Daunt W.J.O. Personal Recollections of Daniel O'Connell, 1 tomas |
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9 psl.
... gave abundant exercise to his energies , without his encumbering himself with a repeal debate . Night after night , he confronted the ablest men in England ; and , so far as the war of argument was concerned , he certainly kept them at ...
... gave abundant exercise to his energies , without his encumbering himself with a repeal debate . Night after night , he confronted the ablest men in England ; and , so far as the war of argument was concerned , he certainly kept them at ...
16 psl.
... gave up Johnson , who was the author of the libel . It was a curious document to emanate from a judge . O'Connell said ; — " It called Lord Hardwicke a sheep - feeder from Cambridgeshire , and Lord Redesdale a stout - built special ...
... gave up Johnson , who was the author of the libel . It was a curious document to emanate from a judge . O'Connell said ; — " It called Lord Hardwicke a sheep - feeder from Cambridgeshire , and Lord Redesdale a stout - built special ...
20 psl.
... unalterable conviction of the Irish people . In the beginning of 1838 , the Liberator gave a proof of his indifference to all popularity which was not founded on the only just title to public favour- 20 PERSONAL RECOLLECTIONS.
... unalterable conviction of the Irish people . In the beginning of 1838 , the Liberator gave a proof of his indifference to all popularity which was not founded on the only just title to public favour- 20 PERSONAL RECOLLECTIONS.
23 psl.
... gave me a seat in his carriage . When tra- velling , he was usually very communicative , and every place of any interest along the road elicited some anecdote or reminiscence . On this journey , he talked much of his own achievements in ...
... gave me a seat in his carriage . When tra- velling , he was usually very communicative , and every place of any interest along the road elicited some anecdote or reminiscence . On this journey , he talked much of his own achievements in ...
42 psl.
... gave me quite too much of it , " said he ; " he apparently forgot that too much black pud- ding would choke a dog . " Of another loquacious chairman he said to me , " That poor B * * * has a sad facility of making the most ...
... gave me quite too much of it , " said he ; " he apparently forgot that too much black pud- ding would choke a dog . " Of another loquacious chairman he said to me , " That poor B * * * has a sad facility of making the most ...
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Pagrindiniai terminai ir frazės
addressed admirable amongst amused anecdote answered asked assizes attend Belfast bench called Carlow carriage Catholic CHAPTER Checkley church continued O'Connell Cork counsel County Cork court cried Daniel O'Connell Darrynane declared dinner Dublin Dungarvan England English exclaimed father favour Feargus O'Connor fellow Fermoy gave gentleman Grady Grattan hare heard honour horses hour hunt Ireland Irish Jerry Keller John O'Connell judge jury Kerry Kilkenny Killarney labour lady land landlord letter Liberator Liberator's Lisburn look Macroom meeting ment miles mode morning mountains nation never night Norbury O'Con O'Connell's O'Gorman O'Grady once Orange Orangemen Parliament party passed period person pistol political popular priest Protestant Protestantism recollect Reform religion Repeal Association replied O'Connell returned road Scarriff Sneem Speaking speech spirit spoke success talk thing tion told took Tory Tralee Union walked whilst witness
Populiarios ištraukos
49 psl. - I should have smil'd and welcom'd death. But thus to perish by a villain's hand ! Cut off from nature's and from glory's course, Which never mortal was so fond to run.
164 psl. - But I have sinuous shells of pearly hue Within, and they that lustre have imbibed In the sun's palace-porch, where when unyoked His chariot-wheel stands midway in the wave: Shake one and it awakens, then apply Its polisht lips to your attentive ear, And it remembers its august abodes, And murmurs as the ocean murmurs there.
165 psl. - Atlantic from submerging the cultivated plains and high steepled villages of proud Britain herself. Or, were you with me amidst the Alpine scenery that surrounds my humble abode, listening to the eternal roar of the mountain torrent, as it bounds through the rocky defiles of my native glens, I would venture to tell you how I was born within the sound of the everlasting wave, and how my dreamy boyhood dwelt upon imaginary intercourse with those who are dead of yore, and fed its fond fancies upon the...
166 psl. - Wert thou all that I wish thee, great, glorious, and free, First flower of the earth, and first gem of the sea, I might hail thee with prouder, with happier brow, But oh ! could I love thee more deeply than now...
105 psl. - ... with the three unfortunate youths. But their mother was there, and she, armed in the •strength of her affection, broke through the guard I saw her clasp her eldest son, who was but twentytwo years of age ; I saw her hang on her second, who was not twenty ; I saw her faint when she clung to the neck of her youngest son, who was but eighteen ; and I ask, what recompense could be made for such agony ? They were executed — and — they were innocent '.'" " A very unhappy case,
93 psl. - Why then I'll tell your honour the whole secret of that, sir. Whenever your honour goes to steal a cow, always go on the worst night you can, for if the weather is very bad, the chances are that nobody will be up to see your honour. The way you'll always know the fat cattle in the dark, is by this token — that the fat cows always stand out in the more exposed places — but the lean ones always go into the ditch for shelter.
217 psl. - He was so fond of brandy that he always kept a supply of it in court upon the desk before him, in an inkstand of peculiar make. His lordship used to lean his arm upon the desk, bob down his head, and steal a hurried sip from time to time, through a quill that lay among the pens, which manoeuvre he flattered himself escaped observation.
288 psl. - We quote this paragraph at full length, because it is replete with your mischievous errors and guilty mode of thinking. In the first place, as to the odour of the negroes, we are quite aware that they have not as yet come to use much of the otto of roses or Eau de Cologne. But we implore of your fastidiousness to recollect that multitudes of the children of white men have negro women for their mothers, and that our British travellers complain, in loud and bitter terms, of the overpowering stench...
166 psl. - ... perhaps you would readily admit that the man who has been so often called a ferocious demagogue, is, in truth, a gentle lover of Nature, an enthusiast of all her beauties — " Fond of each gentle and each dreary scene, and catching, from the loveliness as well as the dreariness of the ocean, and Alpine scenes with which he is surrounded, a greater ardour to promote the good of man, in his overwhelming admiration, of the mighty works of God.
116 psl. - Dr. Stapleton's very striking testimony to young Dan O'Connell's promise as a schoolboy is corroborated by another excellent witness — U'Connell himself. He said once, to O'Neill Daunt, " I was in childhood remarkably quick and persevering. My childish propensity to idleness was overcome by the fear of disgrace : I desired to excel and could not brook the idea of being inferior to others.