Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2013 http://archive.org/details/lifeofdanieloconOOcusa_0 LIFE OF DANIEL O'COMELL, THE LIBERATOR. HIS TIMES—POLITICAL, SOCIAL, AND RELIGIOUS. 6\ SrSTER M. F. CUSACK.. •PTHOR OF ILLUSTRATED M HISTORY OF IRELAND," " LIFE OF ST. PATRICK," " HOINHHUI^T ■ECTORV," " DAILY STEPS TO HEAVEN," AND NEW LIFE OF " FATHER M/THBW." KENMARE PUBLICATIONS. NEW YORK: D. & J. SADLIER & CO., No. 33 BARCLAY STREET. Montreal: 1669 Notre-Damk Street. BOSTOX COLLEGE LIBRARY CHK8TNUT HILL, MASS, C 9 Copy rig-nr. D. & J. SADLIER & CO., 125105 TO TEX CATHOLIC PRIESTS AND TO THE CATHOLIC PEOPLE OF AMERICA, Sins £iT* OF THE MOST ILLUSTRIOUS IRISHMAN OF ANCIENT OR MODERN TIMES DEDICATED. WITH DEEP REVERENCE FOR THE CLERGT WHO, FOLLOWING THEIR DIVINE MASTER, /LAVE FORSAKEN ALL TEMPORAL PLEASURES AND INTERESTS FOR THE 8AKE OB THEIR PEOPLE. WITH TENDER AFFECTION FOR THE PEOPLE WHO, WHILE FAITHFUL TO THE LAND OF THEIR NATIVITY, OR OF THEIR PARENTS, ARE NOT LESS MINDFUL CF THE FAITH FOR WHICH THEIR FATHERS SUFFERED AND BLED IN OLD IRELAND. I PREFACE. T is strange, but none the less true, that the majo- rity of Engl isli men know far less about the real state of Ireland than they do about the state of continental countries. The result of this ignor- ance is an intellectual disability to appreciate a character like O'Connell's. We believe this ignorance arises from one cause, and from one cause only: it is impossible to form a correct judgment on any subject when the will is biassed by prejudice, and the incorrectness of the judgment will be proportioned to the extent of the prejudice. It has been our one special object throughout the pre- sent work to quote from English authorities for proof of all assertions made regarding English misgovernment of Ireland Irishmen do not need such corroborative evi- dence ; but as we believe that this work will circulate as largely as other historical works by the present writer amongs: Englishmen of the upper classes, we offer them, iD viii PREFACE. proof of our assertions, such evidence as they can scarcely set aside. We are very far from wishing to add strife to strife ; but, the elements of discord, which have stirred the waves of popular opinion for some eight hundred years and more, are slowly abating. It is true, indeed, that the gibbet and the triangle are no longer used to silence the cries of an oppressed nation, but Ireland is not spared the lash of the tongue, even by those whose position, as rulers of a king- dom which is said to be " united," should suggest a wiser, if not a more paternal course. The prejudice which prevents the calm and dispassionate consideration of Irish affairs and Irish character is the result, in some cases at least, of culpable ignorance. And yer, unfortunately for the national credit, and still more unfortunately for the national peace, those who are most ignorant are not unfrequently the most confident of the correctness of their conclusions. As an evidence of this prejudice, warping the opinions of a highly intellectual mind, I quote the following extract from the conclusion of Mr Lecky's essay on O'Connell, in his work on u The Leaders of Public Opinion in Ireland " : — When to the great services lie rendered to Fits country we oppose the sectarian and class warfare that resulted from his policy, tbe fVarful elements of discord he evoked, and which he alone viould in some degree control, it may be questioned whether his life was a blessing or a curse to Ireland." The most cursory acquaintance with the history of Ire- PREFACE. ix land during O'Connell's long and chequered career would surely prove the incorrectness of such a conclusion. No man was ever more opposed to M sectarian " warfare than O'Connell; and, indeed, Mr Lecky admits this himself iu the earlier part of his essay, where he says — "With the exception of his advocacy of Repeal, no part of his Irish po icy injured him so much in the eyes of the English people as the opinions he hazarded about the Church ; but judged by the light of the events of our own day, they will be pronounced very reasonable and very moderate." How entirely true this statement is with regard to O'Connell's public career is well known, and the present work affords evidence. His moderation was the result of principle, since in his private correspondence he expresses himself as he did in public. When his religion was attacked he defended it with the vigour of a man who had a definite creed to uphold, but certainly no u sectarian warfare M resulted from his policy. Class warfare had existed in Ireland too long, and that which pre-existed certainly could not " result " from I future cause. That he M evoked discord" can only be said of him in the sense in which it may be said that a man provokes a quarrel when he is obliged to fight for his rights. It would be quite as correct to assert that Tell evoked discord in Switzerland when he r msed up the Switzers to resist a tyrannical oppressor. Mr Lecky concludes by doubting whether O'ConnelTs life was a blessing or a curse to Ireland, and yet we think I PREFACE. Mr Lccky would scarcely deny that O'Connell obtained emancipation for Ireland, and that emancipation was an act of justice. It is thus that prejudice leads Englishmen of the highest intellectual calibre to write, to think, and to speak of Ireland. There are two evils caused and fostered by this preju- dice. Conclusions are drawn on false premises, and, of necessity, acts follow which are more than injudicious. The Irish are admitted to be an intelligent race, even by their worst enemies ; they cannot fail to see the in- justice which is done to them day after day by educated Englishmen ; and they cannot fail to feel, and to feel keenly, that their misfortunes, to use a mild expression, which are not their own fault, are made a subject of ridi- cule by those whose first object, whose first duty, should have been to alleviate them. In the limits of a preface it is impossible to do more thau to indicate subjects for consideration in connection with the work to which the preface is prefixed. We can, there- fore, only give Mr Lecky's incorrect estimate of O'Connell'a character as a sample of the opinion of educated English- men. Having done so, we descend a little lower in the intellectual scale, and quote Mr Lowe's recent observations on Irish fisheries, as an example, and a most painful one, of the flippancy with which Irish grievances are treated, not only by some educated Englishmen, but by men who, in virtue of their office, should be anxious to promote PREFA CE kindly feelings between Great Britain and Ireland, even should they not he bound by their position as members of Government to do acts of justice. One of the great outcries of the day is, that politics and religion should be treated as separate questions. We shall have a few words to say on this subject presently; but we presume no Christian man will deny the duty of practis- ing Christian charity in public life, or will deny that the circumstances of our birth were not under our own control. Mr Lowe might have been born a poor Claddagh fisher- man ; instead of holding the reins of government and receiving the freedom of boroughs, he might have been toiling along the wild Atlantic coast for a bare subsistence for wife and child. He might have been the victim of a God-sent famine, which left hearth and home utterly deso- late ; he might have lost his little all in that year of misery and anguish, which is perhaps the only Irish calamity which no man has ever dared to charge on the Irish them- selves. He might have been nn willing to beg: he might have had an honest pride, which kept him from the work- house ; he might have loved his home, wretched as it was, End his sea-girt island, poor as she is, too well to emigrate to the great Irish empire in the West, where an honest day's wage can be had for an honest day's labour. In his trouble he might have gone to his parish priest — the poor man's only friend — and prayed him, for God's great love, to help him to the means of getting an honest living, how- jlII PREFACE. ever humble. The priest would have replied, " I cannot help yon ; the gentlemen who govern the country will not help you. The troubles of poor fellows like yourself used to be called sentimental grievances, there is another name for them now — they are called 'amusing grievances.' The Scotch fisheries are well protected by English gun-boats, and well assisted by the English Government; but you are only a poor Irish fisherman. You have at least a choice : emigrate, if you can get the money; if you cannot, go to the workhouse." The Claddagh fisherman would have asked the reason of this strange inhumanity ; and it would not have added to his affection for English government to be told that the gentleman who found Irish misery so amusing admitted that he did not exactly understand what had caused it ; tli at he believed the bad harvests had ruined the Irish fisheries; though, indeed, he did not think that could have been the reason ; that, in fact, he knew very little about it, though it certainly was his business to know ; and that all he seemed quite sure of was, that it was " aTnusing." The Claddagh fisherman, some few weeks after, might have seen — for Irishmen are all great readers — an old uewspaper, in which he would have found the following extract, taken from a speech made by a Cabinet Minister at Glasgow, when he received the freedom of the city ; a cursory perusal of it would at once explain tbe priest's meaning : — PRE FA CE. xiij ■ I will now enter on my Last topic. I have made it last, because it is a little more amusing than those that preceded it. It is that Ireland has another grievance. (Laughter.) That grievance is this — the fisheries of Ireland have very much declined. I cannot say exactly why, but it is perhaps the reason given in a committee of the House of Commons, that they had given up the fisheries because they were so much discouraged by bad harvests. (Great laughter.) I don't think that could have been the reason, but, whatever is the reason, they come and ask me to lend them money on personal security — (renewed laughter) — the security of the fishermen and that of the priests, to lend money for nets and boats to resume these fisheries. Well, I said to them I was not in the habit of lending money in that way, and so the matter came to an end, and they assured me that if they had home rule it would be done at once. (Applause.)" He would Lave observed that the gentleman concluded his speech with this quotation : — "Only the actions of the just Smell sweet and blossom in the dust." And it might have occurred to him that a quotation from an older writer than Shakespeare would have suited his side of the question better. Has it not been written — " The just showeth mercy, and shall give." Tins habit of meeting Irish complaints with contempt, was reprobated again and again by O'Connell, and yet it Btill continues. Even if the Irishmen was still an " enemy," it would be unmanly to ridicule his misfortunes, when those misfortunes are, at least to a considerable PREFACE. decree, the fault of his rulers. Such ridicule reflects most on him who uses it. It is indeed scarcely possible to take up any work, whether of fact or of fiction, in which Ireland is mentioned, without finding this 'spirit of ridicule; and sometimes its bitterness is more than a joke. At the present time an autobiography is dragging out its slow length in the pages of Eraser's Magazine, the sole object of which appears to be to throw contempt on Ireland and the Irish ; and the suggestion is made for the hundredth time, to try de- population, and rather to (i populate the land with Chinese and reaping-machines, with monkeys, or any other animal but the Celt." The plan of populating Ireland with beasts has been partly tried, and does not seem to have given as much satisfaction to the proposers as they expected. How a country could be populated with "reaping-machines," is an enigma we do not pretend to solve. The plan of extermination was tried on a very large scale, and with very great success, in the year of grace 1654 ; but the results were contrary to expectation. A work has been written by an Irish gentleman, in which he gives statistics of the grand transplantation scheme which was then tried. The accounts are taken from no doubtful source, they are compiled from State-papers. But the result was, that when English soldiers were transplanted to Ireland, they were not at all more disposed to submit quietly to injustice, than the " Irish enemy " whom they had displaced. PREFACE. xv A plantation of Chinese and reaping-machines would probably prove a failure a' so. But there is a yet deeper depth to which some English- men descend when they write or speak of Ireland. The pages of Fraser*8 Magazine are defiled by the suggestion to "abolish juries, burn the Habeas Corpus, audi erect a factory in the Lower Castle Yard for spinning halters and cat-o'-nine-tails." The suggestion may be intended as a joke ; we suspect it is so couched to hide an earnestness of which the writer has the grace, as yet, to be a little ashamed. But if gentlemen write such jokes, they must recollect that those to whom they would not give that name will write such things in earnest, and probably support their degradation of our common humanity by quoting higher authority. It is not long since a letter went the round of the provincial papers in England and Scotland, in which it was suggested, not that a cat-o'- nine-tails should be made, but that it should be used wherever an outrage was committed in Ireland, the parish priest to be the victim, because he was supposed to be cognisant of the offender through the confessional, and up willing to give him up to justice. Are we returning to the dark ages? The suggestion of deeds of blood and brutality is the first step towards their accomplishment when opportunity offers. But there is yet another class in England who do not suggest such measures for the pacification of Ireland PREFACE. cither in joke or in fact, but who seem, nevertheless, to consider that good advice is the one thing which Ireland requires, And this advice sometimes emanates precisely from those very persons who, for various reasons, are the very last individuals who should offer it. We take the opinions expressed by a recent article in the Contemporary Review as a sample. It may be said that cpinions expressed in reviews, magazines, and newspapers are but the expression of an individual mind; but this is very far from being the case. Those who write are persons who, either from circumstances or capability, express the opinions which others entertain. The greater number of people, both educated and uneducated, confine their read- ing to such books or serials as express their own senti- ments on religion or politics. Publishers and editors cater for the taste of their public. No doubt in many instances opinion is influenced by writers, but it is rarely formed by them. It might be supposed that Irish gentlemen were capable of taking care of their educational interests, and that if they required advice, they would scarcely seek it from a gentleman, however accomplished, who has changed his religion more than once. But as the advice has been given, we may consider it briefly as an expression of Eng- lish opinion on an important subject. From the day on which O'Connell obtained freedom of education for Irish gentlemen to the present hour, a certain PREFACE. party, and a large party, of English gentlemen have tried to fetter that freedom as far as it was possible for them to do so. In O'Conneli's private correspondence with Dr MacIIale, he reiterates his opinion that the education of Iri>h gentlemen should he contided to the clergy of their Church. If Irish gentlemen wish for such education, is it not a i:rave interference with the liberty of the subject to forbid it to them. In Mr Capes' article also, it may be remarked, in passing, that, while it is entirely free from the sarcastic spir it which disgraces so many English comments on Irish affairs, there is nevertheless a de haut en has tone — n quiet conscious superiority. It is taken for granted that the Irish gentleman belongs to an inferior race, and that " we," the people of England, are free to deny or grant, as in our wisdom we think fit, with but scant reference to the wishes of the inferior being. The Irish gentlemen is treated throughout as a person who should submit with thankfulness to the regulations made by the superior wisdom of his English master. The Irish [feasant is treated as part knave and part fool, ami as altogether iueapable of the exercise of even ordinary reason. Of the hundreds who have read Mr Capes' article in the Contemporary Review, few indeed will have read his long and scholarly Preface to the " Life of St Frances of Rome," published in the year 1855. In the Preface he wrote dins xviii PREFACE. of the Catholic clergy, at the conclusion of an exhaustive defence of miracles : — 44 Whether the Catholic religion is true or false, it is beyond the limits of credibility that its ruling principle can be one of inten- tional deception. . . . The Catholic system must have fallen to pieces a hundred times over, if its chief ruler and his subordinates were mere tricksters, playing upon the credulity of a fanatical and besotted world." On the subject of miracles he argues forcibly; first, against the Protestant opinion that Catholics are fools, and then, against the Protestant opinion that Catholics are all knaves. " If," he says, " we are sincere in our faith, it is impossible to suppose us willing to be imposed on." Writ- ing of the lives of Saints, he says : — " Thus, too, I am myself engaged in a similar work, either laugh- ing in my sleeve at the credulity on which I practise, or submitting from sheer intellectual incompetence to be the tool of some wily Jesuit, who enjoins the unhallowed task." We leave Mr Capes to select either horn of the dilemma. Perhaps, he may appeal from Philip drunk to Philip sober; but under any circumstances he should refrain, in common consistency, from offering his advice to Irish gentlemen. When English gentlemen have quite decided what reli- gious belief they really consider true — when they have decided whether they will believe in one creed, in three creeds, or in none — then, but not until then, should they offer any suggestion, or interfere with Irish gentlemen in tL, ' oice of a religion, or of educational guides. PRE FA CE. six The struggle is a hopeless one. It will be better to abandon it, and to have peace. Irishmen only ask for justice. They do not want more ; they will not be satisfied with less. All through his long and stormy life O'Conuell was breasting the waves of English injustice. The truth may be evaded, it may be denied ; but it is still truth. Day after day, week after week, year after year, he asked only for justice. It was granted, at least in a measure; yet, for all that, much more remains to be granted. If Englishmen would take pains to study Irish history, if they would make themselves acquainted with a life like O'Connell's, if they would calmly consider why he agitated, and for what he agitated, the future both of England and Ireland would be happier. But, in order to effect this desirable end, two things are necessary : first, that the student should divest himself, as far as possible, of insular prejudice; ar.d, secondly, that he should make himself acquainted with the facts of Irish history, not from the narrative^ of those who have dis- torted it to suit their own ends, but by weighing the state- ments of the oppressed as well as those of the oppressor. This view of the subject was ably treated in the North British Review for October 1869. It is well remarked that— " Those who are not resolved to be misled by a fragmentary literature, should diverge from the beaten path to seek its comple- ment, ro that whatever judgment they may form at last may be formed after they have heard both sides." PREFACE. The habit of forming conclusions from the evidence of one party only, above all when that party is the one complained of, is neither wine or philosophical. It has done more to deepen and widen the gulf of bitterness between England and Ireland, than all the suspensions of the Habeas Corpus, or all the promulgations of Insurrec- tion Acts. The Irish naturally suppose that educated Englishmen have been at some pains to understand their real condi- tion, and when they find the facts of that state denied oi ridiculed, they can only conclude that the denial or the ridicule has been the result of bitter prejudice, and an irradicable hatred. The lower class of Irish do not know, they would, perhaps, scarcely believe, that so many English gentlemen are so ignorant of the country to which they give so much good advice. We doubt if even English premiers take pains to know the condition of Ireland as it is. Mr Gladstone may read the Times for information; but the Times will not tell of landlord oppression or tenant wrong, unless some flagrant case comes before the public, which i.s forgotten almost as soon as it is read. He may read the Telegraph for sympathy; but a ministerial organ is not likely to trouble the ministerial conscience with reproof. He may read the Standard to learn Conservative opinion; he will find his Irish policy roughly handled, but he will know well that this is .done chiefly from political motives. PREFACE. xxi What statesman ever troubles himself to read the Free- man's Journal, or the Telegraph, or the Irishman, or the Cork Examiner or Herald, or the Northern Star, or the people's papers in Deny and Galway and Waterford and Clonmel ? And descending lower in the social scale, the ignorance increases; the mass of middle class Englishmen know nothing of the state of Ireland, except through the grossest misrepresentation. What wonder, then, that the countries are '"united" only in name, and that the sever- ance of this union is demanded by those who are hopeless of being understood! We can here but draw attention to this subject., earnestly hoping that our efforts may not be in vain. There are thousands of honest, earnest, true-hearted English gentlemen, tradesmen, and mechanics, who would be as indignant as the Irish themselves if they could really understand the causes of Irish poverty, and consequently of Irish discontent. We have not space here to enter into details on this subject; but, as we have throughout this work given English opinion on Irish affairs, well knowing that Irish opinion would not be credited by gome of our readers, we give briefly now some English statements on the causes of Irish discontent. The Irish are taunted and reproached, I must say cruelly, with their poverty ; yet, until the passing of the recent Land Bill, they were not allowed even a chance of bettering their condition. They were to make bricks, they xxii PRE FA CK were cried out against as idle, yet never a straw were they allowed ; nay, if they even attempted to find straw it was - taken from them. Enough of Irish history is known in England to prove that the unhappy Irish peasant was not allowed to till the soil for himself, or even to practise any trade until the close of the last century. Every industrial resource was sternly forbidden ; how then could capital accumulate in the country? Sir John Davis said the state of the bond • slave was better than the state of the Irish peasant, " for the bond slave was fed by his lord, but here the lord was • fed by his bond slave." But it may be said, all this has passed away. We must not lay thi* flattering unction to our souls — no mistake could be more fatal — and yet no mistake is more frequent. English gentlemen, with the best intentions, will express themselves utterly disgusted with Ireland, and will fling aside all thought of doing her justice, because, as they say, . they have done so much, and she still complains. They have disestablished the Protestant Church in Ireland, but they cannot pardon us for saying that this disestablish- ment has not bettered the condition of the poor or middle classes one iota. Irishmen, too, cannot but know that that justice was done rather as a peace-offering at the shrine of public opinion than as special kindness to them,! We are far from wishing to hear of the disestablishment of the Protestant Church in England; but if it does not dis-; xxiii integrate itself from utter inability to cohere in almost every point of doctrine, those who note the signs of the times on the political horizon, are freely predicting its speedy dissolution by Act of Parliament. The recent Land Bill has done a certain, or, perhaps it would be more correct to say, an uncertain amount of good in Ireland. But how much more needs to be done, is best known to those who have personal acquaintance with the miserable state of the Irish peasantry. There are ab- sentee landlords, who own thousands of acres of Irish lan J, whose one sole object seems to be to get the most rent they can from their half-starving tenantry. They may speak well, they may write well, they may enter cordially into every philanthropic scheme, except such as touch their own interests. Yet these men are pointed out as model landlords, because they visit their estates once, perhaps, in two or three years, for two or three weeks, because, at the order of an agent, whom the unhappy tenant dare not disobey, costly rejoicings are made for the visit ; but the landlord does not hear, and the agent does not care for, the u curses, not loud but deep,'* which precede and accom- pan> the demonstration. Even if no other evil were done thereby, the with- drawal of thousands a year from the country, which is 6pent in a distant land, is in itself a most grievous in- justice. It is a natural law, that if you take crops from land you must pay nature back with interest. Thia PREFACE. natural law holds good in political economy as much as in physical science. Men may not defy the divinely-im- posed conditions of nature, or if they do, they know the penalty ; but they do defy it when the penalty does not fall upon themselves. Again, the tiller of the land is the only trader who does not receive consideration in case of loss or failure. In some rare instances — and how rare they are Irish tenants best can tell — some consideration is made for bad weather and cattle plague, or other pro- vidential calamities; but, for the most part, there is no such consideration. The rent is demanded equally, be the crop more or less, and the unhappy tiller of the soil, who has already lived on almost famine fare, must only live on less. No country can prosper unless those who till the soil are permitted a sufficient remuneration for their labour, to enable them, in their turn, to encourage manufacturers. Chinese and reaping-machines might support absentee landlords in affluence, but they could not raise any country in the social scale. If English gentlemen can forget their manhood, and degrade their nationality, by attempting anything like a wholesale depopulation of Ireland, they 'would hear, not "Whisper in your ear, John Bull," but a thunder of in- dignation, which would soon break out into thunder of another kind. It is too late in the nineteenth century for such folly; and as the folly is impractical, it would be PREFACE, xx? better for the self-respect of those who utter it if they would keep silence for the future. Taunts like Mr Lowe's, and insults such as have dis- graced the pages of more than one English magazine, do more to widen the breach between England and Ireland, do more to increase expressions of Irish discontent, do m ne to make rebels, than the speeches of the wildest Fenian, or the leaders of the Irishman or Nation. To honest Englishmen who wish to know the true state of Ireland, we say. Read the Irish local papers. You will find that even at the present day the most cruel and capricious evictions are takiug place ; arid you will lind th;it whole tracts of land are reclaimed by honest and industrious peasants, only to have their rents raised as a reward for their labour. You will find, as the able writer of the article on the Literature of the Laud Question in Ireland has said, " Opinions may vary as to points of policy suggested by the popular writers, and as to the gravity ard bearing of particular statements ; but it is clear that a thorough understanding of the Irish question cannot be obtained without a knowledge of the existence of this literature, and a careful study of it." In this article also the writer fuliy exposes the dealings of two agents, both magistrates. If Irish evidence will be accepted, we would refer to the statements of the " Meath Tenant Defence Association,'* as published in the Drogheda Argus, and signed by the Very xxvi PREFACE. Uev. John Nicolls, P.P.V.G., and his curate, the llev. P, Kenny, C.C., publislied in the month of February 1872. By law, the Irish are free to choose and practise their own religion, yet there is an increasing attempt, on the part of English writers at least, to deprive them of that liberty. If it were possible to find any individual who could look at the whole question, and consider both sides, his judgment would surely be that, until English gentle, men claimed personal or Divine infallibility of belief, they should not interfere with the belief of others. If the Catholic is aggressive in his religion, he is at least con- sistent. He believes in the Divine origin of his Church, and therefore he obeys her commands, and does his best to induce those who are without the fold to enter into it. The Divine origin of the Catholic Church may be denied ; but granted a man believes in it, there is no inconsistency, logical or otherwise, in his acting on his belief. With the Protestant, whether he protests for a State Church or no Church, for three creeds or for none, the case is entirely different. Believing that all men are left to choose their religion, and not being able to deny that such choice leads to the selection of the most opposite forms of belief, he should, in common consistency, leave the Catholic to follow the dictates of his conscience, without even so much as verbal molestation. The strife between the world and the Church has never raged so fiercely as at the present day. It is the practice PRE FA CB. zzvii to speak as if politics and religion were two separate sub- jects, which should be kept carefully apart; and vet the two subjects always have been, and always will be, insepa- rably united while time shall last. Where there is simple misapprehension on the subject, it arises from not clearly understanding what politics really are. Where there is a particular bias, as in the case of those who are constantly declaiming against the interference of priests in politics, the case is different. Politics are taken simply to mean the rivalries of certain opposite parties for power. Even taking this lowest view, religion must enter into the question. In England we find Mr Gladstone taunted again and again with subservience to the Irish hierarchy on the Education question, for the purpose of keeping himself in power. The entire politics of the day in Germany turn on religious questions, and Bismarck, after expelling the Jesuits, is occupying himself with an attempt to get rid of the Catholic hierarchy. " We may wonder at the authority the Pope exercises, and we may regret it ; but there it is, a patent and incontest- able fact." 1 So patent and incontestable is this fact, indeed, that one might have supposed the world would have learned to submit quietly to it, if we did not know that an eternal enmity between the world and the Church has been predicted by the Eternal Truth. 1 Standard, Oct. 1, 1872. txviii PREFACE If we take the word " politics " in the largest sense, wa shall see at once that we cannot separate politics from religion. Politics are part of the ethics of government; to govern implies not merely to make war or peace, but to rule and regulate all the internal constitution of a king- dom. How can such ruling be separated from religion? Statesmen must either govern the state under some kind of submission to a Supreme Power, or they must govern it as infidels. Human beings, considered in the aggregate, are the subject-matter of political science; when amongst, say, four millions of human beings, there are two or three different forms of religious belief, and when this religious belief is of a practical character, the politician cannot govern without special reference to it. If this subject were more carefully considered, more than half the matter which has appeared in print on the subject of the interference of the Catholic clergy in politics, would be treated as simply useless. If Englishmen do not know, they ought to know, that Catholics cannot separate politics from religion. There is a moral aspect in every political question the Catholic receives his moral teaching from his Church; it is then absurd to ask him to consider such questions apart from such teaching ; it is childish to bandy such names as "priest-ridden" and " Ultra- montane." Protestants choose to call the Irish peasant priest-ridden, simply because they cannot understand the principle upon PREFACE xxix which the Irish peasant acts. Because he is consistent, because, believing a certain faith, he acts on his belief, lie is made an object of scorn, or at best, is looked upon as an incomprehensible being. So it is with those of the higher classes who are spoken of as being Ultramontane: they certainly do believe in the authority of the successor of Peter " over the mountains;*' it, is a fact, there is no use in quarrelling with it ; nor is there any wisdom in alleging any reason for it except the true one. It is useless to devote pages of a serial to combative articles on the Irish Roman Catholic laity, to talk of their being under the rule of an " arrogant and domineeriig priesthood" in one breath, and, in the next, to say that they " detest and dread" the priest, because he " flatters the prejudice of the peasantry." 2 All such writing is simply t lie result, of ignorance. There are indeed, unhappily, some few Irish Catholics who have lo3t the freshness of their faith, who are half ashamed of the religion which they are still afraid to forsake. Perhaps fifty such gentlemen might be found in all Ireland — we doubt if there are ten — but they generally come prominently forward; they are complimented hugely on their liberality and their spirit by their Protestant friends; and they are gratified by the compliment. They may proclaim their own opinions, but they have no right 1 "The Irish Roman Catholic Laity."— Fraser's Magazine for October. XXX PREFACE. to speak for others, or to give a false impression of their religion. The subject of Education is not unlilrely to be a minis- terial crisis in the next session. If the Catholic nobility and gentry, the barristers and magistrates, of Ireland, were as anxious to have their children educated by Pro- testants as some persons suppose, they have every facility for obtaining such education for them. It is, therefore, idle to taunt them with moral cowardice because they follow their ecclesiastical superiors in obedience to their conscience ; rather should the taunt be levelled against those who, while still claiming the name of Catholic, have ceased to be Catholics in unity or in practice. It is worse than an insult to assert that the Catholic gentlemen of Ireland admire the "manly courage" and "fervid elo- quence " of Mr Justice Keogh at Gal way, and that they agree with him in denouncing " the tyranny of the bishops, the violence, dishonesty, and equivocation of the priests." We have yet to learn that it is "manly" to attack those who could not defend themselves, or that rant is " fervid eloquence." It might be supposed that thoee who write for the public would take at least some little pains to make themselves acquainted with public opinion, would be at some pains to make themselves acquainted with the previous history of those whom they commend, and with the sentiments of those whose true opinions they profess to know by some mysterious species of intuition. PREFACE. XXXI With regard to Mr Justice Keogh, he had undoubtedly a right to change his mind both on political and religious questions, but his English admirers have no ground for honouring him as a consistent defamer of the priesthood or eulogist of a certain class of landlords. The truth is, that the great majority of English writers are entirely ignorant of what is well known to every man, woman, and child in Ireland; or possibly, in some cases, they find it convenient to ignore what it does not suit their purpose to remember. We would ask the thousands of honest-hearted Englishmen who have taken the judicial harangue of Mr Justice Keogh for gospel to read a history of his career, published and circulated from one end of Ireland to the other. In the year 1851 this gentleman published a pamphkt, in which he revised a speech of his own, made at the Athlone Banquet, and from this speech, as published by himself, we give the following extract : — " I see here the venerated prelates of my Church — first among them, 1 the observed of all observers,' the illustrious Archbishop of Tuam, who, like that lofty tower which rises upon the banks of the yellow Tiber, the pride and protection of the city, is at once tlie glory and the guardian, the decus et tutamen of the Catholic religion, joining with the tried and faithful representatives of the people, who, after each in his own locality receiving the approbation of hia constituents, have done me the great honour of attending this banquet, to testify that I too was one, even though the humblest of that number, who, in a time of great trial, were found true Uj their country, their honour, and their God." xxxii VREF A CE. In the same speech lie denounced the landlords of Ireland as a " heartless aristocracy," as " the most heartless, the most thriftless, the most indefensible landocracy on the face of the earth," and as men who have made Ireland "a Howling wilderness." It is conveniently forgotten, too, that Mr Justice Keogh n i rule a famous declaration — in which he invoked the name of God in the most solemn manner again and again — to con- vince the Irish people of his sincerity to the national cause, a sincerity of which some keen-sighted gentlemen had their doubts. It is forgotten also, that on the 2d of April 1853, he spoke of the Catholic bishops and clergy as his " revered friends." But there is a yet more startling phase in the career of this gentleman whom so manv English writers are de- lighted to honour. If they praise his Gal way utterances as " manly" and "fervid," they must surely give the same praise to his speech at Athlone, where, according to the statement of the Lord-Lieutenant of the day, he distinctly recommended assassination. The subject was brought before the House of Lords on the 10th of June 1853, by Lord Westmeath. He said: — "Mr Keogh, standing on the right hand of that cand'date (Cap- tain Magan), spoke to the audience, the mob, in broad day, in the streets, the words which he should presently read for their lordshipa — words which had been heard by three magistrates of the county, and which they were ready to corroborate on oath. At a place called Moate, from Magan's committee-room, Mr Keogh said :— • PREFACE. xxxiii * Boys, the days are now long and the nights are short. In autumn the days will he getting shorter and the nights longer. In winter (or November) the niykU will be very long, and then let every one remem- ber who voted for Sir H, Levinge.' It was rumoured that vacancies were about to occur on the Irish Bench, and that MrKeogh was not unlikely to succeed to one. Though it might he alleged that Mr Keogh was not Solicitor-General when he made the speech to which he (the Marquis of Westmeath) referred, he wished to know whether any person who would attempt to advance any purpose, whether -political or social, by such means, was Jit to be pi act d on t/ie /risk Bench 1 * Lord Derby said : — " The noble Earl (Aberdeen) says he knows nothing about that election speech, and, of course, I am bound to believe him ; but it appears to me to show a great ignorance — I do not mean the word offensively — but, at any rate, a great absence of knowledge in the noble Earl not to hare known that, at the time when MrKeogh was made Solicitor-General, he was accused of having made that speech. The county of Westmeath is one in which Mr Keogh has not a foot of land. He was acting there as a leader or partisan of what is called the Liberal interest in Ireland — liberal enough in some respects, but illiberal in others — and in that capacity, having been a member of the former parliament and a candidate for a seat in the next, and intending to make his support valuable to the Govern- ment, he is reported to have warned the people that the nights were then short mid the days long, that the time teas coining when the nights would be long and the days short, and that that would be the time at which any person who might vole for Sir 11. Levinge for Westmeatli ought, to look out for what might follow. And, if I am not much mistaken, there was a recommendation that the people of that county should collect together and go into the town of Athlone, for which he was himself a candidate, armed with shillelaghs, and take care to use them when they got there. This may have been totally incorrect ; but if this, or anything like it, was said by Mr Keogh so openly and PREFACE. publicly tliat it was a matter of general notoriety, I say it di* qualified that honourable and learned gentleman from being put into any situation in any government in which, in the slightest degree, he might be called on to support, or nominally to support, the adminis- tration of the law" Mr Keogh denied the charge, but the Protestant rector of Moate, the Rev. Mr Hopkins, wrote to Lord Westmeath to maintain that he had used the words, and his testimony was supported by the solemn assurance of several magis- trates, and of two members of the Society of Friends. How Mr Justice Keogh would have dealt with such testimony — had it been offered in the Gal way trial, we all know; with what withering scorn, with what scathing denunciation, with what " fervid eloquence," would he not have borne down upon the unhappy priest who might have allowed such words to escape his lips? His fine sense of justice would have been horrified, his power of denunciation would have been exhausted; with that exceptional refinement and delicacy which characterises his judicial utterances, he would have imitated the tone and the manner of clerk or laic who had dared to commit such an outrage on the honoured aristocracy of the land. He would have forgotten in his just indignation to criticise the grammar of his victim, to give historical lectures, or to comment on hia rhetoric. His grand thirst for justice would have con- trolled all the petty pride which might tempt him to the little vanity of a display of superior education and knowledge ; the victim would have been held up to the scorn of the PRE FA CE. XXXV Uo'tcd Kingdom, would have been indicted without a da\'s delay for seditious utterances. Mr Keogh'a apology for his observations at Moate were conveyed in the form of a letter to the Duke of Newcastle, in which he said — " It did not occupy five minutes, find I was not reported so as to enable me to refer to it. I have no recollection whatever of using any language even similar to that attributed tome; but my memory may fail me as to the precise words used in the heat and excitement of election occurrences, and I trust, therefore, rather to the evidence of friends who were present, and the inherent improbability of my expressing sentiments which I never entertained rather than to my own recollection." The Dublin Evening Mail, *Jd June 1853, an Orange organ, observed that " the seditious speech was no longer denied, but it was only a little one." Lord Eglinton read for the House a letter from Arthur Brown, Esq., J.P., in which he ■aid— M I wish (as the magistrate who took the declaration of James Burke), to satisfy you that every word in that declaration is true, and that at least twenty gentlemen of independence and station (among them the rector of Moate, the Rev. Mr Hopkins), are ready and willing to support the truth of that deposition by their evidence or. oath. The gentlemen in question were present on the occasion, heard the words so delivered, and there can be no more doubt of their utterance than of any other truth which cannot be disputed." W~e do not desire to pursue the unwelcome theme further. Our one object is gained if we can induce those English gentlemen who shall read this work to ask them- xxxvi PREFACE. selves why Irish Catholics of all classes, not only in Ire- land, but throughout the world, are justly indignant at the Gal way judgment, and, what is, if possible, of far greater importance, why Ireland is not prosperous with English rule. It is frequently believed that " things have changed since O'ConnelPs time," that "the Irish are a discontented race whom nothing can satisfy," that " their grievances are sentimental." Certainly during O'Connell's long and noble career he obtained much justice for Ireland, certainly much has been done lately; but while much yet remains to be done, it is neither right for English honour, nor safe for English prosperity, to refuse all that Ireland needs in order to be prosperous and content. The Irish peasantry are not in a prosperous condition; and while the Irish hear their clergy ridiculed, and their conduct basely maligned and misrepresented, with the full approbation of the great majority of English writers, there can scarcely be peace between the two countries. At a meeting of the clergy of the diocese of Galway, the following solemn protest was put on record : — " We deem it our duty to record our solemn protest, not 0!ily against the judgment itself, but, for the information of the public and the Imperial Parliament, who had no opportunity of witnessing the strange scene, against the gross impropriety of manner attend- ing its delivery, which we k?ve no hesitation in describing as a desecration of the sanctuary of justice, shocking to the feelings ol every impartial listener. We leave the public to judge of this, whom, from personal observation, we assure, that the delivery of PREFACE. xxxv ii the judgment, which occupied nearly eight hours, was but a con- tinued paroxysm of rage, seemingly ungovernable — one uninter- rupted scene of roaring, screaming, foaming, violent striking of the desk with clenched fist, occasional walking backward and forward, with wig flung aside, mimicry of adverse witnesses, fulsome adula- tion of landlords and gentry, of which no printed report could give any idea whatever." So long as there shall be any distinction between the administration of justice in England and in Ireland, so long will the two countries remain disunited. So long as English public opinion of Ireland is governed by prejudice, there can be little confidence. Let Englishmen show them- selves ready not only to do justice, but to speak justice. We cannot conclude this preface without acknowledging our obligations to those gentlemen who have placed valu- able documents, private papers, and letters at our disposal for the present work. To his Grace the Archbishop of Tuam we are especially indebted for the use of his long private correspondence with the Liberator, and for the copies of the few of his own letters to O'Connell which he has preserved. His Grace had intended to publish this correspondence himself ; but, with his usual disin- terested generosity, he transferred it to the present writer on hearing that she was about to publish this work. We are indebted also to the Most Rev. Dr Purcell, Arch- bishop of Cincinnati, for some documents on the sub- ject of shivery, which, with some other papers, are reserved for another work. We owe him thanks, too, for his words xxxviii PREFACE. of encouragement and for help, which has not limited itself to words. 