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But it is now too late to quarrel with our designation; our space, too, is limited, and we must turn to a more pleasing topic, which it would ill become us to neglect. We cannot omit this opportunity of expressing our deep sense of obligation to the newspaper press of the empire, without distinction of polities or party, for the tone and temper of their criticisms. Severally to express our gratitude to each British journal would be impossible, and to particularize any would be invidious. In Ireland our national undertaking has been kindly looked on, even by those whom we have most uncompromisingly opposed. To the leading Protestant journals of Ireland we are deeply indebted. The Evening Mail, a journal which stands triumphantly where it ought to be, at the head of the Irish press, and its honest and excellent ally the Warder, have placed us under repeated obligations; while the provincial Protestant press has, almost with one voice, expressed an opinion of our periodical of which we cannot but feel proud. Support, however, from these journals our principles give us in some degree a right to expect: but even by the radical papers we are received, if not in a spirit of love, yet certainly not of hostility. The criticisms of the Evening Post and the Freeman's Journal have been anything but unkind. To the latter paper in particular we are indebted for comments, in which, mingled with what we must consider intemperate abuse of our politics, there has ever been a full disposition to appreciate whatever literary merits we may possess. We confess that we feel peculiar pleasure in witnessing a spirit such as this; it proves to us that party spirit has not yet pressed into its service every feeling of Irishmen; it could almost revive the dream that once filled our minds in our younger and more enthusiastic days a dream that all party distinctions might one day be obliterated, and all Irishmen unite together in the bonds of fraternity and peace.

But we must have done-we must turn from these fond imaginations to the stern duties which belong to our occupation-duties, the labours and the cares of which are not altogether unrelieved by the sweet consciousness

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that they are effectual. We took pen to say many things-we must lay it down when we have said but a few. Like a traveller who has paused on his way for a few moments' rest and conversation, we have been communing with our friends and readers, and we now again address ourselves to the road. We do so with the feeling that our path is one along which our prospects are brightening at every step. have toiled up many a rough and arduous steep; we can now look back upon our difficulties as past. We certainly are proud of having at last ESTABLISHED an Irish periodical. It has cost us much of labour and of harassing anxiety; but we are more than repaid in our success. We need hardly say that we shall equally exert our energies to retain the confidence and the favor with which we have been honored; and perhaps the exertion may not be the less efficient, as a rapidly increasing circulation is placing increased resources at our disposal. We have struggled in the days of difficulty and danger; we will not relax our efforts in the days which we may call those of our prosperity. Our most anxious desire is, that whatever influence or power may attend upon our success, we may feel to be a sacred trust, and that in the solemnity of that feeling we may honestly employ them in support of those political and religious principles, by an adherence to which we have risen.

It is time, however, that we should release our readers from a colloquy which probably they have found tedious. We could not present them with the completion of our sixth volume without indulging in a few words of self gratulation; and we shall now take our leave of them for this year, wishing them many happy returns of the merry season of Christmas, at least a season which was once merry in the good old days, and which, in spite of Whigs and Radicals, will be merry yet once more. Let every honest Briton in the land cheer up his heart; and as he takes his Christmas glass, let his sentiment be, that he and we may both survive the reign of Whiggery, and live to keep a truly "merry Christmas" in honester and better times.

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To the Cork Evening Herald,' the Londonderry Sentinel,' the Belfast Guardian,' the Belfast News-Letter,' the Cork Constitution,' the Newry TeleKilkenny Moderator,' we beg to return our sincerest thanks.

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UNIVERSITY INTELLIGENCE.

MICHAELMAS TERM EXAMINATIONS AT TRINITY COLLEGE, DUBLIN.

The names of the successful Candidates in each Rank are arranged, not in the order of Merit, but in the order of Standing on the College Books.

JUNIOR SOPHISTERS.-PRIZES IN SCIENCE.-Senior Prizemen-George A. Shaw, William Lee Junior PrizemenJohn James, John M. Lynn, Malachi S. Hussey, Richard W. Biggs, John B. Murphy.

PRIZES IN CLASSICS.-Senior Prizemem-John Walker, Thomas Wrightson, John W. Hallowell, William Lee, John Walsh, James Eccleston. Junior Prizemen-Robert Welsh, Joseph Wilson Higginbotham, Thomas Rice Henn, Joseph Le Fanu, William Kelland, Joha Orr, James W. K. Disney, John Tyrrell Baylee, John Allen Shone, William Falloon, Thomas Walker Stanley, Frank Voules, Daniel Ryan.

SENIOR FRESHMEN.--PRIZES IN SCIENCE.- -Senior Prizemen.-Charles Kelly, Thomas Galwey, Henry Connor, Michael Roberts, Edmond Meredith, John H. Jellett, James A. Lawson. Junior Prize men- Henry Burke, Robert R. Warden, Edward Ovens, Thomas Sanders, Stephen Flanagan, William Roberts, Robert Beere.

