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been the number or condition of her people in those remote ages, of which we have no statistical memorial and no authentic account, it is a little bold in Mr. O'Driscol to persuade us, that in the time of Elizabeth they were by no means an uncultivated or barbarous people. To the testimony afforded by all the official documents, and the full and graphic accounts of Spenser, Davis, and the writers referred to by Camden, long resident in the country, and eye-witnesses of all they describe, we really do not know what Mr. O'Driscol has to oppose, but his own patriotic prejudices, and his deep-rooted conviction, that no English testimony is to be trusted on such a subject. We must be forgiven for not sharing in his generous incredulity.

expressing. The author, we have recently the food of more than a million of new inhab. understood, is a Catholic: But we had really itants, which they remember in their primitive read through his work without discovering it, state of sterile and lonely morasses. Without -and can testify that he not only gives that potatoes, without corn, turnips, or cultivated party their full share of blame in all the trans- grasses-with few sheep, and with nothing actions which deserve it, but speaks of the in short, but roving herds of black cattle, if besetting sins of their system, with a freedom Ireland had a full million of inhabitants in the and severity which no Protestant, not abso-tenth or twelfth century, she had a great deal ; lutely Orange, could easily improve on. We and in spite of her theological colleges, and needed no extrinsical lights, indeed, to discover her traditionary churches, we doubt whether that he was an Irishman,-for, independent she had as many. But whatever may have of the pretty distinct intimation conveyed in his name, we speedily discovered a spirit of nationality about him, that could leave no doubt on the subject. It is the only kind of partiality, however, which we can detect in his performance; and it really detracts less from his credit than might be imagined, partly because it is so little disguised as to lead to no misconceptions, and chiefly because it is mostly confined to those parts of the story in which it can do little harm. It breaks out most conspicuously in the earlier and most problematical portion of the narrative; as to which truth is now most difficult to be come at, and of least value when ascertained. He is clear, for example, that the Irish were, for many centuries before the conquest of Henry II., a very polished, learned, and magnificent As to the more modern parts of the history, people-that they had colleges at Lismore though he never fails to manifest an amiable and Armagh, where thousands upon thousands anxiety to apologise for Irish excesses, and to of studious youth imbibed all the learning of do justice to Irish bravery and kindness, wo the times that they worked beautifully in really are not aware that this propensity has gold and silver, and manufactured exquisite led him into any misrepresentation of facts; fabrics both in flax and wool-and, finally, and are happy to find that it never points, in that the country was not only more prosperous the remotest degree, to any thing so absurd and civilised, but greatly more populous, in as either a separation from England, or a vinthose early ages, than in any succeeding time. dictive wish for her distress or humiliation. We have no wish to enter into an idle anti-He is too wise, indeed, not to be aware of that quarian controversy-but we must say that no important truth, which so few of his zealous sober Saxon can adopt these legends without countrymen seem, however, able to comprevery large allowances. It is indubitable that hend-that there are no longer any of those the Irish, or some of them, did very anciently injured Irish in existence, upon whom the fabricate linen, and probably also some orna- English executed such flagrant oppressions ments of gold; and it would appear, from cer- two hundred years ago! and that nine tenths tain ecclesiactical writers of no great credit, of the intelligent Irish, who now burn with that they had among them large seminaries desire to avenge the wrongs of their predefor priests, a body possessing, in those ages, cessors, are truly as much akin to those who no very extraordinary learning, even in more did, as to those who suffered, the injury. We favoured localities. But it is at least equally doubt whether even the O'Driscols have not, certain, that they were entirely a Pastoral by this time, nearly as much English as Irish people, unacquainted with agriculture, hold-blood in their veins; and are quite sure, that ing their herds as the common property of the if the lands pillaged from their original Celtic clan, dwelling in rude huts or wigwams, for owners, in the days of Elizabeth and Cromthe most part deplorably ignorant, and, in spite well, were to be given back to the true heirs, of their priests, generally practising polygamy scarcely one of those who now reprobate the and other savage vices. But what chiefly spoliation in good English, would profit by the demonstrates the bias under which our author restitution. The living Irishmen of the pres considers those early times, is his firm belief|ent day may have wrongs to complain of, and in the great populousness of ancient Ireland, and the undoubting confidence with which he rejects all the English accounts of their barbarism, even in the times of Henry VIII. and Elizabeth. But a pastoral country never can be If we remember rightly, the forces actually enpopulous-and one overrun with unreclaim-gaged in the conquest or defence of Ireland in the ed bogs and unbroken forests, still less than time of Henry the Second were most insignificant any other. More than two thirds of the present in point of numbers. Less than a hundred men-atpopulation of Ireland undoubtedly owe their arms easily took possession of a whole district; and even after the invaded had time to prepare for reexistence to the potato; and men alive can sistance, an army of three or four hundred was still point out large districts, now producing found quite sufficient to bear down all opposition.

