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+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 14728 ***
+
+THE
+
+Crime Against Europe
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_A Possible Outcome of the War of 1914_
+
+BY
+
+SIR ROGER CASEMENT
+
+ * * * * *
+
+COPYRIGHTED 1915
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+INTRODUCTION.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The reader must remember that these articles were written before
+the war began. They are in a sense prophetic and show a remarkable
+understanding of the conditions which brought about the present great
+war in Europe.
+
+The writer has made European history a life study and his training in
+the English consular service placed him in a position to secure the
+facts upon which he bases his arguments.
+
+Sir Roger Casement was born in Ireland in September, 1864. He was made
+consul to Lorenzo Marques in 1889, being transferred to a similar
+post in the Portuguese Possessions in West Africa, which included the
+consulate to the Gaboon and the Congo Free State. He held this post
+from 1898 to 1905, when he was given the consulate of Santos. The
+following year he was appointed consul to Hayti and San Domingo, but
+did not proceed, going instead to Para, where he served until 1909,
+when he became consul-general to Rio de Janeiro. He was created a
+knight in 1911.
+
+He was one of the organizers of the Irish Volunteers at Dublin in
+November, 1913, being one of their provisional committee. At present
+he is a member of the governing body of that organization. He spent
+the summer of this year in the United States. Sir Roger is at present
+in Berlin, where, after a visit paid to the foreign office by him,
+the German Chancellor caused to be issued the statement that "should
+the German forces reach the shores of Ireland they would come not as
+conquerors but as friends."
+
+Sir Roger is well known for his investigation into the Putomayo rubber
+district atrocities in 1912.
+
+December, 1914.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter I
+
+THE CAUSES OF THE WAR AND THE FOUNDATION OF PEACE
+
+
+Since the war, foreshadowed in these pages, has come and finds public
+opinion in America gravely shocked at a war it believes to be solely
+due to certain phases of European militarism, the writer is now
+persuaded to publish these articles, which at least have the merit of
+having been written well before the event, in the hope that they may
+furnish a more useful point of view. For if one thing is certain it is
+that European militarism is no more the cause of this war than of any
+previous war. Europe is not fighting to see who has the best army,
+or to test mere military efficiency, but because certain peoples wish
+certain things and are determined to get and keep them by an appeal to
+force. If the armies and fleets were small the war would have broken
+out just the same, the parties and their claims, intentions, and
+positions being what they are. To find the causes of the war we must
+seek the motives of the combatants, and if we would have a lasting
+peace the foundations upon which to build it must be laid bare by
+revealing those foundations on which the peace was broken. To find
+the causes of the war we should turn not to Blue Books or White
+Papers, giving carefully selected statements of those responsible
+for concealing from the public the true issues that move nations to
+attack each other, but should seek the unavowed aims of those nations
+themselves.
+
+Once the motive is found it is not hard to say who it is that broke
+the peace, whatever the diplomats may put forward in lieu of the real
+reason.
+
+The war was, in truth, inevitable, and was made inevitable years ago.
+It was not brought about through the faults or temper of Sovereigns
+or their diplomats, not because there were great armies in Europe,
+but because certain Powers, and one Power in particular, nourished
+ambitions and asserted claims that involved not only ever increasing
+armaments but insured ever increasing animosities. In these cases
+peace, if permitted, would have dissipated the ambitions and upset
+claims, so it was only a question of time and opportunity when those
+whose aims required war would find occasion to bring it about.
+
+As Mr. Bernard Shaw put it, in a recent letter to the press: "After
+having done all in our power to render war inevitable it is no use now
+to beg people not to make a disturbance, but to come to London to be
+kindly but firmly spoken to by Sir Edward Grey."
+
+To find the motive powerful enough to have plunged all Europe into war
+in the short space of a few hours, we must seek it, not in the pages
+of a "white paper" covering a period of only fifteen days (July 20th
+to August 4th, 1914), but in the long anterior activities that led the
+great Powers of Europe into definite commitments to each other. For
+the purposes of this investigation we can eliminate at once three of
+the actual combatants, as being merely "accessories after the fact,"
+viz.:--Servia, Belgium and Japan, and confine our study of the
+causes of the conflict to the aims and motives of the five principal
+combatants. For it is clear that in the quarrel between Servia and
+Austria, Hungary is only a side issue of the larger question that
+divides Europe into armed camps. Were categoric proof sought of how
+small a part the quarrel between Vienna and Belgrade played in the
+larger tragedy, it can be found in the urgent insistence of the
+Russian Government itself in the very beginning of the diplomatic
+conversations that preceded the outbreak of hostilities.
+
+As early as the 24th of July, the Russian Government sought to prevail
+upon Great Britain to proclaim its complete solidarity with Russia and
+France, and on the British Ambassador in St. Petersburg pointing out
+that "direct British interests in Servia were nil, and a war on behalf
+of that country would never be sanctioned by British public opinion,"
+the Russian Minister of Foreign Affairs replied that "we must not
+forget that the _general European_ question was involved, the Servian
+question being but a part of the former, and that Great Britain
+could not afford to efface herself from the problem _now at issue_."
+(Despatch of Sir G. Buchanan to Sir E. Grey, 24th July, 1914).
+
+Those problems involved far mightier questions than the relations of
+Servia to Austria, the neutrality of Belgium or the wish of Japan to
+keep the peace of the East by seizing Kiao-Chau.
+
+The neutrality never became a war issue until long after war had been
+decided on and had actually broken out; while Japan came into the
+contest solely because Europe had obligingly provided one, and because
+one European power preferred, for its own ends, to strengthen an
+Asiatic race to seeing a kindred white people it feared grow stronger
+in the sun.
+
+Coming then to the five great combatants, we can quickly reduce them
+to four. Austria-Hungary and Germany in this war are indivisible.
+While each may have varying aims on many points and ambitions that,
+perhaps, widely diverge both have one common bond, self-preservation,
+that binds them much more closely together than mere formal "allies."
+In this war Austria fights of necessity as a Germanic Power, although
+the challenge to her has been on the ground of her Slav obligations
+and activities. Germany is compelled to support Austria by a law of
+necessity that a glance at the map of Europe explains. Hence, for
+the purpose of the argument, we may put the conflict as between the
+Germanic peoples of Central Europe and those who have quarreled with
+them.
+
+We thus arrive at the question, "why should such strangely consorted
+allies as England, Russia and France be at war with the German
+people?"
+
+The answer is not to be found in the White Book, or in any statement
+publicly put forward by Great Britain, Russia or France.
+
+But the answer must be found, if we would find the causes of the war,
+and if we would hope to erect any lasting peace on the ruins of this
+world conflict.
+
+To accept, as an explanation of the war the statement that Germany
+has a highly trained army she has not used for nearly half a century
+and that her people are so obsessed with admiration for it that they
+longed to test it on their neighbours, is to accept as an explanation
+a stultifying contradiction. It is of course much easier to put
+the blame on the Kaiser. This line of thought is highly popular: it
+accords, too, with a fine vulgar instinct.
+
+The German people can be spared the odium of responsibility for a
+war they clearly did nothing to provoke, by representing them as the
+victims of an autocracy, cased in mail and beyond their control.
+We thus arrive at "the real crime against Germany," which explains
+everything but the thing it set out to explain. It leaves unexplained
+the real crime against Europe.
+
+To explain the causes of the war we must find the causes of the
+alliances of England, France and Russia against Germany.
+
+For the cause of the war is that alliance--that and nothing else. The
+defence of the _Entente Cordiale_ is that it is an innocent pact of
+friendship, designed only to meet the threat of the Triple Alliance.
+But the answer to that is that whereas the Triple Alliance was formed
+thirty years ago, it has never declared war on anyone, while the
+_Triple Entente_ before it is eight years old has involved Europe,
+America, Africa, and Asia in a world conflict. We must find the motive
+for England allying herself with France and Russia in an admittedly
+anti-German "understanding" if we would understand the causes of the
+present war and why it is that many besides Bernard Shaw hold that
+"after having done all in our power to render war inevitable" it was
+idle for the British Government to assume a death-bed solicitude
+for peace, having already dug its grave and cast aside the shovel
+for the gun. When that motive is apparent we shall realise who it
+was preferred war to peace and how impossible it is to hope for any
+certain peace ensuing from the victory of those who ensured an appeal
+to arms.
+
+The _Entente Cordiale_, to begin with, is unnatural. There is nothing
+in common between the parties to it, save antagonism to someone
+else. It is wrongly named. It is founded not on predilections but on
+prejudices--not on affection but on animosity. To put it crudely it is
+a bond of hate not of love. None of the parties to it like or admire
+each other, or have consistent aims, save one.
+
+That satisfied, they will surely fall out among themselves, and the
+greater the plunder derived from their victory the more certain their
+ensuing quarrel.
+
+Great Britain, in her dealings with most white people (not with all)
+is a democracy.
+
+Russia in her dealings with all, is an autocracy.
+
+Great Britain is democratic in her government of herself and in her
+dealings with the great white communities of Canada, Australia, New
+Zealand, and South Africa. She is not democratic in her dealings with
+subject races within the Empire--the Indians, notably, or the Irish.
+To the Indians her rule is that of an absentee autocracy, differing
+in speech, colour, religion and culture from those submitted to it by
+force; to the Irish that of a resident autocracy bent on eliminating
+the people governed from residence in their own country, and replacing
+them with cattle for British consumption.
+
+In both instances Britain is notably false to her professions of
+devotion to democratic principles. Her affinity with Russia is found
+then, not in the cases where her institutions are good, but in those
+where they are bad.
+
+An alliance founded on such grounds of contact can only produce evil.
+
+To such it gave birth in Persia, to such it must give birth in the
+present war.
+
+In Persia we saw it betray the principles of democratic government,
+destroy an infant constitution and disembowel the constitutionalists,
+whilst it divided their country into "spheres of influence" and to-day
+we see it harvesting with hands yet red with the blood of Persian
+patriots the redder fruit of the seed then sown.
+
+The alliance with France, while more natural than that with Russia if
+we regard Great Britain as a democracy (by eliminating India, Egypt,
+Ireland) had the same guilty end in view, and rests less on affinity
+of aims than on affinity of antipathies.
+
+The _Entente Cordiale_, the more closely we inspect it, we find is
+based not on a cordial regard of the parties to it for each other, but
+on a cordial disregard all three participants share for the party it
+is aimed against.
+
+It will be said that Germany must have done something to justify the
+resentment that could bring about so strangely assorted a combination
+against herself. What has been the crime of Germany against the powers
+now assailing her? She has doubtless committed many crimes, as have
+all the great powers, but in what respect has she so grievously sinned
+against Europe that the Czar, the Emperor of India, the King of
+Great Britain and Ireland, the Mikado and the President of the French
+Republic--to say nothing of those minor potentates who like Voltaire's
+minor prophets seem _capable de tout_--should now be pledged, by
+irrevocable pact, to her destruction as a great power?
+
+"German militarism," the reply that springs to the lips, is no more a
+threat to civilisation than French or Russian militarism. It was born,
+not of wars of aggression, but of wars of defence and unification.
+Since it was welded by blood and iron into the great human organism of
+the last forty years it has not been employed beyond the frontiers of
+Germany until last year.
+
+Can the same be said of Russian militarism or of French militarism or
+of British navalism?
+
+We are told the things differ in quality. The answer is what about the
+intent and the uses made. German militarism has kept peace and has
+not emerged beyond its own frontier until threatened with universal
+attack. Russian militarism has waged wars abroad, far beyond the
+confines of Russian territory; French militarism, since it was
+overthrown at Sedan, has carried fire and sword across all Northern
+Africa, has penetrated from the Atlantic to the Nile, has raided
+Tonquin, Siam, Madagascar, Morocco, while English navalism in the last
+forty years has bombarded the coast lines, battered the ports, and
+landed raiding parties throughout Asia and Africa, to say nothing of
+the well nigh continuous campaigns of annexation of the British army
+in India, Burma, South Africa, Egypt, Tibet, or Afghanistan, within
+the same period.
+
+As to the quality of the materialism of the great Continental Powers
+there is nothing to prefer in the French and Russian systems to
+the German system. Each involved enormous sacrifices on the people
+sustaining it. We are asked, however, to believe that French
+militarism is maintained by a "democracy" and German militarism by an
+"autocracy." Without appealing to the captive Queen of Madagascar for
+an opinion on the authenticity of French democracy we may confine the
+question to the elected representatives of the two peoples.
+
+In both cases the war credits are voted by the legislative bodies
+responsible to French and German opinion. The elected representatives
+of Germany are as much the spokesman of the nation as those of France,
+and the German Reichstag has sanctioned every successive levy for
+the support of German armaments. As to Russian militarism, it may be
+presumed no one will go quite so far as to assert that the Russian
+Duma is more truly representative of the Russian people than the
+Parliament of the Federated peoples of Germany at Berlin.
+
+The machines being then approximately the same machines, we must seek
+the justification for them in the uses to which they have been put.
+
+For what does France, for what does Russia maintain a great army? Why
+does Germany call so many youthful Germans to the colours? On what
+grounds of moral sanction does Great Britain maintain a navy, whose
+cost far exceeds all the burdens of German militarism?
+
+Russia stretches across the entire area of Central Asia and comprises
+much of the greater part of Europe as well. In its own territory, it
+is unassailable, and never has been invaded with success. No power
+can plunder or weaken Russia as long as she remains within her own
+borders. Of all the great powers in Europe she is the one that after
+England has the least need of a great army.
+
+She cannot be assailed with success at home, and she has no need
+to leave her own territories in search of lands to colonize. Her
+population, secure in its own vast numbers and vast resources has, for
+all future needs of expansion the continent of Siberia into which to
+overflow. Russia cannot be threatened within Russia and has no need
+to go outside Russia. A Russian army of 4,000,000 is not necessary to
+self-defence. Its inspiration can be due only to a policy of expansion
+at the cost of others, and its aim to extend and to maintain existing
+Russian frontiers. As I write it is engaged not in a war of defence
+but in a war of invasion, and is the instrument of a policy of avowed
+aggression.
+
+Not the protection of the Slavs from Austria, herself so largely a
+Slavic power and one that does not need to learn the principles of
+good government from Russia, but the incorporation of the Slavs within
+the mightiest empire upon earth--this is the main reason why Russia
+maintains the mightiest army upon earth. Its threat to Germany, as the
+protector of Austria-Hungary, has been clear, and if we would find
+the reason for German militarism we shall find at least one half of it
+across the Russian frontier.
+
+The huge machine of the French army, its first line troops almost
+equal to Germany's, is not a thing of yesterday.
+
+It was not German aggression founded it--although Germany felt it once
+at Jena. Founded by kings of France, French militarism has flourished
+under republic, empire, constitutional monarchy, and empire again
+until to-day we find its greatest bloom full blown under the mild
+breath of the third republic. What is the purpose of this perfect
+machine? Self-defence? From what attack? Germany has had it in her
+power, again and again within the last thirty years to attack
+France at a disadvantage, if not even with impunity. Why has she
+refrained--whose hand restrained her? Not Russia's--not England's.
+During the Russo-Japanese war or during the Boer war, France could
+have been assailed with ease and her army broken to pieces. But German
+militarism refrained from striking that blow. The object of the great
+army France maintains is not to be found in reasons of self-defence,
+but may be found, like that of Russia in hopes of armed expansion.
+Since the aim in both cases was the same, to wage a war of aggression
+to be termed of "recovery" in one case and "protection" in the other,
+it was not surprising that Czar and President should come together,
+and that the cause of the Slavs should become identified with the
+cause of Strasburg.
+
+To "protect" the Slavs meant assailing Austria-Hungary (another way of
+attacking Germany), and to "recover" Strasburg meant a _mes-alliance_
+between democrat of France and Cossack of the Don.
+
+We come now to the third party to die Entente, and it is now we begin
+to perceive how it was that a cordial understanding with England
+rendered a Russo-French attack upon Germany only a question of time
+and opportunity. Until England appeared upon the scene neither Russia
+nor France, nor both combined, could summon up courage to strike the
+blow. Willing to wound they were both afraid to strike. It needed a
+third courage, a keener purpose and a greater immunity.
+
+German militarism was too formidable a factor in the life of
+65,000,000 of the most capable people in Europe to be lightly assailed
+even by France and Russia combined. Russia needed money to perfect the
+machinery of invasion, so sorely tried by the disastrous failure to
+invade Korea and Manchuria. France had the money to advance, but she
+still doubted the ability of her stagnant population of 40,000,000 to
+face the growing magnitude of the great people across the Rhine. It
+needed another guarantee--and England brought it.
+
+From the day that Great Britain and her mighty fleet joined the
+separated allies with their mighty armies, the bond between them and
+the circle round Germany grew taut. From that day the counsels of
+the allies and their new found "friend" thickened and quickened. The
+immovable "menace across the Rhine" in one case had become the active
+"menace across the North Sea" in the other case.
+
+The sin of German militarism was at last out. It could take to the
+water as kindly as to the land. As long as the war machine guaranteed
+the inviolability of German territory it was no threat to European
+peace, but when it assumed the task of safe-guarding German rights
+at sea it became the enemy of civilization. These trading people not
+content with an army that kept French "revanche" discreetly silent
+and Slav "unity" a dream of the future presumed to have a sea-born
+commerce that grew by leaps and bounds, and they dared to build a navy
+to defend and even to extend it. _Delenda est Carthago!_ From that day
+the doom of "German militarism" was sealed; and England, democratic
+England, lay down with the Czar in the same bed to which the French
+housewife had already transferred her republican counterpane.
+
+The duration of peace became only a question of time, and the war of
+to-day only a question of opportunity and pretext. Each of the parties
+to the understanding had the same clear purpose to serve, and while
+the aim to each was different the end was the same. Germany's power
+of defence must be destroyed. That done each of the sleeping partners
+to the unsigned compact would get the share of the spoils, guarded by
+armed German manhood, he coveted.
+
+To Russia, the dismemberment of Austria-Hungary and the incorporation
+of the Slav elements in part into her own vast empire, in part into a
+vassal and subordinate Balkan Confederacy.
+
+To France the restoration of Lorraine, with Metz, and of Alsace with
+Strasburg and their 1,500,000 of German speaking Teutons to the French
+Empire.
+
+To England, the destruction of German sea-power and along with it the
+permanent crippling of German competition in the markets of the world.
+
+Incidentally German colonies would disappear along with German
+shipping, and with both gone a German navy would become a useless
+burden for a nation of philosophers to maintain, so that the future
+status of maritime efficiency in Europe could be left to the power
+that polices the seas to equitably fix for all mankind, as well as for
+the defeated rival.
+
+Such an outline was the altruistic scope of the unsigned agreement
+entered into by the three parties of the _Triple Entente_; and it only
+remained to get ready for the day when the matter could be brought
+to issue. The murder of the Archduke Ferdinand furnished Russia with
+the occasion, since she felt that her armies were ready, the sword
+sharpened, and the Entente sure and binding.
+
+The mobilization by Russia was all that France needed "to do that
+which might be required of her by her interests." (Reply of the French
+Government to the German Ambassador at Paris, August 1st, 1914.)
+
+Had the neutrality of Belgium been respected as completely as the
+neutrality of Holland, England would have joined her "friends" in the
+assault on Germany, as Sir Edward Grey was forced to admit when the
+German Ambassador in vain pressed him to state his own terms as the
+price of English neutrality.
+
+The hour had struck. Russia was sure of herself, and the rest followed
+automatically since all had been provided for long before. The French
+fleet was in the Mediterranean, as the result of the military compact
+between France and England signed, sealed and delivered in November,
+1912, and _withheld from the cognizance of the British Parliament
+until after war had been declared_. The British fleet had been
+mobilized early in July in anticipation of Russia's mobilization on
+land--and here again it is Sir Edward Grey who incidentally supplies
+the proof.
+
+In his anxiety, while there was still the fear that Russia might hold
+her hand, he telegraphed to the British Ambassador in St. Petersburg
+on 27th of July, requiring him to assure the Russian Foreign Minister,
+that the British Fleet, "which is concentrated, _as it happens_" would
+not disperse from Portland.
+
+That "as it happens" is quite the most illuminating slip in the
+British White Paper, and is best comprehended by those who know what
+have been the secret orders of the British fleet since 1909, and what
+was the end in view when King George reviewed it earlier in the month,
+and when His Majesty so hurriedly summoned the unconstitutional
+"Home Rule" conference at Buckingham Palace on 18th of July. Nothing
+remained for the "friends" but to so manoeuvre that Germany should be
+driven to declare war, or see her frontiers crossed. If she did the
+first, she became the "aggressor"; if she waited to be attacked she
+incurred the peril of destruction.
+
+Such, in outline, are the causes and steps that led to the outbreak of
+war. The writer has seen those steps well and carefully laid, tested
+and tried beforehand. Every rung of the scaling ladder being raised
+for the storming of the German defences on land and sea was planed and
+polished in the British Foreign Office.
+
+As Sir Edward Grey confessed three years ago, he was "but the fly on
+the wheel." That wheel was the ever faster driven purpose of Great
+Britain to destroy the growing sea-power and commerce of Germany. The
+strain had reached the breaking point.
+
+During the first six months of 1914, German export trade almost
+equalled that of Great Britain. Another year of peace, and it would
+certainly have exceeded it, and for the first time in the history of
+world trade Great Britain would have been put in the second place.
+German exports from January to June had swelled to the enormous total
+of $1,045,000,000 as against the $1,075,000,000 of Great Britain. A
+war against such figures could not be maintained in the markets, it
+must be transferred to the seas.
+
+Day by day as the war proceeds, although it is now only six weeks old,
+the pretences under which it was begun are being discarded. England
+fights not to defend the neutrality of Belgium, not to destroy German
+militarism, but to retain, if need be by involving the whole world in
+war, her supreme and undisputed ownership of the seas.
+
+This is the crime against Europe, the crime against the world that,
+among other victims the United States are invited to approve, in order
+that to-morrow their own growing navy may be put into a like posture
+with that of a defeated Germany.
+
+With the Kiel Canal "handed to Denmark," as one of the fruits of
+British victory, as Lord Charles Beresford yesterday magnanimously
+suggested, how long may it be before the Panama Canal shall be found
+to be "a threat to peace" in the hands of those who constructed it?
+
+A rival fleet in being, whether the gunners be Teuton or Anglo-Saxon
+unless the Admiralty controlling it is seated at Whitehall, will
+always be an eyesore to the Mistress of the seas, in other words, "a
+threat to the peace of the world."
+
+The war of armaments cannot be ended by the disarming of the German
+people. To hand Europe over to a triumphal alliance of Russian and
+French militarism, while England controls the highways and waterways
+of mankind by a fleet whose function is "to dictate the maritime
+law of nations," will beget indeed a new Europe, but a Europe
+whose acquiescence is due to fear and the continued pressure of
+well-sustained force--a Europe submitted to the despotism of unnatural
+alliances designed to arrest the laws of progress.
+
+The laws of progress demand that efficiency shall prevail. The crime
+of Germany has been superior efficiency, not so much in the arts
+of war as in the products of peace. If she go down to-day before a
+combination of brute force and unscrupulous intelligence her fall
+cannot be permanent. Germany has within herself the forces that ensure
+revival, and revival means recovery. Neither France nor Russia nor
+both combined, can give to Europe what Britain now designs to take
+from it by their help.
+
+Whatever may be the result of this war on the field of battle, to
+France indeed it can bring only one end. For her there is no future
+save that of a military empire. Her life blood is dried up. This war
+will sweep away all power of recuperation. She will remain impotent
+to increase her race, sterile of new forces for good, her young men's
+blood gone to win the barren fields of Alsace. Her one purpose in the
+new Europe will be to hold a sword, not her own, over the struggling
+form of a resurgent Germany in the interests of another people. Let
+Germany lose 1,000,000 men in the fighting of to-day, she can recover
+them in two years of peace. But to France the losses of this war,
+whether she win or lose, cannot be made good in a quarter of a century
+of child births. Whatever comes to Russia, to England, France as a
+great free power is gone. Her future function will be to act in a
+subordinate capacity alone; supported and encouraged by England she
+will be forced to keep up a great army in order that the most capable
+people of the continent, with a population no defeat can arrest,
+shall not fill the place in Europe and in the world they are called
+on surely to fill, and one that conflicts only with British aims and
+appetites.
+
+German expansion was no threat to France. It was directed to other
+fields, chiefly those of commerce. In order to keep it from those
+fields England fanned the dying fires of French resentment and strove
+by every agency to kindle a natural sentiment into an active passion.
+
+The historian of the future will record that whatever the immediate
+fate of Germany may be, the permanent victim was France.
+
+The day England won her to an active policy of vengeance against
+the victor of 1870, she wooed her to abiding loss. Her true place in
+Europe was one of friendship with Germany. But that meant, inevitably,
+the discovery by Europe that the chief barrier to European concord
+lay not in the armies of the powers, but in the ring of hostile
+battleships that constrained her peoples into armed camps.
+
+European militarism rests on English navalism. English navalism
+requires for its continued existence a disunited Europe; and a Europe
+kept apart is a Europe armed, anxious and watchful, bent on mutual
+attack, its eyes fixed on the _earth_. Europe must lift its eyes
+to the sea. There lies the highway of the nations, the only road to
+freedom--the sole path to peace.
+
+For the pent millions of Europe there can be no peace, no laying aside
+of arms, no sincere development of trade or culture while one people,
+_in Europe but not of Europe_, immune themselves from all attack,
+and sure that whatever suffering they inflict on others can never be
+visited on their own shores, have it in their power to foment strife
+with impunity and to call up war from the ends of the earth while they
+themselves enjoy the blessing of peace.
+
+England, the soul and brain of this confederacy of war abroad remains
+at peace at home. As I write these words a despatch from Sir Alfred
+Sharpe, the correspondent of a London paper in France, comes to hand.
+It should be placarded in every Foreign Office of the world, in every
+temple of justice, in every house of prayer.
+
+"It is difficult for the people in England to realize the condition of
+Northern France at the present time. Although the papers are full of
+accounts of desolation and destruction caused by the German invasion,
+it is only by an actual experience that a full realization of the
+horror comes. To return to England after visiting the French war zone
+is to come back to a land of perfect peace, where everything is normal
+and where it is not easy to believe we are almost within hearing
+distance of the cannonade on the Aisne."
+
+(Sir Alfred Sharpe, to the _Daily Chronicle_ from the Front, September
+2nd, 1914.)
+
+It is this immunity from the horror of war that makes all Englishmen
+jingoes. They are never troubled by the consequences of belligerency.
+Since it is only by "an actual experience that the full realization of
+the horror comes." Until that horror strikes deep on English soil her
+statesmen, her Ministers, her Members of Parliament, her editors, will
+never sincerely love peace, but will plan always to ensure war abroad,
+whenever British need or ambition demands it.
+
+Were England herself so placed that responsibility for her acts could
+be enforced on her own soil, among her own people, and on the head
+of those who devise her policies, then we might talk of arbitration
+treaties with hope, and sign compacts of goodwill sure that they were
+indeed cordial understandings.
+
+But as long as Great Britain retains undisputed ownership of the chief
+factor that ensures at will peace or war on others, there can be only
+armaments in Europe, ill-will among men and war fever in the blood of
+mankind.
+
+British democracy loves freedom of the sea in precisely the same
+spirit as imperial Rome viewed the spectacle of Celtic freedom beyond
+the outposts of the Roman legions; as Agricola phrased it, something
+"to wear down and take possession of so that freedom may be put out of
+sight."
+
+The names change but the spirit of imperial exploitation, whether it
+call itself an empire or a democracy, does not change.
+
+Just as the Athenian Empire, in the name of a democracy, sought to
+impose servitude at sea on the Greek world, so the British Empire, in
+the name of a democracy, seeks to encompass mankind within the long
+walls of London.
+
+The modern Sparta may be vanquished by the imperial democrats
+assailing her from East and West. But let the world be under no
+illusions.
+
+If Germany go down to-day, vanquished by a combination of Asiatic,
+African, American, Canadian and European enemies, the gain will not be
+to the world nor to the cause of peace.
+
+The mistress of the seas will remain to ensure new combinations of
+enmity to prohibit the one league of concord that alone can bring
+freedom and peace to the world. The cause that begot this war will
+remain to beget new wars.
+
+The next victim of universal sea-power may not be on the ravaged
+fields of mid-Europe, but mid the wasted coasts and bombarded seaports
+of the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans.
+
+A permanent peace can only be laid on a sure foundation. A sure
+foundation of peace among men can only be found when mastery of the
+sea by one people has been merged in freedom of the seas for all.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter II
+
+THE KEEPER OF THE SEAS
+
+
+As long ago as 1870 an Irishman pointed out that if the English press
+did not abandon the campaign of prejudiced suspicion it was even then
+conducting against Germany, the time for an understanding between
+Great Britain and the German people would be gone for ever.
+
+It was Charles Lever who delivered this shrewd appreciation of the
+onlooker.
+
+Writing from Trieste on August 29th, 1870, to John Blackwood, he
+stated:
+
+"Be assured the _Standard_ is making a great blunder by its
+anti-Germanism and English opinion has _just now_ a value in Germany
+which if the nation be once disgusted with us will be gone for ever."
+
+Lever preserved enough of the Irishman through all his official
+connection to see the two sides of a question and appreciate the point
+of view of the other man.
+
+What Lever pointed out during the early stages of the Franco-German
+war has come to pass. The _Standard_ of forty years ago is the British
+press of to-day, with here and there the weak voice of an impotent
+Liberalism crying in the wilderness. Germany has, indeed, become
+thoroughly disgusted and the hour of reconciliation has long since
+gone by. In Lever's time it was now or never; the chance not taken
+then would be lost for ever, and the English publicist of to-day
+is not in doubt that it is now too late. His heart-searchings need
+another formula of expression--no longer a conditional assertion of
+doubt, but a positive questioning of impending fact, "is it too soon."
+That the growing German navy must be smashed he is convinced, but how
+or when to do it he is not so clear.
+
+The situation is not yet quite intolerable, and so, although many urge
+an immediate attack before the enemy grows too strong, the old-time
+British love of compromise and trust in luck still holds his hand. The
+American "alliance" too, may yet come off. The Entente with France,
+already of great value, can be developed into something more assuredly
+anti-German, and if present-day relations of friendship with the
+United States can be but tightened into a mutual committal of both
+Powers to a common foreign policy, then the raid on Germany may never
+be needed. She can be bottled up without it. No man who studies the
+British mind can have any doubt of the fixed trend of British thought.
+
+It can be summed up in one phrase. German expansion is not to be
+tolerated. It can only be a threat to or attained at the expense of
+British interests. Those interests being world-wide, with the seas
+for their raiment nay, with the earth for their footstool--it follows
+that wherever Germany may turn for an outlet she is met by the British
+challenge: "Not there!" British interests interdict the Old World; the
+Monroe Doctrine, maintained, it is alleged by British naval supremacy,
+forbids the New.
+
+Let Germany acquire a coaling station, a sanitorium, a health resort,
+the ground for a hotel even, on some foreign shore, and "British
+interests" spring to attention, English jealousy is aroused. How
+long this state of tension can last without snapping could, perhaps,
+be best answered in the German naval yards. It is evident that some
+7,000,000 of the best educated race in the world, physically strong,
+mentally stronger, homogeneous, highly trained, highly skilled,
+capable and energetic and obedient to a discipline that rests upon and
+is moulded by a lofty conception of patriotism, cannot permanently be
+confined to a strictly limited area by a less numerous race, less well
+educated, less strong mentally and physically and assuredly less well
+trained, skilled and disciplined. Stated thus the problem admits of a
+simple answer; and were there no other factor governing the situation,
+that answer would have been long since given.
+
+It is not the ethical superiority of the English race that accounts
+for their lead, but the favourable geographical situation from which
+they have been able to develop and direct their policy of expansion.
+
+England has triumphed mainly from her position. The qualities of
+her people have, undoubtedly, counted for much, but her unrivalled
+position in the lap of the Atlantic, barring the seaways and closing
+the tideways of Central and North-eastern Europe, has counted for
+more.
+
+With this key she has opened the world to herself and closed it to her
+rivals.
+
+The long wars with France ended in the enhancement of this position by
+the destruction of the only rival fleet in being.
+
+Europe, without navies, without shipping became for England a mere
+westward projection of Asia, dominated by warlike peoples who
+could always be set by the ears and made to fight upon points of
+dynastic honour, while England appropriated the markets of mankind.
+Thenceforth, for the best part of a century, while Europe was spent
+in what, to the superior Britain were tribal conflicts, the seas and
+coasts of the world lay open to the intrusions of his commerce, his
+colonists, his finance, until there was seemingly nothing left outside
+the two Americas worth laying hands on. This highly favoured maritime
+position depends, however, upon an unnamed factor, the unchallenged
+possession and use of which by England has been the true foundation
+of her imperial greatness. Without Ireland there would be to-day
+no British Empire. The vital importance of Ireland to England is
+understood, but never proclaimed by every British statesman. To subdue
+that western and ocean-closing island and to exploit its resources,
+its people and, above all its position, to the sole advantage of the
+eastern island, has been the set aim of every English Government from
+the days of Henry VIII onwards. The vital importance of Ireland to
+Europe is not and has not been understood by any European statesman.
+To them it has not been a European island, a vital and necessary
+element of European development, but an appanage of England, an island
+beyond an island, a mere geographical expression in the titles of the
+conqueror. Louis XIV, came nearest, perhaps, of European rulers to
+realizing its importance in the conflict of European interests when
+he sought to establish James II on its throne as rival to the monarch
+of Great Britain and counterpoise to the British sovereignty in
+the western seas. Montesquieu alone of French writers grasped the
+importance of Ireland in the international affairs of his time, and he
+blames the vacillation of Louis, who failed to put forth his strength,
+to establish James upon the throne of Ireland and thus by a successful
+act of perpetual separation to _affaiblir le voisin_. Napoleon,
+too late, in St. Helena, realized his error: "Had I gone to Ireland
+instead of to Egypt the Empire of England was at an end."
+
+With these two utterances of the French writer and of the French ruler
+we begin and end the reference of Ireland to European affairs which
+continental statecraft has up to now emitted, and so far has failed to
+apply.
+
+To-day there is probably no European thinker (although Germany
+produced one in recent times), who, when he faces the over-powering
+supremacy of Great Britain's influence in world affairs and the
+relative subordination of European rights to the asserted interests
+of that small island, gives a thought to the other and smaller island
+beyond its shores. And yet the key to British supremacy lies there.
+Perhaps the one latter day European who perceived the true relation of
+Ireland to Great Britain was Neibuhr.
+
+"Should England," he said, "not change her conduct, Ireland may still
+for a long period belong to her, but not always; and the loss of that
+country is the death day, not only to her greatness, but of her very
+existence."
+
+I propose to point out as briefly as may be possible in dealing
+with so unexpected a proposition, that the restoration of Ireland to
+European life lies at the bottom of all successful European effort to
+break the bonds that now shackle every continental people that would
+assert itself and extend its ideals, as opposed to British interests,
+outside the limits of Europe.
+
+It may be well first to define "British interests" and to show that
+these are not necessarily synonymous with European interests. British
+interests are: first, the control of all the seas of all the world--in
+full military and commercial control. If this be not challenged peace
+is permitted: to dispute it seriously means war.
+
+Next in order of British interests stands the right of pre-emption to
+all healthy, fertile, "unoccupied" lands of the globe not already in
+possession of a people capable of seriously disputing invasion, with
+the right of reversion to such other regions as may, from time to
+time prove commercially desirable or financially exploitable, whether
+suitable for British colonization or not.
+
+In a word, British interests assume that the future of the world shall
+be an English-speaking future. It is clear that sooner or later the
+British colonies, so called, must develop into separate nationalities,
+and that the link of a common crown cannot bind them forever. But, as
+Sir Wilfred Laurier said at the recent Imperial Conference: "We bring
+you British institutions"--English language, English law, English
+trade, English supremacy, in a word--this is the ideal reserved for
+mankind and summed up in words "British interests."
+
+Turn where you will these interests are in effective occupation, and
+whether it be Madeira, Teneriffe, Agadir, Tahiti, Bagdad, the unseen
+flag is more potent to exclude the non-British intruder than the
+visible standard of the occupying tenant. England is the landlord of
+civilization, mankind her tenantry, and the earth her estate. If this
+be not a highly exaggerated definition of British interests, and in
+truth it is but a strongly coloured chart of the broad outline of
+the design, then it is clear that Europe has a very serious problem
+to face if European civilization and ideals, as differing from the
+British type, are to find a place for their ultimate expansion in any
+region favoured by the sun.
+
+The actual conflict of European interests in Morocco is a fair
+illustration of English methods.[1]
+
+[Footnote 1: This was written in August, 1911.]
+
+In the past France was the great antagonist, but since she is to-day
+no longer able to seriously dispute the British usufruct of the
+overseas world she is used (and rewarded) in the struggle now
+maintained to exclude Germany at all costs from the arena. Were France
+still dangerous she would never have been allowed to go to Algeciras,
+or from Algeciras to Fez. She has uses, however, in the anti-German
+prize ring and so Morocco is the price of her hire. That Germany
+should presume to inspect the transaction or claim a share in the
+settlement has filled the British mind with profound indignation, the
+echoes of which are heard rumbling round the world from the Guildhall
+to Gaboon and from the Congo to Tahiti. The mere press rumour that
+France might barter Tahiti for German goods filled the British
+newspaper world with supermundane wrath. That France should presume
+to offer or Germany should accept a French Pacific island in part
+discharge of liabilities contracted at Algeciras was a threat to
+British interests. Tahiti in the hands of a decadent republic, the
+greatest if you will, but still one of the dying nations, is a thing
+to be borne with, but Tahiti possibly in the hands of Germany becomes
+at once a challenge and a threat.
+
+And so we learn that "Australasia protests" to the Home Government
+at the mere rumour that France may choose to part with one of her
+possessions to win German goodwill in Morocco. Neither France nor
+Germany can be permitted to be a free agent in a transaction that
+however regarded as essential to their own interests might affect,
+even by a shadow on the sea, the world orbit of British interests.
+These interests it will be noted have reached such a stage of
+development as to require that all foreign States that cannot be used
+as tools, or regarded as agencies, must be treated as enemies. Germany
+with her growing population, her advancing industries, her keen
+commercial ability, and her ever expanding navy has become the enemy
+of civilization. Far too strong to be openly assailed on land she must
+at all costs be pent up in Central Europe and by a ring-fence of armed
+understandings prohibited from a wider growth that would certainly
+introduce a rival factor to those British institutions and that world
+language that are seriously if not piously meditated as the ordained
+future for mankind.
+
+For English mentality is such that whatever England does is divinely
+ordained, and whether she stamps out a nation or merely sinks a ship
+the hymn of action is "Nearer My God, to Thee." In a recent deputation
+to King George V it will be remembered that certain British religious
+bodies congratulated that monarch on the third centenary of the
+translation into English of the Bible.
+
+Both the addresses of the subjects, eminent, religious and cultured
+men, and the sovereign's reply were highly informative of the mental
+attitude of this extraordinary people. The Bible, it appeared, was the
+"greatest possession of the English race." "The British Bible" was the
+first and greatest of British investments and upon the moral dividends
+derived from its possession was founded the imperial greatness of this
+Island Empire. That other peoples possessed the Bible and had even
+translated it before England was not so much as hinted at. That the
+Bible was Greek and Hebrew in origin was never whispered. It began and
+ended with the English Authorised Version. The British Bible was the
+Bible that counted. It was the Bible upon which the sun never sets,
+the Bible that had blown Indian mutineers from its muzzle in
+the 'fifties and was prepared to-day to have a shot at any other
+mutineers, Teuton or Turk, who dared to dispute its claim that the
+meek shall inherit the earth. The unctuous rectitude that converts the
+word of God into wadding for a gun is certainly a formidable opponent,
+as Cromwell proved. To challenge English supremacy becomes not merely
+a threat to peace, it is an act of sacrilege. And yet this world-wide
+empire broad based upon the British Bible and the English navy, and
+maintained by a very inflexible interpretation of the one and a very
+skilful handling of the other, rests upon a sunk foundation that is
+older than both and will surely bring both to final shipwreck.
+
+The British Empire is founded not upon the British Bible or the
+British dreadnought but upon Ireland. The empire that began upon an
+island, ravaged, sacked and plundered shall end on an island, "which
+whether it proceed from the very genius of the soil, or the influence
+of the stars, or that Almighty God hath not yet appointed the time of
+her reformation, or that He reserveth her in this unquiet state still
+for some secret scourge which shall by her come unto England, it is
+hard to be known but yet much to be feared." Thus Edmund Spenser
+340 years ago, whose muse drew profit from an Irish estate (one of
+the first fruits of empire) and who being a poet had imagination
+to perceive that a day of payment must some day be called and that
+the first robbed might be the first to repay. The Empire founded on
+Ireland by Henry and Elizabeth Tudor has expanded into mighty things.
+England deprived of Ireland resumes her natural proportions, those of
+a powerful kingdom. Still possessing Ireland she is always an empire.
+For just as Great Britain bars the gateways of northern and west
+central Europe, to hold up at will the trade and block the ports of
+every coast from the Baltic to the Bay of Biscay, so Ireland stands
+between Britain and the greater seas of the west and blocks for
+her the highways of the ocean. An Ireland strong, independent and
+self-contained, a member of the European family of nations, restored
+to her kindred, would be the surest guarantee for the healthy
+development of European interests in those regions whence they are
+to-day excluded by the anti-European policy of England.