PRIZES IN CLASSICS.-Senior Prizemen-Thomas Francis Torrens, Richard Wrightson, William Roberts, John Watson, Patrick Murphy, Cornelius Percy Ring. Junior Prizemen-William Knox, James Douglas, James Hodder, John Francis Walters, Michael Roberts, John Perrin, John Robert Minnett, John Ogle, Edmond Meredith, John Marchbanks, John Jellett, James A. Lawson, Henry Edwards, William Ahern.

JUNIOR FRESHMEN.-PRIZES IN SCIENCE. Senior Prizemen-William B. Blood, George Salmon, Michael McCann, Joseph Galbraith. Junior Prizemen—

John Reid, Conway Dobbs, George Kirkpatrick, James Lendrick, Matthew White, Charles Bagot, Archibald Rutherford, Henry Rutherford, Francis M.Gillicuddy, John Coen.

PRIZES IN CLASSICS.-Senior Prizemen-John Storey, Hugh Cairns, John Flanagan, Nicholas Wrixon, Thomas Tracy, John Coen. Junior Prizemen— John O'Neill, G. Salmon, Edward Moriarty, John Laughlin, George Longfield, James Gwynne, William Fausset Black, Robert Peebles, Hugh Law, Richard Longfield, Peter Fawcett, Robert Fulton Neely.

The Senior Moderators are placed in the order of Merit: Junior Moderators in the order of standing on the College Books.

Initio Termini S, Michaelis, habitis Examinationibus pro gradu Baccalaureatus in artibus.

IN MODERATORES SENIORES NOMINANTUR.-In Disciplinis Math. et Phys. 1. M'Dowell, (Georgius); 2. Stack, (Thomas,) Sch; 3 Webb, (Franciscus.) In Ethica et Logica.-I. Davis, (Johannes), Sch. 2. Hughes, (Johannes Gwygher); 3. Ball, (Johannes) Sch.

In Literis Humanioribus.-1, Bentley, (Johannes); 2. Owgan, (Henricus), Sch.

IN MODERATORES JUNIORES NOMINANTUR.-In Disciplinis Math. et Phys. -Chichester, (Gulielmus), Sch.; Le Marchant, (Gulielmus H.); Vickers (Henricus Thomas.)

In Ethica et Logica.--Murland, (Jacobus,) Soc. Com.; Stack, (Thomas,) Sch.; Mullins, (Robertus,) Sch.; Townsend, (Aubrey); Davis, (Thomas)

In Literis Humanioribus.--Fleming, (Alexander,) Sch.; Nash, (Georgius.)

INDEX TO VOL. VI.

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Avenged Bride, a Tale, Review of, 164.
Beggarman, the, and the Jew, 702.
Belgic Revolution of 1830-Part I.,
570-Part II., 593.

Beloved one, Soug to the, 413.
Betrayed one, the, 227.

Bill for the Abolition of the Irish Church,
125.

Billiard Table, the, a Tale, 361.

Black Monday of the Glens, a Tale, 332.
Bloxham, Rev. Mark, Paradise Regained,
Review of, 398; Epigram by, 661-
Letter to the Editor, 708.

Bores of my Acquaintance-No. III. 185.
British Association, Meeting at Dublin,
359.

Brougham's Discourse on Natural Theo-
logy, Review of, 448.

Buckingham's Mr. Court of Honor, 90.
Byron Lord, Ode to, from the French of
De Lamartine,696.

Carlow Election, Sermon at, 229.
Causes of the Failure of the Reformation

in Ireland-No. II. 42.
Centenary, Third, of the Reformation, 479
Cheerfulness, from the German of Salis,

406.

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Coleridge's Table Talk, and Works, Re-
view of, 1-250.

College Romance-Chap. III. The Si-
zar, Arthur John's, 31, Chap IV. The
Billiard Table, 361.

Corby Mac Gillmore, a Tale, 278, 538,
641.

Corporation of Cork and the Privy
Council, 587.

Corporation Reform, 118.

Deism Compared with Christianity, by

E. Chichester, A. M. Review of, 231.
Demon Yager, the, from the German of
Burger, 20.

Effects of Insanity, on some unnoticed,

666.

England, the Fudges in, Review of, 297.
English Theories and Irish Facts, 682.
Epigram, by the Rev. Mark Bloxham,
661.

Essays and Sermons, by the Rev. H.
Woodward, Review of, 675.
Evening Landscape, an, from the Ger-
man, 411.

Exeter Hall, Second Meeting at, 228.
Exile, the, from the German, 416.
Faustus' Translation, by Dr. Anster,
Review of, 96.

Ferns, the late Bishop of, 239.
Fiorelli Italiani--No. I. 306; No, II.
613.

