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416 / ' THE CATHOLIC HERALD. : :
3
: . vess always] plebeian trails of character, by a process of exter-y ry. How could it be otherwise when thebighest | Be hey are nt in their operati fal to human
tlie exermely hands ‘Tho sevesy ot wralyn'nce many ie ‘cessed. “ite a ulege [faim by senting thourands of the ‘generous’ | legal advisers of the Iri sh Governin senvvality jin their bearings, humiliating to, bumen
Ga ig seremely hezacous ree ee of neatly and son af od comma an, ie reline- in almost naked-] ponded in secret with Jud, self-love ;—in their influences, ory animating to bu
et ct
man indolence. ‘The best recommendat
oy of tulden wharlginds, are uot the Mlan.|mente and evjoyien
ple to .
auuton di ing. the 1 of an in-| to prej i i
manners | nes je nari the rigour Prejudice them against Esti or, in other | uem is, that they are the remnants of Catiiy—
~ ers to be feare’ rans | though shy, were pol lished ght art but remnant wes nkened 3 in their principle, and lesser
the risk of being + allo vores tavllr ney tre carci of others was bot th quict ad jot ayin ings and doings” of| ig these 6 princip]
‘some hidden aby atleast while young t} Saurin, and that witless punstor and judicial buf apy a ‘cetinon of a respectable writer, wh:
who cross the grand sin fe that {inne had used him ill, and Trad more-| the mora foon, the Jute Lond No rbury, are not yet consign- y pectable writer, who
pliced him in circumstances that by no/and the rangemen does sot cn ed to Sir, will have the courage | ¥98 able, from the potarety of the fact, to wake @ the -
a ‘greed with his taste, nor with the habi-)former, when they wish to grati Fai 1 oon the veil, ad Missle manifold Orange e cited, can assure the
quired in his father's h ominis- feelings instead Lf eating bre the ‘oy ‘of their iquities in Church and State. You need not g scene is a picture of ‘real
| vi \ Peeval lent rete to tie distant days, when an Orange Corps| life, by no means rarely exhibited by mi bers of the
yogs arth, i eomanry, free from the slightest leaven of| Episcopalian clergy in freland.—Des the effect
tte was obliged a waita long time fora fellow. a ‘judispensable Passport to the Hames of hell. Popery, tmmuted, estan another corpes inclu produced on his mind by the “Shepherd” of Termes,
ship, as the his college succeed aceord-|'The Orangemen and Gentleme satisfied | ing two or thee © ath dea vp
excellent ing Fa on marble orders and he ‘leclared that with the persecution of the bodies of ‘Catholics, | same Tine, to be may refer ws
satake in, Certainly the resi-|on ear Klin their convivial invocations, give recent occurrence in sie south or ‘reland, when
+
nant ber
Berard every year ia reckoned of
ro)
realy te
pogo vil nowy
as Isat leaning my elbow on the
ea of “the Shepherd” did 1 call to mind what my my
inferior degre:
| nh
revit Contnning a great number of| uired more than consumed the prabenda | thei a waruy seception in another tegion. The) frightful sxcriee of human life wae prevente by eee Tooling’ had been, tions thaws ones at
elt fan of ‘
re
nalrot December. to that of ofthe imams “put it ma te supposed that it Pope i in the Pil ed by the Devil with| the judic anagement o jcer or two| ther, P fi
ee ealled matonsiers daily de-| was the resience not its ex renses that he found | Priests, of the favourite toasts of "the wleitnine the route acenad toto te | pen’ the ioe of Bhlyentieget ne ned Mi
toacertain distance ; the one tnost grie ue. He would lll ow his sofa inthe | pious, courteous, compassionate Orangemen, who | giments: e Catholic, and the other, the | seifto din y
towanis the Valais; the other towards Piedmout | evening, and vil stor way of pas sing that por- | hate swearing and love ratio pon eociely” “Avhat t Banh iw ‘Orange facings are appropriate sym-| while his Reverenco bas sat feasting on the flesh tat»
they carry a sinall ques iy of bread and wine, | tion of the se ban ce vie a disgrace to t the rancorous feeling that lurks within [fowl provided purposely for his regaley I hav
and are accompanied jogs, trained 10 dis- | without mu vople ent! “The sitjoned ex tee hen 1 shall, iu a subsequent letter, point myself fore forced to put up with tht ry fee which an
‘eover the path t iro ie int at the snow, and | fle was fond, eetyant ‘readings ani read the E tract, eivngs spp view of the evidence of | out to your obs on numerons instances in} **opdance eried for in Poor ‘osm's belly white
. to hunt out tracks rayed ers. 1 sh Classics with taste and feeling; had eight |a disintere ows ‘sullieient light on. which the ‘Orange boldly del tie al the gavern- ortify i
the maronniers do ni vn at their uaval hour years, passed at a school of | igh Fepuration, the ioral or rather Shtumous origia of these as-| ment, [shall also inntitule contrat betwen is tupetatitious fellow-dinerts_bleeein j .
