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. a favorer
terfeic penitent, § and an
is unparatlelled in the
tclared afi and counterfet penitent,
BM tg
ple.arrest, nothing is attempted i in Spain without the
permission of the supreme council ; wluch fa act pre:
Bupposes the greatest prslenee and cir spection.*
Tf the a accused be declareil a heretic, the tribunal, af-|t
er ving ‘pronounced sentence confiscation,
h ands hin over for legal” “punishment to the secular
pow neil of Ca
Which inespeate th he most st arise, crudite ai
stile ;- the. very spatne of
UNITED STATES CATHOLIC: MISCELLANY.
‘which crimes he has incurred the penalty of bigh ex
{communication, und the Conliseation | of all
howev » beg and: rost affectionately charge in the
ody of nen in the tniv
If the proofs are not it irresistible, if the culprits a are panish author of ‘* The Inguson Unmask-}
not obstinately attached to doctrin nes whieh. tion the}éd,” from which production I take these details,
lamentable experiene of other. natians, tend to.the really pretends that this clause of * Wed ness and
subversion of morality, purer tigion ‘and society, mercy” is a mere @ formality, which produces'no be-
erely required: to
whereby he can hold no office unde er the
thea G Tam thoroughly convinced thi
are cjemency.|
ertal
ve come wledge, and especi
character of that tribunal leave no possible room in
‘my mind to doubt the correctness of such an assertion.
he tri iti i
vil di inqui fication,
ie gov
est manner in 7 power » that-he may
be treated “pith kindness and mercy.
The
neficent effect. He Van Espen, according to
jwhom, this protestation as entered by the tribunal is
asi rt of external form, which ts, feweners dear to the
chure : - we . soe °
us the tribunal is purely rayalyi in spite of the ecclesi-
astical ition, and all th meaning verbiage about saccrdo-
c. Sc. may well be considered as * trifles
light as air,”
; BIGOTRY.
VOL. Ix.
| professed by nise-tenths of the people of Ireland, I
leein them ithe best tribunal to refer io, Had
per ty to the benefit of the re mber and the |g ety bee ful to or or ireland, your eile
reeiury © of his majesty.*- re, moreover, fr ‘end. and ‘iatrew relative, the Duke of Leinster,
|that said accused N. N. ought to be, and he hereby | would cated’ the. situation of president,
is abundoned to justice and the secular arm. We,\now filled, ‘by yout lords hip. atemnents have
been made proving the inutility of the so ,
questioning the correctness of their det ails. hese
statements have been noticed ; denied very stoully ;
ed.
but as yet these.stalements remain unrefute:
nthe report and appendix published for 1828, I
have loo! ra refutation of the charges
of profuse, nay, wanton extravagance, in the dispos-
al of public “money, in buildings, ‘in salaries to,nu-
merous officers, inspectors, &c.* A speech made’bj
e} Mr. 0
ed in the “appendix (p. 16 3), but has ‘any contradic-
on been given to the facts stated by Mr. Cassidy —
the greater portion | is unnotic! ‘hrec ee
were stated as being incorrectly, ret cturned. In re
the: numbers attending a-certain school, on a my
” visits
once in enc o three
¢ The tribunal jie Tiquisition is composed of a Emo oolas ‘* are not in existence.”? and the hon.
supreme chief, who is ealled the Grand Inquisitor, [From the Truth. Teller. ry. “ Lionel. Dowson hae ‘not contradicted the Gpinion of
andis alwa i an a. ishop, or bishop, a {The followibe is taken from the Franklin Reposi- the Kildare-place systeta, stated to have been made
of eight ecclesiastical counsellors, (six of whom are|tory, published at’ Chambersburg,- Pa. We shall by him. Belle-Grove school, teported i in 1827 tu be’
always se culate, two are regulars,) one of whom| barely remark that the just censure of our respecta-| attended by seventy scholars, i is admitted | in 1828, to:
must b e Dominican order, by. virtue of a privi-|ble contemporary on the article from the Philadelphi-| be th hen. ** buildin ng,’? and * to be a flour-.
lege: whi ch was - granted .by king Philip I]. The on is assure indication of the liberality that presides ishing. school.” >The weholart a are not to be insert-
second by rotation of office to the other re-|over the feelings of the enlightened class of-Ameri- n the report of 1828. rove that such is
gular orders, according. toa Provision made by kin,
es Tif.
‘othe youngest member of the - ecclesiastical |
conncil are entrusted the fiscal concerns.
Ther re are certain frases of which A have
fect nowledge, where nesellors from
Castile attend. I pre sume, howeve er, that they are
cunvoked, ‘Whenever capital punishment-is called! ia
question nt
This simple. incontestible description putsto fight
the malicious phantoms of the im
associates,
to
nota per
those poor and
nica prejudice
so dong and ungene sly “ast ened. all “he odium to
which theInquisition has S myst
ve and honor vblige - confess th
ofred 'o their “epttation, and by such an avowal tu
expres:
honecforaed more cautious and charitable.
Vv o reflect upon the constituent members
of this tribunal, it would indeed be difficult to con-
ceive one, better sep teil £0 remove every possibie
suspicion of cruelty, and, Iam justified i in saying,
_ evel a shadow of severit ye Whoever is acquainted
with
Vinced, on cool and dispassionate examination, that
mercy necessarily sways the sceptre of that tribunal.
_ Another. ‘circumstance deserves’ partic:
notice, is the fact, that: inependen tly of the Favoure
ble.p presumption, which grows ou tof eu ch an inquisi-
torial body, it:
h, when cognizance is taken
loss
** We havo declared and do hereby declare the ac-
cused N. N.'to be convicte
and abettor of heretics, a false and coun
ve ‘De centitad. Iie. p. 64,
digert
‘ba acta la wovidencia los vicios de esle Tehama to neces.