3 We have to thank P. J. Fitzpatrick, Esq., J. P., for the use of a valuable collection of old newspapers, and for advanced sheets of his forthcoming work, " The Life of Dr Lanigan," the well-known Irish ecclesiastical historian, and the consistent and ardent opposer of the Yeto. To Maurice Lenihan, Esq., J. P., Limerick, we are obliged for a very valuable collection of private papers, of which we hope to make more use in another work, and for the original of tue King of Bavaria's letter to O'Connell. To Isaac Butt, Esq., M.P., we are indebted for the appendix to Chapter XV., and for his interest in our work. To Sir John Gray, M.P., we are obliged for the narratives of his 3 A sample of the contradictory charges made against Catholics occurred lately in America. The Catholic clergy had been again and again taunted with indifference to literature ; nuns had been represented again and again as either half imbecile, or wasting their lives in useless and frivolous employments, unless they happen to make their work public as Sisters of Mercy. Yet there are few Orders in the Church in which the religious are not engaged actively and unceasingly in the great and noble work of education ; and even the most highly educated of these religious must continue to study both history and science, in order to impart the knowledge of both, as well as the lighter accomplishments which her pupils require, to fit them for their places in society. The charge of intellectual inactivity is about the most groundless which ignorance has made, and which prejudice persists in keeping up. Every nun who teaches the higher classes must teach history, and must write notes for her classes on history, if she wishes to teach it thoroughly. Nor can she teach logic without explaining politics ; and though the angry discussions of the politics of the day cannot be heard in the PREFA CK xxxil prison life, and to Lady Gray for assisting in procuring them. To P. J. 0' Carroll, Esq., we are indebted for news- papers relating to O'Connell's trial; and we are especially indebted to J. Leyne, Esq., of the Registration Office, Dnblin, for the O'Connell pedigree at the end of the work, and for the notes appended thereto. Our special thanks are also due to Mitchell Henry, Esq., M.P., for a copy of his speech in the House of Commons on the 25th of July 1872. Each part of the judicial harangue is carefully examined therein, and triumphantly refuttd. This speech is all the more remarkable, as it comes to us from a Protestant gentleman. Those who 6trive to persuade themselves and others that Catholic conventual class-room, the whole subject of politics, in their highest and truest MOM, must be explained. Even at the risk of making this note very much longer than io was intended to be when commenced, we would call attention to the discussion going on at present in the English school boards, where it is found that hi>torv cannot be taught apart from religion. Not long since Mr Arnold ■aid lie would not send Protestant children to a Catholic school. The ichool board solicitor replied that the religious instruction ceased at half- past nine in the morning ; but Mr Arnold answered that the elements of religious education were sometimes taught in other forms. The reports of the English Poor School Committee speak expressly on the matter ; and Canon Oakley, in his discussions on this subject in the Catholic papers, states that a " distinguished Protestant Government inspector " eays that it may be necessary hereafter to proscribe history during the period of secular instruction. A little common sense, indeed, would show that it is almost impossible to teach any subject except pure mathe- matics, without giving at least a bias to the pupil's mind on religioui quest iui\s. PRE FA CK gentlemen secretly admire the denouncer of their religion, niid the reviler of their clergy, would do well to recollect that (here are many Protestant gentlemen who have had the courage and justice to express their disgust for such a degradation of the hench in Ireland. Mr Henry, being a large landed proprietor, was selected for special compli- ments, an honour which he scorned as it deserved. But Mr Henry's relatives, though they had no connection whatever with Galway, or the Galway judgment, were selected for eminent; and as his brother happened to be a priest and a convert, the judge, to enhance his rhetoric, and we mus + suppose to pander to the class in England to whom he knew the judgment would be acceptable, gave him the title of Jesuit. As we fear that many, to whom it would be of most ser- vice, may not see Mr Henry's able pamphlet, we give the following extracts, as an evidence of Protestant opinion on the subject, from an able and educated man : — " Yes, Mr Speaker, I charge Judge Keogh with deliberately out raging the religious feelings of a religious people ; and there is no one passage in his harangue which has given so much offence, and occasioned so much consternation, as his sneers at the efficacy of prayer. " Go among the peasantry cf Ireland, and your greeting, from the bottom of their hearts, is ' God save you visit them in their sick- ness and sorrow, when their crops have failed and hard hunger knocks at their door, and their commentary is, ' God is good.' Do tliein a service, and the highest reward they can promise you — not in meaningless words, but out of the sincerity of their religioua PREFACE. xli nature — as I have heard a thousand times, is, 'We will pray for you;' for this people of the West pray not with their lips only — they believe in prayer; they believe that they have a Friend in Heaven, who will at last redress their wrongs and vindicate Himself to them. And yet, sir, before such a people, Judge Keogh, from the judgment-seat, and clothed in the official ermine, retails a stale and ribald jest, and fathers it withal on a priest, to show that it is no use their praying for rain unless the wind changes. " It is almost incredible. When he calls a Gal way priest 'this insane disgrace to the Roman Catholic religion,' I cannot help ask- ing what religion he owns himself, and whether he disgraces it or not, and whether he is sane?" We have mentioned elsewhere the obligations to the Rev. John O'Hanlon, C.C., for the record of O'ConnelTs last days, which will be found at page 75G, and to the Rev. M. Close for a verbatim copy ">f this interesting document. To Mr Close I am indebted for much help in my literary labours, given with so prompt courtesy, which enhances their value. We may also observe, for the national credit, that we have found the proprietors of Webb's Library, in Dublin, most obliging in supplying works of reference. We can confidently recommend this library to students. It was first brought to our notice by several Catholic clergymen. The proprietors are, we believe, Protestants — another evi- dence, were it needed, that the Catholic clergy are readers of a high class of literature, and that party prejudice is confined now, as it was in the time of O'Connell, to a class whom nothing will satisfy except Orange ascendancy, and zffi PREFACE. liberty to tyrannise over all who differ from them la politics or religion. CONTENT {3. CHAPTER I family — birth — boyhood. 1 7 74-1 790. IMitical Situation at the time of O'Connell's Birth— His Pedi- gree — Paul Jones — Smuggling in Kerry — English Op- pression— O'Conneli's Affection for his Mother, and Pride of Family — Darrynane Abbey — The Clan O'Connell — O'Connell's Early Aptitude for Letters — His First School- master — The Crelaghs — Father O'Grady — At School in Cork — Education in France — Early Hatred of England — Reign of Terror — Louis XVIII. and the Old Irish Brigade — General Daniel Count O'Connell, CHAPTER a EARLY DAYS AND FIRST IJJPRKSSIOXS. 1790-1800. The French Revolution and the Irish Rebellion Compared — Louis XIV. and George III. — English Opinions on Irish Policy — Louis XVI — The Two Shearca — St Omers — O'Connell and the Priesthood — His Opinions of the French Revolution — Interview with Robert Owen — At Lincoln's Inn — Origin of Constitutionalism — Catholic Church Con- servative — The English and Irish Catholics Contrasted— Early Toryism — Hardy's Trial — Home Tooke — '1 he Georges and the Stuarts — Rise of Democracy — American War — Benjamin Franklin — The Irish in America, . 61-100 CHAPTER UL ENTRY ON PUBLIC LIFE — POLITICAL SITUATION. 1775-1797, Political Troubles in England — Attack on the King — Fondness for Field Sports — Fever — First Visit to Dublin — English Policy with Ireland — Forced Attempt at Legislative Jus- 3-58 CONTENTS. tice— Causes and Character of the Irish Rebellion— v± ** G rattan — Lord Charlemont— Ireland in Arms — Alarm m England— Wants of Ireland— Mr Fox— Repeal of Act VI. Geo. I. — Causes of the Ruin of Irish Independence — Eng- lish Bribery — G rattan's Letter, . • • . 103-156 CHAPTER IV. CAUSES OF THE IRISH REBELLION. 1790-1800. The Northern Whig Club— The United Irishmen Club— Catho- lic Address to the King — Political Commotions — Treachery of Pitt — Lord Fitzwilliam, the Catholic Question, and the Bcrcsfords— Maynooth Established — The Orange Society- Catholic Clergy — Overzeal of O'Connell — Arrests— List of Suspected Persons — Lord Cornwallis' Administration — The Cromwell Policy — State of the Peasantry — Testimony of Mary Leadbetter, . 159-194 CHAPTER V. THE BAR AND POLITICS. 1798-1801. First Circuit— At the Bar — Jerry Keller — Bar Stories— Promise of Success — Clear Ideas of Fox — The Irish Parliament — - The Union— Policy of Pitt — Bribery — The Priests- Concussion in Voting — Letter of Mr Luke Fox — The Bar ami the Union. — " The Anti-Union " — First Speech — Anti- Union Resolutions — Personal Appearance — Grattan and Pitt— Personal danger, . 197-254 CHAPTER VI. PUBLIC SPIRIT AND POPULARITY. 1S02-1810. On Circuit — In Court — Bar Anecdotes — Marriage — On Guard — Fresh Risings and Revenges — Catholic Church — Catho- lic Priests and Protestant Clergy — Maynooth — The Veto • — Pole — Wellesley — Castlereagh — Plain Speaking — Love of Justice — Resolution to Petition — Effects of the Union — Demand for its Repeal— Speech— Petition— The Hier- archy — The Protestant Bishop of Meath— The Edinburgh Review— Cobbett— Lift into Popularity, . . 257-313 C0X7EMS. CHAPTER VII. PROFESSIONAL AND POLITICAL SUCCESSES. 1808-1812. Orange Outrages -Religious Persecution — Intolerance in the Army — Adventures on Circuit — Another Affair of Honour — Professional Successes — Speech at Limerick — Happy Allusions— Address from Dingle and Reply — Catholics Entertaining Protestants at the Festive Board — The Government aim the Catholic Association — Mr Wellesley Pole — Addressing the Prince of Wales — Speeches on the Address and Conduct of Pole — Mr Perceval — Political Dissension among Catholics — Right of Assembly — Arrest of Lord Fingal — Shelley— English Injustice — Father Dan — At Limerick and Cork, .... 317-353 CHAPTER VIII. EXPOSURES OF PUBLIC MEASURES AND PUBLIC MEN". 1812-1S13. English Administration of Irish Affairs — Party Rule — No- Popery Cry— Assassination of Mr Perceval— The Prince of "Wales — The Witchery Resolutions — Speech — The Orange Faction — The Landlords and the Tenantry — Ellective Speech — Denunciation of Orangeism — A National Deht — Style of Speech — At his Zenith — As a Raconteur— Anec- dotes of Jerry Keller and Lord Clare — Parson Hawkes- worth — Administration of Justice — The Dublin Evening Po>t— At Home— Letter to Landor — Trial of John Magee — The Prosecution and Prosecutor — The Reply, . 357-419 CHAPTER IX. COURAGE AND PATRIOTISM. IS 13-1819. The English Catholics— The Duke of Norfolk and Dr Milner — Castle Browne and the Jesuits — Peel and Dr Kenny — Public Honours — Duelling and Duellists — The Irish Catholic Aristocracy — D'Esterre, his Challenge and Fatal Duel — Agrarian Outrages — Rev. John Hamilton, his Plots and Tools — Affair of Honour with Peel — Peel's Gift to Ireland, ....... 423- 450 xlvi CONTENTS. CHAPTER X. LOYALTY TO GOD AND THE KING. 1820-1822. Panegyric on Grattan — Outrage at Kilmainham — Harcourt *»« Lees— " Pastoral Letter" for 1821— First Appearance of Sliiel— Mr Plunket— Analysis of Mr Plunket's Bills- Spiritual Functions and Freedom of the Clergy — Pro- testant Bigotry— George IV. and Queen Caroline— Royal Visit to Ireland — Loyal Reception at Dublin — The Irish People — Presentation of O'Connell at Court — Irony of Lord Byron — Wellesley and his Irish Policy — Orange Orgies— The Beefsteak Club interfered with, and its Revenge — Wellesley and the Orangemen— A Catholic Triumph, ...... 453-482 CHAPTER XI. CATHOLIC ASSOCIATION — ITS FORMATION AND DEFENCE. 1822-1827. Flood and Connar — Cross-examination of Flood — Plunket and Hart— Formation of Catholic Association — Priests and People brought into Action — First Meeting — The Inexor- able Purcell — The Penny-a-month Scheme for Liberating Ireland — Grand Aggregate Meeting — The Conversion Mania — The Pope and Maguire Controversy — Abortive Prosecution of O'Connell— The Duke of York's " So-heip- me-God" Speech — The King's Speech and the Association — Lords Liverpool and Brougham — O'Connell in London — Lords Palmerston and Eldon — The Ladies — O'Conn ell's Popularity — Aims of the Association — Another Challenge — Shiel — Canning, ...... 485-5 14 CHAPTER XII. O'CONNELL AND THE CATHOLIC HIERARCHY. 1827-1835. Commencement of Correspondence with Dr MacHale— Priestly Co-operation— A New Era— Sketch of Dr MacHale's Life —Sketch of Dr Doyle's Life— His " Vindication of Catho- CONTENTS. xlvil lies" — Dr Doyle and the Lords' Committee — Honest Jack paoh Lawless — Henry G rattan — Mr 0' Gorman Mahon — Scene in the " House"— Steele— Mr Barrett— Mr Ray, . . 517-534 CHAPTER Xm KING DAN. 1825-1829. Eng and's Answer to Ireland's Cry for Justice— Decline since the Days of Henry VIII. — Ireland a Necessity for Eng- land — A Catholic Triumph — Address to the Catholics of Clare — Excitement and Agitation — Consternation in Eng- land—Monster Meeting at Ennis— Scene at the Hustings, the Sheriff' and O'Gornian Malum— The Voting Day — Mr Vandaleur and his Tenants — Return of O'Connell — Speech of Shiel — The Chairing — Excitement in England — The Bishops and Priests — Official Irritation— King Dan — The Leicester Declaration— Letter of Wellington — The Eman- cipation Bill Passed — O'Connell's Right to a Seat Disputed — At the Bar of the House — Re-Election — Smith O'Brien — Enthusiasm, ...... 537-578 CHAPTER XIV. PARLIAMENTARY LIFE AND CORRESPONDENCE. 1829-1839. Die Watexfold Election — Montalembert and O'Connell — Let- ters tc the People of Ireland— Lord Leveson Gower — Pal- mention and Wellington — History and Politics — The Emancipation Act not Followed by the Millennium — Exasperation of the Orangemen and Distress among the Peasantry— Temporary Arrest of O'Connell — Letter to Dr Macllale — Anti-Tithe Riots— In Parliament — Lord Al- thorpe and Shiel — O'Connell's Motion for Repeal — Cathedials — Letter — Melbourne and O'Connell — Disraeli and the O'Connells — Letter — Lyndhurst's Attack on the Irish — Banquets — Speech of Dr Machale — Letter— O'Con- nell undertakes a Retreat — Reception at the Abbey — Letters — Entertained in London — Defies the House — Letters, ....... 581-606 Llviii CONTENTS. CHAPTER XV. AGITATION FOR REPEAL. 1839-1843, The. Repeal Movement Projected— Correspondence, explaining Ideas and Plans, with Dr MacHale— Repeal Association Formed —Discouraging Start— Repeal Meetings in the Sou tli and North— General Election. O'Connell Unseated —Elected Lord Mayor of Dublin— Attacked by Shrews- bury—The Repeal Year, par excellence — The Association, Terms of Membership and Card — Peel and Repeal — Mon- ster Meetings at Ennis and Mullaghmast — European Fame— O'Connell and the Society of Friends— Letters to Dr Machale, 669-702 CHAPTER XVI THE CLOSING SHADOWS AND THE END. 1843-1847. Clontarf — Excitement in Dublin — Indictment of O'Connell — Sensation— Forebodings — Address to the people — Con- dolences — Joseph Sturge — The Trial — Notices of the Judges, the Traversers, and the Counsel in the Case — Charge of the Chief-Justice — The Verdict — O'Connell in the House- Excitement over the Country — The Sentence — Incarceration — First Day of Imprisonment — Respect Shown the Prisoners — Dinner Parties and Bon-Mots — McCarthy's Poem — Gives and Refuses Audiences — Reversal of Judgment and Liberation — Ovation — Home- Shadows — The Young Icelanders — Rescript from Rome — The Famine — Bids Farewell to Ireland — Hopes to Die at Rome— Diary of his Servant — Montalembert's Condolence — Last Hours — Death in Peace— The Faithful round the Bier— Funeral Obsequies and Eloge — " The Dead Tri- bune" . 705-774 Appendix, 775 Ixozx, 79 Cjjaptcr Jfirst FAMILY— BIRTH— BOYHOOD. 1774-1790. POLITICAL BTTUATION AT THE TIME OP O'CONNELL'S BTRTH — HIS PEDIGREE— PAUL JONES — SMUGGLINO IN KERRY — ENGLISH OPPRESSION — O'CONNELL'S AFFECTION FOR HIS HOT HER, AND PRIDE OF FAMILY — DARRYNANE ABBEY — THE CLAN O'CONNELL— O'CONNELL'S EARLY APTITUDE FOR LETTERS — HIS FIRST SCHOOLMASTER — THE CRELAGIIS — FATHER o'GRADY — AT SCHOOL IN CORK— EDUCATION IN FRANCE — EARLY HATRED OF ENGLAND — REIGN OF TERROR — LOUIS XVIIL AND TOE OLD IRISH. BRIGADE— GENERAL DANIEL COUNT O'CONNELL, HE events which made t!ie close of the eighteenth cen- tury renowned, cannot be thoroughly understood with- out something more than a glance at what was then the past, as well as what is to us also the past. Europe and America, the New World and the Old, were both convulsed and revolutionised. One part, at least, of the British Empire was also convulsed, and it was also revolutionised. The convulsion was indeed caused by that revolt against injustice, which must come sooner or later both to the peoples and the individuals 4 HISTOIiY REPEATS ITSELF, who are guilty of injustice. This revolution was termed a rebellion, because the cries of those who initiated it were stifled in blood and death. History repeats itself. It may be useful to remember this at a time when there is a probability of another re- volution, none the less dangerous to public safety, because it lias its inception in a demand for personal liberty, — not indeed the personal liberty of individual freedom to do justice, but the personal liberty to prevent the doing of justice by others. The American revolution was settled by law ; the French revolution was quelled by the power of one man. America obtained the freedom which every state must have if it is to bear its part creditably in the political world. France was delivered from the despotism of many by the power of one; hence when the personal influence of the individual ceased, the multitude were left to seek other guides, with what result we all know. It might be king, or it might be kaiser, who influenced the impetuous Gaul ; as long as the influence lasted all was well, or appeared well; the influence once withdrawn, and the hero dethroned, for any reason, or for none, the country is again a prey to anarchy. In Great Britain there was sufficient law to steer tlm bark of government over the torrents of revolution, but, unfortunately, there was not always sufficient justice. The law may be good, but if it is not arl ministered justly, the LAW IN EXGLAXD AND I RE LA XD. 5 results are scarcely less fatal than if there had been no law to administer. In England, law required justice to he done to the poor, ■peaking broadly ; but practically the law was not always administered justly, and had not private individuals been Car mor? generous in practice than in theory, the peasants of Great Britain would have given trouble to their masters, and something more than trouble. In Ireland, the laws, as made by Great Britain, and enforced by Great Britain, were not just; and in Ireland there was more than trouble. From time to time the people rose up as they could against public injustice, against public oppression, but might was for the time stronger than right, and the Irish Celt was too often a victim at the shrine of an unmanly revenge. Still something was gained even by these dis- astrous attempts. 1 There were men in Ireland, and there are men in Ireland, who think little of the personal sacrifice of liberty or life, if they may but gain some increase of liberty, some happier condition of life for those who shall come after them. It remained for O'Connell to show that attention could 1 I have confined myself almost exclusively to English authorities for proof of every statement made in this work with regard to the condition of Ireland. In a letter from Edward F orlie s, Esq , to William Wickhara, Esq., dated Dublin Castle, July 28, 1798, he says, " The universality of conspiracy, the frequent debates and the consequent trials keep up irritation. Our military is also disorderly, and our yeomen resentful. 6 THE 0' 'CON NELL PEDIGREE. be attracted to Irish affairs by public agitation, and that, when attention was once given to them, some at least would see the necessity for a government of that country which should not excite rebellion by the enforcement of unjust laws, or perpetuate it by cruelty in the punishment of revolts excited by those laws. O'Connell was born at Carhen, near Cahirciveen, on the G tli of August 1775. The O'Conails, or O'Connells, were formerly possessed of the lordship of Magh-O-G-oinin, now Magonihy, in Kerry. The chiefs of the sept were transported to Clare during the usurpation of Oliver Cromwell. Hugh O'Connell, of the race of Fiacha-Finghine, son of Darie-Cearb, married Margaret, the daughter of Moenmoy O'Brien, prince of Thomond. His son — Geoffry O'Connell married Catherine, daughter of O'Connor Kerry. His sons — Donal, who married Honoria, the daughter of 0' Sullivan Bere ; Hugh, who was knighted by Sir Richard Nugent, lord- . . . . We get rid of seventy prisoners, many of the most important of whom we could not try, and who could not be disposed of without doing such a violence to the principles of law and evidence as could not be well justified. Our zealots and yeomen do not relish this compro- mise, and there has been a fine buzz on the subject, but it being known the Chancellor most highly approves of it, the tone softens." — Corn* wullis' Corres2)Q)idence, vol. ii. p. 378. THE 0' CO XX ELL PEDIGREE. 7 deputy of Ireland, with whom he was a great favourite. This chieftain married Mary, base-daughter of Donal Mac- Carthv Mof, whose son — Maurice declared for Perkin Warbeck, but obtained the pardon of Henry VII., through the influence of Mac- Carthy Mor, on the 24th of August 1496. He married Juliana, the daughter of Rory O'Sullivan Mor. His son — Morgan married Elizabeth, the daughter of O'Donovan, the chief of Clan-Cathail, in Carbery. His son — Aodh or Hugh married Mora, the daughter of Sir Tadg O'Brien, of Baille-na-Carriga, in the county of Clare. His son — Morgan, called of Ballvcarbery, high-sheriff of the county of Kerry, married Helena, daughter of Donal MacCarthy. His son — Richard assisted the Elizabethan generals against the great Geraldine, surrendered his estates, and obtained a re-grant thereof through the influence of the lord-deputy. He married Johanna, the daughter of Ceallaghan Mac- Carthy, proprietor of Carrignamult, in the county of Cork. His son — Maurice was high sheriff of Kerry, and married Margaret, the daughter of Conchobhar, or Connor, O'Callaghan. His Bon — Bartholomew married Honoria MacCrohan's daughter. His son — 8 MORGAN <9' CON NELL Geoffrey married Miss Barret, of county Cork. His son — Daniel, of Aghagabhar, married Alice, the daughter of Christopher Segrave, Esq., of Cabra, in the county of Dublin. His son — John, called of Aghagower and Darrynane, married Elizabeth, the daughter of Christopher Conway, Esq., of Clachane, or Cloghane, in the county of Kerry. His son — Daniel married Mary, the daughter of Dubh O'Donoghue, of Anwyss, in the county of Kerry. His son- Morgan, of Cahirciveen, in the barony of Iveragh, married Catherine, the daughter of John O'Mullane, Esq., of Whitechurch, by whom he had ten children, who lived to the age of maturity; viz. y four sons and six daughters. The sons were: first, Daniel, the subject of this sketch; second, Maurice, an officer in the British service, who died at St Domingo, in 1796; third, John O'Connell; and fourth, James O'Connell, now Sir James, Bart., of Lake- view. The daughters were : first, Mary, who married Jeremiah M'Carthy, Esq. of Woodview, County Cork; second, Honora, the wife of Daniel O'Sullivan, Esq., of Beendonegan, in that county ; third, Ellen, who married Daniel O'Connell, Esq., solicitor-at-law ; fourth, Bridget, who married Myles M'Sweeny, Esq., late of Drounqumney ; fifth, Catherine, who married Humphry Moynihan, Esq., of Freemount, both in the county Kerry ; and sixth, BLACK MARY. 9 Alice, who married William Francis Finn, E>q., of Tally- roan, in the county Kilkenny, for many years M.P. for that county. " Daniel O'Connell, who married Morna Dniv, 2 and died in the year 1774, left his estate of Darrynane to his eldest son, Maurice O'Connell. and he having no family, adopted Daniel CTConnell [the Liberator] and his brother "Maurice. John O'Connell, the Liberator's son, in a sketch - Moma Dniv, nrBla:k Mary, was a remarkable character. The Kerry people are, or perhaps *ve should say were, noted for the facility and appropriateness with which they gave nicknames. These names were, and still are in common use. In fact, they are almost necessary to distinguish the members of different families where a number of people all bear the fame surname. This lady belonged to the old sept of the O'Donoghuea of the Lakes, and was not a little proud of her descent. Her violence of denunciation, and her remarkable powers of invective are still remem- bered in Keiry. It would appear that she kept the purse, for when paying the labourers their weekly wages she would thunder forth to each in her native language, 1 May God prosper, or make away your wages as you earned them.' Morna was also a poetess, and her daughter, Mrs O'Leary, wrote a poem of fierce invective on the death of her husband, Arthur O'Leary, who was shot by a common soldier for refusing to sell his horse to a Protestant for five pounds. u Thank God," adds my in- formant, " those days are past." Moma Duiv's eldest son Maurice, who adopted the Liberator, was known by the sobriquet of " Old Hunt- ing-cap. ' He died at the advanced age of ninety-five. I am told he was ■ splendid old man, and though he became blind as years advanced, preserved his other faculties to the last. He always wore his hunting- cap. An old Irish bardic topographer writes thus of the O'ConnelLj — " O'Connell of the slender sword, Is over the busby-footed hosts A hazel-tree of branching palms For the Minister plain of horse hosts. " 10 COUNT 0' CON NELL. of his father's life, writes thus of another Daniel O'Connell (see note at the end of this chapter) : — " Respecting him there existed many peculiar circum- stances. First, he was the two-ancl-twentieth child of his father and mother. Secondly, he entered the French service as a sub-lieutenant of Clare's regiment, at the age of fourteen, in the year 1759. Thirdly, unaided by anything but his merit, he rose to the rank of major- general. He became colonel-commandant of the German regiment, in the French service, of Salm-Salm, of two battalions, of twelve hundred men each, which he con- verted from an undisciplined mob into confessedly the unest regiment in the great French camp, at Metz, in 1787. Fourthly, he served at the siege of Gibraltar, in 1782, being then the second lieutenant-colonel of the regiment of royal Swedes — the first lieutenant-colonel being the Count Fersen, remarked for his personal beauty, and his alleged intrigues at the court of Louis XVI. Fifthly, Colonel Daniel Count O'Connell — to which rank he had then arrived—volunteered, with one hundred men, as marines, in the ship of the French admiral, who vainly endeavoured to prevent the relief of Gibraltar by Lord Hood. Sixthly, he was severely wounded in the actual attack upon Gibraltar, when the French were driven oif by General (afterwards Lord) Elliot ; and it was because of the gallantry he then displayed, that Louis XVI. conferred upon him the command of the regiment of Salm-Salm. COUXT 0' CO XX ELL. 11 already mentioned. Seventhly, lie was appointed, in the year 1788, one of the inspectors-general of the French in- fantry. He was the actual author of the system of in- ternal arrangements of the infantry forces now universally adopted in all the European armies. 3 Eighthly, he was entrusted in 17S9, by Louis XVI., during the first revolu- tionary violence, with the command of ten thousand of the foreign troops by which Paris was surrounded — and the writer of this sketch has often heard him declare, that if Loui< XVI. bad permitted the foreign troops to crush the Parisian revolutionary mobs, they were both able and willing to do so ; but the humanity of that benevolent, but weak monarch prevented the making of the great experiment of suppression. Ninthly, he remained about the person of the king as long as it was possible for personal devotion to be of any use; and only emigrated • Sir Bernard Burke, with reference to this system, tells us, that in the year 1788, "The French Government resolved that the art of war should undergo revision ; and a military board was formed for this purpose, comprising four general officers and one colonel. The colonel selected was O'Connell, who was esteemed one of the most scientific •.jitieers in the service. Without patronage or family he had risen to a colonelcy before he had attained his fortieth year. Only a few meetings of the board had taken place when the superior officers, struck with the depth and accuracy of information, great military genius, and correct views displayed by Colonel O Connell, unanimously agreed to confide to him the renewal of the whole French military code ; and he executed the arduous duty so perfectly that his tactics were those followed in the early campaigns of revolutionised France, adhered to by Napoleon, and adopted by Prussia, Austria, Russia, and England." 12 THE O'CONNELLS IN FRANCE. when if. was impracticable to serve the king by any other conduct. He then made the Duke of Bruns- wick's campaign, as colonel d la suite , in the regiment of hussars, called ' De Berchiny;' and, after the close of that disastrous campaign, repaired to England, where he was principally instrumental in prevailing on the British Government to take into their service the officers of the Irish Brigade late in the employment of France. Tenthly, there were six regiments forming that brigade in the British service ; and the command of one of them was conferred upon him. Those regiments were exceedingly ill treated by the British Government ; and the officers (with the exception of the colonels) were unceremoniously put upon half-pay. The colonels, however, were, by stipula- tion, entitled to their full pay for life ; and he accordingly enjoyed that pay, and his rank of colonel in the British service, during the rest of his life. Being married to a St Domingo lady, he returned to France at the peace of Amiens, to make his claims to her estate ; but, on the renewal of hostilities, he was detained as a prisoner in Fiance until the restoration of the Bourbon family. Eleventhly, upon the accession of Louis XVIII., lie was restored to his rank as general in the French service, and received his full pay both as a French general and a British colonel, from 1814 to the downfall of Charles X. in 1830. Having refused to take the oath of allegiance to Louis Philippe, he lost his French pay ; but retained hia O'COXXELL'S GRANDFATHER. 13 pay as British colonel until 1834, when he died in his ninety-first year." 4 As Daniel O'Connell's grandfather had twenty- two chil- dren, and his father ten, a more detailed account of his family connections would occupy too much space, and would scarcely be of general interest, Mr O'Neill Daunt gives an amusing anecdote on this subject in his " Personal Recol- lections of O'Connell." M My grandmother," said the Liberator. " had twenty-two chil- dren, and half of them lived beyond the age of ninety Old Maurice O'Connell of Darrynane pitched upon an oak-tree to make his own coffin, and mentioned his purpose to a carpenter. In the evening, the butler entered after dinner to say that the carpenter wanted to speak to him. ' For what \ ' asked my uncle. 4 To talk about your honour's coffin,' said the carpenter, putting his head inside the door over the butler's shoulder. I wanted to get the fellow out, but my uncle said : ' Oh ! let him in, by all means. Well, friend, what do you want to say to me about my coffin?' — 'Only, sir, that I sawed the oak-tree your honour was speaking of into seven-foot plank.' — ' That would be wasteful,' said my uncle. 4 1 never was more than six feet and an inch in my vamps, the best day I ever saw.'- -'But your honour will stretch after death.' said the carpenter. ' Not eleven inches, 1 am sure, you blockhead ! But I '11 stretch, no doubt, perhaps a couple of inches or so. Well, make my coffin six feet six, and 1 '11 warrant that will give me room enough.' " 5 Morgan O'Connell, of Carhen, had a fair income, though only a second son. It is noticeable and character- 4 Sketch of the Life of Daniel O'Connell, Esq., M.P., by his son John Connell, late M.P., p. 3. 5 Personal Recollections of O'Connell by O'Neill Daunt. 14 CARIIEN. fetic of the times that lie was obliged to make his first pur- chase of laud through the intervention of a trustee; and. although the consideration was paid by him, yet if the trustee (a Protestant) had chosen to violate the trust, he might have taken the property to himself. Any Protes- tant in the community, who chose to file a " bill of dis- covery," could compel that trust to be disclosed, and could take possession of the estate, without repaying any part of the purchase-money. 6 The young Daniel spent his boyhood partly with his father at Carhen, and partly with his uncle at Darrynane. There is ample evidence that he was a child of more than ordinary intellect, and of more than ordinary observation. He has left his earliest impressions on record, and the effect which it had deserves special notice. The famous Paul Jones got command of three French 7 8 Sketch by John O'Connell, page 6. 7 Paul Jones' expedition caused considerable disgust and dismay. Mr Beresford wrote thus in a letter on the subject dated Dublin, April 27, 1778 :— " Perhaps the most interesting to you may be to know the dis- grace brought upon the navy of Great Britain by a dirty privateer of 18 guns, called, I think, the Ranger, commanded by a Scotchman of the name of Jones. You have already heard of this vessel ha ving come into Carrickfergus Bay, and dropped anchor by the Drake sloop-of-war of 20 guns, and of her retiring upon the Drake's firing at her. She kept at the mouth of the harbour for eighteen hours afterwards, then sailed for Whitehaven, where you have heard what she did, as also in Scotland. She then came back here to sail again into Belfast ; but the Drake having gone out on a cruise, met her opposite to Donaghadee, where they engaged, and after thirty-eight hours, she took the Drake, having killed her captain, his clerk, and several men, and wounded Lieutenant Dobbs THE IRISH BRIGADE. 15 ressels in 177S to cruise in the Irish seas and the English Channel. He manned his small fleet with English and Irish Bailors who had been prisoners of war at Brest, and who preferred such service to dying amidst all the horrors of a French prison. A company of the Irish brigade, always ready to fight against the country that expatriated them, voluntered to serve on board the Bonhomme llic/tard, his flag-ship. The first land made by Paul Jones upon his cruise from Brest, was on the coast of Kerry. When he closed in with the haul, it fell a calm; and, the tide running at the rate of three or four knots an hour, between the Shell igs rock and Valentia harbour, the situation of the vessels became dangerous, and the boats were sent a-head to tow them out of their difficult position. Towards duignor capitd, fu incomparabile." lie also says : "Gran cosa, nelle montagne e luogbi rozzi, e gente povero per le devastazioni fatte dei nemici eretici, trovai pero la nobilta della S. fede Catolica, giache auro vi fu uomo, o donna, o ragazzo, ancor che piccolo ehe non me sapesse recitar il Pater, Ave, Credo, e i commandamenti, della Santa Chiesa." "It is most wonderful that in this wild and mountainous place, and a people so impoverished by the heretical enemy, I found, nevertheless, the noble influence of the holy Catholic faith ; for there was not a man or woman, or a child however young, who could not repeat the Our Father, Hail Mary, Creed, and the com- BLinds of Holy Church." We believe the same might be said at the present day of this part of Ireland. It is still as poor, and the people are still as well instructed in and as devoted to their faith now as in that century. A work was published in Florence, in 1844, entitled "Nunziatura in Wanda," di Gio. Battista Rinuccini. This work, which throws great light upoa the history of the period, contains a part of the Rinuccini D 60 IMA GIN A R Y " HA PP Y I G NORA NCR" It is true, indeed, that an English Protestant writer has recently asserted that the prohibition of education in Ire- land resulted either in the conformity of individuals to the state religion or in " happy ignorance." But this assertion, like many another made by those who are utterly ignorant, though, perhaps, not always wilfully so, of the subject on which they write, is simply false. The instances of " conformity " are indeed rare, and few have been so bold as to assert that these "conformities" were conversions. The " happy ignorance " is imaginary. If all who were educated in Catholic continental colleges did not exhibit as brilliant manifestations of intellect as O'Connell, it was not because their education was defective, but because intellectual gifts are not equally distributed. Maurice O'Connell must have been an educated man himself, or he would scarcely have been so desirous of pro- curing educational advantages for his nephews. He was by no means content with sending them to college, at considerable expense; while they pursued their academic career, he took care to inform himself of their progress ; and the following letter to him from the Rev. Dr Stapylton, the President of St Omers, is alike creditable to the boy# MS. This volume also contains, in the original Italian, the report presented by Rinuccini to the Pope on his return from Ireland. Burke has given some extracts from the MS. in his " Hibernia Domini cana," and Carte mentions it also ; but otherwise these very important docu- ments appear to have been quite overlooked. EARLY PROMISE. 