+
+The relation of Ireland to Great Britain has been in no wise
+understood on the continent. The policy of England has been for
+centuries to conceal the true source of her supplies and to prevent
+an audit of transactions with the remoter island. As long ago as the
+reign of Elizabeth Tudor this shutting off of Ireland from contact
+with Europe was a settled point of English policy. The three "German
+Earls" with letters from the Queen who visited Dublin in 1572 were
+prevented by the Lord Deputy from seeing for themselves anything
+beyond the walls of the city.[2]
+
+[Footnote 2: This time-honoured British precept--that foreigners
+should not see for themselves the workings of English rule in
+Ireland--finds frequent expression in the Irish State Papers. In
+a letter from Dublin Castle of August, 1572, from the Lord Deputy
+Fitzwilliam to Burghley Elizabeth's chief Minister, we are told that
+the "three German Earls" with "their conductor," Mr. Rogers, have
+arrived. The Viceroy adds, as his successors have done up to the
+present day: "According to Your Lordship's direction they shall
+travell as little way into the cuntry as I can."]
+
+To represent the island as a poverty striken land inhabited by a
+turbulent and ignorant race whom she has with unrewarded solicitude
+sought to civilise, uplift and educate has been a staple of England's
+diplomatic trade since modern diplomacy began. To compel the trade of
+Ireland to be with herself alone; to cut off all direct communication
+between Europe and this second of European islands until no channel
+remained save through Britain; to enforce the most abject political
+and economic servitude one people ever imposed upon another; to
+exploit all Irish resources, lands, ports, people, wealth, even her
+religion, everything in fine that Ireland held, to the sole profit
+and advancement of England, and to keep all the books and rigorously
+refuse an audit of the transaction has been the secret but determined
+policy of England.
+
+We have read lately something of Mexican peonage, of how a people
+can be reduced to a lawless slavery, their land expropriated, their
+bodies enslaved, their labour appropriated, and how the nexus of this
+fraudulent connection lies in a falsified account. The hacenade holds
+the peon by a debt bondage. His palace in Mexico City, or on the sisal
+plains of Yucatan is reared on the stolen labour of a people whose
+bondage is based on a lie. The hacenade keeps the books and debits
+the slave with the cost of the lash that scourges him into the fields.
+Ireland is the English peon, the great peon of the British Empire.
+The books and the palaces are in London but the work and the wealth
+have come from peons on the Irish Estate. The armies that overthrew
+Napoleon; the fleets that swept the navies of France and Spain from
+the seas were recruited from this slave pen of English civilisation.
+During the last 100 years probably 2,000,000 Irishmen have
+been drafted into the English fleets and armies from a land
+purposely drained of its food. Fully the same number, driven by
+executive-controlled famines have given cheap labour to England and
+have built up her great industries, manned her shipping, dug her
+mines, and built her ports and railways while Irish harbours silted up
+and Irish factories closed down. While England grew fat on the crops
+and beef of Ireland, Ireland starved in her own green fields and
+Irishmen grew lean in the strife of Europe.
+
+While a million Irishmen died of hunger on the most fertile plains
+of Europe, English Imperialism drew over one thousand million pounds
+sterling for investment in a world policy from an island that was
+represented to that world as too poor to even bury its dead. The
+profit to England from Irish peonage cannot be assessed in terms of
+trade, or finance, or taxation. It far transcends Lord MacDonnell's
+recent estimate at Belfast of £320,000,000--"an Empire's ransom," as
+he bluntly put it.
+
+Not an Empire's ransom but the sum of an Empire's achievement, the
+cost of an Empire's founding, and to-day the chief bond of an Empire's
+existence. Detach Ireland from the map of the British Empire and
+restore it to the map of Europe and that day England resumes her
+native proportions and Europe assumes its rightful stature in the
+empire of the world. Ireland can only be restored to the current of
+European life, from which she has so long been purposely withheld by
+the act of Europe. What Napoleon perceived too late may yet be the
+purpose and achievement of a congress of nations. Ireland, I submit,
+is necessary to Europe, is essential to Europe, to-day she is retained
+against Europe, by a combination of elements hostile to Europe and
+opposed to European influence in the world. Her strategic importance
+is a factor of supreme weight to Europe and is to-day used in the
+scales against Europe. Ireland is appropriated and used, not to the
+service of European interests but to the extension of anti-European
+interests. The _arbitium mundi_ claimed and most certainly exercised
+by England is maintained by the British fleet, and until that power
+is effectively challenged and held in check it is idle to talk of
+European influence outside of certain narrow continental limits.
+
+The power of the British fleet can never be permanently restrained
+until Ireland is restored to Europe. Germany has of necessity become
+the champion of European interests as opposed to the world domination
+of England and English-speaking elements. She is to-day a dam, a great
+reservoir rapidly filling with human life that must some day find an
+outlet. England instead of wisely digging channels for the overflow
+has hardened her heart, like Pharaoh, and thinks to prevent it or
+to so divert the stream that it shall be lost and drunk up in the
+thirsty sands of an ever expanding Anglo-Saxondom. German laws, German
+language, German civilization are to find no ground for replenishing,
+no soil to fertilize and make rich.
+
+I believe this to be not only the set policy of England, but to
+be based on the temperamental foundations of the English character
+itself, from which that people could not, even if they would, depart.
+The lists are set. The English mind, the English consciousness are
+such, that to oppose German influence in the world is to this people
+a necessity. They oppose by instinct, against argument, in the face
+of reason, they will do it blindly come what may and at all costs, and
+they will do it to the end.
+
+Their reasoning, if reason exists in what is after all a matter of
+primal instinct, might find expression somewhat as follows:
+
+"German influence cannot but be hostile to British interests. The
+two peoples are too much alike. The qualities that have made England
+great they possess in a still greater degree. Given a fair field and
+no favour they are bound to beat us. They will beat us out of every
+market in the world, and we shall be reduced ultimately to a position
+like that of France to-day. Better fight while we are still die
+stronger. Better hinder now ere it be too late. We have bottled up
+before and destroyed our adversaries by delay, by money, by alliances.
+To tolerate a German rivalry is to found a German empire and to
+destroy our own."
+
+Some such obscure argument as this controls the Englishman's reasoning
+when he faces the growing magnitude of the Teutonic people. A bitter
+resentment, with fear at the bottom, a hurried clanging of bolt and
+rivet in the belt of a new warship and a muffled but most diligent
+hammering at the rivets of an ever building American Alliance--the
+real Dreadnought this, whose keel was laid sixteen years ago and whose
+slow, secret construction has cost the silent swallowing of many a
+cherished British boast.
+
+English Liberalism might desire a different sort of reckoning with
+Germany, but English Liberalism is itself a product of the English
+temperament, and however it may sigh, by individuals, for a better
+understanding between the two peoples, in the mass, it is a part of
+the national purpose and a phase of the national mind and is driven
+relentlessly to the rivets and the hammering, the "Dreadnoughts"
+in being and that mightier Dreadnought yet to be, the Anglo-Saxon
+Alliance which Germany must fight if she is to get out.
+
+Doubtless she has already a naval policy and the plans for a naval
+war, for the fight will be settled on the sea, but the fate will be
+determined on an island.
+
+The Empire that has grown from an island and spread with the winds and
+the waves to the uttermost shores will fight and be fought for on the
+water and will be ended where it began, on an island.
+
+That island, I believe, will be Ireland and not Great Britain.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter III
+
+THE BALANCE OF POWER
+
+
+A conflict between England and Germany exists already, a conflict of
+aims.
+
+England rich, prosperous, with all that she can possibly assimilate
+already in her hands, desires peace on present conditions of world
+power. These conditions are not merely that her actual possessions
+should remain intact, but that no other Great Power shall, by
+acquiring colonies and spreading its people and institutions into
+neighbouring regions, thereby possibly affect the fuller development
+of those pre-existing British States. For, with England equality
+is an offence and the Power that arrives at a degree of success
+approximating to her own and one capable of being expanded into
+conditions of fair rivalry, has already committed the unpardonable
+sin. As Curran put it in his defence of Hamilton Rowan in 1797,
+"England is marked by a natural avarice of freedom which she is
+studious to engross and accumulate, but most unwilling to impart;
+whether from any necessity of her policy or from her weakness, or from
+her pride, I will not presume to say."
+
+Thus while England might even be the attacking party, and in all
+probability will be the attacking party, she will embark on a war
+with Germany at an initial disadvantage. She will be on her defence.
+Although, probably, the military aggressor from reasons of strategy,
+she will be acting in obedience to an economic policy of defence and
+not of attack. Her chief concern will be not to advance and seize,
+always in war the more inspiring task, but to retain and hold. At best
+she could come out of the war with no new gain, with nothing added
+worth having to what she held on entering it. Victory would mean for
+her only that she had secured a further spell of quiet in which to
+consolidate her strength and enjoy the good things already won.
+
+Germany will fight with far other purpose and one that must inspire a
+far more vigorous effort; she will fight, not merely to keep what she
+already has, but to escape from an intolerable position of inferiority
+she knows to be unmerited and forced not by the moral or intellectual
+superiority of her adversary or due to her own short comings, but
+maintained by reason of that adversary's geographical position and
+early seizure of the various points of advantage.
+
+Her effort will be not merely military, it will be an intellectual
+assertion, a fight in very truth for that larger freedom, that
+citizenship of the world England is studious to "engross and
+accumulate" for herself alone and to deny to all others. Thus, while
+English attack at the best will be actuated by no loftier feeling
+than that of a man who, dwelling in a very comfortable house with an
+agreeable prospect resists an encroachment on his outlook from the
+building operations of his less well lodged neighbour, Germany will be
+fighting not only to get out of doors into the open air and sunshine,
+but to build a loftier and larger dwelling, fit tenement for a
+numerous and growing offspring.
+
+Whatever the structure Germany seeks to erect England objects to the
+plan and hangs out her war sign "Ancient Lights."
+
+Who can doubt that the greater patriotism and stronger purpose must
+inspire the man who fights for light, air, and freedom, the right to
+walk abroad, to learn, to teach, aye, and to inspire others, rather
+than him whose chief concern it is to see that no one but himself
+enjoys these opportunities. The means, moreover, that each combatant
+will bring to the conflict are, in the end, on the side of Germany.
+Much the same disproportion of resources exists as lay between Rome
+and Carthage.
+
+England relies on money. Germany on men. And just as Roman men beat
+Carthaginian mercenaries, so must German manhood, in the end, triumph
+over British finance. Just as Carthage in the hours of final shock,
+placing her gold where Romans put their gods, and never with a soul
+above her ships, fell before the people of United Italy, so shall
+the mightier Carthage of the North Seas, in spite of trade, shipping,
+colonies, the power of the purse and the hired valour of the foreign
+(Irish, Indian, African), go down before the men of United Germany.
+
+But if the military triumph of Germany seems thus likely, the ultimate
+assurance, nay even the ultimate safety of German civilization can
+only be secured by a statemanship which shall not repeat the mistake
+of Louis XIV and Napoleon. The military defeat of England by Germany
+is a wholly possible achievement of arms, _if the conflict be between
+these two alone_, but to realize the economic and political fruits
+of that victory, Ireland must be detached from the British Empire.
+To leave a defeated England still in the full possession of Ireland
+would be, not to settle the question of German rights at sea or in
+world affairs, but merely to postpone the settlement to a second and
+possibly far greater encounter. It would be somewhat as if Rome, after
+the first Punic war had left Sicily to Carthage. But Ireland is far
+more vital to England than Sicily was to Carthage, and is of far more
+account to the future of Europe on the ocean than the possession of
+Sicily was to the future of the Mediterranean.
+
+If Germany is to permanently profit from a victory over England, she
+must free the narrow seas, not only by the defeat of British fleets
+in being, but by ensuring that those seas shall not again be closed
+by British fleets yet to be. The German gateway to a free Atlantic
+can only be kept open through a free Ireland. For just as the English
+Channel under the existing arrangement, whereby Ireland lies hidden
+from the rest of Europe, can be closed at will by England, so with
+Ireland no longer tied to the girdle of England, that channel cannot
+be locked. The key to the freedom of European navigation lies at
+Berehaven and not at Dover. With Berehaven won from English hands,
+England might close the Channel in truth, but Ireland could shut the
+Atlantic. As Richard Dox put it in 1689, quaintly but truly, in his
+dedication to King William III, and Queen Mary of his "History of
+Ireland from the Earliest Times."
+
+"But no cost can be too great where the prize is of such value, and
+whoever considers the situation, ports, plenty and other advantages
+of Ireland will confess that it must be retained at what rate soever;
+because if it should come into an enemy's hands, England would find
+it impossible to _flourish_ and perhaps difficult to _subsist_ without
+it. To demonstrate this assertion it is enough to say that Ireland
+lies in the Line of Trade and that all the English vessels that
+sail to the East, West, and South must, as it were, run the gauntlet
+between the harbours of Brest and Baltimore; and I might add that
+the Irish Wool being transported would soon ruin the English Clothing
+Manufacture. Hence it is that all Your Majesty's Predecessors have
+kept close to this fundamental maxim of retaining Ireland inseparably
+united to the Crown of England."
+
+The sole and exclusive appropriation of Ireland and of all her
+resources has indeed formed, since the Recorder of Kinsale wrote, the
+mainstay and chief support of British greatness.
+
+The natural position of Ireland lying "in the line of trade," was
+possibly its chief value, but that "Irish Wool" which was by no means
+to be allowed free access to world markets typifies much else that
+Ireland has been relentlessly forced to contribute to her neighbour's
+growth and sole profit.
+
+I read but yesterday "Few people realise that the trade of Ireland
+with Great Britain is equal to that of our trade with India, is
+13,000,000 pounds greater than our trade with Germany, and 40,000,000
+pounds greater than the whole of our trade with the United States."
+How completely England has laid hands on all Irish resources is
+made clear from a recent publication that Mr. Chamberlain's "Tariff
+Commission" issued towards the end of 1912.
+
+This document, entitled "The Economic Position of Ireland and its
+relation to Tariff Reform," constitutes, in fact, a manifesto calling
+for the release of Ireland from the exclusive grip of Great Britain.
+Thus, for instance, in the section "External Trade of Ireland,"
+we learn that Ireland exported in 1910, £63,400,000 worth of Irish
+produce. Of this Great Britain took £52,600,000 worth, while some
+£10,800,000 went either to foreign countries, or to British colonies,
+over £4,000,000 going to the United States. Of these eleven million
+pounds worth of Irish produce sent to distant countries, only £700,000
+was shipped direct from Irish ports.
+
+The remainder, more than £10,000,000, although the market it was
+seeking lay chiefly to the West, had to be shipped East into and to
+pay a heavy transit toll to that country for discharge, handling,
+agency, commission, and reloading on British vessels in British ports
+to steam back past the shores of Ireland it had just left. While
+Ireland, indeed, lies in the "line of trade," between all Northern
+Europe and the great world markets, she has been robbed of her trade
+and artificially deprived of the very position assigned to her by
+nature in the great tides of commercial intercourse. It is not only
+the geographical situation and the trade and wealth of Ireland that
+England has laid hands on for her own aggrandizement, but she has
+also appropriated to her own ends the physical manhood of the island.
+Just as the commerce has been forcibly annexed and diverted from
+its natural trend, so the youth of Ireland has been fraudulently
+appropriated and diverted from the defence of their own land to the
+extension of the power and wealth of the realm that impoverished it
+at home. The physical qualities of the Irish were no less valuable
+than "Irish wool" to Empire building, provided always they were not
+displayed in Ireland.
+
+So long ago as 1613 we find a candid admission in the State papers
+that the Irish were the better men in the field. "The next rebellion
+whenever it shall happen, doth threaten more danger to the State than
+any heretofore, when the cities and walled towns were always faithful;
+(1) because they have the same bodies they ever had and therein they
+had and have advantage of us; (2) from infancy they have been and
+are exercised in the use of arms; (3) the realm by reason of the long
+peace was never so full of youths; (4) that they are better soldiers
+than heretofore, their continental employment in wars abroad assures
+us, and they do conceive that their men are better than ours."
+
+This testimony to Irish superiority, coming as it does from English
+official sources just three hundred years ago, would be convincing
+enough did it stand alone. But it is again and again reaffirmed by
+English commanders themselves as the reason for their failure in some
+particular enterprise. In all else they were superior to the Irish; in
+arms, armaments, munitions, supplies of food and money, here the long
+purse, settled organization and greater commerce of England, gave
+her an overwhelming advantage. Moreover the English lacked the moral
+restraints that imposed so severe a handicap on the Irish in their
+resistance. They owned no scruple of conscience in committing any
+crime that served their purpose. Beaten often in open fight by the
+hardier bodies, stouter arms and greater courage of the Irishmen,
+they nevertheless won the game by recourse to means that no Irishman,
+save he who had joined them for purposes of revenge or in pursuit of
+selfish personal aims, could possibly have adopted. The fight from
+the first was an unequal one. Irish valour, chivalry, and personal
+strength were matched against wealth, treachery and cunning. The Irish
+better bodies were overcome by the worse hearts. As Curran put it in
+1817--"The triumph of England over Ireland is the triumph of guilt
+over innocence."
+
+The Earl of Essex who came to Ireland in 1599 with one of the largest
+forces of English troops that, up to then, had ever been dispatched
+into Ireland (18,000 men), had ascribed his complete failure, in
+writing to the Queen, to the physical superiority of the Irish:
+
+"These rebels are more in number than your Majesty's army and have
+(though I do unwillingly confess it), better bodies, and perfecter
+use of their arms, than those men who your Majesty sends over."
+
+The Queen, who followed the war in Ireland with a swelling wrath on
+each defeat, and a growing fear that the Spaniards would keep their
+promise to land aid to the Irish princes, O'Neill and O'Donnell,
+issued "instructions" and a set of "ordinances" for the conduct of the
+war in Ireland, which, while enjoining recourse to the usual methods
+outside the field of battle--(i.e. starvation, "politic courses,"
+assassination of leaders; and the sowing of dissension by means of
+bribery and promises), required for the conflict, that her weaker
+soldiers should be protected against the onslaught of the unarmoured
+Irishmen by head pieces of steel. She ordered "every soldier to be
+enforced to wear a murrion, because the enemy is encouraged by
+the advantage of arms to _come to the sword_ wherein he commonly
+prevaileth."
+
+One of the generals of the Spanish King, Philip III, who came to
+Ireland in the winter of 1601 with a handful of Spanish troops (200
+men), to reinforce the small expedition of de Aguila in Kinsale, thus
+reported on the physical qualities of the Irish in a document that
+still lies in Salamanca in the archives of the old Irish College. it
+was written by Don Pedro De Zubiarr on the 16th of January, 1602, on
+his return to the Asturias. Speaking of the prospect of the campaign,
+he wrote: "If we had brought arms for 10,000 men we could have had
+them, for they are very eager to carry on the war against the English.
+The Irish are very strong and well shaped, accustomed to endure hunger
+and toil, and very courageous in fight."
+
+Perhaps the most vivid testimony to the innate superiority of the
+Irishman as a soldier is given in a typically Irish challenge issued
+in the war of 1641. The document has a lasting interest for it
+displays not only the "better body" of the Irishman of that day, but
+something of his better heart as well, that still remains to us.
+
+One Parsons, an English settler in Ireland, had written to a friend
+to say that, among other things, the head of the Colonel of an Irish
+regiment then in the field against the English, would not be allowed
+to stick long on its shoulders. The letter was intercepted by the very
+regiment itself, and a captain in it, Felim O'Molloy, wrote back to
+Parsons:
+
+"I will do this if you please: I will pick out sixty men and fight
+against one hundred of your choice men if you do but pitch your camp
+one mile out of your town, and then if you have the victory, you may
+threaten my Colonel; otherwise, do not reckon your chickens before
+they are hatched."
+
+The Anglo-Saxon preferred "politic courses" to accepting the Irish
+soldier's challenge, even where all the advantage was conceded by
+the Irishman to his foe and all the risks, save that of treachery (a
+very necessary precaution in dealing with the English in Ireland),
+cheerfully accepted by the Celt.
+
+This advantage of the "better bodies" the Irish retained beyond all
+question up to the Famine. It was upon it alone that the Wexford
+peasantry relied in 1798, and with and by it alone that they again and
+again, armed with but pike and scythe swept disciplined regiments of
+English mercenaries in headlong rout from the field.
+
+This physical superiority of his countrymen was frequently referred to
+by O'Connell as one of the forces he relied on. With the decay of all
+things Irish that has followed the Famine, these physical attributes
+have declined along with so much else that was typical of the nation
+and the man.
+
+It could not to-day be fearlessly affirmed that sixty Irishmen were
+more than a match for one hundred Englishmen; yet depleted as it is
+by the emigration of its strongest and healthiest children, by growing
+sickness and a changed and deteriorated diet the Irish race still
+presents a type, superior physically, intellectually and morally to
+the English. It was on Irish soldiers that the English chiefly relied
+in the Boer War, and it is no exaggeration to say that could all
+the Irishmen in the ranks of the British army have been withdrawn, a
+purely British force would have failed to end the war and the Dutch
+would have remained masters of the field in South Africa.
+
+It was the inglorious part of Ireland to be linked with those "methods
+of barbarism" she herself knew only too well, in extinguishing the
+independence of a people who were attacked by the same enemy and
+sacrificed to the same greed that had destroyed her own freedom.
+
+Unhappy, indeed, is it for mankind, as for her own fate and honour
+that Ireland should be forced by dire stress of fortune to aid her
+imperial wrecker in wrecking the fortune and freedom of brave men
+elsewhere.
+
+That these physical qualities of Irishmen, even with a population now
+only one tenth that of Great Britain are still of value to the empire,
+Mr. Churchill's speech on the Home Rule Bill made frankly clear
+(February, 1913). We now learn that the First Lord of the Admiralty
+has decided to establish a new training squadron, "with a base
+at Queenstown," where it is hoped to induce with the bribe of
+"self-government" the youth of Cork and Munster to again man the
+British fleet as they did in the days of Nelson, and we are even told
+that the prospects of brisk recruiting are "politically favourable."
+
+Carthage got her soldiers from Spain, her seamen, her slingers from
+the Balearic Islands and the coasts of Africa, her money from the
+trade of the world. Rome beat her, but she did not leave a defeated
+Carthage to still levy toll of men and mind on those external sources
+of supply.
+
+Germany must fight, not merely to defeat the British fleet of to-day,
+but to neutralize the British fleet of to-morrow. Leave Ireland to
+Great Britain and that can never be. Neutralize Ireland and it is
+already accomplished.
+
+One of the conditions of peace, and _for this reason_ the most
+important condition of peace that a victorious Germany must impose
+upon her defeated antagonist is that Ireland shall be separated
+and erected into an independent European State under international
+guarantees. England, obviously would resist such conditions to the
+last, but then the last has already come before England would consent
+to any peace save on terms she dictated.
+
+A defeated England is a starved England. She would have to accept
+whatever terms Germany imposed unless those terms provoked external
+intervention on behalf of the defeated power.
+
+The prize Germany seeks to win from victory is not immediate
+territorial aggrandizement obtained from annexing British possessions,
+not a heavy money indemnity wrung from British finance and trade
+(although this she might have), but German freedom throughout the
+world on equal terms with Britain. This is a prize worth fighting for,
+for once gained the rest follows as a matter of course.
+
+German civilization released from the restricted confines and unequal
+position in which Britain had sought to pen it must, of itself win
+its way to the front, and of necessity acquire those favoured spots
+necessary to its wide development.
+
+"This is the meaning of his (the German's) will for power; safety from
+interference with his individual and national development. Only one
+thing is left to the nations that do not want to be left behind in the
+peaceful rivalry of human progress--that is to become the equals of
+Germany in untiring industry, in scientific thoroughness, in sense of
+duty, in patient persistence, in intelligent, voluntary submission
+to organization." (History of German Civilization, by Ernst Richard,
+Columbia University, New York.)
+
+Once she had reduced Great Britain to an opposition based on _peaceful
+rivalry_ in human progress, Germany would find the path of success
+hers to tread on more than equal terms, and many fields of expansion
+now closed would readily open to German enterprise without that
+people incurring and inflicting the loss and injury that an attempted
+invasion of the great self-governing dominions would so needlessly
+involve. Most of the British self-governing colonies are to-day great
+States, well able to defend themselves from overseas attack. The
+defeat of the British navy would make scarcely at all easier the
+landing of German troops in, say, Australia, South Africa or New
+Zealand. A war of conquest of those far-distant regions would be,
+for Germany, an impossible and a stupidly impossible task.
+
+A defeated England could not cede any of these British possessions as
+a price of peace, for they are inhabited by free men who, however
+they might deplore a German occupation of London, could in no wise be
+transferred by any pact or treaty made by others, to other rule than
+that of themselves. Therefore, to obtain those British dominions,
+Germany would have to defeat not only England, but after that to begin
+a fresh war, or a series of fresh wars, at the ends of the earth, with
+exhausted resources and probably a crippled fleet.
+
+The thing does not bear inspection and may be dismissed from our
+calculation.
+
+The only territories that England could cede by her own act to
+a victorious power are such as, in themselves, are not suited
+to colonization by a white race. Doubtless, Germany would seek
+compensation for the expense of the war in requiring the transfer
+of some of these latter territories of the British Crown to herself.
+There are points in tropical Africa, in the East, islands in the ocean
+to-day flying the British flag that might, with profit to German
+trade and influence, be acquired by a victorious Germany. But none of
+these things in itself, not all of them put together, would meet the
+requirements of the German case, or ensure to Germany that future
+tranquil expansion and peaceful rivalry the war had been fought to
+secure. England would be weakened, and to some extent impoverished by
+a war ending with such results; but her great asset, her possession
+beyond price would still be hers--her geographical position. Deprive
+her to-day, say of the Gold Coast, the Niger, Gibraltar, even of
+Egypt, impose a heavy indemnity, and while Germany would barely have
+recouped herself for the out-of-pocket losses of the war, England in
+fact would have lost nothing, and ten years hence the Teuton would
+look out again upon the same prospect, a Europe still dominated beyond
+the seas by the Western islanders.
+
+The work would have to be done all over again. A second Punic war
+would have to be fought with this disadvantage--that the Atlantic
+Sicily would be held and used still against the Northern Rome, by the
+Atlantic Carthage.
+
+A victorious Germany, in addition to such terms as she may find
+it well to impose in her own immediate financial or territorial
+interests, must so draft her peace conditions as to preclude her great
+antagonist from ever again seriously imperilling the freedom of the
+seas. I know of no way save one to make sure the open seas. Ireland,
+in the name of Europe, and in the exercise of European right to
+free the seas from the over-lordship of one European island, must be
+resolutely withdrawn from British custody. A second Berlin Conference,
+an international Congress must debate, and clearly would debate, with
+growing unanimity the German proposal to restore Ireland to Europe.
+
+The arguments in favour of that proposal would soon become so clear
+from the general European standpoint, that save England and her
+defeated allies, no power would oppose it.
+
+Considerations of expediency no less than naval, mercantile, and
+moral claims would range themselves on the side of Germany and a free
+Ireland. For a free Ireland, not owned and exploited by England, but
+appertaining to Europe at large, its ports available in a sense they
+never can be while under British control for purposes of general
+navigation and overseas intercourse, would soon become of such
+first-rank importance in continental affairs as to leave men stupified
+by the thought that for five hundred years they had allowed one
+sole member of their community the exclusive use and selfish
+misappropriation of this, the most favoured of European islands.
+
+Ireland would be freed, not because she deserved or asked for freedom,
+not because English rule has been a tyranny, a moral failure, a
+stupidity and sin against the light; not because Germany cared for
+Ireland, but because her withdrawal from English control appeared to
+be a very necessary step in international welfare and one very needful
+to the progress of German and European expansion.
+
+An Ireland released from the jail in which England had confined
+her would soon become a populous State of possibly 10,000,000 to
+12,000,000 people, a commercial asset of Europe in the Atlantic of the
+utmost general value, one holding an unique position between the Old
+and New Worlds, and possibly an intellectual and moral asset of no
+mean importance. This, and more, a sovereign Ireland means to Europe.
+Above all it means security of transit, equalizing of opportunity,
+freedom of the seas--an assurance that the great waterways of the
+ocean should no longer be at the absolute mercy of one member of the
+European family, and that one the least interested in general European
+welfare.
+
+The stronger a free Ireland grew the surer would be the guarantee that
+the rôle of England "consciously assumed for many years past, to be
+an absolute and wholly arbitrary judge of war and peace" had gone for
+ever, and that at last the "balance of power" was kept by fair weight
+and fair measure and not with loaded scales.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter IV
+
+THE ENEMY OF PEACE
+
+
+I believe England to be the enemy of European peace, and that until
+her "mastery of the sea" is overmastered by Europe, there can be
+no peace upon earth or goodwill among men. Her claim to rule the
+seas, and the consequences, direct and indirect, that flow from its
+assertion are the chief factors of international discord that now
+threaten the peace of the world.
+
+In order to maintain that indefensible claim she is driven to
+aggression and intrigue in every quarter of the globe; to setting
+otherwise friendly peoples by the ears; to forming "alliances" and
+ententes, to dissolving friendships, the aim always being the old one,
+_divide et impera_.
+
+The fact that Europe to-day is divided into armed camps is mainly due
+to English effort to retain that mastery of the sea. It is generally
+assumed, and the idea is propagated by English agencies, that Europe
+owes her burden of armaments to the antagonism between France and
+Germany, to the loss of Alsace-Lorraine by France, and the spirit and
+hope of a _revanche_ thereby engendered. But this antagonism has long
+ceased to be the chief factor that moulds European armaments.
+
+Were it not for British policy, and the unhealthy hope it proffers
+France would ere this have resigned herself, as the two provinces
+have done, to the solution imposed by the war of 1870. It is England
+and English ambition that beget the state of mind responsible for
+the enormous growth of armaments that now over-shadows continental
+civilization. Humanity, hemmed in in Central Europe by a forest of
+bayonets and debarred all egress to the light of a larger world by a
+forbidding circle of dreadnoughts, is called to peace conferences and
+arbitration treaties by the very power whose fundamental maxim of rule
+ensures war as the normal outlook for every growing nation of the Old
+World.
+
+If Europe would not strangle herself with her own hands she must
+strangle the sea serpent whose coils enfold her shores.
+
+Inspect the foundation of European armaments where we will, and we
+shall find that the master builder is he who fashioned the British
+Empire. It is that empire, its claim to universal right of pre-emption
+to every zone and region washed by the waves and useful and necessary
+for the expansion of the white races, and its assertion of a right to
+control at will all the seas of all the world that drives the peoples
+of Europe into armed camps. The policy of the Boer War is being tried
+on a vaster scale against Europe. Just as England beat the Boers by
+concentration camps and not by arms, by money and not by men, so she
+seeks to-day to erect an armourplate barrier around the one European
+people she fears to meet in the field, and to turn all Central Europe
+into a vast concentration camp. By use of the longest purse she has
+already carried this barrier well towards completion. One gap remains,
+and it is to make sure that this opening, too, shall be closed that
+she now directs all the force of her efforts. Here the longest purse
+is of less avail, so England draws upon another armoury. She appeals
+to the longest tongue in history--the longest and something else.
+
+In order to make sure the encompassing of Europe with a girdle of
+steel it is necessary to circle the United States with a girdle of
+lies. With America true to the great policy of her great founder,
+an America, "the friend of all powers but the ally of none," English
+designs against European civilization must in the end fail. Those
+plans can succeed only by active American support, and to secure this
+is now the supreme task and aim of British stealth and skill. Every
+tool of her diplomacy, polished and unpolished, from the trained
+envoy to the boy scout and the minor poet has been tried in turn. The
+pulpit, the bar, the press; the society hostess, the Cabinet Minister
+and the Cabinet Minister's wife, the ex-Cabinet Minister and the Royal
+Family itself, and last, but not least, even "Irish nationality"--all
+have been pilgrims to that shrine; and each has been carefully primed,
+loaded, well aimed, and then turned full on the weak spots in the
+armour of republican simplicity. To the success of these resources
+of panic the falsification of history becomes essential and the
+vilification of the most peace-loving people of Europe. The past
+relations of England with the United States are to be blotted out,
+and the American people who are by blood so largely Germanic, are to
+be entrapped into an attitude of suspicion, hostility and resentment
+against the country and race from whom they have received nothing
+but good. Germany is represented as the enemy, not to England's
+indefensible claim to own the seas, but to American ideals on the
+American continent. Just as the Teuton has become the "enemy of
+civilization" in the Old World because he alone has power, strength of
+mind, and force of purpose to seriously dispute the British hegemony
+of the seas, so he is assiduously represented as the only threat to
+American hegemony of the New World.
+
+This, the key note of the attack on Germany, is sounded from every
+corner of the British Empire, wherever the Imperial editor, resting on
+the labours of the lash he wields against the coloured toilers in mine
+and camp, directs his eyes from the bent forms of these indentured
+slaves of dividend to the erect and stalwart frames of the new Goths
+who threaten the whole framework of Imperial dividend from across
+the North Sea. From the _Times_ to the obscurest news-sheet of the
+remotest corner of the British Dominions the word has gone forth.
+
+The Monroe Doctrine, palladium of the Anglo-Saxon world empire, is
+imperilled by German ambitions, and were it not for the British
+fleet, America would be lost to the Americans. Wherever Englishmen are
+gathered to-day their journals, appealing possibly to only a handful
+of readers, assert that the function of the British fleet is to
+exclude the European States, with Germany at their head, from
+South America, not because in itself that is a right and worthy
+end to pursue, but because that continent is earmarked for future
+exploitation and control by their "kinsmen" of the United States,
+and they need the support of those "kinsmen" in their battle against
+Germany.
+
+I need quote but a single utterance from the mass of seditious libels
+of this character before me to show how widespread is the propaganda
+of falsehood and how sustained is the effort being made to poison
+the American mind against the only people in Europe England genuinely
+fears, and therefore wholeheartedly hates.
+
+The _Natal Mercury_ for instance, a paper written for the little town
+of Durban and appealing to a population of only some 30,000 whites,
+in a recent issue (March, 1913), devoted a leader to the approaching
+"Peace Centennial" of 1914, to be held in commemoration of the signing
+of the Treaty of Ghent, which ended the second war between Great
+Britain and the American people in 1814.
+
+"After all, blood is thicker than water," quotes the Natal journal
+with satisfaction, and after pointing out some latter day indications
+of rapprochement between England and the United States, it goes on to
+proclaim the chief function of the British navy and the claim thereby
+established on the goodwill of America.
+
+"We make mention of them because such incidents are likely to repeat
+themselves more and more frequently in that competition for naval
+supremacy in Europe which compels the United States to put her own
+fleets into working order and to join in the work that England has
+hitherto been obliged to perform _unaided_.
+
+"It is England that polices the Seven Seas, and America has reaped no
+small benefits from the _self-imposed task_, an aspect of the matter
+to which every thoughtful American is alive. There is a real and
+hearty recognition in the New World of the _silent barrier_ that Great
+Britain has set up to what might become something more than a dream
+of expansion into South America on the part of _one_ potent European
+State. It is, indeed, hardly too much to say that the maintenance
+of the Monroe Doctrine is at the present moment almost as fully
+guaranteed by England as it is by the country that enunciated the
+policy and is the chief gainer by it. It is a case in which a _silent
+understanding_ is of far greater value than a formal compact that
+'would serve as a target for casual discontent on this side or that'."
+
+The article concludes by proclaiming "the precious permanence of an
+unseen bond" and the lofty and enduring worth of "good faith mutually
+acknowledged and the ultimate solidarity of mutual interests rightly
+perceived." "The ultimate solidarity" aimed at by those who direct
+these world-wide pronouncements is not one of mere sterile friendship
+between the American and the British peoples. American friendship with
+England is only worth having when it can be translated by world acts
+into enmity against Germany.
+
+It might truly be said of the British Empire to-day that where two or
+three are gathered together, there hatred of Germany shall be in the
+midst of them. Turn where he will, from the Colonies to England, from
+England to her fleet, from the seas to the air, the Englishman lives
+and moves and has his being in an atmosphere not of love but of
+hatred. And this too, a hatred, fear, and jealousy of a people who
+have never injured him, who have never warred upon him, and whose sole
+crime is that they are highly efficient rivals in the peaceful rivalry
+of commerce, navigation, and science.
+
+We are told, for instance, in one of the popular London magazines
+for January, 1913, in an article upon the financial grievances of
+the British navy that were it not for Germany there would be to-day
+another Spithead. "Across the North Sea is a nation that some fifty
+years ago was so afraid of the British navy that it panicked itself
+into building an iron-clad fleet.
+
+"To-day, as the second naval power, its menace is too great for any
+up-to-date Spithead mutiny to come off. But the pay question was
+so acute that it is possibly only the Germans and their 'menace'
+that saved us from the trouble." But while the "patriotism" of the
+"lower-deck" may have been sufficiently stout to avert this peril,
+the patriotism of the "quarter-deck" is giving us a specimen of its
+quality that certainly could not be exhibited in any other country in
+the world.
+
+Even as I write I read in the "British Review" how Admiral Sir
+Percy Scott attacks Admiral Lord Charles Beresford, dubs him the
+"laughing-stock of the fleet," accuses him of publishing in his book
+_The Betrayal_ a series of "deliberate falsehoods," and concludes by
+saying that the gallant Admiral is "not a seaman."
+
+And it is a fleet commanded by such Admirals as these that is to sweep
+the German navy from the seas!
+
+During the Crimean war the allied British and French navies
+distinguished themselves by their signal failure to effect the
+reduction of such minor fortresses as Sveaborg, Helsingfors, and
+the fortified lighthouses upon the Gulf of Finland. Their respective
+Admirals fired their severest broadsides into each other, and the
+bombardment of the forts was silenced by the smart interchange of
+nautical civilities between the two flagships. Napoleon III, who
+sought an explanation of this failure of his fleet, was given a reply
+that I cannot refrain from recommending to the British Admiralty
+to-day. "Well, Sire," replied the French diplomatist, who knew the
+circumstances, "both the Admirals were old women, but ours was at
+least a lady." If British Admirals cannot put to sea without incurring
+this risk, they might, at least, take the gunboat woman with them to
+prescribe the courtesies of naval debate.
+
+That England to-day loves America, no one who goes to the private
+opinions of Englishmen, instead of to their public utterances, or the
+interested eulogies of their press, can for a moment believe.
+
+The old dislike is there, the old supercilious contempt for the
+"Yankee" and all his ways. "God's Englishman" no more loves an
+American citizen now than in 1846 when he seriously contemplated an
+invasion of the United States, and the raising of the negro-slave
+population against his "Anglo-Saxon kinsmen."
+
+To-day, when we hear so much of the Anglo-Saxon Alliance it may be
+well to revert to that page of history. For it will show us that if a
+British premier to-day can speak as Mr. Asquith did on December 16th,
+1912, in his reference to the late American Ambassador as "a great
+American and a kinsman," one "sprung from a common race, speaking our
+own language, sharing with us by birth as by inheritance not a few of
+our most cherished traditions and participating when he comes here by
+what I may describe as _his natural right in our domestic interests
+and celebrations_," then this new-found kinship takes its birth not in
+a sense of common race, indeed, but in a very common fear of Germany.
+
+In the year 1846, the British army was engaged in robbing the Irish
+people of their harvest in order that the work of the famine should
+be complete and that the then too great population of Ireland should
+be reduced within the limits "law and order" prescribed, either by
+starvation or flight to America.
+
+Fleeing in hundreds and thousands from the rule of one who claimed
+to be their Sovereign, expelled in a multitude exceeding the Moors of
+Spain, whom a Spanish king shipped across the seas with equal pious
+intent, the fugitive Irish Nation found friendship, hope, and homes in
+the great Celtic Republic of the West. All that was denied to them in
+their own ancient land they found in a new Ireland growing up across
+the Atlantic.
+
+The hate of England pursued them here and those who dared to give help
+and shelter. The United States were opening wide their arms to receive
+the stream of Irish fugitives and were saying very harsh things of
+England's infamous rule in Ireland. This could not be brooked. England
+in those days had not invented the Anglo-Saxon theory of mankind, and
+a united Germany had not then been born to vex the ineptitude of her
+statesmen or to profit from the shortcomings of her tradesmen.
+
+So the greatest Ministers of Queen Victoria seriously contemplated war
+with America and naturally looked around for some one else to do the
+fighting. The Duke of Wellington hoped that France might be played
+on, just as in a later day a later Minister seeks to play France in a
+similar rôle against a later adversary.[3]
+
+[Footnote 3: Sir Edward Grey and the _Entente Cordiale_.]
+
+The Mexicans, too, might be induced to invade the Texan frontier.
+But a greater infamy than this was seriously planned. Again it is an
+Irishman who tells the story and shows us how dearly the English loved
+their trans-Atlantic "kinsmen" when there was no German menace to
+threaten nearer home.
+
+Writing from Carlsruhe, on January 26th, 1846, to his friend,
+Alexander Spencer, in Dublin, Charles Lever said: "As to the war the
+Duke[4] says he could smash the Yankees, and ought to do so while
+France in her present humour and Mexico opens the road to invasion
+from the South--not to speak of the terrible threat that Napier
+uttered, that with two regiments of infantry and a field battery he'd
+_raise the slave population in the United States_."
+
+[Footnote 4: The Duke of Wellington: the report was brought to Lever
+by the Marquis of Douro, the Duke's heir.]
+
+The infamy of this suggestion cannot be surpassed. The brilliant
+soldier who conceived it was the chivalrous Englishman who conquered
+Scinde, one of the chief glories of the Britannic hierarchy of
+soldier-saints.
+
+The Government planning it was that of the late Queen Victoria with
+the Duke of Wellington's advice, and the people against whom the
+black-slave millions were to be loosed were the "kith and kin" of
+those meditating this atrocious form of massacre. Truly, as an old
+Irish proverb, old even in the days of Henry VIII. put it, "the pride
+of France, the _treason of England_ and the warre of Ireland shall
+never have end."
