... O'Connor replied to his critics by appearing before a mass-meeting of his partisans in Manchester to defend his plan and seek a public vindication. He told his audience that his enemies had plotted to ruin him and even to kill him. " O'Connor tested... Preussische Jahrbücher - Seite 5801874Vollansicht - Über dieses Buch
| William E. Adams - 1903 - 348 Seiten
...would give me the nightmare ; nay, an apoplexy." (Loud cheers, and " God Almighty bless thee ! ") " I have now brought money with me to repay every shareholder...related of the Queen, that when she visited the Duke of Argyle's, she took up the young Marquis of Lorne, and actually gave him a kiss, and this was mentioned... | |
| Preston William Slosson - 1916 - 220 Seiten
...ruin him and even to kill him. " O'Connor tested public confidence to the utmost," wrote Gammage. " He said, ' I have now brought money with me to repay...won't have it!'). ' Well, then, I'll spend it all.' (Cries of ' Do, and welcome! ')." 2 No other Chartist leader could claim a following as devoted as... | |
| Preston William Slosson - 1916 - 228 Seiten
...ruin him and even to kill him. " O'Connor tested public confidence to the utmost," wrote Gammage. " He said, ' I have now brought money with me to repay...won't have it ! '). ' Well, then, I'll spend it all.' (Cries of ' Do, and welcome! ')." 2 No other Chartist leader could claim a following as devoted as... | |
| Charles Ryle Fay - 1920 - 344 Seiten
...luxuriate on woman's misery, and grow fat upon the labourer's toil"1, he flung himself on their mercy and said: "I have now brought money with me to repay every...won't have it ! ") " Well, then, I'll spend it all". (Cries of "Do, and welcome".) As a bank manager, on the eve of a crisis, O'Connor would have been worth... | |
| Charles Ryle Fay - 1947 - 328 Seiten
...luxuriate on woman's misery, and grow fat upon the labourer's toil"1, he flung himself on their mercy and said: "I have now brought money with me to repay every...won't have it ! ") " Well, then, I'll spend it all". (Cries of "Do, and welcome".) As a bank manager, on the eve of a crisis, O'Connor would have been worth... | |
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