or when a wale more oun than his com-| enabled him. to-read eit ek with [sociatio the noah and south, and pi ofr Mata whieh |i ars no doubt that the glorious Reformation ba }
panions, reaches the c and announces their | facility, he would have ened hse si ‘The. frst Orange eladge was formed on the eapnot be guen tioned tha arlal balance of pot all these matters om ao much more civilized a
Tistress: the eeclesiasties themselves, armed with {b but these lang ges were eae to He at- | 2tst of September 1296, a the house of crime, of murder ad blow idshody_ dist | Senna slike @ footing:
long iron shod poles, sally forth aumihibe snows, |tempted by their means crease the range of/named Sioan, in the obscure villayoof Longhgall, Orange districts where idleness nd w one “hose le did I then, fe my consolation, know that I wa
and hurry tothe relief of the anderers; | his eeu ba the ibooe repelled him. The immediate cause of those disturbanees in the | fertile incentives. to erime, cannot be pleaded in borne out by tie Aprstolie Canons in my starvation §
they re-snimate and support thee ing spirits] “The time approach hed when he was to enter into north that gave birth to Orangeisin was an attempt | palliation. 1 shall, Sir, furnish you with abun- | 94 whe ry ttn ce oer
and frames; adva ancing defore them, velco 4 pas the ones ofthe Anglican choreh; ig what man-|to plant colonies of Protestants on the farms or |/dant evidence in support of your generous advo-| rey fat ends ste a clight dou
gage through the sn Unteequently ner the c of this change affected him {tenements of Catholics who had been forcibly | eacy victims of Orangeism. General Hight
by turas on. the mai be an ied of by the fullowing anecdote. I lejected. Numhers of then. were seen ver n never have a fair trial in Ireland, ight
nevieness and courage of the digs are, sith, im in the sort of promenade | ing about the country hong ays bs Wfnaked, ill factions of every deanmivation ave diseou: | iriend of St I Pal, ‘Gun to nse withthe Rector of Bate .
Sn quest traellere a sur: re oat Su we chanced to fullow a furiaved. Meh rist ber of the ‘Society raged by the unrelenting hostility of the law. | lymudragget""t
f° ~
BE
ect tor oe
E
5
“ Where was your garden befure it was weeded?”
