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+<title>Peter Plymley's Letters, by Sydney Smith</title>
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+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg eBook, Peter Plymley's Letters, by Sydney Smith,
+Edited by Henry Morley
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
+other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
+whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
+the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
+www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
+to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
+
+
+
+
+Title: Peter Plymley's Letters
+ and Selected Essays
+
+
+Author: Sydney Smith
+
+Editor: Henry Morley
+
+Release Date: September 8, 2014 [eBook #4063]
+[This file was first posted on 29 October 2001]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PETER PLYMLEY'S LETTERS***
+</pre>
+<p>Transcribed from the 1893 Cassell &amp; Company edition by
+David Price, email ccx074@pglaf.org</p>
+<p style="text-align: center"><span
+class="GutSmall">CASSELL&rsquo;S NATIONAL LIBRARY</span></p>
+
+<div class="gapshortline">&nbsp;</div>
+<h1><span class="smcap">Peter Plymley&rsquo;s Letters</span><br
+/>
+<span class="smcap">and</span><br />
+<span class="GutSmall">SELECTED ESSAYS</span></h1>
+
+<div class="gapspace">&nbsp;</div>
+<p style="text-align: center"><span class="GutSmall">BY</span><br
+/>
+SYDNEY SMITH</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">
+<a href="images/tpb.jpg">
+<img alt=
+"Decorative graphic"
+title=
+"Decorative graphic"
+ src="images/tps.jpg" />
+</a></p>
+<p style="text-align: center">CASSELL &amp; COMPANY <span
+class="smcap">Limited</span><br />
+<span class="GutSmall"><i>LONDON&nbsp; PARIS&nbsp; &amp;
+MELBOURNE</i></span><br />
+<span class="GutSmall">1893</span></p>
+<h2>INTRODUCTION.</h2>
+<p><span class="smcap">Sydney Smith</span>, of the same age as
+Walter Scott, was born at Woodford, in Essex, in the year 1771,
+and he died of heart disease, aged seventy-four, on the 22nd of
+February, 1845.&nbsp; His father was a clever man of wandering
+habits who, when he settled in England, reduced his means by
+buying, altering, spoiling, and then selling about nineteen
+different places in England.&nbsp; His mother was of a French
+family from Languedoc, that had been driven to England by the
+Revocation of the Edict of Nantes.&nbsp; Sydney Smith&rsquo;s
+grandfather, upon the mother&rsquo;s side, could speak no
+English, and he himself ascribed some of his gaiety to the French
+blood in his veins.</p>
+<p>He was one of four sons.&nbsp; His eldest brother
+Robert&mdash;known as Bobus&mdash;was sent to Eton, where he
+joined Canning, Frere, and John Smith, in writing the Eton
+magazine, the <i>Microcosm</i>; and at Cambridge Bobus afterwards
+was known as a fine Latin scholar.&nbsp; Sydney Smith went first
+to a school at Southampton, and then to Winchester, where he
+became captain of the school.&nbsp; Then he was sent for six
+months to Normandy for a last polish to his French before he went
+on to New College, Oxford.&nbsp; When he had obtained his
+fellowship there, his father left him to his own resources.&nbsp;
+His eldest brother had been trained for the bar, his two younger
+brothers were sent out to India, and Sydney, against his own
+wish, yielded to the strong desire of his father that he should
+take orders as a clergyman.&nbsp; Accordingly, in 1794, he became
+curate of the small parish of Netherhaven, in Wiltshire.&nbsp;
+Meat came to Netherhaven only once a week in a butcher&rsquo;s
+cart from Salisbury, and the curate often dined upon potatoes
+flavoured with ketchup.</p>
+<p>The only educated neighbour was Mr. Hicks Beach, the squire,
+who at first formally invited the curate to dinner on Sundays,
+and soon found his wit, sense, and high culture so delightful,
+that the acquaintance ripened into friendship.&nbsp; After two
+years in the curacy, Sydney Smith gave it up and went abroad with
+the squire&rsquo;s son.&nbsp; &ldquo;When first I went into the
+Church,&rdquo; he wrote afterwards, &ldquo;I had a curacy in the
+middle of Salisbury Plain; the parish was Netherhaven, near
+Amesbury.&nbsp; The squire of the parish, Mr. Beach, took a fancy
+to me, and after I had served it two years, he engaged me as
+tutor to his eldest son, and it was arranged that I and his son
+should proceed to the University of Weimar in Saxony.&nbsp; We
+set out, but before reaching our destination Germany was
+disturbed by war, and, in stress of politics, we put into
+Edinburgh, where I remained five years.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Young Michael Beach, who had little taste for study, lived
+with Sydney Smith as his tutor, and found him a wise guide and
+pleasant friend.&nbsp; When Michael went to the University, his
+brother William was placed under the same good care.&nbsp; Sydney
+Smith, about the same time, went to London to be married.&nbsp;
+His wife&rsquo;s rich brother quarrelled with her for marrying a
+man who said that his only fortune consisted in six small silver
+teaspoons.&nbsp; One day after their happy marriage he ran in to
+his wife and threw them in her lap, saying, &ldquo;There, Kate,
+you lucky girl, I give you all my fortune!&rdquo;&nbsp; The lucky
+girl had a small fortune of her own which her husband had
+strictly secured to herself and her children.&nbsp; Mr. Beach
+recognised the value of Sydney Smith&rsquo;s influence over his
+son by a wedding gift of &pound;750.&nbsp; In 1802 a daughter was
+born, and in the same year Sydney Smith joined Francis Jeffrey
+and other friends, who then maintained credit for Edinburgh as
+the Modern Athens, in the founding of <i>The Edinburgh
+Review</i>, to which the papers in this volume, added to the
+Peter Plymley Letters, were contributed.&nbsp; The Rev. Sydney
+Smith preached sometimes in the Episcopal Church at Edinburgh,
+and presently had, in addition to William Beach, a son of Mr.
+Gordon, of Ellon Castle, placed under his care, receiving
+&pound;400 a year for each of the young men.</p>
+<p>In 1803 Sydney Smith left Edinburgh for London, where he wrote
+busily in <i>The Edinburgh Review</i>, but remained poor for many
+years.&nbsp; His wit brought friends, and the marriage of his
+eldest brother with Lord Holland&rsquo;s aunt quickened the
+growth of a strong friendship with Lord Holland.&nbsp; Through
+the good offices of Lord Holland, Sydney Smith obtained, in 1806,
+aged thirty-five, the living of Foston-le-Clay, in
+Yorkshire.&nbsp; In the next year appeared the first letter of
+Peter Plymley to his brother Abraham on the subject of the Irish
+Catholics.</p>
+<p>These letters fell, we are told, like sparks on a heap of
+gunpowder.&nbsp; All London, and soon all England, was alive to
+the sound reason recommended by a lively wit.&nbsp; Sydney Smith
+lived to be recognised as first among the social wits, and it was
+always the chief praise of his wit that wisdom was the soul of
+it.&nbsp; Peter Plymley&rsquo;s letters, and Sydney Smith&rsquo;s
+articles on the same subject in <i>The Edinburgh Review</i> were
+the most powerful aids furnished by the pen to the solution of
+the burning question of their time.&nbsp; Lord Murray called the
+Plymley letters &ldquo;after Pascal&rsquo;s letters the most
+instructive piece of wisdom in the form of irony ever
+written.&rdquo;&nbsp; Worldly wealth came later; but in wit,
+wisdom, and kindly helpful cheerfulness, from youth to age,
+Sydney Smith&rsquo;s life was rich.</p>
+<p style="text-align: right">H. M.</p>
+<h2><span class="smcap">Letters on the Subject of the
+Catholics</span>.</h2>
+<p style="text-align: center"><span class="GutSmall">TO</span><br
+/>
+MY BROTHER ABRAHAM,<br />
+<span class="GutSmall">WHO LIVES IN THE COUNTRY.</span><br />
+BY PETER PLYMLEY.</p>
+<h3>LETTER I.</h3>
+<p><span class="smcap">Dear Abraham</span>,&mdash;A worthier and
+better man than yourself does not exist; but I have always told
+you, from the time of our boyhood, that you were a bit of a
+goose.&nbsp; Your parochial affairs are governed with exemplary
+order and regularity; you are as powerful in the vestry as Mr.
+Perceval is in the House of Commons,&mdash;and, I must say, with
+much more reason; nor do I know any church where the faces and
+smock-frocks of the congregation are so clean, or their eyes so
+uniformly directed to the preacher.&nbsp; There is another point,
+upon which I will do you ample justice; and that is, that the
+eyes so directed towards you are wide open; for the rustic has,
+in general, good principles, though he cannot control his animal
+habits; and, however loud he may snore, his face is perpetually
+turned towards the fountain of orthodoxy.</p>
+<p>Having done you this act of justice, I shall proceed,
+according to our ancient intimacy and familiarity, to explain to
+you my opinions about the Catholics, and to reply to yours.</p>
+<p>In the first place, my sweet Abraham, the Pope is not
+landed&mdash;nor are there any curates sent out after
+him&mdash;nor has he been hid at St. Albans by the Dowager Lady
+Spencer&mdash;nor dined privately at Holland House&mdash;nor been
+seen near Dropmore.&nbsp; If these fears exist (which I do not
+believe), they exist only in the mind of the Chancellor of the
+Exchequer; they emanate from his zeal for the Protestant
+interest; and, though they reflect the highest honour upon the
+delicate irritability of his faith, must certainly be considered
+as more ambiguous proofs of the sanity and vigour of his
+understanding.&nbsp; By this time, however, the best-informed
+clergy in the neighbourhood of the metropolis are convinced that
+the rumour is without foundation; and though the Pope is probably
+hovering about our coast in a fishing-smack, it is most likely he
+will fall a prey to the vigilance of our cruisers; and it is
+certain that he has not yet polluted the Protestantism of our
+soil.</p>
+<p>Exactly in the same manner, the story of the wooden gods
+seized at Charing Cross, by an order from the Foreign Office,
+turns out to be without the shadow of a foundation; instead of
+the angels and archangels, mentioned by the informer, nothing was
+discovered but a wooden image of Lord Mulgrave, going down to
+Chatham, as a head-piece for the <i>Spanker</i> gun-vessel; it
+was an exact resemblance of his Lordship in his military uniform;
+and <i>therefore</i> as little like a god as can well be
+imagined.</p>
+<p>Having set your fears at rest, as to the extent of the
+conspiracy formed against the Protestant religion, I will now
+come to the argument itself.</p>
+<p>You say these men interpret the scriptures in an unorthodox
+manner, and that they eat their god.&mdash;Very likely.&nbsp; All
+this may seem very important to you, who live fourteen miles from
+a market-town, and, from long residence upon your living, are
+become a kind of holy vegetable; and in a theological sense it is
+highly important.&nbsp; But I want soldiers and sailors for the
+state; I want to make a greater use than I now can do of a poor
+country full of men; I want to render the military service
+popular among the Irish; to check the power of France; to make
+every possible exertion for the safety of Europe, which in twenty
+years&rsquo; time will be nothing but a mass of French slaves:
+and then you, and ten other such boobies as you, call
+out&mdash;&ldquo;For God&rsquo;s sake, do not think of raising
+cavalry and infantry in Ireland! . . . They interpret the Epistle
+to Timothy in a different manner from what we do! . . . They eat
+a bit of wafer every Sunday, which they call their God!&rdquo; .
+. . I wish to my soul they would eat you, and such reasoners as
+you are.&nbsp; What! when Turk, Jew, Heretic, Infidel, Catholic,
+Protestant, are all combined against this country; when men of
+every religious persuasion, and no religious persuasion; when the
+population of half the globe is up in arms against us; are we to
+stand examining our generals and armies as a bishop examines a
+candidate for holy orders; and to suffer no one to bleed for
+England who does not agree with you about the second of
+Timothy?&nbsp; You talk about the Catholics!&nbsp; If you and
+your brotherhood have been able to persuade the country into a
+continuation of this grossest of all absurdities, you have ten
+times the power which the Catholic clergy ever had in their best
+days.&nbsp; Louis XIV., when he revoked the Edict of Nantes,
+never thought of preventing the Protestants from fighting his
+battles; and gained accordingly some of his most splendid
+victories by the talents of his Protestant generals.&nbsp; No
+power in Europe, but yourselves, has ever thought for these
+hundred years past, of asking whether a bayonet is Catholic, or
+Presbyterian or Lutheran; but whether it is sharp and
+well-tempered.&nbsp; A bigot delights in public ridicule; for he
+begins to think he is a martyr.&nbsp; I can promise you the full
+enjoyment of this pleasure, from one extremity of Europe to the
+other.</p>
+<p>I am as disgusted with the nonsense of the Roman Catholic
+religion as you can be: and no man who talks such nonsense shall
+ever tithe the product of the earth, nor meddle with the
+ecclesiastical establishment in any shape; but what have I to do
+with the speculative nonsense of his theology, when the object is
+to elect the mayor of a county town, or to appoint a colonel of a
+marching regiment?&nbsp; Will a man discharge the solemn
+impertinences of the one office with less zeal, or shrink from
+the bloody boldness of the other with greater timidity, because
+the blockhead thinks he can eat angels in muffins and chew a
+spiritual nature in the crumpets which he buys from the
+baker&rsquo;s shop?&nbsp; I am sorry there should be such impious
+folly in the world, but I should be ten times a greater fool than
+he is, if I refused, till he had made a solemn protestation that
+the crumpet was spiritless and the muffin nothing but a human
+muffin, to lead him out against the enemies of the state.&nbsp;
+Your whole argument is wrong: the state has nothing whatever to
+do with theological errors which do not violate the common rules
+of morality, and militate against the fair power of the ruler: it
+leaves all these errors to you, and to such as you.&nbsp; You
+have every tenth porker in your parish for refuting them; and
+take care that you are vigilant and logical in the task.</p>
+<p>I love the Church as well as you do; but you totally mistake
+the nature of an establishment, when you contend that it ought to
+be connected with the military and civil career of every
+individual in the state.&nbsp; It is quite right that there
+should be one clergyman to every parish interpreting the
+Scriptures after a particular manner, ruled by a regular
+hierarchy, and paid with a rich proportion of haycocks and
+wheatsheafs.&nbsp; When I have laid this foundation for a
+rational religion in the state&mdash;when I have placed ten
+thousand well-educated men in different parts of the kingdom to
+preach it up, and compelled everybody to pay them, whether they
+hear them or not&mdash;I have taken such measures as I know must
+always procure an immense majority in favour of the Established
+Church; but I can go no further.&nbsp; I cannot set up a civil
+inquisition, and say to one, you shall not be a butcher, because
+you are not orthodox; and prohibit another from brewing, and a
+third from administering the law, and a fourth from defending the
+country.&nbsp; If common justice did not prohibit me from such a
+conduct, common sense would.&nbsp; The advantage to be gained by
+quitting the heresy would make it shameful to abandon it; and men
+who had once left the Church would continue in such a state of
+alienation from a point of honour, and transmit that spirit to
+their latest posterity.&nbsp; This is just the effect your
+disqualifying laws have produced.&nbsp; They have fed Dr. Rees,
+and Dr. Kippis; crowded the congregations of the Old Jewry to
+suffocation: and enabled every sublapsarian, and superlapsarian,
+and semi-pelagian clergyman, to build himself a neat brick
+chapel, and live with some distant resemblance to the state of a
+gentleman.</p>
+<p>You say the King&rsquo;s coronation oath will not allow him to
+consent to any relaxation of the Catholic laws.&mdash;Why not
+relax the Catholic laws as well as the laws against Protestant
+dissenters?&nbsp; If one is contrary to his oath, the other must
+be so too; for the spirit of the oath is, to defend the Church
+establishment, which the Quaker and the Presbyterian differ from
+as much or more than the Catholic; and yet his Majesty has
+repealed the Corporation and Test Act in Ireland, and done more
+for the Catholics of both kingdoms than had been done for them
+since the Reformation.&nbsp; In 1778 the ministers said nothing
+about the royal conscience; in 1793 no conscience; in 1804 no
+conscience; the common feeling of humanity and justice then seem
+to have had their fullest influence upon the advisers of the
+Crown; but in 1807&mdash;a year, I suppose, eminently fruitful in
+moral and religious scruples (as some years are fruitful in
+apples, some in hops),&mdash;it is contended by the well-paid
+John Bowles, and by Mr. Perceval (who tried to be well paid),
+that this is now perjury which we had hitherto called policy and
+benevolence.&nbsp; Religious liberty has never made such a stride
+as under the reign of his present Majesty; nor is there any
+instance in the annals of our history, where so many infamous and
+damnable laws have been repealed as those against the Catholics
+which have been put an end to by him; and then, at the close of
+this useful policy, his advisers discover that the very measures
+of concession and indulgence, or (to use my own language) the
+measures of justice, which he has been pursuing through the whole
+of his reign, are contrary to the oath he takes at its
+commencement!&nbsp; That oath binds his Majesty not to consent to
+any measure contrary to the interest of the Established Church;
+but who is to judge of the tendency of each particular
+measure?&nbsp; Not the King alone: it can never be the intention
+of this law that the King, who listens to the advice of his
+Parliament upon a read bill, should reject it upon the most
+important of all measures.&nbsp; Whatever be his own private
+judgment of the tendency of any ecclesiastical bill, he complies
+most strictly with his oath, if he is guided in that particular
+point by the advice of his Parliament, who may be presumed to
+understand its tendency better than the King, or any other
+individual.&nbsp; You say, if Parliament had been unanimous in
+their opinion of the absolute necessity for Lord Howick&rsquo;s
+bill, and the King had thought it pernicious, he would have been
+perjured if he had not rejected it.&nbsp; I say, on the contrary,
+his Majesty would have acted in the most conscientious manner,
+and have complied most scrupulously with his oath, if he had
+sacrificed his own opinion to the opinion of the great council of
+the nation; because the probability was that such opinion was
+better than his own; and upon the same principle, in common life,
+you give up your opinion to your physician, your lawyer, and your
+builder.</p>
+<p>You admit this bill did not compel the King to elect Catholic
+officers, but only gave him the option of doing so if he pleased;
+but you add, that the King was right in not trusting such
+dangerous power to himself or his successors.&nbsp; Now you are
+either to suppose that the King for the time being has a zeal for
+the Catholic establishment, or that he has not.&nbsp; If he has
+not, where is the danger of giving such an option?&nbsp; If you
+suppose that he may be influenced by such an admiration of the
+Catholic religion, why did his present Majesty, in the year 1804,
+consent to that bill which empowered the Crown to station ten
+thousand Catholic soldiers in any part of the kingdom, and place
+them absolutely at the disposal of the Crown?&nbsp; If the King
+of England for the time being is a good Protestant, there can be
+no danger in making the Catholic <i>eligible</i> to anything: if
+he is not, no power can possibly be so dangerous as that conveyed
+by the bill last quoted; to which, in point of peril, Lord
+Howick&rsquo;s bill is a mere joke.&nbsp; But the real fact is,
+one bill opened a door to his Majesty&rsquo;s advisers for trick,
+jobbing, and intrigue; the other did not.</p>
+<p>Besides, what folly to talk to me of an oath, which, under all
+possible circumstances, is to prevent the relaxation of the
+Catholic laws! for such a solemn appeal to God sets all
+conditions and contingencies at defiance.&nbsp; Suppose Bonaparte
+was to retrieve the only very great blunder he has made, and were
+to succeed, after repeated trials, in making an impression upon
+Ireland, do you think we should hear any thing of the impediment
+of a coronation oath? or would the spirit of this country
+tolerate for an hour such ministers, and such unheard-of
+nonsense, if the most distant prospect existed of conciliating
+the Catholics by every species even of the most abject
+concession?&nbsp; And yet, if your argument is good for anything,
+the coronation oath ought to reject, at such a moment, every
+tendency to conciliation, and to bind Ireland for ever to the
+crown of France.</p>
+<p>I found in your letter the usual remarks about fire, fagot,
+and bloody Mary.&nbsp; Are you aware, my dear Priest, that there
+were as many persons put to death for religious opinions under
+the mild Elizabeth as under the bloody Mary?&nbsp; The reign of
+the former was, to be sure, ten times as long; but I only mention
+the fact, merely to show you that something depends upon the age
+in which men live, as well as on their religious opinions.&nbsp;
+Three hundred years ago men burnt and hanged each other for these
+opinions.&nbsp; Time has softened Catholic as well as Protestant:
+they both required it; though each perceives only his own
+improvement, and is blind to that of the other.&nbsp; We are all
+the creatures of circumstances.&nbsp; I know not a kinder and
+better man than yourself; but you, if you had lived in those
+times, would certainly have roasted your Catholic: and I promise
+you, if the first exciter of this religious mob had been as
+powerful then as he is now, you would soon have been elevated to
+the mitre.&nbsp; I do not go the length of saying that the world
+has suffered as much from Protestant as from Catholic
+persecution; far from it: but you should remember the Catholics
+had all the power, when the idea first started up in the world
+that there could be two modes of faith; and that it was much more
+natural they should attempt to crush this diversity of opinion by
+great and cruel efforts, than that the Protestants should rage
+against those who differed from them, when the very basis of
+their system was complete freedom in all spiritual matters.</p>
+<p>I cannot extend my letter any further at present, but you
+shall soon hear from me again.&nbsp; You tell me I am a party
+man.&nbsp; I hope I shall always be so, when I see my country in
+the hands of a pert London joker and a second-rate lawyer.&nbsp;
+Of the first, no other good is known than that he makes pretty
+Latin verses; the second seems to me to have the head of a
+country parson and the tongue of an Old Bailey lawyer.</p>
+<p>If I could see good measures pursued, I care not a farthing
+who is in power; but I have a passionate love for common justice,
+and for common sense, and I abhor and despise every man who
+builds up his political fortune upon their ruin.</p>
+<p>God bless you, reverend Abraham, and defend you from the Pope,
+and all of us from that administration who seek power by opposing
+a measure which Burke, Pitt, and Fox all considered as absolutely
+necessary to the existence of the country.</p>
+<h3>LETTER II.</h3>
+<p><span class="smcap">Dear Abraham</span>,&mdash;The Catholic
+not respect an oath! why not?&nbsp; What upon earth has kept him
+out of Parliament, or excluded him from all the offices whence he
+is excluded, but his respect for oaths?&nbsp; There is no law
+which prohibits a Catholic to sit in Parliament.&nbsp; There
+could be no such law; because it is impossible to find out what
+passes in the interior of any man&rsquo;s mind.&nbsp; Suppose it
+were in contemplation to exclude all men from certain offices who
+contended for the legality of taking tithes: the only mode of
+discovering that fervid love of decimation which I know you to
+possess would be to tender you an oath &ldquo;against that
+damnable doctrine, that it is lawful for a spiritual man to take,
+abstract, appropriate, subduct, or lead away the tenth calf,
+sheep, lamb, ox, pigeon, duck,&rdquo; &amp;c., &amp;c., &amp;c.,
+and every other animal that ever existed, which of course the
+lawyers would take care to enumerate.&nbsp; Now this oath I am
+sure you would rather die than take; and so the Catholic is
+excluded from Parliament because he will not swear that he
+disbelieves the leading doctrines of his religion!&nbsp; The
+Catholic asks you to abolish some oaths which oppress him; your
+answer is that he does not respect oaths.&nbsp; Then why subject
+him to the test of oaths?&nbsp; The oaths keep him out of
+Parliament; why, then, he respects them.&nbsp; Turn which way you
+will, either your laws are nugatory, or the Catholic is bound by
+religious obligations as you are; but no eel in the well-sanded
+fist of a cook-maid, upon the eve of being skinned, ever twisted
+and writhed as an orthodox parson does when he is compelled by
+the gripe of reason to admit anything in favour of a
+dissenter.</p>
+<p>I will not dispute with you whether the Pope be or be not the
+Scarlet Lady of Babylon.&nbsp; I hope it is not so; because I am
+afraid it will induce His Majesty&rsquo;s Chancellor of the
+Exchequer to introduce several severe bills against popery, if
+that is the case; and though he will have the decency to appoint
+a previous committee of inquiry as to the fact, the committee
+will be garbled, and the report inflammatory.&nbsp; Leaving this
+to be settled as he pleases to settle it, I wish to inform you,
+that, previously to the bill last passed in favour of the
+Catholics, at the suggestion of Mr. Pitt, and for his
+satisfaction, the opinions of six of the most celebrated of the
+foreign Catholic universities were taken as to the right of the
+Pope to interfere in the temporal concerns of any country.&nbsp;
+The answer cannot possibly leave the shadow of a doubt, even in
+the mind of Baron Maseres; and Dr. Rennel would be compelled to
+admit it, if three Bishops lay dead at the very moment the
+question were put to him.&nbsp; To this answer might be added
+also the solemn declaration and signature of all the Catholics in
+Great Britain.</p>
+<p>I should perfectly agree with you, if the Catholics admitted
+such a dangerous dispensing power in the hands of the Pope; but
+they all deny it, and laugh at it, and are ready to abjure it in
+the most decided manner you can devise.&nbsp; They obey the Pope
+as the spiritual head of their Church; but are you really so
+foolish as to be imposed upon by mere names?&nbsp; What matters
+it the seven-thousandth part of a farthing who is the spiritual
+head of any Church?&nbsp; Is not Mr. Wilberforce at the head of
+the Church of Clapham?&nbsp; Is not Dr. Letsom at the head of the
+Quaker Church?&nbsp; Is not the General Assembly at the head of
+the Church of Scotland?&nbsp; How is the government disturbed by
+these many-headed Churches? or in what way is the power of the
+Crown augmented by this almost nominal dignity?</p>
+<p>The King appoints a fast-day once a year, and he makes the
+bishops: and if the government would take half the pains to keep
+the Catholics out of the arms of France that it does to widen
+Temple Bar, or improve Snow Hill, the King would get into his
+hands the appointments of the titular Bishops of Ireland.&nbsp;
+Both Mr. C-&rsquo;s sisters enjoy pensions more than sufficient
+to place the two greatest dignitaries of the Irish Catholic
+Church entirely at the disposal of the Crown.</p>
+<p>Everybody who knows Ireland knows perfectly well, that nothing
+would be easier, with the expenditure of a little money, than to
+preserve enough of the ostensible appointment in the hands of the
+Pope to satisfy the scruples of the Catholics, while the real
+nomination remained with the Crown.&nbsp; But, as I have before
+said, the moment the very name of Ireland is mentioned, the
+English seem to bid adieu to common feeling, common prudence, and
+common sense, and to act with the barbarity of tyrants and the
+fatuity of idiots.</p>
+<p>Whatever your opinion may be of the follies of the Roman
+Catholic religion, remember they are the follies of four millions
+of human beings, increasing rapidly in numbers, wealth, and
+intelligence, who, if firmly united with this country, would set
+at defiance the power of France, and if once wrested from their
+alliance with England, would in three years render its existence
+as an independent nation absolutely impossible.&nbsp; You speak
+of danger to the Establishment: I request to know when the
+Establishment was ever so much in danger as when Hoche was in
+Bantry Bay, and whether all the books of Bossuet, or the arts of
+the Jesuits, were half so terrible?&nbsp; Mr. Perceval and his
+parsons forget all this, in their horror lest twelve or fourteen
+old women may be converted to holy water and Catholic
+nonsense.&nbsp; They never see that, while they are saving these
+venerable ladies from perdition, Ireland may be lost, England
+broken down, and the Protestant Church, with all its deans,
+prebendaries, Percevals, and Rennels, be swept into the vortex of
+oblivion.</p>
+<p>Do not, I beseech you, ever mention to me again the name of
+Dr. Duigenan.&nbsp; I have been in every corner of Ireland, and
+have studied its present strength and condition with no common
+labour.&nbsp; Be assured Ireland does not contain at this moment
+less than five millions of people.&nbsp; There were returned in
+the year 1791 to the hearth tax 701,000 houses, and there is no
+kind of question that there were about 50,000 houses omitted in
+that return.&nbsp; Taking, however, only the number returned for
+the tax, and allowing the average of six to a house (a very small
+average for a potato-fed people), this brings the population to
+4,200,000 people in the year 1791: and it can be shown from the
+clearest evidence (and Mr. Newenham in his book shows it), that
+Ireland for the last fifty years has increased in its population
+at the rate of 50 or 60,000 per annum; which leaves the present
+population of Ireland at about five millions, after every
+possible deduction for <i>existing circumstances</i>, <i>just and
+necessary wars</i>, <i>monstrous and unnatural rebellions</i>,
+and all other sources of human destruction.&nbsp; Of this
+population, two out of ten are Protestants; and the half of the
+Protestant population are Dissenters, and as inimical to the
+Church as the Catholics themselves.&nbsp; In this state of things
+thumbscrews and whipping&mdash;admirable engines of policy as
+they must be considered to be&mdash;will not ultimately
+avail.&nbsp; The Catholics will hang over you; they will watch
+for the moment, and compel you hereafter to give them ten times
+as much, against your will, as they would now be contented with,
+if it were voluntarily surrendered.&nbsp; Remember what happened
+in the American war, when Ireland compelled you to give her
+everything she asked, and to renounce, in the most explicit
+manner, your claim of Sovereignty over her.&nbsp; God Almighty
+grant the folly of these present men may not bring on such
+another crisis of public affairs!</p>
+<p>What are your dangers which threaten the
+Establishment?&mdash;Reduce this declamation to a point, and let
+us understand what you mean.&nbsp; The most ample allowance does
+not calculate that there would be more than twenty members who
+were Roman Catholics in one house, and ten in the other, if the
+Catholic emancipation were carried into effect.&nbsp; Do you mean
+that these thirty members would bring in a bill to take away the
+tithes from the Protestant, and to pay them to the Catholic
+clergy?&nbsp; Do you mean that a Catholic general would march his
+army into the House of Commons, and purge it of Mr. Perceval and
+Dr. Duigenan? or, that the theological writers would become all
+of a sudden more acute or more learned, if the present civil
+incapacities were removed?&nbsp; Do you fear for your tithes, or
+your doctrines, or your person, or the English
+Constitution?&nbsp; Every fear, taken separately, is so glaringly
+absurd, that no man has the folly or the boldness to state
+it.&nbsp; Every one conceals his ignorance, or his baseness, in a
+stupid general panic, which, when called on, he is utterly
+incapable of explaining.&nbsp; Whatever you think of the
+Catholics, there they are&mdash;you cannot get rid of them; your
+alternative is to give them a lawful place for stating their
+grievances, or an unlawful one: if you do not admit them to the
+House of Commons, they will hold their parliament in Potatoe
+Place, Dublin, and be ten times as violent and inflammatory as
+they would be in Westminster.&nbsp; Nothing would give me such an
+idea of security as to see twenty or thirty Catholic gentlemen in
+Parliament, looked upon by all the Catholics as the fair and
+proper organ of their party.&nbsp; I should have thought it the
+height of good fortune that such a wish existed on their part,
+and the very essence of madness and ignorance to reject it.&nbsp;
+Can you murder the Catholics?&nbsp; Can you neglect them?&nbsp;
+They are too numerous for both these expedients.&nbsp; What
+remains to be done is obvious to every human being&mdash;but to
+that man who, instead of being a Methodist preacher, is, for the
+curse of us and our children, and for the ruin of Troy and the
+misery of good old Priam and his sons, become a legislator and a
+politician.</p>
+<p>A distinction, I perceive, is taken by one of the most feeble
+noblemen in Great Britain, between persecution and the
+deprivation of political power; whereas, there is no more
+distinction between these two things than there is between him
+who makes the distinction and a booby.&nbsp; If I strip off the
+relic-covered jacket of a Catholic, and give him twenty stripes .
+. . I persecute; if I say, Everybody in the town where you live
+shall be a candidate for lucrative and honourable offices, but
+you, who are a Catholic . . . I do not persecute!&nbsp; What
+barbarous nonsense is this! as if degradation was not as great an
+evil as bodily pain or as severe poverty: as if I could not be as
+great a tyrant by saying, You shall not enjoy&mdash;as by saying,
+You shall suffer.&nbsp; The English, I believe, are as truly
+religious as any nation in Europe; I know no greater blessing;
+but it carries with it this evil in its train, that any villain
+who will bawl out, &ldquo;<i>The Church is in danger</i>!&rdquo;
+may get a place and a good pension; and that any administration
+who will do the same thing may bring a set of men into power who,
+at a moment of stationary and passive piety, would be hooted by
+the very boys in the streets.&nbsp; But it is not all religion;
+it is, in great part, the narrow and exclusive spirit which
+delights to keep the common blessings of sun and air and freedom
+from other human beings.&nbsp; &ldquo;Your religion has always
+been degraded; you are in the dust, and I will take care you
+never rise again.&nbsp; I should enjoy less the possession of an
+earthly good by every additional person to whom it was
+extended.&rdquo;&nbsp; You may not be aware of it yourself, most
+reverend Abraham, but you deny their freedom to the Catholics
+upon the same principle that Sarah your wife refuses to give the
+receipt for a ham or a gooseberry dumpling: she values her
+receipts, not because they secure to her a certain flavour, but
+because they remind her that her neighbours want it:&mdash;a
+feeling laughable in a priestess, shameful in a priest; venial
+when it withholds the blessings of a ham, tyrannical and
+execrable when it narrows the boon of religious freedom.</p>
+<p>You spend a great deal of ink about the character of the
+present prime minister.&nbsp; Grant you all that you
+write&mdash;I say, I fear he will ruin Ireland, and pursue a line
+of policy destructive to the true interest of his country: and
+then you tell me, he is faithful to Mrs. Perceval, and kind to
+the Master Percevals!&nbsp; These are, undoubtedly, the first
+qualifications to be looked to in a time of the most serious
+public danger; but somehow or another (if public and private
+virtues must always be incompatible), I should prefer that he
+destroyed the domestic happiness of Wood or Cockell, owed for the
+veal of the preceding year, whipped his boys, and saved his
+country.</p>
+<p>The late administration did not do right; they did not build
+their measures upon the solid basis of facts.&nbsp; They should
+have caused several Catholics to have been dissected after death
+by surgeons of either religion; and the report to have been
+published with accompanying plates.&nbsp; If the viscera, and
+other organs of life, had been found to be the same as in
+Protestant bodies; if the provisions of nerves, arteries,
+cerebrum, and cerebellum, had been the same as we are provided
+with, or as the Dissenters are now known to possess; then,
+indeed, they might have met Mr. Perceval upon a proud eminence,
+and convinced the country at large of the strong probability that
+the Catholics are really human creatures, endowed with the
+feelings of men, and entitled to all their rights.&nbsp; But
+instead of this wise and prudent measure, Lord Howick, with his
+usual precipitation, brings forward a bill in their favour,
+without offering the slightest proof to the country that they
+were anything more than horses and oxen.&nbsp; The person who
+shows the lama at the corner of Piccadilly has the precaution to
+write up&mdash;<i>Allowed by Sir Joseph Banks to be a real
+quadruped</i>, so his Lordship might have said&mdash;<i>Allowed
+by the bench of Bishops to be real human creatures</i>. . .
