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( O'CONNELL ( Daniel ) ). Repeal of the Union. Report of the debate in the House of Commons, on Mr.

Currency:EUR Category:Antiques / Books & Manuscripts Start Price:10.00 EUR Estimated At:80.00 - 100.00 EUR
( O'CONNELL ( Daniel ) ). Repeal of the Union. Report of the debate in the House of Commons, on Mr.

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Auction Date:2012 Oct 19 @ 18:00 (UTC+1)
Location:38 Molesworth Street, Dublin, Dublin, ., Ireland
[O'CONNELL ( Daniel )]. Repeal of the Union. Report of the debate in the House of Commons, on Mr. O'Connell's motion. And the proceedings in the House of Lords on Earl Grey's motion for concurring in the address of the Commons. April, 1834. London, Charles Knight, 1834FIRST EDITION THUS, 200-pages, 8vo, recent paper wrapper : a very good to nice copy. Goldsmiths' 28416. Not in Black, During this debate, which he prompted by a motion on the status of the Union between Great Britain and Ireland, O'Connell spoke for more than five hours. After nine days of argument the motion was heavily defeated, with only one English member of parliament voting in favour. Despite this rebuff, O'Connell was generally encouraged by the proceedings, believing that the Repeal agenda had been morally advanced.ALSO WITH THIS LOT: (1) MacCOMBIE ( Wm. ). The Irish land question practically considered. A letter to … William Ewart Gladstone … Aberdeen : D. Wyllie & Son, booksellers to the Queen, and Prince of Wales, 1869. FIRST EDITION, pages 38, (2, blank), 8vo, recent paper wrapper : a very good copy. Black 8649, noting the NLI copy only. McCombie (1809–70), farmer and journalist. His final publication was a pamphlet entitled The Irish land question practically considered : a letter to … Gladstone (with whom he had corresponded during the 1860s). In order to prepare himself for constructive comment on the Irish land issue he toured Ireland in the autumn of 1868. In the pamphlet he argued that Irish nationalism was ‘exotic’ and was only sustained by the continuing injustices of the land system and the church. If these two issues were dealt with then, in his view, it would ‘speedily die’. He was critical of both tenants and landowners, the former for their lack of initiative and exertion and the latter for their selfishness and ‘utter disregard for the public interest'. Nevertheless, he felt that ‘were the resources and capabilities of the soil properly developed it might maintain in comfort as large a population as that before the famine’. This pamphlet was perhaps his most accessible and most practical piece of work; his other writings were, like much of his journalism, rather abstract and even metaphysical (ODNB).(2) PALMERSTON ( Henry J. T. ), viscount : - Monteith ( Robert J. I. ). Notice of an article on charges against Lord Palmerston, in the Dublin Unversity Magazine. Glasgow : Printed by William Collins & Co., 1841. FIRST EDITION, 40-pages, 8vo, recent paper wrapper : a very good copy. This scarce pamphlet is in reply to an article in the January 1841 issue of the Dublin University Magazine, entitled "Is Lord Palmerston a Traitor?" In that article, the author of this attack on British policy towards Turkey and Russia, is described as being "connected with the Urquhart clique". This riposte warmly supports David Urquhart's pro-Turkish, anti-Russian stance, in opposition to the prevailing government policy of the day.(3) GLADSTONE ( Wm. E. ). The Irish Church. A speech delivered in the House of Commons on Monday, March 1, 1869. John Murray, 1869. FIRST SEPARATE EDITION, pp 59, (1, blank), 8vo, recent wraps:very good-nice copy Gladstone played the chief part in drawing up the Irish Church Bill in 1869 He got the bill through cabinet in February 1869 and through Commons in the spring with majorities of over 100. Exhausted by his efforts, he left the final negotiations to Lord Granville. Just as Disraeli's 1867 Reform Bill aided Gladstone long term, so Irish establishment was, ironically, a convenience to English tory establishmentarians. Disestablishment in Ireland removed a major religious and civil grievance of Irish Roman Catholics and Presbyterians (ODNB).(4) BEGG ( James ). The late Dr. Chalmers on the establishment principle and Irish Protestantism. With some "Forgotten Chapters" of Free Church History. Published for the National Protestant Union Edinburgh : Jmes Nichol … London : James Nisbet & Co … , 1868. FIRST EDITION, 32-pages, 8vo, recent paper wrapper :a very good copy. Begg (1808-83), a leader of the evangelical, non-intrusionist party in the Church of Scotland, a fluent extemporaneous preacher who drew large congregations. In 1850 he took a leading role in the formation of the Scottish Reformation Society which sought to mobilize public opinion against the Roman Catholic church, to resist political concessions to Rome, and to heighten an awareness of Scottish protestant identity and tradition (ODNB).(5) RUSSELL ( John ), first Earl Russell. A letter to the Right Hon. Chichester Fortescue, M.P. on the state of Ireland. Third edition. Longmans, Green, and Co., 1868. Pages (2), 94, 8vo, recent paper wrapper : a very good copy.Two further letters followed, arguing, as ever, in favour of concurrent endowment.(6)IRELAND; HISTORY; UNION; ABERDEEN PRINTED; LAND TENURE; ENGLAND; RUSSIA; TURKEY; EASTERN QUESTION; RELIGION; CHURCH OF IRELAND; RELIGION