injuries to redress, on the part of the English Government: But it is absurd to imagine that they are entitled to resent the wrongs and in

juries of those who suffered in the same place centuries ago. They are most of them half English, by blood and lineage-and much more than half English, in speech, training, character, and habits. If they are to punish the descendants of the individual English who usurped Irish possessions, and displaced true Irish possessors, in former days, they must punish themselves;-for undoubtedly they are far more nearly connected with those

spoilers than any of the hated English, whose ancestors never adventured to the neighbouring island. Mr. O'Driscol's partiality for the ancient Irish, therefore, is truly a mere peceliarity of taste or feeling-or at best but an historical predilection; and in reality has no influence, as it ought to have none, on his views as to what constitutes the actual griev ances, or is likely to work the deliverance, of the existing generation.

(December, 1826.)

Memoirs of the Life of the Right Honourable Richard Brinsley Sheridan. BY THOMAS MOORE Fourth Edition. 2 vols. 8vo. London: Longman and Co. 1826.*

We have frequently had occasion to speak of the dangers to which the conflict of two extreme parties must always expose the peace and the liberties of such a country as England, and of the hostility with which both are apt to regard those who still continue to stand neutral between them. The charges against this middle party-which we take to be now represented by the old constitutional Whigs of 1688-used formerly to be much the same, though somewhat mitigated in tone, with those which each was in the habit of addressing to their adversaries in the opposite extreme. When the high Tories wanted to abuse the Whigs, they said they were nearly as bad as the Radicals; and when these wished in their turn to lessen the credit of the same unfortunate party, the established form of reproach was, that they were little better than the Tories! Of late years, however, a change seems to have come over the spirit, or the practical tactics at least, of these gallant belligerents. They have now discovered that there are vices and incapacities peculiar to the Whigs, and inseparable indeed from their middle position: and that before settling their fundamental differences with each other, it is most wise and fitting that they should unite to bear down this common enemy, by making good against them these heavy imputations. It has now become necessary, therefore, for those against whom they are directed, to inquire a little into the nature and proofs of these alleged enormities; the horror of which has thus suspended the conflict of old hereditary enemies, and led them to proclaim a truce, till the field, by their joint efforts, can be cleared for fair hostilities, by the destruction of these hated intruders.

Now, the topics of reproach which these two opposite parties have recently joined in directing against those who would mediate

*What is here given forms but a small part of the article originally published under this title, in 1826. But it exhibits nearly the whole of the General Politics contained in that article; and having been, as I believe, among the last political discussions, I contributed to the Review, I have been tempted to close, with it, this most anxious and perilous division of the present publication.

between them, seem to be chiefly two:First, that their doctrines are timid, vacillating, compromising, and inconsistent; and, secondly, that the party which holds them is small, weak, despised, and unpopular. These are the favourite texts, we think, of those whose vocation it has lately become to preach against us, from the pulpits at once of servility and of democratical reform. But it is necessary to open them up a little farther, before we enter on our defence.

