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§.3 ulto
III Experience
II. Ireland
1 §.3. Fruits, Golden Age
§.3. Its fruits — the Golden Age of Ireland. Tranquillity, harmony, morality, felicity, unexampled.
1
Institution, democratic
ascendency. Its fruit
tranquillity, harmony
morality, felicity, unexampled.
Such being the institution — democratic ascendency
behold its fruits: tranquillity will every thing bear repetition
security, for person and property harmony, morality, felicity
unexampled
2
Attested by all parties
peoples men. Whig
Aristocrats — pure—
Monarchy men.
Such as they were — behold another -under
of all parties in one voice: their existence was acknowledged
by all parties. People's men triumphed [in it] in their Jubilee/golden age and recorded [it]:
Whigs transported it calling it their work till the time was come for destroying it
Whigs Aristocrats even after they had succeeded in destroying it in substituting
to it the iron one in reinstating the iron one,
trumpeted it, calling it their own work. So conspicuous
was it so incontestable, not even could the most zealous Tories and Ministerialists and
Tories pure Monarchy men f allow themselves to forbear confessing its existence.
Identifier: | JB/137/172/001 "JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 137.
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1820-02-23 |
1-2 |
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137 |
radicalism not dangerous |
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172 |
radicalism not dangerous |
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001 |
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text sheet |
1 |
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recto |
e1 |
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jeremy bentham |
[[watermarks::[prince of wales feathers] i&m 1818]] |
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arthur wellesley, duke of wellington |
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1818 |
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46889 |
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