Dublin Journal (Newspaper) - June 13, 1812, Dublin, Dublin To PRINTER of the While and the other loyal men are en to check or to allay the turbulent spirit of the Manufacturing a Paper ia this City sets forth the following paragraphs DESTRUCTION OF ENGLISH CLOTH Going to an in the Liberty f On about nine tour pieces of English Cloth were conveying to a certain Patriotic Clothier in the they were stopped by who tore them m thousand TU weavers first met the man them at of and JIM representing that he must take then as they consented ami when he arrived opposite tbe belonging to they destroyed Perhaps Soma of our interpreters might make out this we ft to of the toe same do not hesitate io that are not that Was going to the house of a Master the Bartof fa it AT its was torn and by Irish should wfc be sorry f we a few more such instances of national if this be abetting I know not it Taking tbe as mted the nothing can be more aod wicked than the comment but it is even worse for a misrepresentation is j t r to give as ap of invidiously called Clothier have in Paper account which took Liberty proper true state is as goods T r i from them fT of who them tb my BOOM to have performed by io and cruel those 60 as refer ft the Poster r Many of the who in this particularly the i Gentleman who introduced and who so mt appear to me to take f r granted that there is in the sire Reli gion some general the same in all times and in all and it is quite sufficient for our purpose that in order to determine whether it or is not inconsistent tie powers of our This mode to tne fal in its con The Eternal of I ie Romah whether urged tl boast of its or as the is alike of foundation the co all history and experience demonstrate Ult it is of infinite variety in almost any two countries same npr in the sanje country at of iu history i io that it fs rnoch as Man himself tbe mere of and cir laws and nbt of theoretical which decel pride of consistency may naturally preserve fnn altera but of its practical on humoral at quantities of orders to in to v in the Earl of and took the qy to forward flf a species not made and had ordered from the house of td the house jo of rest open and lite grief and of some wolo were jofet they ta that it has been that for the Army haj been in this of demand aq increase of to great buf go to v AK aui arrived since our We o the aod l that of on day wiU be found iu detail tn our subsequent While Politicians are who shall betray and not stand idly gaping to their own by to justify the wisdom of their who raised the bulwarks and defences of that and call the IKK to from the rinces they were peculiarly selected to bat as HMS so let it ever K stand forward defenders of the which lately took place mt of many were and several ben to tbe credit though cannot that i 1 n except by discovered Upon such tu one it tempted to idler than ike fellow When chat the Church of Rome is nly but Semper Eadem her out have the were tot by in Queen Marys or tbe more and political conduct of Its think may be sufficient for o To this point least 1 si my aod leave their dogmas and which I present confine r cils to an undisturbed and harmless under i bis would ask what it practically means i this menfin different parts of Europe r ence of the Baronet in its paren has no doubt convinced hito here it to a lower to great debasement of human very relaxed morality we find amongst uper country e intellect ily but classes nied by to a Deism more universal even than in 1 amongst tbe middle wety as a liberal and enlightened accom the mptt perfect spirit perhaps I should here confine the fays de it exhibits in r degree the excellencies which it can boast without its blemishes j to instance ia minor particular the perfect spirit of mode by it is there his t ever incredible it might iu that a Church which in the rt orbing U the scene of devotion for the Protestai serves at without for the of the But between the the La disciples of Saint there isk mighty within whose pensive not spot that may not be filled by the Catholicism of some country in some seems to then quite vain to Catholicism n the must look to especially to its real practical ence in the country now under our consideration The Catholicism of appears tome widely different from anything I have alluded for it I tan no more fad a parallel amongst the varieties of other than amongst their histories I can find a parallel for the history of I am well aware of tbe tender ground on J am about to tread but I hold it bounden duty to haVe no reserve upon this sub ject and I shall feel the less anxiety in speaking of Ireland as it because whatever there is in the system I should wish to see corrected I believe it yet may be J and because I not fo any eternal Essence of the Ro man Catholic nor tb the fault of the People j Cad forbid J nor to tail Council or to the fatal events of Irish bloody wars alternate penal codes and periodical rebellions s and partly to die errors of Queen and partly to the policy of her rival who Agreed at least in People of Ireland the the English Eli the with the English Ireland to both i but Philip produced a JUsting it a measure of which by This Work exhibits the most faithful delineation of tbe Ireland atad the England I apd these arc clearly to be traced the true causes the b ud of mafly other k records whether the tW wa is left ftt fume of had Work has been its stamped upon a character to Si was ind uhi his the Duke im n of Douay s the banished be came the focus of the plots life and it of the of It bap founded the Coll ia tie fint hit ifi of the Doke of bjr motivet of which all Protestant art fertile b to overturn aU aod hU teal to to forgot every were kindly jre by the Catholic af with Elizabeth and thete under these who founded