But whether you come as visitors, to enjoy, for a brief time, our hospitality, or as immigrants to become permanent citizens, I bid you welcome, thrice welcome to Kansas. I know you will like Kansas, and I am equally certain that Kansas will like you. We are all glad that you came here to hold your biennial conclave, and, speaking not only for your special hosts, the United Workmen of Topeka, but for the large-hearted people of Kansas, I can say:

“Sirs, you are very welcome to our house;

It must appear in other ways than words,

Therefore I scant this breathing courtesy.”

THE IRISH NATIONAL LEAGUE.

Address, on taking the Chair, at a meeting of the Irish National League, held at Topeka, November 5, 1885.

Ladies and Gentlemen: I accepted the invitation given me by your Committee, to preside at this meeting, not because I have any fitness for or experience in the discharge of such duties, but because I wished to testify, by my presence here, my hearty sympathy with the cause of good government for Ireland.

I wish to say, however, frankly and with emphasis, that I do not agree with all those who, in this country, profess devotion to Ireland. I hold in unspeakable abhorrence any man, or association of men, who, either in Ireland, America, or any other land, perpetrate revolting crimes in the sacred name of Liberty, or who believe, or pretend to believe, that any good cause or noble purpose can be promoted by assassination, or by that weapon of cowardly hate and brutality—dynamite.

But if I understand the purposes and principles for which Charles Stewart Parnell and his followers are contending, in Ireland, they are those which, in America, have enlisted all the zeal and energy of my youth, and all the devotion of my manhood. The Irish leader is seeking to facilitate the ownership of the soil by its occupants. The first political campaign in which I was old enough to take an interest, was waged to open the public domain to the people under the beneficent provisions of the Homestead act. The Irish leader is contending for the right of every man to vote for those who are to make laws for his government, and this right, in America, I have advocated and defended with unfaltering devotion. The Irish leader is contending, in Ireland, for protection to home industries, and this policy, in America, has commanded my ardent support. The same ideas and principles that have controlled my action in America would make me, if in Ireland, a Nationalist. And surely the Irish people, who have fought so gallantly for Liberty in every land, have a just right to expect the sympathy of liberty-loving people, the world over, in their struggle for just laws and better government.

The American people, too, have a personal interest in the Irish leader. For more than half a century his grandfather was one of the most distinguished officers of our navy. He was at Tripoli, with Decatur; and he commanded, during some of her most famous battles, the renowned frigate Constitution, “Old Ironsides.”