Paul Sorrells

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Underlying the whole crisis in Ireland was a widespread feeling in the British political and social elite that the Irish had brought their fate upon themselves by being lazy and having too many children (precisely the complaint made by Malthus about the supposed effects of the Old Poor Law). They had a fatal tendency, one critic declared, to ‘loiter about upon the land’, doing nothing.
The Pursuit of Power: Europe 1815–1914 (The Penguin History of Europe Book 7)
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