5
oF
After
much,
that was holy and good; and they who have tra-
velled in foreign lands, and listened to the vesper “ti
bell—the Tree
most c 1 ne
prised. by an avalanche. IT the victims of the of three or four very gay, sprace unde who oppeare wo have paseel 60 or 70/‘The Orangemen ace refractory, simply becanse | —
mournful accidents be not too deeply busied. the fentates who made themselves somewhat re-| years on his property a asa man Soay in 8 ti wless bandini—a| } {pntroy, Serm. i
i e butt able by their ais of coxsombry. | R. Y. as [the neighbourhood of sue wth. vielent neighbours, who ate in theirconduct| { Travelv ofan iveh Gentleman
not being soficienly po wera to eras sie ‘fo |itin sul day, yet speaking loud enough for me utrages then com: | practical blosphemere of that Protestant religion, -
penetrate far through the snow, ke mup io hearsay do not be ao conceited; two 0 atl sometimes| which hey aflct to veneraey should be shown a
Pig the defvet by sounding, with their ‘Tong poles, | three years your tails willbe cut of and then tof twelve of fines Cavvolie homes wrerkel in| no merey wh ‘They are strangers to kind-| ‘The Churchman notices our few remarks on the
the suspected places, | When ffom the aver of wil be all over with Mair poder, andthe a night and some destroved.’ (3374) "T! at this | nen sal encounter aeverity. © religion | quotation from Le Pas in anvwer to the question
he resistance, they have reason to suspect that a fantastic morle af dress hair and curls, andl Comnence in the neigiborhd orc how stien is thy sacred. name invoked by those [Where wos your Church tefire Luther?” end hoped
huinan body is touched, th iguiekly ee no hill sbeuween Portadown and Dinzamnon. ‘and i ieho, never enter thy temple, but with ated th os
- the'snow, and ofien have tha happiness of restor-| yet given way. to tho more serious am monly Jentende over neosty all dhe northern counties st we will :
ing Life te unfortunates, on whoun, but for them, | fashion introdared at the commencement wtof th * Thave the honor tw be, Sir, resi py nzze wus your garden before it was
lights and hited losed for evermore. In triumph | French revolttion, In the course of time, after the Catholice were | With mue reapeet, your obedient servant woeded To eet the wishes ofthe inquisitive
fhem to the convent, ond there cherish | R.¥. died when his stomach could no longer |many of them driven from the county, and tok] Feb, 6, 1896. servants | tor, we will ensider the question, and if we find i ita
them in thes bosons as log ‘as wearied nature propel depose a daily sperirty ofronst eet of efoge in dierent pais of Irelands I understood : 8 -_| plicable tothe Cathie Chur
requires thei “This period artived to him soon |they w onnaught Some years efter, when
“ Ce Seer hela sine nS rand climacteric. Ear. peieo aa and quietness wat in some measure reator THE CATHOLIC LERALD.
The ceremonial ofthe Raman Cuhote region ing was to Je erely a sensnal cape ei ned agi sin ih bably
like that of the Levitieal law, had Teas bot an occopas “nay inary ono of i | yeas taiwan 4 ‘The property wich they Teft PHILADELPHIA: we can shew that the Catholic Chureb never did, an
ever coram populo ; m 225 pleasures of the tanginaton instances, to Protestants nue: . . never could, stand in need of such a reformation, we
is ‘oreo proerons i Scie sta-| country walk w «approached atom houses n near where they bad houses ‘and gardens, and small THURSDAY, MARCI 24, 1836, will have shown the inapplicability of the interrogation
tion it ts places of pilgrin which ran "srs on the waters of this stream | farms of fan as generally handed over, by | —— Cann” Fo bevy ake we for wt et
sone mrevics, both in the city and dueewildervers lack hag lr by her young |the anode to w Protea tenants. That oo THE ANNUNCIATION. irom Seripture cited in he blowing sepa
2 th ii 7 one said was an usu- | eur knowledge. jarther says i, , r
ea ee ria gates a eeehconae fate 1 Ran tis oneaston ad. | west contiruel for two a tree years, but was | The embassy of the Archangel Gabriel to the Vir-|t2 the Churchman of last Saturday, of which more
visible ackno in cklings, which, with an exe at] not qi jolte an bai in 1796 and 1797 as it was earlier. | gin Mary, claims the serious attention of all Christians, | anon:
worlde-the eubstantial coniessions of a na: once postcal [aa gltionous, be saw they we this wrecking, and the Catholics were |becausointinatcly connected with the mystery ofhu-] |The Cars of ie Lng. 411 Chtendom men wx
y “I should like to see | driven ont, what was called the day } man redemption. ‘The lost state of the entire aman op, the pillar andground of men, and children, for
h sage and onion in your party merge into Orangeism ; ey passed from | family, in.consequence of the transgression of behold, Tam with you Inve ben cp