+.&nbsp; I could write you twenty letters upon this subject; but I
+am tired, and so I suppose are you.&nbsp; Our friendship is now
+of forty years&rsquo; standing; you know me to be a truly
+religious man; but I shudder to see religion treated like a
+cockade, or a pint of beer, and made the instrument of a
+party.&nbsp; I love the king, but I love the people as well as
+the king; and if I am sorry to see his old age molested, I am
+much more sorry to see four millions of Catholics baffled in
+their just expectations.&nbsp; If I love Lord Grenville, and Lord
+Howick, it is because they love their country; if I abhor . . .
+it is because I know there is but one man among them who is not
+laughing at the enormous folly and credulity of the country, and
+that he is an ignorant and mischievous bigot.&nbsp; As for the
+light and frivolous jester, of whom it is your misfortune to
+think so highly, learn, my dear Abraham, that this political
+Killigrew, just before the breaking-up of the last
+administration, was in actual treaty with them for a place; and
+if they had survived twenty-four hours longer, he would have been
+now declaiming against the cry of No Popery! instead of inflaming
+it.&nbsp; With this practical comment on the baseness of human
+nature, I bid you adieu!</p>
+<h3>LETTER III.</h3>
+<p><span class="smcap">All</span> that I have so often told you,
+Mr. Abraham Plymley, is now come to pass.&nbsp; The Scythians, in
+whom you and the neighbouring country gentleman placed such
+confidence, are smitten hip and thigh; their Beningsen put to
+open shame; their magazines of train oil intercepted, and we are
+waking from our disgraceful drunkenness to all the horrors of Mr.
+Perceval and Mr. Canning . . . We shall now see if a nation is to
+be saved by school-boy jokes and doggrel rhymes, by affronting
+petulance, and by the tones and gesticulations of Mr. Pitt.&nbsp;
+But these are not all the auxiliaries on which we have to depend;
+to these his colleague will add the strictest attention to the
+smaller parts of ecclesiastical government, to hassocks, to
+psalters, and to surplices; in the last agonies of England, he
+will bring in a bill to regulate Easter-offerings: and he will
+adjust the stipends of curates, when the flag of France is
+unfurled on the hills of Kent.&nbsp; Whatever can be done by very
+mistaken notions of the piety of a Christian, and by a very
+wretched imitation of the eloquence of Mr. Pitt, will be done by
+these two gentlemen.&nbsp; After all, if they both really were
+what they both either wish to be, or wish to be thought; if the
+one were an enlightened Christian who drew from the Gospel the
+toleration, the charity, and the sweetness which it contains; and
+if the other really possessed any portion of the great
+understanding of his Nisus who guarded him from the weapons of
+the Whigs, I should still doubt if they could save us.&nbsp; But
+I am sure we are not to be saved by religious hatred, and by
+religious trifling; by any psalmody, however sweet; or by any
+persecution, however sharp; I am certain the sounds of Mr.
+Pitt&rsquo;s voice, and the measure of his tones, and the
+movement of his arms, will do nothing for us; when these tones
+and movements, and voice brings us always declamation without
+sense or knowledge, and ridicule without good humour or
+conciliation.&nbsp; Oh, Mr. Plymley, this never will do.&nbsp;
+Mrs. Abraham Plymley, my sister, will be led away captive by an
+amorous Gaul; and Joel Plymley your firstborn, will be a French
+drummer.</p>
+<p>Out of sight, out of mind, seems to be a proverb which applies
+to enemies as well as friends.&nbsp; Because the French army was
+no longer seen from the cliffs of Dover; because the sound of
+cannon was no longer heard by the debauched London bathers on the
+Sussex coast; because the <i>Morning Post</i> no longer fixed the
+invasion sometimes for Monday, sometimes for Tuesday, sometimes
+(positively for the last time of invading) on Saturday; because
+all these causes of terror were suspended, you conceived the
+power of Bonaparte to be at an end, and were setting off for
+Paris with Lord Hawkesbury the conqueror.&nbsp; This is precisely
+the method in which the English have acted during the whole of
+the revolutionary war.&nbsp; If Austria or Prussia armed, doctors
+of divinity immediately printed those passages out of Habakkuk,
+in which the destruction of the Usurper by General Mack, and the
+Duke of Brunswick, are so clearly predicted.&nbsp; If Bonaparte
+halted, there was a mutiny or a dysentery.&nbsp; If any one of
+his generals were eaten up by the light troops of Russia, and
+picked (as their manner is) to the bone, the sanguine spirit of
+this country displayed itself in all its glory.&nbsp; What scenes
+of infamy did the Society for the Suppression of Vice lay open to
+our astonished eyes! tradesmen&rsquo;s daughters dancing, pots of
+beer carried out between the first and second lesson, and dark
+and distant rumours of indecent prints.&nbsp; Clouds of Mr.
+Canning&rsquo;s cousins arrived by the waggon; all the
+contractors left their cards with Mr. Rose; and every plunderer
+of the public crawled out of his hole, like slugs, and grubs, and
+worms after a shower of rain.</p>
+<p>If my voice could have been heard at the late changes, I
+should have said, &ldquo;Gently, patience, stop a little; the
+time is not yet come; the mud of Poland will harden, and the
+bowels of the French grenadiers will recover their tone.&nbsp;
+When honesty, good sense, and liberality have extricated you out
+of your present embarrassment, then dismiss them as a matter of
+course; but you cannot spare them just now; don&rsquo;t be in too
+great a hurry, or there will be no monarch to flatter, and no
+country to pillage; only submit for a little time to be respected
+abroad, overlook the painful absence of the tax-gatherer for a
+few years, bear up nobly under the increase of freedom and of
+liberal policy for a little time, and I promise you, at the
+expiration of that period, you shall be plundered, insulted,
+disgraced, and restrained to your heart&rsquo;s content.&nbsp; Do
+not imagine I have any intention of putting servility and canting
+hypocrisy permanently out of place, or of filling up with courage
+and sense those offices which naturally devolve upon decorous
+imbecility and flexible cunning: give us only a little time to
+keep off the hussars of France, and then the jobbers and jesters
+shall return to their birthright, and public virtue be called by
+its own name of fanaticism.&rdquo;&nbsp; Such is the advice I
+would have offered to my infatuated countrymen: but it rained
+very hard in November, Brother Abraham, and the bowels of our
+enemies were loosened, and we put our trust in white fluxes and
+wet mud; and there is nothing now to oppose to the conqueror of
+the world but a small table wit, and the sallow Surveyor of the
+Meltings.</p>
+<p>You ask me, if I think it possible for this country to survive
+the recent misfortunes of Europe?&mdash;I answer you, without the
+slightest degree of hesitation: that if Bonaparte lives, and a
+great deal is not immediately done for the conciliation of the
+Catholics, it does seem to me absolutely impossible but that we
+must perish; and take this with you, that we shall perish without
+exciting the slightest feeling of present or future compassion,
+but fall amidst the hootings and revilings of Europe, as a nation
+of blockheads, Methodists, and old women.&nbsp; If there were any
+great scenery, any heroic feelings, any blaze of ancient virtue,
+any exalted death, any termination of England that would be ever
+remembered, ever honoured in that western world, where liberty is
+now retiring, conquest would be more tolerable, and ruin more
+sweet; but it is doubly miserable to become slaves abroad,
+because we would be tyrants at home; to persecute, when we are
+contending against persecution; and to perish, because we have
+raised up worse enemies within, from our own bigotry, than we are
+exposed to without, from the unprincipled ambition of
+France.&nbsp; It is indeed a most silly and affecting spectacle
+to rage at such a moment against our own kindred and our own
+blood; to tell them they cannot be honourable in war, because
+they are conscientious in religion; to stipulate (at the very
+moment when we should buy their hearts and swords at any price)
+that they must hold up the right hand in prayer, and not the
+left; and adore one common God, by turning to the east rather
+than to the west.</p>
+<p>What is it the Catholics ask of you?&nbsp; Do not exclude us
+from the honours and emoluments of the state because we worship
+God in one way, and you worship Him in another.&nbsp; In a period
+of the deepest peace, and the fattest prosperity, this would be a
+fair request; it should be granted, if Lord Hawkesbury had
+reached Paris, if Mr. Canning&rsquo;s interpreter had threatened
+the Senate in an opening speech, or Mr. Perceval explained to
+them the improvements he meant to introduce into the Catholic
+religion; but to deny the Irish this justice now, in the present
+state of Europe, and in the summer months, just as the season for
+destroying kingdoms is coming on, is (beloved Abraham), whatever
+you may think of it, little short of positive insanity.</p>
+<p>Here is a frigate attacked by a corsair of immense strength
+and size, rigging cut, masts in danger of coming by the board,
+four foot water in the hold, men dropping off very fast; in this
+dreadful situation how do you think the Captain acts (whose name
+shall be Perceval)?&nbsp; He calls all hands upon deck; talks to
+them of King, country, glory, sweethearts, gin, French prison,
+wooden shoes, Old England, and hearts of oak; they give three
+cheers, rush to their guns, and, after a tremendous conflict,
+succeed in beating off the enemy.&nbsp; Not a syllable of all
+this; this is not the manner in which the honourable Commander
+goes to work: the first thing he does is to secure twenty or
+thirty of his prime sailors who happen to be Catholics, to clap
+them in irons, and set over them a guard of as many Protestants;
+having taken this admirable method of defending himself against
+his infidel opponents, he goes upon deck, reminds the sailors in
+a very bitter harangue, that they are of different religions;
+exhorts the Episcopal gunner not to trust to the Presbyterian
+quartermaster; issues positive orders that the Catholics should
+be fired at upon the first appearance of discontent; rushes
+through blood and brains, examining his men in the Catechism and
+thirty-nine Articles, and positively forbids every one to sponge
+or ram who has not taken the Sacrament according to the Church of
+England.&nbsp; Was it right to take out a captain made of
+excellent British stuff, and to put in such a man as this?&nbsp;
+Is not he more like a parson, or a talking lawyer, than a
+thorough-bred seaman?&nbsp; And built as she is of heart of oak,
+and admirably manned, is it possible, with such a captain, to
+save this ship from going to the bottom?</p>
+<p>You have an argument, I perceive, in common with many others,
+against the Catholics, that their demands complied with would
+only lead to further exactions, and that it is better to resist
+them now, before anything is conceded, than hereafter, when it is
+found that all concessions are in vain.&nbsp; I wish the
+Chancellor of the Exchequer, who uses this reasoning to exclude
+others from their just rights, had tried its efficacy, not by his
+understanding, but by (what are full of much better things) his
+pockets.&nbsp; Suppose the person to whom he applied for the
+meltings had withstood every plea of wife and fourteen children,
+no business, and good character, and refused him this paltry
+little office because he might hereafter attempt to get hold of
+the revenues of the Duchy of Lancaster for life? would not Mr.
+Perceval have contended eagerly against the injustice of refusing
+moderate requests, because immoderate ones may hereafter be
+made?&nbsp; Would he not have said, and said truly, Leave such
+exorbitant attempts as these to the general indignation of the
+Commons, who will take care to defeat them when they do occur;
+but do not refuse me the Irons and the Meltings now, because I
+may totally lose sight of all moderation hereafter?&nbsp; Leave
+hereafter to the spirit and the wisdom of hereafter; and do not
+be niggardly now from the apprehension that men as wise as you
+should be profuse in times to come.</p>
+<p>You forget, Brother Abraham, that is a vast art, where
+quarrels cannot be avoided, to turn public opinion in your favour
+and to the prejudice of your enemy; a vast privilege to feel that
+you are in the right, and to make him feel that he is in the
+wrong: a privilege which makes you more than a man, and your
+antagonist less; and often secures victory by convincing him who
+contends that he must submit to injustice if he submits to
+defeat.&nbsp; Open every rank in the army and the navy to the
+Catholic; let him purchase at the same price as the Protestant
+(if either Catholic or Protestant can purchase such refined
+pleasures) the privilege of hearing Lord Castlereagh speak for
+three hours; keep his clergy from starving, soften some of the
+most odious powers of the tithing-man, and you will for ever lay
+this formidable question to rest.&nbsp; But if I am wrong, and
+you must quarrel at last, quarrel upon just rather than unjust
+grounds; divide the Catholic and unite the Protestant; be just,
+and your own exertions will be more formidable and their
+exertions less formidable; be just, and you will take away from
+their party all the best and wisest understandings of both
+persuasions, and knit them firmly to your own cause.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Thrice is he armed who has his quarrel just;&rdquo; and
+ten times as much may he be taxed.&nbsp; In the beginning of any
+war, however destitute of common sense, every mob will roar, and
+every Lord of the Bedchamber address; but if you are engaged in a
+war that is to last for years, and to require important
+sacrifices, take care to make the justice of your case so clear
+and so obvious that it cannot be mistaken by the most illiterate
+country gentleman who rides the earth.&nbsp; Nothing, in fact,
+can be so grossly absurd as the argument which says I will deny
+justice to you now, because I suspect future injustice from
+you.&nbsp; At this rate, you may lock a man up in your stable,
+and refuse to let him out, because you suspect that he has an
+intention, at some future period, of robbing your
+hen-roost.&nbsp; You may horsewhip him at Lady Day, because you
+believe he will affront you at Midsummer.&nbsp; You may commit a
+greater evil, to guard against a less which is merely contingent,
+and may never happen.&nbsp; You may do what you have done a
+century ago in Ireland, make the Catholics worse than Helots,
+because you suspected that they might hereafter aspire to be more
+than fellow citizens; rendering their sufferings certain from
+your jealousy, while yours were only doubtful from their
+ambition; an ambition sure to be excited by the very measures
+which were taken to prevent it.</p>
+<p>The physical strength of the Catholics will not be greater
+because you give them a share of political power.&nbsp; You may
+by these means turn rebels into friends; but I do not see how you
+make rebels more formidable.&nbsp; If they taste of the honey of
+lawful power, they will love the hive from whence they procure
+it; if they will struggle with us like men in the same state for
+civil influence, we are safe.&nbsp; All that I dread is the
+physical strength of four millions of men combined with an
+invading French army.&nbsp; If you are to quarrel at last with
+this enormous population, still put it off as long as you can;
+you must gain, and cannot lose, by the delay.&nbsp; The state of
+Europe cannot be worse; the conviction which the Catholics
+entertain of your tyranny and injustice cannot be more alarming,
+nor the opinions of your own people more divided.&nbsp; Time,
+which produces such effect upon brass and marble, may inspire one
+Minister with modesty and another with compassion; every
+circumstance may be better; some certainly will be so, none can
+be worse; and after all the evil may never happen.</p>
+<p>You have got hold, I perceive, of all the vulgar English
+stories respecting the hereditary transmission of forfeited
+property, and seriously believe that every Catholic beggar wears
+the terriers of his father&rsquo;s land next his skin, and is
+only waiting for better times to cut the throat of the Protestant
+possessor, and get drunk in the hall of his ancestors.&nbsp;
+There is one irresistible answer to this mistake, and that is,
+that the forfeited lands are purchased indiscriminately by
+Catholic and Protestant, and that the Catholic purchaser never
+objects to such a title.&nbsp; Now the land so purchased by a
+Catholic is either his own family estate, or it is not.&nbsp; If
+it is, you suppose him so desirous of coming into possession that
+he resorts to the double method of rebellion and purchase; if it
+is not his own family estate of which he becomes the purchaser,
+you suppose him first to purchase, then to rebel, in order to
+defeat the purchase.&nbsp; These things may happen in Ireland,
+but it is totally impossible they can happen anywhere else.&nbsp;
+In fact, what land can any man of any sect purchase in Ireland,
+but forfeited property?&nbsp; In all other oppressed countries
+which I have ever heard of, the rapacity of the conqueror was
+bounded by the territorial limits in which the objects of his
+avarice were contained; but Ireland has been actually confiscated
+twice over, as a cat is twice killed by a wicked parish boy.</p>
+<p>I admit there is a vast luxury in selecting a particular set
+of Christians, and in worrying them as a boy worries a puppy dog;
+it is an amusement in which all the young English are brought up
+from their earliest days.&nbsp; I like the idea of saying to men
+who use a different hassock from me, that till they change their
+hassock they shall never be Colonels, Aldermen, or
+Parliament-men.&nbsp; While I am gratifying my personal insolence
+respecting religious forms, I fondle myself into an idea that I
+am religious, and that I am doing my duty in the most exemplary,
+as I certainly am in the most easy, way.&nbsp; But then, my good
+Abraham, this sport, admirable as it is, is become, with respect
+to the Catholics, a little dangerous; and if we are not extremely
+careful in taking the amusement, we shall tumble into the holy
+water and be drowned.&nbsp; As it seems necessary to your idea of
+an established church to have somebody to worry and torment,
+suppose we were to select for this purpose William Wilberforce,
+Esq., and the patent Christians of Clapham.&nbsp; We shall by
+this expedient enjoy the same opportunity for cruelty and
+injustice, without being exposed to the same risks: we will
+compel them to abjure vital clergymen by a public test, to deny
+that the said William Wilberforce has any power of working
+miracles, touching for barrenness or any other infirmity, or that
+he is endowed with any preternatural gift whatever.&nbsp; We will
+swear them to the doctrine of good works, compel them to preach
+common sense, and to hear it; to frequent Bishops, Deans, and
+other High Churchmen; and to appear, once in the quarter at the
+least, at some melodrame, opera, pantomime, or other light
+scenical representation; in short, we will gratify the love of
+insolence and power; we will enjoy the old orthodox sport of
+witnessing the impotent anger of men compelled to submit to civil
+degradation, or to sacrifice their notions of truth to
+ours.&nbsp; And all this we may do without the slightest risk,
+because their numbers are, as yet, not very considerable.&nbsp;
+Cruelty and injustice must, of course, exist; but why connect
+them with danger?&nbsp; Why torture a bulldog when you can get a
+frog or a rabbit?&nbsp; I am sure my proposal will meet with the
+most universal approbation.&nbsp; Do not be apprehensive of any
+opposition from ministers.&nbsp; If it is a case of hatred, we
+are sure that one man will defend it by the Gospel: if it
+abridges human freedom, we know that another will find precedents
+for it in the Revolution.</p>
+<p>In the name of Heaven, what are we to gain by suffering
+Ireland to be rode by that faction which now predominates over
+it?&nbsp; Why are we to endanger our own Church and State, not
+for 500,000 Episcopalians, but for ten or twelve great Orange
+families, who have been sucking the blood of that country for
+these hundred years last past? and the folly of the Orangemen in
+playing this game themselves, is almost as absurd as ours in
+playing it for them.&nbsp; They ought to have the sense to see
+that their business now is to keep quietly the lands and beeves
+of which the fathers of the Catholics were robbed in days of
+yore; they must give to their descendants the sop of political
+power: by contending with them for names, they will lose
+realities, and be compelled to beg their potatoes in a foreign
+land, abhorred equally by the English, who have witnessed their
+oppression, and by the Catholic Irish, who have smarted under
+them.</p>
+<h3>LETTER IV.</h3>
+<p><span class="smcap">Then</span> comes Mr. Isaac Hawkins Brown
+(the gentleman who danced so badly at the Court of Naples), and
+asks if it is not an anomaly to educate men in another religion
+than your own.&nbsp; It certainly is our duty to get rid of
+error, and, above all, of religious error; but this is not to be
+done <i>per saltum</i>, or the measure will miscarry, like the
+Queen.&nbsp; It may be very easy to dance away the royal embryo
+of a great kingdom; but Mr. Hawkins Brown must look before he
+leaps, when his object is to crush an opposite sect in religion;
+false steps aid the one effect as much as they are fatal to the
+other: it will require not only the lapse of Mr. Hawkins Brown,
+but the lapse of centuries, before the absurdities of the
+Catholic religion are laughed at as much as they deserve to be;
+but surely, in the meantime, the Catholic religion is better than
+none; four millions of Catholics are better than four millions of
+wild beasts; two hundred priests educated by our own government
+are better than the same number educated by the man who means to
+destroy us.</p>
+<p>The whole sum now appropriated by Government to the religious
+education of four millions of Christians is &pound;13,000; a sum
+about one hundred times as large being appropriated in the same
+country to about one-eighth part of this number of
+Protestants.&nbsp; When it was proposed to raise this grant from
+&pound;8,000 to &pound;13,000, its present amount, this sum was
+objected to by that most indulgent of Christians, Mr. Spencer
+Perceval, as enormous; he himself having secured for his own
+eating and drinking, and the eating and drinking of the Master
+and Miss Percevals, the reversionary sum of &pound;21,000 a year
+of the public money, and having just failed in a desperate and
+rapacious attempt to secure to himself for life the revenues of
+the Duchy of Lancaster: and the best of it is, that this
+minister, after abusing his predecessors for their impious bounty
+to the Catholics, has found himself compelled, from the
+apprehension of immediate danger, to grant the sum in question,
+thus dissolving his pearl in vinegar, and destroying all the
+value of the gift by the virulence and reluctance with which it
+was granted.</p>
+<p>I hear from some persons in Parliament, and from others in the
+sixpenny societies for debate, a great deal about unalterable
+laws passed at the Revolution.&nbsp; When I hear any man talk of
+an unalterable law, the only effect it produces upon me is to
+convince me that he is an unalterable fool.&nbsp; A law passed
+when there was Germany, Spain, Russia, Sweden, Holland, Portugal,
+and Turkey; when there was a disputed succession; when four or
+five hundred acres were won and lost after ten years&rsquo; hard
+fighting; when armies were commanded by the sons of kings, and
+campaigns passed in an interchange of civil letters and ripe
+fruit; and for these laws, when the whole state of the world is
+completely changed, we are now, according to my Lord Hawkesbury,
+to hold ourselves ready to perish.&nbsp; It is no mean
+misfortune, in times like these, to be forced to say anything
+about such men as Lord Hawkesbury, and to be reminded that we are
+governed by them, but as I am driven to it, I must take the
+liberty of observing that the wisdom and liberality of my Lord
+Hawkesbury are of that complexion which always shrinks from the
+present exercise of these virtues by praising the splendid
+examples of them in ages past.&nbsp; If he had lived at such
+periods, he would have opposed the Revolution by praising the
+Reformation, and the Reformation by speaking handsomely of the
+Crusades.&nbsp; He gratifies his natural antipathy to great and
+courageous measures by playing off the wisdom and courage which
+have ceased to influence human affairs against that wisdom and
+courage which living men would employ for present
+happiness.&nbsp; Besides, it happens unfortunately for the Warden
+of the Cinque Ports, that to the principal incapacities under
+which the Irish suffer, they were subjected after that great and
+glorious revolution, to which we are indebted for so many
+blessings, and his Lordship for the termination of so many
+periods.&nbsp; The Catholics were not excluded from the Irish
+House of Commons, or military commands, before the 3rd and 4th of
+William and Mary, and the 1st and 2nd of Queen Anne.</p>
+<p>If the great mass of the people, environed as they are on
+every side with Jenkinsons, Percevals, Melvilles, and other
+perils, were to pray for divine illumination and aid, what more
+could Providence in its mercy do than send them the example of
+Scotland?&nbsp; For what a length of years was it attempted to
+compel the Scotch to change their religion: horse, foot,
+artillery, and armed Prebendaries, were sent out after the
+Presbyterian parsons and their congregations.&nbsp; The Percevals
+of those days called for blood: this call is never made in vain,
+and blood was shed; but, to the astonishment and horror of the
+Percevals of those days, they could not introduce the book of
+Common Prayer, nor prevent that metaphysical people from going to
+heaven their true way, instead of our true way.&nbsp; With a
+little oatmeal for food, and a little sulphur for friction,
+allaying cutaneous irritation with the one hand, and holding his
+Calvinistical creed in the other, Sawney ran away to his flinty
+hills, sung his psalm out of tune his own way, and listened to
+his sermon of two hours long, amid the rough and imposing
+melancholy of the tallest thistles.&nbsp; But Sawney brought up
+his unbreeched offspring in a cordial hatred of his oppressors;
+and Scotland was as much a part of the weakness of England then
+as Ireland is at this moment.&nbsp; The true and the only remedy
+was applied; the Scotch were suffered to worship God after their
+own tiresome manner, without pain, penalty, or privation.&nbsp;
+No lightning descended from heaven: the country was not ruined;
+the world is not yet come to an end; the dignitaries who foretold
+all these consequences are utterly forgotten, and Scotland has
+ever since been an increasing source of strength to Great
+Britain.&nbsp; In the six hundredth year of our empire over
+Ireland we are making laws to transport a man if he is found out
+of his house after eight o&rsquo;clock at night.&nbsp; That this
+is necessary I know too well; but tell me why it is
+necessary.&nbsp; It is not necessary in Greece, where the Turks
+are masters.</p>
+<p>Are you aware that there is at this moment a universal clamour
+throughout the whole of Ireland against the Union?&nbsp; It is
+now one month since I returned from that country; I have never
+seen so extraordinary, so alarming, and so rapid a change in the
+sentiments of any people.&nbsp; Those who disliked the Union
+before are quite furious against it now; those who doubted doubt
+no more; those who were friendly to it have exchanged that
+friendship for the most rooted aversion; in the midst of all this
+(which is by far the most alarming symptom), there is the
+strongest disposition on the part of the northern Dissenters to
+unite with the Catholics, irritated by the faithless injustice
+with which they have been treated.&nbsp; If this combination does
+take place (mark what I say to you), you will have meetings all
+over Ireland for the cry of <i>No Union</i>; that cry will spread
+like wild-fire, and blaze over every opposition; and if this be
+the case, there is no use in mincing the matter; Ireland is gone,
+and the death-blow of England is struck; and this event may
+happen <i>instantly</i>&mdash;before Mr. Canning and Mr. Hookham
+Frere have turned Lord Howick&rsquo;s last speech into doggerel
+rhymne; before &ldquo;<i>the near and dear relations</i>&rdquo;
+have received another quarter of their pension, or Mr. Perceval
+conducted the Curates&rsquo; Salary Bill safely to a third
+reading.&nbsp; If the mind of the English people, cursed as they
+now are with that madness of religious dissension which has been
+breathed into them for the purposes of private ambition, can be
+alarmed by any remembrances, and warned by any events, they
+should never forget how nearly Ireland was lost to this country
+during the American war; that it was saved merely by the jealousy
+of the Protestant Irish towards the Catholics, then a much more
+insignificant and powerless body than they now are.&nbsp; The
+Catholic and the Dissenter have since combined together against
+you.&nbsp; Last war, the winds, those ancient and unsubsidised
+allies of England; the winds, upon which English ministers depend
+as much for saving kingdoms as washerwomen do for drying clothes;
+the winds stood your friends: the French could only get into
+Ireland in small numbers, and the rebels were defeated.&nbsp;
+Since then, all the remaining kingdoms of Europe have been
+destroyed; and the Irish see that their national independence is
+gone, without having received any single one of those advantages
+which they were taught to expect from the sacrifice.&nbsp; All
+good things were to flow from the Union; they have none of them
+gained anything.&nbsp; Every man&rsquo;s pride is wounded by it;
+no man&rsquo;s interest is promoted.&nbsp; In the seventh year of
+that union four million Catholics, lured by all kinds of promises
+to yield up the separate dignity and sovereignty of their
+country, are forced to squabble with such a man as Mr. Spencer
+Perceval for five thousand pounds with which to educate their
+children in their own mode of worship, he, the same Mr. Spencer,
+having secured to his own Protestant self a reversionary portion
+of the public money amounting to four times that sum.&nbsp; A
+senior Proctor of the University of Oxford, the head of a house,
+or the examining chaplain to a bishop, may believe these things
+can last; but every man of the world, whose understanding has
+been exercised in the business of life, must see (and see with a
+breaking heart) that they will soon come to a fearful
+termination.</p>
+<p>Our conduct to Ireland during the whole of this war has been
+that of a man who subscribes to hospitals, weeps at charity
+sermons, carries out broth and blankets to beggars, and then
+comes home and beats his wife and children.&nbsp; We had
+compassion for the victims of all other oppression and injustice
+except our own.&nbsp; If Switzerland was threatened, away went a
+Treasury Clerk with a hundred thousand pounds for Switzerland;
+large bags of money were kept constantly under sailing orders;
+upon the slightest demonstration towards Naples, down went Sir
+William Hamilton upon his knees, and begged for the love of St.
+Januarius they would help us off with a little money; all the
+arts of Machiavel were resorted to to persuade Europe to borrow;
+troops were sent off in all directions to save the Catholic and
+Protestant world; the Pope himself was guarded by a regiment of
+English dragoons; if the Grand Lama had been at hand, he would
+have had another; every Catholic clergyman who had the good
+fortune to be neither English nor Irish was immediately provided
+with lodging, soap, crucifix, missal, chapel-beads, relics, and
+holy water; if Turks had landed, Turks would have received an
+order from the Treasury for coffee, opium, korans, and
+seraglios.&nbsp; In the midst of all this fury of saving and
+defending this crusade for conscience and Christianity, there was
+a universal agreement among all descriptions of people to
+continue every species of internal persecution, to deny at home
+every just right that had been denied before, to pummel poor Dr.
