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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 ...

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 ...

THE AVENGED BRIDE—A TALE OF THE GLENS

... who married her cousin Godfrey, son of Feargus, by which marriage the lands of Cantire and the island of Islay came to be united under one chief. Feargus had an elder son named Domangart, fromf whom several of the Scottish Kings are descended, and pa ...

GRAND REFORM FESTIVAL

... qualified to sita speak (hear). But it is a souirce of high gratification to me antf to believe that the interests of the two united countries are wit so intimately bound up together, perhipsp more so at present woi than at any precious period (cheers)-tbe ...

LITERATURE

... An English tourist reproaches us because the Niame of Spencer has faded t from the green alders by sweet Mulla's shore. Irishmen could not in- tensely love a sharer in the partition of the territory of the illustrious Desmonds-the author of the Pairy ...

SPIRIT OF THE JOURNALS

... ignorant and dependent of the inhabitants of bad England, and exclaims, these men have returned we, Tory members, while you Irishmen have returned uole Liberals, and the English being more intelligent s, and independent than the Irish, enlightened public ...

TO THE REV. T. D. GREGG, MASTER OF ARTS

... are, and proves the debased state of your mind and understanding, as if an union with the church is not the best means of uniting us to Christ, its invisible head. He (says St. Cyprian) cannot have God for his father who has not the church for his mother ...

GREAT PUBLIC ENTERTAINMENT TO DANIEL O'CONNELL, ESQ., M.P

... their own country, I utterly deny that one Englishman is worth five Irishmen (laughter). Yet for every one Englishman there is a representative; whilst there is but one for every five Irishmen; and Scotland, with its 2,200,000 of inhabitants, has a proportion ...

REYNOLDS, THE INFORMER

... tale is the once too-celebrated Thomas Rey- nolds, who betrayed to the government the secrets and the persons of the United Irishmen of 1798- tbhatthe object of the work is to whitewash the in- former, by an uninterrupted series of charges ad- vanced ...

PUBLIC ENTERTAINMENT TO THE HON. R. S CAREW

... parish, the Rev. Thomas Furlong, the band struck up gee the conquering hero comes, and three loud and hearty cheers-sueh as Irishmen only can give- greeted his presence, and must have made a deep imprse. sion on the sensitive heart of the youthful object ...