THE MIRROR OF FASHION

... brogue, hut Ywe thought hte was much too rapid in his utterance l ?on detailing the particular s of the rescue. There is are Irishmen, of course, who speak with as muchl quick- *r ncss as the men of any other country, but the ge-ieral c d character of their ...

LINES

... At a mectinc, held at New York on the 25th of No- vember, it was resolved that a Society should be formed of Irishmen, or descendants of Irishmen, for the purpose of endeavouring to procure fiom Congress a tract of land in the Illinois territory, to be ...

ORIGINAL POETRY

... dweflinig: let each give his mite, Tilljlike Babel tile new Royal dome lhas arisen; Let beggars and Helots their pittance unite, Add a Palace bestow for a Poor-house and Prisone, * * S * * * S * 7 '7 47 * 4* * 4* * * * * 4* * i} ?? the tables be crowded ...

NO POPERY!!!

... night would have supplie d the defciency.' If a pie- !l e cedent be required, it is be found hi the lease of the it Rn United' Irishmen.- Their soicety was not illegal in its ci rcommencement-it became dangerous to the state, and Ib od was put down by law-so ...

VARIETIES

... spoonful he taken: occasionally, when the cough is tronblesome-.this is a recipe of the late Dr. Hugh James, of Carliste. Two Irishmen meeting one day, one of them inquired of the other if he had seen his friend Pat Murphy lately, for, said lie, he bab grow13 ...

LITERARY NOTICES

... it universally applied alike to Irishmen, Englishmen, and Scotchmen, and secured by the only means by which it can be practically established, that is, by means of a FvAi AND EQUAL REPRaEtBsrAT[ON of HE POPLE of the United Kingdom in the Commons House of ...

(FROM A PLAY-GOING CORRESPONDENT.) THE NEWCASTLE THEATRE

... quit'e in to the stlte of Ireland, more especi IlIV as to cirrcinstances wolich led to tile disturbaicze in that part of tile united kintgd ca.' ' jy this proposition it would be perceived, that he did not riivan to i+XC tide lny fair suhliet of ilaqutiry ...

LITERATURE

... and U. Catholic, are but the out- wvard signs Wp da not, however, agree with, the writee, that, a second society of United Irishmen is like- WI to be formited 'ii' coiisetquence of the recent measures ?? -there is generally amo'itgst Protestants a feeling ...

THE MIRROR OF FASHION

... arrived from the United States, was accompanied to England by a younger brother, who is the Stage Manager of one of the principal Theatres In Amer- ica, and is likewise snid to be an excellent actor, especially in the presentation of Irishmen, a line which ...

THEATRE

... jority of thirty or forty in the House of Commons is es no as. reform, and that Ireland alone has the power of ac ntrli to Irishmen will prove by their conduct On the approaching 8t,,g that they are pre-eminently entitled to freedom. r dgle simply to express ...

LITERARY NOTICE

... consigned to oblivion, and al- loived to perish, fiom the shameful indifference of those who profess to glory in the name of Irishmen. Through a lhng and dreary course of centuries, our history has been written it, dark and sanguine characters. Continutil ...

LITERATURE

... cultivation of the language in which tthey are written-if the energy and thie zeal which are too frequently expended in teaching Irishmen how to hate each other most effectually, were employed ii doimg for our native language-and for the millions who under- stand ...