i ; : ’ kannada ee aa aor ete ia a _ aaa eae Silelnenmesaaennen : fa 5 ae ae them, which to THE EXAMINER. vhole eropire. The purposes for which the colonies! to be attributed, not to the disinclination of the people were chiefly if not wholly useful to the mother country | to rise up in arms, but solely to the want ofa proper were to afford an outlet for emigration and a market for opportunity, and of bold, able, and trusted leaders, This ter manufactures. During the last twenty years the|is no hasty impression or idle guess-work ; it is a deli- ‘ost of emigration had been 20,000,000/., and taking) berate conviction founded on the most satisfactory eyi- } neriods of five aa bite pert A Mi Aacariia Br baecod Vagp talaga) fatlon—a F ? In 1832, it was 60,000 ; in 1837, 66,000 ; 1n 1842, vear. ve years during that time it would be found! dence. Every. mile I travelled—every person I conversed 26,000, and in 1847, 121,000. These facts would delibly on my mind the trath of the statement I have show that the habit of emigration was steadily advanc-/made. Let no man lay the flattering unction to his sno: and bis conclusion was that free trade and emigra-| soul that the spirit of disaffection has been crushed, ‘isn onght to be the sole objects held in view in reference! True it is that the wise and salutary precautions of the to the colonies in concurrence with maintaining the Government have saved the country from convulsion for sovereignty of Great Britain over them. Ifhenceforth,/the present; but the winter is fast approaching—the instead of expending 4,000,000/. on the military, naval,|season for a bivouac will have passed—the troops must ind civil establishments of the colonies, 2,000,0001. were | to be annually applied to the purposes of emigration, the resn]t would soon be most beneficial. The coloniea were competing for labour; and could! England not bridge over the ocean by her emigration ships soas to supply those wants? If that could be accomplished, one of the most difficult social problems ifthe day would be at once solved. The difficulty was to find funds! but, as he said,why not expend 2,000,0000. a year in this way, instead of 4,000,000/. now so idiy and wastefully spent? ‘The system upon which emi-' gration must be based ought to be that practised by the. Greeks in founding their colonies, and by those wise and self-denying men who founded the states of New England onthe shores of America. All classes must go together. The capitalist, the professional man, the artisan, the farmer, the mechanic, the labourer, all with their wives, their families, and implements, so as to con- stitute a complete colony in themselves. From Papers by the last English Mail. IRELAND. (From the European Times.) The intelligence from Dublin represents Mr. Smith O’Brien’s position in a more favourable light than might naturally be expected, when the serious nature of the offence with which he stands charged is taken into con- sideration. He occupies the most comfortable apart- ments in the prison; they are situate over the chapel, and directly opposite to the governor’s rooms. He is permitted to take air and exercise without restriction in the yards, and to receive visits from the members of his fimily, His spirits are good, and he does not appear depressed. The privilege of visiting Mr. O’Brien |is confined to his family and connexions. An application was made by Sir Colman O’Loghien to see him, and he received a letter injreply from Mr. Reddington, the under secretary, refusing to grant the permission sought for. The Freeman’s Journal of the 9th inst. contains the following:—We have received the following important communication from a correspondent in whom we have perfect faith :— ‘Thurles, Tuesday, 7 o’clock, p. m. ‘1 have just learned, through a source on which I can implicitly rely, that a communication has been made to the Irish Government, through the mediation of an in- iuencial Catholic clergyman, from the parties who, next’ atter William Smith O’Brien, were considered the most important against whom warrants have been issued. ‘The communication, I understand, is to the effect that these gentlemen undertake to surrender themselves to the Government upon receiving the assurance that none of the proceedings instituted against any of the state prisoners shall extend to the taking of life. It appears be drawn into winter quarters, and then the hour for mischief will have arrived. I have heard it stated—and the statement does not seem improbable—that the leaders intend to remain passive till the winter sets in—that they are quite satisfied, for the present, with harrassing the soldiery and frightening the Government, but that they are steadily biding their time. Much, however, will depend upon circumstances. In the course of my wan- derings I have met with a great many country gentle- men, and all of them agree in thinking that the rebellion is not extinguished, that it still smoulders, and they look with considerable apprehension to the coming winter. Certainly it is unreasonable to calculate that all the wild theories which have been propounded by the Anarchists and Jacobins—the visions of wealth, happi- ness and independence which have been held out to the misguided people—it is unreasonable to