+
+As a latter day witness of that treason, one who had suffered it from
+birth to the prison cell, a dead Irishman speaks to us from the grave.
+Michael Davitt in a letter to Morrison Davidson on August 2701, 1902,
+thus summed up in final words what every Irishman feels in his heart:
+
+"The idea of being ruled by Englishmen is to me the chief agony
+of existence. They are a nation without faith, truth or conscience
+enveloped in a panoplied pharisaism and an incurable hypocrisy. Their
+moral appetite is fed on falsehood. They profess Christianity and
+believe only in Mammon. They talk of liberty while ruling India and
+Ireland against the principles of a constitution, professed as
+a political faith, but prostituted to the interests of class and
+landlord rule."
+
+Have Englishmen in less than two generations substituted love for
+the hate that Napier, Wellington, and the Queen's Ministers felt and
+expressed in 1846 for the people of the United States? Is it love
+to-day for America or fear of someone else that impels to the
+"Arbitration Treaties" and the celebration of the "Hundred years of
+Peace?"
+
+The Anglo-American "Peace Movement" was to be but the first stage in
+an "Anglo-Saxon Alliance," intended to limit and restrict all further
+world changes, outside of certain prescribed continental limits, to
+these two peoples alone on the basis of a new "Holy Alliance," whose
+motto should be _Beati possidentes_.
+
+Since England and America, either in fact or by reservation enjoy
+almost all the desirable regions of the earth, why not bring about
+a universal agreement to keep everyone in his right place, to stay
+"just as we are," and to kindly refer all possible differences to an
+"International Tribunal?"
+
+Once again the British Bible was thrown into the scale, and the
+unrighteousness of Germany, who did not see her way to join in the
+psalm singing, was exposed in a spirit of bitter resignation and
+castigated with an appropriate selection of texts. The Hague Tribunal
+would be so much nicer than a war of armaments! With no reckless
+rivalries and military expenditure there could be no question of the
+future of mankind.
+
+An idyllic peace would settle down upon the nations, contentedly
+possessing each in its own share of the good things of life, and no
+questionable ambitions would be allowed to disturb the buying and
+selling of the smaller and weaker peoples. The sincerity of the wish
+for universal arbitration can be best shown by England, when she,
+or any of the Powers to whom she appeals, will consent to submit the
+claim of one of the minor peoples she or they hold in subjection to
+the Hague Tribunal. Let France submit Madagascar and Siam, or her
+latest victim, Morocco, to the franchise of the Court. Let Russia
+agree to Poland or Finland seeking the verdict of this bench of
+appeal. Let England plead her case before the same high moral tribunal
+and allow Ireland, Egypt, or India to have the law of her. Then, and
+not until then, the world of little States and beaten peoples may
+begin to believe that the Peace Crusade has some foundations in honour
+and honesty--but not till then.
+
+Germany has had the straightforwardness and manliness to protest that
+she is still able to do her own shooting and that what she holds she
+will keep, by force if need be, and what she wants she will, in her
+own sure time, take, and by force too, if need be. Of the two cults
+the latter is the simpler, sincerer, and certainly the less dishonest.
+
+Irish-American linked with German-American keen-sighted hostility did
+the rest. The rivalry of Mr. Roosevelt and Mr. Taft aided, and the
+effort (for the time at any rate) has been wrecked, thereby plunging
+England into a further paroxysm of religious despondency and grave
+concern for German morals. This mood eventuated in Lord Haldane's
+"week end" trip to Berlin. The voice was the voice of Jacob, in spite
+of the hand of Esau. Mr. Churchill at Glasgow, showed the real hand
+and the mess of pottage so amiably offered at Berlin bought no German
+birthright. The Kreuz Zeitung rightly summed up the situation by
+pointing out that "Mr. Churchill's testimony can now be advanced
+as showing that the will of England alone comes in question as
+the exponent of peace, and that England for many years past has
+consciously assumed the rôle of an absolute and perfectly arbitrary
+judge of war and peace. It seems to us all the more significant that
+Mr. Churchill proposes also in the future to control, with the help of
+the strong navies of the Dominions, the trade and naval movements of
+all the Powers on the face of the earth--that is to say, his aim is to
+secure a world monopoly for England." There has never been any other
+thought in the English mind. As I said in Part I. of this paper,
+"British interests are first the control of all the seas of all
+the world in full military and commercial control. If this be not
+challenged peace is permitted; to dispute it seriously means war."
+
+Germany is driven by necessity to dispute it seriously and to overcome
+it. She cannot get out to play her part in world life, _nay, she
+cannot hope to ultimately maintain herself at home_ until that battle
+has been fought and won.
+
+Arrangements with England, detentes, understandings, call them what
+you will, are merely parleys before the fight. The assault must be
+delivered, the fortress carried, or else Germany, and with her
+Europe, must resign the mission of the white races and hand over the
+government and future of the world to one chosen people.
+
+Europe reproduces herself yearly at the present time at the rate of
+about five million souls. Some three-fifths of the number are to-day
+absorbed into the life of the Continent, the balance go abroad and
+principally to North America, to swell the English-speaking world.
+Germany controls about one-fifth of Europe's natural annual increase,
+and realising that emigration to-day means only to lose her people and
+build up her antagonist's strength, she has for years now striven to
+keep her people within German limits, and hitherto with successful
+results far in excess of any achieved by other European States. But
+the limit must be reached, and that before many years are past.
+Where is Germany to find the suitable region, both on a scale and
+under conditions of climate, health and soil that a people of say
+90,000,000 hemmed in a territory little larger than France, will find
+commensurate to their needs? No European people is in such plight.
+
+Russia has the immense and healthy world of Siberia into which to
+overflow. France, far from needing outlets, increases not at all, and
+during 1911 showed an excess of close on 40,000 deaths over births.
+For France the day of greatness is past. A French Empire, in any other
+sense than the Roman one of commercial and military exploitation of
+occupied territories and subjugated peoples is gone forever.
+
+France has no blood to give except in war. French blood will not
+colonize even the Mediterranean littoral. Italy is faced with
+something of the same problem as Germany, but to a lesser extent. Her
+surplus population already finds a considerable outlet in Argentina
+and South Brazil, among peoples, institutions, and language largely
+approximating to those left behind. While Italy has, indeed need of a
+world policy as well as Germany, her ability to sustain a great part
+abroad cannot be compared to that of the Teutonic people. Her claim is
+not so urgent; her need not so insistent, her might inadequate.
+
+The honesty and integrity of the German mind, the strength of the
+German intellect, the skill of the German hand and brain, and justice
+and vigour of German law, the intensity of German culture, science,
+education and social development, these need a great and healthy field
+for their beneficial display, and the world needs these things more
+than it needs the British mastery of the seas. The world of European
+life needs to-day, as it needed in the days of a decadent Roman
+Empire, the coming of another Goth, the coming of the Teuton. The
+interposing island in the North Sea alone intervenes. How to surmount
+that obstacle, how to win the freedom of the "Seven Seas" for Europe
+must be the supreme issue for Germany.
+
+If she falls she is doomed to sterility. The supreme test of German
+genius, of German daring, of German discipline and imagination lies
+there.
+
+Where Louis XIV., the Directory, and Napoleon failed, will the heirs
+of Karl the Great see clearly?
+
+And then, when that great hour has struck, will Germany, will Europe,
+produce the statesman soldier who shall see that the key to ocean
+freedom lies in that island beyond an island, whose very existence
+Europe has forgotten?
+
+Till that key is out from the Pirate's girdle, Germany may win a
+hundred "Austerlitzes" on the Vistula, the Dnieper, the Loire, but
+until she restores that key to Europe, to paraphrase Pitt, she may
+"roll up that map of the world; it will not be wanted these fifty
+years."
+
+
+
+
+Chapter V
+
+THE PROBLEM OF THE NEAR WEST
+
+
+The foregoing reflections and the arguments drawn from them were
+penned before the outbreak of the war between Turkey and the Balkan
+Allies.
+
+That war is still undecided as I write (March 1913), but whatever its
+precise outcome may be, it is clear that the doom of Turkey as a great
+power is sealed, and that the complications of the Near East will,
+in future, assume an entirely fresh aspect. Hitherto, there was only
+the possibility that Germany might find at least a commercial and
+financial outlet in the Asiatic dominions of the Sultan. There was
+even the possibility, had Turkey held together, that England, to
+mitigate pressure elsewhere, would have conceded to an expanding and
+insistent Germany, a friendly interest and control in Asia Minor. It
+is true that the greatest possible development, and under the most
+favoured conditions of German interests in that region, could not have
+met the needs or satisfied the ever increasing necessities of Teutonic
+growth; but at least it would have offered a safety valve, and could
+have involved preoccupations likely to deflect the German vision, for
+a time, from the true path to greatness, the Western highways of the
+sea.
+
+An occupation or colonisation of the Near East by the Germanic peoples
+could never have been a possible solution under any circumstances of
+the problem that faces German statemanship. As well talk of reviving
+the Frank Kingdom of Jerusalem.
+
+The occupation by the fair-haired peoples of the Baltic and North Seas
+of the lands of Turk and Tartar, of Syrian and Jew, of Armenian and
+Mesopotamian, was never a practical suggestion or one to be seriously
+contemplated. "East is East and West is West," sings the poet of
+Empire, and Englishmen cannot complain if the greatest of Western
+peoples, adopting the singer, should apply the dogma to themselves.
+Germany, indeed, might have looked for a considerable measure of
+commercial dominance in the Near East, possibly for a commercial
+protectorate such as France applies to Tunis and Algeria and hopes
+to apply to morocco, or such as England imposes on Egypt, and this
+commercial predominance could have conferred considerable profits on
+Rhenish industries and benefited Saxon industrialism, but it could
+never have done more than this. A colonisation of the realms of
+Bajazet and Saladin by the fair-skinned peoples of the North, or the
+planting of Teutonic institutions in the valley of Damascus, even with
+the benevolent neutrality of England, is a far wider dream (and one
+surely no German statesman ever entertained) than a German challenge
+to the sea supremacy of England.
+
+The trend of civilized man in all great movements since modern
+civilization began, has been from East to West, not from West to East.
+The tide of the peoples moved by some mysterious impulse from the
+dawn of European expansion has been towards the setting sun. The
+few movements that have taken place in the contrary direction have
+but emphasized the universality of this rule, from the days of the
+overthrow of Rome, if we seek no earlier date. The Crusades furnished,
+doubtless, the classic example. The later contrary instance, that of
+Russia towards Siberia, scarcely, if at all affects the argument, for
+there the Russian overthrow is filling up Northern rather than Eastern
+lands, and the movement involves to the Russian emigrant no change
+of climate, soil, law, language or environment while that emigrant
+himself belongs, perhaps, as much to Asia as to Europe.
+
+But whatever value to German development the possible chances of
+expansion in the Near East may have offered before the present Balkan
+war, those chances to-day, as the result of that war, scarcely exist.
+It is probably the perception of this outcome of the victory of the
+Slav States that has influenced and accelerated the characteristic
+change of English public opinion that has accompanied with shouts of
+derision the dying agonies of the Turk. "In matters of mind," as a
+recent English writer says in the _Saturday Review_, "the national
+sporting instinct does not exist. The English public invariably backs
+the winner." And just as the English public invariably backs the
+winner, British policy invariably backs the anti-German, or supposedly
+anti-German side in all world issues. "What 1912 seems to have
+effected is a vast aggrandizement of the Slavonic races in their
+secular struggle against the Teutonic races. Even a local and
+temporary triumph of Austria over Servia cannot conceal the fact that
+henceforth the way south-east to the Black Sea and the Aegean Sea is
+barred to the Germans."[5]
+
+[Footnote 5: Mr. Frederick Harrison in the _English Review_, Jan.,
+1913.]
+
+That is the outstanding fact that British public opinion perceives
+with growing pleasure from the break up of Turkey.
+
+No matter where the dispute or what the purpose of conflict may be,
+the supreme issue for England is "Where is Germany?"
+
+Against that side the whole weight of Great Britain will, openly or
+covertly, be thrown. German expansion in the Near East has gone by
+the board, and in its place the development of Greek naval strength
+in the Mediterranean, to take its stand by the Triple Entente, comes
+to be jauntily considered, while the solid wedge of a Slav Empire
+or Federation, commanding in the near future 2,000,000 of armed men
+is agreeably seen to be driven across South-eastern Europe between
+Austro-German efforts and the fallow lands of Asia Minor. These latter
+can safely be left in Turkish hands yet a while longer, until the day
+comes for their partition into "spheres of influence," just as Persia
+and parts of China are to-day being apportioned between Russia and
+England. This happy consummation, moreover, has fallen from heaven,
+and Turkey is being cut up for the further extension of British
+interests clearly by the act of God.
+
+The victory of the Balkan States becomes another triumph for the
+British Bible; it is the victory of righteousness over wrong-doing.
+
+The true virtue of the Balkan "Christians" lies in the possibility of
+their being moulded into an anti-German factor of great weight in the
+European conflict, clearly impending, and in their offering a fresh
+obstacle, it is hoped, to German world policy.
+
+Let us first inspect the moral argument on the lips of these
+professors. We are assured, by it, that the claim of the Balkan Allies
+to expel Turkey from Europe rests upon a just and historic basis.
+
+Briefly stated it is that the Turk has held his European provinces
+by a right of conquest only. What the sword took, die sword may take
+away. When the sword was struck from the Ottoman's grasp his right
+to anything it had given him fell too. Thus Adrianople, a city he has
+held for over five hundred years, must be given up to a new conqueror
+who never owned it in the past and who certainly has far less moral
+claim to be there to-day than the descendants of Selim's soldiers.
+
+But the moral argument brings strange revenges.
+
+If Turkey has no right to Adrianople, to Thrace--"right of sword to be
+shattered by the sword"--what right has England to Ireland, to Dublin,
+to Cork? She holds Ireland by exactly the same title as that by which
+Turkey has hitherto held Macedonia, Thrace, Salonika--a right of
+invasion, of seizure, of demoralization. If Turkey's rights, nearly
+six hundred years old, can be shattered in a day by one successful
+campaign, and if the powers of Europe can insist, with justice, that
+this successful sword shall outweigh the occupation of centuries,
+then, indeed, have the Powers, led by England, furnished a precedent
+in the Near East which the victor in the next great struggle should
+not be slow to apply to the Near West, when a captive Ireland shall be
+rescued from the hands of a conqueror whose tide is no better, indeed
+somewhat worse than that of Turkey to Macedonia. And when the day of
+defeat shall strike for the Turkey of the Near West, then shall an
+assembled Europe remember the arguments of 1912-13 and a freed Ireland
+shall be justified on the very grounds England to-day has been the
+first to advance against a defeated Turkey.
+
+"But the Turk is an Asiatic," say the English Bashaws: to which
+indeed, Europe might aptly reply, "and are the English European or
+non-European?" The moral argument, and the "Asiatic argument" are
+strange texts for the desecrater of Christian Ireland to appeal to
+against that continent which she would fain hem in with Malayan and
+Indian battleships, and Canadian and Australasian dreadnoughts. Not
+the moral argument, but the anti-German argument, furnishes the real
+ground for the changed British attitude in the present war.
+
+The moral failure of Turkey, her inability to govern her Christian
+peoples is only the pretext: but just as the moral argument brings
+its strange revenges and shows an Ireland that has suffered all that
+Macedonia has suffered, and this at the hands of Christians, and not
+of Moslems, so the triumph of the Balkan Allies, far from benefiting
+Britain, must, in the end, react to her detriment.
+
+The present apparent injury to German interests by the closing of
+South-eastern Europe, and the road to Asia Minor, will inevitably
+force Germany to still more resolutely face the problem of opening the
+Western seaways. To think otherwise is to believe that Germany will
+accept a quite impossible position tamely and without a struggle.
+
+Hemmed in by Russia on the East and the new Southern Slav States on
+the South-east, with a vengeful France being incited on her Western
+frontier to fresh dreams of conquest, Germany sees England preparing
+still mightier armaments to hold and close the seaways of the world.
+The Canadian naval vote, the Malayan "gift" of a battleship come as
+fresh rivets in the chain forged for the perpetual binding of the
+seas, or it might more truly be said, for the perpetual binding of the
+hands of die German people.
+
+We read in a recent London periodical how these latest naval
+developments portend the coming of the day when "the Imperial navy
+shall keep the peace of the seas as a policeman does the peace of the
+streets. The time is coming when a naval war (except by England), will
+be as relentlessly suppressed as piracy on the high seas." (_Review of
+Reviews_, December, 1912.)
+
+The naïve arrogance of this utterance is characteristically English.
+It is, after all, but the journalistic echo of the Churchill Glasgow
+speech, and the fullest justification of the criticism of the
+Kreuz Zeitung already quoted. It does not stand alone; it could be
+paralleled in the columns of any English paper--Liberal as much as
+Conservative--every day in the week. Nothing is clearer than that
+no Englishman can think of other nations save in terms of permanent
+inferiority. Thus, for instance, in a November (1912) issue of the
+_Daily News_ we find a representative Englishman (Sir R. Edgecumbe),
+addressing that Liberal journal in words that no one but an Englishman
+would dream of giving public utterance to. Sir R. Edgecumbe deprecated
+a statement that had gone round to the effect that the Malayan
+battleship was not a free gift of the toiling Tamils, Japanese,
+Chinese, and other rubber workers who make up, with a few Malays, the
+population of that peninsula, but was really the fruit of an arbitrary
+tax imposed upon these humble, but indifferent Asiatics by their
+English administration.
+
+Far from being indifferent, Sir R. Edgecumbe asserted these poor
+workers nourished a reverence "bordering on veneration" for the
+Englishman. "This is shown in a curious way by their refusing to
+call any European 'a white man' save the Englishman alone. The German
+trader, the Italian and Frenchman all are, in their speech coloured
+men."
+
+After this appreciation of themselves the English cannot object to the
+present writer's view that they are non-Europeans.
+
+Thus while the Eastern question is being settled while I write, by the
+expulsion of the Turk from Europe, England, who leads the cry in the
+name of Europe, is preparing the exclusion of Europe from all world
+affairs that can be dominated by sea power. Lands and peoples held
+for centuries by Turkey by a right not less moral than that by which
+England has held Ireland, are being forcibly restored to Europe. So be
+it.
+
+With settlement of the Eastern question by this act of restitution
+Europe must inevitably gain the clarity of vision to deal with the
+Western question by a similar act of restoration.
+
+The Western Macedonia must go the way of its Eastern fellow. Like
+those of the Orient, the problems of the Occident for Europe are
+twofold--a near Western and a far Western question. Ireland, keeper
+of the seas, constitutes for Europe the near Western question.
+
+The freedom of those seas and their opening to all European effort
+alike on equal terms constitutes the far Western question. But in both
+cases the antagonist of Europe, the non-European power is the same.
+The challenge of Europe must be to England, and the champion of Europe
+must be and can be only Germany. No other European people has the
+power, the strength of mind, of purpose and of arm to accomplish the
+great act of deliverance. Europe too long blinded to her own vital
+interests while disunited, must now, under the guidance of a united
+Germany, resolutely face the problem of freeing the seas.
+
+_That war of the seas is inevitable_. It may be fought on a continent;
+it may be waged in the air--it must be settled on the seas and it must
+mean either the freeing of those seas or the permanent exclusion
+of Europeans from the affairs of the world. It means for Europe the
+future, the very existence of European civilization as opposed to
+the Anglo-Saxon world domination. In that war, Germany will stand not
+alone as the champion of Europe, she will fight for the freedom of the
+world.
+
+As an Irishman I have no fear of the result to Ireland of a German
+triumph. I pray for it; for with the coming of that day the "Irish
+question" so dear to British politicians, becomes a European, a world
+question.
+
+With the humbling of Great Britain and the destruction of her sea
+ownership, European civilization assumes a new stature, and Ireland,
+oldest and yet youngest of the European peoples, shall enter into free
+partnership with the civilization, culture, and prosperity that that
+act of liberation shall bring to mankind.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter VI
+
+THE DUTY OF CHRISTENDOM
+
+
+It is only the truth that wounds. An Irishman to-day in dealing with
+Englishmen is forced, if he speak truly, to wound. That is why so
+many Irishmen do not speak the truth. The Irishman, whether he be a
+peasant, a farm labourer, however low in the scale of Anglicization
+he may have sunk, is still in imagination, if not always in manner,
+a gentleman. The Englishman is a gentleman by chance, by force of
+circumstances, by luck of birth, or some rare opportunity of early
+fellowship. The Irishman is a gentleman by instinct and shrinks from
+wounding the feelings of another man and particularly of the man who
+has wounded him. He scorns to take it out of him that way. That is
+why the task of misgoverning him has been so easy and has come so
+naturally to the Englishman. One of the chief grievances of the
+Irishman in the middle ages was that the man who robbed him was such
+a boor. Insult was added to injury in that the oppressor was no knight
+in shining armour, but a very churl of men; to the courteous and
+cultured Irishman a "bodach Sassenach," a man of low blood, of low
+cunning, caring only for the things of the body, with no veneration
+for the things of the spirit--with, in fine, no music in his soul.
+The things that the Irishman loved he could not conceive of. Without
+tradition or history himself he could not comprehend the passionate
+attachment of the Irishman to both, and he proceeded to wipe both out,
+so far as in him lay, from off the map of Ireland and from out the
+Irishman's consciousness.
+
+Having, as he believed, with some difficulty accomplished his task,
+he stands to-day amazed at the result. The Irishman has still a
+grievance--nay more, Ireland talks of "wrongs." But has she not got
+him? What more can she want except his purse? And, that too, she
+is now taking. In the indulgence of an agreeable self-conceit which
+supplies for him the want of imagination he sees Ireland to-day as a
+species of "sturdy beggar," half mendicant, half pickpocket--making
+off with the proceeds of his hard day's work. The past slips from
+him as a dream. Has he not for years now, well, for thirty years
+certainly, a generation, a life time, done all in his power to meet
+the demands of this incessant country that more in sorrow than in
+anger he will grant you, was misgoverned in the past. That was its
+misfortune, never his fault. This is a steadily recurring phase of the
+fixed hallucination in his blood. Ireland never _is_, but only always
+has been cursed by English rule. He himself, the Englishman of the
+day, is always a simple, bluff, good-hearted fellow. His father if you
+like, his grandfather very probably, misgoverned Ireland, but never he
+himself. Why, just look at him now, his hand never out of his pocket
+relieving the shrill cries of Irish distress. There she stands, a
+poverty-stricken virago at his door, shaking her bony fist at him,
+Celtic porter in her eye, the most fearful apparition in history, his
+charwoman, shaming him before the neighbours and demanding payment for
+long past spring cleanings that he, good soul, has forgotten all about
+or is quite certain were settled at the time. Yes, there she stands,
+the Irish charwoman, the old broom in her hand and preparing for
+one last sweep that shall make the house sweet and fit for her own
+children. And John Bull, honest, sturdy John Bull, believing the house
+to be his, thinks that the only thing between him and the woman is
+the matter of wages; that all she wants is an extra shilling. Ireland
+wants but one thing in the world. She wants her house to herself, and
+the stranger out of her house.
+
+While he is, in his heart, perfectly aware of this, John Bull (for the
+reasons given by Richard Cox), is quite determined that nothing shall
+get him out of the house. "Separation is unthinkable," say English
+Ministers. The task of Ireland is to-day what it always has been--to
+get the stranger out of the house. It is no shame to Ireland or her
+sons, that up to this they have failed in each attempt. Those attempts
+are pillars of fire in her history, beacons of light in the desert of
+sin, where the Irish Israel still wanders in search of the promised
+land. Few of the peoples in Europe who to-day make up the concert of
+powers, have, unaided, expelled the invader who held them down, and
+none has been in the situation of Ireland.
+
+As Mr. Gladstone wrote in 1890, "can anyone say we should have treated
+Ireland as we have done had she lain not between us and the ocean, but
+between us and Europe?"
+
+In introducing the scheme of mild Home Rule termed the Councils Bill
+in 1907, Mr. Birrell prefaced it with the remark that "separation was
+unthinkable--save in the event of some great world cataclysm." World
+cataclysms up to this have not reached Ireland--England intervened too
+well. She has maintained her hold by sea power. The lonely Andromeda
+saw afar off the rescuing Perseus, a nude figure on the coast of Spain
+or France, but long ere his flight reached her rock-bound feet she
+beheld him fall, bruised and mangled, and devoured by the watching sea
+monster.
+
+Had Italy been placed as Ireland is, cut off from all external succour
+save across a sea held by a relentless jailor, would she have been
+to-day a free people, ally of Austria on terms of high equality?
+
+The blood shed by the founders of modern Italy would all have been
+shed in vain--that blood that sanctified the sword of Garibaldi--had
+it not been for the selfish policy of Louis Napoleon and the invading
+armies of France. Italy, no more than Ireland, could have shaken
+herself free had it not been for aid from abroad. The late Queen
+Victoria saw clearly the parallel, and as hereditary custodian of
+Ireland, Her Majesty protested against the effort then being made to
+release Italy from an Austrian prison, when she herself was so hard
+put to it to keep Ireland in an English jail. Writing to her Prime
+Minister on July 25th, 1848, Her Majesty said:--
+
+"The Queen must tell Lord John (Russell) what she has repeatedly told
+Lord Palmerston, but without apparent effect, that the establishment
+of an entente cordiale with the French Republic, for the purpose
+of driving the Austrians out of their dominions in Italy would be a
+disgrace to this country. That the French would attach the greatest
+importance to it and gain the greatest advantage from it, there can
+be no doubt of. But how will England appear before the world at the
+moment she is struggling for her supremacy in Ireland?..." and on Oct.
+10th following Her Majesty wrote to her uncle, the first King of
+the Belgians (who owed his new minted crown to the Belgian people
+depriving the Dutch Sovereign of his "lawful possessions") in the
+following memorable words:
+
+"Really it is quite immoral, with Ireland quivering in our grasp,
+and ready to throw off her allegiance at any moment, for us to force
+Austria to give up her lawful possessions. What shall we say if
+Canada, Malta, etc., begin to trouble us? It hurts me terribly." (Page
+237, Queen Victoria's letters, published by order of His Majesty, King
+Edward VII.)
+
+It hurt Ireland much more terribly, that failure to throw off the
+hand that held her "quivering in our grasp," so soon to stretch her
+"a corpse upon the dissecting table."
+
+Ireland has failed to win her freedom, not so much because she has
+failed to shed her blood, but because her situation in the world
+is just that unique situation I have sought to depict. Belonging to
+Europe, she has not been of Europe; and England with a persistency
+that would be admirable were it not so criminal in intention and
+effect, has bent all her efforts, all her vigour, an unswerving
+policy, and a pitiless sword to extend the limits of exclusion. To
+approach Ireland at all since the first English Sovereign laid hands
+upon it was "quite immoral." When Frederick of Hohenstaufen (so long
+ago as that!) sent his secretary (an Irishman) to Ireland we read that
+Henry III of England declared "it hurt him terribly," and ordered all
+the goings out and comings in of the returned Irish-German statesman
+to be closely watched.
+
+The dire offence of Hugh O'Neill to Elizabeth was far less his
+rebellion than his "practises" with Spain. At every cessation of
+arms during the Nine Years War he waged with England, she sought to
+obtain from him an abjuration of "foreign aid," chiefly "that of the
+Spaniard." "Nothing will become the traitor (O'Neill) more than his
+public confession of any Spanish practices, and his abjuration of any
+manner of harkening or combining with any foreigners."
+
+Could O'Neill be brought to publicly repudiate help from abroad it
+would have, the Queen thought, the effect that "in Spain... the hopes
+of such attempts might be extinguished."
+
+As long as the sea was open to Spain there was grave danger. If
+Spaniard and Irishman came close together O'Neill's offence was
+indeed "fit to be made vulgar"--all men would see the strength of
+combination, the weakness of isolation.
+
+"Send me all the news you receive from Spain for Tyrone doth fill all
+these parts with strange lies, although some part be true, that there
+came some munition." It was because O'Neill was a statesman and knew
+the imperative need to Ireland of keeping in touch with Europe that
+for Elizabeth he became "the chief traitor of Ireland--a reprobate
+from God, reserved for the sword."
+
+Spain was to Elizabethan Englishmen what Germany is to-day.
+
+"I would venture to say one word here to my Irish fellow countrymen of
+all political persuasions. If they imagine they can stand politically
+or economically while Britain falls they are woefully mistaken. The
+British fleet is their one shield. It if be broken Ireland will go
+down. They may well throw themselves heartily into the common defence,
+for no sword can transfix England without the point reaching behind
+her." (Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, in the _Fortnightly Review_, Feb.,
+1913, "Great Britain and the Next War.")
+
+The voice is a very old one, and the bogey has done duty for a long
+time in Ireland. When, to-day, it is from Germany that freedom may
+be feared, Ireland is warned against the German. When, three hundred
+years ago the beacon of hope shone on the coast of Spain, it was the
+Spaniards who were the bad people of history.
+
+Fray Mattheo de Oviedo, who had been sent to Ireland as Archbishop,
+wrote to King Philip III from O'Neill's stronghold, Dungannon, on
+June 24, 1600. We might be listening to the voice of the _Fortnightly
+Review_ of yesterday. "The English are making great efforts to bring
+about a peace, offering excellent terms, and for this purpose the
+Viceroy sent messengers twice to O'Neill, saying among other things,
+that Your Majesty is making peace with the Queen, and that his
+condition will be hopeless. At other times he says that no greater
+misfortune could happen to the country than to bring Spaniards into
+it, because they are haughty and vicious and they would destroy and
+ruin the country." The Irish princes were no fools. "To all this they
+reply most honourably that they will hold out as long as they have one
+soldier or there remains a cow to eat."
+
+Hugh O'Neill saw clearly that all compromise between Ireland and
+England was futile, and that the way of escape was by complete
+separation and lay only through Europe. He again and again begged
+the Spanish King to sever Ireland and erect it into an allied State.
+He offered the crown of Ireland to a Spanish prince, just as three
+centuries earlier another and a great O'Neill offered the crown of
+Ireland to Edward Bruce in 1315.
+
+The coming of the Bruce saved Gaelic Ireland for three centuries. Had
+Philip of Spain sent his son as King to Ireland, her fate had been
+settled then instead of remaining three centuries later to still
+confront European statesmanship with an unsolved problem.
+
+In many letters addressed by the Irish leaders to Philip II and Philip
+III we find the constantly recurring note of warning that to leave
+England in possession of Ireland meant the downfall of Spain. The
+Irish princes knew that in fighting England they were in truth
+fighting the battle of European civilization.
+
+Writing to Philip II from Lifford, on May 16th, 1596, O'Neill and
+O'Donnell drew the King's attention to the cause of Ireland as the
+cause of Europe, and in the name of Ireland offered the crown to
+a Spanish prince. "But inasmuch as we have felt to our great and
+indescribably harm the evil doings and crimes of those whom the Queen
+of England is in the habit of sending amongst us, we beg and beseech
+Your Majesty to send someone well known to you and perfectly fit to
+be the King of this island, for his own welfare, ours, and that of the
+Christian State (Christendom)."
+
+They asked for a prince "who will not be unwilling to rule over and
+live amongst us and to direct and guide our nation, well and wisely."
+They pointed out how "he will obtain much advantage and glory by so
+doing," and finally they begged "would that Your Majesty would appoint
+the Archduke of Austria, now Governor of Flanders, a famous man and
+worthy of all praise, than whom none would be more acceptable." (The
+original is in Latin and in the archives of Simancas.)
+
+No more statesmanlike appeal was ever made from Ireland; and had
+the Archduke of Austria assumed the crown of Ireland in 1596, "now
+or never" would indeed have become "now and forever." Had Philip II
+carried out his often repeated promises of sending aid to that country
+the fate of his own kingdom must have been a very different one.
+
+"I wish it were possible for me, by word of mouth, to show the
+importance of this undertaking and the great service that would be
+rendered thereby to God and His Church, and _the great advantage it
+would be to the service of Your Majesty and the peace of Your States
+to attack the enemy here_."
+
+So wrote in 1600 to Philip II, the Archbishop of Dublin, already
+quoted, Mattheo de Oviedo.
+
+This prelate had been specially sent to Ireland "to see and understand
+the state of the country misrepresented by English emissaries at
+foreign courts."
+
+The wrath of Elizabeth against O'Neill was largely due to his keeping
+in touch with the continent, whereby the lies of her agents abroad
+were turned to her own ridicule. To Essex, her Viceroy, she wrote:
+"Tyrone hath blazed in foreign parts the defeat of regiments, the
+death of captains, and loss of men of quality in every quarter."
+
+O'Neill not only for years beat her generals in the field, her beat
+herself and her councillors at their own game. To Essex, in an ecstacy
+of rage at the loss of the last great army sent, she wrote (September
+17th, 1599): "To trust this traitor upon oath is to trust the devil
+upon his religion. Only this we are sure (for we see it in effect),
+that you have prospered so ill for us by your warfare, as we cannot
+but be very jealous lest we should be as well overtaken by the
+treaty."
+
+(Essex wished to bring O'Neill in by a treaty which, while ostensibly
+conceding the terms of the Irish prince was to allow the Queen time to
+carry out her purpose.)
+
+The Irish princes knew Elizabeth and her Ministers, as well as she
+read Essex. "Believe no news from Ireland of any agreement in this
+country," they had written to Philip II in 1597, "great offers have
+been made by the Queen of England, but we will not break our word and
+promise to your." In a letter written a year earlier (Oct. 18, 1596),
+replying to the special envoy sent by the king, they said: "Since
+the former envoys left us we have used every means in our power, as
+we promised we should do, to gain time and procrastination from one
+day to another. But how could we impose on so clever an enemy so
+skilled in every kind of cunning and cheating if we did not use much
+dissimulation, and especially if we did not pretend we were anxious
+for peace? We will keep firm and unshaken the promises which we made
+to Your Majesty with our last breath; if we do not we shall incur at
+once the wrath of God and the contempt of men."
+
+How faithfully they kept those promises and how the Spanish King
+failed in his, their fate and the bitter ruin of their country shows.
+That men fighting for Ireland had to meet Elizabeth and her statesmen
+with something of her own cunning is made very clear to anyone reading
+the State papers in Ireland.
+
+Essex, in one of his "answers" wrote: "I advise Her Majesty to allow
+me, at my return to Dublin, to conclude this treaty, yielding some
+of their grants in the present; and when Her Majesty has made secret
+preparations to enable me to prosecute, I will find quarrels enough to
+break and give them a deadly blow."
+
+The Irish, however, failed in this contest. They were not sufficiently
+good liars, and lacked the higher flights of villainy necessary to
+sustain the encounter. The essential English way in Tudor days, and
+much later, for administering a deadly blow to an Irish patriot was
+"assassination." Poison frequently took the place of the knife, and
+was often administered wrapped in a leaf of the British Bible. A
+certain Atkinson, knowing the religious nature of Cecil, the Queen's
+Prime Minister, the founder of a long line of statesmen, foremost as
+champions of Church and Book, suggested the getting rid of O'Neill by
+some "poisoned Hosts." This proposal to use the Blessed Sacrament as
+a veritable Last Supper for the last great Irish chief remains on
+record, was endorsed by Cecil.
+
+Another Briton, named Annyas, was charged to poison "the most
+dangerous and open rebel in Munster," Florence MacCarthy More, the
+great MacCarthy. Elizabeth's Prime Minister piously endorsed the
+deed--"though his soul never had the thought to consent to the
+poisoning of a dog, much less a Christian ."
+
+To Carew, the President of Munster, Cecil wrote enjoining the
+assassination of the young Earl of Desmond, then "in the keeping
+of Carew": "Whatever you do to abridge him out of Providence shall
+never be imputed to you for a fault, but exceedingly commended
+by the Queen." After this, we are not surprised to learn that in
+her instructions to Mountjoy, the successor of Essex, the Queen
+recommended "to his special care to preserve the true exercise of
+religion among her loving subjects." As O'Neill was still in the field
+with a large army, she prudently pointed out, however, that the time
+"did not permit that he should intermeddle by any severity or violence
+in matters of religion until her power was better established there
+to countenance his action." That the character of their adversary was
+faithfully appreciated by contemporary Irish opinion stands plain in
+a letter written by James Fitzthomas, nephew of the great Earl Gerald
+of Desmond, to Philip II. "The government of the English is such as
+Pharaoh himself never used the like; for they content not themselves
+with all temporal prosperity, but by cruelty desire our blood and
+perpetual destruction to blot out the whole remembrance of our
+posterity--for that Nero, in his time, was far inferior to that Queen
+in cruelty."
+
+The Irish chiefs well sustained their part in meeting this combination
+of power and perfidy, and merited, on the highest grounds of policy
+the help so often promised by the King of Spain. They showed him not
+only by their valour on the field but by their sagacious council how
+great a part was reserved for Ireland in the affairs of Europe if he
+would but profit from it and do his part.
+
+In this the Spanish King failed. Philip II had died in 1598, too
+immersed in religious trials to see that the centre of his griefs was
+pivoted on the possession of Ireland by the female Nero. With his son
+and successor communication was maintained and in a letter of Philip
+III to O'Neill, dated from Madrid, Dec. 24th, 1599, we read: "Noble
+and well beloved I have already written a joint letter to you and your
+relative O'Donnell, in which I replied to a letter of both of you. By
+this, which I now write to you personally I wish to let you know my
+good will towards you, and I mean to prove it, not only by word, but
+by deed." That promise was not fulfilled, or so inadequately fulfilled
+that the help, when it came, was insufficient to meet the needs of the
+case.
+
+History tells us what the sad consequences were to the cause of
+civilisation in Ireland, from the failure of the Spanish King to
+realize the greatness of his responsibilities. But the evil struck
+deeper than to Ireland alone. Europe lost more than her historians
+have yet realised from the weakness of purpose that let Ireland go
+down transfixed by the sword of Elizabeth.
+
+Had the fate of Europe been then controlled by a Hohenzollern, instead
+of by a Spanish Hapsburg, how different might have been the future of
+the world!
+
+Although Europe had forgotten Ireland, Ireland had never forgotten
+Europe. Natural outpost and sentinel of that continent in the West for
+three-hundred years now gagged and bound, since the flight to Rome of
+her last native Princes, she stands to-day as in the days of Philip
+III, if an outcast from European civilization non the less rejecting
+the insular tradition of England, as she has rejected her insular
+Church. And now once more in her career she turns to the greatest of
+European Sovereigns, to win his eyes to the oldest, and certainly the
+most faithful of European peoples. Ireland already has given and owes
+much to Germany.
+
+In the dark ages intercourse between the Celtic people of the
+West and the Rhinelands and Bavaria was close and long sustained.
+Irish monasteries flourished in the heart of Germany, and German
+architecture gave its note possibly to some of the fairest cathedral
+churches in Ireland.
+
+Clonfert and Cashel are, perhaps amongst the most conspicuous examples
+of the influence of that old-time intercourse with Germany. To-day,
+when little of her past remains to venerate, her ancient language on
+what seemed its bed of death owes much of its present day revival
+to German scholarship and culture. Probably the foremost Gaelic
+scholar of the day is the occupant of the Chair of Celtic at Berlin
+University, and Ireland recognises with a gratitude she is not easily
+able to express, all that her ancient literature owes to the genius
+and loving intellect of Dr. Kuno Meyer.
+
+The name of Ireland may be known on the Bourses or in the
+Chancelleries of Europe; it is not without interest, even fame, in the
+centres of German academical culture. But that the German State may
+also be interested in the political fate of Ireland is believed by the
+present writer.
+
+Maurice Fitzgerald, the outlawed claimant to the Earldom of Desmond,
+wrote to Philip II, from Lisbon on September 4th, 1593:
+
+"We have thought it right to implore your Majesty to send the aid
+you will think fit and with it to send us (the Irish refugees in the
+Peninsula) to defend and uphold the same undertaking; for we hope,
+with God's help Your Majesty will be victorious and conquer and hold
+as your own the kingdom of Ireland.--We trust in God that Your Majesty
+and the Council will weigh well the advantages that will ensue to
+Christendom from this enterprise--since the opportunity is so good
+and the cause so just and weighty, and the undertaking so easily
+completed."
+
+The history of human freedom is written in letters of blood. It is the
+law of God. No people who clutch to safety, who shun death are worthy
+of freedom.
+
+The dead who die for Ireland are the only live men in a free Ireland.
+The rest are cattle. Freedom is kept alive in man's blood only by
+shedding of that blood. It was not an act of a foreign Parliament they
+were seeking, those splendid "scorners of death," the lads and young
+men of Mayo, who awaited with a fearless joy the advance of the
+English army fresh from the defeat of Humbert in 1798. Then, if ever,
+Irishmen might have run from a victorious and pitiless enemy who,
+having captured the French General and murdered in cold blood the
+seven hundred Killala peasants who were with his colours, were now
+come to Killala itself to wreak vengeance on the last stronghold of
+Irish rebellion.
+
+The ill-led and half armed peasants, the last Irishmen in Ireland
+to stand the pitched fight for their country's freedom, went to
+meet the army of England, as the Protestant Bishop, who saw them,
+says:--"running upon death with as little appearance of reflection
+or concern as if they were hastening to a show."