51 end to their self-appointed guardian. It is dated January 1702 :-- " You desire to have my candid opinion respecting your nephews ; and you very properly remark, that no habit can be worse than that the instructors of youth who seek to gratify the parents of those under their care, by ascribing to them talents and qualities which they do not really possess. You add, that, being tn(y ilk* uncle of these young men, you can afford to hear the real truth respecting their abilities or deficiencies. It is not my habit to disguise the precise truth, in reply to such inquiries as yours. You shall, therefore, have my opinion with perfect candour. " I begin with the younger — Maurice. His manner and de- meanour are quite satisfactory. He is gentlemanly in his conduct; and much loved by his fellow-students. He is not deficient in abilities ; but he is idle, and fond of amusement. I do not think he will answer for any laborious profession ; but I will answer for it, that he never will be guilty of anything discreditable. At least, such is my firm belief. 4i With respect to the elder, Daniel, I have but one sentence to write about htm, and that is, that I never was so much mistaken in my life as I shall be, unless he be destined to make a remark- able figure in society." M It is needless to say," observes Mr John O Connell, 11 that the times were as perilous for strangers, as for natives, especially Englith strangers ; under which designation the unhappy con- tinental custom (now at last beginning to be altered), of classing natives of Ireland abroad, caused Mr O'Connell and his brother to be included. They had to remain, however, at Douay, during several weeks of the Reign of Terror, not being able to follow the example of other students in going home, owing to the interruption and delay of communications from Ireland. During this later period the boys were several times insulted by the soldiery that passed through Douay, on their way to and from the seat of war on the northern frontier. On an eminence just outside the town &2 A FORTUNATE ESCAPE. are the traces of a Eoman camp, attributed to Caesar ; and here thirty-six thousand troops, the great majority raw boys, were for some time encamped, rendering residence at Douay still more dangerous and disagreeable. 'Little aristocrats,' 'young priests,' &c, were the mildest terms in which the unbridled soldiery saluted the boys wherever they met ; and, on one occasion, the soldiers, as they were marched through the town, heaped the fiercest execrations and insults upon them." O'Neill Daunt says, — The Bishop of Ardagh told me that a French captain of artillery said to him shortly after the trois jours de Juillet, 6 Some of us imagined that your O'Connell was born at St Omers. Ah ! if he had been a native of our country we should have made him king of the French.'" When we recollect the fate of many French kings, whether reigning by legal or popular right, we cannot but observe that O'Connell had a fortunate escape: A French statesman has dared to face the scepticism of the age, or it might be more correct to say, has anticipated it, by writing of " God in History." It is not fashionable to attribute much influence to Providence ; but we do no + profess or desire to follow the multitude : we would there fore suggest that a most merciful Providence permitted O'Conneli's residence in France while that unhappy country was being purged in the terrible furnace of self-created incendiarism. We cannot doubt that the impression made on his mind by what he saw, and still more by what he heard, was a powerful restraint on his conduct in after life "SEMPER ET UDIQUE FIDEL IS." 53 and made liim dread that violent kindling of the passions which so surely ends in diabolic crimes. Note. — After the fall of Napoleon in 1814-15, and the restoration of the Bourbons, in the person of Louis XVIII., that monarch, as so much at- tached to the old recollections of his dynasty, was not unmindful of the Irish Brigade. Above all, he could not forget how. in 1792, he himself conveyed the final expression of the gratitude of his family to the repre- sentatives of the three last regiments of the Brigade, or those of Dillon, Walsh, and Berwick, with a " drapeau d'adieu," or farewell banner, emblematic of their national deserts, and accompanied by these words — "Gentlemen, — We acknowledge the inappreciable services that France has received from the Irish Brigade, in the course of the last 100 years ; services that we shall never forget, though under an impossibility of requiting them. Receive this standard, as a pledge of our remembrance, a monument of our admiration, and of our respect ; and, in future, generous Irishmen, this shall be the motto of your spotless flag — < 1692—1792/ 'Semper et dbique fidelis.'" The banner for the Brigade represented an Irish harp, and was em- broidered with shamrocks and fleurs-de-lis, or lilies. In 1814, the officers of the Old Irish Brigade in France requested the Duke of Fitz- James to present them to the king ; which request the Duke, after thanking them for the honour thereby done him, complied with, in these few words, " which are a summary of the Irish character, in all its chivalrous sublimity ■ says my French authority — "Sire, — I have the honour of presenting to your Majesty the sur- vivors of the Old Irish Brigade. These gentlemen only ask for a sword, and the privilege of dying at the foot of the throne." Louis, however, was too deeply indebted to England for the recovery of his crown, to do anything directly opposed to the wishes of her govern- ment, and it particularly pressed upon him, through Lord Castlereagh, that thers should be no restoration of an Irish Brigade in France. " This fact is certain," alleges a contemporary in 1814, " and very uncommon exertions must have been used to procure this concession from Louis ; because, independent of the general claims of this body on the gratitude of the French monarchy, one of these regiments had received a promise 154 THE YOUNGEST OF TWENTY-TWO. from the present king — that, in the event of his restoration, the regi- ment, for its fidelity, should be promoted to the rank of the Guards of the King." I have now only to conclude with notices of two venerable survivors, for many years, of the gallant corps to which they belonged — the one, an officer of equally high rank and merit — the other, the last who died on the Continent. 1. Of the former survivor of the old Brigade, who was uncle to the celebrated Daniel O'Connell, this memoir from a member of the family, is given, with some slight alterations and compression : — "General Daniel Count O'Connell, Knight Grand Cross of the Order of the Holy Ghost, and Colonel of the late 6th Eegiment of the Irish Brigade in the British service, entered the French army at the age of 14, in the year 1757, as second Lieutenant in the Eegiment of the Irish Brigade, commanded by, and called after, the Earl of Clare. He was the youngest of twenty-two children, of one marriage, and was born in August 1473, at Darrynane, in the County of Kerry, the residence of hi? father, Daniel O'Connell. His education had, at that early period, been confined to a thorough knowledge of the Greek and Latin languages — a knowledge which he preserved to the latest period of his life — and to a familiar acquaintance with the elements of the mathematics. He served his first campaign during the Seven Years' War in Germany, and became respected by his superior officers, from his strict attention to all his military duties, and beloved by all his companions, from the unaffected grace, gaiety, and generosity of his disposition. At the conclusion of the war, instead of devoting the hours of peace to idleness or pleasure, he dedicated them, with the closest attention, to the study of literature generally, but especially to that of the branches of military engineering, He was attached to the Corps du Genie in its early formation, and soon became known to be one of the most scientific of the military engineers of France. He distinguished himself at the siege and capture of Port Mahon, in Minorca, from the English, in the year 1779, being at that time Major in the Regiment of Royal Swedes. He received public thanks for his services on that occasion, and a recommendation, from the Commander-in-Chief to the Minister of War, for promotion. That promotion he immediately obtained, and served at the siege of Gibraltai in the year 1782, as Lieutenant-Colonel of his Regiment, the Royal Swedes, but attached to the corps of engineers. Everybody remembers the attack made by the floating batteries on Gibralt ar on the 13th THE 'OTHER' LIEU TEX A XT- COLONEL. 53 September 1782, and the glorious and triumphant resistance of the English garrison, under General Elliott. Lieutenant-Colonel O'Connell was one of the three engineers to whose judgment the plan of attack was submitted, a few days before it was carried into effect. He gave it, as his decided opinion, that the plan would not be successful. The* other two engineers were of a contrary opinion, and the attack took place accordingly. The event justified his judgment. Upon a point of honour recognised in the French army, he claimed a right to share the perils of an attack, which was resolved upon against his opinion. When the attempt to storm Gibraltar was resolved on, it became necessary to procure a considerable number of marines, to act on board the floating batteries. For this purpose, the French infantry was drawn up, and being informed of the urgency of the occasion, a call was made for volun- teers, amongst the rest, of course, from the Royal Swedes. Lieutenant- Colonel O'Connell's regiment was paraded, and the men having been informed that he was to be employed on the service, the battalion stepped forward to one man, declaring their intention to follow their Lieutenant- Colonel. It so happened that the senior Lieutenant-Colonel, the Count De Ferzen, then well known as 1 le beau Ferzen/ and towards whom it was more than suspected that Marie Antoinette entertained feelings of peculiar preference, had arrived from Paris, but a short time before, to join the regiment, which since his appointment he had scarcely seen. Attributing the enthusiasm of the men to his appearance, he rode up, and assured them, that he would be proud to lead them. A murmur of disappointment passed along the line ; and, at length, some of the older soldiers ventured to declare, that it was not with him they volunteered, but with the other Lieutenant-Colonel, who had always commanded, and always protected them. With a generosity which does him honour, Ferzen immediately declared, that he would not attempt to deprive Colonel O'Connell of the honour he so well deserved ; but that, in making way for him, he would say, that he hoped, when the regiment knew so much of him, they would be equally ready to follow him. Colonel O'Connell was named second in command of one of the floating batteries, and this battery was among the first to come into action. He had, in tha early part of the fight, a portion of his ear taken off by a ball ; about the period when the batteries began to take fire, a shell from the English mortars burst close to his feet, and severely wounded him in no lesi than nin i places. Although almost covered with wounds, his recovery £6 MASTER IN ART OF DRILL. was not slow, and, being placed high on the list of those recommended &r promotion, he was, in the ensuing year, appointed Colonel comman- dant of a German regiment of two battalions of 1000 men each, then in the French service, but belonging to the Prince of Salm-Salm. The regiment, when Colonel O'Connell got the command, was in the most lamentable state of disorganisation and indiscipline ; and it was an- nounced to him, by the French Minister of War, that cr*.e reason for giving him that regiment was the expectation, that he would remedy all its disorders. Nor was that expectation disappointed. There was, in 1787, a grand review of upwards of 50,000 French infantry in Alsace, and it was admitted, that the Regiment of Salm-Salm was the regiment in the highest state of discipline in the whole camp, and its Colonel re^ ceived public thanks on that account. He was soon after appointed to the high and responsible office of Inspector-General of all the French Infantry, and he attained also the rank of General Officer. In this capacity he was intrusted with the organisation of the general code of military discipline, especially as relating to the interior regimental arrangements ; and as his suggestions and book of regulations were adopted into the French armies after the Revolution, and imitated by other nations, the advantages derived from them are still felt by every army in Europe. We have thus traced his career from his entrance in the French service as a second Lieutenant. From that rank, unaided by any interest, without a pation, or a friend, save those lie attached to himself by his virtues, he rose to the command of a splendid regiment, and to a rank but little below the highest in the service of France ; and he attained that station, at a time when the bigotry of the Penal Code precluded him from holding the most insignificant commission in the British army. Still more brilliant prospects lay before him ; but the French Revolution, overturning thrones and altars, obliterated from the recollection the fate of private individuals, in the absorbing nature of national interests which that mighty movement involved. He was, it may be well said, stripped of his fame and fortunes by that Revolution ; but he might have retained both if he could sacrifice his principles, because both Dumourier and Carnot pressed him, more than once, to accept the command of one of the revolutionary armies. He totally declined any such command, feeling it a duty to remain near the person of Louis XVL, and to share, as he did, some of his greatest perils in the days of tumult and anarchy, until that ill-fated, but weU-meaning, THANKS OF PITT 57 monarch was hurled from his throne, and cast into prison. Unable any longer to serve the Bourbon cause in France. General O'Connell joined the French Princes at Coblentz, and made the disastrous campaign of 1792. under the Duke of Brunswick, as Colonel of the Hu-sars do Berchinv. In 1703, General O'Connell was, on his return to his family in Kerry, detained in London, with other French officers, by the British Government, to lay and digest plans for the restoration of the Bourbon family. Upon this occasion, he sent in apian for the campaign of 1791, which attracted so much attention, that Mr Pitt desired an interview, and received with thanks many elucidations of the plan." Soon after, the Ministry, having determined to form an Irish Brigade of six regi- ments in the British service, " this determination was carried into effect, and one of those regiments was placed under the command of General O'Connell. It w.is stipulated that the Colonels should not be raised to the rank of Generals in the British service, but should receive full pay for life.* General O'Connell, during the peace of 1S02, returned to France, to look after a large property, to which his lady was entitled ; he became a victim of the seizure of British subjects by the then First Consul ; and remained a prisoner in France until the downfall of Napoleon, and the restoration of the Bourbons. That event restored him to his military rank in France ; and he enjoyed, in the decline of life, amidst the atFectionate respect of his relations and friends, the advantage of full pay, as General in the service of France, and Colonel in the service of Great Britain— an advantage which circumstances can, perhaps, never again produce for any man ; but which he enjoyed with the lull knowledge and approbation of both powers. During the peace of 1814, General O'Connell met Marshal Ney at dinner, at the house of one of the then Ministry. A good deal of conversation passed between them, and at length Ney stated, that he had known General O'Connell before the Revolution, and mentioned in particular having frequently seen him in the year 1787. " My memory," replied the General, " is particularly good ; I have seen few officers whom I do not recollect, and I do not think I could have seen a person so likely to be remarkable aa Marshal Ney, without recollecting him." "General," returned Ney, "you could not have remarked me ; you then commanded the regiment of Salm-Salm ; I was a corporal of hussars ; our Colonel and you were fast friends, and frequently exchanged guards ; and I have often, as corporal, posted and relieved the hussar sentinel on your tent, while one 68 CHRISTIAN AND PATRIOT. of your corporals was going through the same duty at my Colonel's." The Revolution of 1830 deprived him, however, of his pay as French General. He refused to take the oath of fidelity to Louis Philippe, and was, of course, destituted. He retired to the country seat of his son-in- law, at Maclon, near Blois — a beauteous spot on the Loire, which he had himself ornamented in the most exquisite style of English planting — and there, in his declining health, he waited with resignation the call of his God, which occurred on the 9th of July, 1833, he having then nearly completed his 90th year, and being the oldest Colonel in the English service. " He had never, in the season of his prosperity, for- gotten his country, or his God. Loving that country, with the strongest affection, he retained, to the last, the full use of her native language ; and, although master of the Spanish, Italian, German, Greek, and Latin, as well as French and English languages, it was, to him, a source of the greatest delight, to find any person capable of conversing with him in the pure Gaelic of his native mountains. There never lived a more sincere friend — a more generous man. His charities were multiplied and continuous ; and it was the surprise of all who knew him, how ha could afford to do all the good he did to his kind. He was, all his life, a practical Catholic, and had the comfort of dying, without a pang, amidst all the sacred and sweet consolations of that religion, which he had not forgotten in his youth, and which did not abandon him in tha days of darkness and death. — Requuscat in pace" (fjapttr Bttnito. EARLY DAYS AXD FIUST IMPRESSIONS. 1 7 90- 1 800. FHZ FRENCH REVOLUTION AND THE IRISH REBELLION COMPARED — LOUIS XIV, AND GEORGE III. — ENGLISH OPINIONS ON IRISH POLICY — LOUIS XVI. — THH TWO SHEARES — ST OMERS — o'CONNKLL AND THE PRIESTHOOD — HIS OPINIONS OF THE FRENCH REVOLUTION — INTERVIEW WITH ROBERT OWEN — AT LIN- COLN'S INN ORIGIN OF CONSTITUTIONALISM — CATHOLIC CHURCH CONSER- VATIVE — THE ENGLISH AND IRISH CATHOLICS CONTRASTED — EARLY TORYISM — HARDY'S TRIAL — HORNE TOOKE— THE GEORGES AND THE STUARTS — RISB OF DEMOCRACY— AMERICAN WAR — BENJAMIN FRANKLIN — THE IRISH Ltt AMR RICA. *Q r uT has been more than once suggested that tlie Irish Re- P bell ion of 179S was inspired i>tances to any lawful constituted human rule have been rare.* In France it was not Catholics, but those who had long ? It 13 difficult to induce some persons to consider any such question calmly and dispassionately. Englishmen who think at all on the subject, are generally loud in their assertions of Irish disloyalty. Now there u a very wide difference between loyalty to a sovereign and approbation ot all bis acts, or the acts performed by bis government. Every English monarch who has ruled Ireland has been treated with respect, and 80 THE CLERGY AND THE REVOLUTION. ceased to be Catholics, who were guilty of regicide, and of crimes whose atrocity shocked the whole civilised world. The men who dragged Louis XYI. to the scaffold, openly renounced all religious belief. The men who murdered Charles made a pitiful boast of their religion. 9 In England, except during times of special persecution^ which were comparatively rare, Catholics did not suffer from political or legal injustice. It is true, indeed, that they were denied the rights of citizens, but they were- tolerated, especially when heavy fines could be obtained to replenish the coffers of needy or licentious monarchs. The fewness of their number protected them, and what was even those Irish papers which write most strongly on the subject of English misgovern ment, invariably respect the person of the sovereign. When the English nation rebelled against James II., he took refuge in Ireland ; how he repaid Irish loyalty is but too well known and remembered in Ireland. 9 In France, though many of the clergy were corrupted by the deluge of evil which inundated the land, where, and because, all religious interests were withdrawn, there were yet a much larger number who were faithful. " The clergy in France were far from being insensible to the danger of this flood of irreligion which deluged the land." — Ali- son's History of Europe, vol. i., page 89. Again, "In a general assembly of the clergy, held in 1770, the most vigorous resistances against the multiplication of irreligious works were made. 1 Impiety,' they said " ia making inroads alike on God and man ; it will never be satisfied till it has destroyed every power, divine and human.'" — page 87. ''It is a remarkable proof how completely ignorant the most able persons in Europe were of the ultimate effects of this irreligious spirit, that the greatest encouragement which the sceptical philosophy of France received was from the despots of the north — Frederick the Great, and the Em- press Catherine." — page 88. ENGLISH CATHOLIC POLITICS. 31 of still more importance, united them. The very hopeless- ness of success, if they attempted to interfere in public affairs, kept them silent. Agitation would have been worse than imprudent, and they had so long learned to keep silence, to submit, to live apart from their fellows, to believe peace to be the one thing above all others to be desired, that they at last came to believe any demand for redress to be dangerous, if not positively wrong ; and any agitation to be imprudent to the highest degree, if not positively culpable. Hence the English Catholics, and especially the English Catholics of the upper classes, were necessarily conservative, and hence also many Irish Catholics of the upper classes, from association or intermarriage with English Catholics, became conservative also. Their few dependants believed as they believed, and thought as they thought. They also intermarried with each other, and lived apart, and they also feared all change, because, as a general rule, change was productive of evil. But with the great mass of Irish Catholics, with, in fact, all of the middle or poorest class who thought, there was little love for Conservatism. Their state was such until the close of the last century (and it is of that period we write), that however their condition might be improved by any change, it could scarcely be injured. They had none of the English Catholic traditional love of, or reverence for monarchy. How, indeed, could they F 82 IRISH CATHOLIC POLITICS. have it? They were told that a certain person was king of England, but whether that person was a William or a George was quite the same to them. It was a sound and nothing more. They heard indeed the name of their king, but they never saw him, they never even felt his influence. A royal birth or death was neither a subject of grief nor sorrow. They heard that such events occurred, perhaps long after they had happened, but for all practical interest or difference which it made to them, the birth or the death of a New Zealander would have been just the same. But when they complained from time to time against injustice, or when they rebelled against it, then indeed they vere made to feel the power of this distant sovereign, cf this individual in whose name vindictive and cruel punishments were inflicted. Certainly they had no reason to uphold monarchy, to revere English law, or to desire to preserve English government, as it showed itself to them. They could not be conservative. 1 1 When the Irish were not allowed even to rent a small piece of land, they called the little plot of earth which could not be denied them a " Protestant lease of the sod." It was in allusion to this penal law that the Irish rhymer made the attendants at the felon's wake sing — " But when dat we found him quite dead, In de dustcase we bundled his carcase, For a Protestant lease of the sod." —Sketches of Ireland Sixty Years Ago, p. 89. Dublin, 1847. Colonel Jervis says : " To hold out the bribe of the father's property to conforming children, brought into play every ill feelirg of which man THE WORST CHURCH IN C II REST E XD M. 83 The influence of the Catholic faith, and the power of the Catholic priesthood alone prevented the Irish Celt from avenging his wrongs, not indeed with the ferocity of a Com- munist, for the Irish Celt has no taint of cruelty in his nature, but with the unflinching vengeance of a Roman plebeian. It was precisely because many English Catholics failed to see the difference between their own position and the posi- tion of their Irish brethren, that they looked eoldly upon (JConneirs career, that they would rather have kept their chains around them a little longer than have accepted release by the means which he used to obtain it for them. And yet, as we have said, O'Connell began life as a Conservative. His son thus describes the time and manner of the change : — is capable — impiety, ingratitude, hatred between father and son, brother and brother. But the penal law has never been found which could con- vert mankind to any one doctrine ; on the contrary, persecution breeds obstinacy, and the ignorant sinner becomes elevated into the proud martyr. Besides, in Ireland there were still no means of exemplifying to the masses the greater wisdom of the Church of England. The Pro- testant Lord Clarendon complained of the absence of the bishops in England, and of the disgraceful state of their dioceses. Queen Mary, as Lead of the Church, wrote to William when in Ireland to take care of it, 'for everybody agrees it is the worst in Christendom.' Many years later the illustrious Bishop Berkeley gave a similar account. Confor- mity meant not a belief in Church of England doctrines, but a disbelief in revealed religion." — Ireland under British Rule, p. 217. No one could desire the conservation of such a state of government, or manifest attachment to it. 84 O 1 'CON NELL A TORY IN HIS YOUTH. " On the 21st December 1793, the day the unfortunate Louis was beheaded at Paris, the brothers set out in a voiture for Calais, which they reached early on the morning of the 23d ; not, however, without some parting compli- merits from their friends, the soldiery ; who went so far aa several times to strike the head of the vehicle with their musket stocks. The English packet-boat, aboard of which the boys proceeded with as little delay as possible, was pre* sently under weigh ; and as she passed out of the harbour, Mr O'Connell and his brother eagerly tore out of theii caps the tricolor cockades, which the commonest regard for personal safety rendered indispensable to be worn b} r every one in France ; and, after trampling them under foot, flung them into the sea. This boyish outburst of natural execra- tion of the horrors which had been committed under thai emblem, procured them a few of those sonorous curses which only a Frenchman can give, from some fishermen rowing past at the moment, by whom the cockades were rescued from the waves, and placed in their hats with all becoming reverence. It is not to be wondered at that Mr O'Connell should, when, in 1794, he became a law-student in Lincoln's Inn, be in a state very nearly approaching, as he has often said, to that of a Tory at heart. " So strong and ardent were these feelings, that, the cele- brated trial of Hardy and others having occurred about this time (viz., October 1794), Mr O'Connell attended it daily, certainly: not more for the mere interest of the thing, CONVERSION TO POTULAR OPIMONS. 85 or benefit of the law arguments to him as a student, than for the gratification of anti-revolutionary feeling, at seeing a supposed offender against law and social order in a fair way of receiving condign punishment. " To llv O'Connell's astonishment, he found, ere the trial had proceeded far, that his sentiments were fast changing to those of pity towards the accused, and of something of self-reproach for having desired his conviction and punish- ment ; and, each successive day revealing more and more the trumped-up and iniquitous nature of the prosecution, 8 the process of change in Mr O'Connell's mind ended by fully and finally converting him to popular opinions and principles, and confirming his natural detestation of tyranny, and desire of resisting it." Even Fox had been disgusted with this trial, and saw clearly the effect it would be likely to produce on the * This famous trial excited an immense sensation at the time. John Home Tooke had been, and according to English law was, a clergyman, having embraced the ecclesiastical state to please his father, and very much against his own inclination. He was educated at Eton, and afterwards at St John's College, Cambridge. In 1773 he studied law. While a student he assisted Dr William Tooke upon an enclosure-bill, a subject which no doubt led him to consider popular politics, or rather to consider politics from the people's point of view. He took up the American War with more energy than discretion, condemned the con- duct of the government, and made a subscription for the widows and orphans of those Americans who had been " murdered by the king's troops at Lexington and Concord." He was the author of the elaborate "Diversions of Purley." John Thelwall was also a writer of some repu- tation. He retired to Wales after his acquittal, and died at Bath in 1834 NONSENSE ABOUT CONSPIRACY. public mind. He writes thus to Lord Holland, June 23, 1794 :— " I think, of all the measures of Government, this last nonsense about conspiracy is the most mischievous, and at the same time the most foolish. How truly have they made good that parallel you drew between the Jacobins of France and the Crown party here! If they succeed in committing and hanging any of these fellows whom, they have taken up, it will be considered as a corroboration of the conspiracy, and a pretence for more extraordinary powers ; if they fail, as I rather think they will, then the consequence that always belongs to men who have been falsely accused and acquitted will attach to Home Tooke, Thelwall, and others like them, and possibly that danger which was only imaginary may in time become real by those wise man- oeuvres, which, unaccountably to me, my old friends think calculated to dispel it." The state of England at this period was scarcely less a subject of apprehension to public men. than the state of Ire- land. The most fatal and disastrous calamities might have happened in that country if timely concession had not been made. In Ireland rebellion was wilfully and advisedly excited. In England every reasonable effort was made to conciliate, This is a fact which has been completely over- looked in considering the history of the period, when studied in connection with Irish politics. George III. ascended thf, throne in the year 1760, THE GEORGES AND THE 1 11 MINISTERS. 87 His reign was an eventful one, but the circumstances which made it such were not turned to the national advantage. It may be questioned, indeed, whether the stolid Hanoverian princes were capable of a large or enterprising policy ; that they were capable of mistrust- ing ministers who were possessed of larger minds than their own, and of following ministers who were too pliant for effective service, the contemporary history of the period sufficiently proves. 8 Two great events of the age, the French Revolution and the revolt of the American colonies, reacted on English society, 3 Perhaps, however, some of his ministers were as much to blame for facility of acquiescence. Lord North's character is thus described by his own daughter, Lady Charlotte Lindsay : — " His character in private life was, I believe, as faultless as that of any human being can be ; and those actions of his public life which appeared to have been the most questionable, proceeded, I am firmly convinced, from what one must own was a weakness, though not an unamiable one, and which followed him through his life — the want of power to resist the influence of those he loved."— Appendix to Lord Brougham's " Historical Sketches of States- men who flourished in the Reiccupied a seat at the Treasury Board. He was removed by the Rock- Ingham ministry in 1765, but came into office again with Lord Chatham as paymaster. A few days only before he became Prime Minister, one of his keenest opponents, Mr Burke, thus described him in the House of Commons : — ** The noble lord who spoke last, after extending his right leg a full yard before his left, rolling his flaming eyes, and moving his ponderous frame, has at length opened his mouth." — Speech of January 9, 1770, • ParL Hist" xvi. p. 720. 88 DEMOCRATIC TENDENCY OF THE AGE. and on English social life. The monarchs who preceded George III. were unpopular, partly because they were devoid of those personal attractions which fascinated the followers of the house of Stuart, and partly because they neither understood, nor took much pains to understand, cheir English subjects. The severity with which social crimes were punished only tended to increase them, and developed political agitations for which there was already sufficient cause. The nation had ceased to speak of or believe in the divine right of kings. The person of the sovereign was no longer an object of respect. This democratic tendency of thought, reacted upon by the revolutionary spirit of France, which began by denying divine right, and ended by denying human justice, had its culmination in England in a per- sonal attack on the king, of which O'Connell was an eye- witness. Of this attack we shall speak more fully after entering into the details of the circumstances which pro- ceded it. George III., however, had two advantages, of which, how- ever, he was unfortunate enough not to have made the most. He was born in England, and he had just sufficient wit to see that this was a claim on the fealty of his English sub- jects. His private life was virtuous, and formed a con- trast to that of the majority of his predecessors. 4 4 " When George II. had to receive the Holy Eucharist, his main GEORGE III. AND ROYAL SI P REM ACT. 89 Unfortunately for himself, he was under the influence of the Earl of Bute. This influence was one which hud takeu its rise in his early life, and under somewhat questionahle circumstances. The king is said to have written his first speech to Parliament himself, but it was alleged that Lord Bute amended it, and substituted the word Briton for Englishman. 6 This, certainly, gratified the Scotch party, if it did not merit the approbation of the Tories. The Whigs had been fifry-five years in office, but Tory prin- ciples, such as they then were, suited the king, who had wooden ideas on the subject of royal supremacy, for it was not the supremacy of divine right, but the supremacy of a wooden, unvarying rule. Riots began early in this reign. The Whigs believed that Bute intended to undermine their power, and a beer-tax, of which he got the credit, made him unpopular with the anxiety seems to have been that the sermon on that day might be a short one, since otherwise he was, to use his own words, ' in danger of falling asleep and catching cold.' " — Lord MaJhon, Hint. v. p. 54. Bishop Newton says {Works, i. p. 76, ed. 1787), that he always took care in his sermons at Court to come within the compass of twenty minutes ; but after a hint as to brevity, " on the great festivals of the Church, he never exceeded fifteen, so that the King sometimes said to the Clerk of the Closet, 4 A good short sermon.' " 5 *' I have heard it related," says Lord Mahon, iv. p. 212, " but on no Tery clear or certain authority, that the King hod in the first place written the word ' Englishman,' and that Lord Bute altered it to 'Briton.'" The King's speech was admired by Frederick the Great.— Mitchell Papers, voL v. No. 201, p. 148. BO THE WORST ENGLISH GOVERNMENT. people. There was a disturbance in the play-house the year after the king's accession. 6 The Bute administration lasted just ten months, and the Scotch lord went out of office, having made a peace which was unpopular because he made it, and leaving his own unpopularity as a bequest to his master. His family said that he retired from office for the sake of his personal safety ; his own accouut of the matter was that he was afraid of involving his royal master in his ruin. 7 The Grenville administration followed, and the king found himself lectured in his closet, and snubbed in his most innocent pursuits. Macaulay characterised this ad- ministration as the worst which ever governed England since the Revolution. The king bore the lectures as best 6 A few days after Lord Bute was sworn, in to the Privy Council, a handbill was affixed to the Royal Exchange, with these words : — " No petticoat government, no Scotch favourites, no Lord George Sackville." A joke went round the Court whether the King would have " Scotch coal, Newcastle coal, or Irish coal." 7 " The alarms of Lord Bute's family about his personal safety are reported here to be the immediate cause of his sudden abdication." — Memoirs of Rockingham, vol. i. p. 165. — "Single in a Cabinet of my own forming ; no aid in the House of Lords to support me, except two Peers (Denbigh and Pomfret) ; both the Secretaries of State (Lordu Egremont and Halifax) silent ; and the Lord Chief Justice (Mansfield), whom I myself brought into office, voting for me and yet speaking against me — the ground I tread upon is so hollow that I am afraid not only of falling myself, but of involving my royal master in my ruin. It is time for me to retire." — Adolphus, vol. i. p. 117. See also " The Correspondence of George III. and Lord North, ' vol. i. p. lxxi. INAUGURATION OF CIVIL WAR. 91 he could, but he could not get even a small sum of money to purchase some fields near the Queen's House. The Rockingham administration succeeded, and its mem- bers treated their sovereign " with decency and reverence but. Pitt could not work with them, and they could not work without Pitt. In 1763, ou the 14th of March, George III. recommended a proper compensation to be made to the Americans for their expenses in the war of 175G. Almost on that very day twelvemonths, Mr Grenville brought forward his unfor- tunate resolution (9th March 1 704), which inaugurated the civil war. " That towards defraying the said expenses, it may be proper to charge certain stamp-duties on the said colonies and plantations." In February 17C3, this resolution passed into a law. The law passed with little anticipation of its fatal results. Burke sat in the gallery listening to the speeches, and declared he never heard " a more languid debate." The House of Lords did not even trouble themselves to debate. The truth was that English senators looked on the American colonies as a dependency which they could treat as they pleased. They forgot that the descendants of the sturdy race of men who fled from England to escape religious and political oppression, were scarcely likely to submit to it in their adopted country. They forgot that the descendants of such men were likely to be thinkers, to be men who would know their own interests. 92 MISMANAGEMENT OF THE COLONIES. It was a brief history certainly, but it was none the less significant. The English government relied too much on the possible effects of their traditional reverence for that land from which they had expatriated themselves. That reverence did exist, but it was merely traditional. The moment the tradition was weakened by the stern logic of facts, its shattered links fell to the ground, and never again re- united. There were few men in England who grasped the diffi- culties of the case, who had sufficient intellect to look beyond the present, sufficient self-sacrifice to forego pre- sent gain when it was sure that it must be purchased at the cost of future loss. Burke indeed did his best. He warned the Government that they were treating with an intelligent people, and with a people who not only loved justice, but thoroughly understood law, 8 a people ' 6 who snuffed the approach of 8 Burke, speaking of the education of the colonists, said : "I have been told by an eminent bookseller, that in no branch of his business, after tracts of popular devotion, were so many books as those on the law ex* ported to the plantations. The colonists have now fallen into the way of printing them for their own use. I hear that they have sold nearly as many of Blackstone's ' Commentaries ' in America as in England General Gage marks out this disposition very particularly in a letter on your table. He states that all the people in his government are lawyers, or smatterers in law ; and that in Boston they have been enabled, by successful chicane, wholly to evade many parts of one of your capital penal ©institutions. . . . This study renders men acute, inquisitive* COS TEMPT FOR AMERICA. 