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of deformity. The last display of his unveiled majesty; the final triumph of his perfections; the mightiest effort of his power, is pictured as conferring immortality on guilt; adding agonies to remorse, and furies to despair; and darkening, with eternal wrath, an immense fragment of the universe. The awful period, to which Revelation encourages us to look for the full developement of all the uncertainties and distresses of this mortal scene, is clouded with horrors, compared to which death is lovely, and nothingness cheering; the opening of a state more myste rious than the ages which have preceded its arrival; a state of ruin unchangeable as the throne of the Universal Parent. Either this deadly conclusion of the dispensations of Heaven was the end to which it directed all its opera tions; either the glimpses of celestial light with which earth has been blessed and purified, were sent but to deepen endless confusion and remediless ruin, or its designs have been baffled by a spirit more powerful than the Almighty. In the midst of the world, reduced to its pri meval chaos, that gigantic and infernal being is represented to us as striding triumphant over the massive ruins of the once majestic temple of human virtue; pointing to the countless generations awakened but to suffer; and scowling, with malignant exultation, on the starless gloom of eternal night he has poured on the wretched, rendered visible only by a deadly glare from the brightness of heaven. And all this unutterable horror; all this worse than ruin of mil lions of minds, stamped with the image of God; all this tremendous wreck of his sublimest works, to satisfy the laws, which he promulgated as the noblest of his bless ings, the fairest of his gifts, the sweetest expressions of his mercy all these strange delusions, these visions of terror, with their lamentable consequences, are the offspring of the great Demon of Vindictive Justice. Let this baseless

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phantom be once dispelled, and the prospects of our species will be clear and glorious; we shall hear, in every charm of nature, in every affection of the heart, in every sorrow, and in every vicissitude, the still small voice of universal mercy. The plan of Heaven will be plain, consistent, and sublime. The Deity will then appear at once beneficent in his designs, and infallible in their completion; as actuated by perfections which could never for a moment clash; so harmonious as to need no reconciliation; so blended as to be incapable of disunion; so lovely as to cherish no vengeance; so perfect as to admit of no change. Filled with this great idea, we shall see, with unearthly gladness, the great Spirit of Love silently working out its eternal purposes, in all the varieties of human character, in all the loveliness of human virtue, and in all the partial clouds which remind us we are but in the infancy of our being; we shall behold through every revelation, every command, every law of purity, this principle breathing in all its freshness; touching the strings of life with gentle transport; gradually modifying earth to the likeness of heaven-" in infinite progression from seeming evil still educing good"and shedding in our hearts all the joy which we are able to endure. Our views will be carried on far, very far, beyond the grave, through other preparatory dispensations still rising in glory, to the fulness of all its joys. The light which first beamed on the newly-created system; which has, through all ages, been gathering lustre; which beams on us now in holy glimpses of heaven; shall lead us onward over the ashes of the universe; shall inspire us to tread securely on the great sepulchre of time; shall shine unclouded over the enchanting paradise of the blessed; and from those glorious mansions shall spread over every desolate region; illuminate unnumbered worlds, emerging from the gloom of a second chaos, in all the beauties

of a second Eden; verdant with everlasting spring; and filled with the joys of the deathless re-union of friendship, the unsullied purity of new-born virtue, and the melody of universal thankfulness. Then the vivifying touch of Divine Love shall shed, on their enraptured inhabitants, at once the bloom of youth, the vigor of manhood, and the venerable sanctity of age; restoring the purity of childhood, and more than exceeding its most enchanting visions; expanding the genius with higher desires, and animating the hopes with brighter prospects; and thus shall commence a new stage of progression, unpolluted by guilt or by sorrow, with a scene of happiness marvellous as the power of the great Lawgiver, boundless as his creation, and stable as the pillars of his everlasting throne. Then, in the midst of God's vast and happy family, standing on an eminence, far above error and weakness, we shall scan, at a glance, the little portion of his great operations, comprised in that space we now consider as gloomy and as long, as a short parenthesis in eternity; we shall contemplate the progress of distant worlds in various stages of progression; and we shall, with deep humility and delight, acknowledge that the whole is a scheme of infinite wisdom, educing good from evil; that the penalties of all deviations from goodness are but the means of blessing the transgressor; and that the end of all divine laws is, what the end of all human enactments should be, to purify and not to avenge, to REFORM and

not to DESTROY.

TWO LETTERS

ON THE QUESTION

OF

Catholic Emancipation.

BY CONCILIATOR.

ORIGINAL.

1814.

TWO LETTERS, &c.

The following little production claims no merit but that of meaning well. The writer, secluded on the beach of the Atlantic Ocean from the follies and passions of the multitude, offers his sentiments as a dispassionate observer. Those sentiments are founded on facts, the proofs of which are referred to in the Appendix. Should this trivial work be favored with public attention, the quotations at large shall be given in a second edition, from which a complete body of evidence will appear, amply sufficient to establish the doctrine of Conciliator. And the present crisis, when the question of Catholic Emancipation is again coming forward, seems to call for the attention of all who are interested in the prosperity of the Empire, and in the stability of the Constitution.

To the Roman Catholics of the County of Clare.

GENTLEMEN,

THE great question of Catholic emancipation, in which you are all so materially concerned, has arrived at its crisis. It is one of those extensive measures whose comprehensive effects go to the prosperity, the

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