most of the Semi and Colleges to which Ireland baa litice been indebted for the education of hef Roman Catholic The genuine spirit of the pa rent College of was lung the ing of not the of Jesuits fbr the propagation of heir but a bitter recollection of the causes which had driven their founders from their native a traditional and mortal hostility to the tyrannical heretical establishment of the Church of But even their peculiar hatred to fell short of their still peculiar devotion to the their great patron and protector their attachment to whom was left unchecked by those safeguards pref which the Roman Catholic Powers have to iv the Seminaries the education of their own Clergy which they all have and to the of I shall presently have occasion more parti to and which hat long since re f he reality of the Popes practical rity within very narrow limits a Which has perhaps the most distinguished the in which at first sight sre should the least to I mean the States the nearest to the seat of Papal poorer even before the Italian of if called on td say in what part of Europe the Pope had the least political we might have amongst his Italian if called to point out the spot in which he had the mott re the extreme western limb of his Spiritual It was to founded thus totally in hatred o England devotion to that Ireland was till lately indebted f for the education of her It was m wms they were co Jearn to become the fait sub of to Imbibe hereditary respect for the and hereditary charity t British after having been thus indebted to of Foreigners and Enemies for this salutary after having in land season of life peculiarly for the reception of full ot foreign and and after having bad their eyes to all the and and glorious circumstance with which their Religion performed on the they were to set out on what they termed their frith chat tasee their Religion in ill native not merely shorn of its I will in past the peculiar object of the oppressors wrong and proud mans and if they would for the crime of landing to reach their groaning under penal the virtue if that was indeed the lesson which they did they must previously have subdued in their own breasts every and feeling of human nature Mat was indeed Union which they be theirs the merit of Philip and the Parliaments of Ireland bad alike provided for the If Philip could have looked into what more could his fondest hopes have anticipated that the Priest should End ia the Peasant an ignorant and a devoted pupil And here again the Penal the faithful seconder of his provided most for their accomplishment j for it secured the ignorance pf the it secured no less the authority of the pre senting him as the sole instructor of a people ious to arraying him with every character of courage and which indeed it of his and exhibiting him thus qualified to a people peculiarly disposed to value M And the of tins whole system nave tuch to of Clergy to the y devotion of tht People Clergy an extent have no hesitation rn that in no country have apy Clergy ever bad power of of the have of Irelind wili not to wear will not to to as a Erra of the House of Bru should he relies upon the Glorious relies upon the loyalty and Acting with lies upon that good which and bur It is read the of tat Popish ilU as generally ojA to be governed and dieted on a bunting our The had Prince Regent at w the remit of overture to and received fresh last jb tbat ation these could be and that lion with some other partita of a thoM mentioned were panning patriotism of ko the unconstitutional ot of the and arraying the rf a and a galvanic battery mid to aava brought act upon the defunct of which would certainly of and restore them to the do believe that up to hour Ja any progress in decisive But from t it will be teen that the country bu The Mo Popery ia Council and will continue IMPERIAL I i u OF v The Bar of My moving 1thiofc it right toar a few with to the me by si Noble Duke to eC the on a and consequent of which some then to now testate your the been day pleased to appoint me Pirn of tie and that Highness has given authority for other arrangement The Duke of Mv ue NoWe has o in consequence of ne only held hit till the appointment of a as ts well was Address voted ra praying ttc Regent to form a stronger aod more efficient Ad We Are that tbe is appointed the Minister of hit Roytt although I am not aware of the ence of any circumstance to do away the event the Noble Earl referred to pa a as a reason why he then holding office only until the appointment of a The Noble being the Minister of the Government I now wish to ask a with reference to our differences with the States of which by the Jast accounts from have reached a point of hostility that may be averted by timely on the part of this The lapse of a single day may make a difference of the greatest for an act done promptly on the part of this may yet avert all the sequences of hostility on the part of I cannot undertake to assign reasons at length for i I a I should to tor re the Orders in aod there fare confine myself to a wish to know whether there ij any intention on the part of the Government to rescind the Orders in Council Tbe Earl of with reference to the event alluded to by the Address voted in pray ing for a stronger and more efficient Administra I think it my duty to that immedi ately on Address being t humbly quested of his Royal Highness the Prince on the part nf my colleagues aod that we might not be in the way of the pro arrangement and I hope your will dp me the justice to in the which have I been no obstacle whatever to the carrying into effect the of my k which hart taken i should have shrunk from my dmy to ihe and from my duty to the if I bad now f i tiie been 10 ajC to staled hy respecting there bu