93 tyranny." Chatham did his best also, but the tide had set in the wrong direction : and who could control an obstinate king, and ministers, some of whom were self-suffi- cient, and some of whom were self-interested? But the public were not satisfied with contempt for Ameri- can intellect. 9 There was open contempt for American military power, and both public and private contempt was heaped on Franklin, one of America's greatest men. At- torney-Generals have not always distinguished themselves by prudence, but few men who have held that position in England have stultified themselves or their country so completely as Wedderburn, one of the Solicitor-Generals who ruled the legal destinies of England in the reign of George III. dexterous, prompt in attack, ready in defence, full of resources. In other countries the people, more simple, and of a less mercurial cast, judge of an ill principle in government only by an actual grievance ; here they anticipate the evil, and judge of the pressure of the grievance by the badness of the principle. They augur misgovernment at a dis tance, and snuff the approach of tyranny in every tainted breeze." a In the debate of 16th March 1775, Lord Sandwich said : "The noble lord [Camden] mentions the impracticability of conquering America. 1 cannot think the noble lord can be serious on this mutter. Suppose the colonies do abound in men, what does that signify ? They are raw, un- disciplined, cowardly men. I wisli that, instead of 40,000 or 50,000 of these half-bred fellows, they would produce in the field at least 200,000, the more the better, the easier would be the conquest." Then he related an anecdote of Sir Peter Warren, and continued, — "Believe me, my lords, the very sound cf a cannon will carry them, in his [Sir Peter's] words, as fast as their feet could carry them." — See " Life and Times of C. J. Fox," by Earl Russell. 94 BENJAMIN FRANKLIN. B njamin Franklin was the son of a Boston merchant. He began life as an apprentice tohis father's business, though it is said he was originally intended for the ministry in some religious persuasion. But the lad abhorred trade, and at last obtained service with his brother, a printer. After a time he removed to Philadelphia. Here he was noticed by the English governor, Sir William Keith, and it is said that he was deceived by him. Possibly Sir William only promised more than he could perform. The result was Franklin's removal to England as early as 1725, when he entered as a journeyman in the well-known and time- lionoured establishment of Messrs Cox & Wyman. He returned again to America, where be married a rich widow, and published the famous " Poor Richard's Almanack." In 1757 he was sent to England as a delegate for Penn- sylvania. He returned once more to his native land, and iu 1764 and in 1766 he was examined at the bar of the English House. The members were anxious to prove that the American colonies were contumacious, but all evidence goes to prove that they were not, and that they did not desire separation from England until they found that England compelled them to revolt. Franklin declared that " the authority of Parliament was allowed to be valid in all laws, except such as should lay internal taxes : that it was never disputed in laying duties to regulate commerce : that the Americans would never submit to the Stamp Act, or to any other tax on the same principle : that North WASHINGTON OX THE COLOXTSTS. 95 America would contribute to the support of Great Britain, if engaged in a war in Europe." Washington wrote thus: — "Although you are taught to believe that the people of Massachusetts are rebellious, setting up for independency, and what not, give me leave, my good friend, to tell you that you are abused, grossly abused. This I advance with a degree of confidence and boldness which may claim your belief, having better oppor- tunities of knowing the real sentiments of the people you are amomr. from the leaders of them, in opposition to the present measures of Administration, than you have from those whose business it is, not to disclose truths, but to misrepresent facts, in order to justify, as much as possible, to the world their own conduct. Give me leave to add, and I think I can announce it as a fact, that it is not the wish or interest of that government, or any other upon this con- tinent, separately or collectively, to set up for independ- ence ; but this you may at the same time rely on, that none of them will ever submit to the loss of those valuable rights and privileges which are essential to the happiness of every free state, and without which life, liberty, and property are rendered totally insecure." 1 In the last debate of the Lords attended by Franklin, March 16th, 1775, he heard American courage, American religion, American intellect, branded as cowardice, hypo- 1 Spark's Life of Washington, vol. i. p. 130. 96 DYING TESTIMONY OF LORD CHATHAM. crisy, and dullness. " We were treated," lie says, "as the lowest of mankind, and almost of a different species from the English of Great Britain ; but particularly American honesty was abused by some of the Lords, who asserted thai we were all knaves, and wanted only by this dispute to avoid paying our debts." An eminent English writer says : — " On this occasion a few tongues helped to dismember an empire. Chatham's prophetic eye had discerned months before this memorable debate the issue of such zealotry. And in the month of November 1776, when America was ringing with the De- claration of Independence, and England was exasperated by what it considered as the sin of witchcraft, the Earl, being then very sick at Hayes, and not expecting to recover, solemnly charged his physician, Dr Addington, to bear testi- mony that he died with his opinions respecting America unchanged. He renewed a former prediction, that unless England changed her policy, France would espouse the cause of the Americans. France, he said, only waited till England was more deeply engaged in this " ruining war against herself in America, as well as to prove how far the Americans, abetted by France indirectly only, may be able to make a stand, before she takes an open part by declaring war upon England." 2 Every one, to speak broadly, was against America; George the Third and Lord North, vol. ii. p. 9. THE TEA- TAX. 97 certainly tho?e who defended her cause could be easily counted ; but it was unfortunate that the multitude were not a little more reserved in their expressions, that they so openly expressed their scorn for, and depreciation of, an enemy who overcame them so easily. 3 They forgot that contempt is not argument, and they forgot also k ' what extraordinary obstacles a small band of insurgents may surmount in the cause of liberty." 4 The American Congress held its first sittings at Phila- delphia on the 4th of September 1774. The members were willing to make peace, but they wisely prepared for war. The result is too well known to need further record. The " tea-tax" was but the last attempt to fetter a people who 8 Johnson, the lexicographer, had a share in exciting the popular feeling also. He wrote a pamphlet entitled " Taxation no Tyranny, " but he forgot to say anything about the necessity for justice in taxation. He said : " One of their complaints is not such as can claim much com- miseration from the softest bosom. They tell us that we have ekonged our conduct, and that a tax is now laid by Parliament on those which [sic] were never taxed by Parliament before. To this we think it may be easily answered that the longer they have been spared, the better they can pay." " By a similar process of arguing," observes Mr Daunt, " Hampden might be shown to have been in arrear for ship-money, and Prynne for ears." All kinds of stories went the round in England on the subject of American incompetence, moral and physical. Farces were enacted in the theatres in which tailors and cobblers were described as samples of American soldiers. A young American officer who was present on one occasion, shouted out from his box, " Hurrah ! but Britain is beaten by tailors and cobblers." 4 Speech in the debates. G 98 DECLARATION OF INDEPENDENCE. were determined to be free, and who carried out their determination. The Declaration of Independence was signed on the 4th of July 1776, by Adams, Franklin, and Jefferson, and America became a nation and the home of the exiled Celt. To her and to them we say, Esto peiyctua. Thus we find America free at the birth of O'Connell, and at the same time we find the first indications of a union in feeling and principle between Ireland and America. It is a subject which ought to be of considerable interest to every Englishman, which is of the very deepest interest to every Irishman. If another war should break out between America and England — and with the pressure of the Irish vote on American politics, such an event might not require even the settlement of " Alabama" or any other claims to precipitate it — there can be no doubt that millions of expatriated Irishmen would join in the conflict with something more than ordinary military ardour. If, as we shall presently show, England was compelled to grant some trifling instalments of justice to Ireland, when threatened on all sides by peril at the close of the last century, it would be but common prudence on her part to make Ireland forget her past wrongs and her present sorrows. One of the things not generally known, or, if known, not generally considered, in connection with American inde- AMERICA APPEALS TO IRELAND. DO pendence, is the Address to the People of Ireland which was issued by Congress. They appeal to Ireland because they are " desirous of the good opinion of the virtuous and humane." " We are desirous of the good opinion of the virtuous and humane. TVe are peculiarly desirous of furnishing yon with the true state of our motives and objects, the better to enable you to judge of our conduct with accuracy and determine the merits of the controversy with impar- tiality and precision. Your Parliament had done us no wrong. You had ever been friendly to the rights of man- kind; and we acknowledge with pleasure and gratitude that your nation has produced patriots who have nobly distinguished themselves in the cause of humanity and America/' Another thing not generally known, or not sufficiently considered, is, that some of the leading men in the Ameri- can revolt were Irish. Even then some few Celts had found their way to the land in which they were to obtain such numerical strength at a future day. Thompson, the secretary of Congress, was Irish. He had been agitating against England for ten years. Frank- lin corresponded with him frequently, and wrote to him from London, " The sun of liberty is set; we must now light up the candles of industry." Thompson's reply was significant, " Be assured we shall light up torches of a very different kind." 100 THE "OSTRICH-EGG." Montgomery was an Irishman. He captured Montreal and 'lied before Quebec. 5 O'Brien was an Irishman, and commanded in the first naval engagement with England. On the 2d of February, Walpole writes to Mann : — " We have no news public or private ; but there is an ostrich-egg laid in America, where the Bostonians have canted three hundred chests of tea into the ocean, for they will not drink tea with our Parliament. . . . Lord Chatham tallied of conquering America in Germany; I believe England will be conquered some day in New Eng« land or Bengal." • Sse Burns' spirited lines : — "And yet what reck ! he at Quebec, Montgomcry-Uke did fa', man, Wi* sword in hand before his bandy Amang his enemies a', man." (Tbnptcr KJift. SKTBY CA PUBLIC LIFE-POLITICAL SITUATION. i775~ I 797- FOUTICAL TROUBLES IN ENGLAND — ATTACK ON TUB KINO — FONDNESS FOR FIELD SPOUTS — FEVEU — FIRST VISIT TO DUBLIN — ENGLISII POLICY WITH IRELAN D — FOUCED ATTEMPT AT LEGISLATIVE JUSTICE — CAUSES AND CHARACTER OF TUB 1RI£H REBELLION— GRA TTAN — LORD CHARLKMONT — IRELAND IN ARMS — ALA KM IN ENGLAND— WANTS OF IRELAND — MR FOX— REPEAL OF ACT VI. GEO. L — CAUSES OF THE RUIN OF IRISH LNDKPKSDEJIOT »— CJIOUSH BRIBERY — ORATlAjr's L£XT£Jl HAP. 893 Jgjjnj'HE troubles which were ex- cj( American war continued for several years. On the 23d of October 1 7 7 . j , thousands of incen- diary papers were dispersed, incit- /Sy ing the people to rise and prevent the ^^^J3 ^ meeting of Parliament. On this the JhrJ ffuard was trebled, and their muskets loaded, and ^jx&jodP thirty-six rounds of powder delivered to them. ^ * ae same ^ me P a P ers ? telling the people how CEj we ^ * ne Court was prepared, signed by Sir John Hawkins, Chairman of the Bench of Westminster r Justices, were spread abroad. 6 Walpole's Last Journals, vol. i. p. 510. 104 ro LI TIC A L TROUBLES IN ENGLAND. The king was fall}' aware of the danger, and wrote thua to Lord North : — " Queen's House, October 25, 1775. 2 min. past 11 a.m. " Lord North, — On the receipt of your letter I have ordered Elliot's regiment to march from Henley to Hounslow, and the Horse and Grenadier Guards to take up their horses. These handbills are certainly spread to cause terror, but they may in the timid duke I saw yesterday, but I thank God I am not of that make. I know what my duty to my country makes me undertake, and threats cannot prevent me from doing that to the fullest extent." 7 In 1779, the king seemed to be recovered sufficiently to see the possible danger to English interests in Ireland. In a letter dared Kew, June 11, 1779, he says: " The present difficulties keep my mind very far from a state of ease. ... I have heard Lord North frequently drop that the advantages to be gained by this contest could never repay the expence ; I owne that, let any war be ever so successful, if persons will sit down and weigh the expences, they will find, as in the last, that it has impoverished the state, enriched individuals, and perhaps raised the name ? Correspondence, vol. i. p. 20. — " Queen's House, afterwards Ihick- ingham House, was bought of Sir Charles Sheffield by George the Third in 1761. for £21,000, and settled on Queen Charlotte, in lieu of Somerset House, by an Act passed in 1775. Here all the King's children were born, George the Fourth alone excepted. The Queen's House was taken down in 1825 to make room for the present Buckingham Palace." — Cut** ningham?s Handbook of London, p. 86, 2d ed. LETTER OF GEORGE III. 105 only of the conquerors; but this is only weighing such events in the scale of a tradesman behind his counter ; it is necessary for those in the station it has pleased Divine Providence to place me to weigh whether expences, though very great, are not sometimes necessary to prevent what might be more ruinous to a country than the loss of money. The present contest with America, I cannot help seeing, as the most serious in which any country was ever engaged : it contains such a train of consequences that they must be examined to feel its real weight. Whether the laying a tax was deserving all the evils that have arisen from it, I should suppose no man could alledge [sic] that without being thought more fit for Bedlam than a seat in the Senate; but step by step the demands of America have risen : independence is their object ; that certainly is one which every man not willing to sacrifice every object to a momentary and inglorious peace must concurr with me in thinking that this country can never submit to : should America succeed in that, the West Indies must follow them, not independence, but must for its own interest be dependent on North America. Ireland would soon follow the same plan and be a separate state; then this island would be reduced to itself, and soon would be a poor island indeed, for, reduced in her trade, merchants would retire with their wealth to climates more to their advantage, and shoals of manufacturers would leave this country for the new empire." 108 THE GORDON RIOTS. There was no question of Irish loss or gain, except in so far as Irish loss or gain affected English interests, and it required a very much larger intellect than that of George III. to see that these interests were, or ought to be, iden- tical. About the same time the Duke of Eichmond made a motion in the House of Lords, in which he said: " That in a moment so critical, the most awful this country had ever experienced, it would be deceiving His Majesty and the nation if they were not to represent that the only means of resisting the powerful combination which threatened the country would be by a total change of that system which had involved us in our present difficulties in America, in Ireland, and at home." The Gordon riots took place in 1780, and lasted from the 2d of June until the 9th. Parliament was unable to meet during this commotion. It was suspected that the French were the instigators of it, as at that time everything revolutionary was laid to their charge. The king wanted to have " examples made," and told Lord North he must " get to the bottom of it." A difficult task for that easy- going minister, who was scarcely capable of getting to the bottom of anything. In 1783 (July 24) the king expressed a strong opinion on the state of public affairs by no means complimentary to himself or his ministers : — " Undoubtedly there is less regularity in the modes of STATE OF PUBLIC AFFAIRS. 107 conducting business in tin's kingdom than in any other European, or the mode of calling a new parliament in Ireland ought to have been so clearly stated in the change of that constitution that no room ought to have been left for doubts as to the proper method of effecting it. But I fear folly, not reason, dictated the measure, and therefore it is not surprising every step has not been well weighed." In November he declared that " Ireland was in fact dis- united from England," and certainly not without cause. The volunteers had been organised, and the volunteers were determined to have justice done to their country, while England was unable to deny it in consequence of her own personal embarrassments. There was war in India also, and though this did not very much concern the nation at large, till some few honour- able men were roused by the recital of the horrible cruelties practised on the unhappy natives, it was not without its effect. The king and the Prince of Wales quarrelled, and the unhappy monarch exhibited the first symptoms of that malady which clouded his latter years. In 1795 all England was excited, turbulent, and violent. The war had necessitated increased taxation, increased taxation involved distress, and distress fell grievously on those who were least able to bear it. Men who could lose thousands of pounds in a game of 103 PUBLIC DISCONTENT. chance, or who could spend hundreds of pounds on mere luxuries, were not likely to understand the sharp suf- ferings of those who had not sixpence to spare for a luxury, who had not at times a penny to buy a loaf of bread. There were few who could even comprehend the terrible misery of starvation, and the terrible agony 02 seeing wife and child pining away for want of common sustenance. 8 Those who suffered thus were not likely to make nice distinctions as to the cause. The king as the ruler of the nation was naturally credited with being the origin of the 8 Alison's " History of Europe," vol. iii. p. 20, thus describes the state of England : — " The condition of Great Britain in the close of 1795 and the beginning of 1796, was nearly as distracted, so far as public opinion went, as that of France. So violent had party spirit become, and so completely had it usurped the place of patriotism or reason, that many of the popular leaders had come to wish anxiously for the triumph of their enemies. It was no longer a simple disapprobation of the war which they felt, but a fervent desire that it might terminate to the dis- advantage of their country, and that the Republican might triumph ovei the British arms. They thought that there was no chance of parliamen- tary reform being carried, or any considerable addition to democratic power acquired, unless the ministry were deposed ; and to accomplish this object they hesitated not to betray their wish for the success of the in- veterate enemies of their country. These ill humours which were afloat during the whole of the summer of 1795, broke out into acts of open violence in the autumn of that year. These causes of discontent were increased by the high price of provisions, the natural consequence of the increased consumption and enlarged circulating medium required in the war, but which the lower orders, under the instigation of their dema* gogues, ascribed entirely to the ministry, and the crusade which they had undertaken against the liberties of mankind." ATTACK OX THE EIXG. 109 national troubles. The king it was supposed could remedy them, and did not do so, and popular vengeance sought to make the king the victim of its indignation. O'Connell was an eye-witness of this scene, and when he beard hitter reflections made, in later years, on the poor Irish peasant who attempted the life of a landlord who had deprived him of house, home, and even of the very possibility of labouring for an existence, it is little wonder that his honest heart burned with indignation when men condemned this, and lightly passed over an attempt at regicide which certainly had not the excuse of being excited by actual starvation. The attack on the king was made on the 29th of October 1795, as he was returning from Parliament. CTConnell went with a friend to St James' Park, little anticipating the extraordinary scene which he was to witness. He thus described it himself to Mr Daunt: "The carriage, sur- rounded by a noisy, angry, and excited mob, came moving Blowly along. Suddenly the glass in the royal window was smashed by some individual in the crowd, who, having read the Bible, " rendered unto Caesar the things that are Cfcesar's," by flinging a penny at His Majesty. The flash- ing sabres of the dragoons were drawn immediately, the loud voice of imperative command was ringing above the tumultuous sounds, and the dragoons, clearing their way through the huddled and scrambling multitude with bran- dished blades and curveting horses, advanced in a gallop in 110 ATTACK ON THE KING. front of the king's carriage. As the procession approached the place where O'Connell stood he pressed forward to get a sight of the king, when a dragoon made a furious slash at him, which deeply notched the tree about an inch or two above his head. Groans, hootings, and hisses filled the air, and the king's life seemed in imminent danger ; however, he got rid of his dutiful subjects, and entered St James's Palace, where he took off his robes in a wonderfully short time. He then came out at the opposite side of the palace, next Cleveland Row, and entered a coach drawn by two large black Hanoverian horses. He was subsequently driven towards Buckingham House, and just as he was passing the bottom of the Green Park, the mob tumultuously swarmed round the carriage, seized the wheels, and, with united strength and horrible vociferations, prevented their revolu- tion, though the postilions, with desperate cuts, rained showers of blows on the straining and perspiring horses. The mob seemed intent on tearing the king to pieces. Two fellows at this moment approached the carriage — the hand of one was on the door-handle in the act of opening it. Had the door opened they would doubtless have dragged the king headlong out and murdered him on the spot. At this critical juncture a tall determined-looking man thrust a pistol through the opposite window at the fellows who were going to open the door ; they shrank back, the mob rehxed their grasp on the wheels, the postilions flogged their horses, and ihe carriage went off at a gallop to Buck- O'COXXELL'S RETURX TO IRELAND. Ill ingham ITouse. Never had "king a more narrow escape. It was a terrible 806110." O'Connell returned home soon after, and some curious and characteristic anecdotes were told of his family life. For himself it is said that lie was passionately fond of field sports, and took care to make up now for lost time by double enjoyment. No doubt that hardy constitution which made him bear up under years of such mental and physical toil as few men have ever endured, was braced and invigorated by the fresh Atlantic breezes of his mountain home. His son thus describes him at this period: u Often has the writer of these pages heard him describe, in his own graphic manner, his going out before dawn, to ensure that his few hounds should have the help of the scent still lying; the feelings of the party as they crouched amid the heather, waiting for day; the larks springing all around, and the eager dogs struggling to get free from the arms that re- strained them. A wager — the only wager of Mr O'Connell's life — was successfully accomplished by him with four of these hounds ; namely, the killing of four hares in three successive days. The four hounds, in fact, ran down and killed six hares in those three days, and vaulted another — a feat which he boasts no four hounds now living could accomplish." The vice of hard drinking was not one in which the future Liberator indulged. He was temperate ; either from inclination, or from being unable to imbibe the 112 HARD DRINKING. copious potations which his companions considered almost a necessary of life. It is said that he was one of the first to break through the time-honoured rule that the door should be locked after dinner, and the key thrown out of the window until every guest had drunk to intoxication. 9 9 Tins practice was by no means confined to the wilds of Kerry, or in- deed to Ireland. At Shanes Castle, where Mrs Sid dons often took part in private theatricals, Lord Mountjoy drew up in joke a set of rules for the company, which give an amusing idea of the state of society even in the highest circles : — " Resolutions formed to promote regularity at Shanes Castle, at the meeting for the representation of ' GymbelineJ Nov. 20, 1785. " L That no noise be made during the forenoon, for fear of wakening the company. " 2. That there shall be no breakfast made after four o'clock in the afternoon, nor tea after one in the morning. "3. To inform any stranger who may come in at breakfast, that we are not at dinner. " 4. That no person be permitted to go out airing after breakfast till the moon gets up, for fear of being overturned in the dark. " 5. That the respective grooms may put up their horses after foui hours' parading before the hall-door of the Castle. "6. That there shall be one complete hour between each meal. " 7. That all the company must assemble at dinner before the cloth is removed. " 8. That supper may not be called for till five minutes after the last glass of claret. " 9. That no gentleman be permitted to drink more than three bottlea of hock at or after supper. " 10. That all M.P.'s shall assemble on post-days in the coffee-room at four o'clock to frank letters." — Cornwallis' Correspondence, vol. ii. p. 349. The free and easy style of living is as manifest from Rule 2, as the genial and general hospitality by Rule 5. CO U SIX KANE. 113 O'ConnelFs favourite place in bis uncle's house was the sideboard, where he found more freedom to indulge his jokes, and more liberty to come aud go as he pleased. A certain "Cousin Kane," who enjoyed " free quar- ters ' whenever he could get them — and when was hospi- tality ever refused in the " Green Island?' 1 — was one of the county characters. Cousin Kane had that charming facility of accommodation which satisfied itself every- where, at least fur a time ; and with his two horses and his twelve dogs, he quartered himself from week to week, now in one house and now in another, where he could, or said he could claim kin. Yet Cousin Kane's disposition does not seem to have been improved by his travels, for it is said that on one occasion there were seventy-six actions for assault and battery pending again.it him at the Tralee assizes. O'Connell offended him once by giving him whisky instead of sherry in mistake. Kane drank the whisky at a draught, and then commenced vituperating his young cousin, con- cluding his harangue by roaring in a tone of thunder, "Fill it again, sir ! " On the following morning, Kane got np at two o'clock and wakened O'Connell by his noise. "What are you about ?" said O'Connell, " the clock has only struck two." "Do you think I am to be a slave to that lying devil cf a clock ye have there? " raved Kane. " Do you think a gentleman like me is to be ruled and governed by a black- guard of a clock like that — eh ? For what would I stay in TT ATTACK OF FEVER. bed if it struck twenty-two when I cannot sleep ? " Mani- festly " Cousin Kane " would have been an ardent admirer of rule number four of the Shanes Castle code. In 1798, after O'Connell had been called to the bar, and before he went bis first circuit, his life was despaired of, in consequence of bis baving taken a violent chill, which resulted in fever. His own eagerness in the cbase was the immediate cause of this malady. His son thus records the circumstances, as related by his father : — • " Eagerness in the pursuit of this amusement bad nearly cost him bis life in the eventful year 1798 — the same in which he was called to tbe bar. After the latter occur- rence, wbich took place May 19, and before his first circuit, he proceeded, in August, to Darrynane ; and there, from a young man's imprudence in allowing wet clothes to dry on him while he slept before a peasant's fire after a hard morning's hunting, was, after the further imprudence of attempting, during a fortnight, to fight off the fierce assailant, prostrated by a most severe and dangerous typhus fever. Early in the disorder, he obtained a full conscious- ness of his danger, and retained that consciousness in the intervals of the fits of delirium, which came upon him violently and frequently. Whenever the mind was able to assert its self-control, his most constant and bitterest thought was, that he was about to die, without having been able to gratify the instinctive and innate feeling which from infancy had been uppermost in his mind — the feeling FAVOURABLE CRISIS. of craving, that it might be his lot to do something- for Ireland ; and it is a curious fact that, in his ravings, he was constantly heard repeating the following lines from the tragedy of Douglas : — 1 Unknown, I die ; no tongue shall speak of me: Some noble spirits, judging by themselves, May yet conjecture what I might have proved, And think lite only wanting to my fame ! ' " An affecting incident marked the turn of the disorder. When, as he felt himself, and as he appeared to others, he was falling into his agony, his head had slipped from the pillow, and death would have been accelerated by the position, a cousin of his, who was present, raised him and supported him in her arms. While for a moment revived by this, his father came to the bedside, and, after contem- plating him for a moment with agonised feelings, addressed him with 6 Dan, don't you know me?' As with the last effort of nature, the son pressed the father's hand, in token of affectionate recognition ; and, with the effort, the fell di-ease, that had so long been triumphant, seemed to be, for the first time, arrested — the crisis arrived, twenty-four hours' tfleep followed, and thenceforth began, and steadily continued, the restoration of health." During the same illness, Napoleon's successful march to Alexandria was mentioned in his presence. The acute mind, which at once grasped the impossibilities, as well as the possibilities of any plan, political or social, at one* FIRST VISIT TO DUBLIN. asserted itself. " 6 That is impossible/ said the patient; i lie cannot have done so — they would have been starved.' 'Oh, no,' replied the doctor; ' they bad a quantity of portable soup, sufficient to feed the army for four days.' 4 Ay,' replied O'Connell, 6 but had they portable water? For their portable soup would be of little use without the water to dissolve it.' The medical gentleman, glancing hopefully at the mother, said, in a low and satisfied tone, 4 His intellect at any rate is untouched.' " O'Connell went to Dublin in the year 1797, probably with a view to further preparation for being called to the bar, possibly with the intention of making friends who might serve him in his new career. It would appear to have been his first visit to the Irish metropolis; — under how many different phases he must have seen it afterwards, under how many different circumstances he must have entered it ! He had witnessed the assembling of an Eng- lish parliament, he has now to witness the last debates of the Irish house. In England he had heard Pitt, and Fox, and Burke ; l in Dublin, he heard Grattan and Flood. In England he had seen the king attacked in open da} 1 He spoke for the last time on the 20th of June 1794 His brothel Richard died during this year, and his death inflicted a deep blow on the sensitive heart of the great Irishman. "Dick" was indeed a uni- versal favourite. Every one loved him in the Ballitore Quaker school, where he waa educated ; and if he was " wished full ten times a day at old Nick," not indeed by his friends, who would scarcely pardon such CA USES OF THE REBELLION. 117 by liis own subjects, and only saved from an instant and terrible deatli by a military escort. In Ireland lie was to be a witness tc secret rebellion, and even to be personally compromised in it. The state of Ireland at that period was certainly alarm- ing, and has been unfortunately but too little understood. The broad outlines of contemporary history are indeed familiar tv, all educated persons. The manner in which the Irish rebellion was — shall we say encouraged, or excited by English statesmen ? — is admitted, because it cannot be denied, by some English historians ; the fraud and force by which the Union was effected is known equally well, but not, perhaps, generally believed. Nevertheless the real causes and the real effects of the rebellion and of the Union have scarcely met with the consideration they deserve, though the subject is one which deserves and would repay a careful study. Lord Townsend's administration had thoroughly debased the Irish parliament. It has been taken for granted, because the Irish Parliament was composed of persons who profanity, but by the poet who sings his praise, he was as surely wished back agaj&. " "What spirits were his, what art and what whim, Now breaking a jest and now breaking a limb ! In short, so ] eculiar a devil was Dick, That we wished him well ten times a day at old Nick, Eut missing his mirth and agreeable vein, As often we wished to have Dick back again." 118 THE IRISH PARLIAMENT. lived, at least, part of their lives in Ireland, that it repre^ rented Irish feeling. It is true, indeed, that there were a few men in it from time to time who were incorruptible and independent, who had Irish interests, and who would make sacrifices for them ; but the great majority had no interest in Ireland. It was indeed the country from whence they drew their rents, and which supplied them with their income, but they were aliens from the people in religion and in affection. English interest was still the ruling motive of every enactment of this so-called Irish Parliament ; and yet, because the Parliament was Irish, because it had an Irish element in it, Ireland prospered during its later years, as Ireland had never prospered before. Still the one fatal policy prevailed, and the one fatal principle was carried out. Ireland was not treated as an integral part of the British Empire. Her interests were not even considered for a moment, and if they were con- sidered, it was only that they might be treated as some- thing absolutely inimical to English prosperity. It was a curious policy, it was an unwise policy, it was a fatal policy. If one-half the money which was spent in repressing Trish rebellions had been spent in promoting Irish industry, there would have been no rebellions to repress, and Eng- land might have enriched herself, instead of adding a heavy item to her national debt, and throwing an additional weight of obloquy on her national character. CHARLES I. AXD HIS IRISH SUBJECTS. 119 But in considering this period of Irish history, Irishmen have sometimes forgotten that the English House of Com- mons was quite as venal as that which sat in Dublin. The English nation had been for years, indeed since the very first hour of its intercourse with Ireland, educated and imbued with an anti-Irish feeling. Even Charles L dared not repeal Povning's Act, though, by so doing, he had at least a chance of saving himself from his English subjects by conciliating his Irish subjects. He took in the full extent of his position. The Irish were Irish aud nothing more. He may not, indeed, have deliberately selected to be murdered by his English subjects in preference to being defended by his Irish subjects ; but undoubtedly he weighed the matter carefully, and practically he concluded that, though the Irish might be his faithful subjects, they were very powerless to protect him against his rebellious sub- jects, while there was not one but thousands of Crom- wells in England. Charles L was right ; he might be spared by these blood-thirsty men, but if he sought protec- tion from his Irish subjects, these men would effect their end sooner or later, and involve him and his defenders in one common ruin. The conditions of Irish political life before the close 01 the last century were sufficiently ominous, but the condi- tions at the close of that century are without parallel in the annals of history. The American war, or rather the evident probability that 120 GOVERNMENT MEN. the American war would be successful, first roused up the English mind to the necessity, for its own sake, of doing something for Ireland. The problem then became how to do as little as possible ; unwillingness to do that little made it be done as ungraciously as possible. When you fling a trifling alms to a relation whom you have systematically defrauded, because you fear he may now have it in his power to retaliate, you can scarcely expect him to over- whelm you with gratitude, or to forget past wrongs. Yet the Irish are constantly reproached with being the most ungrateful people on the earth because they do not go into ecstasies of thankfulness for the smallest instalment of justice. Neither individuals nor nations are to be respected who sacrifice their personal dignity. The American war thus created a necessity for justice, and on the 10th of November 1773, leave was given to bring in a bill to secure the repayment of money that should be lent by Papists to Protestants on mortgages of land, and to show the extra condescension of this act of very accurate legal justice, of justice which one might suppose could not be denied by one man to another, the bill was brought in by Mr Mason, Sir Lucius O'Brien, and Mr Langrishe, who were " government men." It might be supposed that any body of educated men would pass the bill, but it was not passed. Leave was also given to bring in a bill to allow Papists to take leases of houses and of lands. It might be supposed CATHOLICS BRITISH SUBJECTS. 121 that at the close of the eighteenth century such a hill would certainly pass. It was rejected also.* American affairs began to look still more threatening, and on the oth of March 1774, leave was given to Lri:._ in a bill to permit Catholic subjects to testify their allegiance to their sovereign. This bill was passed, and the Irish historian Plowden says : " It gratified the Catholics, inas- much as it was a formal recognition that they were sub- ject?, and to this recognition they looked up as to the corner- stone of their future emancipation. " Emigration to America had already begun. Had there been greater facilities the emigration would have been greater. What indeed were men to do who were neither allowed to live nor to labour, and who were noc recognised even as subjects until now — who were, even after this pitiful recognition, treated virtually as rebels even in time of peace ? 3 * The animus which existed in all classes of Engli sh is strongly shuwn in some of George III.'s letters. He writes thus to Lord North on March 29, 1776 : " I have, both in the times of Lord Hertford and of Lord Townshend, declined making Irish marquises, and I have not in the lea3t changed my opinion on that subject, I am heartily sick of Lord Harcouii s mode of trying step by step to draw me to fulfil his absurd requests. I desire I may hear no more of Irish marquises ; I feel for the English earls, and do not choose to disgust them.'' — Correspondence of Georye 111., voL iL p. 16. It was the same principle of making a dis- tinction betweer. English and Irish subjects which made James L cry out. " Spare my English subjects," when the Irish were fighting for him to the death. 3 We find George IIL writing in a specially contemptuous Style of nil 122 THE REBELLION A PROTESTANT MOVEMENT How completely the rebellion of 1798 was a Protestant movement has never been clearly understood. It is true, indeed, the great mass of those who rose were Catholics, but that was simply because the Catholics formed an over- whelming majority of the population. The leaders were Protestants ; and how this came about we shall proceed to show. Trade was permitted spasmodically in the north of Ireland, because the people in the north of Ireland were principally Protestants, and were many of them of Scotch and French descent. But this by no means saved them from the ill-judged, miserable policy of their English rulers. The volunteer movement began in Belfast, and Cork, which American subjects, until they proclaimed their independence. In a letter dated July 4, 1774, lie writes very boldly of "compulsion;''' the English " lyons " however got the worst of it : — " Since you left me this day, I have seen Lieutenant-General Gage, who came to express bis readiness, though so lately come from America, to return at a day'a notice, if the conduct of the Colonies should induce the directing coercive measures. His language was very consonant to his character of an honest determined man. He says they will be lyons whilst we are lambs ; but, if we take the resolute part, they will undoubtedly prove very meek. He thinks the four regiments intended to relieve as many regiments in America, if sent to Boston, are sufficient to prevent any dis- turbance. I wish you would see him, and hear his ideas as to the mode of compelling Boston to submit to whatever may be thought necessary ; indeed, all men seem now to feel that the fatal compliance in 1766 has encouraged the Americans annually to increase in their pretensions to that thorough independency which one state has of another, but which is quite subversive of the obedience which a colony owes to its mothe* country." — Correspondence, vol. i. p. 36. JEALOUSY OF IRISH TRADE. 