+Abraham Rees and his Dissenters, and to treat the unhappy
+Catholics of Ireland as if their tongues were mute, their heels
+cloven, their nature brutal, and designedly subjected by
+Providence to their Orange masters.</p>
+<p>How would my admirable brother, the Rev. Abraham Plymley, like
+to be marched to a Catholic chapel, to be sprinkled with the
+sanctified contents of a pump, to hear a number of false
+quantities in the Latin tongue, and to see a number of persons
+occupied in making right angles upon the breast and
+forehead?&nbsp; And if all this would give you so much pain, what
+right have you to march Catholic soldiers to a place of worship,
+where there is no aspersion, no rectangular gestures, and where
+they understand every word they hear, having first, in order to
+get him to enlist, made a solemn promise to the contrary?&nbsp;
+Can you wonder, after this, that the Catholic priest stops the
+recruiting in Ireland, as he is now doing to a most alarming
+degree?</p>
+<p>The late question concerning military rank did not
+individually affect the lowest persons of the Catholic
+persuasion; but do you imagine they do not sympathise with the
+honour and disgrace of their superiors?&nbsp; Do you think that
+satisfaction and dissatisfaction do not travel down from Lord
+Fingal to the most potato-less Catholic in Ireland, and that the
+glory or shame of the sect is not felt by many more than these
+conditions personally and corporeally affect?&nbsp; Do you
+suppose that the detection of Sir Henry Mildmay, and the
+disappointment of Mr. Perceval <i>in the matter</i> of the Duchy
+of Lancaster, did not affect every dabbler in public
+property?&nbsp; Depend upon it these things were felt through all
+the gradations of small plunderers, down to him who filches a
+pound of tobacco from the King&rsquo;s warehouses; while, on the
+contrary, the acquittal of any noble and official thief would not
+fail to diffuse the most heart-felt satisfaction over the
+larcenous and burglarious world.&nbsp; Observe, I do not say
+because the lower Catholics are affected by what concerns their
+superiors, that they are not affected by what concerns
+themselves.&nbsp; There is no disguising the horrid truth,
+<i>there must be some relaxation with respect to tithe</i>: this
+is the cruel and heart-rending price which must be paid for
+national preservation.&nbsp; I feel how little existence will be
+worth having, if any alteration, however slight, is made in the
+property of Irish rectors; I am conscious how much such changes
+must affect the daily and hourly comforts of every Englishman; I
+shall feel too happy if they leave Europe untouched, and are not
+ultimately fatal to the destinies of America; but I am madly bent
+upon keeping foreign enemies out of the British empire, and my
+limited understanding presents me with no other means of
+effecting my object.</p>
+<p>You talk of waiting till another reign before any alteration
+is made; a proposal full of good sense and good nature, if the
+measure in question were to pull down St. James&rsquo;s Palace,
+or to alter Kew Gardens.&nbsp; Will Bonaparte agree to put off
+his intrigues, and his invasion of Ireland?&nbsp; If so, I will
+overlook the question of justice, and finding the danger
+suspended, agree to the delay.&nbsp; I sincerely hope this reign
+may last many years, yet the delay of a single session of
+Parliament may be fatal; but if another year elapse without some
+serious concession made to the Catholics, I believe, before God,
+that all future pledges and concessions will be made in
+vain.&nbsp; I do not think that peace will do you any good under
+such circumstances.&nbsp; If Bonaparte give you a respite, it
+will only be to get ready the gallows on which he means to hang
+you.&nbsp; The Catholic and the Dissenter can unite in peace as
+well as war.&nbsp; If they do, the gallows is ready, and your
+executioner, in spite of the most solemn promises, will turn you
+off the next hour.</p>
+<p>With every disposition to please (where to please within fair
+and rational limits is a high duty), it is impossible for public
+men to be long silent about the Catholics; pressing evils are not
+got rid of, because they are not talked of.&nbsp; A man may
+command his family to say nothing more about the stone and
+surgical operations; but the ponderous malice still lies upon the
+nerve, and gets so big, that the patient breaks his own law of
+silence, clamours for the knife, and expires under its late
+operation.&nbsp; Believe me, you talk folly when you talk of
+suppressing the Catholic question.&nbsp; I wish to God the case
+admitted of such a remedy; bad as it is, it does not admit of
+it.&nbsp; If the wants of the Catholics are not heard in the
+manly tones of Lord Grenville, or the servile drawl of Lord
+Castlereagh, they will be heard ere long in the madness of mobs,
+and the conflicts of armed men.</p>
+<p>I observe it is now universally the fashion to speak of the
+first personage in the state as the great obstacle to the
+measure.&nbsp; In the first place, I am not bound to believe such
+rumours because I hear them; and in the next place, I object to
+such language, as unconstitutional.&nbsp; Whoever retains his
+situation in the ministry while the incapacities of the Catholics
+remain, is the advocate for those incapacities; and to him, and
+to him only, am I to look for responsibility.&nbsp; But waive
+this question of the Catholics, and put a general case:&mdash;How
+is a minister of this country to act when the conscientious
+scruples of his Sovereign prevent the execution of a measure
+deemed by him absolutely necessary to the safety of the
+country?&nbsp; His conduct is quite clear&mdash;he should
+resign.&nbsp; But what is his successor to
+do?&mdash;Resign.&nbsp; But is the King to be left without
+ministers, and is he in this manner to be compelled to act
+against his own conscience?&nbsp; Before I answer this, pray tell
+me in my turn what better defence is there against the
+machinations of a wicked, or the errors of a weak Monarch, than
+the impossibility of finding a minister who will lend himself to
+vice and folly?&nbsp; Every English Monarch, in such a
+predicament, would sacrifice his opinions and views to such a
+clear expression of the public will; and it is one method in
+which the Constitution aims at bringing about such a
+sacrifice.&nbsp; You may say, if you please, the ruler of a state
+is forced to give up his object when the natural love of place
+and power will tempt no one to assist him in its attainment; this
+may be force; but it is force without injury, and therefore
+without blame.&nbsp; I am not to be beat out of these obvious
+reasonings, and ancient constitutional provisions, by the term
+conscience.&nbsp; There is no fantasy, however wild, that a man
+may not persuade himself that he cherishes from motives of
+conscience; eternal war against impious France, or rebellious
+America, or Catholic Spain, may in times to come be scruples of
+conscience.&nbsp; One English Monarch may, from scruples of
+conscience, wish to abolish every trait of religious persecution;
+another Monarch may deem it his absolute and indispensable duty
+to make a slight provision for Dissenters out of the revenues of
+the Church of England.&nbsp; So that you see, Brother Abraham,
+there are cases where it would be the duty of the best and most
+loyal subjects to oppose the conscientious scruples of their
+Sovereign, still taking care that their actions were
+constitutional and their modes respectful.&nbsp; Then you come
+upon me with personal questions, and say that no such dangers are
+to be apprehended now under our present gracious Sovereign, of
+whose good qualities we must be all so well convinced.&nbsp; All
+these sorts of discussions I beg leave to decline.&nbsp; What I
+have said upon constitutional topics, I mean of course for
+general, not for particular application.&nbsp; I agree with you
+in all the good you have said of the powers that be, and I avail
+myself of the opportunity of pointing out general dangers to the
+Constitution, at a moment when we are so completely exempted from
+their present influence.&nbsp; I cannot finish this letter
+without expressing my surprise and pleasure at your abuse of the
+servile addresses poured in upon the throne, nor can I conceive a
+greater disgust to a Monarch, with a true English heart, than to
+see such a question as that of Catholic Emancipation argued, not
+with a reference to its justice or importance, but universally
+considered to be of no further consequence than as it affects his
+own private feelings.&nbsp; That these sentiments should be mine
+is not wonderful; but how they came to be yours does, I confess,
+fill me with surprise.&nbsp; Are you moved by the arrival of the
+Irish Brigade at Antwerp, and the amorous violence which awaits
+Mrs. Plymley?</p>
+<h3>LETTER V.</h3>
+<p><span class="smcap">Dear Abraham</span>,&mdash;I never met a
+parson in my life who did not consider the Corporation and Test
+Acts as the great bulwarks of the Church; and yet it is now just
+sixty-four years since bills of indemnity to destroy their penal
+effects, or, in other words, to repeal them, have been passed
+annually as a matter of course.</p>
+<blockquote><p><i>Heu vatum ignar mentes</i>.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>These bulwarks, without which no clergyman thinks he could
+sleep with his accustomed soundness, have actually not been in
+existence since any man now living has taken holy orders.&nbsp;
+Every year the Indemnity Act pardons past breaches of these two
+laws, and prevents any fresh actions of informers from coming to
+a conclusion before the period for the next indemnity bill
+arrives; so that these penalties, by which alone the Church
+remains in existence, have not had one moment&rsquo;s operation
+for sixty-four years.&nbsp; You will say the legislature, during
+the whole of this period, has reserved to itself the discretion
+of suspending or not suspending.&nbsp; But had not the
+legislature the right of re-enacting, if it was necessary?&nbsp;
+And now when you have kept the rod over these people (with the
+most scandalous abuse of all principle) for sixty-four years, and
+not found it necessary to strike once, is not that the best of
+all reasons why the rod should be laid aside?&nbsp; You talk to
+me of a very valuable hedge running across your fields which you
+would not part with on any account.&nbsp; I go down, expecting to
+find a limit impervious to cattle, and highly useful for the
+preservation of property; but, to my utter astonishment, I find
+that the hedge was cut down half a century ago, and that every
+year the shoots are clipped the moment they appear above ground:
+it appears, upon further inquiry, that the hedge never ought to
+have existed at all; that it originated in the malice of
+antiquated quarrels, and was cut down because it subjected you to
+vast inconvenience, and broke up your intercourse with a country
+absolutely necessary to your existence.&nbsp; If the remains of
+this hedge serve only to keep up an irritation in your
+neighbours, and to remind them of the feuds of former times, good
+nature and good sense teach you that you ought to grub it up, and
+cast it into the oven.&nbsp; This is the exact state of these two
+laws; and yet it is made a great argument against concession to
+the Catholics, that it involves their repeal; which is to say, Do
+not make me relinquish a folly that will lead to my ruin;
+because, if you do, I must give up other follies ten times
+greater than this.</p>
+<p>I confess, with all our bulwarks and hedges, it mortifies me
+to the quick to contrast with our matchless stupidity and
+inimitable folly the conduct of Bonaparte upon the subject of
+religious persecution.&nbsp; At the moment when we are tearing
+the crucifixes from the necks of the Catholics, and washing pious
+mud from the foreheads of the Hindoos; at that moment this man is
+assembling the very Jews at Paris, and endeavouring to give them
+stability and importance.&nbsp; I shall never be reconciled to
+mending shoes in America; but I see it must be my lot, and I will
+then take a dreadful revenge upon Mr. Perceval, if I catch him
+preaching within ten miles of me.&nbsp; I cannot for the soul of
+me conceive whence this man has gained his notions of
+Christianity: he has the most evangelical charity for errors in
+arithmetic, and the most inveterate malice against errors in
+conscience.&nbsp; While he rages against those whom in the true
+spirit of the Gospel he ought to indulge, he forgets the only
+instance of severity which that Gospel contains, and leaves the
+jobbers, contractors, and money-changers at their seats, without
+a single stripe.</p>
+<p>You cannot imagine, you say, that England will ever be ruined
+and conquered; and for no other reason that I can find, but
+because it seems so very odd it should be ruined and
+conquered.&nbsp; Alas! so reasoned, in their time, the Austrian,
+Russian, and Prussian Plymleys.&nbsp; But the English are brave:
+so were all these nations.&nbsp; You might get together a hundred
+thousand men individually brave; but without generals capable of
+commanding such a machine, it would be as useless as a first-rate
+man-of-war manned by Oxford clergymen or Parisian
+shopkeepers.&nbsp; I do not say this to the disparagement of
+English officers: they have had no means of acquiring experience;
+but I do say it to create alarm; for we do not appear to me to be
+half alarmed enough, or to entertain that sense of our danger
+which leads to the most obvious means of self-defence.&nbsp; As
+for the spirit of the peasantry in making a gallant defence
+behind hedge-rows, and through plate-racks and hen-coops, highly
+as I think of their bravery, I do not know any nation in Europe
+so likely to be struck with the panic as the English; and this
+from their total unacquaintance with the science of war.&nbsp;
+Old wheat and beans blazing for twenty miles round; cart mares
+shot; sows of Lord Somerville&rsquo;s breed running wild over the
+country; the minister of the parish wounded sorely in his hinder
+parts; Mrs. Plymley in fits.&nbsp; All these scenes of war an
+Austrian or a Russian has seen three or four times over: but it
+is now three centuries since an English pig has fallen in a fair
+battle upon English ground, or a farm-house been rifled, or a
+clergyman&rsquo;s wife been subjected to any other proposals of
+love than the connubial endearments of her sleek and orthodox
+mate.&nbsp; The old edition of Plutarch&rsquo;s Lives, which lies
+in the corner of your parlour window, has contributed to work you
+up to the most romantic expectations of our Roman
+behaviour.&nbsp; You are persuaded that Lord Amherst will defend
+Kew Bridge like Cocles; that some maid of honour will break away
+from her captivity, and swim over the Thames; that the Duke of
+York will burn his capitulating hand; and little Mr. Sturges
+Bourne give forty years&rsquo; purchase for Moulsham Hall, while
+the French are encamped upon it.&nbsp; I hope we shall witness
+all this, if the French do come; but in the meantime I am so
+enchanted with the ordinary English behaviour of these invaluable
+persons, that I earnestly pray no opportunity may be given them
+for Roman valour, and for those very un-Roman pensions which they
+would all, of course, take especial care to claim in
+consequence.&nbsp; But whatever was our conduct, if every
+ploughman was as great a hero as he who was called from his oxen
+to save Rome from her enemies, I should still say, that at such a
+crisis you want the affections of all your subjects in both
+islands: there is no spirit which you must alienate, no art you
+must avert, every man must feel he has a country, and that there
+is an urgent and pressing cause why he should expose himself to
+death.</p>
+<p>The effects of penal laws in matters of religion are never
+confined to those limits in which the legislature intended they
+should be placed: it is not only that I am excluded from certain
+offices and dignities because I am a Catholic, but the exclusion
+carries with it a certain stigma, which degrades me in the eyes
+of the monopolising sect, and the very name of my religion
+becomes odious.&nbsp; These effects are so very striking in
+England, that I solemnly believe blue and red baboons to be more
+popular here than Catholics and Presbyterians; they are more
+understood, and there is a greater disposition to do something
+for them.&nbsp; When a country squire hears of an ape, his first
+feeling is to give it nuts and apples; when he hears of a
+Dissenter, his immediate impulse is to commit it to the county
+gaol, to shave its head, to alter its customary food, and to have
+it privately whipped.&nbsp; This is no caricature, but an
+accurate picture of national feelings, as they degrade and
+endanger us at this very moment.&nbsp; The Irish Catholic
+gentleman would bear his legal disabilities with greater temper,
+if these were all he had to bear&mdash;if they did not enable
+every Protestant cheese-monger and tide-waiter to treat him with
+contempt.&nbsp; He is branded on the forehead with a red-hot
+iron, and treated like a spiritual felon, because in the highest
+of all considerations he is led by the noblest of all guides, his
+own disinterested conscience.</p>
+<p>Why are nonsense and cruelty a bit the better because they are
+enacted?&nbsp; If Providence, which gives wine and oil, had
+blessed us with that tolerant spirit which makes the countenance
+more pleasant and the heart more glad than these can do; if our
+Statute Book had never been defiled with such infamous laws, the
+sepulchral Spencer Perceval would have been hauled through the
+dirtiest horse-pond in Hampstead, had he ventured to propose
+them.&nbsp; But now persecution is good, because it exists; every
+law which originated in ignorance and malice, and gratifies the
+passions from whence it sprang, we call the wisdom of our
+ancestors: when such laws are repealed, they will be cruelty and
+madness; till they are repealed, they are policy and caution.</p>
+<p>I was somewhat amused with the imputation brought against the
+Catholics by the University of Oxford, that they are enemies to
+liberty.&nbsp; I immediately turned to my &ldquo;History of
+England,&rdquo; and marked as an historical error that passage in
+which it is recorded that, in the reign of Queen Anne, the famous
+degree of the University of Oxford respecting passive obedience,
+was ordered by the House of Lords to be burnt by the hands of the
+common hangman, as contrary to the liberty of the subject and the
+law of the land.&nbsp; Nevertheless, I wish, whatever be the
+modesty of those who impute, that the imputation was a little
+more true, the Catholic cause would not be quite so desperate
+with the present.&nbsp; Administration.&nbsp; I fear, however,
+that the hatred to liberty in these poor devoted wretches may ere
+long appear more doubtful than it is at present to the
+Vice-Chancellor and his Clergy, inflamed as they doubtless are
+with classical examples of republican virtue, and panting, as
+they always have been, to reduce the power of the Crown within
+narrower and safer limits.&nbsp; What mistaken zeal to attempt to
+connect one religion with freedom and another with slavery!&nbsp;
+Who laid the foundations of English liberty?&nbsp; What was the
+mixed religion of Switzerland?&nbsp; What has the Protestant
+religion done for liberty in Denmark, in Sweden, throughout the
+north of Germany, and in Prussia?&nbsp; The purest religion in
+the world, in my humble opinion, is the religion of the Church of
+England: for its preservation (so far as it is exercised without
+intruding upon the liberties of others) I am ready at this moment
+to venture my present life, and but through that religion I have
+no hopes of any other; yet I am not forced to be silly because I
+am pious; nor will I ever join in eulogiums on my faith which
+every man of common reading and common sense can so easily
+refute.</p>
+<p>You have either done too much for the Catholics, worthy
+Abraham, or too little; if you had intended to refuse them
+political power, you should have refused them civil rights.&nbsp;
+After you had enabled them to acquire property, after you had
+conceded to them all that you did concede in &rsquo;78 and
+&rsquo;93, the rest is wholly out of your power: you may choose
+whether you will give the rest in an honourable or a disgraceful
+mode, but it is utterly out of your power to withhold it.</p>
+<p>In the last year, land to the amount of <i>eight hundred
+thousand pounds</i> was purchased by the Catholics in
+Ireland.&nbsp; Do you think it possible to be-Perceval, and
+be-Canning, and be-Castlereagh, such a body of men as this out of
+their common rights, and their common sense?&nbsp; Mr. George
+Canning may laugh and joke at the idea of Protestant bailiffs
+ravishing Catholic ladies, under the 9th clause of the Sunset
+Bill; but if some better remedy be not applied to the
+distractions of Ireland than the jocularity of Mr. Canning, they
+will soon put an end to his pension, and to the pension of those
+&ldquo;near and dear relatives,&rdquo; for whose eating,
+drinking, washing, and clothing, every man in the United Kingdoms
+now pays his two-pence or three-pence a year.&nbsp; You may call
+these observations coarse, if you please; but I have no idea that
+the Sophias and Carolines of any man breathing are to eat
+national veal, to drink public tea, to wear Treasury ribands, and
+then that we are to be told that it is coarse to animadvert upon
+this pitiful and eleemosynary splendour.&nbsp; If this is right,
+why not mention it?&nbsp; If it is wrong, why should not he who
+enjoys the ease of supporting his sisters in this manner bear the
+shame of it?&nbsp; Everybody seems hitherto to have spared a man
+who never spares anybody.</p>
+<p>As for the enormous wax candles, and superstitious mummeries,
+and painted jackets of the Catholic priests, I fear them
+not.&nbsp; Tell me that the world will return again under the
+influence of the smallpox; that Lord Castlereagh will hereafter
+oppose the power of the Court; that Lord Howick and Mr. Grattan
+will do each of them a mean and dishonourable action; that
+anybody who has heard Lord Redesdale speak once will knowingly
+and willingly hear him again; that Lord Eldon has assented to the
+fact of two and two making four, without shedding tears, or
+expressing the smallest doubt or scruple; tell me any other thing
+absurd or incredible, but, for the love of common sense, let me
+hear no more of the danger to be apprehended from the general
+diffusion of Popery.&nbsp; It is too absurd to be reasoned upon;
+every man feels it is nonsense when he hears it stated, and so
+does every man while he is stating it.</p>
+<p>I cannot imagine why the friends to the Church Establishment
+should enter in such a horror of seeing the doors of Parliament
+flung open to the Catholics, and view so passively the enjoyment
+of that right by the Presbyterians and by every other species of
+Dissenter.&nbsp; In their tenets, in their Church Government, in
+the nature of their endowments, the Dissenters are infinitely
+more distant from the Church of England than the Catholics are;
+yet the Dissenters have never been excluded from
+Parliament.&nbsp; There are 45 members in one House, and 16 in
+the other, who always are Dissenters.&nbsp; There is no law which
+would prevent every member of the Lords and Commons from being
+Dissenters.&nbsp; The Catholics could not bring into Parliament
+half the number of the Scotch members; and yet one exclusion is
+of such immense importance, because it has taken place; and the
+other no human being thinks of, because no one is accustomed to
+it.&nbsp; I have often thought, if the <i>wisdom of our
+ancestors</i> had excluded all persons with red hair from the
+House of Commons, of the throes and convulsions it would occasion
+to restore them to their natural rights.&nbsp; What mobs and
+riots would it produce!&nbsp; To what infinite abuse and obloquy
+would the capillary patriot be exposed; what wormwood would
+distil from Mr. Perceval, what froth would drop from Mr. Canning;
+how (I will not say <i>my</i>, but <i>our</i> Lord Hawkesbury,
+for he belongs to us all)&mdash;how our Lord Hawkesbury would
+work away about the hair of King William and Lord Somers, and the
+authors of the great and glorious Revolution; how Lord Eldon
+would appeal to the Deity and his own virtues, and to the hair of
+his children: some would say that red-haired men were
+superstitious; some would prove they were atheists; they would be
+petitioned against as the friends of slavery, and the advocates
+for revolt; in short, such a corruptor of the heart and
+understanding is the spirit of persecution, that these
+unfortunate people (conspired against by their fellow-subjects of
+every complexion), if they did not emigrate to countries where
+hair of another colour was persecuted, would be driven to the
+falsehood of perukes, or the hypocrisy of the Tricosian
+fluid.</p>
+<p>As for the dangers of the Church (in spite of the staggering
+events which have lately taken place), I have not yet entirely
+lost my confidence in the power of common sense, and I believe
+the Church to be in no danger at all; but if it is, that danger
+is not from the Catholics, but from the Methodists, and from that
+patent Christianity which has been for some time manufacturing at
+Clapham, to the prejudice of the old and admirable article
+prepared by the Church.&nbsp; I would counsel my lords the
+Bishops to keep their eyes upon that holy village, and its
+vicinity; they will find there a zeal in making converts far
+superior to anything which exists among the Catholics; a contempt
+for the great mass of English clergy, much more rooted and
+profound; and a regular fund to purchase livings for those
+groaning and garrulous gentlemen whom they denominate (by a
+standing sarcasm against the regular Church) Gospel preachers and
+vital clergymen.&nbsp; I am too firm a believer in the general
+propriety and respectability of the English clergy, to believe
+they have much to fear either from old nonsense or from new; but
+if the Church must be supposed to be in danger, I prefer that
+nonsense which is grown half venerable from time, the force of
+which I have already tried and baffled, which at least has some
+excuse in the dark and ignorant ages in which it
+originated.&nbsp; The religious enthusiasm manufactured by living
+men before my own eyes disgusts my understanding as much,
+influences my imagination not at all, and excites my
+apprehensions much more.</p>
+<p>I may have seemed to you to treat the situation of public
+affairs with some degree of levity; but I feel it deeply, and
+with nightly and daily anguish; because I know Ireland; I have
+known it all my life; I love it, and I foresee the crisis to
+which it will soon be exposed.&nbsp; Who can doubt but that
+Ireland will experience ultimately from France a treatment to
+which the conduct they have experienced from England is the love
+of a parent, or a brother?&nbsp; Who can doubt but that five
+years after he has got hold of the country, Ireland will be
+tossed away by Bonaparte as a present to some one of his ruffian
+generals, who will knock the head of Mr. Keogh against the head
+of Cardinal Troy, shoot twenty of the most noisy blockheads of
+the Roman persuasion, wash his pug-dogs in holy water, and
+confiscate the salt butter of the Milesian republic to the last
+tub?&nbsp; But what matters this? or who is wise enough in
+Ireland to heed it? or when had common sense much influence with
+my poor dear Irish?&nbsp; Mr. Perceval does not know the Irish;
+but I know them, and I know that at every rash and mad hazard
+they will break the Union, revenge their wounded pride and their
+insulted religion, and fling themselves into the open arms of
+France, sure of dying in the embrace.&nbsp; And now, what means
+have you of guarding against this coming evil, upon which the
+future happiness or misery of every Englishman depends?&nbsp;
+Have you a single ally in the whole world?&nbsp; Is there a
+vulnerable point in the French empire where the astonishing
+resources of that people can be attracted and employed?&nbsp;
+Have you a ministry wise enough to comprehend the danger, manly
+enough to believe unpleasant intelligence, honest enough to state
+their apprehensions at the peril of their places?&nbsp; Is there
+anywhere the slightest disposition to join any measure of love,
+or conciliation, or hope, with that dreadful bill which the
+distractions of Ireland have rendered necessary?&nbsp; At the
+very moment that the last Monarchy in Europe has fallen, are we
+not governed by a man of pleasantry, and a man of theology?&nbsp;
+In the six hundredth year of our empire over Ireland, have we any
+memorial of ancient kindness to refer to? any people, any zeal,
+any country on which we can depend?&nbsp; Have we any hope, but
+in the winds of heaven and the tides of the sea? any prayer to
+prefer to the Irish, but that they should forget and forgive
+their oppressors, who, in the very moment that they are calling
+upon them for their exertions, solemnly assure them that the
+oppression shall still remain?</p>
+<p>Abraham, farewell!&nbsp; If I have tired you, remember how
+often you have tired me and others.&nbsp; I do not think we
+really differ in politics so much as you suppose; or at least, if
+we do, that difference is in the means, and not in the end.&nbsp;
+We both love the Constitution, respect the King, and abhor the
+French.&nbsp; But though you love the Constitution, you would
+perpetuate the abuses which have been engrafted upon it; though
+you respect the King, you would confirm his scruples against the
+Catholics; though you abhor the French, you would open to them
+the conquest of Ireland.&nbsp; My method of respecting my
+sovereign is by protecting his honour, his empire, and his
+lasting happiness; I evince my love of the Constitution by making
+it the guardian of all men&rsquo;s rights and the source of their
+freedom; and I prove my abhorrence of the French, by uniting
+against them the disciples of every church in the only remaining
+nation in Europe.&nbsp; As for the men of whom I have been
+compelled in this age of mediocrity to say so much, they cannot
+of themselves be worth a moment&rsquo;s consideration, to you, to
+me, or to anybody.&nbsp; In a year after their death they will be
+forgotten as completely as if they had never been; and are now of
+no further importance than as they are the mere vehicles of
+carrying into effect the common-place and mischievous prejudices
+of the times in which they live.</p>
+<h3>LETTER VI.</h3>
+<p><span class="smcap">Dear Abraham</span>,&mdash;What amuses me
+the most is to hear of the <i>indulgences</i> which the Catholics
+have received, and their exorbitance in not being satisfied with
+those indulgences: now if you complain to me that a man is
+obtrusive and shameless in his requests, and that it is
+impossible to bring him to reason, I must first of all hear the
+whole of your conduct towards him; for you may have taken from
+him so much in the first instance that, in spite of a long series
+of restitution, a vast latitude for petition may still remain
+behind.</p>
+<p>There is a village, no matter where, in which the inhabitants,
+on one day in the year, sit down to a dinner prepared at the
+common expense: by an extraordinary piece of tyranny, which Lord
+Hawkesbury would call the wisdom of the village ancestors, the
+inhabitants of three of the streets, about a hundred years ago,
+seized upon the inhabitants of the fourth street, bound them hand
+and foot, laid them upon their backs, and compelled them to look
+on while the rest were stuffing themselves with beef and beer;
+the next year the inhabitants of the persecuted street, though
+they contributed an equal quota of the expense, were treated
+precisely in the same manner.&nbsp; The tyranny grew into a
+custom; and, as the manner of our nature is, it was considered as
+the most sacred of all duties to keep these poor fellows without
+their annual dinner.&nbsp; The village was so tenacious of this
+practice, that nothing could induce them to resign it; every
+enemy to it was looked upon as a disbeliever in Divine
+Providence, and any nefarious churchwarden who wished to succeed
+in his election had nothing to do but to represent his antagonist
+as an abolitionist, in order to frustrate his ambition, endanger
+his life, and throw the village into a state of the most dreadful
+commotion.&nbsp; By degrees, however, the obnoxious street grew
+to be so well peopled, and its inhabitants so firmly united, that
+their oppressors, more afraid of injustice, were more disposed to
+be just.&nbsp; At the next dinner they are unbound, the year
+after allowed to sit upright, then a bit of bread and a glass of
+water; till at last, after a long series of concessions, they are
+emboldened to ask, in pretty plain terms, that they may be
+allowed to sit down at the bottom of the table, and to fill their
+bellies as well as the rest.&nbsp; Forthwith a general cry of
+shame and scandal: &ldquo;Ten years ago, were you not laid upon
+your backs?&nbsp; Don&rsquo;t you remember what a great thing you
+thought it to get a piece of bread?&nbsp; How thankful you were
+for cheese parings?&nbsp; Have you forgotten that memorable era,
+when the lord of the manor interfered to obtain for you a slice
+of the public pudding?&nbsp; And now, with an audacity only
+equalled by your ingratitude, you have the impudence to ask for
+knives and forks, and to request, in terms too plain to be
+mistaken, that you may sit down to table with the rest, and be
+indulged even with beef and beer: there are not more than half a
+dozen dishes which we have reserved for ourselves; the rest has
+been thrown open to you in the utmost profusion; you have
+potatoes, and carrots, suet dumplings, sops in the pan, and
+delicious toast and water in incredible quantities.&nbsp; Beef,
+mutton, lamb, pork, and veal are ours; and if you were not the
+most restless and dissatisfied of human beings, you would never
+think of aspiring to enjoy them.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Is not this, my dainty Abraham, the very nonsense and the very
+insult which is talked to and practised upon the Catholics?&nbsp;
+You are surprised that men who have tasted of partial justice
+should ask for perfect justice; that he who has been robbed of
+coat and cloak will not be contented with the restitution of one
+of his garments.&nbsp; He would be a very lazy blockhead if he
+were content, and I (who, though an inhabitant of the village,
+have preserved, thank God, some sense of justice) most earnestly
+counsel these half-fed claimants to persevere in their just
+demands, till they are admitted to a more complete share of a
+dinner for which they pay as much as the others; and if they see
+a little attenuated lawyer squabbling at the head of their
+opponents, let them desire him to empty his pockets, and to pull
+out all the pieces of duck, fowl, and pudding which he has
+filched from the public feast, to carry home to his wife and
+children.</p>
+<p>You parade a great deal upon the vast concessions made by this
+country to the Irish before the Union.&nbsp; I deny that any
+voluntary concession was ever made by England to Ireland.&nbsp;
+What did Ireland ever ask that was granted?&nbsp; What did she
+ever demand that was not refused?&nbsp; How did she get her
+Mutiny Bill&mdash;a limited Parliament&mdash;a repeal of
+Poyning&rsquo;s Law&mdash;a constitution?&nbsp; Not by the
+concessions of England, but by her fears.&nbsp; When Ireland
+asked for all these things upon her knees, her petitions were
+rejected with Percevalism and contempt; when she demanded them
+with the voice of 60,000 armed men, they were granted with every
+mark of consternation and dismay.&nbsp; Ask of Lord Auckland the
+fatal consequences of trifling with such a people as the
+Irish.&nbsp; He himself was the organ of these refusals.&nbsp; As
+secretary to the Lord Lieutenant, the insolence and the tyranny
+of this country passed through his hands.&nbsp; Ask him if he
+remembers the consequences.&nbsp; Ask him if he has forgotten
+that memorable evening when he came down booted and mantled to
+the House of Commons, when he told the House he was about to set
+off for Ireland that night, and declared before God, if he did
+not carry with him a compliance with all their demands, Ireland
+was for ever lost to this country.&nbsp; The present generation
+have forgotten this; but I have not forgotten it; and I know,
+hasty and undignified as the submission of England then was, that
+Lord Auckland was right, that the delay of a single day might
+very probably have separated the two peoples for ever.&nbsp; The
+terms submission and fear are galling terms when applied from the
+lesser nation to the greater; but it is the plain historical
+truth, it is the natural consequence of injustice, it is the
+predicament in which every country places itself which leaves
+such a mass of hatred and discontent by its side.&nbsp; No empire
+is powerful enough to endure it; it would exhaust the strength of
+China, and sink it with all its mandarins and tea-kettles to the
+bottom of the deep.&nbsp; By refusing them justice now when you
+are strong enough to refuse them anything more than justice, you
+will act over again, with the Catholics, the same scene of mean
+and precipitate submission which disgraced you before America,
+and before the volunteers of Ireland.&nbsp; We shall live to hear
+the Hampstead Protestant pronouncing such extravagant panegyrics
+upon holy water, and paying such fulsome compliments to the
+thumbs and offals of departed saints, that parties will change
+sentiments, and Lord Henry Petty and Sam Whitbread take a spell
+at No Popery.&nbsp; The wisdom of Mr. Fox was alike employed in
+teaching his country justice when Ireland was weak, and dignity
+when Ireland was strong.&nbsp; We are fast pacing round the same
+miserable circle of ruin and imbecility.&nbsp; Alas! where is our
+guide?</p>
+<p>You say that Ireland is a millstone about our necks; that it
+would be better for us if Ireland were sunk at the bottom of the
+sea; that the Irish are a nation of irreclaimable savages and
+barbarians.&nbsp; How often have I heard these sentiments fall
+from the plump and thoughtless squire, and from the thriving
+English shopkeeper, who has never felt the rod of an Orange
+master upon his back.&nbsp; Ireland a millstone about your
+neck!&nbsp; Why is it not a stone of Ajax in your hand?&nbsp; I
+agree with you most cordially that, governed as Ireland now is,
+it would be a vast accession of strength if the waves of the sea
+were to rise and engulf her to-morrow.&nbsp; At this moment,
+opposed as we are to all the world, the annihilation of one of
+the most fertile islands on the face of the globe, containing
+five millions of human creatures, would be one of the most solid
+advantages which could happen to this country.&nbsp; I doubt very
+much, in spite of all the just abuse which has been lavished upon
+Bonaparte, whether there is any one of his conquered countries
+the blotting out of which would be as beneficial to him as the
+destruction of Ireland would be to us: of countries I speak
+differing in language from the French, little habituated to their
+intercourse, and inflamed with all the resentments of a
+recently-conquered people.&nbsp; Why will you attribute the
+turbulence of our people to any cause but the right&mdash;to any
+cause but your own scandalous oppression?&nbsp; If you tie your
+horse up to a gate, and beat him cruelly, is he vicious because
+he kicks you?&nbsp; If you have plagued and worried a mastiff dog
+for years, is he mad because he flies at you whenever he sees
+you?&nbsp; Hatred is an active, troublesome passion.&nbsp; Depend
+upon it, whole nations have always some reason for their
+hatred.&nbsp; Before you refer the turbulence of the Irish to
+incurable defects in their character, tell me if you have treated
+them as friends and equals?&nbsp; Have you protected their
+commerce?&nbsp; Have you respected their religion?&nbsp; Have you
+been as anxious for their freedom as your own?&nbsp; Nothing of
+all this.&nbsp; What then?&nbsp; Why you have confiscated the
+territorial surface of the country twice over: you have massacred
+and exported her inhabitants: you have deprived four-fifths of
+them of every civil privilege: you have at every period made her
+commerce and manufactures slavishly subordinate to your own: and
+yet the hatred which the Irish bear to you is the result of an
+original turbulence of character, and of a primitive, obdurate
+wildness, utterly incapable of civilisation.&nbsp; The
+embroidered inanities and the sixth-form effusions of Mr. Canning
+are really not powerful enough to make me believe this; nor is
+there any authority on earth (always excepting the Dean of Christ
+Church) which could make it credible to me.&nbsp; I am sick of
+Mr. Canning.&nbsp; There is not a &ldquo;ha&rsquo;porth of bread
+to all this sugar and sack.&rdquo;&nbsp; I love not the
+cretaceous and incredible countenance of his colleague.&nbsp; The
+only opinion in which I agree with these two gentlemen is that
+which they entertain of each other.&nbsp; I am sure that the
+insolence of Mr. Pitt, and the unbalanced accounts of Melville,
+were far better than the perils of this new ignorance:&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote><p>Nonne fuit sati&ugrave;s, ristes Amaryllidis
+iras<br />
+Atque superba pati fastidia? nonne Menalcan?<br />
+Quamvis ille <i>niger</i>?</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>In the midst of the most profound peace, the secret articles
+of the Treaty of Tilsit, in which the destruction of Ireland is
+resolved upon, induce you to rob the Danes of their fleet.&nbsp;
+After the expedition sailed comes the Treaty of Tilsit,
+containing no article, public or private, alluding to
+Ireland.&nbsp; The state of the world, you tell me, justified us
+in doing this.&nbsp; Just God! do we think only of the state of
+the world when there is an opportunity for robbery, for murder,
+and for plunder; and do we forget the state of the world when we
+are called upon to be wise, and good, and just?&nbsp; Does the
+state of the world never remind us that we have four millions of
+subjects whose injuries we ought to atone for, and whose
+affections we ought to conciliate?&nbsp; Does the state of the
+world never warn us to lay aside our infernal bigotry, and to arm
+every man who acknowledges a God, and can grasp a sword?&nbsp;
+Did it never occur to this administration that they might
+virtuously get hold of a force ten times greater than the force
+of the Danish fleet?&nbsp; Was there no other way of protecting
+Ireland but by bringing eternal shame upon Great Britain, and by
+making the earth a den of robbers?&nbsp; See what the men whom
+you have supplanted would have done.&nbsp; They would have
+rendered the invasion of Ireland impossible, by restoring to the
+Catholics their long-lost rights: they would have acted in such a
+manner that the French would neither have wished for invasion nor
+dared to attempt it: they would have increased the permanent
+strength of the country while they preserved its reputation
+unsullied.&nbsp; Nothing of this kind your friends have done,
+because they are solemnly pledged to do nothing of this kind;
+because, to tolerate all religions, and to equalise civil rights
+to all sects, is to oppose some of the worst passions of our
+nature&mdash;to plunder and to oppress is to gratify them
+all.&nbsp; They wanted the huzzas of mobs, and they have for ever
+blasted the fame of England to obtain them.&nbsp; Were the fleets
+of Holland, France, and Spain destroyed by larceny?&nbsp; You
+resisted the power of 150 sail of the line by sheer courage, and
+violated every principle of morals from the dread of fifteen
+hulks, while the expedition itself cost you three times more than
+the value of the larcenous matter brought away.&nbsp; The French
+trample on the laws of God and man, not for old cordage, but for
+kingdoms, and always take care to be well paid for their
+crimes.&nbsp; We contrive, under the present administration, to
+unite moral with intellectual deficiency, and to grow weaker and
+worse by the same action.&nbsp; If they had any evidence of the
+intended hostility of the Danes, why was it not produced?&nbsp;
+Why have the nations of Europe been allowed to feel an
+indignation against this country beyond the reach of all
+subsequent information?&nbsp; Are these times, do you imagine,
+when we can trifle with a year of universal hatred, dally with
+the curses of Europe, and then regain a lost character at
+pleasure, by the parliamentary perspirations of the Foreign
+Secretary, or the solemn asseverations of the pecuniary
+Rose?&nbsp; Believe me, Abraham, it is not under such ministers
+as these that the dexterity of honest Englishmen will ever equal
+the dexterity of French knaves; it is not in their presence that
+the serpent of Moses will ever swallow up the serpents of the
+magician.</p>
+<p>Lord Hawkesbury says that nothing is to be granted to the
+Catholics from fear.&nbsp; What! not even justice?&nbsp; Why
+not?&nbsp; There are four millions of disaffected people within
+twenty miles of your own coast.&nbsp; I fairly confess that the
+dread which I have of their physical power is with me a very
+strong motive for listening to their claims.&nbsp; To talk of not
+acting from fear, is mere parliamentary cant.&nbsp; From what
+motive but fear, I should be glad to know, have all the
+improvements in our constitution proceeded?&nbsp; I question if
+any justice has ever been done to large masses of mankind from
+any other motive.&nbsp; By what other motives can the plunderers
+of the Baltic suppose nations to be governed in their intercourse
+<i>with each other</i>?&nbsp; If I say, Give this people what
+they ask because it is just, do you think I should get ten people
+to listen to me?&nbsp; Would not the lesser of the two Jenkinsons
+be the first to treat me with contempt?&nbsp; The only true way
+to make the mass of mankind see the beauty of justice is by
+showing to them, in pretty plain terms, the consequences of
+injustice.&nbsp; If any body of French troops land in Ireland,
+the whole population of that country will rise against you to a
+man, and you could not possibly survive such an event three
+years.&nbsp; Such, from the bottom of my soul, do I believe to be
+the present state of that country; and so far does it appear to
+me to be impolitic and unstatesman-like to concede anything to
+such a danger, that if the Catholics, in addition to their
+present just demands, were to petition for the perpetual removal
+of the said Lord Hawkesbury from his Majesty&rsquo;s councils, I
+think, whatever might be the effect upon the destinies of Europe,
+and however it might retard our own individual destruction, that
+the prayer of the petition should be instantly complied
+with.&nbsp; Canning&rsquo;s crocodile tears should not move me;
+the hoops of the maids of honour should not hide him.&nbsp; I
+would tear him from the banisters of the back stairs, and plunge
+him in the fishy fumes of the dirtiest of all his Cinque
+Ports.</p>
+<h3>LETTER VII.</h3>
+<p><span class="smcap">Dear Abraham</span>,&mdash;In the
+correspondence which is passing between us, you are perpetually
+alluding to the Foreign Secretary; and in answer to the dangers
+of Ireland, which I am pressing upon your notice, you have
+nothing to urge but the confidence which you repose in the
+discretion and sound sense of this gentleman.&nbsp; I can only
+say, that I have listened to him long and often with the greatest
+attention; I have used every exertion in my power to take a fair
+measure of him, and it appears to me impossible to hear him upon
+any arduous topic without perceiving that he is eminently
+deficient in those solid and serious qualities upon which, and
+upon which alone, the confidence of a great country can properly
+repose.&nbsp; He sweats and labours, and works for sense, and Mr.
