The American Irish and Their Influence on Irish PoliticsK. Paul, Trench & Company, 1882 - 252 ページ |
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A. M. Sullivan acres agitation amongst army arrived Bishop Ireland Boston capital Catholic Church cities citizens colony Davitt declared Doheney Dublin Edition England English fact families farm feeling Fenian Brotherhood foreign Friendly Sons GASPARA STAMPA Germans Government hand Home Rule idea immigration independence influence interest Irish colonists Irish emigrants Irish Felon Irish in America Irish National Irish politics Irish population Irish race Irish World Irish-American Irishmen John John Mitchel labor Lalor Land League land question landlords leaders Lord ment millions Minnesota movement Murray County native Native-American number of Irish O'Toole object organization paper Parliament Parnell Patrick persons Philadelphia Poems Portrait prairie priests principles Protestant religious Repeal Republican revolutionary revolutionists Roman Catholic Church says selected settlement society soil Sons of St Stephens tenant Thomas Francis Meagher thousand tion United United Irishman whole York Young Ireland Young Ireland party دو
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55 ページ - ... that you will not vote, nor give your influence for any man for any office in the gift of the people, unless he be an American-born citizen, in favor of Americans ruling America...
161 ページ - Europe. Mark the words of this prophecy - The principle I propound goes to the foundations of Europe, and sooner or later will cause Europe to outrise. Mankind will yet be masters of the earth. The right of the people to make the laws - this produced the first great modern earthquake, whose latest shocks even now are heaving the heart of the world.
131 ページ - Our independence must be had at all hazards. If the men of property will not support us, they must fall ; we can support ourselves by the aid of that numerous and respectable class of the community, the men of no property . 12.
152 ページ - I hold and maintain that the entire soil of a country belongs of right to the entire people of that country, and is the rightful property, not of any one class, but of the nation at large, in full effective possession, to let to whom they will, on whatever tenures, terms, rents, services, and conditions they will, one condition...
155 ページ - You cannot organize, or train, or discipline your own force to any point of efficiency. You must therefore disorganize, and untrain, and undiscipline that of the enemy, and not alone must you unsoldier, you must unofficer it also ; nullify its tactique and strategy, as well as its discipline ; decompose the science and system of war, and resolve them into their first elements.
