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IRELAND UNDER THE TRIPLE ALLIANCE-THE POPULAR PARTY, THE ROMAN CATHOLIC PRIESTS, AND THE QUEEN'S MINISTERS.

HISTORY affords us no example of 'rebellion conducted to a successful issue on the principles which are now in action in Ireland. Hence, perhaps, it is that so many of our "practical" politicians have been influenced to regard the troubles and outrages, by which that country is afflicted, as local and accidental in their origin, and, in their tendency and character, " desultory and driftless." Hence, too, in the prevailing indisposition to receive with favour, or even with ordinary attention, speculations or statements on matters connected with Irish politics. If there were "precedents on the file," by which the object of such politics could be easily inferred, and their issue historically prognosticated, every reflecting man in the British Empire would become sensible of their paramount importance; but, seen as they are without the aid of lights derived from "old experience," they appear "formless and void," having no coherent plan or adequate purpose-the processes of crime, by which their petty and seemingly conflicting ends are wrought out, not affording indications of design and government plainer or more certain than may be discerned in "skirmishes of kites and crows," and repulsing curiosity by those spectacles of violence and barbarism and cruelty, which seem to assign to them their most distinguishing characteristics.

Of the aversion to Irish politics, thus induced, we have good reason to be aware. It creates an opposition between the duties, for which the conductors of a periodical like ours have made themselves answerable, and the projects in which they might be tempt ed to engage, in order to the attainment of literary or commercial success, or the maintenance of a laboriously earned reputation. Many a time we have occupied pages with statements and strictures, which, faithful and well-designed as they were, the subject had rendered distasteful, which we knew well might have been devoted to mat. ter more generally acceptable, and which some of our readers would have received with greater favour if we had left them" a blank." Still we per

severe in these unpopular labours, fully confident that a day will come, when the most fastidious will acknowledge their propriety and importance; and encouraged in the mean-time by occasional and most welcome assurances that they are not, even now, altogether fruitless.

It is to one of these cheering testimonies the reader is indebted, with whatever feelings he may regard it, for the article which now solicits his attention. The truth is, we had not designed to encumber ourselves with "Irish" in our present adventure. The Canadas, we felt, would be likely to engross the whole political market. Principles, we have been long aware, have far less power to excite interest than personalities. And while Lord Brougham could, in all probability, be seen, in the joy of an armed and offensive neutrality, launching well-merited and most impartial sarcasms alternately at the fugitive governor of the Canadas, and at the friends who sent him to do their business, and who, to use an idiom which has more force than elegance, strove to do his business in return; and, while Lord Durham could be heard, with that stridulous voice, which, even were it musical, would be of "sweet and threatening harmony," rousing the ready though short-breathed vehemence of the Premier, torturing Lord Glenelg into the moody and mystic eloquence of a rare somnambulism, we felt that the commonplace, though tragic, interest of the affairs of Ireland must have even less than their ordinary attraction. cordingly, we had made up our minds to let them rest for a more convenient season. A communication, altogether unexpected, and of the value of which the reader shall be enabled to judge, has induced us to change our purpose.

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Some years since, we knew, by reputation well-slightly by acquainance

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gentleman connected with Ireland by birth and fortune, withdrawn by his tastes and the habits of his life from Irish party contention; but, so far as fashion can tolerate political enthusiasm, an enthusiast in the sect of that movement party who were then

called Liberal, but who were not then known to have exemplified the term by liberating themselves from the obligations within which, in politics as well as in morals, honest men feel restricted. Circumstances caused us to remember the principles of this gentleman, and the heat with which, notwithstanding his Sybarite refinement, he sometimes asserted them; and, when we were informed that he had taken up his residence in Ireland and addressed himself to the duties of a landed proprietor, we felt some desire to know whether arguments, which we had vainly addressed to him in gayer times, would be remembered when he had ampler opportunities to test them. In former years our arguments were met by the vehement contradictions of adversaries. Now, the contending statements could both be tried by the standard of actual fact. We recently learned the result. The fashionable Liberal of the Clubs has matured into the rational Liberal-a Conservative country gentleman; and, in testimony of the approbation with which he regards our once unacceptable truths, he has forwarded to us a collection of valuable documents (permitting us to use them freely), through which we have no difficulty in tracing the processes and stages by which he was reclaimed to sane views of justice and policy, from the delusions of over liberal and too confiding youth.