+Ellis seems always to think it is coming, but it does not come;
+the machine can&rsquo;t draw up what is not to be found in the
+spring; Providence has made him a light, jesting,
+paragraph-writing man, and that he will remain to his dying
+day.&nbsp; When he is jocular he is strong, when he is serious he
+is like Samson in a wig; any ordinary person is a match for him:
+a song, an ironical letter, a burlesque ode, an attack in the
+newspaper upon Nicoll&rsquo;s eye, a smart speech of twenty
+minutes, full of gross misrepresentations and clever turns,
+excellent language, a spirited manner, lucky quotation, success
+in provoking dull men, some half information picked up in Pall
+Mall in the morning; these are your friend&rsquo;s natural
+weapons; all these things he can do: here I allow him to be truly
+great; nay, I will be just, and go still further, if he would
+confine himself to these things, and consider the <i>facete</i>
+and the playful to be the basis of his character, he would, for
+that species of man, be universally regarded as a person of a
+very good understanding; call him a legislator, a reasoner, and
+the conductor of the affairs of a great nation, and it seems to
+me as absurd as if a butterfly were to teach bees to make
+honey.&nbsp; That he is an extraordinary writer of small poetry,
+and a diner out of the highest lustre, I do most readily
+admit.&nbsp; After George Selwyn, and perhaps Tickell, there has
+been no such man for this half-century.&nbsp; The Foreign
+Secretary is a gentleman, a respectable as well as a highly
+agreeable man in private life; but you may as well feed me with
+decayed potatoes as console me for the miseries of Ireland by the
+resources of his <i>sense</i> and his <i>discretion</i>.&nbsp; It
+is only the public situation which this gentleman holds which
+entitles me or induces me to say so much about him.&nbsp; He is a
+fly in amber, nobody cares about the fly; the only question is,
+How the devil did it get there?&nbsp; Nor do I attack him for the
+love of glory, but from the love of utility, as a burgomaster
+hunts a rat in a Dutch dyke, for fear it should flood a
+province.</p>
+<p>The friends of the Catholic question are, I observe, extremely
+embarrassed in arguing when they come to the loyalty of the Irish
+Catholics.&nbsp; As for me, I shall go straight forward to my
+object, and state what I have no manner of doubt, from an
+intimate knowledge of Ireland, to be the plain truth.&nbsp; Of
+the great Roman Catholic proprietors, and of the Catholic
+prelates, there may be a few, and but a few, who would follow the
+fortunes of England at all events: there is another set of men
+who, thoroughly detesting this country, have too much property
+and too much character to lose, not to wait for some very
+favourable event before they show themselves; but the great mass
+of Catholic population, upon the slightest appearance of a French
+force in that country, would rise upon you to a man.&nbsp; It is
+the most mistaken policy to conceal the plain truth.&nbsp; There
+is no loyalty among the Catholics: they detest you as their worst
+oppressors, and they will continue to detest you till you remove
+the cause of their hatred.&nbsp; It is in your power in six
+months&rsquo; time to produce a total revolution of opinions
+among this people; and in some future letter I will show you that
+this is clearly the case.&nbsp; At present, see what a dreadful
+in state Ireland is in.&nbsp; The common toast among the low
+Irish is, the feast of the <i>passover</i>.&nbsp; Some allusion
+to <i>Bonaparte</i>, in a play lately acted at Dublin, produced
+thunders of applause from the pit and the galleries; and a
+politician should not be inattentive to the public feelings
+expressed in theatres.&nbsp; Mr. Perceval thinks he has disarmed
+the Irish: he has no more disarmed the Irish than he has resigned
+a shilling of his own public emoluments.&nbsp; An Irish peasant
+fills the barrel of his gun full of tow dipped in oil, butters up
+the lock, buries it in a bog, and allows the Orange bloodhound to
+ransack his cottage at pleasure.&nbsp; Be just and kind to the
+Irish, and you will indeed disarm them; rescue them from the
+degraded servitude in which they are held by a handful of their
+own countrymen, and you will add four millions of brave and
+affectionate men to your strength.&nbsp; Nightly visits,
+Protestant inspectors, licenses to possess a pistol, or a knife
+and fork, the odious vigour of the <i>evangelical</i>
+Perceval&mdash;acts of Parliament, drawn up by some English
+attorney, to save you from the hatred of four millions of
+people&mdash;the guarding yourselves from universal disaffection
+by a police; a confidence in the little cunning of Bow Street,
+when you might rest your security upon the eternal basis of the
+best feelings: this is the meanness and madness to which nations
+are reduced when they lose sight of the first elements of
+justice, without which a country can be no more secure than it
+can be healthy without air.&nbsp; I sicken at such policy and
+such men.&nbsp; The fact is, the Ministers know nothing about the
+present state of Ireland; Mr. Perceval sees a few clergymen, Lord
+Castlereagh a few general officers, who take care, of course, to
+report what is pleasant rather than what is true.&nbsp; As for
+the joyous and lepid consul, he jokes upon neutral flags and
+frauds, jokes upon Irish rebels, jokes upon northern and western
+and southern foes, and gives himself no trouble upon any subject;
+nor is the mediocrity of the idolatrous deputy of the slightest
+use.&nbsp; Dissolved in grins, he reads no memorials upon the
+state of Ireland, listens to no reports, asks no questions, and
+is the</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;<i>Bourn</i> from whom no traveller
+returns.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>The danger of an immediate insurrection is now, I
+<i>believe</i>, blown over.&nbsp; You have so strong an army in
+Ireland, and the Irish are become so much more cunning from the
+last insurrection, that you may perhaps be tolerably secure just
+at present from that evil: but are you secure from the efforts
+which the French may make to throw a body of troops into Ireland?
+and do you consider that event to be difficult and
+improbable?&nbsp; From Brest Harbour to Cape St. Vincent, you
+have above three thousand miles of hostile sea coast, and twelve
+or fourteen harbours quite capable of containing a sufficient
+force for the powerful invasion of Ireland.&nbsp; The nearest of
+these harbours is not two days&rsquo; sail from the southern
+coast of Ireland, with a fair leading wind; and the furthest not
+ten.&nbsp; Five ships of the line, for so very short a passage,
+might carry five or six thousand troops with cannon and
+ammunition; and Ireland presents to their attack a southern coast
+of more than 500 miles, abounding in deep bays, admirable
+harbours, and disaffected inhabitants.&nbsp; Your blockading
+ships may be forced to come home for provisions and repairs, or
+they may be blown off in a gale of wind and compelled to bear
+away for their own coast; and you will observe that the very same
+wind which locks you up in the British Channel, when you are got
+there, is evidently favourable for the invasion of Ireland.&nbsp;
+And yet this is called Government, and the people huzza Mr.
+Perceval for continuing to expose his country day after day to
+such tremendous perils as these; cursing the men who would have
+given up a question in theology to have saved us from such a
+risk.&nbsp; The British empire at this moment is in the state of
+a peach-blossom&mdash;if the wind blows gently from one quarter,
+it survives; if furiously from the other, it perishes.&nbsp; A
+stiff breeze may set in from the north, the Rochefort squadron
+will be taken, and the Minister will be the most holy of men: if
+it comes from some other point, Ireland is gone; we curse
+ourselves as a set of monastic madmen, and call out for the
+unavailing satisfaction of Mr. Perceval&rsquo;s head.&nbsp; Such
+a state of political existence is scarcely credible: it is the
+action of a mad young fool standing upon one foot, and peeping
+down the crater of Mount &AElig;tna, not the conduct of a wise
+and sober people deciding upon their best and dearest interests:
+and in the name, the much-injured name, of heaven, what is it all
+for that we expose ourselves to these dangers?&nbsp; Is it that
+we may sell more muslin?&nbsp; Is it that we may acquire more
+territory?&nbsp; Is it that we may strengthen what we have
+already acquired?&nbsp; No; nothing of all this; but that one set
+of Irishmen may torture another set of Irishmen&mdash;that Sir
+Phelim O&rsquo;Callaghan may continue to whip Sir Toby
+M&rsquo;Tackle, his next door neighbour, and continue to ravish
+his Catholic daughters; and these are the measures which the
+honest and consistent Secretary supports; and this is the
+Secretary whose genius in the estimation of Brother Abraham is to
+extinguish the genius of Bonaparte.&nbsp; Pompey was killed by a
+slave, Goliath smitten by a stripling, Pyrrhus died by the hand
+of a woman; tremble, thou great Gaul, from whose head an armed
+Minerva leaps forth in the hour of danger; tremble, thou scourge
+of God, a pleasant man is come out against thee, and thou shalt
+be laid low by a joker of jokes, and he shall talk his pleasant
+talk against thee, and thou shalt be no more!</p>
+<p>You tell me, in spite of all this parade of sea-coast,
+Bonaparte has neither ships nor sailors: but this is a
+mistake.&nbsp; He has not ships and sailors to contest the empire
+of the seas with Great Britain, but there remains quite
+sufficient of the navies of France, Spain, Holland, and Denmark,
+for these short excursions and invasions.&nbsp; Do you think,
+too, that Bonaparte does not add to his navy every year?&nbsp; Do
+you suppose, with all Europe at his feet, that he can find any
+difficulty in obtaining timber, and that money will not procure
+for him any quantity of naval stores he may want?&nbsp; The mere
+machine, the empty ship, he can build as well, and as quickly, as
+you can; and though he may not find enough of practised sailors
+to man large fighting-fleets&mdash;it is not possible to conceive
+that he can want sailors for such sort of purposes as I have
+stated.&nbsp; He is at present the despotic monarch of above
+twenty thousand miles of sea-coast, and yet you suppose he cannot
+procure sailors for the invasion of Ireland.&nbsp; Believe, if
+you please, that such a fleet met at sea by any number of our
+ships at all comparable to them in point of force, would be
+immediately taken, let it be so; I count nothing upon their power
+of resistance, only upon their power of escaping
+unobserved.&nbsp; If experience has taught us anything, it is the
+impossibility of perpetual blockades.&nbsp; The instances are
+innumerable, during the course of this war, where whole fleets
+have sailed in and out of harbour, in spite of every vigilance
+used to prevent it.&nbsp; I shall only mention those cases where
+Ireland is concerned.&nbsp; In December, 1796, seven ships of the
+line, and ten transports, reached Bantry Bay from Brest, without
+having seen an English ship in their passage.&nbsp; It blew a
+storm when they were off shore, and therefore England still
+continues to be an independent kingdom.&nbsp; You will observe
+that at the very time the French fleet sailed out of Brest
+Harbour, Admiral Colpoys was cruising off there with a powerful
+squadron, and still, from the particular circumstances of the
+weather, found it impossible to prevent the French from coming
+out.&nbsp; During the time that Admiral Colpoys was cruising off
+Brest, Admiral Richery, with six ships of the line, passed him,
+and got safe into the harbour.&nbsp; At the very moment when the
+French squadron was lying in Bantry Bay, Lord Bridport with his
+fleet was locked up by a foul wind in the Channel, and for
+several days could not stir to the assistance of Ireland.&nbsp;
+Admiral Colpoys, totally unable to find the French fleet, came
+home.&nbsp; Lord Bridport, at the change of the wind, cruised for
+them in vain, and they got safe back to Brest, without having
+seen a single one of those floating bulwarks, the possession of
+which we believe will enable us with impunity to set justice and
+common sense at defiance.</p>
+<p>Such is the miserable and precarious state of an anemocracy,
+of a people who put their trust in hurricanes, and are governed
+by wind.&nbsp; In August, 1798, three forty-gun frigates landed
+1,100 men under Humbert, making the passage from Rochelle to
+Killala without seeing any English ship.&nbsp; In October of the
+same year, four French frigates anchored in Killala Bay with
+2,000 troops; and though they did not land their troops, they
+returned to France in safety.&nbsp; In the same month, a
+line-of-battle ship, eight stout frigates, and a brig, all full
+of troops and stores, reached the coast of Ireland, and were
+fortunately, in sight of land, destroyed, after an obstinate
+engagement, by Sir John Warren.</p>
+<p>If you despise the little troop which, in these numerous
+experiments, did make good its landing, take with you, if you
+please, this <i>pr&egrave;cis</i> of its exploits: eleven hundred
+men, commanded by a soldier raised from the ranks, put to rout a
+select army of 6,000 men, commanded by General Lake, seized their
+ordnance, ammunition, and stores, advanced 150 miles into a
+country containing an armed force of 150,000 men, and at last
+surrendered to the Viceroy, an experienced general, gravely and
+cautiously advancing at the head of all his chivalry and of an
+immense army to oppose him.&nbsp; You must excuse these details
+about Ireland, but it appears to me to be of all other subjects
+the most important.&nbsp; If we conciliate Ireland, we can do
+nothing amiss; if we do not, we can do nothing well.&nbsp; If
+Ireland was friendly, we might equally set at defiance the
+talents of Bonaparte and the blunders of his rival, Mr. Canning;
+we could then support the ruinous and silly bustle of our useless
+expeditions, and the almost incredible ignorance of our
+commercial orders in council.&nbsp; Let the present
+administration give up but this one point, and there is nothing
+which I would not consent to grant them.&nbsp; Mr. Perceval shall
+have full liberty to insult the tomb of Mr. Fox, and to torment
+every eminent Dissenter in Great Britain; Lord Camden shall have
+large boxes of plums; Mr. Rose receive permission to prefix to
+his name the appellative of virtuous; and to the Viscount
+Castlereagh a round sum of ready money shall be well and truly
+paid into his hand.&nbsp; Lastly, what remains to Mr. George
+Canning, but that he ride up and down Pall Mall glorious upon a
+white horse, and that they cry out before him, Thus shall it be
+done to the statesman who hath written &ldquo;The Needy
+Knife-Grinder,&rdquo; and the German play?&nbsp; Adieu only for
+the present; you shall soon hear from me again; it is a subject
+upon which I cannot long be silent.</p>
+<h2>LETTER VIII.</h2>
+<p><span class="smcap">Nothing</span> can be more erroneous than
+to suppose that Ireland is not bigger than the Isle of Wight, or
+of more consequence than Guernsey or Jersey; and yet I am almost
+inclined to believe, from the general supineness which prevails
+here respecting the dangerous state of that country, that such is
+the rank which it holds in our statistical tables.&nbsp; I have
+been writing to you a great deal about Ireland, and perhaps it
+may be of some use to state to you concisely the nature and
+resources of the country which has been the subject of our long
+and strange correspondence.&nbsp; There were returned, as I have
+before observed, to the hearth tax in 1791, 701,102 houses, which
+Mr. Newenham shows from unquestionable documents to be nearly
+80,000 below the real number of houses in that country.&nbsp;
+There are 27,457 square English miles in Ireland, and more than
+five millions of people.</p>
+<p>By the last survey it appears that the inhabited houses in
+England and Wales amount to 1,574,902, and the population to
+9,343,578, which gives an average of 5.875 to each house, in a
+country where the density of population is certainly less
+considerable than in Ireland.&nbsp; It is commonly supposed that
+two-fifths of the army and navy are Irishmen, at periods when
+political disaffection does not avert the Catholics from the
+service.&nbsp; The current value of Irish exports in 1807 was
+&pound;9,314,854 17s. 7d.; a state of commerce about equal to the
+commerce of England in the middle of the reign of George
+II.&nbsp; The tonnage of ships entered inward and cleared outward
+in the trade of Ireland, in 1807, amounted to 1,567,430
+tons.&nbsp; The quantity of home spirits exported amounted to
+10,284 gallons in 1796, and to 930,800 gallons in 1804.&nbsp; Of
+the exports which I have stated, provisions amounted to four
+millions, and linen to about four millions and a half.&nbsp;
+There was exported from Ireland, upon an average of two years
+ending in January, 1804, 591,274 barrels of barley, oats, and
+wheat; and by weight 910,848 cwts. of flour, oatmeal, barley,
+oats, and wheat.&nbsp; The amount of butter exported in 1804,
+from Ireland, was worth, in money, &pound;1,704,680
+sterling.&nbsp; The importation of ale and beer, from the immense
+manufactures now carrying on of these articles, was diminished to
+3,209 barrels, in the year 1804, from 111,920 barrels, which was
+the average importation per annum, taking from three years ending
+in 1792; and at present there is an export trade of porter.&nbsp;
+On an average of three years, ending March, 1783, there were
+imported into Ireland, of cotton wool, 3,326 cwts., of cotton
+yarn, 5,405 lbs.; but on an average of three years, ending
+January, 1803, there were imported, of the first article, 13,159
+cwts., and of the latter, 628,406 lbs.&nbsp; It is impossible to
+conceive any manufacture more flourishing.&nbsp; The export of
+linen has increased in Ireland from 17,776,862 yards, the average
+in 1770, to 43,534,971 yards, the amount in 1805.&nbsp; The
+tillage of Ireland has more than trebled within the last
+twenty-one years.&nbsp; The importation of coals has increased
+from 230,000 tons in 1783, to 417,030 in 1804; of tobacco, from
+3,459,861 lbs. in 1783, to 6,611,543 in 1804; of tea, from
+1,703,855 lbs. in 1783, to 3,358,256 in 1804; of sugar, from
+143,117 cwts. in 1782, to 309,076 in 1804.&nbsp; Ireland now
+supports a funded debt of above 64 millions, and it is computed
+that more than three millions&rsquo; of money are annually
+remitted to Irish absentees resident in this country.&nbsp; In
+Mr. Foster&rsquo;s report, of 100 folio pages, presented to the
+House of Commons in the year 1806, the total expenditure of
+Ireland is stated at &pound;9,760,013.&nbsp; Ireland has
+increased about two-thirds in its population within twenty-five
+years, and yet, and in about the same space of time, its exports
+of beef, bullocks, cows, pork, swine, butter, wheat, barley, and
+oats, collectively taken, have doubled; and this, in spite of two
+years&rsquo; famine, and the presence of an immense army, that is
+always at hand to guard the most valuable appanage of our empire
+from joining our most inveterate enemies.&nbsp; Ireland has the
+greatest possible facilities for carrying on commerce with the
+whole of Europe.&nbsp; It contains, within a circuit of 750
+miles, 66 secure harbours, and presents a western frontier
+against Great Britain, reaching from the Firth of Clyde north to
+the Bristol Channel south, and varying in distance from 20 to 100
+miles; so that the subjugation of Ireland would compel us to
+guard with ships and soldiers a new line of coast, certainly
+amounting, with all its sinuosities, to more than 700
+miles&mdash;an addition of polemics, in our present state of
+hostility with all the world, which must highly gratify the
+vigorists, and give them an ample opportunity of displaying that
+foolish energy upon which their claims to distinction are
+founded.&nbsp; Such is the country which the Right Reverend the
+Chancellor of the Exchequer would drive into the arms of France,
+and for the conciliation of which we are requested to wait, as if
+it were one of those sinecure places which were given to Mr.
+Perceval snarling at the breast, and which cannot be abolished
+till his decease.</p>
+<p>How sincerely and fervently have I often wished that the
+Emperor of the French had thought as Mr. Spencer Perceval does
+upon the subject of government; that he had entertained doubts
+and scruples upon the propriety of admitting the Protestants to
+an equality of rights with the Catholics, and that he had left in
+the middle of his empire these vigorous seeds of hatred and
+disaffection!&nbsp; But the world was never yet conquered by a
+blockhead.&nbsp; One of the very first measures we saw him
+recurring to was the complete establishment of religious liberty:
+if his subjects fought and paid as he pleased, he allowed them to
+believe as they pleased: the moment I saw this, my best hopes
+were lost.&nbsp; I perceived in a moment the kind of man we had
+to do with.&nbsp; I was well aware of the miserable ignorance and
+folly of this country upon the subject of toleration; and every
+year has been adding to the success of that game, which it was
+clear he had the will and the ability to play against us.</p>
+<p>You say Bonaparte is not in earnest upon the subject of
+religion, and that this is the cause of his tolerant spirit; but
+is it possible you can intend to give us such dreadful and
+unamiable notions of religion.&nbsp; Are we to understand that
+the moment a man is sincere he is narrow-minded; that persecution
+is the child of belief; and that a desire to leave all men in the
+quiet and unpunished exercise of their own creed can only exist
+in the mind of an infidel?&nbsp; Thank God! I know many men whose
+principles are as firm as they are expanded, who cling
+tenaciously to their own modification of the Christian faith,
+without the slightest disposition to force that modification upon
+other people.&nbsp; If Bonaparte is liberal in subjects of
+religion because he has no religion, is this a reason why we
+should be illiberal because we are Christians?&nbsp; If he owes
+this excellent quality to a vice, is that any reason why we may
+not owe it to a virtue?&nbsp; Toleration is a great good, and a
+good to be imitated, let it come from whom it will.&nbsp; If a
+sceptic is tolerant, it only shows that he is not foolish in
+practice as well as erroneous in theory.&nbsp; If a religious man
+is tolerant, it evinces that he is religious from thought and
+inquiry, because he exhibits in his conduct one of the most
+beautiful and important consequences of a religious mind&mdash;an
+inviolable charity to all the honest varieties of human
+opinion.</p>
+<p>Lord Sidmouth, and all the anti-Catholic people, little
+foresee that they will hereafter be the sport of the antiquary;
+that their prophecies of ruin and destruction from Catholic
+emancipation will be clapped into the notes of some quaint
+history, and be matter of pleasantry even to the sedulous
+housewife and the rural dean.&nbsp; There is always a copious
+supply of Lord Sidmouths in the world; nor is there one single
+source of human happiness against which they have not uttered the
+most lugubrious predictions.&nbsp; Turnpike roads, navigable
+canals, inoculation, hops, tobacco, the Reformation, the
+Revolution&mdash;there are always a set of worthy and
+moderately-gifted men, who bawl out death and ruin upon every
+valuable change which the varying aspect of human affairs
+absolutely and imperiously requires.&nbsp; I have often thought
+that it would be extremely useful to make a collection of the
+hatred and abuse that all those changes have experienced, which
+are now admitted to be marked improvements in our
+condition.&nbsp; Such a history might make folly a little more
+modest, and suspicious of its own decisions.</p>
+<p>Ireland, you say, since the Union is to be considered as a
+part of the whole kingdom; and therefore, however Catholics may
+predominate in that particular spot, yet, taking the whole empire
+together, they are to be considered as a much more insignificant
+quota of the population.&nbsp; Consider them in what light you
+please, as part of the whole, or by themselves, or in what manner
+may be most consentaneous to the devices of your holy
+mind&mdash;I say in a very few words, if you do not relieve these
+people from the civil incapacities to which they are exposed, you
+will lose them; or you must employ great strength and much
+treasure in watching over them.&nbsp; In the present state of the
+world you can afford to do neither the one nor the other.&nbsp;
+Having stated this, I shall leave you to be ruined, Puffendorf in
+hand (as Mr. Secretary Canning says), and to lose Ireland, just
+as you have found out what proportion the aggrieved people should
+bear to the whole population before their calamities meet with
+redress.&nbsp; As for your parallel cases, I am no more afraid of
+deciding upon them than I am upon their prototype.&nbsp; If ever
+any one heresy should so far spread itself over the principality
+of Wales that the Established Church were left in a minority of
+one to four; if you had subjected these heretics to very severe
+civil privations; if the consequence of such privations were a
+universal state of disaffection among that caseous and wrathful
+people; and if at the same time you were at war with all the
+world, how can you doubt for a moment that I would instantly
+restore them to a state of the most complete civil liberty?&nbsp;
+What matters it under what name you put the same case?&nbsp;
+Common sense is not changed by appellations.&nbsp; I have said
+how I would act to Ireland, and I would act so to all the
+world.</p>
+<p>I admit that, to a certain degree, the Government will lose
+the affections of the Orangemen by emancipating the Catholics;
+much less, however, at present, than three years past.&nbsp; The
+few men, who have ill-treated the whole crew, live in constant
+terror that the oppressed people will rise upon them and carry
+the ship into Brest:&mdash;they begin to find that it is a very
+tiresome thing to sleep every night with cocked pistols under
+their pillows, and to breakfast, dine, and sup with drawn
+hangers.&nbsp; They suspect that the privilege of beating and
+kicking the rest of the sailors is hardly worth all this anxiety,
+and that if the ship does ever fall into the hands of the
+disaffected, all the cruelties which they have experienced will
+be thoroughly remembered and amply repaid.&nbsp; To a short
+period of disaffection among the Orangemen I confess I should not
+much object: my love of poetical justice does carry me as far as
+that; one summer&rsquo;s whipping, only one: the thumb-screw for
+a short season; a little light easy torturing between Ladyday and
+Michaelmas; a short specimen of Mr. Perceval&rsquo;s
+rigour.&nbsp; I have malice enough to ask this slight atonement
+for the groans and shrieks of the poor Catholics, unheard by any
+human tribunal, but registered by the Angel of God against their
+Protestant and enlightened oppressors.</p>
+<p>Besides, if you who count ten so often can count five, you
+must perceive that it is better to have four friends and one
+enemy than four enemies and one friend; and the more violent the
+hatred of the Orangemen, the more certain the reconciliation of
+the Catholics.&nbsp; The disaffection of the Orangemen will be
+the Irish rainbow: when I see it I shall be sure that the storm
+is over.</p>
+<p>If these incapacities, from which the Catholics ask to be
+relieved, were to the mass of them only a mere feeling of pride,
+and if the question were respecting the attainment of privileges
+which could be of importance only to the highest of the sect, I
+should still say that the pride of the mass was very naturally
+wounded by the degradation of their superiors.&nbsp; Indignity to
+George Rose would be felt by the smallest nummary gentleman in
+the king&rsquo;s employ; and Mr. John Bannister could not be
+indifferent to anything which happened to Mr. Canning.&nbsp; But
+the truth is, it is a most egregious mistake to suppose that the
+Catholics are contending merely for the fringes and feathers of
+their chiefs.&nbsp; I will give you a list in my next Letter of
+those privations which are represented to be of no consequence to
+anybody but Lord Fingal, and some twenty or thirty of the
+principal persons of their sect.&nbsp; In the meantime, adieu,
+and be wise.</p>
+<h3>LETTER IX.</h3>
+<p><span class="smcap">Dear Abraham</span>,&mdash;No Catholic can
+be chief Governor or Governor of this kingdom, Chancellor or
+Keeper of the Great Seal, Lord High Treasurer, Chief of any of
+the Courts of Justice, Chancellor of the Exchequer, Puisne Judge,
+Judge in the Admiralty, Master of the Rolls, Secretary of State,
+Keeper of the Privy Seal, Vice-Treasurer or his Deputy, Teller or
+Cashier of Exchequer, Auditor or General, Governor or Custos
+Rotulorum of Counties, Chief Governor&rsquo;s Secretary, Privy
+Councillor, King&rsquo;s Counsel, Serjeant, Attorney,
+Solicitor-General, Master in Chancery, Provost or Fellow of
+Trinity College, Dublin, Postmaster-General, Master and
+Lieutenant-General of Ordnance, Commander-in-Chief, General on
+the Staff, Sheriff, Sub-Sheriff, Mayor, Bailiff, Recorder,
+Burgess, or any other officer in a City, or a Corporation.&nbsp;
+No Catholic can be guardian to a Protestant, and no priest
+guardian at all; no Catholic can be a gamekeeper, or have for
+sale, or otherwise, any arms or warlike stores; no Catholic can
+present to a living, unless he choose to turn Jew in order to
+obtain that privilege; the pecuniary qualification of Catholic
+jurors is made higher than that of Protestants, and no relaxation
+of the ancient rigorous code is permitted, unless to those who
+shall take an oath prescribed by 13 and 14 George III.&nbsp; Now
+if this is not picking the plums out of the pudding and leaving
+the mere batter to the Catholics, I know not what is.&nbsp; If it
+were merely the Privy Council, it would be (I allow) nothing but
+a point of honour for which the mass of Catholics were
+contending, the honour of being chief-mourners or pall-bearers to
+the country; but surely no man will contend that every barrister
+may not speculate upon the possibility of being a Puisne Judge;
+and that every shopkeeper must not feel himself injured by his
+exclusion from borough offices.</p>
+<p>One of the greatest practical evils which the Catholics suffer
+in Ireland is their exclusion from the offices of Sheriff and
+Deputy Sheriff.&nbsp; Nobody who is unacquainted with Ireland can
+conceive the obstacles which this opposes to the fair
+administration of justice.&nbsp; The formation of juries is now
+entirely in the hands of the Protestants; the lives, liberties,
+and properties of the Catholics in the hands of the juries; and
+this is the arrangement for the administration of justice in a
+country where religious prejudices are inflamed to the greatest
+degree of animosity!&nbsp; In this country, if a man be a
+foreigner, if he sell slippers, and sealing wax, and artificial
+flowers, we are so tender of human life that we take care half
+the number of persons who are to decide upon his fate should be
+men of similar prejudices and feelings with himself: but a poor
+Catholic in Ireland may be tried by twelve Percevals, and
+destroyed according to the manner of that gentleman in the name
+of the Lord, and with all the insulting forms of justice.&nbsp; I
+do not go the length of saying that deliberate and wilful
+injustice is done.&nbsp; I have no doubt that the Orange Deputy
+Sheriff thinks it would be a most unpardonable breach of his duty
+if he did not summon a Protestant panel.&nbsp; I can easily
+believe that the Protestant panel may conduct themselves very
+conscientiously in hanging the gentlemen of the crucifix; but I
+blame the law which does not guard the Catholic against the
+probable tenor of those feelings which must unconsciously
+influence the judgments of mankind.&nbsp; I detest that state of
+society which extends unequal degrees of protection to different
+creeds and persuasions; and I cannot describe to you the contempt
+I feel for a man who, calling himself a statesman, defends a
+system which fills the heart of every Irishman with treason, and
+makes his allegiance prudence, not choice.</p>
+<p>I request to know if the vestry taxes in Ireland are a mere
+matter of romantic feeling which can affect only the Earl of
+Fingal?&nbsp; In a parish where there are four thousand Catholics
+and fifty Protestants, the Protestants may meet together in a
+vestry meeting at which no Catholic has the right to vote, and
+tax all the lands in the parish 1s. 6d. per acre, or in the
+pound, I forget which, for the repairs of the church&mdash;and
+how has the necessity of these repairs been ascertained?&nbsp; A
+Protestant plumber has discovered that it wants new leading; a
+Protestant carpenter is convinced the timbers are not sound; and
+the glazier who hates holy water (as an accoucheur hates
+celibacy, because he gets nothing by it) is employed to put in
+new sashes.</p>
+<p>The grand juries in Ireland are the great scene of
+jobbing.&nbsp; They have a power of making a county rate to a
+considerable extent for roads, bridges, and other objects of
+general accommodation.&nbsp; &ldquo;You suffer the road to be
+brought through my park, and I will have the bridge constructed
+in a situation where it will make a beautiful object to your
+house.&nbsp; You do my job, and I will do yours.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+These are the sweet and interesting subjects which occasionally
+occupy Milesian gentlemen while they are attendant upon this
+grand inquest of justice.&nbsp; But there is a religion, it
+seems, even in jobs; and it will be highly gratifying to Mr.
