22 JUNE 1895, Page 3

An excellent instance of the rebellions feelings of the Irish

peasantry is given in a story now current in Ireland. A man appeared in Kerry, and gave himself out as a murderer. He was received with open arms, and obtained shelter and enter. tainment for many weeks. At last some one came down from Dublin to " expose " him, and the word went round that " the damned scoundrel was innocent." The outrage thus per- petrated upon an unsuspicious and confiding community was bitterly resented, and the soi-disant murderer had to be rescued by the police from an infuriated mob, who had assembled to lynch the man who was not a murderer after all. It is difficult not to apply the story to the feeling against the Government now entertained by the Socialists and other extreme Radicals. The Government, when they came in, gave themselves out as Jacobins of the reddest hue, whose policy was, "Down with everything," and were helped and supported accordingly. Now, however, that Mr. Labouchere and Mr. Keir Hardie have exposed them, the Radicals are beginning to regard them just as the Kerry peasants regarded the sham murderer.