Ireland Exhibited to England: In a Political and Moral Survey of Her Population, and in a Statistical and Scenographic Tour of Certain Districts; Comprehending Specimens of Her Colonisation, Natural History and Antiquities, Arts, Sciences, and Commerce ... With a Letter to the Members of His Majesty's Government on the State of Ireland, Volume 2Baldwin, Cradock, and Joy, 1823 - Antrim (Ireland : County) |
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Page 22
... seen , the wide landscape , spreading its dew - bespangled carpet up to the very summit of the Mourne mountains . Not a gem nor a dew - drop - no , nor even the slight- est tint of verdure in Nature's pencil escapes the eye . Satiated ...
... seen , the wide landscape , spreading its dew - bespangled carpet up to the very summit of the Mourne mountains . Not a gem nor a dew - drop - no , nor even the slight- est tint of verdure in Nature's pencil escapes the eye . Satiated ...
Page 32
... seen no other portrait of his character , than that which sparkles in the living features of his estate ; yet , in this we have seen enough to command our unpurchased admi- ration , and , in the same disinterested spirit in which we do ...
... seen no other portrait of his character , than that which sparkles in the living features of his estate ; yet , in this we have seen enough to command our unpurchased admi- ration , and , in the same disinterested spirit in which we do ...
Page 36
... seen traversing the roads in many parts of Ireland , but frequently tearing up meadows and potatoe fields ; and after the depredations of the day , returning deliberately home to take possession of the warmest corner in their owner's ...
... seen traversing the roads in many parts of Ireland , but frequently tearing up meadows and potatoe fields ; and after the depredations of the day , returning deliberately home to take possession of the warmest corner in their owner's ...
Page 43
... upon this point of the Belfast history ; but , on our own slender authority , we shall not presume to speak largely of this proud virtue of our country , as it applies to Belfast , having only seen it COUNTY OF ANTRIM . 43.
... upon this point of the Belfast history ; but , on our own slender authority , we shall not presume to speak largely of this proud virtue of our country , as it applies to Belfast , having only seen it COUNTY OF ANTRIM . 43.
Page 44
... seen it shine in the features of a family in Anne - street ( near the old narrow bridge that crosses the Lagan river , and opens a communication between the counties of Antrim and Down ) with steady light , in the branches of an AsH ...
... seen it shine in the features of a family in Anne - street ( near the old narrow bridge that crosses the Lagan river , and opens a communication between the counties of Antrim and Down ) with steady light , in the branches of an AsH ...
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Common terms and phrases
acres of demesne ancient antiquity appears Armagh Ballycastle Ballyclare Ballymena Ballymenagh Ballymoney barony basalt beauty Belfast bleaching bogs Bushmills called canal Carrickfergus castle church coal coast considerable cotton county of Antrim Crumlin Dervock Dioc Diocese Connor distance district Dublin eminent English erected establishment extensive farm feet former gentleman Giant's Causeway Glenarm Glenavy Hertford hill improvement inhabitants Ireland Irish acres island island Magee James John labour Lagan land Larne latter limestone linen trade Lisburn Lord Lough Erne Lough Neagh manufacture ment miles north mills Moira mountains neat neighbourhood north of Dublin noticed opens a communication parish plantations planted Portglenone post town province quantity Randalstown render residence river road scene Scotch Scotland seat Shane's castle shew shore side situated Six Mile water soil stands stone tion Toome tract tree Ulster village wood
Popular passages
Page 18 - Our soul is escaped even as a bird out of the snare of the fowler ; the snare is broken, and we are delivered.
Page 18 - If the Lord himself had not been on our side, now may Israel say : if the Lord himself had not been on our side, when men rose up against us; They had swallowed us up quick : when they were so wrathfully displeased at us.
Page 115 - Our more special Grace, certain Knowledge and mere Motion, We have given and granted, and by these Presents, for Us, Our Heirs and Successors, do give and grant unto the said...
Page 393 - On examining this subterranean wonder, it was found to be a complete gallery, which had been driven forward many hundred yards to the bed of coal : that it branched off into numerous chambers, where miners had carried on their different works : that these chambers were dressed in a workmanlike manner: that pillars were left at proper intervals to support the roof. In short...
Page 18 - But it is to be remembered much with regret, that this loss and overthrow did so enrage the rebels, that for several days and weeks after, they murdered many hundreds of protestants whom they had kept prisoners in the counties of Armagh and Tyrone, and other parts of Ulster, and tormented them by several manners of death. And it is a circumstance very observable, that much snow had fallen in the week before this action, and...
Page 319 - Boyd, and erecting them into a free barony, to be called, in all time coming, the Barony of Kilbride, and which he assumed as his own designation, and under which title he appears several times as a Commissioner of Supply for the County of Ayr, towards the latter end of the seventeenth and beginning of the eighteenth centuries. He had also a share in the troubles of the times, during the reign of Charles II.
Page 337 - ... by their looks and -manners, but particularly by the air of comfort about their dwellings, and a fondness for gardens and orchards. Near Belfast was likewise a colony of Lancashire and Cheshire men, settled there, as it is said, by...
Page 347 - ... soil. This island contains no native quadruped except rats, and the little straw mouse, which is sometimes found. The inhabitants are a simple, laborious, and honest race of people, and possess a great degree of affection for their own country, always speaking of Ireland as of a foreign land. A common and heavy curse among them is, " May Ireland be your latter end...
Page 365 - Oa a minute inspection, each pillar is found to be separable into several joints, whose articulation is neat and compact beyond expression, the convex termination of one joint always meeting a concave socket in the next ; besides which, the *
Page 313 - N. Grimshaw, cotton and linen printer, from England, who had some time before settled in this country ; and shortly after, an experienced spinner was brought over by Mr. Joy, from Scotland, to instruct the children in the house. Also, under the same direction, and at the expense of the gentlemen mentioned, a carding machine was erected, to go by water, at Mr.