suppose that these congenial] theories have taken no root, or that the people, after such golden dreams, will sink back, without a struggle of some kind, into their former position. ‘The absentees are fast returning to the country, and there are at present a great number of resident gentry in the county of Tipperary. I trust their presence may serve to check the existing spirit of insubordination. ‘In all quarters I have heard that there has been no surrender of arms worth speaking of under the procla- mation. Tae constabulary are busily engaged in searching for them, and to-day I met a Jarge force in the neighbourhood of the town of Tipperary engaged in that business, but with little success. The conduct of the Roman Catholic clergy in the present crisis has been most praiseworthy, and I have heard it commended by their bitter political opponents. On last Sunday Dr. Howley, the parish priest of the town I have just men- tioned, delivered a. most impressive discourse to his flock on the criminality of the club system, and I have autho- rity for stating that it produced the very best results. The police in this county are extremely vigilant ; patrols scour the country every night, and all persons found out at unseasonable hours are searched.’ LIST OF POLITICAL PRISONERS. Mr. William Smith O’Brien, M. P. for the county of Limerick. Mr. Charles Gavin Duffy, editor of the Nation. Mr. John Martin, proprietor of the Felon. Mr. Joseph Brennan, sub-editor of the Felon. Mr. John Lawless, secretary of the Sandymount Club, Dublin. : Mr. Francis Hanley, North Earl street, Dublin. Mr. —— Nolan, supposed to be an American sym- pathiser, arrested at Thurles. Mr. —— Fitzpatrick, Thurles. Dr. Ryan, surgeon, Carrick-on-Suir. Mr. O’Ryan, Cashel. Mr. Thomas Witty, farmer or landowner, Wexford that this communication was induced on the parties|county. hearing of the arrest of Smith O’Brien on Saturday evening,’ itis stated that one of the chief witnesses for the ‘rown, at the trials of Mr. Smith O’Brien and the other parties implicated in the insurrection and conspiracy, will be Mr. P. J, Barry, who had been secretary of the first Young Ireland Association, and who remained all ‘long & prominent member of the Confederacy. Mr. Doheny is said to have escaped, by way of Dub- ‘in, in the disguise of a reaper. This is very question- .ole, for more than one reason. Several members promiment inthe Cork clubs have sailed to America. The authorities did not interfere. Accounts have been received from respectable parties in Carrick-on-Suir, intimating that two rev. gentlemen ot that neighbourhood, one whose name has been much spoken of in connection with a recent affair there, have felt themselves compromised, and fled. Warrants, it is sud, have been issued for the arrest of both. } mention ‘itis, because of the authority of the party communicat- ing, but | am inclined to deem it doubtful. ‘The following letter frém a member of the press, who has visited Tipperary, gives a rather important detail of the feeling which prevails in the south of Ireland :— ‘After having traversed the greater part of both ridings of the county of Tipperary, I halt at this little village, situated at the foot of the Galtee Mountains, and on the borders of the county Limerick, to give you a brief ab- stract of the result of my observations. Rebellion I found not. ‘{ have said that I could not find rebellion; that is true. I did not see an army of insurgents, or anything that gave indication of the actual existence of civil war ; 2 rebellion does exist. Ifthe whole of the Tentand ia nant at thie mamenr ' ~ -* wt _ faa ava - ’ a rs nay Prt T: ess , a plunged into 2}! Mr. Francis Strange, solicitor, Waterford, president of the Felon Club there. Mr. Supple, glover, Waterford. Mr. Patrick M‘Auliffe, clothier, Waterford, Mr. Fogarty, assistant surgeon, Waterford. Mr. Thomas William Condon, white sinith, secretary to the Wolfe Tone Club, Waterford. Mr. Taafe, barrister, Dublin. Twenty-one countrymen from the neighbourhood of Ballingarry, in the county of Tipperary, charged with having assisted Smith O’Brien in the attack on the ice. Mr. William. Marron, editor of the Drogheda Argus. Mr. J. S. Barry, editor of the Cork Southern Reporter. Mr. Ralph Varien, Cork. Mr. Isaac Varien, Cork. : Ten drapers’ assistants, from Messrs. Pims’s establish- ment, Dublin. Mr. S. J. Meany, of the Irish Felon. Dr. West, surgeon, Dublin. Dr. M‘Carron, of America. Mr. Bergin, ship broker, of New York. Mr. Butler, editor of the Galway Vindicator. Mr. —— Costigan, of Castlebar. Mr. Denny Lane, merchant, Cork. PaRTIES AGAINST WHOM WARRANTS ARE I[ssvEp. Mr. Francis Morgan, solicitor to the Corporation of Dublin, : Mr. Thomas Francis Meagher, gentleman, Dublin. Mr. Michael Doheny, barrister, Tipperary. Mr. Richard O’Gorman, jun., barrister. The following remarks respecting the failure of the projected insurrection in Ireland will be read with inter- The writer has visited the scene of action, and sat Csi serane ~ l¢ha rs ° 1 = ster 'y . . withdraw would be injurious to the/the horrors of a civil, or rather servile war, the reason is has had an opportunity of forming correct ideas On the )subject. When O’Connell, in February, 1843, rising in the Dublin City Assembly House, opened