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Labour in Irish History
by James Connolly
Chapter VIII
United Irishmen As Democrats And Internationalists
Och, Paddies, my hearties, have done
wid your parties,
Let min of all creeds and professions agree,
If Orange and Green, min, no longer were seen, min,
Och, naboclis, how aisy ould Ireland we'd free.
-- Jamie Hope, 1798.
As we have pointed out elsewhere (`Erin's
Hope, the End and the Means') native Irish civilisation disappeared,
for all practical purposes, with the defeat of the Insurrection of
1641 and the break-up of the Kilkenny Confederation. This great
Insurrection marked the last appearance of the Irish clan system,
founded upon common property and a democratic social organisation,
as a rival to the politico-social order of capitalist feudalism
founded upon the political despotism of the proprietors, and the
political and the social slavery of the actual producers. In the
course of this Insurrection the Anglo-Irish noblemen, who held Irish
tribelands as their private property under the English feudal
system, did indeed throw in their lot with the native Irish
tribesmen, but the union was never a cordial one, and their presence
in the councils of the insurgents was at all times a fruitful source
of dissension, treachery and incapacity. Professing to fight for
Catholicity, they, in reality, sought only to preserve their right
to the lands they held as the result of previous confiscations, from
the very men, or the immediate ancestors of the men, by whose side
they were fighting. They feared confiscation from the new generation
of Englishmen if the insurrection was defeated, and they feared
confiscation at the hands of the insurgent clansmen if the
insurrection was successful.
In the vacillation and treachery arising
out of this state of mind can be found the only explanation for the
defeat of this magnificent movement of the Irish clans, a movement
which had attained to such proportions that it held sway over and
made laws for the greater part of Ireland, issued its own coinage,
had its own fleet, and issued letters of marque to foreign
privateers, made treaties with foreign nations, and levied taxes for
the support of its several armies fighting under its flag. The fact
that it had enrolled under its banner the representatives of two
different social systems contained the germs of its undoing. Had it
been all feudal it would have succeeded in creating an independent
Ireland, albeit with a serf population like that of England at the
time; had it been all composed of the ancient septs it would have
crushed the English power and erected a really free Ireland, but as
it was but a hybrid, composed of both, it had all the faults of both
and the strength of neither, and hence went down in disaster. With
its destruction, and the following massacres, expropriations and
dispersion of the native Irish, the Irish clans disappear finally
from history.
Out of these circumstances certain
conditions arose, well worthy of the study of every student who
would understand modern Irish history.
One condition which thus arose was, that
the disappearance of the clan as a rallying point for rebellions and
possible base of freedom made it impossible thereafter to localise
an insurrectionary effort, or to give it a smaller or more
circumscribed aim than that of the Irish Nation. When, before the
iron hand of Cromwell, the Irish clans went down into the tomb of a
common subjection, the only possible reappearance of the Irish idea
henceforth lay through the gateway of a National resurrection. And
from that day forward, the idea of common property was destined to
recede into the background as an avowed principle of action, whilst
the energies of the nation were engaged in a slow and painful
process of assimilating the social system of the conqueror; of
absorbing the principles of that political society based upon
ownership, which had replaced the the Irish clan society based upon
a common kingship.
Another condition ensuing upon the total
disappearance of the Irish Social Order was the growth and
accentuation of class distinctions amongst the conquerors. The
indubitable fact that from that day forward the ownership of what
industries remained in Ireland was left in the hands of the
Protestant element, is not to be explained as sophistical anti-Irish
historians have striven to explain it, by asserting that it arose
from the greater enterprise of Protestants as against Catholics; in
reality it was due to the state of social and political outlawry in
which the Catholics were henceforth placed by the law of the land.
According to the English Constitution as interpreted for the benefit
of Ireland, the Irish Catholics were not presumed to exist, and
hence the practical impossibility of industrial enterprise being in
their hands, or initiated by them. Thus, as the landed property of
the Catholic passed into the ownership of the Protestant
adventurers, so also the manufacturing business of the nation fell
out of the stricken grasp of the hunted and proscribed `Papists'
into the clutches of their successful and remorseless enemies.
