| | | PAGE |
| [CHAPTER I] | NATURE OF THE ARGUMENT | [1] |
| [CHAPTER II.] | MEANING OF HOME RULE | [20] |
| [CHAPTER III.] | STRENGTH OF THE HOME RULE MOVEMENT IN ENGLAND | [34] |
| [CHAPTER IV.] | ENGLISH ARGUMENTS IN FAVOUR OF HOME RULE. |
| | Argument I.—From Foreign Experience | [48] |
| | II.—From the Will of the Irish People | [67] |
| | III.—From the Lessons of Irish History | [71] |
| | IV.—From the Virtues of Self-Government | [100] |
| | V.—From the Necessity for Coercion Acts | [110] |
| | VI.—From the Inconvenience to England of Refusing Home Rule | [121] |
| [CHAPTER V.] | THE MAINTENANCE OF THE UNION | [128] |
| [CHAPTER VI.] | SEPARATION | [142] |
| [CHAPTER VII.] | HOME RULE—ITS FORMS. |
| | I.—Home Rule as Federalism | [160] |
| | II.—Home Rule as Colonial Independence | [197] |
| | III.—Home Rule as the Revival of Grattan's Constitution | [218] |
| | IV.—Home Rule under the Gladstonian Constitution | [223] |
| [CHAPTER VIII.] | CONCLUSION | [278] |
| [APPENDIX] | | [291] |