Forget me Not, from the German, 409.
Fragments written on the Banks of the
Suir, 19.

France, Murders, Morals, and Monarchy
in, by Terence O'Ruark, 344.
Frithiof's Saga, Review of, 523.
Fudges in England, by Thomas Brown

the younger, Review of, 297.
Grave, the, from the German, 407.
Heraud's Descent into Hell, Notice of,
353.

Hibernian Nights' Entertainments. The
Rebellion of Silken Thomas--Part V.
50; Conclusion, 207. Corby Mac Gill-
more-Part I. 278; Part II. 538;
Part III., Conclusion, 641.
Hope, from the German of Salis, 417.
Hume, Joseph, on Costume, 93.

3D

Insanity, on
on some unnoticed effects of, 666.
Ireland, causes of the Failure of the Re-
formation in, No. II. 42.; Necessity of
Poor Laws, 24.; Statistical Survey
of, 313.

Irish Church Abolition Bill, 125–475.
Irish Facts and English Theories, 682.
Jew, the, and the Beggarman, 702.
Journal of a deceased Pluralist, leaves
from, 308.

Lascelles, Edward, Gent. Scenes from the
life of. Chap. XVII. Homeward
Bound, 241. Chap. XVIII.
affair of the heart, 244.

An

Chap. XIX.
Joining the Flag Ship, 419. Chap.
XX. and XXI. Off Algiers, 496.
Chap. XXII. Malta, 614. Chap.
XXIII. Naples, 618.

Leaves from the Journal of a deceased
Pluralist, 308.

Letters from an Old Orangeman-No. I.
192. No. II. 267. No. III. 426.
Letter to the Editor, by the Rev. Mark
Bloxham, 708.

Letters on the Philosophy of Unbelief, by

Rev. James Wills, Review of, 625.
Life, a Lay of, from the German, 407.
Londonderry, County, Ordnance Survey
of, 313.

Lords, House, what is the use of? 71.
Love's Reminiscences, from the German
of Matthisson, 413.

Mackintosh, Sir James, Memoirs of his
Life, Review of, 481.

Man, addressed to Lord Byron, 696.
Markham's Avenged Bride, a tale, Review
of, 164.

Martineau's, Miss, Tracts, Notice of, 557.
Meade, the late Mr., of Trinity College,

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Murders, Morals and Monarchy in France,

by Terence O'Ruark, A. M. 344.
Music, Lines for, 18.

My Life, by the author of Stories of
Waterloo, review of, 154.

Naples, an evening in the Bay of, 662.
Natural Theology, Discourse on, by Lord
Brougham, Review of, 448.
Night, the Song of, 95,
Obituary-Bishop of Ferns, 239. Mr.
Meade, Junior, Fellow of Trinity Col-
lege, 240. Bishop of Cloyne, 480.
Ode to Lord Byron, from the French, 696.
Ode to melancholy, from the German,
412.

Orange Institution, account of, by an Old
Orangeman, 192-267-426.

Ordnance Survey of the County of Lon-
donderry, by Lieut. Col. Colby, Notice
of, 313.

O'Ruark, Terence, Passages from his
Diary, No. V. 87, No. VI. 228. No.
VII. On Murders, Morals and Mo-
narchy in France, 344; Post Sessional
Reflections, 466.

Paradise Regained, by the Rev. Mark
Bloxham, review of, 398.
Passages from the Diary of Terence
O'Ruark, A. M. No. V. The popu-
lar secretaries of state, 87. The Chi-

valry of the Reformed House, 89. Mr.
Buckingham's Court of Honor, 90.
Lord Wellesley's Resignation, 91. Fuss
at Wolverhampton, 92. Hume on
Costume, 93. Cockney Amusements
in Hot Weather, 94. No. VI. The
Second Meeting at Exeter Hall, 228.
The Election Sermon in Carlow, 229.
The Flying Ship, 229. The Quarter s
Revenue, 230. A Fact and a Rumour.
231. No. VII. Murders, Morals and
Monarchy in France, 344.

Philosophy of Unbelief, Letters on the,
by Rev. James Wills, Review of, 625.
Poems of Matthisson and Salis, 404.
Poetry-Sylvæ, No. I. 17. Lines for

Music, 18. Fragments written on the
Banks of the Suir, 19. The Demon
Yager, from Burger, 20. The Song
of Night, from the German, 95. Sylvæ,
No. II. An Invitation to the Woods,
225. A Sonnet to the Stars, 226
The Recollections of Childhood, 226.
A Night Sonnet, 227. The Betrayed
One, 227. Sonnets, 295-296, Fiorelli
Italiani, No. 1. 307. No. II. 613.
Sylva, No. III. Reveries of a Walk
at Nightfall, 637. Epigram, by the
Rev. Mark Bloxham, 661. An Even-
ing in the Bay of Naples, 662.
to Lord Byron, from the French of
De Lamartine, 696.

