Is Ireland a Nation? [pp. 65-83]

Overland monthly and Out West magazine. / Volume 9, Issue 49

Is Ireland a Na/lia?n6 IS IRELAND A NATION? Country', from the Latin contra, on the opposite side, signifies a distinct and separ ate land or region, as distinguished from any other, and the word nation, from nasci,natus. to be born, means the body of inhabitants or natives, of the country. Government is the ruling power or authority by which the es tablished laws are administered. That every country is prosperous and happy or poor and miserable in proportion to the quality of its government is a proposition the truth of which is so manifest that no process of reasoning or demonstration can make it plainer or more self evident. Given favor able conditions of soil, climate, and popu lation, with an honest and capable adminis tration of the public affairs, national pros perity and contentment follow as a matter of course. A just, sympathetic, and pa ternal government, having the interest of the people at heart, infuses energy and life into the nation, opens up sources of industry and enterprise, and when necessary finds out new fields for employment. This may not always be done directly, it being doubtless more politic to encourage private endeavor than to seem to enter into competition with it; but the whole aim and purpose of a good national government is to promote the well being of the people-the masses, who con stitute the bone and sinew, the power, sta bility and real wealth, of the state. I propose in this brief, and necessarily imperfect, sketch to prove from the facts of history that the government of Ireland by England has been the inverse of this, and to show that were it not for the marvelous vitality and power of endurance, arising from the physical and racial superiority which characterize the Irish as a nation, they must inevitably have perished from off the face of the earth through the inhuman treatment VOL. IX.-5 they received at the hands of the English, just as inferior or uncivilized races have, as the phrase goes, disappeared before the ad vance of the white man. This physical and intellectual superiority has been proved a thousand times, by flood and field, in court and council, in every country throughout the world (witness the names of McMahon in France, O'Donnell in Spain, Taaffe in Austria); and it is placed beyond doubt, by those who have written the history of the time,'that although the English had on their side the advantage of overwhelming numbers, wealth, and resources, they never could have succeeded in their designs against Ireland but through treachery, chicane, and, unfortunately also, through the divided counsels of the Irish leaders themselves. In the Contemporary Review of December, i878, in an article entitled "The Greatness of England," Mr. Goldwin Smith wrote as follows: "That the stronger nation is entitled by the law of force to conquer its weaker neighbors, and to govern the conquered in its own interest, is a doctrine which civilized morality abhors." Mr. Gladstone, on a recent interesting occasion, when replying to the deputations on being presented with the freedom of four Irish cities, and an address, signed by half a million of Irishwomen, expressing gratitude for his noble endeavors to settle on just lines the long standing Irish difficulty, quoted from the writings of Mr. Goldwin Smith, referring to him as a man of high character and consummate ability in the historic field. It would be difficult therefore for me to find a more appropriate text for my purpose than the axiom laid down by so high an authority. English and Protestant historians by the score, from Hollinshead and Fynes Mory 1887.1 65

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Is Ireland a Nation? [pp. 65-83]
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Corbet, W. J.
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Page 65
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Overland monthly and Out West magazine. / Volume 9, Issue 49

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