 113 - ... of his Irish subjects, have made the deepest impression on his mind ; and that he looks forward to the period when he shall revisit them with the strongest feelings of satisfaction. His Majesty trusts that, in the mean time, not only the spirit of loyal union, which now so generally exists, will remain unabated and unimpaired ; but that every cause of irritation will be avoided and discountenanced ; mutual forbearance and good-will observed and encouraged ; and...
Page 15 - ... let every man who feels with me proclaim, that if the alternative were offered him of Union, or the re-enactment of the penal code in all its pristine horrors, that he would prefer without hesitation the latter as the lesser and more sufferable evil ; that he would rather confide in the justice of his brethren the Protestants of Ireland, who have already liberated...
Page 273 - In the former interview it had been represented that, after much conversation twice with his Ministers or such as had come down, he had said, ' Go on;' and upon the latter of those two occasions, after many hours' fatigue, and exhausted by the fatigue of conversation, he had said, ' Go on.' He now produced two papers which he represented as copies of what he had written to them, in which he assents to their proceeding and going on with the bill, adding certainly in each, as he read them, very strong...
Page 272 - At the close of the interview the King took leave of us with great composure and great kindness, gave to each of us a salute on each cheek, and accepted our resignation of office, frequently expressing his sincere regret at the necessity which compelled us to retire from his service.
Page 159 - Industry and commercial enterprise are extending themselves in that part of the United Kingdom. It is therefore the more to be regretted that associations should exist in Ireland which have adopted proceedings irreconcilable with the spirit of the constitution, and calculated, by exciting alarm, and by exasperating animosities, to endanger the peace of society, and to retard the course of national improvement.
Page 199 - You will be told I am not qualified to be elected : the assertion, my friends, is untrue. — I am qualified to be elected, and to be your representative. It is true that, as a Catholic, I cannot, and of course never will, take the oaths at present prescribed to members of parliament ; but the authority which created...