One of these documents, that with which we propose to make the reader acquainted, is a comparative view of the activities of that terrible personification which is called the Irish people, and of the abstraction which, before it had become "identified with the popular party," was visible, and invested with something of authority, in what is styled the Irish government. The selections of our correspondent are taken from the public prints, but they are taken cautiously, and are authenticated by convincing evidence. They are also taken fairly, without partiality or exaggeration. We lay, in substance, the history of a single year, or rather part of a year, before the reader. It shall be that of the year past, or of eleven months of it. So much may serve as a specimen. Within that space of time, or, to be more exact, within ten months and twenty-four days (up to November 24), our correspondent has observed

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The reader is not to suppose that these statements contain returns from which the number of offences in Ire. land can be learned. A single county could, perhaps, present a larger and than that which our correspondent has more appalling catalogue of crime furnished. He has, indeed, guarded us effectually against the idea, that we taining an enumeration of offences, by are to look upon his notices as conaccompanying them with a return it appears, that, at the spring and the from Tipperary. In that one county, summer assizes for 1838,

The number of Coroner's Inquests returned, (for which the county paid),

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Such a return would, of itself, teach us to infer, that the statements of our correspondent, gathered from reports of crime in every part of Ireland, contain not an enumeration of capital offences, but a selection from them. It is a fearful thing to be thus reminded, that the details of 242 attempts (of which 102, at least, were successful) to murder, occurring within a space of less than eleven months, are to be regarded as no more than specimens of the offences perpetrated in Ireland. Yet so it is. Enormous as this amount of crime ought to be considered, it is perhaps not a tenth, we believe certainly not a fifth part of the offences of which it is a selected specimen.

cause.

The principle of selection adopted by our correspondent, appears to us, if we have rightly divined it, eminent ly sound and good. It has assisted us much in ascertaining the acts which are held as capital offences, by what has been termed the "de facto government of Ireland." The details with which we have been favoured, are of cases in which the cause of the murderous assault had been discovered, or was surmised. They rarely have reference to crimes of which private malice or revenge was the instigating The murderous assaults of which our correspondent has given us the details were punishments, it would seem, visited by a community for a breach of its laws. These laws are not plainly and authoritatively promulgated, but, although failing in this important requisite, and, in consequence, appearing often somewhat capricious in their operation, they are, nevertheless, vigilantly administered, and may be learned by all who take pains to study them, as the laws of nature herself are studied, in their effects, in the dreadful execution of their penal sentences.

In this neces

sary study, our valued correspondent is evidently a proficient. His papers establish the truth, that the following, as well as other seemingly innocent acts, are held to be capital offences in Ireland, by a body powerful enough to punish for them.

1. Enforcement, or being instrumental in the enforcement, of rights of property.

2. Unpopular exercise of the elective franchise.

3. Prosecuting or giving evidence against one accused of what is termed an insurrectionary offence.

4. Delivering, as a juror, an obnoxious verdict on a capital charge.

5. Protestantism-with or without the aggravation of having embraced the heresy as a convert.

6. Refusal to enter into certain se

cret societies, or even ignorance of their signs and pass-words.

We shall, painful as the task must be to writer and reader, select and arrange under each of these heads, some details illustrative of the prin ciple expressed in it.

1. ENFORCEMENT, &c., OF RIGHTS OF PROPERTY.

and authority of this law are so numerous, that our difficulty would be to select from them; and they are so notorious, that, were it not indispensable to other parts of our subject, we should not have thought it necessary even to make selections. It appears that every individual at all concerned in the enforcement of the obnoxious rights is a party in the crime, and liable to the severest penalty. The tenant who enters into possession of the farm from which a predecessor has been evicted the bailiff who has served notice of ejectment, or who has given the intruder possession-the agent who has superintended the processes -the landlord who has directed or authorised them-all have rendered themselves liable to the penalties of insurrectionary law ;-nay, the indi. vidual who may be so bold as to continue a friendly intercourse with a delinquent placed under ban, must be upon his guard-the excommunication is strict.

LANDLORDS.

