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NOTES ON THE NEWSPAPERS.
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
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[ The following notes were written as the events occurred , and are given to' the public in the order in which they were committed to paper . The dates annexed are those of the newspapers which contained the first announcement of the facts taken for the subject of remark . The history of the session is taken up in the present number where it broke off in the last ; which accounts for the appearance in our nnm ] ber for April of so early a date as the 21 st of February . ]
21 st February . The Ministerial Resolutions on Irish Tithe . —It is a common excuse for people who promise little , that what they do promise they perform . Like most other stock excuses , this plea is much oftener made 1 han established : one thing , however , is unquestionable , that they who promise little ought to perform all they promise . The King ' s Speech made "but one promise , the settlement of Irish tithes ; and Ministers have produced a measure , which , if proposed many years ago , might have really
settled the question , at least for a season . But concessions in politics almost always come too late . When reforms are granted , not because they are eligible in themselves , but because it is not considered safe to refuse them , it seems to be in their very nature that they should always lag : behind the demand for them . There seldom arises an immediate necessity for conceding anything until the storm has risen so high that it cannot be prevented from ultimately sweeping- away everything .
It was right to retain a land-tax equal to the present amount of the tithe . In Ireland , where the intermediate class of farmers scarcely exists , the whole produce of the soil is shared between the labourer and the landlord . But the labourer in Ireland being reduced by competition to the mere necessaries of life , which he is sure to retain as long as he occupies the land ; and the residue , whatever . its amount , being the landlord ' s ; all imposts charged upon the land subtract so much from what would otherwise be paid to the landlord : it is therefore the landlord who in reality pays them ; if they were laid directly upon him , his situation would not be altered ; if they were abolished without equivalent , he would be the sole gainer .
The course , therefore , would be very clear , if there were no existing contracts between landlord and tenant . A tax payable by the landlord might be substituted for the tithe payable by the tenant , and the landlord left for compensation to the natural course of things . The tenant would then , without any special enactment for tlje purpose , pay , on account of rent alone , the same amount which he now pays for rent and tithe : the tithe would be blended with rent , collected without a separate process , and would
cease to figure as an individual grievance ; while all the odium would be saved , of collecting from the bulk of the Catholic population a tax expressly designed for the pockets of the Protestant clergy . The provision for the Church would then be seen to be , what , in Ireland , it really is ; not a burthen upon the public , but a certain portion of the rent of land , which the State has not permitted individual landlords to appropriate , but has retained in its own hands for another purpose .
But during the currency of existing leases , the tithe , if exacted at all , cannot justly be levied from any but those who are at present liable to it . If paid bythelandlord . it must be recoverable from the tenant ; because the landlord cannot , until the expiration of the lease , be indemnified by an augmentation of his rent . On this shoal it requires no prophet to foretell that the measure will be wrecked . During the existing leases , the present
grievance will continue ; and does any one think that without far more drastic remedies the present constitution of society in Ireland can last as long as the unexp . / ed leases ? For the next few years the Bill does not abolish tithe , but , as Mr . O'Connell observed , merely makes the landlord the tithe-procl and a few years , in the present condition of Ireland , are an eternity .
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Notes On The Newspapers.
NOTES ON THE NEWSPAPERS .
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No , 88 . S
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Citation
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Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), April 2, 1834, page 233, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse-os.kdl.kcl.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2632/page/1/
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