|
The Separatist Idea
In
stating a little while ago the Irish definition of freedom, I said that it would
be well worth while to examine that definition in its breadth and depth, in its
connotations as well as in its denotations, contenting myself for the moment
with making clear its essential idea of Independence, Separation, a distinct and
unfettered national existence. And I said that I proposed to do this in a
sequel. Such a sequel is necessary, for, while the statement that national
freedom means a distinct and unfettered national existence is a true and
complete statement of the nature of national freedom, it is not a sufficient
revelation of the minds that have developed the conception of freedom among us
Irish, not sufficiently quick with their thought nor sufficiently passionate
with their desire. Freedom is so splendid a thing that one cannot worthily state
it in the terms of a definition; one has to write it in some flaming symbol or
to sing it in music riotous with the uproar of heaven. A Danton and a Mitchel
can speak more adequately of freedom than a Voltaire and a Burke, for they have
drunk more deeply of that wine with which God inebriates the votaries of vision.
But even the sublimest things, the Trinity and the Incarnation, can be stated in
terms of philosophy, and it is needful to do this now and then, though such a
statement in no wise affects the spiritual fact which one either feels or does
not feel. So, it is sometimes necessary to state what nationality is, what
freedom, though one's statement may not reveal the awful beauty of his nation's
soul to a single man or move a single village to put up its barricade.
The
purpose, then, of such statements? At least they define the truth, and enable
men to see who holds the truth and who hugs the falsehood. For there is an
absolute truth in such matters, and the truth is ascertainable. The truth is
old, and it has been handed down to us by our fathers. It is not a new thing,
devised to meet the exigencies of a situation. That is the definition of an
expedient.
Now, the truth as to what a nation's nationality is, what a nation's freedom, is
not to be found in the statute-book of the nation's enemy. It is to be found in
the books of the nation's fathers.
I
have named Tone and Davis and Lalor and Mitchel as the four among us moderns who
have chiefly developed the conception of an Irish nation. Others, I have said,
have for the most part only interpreted and illustrated what has been taught by
these; these are the Fathers and the rest are just their commentarists. And I
need not repeat here my reasons for naming no other with these unless the other
be Parnell, whom I name tentatively as the man who saw most deeply and who spoke
most splendidly for the Irish nation since the great seers and speakers. I go on
to examine what these have taught of Irish freedom. And first as to Tone. He
stands first in point of time, and first in point of greatness. Indeed, he is,
as I believe, the greatest man of our nation; the greatest-hearted and the
greatest-minded.
We
have to consider here Tone the thinker rather than Tone the man of action. The
greatest of our men of action since Hugh O'Neill, he is the greatest of all our
political thinkers. His greatness, both as a man and as a thinker, consists in
his sheer reality. There is no froth of rhetoric, no dilution of sentimentality
in Tone; he has none even of the noble oratoric quality of a Mitchel. A man of
extraordinarily deep emotion, he nevertheless thought with relentless logic, and
his expression in exposition or argument is always the due and inevitable garb
of his thought. He was a great visionary; but like all the great visionaries, he
had a firm grip upon realities, he was fundamentally sane.
It
is necessary at times to insist on Tone's intellectual austerity, because the
man's humanity was so gracious that his human side constantly overshadows, for
us as for his contemporaries, his grave intellectual side. Most men of his
greatness are loved at best by a few, feared or disliked or mistrusted by the
many. Tone was one of the extremely rare great men whose greatness is crowned by
those gifts of humility and sweetness that compel affection. Some men are
misunderstood because they are disliked; a few men are in danger of being
misunderstood because they are loved. If the greatest thing in Tone was his
heroic soul, the soul that was gay in death and defeat, the second greatest
thing was his austere and piercing intellect. That intellect has dominated Irish
political thought for over a century. It has given us our political definitions
and values. Constantly we refer doctrines and leaders and policies to its
standards, measuring them by the mind of Tone as an American measures men and
policies by the minds that shaped the Declaration of Independence. Tone's mind
was in a very true sense a revolutionary mind. The spokesmen of the French
Revolution itself did not base things more fundamentally on essential right and
justice than Tone did, did not pierce through outer strata to a firmer bedrock
than he found. And it was an original mind. Influenced no doubt by contemporary
minds, and responsive to every thought-wave that vibrated in either hemisphere,
Tone for the most part worked out his own political system in his own way. He
did not inherit or merely accept his principles; he thought himself into them.