The first charge then is, That the Whigs are essentially an inefficient, trimming, halfway sort of party-too captious, penurious, and disrespectful to authority, to be useful servants in a Monarchy, and too aristocratical, cautious, and tenacious of old institutions, to deserve the confidence, or excite the sympa thies, of a generous and enlightened People. Their advocates, accordingly—and we our selves in an an especial manner-are accused of dealing in contradictory and equivocating doctrines; of practising a continual see-saw of admissions and retractations; of saying now a word for the people-now one for the aris tocracy-now one for the Crown; of paralysing all our liberal propositions by some timid and paltry reservation, and never being betrayed into a truly popular sentiment without instantly chilling and neutralising it by some cold warning against excess, some cautions saving of the privileges of rank and establishment. And so far has this system of inculpa tion been lately carried, that a liberal Journal, of great and increasing celebrity, has actually done us the honour, quarter after quarter, of quoting long passages from our humble pages, in evidence of this sad infirmity in our party and principles.

Now, while we reject of course the epithets which are here applied to us, we admit, at once, the facts on which our adversaries profess to justify them. We acknowledge that we are fairly chargeable with a fear of opposite excesses-a desire to compromise and reconcile the claims of all the great parties in the State-an anxiety to temper and qualify whatever may be said in favour of one, with a steady reservation of whatever may be justly due to the rest. To this sort of trimming, t

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this inconsistency, to this timidity, we distinctly plead guilty. We plead guilty to a love to the British Constitution-and to all and every one of its branches. We are for King, Lords, and Commons; and though not perhaps exactly in that order, we are proud to have it said that we have a word for each in its turn; and that, in asserting the rights of one, we would not willingly forget those of the others. Our jealousy, we confess, is greatest of those who have the readiest means of persuasion; and therefore, we are generally far more afraid of the encroachments of arbitrary power, under cover of its patronage, and the general love of peace, security, and distinction, which attract so strongly to he region of the Court, than of the usurpations of popular violence. But we are for authority, as well as for freedom. We are for he natural and wholesome influence of wealth kend rank, and the veneration which belongs to old institutions, without which no governmment has ever had either stability or respect; as well as for that vigilance of popular control, and that supremacy of public opinion, without which none could be long protected from abuse. We know that, when pushed, to their ultimate extremes, those principles may be said to be in contradiction. But the escape From inconsistency is secured by the very obvious precaution of stopping short of such exremes. It was to prevent this, in fact, that the English constitution, and indeed all good government everywhere, was established. Every thing that we know that is valuable in the ordinances of men, or admirable in the arrangements of Providence, seems to depend on a compromise, a balance; or, if the expression is thought better, on a conflict and struggle, of opposite and irreconcileable principles. Virtue-society-life itself, and, in so far as we can see, the grand movements and whole order of the universe, are maintained only by such a balance or contention.

These, we are afraid, will appear but idle truisms, and shallow pretexts for foolish selfcommendation. No one, it will be said, is for any thing but the British constitution; and nobody denies that it depends on a balance of opposite principles. The only question is, whether that balance is now rightly adjusted; and whether the Whigs are in the proper central position for correcting its obliquities. Now, if the attacks to which we are alluding had been reducible to such a principle as this, -if we had been merely accused, by our brethren of the Westminster, for not going far enough on the popular side, and by our brethren of the Quarterly, for going too far, we should have had nothing to complain of, beyond what is inseparable from all party contentions; and must have done our best to answer those opposite charges, on their separate and specific merits,-taking advantage, of course, as against each, of the authority of the other, as a proof, à fortiori, of the safety of our own intermediate position. But the peculiarity of our present case, and the hardship which alone induces us to complain of it is, hat this is not the course that has been lately

followed with regard to us,- that our adversaries have effected, or rather pretended, an unnatural union against us,-and, deserting not only the old rules of political hostility, but, as it humbly appears to us, their own fundamental principles, have combined to attack us, on the new and distinct ground of our moderation,—not because we are opposed to their extreme doctrines respectively, but because we are not extremely opposed to them!