+
+The late Queen Victoria, in one of her letters to her uncle, the King
+of the Belgians, wrote thus of the abortive rising of fifty years
+later in 1848:
+
+"There are ample means of crushing the rebellion in Ireland, and I
+think it is very likely to go off without any contest, which people
+(and I think rightly) rather regret. The Irish should receive _a
+good lesson or they will begin again_." (Page 223, Vol. II, Queen
+Victoria's letters.) Her Majesty was profoundly right. Ireland needed
+that lesson in 1848, as she needs it still more to-day. Had Irishmen
+died in 1848 as they did in 1798 Ireland would be to-day fifty years
+nearer to freedom. It is because a century has passed since Europe
+saw Ireland willing to die that to-day Europe has forgotten that she
+lives.
+
+As I began this essay with a remark of Charles Lever on Germany so
+shall end it here with a remark of Lever on his own country, Ireland.
+
+In a letter to a friend in Dublin, he thus put the epitaph of Europe
+on the grave of a generation who believed that "no human cause was
+worth the shedding one drop of human blood."
+
+"As to Ireland all foreign sympathy is over owing to the late
+cowardice and poltroonery of the patriots. _Even Italians can fight_"
+(Letter of C. Lever from Florence, August 19th, 1848).
+
+It is only the truth that wounds. It is that reproach that has cursed
+Ireland for a century.
+
+Sedition, the natural garment for an Irishman to wear, has been for a
+hundred years a bloodless sedition. It is this fiery shirt of Nessus
+that has driven our strong men mad. How to shed our blood with honour,
+how to give our lives for Ireland--that has been, that is the problem
+of Irish nationality.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter VII
+
+THE FREEDOM OF THE SEAS
+
+
+It would be idle to attempt to forecast the details of a struggle
+between Great Britain and Germany. That is a task that belongs to the
+War Department of the two States. I have assigned myself merely to
+point out that such a struggle is inevitable, and to indicate what
+I believe to be the supreme factors in the conflict, and how one of
+these, Ireland, and that undoubtedly the most important factor, has
+been overlooked by practically every predecessor of Germany in the
+effort to make good at sea. The Spaniards in Elizabeth's reign,
+the French of Louis XIV and of the Directory took some steps, it
+is true, to challenge England's control of Ireland, but instead of
+concentrating their strength upon that line of attack they were
+content to dissipate it upon isolated expeditions and never once to
+push home the assault on the one point that was obviously the key
+to the enemy's whole position. At any period during that last three
+centuries, with Ireland gone, England was, if not actually at the
+mercy of her assailants, certainly reduced to impotency beyond her own
+shores. But while England knew the value to herself of Ireland, she
+appreciated to the full the fact that this profitable juxtaposition
+lay on her right side hidden from the eyes of Europe.
+
+"Will anyone assert," said Gladstone, "that we would have dared to
+treat Ireland as we have done had she lain, not between us and the
+ocean, but between us and the continent?" And while the bulk of
+England, swollen to enormous dimensions by the gains she drew from
+Ireland interposed between her victim and Europe, her continental
+adversaries were themselves the victims of that strange mental disease
+psychologists term the collective illusion. All the world saw that
+which in fact did not exist. The greatness of England as they beheld
+it, imposing, powerful, and triumphant, existed not on the rocky base
+they believed they saw, but on the object, sacked, impoverished, and
+bled, they never saw. And so it is to-day. The British Empire is the
+great illusion. Resembling in much the Holy Roman Empire it is not
+British, it is not an Empire, and assuredly it is not holy. It lives
+on the life-blood and sufferings of some, on the suffrance and mutual
+jealousy of others, and on the fixed illusion of all. Rather is it a
+great Mendicity Institute. England now, instead of "robbing from Pole
+to Pole," as John Mitchel once defined her activities, goes begging
+from Pole to Pole that all and every one shall give her a helping hand
+to keep the plunder. Chins, Goorkhas, Sikhs, Malays, Irish, Chinese,
+South African Dutch, Australasians, Maoris, Canadians, Japanese, and
+finally "Uncle Sam"--these are the main components that when skilfully
+mixed from London, furnish the colouring material for the world-wide
+canvas. If we take away India, Egypt and the other coloured races the
+white population that remains is greatly inferior to the population of
+Germany, and instead of being a compact, indivisible whole, consists
+of a number of widely scattered and separated communities, each with
+separate and absorbing problems of its own, and more than one of them
+British neither in race, speech, nor affection. Moreover if we turn
+to the coloured races we find that the great mass of the subjects of
+this Empire have less rights within it than they possess outside its
+boundaries, and occupy there a lower status than that accorded to most
+foreigners.
+
+The people of India far out number all other citizens of the British
+Empire put together, and yet we find the British Indians resident in
+Canada, to take but one instance, petitioning the Imperial Government
+in 1910 for as favourable terms of entry into that British possession
+as the Japanese enjoyed.
+
+They pointed out that a Japanese could enter Canada on showing that he
+held from six pounds to ten pounds, but that no British Indian could
+land unless he had forty pounds and had come direct from India,--a
+physical impossibility, since no direct communication exists. But they
+went further, for they showed that their "citizenship" of the British
+Empire entailed penalties that no foreign state anywhere imposed upon
+them.
+
+"We appeal," they said, "and most forcibly bring to your notice
+that no such discriminating laws are existing against us in foreign
+countries like the United States of America, Germany, Japan, and
+Africa, to whom we do not owe any allegiance whatsoever."
+
+So that outside its white or European races it is clear the Empire has
+no general or equal citizenship, and that, far from being one, it is
+more divided racially against itself than are even opposing Asiatic
+and European nations which have the good fortune not to be united in a
+common, imperial bond.
+
+The total white population of this incongruous mass in 1911 consisted
+of some 59,000,000 human beings made up of various national and racial
+strains, as against 66,000,000 of white men in the German Empire the
+vast majority of them of German blood. And while the latter form a
+disciplined, self-contained, and self-supporting and self-defending
+whole, the former are swelled by Irish, French-Canadians, and Dutch
+South Africans who, according to Sir R. Edgcumbe, must be reckoned as
+"coloured."
+
+It is one thing to paint the map red, but you must be sure that your
+colours are fast and that the stock of paints wont run out. England,
+apart from her own perplexities is now faced with this prospect. Great
+Britain can no longer count on Ireland, that most prolific source
+of supply of her army, navy, and industrial efforts during the last
+century, while she is faced with a declining birth-rate, due largely,
+be it noted, to the diminished influx of the Irish, a more prolific
+and virile race. While her internal powers of reproduction are
+failing, her ability to keep those already born is diminishing still
+more rapidly. Emigration threatens to remove the surplus of births
+over deaths.
+
+As long as it was only the population of Ireland that fell (8,500,000
+in 1846 to 4,370,000 in 1911), Great Britain was not merely untroubled
+but actually rejoiced at a decrease in numbers that made the Irish
+more manageable, and yet just sufficiently starvable to supply her
+with a goodly surplus for army, navy, and industrial expansion in
+Great Britain. Now that the Irish are gone with a vengeance it is
+being perceived that they did not take their vengeance with them and
+that the very industrial expansion they built up from their starving
+bodies and naked limbs contains within itself the seeds of a great
+retribution.
+
+"Since Free Trade has ruined our agriculture, our army has become
+composed of starving slum dwellers who, according to the German notion
+are better at shouting than at fighting. German generals have pointed
+out that in the South African war our regular and auxiliary troops
+often raised the white flag and surrendered, without necessity,
+sometimes to a few Boers, and they may do the same to a German
+invading force. Free Trade which "benefits the consumer" and the
+capitalist has, unfortunately, through the destruction of our
+agriculture and through forcing practically the whole population of
+Great Britain into the towns, destroyed the manhood of the nation."
+(Modern Germany page 251, by J. Ellis Barker, 1907). An army of slum
+dwellers is a poor base on which to build the structure of a perpetual
+world dominion.
+
+While the navy shows an imposing output of new battleships
+and cruisers for 1913, the record, we are told, of all warship
+construction in the world, it takes blood as well as iron to cement
+empires. Battleships may become so much floating scrap iron (like the
+Russian fleet at Tsushima), if the men behind the guns lack the right
+stamina and education.
+
+We learn, too, that it is not only the slum dwellers who are failing,
+but that to meet the shortage of officers a large number of transfers
+from the merchant marine to the Royal Navy are being sanctioned.
+To this must be added the call of the Great Dominions for men and
+officers to man their local fleets. As the vital resources of England
+become more and more inadequate to meet the menace of German naval and
+moral strength, she turns her eyes to Ireland, and we learn from the
+London _Daily Telegraph_ that Mr. Churchill's scheme of recruiting at
+Queenstown may furnish "matter for congratulation, as Irish boys make
+excellent bluejackets happy of disposition, amenable to discipline,
+and extremely quick and handy."
+
+As I can recall an article in this same journal, written during the
+course of the Boer War, in which Ireland was likened to a "serpent
+whose head must be crushed beneath the heel," the _Daily Telegraph's_
+praise to-day of the Irish disposition should leave Irish boys
+profoundly unmoved--and still ashore.
+
+There is yet another aspect of the growing stream of British
+emigration. "Death removes the feeble, emigration removes the strong.
+Canada, New Zealand, Australia, and South Africa, have no use for the
+sick and palsied, or of those incapable of work through age or youth.
+They want the workers and they get them. Those who have left the
+United Kingdom during 1912 are not the scum of our islands, but the
+very pick. And they leave behind, for our politicians to grapple with,
+a greater proportion of females, of children and of disabled than ever
+before." (_London Magazine_!)
+
+The excess of females over males, already so noteworthy a feature
+of England's decay, becomes each year more accentuated and doubtless
+accounts for the strenuous efforts now being made to entrap Irish boys
+into the British army and navy.
+
+If we compare the figures of Germany and Great Britain, and then
+contrast them with those of Ireland, we shall see, at a glance, how
+low England is sinking, and how vitally necessary it is for her to
+redress the balance of her own excess of "militants" over males by
+kidnapping Irish youths into her emasculated services and by fomenting
+French and Russian enmities against the fruitful German people.
+
+Germany 1910, males, 32,031,967; females, 32,871,456; total,
+64,925,993. Excess of females, 739,489.
+
+Great Britain, 1911:
+
+England and Wales--Males, 17,448,476; females, 18,626,793; total,
+36,075,269. Excess of females, 1,178,317.
+
+Scotland--Males, 2,307,603; females, 2,251,842; total, 4,759,445.
+Excess of females, 144,239.
+
+Total for Great Britain, 40,834,714. Excess of females, 1,322,556.
+
+Thus on a population much less than two thirds that of Germany Great
+Britain has almost twice as many females in excess over males as
+Germany has, and this disproportion of sexes tends yearly to increase.
+We read in every fresh return of emigration that it is men and not
+women who are leaving England and Scotland. That Irish emigration,
+appalling as its ravages have been since 1846, is still maintained on
+a naturally healthier basis the sex returns for 1911 make clear. The
+figures for Ireland at the census were as follows:
+
+Ireland--Males, 2,186,802; females, 2,195,147; total, 4,381,949.
+Excess of females, 8,346.
+
+Ireland, it is seen, can still spare 100,000 or 150,000 males for the
+British armed forces and be in no unhealthier sex plight than Scotland
+or England is in. It is to get this surplus of stout Irish brawn and
+muscle that Mr. Churchill and the British War Office are now touting
+in Ireland.
+
+I take the following Government advertisement from the Cork _Evening
+Echo_ (of March, 1913), in illustration:
+
+"Notice--Any person that brings a recruit for the Regular or Special
+Reserve Branches of the Army to the Recruiting Officer at Victoria
+Barracks, Cork, will be paid the money reward allowed for each recruit
+which ranges from 1/6 to 5/- each."
+
+From whatever point of view we survey it we shall find that England's
+Empire at bottom rests upon Ireland to make good British deficiencies.
+The Dominions are far off, and while they may give battleships they
+take men. Ireland is close at hand--she gives all and takes nothing.
+Men, mind, food and money--all these she has offered through the
+centuries, and it is upon these and the unrestricted drain of these
+four things from that rich mine of human fertility and wealth that
+the British Empire has been founded and maintained. To secure to-day
+the goodwill and active co-operation of the Irish race abroad as well
+as in Ireland, and through that goodwill to secure the alliance and
+support of the United States has become the guiding purpose of British
+statesmanship.
+
+The Home Rule Bill of the present Liberal Government is merely the
+petty party expression of what all English statesmen recognize as
+a national need. Were the present Liberal Government thrown out
+to-morrow their Unionist successors would hasten to bind Ireland
+(and America) to them by a measure that, if necessary, would go much
+further. Every Unionist knows this. Ireland is always the key to the
+situation.
+
+I will quote two pronouncements, one English and one American, to show
+that Home Rule has now become an imperial necessity for England.
+
+Speaking in the House of Lords on the Home Rule Bill, Earl Grey, the
+late Governor-General of Canada, said on January 27th, 1913:
+
+"In the interests of the Empire I feel very strongly that it is
+imperative that the Irish question should be settled on lines which
+will satisfy the sentiment of the over-sea democracies, both in our
+self-governing colonies and in the United States. Everyone, I think
+will agree that it is most important and in the highest interests of
+the empire that there should be the friendliest feelings of generous
+affection and goodwill, not only between the self-governing Dominions
+and the Motherland, but also between America and England.... I need
+not elaborate this point. We are all agreed upon it. A heavy shadow
+at present exists, and it arises from our treatment of Ireland....
+If this be so is it not our duty to remove the obstacle that prevents
+that relationship with America from being that which we all desire?"
+
+The American utterance came from one equally representative of
+American Imperial interests. It is that of Mr. Roosevelt, published in
+the _Irish World_ of New York, Feb. 8th, 1913.
+
+"I feel that the enactment into law of this measure ... bids fair to
+establish goodwill among the English-speaking peoples. This has been
+prevented more than by any other one thing by this unhappy feud that
+has raged for centuries, and the settlement of which, I most earnestly
+hope, and believe, will be a powerful contribution to the peace of the
+world, based on international justice and goodwill. I earnestly feel
+that the measure is as much in the interests of Great Britain as of
+Ireland."
+
+Did we judge of Ireland only by many of the public utterances made
+in her name, then, indeed might we despair of a people who having
+suffered so much and so valiantly resisted for so many centuries
+were now to be won to their oppressor's side, by, perhaps, the most
+barefaced act of bribery ever attempted by a Government against a
+people.
+
+"Injured nations cannot so entirely forgive their enemies without
+losing something of their virility, and it grates upon me to hear
+leader after leader of the Parliamentary Party declaring without shame
+that Home Rule when it is won for Ireland is to be used for a new
+weapon of offence in England's hands against the freedom of the world
+elsewhere."
+
+Did the Irish Parliamentary Party indeed represent Ireland in this,
+Mr. Wilfred Blunt's noble protest in his recent work, _The Land War
+in Ireland_, would stand for the contemptuous impeachment, not of a
+political party but of a nation.
+
+Mr. Redmond in his latest speech shows how truly Mr. Blunt has
+depicted his party's aim; but to the credit of Ireland it is to be
+recorded that Mr. Redmond had to choose not Ireland, but England for
+its delivery. Speaking at St. Patrick's Day dinner in London on March
+17th, 1913, Mr. Redmond, to a non-Irish audience, thus hailed the
+future part his country is to play under the restoration of what he
+describes as a "National Parliament."
+
+"We will, under Home Rule, devote our attention to education, reform
+of the Poor Law, and questions of that kind which are purely domestic,
+which are, if you like, hum-drum Irish questions, and the only way
+in which we will attempt to interfere in any Imperial question will
+be by our representatives on the floor of the Imperial Parliament in
+Westminster doing everything in our power to increase the strength and
+the glory of what will then be our empire at long last; and by sending
+in support of the empire the strong arms and brave hearts of Irish
+soldiers and Irish sailors, to maintain the traditions of Irish valour
+in every part of the world. That is our ambition."
+
+Were this indeed the ambition of Ireland, did this represent the true
+feeling of Irishmen towards England, and the Empire of England, then
+Home Rule, on such terms, would be a curse and a crime. Thierry, the
+French historian, is a truer exponent of the passionate aspirations of
+the Irish heart than anyone who to-day would seek to represent Ireland
+as willing to sell her soul no less than the strong arms and brave
+hearts of her sons in an unholy cause.
+
+"... For notwithstanding the mixture of races, the intercommunion of
+every kind brought about by the course of centuries, hatred of the
+English Government still subsists as a native passion in the mass of
+the Irish nation. Ever since the hour of invasion this race of men
+has invariably desired that which their conquerors did not desire,
+detested that which they liked, and liked that which they detested
+... This indomitable persistency, this faculty of preserving through
+centuries of misery the remembrance of lost liberty, and of never
+despairing of a cause always defeated, always fatal to those who dared
+to defend it, is perhaps the strangest and noblest example ever given
+by any nation." (_Histoire De La Conquete De L'Angleterre Par Les
+Normands_, Paris edition, 1846. London, 1891.)
+
+The French writer here saw deeper and spoke truer than many who seek
+to-day not to reveal the Irish heart, whose deep purpose they have
+forgotten, but barter its life-blood for a concession that could be
+won to-morrow by half that blood if shed at home, thus offered without
+warrant "as a new weapon of offence to England's hands against the
+freedom of the world elsewhere."
+
+The Irishman, who in the belief that Home Rule has come or that
+any measure of Home Rule the London Parliament will offer can be a
+substitute for his country's freedom, joins the British army or navy
+is a voluntary traitor to his country. Almost everything that Ireland
+produces, or consumes, must all go out or come solely through England
+and on payment of a transit and shipping tax to English trade.
+
+The London press has lately waxed indignant over Servia denied by
+Austria a port on the Adriatic, and we have been told a Servia
+without a port is a Servia held in "economic slavery," and that her
+independence is illusory unless she have free outlet to the sea. But
+what of Ireland? With not one, but forty ports, the finest in all
+Western Europe, they lie idle and empty. With over 1,000 miles of
+seaboard, facing the West and holding the seaway between Europe and
+America, Ireland, in the grip of England, has been reduced to an
+economic slavery that has no parallel in civilization.
+
+And it is to this island, to this people that the appeal is now made
+that we should distrust the Germans and aid our enslavers. Better far,
+were that the only outcome, the fate of Alsace-Lorraine (who got their
+Home Rule Parliament years ago) than the "friendship" of England. We
+have survived the open hate, the prolonged enslavement, the secular
+robbery of England and now the England smiles and offers us with one
+hand Home Rule to take it away with the other, are we going to forget
+the experience of our forefathers? A Connacht proverb of the Middle
+Ages should come back to us--"Three things for a man to avoid;
+the heels of a horse, the horns of a bull; and the smile of an
+Englishman."
+
+That Ireland must be involved in any war that Great Britain undertakes
+goes without saying; but that we should willingly throw ourselves into
+the fray on the wrong side to avert a British defeat, is the counsel
+of traitors offered to fools.
+
+We must see to it that what Thierry wrote of our fathers is not
+shamefully belied by their sons. Our "indomitable persistency"
+has up to this excelled and subdued the unvarying will applied to
+one unvarying purpose of those who, by dint of that quality, have
+elsewhere subjugated the universe. We who have preserved through
+centuries of misery, the remembrance of lost liberty, are not
+now going to merge our unconquered souls in the base body of our
+oppressor.
+
+One of the few Liberal statesmen England has produced, certainly the
+only Liberal politician she has ever produced, the late Mr. Gladstone,
+compared the union between Great Britain and Ireland to "the union
+between the mangled corpse of Hector and the headlong chariot of
+Achilles." (1890.)
+
+But, while I cannot admit that England is an Achilles, save, perhaps,
+that she may be wounded like him in the heel, I will not admit, I
+will not own that Ireland, however mangled, however "the plowers have
+ploughed upon her back and made long furrows," is in truth dead, is
+indeed a corpse. No; there is a juster analogy, and one given us by
+the only Englishman who was in every clime, and in every circumstance
+a Liberal; one who died fighting in the cause of liberty, even as in
+life he sang it. Byron denounced the union between England and Ireland
+as "the union of the shark with its prey."
+
+
+
+
+Chapter VIII
+
+IRELAND, GERMANY AND THE NEXT WAR
+
+
+In the February, 1913, _Fortnightly Review_, Sir Arthur Conan Doyle at
+the end of an article, "Great Britain and the Next War," thus appeals
+to Ireland to recognize that her interests are one with those of Great
+Britain in the eventual defeat of the latter:
+
+"I would venture to say one word here to my Irish fellow-countrymen
+of all political persuasions. If they imagine that they can stand
+politically or economically while Britain falls they are woefully
+mistaken. The British fleet is their one shield. If it be broken
+Ireland will go down. They may well throw themselves heartily into the
+common defence, for no sword can transfix England without the point
+reaching Ireland behind her...."
+
+I propose to briefly show that Ireland, far from sharing the
+calamities that must necessarily fall on Great Britain from defeat
+by a great power, might conceivably thereby emerge into a position of
+much prosperity.
+
+I will agree with Sir A. Conan Doyle up to this--that the defeat of
+Great Britain by Germany must be the cause of a momentous change to
+Ireland: but I differ from him in believing that that change must
+necessarily be disastrous to Ireland. On the contrary, I believe that
+the defeat of Great Britain by Germany might conceivably (save in one
+possible condition) result in great gain to Ireland.
+
+The conclusion that Ireland must suffer all the disasters and eventual
+losses defeat would entail on Great Britain is based on what may be
+termed the fundamental maxim that has governed British dealings with
+Ireland throughout at least three centuries. That maxim may be given
+in the phrase, "Separation is unthinkable." Englishmen have come to
+invincibly believe that no matter what they may do or what may betide
+them, Ireland must inseparably be theirs, linked to them as surely
+as Wales or Scotland, and forming an eternal and integral part of a
+whole whose fate is indissolubly in their hands. While Great Britain,
+they admit, might well live apart (and happily) from an Ireland
+safely "sunk under the sea" they have never conceived of an Ireland,
+still afloat, that could possibly exist, apart from Great Britain.
+Sometimes, as a sort of bogey, they hold out to Ireland the fate that
+would be hers if, England defeated, somebody else should "take" her.
+For it is a necessary corollary to the fundamental maxim already
+stated, that Ireland, if not owned by England, must necessarily be
+"owned" by someone else than her own inhabitants.
+
+The British view of the fate of Ireland in the event of British defeat
+may be stated as twofold. Either Ireland would remain after the war as
+she is to-day, tied to Great Britain, or she _might_ be (this is not
+very seriously entertained) annexed by the victor. No other solution,
+I think, has ever been suggested. Let us first discuss No. I.
+
+This, the ordinary man in the street view, is that as Ireland would
+be as much a part and belonging to Great Britain after a war as before
+it, whatever the termination of that war might be, she could not
+fail to share the losses defeat must bring to a common realm. The
+partnership being indissoluble, if the credit of the house were
+damaged and its properties depreciated, all members of the firm must
+suffer. In this view, an Ireland weaker, poorer, and less recuperative
+than Great Britain, would stand to lose even more from a British
+defeat than the predominant partner itself. Let us at once admit that
+this view is correct. If on the condition of a great war Ireland were
+still to remain, as she is to-day, an integral portion of a defeated
+United Kingdom, it is plain she would suffer, and might be made to
+suffer possibly more even than fell to the share of Great Britain.
+
+But that is not the only ending defeat might bring to the two islands.
+We must proceed then to discuss No. 2, the alternative fate reserved
+for Ireland in the unlikely event of a great British overthrow. This
+is, that if the existing partnership were to be forcibly dissolved, by
+external shock, it would mean for Ireland "out of the frying pan into
+the fire." The idea here is that I have earlier designated as the
+"bogey man" idea. Germany, or the other victor in the great conflict,
+would proceed to "take" Ireland. An Ireland administered, say,
+by Prussians would soon bitterly regret the milder manners of
+the Anglo-Saxon and pine for the good old days of "doles" from
+Westminster. I know many Irishmen who admit that as between England
+and Germany they would prefer to remain in the hands of the former--on
+the principle that it is better to keep the devil you know than fall
+into the hands of a new devil.
+
+German rule, you are asked to believe, would be so bad, so stern, that
+under it Ireland, however much she might have suffered from England in
+the past, would soon yearn to be restored to the arms of her sorrowing
+sister. Assuming, for the sake of argument, that Germany "annexed"
+Ireland, is it at all clear that she would (or even could) injure
+Ireland more than Great Britain has done? To what purpose and with
+what end in view? "Innate brutality"--the Englishman replied--"the
+Prussian always ill-treats those he lays hands on--witness the poor
+Poles." Without entering into the Polish language question, or the
+Polish agrarian question, it is permissible for an Irishman to reply
+that nothing by Prussia in those respects has at all equalled English
+handling of the Irish language or England land dealings in Ireland.
+The Polish language still lives in Prussian Poland and much more
+vigorously than the Irish language survives in Ireland.
+
+But it is not necessary to obscure the issue by reference to the
+Prussian Polish problem. An Ireland annexed to the German Empire
+(supposing this to be internationally possible) as one of the fruits
+of a German victory over Great Britain would clearly be administered
+as a common possession of the German people, and not as a Prussian
+province. The analogy, if one can be set up in conditions so
+dissimilar, would lie not between Prussia and her Polish provinces,
+but between the German Empire and Alsace-Lorraine. What, then,
+would be the paramount object of Germany in her administration of an
+overseas Reichsland of such extraordinary geographical importance to
+her future as Ireland would be?
+
+Clearly not to impoverish and depress that new-won possession but
+to enhance its exceeding strategic importance by vigorous and wise
+administration, so as to make it the main counterpoise to any possible
+recovery of British maritime supremacy, so largely due as this was in
+the past to Great Britain's own possession of this island.
+
+A prosperous and flourishing Ireland, recognizing that her own
+interests lie with those of the new Administration, would assuredly be
+the first and chief aim of German statesmanship.
+
+The very geographical situation of Ireland would alone ensure wise and
+able administration by her new rulers had Germany no other and special
+interest in advancing Irish well-being; for to rule from Hamburg
+and Berlin a remote island and a discontented people, with a highly
+discontented and separated Britain intervening, by methods of
+exploitation and centralization, would be a task beyond the capacity
+of German statecraft. German effort, then, would be plainly directed
+to creating an Ireland satisfied with the change, and fully determined
+to maintain it.
+
+And it might be remembered that Germany is possibly better equipped,
+intellectually and educationally, for the task of developing Ireland
+than even 20th century England. She has already faced a remarkable
+problem, and largely solved it in her forty years' administration of
+Alsace-Lorraine. There is a province torn by force from the bleeding
+side of France and alien in sentiment to her new masters to a degree
+that Ireland could not be to any changes of authority imposed upon her
+from without, has, within a short lifetime, doubled in prosperity and
+greatly increased her population, despite the open arms and insistent
+call of France, and despite a rule denounced from the first as
+hateful.
+
+However hateful, the Prussian has proved himself an able administrator
+and an honest and most capable instructor. In his strong hands
+Strasburg has expanded from being an ill-kept, pent-in French garrison
+town to a great and beautiful city. Already a local Parliament
+gives to the population a sense of autonomy, while the palace and
+constant presence of an Imperial prince affirms the fact that German
+Imperialism, far from engrossing and centralizing all the activities
+and powers of the empire in Berlin, recognizes that German nationality
+is large enough and great enough to admit of many capitals, many
+individualities, and many separate State growths within the sure
+compass of one great organism.
+
+That an Ireland severed by force of arms from the British Empire and
+annexed to the German Empire would be ill-governed by her new masters
+is inconceivable. On the contrary, the ablest brains in Germany,
+scientific, commercial, and financial, no less than military and
+strategic, would be devoted to the great task of making sure the
+conquest not only of an island but of the intelligence of a not
+unintelligent people, and by wisely developing so priceless a
+possession to reconcile its inhabitants through growing prosperity and
+an excellent administration, to so great a change in their political
+environment. Can it be said that England, even in her most lucid
+intervals, has brought to the Government of Ireland her best efforts,
+her most capable men, or her highest purpose? The answer may be given
+by Li Hung Chang, whose diary we have so lately read. Recording his
+interview with Mr. Gladstone, the Chinese statesman says: "He spoke
+about ... Ireland; and I was certain that he hoped to see that unhappy
+country governed better before he died. 'They have given their best
+to England,' he said, 'and in return have been given only England's
+worst.'" It is certain that Germany, once in possession of Ireland,
+would assuredly not give to that country only Germany's worst.
+
+In a score of ways Ireland would stand to gain from the change of
+direction, of purpose, of intention, and, I will add, of inspiration
+and capacity in her newly-imposed rulers.
+
+Whether she liked them or not, at the outset, would be beside the
+question. In this they would differ but little from those she had so
+long and wearily had measure of, and if they brought to their new task
+a new spirit and a new intellectual equipment Irishmen would not be
+slow to realize that if they themselves were never to rule their own
+country, they had, at least, found in their new masters something more
+than emigration agents.
+
+Moreover, to Germany there would be no "Irish question," no "haggard
+and haunting problem" to palsy her brain and miscredit her hand with
+its old tags and jibes and sordid impulses to deny the obvious.
+
+To Germany there would be only an English question. To prevent that
+from ever again imperilling her world future would be the first
+purpose of German overseas statesmanship. And it is clear that a wise
+and capable Irish Administration, designed to build up and strengthen
+from within and not to belittle and exploit from without, would be the
+sure and certain purpose of a victorious Germany.
+
+I have now outlined the two possible dispositions of Ireland that up
+to this British opinion admits as conceivable in die improbable event
+of a British defeat by Germany. Only these two contingencies are
+ever admitted. First that Ireland, sharing the common disaster, must
+endure with her defeated partner all the evils that a great overthrow
+must inflict upon the United Kingdom. Second, that Ireland, if Great
+Britain should be completely defeated, might conceivably be "taken" or
+annexed by the victor and held as a conquered territory, and in this
+guise would bitterly regret the days of her union with Great Britain.
+I have sought to show, in answer to the latter argument, that were
+annexation by the victor indeed to follow a British defeat Ireland
+might very conceivably find the changed circumstances greatly to her
+advantage.
+
+But there is a third contingency I have nowhere seen discussed or
+hinted at, and yet it is at least as likely as No. 1, and far more
+probable than No. 2--for I do not think that the annexation of Ireland
+by a European power is internationally possible, however decisive
+might be the overthrow of England. It is admitted (and it is upon this
+hypothesis that the discussion is proceeding) that Great Britain might
+be defeated by Germany, and that the British fleet might be broken and
+an enemy's sword might transfix England. Such an overthrow would be
+of enormous import to Europe and to the whole world. The trident would
+have changed hands, for the defeat of England could only be brought
+about by the destruction of her sea supremacy. Unless help came
+from without, a blockaded Britain would be more at the mercy of the
+victor than France was after Sedan and Paris. It would lie with the
+victor to see that the conditions of peace he imposed were such as,
+while ensuring to him the objects for which he had fought, would be
+the least likely conditions to provoke external intervention or a
+combination of alarmed world interests. Now, putting aside lesser
+consideration, the chief end Germany would have in a war with England
+would be to ensure her own free future on the seas. For with that
+assured and guaranteed by a victory over England, all else that she
+seeks must in the end be hers. To annex resisting British colonies
+would be in itself an impossible task--physically a much more
+impossible task than to annex Ireland.
+
+To annex Ireland would be, as a military measure, once command of the
+seas was gained, a comparatively easy task. No practical resistance
+to one German army corps even could be offered by any force Ireland
+contains, or could of herself, put into the field. No arsenal or means
+of manufacturing arms exists. The population has been disarmed for a
+century, and by bitter experience has been driven to regard the use
+of arms as a criminal offence. Patriotism has been treated as felony.
+Volunteers and Territorials are not for Ireland. To expect that a
+disarmed and demoralized population who have been sedulously batoned
+into a state of physical and moral dejection, should develop military
+virtues in face of a disciplined army is to attribute to Irishmen
+the very qualities their critics unite in denying them. "The
+Irishman fights well everywhere except in Ireland," has passed into a
+commonplace: and since every effort of government has been directed
+to ensuring the abiding application of the sneer, Englishmen would
+find, in the end, the emasculating success of their rule completely
+justified in the physical submission of Ireland to the new force that
+held her down. With Great Britain cut off and the Irish Sea held by
+German squadrons, no power from within could maintain any effective
+resistance to a German occupation of Dublin and a military
+administration of the island. To convert that into permanent
+administration could not be opposed from within, and with Great
+Britain down and severed from Ireland by a victorious German navy, it
+is obvious that opposition to the permanent retention of Ireland by
+the victor must come from without, and it is for this international
+reason that I think a German annexation of any part of a defeated
+United Kingdom need not be seriously considered. Such a complete
+change in the geography of Europe as a German-owned Ireland could not
+but provoke universal alarm and a widespread combination to forbid its
+realization. The bogey that Ireland, if not John Bull's other island,
+must necessarily be somebody else's other island will not really bear
+inspection at close quarters.
+
+Germany would have to attain her end, the permanent disabling of the
+maritime supremacy of Great Britain, by another and less provocative
+measure. It is here and in just these circumstances that the third
+contingency, and one no Englishman I venture to think, has ever
+dreamed of, would be born on the field of battle and baptized a
+Germanic godchild with European diplomacy as sponsor. Germany, for
+her own imperial ends and in pursuit of a great world policy, might
+successfully accomplish what Louis XIV and Napoleon only contemplated.
+An Ireland, already severed by a sea held by German warships, and
+temporarily occupied by a German army, might well be permanently and
+irrevocably severed from Great Britain, and with common assent erected
+into a neutralized, independent European State under international
+guarantees. An independent Ireland would, of itself, be no threat or
+hurt to any European interest. On the contrary, to make of Ireland an
+Atlantic Holland, a maritime Belgium, would be an act of restoration
+to Europe of this the most naturally favoured of European islands that
+a Peace Congress should, in the end, be glad to ratify at the instance
+of a victorious Germany. That Germany should propose this form of
+dissolution of the United Kingdom in any interests but her own, or
+for the _beaux yeux_ of Ireland I do not for a moment assert. Her main
+object would be the opening of the seas and their permanent freeing
+from that overwhelming control Great Britain has exercised since
+the destruction of the French navy, largely based, as all naval
+strategists must perceive on the unchallenged possession of Ireland.
+
+That Ireland is primarily a European island inhabited by a European
+people who are not English, and who have for centuries appealed
+to Europe and the world to aid them in ceasing to be politically
+controlled by England, is historic fact. And since the translation of
+this historic fact into practice European politics would undoubtedly
+effect the main object of the victorious power, it is evident that,
+Great Britain once defeated, Germany would carry the Irish question to
+a European solution in harmony with her maritime interests, and could
+count on the support of the great bulk of European opinion to support
+the settlement those interests imposed. And if politically and
+commercially an independent and neutral Irish State commended itself
+to Europe, on moral and intellectual grounds the claim could be put
+still higher. Nothing advanced on behalf of England could meet the
+case for a free Ireland as stated by Germany. Germany would attain her
+ends as the champion of national liberty and could destroy England's
+naval supremacy for all time by an act of irreproachable morality.
+The United States, however distasteful from one point of view the
+defeat of England might be, could do nothing to oppose a European
+decision that could dearly win an instant support from influential
+circles--Irish and German--within her own borders.
+
+In any case the Monroe Doctrine cuts both ways, and unless at the
+outset the United States could be drawn into an Anglo-Teutonic
+conflict, it is clear that the decision of a European Congress to
+create a new European State out of a very old European people could
+not furnish ground for American interference.
+
+I need not further labour the question. If Englishmen will but awaken
+from the dream that Ireland "belongs" to them and not to the Irish
+people, and that that great and fertile island, inhabited by a brave,
+a chivalrous and an intellectual race (qualities they have alas! done
+their utmost to expel from the island) is a piece of real estate they
+own and can dispose of as they will, they cannot fail to perceive that
+the Irish question cannot much longer be mishandled with impunity,
+and that far from being, as they now think it, merely a party
+question--and not even a "domestic question" or one the colonies have
+a voice in--it may in a brief epoch become a European question.
+
+With the approaching disappearance of the Near Eastern question (which
+England is hastening to the detriment of Turkey) a more and more
+pent-in Central Europe may discover that there is a Near Western
+question, and that Ireland--a free Ireland--restored to Europe is the
+key to unlock the western ocean and open the seaways of the world.
+
+Again it is Mr. Gladstone who comes to remind Englishmen that Ireland,
+after all, is a European island, and that Europe has some distant
+standing in the issue.
+
+"I would beseech Englishmen to consider how they would behave to
+Ireland, if instead of having 5,000,000 of people, she had 25,000,000;
+or if instead of being placed between us and the ocean she were placed
+between us and the Continent." (Notes and queries on the Irish Demand,
+February, 1887.) While the geographical positions of the islands
+to each other and to Europe have not changed, and cannot change,
+the political relation of one to the other, and so the political
+and economical relation of both to Europe, to the world and to the
+carrying trade of the world and the naval policies of the powers may
+be gravely altered by agencies beyond the control of Great Britain.
+
+The changes wrought in the speed and capacity of steam shipping, the
+growth and visible trend of German naval power, and the increasing
+possibilities of aerial navigation, all unite to emphasize the
+historian Niebuhr's warning, and to indicate for Ireland a possible
+future of restored communion with Europe, and less and less the
+continued wrong of that artificial exclusion in which British policy
+has sought to maintain her--"an island beyond an island."
+
+
+
+
+Chapter IX
+
+THE ELSEWHERE EMPIRE
+
+
+Every man born in Ireland holds a "hereditary brief" for the opponents
+of English sway, wherever they may be. The tribunal of history in his
+own land is closed to him; he must appeal to another court; he must
+seek the ear of those who make history elsewhere. The Irishman is
+denied the right of having a history, as he is denied the right of
+having a country. He must recover both. For him there is no past any
+more than a future. And if he seeks the record of his race in the only
+schools or books open to him he will find that hope has been shut out
+of the school and fame taken out of the story.
+
+The late John Richard Green, one of the greatest of English
+historians, was attracted to Ireland by a noble sympathy for the
+fallen which he shared with very few of his fellow-countrymen. We
+are told that he sympathized with the spirit of Irish nationality. "A
+State," he would say, "is accidental; it can be made or unmade; but a
+nation is something real which can be neither made nor destroyed."
+
+He had once planned a history of Ireland, "but abandoned the idea
+because the continuous record of misery and misgovernment was too
+painful to contemplate." All pleasure lies in contrast. The history of
+Ireland offers no contrast; it is a tale of unmitigated wrong.
+
+It is too full of graves and the ghosts are not laid yet. As well
+write the history of a churchyard. Forty years before John Richard
+Green thus explained why he had abandoned the plan of the graveyard,
+Victor Hugo lashed the front of England with this very thong. "Ireland
+turned into a cemetery; Poland transported to Siberia; all Italy a
+galleys--there is where we stand in this month of November, 1831!"
+
+The history of Ireland remains to be written, because the purpose of
+Ireland remains yet to be achieved. The widow of John Richard Green
+has laid the foundations of that temple of hope in which the youth
+of Ireland must enter and be sworn to the task that yet remains for
+Irishmen to accomplish.
+
+And so in closing the days of 1913 I bring, with a message of hope,
+these scattered thoughts upon the British Empire and its approaching
+dissolution to lay before the youth of Ireland. I say approaching
+dissolution advisedly, for the signs are there to be read. "Home Rule"
+will not save it. The attempt now being made to bribe Ireland and the
+greater Ireland beyond the seas, to the side of the Elsewhere Empire
+by what has been aptly termed a "ticket-of-leave" bill, will not
+suffice. The issue lies in stronger hands. Even could the two Irelands
+be won by the dole now offered, of a subordinate Parliament in Dublin,
+its hands tied so that it must be impotent for any national effort,
+"a Parliament" as Mr. Herbert Samuel says, "for the local affairs of
+Irishmen," there are other and more powerful agencies that no measure
+of conciliation within the Empire can permanently win to that system
+of world exploitation centred in London.
+
+"I would let the Irish have Home Rule," said recently Mr. Winston
+Churchill, "for their own idiotic affairs." But the last word came
+from Lord Morley, the "father of Home Rule." "Give it them," he said,
+in friendly, private counsel, "give it them; let them have the full
+savour of their own dunghill civilization."
+
+But the last word of all will come, not from Lord Morley, or "Home
+Rule," but from the land and the myriad peoples whose ancient
+civilization, Lord Morley, like every preceding Viceroy, has striven
+to bury under the dunghill of British supremacy in India, and to
+hide the very outlines of the ancient body of the set designs of a
+new purpose. The capital of British India is to be the "new Delhi,"
+planned in Whitehall, but paid for in India--the apotheosis of dung.
+The new India will make short work of "the new Delhi."
+
+"An unplumbed, salt, estranging sea" of moral and spiritual separation
+sets between the imperial conception as nourished in Britain and the
+growing hope of the great millions of mankind who make up the greatest
+realm of her empire.
+
+Ireland _might_ be bought or bribed, at any rate in this generation,
+to forfeit her national ideals and barter the aspiration that six
+centuries of contact with England have failed to kill; but the
+350,000,000 of Indian mankind can never be, or bought, or bribed in
+the end.
+
+Even if Ireland forgot the deathless words of Grattan, delivered in
+the subordinate Parliament of 1780, those words will find a response
+in the hearts of men who never heard of Grattan. For the voice of
+the Irish patriot was, in truth, a world voice--a summons to every
+audience wherever men gather in quest of freedom. The prophesy Grattan
+uttered in the name of Ireland assuredly will be fulfilled, and that
+in the life time of many of us, in that greater Ireland England
+holds in the eastern seas by the very same tide of raid, conquest and
+spoliation that has given her our own land.
+
+Substitute India for Ireland and the Grattan of 1780 becomes the
+Indian patriot of to-day.
