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§. 3
III. Experience
II. Ireland
(1) §.3 Corruption general
Of the patrician part of the community including
the constituted authorities possessors of seats in Parliament
and the other constituted authorities the moral character
was to such a degree profligate as to form a perfect
contrast to the virtuousness of that exhibited during that
period by the plebeian part: the patricians partaking of
the public virtue only when intermixt on the occasion of the training with the plebeian,
re preserving their character of profligacy in their intercourse
with one another craving with insatiable appetite
the objects of general desire, neither giving up nor
exhibiting evincing any disposition to give them up in any
shape or degree any further than necessity appeared
to them to present.
1. Posture of giving
up seats.
To this point not to the first place the pretence of
a readiness to give up parliamentary seats accompanied
with a determination not to give up any thing which
of that sort except in the case of them not having it in their
power to release it
Hardy — page
Identifier: | JB/137/292/001 "JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 137.
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radicalism not dangerous |
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radicalism not dangerous |
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