and, affecting a generous indulgence and respect for those who are diametrically against them, seem actually to have agreed to join forces with them, to run down those who stand peacefully between, and would gladly effect their reconcilement. We understand very well the feelings which lead to such a course of proceeding; but we are not the less convinced of their injustice, and, in spite of all that may be said of neutrals in civil war, or interlopers in matrimonial quarrels, we still believe that the Peacemakers are Blessed,— and that they who seek conscientiously to moderate the pretensions of contending factions, are more likely to be right than either of their opponents.

The natural, and, in our humble judgment, the very important function of a middle party is, not only to be a check, but a bulwark both those that are more decidedly opposed; and though liable not to be very well looked on by either, it should only be very obnoxious, we should think, to the stronger, or those who are disposed to act on the offensive. To them it naturally enough presents the appearance of an advanced post, that must be carried be fore the main battle can be joined,—and for the assault of which they have neither the same weapons, the same advantages of pusition, nor the same motives of action. To the weaker party, however, or those who stand on their defence, it must, or at least should, always be felt to be a protection,-though received probably with grudging and ill grace, as a sort of half-faced fellowship, yielded with no cordiality, and ready enough to be withdrawn if separate terms can be made with the adversary. With this scheme of tactics we have long been familiar; and for those feelings we were prepared. But it is rather too much, we think, when those who are irreconcileably hostile, and whose only quarrel with us is, that we go half the length of their hated opponents,-have the face to pretend that we are more justly hateful to them, than those who go the whole length,that they have really no particular quarrel with those who are beyond us, and that we, in fact, and our unhappy mid-way position, are the only obstacles to a cordial union of those whom it is, in truth, our main object to reconcile and unite!

Nothing, we take it, can be so plain as that this is a hollow, and, in truth, very flimsy pretext: and that the real reason of the animosity with which we are honoured by the more eager individuals in both the extreme parties is, that we afford a covering and a shelter to each-impede the assault they are impatient mutually to make on each other

and take away from them the means of that
direct onset, by which the sanguine in both
hosts imagine they might at once achieve a
decisive victory. If there were indeed no
belligerents, it is plain enough that there could
be no neutrals and no mediators. If there
was no natural war between Democracy and
Monarchy, no true ground of discord between
Tories and Radical Reformers-we admit
there would be no vocation for Whigs: for the
true definition of that party, as matters now
stand in England, is, that it is a middle party,
between the two extremes of high monarchical
principles on the one hand, and extremely
popular principles on the other. It holds no
peculiar opinions, that we are aware of, on any
other points of policy,—and no man of com-
mon sense can doubt, and no man of common
candour deny, that it differs from each of the
other parties on the very grounds on which
they differ from each other, the only distinc-peace or its constitution could be maintained
tion being that it does not differ so widely.

within their reach, it is not the less ut fair and
unworthy in itself, nor the less shortsighted
and ungrateful in the parties who are guilty
of it. For we do not hesitate to say, that it
is substantially to this calumniated and mu-
tually reviled Whig party, or to those who act
on its principles, that the country is truly in-
debted for its peace and its constitution,—and
one at least, if not both of the extreme par
ties, for their very existence! If there were
no such middle body, who saw faults and
merits in both, and could not consent to the
unqualified triumph or unqualified extirpation
of either-if the whole population of the
country was composed of intolerant Tones
and fiery reformers,—of such spirits, in short,
to bring the matter to a plain practical bear 1
ing, as the two hostile parties have actually
chosen, and now support as their leaders and
spokesmen, does any man imagine that its