Tone's first political utterance was a pamphlet in defence of the Whig Club,
entitled A Review of the last Session of Parliament (1790). Of this
pamphlet he writes in his Autobiography:
. . . Though I was very far from entirely
approving the system of the Whig Club, and much less their principles and
motives, yet, seeing them at the time the best constituted political body
which the country afforded, and agreeing with most of their positions,
though my own private opinions went infinitely farther, I thought I could
venture on their defence without violating my consistency.
The
pamphlet contains no definitely Separatist teaching. Before the end of the year,
however, Tone had found his voice. It is a Separatist that speaks in The
Spanish War (1790), but a cautious Separatist, one who is feeling his
way. Tone himself describes the expansion of his views which had taken place
between the publication of his first and his second pamphlets:
A closer examination into the history of my
native country had very considerably extended my views, and, as I was
sincerely and honestly attached to her interests, I soon found reason not to
regret that the Whigs had not thought me an object worthy of their
cultivation. I made speedily what was to me a great discovery, though I
might have found it in Swift and Molyneux, that the influence of England was
the radical vice of our Government, and consequently that Ireland would
never be either free, prosperous, or happy until she was independent, and
that independence was unattainable whilst the connection with England
existed.
Accordingly:
On the appearance of a rupture with Spain, I
wrote a pamphlet to prove that Ireland was not bound by the declaration of
war, but might, and ought, as an independent nation, to stipulate for a
neutrality. In examining this question, I advanced the question of
separation, with scarcely any reserve, much less disguise; but the public
mind was by no means so far advanced as I was, and my pamphlet made not the
slightest impression.
The
pamphlet, in fact, tended to prove the impossibility of Grattan's constitution,
i.e., of the co-existence of a British connection with a sovereign Irish
Parliament. It did not propound this in so many words, but the logical
conclusion from its extraordinarily able and subtle argument is that no
`half-way house' is possible as a permanent solution of the issue between
Ireland and England. There were and are only two alternatives: an enslaved
Ireland and a free Ireland. A `dual monarchy' is, in the nature of things, only
a temporary expedient.
In
1790 Tone met Thomas Russell. Theirs was the most memorable of Irish
friendships. It was in conversations and correspondence with Russell that Tone's
political ideas reached their maturity. When he next speaks it is with plenary
meaning and clear definition. Towards the end of 1790 he made his first attempt
in political organisation. He founded a club of seven or eight members `eminent
for their talents and patriotism and who had already more or less distinguished
themselves by their literary productions.' It was a failure, and the failure
satisfied Tone that `men of genius, to be of use, must not be collected in
numbers.' In 1791 Russell went to Belfast. An attempt of Russell's to induce the
Belfast Volunteers to adopt a declaration in favour of Catholic emancipation,
which Tone had prepared at his request, was unsuccessful. Russell wrote to Tone
an account of the discussion, and, says Tone:
It immediately set me thinking more seriously
than I had yet done upon the state of Ireland. I soon formed my theory, and
on that theory I have invariably acted ever since.
To subvert the tyranny of our execrable
Government, to break the connection with England, the never-failing source
of all our political evils, and to assert the independence of my
country---these were my objects. To unite the whole people of Ireland, to
abolish the memory of all past dissensions, and to substitute the common
name of Irishman in place of the denominations of Protestant, Catholic, and
Dissenter---these were my means.
I
have said that I hold all Irish nationalism to be implicit in these words. Davis
was to make explicit certain things here implicit, Lalor certain other things.
But the Credo is here: `I believe in One Irish Nation and that Free.'
