Publisher's Synopsis
Excerpt from An Argument on Behalf of the Catholics of Ireland
L 15 1 Q Q to take it up as a quéltmn ofx mere right, and with reference to the feelihgsof the Catholics theml'efves: They have remained now for above a century in ?a-o very;_ they may have lbft the With Hortreedom and at any rate, very Pure, that the man is their frimd, Who points oufio them th ahd their degradation, at a time when it is not phyfically certain complete emaampation {hall immediately follow: Perhaps everrthi tempt on their behalf, ma'y prejudice the ennfe which it is meaht to deteni lft i it {houl'd be fo, I may lament but I {hall never with to recall it. W1; arenfwer coultl we make _to the Catholics jot Ireland, it they were to 'te, a and With one vo1ce, demand their Rights as Citizens, and as M en What reply jufiifiable to God, and to our 1: nfcience Nene. We prate and bahbkf and wdte books, and 'puhhl'h them, lled with feutiments of freedom, az1d abhorrence of tyranny, and lofty grail'e's of the Rigbtxof Md?' Yetwye are cehtent to hold three millions of our fellow creatures, and fellow fubjefis, i degradation anti infamy, 111111 contempt, or to (um u'p all in one word, in M. U. 'i f CN what chapter of the Right of Man, do we ground our title to liberty, inf: themmnent that we are nveting the tetters ot the vgretched Roman Catholics.
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