+Perceval to learn that no man in Ireland who believes in seven
+sacraments can carry a public road, or bridge, one yard out of
+the direction most beneficial to the public, and that nobody can
+cheat the public who does not expound the Scriptures in the
+purest and most orthodox manner.&nbsp; This will give pleasure to
+Mr. Perceval: but, from his unfairness upon these topics I appeal
+to the justice and the proper feelings of Mr. Huskisson.&nbsp; I
+ask him if the human mind can experience a more dreadful
+sensation than to see its own jobs refused, and the jobs of
+another religion perpetually succeeding?&nbsp; I ask him his
+opinion of a jobless faith, of a creed which dooms a man through
+life to a lean and plunderless integrity.&nbsp; He knows that
+human nature cannot and will not bear it; and if we were to paint
+a political Tartarus, it would be an endless series of snug
+expectations and cruel disappointments.&nbsp; These are a few of
+many dreadful inconveniences which the Catholics of all ranks
+suffer from the laws by which they are at present
+oppressed.&nbsp; Besides, look at human nature: what is the
+history of all professions?&nbsp; Joel is to be brought up to the
+bar: has Mrs. Plymley the slightest doubt of his being
+Chancellor?&nbsp; Do not his two shrivelled aunts live in the
+certainty of seeing him in that situation, and of cutting out
+with their own hands his equity habiliments?&nbsp; And I could
+name a certain minister of the Gospel who does not, in the bottom
+of his heart, much differ from these opinions.&nbsp; Do you think
+that the fathers and mothers of the holy Catholic Church are not
+as absurd as Protestant papas and mammas?&nbsp; The probability I
+admit to be, in each particular case, that the sweet little
+blockhead will in fact never get a brief;&mdash;but I will
+venture to say, there is not a parent from the Giant&rsquo;s
+Causeway to Bantry Bay who does not conceive that his child is
+the unfortunate victim of the exclusion, and that nothing short
+of positive law could prevent his own dear, pre-eminent Paddy
+from rising to the highest honours of the State.&nbsp; So with
+the army and parliament; in fact, few are excluded; but, in
+imagination, all: you keep twenty or thirty Catholics out, and
+you lose the affections of four millions; and, let me tell you,
+that recent circumstances have by no means tended to diminish in
+the minds of men that hope of elevation beyond their own rank
+which is so congenial to our nature: from pleading for John Roe
+to taxing John Bull, from jesting for Mr. Pitt and writing in the
+<i>Anti-Jacobin</i>, to managing the affairs of
+Europe&mdash;these are leaps which seem to justify the fondest
+dreams of mothers and of aunts.</p>
+<p>I do not say that the disabilities to which the Catholics are
+exposed amount to such intolerable grievances, that the strength
+and industry of a nation are overwhelmed by them: the increasing
+prosperity of Ireland fully demonstrates to the contrary.&nbsp;
+But I repeat again, what I have often stated in the course of our
+correspondence, that your laws against the Catholics are exactly
+in that state in which you have neither the benefits of rigour
+nor of liberality: every law which prevented the Catholic from
+gaining strength and wealth is repealed; every law which can
+irritate remains; if you were determined to insult the Catholics,
+you should have kept them weak; if you resolved to give them
+strength, you should have ceased to insult them&mdash;at present
+your conduct is pure, unadulterated folly.</p>
+<p>Lord Hawkesbury says, &ldquo;We heard nothing about the
+Catholics till we began to mitigate the laws against them; when
+we relieved them in part from this oppression they began to be
+disaffected.&rdquo;&nbsp; This is very true; but it proves just
+what I have said, that you have either done too much or too
+little; and as there lives not, I hope, upon earth, so depraved a
+courtier that he would load the Catholics with their ancient
+chains, what absurdity it is, then, not to render their
+dispositions friendly, when you leave their arms and legs
+free!</p>
+<p>You know, and many Englishmen know, what passes in China; but
+nobody knows or cares what passes in Ireland.&nbsp; At the
+beginning of the present reign no Catholic could realise
+property, or carry on any business; they were absolutely
+annihilated, had had no more agency in the country than so many
+trees.&nbsp; They were like Lord Mulgrave&rsquo;s eloquence and
+Lord Camden&rsquo;s wit; the legislative bodies did not know of
+their existence.&nbsp; For these twenty-five years last past the
+Catholics have been engaged in commerce; within that period the
+commerce of Ireland has doubled&mdash;there are four Catholics at
+work for one Protestant, and eight Catholics at work for one
+Episcopalian.&nbsp; Of course, the proportion which Catholic
+wealth bears to Protestant wealth is every year altering rapidly
+in favour of the Catholics.&nbsp; I have already told you what
+their purchases of land were the last year: since that period I
+have been at some pains to find out the actual state of the
+Catholic wealth: it is impossible upon such a subject to arrive
+at complete accuracy; but I have good reason to believe that
+there are at present 2,000 Catholics in Ireland, possessing an
+income of &pound;500 and upwards, many of these with incomes of
+one, two, three, and four thousand, and some amounting to fifteen
+and twenty thousand per annum:&mdash;and this is the kingdom, and
+these the people, for whose conciliation we are to wait Heaven
+knows when, and Lord Hawkesbury why!&nbsp; As for me, I never
+think of the situation of Ireland without feeling the same
+necessity for immediate interference as I should do if I saw
+blood flowing from a great artery.&nbsp; I rush towards it with
+the instinctive rapidity of a man desirous of preventing death,
+and have no other feeling but that in a few seconds the patient
+may be no more.</p>
+<p>I could not help smiling, in the times of No Popery, to
+witness the loyal indignation of many persons at the attempt made
+by the last ministry to do something for the relief of
+Ireland.&nbsp; The general cry in the country was, that they
+would not see their beloved Monarch used ill in his old age, and
+that they would stand by him to the last drop of their
+blood.&nbsp; I respect good feelings, however erroneous be the
+occasions on which they display themselves; and therefore I saw
+in all this as much to admire as to blame.&nbsp; It was a species
+of affection, however, which reminded me very forcibly of the
+attachment displayed by the servants of the Russian ambassador at
+the beginning of the last century.&nbsp; His Excellency happened
+to fall down in a kind of apoplectic fit, when he was paying a
+morning visit in the house of an acquaintance.&nbsp; The
+confusion was of course very great, and messengers were
+despatched in every direction to find a surgeon: who, upon his
+arrival, declared that his Excellency must be immediately
+blooded, and prepared himself forthwith to perform the operation:
+the barbarous servants of the embassy, who were there in great
+numbers, no sooner saw the surgeon prepared to wound the arm of
+their master with a sharp, shining instrument, than they drew
+their swords, put themselves in an attitude of defence, and swore
+in pure Sclavonic, &ldquo;that they would murder any man who
+attempted to do him the slightest injury: he had been a very good
+master to them, and they would not desert him in his misfortunes,
+or suffer his blood to be shed while he was off his guard, and
+incapable of defending himself.&rdquo;&nbsp; By good fortune, the
+secretary arrived about this period of the dispute, and his
+Excellency, relieved from superfluous blood and perilous
+affection, was, after much difficulty, restored to life.</p>
+<p>There is an argument brought forward with some appearance of
+plausibility in the House of Commons, which certainly merits an
+answer: You know that the Catholics now vote for members of
+parliament in Ireland, and that they outnumber the Protestants in
+a very great proportion; if you allow Catholics to sit in
+parliament, religion will be found to influence votes more than
+property, and the greater part of the 100 Irish members who are
+returned to parliament will be Catholics.&nbsp; Add to these the
+Catholic members who are returned in England, and you will have a
+phalanx of heretical strength which every minister will be
+compelled to respect, and occasionally to conciliate by
+concessions incompatible with the interests of the Protestant
+Church.&nbsp; The fact is, however, that you are at this moment
+subjected to every danger of this kind which you can possibly
+apprehend hereafter.&nbsp; If the spiritual interests of the
+voters are more powerful than their temporal interests, they can
+bind down their representatives to support any measures
+favourable to the Catholic religion, and they can change the
+objects of their choice till they have found Protestant members
+(as they easily may do) perfectly obedient to their wishes.&nbsp;
+If the superior possessions of the Protestants prevent the
+Catholics from uniting for a common political object, then the
+danger you fear cannot exist: if zeal, on the contrary, gets the
+better of acres, then the danger at present exists, from the
+right of voting already given to the Catholics, and it will not
+be increased by allowing them to sit in parliament.&nbsp; There
+are, as nearly as I can recollect, thirty seats in Ireland for
+cities and counties, where the Protestants are the most numerous,
+and where the members returned must of course be
+Protestants.&nbsp; In the other seventy representations the
+wealth of the Protestants is opposed to the number of the
+Catholics; and if all the seventy members returned were of the
+Catholic persuasion, they must still plot the destruction of our
+religion in the midst of 588 Protestants.&nbsp; Such terrors
+would disgrace a cook-maid, or a toothless aunt&mdash;when they
+fall from the lips of bearded and senatorial men, they are
+nauseous, antiperistaltic, and emetical.</p>
+<p>How can you for a moment doubt of the rapid effects which
+would be produced by the emancipation?&nbsp; In the first place,
+to my certain knowledge the Catholics have long since expressed
+to his Majesty&rsquo;s Ministers their perfect readiness <i>to
+vest in his Majesty</i>, <i>either with the consent of the
+Pope</i>, <i>or without it if it cannot be obtained</i>, <i>the
+nomination of the Catholic prelacy</i>.&nbsp; The Catholic
+prelacy in Ireland consists of twenty-six bishops and the warden
+of Galway, a dignitary enjoying Catholic jurisdiction.&nbsp; The
+number of Roman Catholic priests in Ireland exceeds one
+thousand.&nbsp; The expenses of his peculiar worship are, to a
+substantial farmer or mechanic, five shillings per annum; to a
+labourer (where he is not entirely excused) one shilling per
+annum; this includes the contribution of the whole family, and
+for this the priest is bound to attend them when sick, and to
+confess them when they apply to him; he is also to keep his
+chapel in order, to celebrate divine service, and to preach on
+Sundays and holydays.</p>
+<p>In the northern district a priest gains from &pound;30 to
+&pound;50; in the other parts of Ireland from &pound;60 to
+&pound;90 per annum.&nbsp; The best paid Catholic bishops receive
+about &pound;400 per annum; the others from &pound;300 to
+&pound;350.&nbsp; My plan is very simple: I would have 300
+Catholic parishes at &pound;100 per annum, 300 at &pound;200 per
+annum, and 400 at &pound;300 per annum; this, for the whole
+thousand parishes, would amount to &pound;190,000.&nbsp; To the
+prelacy I would allot &pound;20,000 in unequal proportions, from
+&pound;1,000 to &pound;500; and I would appropriate &pound;40,000
+more for the support of Catholic schools, and the repairs of
+Catholic churches; the whole amount of which sum is
+&pound;250,000, about the expense of three days of one of our
+genuine, good English <i>just and necessary wars</i>.&nbsp; The
+clergy should all receive their salaries at the Bank of Ireland,
+and I would place the whole patronage in the hands of the
+Crown.&nbsp; Now, I appeal to any human being, except Spencer
+Perceval, Esq., of the parish of Hampstead, what the disaffection
+of a clergy would amount to, gaping after this graduated bounty
+of the Crown, and whether Ignatius Loyala himself, if he were a
+living blockhead instead of a dead saint, could withstand the
+temptation of bouncing from &pound;100 a year at Sligo, to
+&pound;300 in Tipperary?&nbsp; This is the miserable sum of money
+for which the merchants and landowners and nobility of England
+are exposing themselves to the tremendous peril of losing
+Ireland.&nbsp; The sinecure places of the Roses and the
+Percevals, and the &ldquo;dear and near relations,&rdquo; put up
+to auction at thirty years&rsquo; purchase, would almost amount
+to the money.</p>
+<p>I admit that nothing can be more reasonable than to expect
+that a Catholic priest should starve to death, genteelly and
+pleasantly, for the good of the Protestant religion; but is it
+equally reasonable to expect that he should do so for the
+Protestant pews, and Protestant brick and mortar?&nbsp; On an
+Irish Sabbath, the bell of a neat parish church often summons to
+church only the parson and an occasionally conforming clerk;
+while, two hundred yards off, a thousand Catholics are huddled
+together in a miserable hovel, and pelted by all the storms of
+heaven.&nbsp; Can anything be more distressing than to see a
+venerable man pouring forth sublime truths in tattered breeches,
+and depending for his food upon the little offal he gets from his
+parishioners?&nbsp; I venerate a human being who starves for his
+principles, let them be what they may; but starving for anything
+is not at all to the taste of the honourable flagellants: strict
+principles, and good pay, is the motto of Mr. Perceval: the one
+he keeps in great measure for the faults of his enemies, the
+other for himself.</p>
+<p>There are parishes in Connaught in which a Protestant was
+never settled nor even seen.&nbsp; In that province in Munster,
+and in parts of Leinster, the entire peasantry for sixty miles
+are Catholics; in these tracts the churches are frequently shut
+for want of a congregation, or opened to an assemblage of from
+six to twenty persons.&nbsp; Of what Protestants there are in
+Ireland, the greatest part are gathered together in Ulster, or
+they live in towns.&nbsp; In the country of the other three
+provinces the Catholics see no other religion but their own, and
+are at the least as fifteen to one Protestant.&nbsp; In the
+diocese of Tuam they are sixty to one; in the parish of St.
+Mulins, diocese of Leghlin, there are four thousand Catholics and
+one Protestant; in the town of Grasgenamana, in the county of
+Kilkenny, there are between four and five hundred Catholic
+houses, and three Protestant houses.&nbsp; In the parish of
+Allen, county Kildare, there is no Protestant, though it is very
+populous.&nbsp; In the parish of Arlesin, Queen&rsquo;s County,
+the proportion is one hundred to one.&nbsp; In the whole county
+of Kilkenny, by actual enumeration, it is seventeen to one; in
+the diocese of Kilmacduagh, province of Connaught, fifty-two to
+one, by ditto.&nbsp; These I give you as a few specimens of the
+present state of Ireland; and yet there are men impudent and
+ignorant enough to contend that such evils require no remedy, and
+that mild family man who dwelleth in Hampstead can find none but
+the cautery and the knife.</p>
+<blockquote><p>&mdash;&ldquo;Omne per ignem<br />
+Excoquitur vitium.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>I cannot describe the horror and disgust which I felt at
+hearing Mr. Perceval call upon the then Ministry for measures of
+vigour in Ireland.&nbsp; If I lived at Hampstead upon stewed
+meats and claret; if I walked to church every Sunday before
+eleven young gentlemen of my own begetting, with their faces
+washed, and their hair pleasingly combed; if the Almighty had
+blessed me with every earthly comfort&mdash;how awfully would I
+pause before I sent forth the flame and the sword over the cabins
+of the poor, brave, generous, open-hearted peasants of
+Ireland!&nbsp; How easy it is to shed human blood; how easy it is
+to persuade ourselves that it is our duty to do so, and that the
+decision has cost us a severe struggle; how much in all ages have
+wounds and shrieks and tears been the cheap and vulgar resources
+of the rulers of mankind; how difficult and how noble it is to
+govern in kindness and to found an empire upon the everlasting
+basis of justice and affection!&nbsp; But what do men call
+vigour?&nbsp; To let loose hussars and to bring up artillery, to
+govern with lighted matches, and to cut, and push, and prime; I
+call this not vigour, but the <i>sloth of cruelty and
+ignorance</i>.&nbsp; The vigour I love consists in finding out
+wherein subjects are aggrieved, in relieving them, in studying
+the temper and genius of a people, in consulting their
+prejudices, in selecting proper persons to lead and manage them,
+in the laborious, watchful, and difficult task of increasing
+public happiness by allaying each particular discontent.&nbsp; In
+this way Hoche pacified La Vend&eacute;e&mdash;and in this way
+only will Ireland ever be subdued.&nbsp; But this, in the eyes of
+Mr. Perceval, is imbecility and meanness.&nbsp; Houses are not
+broken open, women are not insulted, the people seem all to be
+happy; they are not rode over by horses, and cut by whips.&nbsp;
+Do you call this vigour?&nbsp; Is this government?</p>
+<h3>LETTER X.&nbsp; AND LAST.</h3>
+<p><span class="smcap">You</span> must observe that all I have
+said of the effects which will be produced by giving salaries to
+the Catholic clergy, only proceeds upon the supposition that the
+emanciptaion of the laity is effected:&mdash;without that, I am
+sure there is not a clergyman in Ireland who would receive a
+shilling from government; he could not do so, without an entire
+loss of credit among the members of his own persuasion.</p>
+<p>What you say of the moderation of the Irish Protestant clergy
+in collecting tithes, is, I believe, strictly true.&nbsp; Instead
+of collecting what the law enables them to collect, I believe
+they seldom or ever collect more than two-thirds; and I entirely
+agree with you, that the abolition of agistment tithe in Ireland
+by a vote of the Irish House of Commons, and without any
+remuneration to the Church, was a most scandalous and Jacobinical
+measure.&nbsp; I do not blame the Irish clergy; but I submit to
+your common sense, if it be possible to explain to an Irish
+peasant upon what principle of justice, or common sense, he is to
+pay every tenth potato in his little garden to a clergyman in
+whose religion nobody believes for twenty miles around him, and
+who has nothing to preach to but bare walls?&nbsp; It is true, if
+the tithes are bought up, the cottager must pay more rent to his
+landlord; but the same thing done in the shape of rent is less
+odious than when it is done in the shape of tithe.&nbsp; I do not
+want to take a shilling out of the pockets of the clergy, but to
+leave the substance of things, and to change their names.&nbsp; I
+cannot see the slightest reason why the Irish labourer is to be
+relieved from the real onus, or from anything else but the name
+of tithe.&nbsp; At present he rents only nine-tenths of the
+produce of the land, which is all that belongs to the owner; this
+he has at the market price; if the landowner purchase the other
+tenth of the Church, of course he has a right to make a
+correspondent advance upon his tenant.</p>
+<p>I very much doubt, if you were to lay open all civil offices
+to the Catholics, and to grant salaries to their clergy, in the
+manner I have stated, if the Catholic laity would give themselves
+much trouble about the advance of their Church; for they would
+pay the same tithes under one system that they do under
+another.&nbsp; If you were to bring the Catholics into the
+daylight of the world, to the high situations of the army, the
+navy, and the bar, numbers of them would come over to the
+Established Church, and do as other people do; instead of that,
+you set a mark of infamy upon them, rouse every passion of our
+nature in favour of their creed, and then wonder that men are
+blind to the follies of the Catholic religion.&nbsp; There are
+hardly any instances of old and rich families among the
+Protestant Dissenters: when a man keeps a coach, and lives in
+good company, he comes to church, and gets ashamed of the
+meeting-house; if this is not the case with the father, it is
+almost always the case with the son.&nbsp; These things would
+never be so if the Dissenters were in <i>practice</i> as much
+excluded from all the concerns of civil life as the Catholics
+are.&nbsp; If a rich young Catholic were in Parliament, he would
+belong to White&rsquo;s and to Brookes&rsquo;s, would keep
+race-horses, would walk up and down Pall Mall, be exonerated of
+his ready money and his constitution, become as totally devoid of
+morality, honesty, knowledge, and civility as Protestant loungers
+in Pall Mall, and return home with a supreme contempt for Father
+O&rsquo;Leary and Father O&rsquo;Callaghan.&nbsp; I am astonished
+at the madness of the Catholic clergy in not perceiving that
+Catholic emancipation is Catholic infidelity; that to entangle
+their people in the intrigues of a Protestant parliament, and a
+Protestant court, is to ensure the loss of every man of fashion
+and consequence in their community.&nbsp; The true receipt for
+preserving their religion, is Mr. Perceval&rsquo;s receipt for
+destroying it: it is to deprive every rich Catholic of all the
+objects of secular ambition, to separate him from the Protestant,
+and to shut him up in his castle with priests and relics.</p>
+<p>We are told, in answer to all our arguments, that this is not
+a fit period&mdash;that a period of universal war is not the
+proper time for dangerous innovations in the constitution: this
+is as much as to say, that the worst time for making friends is
+the period when you have made many enemies; that it is the
+greatest of all errors to stop when you are breathless, and to
+lie down when you are fatigued.&nbsp; Of one thing I am quite
+certain: if the safety of Europe is once completely restored, the
+Catholics may for ever bid adieu to the slightest probability of
+effecting their object.&nbsp; Such men as hang about a court not
+only are deaf to the suggestions of mere justice, but they
+despise justice; they detest the word <i>right</i>; the only word
+which rouses them is <i>peril</i>; where they can oppress with
+impunity, they oppress for ever, and call it loyalty and
+wisdom.</p>
+<p>I am so far from conceiving the legitimate strength of the
+Crown would be diminished by these abolitions of civil
+incapacities in consequence of religious opinions, that my only
+objection to the increase of religious freedom is, that it would
+operate as a diminution of political freedom; the power of the
+Crown is so overbearing at this period, that almost the only
+steady opposers of its fatal influence are men disgusted by
+religious intolerance.&nbsp; Our establishments are so enormous,
+and so utterly disproportioned to our population, that every
+second or third man you meet in society gains something from the
+public; my brother the commissioner,&mdash;my nephew the police
+justice,&mdash;purveyor of small beer to the army in
+Ireland,&mdash;clerk of the mouth,&mdash;yeoman to the left
+hand,&mdash;these are the obstacles which common sense and
+justice have now to overcome.&nbsp; Add to this that the King,
+old and infirm, excites a principle of very amiable generosity in
+his favour; that he has led a good, moral, and religious life,
+equally removed from profligacy and methodistical hypocrisy; that
+he has been a good husband, a good father, and a good master;
+that he dresses plain, loves hunting and farming, fates the
+French, and is in all his opinions and habits, quite
+English:&mdash;these feelings are heightened by the present
+situation of the world, and the yet unexploded clamour of
+Jacobinism.&nbsp; In short, from the various sources of interest,
+personal regard, and national taste, such a tempest of loyalty
+has set in upon the people that the 47th proposition in Euclid
+might now be voted down with as much ease as any proposition in
+politics; and therefore if Lord Hawkesbury hates the abstract
+truths of science as much as he hates concrete truth in human
+affairs, now is his time for getting rid of the multiplication
+table, and passing a vote of censure upon the pretensions of the
+<i>hypotenuse</i>.&nbsp; Such is the history of English parties
+at this moment: you cannot seriously suppose that the people care
+for such men as Lord Hawkesbury, Mr. Canning, and Mr. Perceval on
+their own account; you cannot really believe them to be so
+degraded as to look to their safety from a man who proposes to
+subdue Europe by keeping it without Jesuit&rsquo;s Bark.&nbsp;
+The people at present have one passion, and but one&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;A Jove principium, Jovis omnia
+plena.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>They care no more for the ministers I have mentioned, than
+they do for those sturdy royalists who for &pound;60 per annum
+stand behind his Majesty&rsquo;s carriage, arrayed in scarlet and
+in gold.&nbsp; If the present ministers opposed the Court instead
+of flattering it, they would not command twenty votes.</p>
+<p>Do not imagine by these observations that I am not loyal;
+without joining in the common cant of the best of kings, I
+respect the King most sincerely as a good man.&nbsp; His religion
+is better than the religion of Mr. Perceval, his old morality
+very superior to the old morality of Mr. Canning, and I am quite
+certain he has a safer understanding than both of them put
+together.&nbsp; Loyalty within the bounds of reason and
+moderation is one of the great instruments of human happiness;
+but the love of the king may easily become more strong than the
+love of the kingdom, and we may lose sight of the public welfare
+in our exaggerated admiration of him who is appointed to reign
+only for its promotion and support.&nbsp; I detest Jacobinism;
+and if I am doomed to be a slave at all, I would rather be the
+slave of a king than a cobbler.&nbsp; God save the King, you say,
+warms your heart like the sound of a trumpet.&nbsp; I cannot make
+use of so violent a metaphor; but I am delighted to hear it, when
+it is the cry of genuine affection; I am delighted to hear it
+when they hail not only the individual man, but the outward and
+living sign of all English blessings.&nbsp; These are noble
+feelings, and the heart of every good man must go with them; but
+God save the King, in these times, too often means God save my
+pension and my place, God give my sisters an allowance out of the
+privy purse&mdash;make me clerk of the irons, let me survey the
+meltings, let me live upon the fruits of other men&rsquo;s
+industry, and fatten upon the plunder of the public.</p>
+<p>What is it possible to say to such a man as the Gentleman of
+Hampstead, who really believes it feasible to convert the four
+million Irish Catholics to the Protestant religion, and considers
+this as the best remedy for the disturbed state of Ireland?&nbsp;
+It is not possible to answer such a man with arguments; we must
+come out against him with beads and a cowl, and push him into an
+hermitage.&nbsp; It is really such trash, that it is an abuse of
+the privilege of reasoning to reply to it.&nbsp; Such a project
+is well worthy the statesman who would bring the French to reason
+by keeping them without rhubarb, and exhibit to mankind the awful
+spectacle of a nation deprived of neutral salts.&nbsp; This is
+not the dream of a wild apothecary indulging in his own opium;
+this is not the distempered fancy of a pounder of drugs,
+delirious from smallness of profits; but it is the sober,
+deliberate, and systematic scheme of a man to whom the public
+safety is intrusted, and whose appointment is considered by many
+as a masterpiece of political sagacity.&nbsp; What a sublime
+thought, that no purge can now be taken between the Weser and the
+Garonne; that the bustling pestle is still, the canorous mortar
+mute, and the bowels of mankind locked up for fourteen degrees of
+latitude!&nbsp; When, I should be curious to know, were all the
+powers of crudity and flatulence fully explained to his
+Majesty&rsquo;s ministers?&nbsp; At what period was this great
+plan of conquest and constipation fully developed?&nbsp; In whose
+mind was the idea of destroying the pride and the plasters of
+France first engendered?&nbsp; Without castor oil they might for
+some months, to be sure, have carried on a lingering war! but can
+they do without bark?&nbsp; Will the people live under a
+government where antimonial powders cannot be procured?&nbsp;
+Will they bear the loss of mercury?&nbsp; &ldquo;There&rsquo;s
+the rub.&rdquo;&nbsp; Depend upon it, the absence of the materia
+medica will soon bring them to their senses, and the cry of
+<i>Bourbon and bolus</i> burst forth from the Baltic to the
+Mediterranean.</p>
+<p>You ask me for any precedent in our history where the oath of
+supremacy has been dispensed with.&nbsp; It was dispensed with to
+the Catholics of Canada in 1774.&nbsp; They are only required to
+take a simple oath of allegiance.&nbsp; The same, I believe, was
+the case in Corsica.&nbsp; The reason of such exemption was
+obvious; you could not possibly have retained either of these
+countries without it.&nbsp; And what did it signify, whether you
+retained them or not?&nbsp; In cases where you might have been
+foolish without peril you were wise; when nonsense and bigotry
+threaten you with destruction, it is impossible to bring you back
+to the alphabet of justice and common sense.&nbsp; If men are to
+be fools, I would rather they were fools in little matters than
+in great; dulness turned up with temerity is a livery all the
+worse for the facings; and the most tremendous of all things is
+the magnanimity of the dunce.</p>
+<p>It is not by any means necessary, as you contend, to repeal
+the Test Act if you give relief to the Catholic: what the
+Catholics ask for is to be put on a footing with the Protestant
+Dissenters, which would be done by repealing that part of the law
+which compels them to take the oath of supremacy and to make the
+declaration against transubstantiation: they would then come into
+Parliament as all other Dissenters are allowed to do, and the
+penal laws to which they were exposed for taking office would be
+suspended every year, as they have been for this half century
+past towards Protestant Dissenters.&nbsp; Perhaps, after all,
+this is the best method&mdash;to continue the persecuting law,
+and to suspend it every year&mdash;a method which, while it
+effectually destroys the persecution itself, leaves to the great
+mass of mankind the exquisite gratification of supposing that
+they are enjoying some advantage from which a particular class of
+their fellow creatures are excluded.&nbsp; We manage the
+Corporation and Test Acts at present much in the same manner as
+if we were to persuade parish boys who had been in the habit of
+beating an ass to spare the animal, and beat the skin of an ass
+stuffed with straw; this would preserve the semblance of
+tormenting without the reality, and keep boy and beast in good
+humour.</p>
+<p>How can you imagine that a provision for the Catholic clergy
+affects the 5th article of the Union?&nbsp; Surely I am
+preserving the Protestant Church in Ireland if I put it in a
+better condition than that in which it now is.&nbsp; A tithe
+proctor in Ireland collects his tithes with a blunderbuss, and
+carries his tenth hay-cock by storm, sword in hand: to give him
+equal value in a more pacific shape cannot, I should imagine, be
+considered as injurious to the Church of Ireland; and what right
+has that Church to complain if Parliament chooses to fix upon the
+empire the burden of supporting a double ecclesiastical
+establishment?&nbsp; Are the revenues of the Irish Protestant
+clergy in the slightest degree injured by such provision?&nbsp;
+On the contrary, is it possible to confer a more serious benefit
+upon that Church than by quieting and contenting those who are at
+work for its destruction?</p>
+<p>It is impossible to think of the affairs of Ireland without
+being forcibly struck with the parallel of Hungary.&nbsp; Of her
+seven millions of inhabitants, one half were Protestants,
+Calvinists, and Lutherans, many of the Greek Church, and many
+Jews: such was the state of their religious dissensions that
+Mahomet had often been called in to the aid of Calvin, and the
+crescent often glittered on the walls of Buda and Presburg.&nbsp;
+At last, in 1791, during the most violent crisis of disturbance,
+a Diet was called, and by a great majority of voices a decree was
+passed, which secured to all the contending sects the fullest and
+freest exercise of religious worship and education;
+ordained&mdash;let it be heard in Hampstead&mdash;that churches
+and chapels should be erected for all on the most perfectly equal
+terms; that the Protestants of both confessions should depend
+upon their spiritual superiors alone; liberated them from
+swearing by the usual oath, &ldquo;the Holy Virgin Mary, the
+saints, and chosen of God;&rdquo; and then the decree adds,
+&ldquo;that <i>public offices and honours</i>, <i>high or
+low</i>, <i>great or small</i>, <i>shall be given to natural-born
+Hungarians who deserve well of their country</i>, <i>and possess
+the other qualifications</i>, <i>let their religion be what it
+may</i>.&rdquo;&nbsp; Such was the line of policy pursued in a
+Diet consisting of four hundred members, in a state whose form of
+government approaches nearer to our own than any other, having a
+Roman Catholic establishment of great wealth and power, and under
+the influence of one of the most bigoted Catholic Courts in
+Europe.&nbsp; This measure has now the experience of eighteen
+years in its favour; it has undergone a trial of fourteen years
+of revolution such as the world never witnessed, and more than
+equal to a century less convulsed: What have been its
+effects?&nbsp; When the French advanced like a torrent within a
+few days&rsquo; march of Vienna, the Hungarians rose in a mass;
+they formed what they called the sacred insurrection, to defend
+their sovereign, their rights and liberties, now common to all;
+and the apprehension of their approach dictated to the reluctant
+Bonaparte the immediate signature of the treaty of
+<i>Leoben</i>.&nbsp; The Romish hierarchy of Hungary exists in
+all its former splendour and opulence; never has the slightest
+attempt been made to diminish it; and those revolutionary
+principles, to which so large a portion of civilised Europe has
+been sacrificed, have here failed in making the smallest
+successful inroad.</p>
+<p>The whole history of this proceeding of the Hungarian Diet is
+so extraordinary, and such an admirable comment upon the
+Protestantism of Mr. Spencer Perceval, that I must compel you to
+read a few short extracts from the law itself:&mdash;&ldquo;The
+Protestants of both confessions shall, in religious matters,
+depend upon their own spiritual superiors alone.&nbsp; The
+Protestants may likewise retain their trivial and grammar
+schools.&nbsp; The Church dues which the Protestants have
+hitherto paid to the Catholic parish priests, schoolmasters, or
+other such officers, either in money, productions, or labour,
+shall in future entirely cease, and after three months from the
+publishing of this law, be no more anywhere demanded.&nbsp; In
+the building or repairing of churches, parsonage-houses, and
+schools, the Protestants are not obliged to assist the Catholics
+with labour, nor the Catholics the Protestants.&nbsp; The pious
+foundations and donations of the Protestants which already exist,
+or which in future may be made for their churches, ministers,
+schools and students, hospitals, orphan houses, and poor, cannot
+be taken from them under any pretext, nor yet the care of them;
+but rather the unimpeded administration shall be intrusted to
+those from among them to whom it legally belongs, and those
+foundations which may have been taken from them under the last
+government shall be returned to them without delay.&nbsp; All
+affairs of marriage of the Protestants are left to their own
+consistories; all landlords and masters of families, under the
+penalty of public prosecution, are ordered not to prevent their
+subjects and servants, whether they be Catholic or Protestant,
+from the observance of the festivals and ceremonies of their
+religion,&rdquo; etc. etc. etc.&mdash;By what strange chances are
+mankind influenced!&nbsp; A little Catholic barrister of Vienna
+might have raised the cry of <i>No Protestantism</i>, and Hungary
+would have panted for the arrival of a French army as much as
+Ireland does at this moment; arms would have been searched for;
+Lutheran and Calvinist houses entered in the dead of the night;
+and the strength of Austria exhausted in guarding a country from
+which, under the present liberal system, she may expect in the
+moment of danger the most powerful aid: and let it be remembered
+that this memorable example of political wisdom took place at a
+period when many great monarchies were yet unconquered in Europe;
+in a country where the two religious parties were equal in
+number; and where it is impossible to suppose indifference in the
+party which relinquished its exclusive privileges.&nbsp; Under
+all these circumstances the measure was carried in the Hungarian
+Diet by a majority of 280 to 120.&nbsp; In a few weeks we shall
+see every concession denied to the Catholics by a much larger
+majority of Protestants, at a moment when every other power is
+subjugated but ourselves, and in a country where the oppressed
+are four times as numerous as their oppressors.&nbsp; So much for
+the wisdom of our ancestors&mdash;so much for the nineteenth
+century&mdash;so much for the superiority of the English over all
+the nations of the Continent.</p>
+<p>Are you not sensible, let me ask you, of the absurdity of
+trusting the lowest Catholics with offices correspondent to their
+situation in life, and of denying such privileges to the
+higher.&nbsp; A Catholic may serve in the militia, but a Catholic
+cannot come into Parliament; in the latter case you suspect
+combination, and in the former case you suspect no combination;
+you deliberately arm ten or twenty thousand of the lowest of the
+Catholic people; and the moment you come to a class of men whose
+education, honour, and talents seem to render all mischief less
+probable, then you see the danger of employing a Catholic, and
+cling to your investigating tests and disabling laws.&nbsp; If
+you tell me you have enough of members of Parliament and not
+enough of militia without the Catholics, I beg leave to remind
+you that, by employing the physical force of any sect at the same
+time when you leave them in a state of utter disaffection, you
+are not adding strength to your armies, but weakness and
+ruin.&nbsp; If you want the vigour of their common people, you
+must not disgrace their nobility and insult their priesthood.</p>
+<p>I thought that the terror of the Pope had been confined to the
+limits of the nursery, and merely employed as a means to induce
+young master to enter into his small-clothes with greater speed
+and to eat his breakfast with greater attention to decorum.&nbsp;
+For these purposes the name of the Pope is admirable; but why
+push it beyond?&nbsp; Why not leave to Lord Hawkesbury all
+further enumeration of the Pope&rsquo;s powers?&nbsp; For a whole
+century you have been exposed to the enmity of France, and your
+succession was disputed in two rebellions: what could the Pope do
+at the period when there was a serious struggle whether England
+should be Protestant or Catholic, and when the issue was
+completely doubtful?&nbsp; Could the Pope induce the Irish to
+rise in 1715?&nbsp; Could he induce them to rise in 1745?&nbsp;
+You had no Catholic enemy when half this island was in arms; and
+what did the Pope attempt in the last rebellion in Ireland?&nbsp;
+But if he had as much power over the minds of the Irish as Mr.