+
+"I will never be satisfied so long as the meanest cottager in Ireland
+has a link of the British chain clanking in his rags; he may be naked,
+he shall not be in irons; and I do see the time is at hand; the spirit
+has gone forth, the declaration is planted; and though great men
+should apostasize, yet the cause will live; and though the public
+speaker should die, yet the immortal fire shall outlast the organ
+which conveyed it, and the breath of liberty, like the word of holy
+men, will not die with the prophet, but survive him."
+
+Were Ireland to accept the bribe now offered she would indeed justify
+the reproach of Wilfred Blunt; but she would become some thing else
+than a "weapon of offence in England's hands against the freedom of
+the world elsewhere;" she would share, and rightly share the fate of
+the parasite growth that, having gripped her trunk so tightly, has
+by that aid reached the sunlight. The British Empire is no northern
+oak tree. It is a creeping, climbing plant that has fastened on the
+limbs of others and grown great from a sap not its own. If we seek an
+analogy for it in the vegetable and not in the animal world we must
+go to the forests of the tropics and not to the northland woodlands.
+In the great swamps at the mouth of the Amazon the naturalist Bates
+describes a monstrous liana, the "Sipo Matador" or Murdering Creeper,
+that far more fitly than the oak tree of the north typifies John Bull
+and the place he has won in the sunlight by the once strong limbs of
+Ireland.
+
+Speaking of the forests round Para, Bates says:--"In these tropical
+forests each plant and tree seems to be striving to outvie its
+fellows, struggling upwards towards light and air--branch and leaf
+and stem--regardless of its neighbours. Parasitic plants are seen
+fastening with firm grip on others, making use of them with reckless
+indifference as instruments for their own advancement. Live and let
+live is clearly not the maxim taught in these wildernesses. There is
+one kind of parasitic tree very common near Para which exhibits this
+feature in a very prominent manner. It is called the "Sipo Matador,"
+or Murderer Liana. It belongs to the fig order, and has been described
+and figured by Von Martius as the Atlas to Spix and Martius' Travels.
+I observed many specimens. _The base of its stem would be unable
+to bear the weight of the upper growth_; it is obliged therefore
+to support itself on a tree of _another species_. In this it is not
+essentially different from other climbing trees and plants, but the
+way the Matador sets about it is peculiar and produces certainly a
+disagreeable impression. It springs up close to the tree on which it
+intends to fix itself, and the wood of its stem grows by spreading
+itself like a plastic mould over one side of the trunk of its
+supporter. It then puts forth, from each side, an armlike branch,
+which grows rapidly, and looks as though a stream of sap were flowing
+and hardening as it went. This adheres closely to the trunk of the
+victim, and the two arms meet at the opposite side and blend together.
+These arms are put forth at somewhat regular intervals in mounting
+upwards, and the victim, when its strangler is full grown, becomes
+tightly clasped by a number of inflexible rings. These rings gradually
+grow larger as the Murderer flourishes, rearing its crown of foliage
+to the sky mingled with that of its neighbour, and in course of time
+they kill it, by stopping the flow of its sap. The strange spectacle
+now remains of the selfish parasite clasping in its arms the lifeless
+and decaying body of its victim, which had been a help to its own
+growth. Its ends have been served--it has flowered and fruited,
+reproduced and disseminated its kind; and _now when the dead trunk
+moulders away its own end approaches; its support is gone and itself
+also falls_."
+
+The analogy is almost the most perfect in literature, and if we would
+not see it made perfect in history we must get rid of the parasite
+grip before we are quite strangled. If we would not share the coming
+darkness we must shake off the murderer's hold, before murderer and
+victim fall together. That fall is close at hand. A brave hand may yet
+cut the "Sipo Matador," and the slayer be slain before he has quite
+stifled his victim.
+
+If that hand be not a European one, then may it come, bronzed, keen,
+and supple from the tropic calm! The birds of the forest are on the
+wing.
+
+Regions Caesar never knew, including Hibernia, have come under the
+eagles, nay the vultures, of imperial Britain. But the lion's maw is
+full.
+
+At length the overgorged beast of prey, with all the diseases in his
+veins that over-eating brings, finds that his claws are not so sharp
+as they were, that his belly is much heavier when he tries to leap and
+that it is now chiefly by his voice he still scares his enemies.
+
+The Empire of England dates from Tudor times. Henry VIII was the first
+John Bull. When the conquered Irish and the wealth derived from their
+rich country England set out to lay low every free people that had
+a country worth invading and who, by reasons of their non-imperial
+instinct were not prepared to meet her on equal terms. India she
+overran by the same methods as had given her Ireland.
+
+Wholesale plunder, treachery and deceit met at her council board
+under a succession of Governors and Viceroys, whose policy was that of
+Captain Kidd, and whose ante-room of state led every native prince to
+the slippery plank. The thing became the most colossal success upon
+earth. No people were found able to withstand such a combination. How
+could peoples still nursed in the belief of some diviner will ruling
+men's minds resist such an attack?
+
+For one brief space Napoleon reared his head; and had he cast his
+vision to. Ireland instead of to Egypt he would have found out the
+secret of the pirate's stronghold. But the fates willed otherwise; the
+time was not yet. He sailed for Alexandria, lured by a dream, instead
+of for Cork; and the older Imperialists beat the new Imperialists and
+secured a fresh century of unprecedented triumph. The Pyramids looked
+down on Waterloo; but the headlands of Bantry Bay concealed the
+mastery, and the mystery, of the seas.
+
+With 1811 was born the era of Charles Peace, no less than of John
+Bull--on Sundays and Saint's days a churchwarden, who carried the
+plate; on week days a burglar who lifted it. Truly, as John Mitchel
+said on his convict hulk: "On English felony the sun never sets." May
+it set in 1915.
+
+From Napoleon's downfall to the battle of Colenso, the Empire founded
+by Henry VIII has swelled to monstrous size. Innumerable free peoples
+have bit the dust and died with plaintive cries to heaven. The wealth
+of London has increased a thousand fold, and the giant hotels and
+caravanserais have grown, at the millionaire's touch, to rival the
+palaces of the Caesars.
+
+"All's well with God's world"--and poet and plagiarist, courtier
+and courtesan, Kipling and cant--these now dally by the banks of
+the Thames and dine off the peoples of the earth, just as once the
+degenerate populace of imperial Rome fed upon the peoples of the
+Pyramids. But the thing is near the end. The "secret of Empire" is no
+longer the sole possession of England. Other peoples are learning to
+think imperially. The Goths and the Visigoths of modern civilisation
+are upon the horizon. Action must soon follow thought. London, like
+Rome, will have strange guests. They will not pay their hotel bills.
+Their day is not yet but it is at hand. "Home Rule" assemblies and
+Indian "Legislative Councils" may prolong the darkness; but the dawn
+is in die sky. And in the downfall of the Tudor Empire, both Ireland
+and India shall escape from the destruction and join again the free
+civilizations of the earth.
+
+The birds of the forest are on the wing.
+
+It is an Empire in these straights that turns to America, through
+Ireland, to save it. And the price it offers is--war with Germany.
+France may serve for a time, but France like Germany, is in Europe,
+and in the end it is all Europe and not only Germany England assails.
+Permanent confinement of the white races, as distinct from the
+Anglo-Saxon variety, can only be achieved by the active support
+and close alliance of the American people. These people are to-day,
+unhappily republicans and free men, and have no ill-will for Germany
+and a positive distaste for imperialism. It is not really in their
+blood. That blood is mainly Irish and German, the blood of men not
+distinguished in the past for successful piracy and addicted rather to
+the ways of peace. The wars that Germany has waged have been wars of
+defence, or wars to accomplish the unity of her people. Irish wars
+have been only against one enemy, and ending always in material
+disaster they have conferred always a moral gain. Their memory uplifts
+the Irish heart; for no nation, no people, can reproach Ireland with
+having wronged them. She has injured no man.
+
+And now, to-day, it is the great free race of this common origin
+of peace-loving peoples, filling another continent, that is being
+appealed to by every agency of crafty diplomacy, in every garb but
+that of truth, to aid the enemy of both and the arch-disturber of
+the old world. The jailer of Ireland seeks Irish-American support
+to keep Ireland in prison; the intriguer against Germany would win
+German-American good-will against its parent stock. There can be no
+peace for mankind, no limit to the intrigues set on foot to assure
+Great Britain "the mastery of the seas."
+
+If "America" will but see things aright, as a good "Anglo-Saxon"
+people should, she will take her place beside, nay, even a little in
+front of John Bull in the plunder of the earth. Were the "Anglo-Saxon
+Alliance" ever consummated it would be the biggest crime in human
+history. That alliance is meant by the chief party seeking it to be
+a perpetual threat to the peoples of Europe, nay, to the whole of
+mankind outside the allied ranks. And instead of bringing peace it
+must assuredly bring the most distracting and disastrous conflict that
+has ever stained the world with blood.
+
+John Bull has now become the great variety artist, one in truth whose
+infinite variety detention cannot stale any more than Customs officers
+can arrest the artist's baggage.
+
+At one moment the "Shirt King," being prosecuted for the sale of cheap
+cottons as "Irish Linen" in London; the next he lands the "Bloater
+King" in New York, offering small fish as something very like a whale.
+And the offer in both cases is made in the tongue of Shakespeare.
+
+The tongue has infinite uses; from China it sounds the "call for
+prayer," and lo, the Book of Dividends opens at the right text. Were
+Bull ever caught in the act, and put from the trade of international
+opium-dosing to that of picking oakum and the treadmill we should hear
+him exclaim, as he went out of sight, "Behold me weaving the threads
+of democratic destiny as I climb the golden stair."
+
+The rôles are endless! In Ireland, the conversion of Irishmen into
+cattle; in England, the conversion of Irish cattle into men; in
+India and Egypt the suppression of the native press; in America the
+subsidising of the non-native press; the tongue of Shakespeare has
+infinite uses. He only poached deer--it would poach dreadnoughts. The
+emanations of Thames sewage are all over the world, and the sewers are
+running still. The penalty for the pollution of the Thames is a high
+one; but the prize for the pollution of the Mississippi is still
+higher; the fountains of the deep, the mastery of the great waters,
+these are the things John Bull seeks on the shore of the "Father of
+Waters."
+
+The sunset of the fading Empire would turn those waters into blood.
+The British Empire was not founded in peace; how, then can it be kept
+by peace, or ensured by peace-treaties? It was born of pillage and
+blood-shed, and has been maintained by both; and it cannot now be
+secured by a common language any more than a common Bible. The lands
+called the British Empire belong to many races, and it is only by the
+sword and not by the Book of Peace or any pact of peace that those
+races can be kept from the ownership of their own countries.
+
+The "Anglo-Saxon Alliance" means a compact to ensure slavery and
+beget war. The people who fought the greatest war in modern history to
+release slaves are not likely to begin the greatest war in all history
+to beget slaves.
+
+Let the truth be known in America that England wants to turn the great
+Republic of free men into die imperial ally of the great Empire of
+bought men, and that day die "Anglo-Saxon Alliance" gives place to the
+Declaration of Independence.
+
+The true alliance to aim at for all who love peace is the friendly
+Union of Germany, America and Ireland. These are the true United
+States of the world.
+
+Ireland, the link between Europe and America, must be freed by both.
+
+Denied to-day free intercourse with either, she yet forms in the great
+designs of Providence the natural bond to bring the old world and the
+new together.
+
+May 1915 lay the foundation of this--the true Hundred Years of Peace!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's The Crime Against Europe, by Roger Casement
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 14728 ***
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+<div>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 14728 ***</div>
+
+ <h3>THE</h3>
+
+ <h1>Crime Against Europe</h1>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <h3><i>A Possible Outcome of the War of 1914</i></h3>
+
+ <h4>BY</h4>
+
+ <h3>SIR ROGER CASEMENT</h3>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <h4>COPYRIGHTED 1915</h4>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h2>INTRODUCTION.</h2>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>The reader must remember that these articles were written
+ before the war began. They are in a sense prophetic and show a
+ remarkable understanding of the conditions which brought about
+ the present great war in Europe.</p>
+
+ <p>The writer has made European history a life study and his
+ training in the English consular service placed him in a
+ position to secure the facts upon which he bases his
+ arguments.</p>
+
+ <p>Sir Roger Casement was born in Ireland in September, 1864.
+ He was made consul to Lorenzo Marques in 1889, being
+ transferred to a similar post in the Portuguese Possessions in
+ West Africa, which included the consulate to the Gaboon and the
+ Congo Free State. He held this post from 1898 to 1905, when he
+ was given the consulate of Santos. The following year he was
+ appointed consul to Hayti and San Domingo, but did not proceed,
+ going instead to Para, where he served until 1909, when he
+ became consul-general to Rio de Janeiro. He was created a
+ knight in 1911.</p>
+
+ <p>He was one of the organizers of the Irish Volunteers at
+ Dublin in November, 1913, being one of their provisional
+ committee. At present he is a member of the governing body of
+ that organization. He spent the summer of this year in the
+ United States. Sir Roger is at present in Berlin, where, after
+ a visit paid to the foreign office by him, the German
+ Chancellor caused to be issued the statement that "should the
+ German forces reach the shores of Ireland they would come not
+ as conquerors but as friends."</p>
+
+ <p>Sir Roger is well known for his investigation into the
+ Putomayo rubber district atrocities in 1912.</p>
+
+ <p>December, 1914.</p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page3"
+ id="page3"></a>[pg 3]</span>
+
+ <h3 class="sc">Chapter I</h3>
+
+ <h2>THE CAUSES OF THE WAR AND THE FOUNDATION OF PEACE</h2>
+
+ <p>Since the war, foreshadowed in these pages, has come and
+ finds public opinion in America gravely shocked at a war it
+ believes to be solely due to certain phases of European
+ militarism, the writer is now persuaded to publish these
+ articles, which at least have the merit of having been written
+ well before the event, in the hope that they may furnish a more
+ useful point of view. For if one thing is certain it is that
+ European militarism is no more the cause of this war than of
+ any previous war. Europe is not fighting to see who has the
+ best army, or to test mere military efficiency, but because
+ certain peoples wish certain things and are determined to get
+ and keep them by an appeal to force. If the armies and fleets
+ were small the war would have broken out just the same, the
+ parties and their claims, intentions, and positions being what
+ they are. To find the causes of the war we must seek the
+ motives of the combatants, and if we would have a lasting peace
+ the foundations upon which to build it must be laid bare by
+ revealing those foundations on which the peace was broken. To
+ find the causes of the war we should turn not to Blue Books or
+ White Papers, giving carefully selected statements of those
+ responsible for concealing from the public the true issues that
+ move nations to attack each other, but should seek the unavowed
+ aims of those nations themselves.</p>
+
+ <p>Once the motive is found it is not hard to say who it is
+ that broke the peace, whatever the diplomats may put forward in
+ lieu of the real reason.</p>
+
+ <p>The war was, in truth, inevitable, and was made inevitable
+ years ago. It was not brought about through the faults or
+ temper of Sovereigns or their diplomats, not because there were
+ great armies in Europe, but because certain Powers, and one
+ Power in particular, nourished ambitions and asserted claims
+ that involved not only ever increasing armaments but insured
+ ever increasing animosities. In these cases peace, if
+ permitted, would have dissipated the ambitions and upset
+ claims, so it was only a question of time and
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page4"
+ id="page4"></a>[pg 4]</span> opportunity when those whose
+ aims required war would find occasion to bring it about.</p>
+
+ <p>As Mr. Bernard Shaw put it, in a recent letter to the press:
+ "After having done all in our power to render war inevitable it
+ is no use now to beg people not to make a disturbance, but to
+ come to London to be kindly but firmly spoken to by Sir Edward
+ Grey."</p>
+
+ <p>To find the motive powerful enough to have plunged all
+ Europe into war in the short space of a few hours, we must seek
+ it, not in the pages of a "white paper" covering a period of
+ only fifteen days (July 20th to August 4th, 1914), but in the
+ long anterior activities that led the great Powers of Europe
+ into definite commitments to each other. For the purposes of
+ this investigation we can eliminate at once three of the actual
+ combatants, as being merely "accessories after the fact,"
+ viz.:&mdash;Servia, Belgium and Japan, and confine our study of
+ the causes of the conflict to the aims and motives of the five
+ principal combatants. For it is clear that in the quarrel
+ between Servia and Austria, Hungary is only a side issue of the
+ larger question that divides Europe into armed camps. Were
+ categoric proof sought of how small a part the quarrel between
+ Vienna and Belgrade played in the larger tragedy, it can be
+ found in the urgent insistence of the Russian Government itself
+ in the very beginning of the diplomatic conversations that
+ preceded the outbreak of hostilities.</p>
+
+ <p>As early as the 24th of July, the Russian Government sought
+ to prevail upon Great Britain to proclaim its complete
+ solidarity with Russia and France, and on the British
+ Ambassador in St. Petersburg pointing out that "direct British
+ interests in Servia were nil, and a war on behalf of that
+ country would never be sanctioned by British public opinion,"
+ the Russian Minister of Foreign Affairs replied that "we must
+ not forget that the <i>general European</i> question was
+ involved, the Servian question being but a part of the former,
+ and that Great Britain could not afford to efface herself from
+ the problem <i>now at issue</i>." (Despatch of Sir G. Buchanan
+ to Sir E. Grey, 24th July, 1914).</p>
+
+ <p>Those problems involved far mightier questions than the
+ relations of Servia to Austria, the neutrality of Belgium or
+ the wish of Japan to keep the peace of the East by seizing
+ Kiao-Chau.</p>
+
+ <p>The neutrality never became a war issue until long after war
+ had been decided on and had actually broken out; while Japan
+ came into the contest solely because Europe had obligingly
+ provided one, and because one European power preferred, for its
+ own ends, to <span class="pagenum"><a name="page5"
+ id="page5"></a>[pg 5]</span> strengthen an Asiatic race to
+ seeing a kindred white people it feared grow stronger in the
+ sun.</p>
+
+ <p>Coming then to the five great combatants, we can quickly
+ reduce them to four. Austria-Hungary and Germany in this war
+ are indivisible. While each may have varying aims on many
+ points and ambitions that, perhaps, widely diverge both have
+ one common bond, self-preservation, that binds them much more
+ closely together than mere formal "allies." In this war
+ Austria fights of necessity as a Germanic Power, although the
+ challenge to her has been on the ground of her Slav obligations
+ and activities. Germany is compelled to support Austria by a
+ law of necessity that a glance at the map of Europe explains.
+ Hence, for the purpose of the argument, we may put the conflict
+ as between the Germanic peoples of Central Europe and those who
+ have quarreled with them.</p>
+
+ <p>We thus arrive at the question, "why should such strangely
+ consorted allies as England, Russia and France be at war with
+ the German people?"</p>
+
+ <p>The answer is not to be found in the White Book, or in any
+ statement publicly put forward by Great Britain, Russia or
+ France.</p>
+
+ <p>But the answer must be found, if we would find the causes of
+ the war, and if we would hope to erect any lasting peace on the
+ ruins of this world conflict.</p>
+
+ <p>To accept, as an explanation of the war the statement that
+ Germany has a highly trained army she has not used for nearly
+ half a century and that her people are so obsessed with
+ admiration for it that they longed to test it on their
+ neighbours, is to accept as an explanation a stultifying
+ contradiction. It is of course much easier to put the blame on
+ the Kaiser. This line of thought is highly popular: it accords,
+ too, with a fine vulgar instinct.</p>
+
+ <p>The German people can be spared the odium of responsibility
+ for a war they clearly did nothing to provoke, by representing
+ them as the victims of an autocracy, cased in mail and beyond
+ their control. We thus arrive at "the real crime against
+ Germany," which explains everything but the thing it set out
+ to explain. It leaves unexplained the real crime against
+ Europe.</p>
+
+ <p>To explain the causes of the war we must find the causes of
+ the alliances of England, France and Russia against
+ Germany.</p>
+
+ <p>For the cause of the war is that alliance&mdash;that and
+ nothing else. The defence of the <i>Entente Cordiale</i> is
+ that it is an innocent pact of friendship, designed only to
+ meet the threat of the Triple Alliance.
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page6"
+ id="page6"></a>[pg 6]</span> But the answer to that is that
+ whereas the Triple Alliance was formed thirty years ago, it
+ has never declared war on anyone, while the <i>Triple
+ Entente</i> before it is eight years old has involved
+ Europe, America, Africa, and Asia in a world conflict. We
+ must find the motive for England allying herself with France
+ and Russia in an admittedly anti-German "understanding" if
+ we would understand the causes of the present war and why it
+ is that many besides Bernard Shaw hold that "after having
+ done all in our power to render war inevitable" it was idle
+ for the British Government to assume a death-bed solicitude
+ for peace, having already dug its grave and cast aside the
+ shovel for the gun. When that motive is apparent we shall
+ realise who it was preferred war to peace and how impossible
+ it is to hope for any certain peace ensuing from the victory
+ of those who ensured an appeal to arms.</p>
+
+ <p>The <i>Entente Cordiale</i>, to begin with, is unnatural.
+ There is nothing in common between the parties to it, save
+ antagonism to someone else. It is wrongly named. It is founded
+ not on predilections but on prejudices&mdash;not on affection
+ but on animosity. To put it crudely it is a bond of hate not of
+ love. None of the parties to it like or admire each other, or
+ have consistent aims, save one.</p>
+
+ <p>That satisfied, they will surely fall out among themselves,
+ and the greater the plunder derived from their victory the more
+ certain their ensuing quarrel.</p>
+
+ <p>Great Britain, in her dealings with most white people (not
+ with all) is a democracy.</p>
+
+ <p>Russia in her dealings with all, is an autocracy.</p>
+
+ <p>Great Britain is democratic in her government of herself and
+ in her dealings with the great white communities of Canada,
+ Australia, New Zealand, and South Africa. She is not democratic
+ in her dealings with subject races within the Empire&mdash;the
+ Indians, notably, or the Irish. To the Indians her rule is that
+ of an absentee autocracy, differing in speech, colour, religion
+ and culture from those submitted to it by force; to the Irish
+ that of a resident autocracy bent on eliminating the people
+ governed from residence in their own country, and replacing
+ them with cattle for British consumption.</p>
+
+ <p>In both instances Britain is notably false to her
+ professions of devotion to democratic principles. Her affinity
+ with Russia is found then, not in the cases where her
+ institutions are good, but in those where they are
+ bad.</p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page7"
+ id="page7"></a>[pg 7]</span>
+
+ <p>An alliance founded on such grounds of contact can only
+ produce evil.</p>
+
+ <p>To such it gave birth in Persia, to such it must give birth
+ in the present war.</p>
+
+ <p>In Persia we saw it betray the principles of democratic
+ government, destroy an infant constitution and disembowel the
+ constitutionalists, whilst it divided their country into
+ "spheres of influence" and to-day we see it harvesting with
+ hands yet red with the blood of Persian patriots the redder
+ fruit of the seed then sown.</p>
+
+ <p>The alliance with France, while more natural than that with
+ Russia if we regard Great Britain as a democracy (by
+ eliminating India, Egypt, Ireland) had the same guilty end in
+ view, and rests less on affinity of aims than on affinity of
+ antipathies.</p>
+
+ <p>The <i>Entente Cordiale</i>, the more closely we inspect it,
+ we find is based not on a cordial regard of the parties to it
+ for each other, but on a cordial disregard all three
+ participants share for the party it is aimed against.</p>
+
+ <p>It will be said that Germany must have done something to
+ justify the resentment that could bring about so strangely
+ assorted a combination against herself. What has been the crime
+ of Germany against the powers now assailing her? She has
+ doubtless committed many crimes, as have all the great powers,
+ but in what respect has she so grievously sinned against Europe
+ that the Czar, the Emperor of India, the King of Great Britain
+ and Ireland, the Mikado and the President of the French
+ Republic&mdash;to say nothing of those minor potentates who
+ like Voltaire's minor prophets seem <i>capable de
+ tout</i>&mdash;should now be pledged, by irrevocable pact, to
+ her destruction as a great power?</p>
+
+ <p>"German militarism," the reply that springs to the lips, is
+ no more a threat to civilisation than French or Russian
+ militarism. It was born, not of wars of aggression, but of wars
+ of defence and unification. Since it was welded by blood and
+ iron into the great human organism of the last forty years it
+ has not been employed beyond the frontiers of Germany until
+ last year.</p>
+
+ <p>Can the same be said of Russian militarism or of French
+ militarism or of British navalism?</p>
+
+ <p>We are told the things differ in quality. The answer is what
+ about the intent and the uses made. German militarism has kept
+ peace and has not emerged beyond its own frontier until
+ threatened with universal attack. Russian militarism has waged
+ wars abroad, far beyond the confines of Russian territory;
+ French militarism, <span class="pagenum"><a name="page8"
+ id="page8"></a>[pg 8]</span> since it was overthrown at
+ Sedan, has carried fire and sword across all Northern
+ Africa, has penetrated from the Atlantic to the Nile, has
+ raided Tonquin, Siam, Madagascar, Morocco, while English
+ navalism in the last forty years has bombarded the coast
+ lines, battered the ports, and landed raiding parties
+ throughout Asia and Africa, to say nothing of the well nigh
+ continuous campaigns of annexation of the British army in
+ India, Burma, South Africa, Egypt, Tibet, or Afghanistan,
+ within the same period.</p>
+
+ <p>As to the quality of the materialism of the great
+ Continental Powers there is nothing to prefer in the French and
+ Russian systems to the German system. Each involved enormous
+ sacrifices on the people sustaining it. We are asked, however,
+ to believe that French militarism is maintained by a
+ "democracy" and German militarism by an "autocracy." Without
+ appealing to the captive Queen of Madagascar for an opinion on
+ the authenticity of French democracy we may confine the
+ question to the elected representatives of the two peoples.</p>
+
+ <p>In both cases the war credits are voted by the legislative
+ bodies responsible to French and German opinion. The elected
+ representatives of Germany are as much the spokesman of the
+ nation as those of France, and the German Reichstag has
+ sanctioned every successive levy for the support of German
+ armaments. As to Russian militarism, it may be presumed no one
+ will go quite so far as to assert that the Russian Duma is more
+ truly representative of the Russian people than the Parliament
+ of the Federated peoples of Germany at Berlin.</p>
+
+ <p>The machines being then approximately the same machines, we
+ must seek the justification for them in the uses to which they
+ have been put.</p>
+
+ <p>For what does France, for what does Russia maintain a great
+ army? Why does Germany call so many youthful Germans to the
+ colours? On what grounds of moral sanction does Great Britain
+ maintain a navy, whose cost far exceeds all the burdens of
+ German militarism?</p>
+
+ <p>Russia stretches across the entire area of Central Asia and
+ comprises much of the greater part of Europe as well. In its
+ own territory, it is unassailable, and never has been invaded
+ with success. No power can plunder or weaken Russia as long as
+ she remains within her own borders. Of all the great powers in
+ Europe she is the one that after England has the least need of
+ a great army.</p>
+
+ <p>She cannot be assailed with success at home, and she has no
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page9"
+ id="page9"></a>[pg 9]</span> need to leave her own
+ territories in search of lands to colonize. Her population,
+ secure in its own vast numbers and vast resources has, for
+ all future needs of expansion the continent of Siberia into
+ which to overflow. Russia cannot be threatened within Russia
+ and has no need to go outside Russia. A Russian army of
+ 4,000,000 is not necessary to self-defence. Its inspiration
+ can be due only to a policy of expansion at the cost of
+ others, and its aim to extend and to maintain existing
+ Russian frontiers. As I write it is engaged not in a war of
+ defence but in a war of invasion, and is the instrument of a
+ policy of avowed aggression.</p>
+
+ <p>Not the protection of the Slavs from Austria, herself so
+ largely a Slavic power and one that does not need to learn the
+ principles of good government from Russia, but the
+ incorporation of the Slavs within the mightiest empire upon
+ earth&mdash;this is the main reason why Russia maintains the
+ mightiest army upon earth. Its threat to Germany, as the
+ protector of Austria-Hungary, has been clear, and if we would
+ find the reason for German militarism we shall find at least
+ one half of it across the Russian frontier.</p>
+
+ <p>The huge machine of the French army, its first line troops
+ almost equal to Germany's, is not a thing of yesterday.</p>
+
+ <p>It was not German aggression founded it&mdash;although
+ Germany felt it once at Jena. Founded by kings of France,
+ French militarism has flourished under republic, empire,
+ constitutional monarchy, and empire again until to-day we find
+ its greatest bloom full blown under the mild breath of the
+ third republic. What is the purpose of this perfect machine?
+ Self-defence? From what attack? Germany has had it in her
+ power, again and again within the last thirty years to attack
+ France at a disadvantage, if not even with impunity. Why has
+ she refrained&mdash;whose hand restrained her? Not
+ Russia's&mdash;not England's. During the Russo-Japanese war or
+ during the Boer war, France could have been assailed with ease
+ and her army broken to pieces. But German militarism refrained
+ from striking that blow. The object of the great army France
+ maintains is not to be found in reasons of self-defence, but
+ may be found, like that of Russia in hopes of armed expansion.
+ Since the aim in both cases was the same, to wage a war of
+ aggression to be termed of "recovery" in one case and
+ "protection" in the other, it was not surprising that Czar and
+ President should come together, and that the cause of the Slavs
+ should become identified with the cause of Strasburg.</p>
+
+ <p>To "protect" the Slavs meant assailing Austria-Hungary
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page10"
+ id="page10"></a>[pg 10]</span> (another way of attacking
+ Germany), and to "recover" Strasburg meant a
+ <i>mes-alliance</i> between democrat of France and Cossack
+ of the Don.</p>
+
+ <p>We come now to the third party to die Entente, and it is now
+ we begin to perceive how it was that a cordial understanding
+ with England rendered a Russo-French attack upon Germany only a
+ question of time and opportunity. Until England appeared upon
+ the scene neither Russia nor France, nor both combined, could
+ summon up courage to strike the blow. Willing to wound they
+ were both afraid to strike. It needed a third courage, a keener
+ purpose and a greater immunity.</p>
+
+ <p>German militarism was too formidable a factor in the life of
+ 65,000,000 of the most capable people in Europe to be lightly
+ assailed even by France and Russia combined. Russia needed
+ money to perfect the machinery of invasion, so sorely tried by
+ the disastrous failure to invade Korea and Manchuria. France
+ had the money to advance, but she still doubted the ability of
+ her stagnant population of 40,000,000 to face the growing
+ magnitude of the great people across the Rhine. It needed
+ another guarantee&mdash;and England brought it.</p>
+
+ <p>From the day that Great Britain and her mighty fleet joined
+ the separated allies with their mighty armies, the bond between
+ them and the circle round Germany grew taut. From that day the
+ counsels of the allies and their new found "friend" thickened
+ and quickened. The immovable "menace across the Rhine" in one
+ case had become the active "menace across the North Sea" in the
+ other case.</p>
+
+ <p>The sin of German militarism was at last out. It could take
+ to the water as kindly as to the land. As long as the war
+ machine guaranteed the inviolability of German territory it was
+ no threat to European peace, but when it assumed the task of
+ safe-guarding German rights at sea it became the enemy of
+ civilization. These trading people not content with an army
+ that kept French "revanche" discreetly silent and Slav "unity"
+ a dream of the future presumed to have a sea-born commerce that
+ grew by leaps and bounds, and they dared to build a navy to
+ defend and even to extend it. <i>Delenda est Carthago!</i> From
+ that day the doom of "German militarism" was sealed; and
+ England, democratic England, lay down with the Czar in the same
+ bed to which the French housewife had already transferred her
+ republican
+ counterpane.</p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page11"
+ id="page11"></a>[pg 11]</span>
+
+ <p>The duration of peace became only a question of time, and
+ the war of to-day only a question of opportunity and pretext.
+ Each of the parties to the understanding had the same clear
+ purpose to serve, and while the aim to each was different the
+ end was the same. Germany's power of defence must be destroyed.
+ That done each of the sleeping partners to the unsigned compact
+ would get the share of the spoils, guarded by armed German
+ manhood, he coveted.</p>
+
+ <p>To Russia, the dismemberment of Austria-Hungary and the
+ incorporation of the Slav elements in part into her own vast
+ empire, in part into a vassal and subordinate Balkan
+ Confederacy.</p>
+
+ <p>To France the restoration of Lorraine, with Metz, and of
+ Alsace with Strasburg and their 1,500,000 of German speaking
+ Teutons to the French Empire.</p>
+
+ <p>To England, the destruction of German sea-power and along
+ with it the permanent crippling of German competition in the
+ markets of the world.</p>
+
+ <p>Incidentally German colonies would disappear along with
+ German shipping, and with both gone a German navy would become
+ a useless burden for a nation of philosophers to maintain, so
+ that the future status of maritime efficiency in Europe could
+ be left to the power that polices the seas to equitably fix for
+ all mankind, as well as for the defeated rival.</p>
+
+ <p>Such an outline was the altruistic scope of the unsigned
+ agreement entered into by the three parties of the <i>Triple
+ Entente</i>; and it only remained to get ready for the day when
+ the matter could be brought to issue. The murder of the
+ Archduke Ferdinand furnished Russia with the occasion, since
+ she felt that her armies were ready, the sword sharpened, and
+ the Entente sure and binding.</p>
+
+ <p>The mobilization by Russia was all that France needed "to do
+ that which might be required of her by her interests." (Reply
+ of the French Government to the German Ambassador at Paris,
+ August 1st, 1914.)</p>
+
+ <p>Had the neutrality of Belgium been respected as completely
+ as the neutrality of Holland, England would have joined her
+ "friends" in the assault on Germany, as Sir Edward Grey was
+ forced to admit when the German Ambassador in vain pressed him
+ to state his own terms as the price of English neutrality.</p>
+
+ <p>The hour had struck. Russia was sure of herself, and the
+ rest followed automatically since all had been provided for
+ long before. The French fleet was in the Mediterranean, as the
+ result of the <span class="pagenum"><a name="page12"
+ id="page12"></a>[pg 12]</span> military compact between
+ France and England signed, sealed and delivered in November,
+ 1912, and <i>withheld from the cognizance of the British
+ Parliament until after war had been declared</i>. The
+ British fleet had been mobilized early in July in
+ anticipation of Russia's mobilization on land&mdash;and here
+ again it is Sir Edward Grey who incidentally supplies the
+ proof.</p>
+
+ <p>In his anxiety, while there was still the fear that Russia
+ might hold her hand, he telegraphed to the British Ambassador
+ in St. Petersburg on 27th of July, requiring him to assure the
+ Russian Foreign Minister, that the British Fleet, "which is
+ concentrated, <i>as it happens</i>" would not disperse from
+ Portland.</p>
+
+ <p>That "as it happens" is quite the most illuminating slip in
+ the British White Paper, and is best comprehended by those who
+ know what have been the secret orders of the British fleet
+ since 1909, and what was the end in view when King George
+ reviewed it earlier in the month, and when His Majesty so
+ hurriedly summoned the unconstitutional "Home Rule" conference
+ at Buckingham Palace on 18th of July. Nothing remained for the
+ "friends" but to so manoeuvre that Germany should be driven to
+ declare war, or see her frontiers crossed. If she did the
+ first, she became the "aggressor"; if she waited to be attacked
+ she incurred the peril of destruction.</p>
+
+ <p>Such, in outline, are the causes and steps that led to the
+ outbreak of war. The writer has seen those steps well and
+ carefully laid, tested and tried beforehand. Every rung of the
+ scaling ladder being raised for the storming of the German
+ defences on land and sea was planed and polished in the British
+ Foreign Office.</p>
+
+ <p>As Sir Edward Grey confessed three years ago, he was "but
+ the fly on the wheel." That wheel was the ever faster driven
+ purpose of Great Britain to destroy the growing sea-power and
+ commerce of Germany. The strain had reached the breaking
+ point.</p>
+
+ <p>During the first six months of 1914, German export trade
+ almost equalled that of Great Britain. Another year of peace,
+ and it would certainly have exceeded it, and for the first time
+ in the history of world trade Great Britain would have been put
+ in the second place. German exports from January to June had
+ swelled to the enormous total of $1,045,000,000 as against the
+ $1,075,000,000 of Great Britain. A war against such figures
+ could not be maintained in the markets, it must be transferred
+ to the seas.</p>
+
+ <p>Day by day as the war proceeds, although it is now only six
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page13"
+ id="page13"></a>[pg 13]</span> weeks old, the pretences
+ under which it was begun are being discarded. England fights
+ not to defend the neutrality of Belgium, not to destroy
+ German militarism, but to retain, if need be by involving
+ the whole world in war, her supreme and undisputed ownership
+ of the seas.</p>
+
+ <p>This is the crime against Europe, the crime against the
+ world that, among other victims the United States are invited
+ to approve, in order that to-morrow their own growing navy may
+ be put into a like posture with that of a defeated Germany.</p>
+
+ <p>With the Kiel Canal "handed to Denmark," as one of the
+ fruits of British victory, as Lord Charles Beresford yesterday
+ magnanimously suggested, how long may it be before the Panama
+ Canal shall be found to be "a threat to peace" in the hands of
+ those who constructed it?</p>
+
+ <p>A rival fleet in being, whether the gunners be Teuton or
+ Anglo-Saxon unless the Admiralty controlling it is seated at
+ Whitehall, will always be an eyesore to the Mistress of the
+ seas, in other words, "a threat to the peace of the world."</p>
+
+ <p>The war of armaments cannot be ended by the disarming of the
+ German people. To hand Europe over to a triumphal alliance of
+ Russian and French militarism, while England controls the
+ highways and waterways of mankind by a fleet whose function is
+ "to dictate the maritime law of nations," will beget indeed a
+ new Europe, but a Europe whose acquiescence is due to fear and
+ the continued pressure of well-sustained force&mdash;a Europe
+ submitted to the despotism of unnatural alliances designed to
+ arrest the laws of progress.</p>
+
+ <p>The laws of progress demand that efficiency shall prevail.
+ The crime of Germany has been superior efficiency, not so much
+ in the arts of war as in the products of peace. If she go down
+ to-day before a combination of brute force and unscrupulous
+ intelligence her fall cannot be permanent. Germany has within
+ herself the forces that ensure revival, and revival means
+ recovery. Neither France nor Russia nor both combined, can give
+ to Europe what Britain now designs to take from it by their
+ help.</p>
+
+ <p>Whatever may be the result of this war on the field of
+ battle, to France indeed it can bring only one end. For her
+ there is no future save that of a military empire. Her life
+ blood is dried up. This war will sweep away all power of
+ recuperation. She will remain impotent to increase her race,
+ sterile of new forces for good, her young men's blood gone to
+ win the barren fields of Alsace.
