Refine Search

Countries

Regions

Republic of Ireland, Republic of Ireland

Access Type

235

Type

235

Public Tags

NATIONAL PROTEST AGAINST PENAL LAWS

... Irish people,. and who could have thought when that great measure was achieved that in the present year they would have the Whig Prime Minister introducing Papal measures against their religion ? Lord John Russell forgot the struggles he had once made ...

THE NEW PENAL LAW

... a very unhappy influence on the l state of this nation, by bringing on intimacies between Pa- pists and Jacobites, and the Whigs, isho before had no cor-l respondence with them: so 'tie questionable whether (if there were occasion) the justices of the ...

THE NEW PENAL LAW

... the evil, ai d what the remedy? The evil was Whig perfidy and Vi hig misrule. He believed the annals of the world could never produce anything to equal what the people of Irelaud had suffered under this Whig government during the last five years, and which ...

THE NEW PENAL LAW

... because it was bad (cheers); But whether the Whigs want out of office, or remained in for a short time longer, the time was coming when in Ireland, at least, they would be called to account-when the name of Whig would be enough to damn any man setting up ...

THE NEW PENAL LAWS—PROTEST OF THE CATHOLIC BAR

... this country, which has beenconcocted in such treacherous secresy, and has recently been ushered into light by the brutal Whigs. We call this an unanimous protest, not that it is actually signed by every Catholic seem- ber of the bar, or it would, of ...

THE NEW PENAL LAW—MEETING IN CASHEL

... mits their power-a power that can ?? itself felt by, and formidable to any government (hear, beir). People say- If the Whigs be put out the 'Tories will get in. So let them, say I. If they were in power since '45, our people would not be bunted its ...

THE RUSSELL PENAL LAW

... Catholic Church than this proposed by the Russell Whigs. Any man of ordinary judg. ment, having the opportunities possessed by a mem her of Parliament, must have seen that no other statesmen but these Whigs could be found, in the temper which the penal law ...

THE NEW PENAL LAW

... Down with the Whigs (cheers). Down with the Whigs, who had starved the peop!e-down with the Whigs, who had striven to corrupt every class, and who would endeavour to smake them a nation of slaves and place beggars (hear)- 'down with the Whigs, who would ...

THE NEW PENAL LAW

... adopted. r Mr. W. Watson proposed the next resolution. He said- From this spot (humble as I am) I warn the ministers-be they Whig or be they Tory-not to attempt or dare to assail, by any impious penal enactment, the divine institutions of Heaven. The power ...

THE NEW PENAL LAW

... a measure. -Let them not be afraid bf the base traitors to their religion and country who voted to keep in office the vile Whig cabinet. Bv whom, he would ask, were the reins of *government placed in the hands of Lord John Russell ? By O'Connell-the glorious ...

THE IRISH AND ENGLISH PRESS—INJUSTICE OF THE LAW

... beauty of the Union and it- pretended equality of laws is revealed insome of it- true colours. A distinguished Irishman, and a Whig of the purest dye, has called our attention to an illustration of this gross partiality in British legislation. His werds are ...

THE NEW PENAL LAWS—SIMULTANEOUS MEETINGS

... little doubt u hont, ia, far as Catholic Ireland is concerned, the news of the ft °itfal) of Lord John and of the persecuting Whig ministry tV Ire I oill cause such rejoicings as were not witnessed in kan Oinre the emancipation in 1829 (cheers). Lord John ...