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County Waterford. Mr Keeffe of Mountain Castle, in the county of Waterford, had committed a breach of the agrarian laws, and was condemned for the offence. eighty-two years old) could not move His age (he was compassion; and an attempt, which proved abortive, was made to assassinate him.

report as extracted from the Waterford "Our informant states," we give the Mail," that, a short time since, Mr Keeffe purchased a large estate in the county, and that, on the leases falling into his hands, the occupying tenants would not pay more for the land than what they had previously paid, which, we have been informed, was only 5s. per acre. Mr Keeffe, who was a wealthy man, and of course purchased the property as any other man might, expected an advanced rent. The tenants objected to any advance, and some were ejected. On Sunday last, on Mr Keeffe's way to

chapel, about five miles from Dungarvan, as he was riding, he was accosted in the middle of the road by a person in a blue coat, who had a blunderbuss concealed, with,' What do you mean to do with the assassin-on which Mr Keeffe attempted man in jail?'-alluding to the former to dismount, saying, at the time, 'spare my life and his shall be spared.' The fellow instantly levelled his blunderbuss, which he discharged, killing the horse,

The evidences of the existence and lodging part of the contents in Mr

Keeffe's body, who, we understand, died the same night. This occurred on the main road, in the sight of several persons within the distance of one hundred and fifty yards, and the fellow was allowed to depart, without the smallest interference to arrest him, into a neighbouring wood."

County Tipperary.-The following extracts, from a provincial paper and the Gazette, will tell their own story

"The Excellent Population again.-On Sunday last, as Mr John Scully was riding in from his place at Dualla, to attend mass at the chapel, he was attacked by some men in arms, with their faces blackened, who handed him a written document, to the contents of which they ordered him to swear. Mr Scully courageously refused. They then told him to dismount, and go upon his knees, till they would shoot him; whereon he replied he would not, but would die as he was, adding, that if they spared him, he would acquit himself honourably with regard to the business in question. They replied they would give him a trial, and departed. Mr Scully is a Roman Catholic, and one of the ma

gistrates recently appointed by Lord Mulgrave, notwithstanding which, he was thus treated by the noble pisantry."

(From the Dublin Gazette.) "Dublin Castle, June 19, 1838.--John Scully, Esq., of Dualla, in the county of Tipperary, was stopped within a mile and a half of Cashel, at eleven o'clock A.M., on the 17th instant, by two men, having their faces partly blackened, and one of them armed with a pistol, which he placed to Mr Scully's breast, and threatened him if he would turn a Widow Cody from her land.

One hundred pounds."

Queen's County.*—It is enough to name the late lamented Earl of Norbury, a nobleman and a landlord whose high and benevolent qualities even bigotry and political opposition confess. Generosity and forbearance, and the great benefits flowing from the residence of a wealthy and munificent proprietor, could not avail to protect him. Within his own demesne, in open day, the generous and unsuspecting nobleman was assassinated. This, we believe, is the first instance, since the butchery of Lord Kilwarden in 1803, when rebellion

was openly avowed, in which a nobleman has been murdered.

The agrarian system has been well directed. Its ministers have walked warily. Their first punishments were visited upon the poor and helplesson those whom necessity forced to break their laws-on tenants who must perish if they gave up the residence which the "people" required them to surrender and on bailiffs, and those other humbler servants of a landed proprietor, whose only means of living were derived from employments by which they were sometimes transgressors against the "agrarian" law. This was a species of tactique in which the gentry could not imitate them. They would not punish tenantry, or servants, or dependants who kept the secrets of the conspiracy, or who contributed to the funds by which agitators were hired and insurrection was extended. They used to say, "We cannot visit, on these poor defenceless creatures, penal consequences of misdeeds to which they are comqelled." The cruelty of the insurgents was, for its purpose, wiser. It gradually weakened the dependence of the poor upon the rich— loosened the attachment which should subsist between them-sowed the seeds of mutual distrust-embarrassed the operations of law-and, in time, brought the whole rural population under the authority of the system to which it ministered.

increased, its victims were selected As the power of the confederacy from higher stations. Within the last year the number of gentlemen who have been murdered, or assaulted, or threatened, is so considerable, as to indicate a very alarming degree of confidence in the directors of the movement. The Dublin Evening Mail gives publicity to a report that Lord Carew, a well-known Liberal, received threatening notices, in consequence of which he left the country. The Government offered a reward for the writer of a threatening notice, or, as the document might be interpreted, a friendly warning to Lord Bloomfield. Other noblemen and gentlemen have been similarly admonished; and, as a

In this one instance we depart from the lists furnished by our correspondent. In all others we limit ourselves within the events of last year..

comment upon these dreadful missives, and a notice that the power and purposes of the confederacy of assassination have reached their height, murder commences its operations upon the most exalted class of society, by the execution of Lord Norbury, for the "crime," or, rather, false suspicion of the "crime" of landlordism.