Tone had convinced himself as to the end and the means. And now for work:
I sat down accordingly, and wrote a pamphlet
addressed to the Dissenters, and which I entitled An Argument on
behalf of the Catholics of Ireland, the object of which was to
convince them that they and the Catholics had but one common interest and
one common enemy; that the depression and slavery of Ireland was produced
and perpetuated by the divisions existing between them, and that,
consequently, to assert the independence of their country, and their own
individual liberties, it was necessary to forget all former feuds, to
consolidate the entire strength of the whole nation, and to form for the
future but one people.
This pamphlet, signed `A Northern Whig', gave Tone his place in Irish politics.
The Catholic leaders approached him and commenced the connection which led
ultimately to his selection as their agent; the Volunteers of Belfast elected
him an honorary member of their corps. He was soon afterwards invited to
Belfast, where he founded, with Russell, Neilson, the Simmses, Sinclair, and
MacCabe, the first club of United Irishmen. Tone wrote for the United Irishmen
the following declaration:
In the present great era of reform when unjust
governments are falling in every quarter of Europe; when religious
persecution is compelled to abjure her tyranny over conscience; when the
Rights of Man are ascertained in Theory and that Theory substantiated by
Practice; when antiquity can no longer defend absurd and oppressive forms
against the common sense and common interests of mankind; when all
government is acknowledged to originate from the people, and to be so far
only obligatory as it protects their rights and promotes their welfare; we
think it our duty as Irishmen to come forward and state what we feel to be
our heavy grievance, and what we know to be its effectual remedy.
We have no National Government; we are ruled by
Englishmen and the servants of Englishmen, whose object is the interest of
another country; whose instrument is corruption; whose strength is the
weakness of Ireland; and these men have the whole of the power and patronage
of the country as means to seduce and subdue the honesty and the spirit of
her representatives in the legislature. Such an extrinsic power, acting with
uniform force in a direction too frequently opposite to the true line of our
obvious interests, can be resisted with effect solely by unanimity,
decision, and spirit in the people, qualities which may be exerted most
legally, constitutionally, and efficaciously by that great measure essential
to the prosperity and freedom of Ireland---an equal Representation of all
the People in Parliament. . .
The
declaration was not openly Separatist. Tone, however, avows that, while not yet
definitely a republican, his ultimate goal even as early as 1791 was Separation:
the union of Irishmen was to be but a means to an end. Commenting on the
foundation (9th November, 1791) of the Dublin Club of United Irishmen, in which
the republican Tandy co-operated with him, Tone writes:
For my own part, I think it right to mention
that, at this time the establishment of a Republic was not the immediate
object of my speculations. My object was to secure the independence of my
country under any form of government, to which I was led by a hatred of
England so deeply rooted in my nature that it was rather an instinct than a
principle. I left to others, better qualified for the inquiry, the
investigation and merits of the different forms of government, and I
contented myself with labouring on my own system, which was luckily in
perfect coincidence as to its operation with that of those men who viewed
the question on a broader and juster scale than I did at the time I mention.
Thus, Tone in November 1791 had not yet settled his views on abstract theories
of government, but on the practical business of separating Ireland from England
his resolve was fixed and unshakable.
In
June 1791 there had been issued a secret Manifesto to the Friends of Freedom in
Ireland which is attributed to Tone in collaboration with Neilson and others.
Tone himself makes no reference to this document in his Autobiography. If it is
really his it is the nearest approach to a formulation of the theory of freedom
which we have from the mind of this essentially practical statesman. Whether it
be Tone's or another's, it is one of the noblest utterances of the age and it is
a document of primary importance in the history of Ireland. It may be described
as the first manifesto of modern Irish democracy. It bases the Irish claim to
freedom on the bedrock foundation of human rights:
This society is likely to be a means the most
powerful for the promotion of a great end. What end? The Rights of Man in
Ireland. The greatest happiness of the greatest numbers in this island, the
inherent and indefeasible claims of every free nation to rest in this
nation---the will and the power to be happy, to pursue the common weal as an
individual pursues his private welfare, and to stand in insulated
independence, an imperatorial people.