+Wilberforce has over the mind of a young Methodist converted the
+preceding quarter, is this a reason why we are to disgust men who
+may be acted upon in such a manner by a foreign power? or is it
+not an additional reason why we should raise up every barrier of
+affection and kindness against the mischief of foreign
+influence?&nbsp; But the true answer is, the mischief does not
+exist.&nbsp; Gog and Magog have produced as much influence upon
+human affairs as the Pope has done for this half century past;
+and by spoiling him of his possessions, and degrading him in the
+eyes of all Europe, Bonaparte has not taken quite the proper
+method of increasing his influence.</p>
+<p>But why not a Catholic king as well as a Catholic member of
+Parliament, or of the Cabinet?&mdash;Because it is probable that
+the one would be mischievous and the other not.&nbsp; A Catholic
+king might struggle against the Protestantism of the country, and
+if the struggle were not successful it would at least be
+dangerous; but the efforts of any other Catholic would be quite
+insignificant, and his hope of success so small, that it is quite
+improbable the effort would ever be made: my argument is, that in
+so Protestant a country as Great Britain, the character of her
+parliaments and her cabinet could not be changed by the few
+Catholics who would ever find their way to the one or the
+other.&nbsp; But the power of the Crown is immeasurably greater
+than the power which the Catholics could obtain from any other
+species of authority in the state; and it does not follow because
+the lesser degree of power is innocent that the greater should be
+so too.&nbsp; As for the stress you lay upon the danger of a
+Catholic chancellor, I have not the least hesitation in saying
+that his appointment would not do a ten thousandth part of the
+mischief to the English Church that might be done by a
+Methodistical chancellor of the true Clapham breed; and I request
+to know if it is really so very necessary that a chancellor
+should be of the religion of the Church of England, how many
+chancellors you have had within the last century who have been
+bred up in the Presbyterian religion?&nbsp; And again, how many
+you have had who notoriously have been without any religion at
+all?</p>
+<p>Why are you to suppose that eligibility and election are the
+same thing, and that all the cabinet <i>will</i> be Catholics
+whenever all the cabinet <i>may</i> be Catholics?&nbsp; You have
+a right, you say, to suppose an extreme case, and to argue upon
+it&mdash;so have I: and I will suppose that the hundred Irish
+members will one day come down in a body and pass a law
+compelling the King to reside in Dublin.&nbsp; I will suppose
+that the Scotch members, by a similar stratagem, will lay England
+under a large contribution of meal and sulphur: no measure is
+without objection if you sweep the whole horizon for danger; it
+is not sufficient to tell me of what may happen, but you must
+show me a rational probability that it will happen: after all, I
+might, contrary to my real opinion, admit all your dangers to
+exist; it is enough for me to contend that all other dangers
+taken together are not equal to the danger of losing Ireland from
+disaffection and invasion.</p>
+<p>I am astonished to see you, and many good and well-meaning
+clergymen beside you, painting the Catholics in such detestable
+colours; two-thirds, at least, of Europe are Catholics&mdash;they
+are Christians, though mistaken Christians; how can I possibly
+admit that any sect of Christians, and, above all, that the
+oldest and the most numerous sect of Christians are incapable of
+fulfilling the common duties and relations of life: though I do
+differ from them in many particulars, God forbid I should give
+such a handle to infidelity, and subscribe to such blasphemy
+against our common religion?</p>
+<p>Do you think mankind never change their opinions without
+formally expressing and confessing that change?&nbsp; When you
+quote the decisions of ancient Catholic councils, are you
+prepared to defend all the decrees of English convocations and
+universities since the reign of Queen Elizabeth?&nbsp; I could
+soon make you sick of your uncandid industry against the
+Catholics, and bring you to allow that it is better to forget
+times past, and to judge and be judged by present opinions and
+present practice.</p>
+<p>I must beg to be excused from explaining and refuting all the
+mistakes about the Catholics made by my Lord Redesdale; and I
+must do that nobleman the justice to say, that he has been
+treated with great disrespect.&nbsp; Could anything be more
+indecent than to make it a morning lounge in Dublin to call upon
+his Lordship, and to cram him with Arabian-night stories about
+the Catholics?&nbsp; Is this proper behaviour to the
+representative of Majesty, the child of Themis, and the keeper of
+the conscience in West Britain?&nbsp; Whoever reads the Letters
+of the Catholic Bishops, in the appendix to Sir John
+Hippesly&rsquo;s very sensible book, will see to what an excess
+this practice must have been carried with the pleasing and
+Protestant nobleman whose name I have mentioned, and from thence
+I wish you to receive your answer about excommunication, and all
+the trash which is talked against the Catholics.</p>
+<p>A sort of notion has, by some means or another, crept into the
+world that difference of religion would render men unfit to
+perform together the offices of common and civil life: that
+Brother Wood and Brother Grose could not travel together the same
+circuit if they differed in creed, nor Cockell and Mingay be
+engaged in the same cause, if Cockell was a Catholic and Mingay a
+Muggletonian.&nbsp; It is supposed that Huskisson and Sir Harry
+Englefield would squabble behind the Speaker&rsquo;s chair about
+the council of Lateran, and many a turnpike bill miscarry by the
+sarcastical controversies of Mr. Hawkins Brown and Sir John
+Throckmorton upon the real presence.&nbsp; I wish I could see
+some of these symptoms of earnestness upon the subject of
+religion; but it really seems to me that, in the present state of
+society, men no more think about inquiring concerning each
+other&rsquo;s faith than they do concerning the colour of each
+other&rsquo;s skins.&nbsp; There may have been times in England
+when the quarter sessions would have been disturbed by
+theological polemics; but now, after a Catholic justice had once
+been seen on the bench, and it had been clearly ascertained that
+he spoke English, had no tail, only a single row of teeth, and
+that he loved port wine&mdash;after all the scandalous and
+infamous reports of his physical conformation had been clearly
+proved to be false&mdash;he would be reckoned a jolly fellow, and
+very superior in flavour to a sly Presbyterian.&nbsp; Nothing, in
+fact, can be more uncandid and unphilosophical than to say that a
+man has a tail, because you cannot agree within him upon
+religious subjects; it appears to be ludicrous: but I am
+convinced it has done infinite mischief to the Catholics, and
+made a very serious impression upon the minds of many gentlemen
+of large landed property.</p>
+<p>In talking of the impossibility of Catholic and Protestant
+living together with equal privilege under the same government,
+do you forget the Cantons of Switzerland?&nbsp; You might have
+seen there a Protestant congregation going into a church which
+had just been quitted by a Catholic congregation; and I will
+venture to say that the Swiss Catholics were more bigoted to
+their religion than any people in the whole world.&nbsp; Did the
+kings of Prussia ever refuse to employ a Catholic?&nbsp; Would
+Frederick the Great have rejected an able man on this
+account?&nbsp; We have seen Prince Czartorinski, a Catholic
+Secretary of State in Russia; in former times a Greek patriarch
+and an apostolic vicar acted together in the most perfect harmony
+in Venice; and we have seen the Emperor of Germany in modern
+times intrusting the care of his person and the command of his
+guard to a Protestant Prince, Frederick of Wittenberg.&nbsp; But
+what are all these things to Mr. Perceval?&nbsp; He has looked at
+human nature from the top of Hampstead Hill, and has not a
+thought beyond the little sphere of his own vision.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;The snail,&rdquo; say the Hindoos, &ldquo;sees nothing but
+his own shell, and thinks it the grandest palace in the
+universe.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I now take a final leave of this subject of Ireland; the only
+difficulty in discussing it is a want of resistance, a want of
+something difficult to unravel, and something dark to
+illumine.&nbsp; To agitate such a question is to beat the air
+with a club, and cut down gnats with a scimitar; it is a
+prostitution of industry, and a waste of strength.&nbsp; If a man
+say, I have a good place, and I do not choose to lose it, this
+mode of arguing upon the Catholic question I can well understand;
+but that any human being with an understanding two degrees
+elevated above that of an Anabaptist preacher, should
+conscientiously contend for the expediency and propriety of
+leaving the Irish Catholics in their present state, and of
+subjecting us to such tremendous peril in the present condition
+of the world, it is utterly out of my power to conceive.&nbsp;
+Such a measure as the Catholic question is entirely beyond the
+common game of politics; it is a measure in which all parties
+ought to acquiesce, in order to preserve the place where and the
+stake for which they play.&nbsp; If Ireland is gone, where are
+jobs? where are reversions? where is my brother Lord Arden? where
+are my dear and near relations?&nbsp; The game is up, and the
+Speaker of the house of Commons will be sent as a present to the
+menagerie at Paris.&nbsp; We talk of waiting from particular
+considerations, as if centuries of joy and prosperity were before
+us: in the next ten years our fate must be decided; we shall
+know, long before that period, whether we can bear up against the
+miseries by which we are threatened or not; and yet, in the very
+midst of our crisis, we are enjoined to abstain from the most
+certain means of increasing our strength, and advised to wait for
+the remedy till the disease is removed by death or health.&nbsp;
+And now, instead of the plain and manly policy of increasing
+unanimity at home, by equalising rights and privileges, what is
+the ignorant, arrogant, and wicked system which has been
+pursued?&nbsp; Such a career of madness and of folly was, I
+believe, never run in so short a period.&nbsp; The vigour of the
+ministry is like the vigour of a grave-digger&mdash;the tomb
+becomes more ready and more wide for every effort which they
+make.&nbsp; There is nothing which it is worth while either to
+take or to retain, and a constant train of ruinous expeditions
+have been kept up.&nbsp; Every Englishman felt proud of the
+integrity of his country; the character of the country is lost
+for ever.&nbsp; It is of the utmost consequence to a commercial
+people at war with the greatest part of Europe, that there should
+be a free entry of neutrals into the enemy&rsquo;s ports; the
+neutrals who earned our manufactures we have not only excluded,
+but we have compelled them to declare war against us.&nbsp; It
+was our interest to make a good peace, or convince our own people
+that it could not be obtained; we have not made a peace, and we
+have convinced the people of nothing but of the arrogance of the
+Foreign Secretary: and all this has taken place in the short
+space of a year, because a King&rsquo;s Bench barrister and a
+writer of epigrams, turned into Ministers of State, were
+determined to show country gentlemen that the late administration
+had no vigour.&nbsp; In the meantime commerce stands still,
+manufactures perish, Ireland is more and more irritated, India is
+threatened, fresh taxes are accumulated upon the wretched people,
+the war is carried on without it being possible to conceive any
+one single object which a rational being can propose to himself
+by its continuation; and in the midst of this unparalleled
+insanity we are told that the Continent is to be reconquered by
+the want of rhubarb and plums.&nbsp; A better spirit than exists
+in the English people never existed in any people in the world:
+it has been misdirected, and squandered upon party purposes in
+the most degrading and scandalous manner; they have been led to
+believe that they were benefiting the commerce of England by
+destroying the commerce of America, that they were defending
+their Sovereign by perpetuating the bigoted oppression of their
+fellow-subjects; their rulers and their guides have told them
+that they would equal the vigour of France by equalling her
+atrocity; and they have gone on wasting that opulence, patience,
+and courage, which, if husbanded by prudent and moderate
+counsels, might have proved the salvation of mankind.&nbsp; The
+same policy of turning the good qualities of Englishmen to their
+own destruction, which made Mr. Pitt omnipotent, continues his
+power to those who resemble him only in his vices; advantage is
+taken of the loyalty of Englishmen to make them meanly
+submissive; their piety is turned into persecution, their courage
+into useless and obstinate contention; they are plundered because
+they are ready to pay, and soothed into asinine stupidity because
+they are full of virtuous patience.&nbsp; If England must perish
+at last, so let it be: that event is in the hands of God; we must
+dry up our tears and submit.&nbsp; But that England should perish
+swindling and stealing; that it should perish waging war against
+lazar houses and hospitals; that it should perish persecuting
+with monastic bigotry; that it should calmly give itself up to be
+ruined by the flashy arrogance of one man, and the narrow
+fanaticism of another; these events are within the power of human
+beings, and I did not think that the magnanimity of Englishmen
+would ever stoop to such degradations.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center"><i>Longum Vale!</i></p>
+<p style="text-align: right"><span class="smcap">Peter
+Plymley</span>.</p>
+<h2><span class="smcap">Historical Apology for the Irish
+Catholics</span>.</h2>
+<p><i>Historical Apology for The Irish Catholics</i>.&nbsp; By
+<span class="smcap">William Parnell</span>, Esquire.&nbsp;
+Fitzpatrick, Dublin.&nbsp; 1807.</p>
+
+<div class="gapshortline">&nbsp;</div>
+<p><span class="smcap">If</span> ever a nation exhibited symptoms
+of downright madness, or utter stupidity, we conceive these
+symptoms may be easily recognised in the conduct of this country
+upon the Catholic question.&nbsp; A man has a wound in his great
+toe, and a violent and perilous fever at the same time; and he
+refuses to take the medicines for the fever because it will
+disconcert the toe!&nbsp; The mournful and folly-stricken
+blockhead forgets that his toe cannot survive him; that if he
+dies, there can be no digital life apart from him: yet he lingers
+and fondles over this last part of his body, soothing it madly
+with little plasters, and anile fomentations, while the neglected
+fever rages in his entrails, and burns away his whole life.&nbsp;
+If the comparatively little questions of Establishment are all
+that this country is capable of discussing or regarding, for
+God&rsquo;s sake let us remember that the foreign conquest, which
+destroys all, destroys this beloved <i>toe</i> also.&nbsp; Pass
+over freedom, industry, and science&mdash;and look upon this
+great empire, by which we are about to be swallowed up, only as
+it affects the manner of collecting tithes, and of reading the
+liturgy&mdash;still, if all goes, these must go too; and even,
+for their interests, it is worth while to conciliate Ireland, to
+avert the hostility, and to employ the strength of the Catholic
+population.&nbsp; We plead the question as the sincerest friends
+to the Establishment;&mdash;as wishing to it all the prosperity
+and duration its warmest advocates can desire,&mdash;but
+remembering always what these advocates seem to forget, that the
+Establishment cannot be threatened by any danger so great as the
+perdition of the kingdom in which it is established.</p>
+<p>We are truly glad to agree so entirely with Mr. Parnell upon
+this great question; we admire his way of thinking, and most
+cordially recommend his work to the attention of the
+public.&nbsp; The general conclusion which he attempts to prove
+is this: that religious sentiment, however perverted by bigotry
+or fanaticism, has always a <i>tendency</i> to moderation; that
+it seldom assumes any great portion of activity or enthusiasm,
+except from novelty of opinion, or from opposition, contumely,
+and persecution, when novelty ceases; that a Government has
+little to fear from any religious sect, except while that sect is
+new.&nbsp; Give a Government only time, and, provided it has the
+good sense to treat folly with forbearance, it must ultimately
+prevail.&nbsp; When, therefore, a sect is found, after a lapse of
+years, to be ill-disposed to the Government, we may be certain
+that Government has widened its separation by marked
+distinctions, roused its resentment by contumely, or supported
+its enthusiasm by persecution.</p>
+<p>The <i>particular</i> conclusion Mr. Parnell attempts to prove
+is, that the Catholic religion in Ireland had sunk into torpor
+and inactivity, till Government roused it with the lash: that
+even then, from the respect and attachment which men are always
+inclined to show towards government, there still remained a large
+body of loyal Catholics; that these only decreased in number from
+the rapid increase of persecution; and that, after all, the
+effects which the resentment of the Roman Catholics had in
+creating rebellions had been very much exaggerated.</p>
+<p>In support of these two conclusions, Mr. Parnell takes a
+survey of the history of Ireland, from the conquest under Henry
+to the rebellion under Charles I., passing very rapidly over the
+period which preceded the Reformation, and dwelling principally
+upon the various rebellions which broke out in Ireland between
+the Reformation and the grand rebellion in the reign of Charles
+I.&nbsp; The celebrated conquest of Ireland by Henry II. extended
+only to a very few counties in Leinster; nine-tenths of the whole
+kingdom were left, as he found them, under the dominion of their
+native princes.&nbsp; The influence of example was as strong in
+this as in most other instances; and great numbers of the English
+settlers who came over under various adventures resigned their
+pretensions to superior civilisation, cast off their lower
+garments, and lapsed into the nudity and barbarism of the
+Irish.&nbsp; The limit which divided the possessions of the
+English settler from those of the native Irish was called <i>the
+pale</i>; and the expressions of inhabitants <i>within the
+pale</i>, and <i>without the pale</i>, were the terms by which
+the two nations were distinguished.&nbsp; It is almost
+superfluous to state, that the most bloody and pernicious warfare
+was carried on upon the borders&mdash;sometimes for something,
+sometimes for nothing&mdash;most commonly for cows.&nbsp; The
+Irish, over whom the sovereigns of England affected a sort of
+nominal dominion, were entirely governed by their own laws, and
+so very little connection had they with the justice of the
+invading country, that it was as lawful to kill an Irishman as it
+was to kill a badger or a fox.&nbsp; The instances are
+innumerable, where the defendant has pleaded that the deceased
+was an Irishman, and that therefore defendant had a right to kill
+him&mdash;and upon the proof of Hibernicism, acquittal followed
+of course.</p>
+<p>When the English army mustered in any great strength, the
+Irish chieftains would do exterior homage to the English Crown;
+and they very frequently, by this artifice, averted from their
+country the miseries of invasion: but they remained completely
+unsubdued, till the rebellion which took place in the reign of
+Queen Elizabeth, of which that politic woman availed herself to
+the complete subjugation of Ireland.&nbsp; In speaking of the
+Irish about the reign of Elizabeth or James I., we must not draw
+our comparisons from England, but from New Zealand; they were not
+civilised men, but savages; and if we reason about their conduct,
+we must reason of them as savages.</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;After reading every account of Irish
+history,&rdquo; says Mr. Parnell, &ldquo;one great perplexity
+appears to remain: How does it happen, that, from the first
+invasion of the English till the reign of James I., Ireland seems
+not to have made the smallest progress in civilisation or
+wealth?</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That it was divided into a number of small
+principalities, which waged constant war on each other&mdash;or
+that the appointment of the chieftains was elective&mdash;do not
+appear sufficient reasons, although these are the only ones
+assigned by those who have been at the trouble of considering the
+subject: neither are the confiscations of property quite
+sufficient to account for the effect.&nbsp; There have been great
+confiscations in other countries, and still they have flourished;
+the petty states of Greece were quite analogous to the chiefries,
+as they were called, in Ireland; and yet they seemed to flourish
+almost in proportion to their dissensions.&nbsp; Poland felt the
+bad effects of an elective monarchy more than any other country;
+and yet, in point of civilisation, it maintained a very
+respectable rank among the nations of Europe; but Ireland never,
+for an instant, made any progress in improvement, till the reign
+of James I.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is scarcely credible, that in a climate like that of
+Ireland, and at a period so far advanced in civilisation as the
+end of Elizabeth&rsquo;s reign, the greater part of the natives
+should go naked.&nbsp; Yet this is rendered certain by the
+testimony of an eye-witness, Fynes Moryson.&nbsp; &lsquo;In the
+remote parts,&rsquo; he says, &lsquo;where the English laws and
+manners are unknown, the very chief of the Irish, as well men as
+women, go naked in the winter time, only having their privy parts
+covered with a rag of linen, and their bodies with a loose
+mantle.&nbsp; This I speak of my own experience; yet remember
+that a Bohemian baron coming out of Scotland to us by the north
+parts of the wild Irish, told me in great earnestness, that he,
+coming to the house of O&rsquo;Kane, a great lord amongst them,
+was met at the door by sixteen women, all naked, excepting their
+loose mantles, whereof eight or ten were very fair; with which
+strange sight his eyes being dazzled, they led him into the
+house, and then sitting down by the fire, with crossed legs, like
+tailors, and so low as could not but offend chaste eyes, desired
+him to sit down with them.&nbsp; Soon after, O&rsquo;Kane, the
+lord of the country, came in all naked, except a loose mantle and
+shoes, which he put off as soon as he came in; and, entertaining
+the Baron after his best manner in the Latin tongue, desired him
+to put off his apparel, which he thought to be a burden to him,
+and to sit naked.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;To conclude, men and women at night going to
+sleep, he thus naked in a round circle about the fire, with their
+feet towards it.&nbsp; They fold their heads and their upper
+parts in woollen mantles, first steeped in water to keep them
+warm; for they say, that woollen cloth, wetted, preserves heat
+(as linen, wetted, preserves cold), when the smoke of their
+bodies has warmed the woollen cloth.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The cause of this extreme poverty, and of its long
+continuance, we must conclude, arose from the peculiar laws of
+property which were in force under the Irish dynasties.&nbsp;
+These laws have been described by most writers as similar to the
+Kentish custom of gavelkind; and, indeed, so little attention was
+paid to the subject, that were it not for the researches of Sir
+J. Davis, the knowledge of this singular usage would have been
+entirely lost.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The Brehon law of property, he tells us, was similar to
+the custom (as the English lawyers term it) of hodge-podge.&nbsp;
+When any one of the sept died, his lands did not descend to his
+sons, but were divided among the whole sept: and, for this
+purpose, the chief of the sept made a new division of the whole
+lands belonging to the sept, and gave every one his part
+according to seniority.&nbsp; So that no man had a property which
+could descend to his children; and even during his own life his
+possession of any particular spot was quite uncertain, being
+liable to be constantly shuffled and changed by new
+partitions.&nbsp; The consequence of this was that there was not
+a house of brick or stone among the Irish down to the reign of
+Henry VII.; not even a garden or orchard, or well-fenced or
+improved field; neither village or town, or in any respect the
+least provision for posterity.&nbsp; This monstrous custom, so
+opposite to the natural feelings of mankind, was probably
+perpetuated by the policy of the chiefs.&nbsp; In the first place
+the power of partitioning being lodged in their hands, made them
+the most absolute of tyrants, being the dispensers of the
+property as well as of the liberty of their subjects.&nbsp; In
+the second place, it had the appearance of adding to the number
+of their savage armies; for where there was no improvement or
+tillage, war was pursued as an occupation.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;In the early history of Ireland, we find several
+instances of chieftains discountenancing tillage; and so late as
+Elizabeth&rsquo;s reign, Moryson says, that &lsquo;Sir Neal Garve
+restrained his people from ploughing, that they might assist him
+to do any mischief.&rsquo;&rdquo;&mdash;(pp. 99&ndash;102).</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>These quotations and observations will enable us to state a
+few plain facts for the recollection of our English
+readers:&mdash;1st, Ireland was never subdued till the rebellion
+in the reign of Queen Elizabeth.&nbsp; 2nd, For four hundred
+years before that period the two nations had been almost
+constantly at war; and in consequence of this, a deep and
+irreconcilable hatred existed between the people within and
+without the pale.&nbsp; 3rd, The Irish, at the accession of Queen
+Elizabeth, were unquestionably the most barbarous people in
+Europe.&nbsp; So much for what had happened previous to the reign
+of Queen Elizabeth; and let any man, who has the most superficial
+knowledge of human affairs, determine whether national hatred,
+proceeding from such powerful causes, could possibly have been
+kept under by the defeat of one single rebellion&mdash;whether it
+would not have been easy to have foreseen, at that period, that a
+proud, brave, half-savage people, would cherish the memory of
+their wrongs for centuries to come, and break forth into arms at
+every period when they were particularly exasperated by
+oppression, or invited by opportunity.&nbsp; If the Protestant
+religion had spread in Ireland as it did in England, and if there
+had never been any difference of faith between the two
+countries&mdash;can it be believed that the Irish, ill-treated
+and infamously governed as they have been, would never have made
+any efforts to shake off the yoke of England?&nbsp; Surely there
+are causes enough to account for their impatience of that yoke,
+without endeavouring to inflame the zeal of ignorant people
+against the Catholic religion, and to make that mode of faith
+responsible for all the butchery which the Irish and English for
+these last two centuries have exercised upon each other.&nbsp;
+Everybody, of course, must admit, that if to the causes of hatred
+already specified there be added the additional cause of
+religious distinction, this last will give greater force (and
+what is of more consequence to observe, give a <i>name</i>) to
+the whole aggregate motive.&nbsp; But what Mr. Parnell contends
+for, and clearly and decisively proves, is that many of those
+sanguinary scenes attributed to the Catholic religion are to be
+partly imputed to causes totally disconnected from religion; that
+the unjust invasion, and the tyrannical, infamous policy of the
+English, are to take their full share of blame with the sophisms
+and plots of Catholic priests.&nbsp; In the reign of Henry VIII.,
+Mr. Parnell shows that feudal submission was readily paid to him
+by all the Irish chiefs; that the Reformation was received
+without the slightest opposition; and that the troubles which
+took place at that period in Ireland are to be entirely
+attributed to the ambition and injustice of Henry.&nbsp; In the
+reign of Queen Mary there was no recrimination upon the
+Protestants&mdash;a striking proof that the bigotry of the
+Catholic religion had not at that period risen to any great
+height in Ireland.&nbsp; The insurrections of the various Irish
+princes were as numerous during this reign as they had been in
+the two preceding reigns&mdash;a circumstance rather difficult of
+explanation, if, as is commonly believed, the Catholic religion
+was at that period the main-spring of men&rsquo;s actions.</p>
+<p>In the reign of Elizabeth, the Catholic in the pale regularly
+fought against the Catholic out of the pale.&nbsp;
+O&rsquo;Sullivan, a bigoted Papist, reproaches them with doing
+so.&nbsp; Speaking of the reign of James I., he says, &ldquo;And
+now the eyes even of the English Irish (the Catholics of the
+pale) were opened; and they cursed their former folly for helping
+the heretic.&rdquo;&nbsp; The English Government were so sensible
+of the loyalty of the Irish English Catholics that they entrusted
+them with the most confidential services.&nbsp; The Earl of
+Kildare was the principal instrument in waging war against the
+chieftains of Leix and Offal.&nbsp; William O&rsquo;Bourge,
+another Catholic, was created Lord Castle Connel for his eminent
+services; and MacGully Patrick, a priest, was the State
+spy.&nbsp; We presume that this wise and <i>manly</i> conduct of
+Queen Elizabeth was utterly unknown both to the Pastrycook and
+the Secretary of State, who have published upon the dangers of
+employing Catholics even against foreign enemies; and in those
+publications have said a great deal about the wisdom of our
+ancestors&mdash;the usual topic whenever the folly of their
+descendants is to be defended.&nbsp; To whatever other of our
+ancestors they may allude, they may spare all compliments to this
+illustrious Princess, who would certainly have kept the worthy
+confectioner to the composition of tarts, and most probably
+furnished him with the productions of the Right Honourable
+Secretary as the means of conveying those juicy delicacies to a
+hungry and discerning public.</p>
+<p>In the next two reigns, Mr. Parnell shows by what injudicious
+measures of the English Government the spirit of Catholic
+opposition was gradually formed; for that it did produce powerful
+effects at a subsequent period he does not deny; but contends
+only (as we have before stated) that these effects have been much
+overrated, and ascribed <i>solely</i> to the Catholic religion
+when other causes have at least had an equal agency in bringing
+them about.&nbsp; He concludes with some general remarks on the
+dreadful state of Ireland, and the contemptible folly and bigotry
+of the English&mdash;remarks full of truth, of good sense, and of
+political courage.&nbsp; How melancholy to reflect, that there
+would be still some chance of saving England from the general
+wreck of empires, but that it may not be saved, because one
+politician will lose two thousand a year by it, and another three
+thousand&mdash;a third a place in reversion, and a fourth a
+pension for his aunt!&nbsp; Alas! these are the powerful causes
+which have always settled the destiny of great kingdoms, and
+which may level Old England, with all its boasted freedom, and
+boasted wisdom, to the dust.&nbsp; Nor is it the least singular,
+among the political phenomena of the present day, that the sole
+consideration which seems to influence the unbigoted part of the
+English people, in this great question of Ireland, is a regard
+for the personal feelings of the Monarch.&nbsp; Nothing is said
+or thought of the enormous risk to which Ireland is
+exposed&mdash;nothing of the gross injustice with which the
+Catholics are treated&mdash;nothing of the lucrative apostasy of
+those from whom they experience this treatment: but the only
+concern by which we all seem to be agitated is, that the King
+must not be vexed in his old age.&nbsp; We have a great respect
+for the King; and wish him all the happiness compatible with the
+happiness of his people.&nbsp; But these are not times to pay
+foolish compliments to kings, or the sons of kings, or to anybody
+else; this journal (the <i>Edinburgh Review</i>) has always
+preserved its character for courage and honesty; and it shall do
+so to the last.&nbsp; If the people of this country are solely
+occupied in considering what is personally agreeable to the King,
+without considering what is for his permanent good, and for the
+safety of his dominions; if all public men, quitting the common
+vulgar scramble for emolument, do not concur in conciliating the
+people of Ireland; if the unfounded alarms, and the comparatively
+trifling interests of the clergy, are to supersede the great
+question of freedom or slavery, it does appear to us quite
+impossible that so mean and so foolish a people can escape that
+destruction which is ready to burst upon them&mdash;a destruction
+so imminent that it can only be averted by arming all in our
+defence who would evidently be sharers in our ruin&mdash;and by
+such a change of system as may save us from the hazard of being
+ruined by the ignorance and cowardice of any general, by the
+bigotry or the ambition of any minister, or by the well-meaning
+scruples of any human being, let his dignity be what it
+may.&nbsp; These minor and domestic dangers we must endeavour
+firmly and temperately to avert as we best can; but at all
+hazards we must keep out the destroyer from among us, or perish
+like wise and brave men in the attempt.</p>
+<h2><span class="smcap">Ireland and England</span>.</h2>
+<p>1.&nbsp; <i>Whitelaw&rsquo;s History of the City of
+Dublin</i>. 4to.&nbsp; Cadell and Davies.</p>
+<p>2.&nbsp; <i>Observations on the State of Ireland</i>,
+<i>principally directed to its Agriculture and Rural
+Population</i>; <i>in a Series of Letters written on a Tour
+through that Country</i>.&nbsp; In 2 vols.&nbsp; By J. C. <span
+class="smcap">Curwen</span>, Esq., M.P.&nbsp; London, 1818.</p>
+<p>3.&nbsp; <i>Gamble&rsquo;s Views of Society in
+Ireland</i>.</p>
+
+<div class="gapshortline">&nbsp;</div>
+<p><span class="smcap">These</span> are all the late publications
+that treat of Irish interests in general, and none of them are of
+first-rate importance.&nbsp; Mr. Gamble&rsquo;s &ldquo;Travels in
+Ireland&rdquo; are of a very ordinary description, low scenes and
+low humour making up the principal part of the narrative.&nbsp;
+There are readers, however, whom it will amuse; and the reading
+market becomes more and more extensive, and embraces a greater
+variety of persons every day.&nbsp; Mr. Whitelaw&rsquo;s
+&ldquo;History of Dublin&rdquo; is a book of great accuracy and
+research, highly creditable to the industry, good sense, and
+benevolence of its author.&nbsp; Of the &ldquo;Travels&rdquo; of
+Mr. Christian Curwen we hardly know what to say.&nbsp; He is bold
+and honest in his politics, a great enemy to abuses, vapid in his
+levity and pleasantry, and infinitely too much inclined to
+declaim upon commonplace topics of morality and
+benevolence.&nbsp; But, with these drawbacks, the book is not
+ill-written, and may be advantageously read by those who are
+desirous of information upon the present state of Ireland.</p>
+<p>So great and so long has been the misgovernment of that
+country, that we verily believe the empire would be much stronger
+if everything was open sea between England and the Atlantic, and
+if <i>skates and cod-fish</i> swam over the fair land of
+Ulster.&nbsp; Such jobbing, such profligacy, so much direct
+tyranny and oppression, such an abuse of God&rsquo;s gifts, such
+a profanation of God&rsquo;s name for the purposes of bigotry and
+party spirit, cannot be exceeded in the history of civilised
+Europe, and will long remain a monument of infamy and shame to
+England.&nbsp; But it will be more useful to suppress the
+indignation which the very name of Ireland inspires, and to
+consider impartially those causes which have marred this fair
+portion of the creation, and kept it wild and savage in the midst
+of improving Europe.</p>
+<p>The great misfortune of Ireland is that the mass of the people
+have been given up for a century to a handful of Protestants, by
+whom they have been treated as <i>Helots</i>, and subjected to
+every species of persecution and disgrace.&nbsp; The sufferings
+of the Catholics have been so loudly chanted in the very streets,
+that it is almost needless to remind our readers that, during the
+reigns of George I. and George II., the Irish Roman Catholics
+were disabled from holding any civil or military office, from
+voting at elections, from admission into corporations, from
+practising law or physic.&nbsp; A younger brother, by turning
+Protestant, might deprive his elder brother of his birthright; by
+the same process he might force his father, under the name of a
+liberal provision, to yield up to him a part of his landed
+property; and, if an eldest son, he might, in the same way,
+reduce his father&rsquo;s fee-simple to a life-estate.&nbsp; A
+Papist was disabled from purchasing freehold lands, and even from
+holding long leases; and any person might take his Catholic
+neighbour&rsquo;s house by paying &pound;5 for it.&nbsp; If the
+child of a Catholic father turned Protestant he was taken away
+from his father and put into the hands of a Protestant
+relation.&nbsp; No Papist could purchase a freehold or lease for
+more than thirty years, or inherit from an intestate Protestant,
+nor from an intestate Catholic, nor dwell in Limerick or Galway,
+nor hold an advowson, nor buy an annuity for life.&nbsp;
+&pound;50 was given for discovering a Popish archbishop,
+&pound;30 for a Popish clergyman, and 10s. for a
+schoolmaster.&nbsp; No one was allowed to be trustee for
+Catholics; no Catholic was allowed to take more than two
+apprentices; no Papist to be solicitor, sheriff, or to serve on
+Grand Juries.&nbsp; Horses of Papists might be seized for the
+militia, for which militia Papists were to pay double, and to
+find Protestant substitutes.&nbsp; Papists were prohibited from
+being present at vestries, or from being high or petty
+constables: and, when resident in towns, they were compelled to
+find Protestant watchmen.&nbsp; Barristers and solicitors
+marrying Catholics were exposed to the penalties of
+Catholics.&nbsp; Persons plundered by privateers during a war
+with any Popish prince were reimbursed by a levy on the Catholic
+inhabitants where they lived.&nbsp; All Popish priests
+celebrating marriages contrary to 12 Geo. I., cap 3, were to be
+<i>hanged</i>!</p>
+<p>The greater part of these incapacities are removed, though
+many of a very serious and oppressive nature still remain.&nbsp;
+But the grand misfortune is that the spirit which these
+oppressive laws engendered remains.&nbsp; The Protestant still
+looks upon the Catholic as a degraded being.&nbsp; The Catholic
+does not yet consider himself upon an equality with his former
+tyrant and taskmaster.&nbsp; That religious hatred which required
+all the prohibiting vigilance of the law for its restraint has
+found in the law its strongest support; and the spirit which the
+law first exasperated and embittered continues to act long after
+the original <i>stimulus</i> is withdrawn.&nbsp; The law which
+prevented Catholics from serving on Grand Juries is repealed; but
+Catholics are not called upon Grand Juries in the proportion in
+which they are entitled by their rank and fortune.&nbsp; The Duke
+of Bedford did all he could to give them the benefit of those
+laws which are already passed in their favour.&nbsp; But power is
+seldom entrusted in this country to one of the Duke of
+Bedford&rsquo;s liberality, and everything has fallen back in the
+hands of his successors into the ancient division of the
+privileged and degraded castes.&nbsp; We do not mean to cast any
+reflection upon the present Secretary for Ireland, whom we
+believe to be upon this subject a very liberal politician, and on
+all subjects an honourable and excellent man.&nbsp; The
+Government under which he serves allows him to indulge in a
+little harmless liberality; but it is perfectly understood that
+nothing is intended to be done for the Catholics; that no loaves
+and fishes will be lost by indulgence in Protestant insolence and
+tyranny; and, therefore, among the generality of Irish
+Protestants, insolence, tyranny, and exclusion continue to
+operate.&nbsp; However eligible the Catholic may be, he is not
+elected; whatever barriers may be thrown down, he does not
+advance a step.&nbsp; He was first kept out by law; he is now
+kept out by opinion and habit.&nbsp; They have been so long in
+chains that nobody believes they are capable of using their hands
+and feet.</p>
+<p>It is not, however, the only or the worst misfortune of the
+Catholics that the relaxations of the law are hitherto of little
+benefit to them; the law is not yet sufficiently relaxed.&nbsp; A
+Catholic, as everybody knows, cannot be made sheriff; cannot be
+in parliament; cannot be a director of the Irish Bank; cannot
+fill the great departments of the law, the army, and the navy; is
+cut off from all the high objects of human ambition, and treated
+as a marked and degraded person.</p>
+<p>The common admission now is that the Catholics are to the
+Protestants in Ireland as about four to one, of which Protestants
+not more than <i>one half</i> belong to the Church of
+Ireland.&nbsp; This, then, is one of the most striking features
+in the state of Ireland.&nbsp; That the great mass of the
+population is completely subjugated and overawed by a handful of
+comparatively recent settlers, in whom all the power and
+patronage of the country is vested, who have been reluctantly
+compelled to desist from still greater abuses of authority, and
+who look with trembling apprehension to the increasing liberality
+of the parliament and the country towards these unfortunate
+persons whom they have always looked upon as their property and
+their prey.</p>
+<p>Whatever evils may result from these proportions between the
+oppressor and oppressed&mdash;to whatever dangers a country so
+situated may be considered to be exposed, these evils and dangers
+are rapidly increasing in Ireland.&nbsp; The proportion of
+Catholics to Protestants is infinitely greater now than it was
+thirty years ago, and is becoming more and more favourable to the
+former.&nbsp; By a return made to the Irish House of Lords in
+1732 the proportion of Catholics to Protestants was not two to
+one.&nbsp; It is now (as we have already observed) four to one;
+and the causes which have thus altered the proportions in favour
+of the Catholics are sufficiently obvious to any one acquainted
+with the state of Ireland.&nbsp; The Roman Catholic priest
+resides; his income entirely depends upon the number of his
+flock; and he must exert himself or he starves.&nbsp; There is
+some chance of success, therefore, in <i>his</i> efforts to
+convert; but the Protestant clergyman, if he were equally eager,
+has little or no probability of persuading so much larger a
+proportion of the population to come over to his Church.&nbsp;
+The Catholic clergyman belongs to a religion that has always been
+more desirous of gaining proselytes than the Protestant Church;
+and he is animated by a sense of injury and a desire of
+revenge.&nbsp; Another reason for the disproportionate increase
+of Catholics is that the Catholics will marry upon means which
+the Protestant considers as insufficient for marriage.&nbsp; A
+few potatoes and a shed of turf are all that Luther has left for
+the Romanist; and, when the latter gets these, he instantly
+begins upon the great Irish manufacture of children.&nbsp; But a
+Protestant belongs to the sect that eats the fine flour and
+heaves the bran to others; he must have comforts, and he does not
+marry till he gets them.&nbsp; He would be ashamed if he were
+seen living as a Catholic lives.&nbsp; This is the principal
+reason why the Protestants who remain attached to their Church do
+not increase so fast as the Catholics.&nbsp; But in common minds,
+daily scenes, the example of the majority, the power of
