Excursions Through Ireland: Province of LeinsterLongman, Hurst, Rees, Orme, and Brown, 1820 - Architecture |
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Page 1
... tranquillity and prosperity enjoyed by the island , previous to the invasion ordered by Egfrid , King of the Northumbrians , in the seventh century ; when B its lands , churches , and monasteries , were laid Bequest of Mrs. Jances ...
... tranquillity and prosperity enjoyed by the island , previous to the invasion ordered by Egfrid , King of the Northumbrians , in the seventh century ; when B its lands , churches , and monasteries , were laid Bequest of Mrs. Jances ...
Page 2
Thomas Cromwell. its lands , churches , and monasteries , were laid waste . This irruption , together with those of the Norwegians and Danes , ( the Ostmen , or Eastmen , of Irish history , ) towards the close of the eighth or the ...
Thomas Cromwell. its lands , churches , and monasteries , were laid waste . This irruption , together with those of the Norwegians and Danes , ( the Ostmen , or Eastmen , of Irish history , ) towards the close of the eighth or the ...
Page 3
... land him to restore , oure grace and oure good love have they thereto . " After some delay , Richard de Clare , Earl of Pembroke , surnamed Strong- bow from his excellence in archery , a man of courage and address , but of desperate ...
... land him to restore , oure grace and oure good love have they thereto . " After some delay , Richard de Clare , Earl of Pembroke , surnamed Strong- bow from his excellence in archery , a man of courage and address , but of desperate ...
Page 9
... lands of their fathers , they will be amongst the most faithful subjects of the British empire , ' " " * Strong reasons exist for believing that the native Irish and the Highlanders of Scotland were anciently one people : their customs ...
... lands of their fathers , they will be amongst the most faithful subjects of the British empire , ' " " * Strong reasons exist for believing that the native Irish and the Highlanders of Scotland were anciently one people : their customs ...
Page 14
... land , ( from the time of the Brehon laws too prevalent in Ireland ; ) while this excessive subdivision again afforded " too great a facility to marriage . " Thus cause and effect operated and re- operated upon each other ; while the ...
... land , ( from the time of the Brehon laws too prevalent in Ireland ; ) while this excessive subdivision again afforded " too great a facility to marriage . " Thus cause and effect operated and re- operated upon each other ; while the ...
Common terms and phrases
Abbey acres ancient appearance arch Archbishop architecture barracks beautiful Bridge building called castle centre chapel circumstance College College Green columns commenced consists contains contiguous Corinthian order courts decorated dome Doric Doric order Drawing by Geo Dublin edifice elegant English Engraved entablature entrance erected Excursions through Ireland extending four front Grand Canal ground handsome harbour Hibernian honour Hospital houses Howth inhabitants inscription institution Ionic Ireland's Eye Irish island Kilbarrack KILDARE King's Inns land latter Liffey Longman & Paternoster Lord Lord Charlemont Lord Whitworth Malton ment miles native nearly neat noble object observed original ornamented parish of St parochial church Paternoster Row pedestal pediment Petrie pier pilasters population portico Portland stone present principal Province of Leinster purpose Quay remarkable river side Sir Richard Hoare situation society spacious square steeple stone street tion wall Walsh Whitelaw whole WICKLOW Wicklow Mountains
Popular passages
Page 99 - STELLA, under which she is celebrated in the writings of Dr. JONATHAN SWIFT, Dean of this Cathedral.
Page 6 - ... as are consistent with the laws of Ireland : or as they did enjoy in the reign of king Charles the Second : and their majesties, as soon as their affairs will permit them to summon a parliament in this kingdom, will endeavour to procure the said Roman Catholics such further security in that particular, as may preserve them from any disturbance upon the account of their said religion.
Page 102 - Sir Richard Hoare characterized the choir, as ' a sad medley of Gothic and Italian architecture, combined in the most unnatural manner.
Page 99 - She was a person of extraordinary endowments and accomplishments of body, mind, and behaviour ; justly admired and respected by all who knew her, on account of her many eminent virtues, as well as for her great natural and acquired perfections. She died...
Page 39 - I procured for the purpose (for the inhabitants without any concern waded through it) I reached the staircase. It had rained violently, and from the shattered state of the roof a torrent of water made its way through every floor, from the garret to the ground. The sallow looks and filth of the wretches who crowded round me indicated their situation, though they seemed insensible to the stench, which I could scarce sustain for a few minutes.
Page 177 - O'er the plenty of the plain. Low the dauntless earl is laid, Gor'd with many a gaping wound : Fate demands a nobler head; Soon a king shall bite the ground. Long his loss shall Eirin weep, Ne'er again his likeness see; Long her strains in sorrow steep, Strains of immortality.
Page 135 - The centre pile, one hundred and forty feet square, divides off the law offices, and forms two court-yards, one to the east, the other to the west, which courts are shut out from the street by handsome screen walls, perforated by arches (defaced, by the way, by lines of old-book stalls)." The middle structure contains the "Four Courts" of Judicature, Chancery, King's Bench, Exchequer, and Common Pleas.
Page 72 - Dublin has to boast ; and it is no hyperbole to advance, that this edifice in the entire, is the grandest, most convenient, and most extensive of the kind in Europe. The portico is without any of the usual architectural decorations, having neither statue, vase...
Page 145 - Church is immediately impressed with the idea of his arrival in a quarter of the city which taste and opulence have united to embellish: the streets in the vicinity are all built on a regular plan: the houses are lofty and elegant; and neither hotels, shops, nor warehouses, obtruding upon the scene, the whole possesses an air of dignified retirement — the tranquillity of ease, affluence and leisure. The inhabitants of this parish are indeed almost exclusively of the upper ranks...
Page 170 - Ballybough) were formerly much more numerous until stolen to be converted into hearthstones and to other purposes; a curious anecdote of this nature is told. A Jew, paying a visit a short time ago to a Christian friend in the vicinity of Ballybough Bridge, found him in the act of repairing his house. Examining the improvements, he perceived near the fireplace a stone with a Hebrew inscription intimating to the astonished Israelite that the body of his father was buried in the chimney.