| Edmund Burke - 1815 - 858 pages
...that the Irish peasant may have, at least, the comforts of an " English sow ;" for an English farmvr would refuse to eat the flesh of a hog, so lodged and fed as an Irish peasant is. Are the farms of an English landholder out of lease, or his cottages in a state of dilapidation ? He... | |
| John Fitzgibbon (1st earl of Clare.) - 1800 - 1026 pages
...have, at least, the " comfort fif an -English sow; for," says he, " an Engluh " Farmer would reiuse to eat the flesh of a hog so lodged '< and fed as an Irish Peasant." Pray, what have the comtorts of an English sow to do witli the business anil the Presentments of the... | |
| William Eusebius Andrews - 1814 - 534 pages
...the example, upon their own estates, of building decent cottages, so that the Irish Peasant may have, at least, the comforts of an " English Sow;" for an English farmer would refuse to eat the llesh of a hog, so lodged and fed as an Irish Peasant is." After tli is just and official description... | |
| 1815 - 822 pages
...the example upon their own estates, of building decent cottages, so that the Irish peasant may have, at least, the comforts of an " English sow ;'' for...of a hog, so lodged and fed as an Irish peasant is. Are the farms of an English landholder out of lease, or his cottages in a state of dilapidation ? He... | |
| Edmund Burke - 1815 - 1026 pages
...the example upon their own estates, of building decent cottages, so that the Irish peasant may have, at least, the comforts of an " English sow ;" for...a .hog, so lodged and fed as an Irish peasant is. Are the farms of an English landholder out of lease, or his cottages in a state of dilapidation ? He... | |
| C. H. Gifford - 1817 - 904 pages
...example upon their own estates, of building decent cottages,, so that the Irish peasant -may have, nscendent injustice of this innovation, the first...was, that the orders were reluctantly adopted by Gr во lodged and fed as an 'Irish peasant is. Are the farms of an English landholder out of lease, or... | |
| Anne Plumptre - 1817 - 452 pages
...building decent cottages, that the Irish peasantry may at least enjoy as much comfort as is enjoyed by an English sow ; — for an English farmer would refuse to eat the flesh of a hog so ill lodged and fed as an Irish peasant." — Once more : " I do not encourage you to expect any immediate... | |
| William Joseph Battersby - 1833 - 388 pages
...building decent cottages, eo that the Irish peasant may have at least the comfort of an English one ; for an English farmer would refuse to eat the flesh of a hog so lodged and fed as an Irish peasant. — Again, I say, that those occasional absentees ought to come home, and not remain abroad, resting... | |
| Daniel O'Connell - 1846 - 564 pages
...their own estates, of building decent cottages, so that the Irish peasant may have at least the comfort of an ' English sow ;' for an English farmer would...of a hog so lodged and fed as an Irish peasant is. " Are the farms of an English landholder out of lease, or his cottages in a state of dilapidation ?... | |
| Thomas Matthew Ray - 1846 - 272 pages
...way than continued as it is ... ... ... 63 Fletcher, Hon. Justice, declaration of, in 1814, that " an English farmer would refuse to eat the flesh of a hog so lodged and fed as an Irish peasant." ... ... 171 Newenham, WHW Esq., " Never saw any peasantry so badly off." ... ... ... ... 63 Nimmo,... | |
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