The greatest happiness of the Greatest
Number.---On the rock of this principle let this society rest; by this let
it judge and determine every political question, and whatever is necessary
for this end let it not be accounted hazardous, but rather our interest, our
duty, our glory, and our common religion: The Rights of Man are the Rights
of God, and to vindicate the one is to maintain the other. We must be free
in order to serve Him whose service is perfect freedom. . . `Dieu et mon
Droit' (God and my right) is the motto of kings. `Dieu et la liberté' (God
and liberty), exclaimed Voltaire when he beheld Franklin, his fellow-citizen
of the world. `Dieu et nos Droits' (God and our rights)---let every Irishman
cry aloud to each other the cry of mercy, of justice, and of victory.
The
Rights of Man in Ireland is almost an adequate definition of Irish freedom. And
the historic claim of Ireland has never been more worthily stated than in these
words:
The inherent and indefeasible claims of every
free nation to rest in this nation---the will and the power to be happy, to
pursue the common weal as an individual pursues his private welfare, and to
stand in insulated independence, an imperatorial people.
The
deep and radical nature of Tone's revolutionary work, the subtlety and power of
the man himself, cannot be grasped unless it is clearly remembered that this is
the secret manifesto of the movement of which the carefully constitutional
declaration of the United Irishmen is the public manifesto. Tone himself, in a
letter to Russell at the beginning of 1792, admits his ulterior designs while at
the same time laying stress on the necessity of caution in public utterances.
Referring to the declaration of the United Irishmen, he says:
The foregoing contains my true and sincere
opinion of the state of this country, so far as in the present juncture it
may be advisable to publish it. They certainly fall short of the truth, but
truth itself must sometimes condescend to temporise. My unalterable opinion
is that the bane of Irish prosperity is in the influence of England: I
believe that influence will ever be extended while the connection between
the countries continues; nevertheless, as I know that opinion is, for the
present, too hardy, though a very little time may establish it universally,
I have not made it a part of the resolutions, I have only proposed to set up
a reformed parliament, as a barrier against that mischief which every honest
man that will open his eyes must see in every instance overbears the
interest of Ireland: I have not said one word that looks like a wish for
separation, though I give it to you and your friends as my most decided
opinion that such an event would be a regeneration to this country.
In
1792 Tone became agent to the General Committee of the Catholics. Before the end
of the year his dream of a union between the Catholics and the Dissenters was an
accomplished fact. In December the Catholic Convention met. Catching Tone's
spirit, it demanded complete emancipation. The Government proposed a compromise
to the leaders. Tone was against any compromise, but the Catholic leaders
yielded. `Merchants, I see, make bad revolutionists', commented Tone. The Act of
1793, admitting Catholics to the Parliamentary franchise, marks the end of
Tone's `constitutional' period. He pressed on towards Separation, adopting
revolutionary methods. The United Irishmen were reorganised as a secret
association, with `a Republican Government and Separation from England' as its
aims. In 1795 Tone, compromised by his relations with Jackson, left Ireland for
America. It was out of settled policy that at this stage he chose exile rather
than a contest with the Government. He had already conceived the idea of
appealing for help to the French Republic. Shortly before he left Dublin he went
out with Russell to Rathfarnham, to see Thomas Addis Emmet.
As we walked together into town I opened my plan
to them both. I told them that I considered my compromise with Government to
extend no further than the banks of the Delaware, and that the moment I
landed I was free to follow any plan which might suggest itself to me, for
the emancipation of my country. . .I then proceeded to tell them that my
intention was, immediately on my arrival in Philadelphia, to wait on the
French Minister, to detail to him, fully, the situation of affairs in
Ireland, to endeavour to obtain a recommendation to the French Government,
and, if I succeeded so far, to leave my family in America, and to set off
instantly for Paris, and apply, in the name of my country, for the
assistance of France to enable us to assert our independence.