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page14"
+ id="page14"></a>[pg 14]</span> Her one purpose in the new
+ Europe will be to hold a sword, not her own, over the
+ struggling form of a resurgent Germany in the interests of
+ another people. Let Germany lose 1,000,000 men in the
+ fighting of to-day, she can recover them in two years of
+ peace. But to France the losses of this war, whether she win
+ or lose, cannot be made good in a quarter of a century of
+ child births. Whatever comes to Russia, to England, France
+ as a great free power is gone. Her future function will be
+ to act in a subordinate capacity alone; supported and
+ encouraged by England she will be forced to keep up a great
+ army in order that the most capable people of the continent,
+ with a population no defeat can arrest, shall not fill the
+ place in Europe and in the world they are called on surely
+ to fill, and one that conflicts only with British aims and
+ appetites.</p>
+
+ <p>German expansion was no threat to France. It was directed to
+ other fields, chiefly those of commerce. In order to keep it
+ from those fields England fanned the dying fires of French
+ resentment and strove by every agency to kindle a natural
+ sentiment into an active passion.</p>
+
+ <p>The historian of the future will record that whatever the
+ immediate fate of Germany may be, the permanent victim was
+ France.</p>
+
+ <p>The day England won her to an active policy of vengeance
+ against the victor of 1870, she wooed her to abiding loss. Her
+ true place in Europe was one of friendship with Germany. But
+ that meant, inevitably, the discovery by Europe that the chief
+ barrier to European concord lay not in the armies of the
+ powers, but in the ring of hostile battleships that constrained
+ her peoples into armed camps.</p>
+
+ <p>European militarism rests on English navalism. English
+ navalism requires for its continued existence a disunited
+ Europe; and a Europe kept apart is a Europe armed, anxious and
+ watchful, bent on mutual attack, its eyes fixed on the
+ <i>earth</i>. Europe must lift its eyes to the sea. There lies
+ the highway of the nations, the only road to freedom&mdash;the
+ sole path to peace.</p>
+
+ <p>For the pent millions of Europe there can be no peace, no
+ laying aside of arms, no sincere development of trade or
+ culture while one people, <i>in Europe but not of Europe</i>,
+ immune themselves from all attack, and sure that whatever
+ suffering they inflict on others can never be visited on their
+ own shores, have it in their power to foment strife with
+ impunity and to call up war from the ends of the earth while
+ they themselves enjoy the blessing of
+ peace.</p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page15"
+ id="page15"></a>[pg 15]</span>
+
+ <p>England, the soul and brain of this confederacy of war
+ abroad remains at peace at home. As I write these words a
+ despatch from Sir Alfred Sharpe, the correspondent of a London
+ paper in France, comes to hand. It should be placarded in every
+ Foreign Office of the world, in every temple of justice, in
+ every house of prayer.</p>
+
+ <p>"It is difficult for the people in England to realize the
+ condition of Northern France at the present time. Although the
+ papers are full of accounts of desolation and destruction
+ caused by the German invasion, it is only by an actual
+ experience that a full realization of the horror comes. To
+ return to England after visiting the French war zone is to come
+ back to a land of perfect peace, where everything is normal and
+ where it is not easy to believe we are almost within hearing
+ distance of the cannonade on the Aisne."</p>
+
+ <p>(Sir Alfred Sharpe, to the <i>Daily Chronicle</i> from the
+ Front, September 2nd, 1914.)</p>
+
+ <p>It is this immunity from the horror of war that makes all
+ Englishmen jingoes. They are never troubled by the consequences
+ of belligerency. Since it is only by "an actual experience that
+ the full realization of the horror comes." Until that horror
+ strikes deep on English soil her statesmen, her Ministers, her
+ Members of Parliament, her editors, will never sincerely love
+ peace, but will plan always to ensure war abroad, whenever
+ British need or ambition demands it.</p>
+
+ <p>Were England herself so placed that responsibility for her
+ acts could be enforced on her own soil, among her own people,
+ and on the head of those who devise her policies, then we might
+ talk of arbitration treaties with hope, and sign compacts of
+ goodwill sure that they were indeed cordial understandings.</p>
+
+ <p>But as long as Great Britain retains undisputed ownership of
+ the chief factor that ensures at will peace or war on others,
+ there can be only armaments in Europe, ill-will among men and
+ war fever in the blood of mankind.</p>
+
+ <p>British democracy loves freedom of the sea in precisely the
+ same spirit as imperial Rome viewed the spectacle of Celtic
+ freedom beyond the outposts of the Roman legions; as Agricola
+ phrased it, something "to wear down and take possession of so
+ that freedom may be put out of sight."</p>
+
+ <p>The names change but the spirit of imperial exploitation,
+ whether it call itself an empire or a democracy, does not
+ change.</p>
+
+ <p>Just as the Athenian Empire, in the name of a democracy,
+ sought to impose servitude at sea on the Greek world, so the
+ British <span class="pagenum"><a name="page16"
+ id="page16"></a>[pg 16]</span> Empire, in the name of a
+ democracy, seeks to encompass mankind within the long walls
+ of London.</p>
+
+ <p>The modern Sparta may be vanquished by the imperial
+ democrats assailing her from East and West. But let the world
+ be under no illusions.</p>
+
+ <p>If Germany go down to-day, vanquished by a combination of
+ Asiatic, African, American, Canadian and European enemies, the
+ gain will not be to the world nor to the cause of peace.</p>
+
+ <p>The mistress of the seas will remain to ensure new
+ combinations of enmity to prohibit the one league of concord
+ that alone can bring freedom and peace to the world. The cause
+ that begot this war will remain to beget new wars.</p>
+
+ <p>The next victim of universal sea-power may not be on the
+ ravaged fields of mid-Europe, but mid the wasted coasts and
+ bombarded seaports of the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans.</p>
+
+ <p>A permanent peace can only be laid on a sure foundation. A
+ sure foundation of peace among men can only be found when
+ mastery of the sea by one people has been merged in freedom of
+ the seas for all.</p>
+
+ <h3 class="sc">Chapter II</h3>
+
+ <h2>THE KEEPER OF THE SEAS</h2>
+
+ <p>As long ago as 1870 an Irishman pointed out that if the
+ English press did not abandon the campaign of prejudiced
+ suspicion it was even then conducting against Germany, the time
+ for an understanding between Great Britain and the German
+ people would be gone for ever.</p>
+
+ <p>It was Charles Lever who delivered this shrewd appreciation
+ of the onlooker.</p>
+
+ <p>Writing from Trieste on August 29th, 1870, to John
+ Blackwood, he stated:</p>
+
+ <p>"Be assured the <i>Standard</i> is making a great blunder by
+ its anti-Germanism and English opinion has <i>just now</i> a
+ value in Germany <span class="pagenum"><a name="page17"
+ id="page17"></a>[pg 17]</span> which if the nation be once
+ disgusted with us will be gone for ever."</p>
+
+ <p>Lever preserved enough of the Irishman through all his
+ official connection to see the two sides of a question and
+ appreciate the point of view of the other man.</p>
+
+ <p>What Lever pointed out during the early stages of the
+ Franco-German war has come to pass. The <i>Standard</i> of
+ forty years ago is the British press of to-day, with here and
+ there the weak voice of an impotent Liberalism crying in the
+ wilderness. Germany has, indeed, become thoroughly disgusted
+ and the hour of reconciliation has long since gone by. In
+ Lever's time it was now or never; the chance not taken then
+ would be lost for ever, and the English publicist of to-day is
+ not in doubt that it is now too late. His heart-searchings need
+ another formula of expression&mdash;no longer a conditional
+ assertion of doubt, but a positive questioning of impending
+ fact, "is it too soon." That the growing German navy must be
+ smashed he is convinced, but how or when to do it he is not so
+ clear.</p>
+
+ <p>The situation is not yet quite intolerable, and so, although
+ many urge an immediate attack before the enemy grows too
+ strong, the old-time British love of compromise and trust in
+ luck still holds his hand. The American "alliance" too, may yet
+ come off. The Entente with France, already of great value, can
+ be developed into something more assuredly anti-German, and if
+ present-day relations of friendship with the United States can
+ be but tightened into a mutual committal of both Powers to a
+ common foreign policy, then the raid on Germany may never be
+ needed. She can be bottled up without it. No man who studies
+ the British mind can have any doubt of the fixed trend of
+ British thought.</p>
+
+ <p>It can be summed up in one phrase. German expansion is not
+ to be tolerated. It can only be a threat to or attained at the
+ expense of British interests. Those interests being world-wide,
+ with the seas for their raiment nay, with the earth for their
+ footstool&mdash;it follows that wherever Germany may turn for
+ an outlet she is met by the British challenge: "Not there!"
+ British interests interdict the Old World; the Monroe Doctrine,
+ maintained, it is alleged by British naval supremacy, forbids
+ the New.</p>
+
+ <p>Let Germany acquire a coaling station, a sanitorium, a
+ health resort, the ground for a hotel even, on some foreign
+ shore, and "British interests" spring to attention, English
+ jealousy is aroused. How long this state of tension can last
+ without snapping could, <span class="pagenum"><a name="page18"
+ id="page18"></a>[pg 18]</span> perhaps, be best answered in
+ the German naval yards. It is evident that some 7,000,000 of
+ the best educated race in the world, physically strong,
+ mentally stronger, homogeneous, highly trained, highly
+ skilled, capable and energetic and obedient to a discipline
+ that rests upon and is moulded by a lofty conception of
+ patriotism, cannot permanently be confined to a strictly
+ limited area by a less numerous race, less well educated,
+ less strong mentally and physically and assuredly less well
+ trained, skilled and disciplined. Stated thus the problem
+ admits of a simple answer; and were there no other factor
+ governing the situation, that answer would have been long
+ since given.</p>
+
+ <p>It is not the ethical superiority of the English race that
+ accounts for their lead, but the favourable geographical
+ situation from which they have been able to develop and direct
+ their policy of expansion.</p>
+
+ <p>England has triumphed mainly from her position. The
+ qualities of her people have, undoubtedly, counted for much,
+ but her unrivalled position in the lap of the Atlantic, barring
+ the seaways and closing the tideways of Central and
+ North-eastern Europe, has counted for more.</p>
+
+ <p>With this key she has opened the world to herself and closed
+ it to her rivals.</p>
+
+ <p>The long wars with France ended in the enhancement of this
+ position by the destruction of the only rival fleet in
+ being.</p>
+
+ <p>Europe, without navies, without shipping became for England
+ a mere westward projection of Asia, dominated by warlike
+ peoples who could always be set by the ears and made to fight
+ upon points of dynastic honour, while England appropriated the
+ markets of mankind. Thenceforth, for the best part of a
+ century, while Europe was spent in what, to the superior
+ Britain were tribal conflicts, the seas and coasts of the world
+ lay open to the intrusions of his commerce, his colonists, his
+ finance, until there was seemingly nothing left outside the two
+ Americas worth laying hands on. This highly favoured maritime
+ position depends, however, upon an unnamed factor, the
+ unchallenged possession and use of which by England has been
+ the true foundation of her imperial greatness. Without Ireland
+ there would be to-day no British Empire. The vital importance
+ of Ireland to England is understood, but never proclaimed by
+ every British statesman. To subdue that western and
+ ocean-closing island and to exploit its resources, its people
+ and, above all its position, to the sole advantage of the
+ eastern island, has been the set aim of every English
+ Government from the days <span class="pagenum"><a name="page19"
+ id="page19"></a>[pg 19]</span> of Henry VIII onwards. The
+ vital importance of Ireland to Europe is not and has not
+ been understood by any European statesman. To them it has
+ not been a European island, a vital and necessary element of
+ European development, but an appanage of England, an island
+ beyond an island, a mere geographical expression in the
+ titles of the conqueror. Louis XIV, came nearest, perhaps,
+ of European rulers to realizing its importance in the
+ conflict of European interests when he sought to establish
+ James II on its throne as rival to the monarch of Great
+ Britain and counterpoise to the British sovereignty in the
+ western seas. Montesquieu alone of French writers grasped
+ the importance of Ireland in the international affairs of
+ his time, and he blames the vacillation of Louis, who failed
+ to put forth his strength, to establish James upon the
+ throne of Ireland and thus by a successful act of perpetual
+ separation to <i>affaiblir le voisin</i>. Napoleon, too
+ late, in St. Helena, realized his error: "Had I gone to
+ Ireland instead of to Egypt the Empire of England was at an
+ end."</p>
+
+ <p>With these two utterances of the French writer and of the
+ French ruler we begin and end the reference of Ireland to
+ European affairs which continental statecraft has up to now
+ emitted, and so far has failed to apply.</p>
+
+ <p>To-day there is probably no European thinker (although
+ Germany produced one in recent times), who, when he faces the
+ over-powering supremacy of Great Britain's influence in world
+ affairs and the relative subordination of European rights to
+ the asserted interests of that small island, gives a thought to
+ the other and smaller island beyond its shores. And yet the key
+ to British supremacy lies there. Perhaps the one latter day
+ European who perceived the true relation of Ireland to Great
+ Britain was Neibuhr.</p>
+
+ <p>"Should England," he said, "not change her conduct, Ireland
+ may still for a long period belong to her, but not always; and
+ the loss of that country is the death day, not only to her
+ greatness, but of her very existence."</p>
+
+ <p>I propose to point out as briefly as may be possible in
+ dealing with so unexpected a proposition, that the restoration
+ of Ireland to European life lies at the bottom of all
+ successful European effort to break the bonds that now shackle
+ every continental people that would assert itself and extend
+ its ideals, as opposed to British interests, outside the limits
+ of Europe.</p>
+
+ <p>It may be well first to define "British interests" and to
+ show that these are not necessarily synonymous with European
+ interests. <span class="pagenum"><a name="page20"
+ id="page20"></a>[pg 20]</span> British interests are: first,
+ the control of all the seas of all the world&mdash;in full
+ military and commercial control. If this be not challenged
+ peace is permitted: to dispute it seriously means war.</p>
+
+ <p>Next in order of British interests stands the right of
+ pre-emption to all healthy, fertile, "unoccupied" lands of the
+ globe not already in possession of a people capable of
+ seriously disputing invasion, with the right of reversion to
+ such other regions as may, from time to time prove commercially
+ desirable or financially exploitable, whether suitable for
+ British colonization or not.</p>
+
+ <p>In a word, British interests assume that the future of the
+ world shall be an English-speaking future. It is clear that
+ sooner or later the British colonies, so called, must develop
+ into separate nationalities, and that the link of a common
+ crown cannot bind them forever. But, as Sir Wilfred Laurier
+ said at the recent Imperial Conference: "We bring you British
+ institutions"&mdash;English language, English law, English
+ trade, English supremacy, in a word&mdash;this is the ideal
+ reserved for mankind and summed up in words "British
+ interests."</p>
+
+ <p>Turn where you will these interests are in effective
+ occupation, and whether it be Madeira, Teneriffe, Agadir,
+ Tahiti, Bagdad, the unseen flag is more potent to exclude the
+ non-British intruder than the visible standard of the occupying
+ tenant. England is the landlord of civilization, mankind her
+ tenantry, and the earth her estate. If this be not a highly
+ exaggerated definition of British interests, and in truth it is
+ but a strongly coloured chart of the broad outline of the
+ design, then it is clear that Europe has a very serious problem
+ to face if European civilization and ideals, as differing from
+ the British type, are to find a place for their ultimate
+ expansion in any region favoured by the sun.</p>
+
+ <p>The actual conflict of European interests in Morocco is a
+ fair illustration of English methods.<a id="footnotetag1"
+ name="footnotetag1"></a><a href="#footnote1"><sup>1</sup></a></p>
+
+ <p>In the past France was the great antagonist, but since she
+ is to-day no longer able to seriously dispute the British
+ usufruct of the overseas world she is used (and rewarded) in
+ the struggle now maintained to exclude Germany at all costs
+ from the arena. Were France still dangerous she would never
+ have been allowed to go to Algeciras, or from Algeciras to Fez.
+ She has uses, however, in the anti-German prize ring and so
+ Morocco is the price of her hire. That Germany should presume
+ to inspect the transaction or claim a share in the settlement
+ has filled the British mind with profound
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page21"
+ id="page21"></a>[pg 21]</span> indignation, the echoes of
+ which are heard rumbling round the world from the Guildhall
+ to Gaboon and from the Congo to Tahiti. The mere press
+ rumour that France might barter Tahiti for German goods
+ filled the British newspaper world with supermundane wrath.
+ That France should presume to offer or Germany should accept
+ a French Pacific island in part discharge of liabilities
+ contracted at Algeciras was a threat to British interests.
+ Tahiti in the hands of a decadent republic, the greatest if
+ you will, but still one of the dying nations, is a thing to
+ be borne with, but Tahiti possibly in the hands of Germany
+ becomes at once a challenge and a threat.</p>
+
+ <p>And so we learn that "Australasia protests" to the Home
+ Government at the mere rumour that France may choose to part
+ with one of her possessions to win German goodwill in Morocco.
+ Neither France nor Germany can be permitted to be a free agent
+ in a transaction that however regarded as essential to their
+ own interests might affect, even by a shadow on the sea, the
+ world orbit of British interests. These interests it will be
+ noted have reached such a stage of development as to require
+ that all foreign States that cannot be used as tools, or
+ regarded as agencies, must be treated as enemies. Germany with
+ her growing population, her advancing industries, her keen
+ commercial ability, and her ever expanding navy has become the
+ enemy of civilization. Far too strong to be openly assailed on
+ land she must at all costs be pent up in Central Europe and by
+ a ring-fence of armed understandings prohibited from a wider
+ growth that would certainly introduce a rival factor to those
+ British institutions and that world language that are seriously
+ if not piously meditated as the ordained future for
+ mankind.</p>
+
+ <p>For English mentality is such that whatever England does is
+ divinely ordained, and whether she stamps out a nation or
+ merely sinks a ship the hymn of action is "Nearer My God, to
+ Thee." In a recent deputation to King George V it will be
+ remembered that certain British religious bodies congratulated
+ that monarch on the third centenary of the translation into
+ English of the Bible.</p>
+
+ <p>Both the addresses of the subjects, eminent, religious and
+ cultured men, and the sovereign's reply were highly informative
+ of the mental attitude of this extraordinary people. The Bible,
+ it appeared, was the "greatest possession of the English race."
+ "The British Bible" was the first and greatest of British
+ investments and upon the moral dividends derived from its
+ possession was founded the imperial greatness of this Island
+ Empire. That other peoples possessed the Bible and had even
+ translated it before England was
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page22"
+ id="page22"></a>[pg 22]</span> not so much as hinted at.
+ That the Bible was Greek and Hebrew in origin was never
+ whispered. It began and ended with the English Authorised
+ Version. The British Bible was the Bible that counted. It
+ was the Bible upon which the sun never sets, the Bible that
+ had blown Indian mutineers from its muzzle in the 'fifties
+ and was prepared to-day to have a shot at any other
+ mutineers, Teuton or Turk, who dared to dispute its claim
+ that the meek shall inherit the earth. The unctuous
+ rectitude that converts the word of God into wadding for a
+ gun is certainly a formidable opponent, as Cromwell proved.
+ To challenge English supremacy becomes not merely a threat
+ to peace, it is an act of sacrilege. And yet this world-wide
+ empire broad based upon the British Bible and the English
+ navy, and maintained by a very inflexible interpretation of
+ the one and a very skilful handling of the other, rests upon
+ a sunk foundation that is older than both and will surely
+ bring both to final shipwreck.</p>
+
+ <p>The British Empire is founded not upon the British Bible or
+ the British dreadnought but upon Ireland. The empire that began
+ upon an island, ravaged, sacked and plundered shall end on an
+ island, "which whether it proceed from the very genius of the
+ soil, or the influence of the stars, or that Almighty God hath
+ not yet appointed the time of her reformation, or that He
+ reserveth her in this unquiet state still for some secret
+ scourge which shall by her come unto England, it is hard to be
+ known but yet much to be feared." Thus Edmund Spenser 340 years
+ ago, whose muse drew profit from an Irish estate (one of the
+ first fruits of empire) and who being a poet had imagination to
+ perceive that a day of payment must some day be called and that
+ the first robbed might be the first to repay. The Empire
+ founded on Ireland by Henry and Elizabeth Tudor has expanded
+ into mighty things. England deprived of Ireland resumes her
+ natural proportions, those of a powerful kingdom. Still
+ possessing Ireland she is always an empire. For just as Great
+ Britain bars the gateways of northern and west central Europe,
+ to hold up at will the trade and block the ports of every coast
+ from the Baltic to the Bay of Biscay, so Ireland stands between
+ Britain and the greater seas of the west and blocks for her the
+ highways of the ocean. An Ireland strong, independent and
+ self-contained, a member of the European family of nations,
+ restored to her kindred, would be the surest guarantee for the
+ healthy development of European interests in those regions
+ whence they are to-day excluded by the anti-European policy of
+ England.</p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page23"
+ id="page23"></a>[pg 23]</span>
+
+ <p>The relation of Ireland to Great Britain has been in no wise
+ understood on the continent. The policy of England has been for
+ centuries to conceal the true source of her supplies and to
+ prevent an audit of transactions with the remoter island. As
+ long ago as the reign of Elizabeth Tudor this shutting off of
+ Ireland from contact with Europe was a settled point of English
+ policy. The three "German Earls" with letters from the Queen
+ who visited Dublin in 1572 were prevented by the Lord Deputy
+ from seeing for themselves anything beyond the walls of the
+ city.<a id="footnotetag2"
+ name="footnotetag2"></a><a href="#footnote2"><sup>2</sup></a></p>
+
+ <p>To represent the island as a poverty striken land inhabited
+ by a turbulent and ignorant race whom she has with unrewarded
+ solicitude sought to civilise, uplift and educate has been a
+ staple of England's diplomatic trade since modern diplomacy
+ began. To compel the trade of Ireland to be with herself alone;
+ to cut off all direct communication between Europe and this
+ second of European islands until no channel remained save
+ through Britain; to enforce the most abject political and
+ economic servitude one people ever imposed upon another; to
+ exploit all Irish resources, lands, ports, people, wealth, even
+ her religion, everything in fine that Ireland held, to the sole
+ profit and advancement of England, and to keep all the books
+ and rigorously refuse an audit of the transaction has been the
+ secret but determined policy of England.</p>
+
+ <p>We have read lately something of Mexican peonage, of how a
+ people can be reduced to a lawless slavery, their land
+ expropriated, their bodies enslaved, their labour appropriated,
+ and how the nexus of this fraudulent connection lies in a
+ falsified account. The hacenade holds the peon by a debt
+ bondage. His palace in Mexico City, or on the sisal plains of
+ Yucatan is reared on the stolen labour of a people whose
+ bondage is based on a lie. The hacenade keeps the books and
+ debits the slave with the cost of the lash that scourges him
+ into the fields. Ireland is the English peon, the great peon of
+ the British Empire. The books and the palaces are in London but
+ the work and the wealth have come from peons on the Irish
+ Estate. The armies that overthrew Napoleon; the fleets that
+ swept the navies of France and Spain from the seas were
+ recruited from this slave pen of English civilisation. During
+ the last 100 years <span class="pagenum"><a name="page24"
+ id="page24"></a>[pg 24]</span> probably 2,000,000 Irishmen
+ have been drafted into the English fleets and armies from a
+ land purposely drained of its food. Fully the same number,
+ driven by executive-controlled famines have given cheap
+ labour to England and have built up her great industries,
+ manned her shipping, dug her mines, and built her ports and
+ railways while Irish harbours silted up and Irish factories
+ closed down. While England grew fat on the crops and beef of
+ Ireland, Ireland starved in her own green fields and
+ Irishmen grew lean in the strife of Europe.</p>
+
+ <p>While a million Irishmen died of hunger on the most fertile
+ plains of Europe, English Imperialism drew over one thousand
+ million pounds sterling for investment in a world policy from
+ an island that was represented to that world as too poor to
+ even bury its dead. The profit to England from Irish peonage
+ cannot be assessed in terms of trade, or finance, or taxation.
+ It far transcends Lord MacDonnell's recent estimate at Belfast
+ of £320,000,000&mdash;"an Empire's ransom," as he bluntly put
+ it.</p>
+
+ <p>Not an Empire's ransom but the sum of an Empire's
+ achievement, the cost of an Empire's founding, and to-day the
+ chief bond of an Empire's existence. Detach Ireland from the
+ map of the British Empire and restore it to the map of Europe
+ and that day England resumes her native proportions and Europe
+ assumes its rightful stature in the empire of the world.
+ Ireland can only be restored to the current of European life,
+ from which she has so long been purposely withheld by the act
+ of Europe. What Napoleon perceived too late may yet be the
+ purpose and achievement of a congress of nations. Ireland, I
+ submit, is necessary to Europe, is essential to Europe, to-day
+ she is retained against Europe, by a combination of elements
+ hostile to Europe and opposed to European influence in the
+ world. Her strategic importance is a factor of supreme weight
+ to Europe and is to-day used in the scales against Europe.
+ Ireland is appropriated and used, not to the service of
+ European interests but to the extension of anti-European
+ interests. The <i>arbitium mundi</i> claimed and most certainly
+ exercised by England is maintained by the British fleet, and
+ until that power is effectively challenged and held in check it
+ is idle to talk of European influence outside of certain narrow
+ continental limits.</p>
+
+ <p>The power of the British fleet can never be permanently
+ restrained until Ireland is restored to Europe. Germany has of
+ necessity become the champion of European interests as opposed
+ to the world domination of England and English-speaking
+ elements. <span class="pagenum"><a name="page25"
+ id="page25"></a>[pg 25]</span> She is to-day a dam, a great
+ reservoir rapidly filling with human life that must some day
+ find an outlet. England instead of wisely digging channels
+ for the overflow has hardened her heart, like Pharaoh, and
+ thinks to prevent it or to so divert the stream that it
+ shall be lost and drunk up in the thirsty sands of an ever
+ expanding Anglo-Saxondom. German laws, German language,
+ German civilization are to find no ground for replenishing,
+ no soil to fertilize and make rich.</p>
+
+ <p>I believe this to be not only the set policy of England, but
+ to be based on the temperamental foundations of the English
+ character itself, from which that people could not, even if
+ they would, depart. The lists are set. The English mind, the
+ English consciousness are such, that to oppose German influence
+ in the world is to this people a necessity. They oppose by
+ instinct, against argument, in the face of reason, they will do
+ it blindly come what may and at all costs, and they will do it
+ to the end.</p>
+
+ <p>Their reasoning, if reason exists in what is after all a
+ matter of primal instinct, might find expression somewhat as
+ follows:</p>
+
+ <p>"German influence cannot but be hostile to British
+ interests. The two peoples are too much alike. The qualities
+ that have made England great they possess in a still greater
+ degree. Given a fair field and no favour they are bound to beat
+ us. They will beat us out of every market in the world, and we
+ shall be reduced ultimately to a position like that of France
+ to-day. Better fight while we are still die stronger. Better
+ hinder now ere it be too late. We have bottled up before and
+ destroyed our adversaries by delay, by money, by alliances. To
+ tolerate a German rivalry is to found a German empire and to
+ destroy our own."</p>
+
+ <p>Some such obscure argument as this controls the Englishman's
+ reasoning when he faces the growing magnitude of the Teutonic
+ people. A bitter resentment, with fear at the bottom, a hurried
+ clanging of bolt and rivet in the belt of a new warship and a
+ muffled but most diligent hammering at the rivets of an ever
+ building American Alliance&mdash;the real Dreadnought this,
+ whose keel was laid sixteen years ago and whose slow, secret
+ construction has cost the silent swallowing of many a cherished
+ British boast.</p>
+
+ <p>English Liberalism might desire a different sort of
+ reckoning with Germany, but English Liberalism is itself a
+ product of the English temperament, and however it may sigh, by
+ individuals, for a better understanding between the two
+ peoples, in the mass, it is a part of the national purpose and
+ a phase of the national mind
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page26"
+ id="page26"></a>[pg 26]</span> and is driven relentlessly to
+ the rivets and the hammering, the "Dreadnoughts" in being
+ and that mightier Dreadnought yet to be, the Anglo-Saxon
+ Alliance which Germany must fight if she is to get out.</p>
+
+ <p>Doubtless she has already a naval policy and the plans for a
+ naval war, for the fight will be settled on the sea, but the
+ fate will be determined on an island.</p>
+
+ <p>The Empire that has grown from an island and spread with the
+ winds and the waves to the uttermost shores will fight and be
+ fought for on the water and will be ended where it began, on an
+ island.</p>
+
+ <p>That island, I believe, will be Ireland and not Great
+ Britain.</p>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote1"
+ name="footnote1"></a><b>Footnote 1:</b>
+ <a href="#footnotetag1">(return)</a>
+
+ <p>This was written in August, 1911.</p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote2"
+ name="footnote2"></a><b>Footnote 2:</b>
+ <a href="#footnotetag2">(return)</a>
+
+ <p>This time-honoured British precept&mdash;that foreigners
+ should not see for themselves the workings of English rule
+ in Ireland&mdash;finds frequent expression in the Irish
+ State Papers. In a letter from Dublin Castle of August,
+ 1572, from the Lord Deputy Fitzwilliam to Burghley
+ Elizabeth's chief Minister, we are told that the "three
+ German Earls" with "their conductor," Mr. Rogers, have
+ arrived. The Viceroy adds, as his successors have done up
+ to the present day: "According to Your Lordship's direction
+ they shall travell as little way into the cuntry as I
+ can."</p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <h3 class="sc">Chapter III</h3>
+
+ <h2>THE BALANCE OF POWER</h2>
+
+ <p>A conflict between England and Germany exists already, a
+ conflict of aims.</p>
+
+ <p>England rich, prosperous, with all that she can possibly
+ assimilate already in her hands, desires peace on present
+ conditions of world power. These conditions are not merely that
+ her actual possessions should remain intact, but that no other
+ Great Power shall, by acquiring colonies and spreading its
+ people and institutions into neighbouring regions, thereby
+ possibly affect the fuller development of those pre-existing
+ British States. For, with England equality is an offence and
+ the Power that arrives at a degree of success approximating to
+ her own and one capable of being expanded into conditions of
+ fair rivalry, has already committed the unpardonable sin. As
+ Curran put it in his defence of Hamilton Rowan in 1797,
+ "England is marked by a natural avarice of freedom which she is
+ studious to engross and accumulate, but most unwilling to
+ impart; whether from any necessity of her policy or from her
+ weakness, or from her pride, I will not presume to say."</p>
+
+ <p>Thus while England might even be the attacking party, and in
+ all probability will be the attacking party, she will embark on
+ a war with Germany at an initial disadvantage. She will be on
+ her defence. Although, probably, the military aggressor from
+ reasons <span class="pagenum"><a name="page27"
+ id="page27"></a>[pg 27]</span> of strategy, she will be
+ acting in obedience to an economic policy of defence and not
+ of attack. Her chief concern will be not to advance and
+ seize, always in war the more inspiring task, but to retain
+ and hold. At best she could come out of the war with no new
+ gain, with nothing added worth having to what she held on
+ entering it. Victory would mean for her only that she had
+ secured a further spell of quiet in which to consolidate her
+ strength and enjoy the good things already won.</p>
+
+ <p>Germany will fight with far other purpose and one that must
+ inspire a far more vigorous effort; she will fight, not merely
+ to keep what she already has, but to escape from an intolerable
+ position of inferiority she knows to be unmerited and forced
+ not by the moral or intellectual superiority of her adversary
+ or due to her own short comings, but maintained by reason of
+ that adversary's geographical position and early seizure of the
+ various points of advantage.</p>
+
+ <p>Her effort will be not merely military, it will be an
+ intellectual assertion, a fight in very truth for that larger
+ freedom, that citizenship of the world England is studious to
+ "engross and accumulate" for herself alone and to deny to all
+ others. Thus, while English attack at the best will be actuated
+ by no loftier feeling than that of a man who, dwelling in a
+ very comfortable house with an agreeable prospect resists an
+ encroachment on his outlook from the building operations of his
+ less well lodged neighbour, Germany will be fighting not only
+ to get out of doors into the open air and sunshine, but to
+ build a loftier and larger dwelling, fit tenement for a
+ numerous and growing offspring.</p>
+
+ <p>Whatever the structure Germany seeks to erect England
+ objects to the plan and hangs out her war sign "Ancient
+ Lights."</p>
+
+ <p>Who can doubt that the greater patriotism and stronger
+ purpose must inspire the man who fights for light, air, and
+ freedom, the right to walk abroad, to learn, to teach, aye, and
+ to inspire others, rather than him whose chief concern it is to
+ see that no one but himself enjoys these opportunities. The
+ means, moreover, that each combatant will bring to the conflict
+ are, in the end, on the side of Germany. Much the same
+ disproportion of resources exists as lay between Rome and
+ Carthage.</p>
+
+ <p>England relies on money. Germany on men. And just as Roman
+ men beat Carthaginian mercenaries, so must German manhood, in
+ the end, triumph over British finance. Just as Carthage in the
+ hours of final shock, placing her gold where Romans put their
+ gods, and <span class="pagenum"><a name="page28"
+ id="page28"></a>[pg 28]</span> never with a soul above her
+ ships, fell before the people of United Italy, so shall the
+ mightier Carthage of the North Seas, in spite of trade,
+ shipping, colonies, the power of the purse and the hired
+ valour of the foreign (Irish, Indian, African), go down
+ before the men of United Germany.</p>
+
+ <p>But if the military triumph of Germany seems thus likely,
+ the ultimate assurance, nay even the ultimate safety of German
+ civilization can only be secured by a statemanship which shall
+ not repeat the mistake of Louis XIV and Napoleon. The military
+ defeat of England by Germany is a wholly possible achievement
+ of arms, <i>if the conflict be between these two alone</i>, but
+ to realize the economic and political fruits of that victory,
+ Ireland must be detached from the British Empire. To leave a
+ defeated England still in the full possession of Ireland would
+ be, not to settle the question of German rights at sea or in
+ world affairs, but merely to postpone the settlement to a
+ second and possibly far greater encounter. It would be somewhat
+ as if Rome, after the first Punic war had left Sicily to
+ Carthage. But Ireland is far more vital to England than Sicily
+ was to Carthage, and is of far more account to the future of
+ Europe on the ocean than the possession of Sicily was to the
+ future of the Mediterranean.</p>
+
+ <p>If Germany is to permanently profit from a victory over
+ England, she must free the narrow seas, not only by the defeat
+ of British fleets in being, but by ensuring that those seas
+ shall not again be closed by British fleets yet to be. The
+ German gateway to a free Atlantic can only be kept open through
+ a free Ireland. For just as the English Channel under the
+ existing arrangement, whereby Ireland lies hidden from the rest
+ of Europe, can be closed at will by England, so with Ireland no
+ longer tied to the girdle of England, that channel cannot be
+ locked. The key to the freedom of European navigation lies at
+ Berehaven and not at Dover. With Berehaven won from English
+ hands, England might close the Channel in truth, but Ireland
+ could shut the Atlantic. As Richard Dox put it in 1689,
+ quaintly but truly, in his dedication to King William III, and
+ Queen Mary of his "History of Ireland from the Earliest
+ Times."</p>
+
+ <p>"But no cost can be too great where the prize is of such
+ value, and whoever considers the situation, ports, plenty and
+ other advantages of Ireland will confess that it must be
+ retained at what rate soever; because if it should come into an
+ enemy's hands, England would find it impossible to
+ <i>flourish</i> and perhaps difficult
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page29"
+ id="page29"></a>[pg 29]</span> to <i>subsist</i> without it.
+ To demonstrate this assertion it is enough to say that
+ Ireland lies in the Line of Trade and that all the English
+ vessels that sail to the East, West, and South must, as it
+ were, run the gauntlet between the harbours of Brest and
+ Baltimore; and I might add that the Irish Wool being
+ transported would soon ruin the English Clothing
+ Manufacture. Hence it is that all Your Majesty's
+ Predecessors have kept close to this fundamental maxim of
+ retaining Ireland inseparably united to the Crown of
+ England."</p>
+
+ <p>The sole and exclusive appropriation of Ireland and of all
+ her resources has indeed formed, since the Recorder of Kinsale
+ wrote, the mainstay and chief support of British greatness.</p>
+
+ <p>The natural position of Ireland lying "in the line of
+ trade," was possibly its chief value, but that "Irish Wool"
+ which was by no means to be allowed free access to world
+ markets typifies much else that Ireland has been relentlessly
+ forced to contribute to her neighbour's growth and sole
+ profit.</p>
+
+ <p>I read but yesterday "Few people realise that the trade of
+ Ireland with Great Britain is equal to that of our trade with
+ India, is 13,000,000 pounds greater than our trade with
+ Germany, and 40,000,000 pounds greater than the whole of our
+ trade with the United States." How completely England has laid
+ hands on all Irish resources is made clear from a recent
+ publication that Mr. Chamberlain's "Tariff Commission" issued
+ towards the end of 1912.</p>
+
+ <p>This document, entitled "The Economic Position of Ireland
+ and its relation to Tariff Reform," constitutes, in fact, a
+ manifesto calling for the release of Ireland from the exclusive
+ grip of Great Britain. Thus, for instance, in the section
+ "External Trade of Ireland," we learn that Ireland exported in
+ 1910, £63,400,000 worth of Irish produce. Of this Great Britain
+ took £52,600,000 worth, while some £10,800,000 went either to
+ foreign countries, or to British colonies, over £4,000,000
+ going to the United States. Of these eleven million pounds
+ worth of Irish produce sent to distant countries, only £700,000
+ was shipped direct from Irish ports.</p>
+
+ <p>The remainder, more than £10,000,000, although the market it
+ was seeking lay chiefly to the West, had to be shipped East
+ into and to pay a heavy transit toll to that country for
+ discharge, handling, agency, commission, and reloading on
+ British vessels in British ports to steam back past the shores
+ of Ireland it had just left. While Ireland, indeed, lies in the
+ "line of trade," between all Northern Europe and the great
+ world markets, she has been robbed
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page30"
+ id="page30"></a>[pg 30]</span> of her trade and artificially
+ deprived of the very position assigned to her by nature in
+ the great tides of commercial intercourse. It is not only
+ the geographical situation and the trade and wealth of
+ Ireland that England has laid hands on for her own
+ aggrandizement, but she has also appropriated to her own
+ ends the physical manhood of the island. Just as the
+ commerce has been forcibly annexed and diverted from its
+ natural trend, so the youth of Ireland has been fraudulently
+ appropriated and diverted from the defence of their own land
+ to the extension of the power and wealth of the realm that
+ impoverished it at home. The physical qualities of the Irish
+ were no less valuable than "Irish wool" to Empire building,
+ provided always they were not displayed in Ireland.</p>
+
+ <p>So long ago as 1613 we find a candid admission in the State
+ papers that the Irish were the better men in the field. "The
+ next rebellion whenever it shall happen, doth threaten more
+ danger to the State than any heretofore, when the cities and
+ walled towns were always faithful; (1) because they have the
+ same bodies they ever had and therein they had and have
+ advantage of us; (2) from infancy they have been and are
+ exercised in the use of arms; (3) the realm by reason of the
+ long peace was never so full of youths; (4) that they are
+ better soldiers than heretofore, their continental employment
+ in wars abroad assures us, and they do conceive that their men
+ are better than ours."</p>
+
+ <p>This testimony to Irish superiority, coming as it does from
+ English official sources just three hundred years ago, would be
+ convincing enough did it stand alone. But it is again and again
+ reaffirmed by English commanders themselves as the reason for
+ their failure in some particular enterprise. In all else they
+ were superior to the Irish; in arms, armaments, munitions,
+ supplies of food and money, here the long purse, settled
+ organization and greater commerce of England, gave her an
+ overwhelming advantage. Moreover the English lacked the moral
+ restraints that imposed so severe a handicap on the Irish in
+ their resistance. They owned no scruple of conscience in
+ committing any crime that served their purpose. Beaten often in
+ open fight by the hardier bodies, stouter arms and greater
+ courage of the Irishmen, they nevertheless won the game by
+ recourse to means that no Irishman, save he who had joined them
+ for purposes of revenge or in pursuit of selfish personal aims,
+ could possibly have adopted. The fight from the first was an
+ unequal one. Irish valour, chivalry, and personal strength were
+ matched against wealth, treachery and cunning. The Irish better
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page31"
+ id="page31"></a>[pg 31]</span> bodies were overcome by the
+ worse hearts. As Curran put it in 1817&mdash;"The triumph of
+ England over Ireland is the triumph of guilt over
+ innocence."</p>
+
+ <p>The Earl of Essex who came to Ireland in 1599 with one of
+ the largest forces of English troops that, up to then, had ever
+ been dispatched into Ireland (18,000 men), had ascribed his
+ complete failure, in writing to the Queen, to the physical
+ superiority of the Irish:</p>
+
+ <p>"These rebels are more in number than your Majesty's army
+ and have (though I do unwillingly confess it), better bodies,
+ and perfecter use of their arms, than those men who your
+ Majesty sends over."</p>
+
+ <p>The Queen, who followed the war in Ireland with a swelling
+ wrath on each defeat, and a growing fear that the Spaniards
+ would keep their promise to land aid to the Irish princes,
+ O'Neill and O'Donnell, issued "instructions" and a set of
+ "ordinances" for the conduct of the war in Ireland, which,
+ while enjoining recourse to the usual methods outside the field
+ of battle&mdash;(i.e. starvation, "politic courses,"
+ assassination of leaders; and the sowing of dissension by means
+ of bribery and promises), required for the conflict, that her
+ weaker soldiers should be protected against the onslaught of
+ the unarmoured Irishmen by head pieces of steel. She ordered
+ "every soldier to be enforced to wear a murrion, because the
+ enemy is encouraged by the advantage of arms to <i>come to the
+ sword</i> wherein he commonly prevaileth."</p>
+
+ <p>One of the generals of the Spanish King, Philip III, who
+ came to Ireland in the winter of 1601 with a handful of Spanish
+ troops (200 men), to reinforce the small expedition of de
+ Aguila in Kinsale, thus reported on the physical qualities of
+ the Irish in a document that still lies in Salamanca in the
+ archives of the old Irish College. it was written by Don Pedro
+ De Zubiarr on the 16th of January, 1602, on his return to the
+ Asturias. Speaking of the prospect of the campaign, he wrote:
+ "If we had brought arms for 10,000 men we could have had them,
+ for they are very eager to carry on the war against the
+ English. The Irish are very strong and well shaped, accustomed
+ to endure hunger and toil, and very courageous in fight."</p>
+
+ <p>Perhaps the most vivid testimony to the innate superiority
+ of the Irishman as a soldier is given in a typically Irish
+ challenge issued in the war of 1641. The document has a lasting
+ interest for it displays not only the "better body" of the
+ Irishman of that <span class="pagenum"><a name="page32"
+ id="page32"></a>[pg 32]</span> day, but something of his
+ better heart as well, that still remains to us.</p>
+
+ <p>One Parsons, an English settler in Ireland, had written to a
+ friend to say that, among other things, the head of the Colonel
+ of an Irish regiment then in the field against the English,
+ would not be allowed to stick long on its shoulders. The letter
+ was intercepted by the very regiment itself, and a captain in
+ it, Felim O'Molloy, wrote back to Parsons:</p>
+
+ <p>"I will do this if you please: I will pick out sixty men and
+ fight against one hundred of your choice men if you do but
+ pitch your camp one mile out of your town, and then if you have
+ the victory, you may threaten my Colonel; otherwise, do not
+ reckon your chickens before they are hatched."</p>
+
+ <p>The Anglo-Saxon preferred "politic courses" to accepting the
+ Irish soldier's challenge, even where all the advantage was
+ conceded by the Irishman to his foe and all the risks, save
+ that of treachery (a very necessary precaution in dealing with
+ the English in Ireland), cheerfully accepted by the Celt.</p>
+
+ <p>This advantage of the "better bodies" the Irish retained
+ beyond all question up to the Famine. It was upon it alone that
+ the Wexford peasantry relied in 1798, and with and by it alone
+ that they again and again, armed with but pike and scythe swept
+ disciplined regiments of English mercenaries in headlong rout
+ from the field.</p>
+
+ <p>This physical superiority of his countrymen was frequently
+ referred to by O'Connell as one of the forces he relied on.
+ With the decay of all things Irish that has followed the
+ Famine, these physical attributes have declined along with so
+ much else that was typical of the nation and the man.</p>
+
+ <p>It could not to-day be fearlessly affirmed that sixty
+ Irishmen were more than a match for one hundred Englishmen; yet
+ depleted as it is by the emigration of its strongest and
+ healthiest children, by growing sickness and a changed and
+ deteriorated diet the Irish race still presents a type,
+ superior physically, intellectually and morally to the English.