123 was then an ukra-Protestant city, supplied two of the lead* ing spirits of the rebellion in the persons of the Shearses. BotiiCurk and Belfast suflfered most severely from English law=, made to restrain, or, to speak more accurately, to ruin Irish trade.* * Sir William Temple wrote thus in 1673 : <; Regard must be had to those points wherein the trade of Ireland comes to interfere with that of England, in which case the Irish trade ought to be declined, so as to give way to the trade of England." A pamphlet on trade, published in London. 1727, apologises for op- posing what it states as u the universally received opinion that it were better for England if Ireland were no more ! " And the writer grounds this opposition on his conviction that such are Ireland's natural advan- tages for commerce, that her trade would increase greatly if the restric- tions then existing were taken off ; and the consequence would be, that "the drafts of England upon her would be increased, and the greater part of Ireland's gains by trade would centre in England ! 9 Anderson, in his k * History of Commerce." openly declares the English jealousy of Irish commercial enterprise. Coonibe, who continued An- derson's work, comments with rather too considerate, but still a decided tone of censure, on the oppressive and tyrannous line of conduct adopted in consequence of that jealousy. Arthur Young, in 1776, wrote thus : " British legislation, on all oc- casions, controlled Irish commerce with a very high hand — universaLy on the principle of monopoly, as if the poverty of Ireland were her wealth Pitt in 1735 bore the same testimony ; and again in 1799. On the latter occasion, he said : " Ireland long felt the narrow policy of Great Britain, who, influenced by views of commercial advantage, and stained with selfish motives, never looked on her prosperity as that of the empire at large." Mr Huskissou, in 1S25, added his testimony to the same effect : — u Till 1780 the agriculture, internal industry, manufactures, commerce, and navigation of Ireland, were held in the most rigid subserviency to the supposed interests of Great Britain. In 1776 there was a proposal zq 124 THE VOLUNTEER MOVEMENT. In 1759 the Belfast people were obliged to arm them- selves in self-defence, and the English Government was obliged to permit, and even to encourage this movement, to prevent the French landing in Ireland. Three companies of volunteers were formed, and the spirit of the Irish was roused for the first time during the past half century. Volunteer companies started up everywhere, but this ar« rangement did not suit the English Government. It is true, indeed, that these volunteers were all Protestants, but Protestants were quite as likely to use their arms against oppression as Catholics, and even more so. The Lord- Lieutenant was requested to put down the movement, but it was not easy to do so. In 1779, when Protestant discontent became still more formidable, the Lord-Lieutenant wrote to Lord Weymouth on this subject :— "The seizing their arms would, therefore, be a violent expedient; and the preventing them from assembling, without a military force, impracticable ; for when the civil magistrate will rarely attempt to seize an offender suspected of the most enormous crimes, and when convicted, convey him to the place of execution without soldiers, — nay, when, in many instances, persons cannot let her import sugar direct, and export all but woollens, to pay for it ; and this proposal was almost made a question of allegiance by the great towns of Great Britain, and so lost ! But towards the close of that year the disasters in America, and the state of things in Ireland, produced a different feeling in the British Parliament. State necessities, acting under a sense of political danger, yielded, without grace, that which good sens* and goodfieling had before recommended in vain 1" IRISH GRIEVAXCES. 125 be put into possession of their property, nor, being possessed, maintain it without such assistance, — there is little presumption in asserting that unless bodies of troops be universally dispersed, nothing can be done to effect." Nevertheless the Irish Protestants were so infatuated, or so ignorant, as not to see that their true interest lay in union with the Catholics, that a nation divided against itself could no more prosper than a divided family. In May 1778, a hill was brought in to permit Catholics to hold land, and was fiercely petitioned against by the Protestant party. It was necessary, however, for Govern- ment to conciliate the Catholics, so the bill passed by a small majority. But nothing was done for the benefit of trade. Poverty and destitution reigned supreme. Ireland was forbidden commerce, was obliged to pay tithes to a Church which she abhorred, and to support the priests of her own religion. She was compelled to pay taxes for the maintenance of a military force to compel her to remain silent under her cruel wrongs, and to support an army for the subjugation of the only country from which she had any hope of redress. England began to be alarmed. There were certainly 6ome few men of the realm with sufficient common sense to gee the fatuity of the present course of Irish government ; amongst the number were Lord Newhaven and the Marquis of Rockingham. Lord Temple, who held the unenviable post of Lord-Lieu- 126 "FREE TRADE— OR THIS." tenant in Ireland, proposed a committee to inquire into the distress of the nation. Bat the nation was tired of pro- mises, and on the 4th of November 1778, the volunteers paraded Dublin. They had two field-pieces with them, and bearing a significant inscription — " Free Trade — or this." The result was that an act allowing free trade between Ireland and the British Colonies received the royal assent on the 24th of July 1780. This concession was obtained merely by the physical force argument of the volunteers. On the 24th of November 1779, Grattan moved in the House of Commons that it was then inexpedient to grant new taxes. Ireland was plunged in the deepest and most abject poverty through no fault of her own, and England asked new subsidies from this nation which she had herself deprived of all means of enrichment! The motion was carried by a majority of over one hundred; and on the following day the opposition resolved, by a majority of one hundred and thirty-eight to one hundred, that the new duties should be for six months only. Dar- ing the debate, when Mr Brough the prime serjeant ex- claimed, " Talk not to me of peace. Ireland is not in a state of peace, it is> smothered over," — the house, thrilled io the core, rose in a body to cheer him. 5 Certainly there was 6 Life of Grattan, vol. i. ch. 17 ; Memoirs of the Court of George III. G RATTAN, 127 some public spirit in Ireland then, and the man who evoked that spirit, who gave it body and active life, was Grattan. His lather had been recorder of Dublin for many years, and he was therefore initiated into Irish politics from his very childhood. He was endowed by nature with great gifts of eloquence, and with that noble spirit of justice without which eloquence is a curse, for it only leads men, not indeed to admire, but to practise tyranny. During his early life he spent much of his time at Marley Abbey, the residence of his uncle, where he learned to admire the writ- ings of Swift, and in some degree imbibed their spirit. Grattan entered Parliament as member for Lord Chavie mont's borough of Charlemont, situated on the borders of Armagh and Tyrone. He was then in his thirtieth year. Whatever may be said of electoral intimidation in the pre- sent age, of close or open, of rotten or honest, of saleable or unsaleable boroughs, there is nothing even faintly approach- ing the state of parliamentary representation at the close of the eighteenth century. The process of election was simple, juid, after all, it had the merit of simplicity. The lord of the soil was the lord of the tenants parliamentary conscience. There was no doubt about the matter — no question about the matter. He sent down the candidate of his choice ; whether that choice was directed by political or pecuniary motives, mattered little. It was nothing to the free and independent electors certainly. They knew their duty, and f.28 "NO IRISH NEED APPLY." they did it. If the}' failed God might help them, but there was no help from man. To have granted the lord of the soil the unlimited right of returning a member for his borough, would have saved a good deal of trouble, a good deal of expense, and a good deal of bitterness, but the arrangement does not seem to have been thought of, and certainly it would have looked unconstitutional. After all there is nothing like making a sham look legal and respectable. Men like Grattan got into Parliament now and then, when there were men like Lord Charlemont to nominate them ; but there were not many Lord Charlemonts in Ireland, and certainly there were not many Grattans. Lord Charlemont's conversion to Irish nationality, such as it was, arose from an open expression of English con- tempt for Irish peeresses. The whole affair is curious and instructive. A grand procession of peers and peeresses was arranged to meet the unfortunate Princess Caroline, but, before the Princess landed, the Duchess of Bedford was commanded to inform the Irish peeresses that they were neither to walk nor take any part in the procession. It was carrying out the trite saying, " No Irish need apply," in high life. This might be done with impunity and with approbation where the lower classes of Irish were concerned, but the peeresses resented it. Lord Charlemont had spent seven years abroad, and was not accustomed to the unedifying LORD CH A RL EM ON T. 129 spectacle of a nation divided against itself — of one half of the body politic despising the other half. He warmly resented the insult, and by his efforts obtained a reversal of the order. But he did not forget it. For a time at least he took part with the oppressed nation to which he be- longed, but it was only for a time. The tide of public opinion in his own rank in life set strongly against him. Neither Ireland nor Irish politics were fashionable. It was well to be a peer certainly, even though he might be an Irish peer; but the less Irish he appeared, the more he would be respected by his fellows. What indeed were popular laudations in comparison with the approbation of his own immediate circle ? On the 27th of March 17S2, Charles Sheridan wrote thus to his brother Richard : — " As to our politics here, I send you a newspaper ; read the resolutions of the volunteers, and you will be enabled to form some idea of the spirit which pervades the country. A declara- tion of the dependency of our Parliament upon yours will cer- tainly pass our House of Commons immediately after the recess. Government here dare not, cannot oppose it : you will see the volunteers have pledged their lives and fortunes in support of the measure, the grand juries of every county have followed their example, and some of the staunchest friends of Government have been, much against their inclination, compelled to sign the most epirited resolutions.'' 6 The volunteer movement, as we have said, began in 6 Life of G rattan, vol. ii. p. 214. I 130 SPIRIT OF THE VOLUNTEERS. Belfast; when the necessity was over, the corps were dis- banded; but they refused in 1778, when there were again reports and fears of a French invasion. Id January 1779, Lord Charlemont assumed the com- mand of the Armagh volunteers. The Government did not like it. They had a choice of evils. Protection against a foreign foe was needed, but there were grave fears lest the protectors against a foreign foe might turn out domestic enemies. The English were thoroughly aware of the state of Irish feeling, though they took no pains to reconcile it. In May 1779, Lord Rockingham wrote thus to Lord Weymouth :— " Upon receiving official intimation that the enemy meditated an attack upon the northern parts of Ireland, the inhabitants of Belfast and Carrickfergus, as Government could not immediately afford a greater force for their protection than about sixty troopers, armed themselves, and by degrees formed themselves into two or three companies ; the spirit diffused itself into different parts of the kingdom, and the numbers became considerable, but in no degree to the amount represented. Discouragement has, however, been given on my part, as far as might be without offence, at a crisis when the arm and good-will of every individual might have been wanting for the defence of the state." The volunteers were in fact working up the country with a steady energy, with a quiet determination, that must have been terribly embarrassing to the Government. Those who thought at all, who looked ever so little beyond the narrow sphere of their self-interest, asked themselves what would be the end of all this ? SPIRITED RESOLUTIONS. 131 It was impossible to raise a " No Popery !'* cry against them, however desirable, for tliey were all Protestants, end, being Protestants, though they were Irish, they could scarcely be shot down like dogs. Moreover, the}" were headed by men of high respectability, by men of rank and position. "When they met at Dungannon, on the 15th of February 1782, Colonel Irvine took the chair, and the following are but a few of the names of those who signed the resolutions: — Viscount Enniskillen, Colonel Mervyn Archdall, Colonel William Irvine, Colonel Robert M ; Clintock, Colonel John Ferguson, Colonel John Mont- gomery, Colonel Charles Leslie, Colonel Francis Lucas, Colonel Thomas M. Jones, Colonel James Hamilton, Colonel Andrew Thomson, Lieutenant-Colonel C. Nesbitt, Lieutenant-Colonel A. Stewart, Major James Patterson, Major Francis Dobbs, Major James M'Clintock. The following are some of the resolutions ; we do not give them all, because of their length, our present object being merely to give a general outline of the state of Ireland when O'Connell commenced his public career : — " Whereas, it has been asserted that volunteers, as such, can- not with propriety debate, or publish their opinions on political subjects, or on the conduct of Parliament or political men. " Resolved, unanimously, That a citizen by learning the use of arms does not abandon any of his civil rights. M Resolved, unanimously, That a claim of any body of men, other than the King, Lords, and Commons of Ireland, to make 132 A NEW DISCOVERY. laws to bind this kingdom, is unconstitutional, illegal, and a grievance. " Resolved, with one dissenting voice only, That the powers exercised by the Privy Councils of both kingdoms, under, or under colour or pretence of, the law of Poyning's, are unconstitutional, and a grievance. " Resolved, unanimously, That the ports of this country are by right open to all foreign countries not at war with the king ; and that any burden thereupon, or obstruction thereto, save only by the Parliament of Ireland, is unconstitutional, illegal, and a grievance. 11 Resolved, with two dissenting voices only to this and the following resolution, That we hold the right of private judgment, in matters of religion, to be equally sacred in others as ourselves. " Resolved, therefore, That as men and as Irishmen, as Chris* tians and as Protestants, we rejoice in the relaxation of the penal laws against our Roman Catholic fellow-subjects, and that we conceive the measure to be fraught with the happiest conse- quences to the union and prosperity of the inhabitants of Ireland." The two last resolutions are noteworthy. For the first time Protestants seem to have obtained some glimmering light on the subject of religious liberty. It was a new discovery ; yet one should think it ought to have been an established axiom, that " the right of private judgment in religious matters," if it existed at all, must exist equally for all. The relaxation of the penal code was but a neces- sary consequence of this conclusion ; the entire removal of every disability — social, political, or domestic — would be but the natural end. Burke thus describes the pitiful concessions which were ON RELAXING THE PENAL CODE. 133 the result. His observations might be studied with advan- tage even at the present day. Liberal-minded, or to speak more correctly, large-minded Protestants need to be re- minded of Ireland's past grievances, of the terrible strug- gles which she was obliged to make in order to obtain even the most trifling act of justice. Those who are prejudiced might perhaps lessen their prejudice, if they have not sulti- cient intellect to discard them by studying the argu- ment of one of England's most famous senators, though his birth was Irish : — " To look at the bill in the abstract, it is neither more nor less than a renewed act of universal, unmitigated, indispensable, ex- ceptionless disqualification. One would imagine that a bill in- flicting such a multirude of incapacities, had followed on the heels of a conquest made by a very fierce enemy, under the impression of recent animosity and resentment. No man, on reading that bill, could imagine that he was reading an act of amnesty and indulgence. This I say on memory. It recites the oath, and that Catholics ought to be considered as good and loyal subjects to his majesty, his crown, and government; then follows a uni- versal exclusion of those good and loyal subjects from every, even the lowest office of trust and profit, or from any vote at an election ; from any privilege in a town corporate ; from being even a freeman of such corporations ; from serving on grand juries ; from a vote at a vestry ; from having a gun in his house ; from being a barrister, attorney, solicitor, &c, &c, &c. " This has surely more of the air of a table of proscriptions than an act of grace. What must we suppose the laws concern- ing those good subjects to have been of which this is a relaxa tion ? VVh^n a very great portion of the labour of individual goes to the State, and is by the State again refunded to iniU« 134 $ RATTAN ON THE PENAL CODE. viduals through the medium of offices, and in this circuitous pro* gress from the public to the private fund, indemnifies the families from whom it is taken, an equitable balance between the Govern- ment and the subject is established. But if a great body of the people who contribute to this State lottery, are excluded from all the prizes, the stopping the circulation with regard to them must be a most cruel hardship, amounting in effect to being double and treble taxed, and will be felt as such to the very quick by all the families, high and low, of those hundreds of thousands who are denied their chance in the returned fruits of their own industry. This is the thing meant by those who look on the public revenue only as a spoil ; and will naturally wish to have as few as possi- ble concerned in the division of the booty. If a State should be so unhappy as to think it cannot subsist without such a barbarous proscription, the persons so proscribed ought to be indemnified by the remission of a large part of their taxes, by an immunity from the offices of public burden, and by an exemption from being pressed into any military or naval service. Why are Catholics excluded from the law ? Do not they expend money in their suits ? Why may not they indemnify themselves by profit- ing in the persons of some for the losses incurred by others ? Why may they not have persons of confidence, whom they may, if they please, employ in the agency of their affairs? The ex- clusion from the law, from grand juries, from sheriffships, under- sheriffships, as well as from freedom in any corporation, may subject them to dreadful hardships, as it may exclude them wholly from all that is beneficial, and expose them to all that is mischievous in a trial by jury." Grattan exclaimed — " So long as the penal code remains, we never can be a great nation : the penal code is the shell in which the Protestant power has been hatched, and now it is become a bird, it must burst the shell asunder, or perish in it. I give my consent to the LORD ClIARLEMOST'S LETTER. 135 clause in its principle, extent, and boldness, and give my consent to it as the most likely means of obtaining a victory over the prejudices of Catholics, and over our own. I give my consent to it, because I would not keep two millions of my fellow-subjects in a state of slavery ; and because, as the mover of the Declaration of Bights, I should be ashamed of giving freedom to but six hundred thousand of my countrymen, when I could extend it to two millions more." The state of Ireland was causing general alarm in Eng- land. Lord Charlemont wrote to Mr Fox the bold words : " / am an Irishman; I pride myself in the appellation." 1 The 7 "We give a considerable portion of Lord Charlemont's letter. The original may be found both in Hardy's " Life of Lord Charlemont," and in the Fox Correspondence : — M Dublin', nth April, 1782. "No man can be more rejoiced than I am at this late happy, though tardy, change, I rejoice in it as a friend to individuals, but more espe- cially as a member of the empire at large, which will probably be indebted to it for its salvation. I hope also, and doubt not, that I shall have reason to rejoice in it as an Irishman, for I cannot conceive that they who are intent upon the great work of restoring the empire, should not be ardently attentive to the real welfare of all its parts ; or that true Whigs, genuine lovers of liberty, whose principles I know, honour, and 6trive to imitate, should not wish to diffuse this invaluable blessing through every part of those dominions whose interests they are called o\ na to administer. The appointment of the Duke of Portland, and of his secretary, is a <;ood presage. I know and respect their principles, ami should be truly unhappy if anything in their conduct respecting this country should prevent my perfect co-operation with them For, my dear sir, with every degree of affection for our sister kingdom, with every regard for the interests of the empire at large, I am an Irishman ; I pride myself in the appellation, and will in every particular act as such, at the same time declaring that I most sincerely and heartily concur with you in thinking that the interests of England and of Ireland can- 136 KINDLING OF NATIONAL SPIRIT. volunteers were feared certainly, but the spirit which the volunteers had evoked was feared, and should have been feared a great deal more. Irishmen had been so long treated as inferiors, that they had begun to acquiesce in this treatment, passively at least. Their new assertion that they were men who had rights, their new perception that it needed only a little force, moral and physical, to obtain these rights, roused the spirit of the nation. Mr Fox discovered very clearly some of the evils of Irish not be distinct ; and that, therefore, in acting as an Irishman, I may always hope to perform the part of a true Englishman also. " I have shown your letter to Grattan, and he is much gratified by your friendly opinion of him. We are both of us precisely of the same mind. "We respect and honour the present administration. We adore the principle on which it is founded. We look up to its members with the utmost confidence for their assistance in the great work of general free- dom, and should be happy in our turn to have it in our power to support them in Ireland in the manner which may be most beneficial to them, and most honourable to us ; consulted but not considered. The people at large must indeed entertain a partiality for the present ministers. True Whigs must rejoice at the prevalence of Whiggish principles. The nation wishes to support the favourers of American freedom, the men who opposed the detested, the execrated American war. Let our rights be acknowledged and secured to us — those rights which no man can con- trovert, but which to a true Whig are self-evident — and that nation, those lives and fortunes which are now universally pledged for the emancipation of our country, will be as cheerfully, as universally pledged for the defence of our sister kingdom, and for the support of an adminis- tration which will justly claim the gratitude of a spirited and grateful people, by having contributed to the completion of all their wishes. — I am, &c, " Charlemont." AN IRRESPONSIBLE GOVERNMENT. 137 administration. He wrote thus to Mr Fitzpatrick, who was chief secretary, on the 13th April 1782 : — " He [the Duke of Leinster] describes the want of concert and oystem which comes from the want of such a tiling [a cabinet] to he very detrimental in every respect, and particularly in parlia- mentary operations, where those who wish to support Government often do not know till the moment what is the plan proposed, and consequently are wholly unable to support it either system- atically or effectually. Another great inconvenience, which he attributes to this want, is that the Lord-Lieutenant, not having any regular ministry to apply to, is driven, or at least led, to con- sult Lees and such sort of inferior people, and by that means the whole power is (as it was here) centered in the Jenkinsons and Ro- binsons, &c., of that country. Nobody is responsible but the Lord- Lieutenant and his secretary ; they know they are to go away, and consequently all the mischiefs ensue that belong to a govern* ment without responsibility. I have not talked with anybody upon this, nor indeed had time to think it over myself, but it really strikes me as a matter very well worth weighing, ami I wish the Duke of Portland and you would turn your minds to it, especially if, as I take for granted, this idea was suggested to the Duke of Leinster by other considerable men on your side of the water. I have only stated it to you as it strikes me, upon first hearing the thing broached."* It was an old story. The Lord-Lieutenant merely looked on his post as a place of emolument or a dignity. Ireland was nothing to him. How should it be, when his residence in that country might terminate at any moment, when he ■ Correspondence of Cliarles James Fox, vol. i p. 387. — The editor of that work observes : " It is ciftious to see the question of ' responsible government' started in Ireland more than half a century before it waa a watchword in Canada'' 138 A WARNING. had no power to do good if he wished, and would have even scant thanks from his masters for doing it had he been able ? The position was anything but a pleasant one. We shall see later on what another viceroy thought on the subject. At this time there was undoubtedly a system of espionage. Letters were opened, it was said, by the crea- tures of the late administration. Mr Fitzpatrick wrote to Mr Fox to warn him : — " Dublin Castle, April VWi, 1782. " Dear Charles, — I shall begin my letter with giving you a caution concerning the communication of its contents too generally on your side of the water, and with another, respecting the con- fidential letters you write me, which you had better never trust to the post, as we have the misfortune of being here in the hands of the tools of the last Government, and there is every reason tn suspect that our letters may be opened before they reach us. 1 wish you, therefore, to trust them only in the hands of mes- sengers." 9 9 There are some amusing remarks about Grattan in this letter : " P>ut what appears to me the worst of all is, that unless the heat of the volun- teers subsides, I dread Grattan's. For though everybody seems to agree that he is honest, I am sure he is an enthusiast, and impracticable as the most impracticable of our friends in the Westminster Committee. His situation is enough to turn the head of any man fond of popular applause, but the brilliancy of it can only subsist by carrying points in opposition to Government ; and though he chose to make a comparison yesterday between Ireland and America, giving the preference to his own country, I confess I think the wise, temperate, systematic conduct of the other, if adopted by Ireland, would bring all these di fficulties to a very short and happy conclusion, to the satisfaction and advantage of POST-OFFICE ESPIOXAGE. 139 On the 19th of July 1783, Lord Temple wrote a similar complaint to Mr Beresford : — M It is probable that this letter will share the fate which many others have experienced, and as I do not mean to write for the information of the post-office, I will only say that I still take that eager interest in the government of Ireland which will make me cordially rejoice in the success of a wise and temperate govern- ment ; but I have not the smallest objection to the publication of my opinion, that as far as your administration depends upon English ministers, it will not be wise, temperate, or consistent, and that every scene to which I have been a witness since my arrival in England has confirmed me in my opinions, under which I resigned the government, which I could not hold with advan- tage to the empire and honour to myself." On the 13th of October 1783, he wrote : — u The shameful liberties taken with my letters, both sent and received (for even the Speaker's letter to me had been opened), make me cautious on politics ; but you, who know me, will be- lieve that I am most deeply anxious for the events of this Irish session, and with every disposition to loathe and execrate our English ministry, even with the certainty that their measures, their abilities, and their intentions are little proportioned to the exigencies of the State, I am still too warmly anxious for the peace and unity of the empire not to wish to Government in Ireland every success in the arduous task of this winter." It was no wonder that Ireland was discontented. The both parties. Lord Shelburne's speech gives great satisfaction here, and probably it' there had been any chance of soothing this country into moderation, would have done infinite mischief. It is curious enough that "while he is recommending us to support the authority of England more than we either can or, I think, ought to do, he should be declaring in the House of Lords that the claims of Ireland must be acceded to." 140 IRISH GRIEVANCES. private correspondence of the times between those who pro- fessed to govern her, afford ample evidence that while they disagreed totally as to how she should be governed, they agreed thoroughly that she should not be allowed a voice in her own government ; above all, that she should not be allowed prosperity, commercial or otherwise. Men asked in one breath, " What did Ireland want? and what were her grievances ? " but when she told them, they were flung aside with contempt, or silenced by force. If any man dared to speak for her, and boldly proclaim her wrongs, he was a malcontent; if any man ventured to suggest physical force, he was a rebel. America was quoted to her quite as a model theoretically, but practi- cally we all know the result when she attempted to follow this example. The truth was, England did not choose to listen. What were the most cogent arguments to her, when she had formed her resolve, and did not intend to alter it ? Grattan told her in plain, clear, unmisrepresentable language what Ireland did not want, and what she did want. She did not want "a foreign judicature ; " English rule in Ireland was no better. The Englishmen who ruled Ireland did not consider it their home, much less did they consider it their fatherland, which they should honour, for whose prosperity they should work, heart and soul. The one question with them was, not what will benefit Ireland, but what will benefit England. When an act of the commonest SCORX OF IRISH DEMASDS. 141 justice was proposed for Ireland, the first observation was not, We must grant it — it is justice : but, Will it ever in the least interfere with English interests? This is no mere assertion. There is ample proof of it. Ireland was told to be " reasonable," which meant that she was to be thankful for such little permission to trade as certainly could not divert a ship-load of any manufac- ture from England, even by the remotest possibility. If concessions were asked, the petition was quietly shelved. If they were demanded, it was considered an insult, and an ample reason for refusing them. If the interests of a great realm were not concerned, if the interests of men who were equals were not con- cerned, one could afford to smile at such folly. It was a schoolboy axiom carried out by great men in politi- cal life. If you will not ask, how can we know what you want? if you do ask, be assured you shall not get what you ask. There was evermore something wrong in that which was asked for, or in the manner of the asking. Practically it mattered little, for the result was just the same. 1 1 Sir Richard Heron wrote thus to Mr Robinson from Dublin Castle on the 20th August 1779 : " The unusual sum of money now wanted, the low state of the revenue, and the general distress of the kingdom, considered together, give great reason to apprehend a very difficult ses- sion. It will, however, be my Lord-Lieutenant's utmost endeavour that the affairs of this kingdom may embarrass his Majesty and his British servants a? little as possible." — Beresford Corresponde?ice, vol. i. p. 47. 142 A PUZZLE PAST COMPREHENSION. Meanwhile the state of the country was becoming daily worse. Ireland was to be allowed only the " gleanings " 1 of commerce, though her worst enemies admitted she could not live on them ; she was to be " reasonable," 3 though the same persons declared the kingdom was in such a dis- tress, it " puzzled 4 all [English] comprehension" what it might do. 2 " Ireland is certainly a great kingdom ; but the idea of its supporting, upon the gleanings of commerce (for such only it can carry on during a war), its continual drains to Great Britain, and a military establishment sufficient to defend itself, is certainly ill-founded. Prepare, therefore, to give handsomely, but upon proper terms, some material extension of their commerce. Whatever commerce this kingdom carries on legally will prejudice yours less than their carrying it on, as they have hitherto done, illicitly." — Letter of Sir Richard Heron to Mr Robinson, August 20, 1779. 3 " That no extension (by trade) of any value can be given without the exertion of Government, nor without occasioning great discontent in many parts of England ; and, therefore, unless Ireland is likely to be satisfied with reasonable extensions, they may be assured his Majesty's servants will preserve good-humour at home by not giving their suppwi t to any, and that the gentlemen of this country will have the ill humours they excite to pacify, or the kingdom will go into a state of confusion, which cannot but have very serious consequences to all gentlemen who possess property here." — Beresford Correspondence, vol. i. p. 50. 4 " This kingdom is in such a state as puzzles all comprehension as to what it may do : a multitude of idlers miserably poor ; a debt, small as it is, without a shilling to pay interest ; the skeleton of a force not in his Majesty's service, which it may be difficult to deal, or madness to meddle with ; taxes to be imposed, and no material for imposition ; a great deal of ignorance ; a great deal of prejudice ; a most over- grown hierarchy, and a most oppressed peasantry ; property by some late determinations of the Lords upon covenants for perpetual renewals of leases very much set at sea, and no means to a multitude of families WHAT IRELAXD DID XOT WAXT. 143 Ireland did not want a " foreign judicature." She wanted an impartial administration, and that could not be given to her by men whose one idea was not justice, but English interests. She did not want a " legis- lative Privy Council," nor a " perpetual army." The " perpetual army" for which she was compelled to pay to supply its place ; rents fallen, and a general disposition to riot and mischief."— Letter from the Attorney-General to Mr Robinson, dated Har- court Street, Dublin, April 13, 1779. The Attorney-General was created Earl of Clonmel in 1793. He was a clever but utterly unscrupulous politician, and by no means choice in his language. He certainly had little respect for the Protestant Church, of which he was a member. Rowans "Autobiography" records a strange dialogue between Lord Clonmel and a bookseller named Byrne, whose shop he visited on seeing Rowan's trial advertised. One sentence will convey an idea of the col- loquy, as well as of the times in which such language could be hazarded by a judge. "Take care, sir, what you do; I give you this caution ; ibr if there are any reflections on the judges of the land, by the eternal G — I will lay you by the heels." Lord Clonmers health and spirits gradually broke down, and accounts of his death were daily circulated. On one of these occasions, when he was really very ill, a friend said to Curran, " Well, they say Clonmel is going to die at last Do you believe it?" "I believe," said Curran, "he is scoundrel enough to live or die, just as it suits his own con- venience!" Shortly before the death of Lord Clonmel, Mr Lawless, afterwards Lord Cloncurry, had an interview with him, when the chief exclaimed, " My dear Val, I have been a fortunate man through life ; I am a chief-justice and an earl : but were I to begin the world again, 1 vould rather be a chimney-sweeper, than connected with the Irish Government." His family published his diary for private circulation. It is an amusing and not very edifying production. For fuller accounts of him, see "The Sham Squire, or the Reformers of ; 98," — a most curious and inter- esting work, giving details never before published of the state of Ireland U4 THE WANTS OF IRELAND. was a necessary consequence of the "foreign judicature." 8 She asked u nothing but what was essential to her liberty," and she heard this powerful argument enforced by one of the best and ablest of her sons. She only asked what at this eventful period. Lord Clonmel, it is stated, enriched himself by a gross breach of trust, which, however, was then perfectly legal. It would appear that the lady whom lie defended was his own step- daughter. The author of " The Sham Squire " was informed by a very respectable solicitor, Mr H , that in looking over Lord Clonmel's rentals, he was struck by the following note written by his lordship's agent, in reference to the property Brolnaduff. " Lord Clonmel, when Mr Scott, held this in trust for a Roman Catholic, who, owing to the opera- tion of the Popery laws, was incapacitated from keeping it in his own hands. When reminded of the trust. Mr Scott refused to acknowledge i% and thus the property fell into the Clonmel family." The key to this is found in a paragraph in Walker's Hibernian Magazine for July 1797. We read, p. 97, — " Edward Byrne of Mullinahack, Esq., to Miss Roe, step-daughter to the Earl of Clonmel, and niece to Lord Viscount Llandaff." Hereby hangs a tale. Miss Roe was understood to have a large fortune, and when Mr Byrne applied to Lord Clonmel for it, his lordship shuffled, saying, " Miss Roe is a lapsed Papist, and I avail myself of the laws which I administer to withhold the money." Mr Byrne filed a bill, in which he recited the evasive reply of Lord Clon- mel. The chief-justice never answered the bill, and treated Mr Byrne's remonstrances with contempt. These facts transpire in the legal docu- ments held by Mr H . Too often the treachery manifested by the rich in positions of trust, at the calamitous period in question, contrasted curiously with the tried fidelity observed by some needy persons in a similar capacity. Moore, in his " Memoirs of Captain Rock," mentions the case of a poor Protestant barber, who, though his own property did not exceed a few pounds in value, actually held in lee the estates of most of the Catholic gentry of the county. He adds, that this estimable man was never known to betray his trust." 5 See Grattan's Letter, at the end of this chapter. UXCOXDITIOXA L COXCESSIOXS. 145 Englishmen considered indispensable for themselves. The burden of proof lay on them. They were bound to show, if they could; why they denied Ireland that justice which was the pride and boast of their own country. Mr Fox wrote a politely evasive reply. He assured Mr Grattan that he considered Irish affairs " very import- ant," but that it would be " imprudent" to meddle with f iiem. He wrote the usual platitudes about ardent wishes to satisfy both countries. He probably knew as well, or better, than any living man that he could not satisfy both countries, so long as justice to Ireland was considered injustice to England. Mr Fox wrote a private letter at the same time to Mr Fitzpatrick, in which he said that his answer to Grattau's letter was " perfectly general," 6 which was per- fectly true. The result, however, was favourable. Grattan's appeal was considered and accepted. The Act of the 6th George I., entitled, " An Act for the Better Securing the Dependency of Ireland upon the Crown of Great Britain," was repealed. On the 27th of May 1782, when the Irish Houses met, after an adjournment of three weeks, the Duke of Portland announced the unconditional concessions which had been made to Ireland by the English Parliament. Mr Grattan in- terpreted the concession in the fullest sense, and moved an 6 Correspondence of Charles James Fox. K 146 IRISH GRATITUDE. address, ' ; breathing the generous sentiments of his noble and confiding nature/' Mr Flood and a few other mem- bers took a different and more cautious view of the case. They wished for something more than a simple repeal of the Act of the 6th George L, and they demanded an express declaration that England would not interfere with Irish affairs. But the address was carried by a division of 211 to 2 ; and the House, to show its gratitude, voted that 20,000 Irish seamen should be raised for the British navy, at a cost of £100,000, and that £50,000 should be given to purchase an estate and build a house for Mr Grattan, whose eloquence had contributed so powerfully to obtain what they hoped would prove justice to Ireland. If even a small majority of the Irish Parliament had been men whose interests were Irish, there is no doubt that Ireland would have prospered. Even as it was, the last years of her nominal independence were her best years. There were three causes which proved the ruin of Irish independence. First, the volunteers were quietly and cleverly suppressed. 