THE CONQUEST OF IRELAND
Before we can talk of or develop a policy
for the
re-conquest of Ireland
it is well that we picture clearly to our mind the essential feature of
the
conquest itself, how far it went, and how far it has already been
reversed. Let
it be remembered, then, that the conquest was two-fold---social and
political.
It was the imposition upon Ireland
of an alien rule in political matters and of a social system equally
alien and
even more abhorrent.
In the picturesque phrase of Fintan Lalor
it
meant the `conquest of our liberties and the conquest of our lands'.
The lands
being the material basis of life, alike of conquerors and conquered,
whosoever
held those lands was master of the lives and liberties of the nation.
The full
extent of that mastery, that conquest, is best seen by the record of
the
Cromwellian settlement in 1654. In that settlement the conquest reached
its
highest and completest point. Never before, and never again, were the
lives and
liberties of the people of Ireland
so completely at the mercy of foreign masters as during the period in
question.
Previously the old Gaelic culture and
social
system still held sway in the greater part of Ireland, and the armed
force of
the Gael still existed to curb the greed of the alien enemy and
restrain, by
the example of its greater freedom, the full exercise of his tyrannical
propensities, and subsequently the gradual growth of the ideals of a
softer
civilisation, and the growth of democracy, contributed to weaken the
iron rule
of the conqueror. But the Cromwellian settlement well understood was
indeed the
final consummation of the conquest of Ireland.
There are then three pictures we must needs conjure up before our
mind's eye in
our endeavour to understand the point we have reached in the history of
the
Irish nation. These three pictures are successively---of Ireland
as she was before the conquest; as she was at the completion of the
conquest;
as she will be at the re-conquest by the people of Ireland
of their own country. The first is a picture of a country in which the
people
of the island were owners of the land upon which they lived, masters of
their
own lives and liberties, freely electing their rulers, and shaping
their castes
and conventions to permit of the closest approximation to their ideals
of
justice as between man and man. It is a picture of a system of society
in which
all were knit together as in a family, in which all were members having
their
definite place, and in which the highest could not infringe upon the
rights of
the lowest---those rights being as firmly fixed and assured as the
powers of
the highest, and fixed and assured by the same legal code and social
convention. It is a system evolved through centuries of development out
of the
genius of the Irish race, safeguarded by the swords of Irishmen, and
treasured
in the domestic affections of Irish women.
The second picture is a picture of the
destruction by force of the native system and the dispersion and
enslavement of
the natives. Let these few quotations from Prendergast's Cromwellian
Settlement of Ireland place before our eyes this picture in all
its grim
and agonising horror. He tells of the proclamation issued by the
English
Parliament directing that `by beat of drum and sound of trumpet, on
some market
day within ten days after the same shall come unto them within their
respective
precincts', the English governors throughout Ireland shall proclaim
that `all
the ancient estates and farms of the people of Ireland were to belong
to the
adventurers and the army of England, and that the Parliament had
assigned
Connaught for the habitation of the Irish nation, whither they must
transplant
their wives and daughters and children before the First of May
following (1654)
under penalty of death if found on this side of the Shannon after that
day'.
In addition to this transplanting to Connacht,
gangs of soldiery were despatched throughout Ireland
to kidnap young boys and girls of tender years to be sold into slavery
in the West Indies. Sir William Petty, ancestor
of the Lansdowne family and a
greedy and unscrupulous land-thief, declared that in some Irish
accounts the
number so sold into slavery was estimated at one hundred thousand.
This ancestor of Lord Lansdowne, the
founder of
the noble Lansdowne family, Sir William Petty, landed in Ireland
in 1652 with a total capital of all his fortune of £500. But he came
over in
the wake of Cromwell's army, and got himself appointed `Physician to
the Army
of Ireland'. In 1662 he was made one of a Court of Commissioners of
Irish
Estates, and also Surveyor-General for Ireland.
As the native Irish were then being hunted to death, or transported in
slave-gangs to Barbadoes, the latter fact gave this worthy ancestor of
a worthy
lord excellent opportunities to `invest' his £500 to good purpose.
How this hunting of the Irish was going
on whilst
Sir William Petty was founding the noble Lansdowne family may be gauged
from
the fact that over 100,000 men, women and children were transported to
the West
Indies, there to be sold into slavery upon the tobacco plantations.
Prendergast, in his Cromwellian Settlement of Ireland,
gives the
following illustration of the methods pursued:---
`As an
instance
out of many:---Captain John Vernon was employed by the Commissioners
for
Ireland to England, and contracted in their behalf with Mr. David
Sellick and
the Leader under his hand to supply them with two hundred and fifty
women of
the Irish nation, above twelve years and under the age of forty-five,
also
three hundred men above twelve years and under fifty, to be found in
the
country within twenty miles of Cork, Youghal and Kinsale, Waterford and
Wexford, to transport them into New England.'
