On this page
-
Text (1)
-
Untitled Article
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
-
-
Transcript
-
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
Additionally, when viewing full transcripts, extracted text may not be in the same order as the original document.
Untitled Article
jfety iiig ~ y / itfc Cardinal La # I , or t ^ iik ^ ^ Kfc tb < e Abbe Barruel , th ^ Tfcries wouM hav e been on nis > side . THiey would have fo&ght twenty years by it ; joined a Holy Alliance in its favour ; accompanied its struggles and its banishments with
the greatest respect , hats off rind purses in hand ; and identified its cause with that of good government all over the world ; to wit , despotism on the throne , an < $ r ignorance among th e people .
And on what ground would they have defended this policy ? " Qh , " they would have said , " Catholicism is a very different tiling now from what it was . There are no inquisitions and massacres now ; no Pope
of any consequence . To support it , is a good reaction against infidelity and disobedience . ' * This is what they said when they fought against the first French llevolution .
In other Wdrds , and upon their oWn grounds , they would have vindicated that very harrnlessfriess of ihe creed in France , JSpainy Italy , Portugal , and 'Gei ^ niany , which they pretend 1
Jto * consider ' somethingso dreddfully « the r ^ ve r&e in thfc liarjds of ( the po ^ r good-natured Wish , Who ask thewi for permtesittiii not . 1 to puy 1 tw 6 < Shurclies . ) Most truly is it to be grariC ^ d , tMstt OathoHelsni is not tile foR
midahie thing it wals m thos ^ cbuntries . ' Stfange ¦ infeeft wo » 9 di ^ b ^ i , if aft ^ r ^ all' tihiiV likk been'Mdclii 0 b y » tlier > V ^ ltAtfes ah * tfto < is » featts ^
Untitled Article
Filangidris , ] , Wielandsj and Goethes ^ &c . Ca tB 613 cjstt sh ij ulH hk what it wai iinder dpMli |> the S £ c 6 nd or Cathiarinfe de Medicis . But gr ^ hfitig tleire is no dahg-er to titiW civilized world , or to tlie iaimenities of
Protestantisrh , in th ^ present condition of ninety-nitae . hundredths of the Cathdlib part of it , what is the meaning of the danger to be apptehe ^ iaed from the poor , ragged ^ half- stkifvecl remainder ; me hundredth part ;
to wit , —the Irish fjarti—lining upon potatoes arid s ' ea ^ tvefea , and paying twp churches ? lis the mere fact of its asking permission to pay only' one , the same thing in amount of horror as the massacres arid stakes of old ?
Supposing , for the / sake of argument , ( ridiculous as such suppositions often are ) that the dreams of such men as Lords Roden and Kenyon cibuld be true , and that there ivere ti
ganger of reaction 6 ri the part of the Irish Catholics , if they g 6 t fife ascendancy in their 6 wn cotiiiftry , is large G ^ at Briiaiii going to be riui doWh all <> f a
stidderi by little / ' ^ lahd ; ' ifrM a ship by a cock-bdat ? or 'If Jt is meant that there could be k
sanguinary reaction in Ireland against tlie Protestants iS there rio suck , tlvuitt * . qh , a ; , salutary respect for dielarge ship Ion , the pM of { he lHt # Vess ^? and wSHo nidc ^ t He t ^ tyU ^ Wmit
tfr < \\ Wpitr ^ TM "Prints ? Wmme ^ erf fr rteM affe inWd ^ ^ ' ; t « tfP > succ& ^ ] a tiM 8 ffi theM / 'W the ^ te 6 fT p 6 > mWWdt ? e § ta 1 it £ J ^ rMfetei
Untitled Article
tMj fyQk& ^ Mti 3 erti k ^ dKttsk . SSS
-
-
Citation
-
Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), Nov. 1, 1837, page 353, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct1837/page/57/
-