Irish Nationalism: An Appeal to History

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J. Murray, 1893 - 267 páginas
 

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Página 255 - For in the name of God, what grievance has Ireland, as Ireland, to complain of with regard to Great Britain ; unless the protection of the most powerful country upon earth, — giving all her privileges, without exception, in common to Ireland, and reserving to herself only the painful preeminence of ten-fold burthens, be a matter of complaint.
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Página 135 - Battles, plunderings, etc., exclusive of those in which the English Government was engaged, 116; Irish gentlemen of family killed in battle, 102 ; murdered, 168 — many of them with circumstances of great atrocity ; and during this period, on the other hand, there is no allusion to the enactment of any law, the judicial decision of any controversy, the founding of any town, monastery or church ; and all this is recorded by the annalist without the slightest expression of regret or astonishment,...
Página 11 - Irish enemy" was no nation in the modern sense of the word, but a race divided into many nations or tribes, separately defending their lands from the English barons in their immediate neighbourhood. There had been no ancient national government displaced, no national dynasty overthrown ; the Irish had no national flag, nor any capital city as the metropolis of their common country, nor any common administration of law ; nor did they ever give a national opposition to the English.
Página 256 - ... is privileged in a manner that has no example. The provision trade is the same ; nor does Ireland, on her part, take a single article from England, but what she has with more advantage than she could have it from any nation upon earth. I say nothing of the immense advantage she derives from the use of the English capital. In what country upon earth is it, that a quantity of...

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