Amongst these latter there were two elements -- the fanatical
Protestant, and the mere adventurer trading on the religious
enthusiasm of the former. The latter used the fanaticism of the
former in order to disarm, subjugate and rob the common Catholic
enemy, and having done so, established themselves as a ruling landed
and commercial class, leaving the Protestant soldier to his fate as
tenant or artisan. Already by the outbreak of the Williamite war in
the generation succeeding Cromwell, the industries of the North of
Ireland had so far developed that the `Prentice Boys' of Derry were
the dominating factor in determining the attitude of that city
towards the contending English Kings, and, with the close of that
war, industries developed so quickly in the country as to become a
menace to the capitalists of England, who accordingly petitioned the
King of England to restrict and fetter their growth, which he
accordingly did. With the passing of this restrictive legislation
against Irish industries, Irish capitalism became discontented and
disloyal without, as a whole, the power or courage to be
revolutionary. It was a re-staging of the ever-recurring drama of
English invasion and Anglo-Irish disaffection, with the usual
economic background. We have pointed out in a previous chapter how
each generation of English adventurers, settling upon the soil as
owners, resented the coming of the next generation, and that their
so-called Irish patriotism was simply inspired by the fear that they
should be dispossessed in their turn as they had dispossessed
others. What applies to the land-owning `patriots' applies also to
the manufacturers. The Protestant capitalists, with the help of the
English, Dutch, and other adventurers, dispossessed the native
Catholics and became prosperous; as their commerce grew it became a
serious rival to that of England, and accordingly the English
capitalists compelled legislation against it, and immediately the
erstwhile `English Garrison in Ireland' became an Irish `patriot'
party.
From time to time many weird and fanciful
theories have been evolved to account for the transformation of
English settlers of one generation into Irish patriots in the next.
We have been told it was the air, or the language, or the religion,
or the hospitality, or the lovableness of Ireland; and all the time
the naked economic fact, the material reason, was plain as the
alleged reason was mythical or spurious. But there are none so blind
as those who will not see, yet the fact remains that, since English
confiscations of Irish land ceased, no Irish landlord body has
become patriotic or rebellious, and since English repressive
legislation against Irish manufacturers ceased, Irish capitalists
have remained valuable assets in the scheme of English rule in
Ireland. So it would appear that since the economic reason ceased to
operate, the air, and the language, and the religion, and the
hospitality, and the lovableness of Ireland have lost all their
seductive capacity, all their power to make an Irish patriot out of
an English settler of the propertied classes.
With the development of this `patriotic'
policy amongst the Irish manufacturing class, there had also
developed a more intense and aggressive policy amongst the humbler
class of Protestants in town and country. In fact, in Ireland at
that time, there were not only two nations divided into Catholics
and non- Catholics, but each of those two nations in turn was
divided into other two rich and the poor. The development of
industry had drawn large numbers of the Protestant poor from
agricultural pursuits into industrial occupations, and the
suppression of those latter in the interest of English manufacturers
left them both landless and workless. This condition reduced the
labourers in town and country to the position of serfs. Fierce
competition for farms and for jobs enabled the master class to bend
both Protestant and Catholic to its will, and the result was seen in
the revolts we have noticed earlier in our history. The Protestant
workman and tenant was learning that the Pope of Rome was a very
unreal and shadowy danger compared with the social power of his
employer or landlord, and the Catholic tenant was awakening to a
perception of the fact that under the new the new social order the
Catholic landlord represented the Mass less than the rent-roll. The
times were propitious for a union of the two democracies of Ireland.
They had travelled from widely different points through the valleys
of disillusion and disappointment to meet at last by the unifying
waters of a common suffering.
To accomplish this union, and make it a
living force in the life of the nation, there was required the
activity of a revolutionist with statesmanship enough to find a
common point upon which the two elements could unite, and some great
event, dramatic enough in its character, to arrest the attention of
all and fire them with a common feeling. The first, the Man,
revolutionist and statesman, was found in the person of Theobald
Wolfe Tone, and the second, the Event, in the French Revolution.
Wolfe Tone had, although a Protestant, been secretary for the
Catholic Committee for some time, and in that capacity had written
the pamphlet quoted in a previous chapter, but eventually had become
convinced that the time had come for more comprehensive and drastic
measures than the Committee could possibly initiate, even were it
willing to do so. The French Revolution operated alike upon the
minds of the Catholic and Protestant democracies to demonstrate this
fact, and prepare them for the reception of it. The Protestant
workers saw in it a revolution of a great Catholic nation, and hence
wavered in the belief so insidiously instilled into them that
Catholics were willing slaves of despotism; and the Catholics saw in
it a great manifestation of popular power -- a revolution of the
people against the aristocracy, and, therefore, ceased to believe
that aristocratic leadership was necessary for their salvation.
