. The Irish green book. Bright S Opinion of them. They have exhibited a boundless sympathy for criminals and their lips no sentence of emphatic condemnation of them was passed. There has been no word of sympathy fortheir victims.—J. Bright, 24(/i July 1885. [A patriot of the old .stamp, before patriotism became profitable, andwas quoted in the market at so many dollars a head.—J. Chambekl.\in, , 12th Oct. 1887.] The Patriots and Crime. The Grand Old Parnellite solemnly declares :— I In Dec. 1880, the G. 0. P. prosecuted Messrs Parnell,Neither now OR at any time


. The Irish green book. Bright S Opinion of them. They have exhibited a boundless sympathy for criminals and their lips no sentence of emphatic condemnation of them was passed. There has been no word of sympathy fortheir victims.—J. Bright, 24(/i July 1885. [A patriot of the old .stamp, before patriotism became profitable, andwas quoted in the market at so many dollars a head.—J. Chambekl.\in, , 12th Oct. 1887.] The Patriots and Crime. The Grand Old Parnellite solemnly declares :— I In Dec. 1880, the G. 0. P. prosecuted Messrs Parnell,Neither now OR at any time have I given utterance Dillon, T. D. Sullivan, and Biggar, for the crime of con-to the sentiment, or have I entertained a suspicion spiracy, for boycotting, for threatening violence, for frus-that these gentlemen were associated with crime.— trating the administration of justice, and for unlawfully,G. O. M., 19th April 1887. wickedly, and seditiously conspiring to create discon-tent among the people of THE POLICY OF SILENCE. Oh, wondrous wise ! and most convenient too.—Coleridge, Parne/Is Paid Patriots^ lo [Legal Agitation. The Dreary Drip of Dilatory Declamation. Between 28th Jan. issand 9th Sept. 1S87, six Pamei- lites, Messrs T. M. Healy, Chance, M. Healy, A. OConnor, Dillon, and Tanner, made 1480 speeches in Parliament. .*o loud each tongue, ao empty was each much they talked, so very little said.—Churchill. Xeoal Ha i tat ion. Desperate Expedients, inauguration of Ohtrages and Murders. Mr T. P. OConnor, , says, that in 1879Mr Parnell became convinced that mild metliods were no longer in place, and that, if Ireland were to be saved, resortmust be had to desperate E!iVBDiESTS.^The Parnell Movement, p. 297. [Result.—Outrages m Ireland increasedfrom 974, in first quarter of 1880, to 2360, in first quarter of 1882.] ^ ,, t The Uncrowned Kino. The Liberator. j We are obliged to make the situation a very hot No political Reform is worth the sh


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1880, booksubjectgladsto, bookyear1888