A True Account of the Hungarian Revolution; Its Purposes and Pretenses by an American DemocratRichardson, 1851 - 144 էջ |
From inside the book
Արդյունքներ 36–ի 1-ից 5-ը:
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... Political results of the " Liberal " Reformation in Germany and in Eng- land - spoliation of the Church - oppression of the poor - tyranny of princes - proofs taken from Protestant writers CHAPTER II . ... ... The " Liberals " in modern ...
... Political results of the " Liberal " Reformation in Germany and in Eng- land - spoliation of the Church - oppression of the poor - tyranny of princes - proofs taken from Protestant writers CHAPTER II . ... ... The " Liberals " in modern ...
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... political prejudice ; of seeking to counteract it ; of endea- vouring to destroy it . Truth wears not the garb of a peculiar sect : it speaks in the language of every country . It is the birth - right of the honest : the test of virtue ...
... political prejudice ; of seeking to counteract it ; of endea- vouring to destroy it . Truth wears not the garb of a peculiar sect : it speaks in the language of every country . It is the birth - right of the honest : the test of virtue ...
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... political , and polemical discussions , we shall not again revert , as classes deserving of particular consideration , either to " the Com- munists , ' " the Red Republicans , " or " the Anti - Catholic Bigots . " We shall confine our ...
... political , and polemical discussions , we shall not again revert , as classes deserving of particular consideration , either to " the Com- munists , ' " the Red Republicans , " or " the Anti - Catholic Bigots . " We shall confine our ...
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... political , and not in its religious consequences , that we desire to regard the Reformation , fomented in the sixteenth century by the Liberal party , for the purpose of securing to its members the Church pro- perty it caused to be ...
... political , and not in its religious consequences , that we desire to regard the Reformation , fomented in the sixteenth century by the Liberal party , for the purpose of securing to its members the Church pro- perty it caused to be ...
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... political and social consequences of the Reformation ; and we desire to do so the more , from this additional consideration , that though the Liberal party may be considered as fairly chargeable with all the crimes of the Reformation ...
... political and social consequences of the Reformation ; and we desire to do so the more , from this additional consideration , that though the Liberal party may be considered as fairly chargeable with all the crimes of the Reformation ...
Այլ խմբագրություններ - View all
A True Account of the Hungarian Revolution; Its Purposes and Pretenses by an ... William Bernard Maccabe Ամբողջությամբ դիտվող - 1851 |
Common terms and phrases
6th of October affairs of Hungary amongst ancient army authority Bathiany bondage cause centuries Church civil classes constitution conviction Correspondence relating Count Lamberg Croats Crown cruelty declared defeat despotism Dublin Review Edinburgh Review Emperor of Austria empire England Europe fact France freedom German honour House Hungarian Diet Hungarian ministry Hungarian Revolution Ibid Imperial independence Ireland Italian Italy Jellachich king Kossuth labour land language Liberal party liberty London Lord Lord William Russell Louis Philippe March masters ment monarch monasteries murder of Count nation nine millions nobility nobles oppression patriots paupers peasantry peasants persecution persons Pesth plunder political population Portugal pretence Prince proclaimed Quarterly Review quote rebellion rebels Red Republicans Reformation reign religion religious respect Roman Catholics says Sclaves Sclavonians Sclavonic races slavery social sovereign Spain spoliation sympathy tion Titus Oates troops truth tyranny Vienna Viennese Wallachians whilst writer
Սիրված հատվածներ
Էջ 49 - Like the leaves of the forest when summer is green, That host with their banners at sunset were seen: Like the leaves of the forest when autumn hath blown, That host on the morrow lay withered and strown.
Էջ 40 - Reference will be made in another chapter to the dissolution of the religious houses in the reign of Henry VIII, but here we may note that London was the chief scene of the burning of " heretics " at Smithfield in the reign of Mary.
Էջ 130 - Slavonian brethren their political rights; even going the length of sacrificing some of their own rights, by acknowledging special privileges and immunities in those dependencies. The ban revolted, therefore, in the name of the emperor, and rebelled, openly, against the king of Hungary, who is, however, one and the same person; and he went so far as to decree the separation of Croatia and Slavonia from Hungary, with which they had been united for eight hundred years, as well as to incorporate them...
Էջ 53 - De mendicis qui per patrias discurrunt volumus, ut unusquisque fidelium nostrorum suum pauperem de beneficio aut de propria familia nutriat et non permittat aliubi ire mendicando. Et ubi tales inventi fuerint, nisi manibus laborent, nullus eis quicquam tribuere praesumat.
Էջ 114 - Magyars numbered but little over four millions, and were hated alike by Wallachians, Germans, and Sclavonians, at the same time that they were disloyal to the emperor. These reasons appearing conclusive, the emperor did not hesitate at once to change sides, to unite the imperial forces with those whom he had just before denounced as rebels, and to commission the Ban Jellachich himself, the chief rebel, to put down the insurrection in Hungary. This arrangement, however, was kept secret for a time,...
Էջ 130 - Croatia and Sclavonia were chosen to begin this rebellion, because in those countries the inhuman policy of Prince Metternich had, with a view to the weakening of all parties, for years cherished hatred against the Hungarian nation. By exciting in every possible manner the most unfounded national jealousies, and by employing the most disgraceful means, he had succeeded in inflaming a party with rage ; although the Hungarians, far from desiring to oppress the...
Էջ 12 - ... prevented the most lasting compromise of all interests, had, what is properly Revolution, namely, Illegal Violence, not usurped the place of Constitutional Improvement. At this period, the temper of the times, so far from being yet sanguinary, was for the extinction of capital punishment. We repeat and insist upon the truth that the Movement had only to abstain from violence in order to have carried reform to the highest point which the liberty and enlightenment of the Age could have desired...
Էջ 131 - Ban in this act of rebellion openly alleges that he acted as a faithful subject of the Emperor, the ministry of Hungary requested their sovereign by a public declaration to wipe off the stigma which these proceedings threw upon the family. At that moment affairs were not prosperous for Austria in Italy ; the Emperor, therefore, did proclaim that the Ban and his associates were guilty of high treason, and of exciting to rebellion. But while publishing this edict, the Ban and his accomplices were covered...
Էջ 130 - Sclavonia from Hungary, with which they had been united for eight hundred years,, as well as to incorporate them with the Austrian empire. Public opinion and undoubted facts threw the blame of these proceedings on the Archduke Louis, uncle to the Emperor, on his brother, the Archduke Francis Charles, and especially on the consort of the last-named prince, the Archduchess Sophia ; and since the Ban in this act of rebellion openly alleged that he acted as a faithful subject of the Emperor, the ministry...
Էջ 144 - Maccabe's mode of composition is as novel as his plan. Sacrificing ordinary literary pride, he makes the old Monkish writers compose the narrative ; his ingenuity being displayed in the skill with which the passages translated directly from the original, with all their natural vigour of language, are connected, so as to produce an appearance of oneness of design and continuity. He then fuses into one whole centuries of observation and narrative, and in fact, revives those dead monks and scribes till...