| Philip Harwood - Great Britain - 1844 - 268 pages
...taken possession of his thoughts, that he could neither eat nor sleep ; and on the morning of the 25th he fell on his face and expired, in a little grove near my house." By this time there wem seven thousand of them : eight hundred had fire-arms, which they had... | |
| Philip Harwood - Great Britain - 1844 - 268 pages
...taken possession of his thoughts, that he could neither eat nor sleep ; and on the morning of the 25th he fell on his face and expired, in a little grove near my house." By this time there were seven thousand of them : eight hundred had fire-- arms, which they... | |
| William Hamilton Maxwell - Autonomy and independence movements - 1845 - 576 pages
...taken possession of his thoughts, that he could neither eat nor sleep, and on the morning of the 25th, he fell on his face and expired in a little grove near my house." J " His father was a petty farmer at Tincurry, in the parish of Ferns, where he was educated... | |
| Edward Hay - Great Britain - 1847 - 440 pages
...taken possession of his thoughts, that he could neither eat nor sleep ; and on the morning of the 25th he fell on his face and expired in a little grove near my house."* The Rev. Mr. Gordon, from whose history I have quoted the foregoing narrative, is a clergyman... | |
| William Hamilton Maxwell - Emmet's rebellion, 1803 - 1854 - 552 pages
...taken possession of his thoughts, that he could neither eat nor sleep, and on the morning of the 25th, he fell on his face and expired in a little grove near my house." J " His father was a petty farmer at Tincurry, in the parish of Ferns, where he was educated... | |
| Patrick F. Kavanagh - Ireland - 1880 - 316 pages
...taken possession of his thoughts that he could neither eat nor sleep, and on the morning of the 25th he fell on his face, and expired in a little grove near my house."* Authors differ considerably in their statements concerning the extent and influence of the... | |
| Patrick F. Kavanagh - Ireland - 1918 - 382 pages
...taken possession of his thoughts that he could neither eat nor sleep, and on the morning of the 25th he fell on his face and expired in a little grove near my house."* * History of Irish Rebellion, p. 87. Authors differ considerably in their statements concerning... | |
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