Ireland and the Home Rule Movement
The Project Gutenberg eBook, Ireland and the Home Rule Movement, by Michael F. J. McDonnell, et al
Without agreeing with every expression of opinion contained in the following pages I heartily recommend this book, especially to Englishmen and Scotchmen, as a thoughtful, well-informed, and scholarly study of several of the more important features of the Irish question.
It has always been my conviction that one of the chief causes of the difficulty of persuading the British people of the justice and expediency of conceding a full measure of National autonomy to Ireland was to be found in the deep and almost universal ignorance in Great Britain regarding Irish affairs present and past—an ignorance which has enabled every unscrupulous opponent of Irish demands to appeal with more or less success to inherited and anti-Irish prejudice as his chief bulwark against reform. It was this conviction that led Mr. Parnell and his leading colleagues, after the defeat of the first Home Rule Bill in 1886, to establish an agency in England for the express purpose of removing the ignorance and combating its effects, and no advocate of Irish claims in England or Scotland has failed to find traces down to this day of the good effects of the propaganda thus set on foot, the discontinuance of which was one of the lamentable results of the dissensions in the Irish National Party between 1890 and 1900.
This book carries on the work of combating British ignorance of Irish affairs and the effects of that ignorance in a manner which seems to me singularly effective. The writer is no mere rhetorician or dealer in generalities. On the contrary, he deals in particular facts and gives his authorities. Nothing is
I shall not anticipate what the author has to say except in respect of one particular matter to which it seems to me expedient that particular public attention should be directed, especially by English and Scotch readers. The study of Irish history throws an inglorious light on the character of many British statesmen, and one of the salient facts brought into prominence in this little volume is that, even since the conversion of Mr. Gladstone to Home Rule, more than one leader of each of the two great political parties in Great Britain have displayed an utter lack of political principle in their dealings with Ireland, and especially with the Irish National question. I cannot but think that if the facts, as told by the author of this volume, were universally, or even widely, known amongst Englishmen and Scotchmen there would be much less heard in the future regarding Home Rule eventuating in Rome Rule or endangering the existence of the Empire.
Sir Michael McDonnell
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Ireland and the Home Rule Movement
With a Preface by John Redmond, M.P.
PREFACE
CONTENTS
INTRODUCTION
CHAPTER I
THE EXECUTIVE IN IRELAND
CHAPTER II
THE FINANCIAL RELATIONS BETWEEN GREAT BRITAIN AND IRELAND
CHAPTER III
THE ECONOMIC CONDITION OF IRELAND
CHAPTER IV
THE LAND QUESTION
CHAPTER V
THE RELIGIOUS QUESTION
CHAPTER VI
THE EDUCATIONAL PROBLEM
CHAPTER VII
UNIONISM IN IRELAND
CHAPTER VIII
IRELAND AND DEMOCRACY
CHAPTER IX
IRELAND AND GREAT BRITAIN
CHAPTER X
CONCLUSION
NOTES
ADDENDUM
NOTABLE IRISH BOOKS
ECONOMICS FOR IRISHMEN.
THE SORROWS OF IRELAND.
THE NEW IRELAND.
WHAT IS THE USE OF REVIVING IRISH?
CLERICALISED EDUCATION IN IRELAND.
THE ARAN ISLANDS.
THE PLAYBOY OF THE WESTERN WORLD.
THE WELL OF THE SAINTS.
THE TINKER'S WEDDING.
BOOKS BY STEPHEN GWYNN.
POETRY.
DRAMA.
ABBEY THEATRE SERIES OF IRISH PLAYS.