To
the fulfilment of this purpose Tone devoted the three years of life that
remained to him. He landed in France in 1796. The notes in his Journal of his
conferences with the representatives of the French Government and the two
masterly memorials which he submitted to the Executive Directory remain the
fullest and most practical statement, not only of the necessity of Separation,
but of the means by which Separation is to be attained, that has been made by
any Irishman. In the concluding passage of his second memorial Tone sums up as
follows:
I submit to the wisdom of the French Government
that England is the implacable, inveterate, irreconcilable enemy of the
Republic, which never can be in perfect security while that nation retains
the dominion of the sea; that, in consequence, every possible effort should
be made to humble her pride and to reduce her power; that it is in Ireland,
and in Ireland only, that she is vulnerable--- a fact of the truth of which
the French Government cannot be too strongly impressed; that by establishing
a free Republic in Ireland they attach to France a grateful ally whose
cordial assistance, in peace and war, she might command, and who, from
situation and produce, could most essentially serve her: that at the same
time they cut off from England her most firm support, in losing which she is
laid under insuperable difficulties in recruiting her army, and especially
in equipping, victualling, and manning her navy, which, unless for the
resources she drew from Ireland, she would be absolutely unable to do; that
by these means---and, suffer me to add, by these means only---her arrogance
can be effectually humbled, and her enormous and increasing power at sea
reduced within due bounds---an object essential, not only to France, but to
all Europe; that it is at least possible, by the measures mentioned, that
not only her future resources, as to her navy, may be intercepted and cut
off at the fountain head, but that a part of her fleet may be actually
transferred to the Republic of Ireland; that the Irish people are united and
prepared, and want but the means to begin: that, not to speak of the policy
or the pleasure of revenge in humbling a haughty and implacable rival, it is
in itself a great and splendid act of generosity, worthy of the Republic, to
rescue a whole nation from a slavery under which they have groaned for six
hundred years; that it is for the glory of France, after emancipating
Holland and receiving Belgium into her bosom, to establish one more free
Republic in Europe; that it is for her interest to cut off for ever, as she
now may do, one-half of the resources of England, and lay her under extreme
difficulties in the employment of the other. For all these reasons, in the
name of justice, of humanity, of freedom, of my own country, and of France
herself, I supplicate the Directory to take into consideration the state of
Ireland; and by granting her the powerful aid and protection of the
Republic, to enable her at once to vindicate her liberty, to humble her
tyrant, and to assume that independent station among the nations of the
earth for which her soil, her productions and her position, her population
and her spirit have designed her.
Finally---after Bantry Bay, the Texel, and Lough Swilly---Tone before his judges
thus testified to his faith as a Separatist:
I mean not to give you the trouble of bringing
judicial proof to convict me, legally, of having acted in hostility to the
Government of his Britannic Majesty in Ireland. I admit the fact. From my
earliest youth I have regarded the connection between Ireland and Great
Britain as the curse of the Irish nation, and felt convinced that, whilst it
lasted, this country could never be free nor happy. My mind has been
confirmed in this opinion by the experience of every succeeding year, and
the conclusions which I have drawn from every fact before my eyes. In
consequence, I determined to apply all the powers which my individual
efforts could move in order to separate the two countries. That Ireland was
not able, of herself, to throw off the yoke, I knew. I therefore sought for
aid wherever it was to be found. In honourable poverty I rejected offers
which, to a man in my circumstances, might be considered highly
advantageous. I remained faithful to what I thought the cause of my country,
and sought in the French Republic an ally to rescue three millions of my
countrymen from. . .
Here the prisoner was interrupted by the President of the Court-Martial.
In
order to complete this brief study of Tone's teaching it is necessary to
consider him as a democrat. And Tone, the greatest of modern Irish Separatists,
is the first and greatest of modern Irish democrats. It was Tone that said:
Our independence must be had at all hazards. If
the men of property will not support us, they must fall: we can support
ourselves by the aid of that numerous and respectable class of the
community---the men of no property.
In
this glorious appeal to Caesar modern Irish democracy has its origin.