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Can any thing be so preposterous as a pretended truce between two belligerents, in order that they may fall jointly upon those who are substantially neutral-a dallying and coquetting with mortal enemies, for the purpose of gaining a supposed advantage over those who are to a great extent friends? Yet this is the course that has recently been followed, and seems still to be pursued. It is now some time since the thorough Reformers began to make awkward love to the Royalists, by pretending to bewail the obscuration which the Throne had suffered from the usurpations of Parliamentary inficence, the curtailment of the Prerogative by a junto of ignoble boroughmongers, and the thraldom in which the Sovereign was held by those who were truly his creatures. Since that time, the more prevailing tone has been, to sneer at the Whig aristocracy, and to declaim, with all the bitterness of real fear and affected contempt, on the practical insignificance of men of fortune and talents, who are neither Loyal nor Popular-and, at the same time, to lose no opportunity of complimenting the Tory possessors of power, for every act of liberality, which had been really forced upon them by those very Whigs whom they refuse to acknowledge as even co-operating in the cause! The high Tory or Court party have, in substance, played the same game. They have not indeed affected, so barefacedly, an entire sympathy, or very tender regard for their radical allies: but they have acted on the same principle. They have echoed and adopted the absurd fiction of the unpopularity of the Whigs,—and, speaking with affected indulgence of the excesses into which a generous love of liberty may occasionally hurry the ignorant and unthinking, have reserved all their severity, unfairness, and intolerance, for the more moderate opponents with whose reasonings they find it more difficult to cope, and whose motives and true position in the country, they are therefore so eager to misrepresent.

Now, though all this may be natural enough in exasperated disputants, who are apt to wreak their vengeance on whatever is most

for a single year? On such a supposition, it is plain that they must enter immediately on an active, uncompromising, relentless con- ·| tention; and, after a short defying parley, must, by force or fear, effect the entire subversion of one or the other; and in either case, a complete revolution and dissolution of the present constitution and principle of government. Compromise, upon that supposition, we conceive, must be utterly out of the ques tion; as well as the limitation of the contest to words, either of reasoning or of abuse. They would be at each other's Throats, before the end of the year! or, if there was any com promise, what could it be, but a compromise on the middle ground of Whiggisma vir tual conversion of a majority of those very combatants, who are now supposed so to hate and disdain them, to the creed of that moderate and liberal party?

What is it, then, that prevents such a mortal conflict from taking place at the present moment between those who represent themsent themselves respectively, as engrossing all the principle and all the force of the country? what, but the fact, that a very large portion of the population do not in reality be long to either; but adhere, and are known to adhere, to those moderate opinions, for the profession of which the Whigs and their advocates are not only covered with the obloquy of those whom they save from the perils of such frightful extremities, but are preposterously supposed to have incurred the dislike of those with whom in fact they are identified, and to whom they belong?

And this leads us to say a few words on the second grand position of the Holy Allies, against whom we are now called to defend ourselves, that the Whigs are not only incon sistent and vacillating in their doctrines, but, in consequence of that vice or error, are, in fact, weak, unpopular, and despised in the country. The very circumstance of their being felt to be so formidable as to require this, strange alliance to make head against them. and to force their opponents to intermit all other contests, and expenc. on them exclu sively the whole treasures of their sophistry