7 There was no noise, no commotion ; 1 How terribly afraid Government was of the volunteers is evident from the following documents. On the 31st October 1783, General Burgoyne wrote to Mr Fox : — " Add to this the apprehensions that timid and melancholy specu- lators entertain upon the meeting of the Convention of Delegates the 10th of next month. I have not myself any idea of serious commotion, but we have strengthened the garrison of Dublin, and it might be thought wrong in the commander-in-chief to be absent. You have, DREAD OF THE VOLUNTEER: 147 it was a simple extinction. Men might talk as they pleased, but without an armed force to give at least a physical impression to their words, the talk was a breath, and nothing more. Secondly individual members of Par- liament were bribed, sometimes with place, sometimes with doubtless, the fullest information of the proceedings and language of the Bishop of Deny, and of the mode in which the friends of Government mean to meet the question of Parliamentary Reform, if urged other- wise than by application to Parliament." — Fox's Correspondence, vol. ii. p. 180. Lord "Worth ington wrote from Dublin Castle on November 30, sug- gesting that they should be got rid of politely : — "If this business goes off, as I sanguinely hope it may, and the ad- dress should go to the king, an answer of temper and firmness at the same time would highly suit the present state of things ; such as a retrospective compliment to the conduct of the volunteers, and disap- probation of their present meeting,— a hope, expectation, or advice of their disbanding themselves." On the 17th November, General Burgoyne wrote again : — "A greater embarrassment yet has arisen in the Convention, which you will see in print — viz., the interfeience (but upon different prin- ciples) of the Catholics. By the mouth of Lord Kenmare, they relin- quish their pretensions to suffrages at elections ; by the mouth of Sir Patrick Bellew, they assert them. I wish they did so more soundly, for I am clearly of opinion that every alarm of the increase of Catholic interest and prevalence beyond the present limits — which give them in the general opinion all the share of rights necessary for their happiness, and consistent with the safety of their Protestant fellow-subjects — every idea, I think, of an extension of their claims, excites new jealous)'- and dread of the volunteers, and cements and animates the real friends of the constitution, and surely with reason ; for, upon the very principle of free and conscientious suffrage, nothing can be more impossible than a Protestant representative chosen by Catholic electors." The last clause is amusing. " Free and conscientious suffrage " would have allowed Catholic electors to elect Catholic representative*. 148 BRIBERY OF THE PRESS. pension, sometimes with rank. It was quite the same in which form the bribe was given or taken, the work was done. And, thirdly, the press was bribed ; and, moreover, this was done more or less openly. On the 23d of January 1 789, Mr Griffith complained in his place in Parliament that the " newspapers seemed under some very improper influence. In one paper the country was described as one scene of riot and confusion ; in another all is peace. By the proclamations that are published in them, and which are kept in for years, in order to make the fortunes of some individuals, the kingdom is scandalised and dis- graced through all the nations of the world where our newspapers are read. The proclamations are a libel on the country. Was any offender ever taken up in con- sequence of such publications ? And are they not rather a hint to offenders to change their situation and appear- ance ? He did hope, from what a right honourable gentleman had said last year, that this abuse would have been redressed, but ministers have not deigned to give any answer on the subject." Proclamations were actually kept up when the country was at peace, so that strangers would suppose that Ireland was a " savage nation ;" — not the last time by any means that it was similarly misrepresented. Newspapers were also distributed gratuitously through the country. On the 27th August 1781, Mr Eden wrote to Lord North, APPEALS FOR SECRET SERVICE MOXEY. 149 complaining cf the "sickening circumstances" of an Irish secretaryship, and concluded his letter thus: — " My Lord-Lieutenant has repeatedly written to your lord- ship, both through me and through Lord Hillsborough, on the essential importance of obtaining from you some small help of secret service money. We have hitherto, by the force of good words, and with some degree of private expense, preserved an ascendency over the press, not hitherto known here, and it is of an importance equal to ten thousand times its cost ; but we are without the means of continuing it, nor have we any fund to resist the factious attempts among the populace, which may occa- sionally be serious. " Believe me, my dear Lord, ever respectfully and affectionat ely yours, " Wm. Eden. ' On the 13th September, he wrote again on the same 8ubject : — " Our session is drawing desperately near, and all preparations for it are much interrupted by this alarm of an invasion. We much regret that your lordship has not found any means to assist us in the article of secret service. The press is the principal operative power in the government of this kingdom; and we are utterly without means to influence that power. We are equally without means to counteract the wicked attempts occasionally made in the idle and populous part of this town to raise mobs, and to turn the rabble against ministers ; having, however, re- peatedly represented these points, ' which nobody can deny,' we have done all that we can do, and must continue to steer through the various difficulties of this government as well as we can, without troops and without money, in the face of an armed people and general poverty." In 1789, Irish politics were complicated by the regency 150 ADD LI ESS TO PRINCE OF WALES. question. Mr Pitt opposed, and Mr Fox 8 supported the unrestricted regency of the Prince of Wales. The Irish Parliament issued an address " requesting that his Royal Highness would take upon himself the government of Ireland during the continuation of the king's indispo- sition." Grattan headed the independent party. Some curious particulars of the fashion in which Ireland was governed came out. The Lord-Lieutenant, Lord Rook* ingham. positively refused to forward the address, and 8 Mr Fox was then at Bath to recruit his health. He had duffrred severely from his hurried journey home from Boulogne on hearing of the king's illness. He wrote on Irish affairs to Mr Fitzpatrick on the 17th February 1789, from Bath :— " Dear Dick, — You have heard before this of our triumphant majority in the House of Lords in Ireland, but I think one of the best parts oi the news is the address having been put off till yesterday, which seema to remove all apprehension of the difficulty which you mention in your letter, and which in effect appears to me to be a very serious one. The delegation cannot leave Dublin till to-morrow ; and as prooably it will not be composed of persons who travel like couriers, the Prince will not be able to make an answer till he is actually Regent here. I think this object so material that our friends ought more than ever to avoid any- thing that tends to delay here. " If the bill is passed there can be no difficulty in the Prince's answer, which must be acceptance, with expression of sensibility to the confidence in him. If, in spite of my calculations, he should be obliged to make his answer before the bill has passed — which, by the way, i hardly think possible — it must be couched in some general terms to which the acts he will do in a few days after must give the construction of acceptance. The fact is, our friends have gone too fast in Dublin ; but how could they conceive our extreme slowness here 1" — Correspond- ence of Charles James Fox, vol. ii. p. 301. Ireland, loyal or disloyal, waa sure to be in the wrong. FA TRIO TISM V A7.V U > /> J ]'. 151 Parliament was obliged to send delegates. Previous to their departure, tlie following resolution was carried by 115 to S3: "That his Excellency's answer to both Houses of Parliament, requesting him to transmit their address to his Royal Highness, is ill-advised, contains an unwarrantable and unconstitutional censure on the proceedings of both Houses, and attempts to question the undoubted rights and privileges of the Lords spiritual and temporal, and of the Commons of Ireland.'' A desperate struggle now T commenced between the viceroy and the Parliament. It resolved itself into pa- triotism versus pay. Men who had no personal interest in the country could not be expected to be very patriotic, and pay carried the day. Peerages were sold openly and shamelessly, and the money thus obtained was spent in bribing those to whom money was more necessary, or more gratifying than "auk. Mr Firzgibbon gave it to be understood that half a million of money was placed in his hands for this purpose, and he casually confessed that one address of thanks to Lord Town- eend had cost the nation £500,000 a few j-ears before. Grattan, Curran, and Ponsonby offered to prove this bribery at the time, but they were not allowed. Grattan's voice, however, could not be easily silenced ; and he ob- served at a later period : — " The threat w r as put into its f idlest execution ; the canvass of the minister was everywhere— in the House of Commons, in the PA RLI A MEN TA R Y COR 11 UP T10N. lobby, in the street, at the door of the parliamentary undertakers, lapped at and worn by the little caitiffs of Government, who offered amnesty to some, honours to others, and corruption to all ; and where the word of the viceroy was doubted, they offered their own. According!}^, we find a number of parliamentary provisions were created, and divers peerages sold, with such effect, that the same Parliament which had voted the chief governor a criminal, did immediately after give that very governor implicit support.'* 9 " They began," said Curran, "with the sale of the honour of the peerage — the open and avowed sale for money of the peerage to any man who was rich and shameless enough to be the pur- chaser." 1 In 1790, one hundred and ten placemen sat in the House of Commons; and on the 11th of July, Mr Forbes declared that the pensions had been recently increased upwards of £100,000. It was little wonder that when O'Connell arrived in Dublin in 1797 he found the country on the eve of a rebel- lion, and the so-called Irish Parliament about to extinguish itself under a weight of infamy, none the less contemptible, because it was heavily gilded over by pecuniary greed. Note. "April 18, 1782. " Sir, — I shall make no apology for writing ; in the present posture of things I should rather deem it necessary to make an apology for not writing. Ireland has sent an Address, stating the causes of her discon- tents and jealousies ; thus the question between the two nations be- comes capable of a specific final settlement. We are acquitted of being 9 Life and Times of Grattan, vol. iii. p. 338. 1 Life of Curran, vol. i. p. 240. GRATTAS OX IRISH AFFAIRS. 153 indefinite in discontents and jealousies ; we have stated the grounds of them, and they are those particular* in which the practical constitution of Ireland is diametrically opposite to the principles of British liberty. A foreign legislation, a foreign judicature, a legislative Privy Council, and a perpetual army. It is impossible for any Irishman to be recon- ciled to any part of such a constitution, and not to hold in the most profound contempt the constitution of England. Thus you cannot re- concile us to your claim of power, without making us dangerous to your liberty ; and you also will, I am confident, allow that in stating such enormities as just causes of discontent and jealousy, we have asked nothing which is not essential to our liberty. Thus we have gained another step in the way to a settlement. "We have defined our desires and limited them, and committed ourselves only to what is indispensable to our freedom; and have this further argument, that you have thought it indispensable to yours. One question then only remains — whether what is necessary for us to have, is safe and honourable to Great Britain ? "The perpetual Mutiny Law, and the legislative power exercised by the councils of both kingdoms, it is scarcely necessary to dwell upon, inasmuch as I make no doubt you hold them to be mischievous or use- less to England. The legislative power of the Council can't be material to the connection, though the necessity of passing bills under the seal of Gn at Britain may be so. The power of suppressing in the Irish, and of altering in the English Council, never has been useful to England ; on the contrary, frequently the cause of embarrassment to British government. I have known Privy Councillors agree to bills in Parlia- ment, and in Council alter them materially by some strong clause in- serted to show their zeal to the King, at the expense of the popularity of Government In England, an Attorney-General, or his clerk, from ignorance, or corruption, or contempt, may, and often has, inserted clauses in Irish bills which have involved Irish Governments in lasting consequences with the people ; for you must see that a servant of Government in Great Britain, uninformed of the passions of Ireland, may, in the full exercise of legislative power, do irreparable mischief to his king and country, without being responsible to either. " I could mention several instances, but a Mutiny Bill rendered per- petual is a sufficient one, to show how impolitic that law, which com- mits the machine of the constitution and the passions of the human mind to the hand of one man. The negativing our bills is a right 154 GRATTAN ON IRISH AFFAIRS. never disputed ; the poisoning them is a practice we do most ardently deprecate, from sound reason and sad experience 1 brought to Parlia- ment a list of the alterations made, for the last ten years, in Irish bills by the Privy Council or Attorney-General, and there was not a single alteration made upon a sound legislative motive ; sometimes an altera- tion to vex the Presbyterians, made "by the bishops ; sometimes an alteration made by an over zealous courtier, to make Government obnoxious and to render himself at the same time peculiarly acceptable to the king ; sometimes an alteration from ignorance, and not seldom for money. " I shall, therefore, suppose the power of the Council no object to a principled Administration, and no vital question between the two king- doms. We shall have then cleared the way to the great question of supremacy ; for I conceive the legislative and judicative supremacy to be one question. If you retain the legislative power, you must reserve the final determination of law, because you alone will determine the law, in support of your claim ; whereas, if you cede the claim, the question of judicature is one of private property, not national ascend- ency, and becomes as useless to you as it is opprobrious to us. Besides, there are circumstances which render the appellant judicature to you the most precarious thing imaginable. The Lords of Ireland have on their journals a resolution, that they are ready to receive appeals ; so that, after the final settlement with England, if the judicature was not included, any attorney might renew the contest. The decrees of the Lords of England, and of the King's Bench likewise, affecting Ireland, are executed by the officers of the Courts of Justice of Ireland. The judges of Ireland are now independent. Two of the barons, or judges, may put a total stop to the judicature of the Lords of England, by refusing to lend the process of their Courts ; so that, in order to determine your final judicature, it would be unnecessary to go further than the authority of a few judges,. independent of England by their tenure, dependent, on [reland by their residence, and perhaps influenced by conscience and by oath. Besides, the 6th of George I. is enacting as to the appealing, as well as the judicative power. If the former part stands, we are divested of our supreme judicature by an actual exercise of your supreme legis- lative power, and then a partial repeal would be defective upon prin- ciples legislative, as well as jurisdictive. You can't cexle your legislative claim, and enjoy your jurisdictive under its authority and exercise ; and the whole law must (if the claim of legislature is ceded") fall totally GRATTAX OX IRIS /I AFFAIRS 155 The question then "between the two nations is thus reduced to one point — Will England cede the claim of supremacy ? You seem willing to cede it. Your arguments have led to it. When I say your arguments, I mean the liberal and enlightened part of England. Both nations, by what they have said— one by what it has admitted, and the other by w hat it has asserted — have made the claim of England impracticable. The reserve of that claim, of course, becomes unprofitable odium, ?nd the relinquishment is an acquisition of affection without a loss of power. Thus the question between the two nations is brought to a mere punc- tilio — Can En land cede with dignity \ I submit she can ; for if she has consented to enable his Majesty to repeal all the laws respecting America, among which the Declaratory Act is one, she can with more majesty repeal the Declaratory Act against Ireland, who has declared her resolution to stand and fall with the British nation, and has stated her own rights by appealing not to your fears, but your magnanimity. You will please to observe in our Address a veneration for the pride, as well as a love for the liberty of England. You will see in our manner of transmitting the Address, we have not gone to Castle with volunteers is in 1779. It was expedient to resort to such a measure with your pre- iecasors in office. In short, sir, you will see in our requisition nothing bat what is essential to the liberty and composure of our country, and consistent with the dignity and interest of the other. These things granted, your Administration in Ireland will certainly meet with great support : I mean national as well as parliamentary. In consequence of these things, some laws will be necessary — an act to quiet property held under former judgments or decrees in England ; a Mutiny Bill ; a Bill to modify Poyning's Law. Possibly it might be judicious that some of these should be moved by the Secretary here — it would contribute to his popularity. It will be perhaps prudent to adjourn to some further day, until the present Administration have formed. " Before I conclude I will take the liberty to guard you against a Wiijar artifice, which the old Court (by that I mean the Carlisle faction) will incline to adopt. They will perhaps write to England false sug- gestions, that Ireland will be satisfied with less, and that the Irish Administration are sacrificing to Irish popularity British rights ; and then they will instigate Ireland to stand upon her ultimatum, and thus embarrass Government and betray the people. I know this practice was adopted in Lord Buckingham's Administration by men mortified by his frugality. ORATTAN ON IRISH AFFAIRS. " MWit I suggest, if you mean (as I am well inclined to believe, and uliall be convinced by the success of our application) a Government by privilege, that it would be very beneficial to the character of your government in Ireland, to dismiss from their official connexions with ! Government some notorious consciences, to give a visible, as well as real, integrity to his Majesty's Councils in Ireland, and to relieve them from a certain treachery in men, who will obey you and betray you. " it vould be prudent to exhibit to the public eye a visible constitu tional Administration. The people here have a personal antipathy to some men here wno were the agents of former corruption, and would feel a vindictive delight in the justice of discarding them. When I say t his, I speak of a measure not necessary absolutely, if the requisitions are complied with, but veiy proper and very necessary to elevate the character of your government, and to protect from treachery your con- sultations ; and when I say tins, it is without any view to myself, who under the constitutional terms s>ec forth, am willing to take any part in the Administration, provided it is not emolumentary. Your minister here will find very great opportunities for vigorous retrenchment, such as will not hazard him in the House of Commons, and may create an enthusiasm in his favour without doors. " I am running into immoderate length, and beg to conclude with assurances of great constitutional hopes, and personal admiration, and am, with great respect, " Your most humble and obedient nervant, "H. Grattam. Cjaptcr jfonrtj}. CAUSES OF THE HUSH REBELLION. 1 7 90- 1 800. flOt W0BTHEB5 WHIO CLUB — THE UNITED IRISHMEN CLUB CATHOLIC ftOOKKfli TO THE K1NQ — POLITICAL COMMOTIONS TREACHERY OF PITT — LOUD Ml* WILLIAM, THE CATHOLIC QUESTION, AND THE BERKS FORDS MATNOOTH ESTABLISHED — THE ORANGE SOCIETY CATHOLIC CLEROT OVERZKAL OF O'CONNELL — ARRESTS — LIST OF SUSPECTED PEBSONS — LOUD CORNWa I.I. I -.' ADMINISTRATION — THE CROMWELL POLICY — STATE OF TUfcl PLASANTHY — TEST! MOBY O? MABY LEADBXTTSA. , , T tlie period when O'Connell I arrived in Dublin in the year 1707, he hud heard enough of the y^ y state of public affairs t<> be fully r) 9 aware that a dark, deep, and deadly struggle was at hand. It had, in fact, already commenced. In 1790, the Northern AVhig Club was established in Belfast, at the suggestion of Lord Charlemont. Heform and parliamentary inde- pendence were its avowed and probably its real objects. But neither Irish nor English Protest- ants were as yet free from the illogical bigotry of prejudice, and they declared that " no person ought to suffer civil hardships for his religious persuasion, unless the tenets of his religion lead him to endeavour at the subversion of the State." ICO THE EATING AND DRINKING CLUB. There was a gleam of intelligence in the implied possi- bility that it might not be right, under some certain cir- cumstances, to persecute a man for following the dictates of his conscience; there was an alloy of prejudice in the suggestion that Catholics, who were alluded to, would, or did attempt to subvert the State. Possibly, however, and we think probably, it was a sop to the Cerberus of Protestant ascendency, a declaration that, though they were liberal, they would, under certain circumstances, be willing to act illiberally. It was something certainly to the credit of humanity that a time had arrived when Catholics were not avowedly persecuted without the ready excuse of disloyalty. A banquet followed, and the toast of " the glorious and immortal memory " was duly honoured, though probably nine-tenths of those who quaffed the libation to the shades of the departed hero, would have been sorely puzzled to tell why he was styled " glorious," and, having serious doubts as to the immortality of the human race, would hardly have believed in his. Lord Clare termed it an "eating and drinking clubh- and no doubt it was. There was certainly a good deal of drinking. On the 14th July 1791, the anniversary of the French Revolution was celebrated by the Protestant patriots, and they drank to the memoiy of " Thomas Paine," and " the rights of man," to " the glorious: memory," and to " the majesty of the people." Notwith- . LIED OF RESPECTABILITY. 1(51 standing all this drinking, or perhaps because of it, the club died out. But the principles which animated the club did not die out. It died of respectability. When some of the men who had helped to inaugurate it found that the club meant something more than talking and drinking, they gradual ly withdrew. Lord Charlemont had been a member, and Lord de Clifford, and the Earl of Moira, and the Hon. Robert Stewart, afterwards Lord Castlereagb. But the men who really instituted it were there still. Henry Joy, M'Cracken, Russell, and, above all, Samuel Neilson, set themselves to form another club, a political club. Mr Neilson went further than his friends; he suggested that Catholics should be permitted to join it. Perhaps he saw that such a movement as he contem- plated could not be effected without the co-operation of his Catholic fellow-subjects.' It was very well to talk of * The following extracts from the "Lives and Times of the United Irishmen," second series, vol. i. p. 79, will show how the blameless and exemplary life of a poor Catholic servant was the means of removing pre- judice. Alter all. personal knowledge of Catholics in private life seldom failed tu do so. " Neilson on this occasion said, 1 Oar efforts for reform hitherto have been ineffectual, and they deserved to be so, for they have been selfish and unjust, as not including the rights of the Catholics in the claims we put forward for ourselves,' The evening of that day, when the subject was first mooted, M'Cracken, on his return home, mentioned thecircum- htantc to a member of his family, who, in reference to the proposed club, expressed some doubts of Roman Catholics being sutficiently enlightened to co-jperate with them, or to be trusted by their party, M'Cracken, L 162 D UNO ANN ON CONVENTION. public action, but public action required men to act, and the handful of Protestants, however important they might be in the eyes of Government, had not material strength For any movement requiring physical force. Whether the United Irishmen looked to physical force at the commence- ment of their career or not, we cannot say, but there are many reasons for supposing that they did. In the first place, they were ardent admirers of the French Revolution; in the second place, they had a good many years' experi- ence of the uselessness of addresses and petitions. The famous Dun cannon convention was held on the 26th of December 1792; Neilson acted as secretary. A Protestant clergyman, the Rev. Mr Kelburne, used some strong language about " our boasted constitution," and some language which must have then sounded rather with great earnestness, endeavoured to show the groundlessness of the prejudices that were entertained against the Catholics. His opinions were shared by one of his sisters (to whom I am indebted for these par- ticulars), a person even then in advance of public opinion on the subject in question, and whose noble sentiments on most matters were above the level of those of ordinary mind's. Her brother, she. informs me, asked the relative who had expressed the apprehensions referred to, il there was not a poor old blind woman under their roof, who had spent the best part of her life in their family, and although she was a Roman Catholic, was there anything in this world they would not trust to hei fidelity ? and if they put their whole confidence in her because they happened to be acquainted with her, why should thfty think .so ill ti those of the same creed whom they did not know ? Ihese details, 1 rivial as they may seem, are calculated to throw some light on the original views and principles of those persons who were the founders of ih« Northern Society of United Irishmen." EMANCIPATION A NECESSITY. 163 treasonable about " hereditary legislation M not being desirable, because lords did not always inherit wisdom with their rank. On the loth of July 1793, however, the delegates had a Meeting, and expressed themselves a little more cautiously. They passed resolutions disapproving of a republican form of government for their own country, and expressed their belief that Catholic Emancipation was necessary for the safety of the country. 1 The Catlmlic- came forward now, but not without con- siderable trepidation. Accustomed to centuries of perse- cution, they had hitherto only bowed to the tempest as it passed over them, except in some rare instances when war 3 At a public meeting held in Belfast, on the 19th of January 1793, in address to his Majesty was determined on, signed, by order of the meeting, and in their name, by Charles Rankin, chairman, and Samuel Neilson, se cretary ; expressive of their gratitude for his Majesty's " re- ebmmendation of the situation of their Catholic brethren and fellow- subjects to the attention of the Irish Parliament;" and conveying the wannest sentiments of loyalty and attachment to his Majesty's person. At another meeting held in Belfast, on the 28th of January 1792, the particulars of which will be found in the appendix, Neilaon took an active part. In reply to an opinion expressed by Mr Henry Joy, " That neither the Protestant mind was sufficiently prepared to grant, nor the Catholic one universally prepared to receive, a plenary and immediate* exercise of every right which members of a State can possibly possess ; w — NeUson expressed his "astonishment at hearing that or any part of the address called a Catholic question \* To his understanding, " it no more presented a Roman Catholic question than a Church question, a Presbyterian, a Quaker, an Anabaptist, or a mountain question. The true question teas, whether Irishmen should be free," 164 RIOTS IN ENGLAND. seemed the only hope of obtaining liberty to worship God as their conscience bade them. The plan was prepared by Theobald Wolfe Tone, a Protestant. The Catholics were to meet openly, and proceed openly. Five gentlemen were chosen to bear their address to the king. These gentlemen were Sir Thomas French, Mr Byrne, Mr Keogh, Mr Deve- reanx, and Mr Bellew. They went through Belfast on their way to London. It was not their direct road cer- tainly, but the Protestant leaders of the United Irishmen received them in triumph, and the northern Presbyterians showed their advancement in political enlightenment by removing the horses from their carriage, and dragging them in triumph through the town. The delegates had chosen an opportune moment for theil visit to royalty. There were fears both within and without; war imminent in Europe ; and in England there were ter- rible apprehensions of domestic riot. Several associations had been formed in England demanding Parliamentary reform, or seeking to obtain it ; hence it was necessary that war in Ireland should be averted, even at the cost of a few concessions. 4 * On the 13th December 1792, at the opening of the session, the king addressed Parliament thus, on the state of England :— "The seditious practices which had been in a great measure checked by your firm and explicit declaration in the last session, and by the general concurrence of my people in the same sentiments, have of late been more openly renewed, and with increased activity. A spirit of tumult and disorder (the natural consequence of such practices) has shown itself in acts of SOMETIIIXG MUST BE LOSE. 165 Several acts were passed to avert the danger, but Irish- men had begun to know their power, the power of united IrisLmer ; and when the Portland ministry was formed in j ^04, it was found that something more substantial was Itecessary. Lord Fitzwilliam was appointed Lord-Lieu- tenant, and for the first time G rattan was taken into the counc ils of the so-called Irish Government. On the 12th riot and insurrection, which required the interposition of a military force in support of the civil magistrate. The industry employed to excite dis- content on various pretexts, and in different parts of the kingdom, lias appeared to proceed from a de.»ign to attempt the destruction of our happy constitution, and the subversion of all order and govemmeut ; and this design has evidently been pursued in connection and concert with persons in foreign countries." Lord John Russell observes, in his " Correspondence of Fox," vol iiL p. 33 : u England, Prussia, and Austria, with lofty pretensions of fight- ing for the cause of religion and order, had each separate and selfish objects, while the French, united and enthusiastic, fought for a mock liberty, but a real independence. "With the Allies it was a war some- times of principles ; sometimes of provinces ; sometimes to restore a monarchy, sometimes to acquire Martinique. With the French the most horrible tyranny, the most systematic murder and plunder at home, were accompanied by the most brilliant courage, the most scientific plans of campaign, and the most entire devotion to the glory of their country." Mr Fox wrote thus to Lord Holland, June 14, 1793 : " I believe the love of political liberty is not an error ; but, if it is one, I am sure I never shall be converted from it — and I hope you never will. If it be an illusion, it is one that has brought forth more of the best qualities and exertions of the human mind than all other causes put together ; and it serves to give an interest in the affairs of the world which, without it, would be insipid ; but it is unnecessary to preach to you upon this sub- ject. It was only when political liberty was asked for in Ireland tnat it ceased to meet with the admiration of English statesmen." 166 THE NATION DUPED AGAIN. of July, lie obtained leave to bring in a bill for the relief of ( 'a I holies, three members only dissenting. But once more the nation was duped; Lord Fitzwilliam was recalled on the 24tn of March. Whether the English Government really intended to do anything for Ireland or not, can never now be known. If they intended justice, it was a pitMpie intention should not have been carried out ; if they played a deceitful game, they might have learned by the result that honesty, even in political matters, is the best, because it is the wisest policy. Lord Fitzwilliam indeed declared that he would never have undertaken the govern- ment, if Catholic Emancipation had not been included in the ministerial programme. Possibly Mr Pitt expected to find him a more pliant tool, and recalled him when he found the metal not malleable. 5 5 " There were some members of the Irish Parliament certainly not disposed to favour the Catholic claims, who saw the folly of this kind ol government. Sir Lawrence Parsons said : « That the grant of supplies and the redress of grievances should go hand in hand. The only security the country had was a short Money Bill ; it had been tried in 1771) ; it had been tried in 1789 ; and, in both instances, had been of utility. The people had been led to expect great measures ; their hopes had been raised, and now were about to be blasted. If the Cabinet of Great Britain had held out an assent to the Catholic question, and had afterwards retracted, it was an insult to the nation which the House should resent. There had been no meetings ; no petitions of the Protestants against the claims of the Catholics. It would thence be inferred that their senti- ments were nor adverse to the emancipation ; this was held out as the leading measure of administration ; the Responsibility Bill was an- other ; the Reform Bill was another. In consideration of these measures additional taxes had been voted to the amount of £250,000 : but now it COXDUCT OF Mil PITT. 1C7 But the Engli.-h Government were perfectly well aware of the certain result of this treachery. It has been said again and again, that Mr Pitt wished to drive the Irish into rebellion in order to effect the Union. Whether be deliberately took measures to that effect or not, cannot now be discovered, but his public acts sufficiently show that if he had not that intention, he was at least fully aware that what he did, aud what he omitted to do, would alike lead to that result. His conduct was mean and dastardly; no noble-minded man would have deceived a helpless and confident people as he deceived the Irish nation. " It was not until the Irish Parliament had submitted to heavy burdens, not only by providing for the security of the kingdom by great military establishments, but like- wise by assisting the empire at large in the moment of its greatest distress, by aids great and unparalleled beyond all example ; it was not till Lord Fitzwilliam's popularity had induced the House of Commons, on the faith of popular appeared that the country had been duped — that nothing was to be done tot the p2up]e. If the British minister persisted in such infatuation, discontent would be at its height, the army must be increased, and every man must have dragoons in his house/ The motion was rejected by 146 to 24. Mr Conolly then proposed three resolutions : — 'That Lord Fitzwilliam by his public conduct since his arrival in Ireland de- served the thanks of the House, and the confidence of the people.' Never in the h istory of any nation can there be found such duplicity, such treachery, and such meanness as was practised towards the people oi Ireland."— Lift of G'rattan, vol. iv. p. 18a 168 THE CATHOLIC QUESTION. questions, to grant the largest supply ever demanded, and B larger army than had ever before been voted in Ireland ; it was not till he had laid a foundation for increasing the established force of the country, and procured a vote of £200,00C for the general defence of the empire, and 'J 0,000 men for the navy, and a supply to the amount of £1,800,000, that the British Cabinet proceeded to notice and reply to Lord Fitzwil Ham's letters. Then, for the first time, the dismissal of Mr Cooke and Mr Beresford was complained of, and made a charge against Lord Fitzwilliam; then, and not till then, commenced the accusations against him as to the Catholic question, and his imputed design to overturn the constitution in Church and State. But a re- ference to the proceedings on this subject will show the futility of this charge, and that it was a mere pretext. Let it be recollected that this question, though opposed in 1793 by Lord Westmoreland and his friends, had been sup- ported by Mr Hobart (the Irish Secretary), and the British Cabinet ; that Mr Pitt and Mr Dundas (Lord Melville), had given it their support ; that they had communicated their intentions to the Catholic agents in London, and their expressions (well remembered and often quoted) were, that "they would not risk a rebellion in Ireland on such a question ; " yet the very man who had actually agreed to it, in conference with Mr Grrattan and Lord Fitzwilliam, and to the former of whom he had used these very remark- able words, " I have taken office, and I have done so be- LORD FITZWILLIAM. 169 cause I knew there was to be an entire change of system," — this Duke of Portland, in his letter to Lord Fitzwilliam, gays that " to defer the Catholic question was not only a thing to be desired for the present, but the means of doing a greater service to the British empire than it has beeu curable of receiving since the Revolution, or at least since the Union." On the receipt of this letter, Lord Fitzwilliam immedi- ately acted with a spirit and resolution worthy of him. lie wrote to Mr Pitt, defended the dismissal of Mr Beresford, as necessary to the eilicaey of his government, and left the minister to choose between him and Mr Beresford. lie wrote the 6ame night to the Duke of Portland, stating his surprise at their resisting a question that had been long since agreed upon, and this at the expiration of such an interval of time — namely, from the 8th of January, when he first wrote about the Catholic question, to the 8th of February, when it was first objected to by the English ministers. He stated the danger of hesitation or resistance, and he refused to be the person to raise a flame in the country, that nothing short of arms could keep down ; and left him to determine whether, if he was not to be supported, he ought not to be removed. 6 • Life of Grattan, vol. iv. p. 193.— The Beresfords knew their power well. They knew also, though they raised a " No Popery " cry, that the leaders and tirst movers of the United Irishmen, wlom they styled 170 MR FORBES' LETTER. On the 25th of February 1795, Mr Forbes wrote to Mr Sergeant Adair. He concluded his letter thus: "It is reported that Pitt intends to overturn the Irish Cabinet by rejecting Catholic claims. Should he pursue that line, England will be involved in inextricable confusion, and it will end in the total alienation of Ireland." Burke wrote to Mr Grattan, expressing his indignation at the wa}' in which he had been treated. In the English Parliament, there was a scene of mutual recrimination con- cerning the recall of Lord Fitzwilliam, but no one con- cerned himself much about the effect that this would have in Ireland. The truth was that the Beresfords had determined from the first to get rid of the Lord-Lieutenant, and they suc- " devils," were Protestants. It mattered little to tliem how Ireland Buffered so they held place and pension. On the 4th Sept. 1796, Ml Beresford wrote to his friend Lord Auckland :— " The United Irishmen of the north, alias the Dissenters and the Defenders, and the Papists would join them ; these two classes are bound by oaths, &c, whilst the mob and common people, not sworn, M ould take advantage, and plunder everybody, and commit murders and such extravagances as are always the consequences of letting loose th« rabble. The utmost pains have been taken by these devils, the United Irishmen, to prepare the minds of the different classes of the people for mischief. The public prints are of the most seditious and inflammatory species. They have a vast number of emissaries constantly going through the country, to seduce every person they can, and swear them ; they have songs and prophecies, just written, stating all late events and what is to happen, as if made several years ago, in order to persuade th* people that, as a great part of them has already come to pass, so tha remainder will certainly happen." COLLEGE OF MAY SOOTH. 171 ceeded. 