@ one to the other, and the gentlemen in the | rent from whom all were derives i—the cael nto thoconsum Gamt
's literary amusements have been mentioned; connty, peor ‘what they terued their Orange superadded, and eo oe ean peri peril of
commenced to him to acquire so much of the | warrants to enable them to assemble legally as | which were particularly visible had ee vices, evrore |! Bo my thao such re ret
‘squilln di lontano French and Italian languages as to be able to read they ‘ened ie ‘The name dri jp and rare and idolatrous practices of the heathen nations—pre-|s Ghecel a ns Eanes of bell in the hom
Che paia" giorns pianger che si muore? suns wong ane and bewtifl eOmPoE ee ee OE Day en (357 3.)" | gented amet desolatng scene, fa tho contemplation Ae ysis fe ak
will regret that tasteless fanaticism which swept] styihful was he, that he sould have {argon hi is| its origin in wither nee or charity. leis hardly ceil we are relieved Y ie Joyful tidings that a) paractete the spirit of rath, 1
way many sensible, yet innocent incentives t0| share of the ve ary for | corret to state that Orangeism, beyond the name | Redeomerigathani. A heavenly messongerappears| cme, fe wil. tench you all
devotion as abominatinns, and guarded effectally |e, 99 for aneas and ompanions, to shoot | didn ot exist antecedently 101705, ‘he fell spirit | before the humble maid of Nazareth, and greete hee| Sen "ne Stn oie
ious excers by subrtitating for ite |x and prepare it himeelf. ~ lof the er sence of which belong athe eecal favourite ofthe Diy. He salma ber shall remmaia wit
gious vindiflerence.” —Quarte vty Revi In religion he had no prejudices, except sina to “a rule-—-was in fall flourish soprchensons and assures her that without forfeiting| Me that heareth
the divide el
inhi and vical who, he snspec: ere centuries ifs ani sero ne ppella- ‘ginity, she shall become the sanctuary of the niet dapat
Lieutenant Maw, in his “Journey from the | inelin iid work with mow “foun jas | tive and a ter deg of religions viglenee: Son of Ged made flesh. In her a mystery is to be ac-
Pavific to the Atlantic,” says; “1 am myse.fa tions. “ie a ‘not settled his faith, and, like when it merged in e Orangeisn of 1795. Ik complished hich the sublimest spirits of the heavenly
Protestant ‘bot Leneeisel should no actenrrect-| every etsled, unpre) 5 Nyavered bes | would be a most revaling task to mark the devas-| court had never conceived-—not only is a virgin to
st to site thot llowever Roman Cath | ween Uelieving a or A fellow eulle-| tating progress of the ulions faction racked in
Bie pees vay have acted at other times, and ia | gian havin} declaced ‘haw i Pemprised his own every quaiter of the island, by mn blo
oiker counties they. and particularly the Jesuit, creed in three short. words,—*//e era oe bev—R. ‘About the year 1798, ies Aaterat it ‘hei sane. 1 Wher nakiect teeth |
har widen Y. tesiningy ailmitted thot all beyond this sion to the plebeian ted by the | above all. at a subject for the pious contempla- |
bret Forsvta woo a lest doutul, Yet when he Bresk-o'-day Orange Be “vy Lord Gosford, a| tion of those who believe ia his name, and hope for |
conversion to the Catholic |late Governor a, ver magh, gives the “lowing salvtion through hs atonement! How profound should | n |
faith. he saidy TTI DS deed it I do notthink that| narrative, whic derives its touching eloquence their homagesbe to the Deity incarnate! Whilst ador-
rom generous “mr hy of fe ing Him, they eannot but regard with veneration, Her ty -
Tathe old red cow and the righty secret that a persecution, accompanied with all] who was chosen to the high dignity of his mot ther, ny trom henceforth and
The other is but set up in spite the circumstances of ferocious ervey which have | Ha ill of grace, the Lord is with thee; blessed a Bieter |
in all ages dia inguished that dreadful calamity in thou amongst women! REMARKS, |
ti From the London Weekly True San. now raging in this country. ge Scripture or the Church of England? ch
long On sions that we SCVOLA’S LETTER. even acknowled ed innve ne Scripture the Church Sand orient tasck
SO ‘it Eco aly CORRECTION. of | naan 1! Christians ave ered; and 90
treated the’ priests with the gresiect respect, am ORANGEISM. crime which the ana jects this merci-| ‘Tho Missionary, with some indications of irritated| wi" the pileeandargndot er “SS iors petal
would at alf times, exert themsclves fora ‘pa-| “The qualifications of 9 Orangeman sro Bish pioty, cour. tess perseention are charged with, is a crime of | fucling, calls on us toshew cause why we rejoiced tha tee ae eee prevail agsinat te coh, of Rnpland—
dre.” % re ney: | easy proof; i x simply a profession of the Cath-| respect for the Lent fast was manifested by those who Stat aal gud yon all truth, and remain wi
were wont to essilit as a relic of Judaiem, or other- sa she i
re of 800 ae the
ac sear eu yom.