that campaign fy the renewal of Reneal agitation, of which the resent hour is perhaps the end, but I speak doubtingly, with speech commencing, nee “ Where is that slave se lowly, Wha, could he burst His chains at first, Would pine beneath them slowly ?” acord that vibrated through every Irish h Protestants remembered the glories of 60th Gedy burned to be free from that power that. through ages proscribed him and his religion. ’ The landlords, however, who have little now that is Irish but their estates, were adverse ; and the Procest. ant, though he writhed as ke read the insults of the En- glish press (for he, too, isan Irishman!) only sighed for national freedom, for whenever he turned the sohied in his thoughts it became to him impossible—the stoled priest, the friar, the confessional, and the Jesuit in ful! activity (things he abominates) rose before his View as the consequence of Repeal. Davis, Mitchel, O’Gorman, and others, to whom O’Brien joined himself, seeing that this coldness of the North must ever continue ee as the ecclesiastical organisation of O’Connell’s movement remaitied, deter. mined to make it national and democratic. They esta- blished a press that appealed to the historic and poetic memory of the people, and soon came to an open rupture with O’Connel] in the Association on the education question, The debate arose on the Colleges Bill, whieh they supported against the wishes of O’Connell and the priests. Soon.afterwards O’Connell framed his ‘ Peaoe resolutions,’ for the express, purpose of turning them out of the Association, and at once called his party—known since the secession of Davis,Mitchel, and Co., as ‘the Old Ireland party’—‘the Moral Force party ;’ and nicknamed the Young Ireland men ‘the War party,’ ‘the Physical Force party.’ But thie was not the trne distinction, for it will be remembered that it was the ‘ moral force party’ that invariably in the Association, and in the well-known attack on O’Brien and his friends at Limerick, used sticks and stones, The real distinction was, that one party wished to or- ganise the agitation with an ecclesiastical frort as O’Connell! had ever done—theyoung Irelanders, in or to make it lay and democratic. By means of theirp they soon revolutionised the towns (for it was a complete internal revolution in agitation,) and the overpowering majority became in each town Young Ireland men. But the country was not so accessible, as the peasantry are out of reach of newspapers, and so the country re- mained ‘Old Ireland’ and ‘ moral force,—in other words, under the control of the priests. When, therefore, Lord Clarendon concentrated the police and military inthe towns, and then suspended ithe Habeas Corpus Act, he had th ders of this con- cocted rebellion checkmated. The towns could not rise on account of the large military force concentrated there, nor protect the leaders from the unlimited powers of arrest granted to the Lord-Lieutenancy. And when they were thus forced out of the towns intothe country, they jumped, as it were, intoa trap, for no clubs were organised, nor was there any force (the priests being opposed, and everywhere resenting the attempt made by the Young Irelanders to depose them from leadership} ready to follow their standard, So signal a failure of a Jong-cherished scheme of re- vellion has scarce ever been known or heard of; but, to the observant, it is less inexplicable than it appears to the multitude. One important cause of failure was the loss of Mitchel, the man of genius, and neglect of his advice. When he was taken, the leadersbip of the in- tellct of the party fell to Charles Gavin Duffy, editor of the .Vation newspaper, who set obout organising clubs in the country, a scheme which Lord Clarendon did not permit him to carry out, as Mitchel forewarned him. Mitchel’s advice was, ‘Get arms! No organising of paper armies, under the name of clubs, which will quail and vanish like flocks of sheep at the first sound of a bark, at the first demonstration of British power; and so spread panic, terror. Let each man amp, and resolve to do what in himlies, It is this individual resolve that is wanting—in orther words, ‘the spirit.’ When this has come into many breasts (and the handling of arms will bring it,) then without organising, without any orders from Dublin when to rise, or on what opportunity to move, opportunity will present itself as plain as from heaven, and the brave will seize it and turn it into suc- cess.’ Such wes his parting advice, contained in h's his conviction Whether this plan had elements of succes or not, lic at least saw the vices of the other. IneELaND.—A a writer in Douglas Jerrold’s Magazine says, that Ireland has cost England 150,000,000/ since the Union ; that being the net excess of the expenditure for the Irish Government over the receipts of Irish Re- venue. But this money, it must be understood, has not been spent for the benefit of the Irish people, but for the English people governing Ireland. The Enclish labouring people have been robbed so much to support a portion of the English aristocracy, and put them ina ‘position to rob Ireland. Ireland ‘jis actually made to jand immediately added ‘I am not that slave,’ he touched letter to his club, dated from Newgate prison the day of