I
have already quoted the secret Manifesto to the Friends of Freedom, attributed
to Tone, in which the right to national freedom is made to rest on its true
basis, the right to individual freedom. The abstract theory of freedom was not
further developed by Tone, who devoted his life to the pursuit of a practical
object rather than to the working out of a philosophy. When, however, any
question arose which involved the relations of a democracy and an aristocracy,
of the people and the gentry (`as they affect to call themselves'), of the `men
of no property' and the `men of property,' Tone's decision was instant and
unerring. The people must rule; if the aristocracy make common cause with the
people, so much the better; if not, woe to the aristocracy. One passage from his
Journal, under date April 27th, 1798, says all that need be said as to the
practical question of dealing with a hostile aristocracy in a national
revolution:
What miserable slaves are the gentry of Ireland!
The only accusation brought against the United Irishmen by their enemies, is
that they wish to break the connection with England, or, in other words, to
establish the independence of their country---an object in which surely the
men of property are most interested. Yet the very sound of independence
seems to have terrified them out of all sense, spirit, or honesty. If they
had one drop of Irish blood in their veins, one grain of true courage or
genuine patriotism in their hearts, they should have been the first to
support this great object; the People would have supported them; the English
government would never have dared to attempt the measures they have since
triumphantly pursued, and continue to pursue; our Revolution would have been
accomplished without a shock, or perhaps one drop of blood spilled; which
now can succeed, if it does succeed, only by all the calamities of a most
furious and sanguinary contest: for the war in Ireland, whenever it does
take place, will not be an ordinary one. The armies will regard each other
not as soldiers, but as deadly enemies. Who, then, are to blame for this?
The United Irishmen, who set the question afloat, or the English government
and their partisans, the Irish gentry, who resist it? If independence be
good for a country as liberty for an individual, the question will be soon
decided. Why does England so pertinaciously resist our independence? Is it
for love of us---is it because she thinks we are better as we are? That
single argument, if it stood alone, should determine every honest Irishman.
But, it will be said, the United Irishmen extend
their views farther; they go now to a distribution of property, and an
agrarian law. I know not whether they do or no. I am sure in June 1795 when
I was forced to leave the country, they entertained no such ideas. If they
have since taken root among them, the Irish gentry may accuse themselves.
Even then they made themselves parties to the business: not content with
disdaining to hold communications with the United Irishmen, they were among
the foremost of their persecutors; even those who were pleased to denominate
themselves patriots were more eager to vilify, and, if they could, to
degrade them, than the most devoted and submissive slaves of the English
Government. What wonder if the leaders of the United Irishmen, finding
themselves not only deserted, but attacked by those who, for every reason,
should have been their supporters and fellow-labourers, felt themselves no
longer called upon to observe any measures with men only distinguished by
the superior virulence of their persecuting spirit? If such men, in the
issue, lose their property, they are themselves alone to blame, by deserting
the first and most sacred of duties---the duty to their country. They have
incurred a wilful forfeiture by disdaining to occupy the station they might
have held among the People, and which the People would have been glad to see
them fill; they left a vacancy to be seized by those who had more courage,
more sense, and more honesty; and not only so, but by this base and
interested desertion they furnished their enemies with every argument of
justice, policy, and interest, to enforce the system of confiscation.
The best that can be said in palliation of the
conduct of the English party, is that they are content to sacrifice the
liberty and independence of their country to the pleasure of revenge, and
their own personal security. They see Ireland only in their rent rolls,
their places, their patronage, and their pensions. There is not a man among
them who, in the bottom of his soul, does not feel that he is a degraded
being in comparison of those whom he brands with the names of incendiaries
and traitors. It is this stinging reflection which, among other powerful
motives, is one of the most active in spurring them on to revenge. Their
dearest interests, their warmest passions, are equally engaged. Who can
forgive the man that forces him to confess that he is a voluntary slave, and
that he has sold for money everything that should be most precious to an
honourable heart? That he has trafficked in the liberties of his children
and his own, and that he is hired and paid to commit a daily parricide on
his country? Yet these are the charges which not a man of that infamous
caste can deny to himself before the sacred tribunal of his own conscience.
At least the United Irishmen, as I have already said, have a grand, a
sublime object in view. Their enemies have not as yet ventured, in the long
catalogue of their accusations, to insert the charge of interested motives.
