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forever be the master and Ireland the subject.————————————————————————Notes1. The author expresses his gratitude to the Thomas Jefferson Memorial Foundation at the University of Virginia for the grant of a Dumas Malone Travelling Fellowship, which made the completion of this paper possible.2. Times, June 26, 1845.3. Daniel Owen-Madden, Revelations of Ireland in the Past Generation (Dublin: James McGlashan, 1848), 302- 3.4. Liz Curtis, Nothing but the Same Old Story: The Roots of Anti-Irish Racism (London: Information on Ireland, 1984): 21, 45-6.5. Ibid., 50.6. Morning Chronicle, Dec. 7, 1846. Quoted in Richard Ned Lebow, ed. John Stuart Mill on Ireland, with an Essay by Richard Ned Lebow . (Philadelphia: Institute for the Study of

Human Issues, 1979), 35.7. K.D.M. Snell, introduction to Alexander Somerville, Letters from Ireland during the Famine of 1847 (Dublin: Irish Academic Press, 1994), 20-1.8. Somerville, 50-1, 67.10. George Poulett Scrope, How to Make Ireland Self-Supporting; or, Irish Clearences, and Improvement of Waste Lands (London: James Ridgway, 1848), 17.11. Times, January 25, 1847.12. Samuel Smiles, History of Ireland and the Irish People, under the Government of England (London: William Strange, 1844), iv-v.13. Sir George Nicholls, A History of the Irish Poor Law, in Connexion with the Condition of the People (London: John Murray, 1856), 67, 72.14. James Grant, Impressions of Ireland and the Irish. 2 volumes (London: Hugh Cunningham, 1844), 2: 189-90.15. Times, August 24, 1847.16.

Somerville, 98.17. Somerville, 145-6.18. Somerville, 177-9.19. Daniel Owen-Madden, Ireland and its Rulers; since 1829, 3 volumes (London: T.C. Newby, 1843-4), 3: 237-8.20. Cf. for example, John Russell to Lord Auckland, September 23, 1846, PRO 30/22/5C, ff. 255-6, Public Record Office.21. Lynda Nead, Myths of Sexuality: Representations of Women in Victorian Britain (Oxford: Basil Blackwell, 1988), 34.22. William Carleton, The Black Prophet: A Tale of Irish Famine (London: Simms and M’Intyre, 1847), 452.23. Mr. & Mrs. S.C. Hall, Ireland: Its Scenery, Character, etc . 3 volumes (London: Howard Parsons, 1841-3), 1: 2.24. John Garwood, The Million-Peopled City; or, One-Half of the People of London Made Known to the Other Half (1853; reprint, New York: Garland Publishing, 1985),

256- 7.25. “Who are the Anglo-Saxons?” The Anglo-Saxon 3 (July 1849), 6.26. James Johnson, A Tour in Ireland; with Meditations and Reflections (London: S. Highley, 1844), 144.27. Smiles, x.28. Times, October 30, 1845.29. Sir James Graham to Peel, September 26, 1846. Add. MS 40452, pp. 163-4, Peel MSS, British Library.30. Robert Traile to Sir Robert Peel, November 18, 1845. Peel MSS, Add. MS 40579, f. 98.31. Sir Charles Wood to Lord John Russell December 2, 1846, PRO 30/22/5F, f. 5332. Sir Charles Wood to Lord John Russell, October 16, 1846. PRO 30/22/5D, f.214.33. Lord Clarendon to Lord John Russell, August 21, 1848, PRO 30/22/7C, f. 377.34. Times, May 10, 1847.35. Times, March 19, 1847.36. Scrope, 28.37. Times, December 10, 1846.38. Robert Knox, The Races of Men: A

Philosophical Inquiry into the Influence of Race over the Destinies of Nations, second edition (London: Henry Renshaw, 1862), v.39. Knox, 379; emphasis in original.40. Ibid., 13.41. Ibid., 20.42. Ibid., 375.