This Bristol
firm alone was responsible for shipping over 6,400 girls and boys, one
of their
agents in the County Cork
being Lord Broghill, afterwards Earl of Orrery.
Every Irishman or woman not able to hide
in the
woods, morasses or mountains, or not able to defend themselves by force
of
arms, was good prey at that time, and hence, when Sir William Petty
coveted a
piece of land, he but required to send a party of soldiers to
hunt down
the owners or occupants, ship them out to the West Indies as slaves,
and lo!
the trick was done. The land was thenceforth the property of the Lord's
anointed. So when Sir William Petty died the original £500 with which
he came
to Ireland
had
swelled to an annual rent roll of £18,000, and from one mountain peak
in the County Kerry
he could look round and see
no land that had not fallen into his grasp.
Here then is the conquest. Fix it clearly
before
your eyes. National liberty, personal liberty, social security all
gone; the
country ruled from its highest down to its meanest officer by
foreigners; the
Irish race landless, homeless, living by sufferance upon the mercy of
their
masters, or trusting alone to the greed of their conquerors to gain
that
toleration which even a conqueror must give to the slaves whose labour
he
requires to sate his avarice or minister to his wants.
This, then, is the second picture.
Mastery of the
lives and liberties of the people of Ireland
by forces outside of and irresponsible and unresponsive to the people
of Ireland---social
and political slavery.
The third picture must be drawn by each,
as it
suits his or her fancy, who wishes to visualise to the mind's eye the
complete
reversal of all that was embodied in the second. As they construct that
picture
of the future so they will shape their public actions. In the belief
that the
labour movement alone has an ideal involving the complete reversal of
the
social and political consequences defined in the second picture, these
chapters
were written to help the workers in constructing that mental picture
aright.
But how far has that conquest been
already
reversed? As a cold historical fact that conquest fell far short of the
impious
wishes of its projectors. The projected removal of the entire people to
within
the confines of Connacht came into collision
with the
desires of the land-thieves for a tenantry upon whose labours they
could grow
rich. Land without labour is valueless; and to be an owner of
confiscated land,
and that land lying idle for want of labourers did not suit the desires
of the
new Cromwellian squire-archy. So gradually the laws were relaxed or
their
evasion connived at by the local rulers, and the peasantry began to
re-appear
at or near their former homes, and eventually to gain permission to be
tenants
and labourers to the new masters. Into the towns the Catholic also
began to
find his way as a personal servant, or in some other menial way
ministering to
the needs of his new rulers.
Catholic women were within the forbidden
territory as wives of Protestant officers or soldiers, and by rearing
up their
children in their own faith, whispering old legends into their ears by
day, or
crooning old Gaelic songs to them at night helped, consciously or
unconsciously, to re-create an Irish atmosphere in the very heart of
the
ascendancy. Ere long, by one of those silent movements of which the
superficial
historian takes no account, the proscribed people were once more back
from the
province into which they had been hunted, heartbroken and subdued, it
is true,
but nevertheless back upon their own lands.
In the North the proscription had been
more
effectual for the reason that in that province there were Protestant
settlers
to occupy the lands from which the Catholics had been driven. But even
there
the craving for a return to the old homes and tribelands destroyed the
full
effect of the Cromwellian proscription. The hunted Ulstermen and women
crept
back from Connacht and, unable to act like
their
Southern brethren and re-occupy their own lands upon any terms, they
took
refuge in the hills and `mountainy' land. At first we can imagine these
poor
people led a somewhat precarious life, ever dreading the advent of a
Government
force to dislodge them and drive them back to Connacht; but they
persisted,
built their huts, tilled with infinite toil the poor soil from which
they
scraped the accumulations of stones, and gradually established their
families
in the position of a tolerated evil. Two things helped in securing this
toleration.
First, the avarice of the new land-owning
aristocracy, who easily subdued their religious fanaticism sufficiently
to
permit Papists settling upon and paying rent for formerly worthless
mountain
land.
Second, the growing acuteness of the
difficulties
of the Government in England itself; the death of Cromwell; the fear of
the
owners of confiscated estates that the accession of Charles II might
lead to a
resumption of their property by former owners, and, arising from that
fear, a
disinclination to attract too much attention by further attacks upon
the
returning Catholics, who might retaliate, and, finally, the unrest and
general
uncertainty centering round the succession to the throne.
