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
settle the Roman Catholic question , I beg leave to submit to your superior judgment a few reflections made to me by some well-informed and unbiassed friends , as well Protestants as Catholics , wjio certainly understand the subject much better than I can pretend to do . They have read with great pleasure and gratitude the noble declaration in which your Grace so strongly expresses
your sincere anxiety to witness the settlement of the Roman Catholic question ,- which , you are convinced , would , by benefiting the state , confer a benefit on every individual of society ; and you regret that yon see no prospect of such a settlement , because violent party feelings are mixed up with that question , and pervade every discussion of it to such a degree , as to preclude the possibility of prevailing upon men to consider it dispassionately ; but that if it could be buried in oblivion for a short time , and if that time were
diligently employed in the consideration of the question , you would not despair of seeing a satisfactory remedy . " These humane and statesman-like sentiments ( as far as they go ) do great honour to your Grace ' s head and heart , and might appear sufficient if you were a private nobleman , but not in your present exalted station , with power
to wield , when necessary , all the resources of Government : for it would be a slur on the unrivalled and far-famed British constitution to assert , that , even when well administered , it does not possess or supply means for establishing any thing known to be essential for the peace , welfare , and tranquillity of the empire at large , and for pulling down or removing any intrigue or party spirit that might wantonly attempt to oppose so great a blessing . t (
My friends allow that such momentous exertions may be sometimes unsuccessful when Government is conducted b y weak or unsupported heads or hands , and that they require such a Prime Minister as the nation has now , and , I trust , will long have , the happiness to enjoy ; who , after an uninterrupted series of the greatest victories , and a successful arrangement of the most important interests , that perhaps ever yet occurred , has been placed at the head of Government by the entire and well-earned confidence of our most gracious Sovereign , and with the universal applause of the whole empire , and > indeed , of all nations .
" Under such a chief , exerting his legitimate prerogative , they say that no party would dare to oppose the general good ; and that if your Grace would intimate your serious resolution to settle the Roman Catholic question , its opponents would instantly fly and appear no more ; and if the settlement were once carried , it would , in a few days , be no more spoken or thought of than the concessions now are that were lately made to the Dissenters ; for the enemies of such arrangement are not half so angry in reality as they now appear to be , in order , by that bugbear , to carry their point . But my friends have no hesitation in declaring , that the project mentioned by your Grace , of burying the Catholic question in oblivion , for the purpose of considering it more
at leisure , is totally inadmissible , and would exasperate in the highest degree those who are already too much excited , and would only consider that measure as a repetition , of the same old pretext so often employed to elude and disappoint their hopes of redress ; but that if it even were adopted , it could only serve to augment the difficulties by allowing the contending parties , and particularly the enemies of all concession , the opportunities they seek for preparing their means of resistance and violence , which they have latterly carried to the most alarming lengths , which they have avowed and publicly announced in atrocious and sanguinary terms ; to which , however , 1 should
not here allude , for I never wish to be an accuser , but that I am certain your Grace must have read those horrible threats , often repeated ia the Brunswick and Orange public prints ; and to this latter subject at least I must beg leave to call your Grace ' s attention , and to implore your powerful protection , humbly praying that you will not suffer public peace and concord to be violated or disturbed under any pretext whatever . An effectual remedy would cost your Grace but one word . I do not , however , hereb y mean to meddle in temporal affairs , but I consider it my bounden duty to labour incessantly , in
Untitled Article
Catholic Question . Ill
-
-
Citation
-
Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), Feb. 2, 1829, page 111, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2569/page/39/
-