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Show - [l "'('- 1·--~ · _, "':::-.-4 98 are nQt the wrongs of Ireland acknowledged ? Is not British legislation laboring to restore her prosperity? Is it not true, that, whilst the slave's lot arlmits no important change, the most enltghtened minds are at work to confer on the Irish peasant the biessings of education, of equal laws, of new springs to exertion, of new sources of wealth? Other men, however fallen, may be lifted up. An immovable weight presses on the slave. But still we are told the slave is gay. He is not as wretched as our theories teach. After his toil, he sings, he dances, be gives no signs of an exhausted frame or gloomy spirit. The slave happy! Why, then, contend for Rights? Why follow with beating hearts the struggles of the patriot for fre~dom? Why canonize the martyr to freedom? The slave happy! Then happiness is to be found in giving up the distinctive attributes of a man ; in darkening intellect and conscience ; in quenching generous sentiments; in servility of spirit; in living under a whip; in Jm ving neither property nor rights; in holding wife aud child at another's pleasure ; in toiling without hope; in living without an end! The slave,_indeed, has his pleasures. His animal nature survtves the injury to his rational and moral powers; and every animal has its enjoyments. The kindness of Providence allows no human being to be wholly divorced from good. The lamb frolics; the dog 99 leaps for joy ; the bird fills the air with cheerful harmony ; and the slave spends his holiday in laughter and the dance. Thanks to Him who never leaves himself without witness; who cheer5 e1•en the desert with spots of verdure ; and opens a fountain of joy in the most withered heart! It is not possihle, however, to contemplate the occasional gayety of the slave without some mixture of painful thought. He is gay, because he has not learned to think ; because he is too fallen to feel his wrongs ; because he wants just self-respect. We are grieved by the gayety of the insane. There is a sadness in the gayety of him, whose lightness of heart would be turned to bitterness and indignation, were one ray of light to awaken in him the spirit of a man. That there are those among the free, who are more wretched than slaves, is undoubtedly true; just as tbere is incomparably greater misery among men than among brutes. The brute never knew the agony of a human spirit torn by remorse or wounded in its love. But would we cease to be human, because our capacity for suftering increases with the elevation of our nature? All blessings may be perverted, and the greatest perverted most. 'Vere we to visit a slave-country, undoubtedly the most miserable human beings would be found among the free ; for among them the passions have wider sweep, and the power |