Seizing this propitious moment, Tone and
his associates proposed the formation of a society of men of every
creed for the purpose of securing an equal representation of all the
people in Parliament.
This was, as Tone's later words and works
amply prove, intended solely as a means of unity. Knowing well the
nature of the times and political oligarchy in power, he realised
that such a demand would be resisted with all the power of
government; but he wisely calculated that such resistance to a
popular demand would tend to make closer and more enduring the union
of the democracy, irrespective of religion. And that Tone had no
illusions about the value of the aristocracy is proven in scores of
passages in his autobiography. We quote one, proving alike this
point, and also the determining effect of the French Revolution upon
the popular mind in Ireland: --
As the Revolution advanced, and as events
expanded themselves, the public spirit of Ireland rose with a rapid
acceleration. The fears and animosities of the aristocracy rose
in the same or a still higher proportion. In a little time the
French Revolution became the test of every man's political creed,
and the nation was fairly divided into great parties -- the
aristocrats and democrats borrowed from France, who have ever since
been measuring each other's strength and carrying on a kind of
smothered war, which the course of events, it is highly probable,
may soon call into energy and action''.
It will be thus seen that Tone built up his
hopes upon a successful prosecution of a Class War, although those
who pretend to imitate him to-day raise up their hands in holy
horror at the mere mention of the phrase.
The political wisdom of using a demand for
equal representation as a rallying cry for the democracy of Ireland
is evidenced by a study of the state of the suffrage at the time. In
an Address from the United Irishmen of Dublin to the English
Society of the Friends of the People, dated Dublin, October
26, 1792, we find the following description of the state of
representation: --
The state of Protestant representation is
as follows: -- seventeen boroughs have no resident elector;
sixteen have but one; ninety out of thirteen electors each; ninety
persons return for 106 rural boroughs -- that is 212 members out
of 300 -- the whole number; fifty-four members are returned by
five noblemen and four bishops; and borough influence has given
landlords such power in the counties as to make them boroughs
also...yet the Majesty of the People is still quoted with affected
veneration; and if the crown be ostensibly placed in a part of the
Protestant portion it is placed there in mockery, for it is
encircled with thorns.
With regard to the Catholics, the
following is the simple and sorrowful fact: -- Three millions,
every one of whom has an interest in the State, and collectively
give it its value, are taxed without being represented, and bound
by laws to which they have not given consent.
The above Address, which is signed by
Thomas Wright as secretary, contains one sentence which certain
Socialists and others in Ireland and England might well study to
advantage, and is also useful as illustrating the thought of the
time. It is as follows: --
As to any union between the two islands,
believe us when we assert that our union rests upon our mutual
independence. We shall love each other if we be left to ourselves.
It is the union of mind which ought to bind these nations
together''.
This, then, was the situation in which the
Society of United Irishmen was born. That society was initiated and
conducted by men who realised the importance of all those
principles of action upon which latter-day Irish revolutionists have
turned their backs. Consequently it was as effective in uniting the
democracy of Ireland as the `patriots' of our day have been in
keeping it separated into warring religious factions. It understood
that the aristocracy was necessarily hostile to the principle and
practice of Freedom; it understood that the Irish fight for liberty
was but a part of the world-wide upward march of the human race, and
hence it allied itself with the revolutionists of Great Britain as
well as with those of France, and it said little about ancient
glories, and much about modern misery. The Report of the Secret
Committee of the House of Lords reprinted in full the Secret
Manifesto to the Friends of Freedom in Ireland, circulated
throughout the country by Wolfe Tone and his associates, in the
month of June, 1791. As this contains the draft of the designs of
the revolutionary association known to history as the Society of
United Irishmen, we quote a few passages in support of our
contentions, and to show the democratic views of its founders. The
manifesto is supposed to have been written by Wolfe Tone in
collaboration with Samuel Neilson and others:
It is by wandering from the few plain and
simple principles of Political Faith that our politics, like our
religion, has become preaching, not practice; words not works. A
society such as this will disclaim those party appellations which
seem to pale the human hearts into petty compartments, and parcel
out into sects and sections common sense, common honesty, and
common weal.
It will not be an aristocracy, affecting
the language of patriotism, the rival of despotism for its own
sake, nor its irreconcilable enemy for the sake of us all. It will
not, by views merely retrospective, stop the march of mankind or
force them back into the lanes and alleys of their ancestors.