Nat
anacl Tom {Thi
sin Bvo.
favor tn quote
hostile to the Inquisition, in order to avoid eve istake in
Binal ed contain in any manner favorable to. this ig.
nal
an ar
and am truly sorry for th ie invariably pardoned chit morcy
e dog to its
T having received ‘pardos, he is
pious Voltaire, of |
oO he
is characteristre of. that apacice of liberality which
e has!)
for the offence, and to become th
the spirit of catholic Priesthood must be con-
ol
gious intolerance which bas so Jong op
ernes which hthe hw of the state visits with the
d as an heretical apostate,t
--impenitent relapser : by
: . a preside at the yearly exhibition, got up under the
‘tna
s|
only the works which are deciedly j
cans. In this censure the Editor ofthe Re ‘pository(a|
* I Pre ratestant) sets a brilliant example of ptulanthropy, |
and triumphantly scars spare the Sphere of contract-
illiberality—£d, T. Teller.]
"* More Ecclesiastics from the Pope have reached
our shores! .The Right. Rev: D.' Portier, as he is
called, bishop of Mobile; has just arrived in theA’
che at ew-Orleans, with ten ecclesiastical adju-
tan athe c
| Mississippi is iis inafair way of
panties istructoa=-Philde
ve paragraph from
.o
=.
being supplied with
slphidns Feb, 26.
fe Philadelphian’?
common fame has allotted to its editor, the Rev. Dr.
y..and goes very far, i in our opinion, to strengthen
y at the numerous re-
Ihsiace newspapers,established throughout the Union,
will, at no distant,
ing calculated to promote peace on earth and good
o meri~~but very reverse. ry religious
denomination in this happy‘country, is on. a perfect
equali ty—to worship God according ‘° their own
ed is more than a privi lege, —' right; and|°
this denaciation of Dr. Ely’s is therfore equally a
violatio t ions and of}!
spirit of our free in
that of the gospel. Can it be that any
wish to introduce into this country that hatefal reli
ressed his} 3
ow man in Europe, and - which there, -we trust,
is 5 fast giving place tu better feelings and better prin-
iples. - 2... : “
ES
. ERELAND..
“ EpucAT ION.
Society for Promoting & the Eaueation ofthe Poor of |
TO THE MOST WOBLE THE MARQUIS, or POWNSHIRE,
My Lorv—By an advertisement.in the Dublin
papers, 1 obse erve that your lordship has been induc:
ed to lend the sanction of _ your high name, and t
nnual meeting of the soviely for Promot-
ing the education of the poor of Jrelan
dopt- this public mode of adivenin ing your r lord-
ingi ob-
That this society. has done some service for the
t} poo of Treland, none acquainted with their pro
ceedings will be _ disposed to deny. But have the
mnanaging
ice to the nation, for the large. sum of 203. 467, 17s.
id., public m money. committed to their, care by snc-
cessive parliam
this questi ny “my bo rd, be fairly answered by
ause of the man of sin, TheValley of the]!
the system of the society tepor's. and as dn example
of the inutility of 2.5371, 15s, 2d. wa
ted.to be urider the patronage of Lieut. Colonel
Bagot, and attended by 125 scholars, is not only un-
true, but the school house of ney is now ood as
school has be ven held in,
nce to the appen
cnable your lordship to judge of the want of candour
nimaking up these reports. ‘There is a note of re-
ference to Nurney school—see its explanation, p.
The annual incetings are held generally in Febru-
ary, the report is received an dered to be printed;
the detailed accounts are andor in the hands of the
public before September. What, my lord, causes
the de’ elay in in printing a pamphlet of 176 pages ?
Certainly of assistant s. , phe sociely have
the services rot a committee of 31 members, one se-
cretary in ‘chief, sixteen clerks; besides porters, col-
Silectors. &c.
The delay of publication prevents immediate ex-
amination of. facts # reported. It would
time in the autumn of 1829
attendances of. Mareh 1828,
sg ubsided. and the details are not generally read,
nnual statements made with a sounding
flourish of trumpets | is forgotten ; parliament is pro-
rogued, and the public money in the society’s pos-
session. ‘I'he society, in their. annual reports, pub-
lish letters from anonymous correspondents. 1
to inquire into school
public interest
m
me refer you fo
the appendix
my lord, if the writer of the letter read by Mr. Jack-
on, in reply to lord Cloncurry’s- observations, would
ave written such a statement under-a conviction
tat it would be read in lord Cloncurry’s presence, in
ublic meeting ? posi it not strike your lordship, as
it does every ma "common judgment, that writing
for. & public assembly would pave insured a6 uracy
to facts, at all events? But of the. society
was to publish without names ‘tnd vesiden nce.
Tahal! not enter into a detail ofthe relative num-
of protestant and catholic children in Ireland;
ire iin aid from public | bounty to promote their
n. Your lordshi
_
educatio| "3 experie a-resi-
dent nobleman and extensive Jand proprietor, will,
think. enable your dshi onfirm i
ant unable to obtain that
essing. pAssnmning this proportion, examine the
services of the Kildare place society on this data.—,
tn Mr. Robert Cassidy’s speech. published by the
ciety. he j is reported to have stated, and that state-
ment basn
the same p
masters, and 32 catholic | nines mere instructed.
A much greater dispar in 1828.
your "catholic countrymen, and as that religion i is
number of Protestant masters “trained in that year pind
rt Cassidy, i in July, 1828, has been publish-.
sted in country.
|inspections, Nurney sehoul. in the-cuunty of Kilda
be waste of |
vas. —