Ode

Poor Laws for Ireland, necessity of, 24.
Indigent who are unable to work, 26.
Public Asylums, 26. Annuity System,
27. How funds are to be raised, 28.
Mode to be distributed, 28. Manage-
ment, 29. Suppression of Mendicancy,
29. The Able-bodied Poor who are
unable to find employment, 29.
Poplar's, Anthony, Note Book, 349.
Post Sessional Reflections, by Terence
O'Ruark, A. M. 466.
Present not a Crisis, 505.

Privy Council and the Corporation of
Cork, 587.

Rambling Recollections, No. V. Mr.

McDermott's Story concluded, 567.
Rebellion of Silken Thomas, 50-207.

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Recollections of Childhood, 226.
Reform, Corporation, 118.

Song to the Beloved Or, from the Ger-
man, 413.

Reformed House of Commons, Chivalry Song of the Night, 95.

of the, 89.

Reformation in Ireland, causes of its

Failure, No. II. 42.

Revenue, the Quarter's, 230.

Reveries of a Walk at Nightfall, 637.
Review of Coleridge's Table Talk and
Works, 1-250. Of Anster's Trans-
lation of Faust, 96. Of My Life,
154. Of Markham's Avenged Bride,
a Tale, 164. Of Spiritual Despotism,
171. Of Chichester's Deism compared
with Christianity, 231. Of the Fudges
in England, 297. Of Col. Colby's
Ordnance Survey of the County of
Londonderry, 313. Of Warren's In-
struction to Law Studies, 349. Of
Heraud's Descent into Hell, a Poem,
353. Of Bloxham's Paradise Regained,
398. Of Brougham's Discourse on Na-
tural Theology, 448. Of Sir James
Mackintosh's Memoirs and Life, 481.
Of Frithiof's Saga, 523. Of White's
Belgic Revolution of 1830, 570-593.
Of Miss Martineau's Tracts, 557. Of
Woodward's Essays and Sermons, 675.
Revolution in Belgium, in 1830, 570. 593
Riots at Wolverhampton, 92.
Romance, Chapters of College, Chap. III.
The Sizar, Arthur John's, 31. Chap.
IV. The Billiard Table, 361.
Scenes from the Life of Edward Lascelles,
Gent. Chap. XVII. 241. Chap.
XVIII. 244. Chap. XIX. 419.
Chap. XX. and XXI. 496. Chap.
XXII. 614. Chap. XXIII. 618.
Secretaries of State, the Popular, 87.
Session, the close of, 470. Municipal
Corporation Bill, 471. Irish Corpo-
rations, 475. Irish Church Bill, 475.
Rights of the Clergy, 476. Centenary
of the Reformation, 479.

Ship, the Flying, 229.

Silence, from the German of Salis, 416.
Silken Thomas, Rebellion of, a Tale,
50-207.

Sizar, the, a Tale, 31.

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Sonaets, 18-295. Onhelley, 224. To
the Stars,
Night, 227. On
Life, 296. On I sve, 296. The Deity,
307. To Phillis. 307. Beauty, 307.
From the Italian, 306-613.
Spiritual Despotism, Review of, 171.
Statistical Survey of Ireland, 313.
Story of Mr. McDermott, concluded, 567.
Sylva, No. I. Sonnet, 18. Lines for
Music, 18. Fragments written on the
Banks of the Suir, 19. No. H. To
Lucy Convalescent, an Invitation to
the Woods, 225. Sonnet to the Stars,
226. The Recollections of Childhood,
226. A Night Sonnet, 227. No. III.
The Reveries of a Walk at Nightfall,
637.

Swindling, a tale of Oriental, 702.
Table Talk of the late S. T. Coleridge, 1.
Tales and Narratives-Arthur John's,

The Sizar, 31. The Billiard Table,
361. The Rebellion of Silken Thomas,
50. A Tale of Ten years ago, 141.
Corby Mac Gillmore, 278-641. The
Black Monday of the Glens, 332. Mr.
McDermott's Story, concluded, 567.
Terence Ryley's Adventures, 445.
The Close of the Session of Parliament,
708.

The Present is not a Crisis, 505.
Theology, Natural, Discourse on, by
Lord Brougham, 448.
To Childhood, 414.
University Intelligence, 712.
Warren's Popular and Practical Intro-
duction to Law Studies, notice of, 349.
Wellesley, Lord, resignation of, 91.
What is the use of the House of Lords?
71.

White's Belgic Revolution of 1830, Re-
view of, 570-593.

Wills', Rev. James, Letters on the Philo-
sophy of Unbelief, Review of, 625.
Woodward, Rev. H. Essays and Sermons,
Review of, 675.

Year, close of the, 708.

END OF VOL. VI.

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