7 Lord Fitzwilliam was perfectly aware of the cause of his dismissal, but he seems to have felt the decep- tion which had been practised ou the Irish nation far more than the injury done to himself. Lord Camden succeeded, and as the Government had anine apprehensions lest the Catholics should avenge t.hem- eelves in any way for the duplicity with which they had been treated, it was proposed to establish the College of Maynooth. The excuse to those who objected to granting even the least favour to Catholics, had the advantage of being a plausible one. It was evident that no amount of penal laws would prevent Catholics from becoming priests ; it was evident, it was indeed a matter of fact, that if they were not allowed to be educated in Ireland, they would be educated abroad. It was said that being educated abroad tended to render them disloyal ; and certainly to deny a man education in his own country, and oblige him to endure the labour and expense of expatriation in order to obtain it, was I Lord Auckland worked up the Beresford interest in London quietly, and with the steady determination which generally insures success. The Beresfords held their power solely on a " No Popery " cry. Any liberality— or, to speak more correctly, justice to Catholics — was latal to their continuance in power, because they had made their political success depend on their religious bigotry. Mr Beresford, of course, denied his great political power, but even in the letter which he wrote himself to Lord Auckland, who acted as his ambassador in the affair, he \rrote so strongly of his "power of embarrassing Govern ment," that Lord Auckland thought it best to keep back that part of his letter even from his patron, Mr Pitt. — Bereaford Correspondence, vol. ii. pp. 56-84. 172 CONDITION OF TEE PEOPLE. not naturally the best method of inducing affection for the power which compelled this course. It was, moreover, believed that if Government endowed Maynooth the Irish hierarchy would feel bound in return to support Govern- ment. It was at least certain to all but the most obtuse that a rebellion was imminent in Ireland, and this seemed a probable means of enlisting the Catholic clergy on the side of England. The times were becoming daily more and more troubled, principally because the condition of the people was becoming daily worse. When men are starving, when they know that their starvation is caused by injustice, they are seldom slow to redress their wrongs. How patiently the Irish can suffer when famine comes to them as a direct visitation from God, has been proved in later years. It is probable the poor Irish Catholics of the south would have suffered as patiently if they had not been roused to resistance by the stern Presbyterians of the north, and if the newly-formed Orange Society had not been allowed to attack them with impunity. The state of Ireland at this period was certainly fearfdJ and an eternal disgrace to those by whom it was governed. A Protestant writer says : — " The Government thought, at least, to retain the Church of England faction by uniting the interest of the ' Peep-of-Day Boys' with that of the Church of England gentry, from which curious union sprung, in 1796, the Orange Society, sworn to maintain the Protestant ascendency of 1688. But the Orangemen were as ORANGE OUTRAGES. 173 lawless as the Defenders. Lord Gosford. who had been appointed joint lord-lieutenant of the county of Armagh with the Earl of Cbarlemont, in 1791, to counterpoise the Whiggism of the latter, found it necessary in December 1795, to convene a meeting of the magistrates of that county, and call on them to put a stop to tin- barbarous practices of the Orange Society. It sufficed for a man to profess the Roman Catholic religion to have his dwelling burnt over his bead, and himself, with his family, banished out of the county. Nearly half the inhabitants of the county of Armagh luul been thus expatriated. To check these outbreaks of Defenders ami Orangemen, Parliament, early in 1796, passed an Insurrection Act. Persons administering unlawful oaths were to suffer death, and those who took them transportation. But in the terrible times which ensued, this evil was allowed to work only one way. The Orangemen, ami otb.T Protestant insurrectionists, were allowed to bear arms, and to use them as they pleased. The penalties all fell upon the unhappy Catholics, and on such Pro- tectants as had joined the United Irishmen, a numerous and powerful body." The high sheriff of Gal way, Charles Blake, addressed Grattan on the alarming state of affairs, in the name and by the desire of the gentlemen and freeholders of the county. They declared it "highly honourable" to him, though not to the age, that his dismissal from office was considered " a necessary and previous stage to the return of some that are not reported to love the people." The letter was short, manly, intelligent, and worthy of the men of Gal way. The students of Dublin University addressed him. and, with a liberality quite beyond the age, declared m rt< *t truly " that the harmony and strength of Ireland will be 174 THE CATHOLIC CLERGY. founded on the solid basis of Catholic Emancipation, and the reform of those grievances which have inflamed public indignation." 8 Even at that moment, if the least effort had been made in the direction of justice to Catholics, and if even a trifling instalment of the justice which has since been done to them had been attempted, the rebellion of 1798 might never have been, and a legacy of hatred to England might have been averted. The Catholic clergy were wholly on the side of order; but what could they do with a starving people ? England had destroyed Irish trade; they could not excuse this; they could not say it is your own fault, that you are starving, bear it as a calamity which you have brought on yourselves. England still persecuted their religion, and what was worse, permitted, if she did not actually encourage, Irish Protestants to massacre their fellow-subjects because they were Irish Catholics. Could this be defended ? Yet they did what they could ; they practised patience, they practised submission, they preached practical Christianity ; and if their lessons had no effect, it was not because Irish Catho- lics were less faithful to the teaching of their holy faith than they had been in former ages, but because they believed that their cause was a just one. 9 8 Life of Grattan, by his Son, vol. iv. pp. 222, 223. 9 On the 10th March 1798, Dr Lanigan, the Catholic Bishop of Ossoiyi wrote thus to Dr Troy, the Catholic Archbishop of Dublin DR LAXIGAX'S LETTER. Negotiations were opened with the French Government by the United Irishmen in 1796. Lord Edward Fitzgerald, Arthur O'Connor, a gentleman of property in the county of Cork, and Theobald "Wolfe Tone, a barrister, were the persons selected for this undertaking. O'ConnelFs son, in writing his father's Memoir, was naturally anxious to screen his father from the discredit '■ B.yi.lyragget, March 10, 1798. " Most Rev. Sir, — I was absent from Kilkenny these eight days, and •■•a great part of that time occupied with the priests that border on the Queen's County, in consulting them, and concerting measures with them in Older to prev< nt, if possible, the introduction of United Irishmen and (their principles into this county. The letter you honoured me with was Bent alter me, and I received it there. 1 could make this short but true answer to it, that the charges mentioned there against the priests and me are false, malicious, and groundless. It is necessary, perhaps, to prove this more at large. I beg your patience, then, while I state the facts as they happened. "A sermon was preached in St James's chapel, about a month ago, on faith, it3 necessity, its utility, and tiie conditions required for true faith. The preacher had in view oniy to confute the lax principles of the richer Roman Catholics, who, under pretext of liberality of senti- ment, wished to establish an indifference about all religion and all reli- gious modes of worship.'' — Memoirs of Viscount Castlcreagh, vol. i. p. I CI. The upper classes of Catholics were sorely tempted to apostatise. The cause of this temptation has been already fully explained. The consequence was that they kept very much aloof from their formei ( 'atholic brethren. Mr Grattan says, in his " Life of his Father," vol. iv. j). 5'): ''In late as well as in early times the Irish aristocracy have attached themselves too much to party in England, and have forgotten the real interests of their own nation. The wise policy would have been to have attended exclusively to their own country — a course more politic, though less profitable.* The treatment which the upper classes hail received duri'og the Irish revolution tended to strengthen this feeliuj •till greater. 17(5 0' CON NELL A UNITED IRISHMAN of being a United Irishman. That he was there is not the slightest doubt, for he has left the fact on record himself. His naturally enthusiastic temperament led him to throw himself eagerly into any scheme likely to benefit his country. He joined the artillery corps on his arrival in Dublin ; and the division to which he belonged, known as the " Lawyers' Artillery," was said to have been the best got up, and the best equipped in Dublin. 1 He also joined a debating society which met in Eustace Street, where the stirring events of the times were freely canvassed. Here, he says : — " I had many good opportunities of acquiring valuable informa- tion, upon which I very soon formed my own judgment. It was a terrible time. The political leaders of the period could not con- ceive such a thing as a perfectly open and above-board political machinery. My friend, Richard Newton Bennett, was an adjunct to the Directory of United Irishmen. I was myself a United Irishman. As I saw how matters worked, I soon learned to have no secrets in politics." 2 O'Connell lodged in Trinity Place. A gentleman who 1 The uniform of the lawyers' corps was scarlet and blue, their motto, Pro aris et focis ; the attorneys' regiment of Volunteers was scarlet and Pomona green ; a corps called the Irish Brigade, and composed princi- pally of Catholics (after the increasing liberality of the day had per- mitted them to become Volunteers) wore scarlet and white ; other legi- ments of Irish brigades wore scarlet faced with green, and their mott was Vox populi supremo, lex est ; the goldsmiths' corps, commanded by the Duke of Leinster, wore blue, faced with scarlet and a prr fessional prof usi an of gold lace. 8 Personal Recollections, by O'Neill Daunt. O'COXXELL IX D A NO EH 177 knew Dublin well at that period describes it as " an almost- unexplored nook." He was very intimate with Mr Murray, a respectable grocer, who resided at No. 3 South Great George Street, and who, like most Irishmen of the period, was in heart a rebel. That O'Connell was then in favour of physical force there can be no doubt, however he may have wished in later years to throw a veil of oblivion over his boyish ardour. A rising was expected literally every night, and Major Sirr was patrolling Dublin eager to exer- cise his bloody mission on the suspected. On one memorable evening O'Connell, excited partly by drink and partly by patriotism, and always ready to be first in the fray, was eager to join a meeting of United Irishmen that very night, and to swear in new members, but his host, more prudent, though by no means less patriotic,* induced the enthusiastic youth to accompany him to 8 Mr Murray's son, who must have been thoroughly well-informed on the subject, lias left the following account of the affair on record, which I quote from the " Sham Squire," with the author's permission : — " We are indebted to the late Mr Peter Murray, of the Registry of Deeds Office. Dublin, a man of scrupulous veracity, for the following curious reminiscence of O'Connell in 1798 : — 1 My father, a respectable cheese- monger and grocer, residing at 3 South Great George Street, was ex- ceedingly intimate with O'Connell, when a law student, and during his earlier career at the bar. Mr O'Connell, at the period of which I speak, lodged in Trinity Place adjacent, an almost unexplored nook, and to many of our citizens a terra incognita. I well remember O'Connell, one night at my father's house during the spring of 1798, so carried away by the political excitement of the day, and by the ardour of his innate patriotism, calling for a prayer-book to swear in some zualoua M 178 A NARROW USC APR the canal bridge at Leeson Street, where he saw him safely mi hoard a turf boat, and out of harm's way. It was well thai this had been accomplished, for Mr Murray's house w as searched that night by Major Sirr. In one ofO'Connell's communications to Mr O'Neill Daunt, he mentions leaving Dublin in June 1798 in a boat, and having paid the pilot half a guinea to put him on shore at Cork. Indeed, it was impossible at that time to travel in any other way. Bands of armed men were marching in every direction through the country, and as neither party was very particular as to identity, the most peaceful tra- veller was not free from danger. It would, appear probable young men as United Irishmen at a meeting of the body in a neigh bouring street. Counsellor — was there, and offered to accompany O'Connell on his perilous mission. My father, although an Irishman of advanced liberal views and strong patriotism, was not a United Irish- man, and endeavoured, but without effect, to deter his young and gifted friend from the rash course in which he seemed embarked. Dublin was in an extremely disturbed state, and the outburst of a bloody in- surrection seemed hourly imminent. My father resolved to exert to the uttermost the influence which it was well known he possessed over hia young friend. He made him accompany him to the canal bridge at Leeson Street, and after an earnest conversation, succeeded in persuad- ing the future Liberator to step into a turf boat which was then leaving Dublin. That night my father's house was searched hy Major Sirr, accompanied by the attorneys' corps of yeomanry, who pillaged it to their hearts' content. There can be no doubt that private information of O'Connell's tendencies and haunts had been communi- cated to the government.' "—The Sham Squire; or, The Rebellion in In* land, page 305. Dublin : Kelly. Mr John O'Connell gives an account of the affair which was evi- dently " revised." He says :— " On one occasion, however (perhaps th« OUT OF HA RIPS WAT. 176 that O'Connell remained in the peaceful wilds of Kerry during the most eventful period of the Rebellion. It was at that time that he contracted the fever previously men- tioned. But even then news travelled to that remote locality, and the terrible Revolution of '08 was read, not as we read it now. as a tale of horrors long past, but as a terrible tragedy then being enacted hour by hour, and of which the end waa not known yet. only one of his life), at the table of Mr Murray, already mentioned, about the month of March of the year 179S, he was betrayed, by the heat of a political discussion, into some forget fulness of his constant habit of tem- perance ; and took what to him was inconvenient, although to the well- SOaked brains of most of his compeers it would have been of no conse- quence. Returning that night full of self reproach and annoyance at the unaccustomed sensations he had subjected himself to, his interposi- tion to save a wretched female from the blows of some cowardly ruffians, in the garb of gentlemen, drew upon him the attack of the whole party ; but for a while (owing to his great strength and activity) with signal dis- comfiture to themselves, three being knocked down by him in succes- sion. However, one of the latter, on getting up, came behind and pinioned him, and so he was overpowered — receiving, while in this de- fenceless position, and ere he could free himself, several blows on the face, by which it was so disfigured as to render a few days' confinement to the house advisable. While under this irksome restraint, his land- lord, a most respectable tradesman (well known long afterwards to the theatre-going folk as Regan the fruiterer), then purveyor to the Castle of Dublin, took the liberty of his years, and permitted but respectful familiarity, to warn his young lodger from committing himself politically ■ — detailing the dark hints rife in the purlieus of the Castle, of the deep and fearful game the government were playing in allowing the insur- rection to mature, while they kept themselves ready, and had it in their power to lay hands upon its leaders at any moment. " — Memoir* / (SConnell, by his Son, vol. i. p. 15. ISO LORD EDWARD FITZGERALD. rattan withdrew from politics, hopeless of inducing the Government to do justice, or the people to bear injustice. The United Irishmen only numbered two men of rank amongst their leaders, Lord Edward Fitzgerald and Arthur O'Connor. Lord Edward belonged to the noble hoiuc of Leinster, and had learned to desire liberty, not for a class, but for all, first in America, 4 where he had served under Lord Cornwallis, and then in France, where he had attended 4 Lord Edward Fitzgerald's letters to his mother from America show the singular tenderness of his nature, and his delicate though tf umess for others, and especially for his good mother. He wrote, " She has a rope about my neck that gives hard tugs at it, and it is all I can do not to give way." How terrible was the last " giving way " of that fond heart, can only be realised by natures as sensitive as his. Writing about some business, he says — " I believe there is vn Men clique of fellowa in that country. Pray do not let any of them into Eilrush, for they will only distress and domineer over the poor tenants." — Memoirs of Lord Edward Fitzgerald, vol. i. p. 124. Lord Edward was treated most cruelly after his capture, notwithstanding his high rank. It is said that Lord Clare urged him to escape, and said every port in the country would be left open to him, but his nature was far too chivalrous to seek his own safety while others were in danger. The late Lord Holland furnishes, in his " Memoirs," many interesting illustrations of Lord Edward's sweet and gentle disposition :— " With the most unaffected simplicity and good nature he would palliate, from the force of circumstances or the accident of situation, the perpetrators of the very enormities which had raised his high spirit and compassionate nature to conspire and resist. It was this kindness of heart that led him, on his deathbed, to acquit the officer who inflicted his wounds of all malice, and even to commend him for an honest discharge of hia duty. It was this sweetness of disposition that enabled him to dismiss with good humour one of his bitterest persecutors, who had visited him in his mangled condition, if not to insult his misfortunes, with the idle hope of extoi ting l is secret. < I would shafce hands willingly with you,' ARREST OF FIFTEEN LEADERS. 181 a political dinner, at which lie accepted the title of u citi- zen." O'Connor was nephew and heir to Lord Longueville, by whom he was brought into Parliament in 1790. Fifteen leaders of the United Irishmen were seized in Belfast on the 14th of April 1797. They were all Protes- tants, and of the number there were seven Presbyterian ministers, and three Covenanters. Their papers were exa- mined, and alforded an excuse for fresh cruelties. In the very face of the fact, that these men, who were the real originators of the revolt, were Protestants, the fiercest punishments were inflicted on the Catholics. When Lord Cornwall is arrived in Ireland, he found his dilHeulty was not so much to repress the rebellion as to quiet those who were exciting and increasing it by their blood-thirsty rage. Every one who had a grudge against a neighbour denounced him as a rebel. Every one who wanted to gain favour with government sent in a list of suspected persons. This was often done secretly; no name was given, and yet government, or those who were acting in the name of government, proceeded at once to hang, shoot, or torture the unhappy victims.* Baid he, 1 but mine are cut to pieces. However, I '11 shake a toe, and wish you good-bye.' " His family felt his treatment bitterly. His brother, Lord Heniy Fitzgerald, wrote to Lord Camden reproaching him with his cruelty ; but it was useless, cruelty was the order of the day. — See Memoirs oj (Jruttun, vol. iv p. 387. 6 Mr Duudas forwarded one of these lists from a man " who would 182 LIST OF THOSE SUSPECTED. The excesses committed by the army were so horrible that we cannot defile these pages with them. On the 31st of not come forward/' to Sir Ralph Abercrombie. The list is a curiosity ami shows how such matters were arranged. Return of Suspected Persons. Names. Stephen Garry Waller Mooney Michael Lee . James Kelly . Patrick Burne. Hugh Toole . Patrick Con! an John Conlan . Dominick Conlan Maurice Conlan Matthew Conlan — Conlan, his son Thomas Gannon Michael Barnes Edward Burne Christopher Flood — Deering . . « Edmund Bell Residence. Kildare Eriarstown Kildare. . Do. . . . Ballysax . Conlanstown Do. . . . Do. Brownstown. Do. Ballysax. Do. Ballyfair . , Do. ... • Land croft. Cut Bush. Maddenstown Characters of the Men. Treasurer to the County meetil g, ( Representative to Surgeon Cum- ( mings. Deeply engaged, and a Captain. A Committee-man, and knows much. A Captain, much with Lord Ed. Fitzgerald. Treasurer Kildare Meeting. A supposed assassin. Deep in the secret. Used to be much with Lord Edward Fitzgerald. His son a Captain, and now in jail. . \ H on d the H Cur! \ Has . a meetin " ever ^ Smid '^ * ) -l ( his home at 10 o'clock. ra^h Thomas Kelly . j P( ^^^ l af j A Captain, and swears in many. Patrick Doyle - Flood . . , Do. Do. A Captain, and deeply con- cerned. -Daly, son to Ed- ) - (A Captain of the half-barony of ward Daly . . . Do < " J Lawrance Byrne . . Ballysax \ Kilcullen. { A blacksmith, and supposed tc ' ( have made must of the pikes. EXCESSES OF THE MILITARY. 18? August 1798. Lord Cornwallis issued general orders in the vain hope of improving their conduct; he might as well have tiied to control the west win J. " Bali.ixamoue, August o\st, 1798. "It is with very great concern that Lord Cornwall is finds him- self obliged to call on the General Officers and the Commanding Officers of regiments in particular, and in general on the officers oi the army, to assist him in putting a stop to the licentious conduct of the troops, and in saving the wretched inhabitants It will be seen that whole families were marked out for slaughter — that in many cases no reason whatever is given for the accusation, anil that in many more the unhappy men were only "supposed" to be guilty. Mr Dundas concludes this letter by saying: — "Everything goes on quietly, hut we have been obliged to destroy a large quantity of whisky, without which the troops would have got drunk, and done much mischief." The yeomen and military were drunk half their time, and those wretches were the men to whom lull liberty was granted to kill and torture any one on mere suspicion, or even without that excuse. Sir Ralph Abercrombie wa< too gallant an officer to encourage, or if he could help it, to practise such atrocities, but no one had control over the army, whi h he declared " was formidable to every one but the enemy." Lord Castlereagh wrote to General Lake, who succeeded Sir Ralph on the same subject. " Dcblin Castle, April 25*/?, 1798. "Sir, — It having been represented to his Excellency the Lord-Lieu- tenant, that much evil may arise to the disci; »line of the trooos from their being permitted fcr any length of time to live at free quarter*, tn^t the loyal and well-affected have in many instances suffered in common with the disaffected, from a measure which does not admit in its execution of sufficient discrimination of persons, I am directed by his Excellency to request that you will advert to these inconveniences, and adopt such otlur vigorous and effectual measures for enforcing the speedy surrender of arms as in your discretion you shall think fit, and which shall appear to you not liable to these objections." — Memoirs or Viscount Castlereagh, vol. i. p. 187. 184 A VAIN APPEAL. from being robbed, and in the most shocking manner ill-treated, by those to whom they had a right to look for safety and pro- tection. "Lord Cornwallis declares, that if he finds that the soldiers of any regiment have had opportunities of committing these excesses from the negligence of their officers, he will make those officers answerable for their conduct ; and that if any soldiers are caught either in the act of robbery, or with the articles of plunder in their possession, they shall be instantly tried, and immediate execution shall follow their conviction. "A Provost-Marshal will be appointed, who will, with his guard, march in the rear of the army, and who will patrol about the villages and houses in the neighbourhood of the camp." Lord Cornwallis has been accused of partiality to Ire- land because he would not countenance cruelty, though he could not prevent it. We therefore give other testimony- Captain Taylor wrote from Ballinamore on the 31st of August 1798 :— "We halt here this day to give the Queen's and 29th time to join us : they have made a most expeditious march from Wex- ford, and will be at Ballinasloe this day. We shall proceed towards Tuam to-morrow, and they will march in the same direc- tion. As far as we can learn as yet, the French are still at Castlebar, entrenching themselves, and drilling those of the in- habitants who have joined. Among the latter I fear there are some of the Longford and Kilkenny : those regiments marched to this place yesterday, and upon our arrival were immediately ordered on towards Athlone. Their conduct, and that of the Carabineers and Frazers, in action on the retreat from Castlebar and Tuam, and the depredations they committed on the road, exceed, I am told, ail description. Indeed, they have, I believe, raised a spirit of liscontent and disaffection which did no* before LORD CORNWALLIS. 185 exist in this part of the country. Every endeavour lias been used to prevent plunder in our corps, but it really is impossible to stop it in some of the regiments of militia with us, particularly the light battalions." With 'be intelligence of a master mind, and the clear- ness of an unprejudiced mind, Lord Cornwallis studied and fathomed the " Irish difficulty." It would have been well for both countries if counsels like his had prevailed. He saw that the system hitherto pursued was bad; 6 certainly it had been thoroughly tested, and as certainly it had entirely failed. • The following letter deserves consideration even at the present day :— " Marquis Conucallis to the Duke of Portland. [Secret and Confidential.] " Dublin Castle, Sept. 16, 1708. "My dear Lord, — If I have not appeared to give my sentiments to four Grace with the utmost freedom, and to speak with the most perfect openness of heart on the subject both of men and measures in this country, I most earnestly request that you will believe that such ap- parent reserve has not proceeded from a want of the most affectionate regard personally to yourself, or the most entire confidence in your up- rightness and honour, but in truth from my not being able to give you opinions which I had not formed, or to explain things which I was not sure that I understood. u The w defenceless the unhappy Irish peasantry were at this period, is evident from a letter of the Marquis of Cornwallis to the Duke of Portland, dated Dublin Castle, June 4 JS, 1798, in which he says: — "The accounts that you see of the numbers of the enemy de itroyed in every action, are, I conclude, greatly exaggerated ; from my own knowledge of military affairs, I am sure that a very small proportion of them only could be killed in battle; and I am much afraid that any man in a brown coat, who is found within several miles of the field of action, is butchered without discrimi- nation. u It shall be one of my first objects to soften the ferocity of our troops, which I am afraid, in the Irish corps at least, is not confined to the private soldiers. "I shall use my utmost exertions to suppress the folly which has been too prevalent in this quarter, of substituting the word Catholicism instead of Jacobinism, as the foundation of the present rebellion." On the 1st of July he wrote — u The violence of our friends, and their folly in endeavouring miserable thing to say, but, from all I have seen and know, I am per- fectly convinced that while everything round them has improved, the minds and feelings of the lower class of the Catholics of Ireland are exactly what they were in 1641. This is possible, and what I could not have believed four months ago, nor at all, had I not seen the proof with my own eyes. They are, however, to be brought to reason, as Cromwell brought them then, and by no other means, as the event will prove. In my opinion, a union would be the salvation of both islands." — Diary of Lord Colchester, vol. i. p. 160. It is difficult to understand how the Irish peasantry could have im- proved, when they were neither allowed education nor commerce. 190 VIOLENCE—CIVIL AND MILITARY. to make it a religious war, added to the ferocity of our troopa who delight in murder, most powerfully counteract all plans of conciliation. • ••••• • " The Irish militia are totally without discipline, contemptible before the enemy when any serious resistance is made to them, bul ferocious and cruel in the extreme when any poor wretches, either with or without arms, come within their power; in short, murder appears to be their favourite pastime. ' ; The principal persons of this country, and the members of both Houses of Parliament, are, in general, averse to all acts of clemenc}^, and although they do not express, and perhaps are too much heated to see the ultimate effects which their violence must produce, would pursue measures that wuld only terminate in the extirpation of the greater number of the inhabitants, and in the utter destruction of the country. The words Papists and Priests are for ever in their mouths, and by their unaccountable policy they would drive four-fifths of the community into irreconcilable rebellion ; and in their warmth they lose sight of the real cause of the present mischief, of that deep-laid conspiracy to revolu- tionise Ireland on the principles of France, which was originally formed, and by wonderful assiduity brought nearly to maturity, by men who had no thought of religion but to destroy it, and who knew how to turn the passions and prejudices of the different sects to the advancement of their horrible plot for the introduc- tion of that most dreadful of all evils, a Jacobin revolution." We have given sufficient English authority to show tbe state of Ireland at the period of 0' Council's entrance into public life. Many Irish authorities might have been quoted, but we are so fully aware of English misconception of the whole subject, and of the prejudice which exists against the THE SHACKLETOXS. 191 accents even of Irish Protestants, who have given truthful narrative? of the times, that we do not introduce their authority here. But there is one authority little known, and seldom, as far as we are aware, quoted, to which few can object, as likely to he prejudiced unduly on either gide — it is that of the gentle and gifted Mary Leadbetter, a member of the Society of Friends. Mr Shackleton, Mrs Leadbetter's father, kept a famous school at Ballitore, in the county Kildare. The village lies on the high road to Cork, about twenty miles from Dublin. It was almost a Quaker settlement, hut many Irish gentlemen were glad to confide the education of their ?ons to the conscientious and able schoolmaster. Mrs Leadhetter wrote, amongst other works, "The Annals of Ballitore," in which she gives a charming description of ber home. Edmund Burke was educated there, and kept lip a life-long correspondence with the Shackletons, honourable alike to master and pupil. His correspondence forms a considerable and most interesting portion of the volume. All was happy in that happy home till t^e dread hour when the " Irish rising " was put down with merciless cruelty. With a few extracts from Mrs Leadbetter's narra- tive, we conclude this painful subject. The Shackleton family were treated by both sides with consideration, though they had a " green 8 cloth" on their 8 The writer knew a lady, since dead, who was unhappy enough t<; have seen a young man taken up, and hanged without any trial, oi 192 MRS LEADBETTER'S TESTIMONY. table which they did not remove. We suspect the sympathies of (lie gentle Friends were rather with the people; but how could it be otherwise, when the people were always eager to serve them in any way? Their house was visited frequently both by the insurgents and the military. The following are some of the many scenes of horror which Mrs Lead* better records : — " Every one seemed to think that safety and security were to be found in my brother's house. Thither the insurgents brought their prisoners, and thither also their own wounded comrades. It was an awful sight to behold in that large parlour such a mingled assembly of throbbing, anxious hearts ; my brother's own family, silent tears rolling down their faces, the wives of the loyal officers, the wives of the soldiers, the wives and daughters of the insurgents, the numerous guests, the prisoners, the trembling women — all dreading to see the door open, lest some new distress, some fresh announcement of horrors, should enter. It was awful ; but every scene was now awful, and we knew not what a day might bring forth. • •«•••• • " Young girls dressed in white, with green ribbons, and carrying pikes, accompanied the insurgents. They had patrols and a countersign, but it was long before they could decide upon the password. even attempt at a trial, simply because he wore a necktie which was partly green. One of the favourite ballads of the period, and which indeed is still sung by the peasants, alludes to this as a common practice. " The Wearing of the Green" is perhaps one of the most soul-stirring of all the Irish rebel-songs— " Oh ! such a wretched country As this was never seen, For they're hanging men and women, For the wearing of the green." MRS LEADBETTEWS TESTIMONY. 193 ■ At length they fixed upon the word t: scourges." Sentinels were placed in various parts of the village. One day as I went to my brothers, a sentinel called to a man who walked with me not to advance on pain of being shot. The sentinel was my former friend '*the Canny." I approached him, and asked, would he would shoot me if I proceeded ? " Shoot you ! " exclaimed he, taking my hand and kissing it, adding a eulogium on the Quakers. ' I told him it would be well if they were all of our way of thinking, for then there would be no such work as the present. 1 thought I could comprehend 11 the Cannv's n incoherent answer "Ay ! but you know our Saviour — the scourges, oh! the scourges ! " • ••••••• Then raising himself in his stirrups, he revoked the orders given to his men to fire upon every man in coloured clothes. Oh, rash and cruel orders, which exposed to such danger lives of such value, which if thus sacrificed no regrets could have restored ! Nothing can justify such commands. • • •••••• " Soldiers carne in for milk ; some of their countenances were pale with anger, and they grinned at me, calling me names which I had never heard before. They said I had poisoned the milk which I gave them, and desired me to drink some, which I did with much indignation. Others were civil, and one inquired if we had had any United Irishmen in the house. I told them we had. In that fearful tune the least equivocation, the least deception, appeared to me to be fraught with danger. The soldier continued his inquiry — ' Had they plundered us V 4 No, except of eating and drinking.' ' Oh, free quarters,' he replied, smiled and went away. A fine looking man, a soldier, came in in an extravagant passion ; neither his rage nor my terror could prevent me from observing that this man was strikingly handsome ; he asked me the same questions in the same terms, and I made the same answer. He N 10 1 MRS I EA I) BET TEE S TESTIMONY. cursed me with great bitterness, and raising his musket, presented it to my breast. I desired him not to shoot me. It seemed as if lie had the will but not the power to do so. He turned from me, dashed pans and jugs off the kitchen table with his musket, and shattered the kitchen window. Terrified almost out of my wits, I pan out of the house, followed by several women almost as much frightened as myself. When I fled my fears gained strength, and I believed my enemy was pursuing ; I thought of throwing myself into the river at the foot of the garden, thinking the bullet could not hurt me in the water. One of our servants ran into the street to call for help. William Richardson and Charles Coote, who kindly sat on oheir horses outside our windows, came in and turned the ruffian out of the house. That danger passed, I beheld from the back window of our parlour the dark- red flames of Gavin's house, and others, rising above the green of the trees. At the same time, a fat tobacconist from Carlo w lolled upon one of our chairs, and talked boastingly of the exploits performed by the military whom he had accompanied ; how they had shot several, adding, ' We burned one fellow in a barrel.' I never in my iifn felt disgusted so strongly ; it even overpowered the horror due to the deed which had been actually committed." Chapter |i% + HE BAIL AXD POLITICS. 1 798-1801. TTkgr circuit — AT the bar— jerry kei.ler — bar stories— promise of suo C£gS — CLEAR IDEAS OF FOX — THE IRISH PARLIAMENT — THE UNION — POLICY OF PITT — BRIBERY — ^UE PRIESTS — CONCUSSION IN VOTING LETTER OF MR LUKE FOX — THE BAR AND THE UNION — " THE ANTI-UNION " — FIR8T SPEECH — ANTI-UNION RESOLUTIONS — PERSONAL APPEARANCE — QRATTAU AMD PITT — PERSONAL DAXOUU y^f^CONNELL went hia first circuit in 1 798. He had only just re- covered from the fever already mentioned, which was so nearly fatal, but his tigorons consti- tution enabled him t<> bear both then and in later life what might have proved beyond the strength of others less favoured in that way. We ffive here his own account of this illness : — "It was occasioned,'' said he, "by sleeping in wet clothes. I had dried them upon me at a peasant's fire, and drank three glasses of whisky, after which I fell asleep. The next day I hunted, was soon weary, and fell asleep in a ditcli under sunshine. I became much worse ; I spent a fortnight in great 198 THE INTELLECT UNTOUCHED. discomfort, wandering about and unable to eat. At last, when I (•(mid no longer battle it out, I gave up and went to bed. Old Doctor Moriarty was sent for ; lie pronounced me in a high fever, was in such pain that I wished to die. In my ravings I fancied at 1 was in the middle of a wood, and that the branches Were n fire around me. I felt my backbone stiffening for death, and I positively declare that I think what saved me was the effort I made to rise up, and show my father, who was at my bedside, that 1 knew him. I verily believe that effort of nature aveited death. During my illness I used to quote from the tragedy of Douglas these lines — 'Unknown I die ; no tongue shall speak of me ; Some noble spirits, judging by themselves, May yet conjecture what I might have proved ; And think life only wanting to my fame.' I used to quote those lines under the full belief that my illness would end fatally. Indeed, long before that period — when I was Beven years old — yes, indeed, as long as ver I can recollect. I always felt a presentiment that I should write my name on the page of history. I hated Saxon domination. I detested the tyrants of Ireland. During the latter part of my illness, Doctor Moriarty told me that Buonaparte had got his whole army to Alexandria, across the desert. ' That is impossible,' said I, ' he cannot have done so ; they would have starved. 1 ' Oh, no,' re- plied the doctor, 'they had a quantity of portable soup with, them, sufficient to feed the whole army for four days.' ' Ay,' joined I, 'but had they portable water? For their portable jp Avould have been of little use if they had not water to dis- solve it in.' My father looked at the attendants with an air of hope. Doctor Moriarty said to my mother, 'His intellect, at any rate, is untouched.' " This illness occurred in August 1798, and immediately after his recovery he went on circuit. Of this event ho LEA YING HOME. 199 has also left a record, or rather the record as given by him- self has been preserved by his faithful friend Mr Daunt. Travelling then in Kerry, 9 or indeed in any part of the world, was by no means the easy and rapid affair it is uuw. O'Connell left home at four o'clock in the morning on horseback, accompanied by his brother John, who was bound for the more congenial occupation of hunting. O'Connell was passionately fond of sport, and tenderly attached to his whole family, so that the parting had a double pang. We give the remainder of the narrative in 0' Council's own words : — "I looked after him. from time to time, until he was out of tight, and then I cheered up my spirits as well as 1 could; I had left home at such an early hour, that I was in Tralee at half-past • Until the year 1825, when the Limerick mail-coach was established, put-chaises, sometimes of the rudest construction, were the only meana of conveyance. Two well-known Tralee characters, Davy Dog and Ja"\k Hackney, kept these coaches, and with rope shrouds rigged under tne bodies of them to assiU or preserve the springs. They took six or seven hours going from Tralee to Listowel — a distance of eighteen miles — stopped there that night, the next day journeying as far as Newbridge, where another night was spent, and the third day they reached Lime- rick. The journey between Tralee and Limerick is performed at present by rail in about live hours. The first four-horse mail was driven into Kerry from Cork on the 11th of August 1810, by old Mich Daly, a famous Jehu, whose chirrup was the delight of his horses, and who made the noble and creditable boast that " a ha'porth of whipcord " would last a twelvemonth. He had a theory, rather old-fashioned, we must fear, that " beating horses was not driving them." He proved his theory by practice, and we Bincerely wish we had a few more imitators. Butgcod driving requires some intellectual effort ; and brute force, which the prosecutions of the "YOU'LL DO, YOUNG GENTLEMAN." twelve. I got my horse fed, and, thinking it was as well to push on 1 remounted him, and took the road to Tarbert by Listowell. A few miles further on, a shower of rain drove me under a bridge for shelter. While 1 stayed there, the rain sent Robert Hickson also under the bridge. He saluted me, and asked me where I was going? I answered, 'To Tarbert.'— ' Why so late?' said Hickson. * I am not late,' said I. ' I have been up since four o'clock this morning.' — 'Why, where do you come from?' — 'From Carhen.' Hickson looked astonished, for the distance was near fifty Irish miles. But he expressed his warm approval of my activity. ' Youll do, young gentleman,' said he ; ' I see you'll do.