[The Land-War In Ireland (1870) by James Godkin]@TWC D-Link book
The Land-War In Ireland (1870)

CHAPTER XI
14/55

Relying with confidence on the power of England and the force of discipline, they knew that the active defenders of the Government would be victorious in the end, and that their rewards would be estates.

The more rebellions, the more forfeited territory, the more opportunities to implicate, ruin, and despoil the principal men of the hated race.

The most sober writer, dealing with such facts, cannot help stirring men's blood while recording the deeds of the heroes who founded the English system of government in Ireland, and secured to themselves immense tracts of its most fertile soil.

What then must be the effect of the eloquent and impassioned denunciations of such writers as Mr.
Butt, Mr.A.M.Sullivan, and Mr.John Mitchell, not to speak of the 'national press'?
Yet the most fiery patriot utters nothing stronger on the English rule in Ireland than what the Irish may read in the works of the greatest statesmen and most profound thinkers in England.
The evil is in the facts, and the facts cannot be suppressed because they are the roots of our present difficulties.

Mr.Darcy Magee, one of the most moderate of Irish historians, writing far away from his native land, not long before he fell by the bullet of the assassin--a martyr to his loyalty--sketches the preliminaries of confiscation at the commencement of this civil war.
In Munster, their chief instruments were the aged Earl of Cork, still insatiable as ever for other men's possessions, and the president, St.Leger: in Leinster, Sir Charles Coote.


<<Back  Index  Next>>

D-Link book Top

TWC mobile books