Thus, in Ulster
the Celt returned to his ancient tribelands, but to its hills and stony
fastnesses, from which with tear-dimmed eyes he could look down upon
the
fertile plains of his fathers which he might never again hope to
occupy, even
on sufferance.
On the other hand, the Protestant common
soldier
or settler, now that the need of his sword was passed, found himself
upon the
lands of the Catholic, it is true, but solely as a tenant and
dependant. The
ownership of the province was not in his hands, but in the hands of the
companies of London
merchants who
had supplied the sinews of war for the English armies, or, in the hands
of the
greedy aristocrats and legal cormorants who had schemed and intrigued
while he
had fought. The end of the Cromwellian settlement then found the
`commonality',
to use a good old word, dispossessed and defrauded of all hold upon the
soil of
Ireland---the Catholic dispossessed by force, the Protestant
dispossessed by
fraud. Each hating and blaming the other, a situation which the
dominant
aristocracy knew well how, as their descendants know to-day, to profit
by to
their own advantage.
This, then was the Conquest. Now sit down
and
calmly reason out to yourself how far we have gone to the reversal of
that
conquest---how far we have still to go. The measure of our progress
towards its
reversal is the measure of the progress of democracy in this island, as
measured by the upward march of the `lower classes'. The insurgence of
the
peasantry against the landlord, the shattering of the power of the
landlord,
the surrender of the British Government to the demand for the abolition
of
landlordism, all were so many steps toward the replanting securely upon
the
soil of Ireland of that population which, `with sound of trumpett and
beat of
drumme', were ordered 300 years ago `with their women and daughters and
children' to betake themselves across the Shannon into Connacht, there
to
remain for ever as the despised and hated helots of foreign masters.
The unsatisfactory nature of the scheme
for
replanting may be admitted; the essential fact is the reversal of that
part of
the conquest which demanded and enforced the uprooting and
expropriation and
dispersion of the mere Irish. In this, as in the political and social
world
generally, the thing that matters most is not so much the EXTENT of our
march,
but rather the DIRECTION in which we are marching.
On the political side the Re-conquest of Ireland
by its people has gone on even more exhaustively and rapidly. We
remember
sitting as delegates to the `'98 Centenary Committee' in the Council
Room of
the City Hall of Dublin
in 1898, and looking around upon the pictures of the loyal ascendancy
Lord
Mayors of the past which cover the walls of that room. At first we
thought merely
that if the dead do have cognisance of the acts of the living, surely
fierce
and awful must be the feelings of these old tyrants at the thought that
such a
room should be handed over gratu- itously to the use of such rebels as
were
there upon that occasion. Then our thoughts took a wider range, and we
went in
imagination back to that period we have spoken of as the culmination of
the
Conquest, and forward to the following year when we were assured that
under the
Local Government Act the representatives of the labourers of Ireland
might sit
and legislate all over Ireland in such halls of local power as the
Council Room
of the Municipality of Dublin. What a revolution was here! At the one
period
banished, proscribed, and a serf even to the serfs of his masters; at
the other
period quietly invading all the governing boards of the land, pushing
out the
old aristocracy and installing in their places the sons of toil fresh
from
field, farm and workshop, having the legal right to grasp every
position of political
power, local administration and responsibility---where at the former
period
they were hunted animals whose lives were not accounted as valuable as
foxes or
hares. Truly this was, and is, a rolling back of the waves of conquest.
But how
many had or have the imagination necessary to grasp the grandeur of
this slow
re-instatement of a nation, and how many or how few can realise that we
are now
witnessing another such change, chiefly portentous to us as a still
further
development of the grasp of the Irish democracy upon the things that
matter in
the life of a people.
It shall be our task in future chapters
briefly
to portray that development, to picture how far we have gone, to
illustrate the
truth that the capitalist and landlord classes in Ireland, irrespective
of
their political creed, are still saturated with the spirit of the
conquest, and
that it is only in the working class we may expect to find the true
principles
of action, which, developed into a theory, would furnish a real
philosophy of Irish
freedom.
But in this, as in many other conflicts,
the
philosophy of Irish freedom will probably, for the great multitude,
follow the
lines of battle rather than precede them. The thinking few may, and
should,
understand the line of march; the many will fight from day to day, and
battle
to battle, as their class instincts and immediate needs compel them.
For the writer, our inspiration, we
confess,
comes largely from the mental contemplation of these two pictures. The
dispossessed Irish race dragging itself painfully along through roads,
mountains and morasses, footsore and bleeding, at the behest of a
merciless
conqueror, and the same race in the near future marching confidently
and
serenely, aided by all the political and social machinery they can
wrest from
the hands of their masters, to the re-conquest of Ireland.