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 number in this island, the inherent and indefeasible
claim 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.
The external business of this society
will be -- first, publication, in order to propagate their second
principles and effectuate their ends. Second, communications with
the different towns to be assiduously kept up and every exertion
used to accomplish a National Convention of the People of Ireland,
who may profit by past errors and by many unexpected circumstances
which have happened since this last meeting. Third, communications
with similar societies abroad -- as the Jacobin Club of Paris, the
Revolutionary Society in England, the Committee for Reform in
Scotland. Let the nations go abreast. Let the interchange
of sentiments among mankind concerning the Rights of Man be as
immediate as possible.
When the aristocracy come forward, the
people fall backward; when the people come forward, the
aristocracy, fearful of being left behind, insinuate themselves
into our ranks and rise into timid leaders or treacherous
auxiliaries. They mean to make us their instruments; let us rather
make them our instruments. One of the two must happen. The people
must serve the party, or the party must emerge in the mightiness
of the people, and Hercules will then lean upon his club. On the
14th of July, the day which shall ever commemorate the French
Revolution, let this society pour out their first libation to
European liberty, eventually the liberty of the world, and, their
eyes raised to Heaven in His presence who breathed into them an
ever-living soul, let them swear to maintain the rights and
prerogatives of their nature as men, and the right and prerogative
of Ireland as an independent people.
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.
It would be hard to find in modern
Socialist literature anything more broadly International in its
scope and aims, more definitely of a class character in its methods,
or more avowedly democratic in its nature than this manifesto, yet,
although it reveals the inspiration and methods of a revolutionist
acknowledged to be the most successful organiser of revolt in
Ireland since the days of Rory O'More, all his present-day professed
followers constantly trample upon and repudiate every one of these
principles, and reject them as a possible guide to their political
activity. The Irish Socialist alone is in line with the thought of
this revolutionary apostle of the United Irishmen.
The above quoted manifesto was circulated
in June, 1791, and in July of the same year the townspeople and
volunteer societies of Belfast met to celebrate the anniversary of
the Fall of the Bastille, a celebration recommended by the framer of
the manifesto as a means of educating and uniting the real
people of Ireland -- the producers. From the Dublin Chronicle
of the time we quote the following passages from the `Declaration of
the Volunteers and Inhabitants at Large of the town and
neighbourhood of Belfast on the subject of the French Revolution.'
As Belfast was then the hot-bed of revolutionary ideas in Ireland,
and became the seat of the first society of United Irishmen, and as
all other branches of the society were founded upon this original,
it will repay us to study the sentiments here expressed.
Neither on marble, nor brass, can the
rights and duties of men be so durably registered as on their
memories and on their hearts. We therefore meet this day to
commemorate the French Revolution, that the remembrance of this
great event mat sink deeply into our hearts, warmed not merely
with the fellow-feeling of townsmen, but with a sympathy which
binds us to the human race in a brotherhood of interest, of duty
and affection.
Here then we take our stand, and if we be
asked what the French Revolution is to us, we answer, much. Much
as men. It is good for human nature that the grass grows where the
Bastille stood. We do rejoice at an event that means the breaking
up of civil and religious bondage, when we behold this misshapen
pile of abuses, cemented merely by customs, and raised upon the
ignorance of a prostrate people, tottering to its base to the very
level of equal liberty and commonwealth. We do really rejoice in
this resurrection of human nature, and we congratulate our
brother-man coming forth from the vaults of ingenious torture and
from the cave of death. We do congratulate the Christian World
that there is in it one great nation which has renounced all ideas
of conquest, and has published the first glorious manifesto of
humanity, of union, and of peace. In return we pray to God that
peace may rest in their land, and that it may never be in power of
royalty, nobility, or a priesthood to disturb the harmony of a
good people, consulting about those laws which must ensure their
own happiness and that of unborn millions.
Go on, then -- great and gallant people;
to practise the sublime philosophy of your legislation, to force
applause from nations least disposed to do you justice, and by
conquest but by the omnipotence of reason, to convert and liberate
the world -- a world whose eyes are fixed on you, whose heart is
with you, who talks of you with all her tongues; you are in very
truth the hope of this world, of all except a few men in a few
cabinets who thought the human race belonged to them, not them to
the human race; but now are taught by awful example, and tremble,
and not dare confide in armies arrayed against you and your cause.
