Personal Recollections of the Late Daniel O'Connell, M.P.Chapman and Hall, 1848 |
Knygos viduje
Rezultatai 15 iš 66
psl.
... also , have been furnished by my kind and valued friend , Patrick Vincent FitzPatrick , Esq . , of Dublin . The nature of a book thus compiled must of course VOL . I. b be very desultory . It was necessarily impossible to methodise.
... also , have been furnished by my kind and valued friend , Patrick Vincent FitzPatrick , Esq . , of Dublin . The nature of a book thus compiled must of course VOL . I. b be very desultory . It was necessarily impossible to methodise.
5 psl.
... Dublin . Many of their number obeyed the invi- tation . I must own that I did so , in the confident expectation that the leader would lay before us a plan for the agitation of Repeal in Parliament during the ensuing session . But O ...
... Dublin . Many of their number obeyed the invi- tation . I must own that I did so , in the confident expectation that the leader would lay before us a plan for the agitation of Repeal in Parliament during the ensuing session . But O ...
6 psl.
... Dublin . He was introduced by O'Connell on our first day of meeting , and presented us with financial details illustrative of the misma- nagement of Irish resources by the English Parlia- ment . Rumours at this time were rife that ...
... Dublin . He was introduced by O'Connell on our first day of meeting , and presented us with financial details illustrative of the misma- nagement of Irish resources by the English Parlia- ment . Rumours at this time were rife that ...
18 psl.
... Dublin corpo- ration . Notwithstanding the obstacles thrown by the Coercion Act in the way of petitions to the legis- lature , O'Connell was backed , on this occasion , by more than half a million of signatures to petitions in favour of ...
... Dublin corpo- ration . Notwithstanding the obstacles thrown by the Coercion Act in the way of petitions to the legis- lature , O'Connell was backed , on this occasion , by more than half a million of signatures to petitions in favour of ...
21 psl.
... Dublin . The results were necessarily ruinous to the short - sighted combinators themselves . The shipwrights were the greatest sufferers ; the ship - building trade having nearly been destroyed in Dublin by this foolish and fatal ...
... Dublin . The results were necessarily ruinous to the short - sighted combinators themselves . The shipwrights were the greatest sufferers ; the ship - building trade having nearly been destroyed in Dublin by this foolish and fatal ...
Kiti leidimai - Peržiūrėti viską
Personal Recollections of the Late Daniel O'Connell, M.P. William Joseph O'Neill Daunt Visos knygos peržiūra - 1848 |
Personal Recollections of the Late Daniel O'Connell, M.P. William J. O'Neill Daunt Visos knygos peržiūra - 1848 |
Personal Recollections of the Late Daniel O'connell, M.P William Joseph O Daunt Peržiūra negalima - 2019 |
Pagrindiniai terminai ir frazės
admirable agitation amongst amused anecdote asked attend AUTHOR beautiful Belfast carriage Catholic CHAPMAN AND HALL CHAPTER CHARLES CHARLES DICKENS church cloth continued O'Connell Cork County Cork court Daniel O'Connell Darrynane dinner Dublin Dungarvan England English Engravings excellent exclaimed Father favour Feargus Feargus O'Connor fellow Fermoy gentleman gilt Grady Hall ditto heard honour horses hour House hunt Illustrations Ireland Irish John O'Connell judge Kerry Kilkenny Killarney labour lady landlord letter Liberator Liberator's Lord meeting ment miles morning morocco Mount Sorel mountains nation never night Norbury O'Con O'Connell's O'Grady Orange Orangemen Parliament party passed person pistol political popular post 8vo price 11 Protestant Protestantism recollect Reform religion remarkable Repeal Association replied O'Connell returned road Scarriff small 8vo speech spirit spoke talk thing THOMAS CARLYLE tion told Tory Tralee Union volume whilst witness young
Populiarios ištraukos
20 psl. - Costume in England. A HISTORY OF DRESS, from the Earliest Period until the close of the Eighteenth Century ; with a Glossary of Terms for all Articles of Use or Ornament worn about the Person. "By FW FAIRHOLT, FSA With upwards of 600 Engravings, drawn on Wood by the Author.
116 psl. - We thank you for your noble and spirited, though hitherto ineffectual efforts in defence of the great constitutional and commercial rights of your country. Go on! The almost unanimous voice of the people is with you, and in a free country the voice of the people must prevail. We know our duty to our sovereign, and are loyal. We know our duty to ourselves, and are resolved to be free. We seek for our rights, and no more than our rights ; and in so just a pursuit we should doubt the being of a Providence...
51 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.
166 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.
168 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...
167 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...
25 psl. - SURTEES' (WE) SKETCH OF THE LIVES OF LORDS STOWELL AND ELDON ; Comprising, with Additional Matter, some Corrections of Mr. Twiss's Work on the Chancellor. By WILLIAM EDWAED SUHTEES, DCL, Barrister-at-Law.
107 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,
168 psl. - 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.