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ffief cWf ' $# M $ * l *> fag tjt » eto- * & ? Wm 6 ( oppositereljgjgiMsentiments in CorriWaff , I was told , s ^ d ^ Wiiatin ^ opinions
^ vcr bi ^ * & £ o £ jheie i ^ j ^ o ^ v % erroneous their docttinjeJiM ^ y b ^ t they must be sincere ; forfti&X wadt nothing of us but a pa ^ edthearimg , they take no m ^ itey offrs : and they not only travel and preach to us for nothing , but give us bo ^ ks \ yithout being" paid for them . ' *
^ Before I lay down my pen , justice requites that t should thank the Gbmrnittee for so agreeable and worthy an assistant in my late journey , as my traveling companion , Mr . Copper , \ vhom 1 found a great comfort and help to me in so long and
iabofious a mission . To say I was perl&ctiy satisfied with his couduct , wcmi ( J fell far short of what I ought " to express ^ his deep seriousness * itfeady piety , gobd sense and rational £ eaf rendered h | s company apc | assistance highly acceptable . He
partiQfjyated , with much propriety , in a variety of conversations ^ and conducted the devotional part of services iii public in a truly edify ing manner . His pulpit services , also , as far as I could
learn , were generally acceptable-Throughout , he shewed his heart to be in the work . During the whole of the journey , Mr . Cooper preached twieuty-four times . R . WRIGHT .
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Tte Address and Reniomtrance of tie Roman ( Jytholics of Ireland , to his Holiness Pope Pius Vl f . 9 resolved upon at their Aggregate Meeting held in the City of Dublin , August 29 th , 1815 ,
Sir Thomas Esmonde , Bart , in the Chair . To his Holiness Pope Pius VII . the humble Address and Remonstrance of the Roman Catholics of Ireland . MOBT HOI . Y FaTH £ | 1 ,
We , the Roman Oatiiolic pwple of Ireland , i ^ ofest hiimbJy ^ ppro a ^ h yo ^ r Holiness , imploring for ^ ve i ^ illioM ^ o ^ faithful children , the apostolical benediction .
We f lesire , Mo ^ t Holy patter , to W 3 r ai * l jour Jijsr fin ^ in reajp ^ cMwl ¦^^ ' ¦ W ft ' ^^^^ ^ i tt ^ t so , ypur Bdiiiiesy may ^ Tbe perfectly jfifoirpi ^ d p ¥ &ur feats , oifr d&iydB , \* nj& ? ur
de-We deem it i | nnece * sa ^ Moip H ^ ty JF athfer , to remind the Sxiv ^ Vefg ^ I ^ ohltifif of i ^ tt r ChuiH ^^ fcdFdur jjtefeftharchiims to hia p rp ^ tliBa \| a ^^ pprt ^ for we cannot / for $ * m $ M&mi imagine that your Holiness isunmindful of th ^ j constancy and devotioii ^ Sinifejsted towards the Holy Se ^ f bjr the Roman Catholics of Irehtnd , in
despite of the most sanguinary anct unrelenting persecution , that ever , aggrieved a Christian people-We cannot , however , ab » tain from reminding our Most Holy Father * that although the persecution which we and our ancestors endured , was
notoriously and avowedly inflicted upon us , on account of our adherence to , and connexion with , the Holy See ; nevertheless , the Roman Catholics of Ireland never solicited the
predecessors of your Holiness , at aijy period of that persecution , to alter , in the slightest degree , that connexion , or make any modification of the existing discipline of our Holy Church , to obtain , for the Roman Catholics of
Ireland , the repeal or mitigation of those cruel laws which prpscrib ^ d them . i With , sentiments of most sin £ ei £ sorrow , we have heard ihaf , nptivitihstanding the uniform manifest at ion ? v of our spiritual attachment to the Holy See , it ha ^ pleased yotir Holiness to favour a ineasurfe , which
would enable a Protestant gbytrumerit to tpntrplil the ai ^ pointmeht of our prelates ; against which the CatUr olic voice of Ireland has pirotested , and ever will protest with one accords No spiritual grounds are alleged for
t | ie proposed alteration iti pur ecclesiastical system ; it is not j > r £ fended that it would . a 4 vance the iritere ^ ii of religion , or improve the inoraKty 0 ( T the Catholic people of IreliU ? d ; on the contrary , it is proposed in
Qptio-&jtion to the well-known andxieclar ^ d opinions of our spirituar guidies , aild is offered $ * ad exchange or barter for some f empbral aid gr conoea » uo | i : it thereft > lFe becomes our duty , tif Catholics and as stihjects , to * at ate , in
moot explicit terms , our sentualeiit ^ Upon i ( t . ; . It in considered right to a ^ suVa ywr Holiuoss , in the first instati c ^ that although the penal Javr « , which wer ^ framea for the op pye ^ siott ofHi % Catholics of Ireland , have beep . £ ph-• iderabJy relaxed dujiug tlie reign
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Citation
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Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), Dec. 2, 1815, page 771, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct1767/page/43/
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