‘An the Chi . s
al
Tom. and to them at turn
Dg fom tranrestion
a mother, but a creature isto be the mother, according
to the Aosh, of Hin who before all ages is God bh
thei
emonies, but olson mattery
of faiths “Art. 19,
HE
anh
that ehhougis the Indiana haa beg
some of the pucblos {illsges) in
unjust resumen n by your
draw an extra
sulicient te ex- Morand ground of th, Chae
Bane
ind remain with you for
met ihe
P
sae | olié faith, wless banditti_have constitated
Fo i0seni Care, sa. ar, [heme js ioe of yee
Sin : cone Pemnorderaus cise and ere it is nothing less than a con
oll t acim, I respectilly cae rere Bia iverson proscription! Tere | Episcopalians wore meant, though wo assure biz that
unhapny quikiven coldemned - unfe sling Be ote oth’ merely pref cng the oor ee Tonka | 8 evidence enough, with ut tale de tail of horrors, | the whole variety of Protestant sects were included. | __Let the texts from Scripture cited in the left column
vite dea convential ie for the purpos maz! 85 io i) woes i oe crete a urteous” people Ur-| We were perfectly aware that the Lent fast was mark- of the foregoing piece be calmly considered, and it will
ching their other children, who are to or the aaa on “ rst en heneve.| angemen are jn yet this ernslne er iesnny in the Episcopalian Calendar, and that the learned Bi-| *PPear evident that the church of Jesus Christ wos
. delighis of the world. ent wihess The Orangeme tare Phos ly. ed by a Royal Duk ' 7 a Han shop Beveridge, and other distinguished divines of the | Promised the perpetual assistance of the Holy Spirit,
Sime abuses have arisen from the recagni- eon es, nd can Usp dom hy mee zs i om the gi te ig again in Ei ch had vindicated its apostolic origin; | "48 declared to be the pillar and the ground of truth,
finn of religious houses as corporations ; but un-| jip-homage of its presepia, whi bears | wetinal Thier eblocdy". conclave i ier yet we had never eeen en Episcopalian expose himself] @%4 was appointed as the sacred medium by which the
fe had so recognised | tents wth could | are © brim of “ene wy, malice, and alluneharitable. rat orelate a Chr ‘atin s fanelase nef Solise to thoeovnft jeer of the reformed, by adhering to this| T¥elation cf God was to be madeknown toman,—each
not have ‘pnsseseed raperty. arise wh at a precious eperimen of hy porrisy | ra ye who ho doubt, in the fult yop ie of i ortho, theory and we had some reason to believe that Epis-|0f which privileges is sufficient to prove that the
from she very perman sins cf these exablishanent 13 we havo nthe motto prefixed to this lever! Mei , copalians ‘oaiod it by fuct and argament, hurch never could have erred in faith. But the re~
Uinanence ia also an. advantage i lone ie. bots of being s succes sor to the meek and | °°P# y + | Our) &
nu mi hia nerina i both for and ageinst the’ “fs a aries are with blood, talk- ‘osiles. A whole regime ent of militant | ®Pology may best be expressed in the words of Flotch-| formers pretended that she had erred, and therefore
i for ands nga he 1 Ving of piety, whieh tangs 0a religion of meek ee yar (ih Phves cnet wtih, aoe hee | er — eal goad an
he ueeror som ne ot i a ence! oe latking ob fi oe hee ness of application, "esignate“sarplced ruffians,”| “Be the thing as area
Catholie monkery. but to show that mon pe] wih widows an ‘ pl eel cath cl tone sls forget their leg timate vocation, and purtici-| multitude of modern inne tnt ree the} 1 novi To this 5 -
sist in England with “ee is or without My we ike the Bacchunalian vengion | pat nthe orgies Of this-antinational and blood. Wet of the first reformers, a h as we do, | lees accusation we reply in the wordsof a writer of the . ‘
5 what, againy are the pract tices, even now| thi a it
taelity, and at on enorme eighbours, in intoxicating draaghiss which ae an ich our stricter Protestants retain? My brethren, ve contury—Tertullian—not only becouse itdeves
oe es younger son roa conney gen-| the pacsions a wild ascendancy over reason, talk The very oath of this s sant qoyal body Jou are in the mistof them; and on this pont, ya
erale estate in ———s! This ofan ety | Men, eho i in the year 1295, eject. | proves only a ‘ratified allegiane: 'y sweat | may ask your own experience. Do you know the use it shews that the errors of !