* I then rode on, and got to Tarbert about five in the afternoon — full sixty miles Irish from Carhen. There wasn't one book to be had at the inn. I had no acquaintance in the town ; and I felt my spirits low enough at the prospect of a long, stupid even- ing. But I was relieved by the sudden appearance of Ralph Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals shows to be very much in vogue at the other side of the Channel, is within the reach of every man, however degraded, who has a strong arm. The judges in the eighteenth century at least, travelled direct from Limerick to Tralee, and were particular about the state of the roads, for they fined the county Kerry one hundred pounds for not keeping the " great circuit road " in proper repair. The first hotel of any importance in Tralee was set up by Dick Thornton, and was styled the Denny Arms. Dick, as usual in such cases, was a retired servant. He had been coachman to Sir Barry" Denny, but having become incapacitated for that position by a fall from his seat of authority, the coach-box — he was set up as hotel-keeper, and provided with a wooden leg. The Blennerhassets, too, had their hotel, conducted by Sam Benner, who was also a post-master, and is said to have advanced the art of locomotion by his strenuous efforts to keep up and improve his busi- ness. Paddy Devine represented the Crosbie interest. His hotel, as in duty bound, was called the Crosbie Arms. He is reported to have been an extensive farmer, and, moreover, kept race-korsea. O'COy SELL'S FORTE. 201 Marshall, an i>ld friend of mine, who came to the, inn to dress for a ball that took place in Tarbert that night. He asked me to accompany him to the hall. ' Why,' said I, ' I have ridden sixty miles.' ' Oh, you don't seem in the least tired,' said he, ' so come along.' Accordingly I went, and sat up until two o'clock in the morning, dancing." A few hours' sleep was sufficient to refresh the hardy youth, and he rode off to the Limerick assizes to make his iirst public appearance as a barrister. How little he could have anticipated, as he rode quietly and unnoticed into the grand old city of the Violated Treaty, 1 and glanced at the stone which commemorates Irish bravery and English bad faith, how triumphantly he should one day be received there himself! He at once distinguished himself as a cross-examiner, which was undoubtedly his great forte at the bar. This department of the legal profession requires a tact and talent peculiar to itself, and which is often wanting in those who were gifted in other ways with the highest forensic ability. Woe to the unhappy man who gets into the witness box with a secret ; he might make a thousand resolutions to keep it to himself, — he might succeed with eome cross-examiners, but certainly not when OConnel] was counsel. He laughed, he cajoled, he rarely threatened, be began a 1 The particulars of the Violated Treaty are too well-known to need more than a passing allusion. It is certainly one of the worst breaches of faith on record. 202 EXAMINING A WITNESS. cheerful conversation in most confidential terms. The half- pleased, half-bewildered witness " did not know where he was." This agreeable gentleman surely could have no ulterior designs in all this. Precisely when the unhappy man was thoroughly off his guard, out came the question. It was generally answered with a second's hesitation, and O'Connell sat down triumphant. He had a singular facility, a gift which cannot be ac- quired by any amount of practice, of seizing the salient points of a subject at one glance. He not only asked well, but he knew exactly what to ask. In ten minutes he would extract as much information from a witness, as a more practised but less gifted barrister would attain in half an hour. At the Tralee assizes he held a brief from Jerry Keller, a noted attorne} r . O'Connell had to examine a witness about whose sobriety there was some question. The wit- ness would not convict himself. He declared he had his " share of a pint of whisky." His sobriety depended on the amount of the " share." O'Connell asked him by virtue of his oath, was not his share all but the pewter ; and amid a roar of laughter the unhappy victim of forensic dexterity was obliged to admit that it was. O'Connell, in relating the story afterwards, said, " The oddity of my mode of putting the question was very successful, and created a general and hearty laugh. Jerry Keller repeated the encouragement Robert Hickson had already bestowed ■ A CLEVER ROGUE? 20:? upon my activity, in the very same words, 'You'll do y )'o ung gentleman ! you'll do . r M Mr Hickson'8 history was a curious exemplification 01 the state of the times. He turned Protestant to save his property, and was twice High Sheriff of Kerry. When the penal code was relaxed, he went back to his old faith to save his conscience, having, however, first made very sure that this proceeding would not injure his temporal pro- sperity. O'Connell used to tell some capital bar stories. "The cleverest rogue in the profession that ever I heard of," he said, on one occasion, " was one Checkley, familiarly known by the name of 1 Checkley-be-d — d.' Checkley was agent once at the Cork assizes for a fellow accused of burglary and aggravated assault committed at Ban try. The noted Jerry Keller was coun- sel for the prisoner, against whom the charge was made out by the clearest circumstantial evidence; so clearly, that it seemed quite impossible to doubt his guilt. When the case for the pro- secution closed, the judge asked if there were any witnesses for the* defence. 'Yes, my lord,' said Jerry Keller, 'I have three briefed to me.' 1 Call them/ said the judge. Checkley immedi- ately bustled out of court, and returned at once, leading in a very respectable-looking, farmer-like man, with a blue coat and gdt buttons scratch wig, corduroy tights, and gaiters. 'This is a witness to character, my lord,' said Checkley. Jerry Keller (the counsel) forthwith began to examine the witness. After asking him his name and residence, 4 You know the prisoner in the dock ? ' said Keller. 'Yes, your honour, ever since he was a gorsoon V 'And what is his general character?' said Keller. * Ogh, the devil a worse ! ' ' Why, what sort of a witness is this yon 've brought?' cried Keller, passionately, flinging down his brief, and £04 PROVING Ai\ ALIBI. looking furiously at Checkley; 1 he has ruined us-F 'He may prove an alibi, however,' returned Checkley; 'examine him to alibi as instructed in your brief.' Keller accordingly resumed his examination. ' Where was the prisoner on the 10th instant ?' mid be. 'He was near Castlemartyr,' answered the witness. 'Are you sure of that?' 'Quite sure, counsellor!' ' How do you know with such certainty?' 'Because upon that very night 1 was returning from the fair, and when I got near my own house, 1 saw the prisoner a little way on before me — I'd swear to him anywhere. He was dodging about, and I knew it could be for no good end. So I slipped into the field, and turned off my horse to grass ; and while I was watching the lad from behind the ditch, I saw him pop across the wall into my garden and steal a lot of parsnips and carrots ; and, what I thought a great dale worse of, he stole a bran-new English spade I had got from my landlord, Lord Shannon. So, faix ! I cut away after him, but aa I was tired from the day's labour, and he being fresh and nimble, I wasn't able to ketch him. But next day my spade was seen surely in his house, and that 's the same rogue in the dock ! ] wish I had a hoult of him.' ' It is quite evident,' said the judge, that we must acquit the prisoner ; the witness has clearly estab- lished an alibi for him ; Castlemartyr is nearly sixty miles from gantry • and he certainly is anything but a partisan of his. Pray, friend,' addressing the witness, ' will you swear informations against the prisoner for his robbery of your property ? ' ' Troth i will, my lord ! with all the pleasure in life, if your lordshifi thinks I can get any satisfaction out of him. I 'm tould I can f;>r the spade, but not for the carrots and parsnips.' ' Go to the Crown Office and swear informations,' said the judge. " The prisoner was of course discharged, the alibi having clearly been established ; in an hour s time some inquiry was made as to whether Checkley s rural witness had sworn informations in the Crown Office. That gentleman was not to be heard of: the prisoner also had vanished immediately on being discharged— and of course resumed his mal -practices forthwith. It needs "TAKE AWAY THAT OWL. hardly he told, that Lord Shannon's soi-disant tenant dealt a little in fiction, and that the whole story of his farm from that nobleman, and of the prisoner's thefts of the spade and the vegetables, was a pleasant device of Mr Checkley's. I told this story," continued O'Connell, " to a coterie of English barristers with whom I dined; and it was most diverting to witness their astonishment at Mr Checkley's unprincipled ingenuity. Stephen Rice, the assistant barrister, had so high an admiration of this clever rogue, that he declared he would readily walk fifty miles to see Checkley ! " The Tralee court-house was the scene of some curious episodes. One of these was thus related by O'Connell : — "O'Grady was on one occasion annoyed at the disorderly noise, in the court-house at Tralee. He bore it quietly for some time, expecting that Denny (the High Sheriff) would interfere to restore order. Finding, however, that Denny, who was reading in his box, took no notice of the riot, Grady rose from the bench, and called out to the studious High Sheriff, 'Mr Denny, I just got up to hint that I 'm afraid the noise in the court will prevent you from reading your novel in quiet.' u After O'Grady had retired from the bench, some person placed a large stuffed owl on the sofa beside him. The bird was of enor mous size, and had been brought as a great curiosity from the tropics. O'Grady looked at the owl for a moment, and then said with a gesture of peevish impatience, 1 Take away that owl ! take away that owl ! If you don't, I shall fancy I am seated again oij the Exchequer Bench beside Baron Foster ! 9 " Those who have seen Baron Foster on the bench, can best appreciate the felicitous resemblance traced by his venerable brother judge between his lordship and an old stuffed owl.' "Judge O'Grady was by no means deficient in wit. Mr PurcoH O'Gorman, previously to emancipation, was one of the most violent . pot and out partisans of the Catholic party. He often declared that 1 did not go far enough. We were once standing together hi TRIED FOR MELODIOUS PRACTICES. the inn at Ennis, and I took up a prayer-book which lay in the w indow-, and said, kissing it, ' By virtue of this book, I will not take place or office from the Government, until emancipation is carried. Now, Purcell, my man ! will you do as much 1 ' Pnrceli 0' Gorman put the book to his lips, but immediately put it away, saying, 'I won't swear; I needn't ! my word is as good as my oath — I am sure of my own fidelity ! ' When Chief Baron O'Grady heard this story, he remarked, 'They were both quite right. Go- vernment has nothing worth O'Connell's while to take, until emancipation be carried ; but anything at all would be good enough for Purcell O'Gorman.'" Some waggish barrister having accused Nicholas Purcell O'Gorman of being a musician, the charge was stoutly denied by the accused person. "A jury," said O'Connell, " was thereupon impannelled to try the defendant, who persisted in pleading ' Not guilty ' to the indictment for melodious practices. The jury consisted of Con Lyne, under twelve different aliases — such as ' Con of the Seven Bottles,' 'Con of the Seven Throttles/ * Crim-Con,' and so forth. The prosecutor then proceeded to interrogate the defen- dant : — ' By virtue of your oath, Mr O'Gorman, did you never play on any musical instrument 1 ' — ' Never, on my honour ! ' re- plied Purcell. ' Come, sir, recollect yourself. By virtue of your oath, did you never play second fiddle to O'Connell ? ' — The fact was too notorious to admit of any defence, and the unanimous jury accordingly returned a verdict of guilty." O'Connell once received a singular compliment from one of his clients whom he had unsuccessfully defended for cow-stealing — " I was once," said he, " counsel for a cow-stealer, who waa clearly convicted — the sentence was transportation for fourteen years. At the end of that time he returned, and happening to meet me, he began to talk about the trial. I asked him how he LESS0J9 IN COW-STEALISG GRATIS. *2J7 har it I cannot guess, as exclusive of temporary objections I never had the least liking to the SPefcsure, though I confess I have less attended to the arguments pro and v>n than | erhaps I otherwise should have done, from a full conviction that it was completely impossible. You know, I dare say, that my general principle in politics is very much against the 0*6 and indivisible, and if 1 were to allow myself a leaning to any extreme it would be to that of Federalism. Pray, therefore, whenever you hear my opinion men- tioned, declare for me my decided disapprobation ; not that I would have my wish to have this known a reason fur your attendance, however, if otherwise you wish to stay away." — /W* Correspondence, vol. iv. p. 150- 214 COST OF A STATE POLICY. He had to deal with the people of Ireland, with those units who are considered so insignificant when counted by ones, who are so terribly formidable when you ccme to add the ones, and discover that they amount to millions. A multitude is terribly formidable even without leaders, even when they are held in chains. The English ministei knew this, and crushed the multitude. If it did cost some millions of money, what matter ! his was an extravagant administration, and he hoped to revenge himself after the Union. As to the lives, the agony, the legacy of hatred, all that " went without saying." Perhaps he deplored the blood and crime a little, not having the brutal nature of Cromwell, who delighted in it, but he consoled himself with the reflection that state policy requires sacrifice. The benefit of England was the one grand object. 6 It 6 This was no secret. In 1699, Sir Richard Cox wrote a work, en- titled " The English Interest in Ireland," proposing a Union in the fol- lowing words : — " It is your interest to unite and incorporate us with England ; for by that means the English interest will always be prevalent here, and the kingdom as secure to you as Wales, or any county in England. Your taxes will be lessened when we bear part of the burden. . . . All our money will still centre at London; and our trade and communicatica with England will be so considerable, that we shall think ourselves at home when there ; and where one goes thither now, then ten will go when all our business is transacted in your Parliament, to which, if we send sixty-four knights lor our thirty-two counties, ten lords, and six bishops, they may spend our money, but cannot influence your councils to your disadvantage. . . . By the Union, England will get much of out money, and abundance of our trade." This man was a specimen of the class of men who carried the Union IRELAND A DEPEXDEXCY. 215 ffas right, it was more than justifiable that Englishmen should seek the advancement of their own nation above all thing>, but they were equally bound in common honesty either to treat Irish interests as synonymous with their own, or to leave Ireland perfectly free to look after her < wn interests. It was not just to treat her as a dependency, or rather as a country which was to be used solely for the interests of those who had made themselves her masters by force of arms. Fox was probably the only English statesman of his time who had thoroughly clear ideas as to the duty and the good policy of making English and Irish interests coincide. He held and expressed strong views as to the power of the people, and was decidedly of opinion that Parliament could not make a Union between the two countries either with legal or moral right, unless Parliament had the sanction of the people. *' Supposing the Stamp Act were beneficial to America, or who represented Ireland. Though lii-li by birth, his interests were wholly English. In 1751, Sir Matthew Dicker wrote " Essays on Trade," in which he •nil : — "By a union with Ireland the taxes of Great Britain will be les- sened." In 1767, Postlethwayte wrote a work, entitled " Britain's Com- mercial Interest," in which he said : " By the Union, Ireland would soon be enabled to pay a million a year towards the taxes of Great Britain ; the riches of Ireland would chiefly return to England, she containing the seat of empire ; the Irish lairds would be little better than tenants to her, for allowing them the privilege of making the best, of their rela- tions." — P. 203. 218 FOX ON THE UNION. Parliament was not competent in any sense of the word to enact it. Supposing a Union would be beneficial to Ireland, Parliament again is not competent to enact it, because it is not within its commission to destroy the cola* stitution which it is instituted to support, even though it should place a better in its stead; and here comes in with propriety what Locke says, that Parliament is to make laws and not legislatures. I cannot think, for instance, that Parliament is competent to declare Great Britain an absolute monarchy, or a republic, though it should be of opinion that the change would be for the better. For such revolutions there must be a known opinion of the people, and though such opinion be difficult to collect legally, yet for practical purposes it may be col- lected in a practical way, as I contend that it was, or at least that it was pretended to be, in 1088 and 1706. It is said that this reasoning goes to say, that Parliament, which is instituted to improve, cannot be competent to impair the Constitution ; the answer is, that whether a projected alteration be an improvement or an injury, is a question upon which Parliament is commissioned to judge, but annihilation (which Union must be allowed to be) is not within their commission. That it is nmihila- tion, I, of course, suppose proved, before I deny the com- petence." We have seen how Mr Pitt dealt with the people. His mode of dealing with the upper classes was far more simple LANDLORD AND TENANT. 217 and effective. They wanted money, and he flung it about With reckless prodigality. The sale of boroughs was always a profitable source of income to Anglo-Irish noblemen. They wi re a needy race, and by no means satisfied with their poverty. In their folly and infatuation they en- couraged the rebellion, forgetting that they were but im- poverishing themselves. They soon learned their fatal mistake, but they had not the wisdom to discern the remedy. It was always hard for the Irish tenant to pay his rent, necau>e he was not allowed a straw for his bricks, though the bricks were required all the same ; but after the rebel- lion there was a deficiency of tenants, and no amount of torture could wring money from the hapless few who re- mained to till the impoverished soil. The circulation of the Bank of Ireland also was discredited, and, of course, the poor were the sufferers. The tenants were obliged to pay in gold when they could be made pay at all, but the scar- city was so great that the tradesmen were paid in paper money, thus throwing the burden still on the people. 7 7 On the 8th June 1799, Lord Devonshire wrote to Lord Castlereagh . "Whilst I have the pen in my hand, I beg leave to trespass upon your Lordship a little longer, to state a great grievance that this part of the world labours under, which, if possible, ought to be stopped — that is, the sale of the gold coin. When Government thought fit, two or three years ago, to encourage the circulation of bank paper, that traffic began. I gave all the assistance I could to Government in their object; and took bank paper in my office for rent, which I still continue to do, which, 218 BRIBERY AND INCAPABILITY. The bribery system was not made any secret. Gentle- men knew their worth, and were by no means modest in proclaiming it. If they were to sell honour and conscience, at least they meant to have the fall value of both. Lord Cornwallis wrote to Major-General Ros« 01? the 23d November 1798, and gave some charmingly naive descrip- tions of how affairs were being managed. He was obliged to talk a great deal, and found it a bore. He thought the Catholics might as well have got the benefit of what was going, they, at the very time, being kept under the de- lusion that they were to be included. He declared the Lords-Lieutenant had been idle and incapable, yet Irish men were wildly blamed if they were not loyal to them, I believe, none of my neighbours do. I understand Lord Hertford, Lord Donegal, Lord Londonderry, &c, never have and do not take any paper for their rents ; but now I cannot pay a bill to any tradesman in Belfast or the country, in bank notes, without allowing from threepence to eightpence in every guinea. I understand it is the same hi the pay of the army. The conduct of the Bank of Ireland is so illiberal, if not illegal, and, besides, take so little pains to stop forgeries upon them, that I shall no longer take their paper as rent in my office. There is scarce a remittance made to Dublin but two or three notes are returned as forged. They have left off defacing the note, indeed, as they used to do, by which a poor honest man lost eight five-pound notes that my agent recovered for him ; but he had not taken the same precaution my agent did, as the notes were so defaced by an oiled red stamp that lie could not swear to the paper, and those that he thought had paid them to him denied that these notes were those they paid him. I have ordered no notes to be taken, till some means are devised to prevent the gross imposition of paying for goloV' PICTURE OF THE STATE OF IRELAND. 219 and he declared the whole manner of governing Ireland was founded on the " grossest corruption. " On the 27th of April 1799, Lord Cornwall^ wrote to the Bishop of Lichfield, giving a wretched picture of the state of Ireland. " This wretched country remains much in the same state, — the seeds of disaffection, of hatred of England, and in particular (and, I am sorry to say, in general with more reason) of their own land- lords, are as deeply rooted as ever, and frequently break out in various shapes, such as the murder of magistrates, or the hough- ing of cattle : our politicians of the old leaven are as much occu- pied with their dirty jobs as ever. Those who think at all of the great question of the Union, confine their speculation to the simple question of its either promoting or counteracting their own private views, and the great mass of the people neither think cr care about the matter. Under these circumstances, you will easily conceive how unpleasant my situation must be, and how little I can flatter myself with the hopes of obtaining any credit for myself, or of rendering any essential service to my country. Sincerely do I repent that I did not return to Bengal. ' 8 The interested parties were soon satisfied. A sum of £1,'JG0,000 was expended in buying up the boroughs, and with the addition of a few peerages and pen- ions, the • Cornwallis Correspondence, vol. 3, p. 93. " My time has lately been much taken up with seeing, and breaking to the principal persons here, the projected Union, and when you send for a man on such business, he must stay with you and talk to you as long as he likes. I have no great doubts of being able to carry the measure here, but I have great apprehensions of the inefficacy of it after it is carried, and I do not think it would have been much more difficult to have included the Catholics. " Those who are called principal persons here, are men who have been 220 J10R0UG II- M ONGER 1NG AND CAJOLING. work was done. Lord Devonshire got £52,500, and Lord Ely £45,000. Three or four powerful families had the representation of Ireland completely in their power, either by the possession of large property, or by intermarriages. The Ponsonbys had no less than twenty-two seats under their complete control. The Devonshire and Beresford families had almost the same number. Lord Longueville ruled Cork and Mallow with six other places. The principal difficulty was with the Catholic clergy, who could not be bribed, but whom it was quite possible to deceive. The managers of the Union were not particular how the work was effected, with perhaps the exception of Lord Corn wallis, who had some idea of honour even where Papists were concerned. It is to be regretted that the Catholic Bishops, who worked for the Union, did not see some oi the private correspondence in which they were mentioned, and did not hear some of the private conversations which have been recorded, and sent down to posterity. Sir J. Hippisley, who was specially employed to cajole the Catholics, wrote to Lord Castlereagh : — " The Speaker told me, some time before, that Mr Pitt had much approved the suggestions I had offered, with respect to the raised into consequence, only by having the entire disposal of the pat ronage of the Crown in return for their undertaking the management of the country, because the Lords-Lieutenant were too idle or too in- capable to management it themselves. They are detested by everybody but their immediate followers, and have no influence but what is founded on the grossest corruption."— Cornwallis' Correspondence, vol. 3, p. 445. EARL ALT A MO XT AXD HIS ASSOCIATES. 221 distinctions and checks on the Monastic Clergy. Your Lordship will permit me to quote a vulgar Italian proverb, which is this: — "One must he aware of a bull before, of an ass at his heels, and of a friar on all sides." Seven years' experience on Catholic ground convinced me that this adage was well imagined." On the 5th of June 1799, the Earl of Altamont wrote from Westport House — " The priests have all appeared to 6ign, and though I am not proud of many of them as asso- ciates, I will take their signatures to prevent a possibility of a counter declaration." 9 On the 3rd of June 1799, Lord Castlereagh wrote to • " If the Roman Catholics stand forward, it will be unwillingly; they are keeping bock decidedly, but many will be influenced, and some few who connected themselves with the Protestants during the disturbance will be zealously forward on the present occasion. The priests have all offered to sign ; and, though I am not proud of many of them as asso- ciates, I will take their signatures, to prevent a possibility of a counter- declaration. I hear the titular Archbishop has expressed himself inclined to the measure This day, I have sent round to all the Catholics oi property in the country : I may be mistaken, but, in my judgment, the wish of the most of them would be to stand neuter ; or, perhaps, if they had any countenance, to oppose it — that is the fact Several will sign from influence, some from fear; but the majority, I believe, will pretend that they have given opinions already, and can't decently retract them. You shall know exactly when I get to Dublin. Every man applied to, of all persuasions, wants to make it personal compliment" — Memoir oj Viscount Castlereagh, vol. ii. p. 328. Mr Cook wrote to Lord Castlereagh at the close of 1798 to inform him of public opinion in Dublin : — " The Dublin argument is this: — Absenteeism will increase— interest of the debt to England will increase — and we cannot bear the drain. Our manufactures will be ruined by putting an end to duties between the two countries. All the proprietors in Dublin must be injured. We shall be liable to British debts," &c 222 THE CLERGY AND THE UNION, the Duke of Portland that the rebellion " was managed by the inferior priests." There were certainly some of the Catholic clergy who united with the rebels in self-defence, but a careful examination of the correspondence of the times will show at once that they were few in number, and that the Government relied much on the co-operation of the priests, even at the very time that many of them were being treated with inhuman cruelty. On the 20th of July 1799, Lord Cornwallis wrote to the Duke of Portland, that the u clergy of the Church, par- ticularly the superior, countenance the measure," and that the linen merchants of the north were much too busy with their trade to think much on the subject. 1 If the Catholic 1 These letters are so important an illustration of the state of Ireland at this period that we give further extracts: — " Within these few clays, the Catholics have shown a disposition to depart from their line of neutrality, and to support the measure. Those of the city of Waterford have sent up a very strong declaration in favour of Union, at the same time expressing a hope that it will lead to the accomplishment of their emancipation, as they term it, but not looking to it as a preliminary. The Catholics of Kilkenny have agree! to a similar declaration ; and, as the clergy of that Church, particularly the superiors, countenance the measure, it is likely to extend itself. " In the North, the public opinion is much divided on the question. In Deny and Donegal, the gentry are in general well-disposed. The linen merchants are too busily employed in their trade to think much on the subject, or to take an active part on either side ; but I under- stand they are, on the whole, rather favourable, wishing to have their trade secured, which they do not feel, notwithstanding the Speaker's argument, to be independent of Great Britain." — Memoirs of Viscount Castlereacjk, vol ii. p. 351. AN UNCOXSTITUTIONAL PRACTICE. 22:1 Bouth had been allowed to trade as well as the Protestant north, and permitted the same liberty of conscience, Eng- land might have saved herself some millions of money. There was some difficulty in Tipperary, and Lord Castle- reegh wrote to the Duke of Portland complaining that the country members had voted against the Government, which he declared to be a " a very unconstitutional practice," and but too prevalent in Ireland. Thus, while the tenant was compelled to vote as his landlord pleased, his repre- sentative was to vote as the Government pleased. This, of course, was only in the Irish Parliament, where tenants and members should alike be deeply grateful for the pri- vilege of being allowed to vote at all, and were bound, according to English views of Irish constitutional liberty, to vote as their masters ordered them. Certainly, under the circumstances, it ought not to have been so difficult to carry the Union. Neither wuld it have been difficult, had not a number of the members discovered that a good deal of capital could be made of their votes. 8 One of the most remarkable and able letters of the whole 2 Lord tie Clifford wrote an elaborate letter to Mr Townsend, 23d July 1799, in which lie puts forward very strong objections to the Union, manifestly for the purpose of enhancing his price. With a can- dour almost too transparent for laughter, he concludes by saying that, if lie believed the measure for the public good, he would sacrifice hi* boroughs ; hut as he does not, he cannot be unmindful of his private Uitere>ts. One can scarcely believe it possible that any educated man ODuld coolly write his own shame so openly. MR LUKE FOX. series was written by Mr Luke Fox, afterwards a judge of Common Pleas, to Lord Castlereagh. He grasped the whole subject with resolute precision. 3 The population of Ireland, lie estimated at more than five millions five hun- dred thousand. Of these only 500,000 were Protestants. This population was again divided into three classes, who 1 composed three distinct nations, as different in character .iiid principles and habits of life as the antipodes." " The object is to form them into one united people under the 3 The following extracts from his letter will prove that he did this : — " With regard to the measure itself, supposing the nation, or even the Parliament, should be induced to adopt it, I much fear that the great number of absentees which would immediately follow its being carried into execution would be much more likely to occasion the rebellion's breaking out afresh, than it would tend to restoring peace and quietness, even were the majority of the well-affected in favour of it. It is a well-known fact to those that are at all acquainted with the interior of Ireland, that a very great majority of the people look upon the proprie- tors of the land of the country as a set of usurpers, and have been ready (time immemoiial) to rise and wrest their property from them on the first opportunity. I am perfectly convinced that we owe the salvation of the country during the late rebellion (which, by the by, I fear is not suppressed, but barely smothered) more to the personal exertions of the country gentlemen in devoting their whole time, their lives, and their properties, to keeping their tenantry and neighbours in order, than we do to the great military force that was brought into the kingdom. If. by forcing a Union upon this country, you disgust one-half of these gentlemen and convert the other half into absentees, you will leave the country a prey to the machinations of the disaffected, and the conse- quence I fear would be fatal." He then alludes to the Scotch Union, and says Scotland would have improved just as fast if left independent :— " The very reverse appears to me to be the best policy for Ireland. LETTER OF MR LUKE FOX. rule of the British constitution, and to unite, by sentiment and interest, that people to Great Britain. Our fleets may display their triumphant flags in every quarter of the globe ; our troops may conquer, but barren are their laurels and futile their triumphs, when compared to the advantages likely to result to Great Britain and Ireland from this measure in a military, com- mercial and financial point of view. But, to proceed to delineate the mode — it is material to observe how these three distinct bodies, the Protestants, the Presbyterians, and the Catholics, stand affected to the question of Union. "The Frotr-tants, composing about 50,000 souls, the descend- ants of English colonists, possess the whole power and patronage, and almost the whole landed property of the country. 11 They are, of course, political monopolists, and can only be gained by influence. " The Catholics, composing the mass of the population, amount- ing at least to three millions — four would have been more correct — of souls, descendants of the original inhabitants, or of colonists who degenerated, and, in the language of the historian, not very The landed interest you have already attached to you, both from prin- ciple and interest. The great body of the people are against you, and I should therefore think that, instead of holding out inducements to them to leave it, you ought rather to give them every encouragement to reside upon their estates, and guard the mutual interests and connection of the two kingdoms, where they have most power to do it with effect. "Lcrd Castlereagh informs me that 'it is intended that the counties should return two members, as at present ; that the populous cities and towns should return one member each, and the rest of the boroughs be pasted as in Scotland, making a proportionate compensation to the proprietors/ Though I solemnly declare I would not hesitate a mo- ment sacrificing my borough interest if I was convinced the measure was f< it the public good, I cannot be expected (entertaining the doubts that I do respecting it), to be wholly unmindful of my private interests, and I should wish much to know in what light my boroughs would be looked upon according to this plan." P L'2G LETTER OF MR LUKE FOX. classical hut strong, became Hibernicu ipsis Hiberniores, are, for the most part, poor, uneducated, and ignorant, deriving weight almost solely from their numbers, added to a natural vigour of body and astuteness of mind, capable, under a proper regimen, of being modelled to the most beneficial ends, both civil and military. They are at present in the lowest state of political depression, in a semi-barbarous state (as has been truly observed), and thereby eminently qualified to answer the continual drains on a great commercial empire to supply her fleets and armies in every acces- sible quarter of the globe. These are to be gained by concession. " The Protestants are, from every motive of a monopolising interest, determined opponents to the scheme of Union, by which they must lose that monopoly of power and profit, which it is not in human nature voluntarily to resign when once possessed. Does any man think that Mr Foster and Mr Ponsonby are actu- ated by such motives 1 Religion is a mere pretence — the true bone of contention is the monopoly of Irish power and patronage." Never was a truer word said. Not only did these mono- polists sell " power and patronage," but they actually made every effort to depress Irish industry, because, if the Irish once began to be an independent nation, their gain was gone. 4 Such was the state of public affairs when O'Connell made his first speech. The bar were nearly all against the Union, 4 The Beresford family were amongst the most rapacious and unsc.ru? pulous of this class. Lord Auckland wrote to Mr Beresford, that Eng- land " ought to check that system of liberality and fostering protection which tended to increase Irish capital and prosperity, and give ex- tended means of mischief." So that all that has been done to ruin Ireland was not considered sufficient by those men who wished to build their fortunes on her misery. THE BAR AXD THE US ION. 227 and even Mr Saurin, who was the father of the bar. and a conscientious hater of Catholics, was warmly opposed to it. The bar held their first meeting on the 9th of December 1 798. Mr Saurin had been elected some years before to the command of the Lawyers' Volunteer Corps, and now issued the following order: — " Lawyers' Infantry. — The corps is ordered to parade at twelve at noon at the new court in the new regimentals. A punctual attendance is requested, as business of the utmost im- portance is to be transacted. u (Signed) Stewart King, Adjutant." The majority of the bar, 5 however, suggested that a dis- cussion in an armed assembly was unsuitable, and the result was a meeting as civilians. At this meeting Mr Saurin moved — u That the measure of a legislative union of Great Britain, is an innovation which it would be highly dangerous and im- proper to propose at the present juncture of affairs in this country." Mr Plimket said — " Should the administration propose that measure now, it will be carried. For animosity and want of time to consider coolly its 6 Lord Cornwallis wrote to the Duke of Portland : — "The bar have been most forward in their opposition, and have been this day assembled as a corps, it is understood, with an intention of taking up the question. Should that learned body be so intemperate as to set an example to the yeomanry at large, unconstitutional in the extreme, and dangerous to the public safety, I shall feel myself called on, in the outset, to meet this attempt to overawe the King's Government and the legislature with decision." — Cornwallis' Correspondence, vol. i ; i. p. 5. 828 SPREAD OF ANTI-UNION FEELING. consequences, and fort}' thousand British troops in Ireland, will cam" the measure. But in a little time the people will awaken as from a dream, and what consequences will follow I tremble to think. For myself, I declare that I oppose a union principally be- cause I am convinced that it will accelerate a total separation of the two countries." The determined conduct of the bar was certainly annoy- ing to the Government, and on the 15th December Lord Cornwallis wrote to the Duke of Portland : — [" Secret and confidential."] " Dublin Castle, Dec. 15, 1798. " My Lord, — Your Grace will probably have seen in the papers an account of the violence which disgraced the meeting of the barristers, and of the miserable figure which the friends of Union made on a division of 32 against 162. " The bankers and merchants are to meet on Tuesday next, and I do not expect a more favourable division on that occasion. In point of indecency of manners and language, they cannot surpass the gentlemen of the learned profession. " Our reports of the reception of the measure in the North are not favourable, especially about Belfast, and the principal Catho- lics about Dublin begin to hold a much less sanguine language about the probable conduct of their brethren, and are disposed to think that, in this part of the kingdom at least, the greater number of them will join in the opposition to the Union." In a confidential and friendly letter to Major-General Boss, he said — "The opposition to the Union increases daily in and about Dublin, and I am afraid, from conversations which I have held with persons much connected with them, that I was too sanguine when I hoped for the good inclinations of the Catholics. Their disposition is so completely alienated from the British Govern- THE "ANTI-UNION? NO. I. 229 merit, that I believe they would even be tempted to join with their bitterest enemies, the Protestants of Ireland, if they thought that measure would lead to a total separation of the two countries. My thoughts may be more gloomy, as a black north east wind is blowing with great violence, and darkening the hemisphere ; but I think, from the folly, obstinacy, and gross corruption which per- vade every corner of this island, that it is impossible that it can be saved from destruction. I tremble likewise for the spirit of enterprise w hich prevails on your side of the water, without troops, and in defiance of the seasons." On the 27th of December 1 70S, the first number of the Anti-Union newspaper was published. Plunket, Grattan, and Burke were the chief contributors ; they were the men of the day. How little did any one anticipate that the young barrister, whose maiden speech is recorded in one of its earliest numbers, would at a future time wield a power, and possess an influence far superior to theirs — that this youth would obtain the justice so long asked for by Catholics, and which was denied even to their eloquence and patriotism. These meetings were carefully watched, and Major Sirr, hut too well known for undertaking any mean office re- quired by Government, clattered into the Royal Exchange J lull when Mr Moore had taken the chair, and O'Conneli 9 The fact seem* to be that the Government either deceived themselves or * ev