Essays on the Political Circumstances of Ireland: Written During the Administration of Earl CamdenAuthor, 1799 - 240 pages |
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Page 12
... British Cabinet had , or had not , any private reasons for this apparent alteration , or whether any thought might have fubfequent- ly fprung up in their minds , which did not oc- cur cur to them at the firft view of the bufinefs ( 12 )
... British Cabinet had , or had not , any private reasons for this apparent alteration , or whether any thought might have fubfequent- ly fprung up in their minds , which did not oc- cur cur to them at the firft view of the bufinefs ( 12 )
Page 13
... reason fe to do , from the very communications made . to them by Lord Fitzwilliam himself , after his acceffion to the Irish Viceroyalty . His Lordship gives fo minute an account of what paffed between him and his British Cor ...
... reason fe to do , from the very communications made . to them by Lord Fitzwilliam himself , after his acceffion to the Irish Viceroyalty . His Lordship gives fo minute an account of what paffed between him and his British Cor ...
Page 14
... reason , how , in such an investigation , my Lord Fitzwilliam's ftatement ought to have operated ? The amount of it was evidently neither more nor lefs than this , that the Irish Catholics were determined , at all events , to gain their ...
... reason , how , in such an investigation , my Lord Fitzwilliam's ftatement ought to have operated ? The amount of it was evidently neither more nor lefs than this , that the Irish Catholics were determined , at all events , to gain their ...
Page 17
... reason , I most readily grant ; but , in the present case , if my Lord Fitzwilliam's statement be correct , the Roman Catholics fcarcely condcfcended to reafon at all . Heretofore they had reafoned , and , when they reafoned , they had ...
... reason , I most readily grant ; but , in the present case , if my Lord Fitzwilliam's statement be correct , the Roman Catholics fcarcely condcfcended to reafon at all . Heretofore they had reafoned , and , when they reafoned , they had ...
Page 20
... reasons which he affigned why they fhould be immediately gratified , viz . the irrefiftibility of the general wifh , and the calamities to be apprehended if it was not instantly complied with , were fuffi- cient , on every ground ...
... reasons which he affigned why they fhould be immediately gratified , viz . the irrefiftibility of the general wifh , and the calamities to be apprehended if it was not instantly complied with , were fuffi- cient , on every ground ...
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Essays on the Political Circumstances of Ireland: Written During the ... Alexander Knox No preview available - 2019 |
Essays on the Political Circumstances of Ireland: Written During the ... Alexander Knox No preview available - 2019 |
Common terms and phrases
affert affociation againſt almoſt arife becauſe Britiſh cafe caufe cauſe circumftances confequences confiftency Conftitution courſe defign defperate eſtabliſhed exift expreffion fafe fafety faid fame fecurity feems felves fenfe ferve fhall fhould fince fingle firft firſt fociety fome fpirit France French ftate ftatement ftill ftrength fubject fuch fuffer fufficient fuggefted fuppofe fure furniſh fyftem gentlemen Government happineſs Heaven himſelf honeft increaſe inftance infurrection intereft Ireland Irish Iriſhmen itſelf juft juftice juſt kingdom labour laft lefs Legiſlature liberty Lord Fitzwilliam Lord George Gordon madneſs meaſure ment mifery moft moſt muft multitude muſt neceffary neceffity obferved occafion once Oppofition paffions Parliament perfons poffeffed poffible political popular prefent principles purpoſe queftion reafon refift Reform refpect reft Roman Catholics ſay ſpeak ſtate ſtill ſuppoſed thefe themſelves theſe thing thofe thoſe thouſand tion underſtanding United Irish United Irishmen uſed Whig whofe wiſh yourſelves
Popular passages
Page 146 - Laws, all combinations and associations, under whatever plausible character, with the real design to direct, control, counteract, or awe the regular deliberation and action of the constituted authorities, are destructive of this fundamental principle, and of fatal tendency. They serve to organize faction, to give it an artificial and extraordinary force ; to put, in the place of the delegated will of the nation, the will of a party, often a small but artful and enterprising minority of the community...
Page 34 - The day of Jehovah cometh, the land is as the garden of Eden before them, but behind them a desolate wilderness,
Page 149 - Number. — On the rock of this principle let this society rest ; by this let it judge and determine every political question, and whatever is necessary for this end let it not be accounted hazardous, but rather our interest, our duty, our glory and our common religion. The Rights of Man are the Rights of God, and to vindicate the one is to maintain the other. We must be free in order to serve Him whose service is perfect freedom. " The external business of this society will be — first, publication,...
Page 133 - I have uniformly pursued the just and virtuous course of conduct; assertor of the honors, of the prerogatives, of the glory of my country; studious to support them, zealous to advance them, my whole being is devoted to this glorious cause. I was never known to march through the city with a face of joy and exultation at the success of a foreign power; embracing and announcing the joyful tidings to those who, I supposed, would transmit it to the proper place. I was never known...
Page 148 - The greatest happiness of the greatest numbers in this island, the inherent and indefeasible claims of every free nation to rest in this nation — the will and the power to be happy to pursue the common weal as an individual pursues his private welfare, and to stand in insulated independence, an imperatorial...
Page 6 - Should such a combination, at once inflamed as it must be now, by the favour of the British court, and by the reprobation of the Irish people, return to power, I have no hesitation to say, that they will extinguish Ireland, or Ireland must remove them : it is not your cause only, but that of the nation.
Page 158 - ... of Providence, and the strong efforts of human nature resisting and overcoming the malignant influence of a miserable administration. To resist this influence, which rules by discord and embroils by system, it...
Page 157 - ... and opinion ; and remember, efpecially, that for the efficient management of your common, interefts, in a country fo...
Page 153 - What are the means of procuring fuch a *' Reform in the Conftitution as may fecure to " the people their rights moft effectually and *' moftfpeedily? " What is the plan of reform moft fuited to " this country ? " Can the. renovation in the Conftitution, " which we all deem neceflary, be accomplifhed " by the ways of the Conftitution? The evil...
Page 185 - ... muft come, in time. The United States are large and populous nations, in comparifon of the Grecian commonwealths, or even the Swifs cantons ; and are growing every day more difproportionate, and therefore lefs capable of being held together by fimple governments. Countries that increafe in population fo rapidly as the States of America- did, even during fuch an impoverifhing and deftructive war as the laft was, are not to be bound long with filken threads : lions, young or old, will not be bound...