" His neighbour, Dr. Bodkin, Bishop Galway, wrote that the Union was the only measure to save "poor infatuated Ireland" from "ruin and destruction." Dr.
Moylan, Bishop of Cork, was equally emphatic. "I am perfectly satisfied," he says, "that it is impossible to extinguish the feuds and animosities which disgrace this Kingdom, nor give it the advantages of its natural local situation, without a Union with Great Britain. God grant that it may soon take place!"
As for the feeling of the rank and file of the electors-under a very widely extended franchise-two examples will suffice.
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Gerald Balfour has done
Since the days when
Local affairs were in
There is the loose
This the National Board
But such a policy
51 Ireland Great Britain
When this plea is
On the side of
From the time of
If there were no
The State then advanced
FOOTNOTES Footnote 20 See
This is not an
he conduct of any portion
NATIONALIST HOSTILITY Nationalist hostility
Colonial experience is thus
So far as State
Consider what this means
There have been too
No one desires to
4412 of 1908 as
against his Parliament and
It is hardly necessary
The same solvent of
on operations in Ireland
In South Africa the
Some Home Rulers are
The method of computation
The argument however omits
One other comparison may
The result is that
The average annual value
Without a union with
Another evil which the
The Chambers of Commerce
By lending money to
With such resources it
Every one in trade
There was consequently little
The figures of Irish
The Irish ratepayers and
It is these same
Unionists and Imperialists can
Gorst to reserve laws
XIX IRISH EDUCATION UNDER
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