+ It was on Irish soldiers that the English chiefly relied in the
+ Boer War, and it is no exaggeration to say that could all the
+ Irishmen in the ranks of the British army have been withdrawn,
+ a purely British force would have failed to end the war and the
+ Dutch would have remained masters of the field in South
+ Africa.</p>
+
+ <p>It was the inglorious part of Ireland to be linked with
+ those "methods of barbarism" she herself knew only too well, in
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page33"
+ id="page33"></a>[pg 33]</span> extinguishing the
+ independence of a people who were attacked by the same enemy
+ and sacrificed to the same greed that had destroyed her own
+ freedom.</p>
+
+ <p>Unhappy, indeed, is it for mankind, as for her own fate and
+ honour that Ireland should be forced by dire stress of fortune
+ to aid her imperial wrecker in wrecking the fortune and freedom
+ of brave men elsewhere.</p>
+
+ <p>That these physical qualities of Irishmen, even with a
+ population now only one tenth that of Great Britain are still
+ of value to the empire, Mr. Churchill's speech on the Home Rule
+ Bill made frankly clear (February, 1913). We now learn that the
+ First Lord of the Admiralty has decided to establish a new
+ training squadron, "with a base at Queenstown," where it is
+ hoped to induce with the bribe of "self-government" the youth
+ of Cork and Munster to again man the British fleet as they did
+ in the days of Nelson, and we are even told that the prospects
+ of brisk recruiting are "politically favourable."</p>
+
+ <p>Carthage got her soldiers from Spain, her seamen, her
+ slingers from the Balearic Islands and the coasts of Africa,
+ her money from the trade of the world. Rome beat her, but she
+ did not leave a defeated Carthage to still levy toll of men and
+ mind on those external sources of supply.</p>
+
+ <p>Germany must fight, not merely to defeat the British fleet
+ of to-day, but to neutralize the British fleet of to-morrow.
+ Leave Ireland to Great Britain and that can never be.
+ Neutralize Ireland and it is already accomplished.</p>
+
+ <p>One of the conditions of peace, and <i>for this reason</i>
+ the most important condition of peace that a victorious Germany
+ must impose upon her defeated antagonist is that Ireland shall
+ be separated and erected into an independent European State
+ under international guarantees. England, obviously would resist
+ such conditions to the last, but then the last has already come
+ before England would consent to any peace save on terms she
+ dictated.</p>
+
+ <p>A defeated England is a starved England. She would have to
+ accept whatever terms Germany imposed unless those terms
+ provoked external intervention on behalf of the defeated
+ power.</p>
+
+ <p>The prize Germany seeks to win from victory is not immediate
+ territorial aggrandizement obtained from annexing British
+ possessions, not a heavy money indemnity wrung from British
+ finance and trade (although this she might have), but German
+ freedom throughout the world on equal terms with Britain. This
+ is a prize <span class="pagenum"><a name="page34"
+ id="page34"></a>[pg 34]</span> worth fighting for, for once
+ gained the rest follows as a matter of course.</p>
+
+ <p>German civilization released from the restricted confines
+ and unequal position in which Britain had sought to pen it
+ must, of itself win its way to the front, and of necessity
+ acquire those favoured spots necessary to its wide
+ development.</p>
+
+ <p>"This is the meaning of his (the German's) will for power;
+ safety from interference with his individual and national
+ development. Only one thing is left to the nations that do not
+ want to be left behind in the peaceful rivalry of human
+ progress&mdash;that is to become the equals of Germany in
+ untiring industry, in scientific thoroughness, in sense of
+ duty, in patient persistence, in intelligent, voluntary
+ submission to organization." (History of German Civilization,
+ by Ernst Richard, Columbia University, New York.)</p>
+
+ <p>Once she had reduced Great Britain to an opposition based on
+ <i>peaceful rivalry</i> in human progress, Germany would find
+ the path of success hers to tread on more than equal terms, and
+ many fields of expansion now closed would readily open to
+ German enterprise without that people incurring and inflicting
+ the loss and injury that an attempted invasion of the great
+ self-governing dominions would so needlessly involve. Most of
+ the British self-governing colonies are to-day great States,
+ well able to defend themselves from overseas attack. The defeat
+ of the British navy would make scarcely at all easier the
+ landing of German troops in, say, Australia, South Africa or
+ New Zealand. A war of conquest of those far-distant regions
+ would be, for Germany, an impossible and a stupidly impossible
+ task.</p>
+
+ <p>A defeated England could not cede any of these British
+ possessions as a price of peace, for they are inhabited by free
+ men who, however they might deplore a German occupation of
+ London, could in no wise be transferred by any pact or treaty
+ made by others, to other rule than that of themselves.
+ Therefore, to obtain those British dominions, Germany would
+ have to defeat not only England, but after that to begin a
+ fresh war, or a series of fresh wars, at the ends of the earth,
+ with exhausted resources and probably a crippled fleet.</p>
+
+ <p>The thing does not bear inspection and may be dismissed from
+ our calculation.</p>
+
+ <p>The only territories that England could cede by her own act
+ to a victorious power are such as, in themselves, are not
+ suited to colonization by a white race. Doubtless, Germany
+ would seek <span class="pagenum"><a name="page35"
+ id="page35"></a>[pg 35]</span> compensation for the expense
+ of the war in requiring the transfer of some of these latter
+ territories of the British Crown to herself. There are
+ points in tropical Africa, in the East, islands in the ocean
+ to-day flying the British flag that might, with profit to
+ German trade and influence, be acquired by a victorious
+ Germany. But none of these things in itself, not all of them
+ put together, would meet the requirements of the German
+ case, or ensure to Germany that future tranquil expansion
+ and peaceful rivalry the war had been fought to secure.
+ England would be weakened, and to some extent impoverished
+ by a war ending with such results; but her great asset, her
+ possession beyond price would still be hers&mdash;her
+ geographical position. Deprive her to-day, say of the Gold
+ Coast, the Niger, Gibraltar, even of Egypt, impose a heavy
+ indemnity, and while Germany would barely have recouped
+ herself for the out-of-pocket losses of the war, England in
+ fact would have lost nothing, and ten years hence the Teuton
+ would look out again upon the same prospect, a Europe still
+ dominated beyond the seas by the Western islanders.</p>
+
+ <p>The work would have to be done all over again. A second
+ Punic war would have to be fought with this
+ disadvantage&mdash;that the Atlantic Sicily would be held and
+ used still against the Northern Rome, by the Atlantic
+ Carthage.</p>
+
+ <p>A victorious Germany, in addition to such terms as she may
+ find it well to impose in her own immediate financial or
+ territorial interests, must so draft her peace conditions as to
+ preclude her great antagonist from ever again seriously
+ imperilling the freedom of the seas. I know of no way save one
+ to make sure the open seas. Ireland, in the name of Europe, and
+ in the exercise of European right to free the seas from the
+ over-lordship of one European island, must be resolutely
+ withdrawn from British custody. A second Berlin Conference, an
+ international Congress must debate, and clearly would debate,
+ with growing unanimity the German proposal to restore Ireland
+ to Europe.</p>
+
+ <p>The arguments in favour of that proposal would soon become
+ so clear from the general European standpoint, that save
+ England and her defeated allies, no power would oppose it.</p>
+
+ <p>Considerations of expediency no less than naval, mercantile,
+ and moral claims would range themselves on the side of Germany
+ and a free Ireland. For a free Ireland, not owned and exploited
+ by England, but appertaining to Europe at large, its ports
+ available in a sense they never can be while under British
+ control for purposes <span class="pagenum"><a name="page36"
+ id="page36"></a>[pg 36]</span> of general navigation and
+ overseas intercourse, would soon become of such first-rank
+ importance in continental affairs as to leave men stupified
+ by the thought that for five hundred years they had allowed
+ one sole member of their community the exclusive use and
+ selfish misappropriation of this, the most favoured of
+ European islands.</p>
+
+ <p>Ireland would be freed, not because she deserved or asked
+ for freedom, not because English rule has been a tyranny, a
+ moral failure, a stupidity and sin against the light; not
+ because Germany cared for Ireland, but because her withdrawal
+ from English control appeared to be a very necessary step in
+ international welfare and one very needful to the progress of
+ German and European expansion.</p>
+
+ <p>An Ireland released from the jail in which England had
+ confined her would soon become a populous State of possibly
+ 10,000,000 to 12,000,000 people, a commercial asset of Europe
+ in the Atlantic of the utmost general value, one holding an
+ unique position between the Old and New Worlds, and possibly an
+ intellectual and moral asset of no mean importance. This, and
+ more, a sovereign Ireland means to Europe. Above all it means
+ security of transit, equalizing of opportunity, freedom of the
+ seas&mdash;an assurance that the great waterways of the ocean
+ should no longer be at the absolute mercy of one member of the
+ European family, and that one the least interested in general
+ European welfare.</p>
+
+ <p>The stronger a free Ireland grew the surer would be the
+ guarantee that the rôle of England "consciously assumed for
+ many years past, to be an absolute and wholly arbitrary judge
+ of war and peace" had gone for ever, and that at last the
+ "balance of power" was kept by fair weight and fair measure and
+ not with loaded
+ scales.</p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page37"
+ id="page37"></a>[pg 37]</span>
+
+ <h3 class="sc">Chapter IV</h3>
+
+ <h2>THE ENEMY OF PEACE</h2>
+
+ <p>I believe England to be the enemy of European peace, and
+ that until her "mastery of the sea" is overmastered by Europe,
+ there can be no peace upon earth or goodwill among men. Her
+ claim to rule the seas, and the consequences, direct and
+ indirect, that flow from its assertion are the chief factors of
+ international discord that now threaten the peace of the
+ world.</p>
+
+ <p>In order to maintain that indefensible claim she is driven
+ to aggression and intrigue in every quarter of the globe; to
+ setting otherwise friendly peoples by the ears; to forming
+ "alliances" and ententes, to dissolving friendships, the aim
+ always being the old one, <i>divide et impera</i>.</p>
+
+ <p>The fact that Europe to-day is divided into armed camps is
+ mainly due to English effort to retain that mastery of the sea.
+ It is generally assumed, and the idea is propagated by English
+ agencies, that Europe owes her burden of armaments to the
+ antagonism between France and Germany, to the loss of
+ Alsace-Lorraine by France, and the spirit and hope of a
+ <i>revanche</i> thereby engendered. But this antagonism has
+ long ceased to be the chief factor that moulds European
+ armaments.</p>
+
+ <p>Were it not for British policy, and the unhealthy hope it
+ proffers France would ere this have resigned herself, as the
+ two provinces have done, to the solution imposed by the war of
+ 1870. It is England and English ambition that beget the state
+ of mind responsible for the enormous growth of armaments that
+ now over-shadows continental civilization. Humanity, hemmed in
+ in Central Europe by a forest of bayonets and debarred all
+ egress to the light of a larger world by a forbidding circle of
+ dreadnoughts, is called to peace conferences and arbitration
+ treaties by the very power whose fundamental maxim of rule
+ ensures war as the normal outlook for every growing nation of
+ the Old World.</p>
+
+ <p>If Europe would not strangle herself with her own hands she
+ must strangle the sea serpent whose coils enfold her
+ shores.</p>
+
+ <p>Inspect the foundation of European armaments where we will,
+ and we shall find that the master builder is he who fashioned
+ the British Empire. It is that empire, its claim to universal
+ right of pre-emption to every zone and region washed by the
+ waves and useful and necessary for the expansion of the white
+ races, and its assertion of a right to control at will all the
+ seas of all the world that drives the peoples of Europe into
+ armed camps. The policy <span class="pagenum"><a name="page38"
+ id="page38"></a>[pg 38]</span> of the Boer War is being
+ tried on a vaster scale against Europe. Just as England beat
+ the Boers by concentration camps and not by arms, by money
+ and not by men, so she seeks to-day to erect an armourplate
+ barrier around the one European people she fears to meet in
+ the field, and to turn all Central Europe into a vast
+ concentration camp. By use of the longest purse she has
+ already carried this barrier well towards completion. One
+ gap remains, and it is to make sure that this opening, too,
+ shall be closed that she now directs all the force of her
+ efforts. Here the longest purse is of less avail, so England
+ draws upon another armoury. She appeals to the longest
+ tongue in history&mdash;the longest and something else.</p>
+
+ <p>In order to make sure the encompassing of Europe with a
+ girdle of steel it is necessary to circle the United States
+ with a girdle of lies. With America true to the great policy of
+ her great founder, an America, "the friend of all powers but
+ the ally of none," English designs against European
+ civilization must in the end fail. Those plans can succeed only
+ by active American support, and to secure this is now the
+ supreme task and aim of British stealth and skill. Every tool
+ of her diplomacy, polished and unpolished, from the trained
+ envoy to the boy scout and the minor poet has been tried in
+ turn. The pulpit, the bar, the press; the society hostess, the
+ Cabinet Minister and the Cabinet Minister's wife, the
+ ex-Cabinet Minister and the Royal Family itself, and last, but
+ not least, even "Irish nationality"&mdash;all have been
+ pilgrims to that shrine; and each has been carefully primed,
+ loaded, well aimed, and then turned full on the weak spots in
+ the armour of republican simplicity. To the success of these
+ resources of panic the falsification of history becomes
+ essential and the vilification of the most peace-loving people
+ of Europe. The past relations of England with the United States
+ are to be blotted out, and the American people who are by blood
+ so largely Germanic, are to be entrapped into an attitude of
+ suspicion, hostility and resentment against the country and
+ race from whom they have received nothing but good. Germany is
+ represented as the enemy, not to England's indefensible claim
+ to own the seas, but to American ideals on the American
+ continent. Just as the Teuton has become the "enemy of
+ civilization" in the Old World because he alone has power,
+ strength of mind, and force of purpose to seriously dispute the
+ British hegemony of the seas, so he is assiduously represented
+ as the only threat to American hegemony of the New World.</p>
+
+ <p>This, the key note of the attack on Germany, is sounded from
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page39"
+ id="page39"></a>[pg 39]</span> every corner of the British
+ Empire, wherever the Imperial editor, resting on the labours
+ of the lash he wields against the coloured toilers in mine
+ and camp, directs his eyes from the bent forms of these
+ indentured slaves of dividend to the erect and stalwart
+ frames of the new Goths who threaten the whole framework of
+ Imperial dividend from across the North Sea. From the
+ <i>Times</i> to the obscurest news-sheet of the remotest
+ corner of the British Dominions the word has gone forth.</p>
+
+ <p>The Monroe Doctrine, palladium of the Anglo-Saxon world
+ empire, is imperilled by German ambitions, and were it not for
+ the British fleet, America would be lost to the Americans.
+ Wherever Englishmen are gathered to-day their journals,
+ appealing possibly to only a handful of readers, assert that
+ the function of the British fleet is to exclude the European
+ States, with Germany at their head, from South America, not
+ because in itself that is a right and worthy end to pursue, but
+ because that continent is earmarked for future exploitation and
+ control by their "kinsmen" of the United States, and they need
+ the support of those "kinsmen" in their battle against
+ Germany.</p>
+
+ <p>I need quote but a single utterance from the mass of
+ seditious libels of this character before me to show how
+ widespread is the propaganda of falsehood and how sustained is
+ the effort being made to poison the American mind against the
+ only people in Europe England genuinely fears, and therefore
+ wholeheartedly hates.</p>
+
+ <p>The <i>Natal Mercury</i> for instance, a paper written for
+ the little town of Durban and appealing to a population of only
+ some 30,000 whites, in a recent issue (March, 1913), devoted a
+ leader to the approaching "Peace Centennial" of 1914, to be
+ held in commemoration of the signing of the Treaty of Ghent,
+ which ended the second war between Great Britain and the
+ American people in 1814.</p>
+
+ <p>"After all, blood is thicker than water," quotes the Natal
+ journal with satisfaction, and after pointing out some latter
+ day indications of rapprochement between England and the United
+ States, it goes on to proclaim the chief function of the
+ British navy and the claim thereby established on the goodwill
+ of America.</p>
+
+ <p>"We make mention of them because such incidents are likely
+ to repeat themselves more and more frequently in that
+ competition for naval supremacy in Europe which compels the
+ United States to put her own fleets into working order and to
+ join in the work that England has hitherto been obliged to
+ perform
+ <i>unaided</i>.</p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page40"
+ id="page40"></a>[pg 40]</span>
+
+ <p>"It is England that polices the Seven Seas, and America has
+ reaped no small benefits from the <i>self-imposed task</i>, an
+ aspect of the matter to which every thoughtful American is
+ alive. There is a real and hearty recognition in the New World
+ of the <i>silent barrier</i> that Great Britain has set up to
+ what might become something more than a dream of expansion into
+ South America on the part of <i>one</i> potent European State.
+ It is, indeed, hardly too much to say that the maintenance of
+ the Monroe Doctrine is at the present moment almost as fully
+ guaranteed by England as it is by the country that enunciated
+ the policy and is the chief gainer by it. It is a case in which
+ a <i>silent understanding</i> is of far greater value than a
+ formal compact that 'would serve as a target for casual
+ discontent on this side or that'."</p>
+
+ <p>The article concludes by proclaiming "the precious
+ permanence of an unseen bond" and the lofty and enduring worth
+ of "good faith mutually acknowledged and the ultimate
+ solidarity of mutual interests rightly perceived." "The
+ ultimate solidarity" aimed at by those who direct these
+ world-wide pronouncements is not one of mere sterile friendship
+ between the American and the British peoples. American
+ friendship with England is only worth having when it can be
+ translated by world acts into enmity against Germany.</p>
+
+ <p>It might truly be said of the British Empire to-day that
+ where two or three are gathered together, there hatred of
+ Germany shall be in the midst of them. Turn where he will, from
+ the Colonies to England, from England to her fleet, from the
+ seas to the air, the Englishman lives and moves and has his
+ being in an atmosphere not of love but of hatred. And this too,
+ a hatred, fear, and jealousy of a people who have never injured
+ him, who have never warred upon him, and whose sole crime is
+ that they are highly efficient rivals in the peaceful rivalry
+ of commerce, navigation, and science.</p>
+
+ <p>We are told, for instance, in one of the popular London
+ magazines for January, 1913, in an article upon the financial
+ grievances of the British navy that were it not for Germany
+ there would be to-day another Spithead. "Across the North Sea
+ is a nation that some fifty years ago was so afraid of the
+ British navy that it panicked itself into building an iron-clad
+ fleet.</p>
+
+ <p>"To-day, as the second naval power, its menace is too great
+ for any up-to-date Spithead mutiny to come off. But the pay
+ question was so acute that it is possibly only the Germans and
+ their 'menace' that saved us from the trouble."
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page41"
+ id="page41"></a>[pg 41]</span> But while the "patriotism" of
+ the "lower-deck" may have been sufficiently stout to avert
+ this peril, the patriotism of the "quarter-deck" is giving
+ us a specimen of its quality that certainly could not be
+ exhibited in any other country in the world.</p>
+
+ <p>Even as I write I read in the "British Review" how Admiral
+ Sir Percy Scott attacks Admiral Lord Charles Beresford, dubs
+ him the "laughing-stock of the fleet," accuses him of
+ publishing in his book <i>The Betrayal</i> a series of
+ "deliberate falsehoods," and concludes by saying that the
+ gallant Admiral is "not a seaman."</p>
+
+ <p>And it is a fleet commanded by such Admirals as these that
+ is to sweep the German navy from the seas!</p>
+
+ <p>During the Crimean war the allied British and French navies
+ distinguished themselves by their signal failure to effect the
+ reduction of such minor fortresses as Sveaborg, Helsingfors,
+ and the fortified lighthouses upon the Gulf of Finland. Their
+ respective Admirals fired their severest broadsides into each
+ other, and the bombardment of the forts was silenced by the
+ smart interchange of nautical civilities between the two
+ flagships. Napoleon III, who sought an explanation of this
+ failure of his fleet, was given a reply that I cannot refrain
+ from recommending to the British Admiralty to-day. "Well,
+ Sire," replied the French diplomatist, who knew the
+ circumstances, "both the Admirals were old women, but ours was
+ at least a lady." If British Admirals cannot put to sea without
+ incurring this risk, they might, at least, take the gunboat
+ woman with them to prescribe the courtesies of naval
+ debate.</p>
+
+ <p>That England to-day loves America, no one who goes to the
+ private opinions of Englishmen, instead of to their public
+ utterances, or the interested eulogies of their press, can for
+ a moment believe.</p>
+
+ <p>The old dislike is there, the old supercilious contempt for
+ the "Yankee" and all his ways. "God's Englishman" no more loves
+ an American citizen now than in 1846 when he seriously
+ contemplated an invasion of the United States, and the raising
+ of the negro-slave population against his "Anglo-Saxon
+ kinsmen."</p>
+
+ <p>To-day, when we hear so much of the Anglo-Saxon Alliance it
+ may be well to revert to that page of history. For it will show
+ us that if a British premier to-day can speak as Mr. Asquith
+ did on December 16th, 1912, in his reference to the late
+ American Ambassador as "a great American and a kinsman," one
+ "sprung from a common race, speaking our own language, sharing
+ with us by birth as by inheritance not a few of our most
+ cherished traditions <span class="pagenum"><a name="page42"
+ id="page42"></a>[pg 42]</span> and participating when he
+ comes here by what I may describe as <i>his natural right in
+ our domestic interests and celebrations</i>," then this
+ new-found kinship takes its birth not in a sense of common
+ race, indeed, but in a very common fear of Germany.</p>
+
+ <p>In the year 1846, the British army was engaged in robbing
+ the Irish people of their harvest in order that the work of the
+ famine should be complete and that the then too great
+ population of Ireland should be reduced within the limits "law
+ and order" prescribed, either by starvation or flight to
+ America.</p>
+
+ <p>Fleeing in hundreds and thousands from the rule of one who
+ claimed to be their Sovereign, expelled in a multitude
+ exceeding the Moors of Spain, whom a Spanish king shipped
+ across the seas with equal pious intent, the fugitive Irish
+ Nation found friendship, hope, and homes in the great Celtic
+ Republic of the West. All that was denied to them in their own
+ ancient land they found in a new Ireland growing up across the
+ Atlantic.</p>
+
+ <p>The hate of England pursued them here and those who dared to
+ give help and shelter. The United States were opening wide
+ their arms to receive the stream of Irish fugitives and were
+ saying very harsh things of England's infamous rule in Ireland.
+ This could not be brooked. England in those days had not
+ invented the Anglo-Saxon theory of mankind, and a united
+ Germany had not then been born to vex the ineptitude of her
+ statesmen or to profit from the shortcomings of her
+ tradesmen.</p>
+
+ <p>So the greatest Ministers of Queen Victoria seriously
+ contemplated war with America and naturally looked around for
+ some one else to do the fighting. The Duke of Wellington hoped
+ that France might be played on, just as in a later day a later
+ Minister seeks to play France in a similar rôle against a later
+ adversary.<a id="footnotetag3"
+ name="footnotetag3"></a><a href="#footnote3"><sup>3</sup></a></p>
+
+ <p>The Mexicans, too, might be induced to invade the Texan
+ frontier. But a greater infamy than this was seriously planned.
+ Again it is an Irishman who tells the story and shows us how
+ dearly the English loved their trans-Atlantic "kinsmen" when
+ there was no German menace to threaten nearer home.</p>
+
+ <p>Writing from Carlsruhe, on January 26th, 1846, to his
+ friend, Alexander Spencer, in Dublin, Charles Lever said: "As
+ to the war the Duke<a id="footnotetag4"
+ name="footnotetag4"></a><a href="#footnote4"><sup>4</sup></a>
+ says he could smash the Yankees, and ought to do so while
+ France in her present humour and Mexico opens the road to
+ invasion from the South&mdash;not to speak of the terrible
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page43"
+ id="page43"></a>[pg 43]</span> threat that Napier uttered,
+ that with two regiments of infantry and a field battery he'd
+ <i>raise the slave population in the United States</i>."</p>
+
+ <p>The infamy of this suggestion cannot be surpassed. The
+ brilliant soldier who conceived it was the chivalrous
+ Englishman who conquered Scinde, one of the chief glories of
+ the Britannic hierarchy of soldier-saints.</p>
+
+ <p>The Government planning it was that of the late Queen
+ Victoria with the Duke of Wellington's advice, and the people
+ against whom the black-slave millions were to be loosed were
+ the "kith and kin" of those meditating this atrocious form of
+ massacre. Truly, as an old Irish proverb, old even in the days
+ of Henry VIII. put it, "the pride of France, the <i>treason of
+ England</i> and the warre of Ireland shall never have end."</p>
+
+ <p>As a latter day witness of that treason, one who had
+ suffered it from birth to the prison cell, a dead Irishman
+ speaks to us from the grave. Michael Davitt in a letter to
+ Morrison Davidson on August 2701, 1902, thus summed up in final
+ words what every Irishman feels in his heart:</p>
+
+ <p>"The idea of being ruled by Englishmen is to me the chief
+ agony of existence. They are a nation without faith, truth or
+ conscience enveloped in a panoplied pharisaism and an incurable
+ hypocrisy. Their moral appetite is fed on falsehood. They
+ profess Christianity and believe only in Mammon. They talk of
+ liberty while ruling India and Ireland against the principles
+ of a constitution, professed as a political faith, but
+ prostituted to the interests of class and landlord rule."</p>
+
+ <p>Have Englishmen in less than two generations substituted
+ love for the hate that Napier, Wellington, and the Queen's
+ Ministers felt and expressed in 1846 for the people of the
+ United States? Is it love to-day for America or fear of someone
+ else that impels to the "Arbitration Treaties" and the
+ celebration of the "Hundred years of Peace?"</p>
+
+ <p>The Anglo-American "Peace Movement" was to be but the first
+ stage in an "Anglo-Saxon Alliance," intended to limit and
+ restrict all further world changes, outside of certain
+ prescribed continental limits, to these two peoples alone on
+ the basis of a new "Holy Alliance," whose motto should be
+ <i>Beati possidentes</i>.</p>
+
+ <p>Since England and America, either in fact or by reservation
+ enjoy almost all the desirable regions of the earth, why not
+ bring <span class="pagenum"><a name="page44"
+ id="page44"></a>[pg 44]</span> about a universal agreement
+ to keep everyone in his right place, to stay "just as we
+ are," and to kindly refer all possible differences to an
+ "International Tribunal?"</p>
+
+ <p>Once again the British Bible was thrown into the scale, and
+ the unrighteousness of Germany, who did not see her way to join
+ in the psalm singing, was exposed in a spirit of bitter
+ resignation and castigated with an appropriate selection of
+ texts. The Hague Tribunal would be so much nicer than a war of
+ armaments! With no reckless rivalries and military expenditure
+ there could be no question of the future of mankind.</p>
+
+ <p>An idyllic peace would settle down upon the nations,
+ contentedly possessing each in its own share of the good things
+ of life, and no questionable ambitions would be allowed to
+ disturb the buying and selling of the smaller and weaker
+ peoples. The sincerity of the wish for universal arbitration
+ can be best shown by England, when she, or any of the Powers to
+ whom she appeals, will consent to submit the claim of one of
+ the minor peoples she or they hold in subjection to the Hague
+ Tribunal. Let France submit Madagascar and Siam, or her latest
+ victim, Morocco, to the franchise of the Court. Let Russia
+ agree to Poland or Finland seeking the verdict of this bench of
+ appeal. Let England plead her case before the same high moral
+ tribunal and allow Ireland, Egypt, or India to have the law of
+ her. Then, and not until then, the world of little States and
+ beaten peoples may begin to believe that the Peace Crusade has
+ some foundations in honour and honesty&mdash;but not till
+ then.</p>
+
+ <p>Germany has had the straightforwardness and manliness to
+ protest that she is still able to do her own shooting and that
+ what she holds she will keep, by force if need be, and what she
+ wants she will, in her own sure time, take, and by force too,
+ if need be. Of the two cults the latter is the simpler,
+ sincerer, and certainly the less dishonest.</p>
+
+ <p>Irish-American linked with German-American keen-sighted
+ hostility did the rest. The rivalry of Mr. Roosevelt and Mr.
+ Taft aided, and the effort (for the time at any rate) has been
+ wrecked, thereby plunging England into a further paroxysm of
+ religious despondency and grave concern for German morals. This
+ mood eventuated in Lord Haldane's "week end" trip to Berlin.
+ The voice was the voice of Jacob, in spite of the hand of Esau.
+ Mr. Churchill at Glasgow, showed the real hand and the mess of
+ pottage so amiably offered at Berlin bought no German
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page45"
+ id="page45"></a>[pg 45]</span> birthright. The Kreuz Zeitung
+ rightly summed up the situation by pointing out that "Mr.
+ Churchill's testimony can now be advanced as showing that
+ the will of England alone comes in question as the exponent
+ of peace, and that England for many years past has
+ consciously assumed the rôle of an absolute and perfectly
+ arbitrary judge of war and peace. It seems to us all the
+ more significant that Mr. Churchill proposes also in the
+ future to control, with the help of the strong navies of the
+ Dominions, the trade and naval movements of all the Powers
+ on the face of the earth&mdash;that is to say, his aim is to
+ secure a world monopoly for England." There has never been
+ any other thought in the English mind. As I said in Part I.
+ of this paper, "British interests are first the control of
+ all the seas of all the world in full military and
+ commercial control. If this be not challenged peace is
+ permitted; to dispute it seriously means war."</p>
+
+ <p>Germany is driven by necessity to dispute it seriously and
+ to overcome it. She cannot get out to play her part in world
+ life, <i>nay, she cannot hope to ultimately maintain herself at
+ home</i> until that battle has been fought and won.</p>
+
+ <p>Arrangements with England, detentes, understandings, call
+ them what you will, are merely parleys before the fight. The
+ assault must be delivered, the fortress carried, or else
+ Germany, and with her Europe, must resign the mission of the
+ white races and hand over the government and future of the
+ world to one chosen people.</p>
+
+ <p>Europe reproduces herself yearly at the present time at the
+ rate of about five million souls. Some three-fifths of the
+ number are to-day absorbed into the life of the Continent, the
+ balance go abroad and principally to North America, to swell
+ the English-speaking world. Germany controls about one-fifth of
+ Europe's natural annual increase, and realising that emigration
+ to-day means only to lose her people and build up her
+ antagonist's strength, she has for years now striven to keep
+ her people within German limits, and hitherto with successful
+ results far in excess of any achieved by other European States.
+ But the limit must be reached, and that before many years are
+ past. Where is Germany to find the suitable region, both on a
+ scale and under conditions of climate, health and soil that a
+ people of say 90,000,000 hemmed in a territory little larger
+ than France, will find commensurate to their needs? No European
+ people is in such plight.</p>
+
+ <p>Russia has the immense and healthy world of Siberia into
+ which to overflow. France, far from needing outlets, increases
+ not at all, <span class="pagenum"><a name="page46"
+ id="page46"></a>[pg 46]</span> and during 1911 showed an
+ excess of close on 40,000 deaths over births. For France the
+ day of greatness is past. A French Empire, in any other
+ sense than the Roman one of commercial and military
+ exploitation of occupied territories and subjugated peoples
+ is gone forever.</p>
+
+ <p>France has no blood to give except in war. French blood will
+ not colonize even the Mediterranean littoral. Italy is faced
+ with something of the same problem as Germany, but to a lesser
+ extent. Her surplus population already finds a considerable
+ outlet in Argentina and South Brazil, among peoples,
+ institutions, and language largely approximating to those left
+ behind. While Italy has, indeed need of a world policy as well
+ as Germany, her ability to sustain a great part abroad cannot
+ be compared to that of the Teutonic people. Her claim is not so
+ urgent; her need not so insistent, her might inadequate.</p>
+
+ <p>The honesty and integrity of the German mind, the strength
+ of the German intellect, the skill of the German hand and
+ brain, and justice and vigour of German law, the intensity of
+ German culture, science, education and social development,
+ these need a great and healthy field for their beneficial
+ display, and the world needs these things more than it needs
+ the British mastery of the seas. The world of European life
+ needs to-day, as it needed in the days of a decadent Roman
+ Empire, the coming of another Goth, the coming of the Teuton.
+ The interposing island in the North Sea alone intervenes. How
+ to surmount that obstacle, how to win the freedom of the "Seven
+ Seas" for Europe must be the supreme issue for Germany.</p>
+
+ <p>If she falls she is doomed to sterility. The supreme test of
+ German genius, of German daring, of German discipline and
+ imagination lies there.</p>
+
+ <p>Where Louis XIV., the Directory, and Napoleon failed, will
+ the heirs of Karl the Great see clearly?</p>
+
+ <p>And then, when that great hour has struck, will Germany,
+ will Europe, produce the statesman soldier who shall see that
+ the key to ocean freedom lies in that island beyond an island,
+ whose very existence Europe has forgotten?</p>
+
+ <p>Till that key is out from the Pirate's girdle, Germany may
+ win a hundred "Austerlitzes" on the Vistula, the Dnieper, the
+ Loire, but until she restores that key to Europe, to paraphrase
+ Pitt, she may "roll up that map of the world; it will not be
+ wanted these fifty years."</p>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote3"
+ name="footnote3"></a><b>Footnote 3:</b>
+ <a href="#footnotetag3">(return)</a>
+
+ <p>Sir Edward Grey and the <i>Entente Cordiale</i>.</p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote4"
+ name="footnote4"></a><b>Footnote 4:</b>
+ <a href="#footnotetag4">(return)</a>
+
+ <p>The Duke of Wellington: the report was brought to Lever
+ by the Marquis of Douro, the Duke's heir.</p>
+ </blockquote><span class="pagenum"><a name="page47"
+ id="page47"></a>[pg 47]</span>
+
+ <h3 class="sc">Chapter V</h3>
+
+ <h2>THE PROBLEM OF THE NEAR WEST</h2>
+
+ <p>The foregoing reflections and the arguments drawn from them
+ were penned before the outbreak of the war between Turkey and
+ the Balkan Allies.</p>
+
+ <p>That war is still undecided as I write (March 1913), but
+ whatever its precise outcome may be, it is clear that the doom
+ of Turkey as a great power is sealed, and that the
+ complications of the Near East will, in future, assume an
+ entirely fresh aspect. Hitherto, there was only the possibility
+ that Germany might find at least a commercial and financial
+ outlet in the Asiatic dominions of the Sultan. There was even
+ the possibility, had Turkey held together, that England, to
+ mitigate pressure elsewhere, would have conceded to an
+ expanding and insistent Germany, a friendly interest and
+ control in Asia Minor. It is true that the greatest possible
+ development, and under the most favoured conditions of German
+ interests in that region, could not have met the needs or
+ satisfied the ever increasing necessities of Teutonic growth;
+ but at least it would have offered a safety valve, and could
+ have involved preoccupations likely to deflect the German
+ vision, for a time, from the true path to greatness, the
+ Western highways of the sea.</p>
+
+ <p>An occupation or colonisation of the Near East by the
+ Germanic peoples could never have been a possible solution
+ under any circumstances of the problem that faces German
+ statemanship. As well talk of reviving the Frank Kingdom of
+ Jerusalem.</p>
+
+ <p>The occupation by the fair-haired peoples of the Baltic and
+ North Seas of the lands of Turk and Tartar, of Syrian and Jew,
+ of Armenian and Mesopotamian, was never a practical suggestion
+ or one to be seriously contemplated. "East is East and West is
+ West," sings the poet of Empire, and Englishmen cannot complain
+ if the greatest of Western peoples, adopting the singer, should
+ apply the dogma to themselves. Germany, indeed, might have
+ looked for a considerable measure of commercial dominance in
+ the Near East, possibly for a commercial protectorate such as
+ France applies to Tunis and Algeria and hopes to apply to
+ morocco, or such as England imposes on Egypt, and this
+ commercial predominance could have conferred considerable
+ profits on Rhenish industries and benefited Saxon
+ industrialism, but it could never have done more than this. A
+ colonisation of the realms of Bajazet and Saladin by the
+ fair-skinned peoples of the North, or the planting of Teutonic
+ institutions in the valley of Damascus, even with the
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page48"
+ id="page48"></a>[pg 48]</span> benevolent neutrality of
+ England, is a far wider dream (and one surely no German
+ statesman ever entertained) than a German challenge to the
+ sea supremacy of England.</p>
+
+ <p>The trend of civilized man in all great movements since
+ modern civilization began, has been from East to West, not from
+ West to East. The tide of the peoples moved by some mysterious
+ impulse from the dawn of European expansion has been towards
+ the setting sun. The few movements that have taken place in the
+ contrary direction have but emphasized the universality of this
+ rule, from the days of the overthrow of Rome, if we seek no
+ earlier date. The Crusades furnished, doubtless, the classic
+ example. The later contrary instance, that of Russia towards
+ Siberia, scarcely, if at all affects the argument, for there
+ the Russian overthrow is filling up Northern rather than
+ Eastern lands, and the movement involves to the Russian
+ emigrant no change of climate, soil, law, language or
+ environment while that emigrant himself belongs, perhaps, as
+ much to Asia as to Europe.</p>
+
+ <p>But whatever value to German development the possible
+ chances of expansion in the Near East may have offered before
+ the present Balkan war, those chances to-day, as the result of
+ that war, scarcely exist. It is probably the perception of this
+ outcome of the victory of the Slav States that has influenced
+ and accelerated the characteristic change of English public
+ opinion that has accompanied with shouts of derision the dying
+ agonies of the Turk. "In matters of mind," as a recent English
+ writer says in the <i>Saturday Review</i>, "the national
+ sporting instinct does not exist. The English public invariably
+ backs the winner." And just as the English public invariably
+ backs the winner, British policy invariably backs the
+ anti-German, or supposedly anti-German side in all world
+ issues. "What 1912 seems to have effected is a vast
+ aggrandizement of the Slavonic races in their secular struggle
+ against the Teutonic races. Even a local and temporary triumph
+ of Austria over Servia cannot conceal the fact that henceforth
+ the way south-east to the Black Sea and the Aegean Sea is
+ barred to the Germans."<a id="footnotetag5"
+ name="footnotetag5"></a><a href="#footnote5"><sup>5</sup></a></p>
+
+ <p>That is the outstanding fact that British public opinion
+ perceives with growing pleasure from the break up of
+ Turkey.</p>
+
+ <p>No matter where the dispute or what the purpose of conflict
+ may be, the supreme issue for England is "Where is
+ Germany?"</p>
+
+ <p>Against that side the whole weight of Great Britain will,
+ openly or covertly, be thrown. German expansion in the Near
+ East has <span class="pagenum"><a name="page49"
+ id="page49"></a>[pg 49]</span> gone by the board, and in its
+ place the development of Greek naval strength in the
+ Mediterranean, to take its stand by the Triple Entente,
+ comes to be jauntily considered, while the solid wedge of a
+ Slav Empire or Federation, commanding in the near future
+ 2,000,000 of armed men is agreeably seen to be driven across
+ South-eastern Europe between Austro-German efforts and the
+ fallow lands of Asia Minor. These latter can safely be left
+ in Turkish hands yet a while longer, until the day comes for
+ their partition into "spheres of influence," just as Persia
+ and parts of China are to-day being apportioned between
+ Russia and England. This happy consummation, moreover, has
+ fallen from heaven, and Turkey is being cut up for the
+ further extension of British interests clearly by the act of
+ God.</p>
+
+ <p>The victory of the Balkan States becomes another triumph for
+ the British Bible; it is the victory of righteousness over
+ wrong-doing.</p>
+
+ <p>The true virtue of the Balkan "Christians" lies in the
+ possibility of their being moulded into an anti-German factor
+ of great weight in the European conflict, clearly impending,
+ and in their offering a fresh obstacle, it is hoped, to German
+ world policy.</p>
+
+ <p>Let us first inspect the moral argument on the lips of these
+ professors. We are assured, by it, that the claim of the Balkan
+ Allies to expel Turkey from Europe rests upon a just and
+ historic basis.</p>
+
+ <p>Briefly stated it is that the Turk has held his European
+ provinces by a right of conquest only. What the sword took, die
+ sword may take away. When the sword was struck from the
+ Ottoman's grasp his right to anything it had given him fell
+ too. Thus Adrianople, a city he has held for over five hundred
+ years, must be given up to a new conqueror who never owned it
+ in the past and who certainly has far less moral claim to be
+ there to-day than the descendants of Selim's soldiers.</p>
+
+ <p>But the moral argument brings strange revenges.</p>
+
+ <p>If Turkey has no right to Adrianople, to Thrace&mdash;"right
+ of sword to be shattered by the sword"&mdash;what right has
+ England to Ireland, to Dublin, to Cork? She holds Ireland by
+ exactly the same title as that by which Turkey has hitherto
+ held Macedonia, Thrace, Salonika&mdash;a right of invasion, of
+ seizure, of demoralization. If Turkey's rights, nearly six
+ hundred years old, can be shattered in a day by one successful
+ campaign, and if the powers of Europe can insist, with justice,
+ that this successful sword shall outweigh the occupation of
+ centuries, then, indeed, have the Powers, led by
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page50"
+ id="page50"></a>[pg 50]</span> England, furnished a
+ precedent in the Near East which the victor in the next
+ great struggle should not be slow to apply to the Near West,
+ when a captive Ireland shall be rescued from the hands of a
+ conqueror whose tide is no better, indeed somewhat worse
+ than that of Turkey to Macedonia. And when the day of defeat
+ shall strike for the Turkey of the Near West, then shall an
+ assembled Europe remember the arguments of 1912-13 and a
+ freed Ireland shall be justified on the very grounds England
+ to-day has been the first to advance against a defeated
+ Turkey.</p>
+
+ <p>"But the Turk is an Asiatic," say the English Bashaws: to
+ which indeed, Europe might aptly reply, "and are the English
+ European or non-European?" The moral argument, and the "Asiatic
+ argument" are strange texts for the desecrater of Christian
+ Ireland to appeal to against that continent which she would
+ fain hem in with Malayan and Indian battleships, and Canadian
+ and Australasian dreadnoughts. Not the moral argument, but the
+ anti-German argument, furnishes the real ground for the changed
+ British attitude in the present war.</p>
+
+ <p>The moral failure of Turkey, her inability to govern her
+ Christian peoples is only the pretext: but just as the moral
+ argument brings its strange revenges and shows an Ireland that
+ has suffered all that Macedonia has suffered, and this at the
+ hands of Christians, and not of Moslems, so the triumph of the
+ Balkan Allies, far from benefiting Britain, must, in the end,
+ react to her detriment.</p>
+
+ <p>The present apparent injury to German interests by the
+ closing of South-eastern Europe, and the road to Asia Minor,
+ will inevitably force Germany to still more resolutely face the
+ problem of opening the Western seaways. To think otherwise is
+ to believe that Germany will accept a quite impossible position
+ tamely and without a struggle.</p>
+
+ <p>Hemmed in by Russia on the East and the new Southern Slav
+ States on the South-east, with a vengeful France being incited
+ on her Western frontier to fresh dreams of conquest, Germany
+ sees England preparing still mightier armaments to hold and
+ close the seaways of the world. The Canadian naval vote, the
+ Malayan "gift" of a battleship come as fresh rivets in the
+ chain forged for the perpetual binding of the seas, or it might
+ more truly be said, for the perpetual binding of the hands of
+ die German people.</p>
+
+ <p>We read in a recent London periodical how these latest naval
+ developments portend the coming of the day when "the Imperial
+ navy shall keep the peace of the seas as a policeman does the
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page51"
+ id="page51"></a>[pg 51]</span> peace of the streets. The
+ time is coming when a naval war (except by England), will be
+ as relentlessly suppressed as piracy on the high seas."