. estate was destined, in its c ety, 1 ed Catbole ossessinns, and |! support and defend to the utmo: Sonn F pow. | testant whose practices of piety are rigid and aise; one age resemble those of another only in vain preten=
heritan wt theese son: there were darters cnc themactves | by rly and renteaton, f, the King and his heirs, s0 long as te v they <i hae cer whose rae wank dia the| Soneand uncandid reasoning. “*" Suppose, however,* .
0 to wise reformers ell themselves hones jlate the | auppart ‘he Protestant arcenancy: tn Of christian virtue t= Bor exampley-to appee [5228 this writer, «that all (the Churches) erred; tbat :
decent a an ride ne tgate the long as he or they sacrifice nation ‘e ‘the a8-| only to one single at the Prot the Ay le was mistaken ip the testimony he gave”
| of an agon red widow sn Tate hie, valk cendaney a blood-stain ned faction. Mr. Sones, | feaane establiniine eee them, that the Holy Spirit did not regard any of them
of contrite: ey! ry magistrate, who Wad been hivnself aunung its ra ese intitutn of fasts and | so as to lead it inv the truth, although cent by Chis
| the moral Cuegny of (Oegsin - ‘Sutiee ce on “ an “Ctango raatess Till L went to the nor abstiuen I,J and demanded of the Father for this end—to bet
nge acts range professions. Or-
whal
eal obsereens ad no 8 oft
angemen are soinewhat like the natives of New
Zeal
a jee a heathen hurch ‘of Ey ian hear-
crv toy he Eur oes |e be ue at ee
into error, and thus undergo tt ‘he ¢ curse of Gon.
33
3
2
2
3
=
sEe
2
z2
§
g
1 Me
spiti- | ists rot old, pledge themselves to perseci | Fained 60
orn ie
at the English, chu i ere it, in its Books of | te2eher of truth wand that thie divine intendan
Homilies and of Common Prayer; Teaulates i icar of Christ i
who manifest their cenpest fo ‘or European lomi ay lates aie oe vicar of rist neglected his duty and termite te
ara acters io 5
acl
Haein ni h Report servance in its spiritual arc
exteratins ing Br , th of its spiritual and political antho i
r _| Weight, bot fit ti on shalt toa it ry. Christ had Pee aa capone alt this—would it st
geism, when 7, Catholies were expelled | And yet do you hae the Protestant that duce respect be probable that so many and auch great Churches
from theie.teneme a Protestant colony and cultivate it? 1 believe, that in its priestiood | should combine in the belief of one false faith? Noone
Bew , | might be esis ‘phe ‘eect pressure of Par- there.
the Orange bent of ‘Toryiemn, an his piel eon liamentary ai telligence which pre-oc- Fi
frees, who talk in Parliament of the gen | cupies the calor of the Ieckly True Sun, re-| ht Mg yt donet. I
on one Tthe 1 i i ism i ral oe ent nat: Hovwovers be alll this as it
Pp of the rah the misfortune that Caacha ull is tues that whatever be th lo prctice
people should agitations, and
f the various sects of
then prove the sincerity of their alinitation of tows, throngh the Ora cborvery
* popular
ie Tile. is
‘The
. usage is responsible, thei
contnensalee superiors ordinis
> has no doubt, gd reasone fo
independent ary m
Jeuers.. ‘The
ere wo sunbon gh?
To R. Y- the silken robe and the velvet cov-
e ng ofthe aquare trencher, were unknown as pe
sonal orn je becane a scholar on th
foundation of that college ‘which hi s Father and
not an error but a tradition, Will any one, then,
ela
mr
ies of the > ju- and ‘cultivate, they are not, i ia Taunber very considere-| * De praxeript, cap, 25,29