| Dennis Taaffe - 1810 - 588 páginas
...easily fled, if he apprehended any danger in the stay. When he was brought before the earl of Ormond, he voluntarily confessed that he was a papist, and...it; having by his sole charity and power, preserved very many of the English from the rage and fury of the Irish; and therefore he only besought his lordship... | |
| John Curry - 1810 - 736 páginas
...refused to fly away, with thoSe. that v:ere guilty, because he not only knew himself very innecent, bat believed that he could not be without ample testimony...it; having by his sole charity and power, preserved very many of the English from the rage and fury of the Irish ; and therefore he only besought his lordship... | |
| John Curry - 1810 - 732 páginas
...he refused to fly away, with those that were guilty, because he not only knew himself very innecent, but believed that he could not be without ample testimony of it; having fey his sole charity and power, preserved very many of the English from the rage and fury of the Irish... | |
| Daniel O'Connell - 1843 - 98 páginas
...Papist, and that his residence was in the town, from whence he refused to fly away ' with those who were guilty ; because he not 'only knew himself very...innocent, but be'lieved that he could not be without ample evi' dene« of it, having by hie sole charity and power, ' preserved very -many of the English Protestants... | |
| Edward Hyde Earl of Clarendon - 1849 - 410 páginas
...priest, and that his residence was in that town, from whence he refused to fly away with those who were guilty, because he not only knew himself very innocent, but believed he should not be without ample evidence of it, having by his sole charity and power preserved very... | |
| Irish ecclesiastical record - 1868 - 596 páginas
...he voluntarily acknowledged that he was a papist, and that his residence was in the town, from which he refused to fly away with those that were guilty...innocent, but believed that he could not be without ample evidence of it, having by his sole charity and power preserved very many of the English Protestants... | |
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