+imitation, decide their habits, religious as well as civil.&nbsp;
+A Protestant labourer who works among Catholics soon learns to
+think and act and talk as they do; he is not proof against the
+eternal panegyric which he hears of Father O&rsquo;Leary.&nbsp;
+His Protestantism is rubbed away, and he goes at last, after some
+little resistance, to the chapel where he sees everybody else
+going.</p>
+<p>These eight Catholics not only hate the ninth man, the
+Protestant of the Establishment, for the unjust privileges he
+enjoys&mdash;not only remember that the lands of their father
+were given to his father&mdash;but they find themselves forced to
+pay for the support of his religion.&nbsp; In the wretched state
+of poverty in which the lower orders of Irish are plunged, it is
+not without considerable effort that they can pay the few
+shillings necessary for the support of their Catholic priest; and
+when this is effected, a tenth of the potatoes in the garden are
+to be set out for the support of a persuasion, the introduction
+of which into Ireland they consider as the great cause of their
+political inferiority, and all their manifold wretchedness.&nbsp;
+In England a labourer can procure constant employment, or he can,
+at the worst, obtain relief from his parish.&nbsp; Whether tithe
+operates as a tax upon him, is known only to the political
+economist: if he does pay it, he does not know that he pays it,
+and the burden of supporting the Clergy is at least kept out of
+his view.&nbsp; But in Ireland, the only method in which a poor
+man lives is by taking a small portion of land in which he can
+grow potatoes: seven or eight months out of twelve, in many parts
+of Ireland, there is no constant employment of the poor; and the
+potato farm is all that shelters them from absolute famine.&nbsp;
+If the Pope were to come in person, seize upon every tenth
+potato, the poor peasant would scarcely endure it.&nbsp; With
+what patience, then, can he see it tossed into the cart of the
+heretic rector, who has a church without a congregation, and a
+revenue without duties?&nbsp; We do not say whether these things
+are right or wrong, whether they want a remedy at all, or what
+remedy they want; but we paint them in those colours in which
+they appear to the eye of poverty and ignorance, without saying
+whether those colours are false or true.&nbsp; Nor is the case at
+all comparable to that of Dissenters paying tithe in England;
+which case is precisely the reverse of what happens in Ireland,
+for it is the contribution of a very small minority to the
+religion of a very large majority; and the numbers on either side
+make all the difference in the argument.&nbsp; To exasperate the
+poor Catholic still more, the rich graziers of the parish, or the
+squire in his parish, pay no tithe at all for their grass
+land.&nbsp; Agistment tithe is abolished in Ireland, and the
+burthen of supporting two Churches seems to devolve upon the
+poorer Catholics, struggling with plough and spade in small
+scraps of dearly-rented land.&nbsp; Tithes seem to be collected
+in a more harsh manner than they are collected in England.&nbsp;
+The minute sub-divisions of land in Ireland&mdash;the little
+connection which the Protestant clergyman commonly has with the
+Catholic population of his parish&mdash;have made the
+introduction of tithe proctors very general, sometimes as the
+agent of the clergyman, sometimes as the lessee or middleman
+between the clergyman and the cultivator of the land, but, in
+either case, practised, dexterous estimators of tithe.&nbsp; The
+English clergymen in general are far from exacting the whole of
+what is due to them, but sacrifice a little to the love of
+popularity or to the dread of odium.&nbsp; A system of
+tithe-proctors established all over England (as it is in
+Ireland), would produce general disgust and alienation from the
+Established Church.</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;During the administration of Lord
+Halifax,&rdquo; says Mr. Hardy, in quoting the opinion of Lord
+Charlemont upon tithes paid by Catholics, &ldquo;Ireland was
+dangerously disturbed in its southern and northern regions.&nbsp;
+In the south principally, in the counties of Kilkenny, Limerick,
+Cork, and Tipperary, the White Boys now made their first
+appearance; those White Boys who have ever since occasionally
+disturbed the public tranquillity, without any rational method
+having been as yet pursued to eradicate this disgraceful
+evil.&nbsp; When we consider that the very same district has been
+for the long space of seven-and-twenty years liable to frequent
+returns of the same disorder into which it has continually
+relapsed, in spite of all the violent remedies from time to time
+administered by our political quacks, we cannot doubt but that
+some real, peculiar, and topical cause must exist, and yet
+neither the removal, nor even the investigation of this cause,
+has ever once been seriously attempted.&nbsp; Laws of the most
+sanguinary and unconstitutional nature have been enacted; the
+country has been disgraced and exasperated by frequent and bloody
+executions; and the gibbet, that perpetual resource of weak and
+cruel legislators, has groaned under the multitude of starving
+criminals; yet, while the cause is suffered to exist, the effects
+will ever follow.&nbsp; The amputation of limbs will never
+eradicate a prurient humour, which must be sought in its source
+and there remedied.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I wish,&rdquo; continues Mr. Wakefield, &ldquo;for the
+sake of humanity and for the honour of the Irish character, that
+the gentlemen of that country would take this matter into their
+serious consideration.&nbsp; Let them only for a moment place
+themselves in the situation of the half-famished cotter,
+surrounded by a wretched family clamorous for food, and judge
+what his feelings must be when he sees the tenth part of the
+produce of his potato garden exposed at harvest time to public
+<i>cant</i>, or if he have given a promissory note for the
+payment of a certain sum of money to compensate for such tithe
+when it becomes due, to hear the heart-rending cries of his
+offspring clinging round him, and lamenting for the milk of which
+they are deprived by the cows being driven to the pound to be
+sold to discharge the debt.&nbsp; Such accounts are not the
+creations of fancy; the facts do exist, and are but too common in
+Ireland.&nbsp; Were one of them transferred to canvas by the hand
+of genius, and exhibited to English humanity, that heart must be
+callous indeed that could refuse its sympathy.&nbsp; I have seen
+the cow, the favourite cow, driven away, accompanied by the
+sighs, the tears, and the imprecations of a whole family, who
+were paddling after, through wet and dirt, to take their last
+affectionate farewell of this their only friend and benefactor at
+the pound gate.&nbsp; I have heard with emotions which I can
+scarcely describe, deep curses repeated from village to village
+as the cavalcade proceeded.&nbsp; I have witnessed the group pass
+the domain walls of the opulent grazier, whose numerous herds
+were cropping the most luxuriant pastures, while he was secure
+from any demand for the tithe of their food, looking on with the
+most unfeeling indifference.&rdquo;&mdash;Ibid., p. 486.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>In Munster, where tithe of potatoes is exacted, risings
+against the system have constantly occurred during the last forty
+years.&nbsp; In Ulster, where no such tithe is required, these
+insurrections are unknown.&nbsp; The double Church which Ireland
+supports, and that painful visible contribution towards it which
+the poor Irishman is compelled to make from his miserable
+pittance, is one great cause of those never-ending insurrections,
+burnings, murders, and robberies, which have laid waste that
+ill-fated country for so many years.&nbsp; The unfortunate
+consequence of the civil disabilities, and the Church payments
+under which the Catholics labour, is a rooted antipathy to this
+country.&nbsp; They hate the English Government from historical
+recollection, actual suffering, and disappointed hope, and till
+they are better treated they will continue to hate it.&nbsp; At
+this moment, in a period of the most profound peace, there are
+twenty-five thousand of the best disciplined and best appointed
+troops in the world in Ireland, with bayonets fixed, presented
+arms, and in the attitude of present war: nor is there a man too
+much&mdash;nor would Ireland be tenable without them.&nbsp; When
+it was necessary last year (or thought necessary) to put down the
+children of reform, we were forced to make a new levy of troops
+in this country; not a man could be spared from Ireland.&nbsp;
+The moment they had embarked, Peep-of-Day Boys, Heart-of-Oak
+Boys, Twelve-o&rsquo;-clock Boys, Heart-of-Flint Boys, and all
+the bloody boyhood of the Bog of Allen, would have proceeded to
+the ancient work of riot, rapine, and disaffection.&nbsp;
+Ireland, in short, till her wrongs are redressed and a more
+liberal policy is adopted towards her, will always be a cause of
+anxiety and suspicion to this country, and in some moment of our
+weakness and depression, will forcibly extort what she would now
+receive with gratitude and exultation.</p>
+<p>Ireland is situated close to another island of greater size,
+speaking the same language, very superior in civilisation, and
+the seat of government.&nbsp; The consequence of this is the
+emigration of the richest and most powerful part of the
+community&mdash;a vast drain of wealth&mdash;and the absence of
+all that wholesome influence which the representatives of ancient
+families, residing upon their estates, produce upon their
+tenantry and dependents.&nbsp; Can any man imagine that the
+scenes which have been acted in Ireland, within these last twenty
+years, would have taken place, if such vast proprietors as the
+Duke of Devonshire, the Marquis of Hertford, the Marquis of
+Lansdowne, Earl Fitzwilliam, and many other men of equal wealth,
+had been in the constant habit of residing upon their Irish as
+they are upon their English estates?&nbsp; Is it of no
+consequence to the order and the civilisation of a large
+district, whether the great mansion is inhabited by an
+insignificant, perhaps a mischievous attorney, in the shape of
+agent, or whether the first and greatest men of the United
+Kingdoms, after the business of Parliament is over, come with
+their friends and families, to exercise hospitality, to spend
+large revenues, to diffuse information, and to improve
+manners?&nbsp; This evil is a very serious one to Ireland; and,
+as far as we see, incurable.&nbsp; For if the present large
+estates were, by the dilapidation of families, to be broken to
+pieces and sold, others equally great would, in the free
+circulation of property, speedily accumulate; and the moment any
+possessor arrived at a certain pitch of fortune, he would
+probably choose to reside in the better country&mdash;near the
+Parliament, or the Court.</p>
+<p>This absence of great proprietors in Ireland necessarily
+brings with it, or if not necessarily, has actually brought with
+it, the employment of the middlemen, which forms one other
+standing and regular Irish grievance.&nbsp; We are well aware of
+all that can be said in defence of middlemen; that they stand
+between the little farmer and the great proprietor as the
+shopkeeper does between the manufacturer and consumer; and, in
+fact, by their intervention, save time, and therefore
+expense.&nbsp; This may be true enough in the abstract; but the
+particular nature of land must be attended to.&nbsp; The object
+of the man who makes cloth is to sell his cloth at the present
+market, for as high a price as he can obtain.&nbsp; If that price
+is too high, it soon falls; but no injury is done to his
+machinery by the superior price he has enjoyed for a
+season&mdash;he is just as able to produce cloth with it, as if
+the profits he enjoyed had always been equally moderate; he has
+no fear, therefore, of the middleman, or of any species of moral
+machinery which may help to obtain for him the greatest present
+prices.&nbsp; The same would be the feeling of any one who let
+out a steam-engine, or any other machine, for the purposes of
+manufacture; he would naturally take the highest price he could
+get; for he might either let his machine for a price
+proportionate to the work it did, or the repairs, estimable with
+the greatest precision, might be thrown upon the tenant; in
+short, he could hardly ask any rent too high for his machine
+which a responsible person would give; dilapidation would be so
+visible, and so calculable in such instances, that any secondary
+lease, or subletting, would be rather an increase of security
+than a source of alarm.&nbsp; Any evil from such a practice would
+be improbable measurable, and remediable.&nbsp; In land, on the
+contrary, the object is not to get the highest prices absolutely,
+but to get the highest prices which will not injure the
+machine.&nbsp; One tenant may offer and pay double the rent of
+another, and in a few years leave the land in a state which will
+effectually bar all future offers of tenancy.&nbsp; It is of no
+use to fill a lease full of clauses and covenants; a tenant who
+pays more than he ought to pay, or who pays even to the last
+farthing which he ought to pay, will rob the land, and injure the
+machine, in spite of all the attorneys in England.&nbsp; He will
+rob it even if he means to remain upon it&mdash;driven on by
+present distress, and anxious to put off the day of defalcation
+and arrear.&nbsp; The damage is often difficult of
+detection&mdash;not easily calculated, not easily to be proved;
+such for which juries (themselves perhaps farmers) will not
+willingly give sufficient compensation.&nbsp; And if this be true
+in England, it is much more strikingly true in Ireland, where it
+is extremely difficult to obtain verdicts for breaches of
+covenant in leases.</p>
+<p>The only method, then, of guarding the machine from real
+injury, is by giving to the actual occupier such advantage in his
+contract, that he is unwilling to give it up&mdash;that he has a
+real interest in retaining it, and is not driven by the
+distresses of the present moment to destroy the future
+productiveness of the soil.&nbsp; Any rent which the landlord
+accepts more than this, or any system by which more rent than
+this is obtained, is to borrow money upon the most usurious and
+profligate interest&mdash;to increase the revenue of the present
+day by the absolute ruin of the property.&nbsp; Such is the
+effect produced by a middleman; he gives high prices that he may
+obtain higher from the occupier; more is paid by the actual
+occupier than is consistent with the safety and preservation of
+the machine; the land is run out, and, in the end, that maximum
+of rent we have described is not obtained; and not only is the
+property injured by such a system, but in Ireland the most
+shocking consequences ensue from it.&nbsp; There is little
+manufacture in Ireland; the price of labour is low, the demand
+for labour irregular.&nbsp; If a poor man be driven, by distress
+of rent, from his potato garden, he has no other
+resource&mdash;all is lost: he will do the impossible (as the
+French say) to retain it; subscribe any bond, and promise any
+rent.&nbsp; The middleman has no character to lose; and he knew,
+when he took up the occupation, that it was one with which pity
+had nothing to do.&nbsp; On he drives; and backward the poor
+peasant recedes, loses something at every step, till he comes to
+the very brink of despair; and then he recoils and murders his
+oppressor, and is a <i>White Boy</i> or a <i>Right
+Boy</i>;&mdash;the soldier shoots him, and the judge hangs
+him.</p>
+<p>In the debate which took place in the Irish House of Commons,
+upon the Bill for preventing tumultuous risings and assemblies,
+on the 31st of January, 1787, the Attorney-General submitted to
+the House the following narrative of facts.</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;The commencement,&rdquo; said he,
+&ldquo;was in one or two parishes in the county of Kerry; and
+they proceeded thus.&nbsp; The people assembled in a Catholic
+chapel, and there took an oath to obey the laws of Captain Right,
+and to starve the clergy.&nbsp; They then proceeded to the next
+parishes on the following Sunday, and there swore the people in
+the same manner; with this addition, that they (the people last
+sworn) should on the ensuing Sunday proceed to the chapels of
+their next neighbouring parishes and swear the inhabitants of
+those parishes in like manner.&nbsp; Proceeding in this manner,
+they very soon went through the province of Munster.&nbsp; The
+first object was the <i>reformation of tithes</i>.&nbsp; They
+swore not to give more than a certain price per acre, not to
+assist or allow them to be assisted in drawing the tithe, and to
+permit <i>no proctor</i>.&nbsp; They next took upon them to
+prevent the collection of parish cesses, next to nominate parish
+clerks, and in some cases curates, to say what church should or
+should not be repaired, and in one case to threaten that they
+would burn a <i>new</i> church if the <i>old</i> one were not
+given for a mass-house.&nbsp; At last they proceeded to regulate
+the price of lands, to raise the price of labour, and to oppose
+the collection of the hearth-money and other taxes.&nbsp; Bodies
+of 5,000 of them have been seen to march through the country
+unarmed, and, if met by any magistrate, <i>they never offered the
+smallest rudeness or offence</i>; on the contrary, they had
+allowed persons charged with crimes to be taken from amongst them
+by the magistrate <i>alone</i>, unaided by any force.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The Attorney-General said he was well acquainted with
+the province of Munster, and that it was impossible for human
+wretchedness to <i>exceed that of the peasantry of that
+province</i>.&nbsp; The unhappy tenantry were <i>ground to
+powder</i> by relentless landlords; that, far from being able to
+give the clergy their just dues, they had not food or raiment for
+themselves&mdash;the landlord grasped the whole; and sorry was he
+to add that, not satisfied with the present extortion, some
+landlords had been so base as to instigate the insurgents to rob
+the clergy of their tithes, not in order to alleviate the
+distresses of the tenantry, but that they might add the
+clergy&rsquo;s share to the cruel rack-rents they already
+paid.&nbsp; The poor people of Munster lived in a <i>more abject
+state of poverty than human nature could be supposed equal to
+bear</i>.&rdquo;&mdash;&ldquo;Grattan&rsquo;s Speeches,&rdquo;
+vol. i., p. 292.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>We are not, of course, in such a discussion to be governed by
+names.&nbsp; A middleman might be tied up by the strongest legal
+restriction, as to the price he was to exact from the
+under-tenants, and then he would be no more pernicious to the
+estate than a steward.&nbsp; A steward might be protected in
+exactions as severe as the most rapacious middleman; and then, of
+course, it would be the same thing under another name.&nbsp; The
+practice to which we object is the too common method in Ireland
+of extorting the last farthing which the tenant is willing to
+give for land rather than quit it: and the machinery by which
+such practice is carried into effect is that of the
+middleman.&nbsp; It is not only that it ruins the land; it ruins
+the people also.&nbsp; They are made so poor&mdash;brought so
+near the ground&mdash;that they can sink no lower; and burst out
+at last into all the acts of desperation and revenge for which
+Ireland is so notorious.&nbsp; Men who have money in their
+pockets, and find that they are improving in their circumstances,
+don&rsquo;t do these things.&nbsp; Opulence, or the hope of
+opulence or comfort, is the parent of decency, order, and
+submission to the laws.&nbsp; A landlord in Ireland understands
+the luxury of carriages and horses, but has no relish for the
+greater luxury of surrounding himself with a moral and grateful
+tenantry.&nbsp; The absent proprietor looks only to revenue, and
+cares nothing for the disorder and degradation of a country which
+he never means to visit.&nbsp; There are very honourable
+exceptions to this charge: but there are too many living
+instances that it is just.&nbsp; The rapacity of the Irish
+landlord induces him to allow of the extreme division of his
+lands.&nbsp; When the daughter marries, a little portion of the
+little farm is broken off&mdash;another corner for Patrick, and
+another for Dermot&mdash;till the land is broken into sections,
+upon one of which an English cow could not stand.&nbsp; Twenty
+mansions of misery are thus reared instead of one.&nbsp; A louder
+cry of oppression is lifted up to heaven, and fresh enemies to
+the English name and power are multiplied on the earth.&nbsp; The
+Irish gentleman, too, extremely desirous of political influence,
+multiplying freeholds, and splitting votes; and this propensity
+tends of course to increase the miserable redundance of living
+beings, under which Ireland is groaning.&nbsp; Among the manifold
+wretchedness to which the poor Irish tenant is liable, we must
+not pass over the practice of driving for rent.&nbsp; A lets land
+to B, who lets it to C, who lets it again to D.&nbsp; D pays C
+his rent, and C pays B.&nbsp; But if B fails to pay A, the cattle
+of B, C, D are all driven to the pound, and after the interval of
+a few days sold by auction.&nbsp; A general driving of this kind
+very frequently leads to a bloody insurrection.&nbsp; It may be
+ranked among the classical grievances of Ireland.</p>
+<p>Potatoes enter for a great deal into the present condition of
+Ireland.&nbsp; They are much cheaper than wheat; and it is so
+easy to rear a family upon them, that there is no cheek to
+population from the difficulty of procuring food.&nbsp; The
+population therefore goes on with a rapidity approaching almost
+to that of new countries, and in a much greater ratio than the
+improving agriculture and manufacturers of the country can find
+employment for it.&nbsp; All degrees of all nations begin with
+living in pig-styes.&nbsp; The king or the priest first gets out
+of them; then the noble, then the pauper; in proportion as each
+class becomes more and more opulent.&nbsp; Better tastes arise
+from better circumstances; and the luxury of one period is the
+wretchedness and poverty of another.&nbsp; English peasants, in
+the time of Henry VII., were lodged as badly as Irish peasants
+now are; but the population was limited by the difficulty of
+procuring a corn subsistence.&nbsp; The improvements of this
+kingdom were more rapid; the price of labour rose; and with it
+the luxury and comfort of the peasant, who is now decently lodged
+and clothed, and who would think himself in the last stage of
+wretchedness if he had nothing but an iron pot in a turf house,
+and plenty of potatoes in it.&nbsp; The use of the potato was
+introduced into Ireland when the wretched accommodation of her
+own peasantry bore some proportion to the state of those
+accommodations all over Europe.&nbsp; But they have increased
+their population so fast, and, in conjunction with the oppressive
+government of Ireland retarding improvement, have kept the price
+of labour so low, that the Irish poor have never been able to
+emerge from their mud cabins, or to acquire any taste for
+cleanliness and decency of appearance.&nbsp; Mr. Curwen has the
+following description of Irish cottages:&mdash;</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;These mansions of miserable existence, for
+so they may truly be described, conformably to our general
+estimation of those indispensable comforts requisite to
+constitute the happiness of rational beings, are most commonly
+composed of two rooms on the ground floor, a most appropriate
+term, for they are literally on the earth, the surface of which
+is not unfrequently reduced a foot or more to save the expense of
+so much outward walling.&nbsp; The one is a refectory, the other
+the dormitory.&nbsp; The furniture of the former, if the owner
+ranks in the upper part of the scale of scantiness, will consist
+of a kitchen dresser, well provided and highly decorated with
+crockery&mdash;not less apparently the pride of the husband than
+the result of female vanity in the wife: which, with a table, a
+chest, a few stools, and an iron pot, complete the catalogue of
+conveniences generally found as belonging to the cabin: while a
+spinning-wheel, furnished by the Linen Board, and a loom,
+ornament vacant spaces that otherwise would remain
+unfurnished.&nbsp; In fitting up the latter, which cannot on any
+occasion or by any display add a feather to the weight or
+importance expected to be excited by the appearance of the
+former, the inventory is limited to one, and sometimes two beds,
+serving for the repose of the whole family!&nbsp; However downy
+these may be to limbs impatient for rest, their coverings appear
+to be very slight, and the whole of the apartment created
+reflections of a very painful nature.&nbsp; Under such
+privations, with a wet mud floor and a roof in tatters, how idle
+the search for comforts!&rdquo;&mdash;<i>Curwen</i>, <i>i.</i>,
+pp. 112, 113.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>To this extract we shall add one more on the same subject.</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;The gigantic figure, bareheaded before me,
+had a beard that would not have disgraced an ancient
+Israelite&mdash;he was without shoes or stockings&mdash;and
+almost a sans-culotte&mdash;with a coat, or rather a jacket, that
+appeared as if the first blast of wind would tear it to
+tatters.&nbsp; Though his garb was thus tattered, he had a manly
+commanding countenance.&nbsp; I asked permission to see the
+inside of his cabin, to which I received his most courteous
+assent.&nbsp; On stooping to enter at the door I was stopped, and
+found that permission from another was necessary before I could
+be admitted.&nbsp; A pig, which was fastened to a stake driven
+into the floor, with length of rope sufficient to permit him the
+enjoyment of sun and air, demanded some courtesy, which I showed
+him, and was suffered to enter.&nbsp; The wife was engaged in
+boiling thread, and by her side, near the fire, a lovely infant
+was sleeping, without any covering, on a bare board.&nbsp;
+Whether the fire gave additional glow to the countenance of the
+babe, or that Nature impressed on its unconscious cheek a blush
+that the lot of man should be exposed to such privations, I will
+not decide; but if the cause be referable to the latter, it was
+in perfect unison with my own feelings.&nbsp; Two or three other
+children crowded round the mother: on their rosy countenances
+health seemed established in spite of filth and ragged
+garments.&nbsp; The dress of the poor woman was barely sufficient
+to satisfy decency.&nbsp; Her countenance bore the expression of
+a set melancholy, tinctured with an appearance of ill
+health.&nbsp; The hovel, which did not exceed twelve or fifteen
+feet in length and ten in breadth, was half obscured by
+smoke&mdash;chimney or window I saw none; the door served the
+various purposes of an inlet to light and the outlet to
+smoke.&nbsp; The furniture consisted of two stools, an iron pot,
+and a spinning-wheel, while a sack stuffed with straw, and a
+single blanket laid on planks, served as a bed for the repose of
+the whole family.&nbsp; Need I attempt to describe my
+sensations?&nbsp; The statement alone cannot fail of conveying to
+a mind like yours an adequate idea of them&mdash;I could not long
+remain a witness to this acme of human misery.&nbsp; As I left
+the deplorable habitation the mistress followed me to repeat her
+thanks for the trifle I had bestowed.&nbsp; This gave me an
+opportunity of observing her person more particularly.&nbsp; She
+was a tall figure, her countenance composed of interesting
+features, and with every appearance of having once been
+handsome.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Unwilling to quit the village without first satisfying
+myself whether what I had seen was a solitary instance or a
+sample of its general state, or whether the extremity of poverty
+I had just beheld had arisen from peculiar improvidence and want
+of management in one wretched family, I went into an adjoining
+habitation, where I found a poor old woman of eighty, whose
+miserable existence was painfully continued by the maintenance of
+her granddaughter.&nbsp; Their condition, if possible, was more
+deplorable.&rdquo;&mdash;<i>Curwen</i>, i., pp.
+181&ndash;183.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>This wretchedness, of which all strangers who visit Ireland
+are so sensible, proceeds certainly in great measure from their
+accidental use of a food so cheap, that it encourages population
+to an extraordinary degree, lowers the price of labour, and
+leaves the multitudes which it calls into existence almost
+destitute of everything but food.&nbsp; Many more live in
+consequence of the introduction of potatoes; but all live in
+greater wretchedness.&nbsp; In the progress of population, the
+potato must of course become at last as difficult to be procured
+as any other food; and then let the political economist calculate
+what the immensity and wretchedness of a people must be, where
+the further progress of population is checked by the difficulty
+of procuring potatoes.</p>
+<p>The consequence of the long mismanagement and oppression of
+Ireland, and of the singular circumstances in which it is placed,
+is, that it is a semi-barbarous country&mdash;more shame to those
+who have thus ill-treated a fine country and a fine people; but
+it is part of the present case of Ireland.&nbsp; The barbarism of
+Ireland is evinced by the frequency and ferocity of
+duels&mdash;the hereditary clannish feuds of the common people
+and the fights to which they give birth&mdash;the atrocious
+cruelties practised in the insurrections of the common
+people&mdash;and their proneness to insurrection.&nbsp; The lower
+Irish live in a state of greater wretchedness than any other
+people in Europe inhabiting so fine a soil and climate.&nbsp; It
+is difficult, often impossible, to execute the processes of
+law.&nbsp; In cases where gentlemen are concerned, it is often
+not even attempted.&nbsp; The conduct of under-sheriffs is often
+very corrupt.&nbsp; We are afraid the magistracy of Ireland is
+very inferior to that of this country; the spirit of jobbing and
+bribery is very widely diffused, and upon occasions when the
+utmost purity prevails in the sister kingdom.&nbsp; Military
+force is necessary all over the country, and often for the most
+common and just operations of Government.&nbsp; The behaviour of
+the higher to the lower orders is much less gentle and decent
+than in England.&nbsp; Blows from superiors to inferiors are more
+frequent, and the punishment for such aggression more
+doubtful.&nbsp; The word <i>gentleman</i> seems, in Ireland, to
+put an end to most processes at law.&nbsp; Arrest a
+gentleman!!!&mdash;take out a warrant against a
+gentleman&mdash;are modes of operation not very common in the
+administration of Irish justice.&nbsp; If a man strike the
+meanest peasant in England, he is either knocked down in his
+turn, or immediately taken before a magistrate.&nbsp; It is
+impossible to live in Ireland without perceiving the various
+points in which it is inferior in civilisation.&nbsp; Want of
+unity in feeling and interest among the
+people&mdash;irritability, violence, and revenge&mdash;want of
+comfort and cleanliness in the lower orders&mdash;habitual
+disobedience to the law&mdash;want of confidence in
+magistrates&mdash;corruption, venality, the perpetual necessity
+of recurring to military force&mdash;all carry back the observer
+to that remote and early condition of mankind, which an
+Englishman can learn only in the pages of the antiquary or the
+historian.&nbsp; We do not draw this picture for censure but for
+truth.&nbsp; We admire the Irish&mdash;feel the most sincere pity
+for the state of Ireland&mdash;and think the conduct of the
+English to that country to have been a system of atrocious
+cruelty and contemptible meanness.&nbsp; With such a climate,
+such a soil, and such a people, the inferiority of Ireland to the
+rest of Europe is directly chargeable to the long wickedness of
+the English Government.</p>
+<p>A direct consequence of the present uncivilised state of
+Ireland is, that very little English capital travels there.&nbsp;
+The man who deals in steam-engines, and warps and woofs, is
+naturally alarmed by Peep-of-Day Boys, and nocturnal Carders; his
+object is to buy and sell as quickly and quietly as he can, and
+he will naturally bear high taxes and rivalry in England, or
+emigrate to any part of the Continent, or to America, rather than
+plunge into the tumult of Irish politics and passions.&nbsp;
+There is nothing which Ireland wants more than large
+manufacturing towns to take off its superfluous population.&nbsp;
+But internal peace must come first, and then the arts of peace
+will follow.&nbsp; The foreign manufacturer will hardly think of
+embarking his capital where he cannot be sure that his existence
+is safe.&nbsp; Another check to the manufacturing greatness of
+Ireland is the scarcity, not of coal, but of good coal, cheaply
+raised&mdash;an article in which (in spite of papers in the Irish
+Transactions) they are lamentably inferior to the English.</p>
+<p>Another consequence from some of the causes we have stated is
+the extreme idleness of the Irish labourer.&nbsp; There is
+nothing of the value of which the Irish seem to have so little
+notion as that of time.&nbsp; They scratch, pick, dawdle, stare,
+gape, and do anything but strive and wrestle with the task before
+them.&nbsp; The most ludicrous of all human objects is an
+Irishman ploughing.&nbsp; A gigantic figure&mdash;a seven-foot
+machine for turning potatoes in human nature&mdash;wrapt up in an
+immense great-coat, and urging on two starved ponies, with
+dreadful imprecations and uplifted shillala.&nbsp; The Irish crow
+discerns a coming perquisite, and is not inattentive to the
+proceedings of the steeds.&nbsp; The furrow which is to be the
+depository of the future crop is not unlike, either in depth or
+regularity, to those domestic furrows which the nails of the meek
+and much-injured wife plough, in some family quarrel, upon the
+cheeks of the deservedly punished husband.&nbsp; The weeds seem
+to fall contentedly, knowing that they have fulfilled their
+destiny, and left behind them, for the resurrection of the
+ensuing spring, an abundant and healthy progeny.&nbsp; The whole
+is a scene of idleness, laziness, and poverty, of which it is
+impossible, in this active and enterprising country, to form the
+most distant conception; but strongly indicative of habits,
+whether secondary or original, which will long present a powerful
+impediment to the improvement of Ireland.</p>
+<p>The Irish character contributes something to retard the
+improvements of that country.&nbsp; The Irishman has many good
+qualities: he is brave, witty, generous, eloquent, hospitable,
+and open-hearted; but he is vain, ostentatious, extravagant, and
+fond of display, light in counsel, deficient in perseverance,
+without skill in private or public economy, an enjoyer, not an
+acquirer&mdash;one who despises the slow and patient
+virtues&mdash;who wants the superstructure without the
+foundation, the result without the previous operation, the oak
+without the acorn and the three hundred years of
+expectation.&nbsp; The Irish are irascible, prone to debt and to
+fight, and very impatient of the restraints of law.&nbsp; Such a
+people are not likely to keep their eyes steadily upon the main
+chance like the Scotch or the Dutch.&nbsp; England strove very
+hard at one period to compel the Scotch to pay a double Church,
+but Sawney took his pen and ink, and finding what a sum it
+amounted to became furious and drew his sword.&nbsp; God forbid
+the Irishman should do the same!&nbsp; The remedy now would be
+worse than the disease; but if the oppressions of England had
+been more steadily resisted a century ago, Ireland would not have
+been the scene of poverty, misery, and distress which it now
+is.</p>
+<p>The Catholic religion, among other causes, contributes to the
+backwardness and barbarism of Ireland.&nbsp; Its debasing
+superstition, childish ceremonies, and the profound submission to
+the priesthood which it teaches, all tend to darken men&rsquo;s
+minds, to impede the progress of knowledge and inquiry, and to
+prevent Ireland from becoming as free, as powerful, and as rich
+as the sister kingdom.&nbsp; Though sincere friends to Catholic
+emancipation, we are no advocates for the Catholic
+religion.&nbsp; We should be very glad to see a general
+conversion to Protestantism among the Irish, but we do not think
+that violence, privations, and incapacities, are the proper
+methods of making proselytes.</p>
+<p>Such, then, is Ireland at this period&mdash;a land more
+barbarous than the rest of Europe, because it has been worse
+treated and more cruelly oppressed.&nbsp; Many of the
+incapacities and privations to which the Catholics were exposed
+have been removed by law, but in such instances they are still
+incapacitated and deprived by custom.&nbsp; Many cruel and
+oppressive laws are still enforced against them.&nbsp; A tenth
+part of the population engrosses all the honours of the country;
+the other nine pay a tenth of the product of the earth for the
+support of a religion in which they do not believe.&nbsp; There
+is little capital in the country.&nbsp; The great and rich men
+are called by business, or allured by pleasure, into England;
+their estates are given up to factors, and the utmost farthing of
+rent extorted from the poor, who, if they give up the land,
+cannot get employment in manufactures, or regular employment in
+husbandry.&nbsp; The common people use a sort of food so very
+cheap that they can rear families who cannot procure employment,
+and who have little more of the comforts of life than food.&nbsp;
+The Irish are light-minded&mdash;want of employment has made them
+idle; they are irritable and brave, have a keen remembrance of
+the past wrongs they have suffered, and the present wrongs they
+are suffering from England.&nbsp; The consequence of all this is,
+eternal riot and insurrection, a whole army of soldiers in time
+of profound peace, and general rebellion whenever England is busy
+with her other enemies or off her guard!&nbsp; And thus it will
+be, while the same causes continue to operate, for ages to come,
+and worse and worse as the rapidly increasing population of the
+Catholics becomes more and more numerous.</p>
+<p>The remedies are time and justice, and that justice consists
+in repealing all laws which make any distinction between the two
+religions; in placing over the government of Ireland, not the
+stupid, amiable, and insignificant noblemen who have too often
+been sent there, but men who feel deeply the wrongs of Ireland,
+and who have an ardent wish to heal them; who will take care that
+Catholics, when eligible, shall be elected; who will share the
+patronage of Ireland proportionally among the two parties, and
+give to just and liberal laws the same vigour of execution which
+has hitherto been reserved only for decrees of tyranny, and the
+enactments of oppression.&nbsp; The injustice and hardship of
+supporting two Churches must be put out of sight, if it cannot or
+ought not to be cured.&nbsp; The political economist, the
+moralist, and the satirist, must combine to teach moderation and
+superintendence to the great Irish proprietors.&nbsp; Public talk
+and clamour may do something for the poor Irish, as it did for
+the slaves in the West Indies.&nbsp; Ireland will become more
+quiet under such treatment, and then more rich, more comfortable,
+and more civilised; and the horrid spectacle of folly and
+tyranny, which it at present exhibits, may in time be removed
+from the eyes of Europe.</p>
+<p>There are two eminent Irishmen now in the House of
+Commons&mdash;Lord Castlereagh and Mr. Canning&mdash;who will
+subscribe to the justness of every syllable we have said upon
+this subject, and who have it in their power, by making it the
+condition of their remaining in office, to liberate their native
+country, and raise it to its just rank among the nations of the
+earth.&nbsp; Yet the Court buys them over, year after year, by
+the pomp and perquisites of office; and year after year they come
+into the House of Commons, feeling deeply, and describing
+powerfully, the injuries of five millions of their
+countrymen&mdash;and <i>continue</i> members of a government that
+inflicts those evils, under the pitiful delusion that it is not a
+Cabinet Question, as if the scratchings and quarrellings of Kings
+and Queens could alone cement politicians together in
+indissoluble unity, while the fate and torture of one-third of
+the empire might be complimented away from one minister to
+another, without the smallest breach in their Cabinet
+alliance.&nbsp; Politicians, at least honest politicians, should
+be very flexible and accommodating in little things, very rigid
+and inflexible in great things.&nbsp; And is this <i>not</i> a
+great thing?&nbsp; Who has painted it in finer and more
+commanding eloquence than Mr. Canning?&nbsp; Who has taken a more
+sensible and statesmanlike view of our miserable and cruel policy
+than Lord Castlereagh?&nbsp; You would think, to hear them, that
+the same planet could not contain them and the oppressors of
+their country&mdash;perhaps not the same solar system.&nbsp; Yet
+for money, claret, and patronage, they lend their countenance,
+assistance, and friendship to the Ministers who are the stern and
+inflexible enemies to the emancipation of Ireland!</p>
+<p>Thank God that all is not profligacy and corruption in the
+history of that devoted people&mdash;and that the name of
+Irishman does not always carry with it the idea of the oppressor
+or the oppressed&mdash;the plunderer or the plundered&mdash;the
+tyrant or the slave!&nbsp; Great men hallow a whole people, and
+lift up all who live in their time.&nbsp; What Irishman does not
+feel proud that he has lived in the days of <span
+class="smcap">Grattan</span>? who has not turned to him for
+comfort, from the false friends and open enemies of Ireland? who
+did not remember him in the days of its burnings and wastings and
+murders?&nbsp; No Government ever dismayed him&mdash;the world
+could not bribe him&mdash;he thought only of Ireland&mdash;lived
+for no other object&mdash;dedicated to her his beautiful fancy,
+his elegant wit, his manly courage, and all the splendour of his
+astonishing eloquence.&nbsp; He was so born and so gifted that
+poetry, forensic skill, elegant literature, and all the highest
+attainments of human genius were within his reach; but he thought
+the noblest occupation of a man was to make other men happy and
+free; and in that straight line he went on for fifty years,
+without one side-look, without one yielding thought, without one
+motive in his heart which he might not have laid open to the view
+of God and man.&nbsp; He is gone!&mdash;but there is not a single
+day of his honest life of which every good Irishman would not be
+more proud than of the whole political existence of his
+countrymen&mdash;the annual deserters and betrayers of their
+native land.</p>
+<h2><span class="smcap">Moore&rsquo;s Captain Rock</span>.</h2>
+<p><i>Memoirs of Captain Rock</i>, <i>the celebrated Irish
+Chieftain</i>; <i>with some Account of his Ancestors</i>.&nbsp;
+Written by Himself.&nbsp; Fourth Edition.&nbsp; 12mo.&nbsp;
+London, 1824.</p>
+
+<div class="gapspace">&nbsp;</div>
+<p><span class="smcap">This</span> agreeable and witty book is
+generally supposed to have been written by Mr. Thomas Moore, a
+gentleman of small stature, but full of genius, and a steady
+friend of all that is honourable and just.&nbsp; He has here
+borrowed the name of a celebrated Irish leader, to typify that
+spirit of violence and insurrection which is necessarily
+generated by systematic oppression, and rudely avenges its
+crimes; and the picture he has drawn of its prevalence in that
+unhappy country is at once piteous and frightful.&nbsp; Its
+effect in exciting our horror and indignation is in the long run
+increased, we think&mdash;though at first it may seem
+counteracted&mdash;by the tone of levity, and even jocularity,
+under which he has chosen to veil the deep sarcasm and
+substantial terrors of his story.&nbsp; We smile at first, and
+are amused, and wonder, as we proceed, that the humorous
+narrative should produce conviction and pity&mdash;shame,
+abhorrence, and despair.</p>
+<p>England seems to have treated Ireland much in the same way as
+Mrs. Brownrigg treated her apprentice&mdash;for which Mrs.
