to Douai or St. Omer, in France; some to the renowned
Spanish University of Salamanca. But the French
colleges had been swept away by the Revolution, which
also made a passage to Spain (the greater expense
of which had at all times confined that resource to
a small number of students) more difficult; and the
consequence was, that in 1794 the Roman Catholic Primate,
Dr. Troy, petitioned the government to grant a royal
license for the endowment of a college in Ireland.
Justice and policy were equally in favor of the grant
of such a request. For the sake of the whole
kingdom, and even for that of Protestantism itself,
it was better that the Roman Catholic priesthood should
be an educated rather than an ignorant body of men;
and, in the temper which at that time prevailed over
the western countries of the Continent, it was at
least equally desirable that the rising generation
should be preserved from the contagion of the revolutionary
principles which the present rulers of France were
so industrious to propagate. Pitt at once embraced
the idea, and in the spring of the next year a bill
was introduced into the Irish Parliament by the Chief
Secretary, authorizing the foundation and endowment
of a college at Maynooth, in the neighborhood of Dublin,
for the education of Roman Catholics generally, whether
destined for the Church or for lay professions.
It is a singular circumstance that the only opposition
to the measure came from Grattan and his party, who
urged that, as the Roman Catholics had recently been
allowed to matriculate and take degrees at Trinity
College, though not to share in the endowments of that
wealthy institution, the endowment of another college,
to be exclusively confined to Roman Catholics, would
be a retrograde step, undoing the benefits of the
recent concession of the authorities of Trinity; would
be “a revival and re-enactment of the principles
of separation and exclusion,” and an injury
to the whole community. For, as he wisely contended,
nothing was so important to the well-doing of the entire
people as the extinction of the religious animosities
which had hitherto embittered the feelings of each
Church toward the other, and nothing could so surely
tend to that extinction as the uniting the members
of both from their earliest youth, in the pursuit
both of knowledge and amusement, as school-fellows
and playmates. If Mr. Froude’s interpretation
of the motives of those who influenced Grattan on this
occasion be correct, he was unconsciously made a tool
of by those whose real object was a separation from
England, of the attainment of which they despaired,
unless they could unite Protestants and Roman Catholics
in its prosecution. The bill, however, was passed
by a very large majority, and L9000 a year was appropriated
to the endowment of the college. Half a century
afterward, as will be seen, that endowment was enlarged,
and placed on a more solid and permanent footing, by
one of the ablest of Pitt’s successors.
It was a wise and just measure; and if its success
has not entirely answered the expectations of the minister
who granted it, its comparative failure has been owing
to circumstances which the acutest judgment could
not have foreseen.