Thus spoke Belfast. It will be seen that
the ideas of the publishers of the secret manifesto were striking a
responsive chord in the hearts of the people. A series of meetings
of the Dublin Volunteer Corps were held in October of the same year,
ostensibly to denounce a government proclamation offering a reward
for the apprehension of Catholics under arms, but in reality to
discuss the political situation. The nature of the conclusions
arrived at may be judged by a final paragraph in the resolution,
passed 23rd October, 1791, and signed amongst others by James Napper
Tandy, on behalf of the Liberty Corps of Artillery. It reads:
While we admire the philanthropy of that
great and enlightened nation, who have set an example to mankind,
both of political and religious wisdom, we cannot but lament that
distinctions, injurious to both, have too long disgraced the name of
Irishmen; and we most fervently wish that our animosities were
entombed with the bones of our ancestors; and that we and our Roman
Catholic brethren would unite like citizens, and claim the
Rights of Man''.
This was in October. In the same month
Wolfe Tone went to Belfast on the invitation of one of the advanced
Volunteer Clubs, and formed the first club of United Irishmen.
Returning to Dublin he organised another. From the minutes of the
Inauguration Meeting of this First Dublin Society of United
Irishmen, held at the Eagle Inn, Eustace Street, 9th November, 1791,
we make the following extracts, which speak for the principles of
the original members of those two parent clubs of a society destined
in a short time to cover all Ireland, and to set in motion the
fleets of two foreign auxiliaries.
For the attainment then of this great and
important object -- the removal of absurd and ruinous distinctions
-- and for promoting a complete coalition of the people, a club
has been formed composed of all religious persuasions who have
adopted for their name The Society of United Irishmen of Dublin,
and have taken as their declaration that of a similar society in
Belfast, which is as follows: --
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....
We have gone to what we conceive to be
the root of the evil; we have stated what we conceive to be the
remedy -- with a Parliament thus reformed everything is easy;
without it nothing can be done.
Here we have a plan of campaign indicated
on the lines of those afterwards followed so successfully by the
Socialists of Europe -- a revolutionary party openly declaring their
revolutionary sympathies, but limiting their first demand to a
popular measure such as would enfranchise the masses, upon whose
support their ultimate success must rest. No one can read the
manifesto we have just quoted without realising that these men aimed
at nothing less than a social and political revolution such as had
been accomplished in France, or even greater, because the French
Revolution did not enfranchise all the people, but made a
distinction between active and passive citizens, taxpayers and
non-taxpayers. Nor yet can an impartial student fail to realise that
it was just this daring aim that was the secret of their success as
organisers, as it is the secret of the political effectiveness of
the Socialists of our day. Nothing less would have succeeded in
causing Protestant and Catholic masses to shake hands over the
bloody chasm of religious hatreds, nothing less will accomplish the
same result in our day among the Irish workers. It must be related
to the credit of the leaders of the United Irishmen that they
remained true to their principles, even when moderation might have
secured a mitigation of their lot. When examined before the Secret
Committee of the House of Lords at the prison of Fort George,
Scotland, Thomas Addis Emmet did not hesitate to tell his
inquisitors that if successful they would have inaugurated a very
different social system to that which then prevailed.
Few movements in history have been more
consistently misrepresented, by open enemies and professed admirers,
than that of the United Irishmen. The suggestio falsi, and
the suppressio veri have been remorselessly used. The middle
class `patriotic' historians, orators, and journalists of Ireland
have ever vied with one another in enthusiastic descriptions of
their military exploits on land and sea, their hair- breadth escapes
and heroic martyrdom, but have resolutely suppressed or distorted
their writings, songs and manifestoes. We have striven to reverse
the process, to give publicity to their literature, believing that
this literature reveals the men better than any partisan biographer
can do. Dr. Madden, a most painstaking and conscientious biographer,
declares in his volume of The Literary Remains of the United
Irishmen, that he has suppressed many of their productions
because of their `trashy' republican and irreligious tendencies.
This is to be regretted, as it places upon
other biographers and historians the trouble (a thousand times more
difficult now) of searching for anew, and re-collecting the literary
material from which to build a proper appreciation of the work of
those pioneers of democracy in Ireland. And as Irish men and women
progress to a truer appreciation of correct social and political
principles, perhaps it will be found possible to say, without being
in the least degree blasphemous or irreverent, that the stones
rejected by the builders of the past have become the corner-stones
of the edifice.
Continued...
Labour in Irish History |
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