CONTENTS.

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]