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IMPERIAL PARLIAMENT

... reforms that mav be ncressary, you will probably find that, although the Established Church of Ireland is, by law, permanently united with that of England, the peculiarities of their respective circumstances will require a separate consideration. There are ...

EXTRACTS FROM THE SPEECH OF MR. CALHOUN', LATE VICE-PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES.

... honourable and learned member, after some further observations, re- marked that the measure was not so extensive as many Irishmen could wish, still they would receive it with unmixed pleasure, considering perhaps that the cautious manner in which the ...

[No title]

... the world. KKPALB IN AMERICA.—A nnmher of hot- headed Irishmen, who have patriotically removed themselves to America, have formed an Association at Baltimore, to induce the people of the United States to assist in procuring the Repeal Union. These persons ...

l O ID T it y

... elves, T churlishness now hoist the banners, TH^W^61' 1 'ET'N these Dan-ers, N !°IUSE, KNOWS, hath lost its Maimers. ON Irishmen, is this your doinn, OMRWNFITAINCDCHAI'ACLCR T0 Welshmen, where's St. David's pride ? an you from woman e'er divide ? T ...

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... his tongue, and covers them as a lie,, covers her chickens. It is thus, we presume, that O'CONNELL, the Pantagruel of United Irishmen, will protect by his eloquence those whom he hurries into crime. Our readers will remember how he was once denounced by ...

.-.I I it ELAN D.I

... people, by communicating to each of the three divisions of the United Kingdom all that is valuable and useful in such divisions. 3. To obtain for Ireland her due proportion of bers in the. united Parliament. 4. To obtain an entire reform of our corporations ...

ABSTRACTION OF THE ECCLESIASTICAL REVENUES OF NORTH WALES

... hoped that such a united feeling, and such a united expre-sion of that feeling, would be sent from Liverpool to Parliament, as would sattsly them that it was their duty, as the representatives of the land, to repeal the law uniting the two dioceses which ...

L l T ERA T U R E.

... addition to t25,000 and 126,000, voted in the years 1839 and 1810; making the total cost of the experiment £ 75,000. Only two Irishmen have filled the office of Chief Secretary for Ireland, since the Union, the lapse of 40 years, viz. Sir Arthur Wcllesley ...

[No title]

... ts, however, have not gone so smoothly off. The Dublin Evening Mail has complained with some degree of bitterness th- t Irishmen have been excluded from the higher state offices, and that Lord Eliot has been made Irish Secretary. With regard to the first ...