Whilst that is the case they may be feared and abhorred, but they can never
be despised; and I believe there are few men who do not look upon contempt
as the most insufferable of all human evils. Can the English faction say as
much? In vain do they crowd together, and think by their numbers to disguise
or lessen their infamy. The public sentiment, the secret voice of their own
corrupt hearts, has already condemned them. They see their destruction
rapidly approaching, and they have the consciousness that when they fall no
honest man will pity them. They shall perish like their own dung; those who
have seen them shall say, Where are they?
Tone did not propose any general confiscation of private property other than the
property of Englishmen in Ireland, and this only after proclamation to the
English people, as distinct from the English Government, stating the grounds of
the action of the Irish nation and declaring their earnest desire to avoid the
effusion of blood; if, after such proclamation, the English people supported the
English Government in war upon Ireland, Tone held that the confiscation of
English property `would then be an act of strict justice, as the English people
would have made themselves parties to the war.' Emmet's proposals in 1803 are a
fuller and more detailed expression of the mind of revolutionary Ireland on the
subject of property. The first decree drafted by Emmet for his Provisional
Government was that `tithes are forever abolished, and church lands are the
property of the nation' ; the second laid down that `from this date all
transfers of landed property are prohibited, each person paying his rent until
the National Government is established, the national will declared, and the
courts of justice be organised '; the third made a like provision with regard to
the transfer of bonds and securities; and the fifth decreed the confiscation of
the property of Irishmen in the Militia, Yeomanry, or Volunteer corps who, after
fourteen days, should be found in arms against the Republic. When we speak of
men like Tone and Emmet as `visionaries' and `idealists' we regard only one side
of their minds. Both were extraordinarily able men of affairs, masters of all
the details of the national, social, and economic positions in their day; and
both would have been ruthless in revolution, shedding exactly as much blood as
would have been necessary to their purpose. Both, however, were Nationalists
first, and revolutionists only in so far as revolution was essential to the
establishment of the nation. `We war not against property', said Emmet in his
proclamation, `we war against no religious sect, we war not against past
opinions or prejudices---we war against English dominion.'
One
is now in a position to sum up Tone's teaching in a series of propositions:
The Irish Nation is One.
The Irish Nation, like all Nations, has an
indefeasible right to Freedom.
Freedom denotes Separation and Sovereignty.
The right to National Freedom rests upon the
right to Personal Freedom, and true National Freedom guarantees true
Personal Freedom.
The object of Freedom is the pursuit of the
happiness of the Nation and of the individuals that compose the Nation.
Freedom is necessary to the happiness and
prosperity of the Nation. In the particular case of Ireland, Separation from
England is necessary not only to the happiness and prosperity but almost to
the continued existence of Ireland, inasmuch as the interests of Ireland and
England are fundamentally at variance, and while the two nations are
connected England must necessarily predominate.
The National Sovereignty implied in National
Freedom holds good both externally and internally, i.e., the sovereign
rights of the Nation are good as against all other nations and good as
against all parts of the Nation. Hence---
The Nation has jurisdiction over lives and
property within the Nation.
The People are the Nation.
All
this Tone taught, not in the dull pages of a treatise, but in the living phrases
that dropped from him in his conversation, in his correspondence, in his
diaries, in his impassioned pleas for his nation to the Executive Directory of
France. Some of the greatest teachers have been literary men only incidentally;
but their teaching has none the less the splendour of great literary utterance.
The masters of literature do not always label themselves. When a great soul
utters a great truth have we not always great literature? That is why the true
gospels of the world are always true literature. Those who have preached the
divine worth of faith and justice and charity and freedom have done so in
glorious and imperishable words: and the reason is that God speaks through them.
That God spoke to Ireland through Tone and through those who, after Tone, have
taken up his testimony, that Tone's teaching and theirs is true and great and
that no other teaching as to Ireland has any truth or worthiness at all, is a
thing upon which I stake all my mortal and all my immortal hopes. And I ask the
men and women of my generation to stake their mortal and immortal hopes with me.
|