From this conclusion Hugh Brontë proceeded to his fourth negative proposition:
IV. “Irish law is not justice.”
He expressed regret that he was unable to respect the laws of the country. According to his views, the laws were made by an assembly of landlords, purely and solely to serve their own rapacious desires, and not in accordance with any dictates of right or wrong. As soon might the lambs respect the laws of the wolves as the people of Ireland respect the laws of the landlords.
From this point he naturally arrived at his fifth negative proposition:
V. “Obedience to law is not a duty.”
He said it might be prudent to obey a bad law, cruelly administered, because disobedience might entail inconvenient consequences; but there was no moral obligation impelling a man to obey a law which outraged decency, and against which every righteous and generous instinct revolted. Human laws should be the reflection of divine laws; but the landlord-made laws of Ireland had neither the approval of honest men nor the sanction of divine justice.
Hugh’s sixth and last negative proposition was:
VI. “Patriotism is not a virtue.”
He held that every man should love his country, and that every Irishman did; but he could not do violence to the most sacred instincts of his nature, 463 by any zeal to uphold a system of government which dealt with Ireland as the legitimate prey of plunderers.
In other lands men were patriotic because they loved their country. He loved his country too well to be a patriot. Love of country more than any other passion had prompted to the purest patriotism; but who would do heroic acts to maintain a swarm of harpies to pollute and lacerate his country? Who would have his zeal aglow to maintain the desolators of his native land?