We extract from the Dublin Even

ing Mail a representation given of this enormity by an organ of the popular party, and will have a word of comment to offer upon it. We add, also, a note from the correspondent of the Dublin Evening Mail :

"The public are yet ignorant of the peculiar features of daring and audacity which characterised this dreadful murder. The high road was within sixty yards of the spot on which the assassin stood. was an open space-at least there was no thick plantation, or a particle of under

cover.

It

The trees are fir-without lower brauches, and growing far apart from each other; so that any one passing the road, necessarily commanded a view of the position of all the parties, before and after the shot was fired. It should be borne in mind that the day was a holiday, and that therefore it was to be calculated that many might be going to and fro on the road. But there was a second road, at the other side of the field in which Lord Norbury was shot, called the Abbey Road. There was on this road a funeral passing at the very moment that the fatal deed was being perpetrated. It appears that at this funeral from forty to fifty persons were in attendance, every one of whom must have heard the shot, and most probably seen the assassin escape; for it is physically impossible that he could have gotten up out of the dyke and against the hedge to wards the other road. Indeed, the trace proves distinctly that he went along the field, and in view of every person attending this funeral; and yet ignorance of the whole transaction is affected, and an appearance of innocence as to the cause, and regret at the event assumed, to an extent calculated to mislead the most acute and diligent."

"When the body had been laid in the vault, the Rev. Mr Rafferty, parish priest of Tullamoore, addressed the assembled meeting at considerable length, and with much propriety. I understand he delivered a similar address at his chapel on Sunday last. Amongst other observations, in re ference to Lord Norbury, he said

"I have known this illustrious nobleman in private and in public—his life has been spent in acts of charity, kindness, and

liberality, and every one here must feel and mourn his loss, as he would that of his father, benefactor, protector, and best friend. No one act of his life was calculated to give offence, and in managing his estate every act of his was necessary and just; nay, he would not say one unkind word, much less do any unkind act towards any one.

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"We extract the following palliationindeed it amounts to a justification of the Friday evening. We shall not offer a single murder of Lord Norbury from the Pilot of observation upon the article, but leave it to

meet that fate to which the honest portion

of public opinion must award it.

"The first notice was (as our readers will recollect) headed Lord NORBURY wounded,' and ended with ascribing jealousy' as the cause of the attack. The second notice is under the head

"MURDER OF LORD NORBURY.-Unfortunately, murder we must now call it— Lord Norbury is dead. He died at twelve o'clock yesterday, wounded by five swan drops, one of which touched the lungs and proved fatal. The circumstances, the motives, are still involved in considerable mystery. Various reports were in circulation on Wednesday; we gave them as reports, attaching to each just the proportion of weight they received from the public, and no one that day knew any thing else. Little more than reports, except as to the manner of the murder, is known as yet. It is known that his Lordship was walking with his Scotch steward through a shrubbery, when a man just raised his head and shoulder above a bush, and fired the fatal shot. This fact is ascertained.

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The rest is rumour; but one rumour gradually displaces all others: it is, that the murder arose out of the landlord crime of extermination. It is said that Lord Norbury had got infected with the horrible exterminating mania, and had got 250 notices to quit served on his tenants. We do not vouch for the statement; but, if true, heavens! what a scene of crime, cruelty, calamity, and human suffering is presented by the ejection-houseless, homeless, and foodless of 250 families to starvation and death. We shall not dwell on it. We do not notice it to excuse, but to account, for such a horrid crime. It is not that we abhor the single murder less, but that, if possible, we deprecate the system of wholesale murder

more.

The allegations against Lord Norbury, in this execrable passage, the correspondent of the Evening Mail pronounces utterly false. When the lamented nobleman, some years since, came into possession of his property,

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