| Jonathan Swift, Thomas Roscoe - 1859 - عدد الصفحات: 686
...find it perhaps no difficult matter to bring great numbers over, to the church ; and in the mean time the common people, without leaders, without discipline...any mischief, if they were ever so well inclined. Neither arc they at all likely to join, in any considerable numbers, with an invader, having found... | |
| Mathieu Orsini - 1864 - عدد الصفحات: 890
...find it perhaps no difficult matter to bring great numbers over to the church ; and in the mean time the common people, without leaders, without discipline, or natural courage, being little better than heicera of wood and drawers of water, are out of Under James VI., the borderers were still so cool... | |
| Thomas Babington Macaulay Baron Macaulay - 1866 - عدد الصفحات: 440
...the greater and more immediate sufferers: but, on the contrary, we look upon them to be altogether a* inconsiderable as the women and children. . . . The...drawers of water, are out of all capacity of doing miy mischief, if they \vere ever so well inclined." In the Drapier's Sixth Letter, written in 1724,... | |
| John Nicholas Murphy - 1870 - عدد الصفحات: 548
...provision is made by the late Act against Popery, that it will daily crumble away. In the mean time, the common people, without leaders, without discipline,...mischief, if they were ever so well inclined.' In his ' Short View of the State of Ireland in 1727,' the same accurate observer and able writer says... | |
| James Roderick O'Flanagan - 1870 - عدد الصفحات: 654
...find it perhaps no difficult matter to bring great numbers over to the Church ; and in the mean time the common people, without leaders, without discipline,...any mischief if they were ever so well inclined.' ' It was Lord Wharton who brought Joseph Addison to Ireland, and appointed him Secretary of State.... | |
| William Edward Hartpole Lecky - 1871 - عدد الصفحات: 388
...without discipline, without natural courage, little better than hewers of wood and drawers of water, and out of all capacity of doing any mischief if they were ever so well inclined ; ' but yet the iron of the penal laws had entered into their souls, and they had always thrown themselves... | |
| William Edward Hartpole Lecky - 1871 - عدد الصفحات: 382
...without discipline, without natural courage, little better than hewers of wood and drawers of water, and out of all capacity of doing any mischief if they were ever so well inclined ;' but yet the iron of the penal laws had entered into their souls, and they had always thrown themselves... | |
| John Forster - 1875 - عدد الصفحات: 524
...it eas}- at any time, by refusing to renew the licences, to diminish if not abolish them. And as for the common people, without leaders, without discipline...being little better than hewers of wood and drawers * There are no better or braver soldiers than the Iriih, but Swift would call that trained courage.... | |
| John Forster - 1875 - عدد الصفحات: 530
...it easy at any time, by refusing to renew the licences, to diminish if not abolish them. And as for the common people, without leaders, without discipline...being little better than hewers of wood and drawers * There are no better or braver soldiers than the Irish, bat Swift would call that trained courage.... | |
| 1875 - عدد الصفحات: 1090
...without leaders, without discipline, . . . little better than hewers of wood and drawers of water, and out of all capacity of doing any mischief if they were ever so well inclined." Swift went further and declared them devoid of " natural courage." But this was the libel of the Protestant... | |
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