Bud abuse, might go far, we think, to refute | ministration in some measure in their hands this desperate allegation. But a very short would be glad enough to put down all popu resumption of the principles we have just lar interference, whether by assemblies, by been unfolding will show that it cannot pos- speech, or by writing; and, in fact, only allow sibly be true. the law to be as indulgent as it is, and its adWe reckon as Whigs, in this question, all ministration to be so much more indulgent, those who are not disposed to go the length from a conviction that they would not be sup of either of the extreme parties who would ported in more severe measures, either by now divide the country between them,-all, public opinion without, or even by their own in other words, who wish the Government to majorities within the walls of the Legislature. be substantially more popular than it is, or is They know very well that a great part of their tending to be-but, at the same time, to re-adherents are attached to them by no other tain more aristocratical influence, and more tie than that of their own immediate interest, deference to authority, than the Radical Re--and that, even among them as they now formers will tolerate:-and, we do not hesi- stand, they could command at least as large tate to say, that so far from being weak or inconsiderable in the country, we are perfectly convinced that, among the educated classes, which now embrace a very large proportion of the whole, it greatly outnumbers both the others put together. It should always be recollected, that a middle party like this is invariably much stronger, as well as more determined and formidable, than it appears. Extreme doctrines always make the most noise. They lead most to vehemence, passion, and display,-they are inculcated with most clamour and exaggeration, and excite the greatest alarm. In this way we hear of them most frequently and loudly. But they are not, upon that account, the most widely spread or generally adopted;-and, in an enlightened country, where there are two opposite kinds of extravagance thus trumpeted abroad together, they serve in a good degree as correctives to each other; and the great body of the people will almost inevitably settle into a middle or moderate opinion. The champions, to be sure, and ambitious leaders on each side, will probably only be exasperat ed into greater bitterness and greater confidence, by the excitement of their contention. -But the greater part of the lookers-on can scarcely fail to perceive that mutual wounds have been inflicted, and mutual infirmities revealed, and the continuance and very fierceness of the combat is apt to breed a general opinion, that neither party is right, to the height of their respective pretensions; and that truth and justice can only be satisfied by large and mutual concessions.

a following for Whig measures as for Tory measures, if only proposed by an administra tion of as much apparent stability. It is not necessary, indeed, to go farther than to the common conversation of the more open or careless of those who vote and act among the Tories, to be satisfied, that a very large proportion, indeed, of those who pass under that title, are what we should call really Whigs in heart and conviction, and are ready to declare themselves such, on the first convenient opportunity. With regard to the Radical Reformers, again, very little more, we think, can be necessary to show their real weakness in the country, than to observe how very few votes they ever obtain at an election, even in the most open boroughs, and the most popu lous and independent counties. We count for nothing in this question the mere physical force which may seem to be arrayed on their side in the manufacturing districts, on occa sions of distress and suffering; though, if they felt that they had even this permanently at their command, it is impossible that they should not have more nominations of parlia mentary attorneys, and more steady and imposing exhibitions of their strength and union.

At the present moment, then, we are persuaded that the proper Whig party is in reality by much the largest and the steadiest in the country; and we are also convinced, that it is in a course of rapid increase. The effect of all long-continued discussion is to disclose flaws in all sweeping arguments, and to mul tiply exceptions to all general propositionsto discountenance extravagance, in short, to Of the two parties-the Thorough Reformers abate confidence and intolerance, and thus to are most indebted for an appearance of greater lay the foundations for liberal compromise and strength than they actually possess, to their mutual concession. Even those who continue own boldness and activity, and the mere curi- to think that all the reason is exclusively on osity it excites among the idle, co-operating their side, can scarcely hope to convert their with the sounding alarms of their opponents, opponents, except by degrees. Some few rash -while the high Tories owe the same advan- and fiery spirits may contrive to pass from one tage in a greater degree to the quiet effect of extreme to the other, without going through their influence and wealth, and to that pru- the middle. But the common course undoubt dence which leads so many, who in their edly is different; and therefore we are entitled hearts are against them, to keep their opinions to reckon, that every one who is detached from to themselves, till some opportunity can be the Tory or the Radical faction, will make a found of declaring them with effect. Both, stage at least, or half-way house, of Whiggism; however, are conscious that they owe much and may probably be induced, by the comfort to such an illusion, and neither, accordingly, and respectability of the establishment, to rehas courage to venture on those measures to main: As the temperate regions of the earth which they would infallibly resort, if they are found to detain the greater part of those trusted to their apparent, as an actual or avail- who have been induced to fly from the heats able strength. The Tories, who have the of the Equator, or the rigours of the Pole.

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