19 SEPTEMBER 1829, Page 1

The resolutions passed by the Irish gentlemen at Thurles, notwith-

standing the display. of numbers, are to be received cum gran, as are all statements of Irish gentlemen respecting their dear land. It is not supposed that Government will act on them, even where by law they might do so. Sir GEORGE BYNG is said to dissent from the resolu- tions ; and the Dublin Register says,° that instead of going into a wholesale measure of punishment, the Government will early next ses- sion enter on an inquiry into the causes that render Tipperary so uni- formly turbulent. This is at least as wise a plan as that of the Thurles meeting.

The Morning Chronicle, which seems to have always some lights of its own on the subject of Ireland, has the following paragraph in its number of yesterday :- " The general aspect of Irish affairs is represented to us by an excel- lent authority on the spot, as having a tendency to improvement. Our cor- respondent, whose station in society, and unquestionable access to official information, render him a conclusive authority on this subject, expresses a confident belief, that the unhappy exasperation, which was so prevalent previous to the circuit, has to a certain extent subsided; and that little more is wanted to produce a general pacification, than a conviction that the Government is determined to persevere in its system of perfect impartiality,. and vigorously and promptly to coerce in every quarter any approach to in- subordination to the existing laws. In a short summary we recently gave of some measures in contemplation for the advantage of the Sister Kingdom, we noticed the fact, that the system of the Irish National Bank was undergoing revision, under the immediate inspection of a Cabinet Minister; and we learn from our correspondent that the first fruit of that revision is exhibited, in a change of the manner hitherto uniformly practised of receiving remit- tances from the Branch Banks of that great Establishment ; and we further learn, that changes in the internal economy, of a nature still more important, have been adopted, but their operation will, from their confidential nature, be less a matter of public notoriety. Upon the whole, the general complexion of this communication, which we are disposed to receive as a perfectly com- petent authority, is, as far as it goes, of a satisfactory description."

A private correspondent of the Times of Thursday says- " Out of eleven baronies in Tipperary, nine are as tranquil, or more so„ than lotiv,1; comprising the towns and ileiguinuriama of

Cahir, Tipperary, Mitehelstown, Thurles, Fethard, Cashel. The country called the Ormonds is excited. In the first-mentioned districts the popula- tion is Catholic, and, generally speaking, the gentry Liberal ; in the Ormonds, the population is also Catholic, but the gentry are Orange."