+Brownrigg is hanged in the first volume of the Newgate
+Calendar.&nbsp; Upon the whole, we think the apprentice is better
+off than the Irishman; as Mrs. Brownrigg merely starves and beats
+her, without any attempt to prohibit her from going to any shop,
+or praying at any church her apprentice might select: and once or
+twice, if we remember rightly, Brownrigg appears to have felt
+some compassion.&nbsp; Not so Old England, who indulges rather in
+a steady baseness, uniform brutality, and unrelenting
+oppression.</p>
+<p>Let us select from this entertaining little book a short
+history of dear Ireland, such as even some profligate idle member
+of the House of Commons, voting as his master bids him, may
+perchance throw his eye upon, and reflect for a moment upon the
+iniquity to which he lends his support.</p>
+<p>For some centuries after the reign of Henry II., the Irish
+were killed like game, by persons qualified or unqualified.&nbsp;
+Whether dogs were used does not appear quite certain, though it
+is probable they were, spaniels as well as pointers; and that,
+after a regular point by Basto, well backed by Ponto and
+C&aelig;sar, Mr. O&rsquo;Donnel or Mr. O&rsquo;Leary bolted from
+the thicket, and were bagged by the English sportsman.&nbsp; With
+Henry II. came in tithes, to which, in all probability, about one
+million of lives may have been sacrificed in Ireland.&nbsp; In
+the reign of Edward I. the Irish who were settled near the
+English requested that the benefit of the English laws might be
+extended to them; but the remonstrance of the barons with the
+hesitating king was in substance this: &ldquo;You have made us a
+present of these wild gentlemen, and we particularly request that
+no measures may be adopted to check us in that full range of
+tyranny and oppression in which we consider the value of such a
+gift to consist.&nbsp; You might as well give us sheep, and
+prevent us from shearing the wool, or roasting the
+meat.&rdquo;&nbsp; This reasoning prevailed, and the Irish were
+kept to their barbarism, and the barons preserved their dive
+stock.</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;Read &lsquo;Orange faction&rsquo; (says
+Captain Rock) here and you have the wisdom of our rulers, at the
+end of near six centuries, <i>in statu quo</i>.&nbsp; The grand
+periodic year of the stoics, at the close of which everything was
+to begin again, and the same events to be all reacted in the same
+order, is, on a miniature scale, represented in the history of
+the English Government in Ireland, every succeeding century being
+but a new revolution of the same follies, the same crimes, and
+the same turbulence that disgraced the former.&nbsp; But
+&lsquo;Vive l&rsquo;ennemi!&rsquo; say I: whoever may suffer by
+such measures, Captain Rock, at least, will prosper.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And such was the result at the period of which I am
+speaking.&nbsp; The rejection of a petition, so humble and so
+reasonable, was followed, as a matter of course, by one of those
+daring rebellions into which the revenge of an insulted people
+naturally breaks forth.&nbsp; The M&rsquo;Cartys, the
+O&rsquo;Briens, and the other Macs and O&rsquo;s, who have been
+kept on the alert by similar causes ever since, flew to arms
+under the command of a chieftain of my family; and, as the
+proffered <i>handle</i> of the sword had been rejected, made
+their inexorable masters at least feel its
+<i>edge</i>.&rdquo;&mdash;(<i>pp.</i> 23&ndash;25.)</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Fifty years afterwards the same request was renewed and
+refused.&nbsp; Up again rose Mac and O, a <i>just and necessary
+war</i> ensued; and after the usual murders, the usual chains
+were replaced upon the Irishry.&nbsp; All Irishmen were excluded
+from every species of office.&nbsp; It was high treason to marry
+with the Irish blood, and highly penal to receive the Irish into
+religious houses.&nbsp; War was waged also against their Thomas
+Moores, Samuel Rogerses, and Walter Scotts, who went about the
+country harping and singing against English oppression.&nbsp; No
+such turbulent guests were to be received.&nbsp; The plan of
+making them poets-laureate, or converting them to loyalty by
+pensions of &pound;100 per annum, had not then been thought
+of.&nbsp; They debarred the Irish even from the pleasure of
+running away, and fixed them to the soil like negroes.</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;I have thus selected,&rdquo; says the
+historian of Rock, &ldquo;cursorily and at random, a few features
+of the reigns preceding the Reformation, in order to show what
+good use was made of those three or four hundred years in
+attaching the Irish people to their English governors; and by
+what a gentle course of alternatives they were prepared for the
+inoculation of a new religion, which was now about to be
+attempted upon them by the same skilful and friendly hands.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Henry VII. appears to have been the first monarch to
+whom it occurred, that matters were not managed exactly as they
+ought in this part of his dominions; and we find him&mdash;with a
+simplicity which is still fresh and youthful among our
+rulers&mdash;expressing his <i>surprise</i> that his subjects of
+this land should be so prone to faction and rebellion, and that
+so little advantage had been hitherto derived from the
+acquisitions of his predecessor, notwithstanding the fruitfulness
+and natural advantages of Ireland.&nbsp; Surprising, indeed, that
+a policy, such as we have been describing, should not have
+converted the whole country into a perfect Atlantis of
+happiness&mdash;should not have made it like the imaginary island
+of Sir Thomas More, where &lsquo;<i>tota insula velut una familia
+est</i>!&rsquo;&mdash;most stubborn, truly, and ungrateful, must
+that people be, upon whom, up to the very hour in which I write,
+such a long and unvarying course of penal laws, confiscations,
+and Insurrection Acts has been tried, without making them in the
+least degree in love with their rulers.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Heloise tells her tutor, Abelard, that the correction
+which he inflicted upon her only served to increase the ardour of
+her affection for him; but bayonets and hemp are no such
+&lsquo;<i>amoris stimuli</i>.&rsquo;&nbsp; One more
+characteristic anecdote of those times and I have done.&nbsp; At
+the battle of Knocktow, in the reign of Henry VII., when that
+remarkable man, the Earl of Kildare, assisted by the great
+O&rsquo;Neal and other Irish chiefs, gained a victory over
+Clanricard of Connaught, most important to the English
+Government, Lord Gormanstown, after the battle, in the first
+insolence of success, said, turning to the Earl of Kildare,
+&lsquo;We have now slaughtered our enemies, but, to complete the
+good deed, we must proceed yet further, and&mdash;cut the throats
+of those Irish of our own party!&rsquo;&nbsp; Who can wonder that
+the Rock family were active in those times?&rdquo;&mdash;(pp. 33,
+35.)</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Henry VIII. persisted in all these outrages, and aggravated
+them by insulting the prejudices of the people.&nbsp; England is
+almost the only country in the world (even at present) where
+there is not some favourite religious sport, where absurd lies,
+little bits of cloth, feathers, rusty nails, splinters, and other
+invaluable relics, are treasured up, and in defence of which the
+whole population are willing to turn out and perish as one
+man.&nbsp; Such was the shrine of St. Kieran, the whole treasures
+of which the satellites of that corpulent tyrant turned out into
+the street, pillaged the sacred church of Clonmacnoise, scattered
+the holy nonsense of the priests to the winds, and burnt the real
+and venerable crosier of St. Patrick, fresh from the
+silversmith&rsquo;s shop, and formed of the most costly
+materials.&nbsp; Modern princes change the uniform of regiments;
+Henry changed the religion of kingdoms, and was determined that
+the belief of the Irish should undergo a radical and Protestant
+conversion.&nbsp; With what success this attempt was made, the
+present state of Ireland is sufficient evidence.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Be not dismayed,&rdquo; said Elizabeth, on hearing that
+O&rsquo;Neal meditated some designs against her government;
+&ldquo;tell my friends, if he arise, it will turn to their
+advantage&mdash;<i>there will be estates for those who
+want</i>.&rdquo;&nbsp; Soon after this prophetic speech, Munster
+was destroyed by famine and the sword, and near 600,000 acres
+forfeited to the crown, and distributed among Englishmen.&nbsp;
+Sir Walter Raleigh (the virtuous and good) butchered the garrison
+of Limerick in cold blood, after Lord Deputy Gray had selected
+700 to be hanged.&nbsp; There were, during the reign of
+Elizabeth, three invasions of Ireland by the Spaniards, produced
+principally by the absurd measures of this princess for the
+reformation of its religion.&nbsp; The Catholic clergy, in
+consequence of these measures, abandoned their cures, the
+churches fell to ruin, and the people were left without any means
+of instruction.&nbsp; Add to these circumstances the murder of
+M&rsquo;Mahon, the imprisonment of O&rsquo;Toole and
+O&rsquo;Dogherty, and the kidnapping of O&rsquo;Donnel&mdash;all
+truly Anglo-Hibernian proceedings.&nbsp; The execution of the
+laws was rendered detestable and intolerable by the queen&rsquo;s
+officers of justice.&nbsp; The spirit raised by these
+transactions, besides innumerable smaller insurrections gave rise
+to the great wars of Desmond and Hugh O&rsquo;Neal; which, after
+they had worn out the ablest generals, discomfited the choicest
+troops, exhausted the treasure, and embarrassed the operations of
+Elizabeth, were terminated by the destruction of these two
+ancient families, and by the confiscation of more than half the
+territorial surface of the island.&nbsp; The last two years of
+O&rsquo;Neal&rsquo;s wars cost Elizabeth &pound;140,000 per
+annum, though the whole revenue of England at that period fell
+considerably short of &pound;500,000.&nbsp; Essex, after the
+destruction of Norris, led into Ireland an army of above 20,000
+men, which was totally baffled and destroyed by Tyrone, within
+two years of their landing.&nbsp; Such was the importance of
+Irish rebellions two centuries before the time in which we
+live.&nbsp; Sir G. Carew attempted to assassinate the Lugan
+Earl&mdash;Mountjoy compelled the Irish rebels to massacre each
+other.&nbsp; In the course of a few months 3,000 men were starved
+to death in Tyrone.&nbsp; Sir Arthur Chichester, Sir Richard
+Manson, and other commanders, saw three children feeding on the
+flesh of their dead mother.&nbsp; Such were the golden days of
+good Queen Bess!</p>
+<p>By the rebellions of Dogherty, in the reign of James I., six
+northern counties were confiscated, amounting to 500,000
+acres.&nbsp; In the same manner, 64,000 acres were confiscated in
+Athlone.&nbsp; The whole of his confiscations amount to nearly a
+million acres; and if Leland means plantation acres, they
+constitute a twelfth of the whole kingdom according to Newenham,
+and a tenth according to Sir W. Petty.&nbsp; The most shocking
+and scandalous action in the reign of James, was his attack upon
+the whole property of the province of Connaught, which he would
+have effected, if he had not been bought off by a sum greater
+than he hoped to gain by his iniquity, besides the luxury of
+confiscation.&nbsp; The Irish, during the reign of James I.,
+suffered under the <i>double</i> evils of a licentious soldiery
+and a religious persecution.</p>
+<p>Charles I. took a bribe of &pound;120,000 from his Irish
+subjects, to grant them what in those days were called
+<i>Graces</i>, but in these days would be denominated the
+Elements of Justice.&nbsp; The money was paid, but the graces
+were never granted.&nbsp; One of these graces was curious enough:
+&ldquo;That the clergy were not to be permitted to keep
+henceforward any private prisons of their own, but delinquents
+were to be committed to the public jails.&rdquo;&nbsp; The idea
+of a rector, with his own private jail full of Dissenters, is the
+most ludicrous piece of tyranny we ever heard of.&nbsp; The
+troops in the beginning of Charles&rsquo;s reign were supported
+by the weekly fines levied upon the Catholics for non-attendance
+upon established worship.&nbsp; The Archbishop of Dublin went
+himself at the head of a file of musketeers, to disperse a
+Catholic congregation in Dublin&mdash;which object he effected
+after a considerable skirmish with the priests.&nbsp; &ldquo;The
+favourite object&rdquo; (says Dr. Leland, a Protestant clergyman,
+and dignitary of the Irish Church) &ldquo;of the Irish Government
+and the English Parliament, was <i>the utter extermination</i> of
+all the Catholic inhabitants of Ireland.&rdquo;&nbsp; The great
+rebellion took place in this reign, and Ireland was one scene of
+blood and cruelty and confiscation.</p>
+<p>Cromwell began his career in Ireland by massacring for five
+days the garrison of Drogheda, to whom quarter had been
+promised.&nbsp; Two millions and a half of acres were
+confiscated.&nbsp; Whole towns were put up in lots, and
+sold.&nbsp; The Catholics were banished from three-fourths of the
+kingdom, and confined to Connaught.&nbsp; After a certain day,
+every Catholic found out of Connaught was to be punished with
+death.&nbsp; Fleetwood complains peevishly &ldquo;that the people
+<i>do not transport readily</i>,&rdquo; but adds, &ldquo;<i>it is
+doubtless a work in which the Lord will appear</i>.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+Ten thousand Irish were sent as recruits to the Spanish army.</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;Such was <i>Cromwell&rsquo;s</i> way of
+settling the affairs of Ireland; and if a nation <i>is</i> to be
+ruined, this method is, perhaps, as good as any.&nbsp; It is, at
+least, more humane than the slow, lingering process of exclusion,
+disappointment, and degradation, by which their hearts are worn
+out under more specious forms of tyranny; and that talent of
+despatch which Moli&egrave;re attributes to one of his physicians
+is no ordinary merit in a practitioner like
+Cromwell:&mdash;&ldquo;C&rsquo;est un homme exp&eacute;ditif, qui
+aime &agrave; dep&ecirc;cher ses malades; et quand on &agrave;
+mourir, cela se fait avec lui le plus vite du monde.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+A certain military Duke, who complains that Ireland is but half
+conquered, would, no doubt, upon an emergency, try his hand in
+the same line of practice, and, like that &lsquo;stern
+hero&rsquo; Mirmillo, in the Dispensary,</p>
+<p>&ldquo;While others meanly take whole months to slay,<br />
+Despatch the grateful patient in a day!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Among other amiable enactments against the Catholics at
+this period, the price of five pounds was set on the head of a
+Romish priest, being exactly the same sum offered by the same
+legislators for the head of a wolf.&nbsp; The Athenians, we are
+told, encouraged the destruction of wolves by a similar reward
+(five drachms); but it does not appear that these heathens bought
+up the heads of priests at the same rate, such zeal in the cause
+of religion being reserved for times of Christianity and
+Protestantism.&rdquo;&mdash;(pp. 97&ndash;99.)</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Nothing can show more strongly the light in which the Irish
+were held by Cromwell than the correspondence with Henry Cromwell
+respecting the peopling of Jamaica from Ireland.&nbsp; Secretary
+Thurloe sends to Henry, the Lord Deputy in Ireland, to inform him
+that &ldquo;a stock of Irish girls and Irish young men are
+wanting for the peopling of Jamaica.&rdquo;&nbsp; The answer of
+Henry Cromwell is as follows:&mdash;&ldquo;Concerning the supply
+of young men, although we must use force in taking them up,
+<i>yet it being so much for their own good</i>, and likely to be
+of so great advantage to the public, it is not the least doubted
+but that you may have such a number of them as you may think fit
+to make use of on this account.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I shall not need repeat anything respecting the girls,
+not doubting to answer your expectations to the full <i>in
+that</i>; and I think it might be of like advantage to your
+affairs there and ours here if you should think fit to send 1,500
+or 2,000 boys to the place above mentioned.&nbsp; <i>We can well
+spare them</i>; and who knows but that it may be the means of
+making them Englishmen&mdash;I mean, rather, Christians?&nbsp; As
+for the girls, I suppose you will make provisions of clothes, and
+other accommodations for them.&rdquo;&nbsp; Upon this, Thurloe
+informs Henry Cromwell that the council have voted 4,000
+<i>girls</i>, <i>and as many boys</i>, to go to Jamaica.</p>
+<p>Every Catholic priest found in Ireland was hanged, and five
+pounds paid to the informer.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;About the years 1652 and 1653,&rdquo; says Colonel
+Lawrence, in his <i>Interests of Ireland</i>, &ldquo;the plague
+and famine had so swept away whole counties, that a man might
+travel twenty or thirty miles and not see a living creature,
+either man, or beast, or bird, they being all dead, or had
+quitted those desolate places.&nbsp; Our soldiers would tell
+stories of the places where they saw smoke&mdash;it was so rare
+to see either smoke by day or fire or candle by
+night.&rdquo;&nbsp; In this manner did the Irish live and die
+under Cromwell, suffering by the sword, famine, pestilence, and
+persecution, beholding the confiscation of a kingdom and the
+banishment of a race.&nbsp; &ldquo;So that there perished,&rdquo;
+says Sir W. Petty, &ldquo;in the year 1641, 650,000 human beings,
+whose bloods somebody must atone for to God and the
+King!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>In the reign of Charles II., by the Act of Settlement, four
+millions and a half of acres were for ever taken from the
+Irish.&nbsp; &ldquo;This country,&rdquo; says the Earl of Essex,
+Lord Lieutenant in 1675, &ldquo;has been perpetually rent and
+torn since his Majesty&rsquo;s restoration.&nbsp; I can compare
+it to nothing better than the flinging the reward on the death of
+a deer among the pack of hounds, where every one pulls and tears
+where he can for himself.&rdquo;&nbsp; All wool grown in Ireland
+was, by Act of Parliament, compelled to be sold to England; and
+Irish cattle were excluded from England.&nbsp; The English,
+however, were pleased to accept 30,000 head of cattle, sent as a
+gift from Ireland to the sufferers in the great fire! and the
+first day of the Sessions, after this act of munificence, the
+Parliament passed fresh acts of exclusion against the productions
+of that country.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Among the many anomalous situations in which the Irish
+have been placed, by those &lsquo;marriage vows, false as
+dicers&rsquo; oaths,&rsquo; which bind their country to England,
+the dilemma in which they found themselves at the Revolution was
+not the less perplexing or cruel.&nbsp; If they were loyal to the
+King <i>de jure</i>, they were hanged by the King <i>de
+facto</i>; and if they escaped with life from the King <i>de
+facto</i>, it was but to be plundered and proscribed by the King
+<i>de jure</i> afterwards.</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Hac <i>gener</i> atque <i>socer</i>
+coeant mercede suorum.&rsquo;&mdash;<span
+class="smcap">Virgil</span>.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;In a manner so summary, prompt, and high
+mettled,<br />
+Twixt father and son-in-law matters were settled.&rsquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>&ldquo;In fact, most of the outlawries in Ireland were for
+treason committed the very day on which the Prince and Princess
+of Orange accepted the crown in the Banqueting-house; though the
+news of this event could not possibly have reached the other side
+of the Channel on the same day, and the Lord-Lieutenant of King
+James, with an army to enforce obedience, was at that time in
+actual possession of the government, so little was common sense
+consulted, or the mere decency of forms observed, by that
+rapacious spirit, which nothing less than the confiscation of the
+whole island could satisfy; and which having, in the reign of
+James I. and at the Restoration, despoiled the natives of no less
+than ten millions six hundred and thirty-six thousand eight
+hundred and thirty-seven acres, now added to its plunder one
+million sixty thousand seven hundred and ninety-two acres more,
+being the amount altogether (according to Lord Clare&rsquo;s
+calculation) of the whole superficial contents of the island!</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;Thus, not only had <i>all</i> Ireland
+suffered confiscation in the course of this century, but no
+inconsiderable portion of it had been twice and even thrice
+confiscated.&nbsp; Well might Lord Clare say, &lsquo;that the
+situation of the Irish nation, at the Revolution, stands
+unparalleled in the history of the inhabited
+world.&rsquo;&rdquo;&nbsp; (pp. 111&ndash;113.)</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>By the Articles of Limerick, the Irish were promised the free
+exercise of their religion; but from that period to the year
+1788, every year produced some fresh penalty against that
+religion, some liberty was abridged, some right impaired, or some
+suffering increased.&nbsp; By acts in King William&rsquo;s reign,
+they were prevented from being solicitors.&nbsp; No Catholic was
+allowed to marry a Protestant; and any Catholic who sent a son to
+Catholic countries for education was to forfeit all his
+lands.&nbsp; In the reign of Queen Anne, any son of a Catholic
+who chose to turn Protestant got possession of the father&rsquo;s
+estate.&nbsp; No Papist was allowed to purchase freehold
+property, or to take a lease for more than thirty years.&nbsp; If
+a Protestant dies intestate, the estate is to go to the next
+<i>Protestant</i> heir, though all to the tenth generation should
+be Catholic.&nbsp; In the same manner, if a Catholic dies
+intestate, his estate is to go to the next Protestant.&nbsp; No
+Papist is to dwell in Limerick or Galway.&nbsp; No Papist is to
+take an annuity for life.&nbsp; The widow of a Papist turning
+Protestant to have a portion of the chattels of deceased in spite
+of any will.&nbsp; Every Papist teaching schools to be presented
+as a regular Popish convict.&nbsp; Prices of catching Catholic
+priests, from 50s. to &pound;10, according to rank.&nbsp; Papists
+are to answer all questions respecting other Papists, or to be
+committed to jail for twelve months.&nbsp; No trust to be
+undertaken for Papists.&nbsp; No Papist to be on Grand
+Juries.&nbsp; Some notion may be formed of the spirit of those
+times, from an order of the House of Commons, &ldquo;that the
+Sergeant-at-Arms should take into custody all Papists that should
+presume to come into <i>the gallery</i>!&rdquo;&nbsp;
+(<i>Commons&rsquo; Journal</i>, vol. iii., fol. 976.)&nbsp;
+During this reign the English Parliament legislated as absolutely
+for Ireland as they do now for Rutlandshire, an evil not to be
+complained of, if they had done it as justly.&nbsp; In the reign
+of George I., the horses of Papists were seized for the militia,
+and rode by Protestants; towards which the Catholics paid double,
+and were compelled to find Protestant substitutes.&nbsp; They
+were prohibited from voting at vestries, or being high or petty
+constables.&nbsp; An act of the English Parliament in this reign
+opens as follows:&mdash;&ldquo;Whereas attempts have been lately
+made to shake off the subjection of Ireland to the Imperial Crown
+of these realms, be it enacted,&rdquo; etc. etc.&nbsp; In the
+reign of George II. four-sixths of the population were cut off
+from the right of voting at elections by the necessity under
+which they were placed of taking the oath of supremacy.&nbsp;
+Barristers and solicitors marrying Catholics are exposed to all
+the penalties of Catholics.&nbsp; Persons robbed by privateers
+during a war with a Catholic State are to be indemnified by a
+levy on the Catholic inhabitants of the neighbourhood.&nbsp; All
+marriages between Catholics and Protestants are annulled.&nbsp;
+All Popish priests celebrating them are to be hanged.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;This system&rdquo; (says Arthur Young) &ldquo;has no other
+tendency than that of driving out of the kingdom all the personal
+wealth of the Catholics, and extinguishing their industry within
+it; and the face of the country, every object which presents
+itself to travellers, tells him how effectually this has been
+done.&rdquo;&mdash;<i>Young&rsquo;s Tour in Ireland</i>, vol.
+ii., p. 48.</p>
+
+<div class="gapspace">&nbsp;</div>
+<p>Such is the history of Ireland&mdash;for we are now at our own
+times; and the only remaining question is, whether the system of
+improvement and conciliation begun in the reign of George III.
+shall be pursued, and the remaining incapacities of the Catholics
+removed, or all these concessions be made insignificant by an
+adherence to that spirit of proscription which they professed to
+abolish?&nbsp; Looking to the sense and reason of the thing, and
+to the ordinary working of humanity and justice, when assisted,
+as they are here, by self-interest and worldly policy, it might
+seem absurd to doubt of the result.&nbsp; But looking to the
+facts and the persons by which we are now surrounded, we are
+constrained to say that we greatly fear that these incapacities
+never will be removed till they are removed by fear.&nbsp; What
+else, indeed, can we expect when we see them opposed by such
+enlightened men as Mr. Peel&mdash;faintly assisted by men of such
+admirable genius as Mr. Canning&mdash;when Royal Dukes consider
+it as a compliment to the memory of their father to continue this
+miserable system of bigotry and exclusion, when men act
+ignominiously and contemptibly on this question, who do so on no
+other question, when almost the only persons zealously opposed to
+this general baseness and fatuity are a few Whigs and Reviewers,
+or here and there a virtuous poet like Mr. Moore?&nbsp; We repeat
+again, that the measure never will be effected but by fear.&nbsp;
+In the midst of one of our just and necessary wars, the Irish
+Catholics will compel this country to grant them a great deal
+more than they at present require or even contemplate.&nbsp; We
+regret most severely the protraction of the disease, and the
+danger of the remedy; but in this way it is that human affairs
+are carried on!</p>
+<p>We are sorry we have nothing for which to praise
+Administration on the subject of the Catholic question, but it is
+but justice to say, that they have been very zealous and active
+in detecting fiscal abuses in Ireland, in improving mercantile
+regulations, and in detecting Irish jobs.&nbsp; The commission on
+which Mr. Wallace presided has been of the greatest possible
+utility, and does infinite credit to the Government.&nbsp; The
+name of Mr. Wallace in any commission has now become a pledge to
+the public that there is a real intention to investigate and
+correct abuse.&nbsp; He stands in the singular predicament of
+being equally trusted by the rulers and the ruled.&nbsp; It is a
+new era in Government when such men are called into action; and
+if there were not proclaimed and fatal limits to that ministerial
+liberality, which, so far as it goes, we welcome without a grudge
+and praise without a sneer, we might yet hope that, for the sake
+of mere consistency, they might be led to falsify our
+forebodings.&nbsp; But alas! there are motives more immediate,
+and therefore irresistible; and the time is not yet come when it
+will be believed easier to govern Ireland by the love of the many
+than by the power of the few, when the paltry and dangerous
+machinery of bigoted faction and prostituted patronage may be
+dispensed with, and the vessel of the State be propelled by the
+natural current of popular interests and the breath of popular
+applause.&nbsp; In the meantime, we cannot resist the temptation
+of gracing our conclusion with the following beautiful passage,
+in which the author alludes to the hopes that were raised at
+another great era of partial concession and liberality, that of
+the revolution of 1782, when, also, benefits were conferred which
+proved abortive because they were incomplete, and balm poured
+into the wound, where the envenomed shaft was yet left to
+rankle.</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;And here,&rdquo; says the gallant Captain
+Rock, &ldquo;as the free confession of weakness constitutes the
+chief charm and use of biography, I will candidly own that the
+dawn of prosperity and concord which I now saw breaking over the
+fortunes of my country, so dazzled and deceived my youthful eyes,
+and so unsettled every hereditary notion of what I owed to my
+name and family, that&mdash;shall I confess it&mdash;I even
+hailed with pleasure the prospects of peace and freedom that
+seemed opening around me; nay, was ready, in the boyish
+enthusiasm of the moment, to sacrifice all my own personal
+interest in all future riots and rebellions to the one bright,
+seducing object of my country&rsquo;s liberty and repose.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;When I contemplated such a man as the venerable
+Charlemont, whose nobility was to the people like a fort over a
+valley, elevated above them solely for their defence; who
+introduced the polish of the courtier into the camp of the
+freeman, and served his country with all that pure Platonic
+devotion which a true knight in the time of chivalry proffered to
+his mistress; when I listened to the eloquence of Grattan, the
+very music of freedom, her first fresh matin song, after a long
+night of slavery, degradation, and sorrow; when I saw the bright
+offerings which he brought to the shrine of his
+country&mdash;wisdom, genius, courage, and patience, invigorated
+and embellished by all those social and domestic virtues, without
+which the loftiest talents stand isolated in the moral waste
+around them, like the pillars of Palmyra towering in a
+wilderness!&mdash;when I reflected on all this, it not only
+disheartened me for the mission of discord which I had
+undertaken, but made me secretly hope that it might be rendered
+unnecessary; and that a country which could produce such men and
+achieve such a revolution, might yet&mdash;in spite of the joint
+efforts of the Government and my family&mdash;take her rank in
+the scale of nations, and be happy!</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My father, however, who saw the momentary dazzle by
+which I was affected, soon drew me out of this false light of
+hope in which I lay basking, and set the truth before me in a way
+but too convincing and ominous.&nbsp; &lsquo;Be not deceived,
+boy,&rsquo; he would say, &lsquo;by the fallacious appearances
+before you.&nbsp; Eminently great and good as is the man to whom
+Ireland owes this short era of glory, <i>our</i> work, believe
+me, will last longer than his.&nbsp; We have a power on our side
+that &ldquo;will not willingly let us die;&rdquo; and, long after
+Grattan shall have disappeared from earth like that arrow shot
+into the clouds by Alcestes, effecting nothing, but leaving a
+long train of light behind him, the family of the <span
+class="smcap">Rocks</span> will continue to flourish in all their
+native glory, upheld by the ever-watchful care of the
+Legislature, and fostered by that &ldquo;nursing-mother of
+Liberty,&rdquo; the Church.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PETER PLYMLEY'S LETTERS***</p>
+<pre>
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+</pre></body>
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