Speeches of the Late Rt. Hon. Henry Grattan, in the Irish Parliament in 1780 and 1782Ridgway, 1821 - 69페이지 |
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3 페이지
... charter of Ireland - a tribute to her strength , to maintain which , she must continue in a state of armed preparation , dreading the approach of a general peace , and attributing all she holds dear , to the calamitous condition of the ...
... charter of Ireland - a tribute to her strength , to maintain which , she must continue in a state of armed preparation , dreading the approach of a general peace , and attributing all she holds dear , to the calamitous condition of the ...
5 페이지
... charter of John , and with all the passions of the people ! Our lives are at your service ; but our liberties , we re- ceived them from God : we will not resign them to man ! Speaking to you thus , if you repulse these petitioners , you ...
... charter of John , and with all the passions of the people ! Our lives are at your service ; but our liberties , we re- ceived them from God : we will not resign them to man ! Speaking to you thus , if you repulse these petitioners , you ...
7 페이지
... charters in one hand and arms in the other , afraid to say , we are a free peo- ple ? Are you , the greatest House of Commons that ever sat in Ireland , that want but this one act to equal that English House of Commons that passed the ...
... charters in one hand and arms in the other , afraid to say , we are a free peo- ple ? Are you , the greatest House of Commons that ever sat in Ireland , that want but this one act to equal that English House of Commons that passed the ...
12 페이지
... Charter confirmed ? not more frequently than your rights have been violated . Is one solitary resolution ... charters should be over- whelmed by precedents , and a nation's rights lost in oblivion , and the people . themselves lose the ...
... Charter confirmed ? not more frequently than your rights have been violated . Is one solitary resolution ... charters should be over- whelmed by precedents , and a nation's rights lost in oblivion , and the people . themselves lose the ...
13 페이지
... charter spoliated . A nation's liberty cannot , like her money , be rated and par- celled out in gratitude . No man can be grateful or liberal of his conscience , nor woman of her honour , nor nation of her liberty . There are certain ...
... charter spoliated . A nation's liberty cannot , like her money , be rated and par- celled out in gratitude . No man can be grateful or liberal of his conscience , nor woman of her honour , nor nation of her liberty . There are certain ...
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10th of Henry accordingly act of parliament Address be presented April arms army assure his Majesty authority better securing bound Britain British nation British Parliament Charter claim of England common law connexion constitution court of high covenant Crown Declaration of Right declaratory discontents and jealousies English Parliament force in Ireland freedom George the 1st give mutual satisfaction Grace the Lord gracious Message Henry 2nd Henry 6th honour House of Commons House of Peers humble Address idea of conquest Irish Act Irish Parliament Kingdom of Ireland land late Majesty King laws of England legislative liament Lord Lieutenant Majesty King George Majesty's ment minister Ordered parlia Parliament of England Parliament of Ireland perpetual Petition of Right precedent Privy Council proceeding realm reign repealing an act resolution Resolved right of conquest rity royal assent Secretary Fox securing the Dependency statutes subjects of Ireland thing tion trade volunteer
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45 페이지 - I AM now to address a free people. Ages have passed away, and this is the first moment in which you could be distinguished by that appellation.
18 페이지 - I wish for nothing but to breathe, in this our island, in common with my fellow-subjects, the air of liberty. I have no ambition, unless it be the ambition to break your chain, and contemplate your glory. I never will be satisfied so long as the meanest cottager in Ireland has a link of the British chain clanking to his rags : he may be naked, he shall not be in iron.
4 페이지 - ... her enemies are a host, pouring upon her from all quarters of the earth; her armies are dispersed; the sea is not hers; she has no minister, no ally, no admiral, none in whom she long confides, and no general whom she has not disgraced; the balance of her fate is in the hands of Ireland; you are not only her last connection, you are the only nation in Europe that is not her enemy.
58 페이지 - That an humble address be presented to His Majesty, to return His Majesty the thanks of this House for his most gracious message to this House, signified by His Grace the Lord-lieutenant.
8 페이지 - ... or cut off the nation's right hand ; greatly emancipate or fundamentally destroy. We may talk plausibly to England, but so long as she exercises a power to bind this country, so long are the nations in a state of war ; the claims of the one go against the liberty of the other, and the sentiments of the latter go to oppose those claims to the last drop of her blood.
18 페이지 - ... by the arms, inspiration, and providence of the present moment, tell us the rule by which we shall go — assert the law of Ireland — declare the liberty of the land. " I will not be answered by a public lie in the shape of an amendment ; neither, speaking for the subject's freedom, am I to hear of faction.
45 페이지 - Heaven-directed steps you have proceeded until the whole faculty of the nation is braced up to the act of her own deliverance. I found Ireland on her knees.
15 페이지 - ... law. Never was such a revolution accomplished in so short a time, and with such public tranquillity. In what situation would those men who call themselves friends of constitution and of government have left you ? They would have left you without a title, as they...
1 페이지 - I have entreated an attendance on this day, that you might, in the most public manner, deny the claim of the British Parliament to make law for Ireland, and with one voice lift up your hands against it.
62 페이지 - His Majesty being concerned to find that discontents and jealousies are prevailing among his loyal subjects of this country, upon matters of great weight and importance, His Majesty recommends it to this House to take the same into their most serious consideration, in order to such a final adjustment as may give mutual satisfaction to his kingdoms of Great Britain and Ireland.