+ (<i>Review of Reviews</i>, December, 1912.)</p>
+
+ <p>The naïve arrogance of this utterance is characteristically
+ English. It is, after all, but the journalistic echo of the
+ Churchill Glasgow speech, and the fullest justification of the
+ criticism of the Kreuz Zeitung already quoted. It does not
+ stand alone; it could be paralleled in the columns of any
+ English paper&mdash;Liberal as much as Conservative&mdash;every
+ day in the week. Nothing is clearer than that no Englishman can
+ think of other nations save in terms of permanent inferiority.
+ Thus, for instance, in a November (1912) issue of the <i>Daily
+ News</i> we find a representative Englishman (Sir R.
+ Edgecumbe), addressing that Liberal journal in words that no
+ one but an Englishman would dream of giving public utterance
+ to. Sir R. Edgecumbe deprecated a statement that had gone round
+ to the effect that the Malayan battleship was not a free gift
+ of the toiling Tamils, Japanese, Chinese, and other rubber
+ workers who make up, with a few Malays, the population of that
+ peninsula, but was really the fruit of an arbitrary tax imposed
+ upon these humble, but indifferent Asiatics by their English
+ administration.</p>
+
+ <p>Far from being indifferent, Sir R. Edgecumbe asserted these
+ poor workers nourished a reverence "bordering on veneration"
+ for the Englishman. "This is shown in a curious way by their
+ refusing to call any European 'a white man' save the Englishman
+ alone. The German trader, the Italian and Frenchman all are, in
+ their speech coloured men."</p>
+
+ <p>After this appreciation of themselves the English cannot
+ object to the present writer's view that they are
+ non-Europeans.</p>
+
+ <p>Thus while the Eastern question is being settled while I
+ write, by the expulsion of the Turk from Europe, England, who
+ leads the cry in the name of Europe, is preparing the exclusion
+ of Europe from all world affairs that can be dominated by sea
+ power. Lands and peoples held for centuries by Turkey by a
+ right not less moral than that by which England has held
+ Ireland, are being forcibly restored to Europe. So be it.</p>
+
+ <p>With settlement of the Eastern question by this act of
+ restitution Europe must inevitably gain the clarity of vision
+ to deal with the Western question by a similar act of
+ restoration.</p>
+
+ <p>The Western Macedonia must go the way of its Eastern fellow.
+ Like those of the Orient, the problems of the Occident for
+ Europe are twofold&mdash;a near Western and a far Western
+ question. Ireland, <span class="pagenum"><a name="page52"
+ id="page52"></a>[pg 52]</span> keeper of the seas,
+ constitutes for Europe the near Western question.</p>
+
+ <p>The freedom of those seas and their opening to all European
+ effort alike on equal terms constitutes the far Western
+ question. But in both cases the antagonist of Europe, the
+ non-European power is the same. The challenge of Europe must be
+ to England, and the champion of Europe must be and can be only
+ Germany. No other European people has the power, the strength
+ of mind, of purpose and of arm to accomplish the great act of
+ deliverance. Europe too long blinded to her own vital interests
+ while disunited, must now, under the guidance of a united
+ Germany, resolutely face the problem of freeing the seas.</p>
+
+ <p><i>That war of the seas is inevitable</i>. It may be fought
+ on a continent; it may be waged in the air&mdash;it must be
+ settled on the seas and it must mean either the freeing of
+ those seas or the permanent exclusion of Europeans from the
+ affairs of the world. It means for Europe the future, the very
+ existence of European civilization as opposed to the
+ Anglo-Saxon world domination. In that war, Germany will stand
+ not alone as the champion of Europe, she will fight for the
+ freedom of the world.</p>
+
+ <p>As an Irishman I have no fear of the result to Ireland of a
+ German triumph. I pray for it; for with the coming of that day
+ the "Irish question" so dear to British politicians, becomes a
+ European, a world question.</p>
+
+ <p>With the humbling of Great Britain and the destruction of
+ her sea ownership, European civilization assumes a new stature,
+ and Ireland, oldest and yet youngest of the European peoples,
+ shall enter into free partnership with the civilization,
+ culture, and prosperity that that act of liberation shall bring
+ to mankind.</p>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote5"
+ name="footnote5"></a><b>Footnote 5:</b>
+ <a href="#footnotetag5">(return)</a>
+
+ <p>Mr. Frederick Harrison in the <i>English Review</i>,
+ Jan., 1913.</p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <h3 class="sc">Chapter VI</h3>
+
+ <h2>THE DUTY OF CHRISTENDOM</h2>
+
+ <p>It is only the truth that wounds. An Irishman to-day in
+ dealing with Englishmen is forced, if he speak truly, to wound.
+ That is why so many Irishmen do not speak the truth. The
+ Irishman, whether he be a peasant, a farm labourer, however low
+ in the scale of Anglicization he may have sunk, is still in
+ imagination, if not always in manner, a gentleman.
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page53"
+ id="page53"></a>[pg 53]</span> The Englishman is a gentleman
+ by chance, by force of circumstances, by luck of birth, or
+ some rare opportunity of early fellowship. The Irishman is a
+ gentleman by instinct and shrinks from wounding the feelings
+ of another man and particularly of the man who has wounded
+ him. He scorns to take it out of him that way. That is why
+ the task of misgoverning him has been so easy and has come
+ so naturally to the Englishman. One of the chief grievances
+ of the Irishman in the middle ages was that the man who
+ robbed him was such a boor. Insult was added to injury in
+ that the oppressor was no knight in shining armour, but a
+ very churl of men; to the courteous and cultured Irishman a
+ "bodach Sassenach," a man of low blood, of low cunning,
+ caring only for the things of the body, with no veneration
+ for the things of the spirit&mdash;with, in fine, no music
+ in his soul. The things that the Irishman loved he could not
+ conceive of. Without tradition or history himself he could
+ not comprehend the passionate attachment of the Irishman to
+ both, and he proceeded to wipe both out, so far as in him
+ lay, from off the map of Ireland and from out the Irishman's
+ consciousness.</p>
+
+ <p>Having, as he believed, with some difficulty accomplished
+ his task, he stands to-day amazed at the result. The Irishman
+ has still a grievance&mdash;nay more, Ireland talks of
+ "wrongs." But has she not got him? What more can she want
+ except his purse? And, that too, she is now taking. In the
+ indulgence of an agreeable self-conceit which supplies for him
+ the want of imagination he sees Ireland to-day as a species of
+ "sturdy beggar," half mendicant, half pickpocket&mdash;making
+ off with the proceeds of his hard day's work. The past slips
+ from him as a dream. Has he not for years now, well, for thirty
+ years certainly, a generation, a life time, done all in his
+ power to meet the demands of this incessant country that more
+ in sorrow than in anger he will grant you, was misgoverned in
+ the past. That was its misfortune, never his fault. This is a
+ steadily recurring phase of the fixed hallucination in his
+ blood. Ireland never <i>is</i>, but only always has been cursed
+ by English rule. He himself, the Englishman of the day, is
+ always a simple, bluff, good-hearted fellow. His father if you
+ like, his grandfather very probably, misgoverned Ireland, but
+ never he himself. Why, just look at him now, his hand never out
+ of his pocket relieving the shrill cries of Irish distress.
+ There she stands, a poverty-stricken virago at his door,
+ shaking her bony fist at him, Celtic porter in her eye, the
+ most fearful apparition in history, his charwoman, shaming
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page54"
+ id="page54"></a>[pg 54]</span> him before the neighbours and
+ demanding payment for long past spring cleanings that he,
+ good soul, has forgotten all about or is quite certain were
+ settled at the time. Yes, there she stands, the Irish
+ charwoman, the old broom in her hand and preparing for one
+ last sweep that shall make the house sweet and fit for her
+ own children. And John Bull, honest, sturdy John Bull,
+ believing the house to be his, thinks that the only thing
+ between him and the woman is the matter of wages; that all
+ she wants is an extra shilling. Ireland wants but one thing
+ in the world. She wants her house to herself, and the
+ stranger out of her house.</p>
+
+ <p>While he is, in his heart, perfectly aware of this, John
+ Bull (for the reasons given by Richard Cox), is quite
+ determined that nothing shall get him out of the house.
+ "Separation is unthinkable," say English Ministers. The task of
+ Ireland is to-day what it always has been&mdash;to get the
+ stranger out of the house. It is no shame to Ireland or her
+ sons, that up to this they have failed in each attempt. Those
+ attempts are pillars of fire in her history, beacons of light
+ in the desert of sin, where the Irish Israel still wanders in
+ search of the promised land. Few of the peoples in Europe who
+ to-day make up the concert of powers, have, unaided, expelled
+ the invader who held them down, and none has been in the
+ situation of Ireland.</p>
+
+ <p>As Mr. Gladstone wrote in 1890, "can anyone say we should
+ have treated Ireland as we have done had she lain not between
+ us and the ocean, but between us and Europe?"</p>
+
+ <p>In introducing the scheme of mild Home Rule termed the
+ Councils Bill in 1907, Mr. Birrell prefaced it with the remark
+ that "separation was unthinkable&mdash;save in the event of
+ some great world cataclysm." World cataclysms up to this have
+ not reached Ireland&mdash;England intervened too well. She has
+ maintained her hold by sea power. The lonely Andromeda saw afar
+ off the rescuing Perseus, a nude figure on the coast of Spain
+ or France, but long ere his flight reached her rock-bound feet
+ she beheld him fall, bruised and mangled, and devoured by the
+ watching sea monster.</p>
+
+ <p>Had Italy been placed as Ireland is, cut off from all
+ external succour save across a sea held by a relentless jailor,
+ would she have been to-day a free people, ally of Austria on
+ terms of high equality?</p>
+
+ <p>The blood shed by the founders of modern Italy would all
+ have been shed in vain&mdash;that blood that sanctified the
+ sword of Garibaldi&mdash;had it not been for the selfish policy
+ of Louis Napoleon and <span class="pagenum"><a name="page55"
+ id="page55"></a>[pg 55]</span> the invading armies of
+ France. Italy, no more than Ireland, could have shaken
+ herself free had it not been for aid from abroad. The late
+ Queen Victoria saw clearly the parallel, and as hereditary
+ custodian of Ireland, Her Majesty protested against the
+ effort then being made to release Italy from an Austrian
+ prison, when she herself was so hard put to it to keep
+ Ireland in an English jail. Writing to her Prime Minister on
+ July 25th, 1848, Her Majesty said:&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>"The Queen must tell Lord John (Russell) what she has
+ repeatedly told Lord Palmerston, but without apparent effect,
+ that the establishment of an entente cordiale with the French
+ Republic, for the purpose of driving the Austrians out of their
+ dominions in Italy would be a disgrace to this country. That
+ the French would attach the greatest importance to it and gain
+ the greatest advantage from it, there can be no doubt of. But
+ how will England appear before the world at the moment she is
+ struggling for her supremacy in Ireland?..." and on Oct. 10th
+ following Her Majesty wrote to her uncle, the first King of the
+ Belgians (who owed his new minted crown to the Belgian people
+ depriving the Dutch Sovereign of his "lawful possessions") in
+ the following memorable words:</p>
+
+ <p>"Really it is quite immoral, with Ireland quivering in our
+ grasp, and ready to throw off her allegiance at any moment, for
+ us to force Austria to give up her lawful possessions. What
+ shall we say if Canada, Malta, etc., begin to trouble us? It
+ hurts me terribly." (Page 237, Queen Victoria's letters,
+ published by order of His Majesty, King Edward VII.)</p>
+
+ <p>It hurt Ireland much more terribly, that failure to throw
+ off the hand that held her "quivering in our grasp," so soon to
+ stretch her "a corpse upon the dissecting table."</p>
+
+ <p>Ireland has failed to win her freedom, not so much because
+ she has failed to shed her blood, but because her situation in
+ the world is just that unique situation I have sought to
+ depict. Belonging to Europe, she has not been of Europe; and
+ England with a persistency that would be admirable were it not
+ so criminal in intention and effect, has bent all her efforts,
+ all her vigour, an unswerving policy, and a pitiless sword to
+ extend the limits of exclusion. To approach Ireland at all
+ since the first English Sovereign laid hands upon it was "quite
+ immoral." When Frederick of Hohenstaufen (so long ago as that!)
+ sent his secretary (an Irishman) to Ireland we read that Henry
+ III of England declared "it hurt him terribly," and ordered all
+ the goings out and comings in of
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page56"
+ id="page56"></a>[pg 56]</span> the returned Irish-German
+ statesman to be closely watched.</p>
+
+ <p>The dire offence of Hugh O'Neill to Elizabeth was far less
+ his rebellion than his "practises" with Spain. At every
+ cessation of arms during the Nine Years War he waged with
+ England, she sought to obtain from him an abjuration of
+ "foreign aid," chiefly "that of the Spaniard." "Nothing will
+ become the traitor (O'Neill) more than his public confession of
+ any Spanish practices, and his abjuration of any manner of
+ harkening or combining with any foreigners."</p>
+
+ <p>Could O'Neill be brought to publicly repudiate help from
+ abroad it would have, the Queen thought, the effect that "in
+ Spain... the hopes of such attempts might be extinguished."</p>
+
+ <p>As long as the sea was open to Spain there was grave danger.
+ If Spaniard and Irishman came close together O'Neill's offence
+ was indeed "fit to be made vulgar"&mdash;all men would see the
+ strength of combination, the weakness of isolation.</p>
+
+ <p>"Send me all the news you receive from Spain for Tyrone doth
+ fill all these parts with strange lies, although some part be
+ true, that there came some munition." It was because O'Neill
+ was a statesman and knew the imperative need to Ireland of
+ keeping in touch with Europe that for Elizabeth he became "the
+ chief traitor of Ireland&mdash;a reprobate from God, reserved
+ for the sword."</p>
+
+ <p>Spain was to Elizabethan Englishmen what Germany is
+ to-day.</p>
+
+ <p>"I would venture to say one word here to my Irish fellow
+ countrymen of all political persuasions. If they imagine they
+ can stand politically or economically while Britain falls they
+ are woefully mistaken. The British fleet is their one shield.
+ It if be broken Ireland will go down. They may well throw
+ themselves heartily into the common defence, for no sword can
+ transfix England without the point reaching behind her." (Sir
+ Arthur Conan Doyle, in the <i>Fortnightly Review</i>, Feb.,
+ 1913, "Great Britain and the Next War.")</p>
+
+ <p>The voice is a very old one, and the bogey has done duty for
+ a long time in Ireland. When, to-day, it is from Germany that
+ freedom may be feared, Ireland is warned against the German.
+ When, three hundred years ago the beacon of hope shone on the
+ coast of Spain, it was the Spaniards who were the bad people of
+ history.</p>
+
+ <p>Fray Mattheo de Oviedo, who had been sent to Ireland as
+ Archbishop, wrote to King Philip III from O'Neill's stronghold,
+ Dungannon, on June 24, 1600. We might be listening to the voice
+ of the <i>Fortnightly Review</i> of yesterday. "The English are
+ making <span class="pagenum"><a name="page57"
+ id="page57"></a>[pg 57]</span> great efforts to bring about
+ a peace, offering excellent terms, and for this purpose the
+ Viceroy sent messengers twice to O'Neill, saying among other
+ things, that Your Majesty is making peace with the Queen,
+ and that his condition will be hopeless. At other times he
+ says that no greater misfortune could happen to the country
+ than to bring Spaniards into it, because they are haughty
+ and vicious and they would destroy and ruin the country."
+ The Irish princes were no fools. "To all this they reply
+ most honourably that they will hold out as long as they have
+ one soldier or there remains a cow to eat."</p>
+
+ <p>Hugh O'Neill saw clearly that all compromise between Ireland
+ and England was futile, and that the way of escape was by
+ complete separation and lay only through Europe. He again and
+ again begged the Spanish King to sever Ireland and erect it
+ into an allied State. He offered the crown of Ireland to a
+ Spanish prince, just as three centuries earlier another and a
+ great O'Neill offered the crown of Ireland to Edward Bruce in
+ 1315.</p>
+
+ <p>The coming of the Bruce saved Gaelic Ireland for three
+ centuries. Had Philip of Spain sent his son as King to Ireland,
+ her fate had been settled then instead of remaining three
+ centuries later to still confront European statesmanship with
+ an unsolved problem.</p>
+
+ <p>In many letters addressed by the Irish leaders to Philip II
+ and Philip III we find the constantly recurring note of warning
+ that to leave England in possession of Ireland meant the
+ downfall of Spain. The Irish princes knew that in fighting
+ England they were in truth fighting the battle of European
+ civilization.</p>
+
+ <p>Writing to Philip II from Lifford, on May 16th, 1596,
+ O'Neill and O'Donnell drew the King's attention to the cause of
+ Ireland as the cause of Europe, and in the name of Ireland
+ offered the crown to a Spanish prince. "But inasmuch as we have
+ felt to our great and indescribably harm the evil doings and
+ crimes of those whom the Queen of England is in the habit of
+ sending amongst us, we beg and beseech Your Majesty to send
+ someone well known to you and perfectly fit to be the King of
+ this island, for his own welfare, ours, and that of the
+ Christian State (Christendom)."</p>
+
+ <p>They asked for a prince "who will not be unwilling to rule
+ over and live amongst us and to direct and guide our nation,
+ well and wisely." They pointed out how "he will obtain much
+ advantage and glory by so doing," and finally they begged
+ "would that Your Majesty would appoint the Archduke of Austria,
+ now Governor of Flanders, a famous man and worthy of all
+ praise, <span class="pagenum"><a name="page58"
+ id="page58"></a>[pg 58]</span> than whom none would be more
+ acceptable." (The original is in Latin and in the archives
+ of Simancas.)</p>
+
+ <p>No more statesmanlike appeal was ever made from Ireland; and
+ had the Archduke of Austria assumed the crown of Ireland in
+ 1596, "now or never" would indeed have become "now and
+ forever." Had Philip II carried out his often repeated promises
+ of sending aid to that country the fate of his own kingdom must
+ have been a very different one.</p>
+
+ <p>"I wish it were possible for me, by word of mouth, to show
+ the importance of this undertaking and the great service that
+ would be rendered thereby to God and His Church, and <i>the
+ great advantage it would be to the service of Your Majesty and
+ the peace of Your States to attack the enemy here</i>."</p>
+
+ <p>So wrote in 1600 to Philip II, the Archbishop of Dublin,
+ already quoted, Mattheo de Oviedo.</p>
+
+ <p>This prelate had been specially sent to Ireland "to see and
+ understand the state of the country misrepresented by English
+ emissaries at foreign courts."</p>
+
+ <p>The wrath of Elizabeth against O'Neill was largely due to
+ his keeping in touch with the continent, whereby the lies of
+ her agents abroad were turned to her own ridicule. To Essex,
+ her Viceroy, she wrote: "Tyrone hath blazed in foreign parts
+ the defeat of regiments, the death of captains, and loss of men
+ of quality in every quarter."</p>
+
+ <p>O'Neill not only for years beat her generals in the field,
+ her beat herself and her councillors at their own game. To
+ Essex, in an ecstacy of rage at the loss of the last great army
+ sent, she wrote (September 17th, 1599): "To trust this traitor
+ upon oath is to trust the devil upon his religion. Only this we
+ are sure (for we see it in effect), that you have prospered so
+ ill for us by your warfare, as we cannot but be very jealous
+ lest we should be as well overtaken by the treaty."</p>
+
+ <p>(Essex wished to bring O'Neill in by a treaty which, while
+ ostensibly conceding the terms of the Irish prince was to allow
+ the Queen time to carry out her purpose.)</p>
+
+ <p>The Irish princes knew Elizabeth and her Ministers, as well
+ as she read Essex. "Believe no news from Ireland of any
+ agreement in this country," they had written to Philip II in
+ 1597, "great offers have been made by the Queen of England, but
+ we will not break our word and promise to your." In a letter
+ written a year earlier (Oct. 18, 1596), replying to the special
+ envoy sent by the <span class="pagenum"><a name="page59"
+ id="page59"></a>[pg 59]</span> king, they said: "Since the
+ former envoys left us we have used every means in our power,
+ as we promised we should do, to gain time and
+ procrastination from one day to another. But how could we
+ impose on so clever an enemy so skilled in every kind of
+ cunning and cheating if we did not use much dissimulation,
+ and especially if we did not pretend we were anxious for
+ peace? We will keep firm and unshaken the promises which we
+ made to Your Majesty with our last breath; if we do not we
+ shall incur at once the wrath of God and the contempt of
+ men."</p>
+
+ <p>How faithfully they kept those promises and how the Spanish
+ King failed in his, their fate and the bitter ruin of their
+ country shows. That men fighting for Ireland had to meet
+ Elizabeth and her statesmen with something of her own cunning
+ is made very clear to anyone reading the State papers in
+ Ireland.</p>
+
+ <p>Essex, in one of his "answers" wrote: "I advise Her Majesty
+ to allow me, at my return to Dublin, to conclude this treaty,
+ yielding some of their grants in the present; and when Her
+ Majesty has made secret preparations to enable me to prosecute,
+ I will find quarrels enough to break and give them a deadly
+ blow."</p>
+
+ <p>The Irish, however, failed in this contest. They were not
+ sufficiently good liars, and lacked the higher flights of
+ villainy necessary to sustain the encounter. The essential
+ English way in Tudor days, and much later, for administering a
+ deadly blow to an Irish patriot was "assassination." Poison
+ frequently took the place of the knife, and was often
+ administered wrapped in a leaf of the British Bible. A certain
+ Atkinson, knowing the religious nature of Cecil, the Queen's
+ Prime Minister, the founder of a long line of statesmen,
+ foremost as champions of Church and Book, suggested the getting
+ rid of O'Neill by some "poisoned Hosts." This proposal to use
+ the Blessed Sacrament as a veritable Last Supper for the last
+ great Irish chief remains on record, was endorsed by Cecil.</p>
+
+ <p>Another Briton, named Annyas, was charged to poison "the
+ most dangerous and open rebel in Munster," Florence MacCarthy
+ More, the great MacCarthy. Elizabeth's Prime Minister piously
+ endorsed the deed&mdash;"though his soul never had the thought
+ to consent to the poisoning of a dog, much less a Christian
+ ."</p>
+
+ <p>To Carew, the President of Munster, Cecil wrote enjoining
+ the assassination of the young Earl of Desmond, then "in the
+ keeping of Carew": "Whatever you do to abridge him out of
+ Providence shall never be imputed to you for a fault, but
+ exceedingly commended by the Queen." After this, we are not
+ surprised to learn <span class="pagenum"><a name="page60"
+ id="page60"></a>[pg 60]</span> that in her instructions to
+ Mountjoy, the successor of Essex, the Queen recommended "to
+ his special care to preserve the true exercise of religion
+ among her loving subjects." As O'Neill was still in the
+ field with a large army, she prudently pointed out, however,
+ that the time "did not permit that he should intermeddle by
+ any severity or violence in matters of religion until her
+ power was better established there to countenance his
+ action." That the character of their adversary was
+ faithfully appreciated by contemporary Irish opinion stands
+ plain in a letter written by James Fitzthomas, nephew of the
+ great Earl Gerald of Desmond, to Philip II. "The government
+ of the English is such as Pharaoh himself never used the
+ like; for they content not themselves with all temporal
+ prosperity, but by cruelty desire our blood and perpetual
+ destruction to blot out the whole remembrance of our
+ posterity&mdash;for that Nero, in his time, was far inferior
+ to that Queen in cruelty."</p>
+
+ <p>The Irish chiefs well sustained their part in meeting this
+ combination of power and perfidy, and merited, on the highest
+ grounds of policy the help so often promised by the King of
+ Spain. They showed him not only by their valour on the field
+ but by their sagacious council how great a part was reserved
+ for Ireland in the affairs of Europe if he would but profit
+ from it and do his part.</p>
+
+ <p>In this the Spanish King failed. Philip II had died in 1598,
+ too immersed in religious trials to see that the centre of his
+ griefs was pivoted on the possession of Ireland by the female
+ Nero. With his son and successor communication was maintained
+ and in a letter of Philip III to O'Neill, dated from Madrid,
+ Dec. 24th, 1599, we read: "Noble and well beloved I have
+ already written a joint letter to you and your relative
+ O'Donnell, in which I replied to a letter of both of you. By
+ this, which I now write to you personally I wish to let you
+ know my good will towards you, and I mean to prove it, not only
+ by word, but by deed." That promise was not fulfilled, or so
+ inadequately fulfilled that the help, when it came, was
+ insufficient to meet the needs of the case.</p>
+
+ <p>History tells us what the sad consequences were to the cause
+ of civilisation in Ireland, from the failure of the Spanish
+ King to realize the greatness of his responsibilities. But the
+ evil struck deeper than to Ireland alone. Europe lost more than
+ her historians have yet realised from the weakness of purpose
+ that let Ireland go down transfixed by the sword of
+ Elizabeth.</p>
+
+ <p>Had the fate of Europe been then controlled by a
+ Hohenzollern, <span class="pagenum"><a name="page61"
+ id="page61"></a>[pg 61]</span> instead of by a Spanish
+ Hapsburg, how different might have been the future of the
+ world!</p>
+
+ <p>Although Europe had forgotten Ireland, Ireland had never
+ forgotten Europe. Natural outpost and sentinel of that
+ continent in the West for three-hundred years now gagged and
+ bound, since the flight to Rome of her last native Princes, she
+ stands to-day as in the days of Philip III, if an outcast from
+ European civilization non the less rejecting the insular
+ tradition of England, as she has rejected her insular Church.
+ And now once more in her career she turns to the greatest of
+ European Sovereigns, to win his eyes to the oldest, and
+ certainly the most faithful of European peoples. Ireland
+ already has given and owes much to Germany.</p>
+
+ <p>In the dark ages intercourse between the Celtic people of
+ the West and the Rhinelands and Bavaria was close and long
+ sustained. Irish monasteries flourished in the heart of
+ Germany, and German architecture gave its note possibly to some
+ of the fairest cathedral churches in Ireland.</p>
+
+ <p>Clonfert and Cashel are, perhaps amongst the most
+ conspicuous examples of the influence of that old-time
+ intercourse with Germany. To-day, when little of her past
+ remains to venerate, her ancient language on what seemed its
+ bed of death owes much of its present day revival to German
+ scholarship and culture. Probably the foremost Gaelic scholar
+ of the day is the occupant of the Chair of Celtic at Berlin
+ University, and Ireland recognises with a gratitude she is not
+ easily able to express, all that her ancient literature owes to
+ the genius and loving intellect of Dr. Kuno Meyer.</p>
+
+ <p>The name of Ireland may be known on the Bourses or in the
+ Chancelleries of Europe; it is not without interest, even fame,
+ in the centres of German academical culture. But that the
+ German State may also be interested in the political fate of
+ Ireland is believed by the present writer.</p>
+
+ <p>Maurice Fitzgerald, the outlawed claimant to the Earldom of
+ Desmond, wrote to Philip II, from Lisbon on September 4th,
+ 1593:</p>
+
+ <p>"We have thought it right to implore your Majesty to send
+ the aid you will think fit and with it to send us (the Irish
+ refugees in the Peninsula) to defend and uphold the same
+ undertaking; for we hope, with God's help Your Majesty will be
+ victorious and conquer and hold as your own the kingdom of
+ Ireland.&mdash;We trust in God that Your Majesty and the
+ Council will weigh well <span class="pagenum"><a name="page62"
+ id="page62"></a>[pg 62]</span> the advantages that will
+ ensue to Christendom from this enterprise&mdash;since the
+ opportunity is so good and the cause so just and weighty,
+ and the undertaking so easily completed."</p>
+
+ <p>The history of human freedom is written in letters of blood.
+ It is the law of God. No people who clutch to safety, who shun
+ death are worthy of freedom.</p>
+
+ <p>The dead who die for Ireland are the only live men in a free
+ Ireland. The rest are cattle. Freedom is kept alive in man's
+ blood only by shedding of that blood. It was not an act of a
+ foreign Parliament they were seeking, those splendid "scorners
+ of death," the lads and young men of Mayo, who awaited with a
+ fearless joy the advance of the English army fresh from the
+ defeat of Humbert in 1798. Then, if ever, Irishmen might have
+ run from a victorious and pitiless enemy who, having captured
+ the French General and murdered in cold blood the seven hundred
+ Killala peasants who were with his colours, were now come to
+ Killala itself to wreak vengeance on the last stronghold of
+ Irish rebellion.</p>
+
+ <p>The ill-led and half armed peasants, the last Irishmen in
+ Ireland to stand the pitched fight for their country's freedom,
+ went to meet the army of England, as the Protestant Bishop, who
+ saw them, says:&mdash;"running upon death with as little
+ appearance of reflection or concern as if they were hastening
+ to a show."</p>
+
+ <p>The late Queen Victoria, in one of her letters to her uncle,
+ the King of the Belgians, wrote thus of the abortive rising of
+ fifty years later in 1848:</p>
+
+ <p>"There are ample means of crushing the rebellion in Ireland,
+ and I think it is very likely to go off without any contest,
+ which people (and I think rightly) rather regret. The Irish
+ should receive <i>a good lesson or they will begin again</i>."
+ (Page 223, Vol. II, Queen Victoria's letters.) Her Majesty was
+ profoundly right. Ireland needed that lesson in 1848, as she
+ needs it still more to-day. Had Irishmen died in 1848 as they
+ did in 1798 Ireland would be to-day fifty years nearer to
+ freedom. It is because a century has passed since Europe saw
+ Ireland willing to die that to-day Europe has forgotten that
+ she lives.</p>
+
+ <p>As I began this essay with a remark of Charles Lever on
+ Germany so shall end it here with a remark of Lever on his own
+ country, Ireland.</p>
+
+ <p>In a letter to a friend in Dublin, he thus put the epitaph
+ of Europe on the grave of a generation who believed that "no
+ human <span class="pagenum"><a name="page63"
+ id="page63"></a>[pg 63]</span> cause was worth the shedding
+ one drop of human blood."</p>
+
+ <p>"As to Ireland all foreign sympathy is over owing to the
+ late cowardice and poltroonery of the patriots. <i>Even
+ Italians can fight</i>" (Letter of C. Lever from Florence,
+ August 19th, 1848).</p>
+
+ <p>It is only the truth that wounds. It is that reproach that
+ has cursed Ireland for a century.</p>
+
+ <p>Sedition, the natural garment for an Irishman to wear, has
+ been for a hundred years a bloodless sedition. It is this fiery
+ shirt of Nessus that has driven our strong men mad. How to shed
+ our blood with honour, how to give our lives for
+ Ireland&mdash;that has been, that is the problem of Irish
+ nationality.</p>
+
+ <h3 class="sc">Chapter VII</h3>
+
+ <h2>THE FREEDOM OF THE SEAS</h2>
+
+ <p>It would be idle to attempt to forecast the details of a
+ struggle between Great Britain and Germany. That is a task that
+ belongs to the War Department of the two States. I have
+ assigned myself merely to point out that such a struggle is
+ inevitable, and to indicate what I believe to be the supreme
+ factors in the conflict, and how one of these, Ireland, and
+ that undoubtedly the most important factor, has been overlooked
+ by practically every predecessor of Germany in the effort to
+ make good at sea. The Spaniards in Elizabeth's reign, the
+ French of Louis XIV and of the Directory took some steps, it is
+ true, to challenge England's control of Ireland, but instead of
+ concentrating their strength upon that line of attack they were
+ content to dissipate it upon isolated expeditions and never
+ once to push home the assault on the one point that was
+ obviously the key to the enemy's whole position. At any period
+ during that last three centuries, with Ireland gone, England
+ was, if not actually at the mercy of her assailants, certainly
+ reduced to impotency beyond her own shores. But while England
+ knew the value to herself of Ireland, she appreciated to the
+ full the fact that this profitable juxtaposition lay on her
+ right side hidden from the eyes of Europe.</p>
+
+ <p>"Will anyone assert," said Gladstone, "that we would have
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page64"
+ id="page64"></a>[pg 64]</span> dared to treat Ireland as we
+ have done had she lain, not between us and the ocean, but
+ between us and the continent?" And while the bulk of
+ England, swollen to enormous dimensions by the gains she
+ drew from Ireland interposed between her victim and Europe,
+ her continental adversaries were themselves the victims of
+ that strange mental disease psychologists term the
+ collective illusion. All the world saw that which in fact
+ did not exist. The greatness of England as they beheld it,
+ imposing, powerful, and triumphant, existed not on the rocky
+ base they believed they saw, but on the object, sacked,
+ impoverished, and bled, they never saw. And so it is to-day.
+ The British Empire is the great illusion. Resembling in much
+ the Holy Roman Empire it is not British, it is not an
+ Empire, and assuredly it is not holy. It lives on the
+ life-blood and sufferings of some, on the suffrance and
+ mutual jealousy of others, and on the fixed illusion of all.
+ Rather is it a great Mendicity Institute. England now,
+ instead of "robbing from Pole to Pole," as John Mitchel once
+ defined her activities, goes begging from Pole to Pole that
+ all and every one shall give her a helping hand to keep the
+ plunder. Chins, Goorkhas, Sikhs, Malays, Irish, Chinese,
+ South African Dutch, Australasians, Maoris, Canadians,
+ Japanese, and finally "Uncle Sam"&mdash;these are the main
+ components that when skilfully mixed from London, furnish
+ the colouring material for the world-wide canvas. If we take
+ away India, Egypt and the other coloured races the white
+ population that remains is greatly inferior to the
+ population of Germany, and instead of being a compact,
+ indivisible whole, consists of a number of widely scattered
+ and separated communities, each with separate and absorbing
+ problems of its own, and more than one of them British
+ neither in race, speech, nor affection. Moreover if we turn
+ to the coloured races we find that the great mass of the
+ subjects of this Empire have less rights within it than they
+ possess outside its boundaries, and occupy there a lower
+ status than that accorded to most foreigners.</p>
+
+ <p>The people of India far out number all other citizens of the
+ British Empire put together, and yet we find the British
+ Indians resident in Canada, to take but one instance,
+ petitioning the Imperial Government in 1910 for as favourable
+ terms of entry into that British possession as the Japanese
+ enjoyed.</p>
+
+ <p>They pointed out that a Japanese could enter Canada on
+ showing that he held from six pounds to ten pounds, but that no
+ British Indian could land unless he had forty pounds and had
+ come direct <span class="pagenum"><a name="page65"
+ id="page65"></a>[pg 65]</span> from India,&mdash;a physical
+ impossibility, since no direct communication exists. But
+ they went further, for they showed that their "citizenship"
+ of the British Empire entailed penalties that no foreign
+ state anywhere imposed upon them.</p>
+
+ <p>"We appeal," they said, "and most forcibly bring to your
+ notice that no such discriminating laws are existing against us
+ in foreign countries like the United States of America,
+ Germany, Japan, and Africa, to whom we do not owe any
+ allegiance whatsoever."</p>
+
+ <p>So that outside its white or European races it is clear the
+ Empire has no general or equal citizenship, and that, far from
+ being one, it is more divided racially against itself than are
+ even opposing Asiatic and European nations which have the good
+ fortune not to be united in a common, imperial bond.</p>
+
+ <p>The total white population of this incongruous mass in 1911
+ consisted of some 59,000,000 human beings made up of various
+ national and racial strains, as against 66,000,000 of white men
+ in the German Empire the vast majority of them of German blood.
+ And while the latter form a disciplined, self-contained, and
+ self-supporting and self-defending whole, the former are
+ swelled by Irish, French-Canadians, and Dutch South Africans
+ who, according to Sir R. Edgcumbe, must be reckoned as
+ "coloured."</p>
+
+ <p>It is one thing to paint the map red, but you must be sure
+ that your colours are fast and that the stock of paints wont
+ run out. England, apart from her own perplexities is now faced
+ with this prospect. Great Britain can no longer count on
+ Ireland, that most prolific source of supply of her army, navy,
+ and industrial efforts during the last century, while she is
+ faced with a declining birth-rate, due largely, be it noted, to
+ the diminished influx of the Irish, a more prolific and virile
+ race. While her internal powers of reproduction are failing,
+ her ability to keep those already born is diminishing still
+ more rapidly. Emigration threatens to remove the surplus of
+ births over deaths.</p>
+
+ <p>As long as it was only the population of Ireland that fell
+ (8,500,000 in 1846 to 4,370,000 in 1911), Great Britain was not
+ merely untroubled but actually rejoiced at a decrease in
+ numbers that made the Irish more manageable, and yet just
+ sufficiently starvable to supply her with a goodly surplus for
+ army, navy, and industrial expansion in Great Britain. Now that
+ the Irish are gone with a vengeance it is being perceived that
+ they did not take their vengeance with them and that the very
+ industrial expansion they
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page66"
+ id="page66"></a>[pg 66]</span> built up from their starving
+ bodies and naked limbs contains within itself the seeds of a
+ great retribution.</p>
+
+ <p>"Since Free Trade has ruined our agriculture, our army has
+ become composed of starving slum dwellers who, according to the
+ German notion are better at shouting than at fighting. German
+ generals have pointed out that in the South African war our
+ regular and auxiliary troops often raised the white flag and
+ surrendered, without necessity, sometimes to a few Boers, and
+ they may do the same to a German invading force. Free Trade
+ which "benefits the consumer" and the capitalist has,
+ unfortunately, through the destruction of our agriculture and
+ through forcing practically the whole population of Great
+ Britain into the towns, destroyed the manhood of the nation."
+ (Modern Germany page 251, by J. Ellis Barker, 1907). An army of
+ slum dwellers is a poor base on which to build the structure of
+ a perpetual world dominion.</p>
+
+ <p>While the navy shows an imposing output of new battleships
+ and cruisers for 1913, the record, we are told, of all warship
+ construction in the world, it takes blood as well as iron to
+ cement empires. Battleships may become so much floating scrap
+ iron (like the Russian fleet at Tsushima), if the men behind
+ the guns lack the right stamina and education.</p>
+
+ <p>We learn, too, that it is not only the slum dwellers who are
+ failing, but that to meet the shortage of officers a large
+ number of transfers from the merchant marine to the Royal Navy
+ are being sanctioned. To this must be added the call of the
+ Great Dominions for men and officers to man their local fleets.
+ As the vital resources of England become more and more
+ inadequate to meet the menace of German naval and moral
+ strength, she turns her eyes to Ireland, and we learn from the
+ London <i>Daily Telegraph</i> that Mr. Churchill's scheme of
+ recruiting at Queenstown may furnish "matter for
+ congratulation, as Irish boys make excellent bluejackets happy
+ of disposition, amenable to discipline, and extremely quick and
+ handy."</p>
+
+ <p>As I can recall an article in this same journal, written
+ during the course of the Boer War, in which Ireland was likened
+ to a "serpent whose head must be crushed beneath the heel," the
+ <i>Daily Telegraph's</i> praise to-day of the Irish disposition
+ should leave Irish boys profoundly unmoved&mdash;and still
+ ashore.</p>
+
+ <p>There is yet another aspect of the growing stream of British
+ emigration. "Death removes the feeble, emigration removes the
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page67"
+ id="page67"></a>[pg 67]</span> strong. Canada, New Zealand,
+ Australia, and South Africa, have no use for the sick and
+ palsied, or of those incapable of work through age or youth.
+ They want the workers and they get them. Those who have left
+ the United Kingdom during 1912 are not the scum of our
+ islands, but the very pick. And they leave behind, for our
+ politicians to grapple with, a greater proportion of
+ females, of children and of disabled than ever before."
+ (<i>London Magazine</i>!)</p>
+
+ <p>The excess of females over males, already so noteworthy a
+ feature of England's decay, becomes each year more accentuated
+ and doubtless accounts for the strenuous efforts now being made
+ to entrap Irish boys into the British army and navy.</p>
+
+ <p>If we compare the figures of Germany and Great Britain, and
+ then contrast them with those of Ireland, we shall see, at a
+ glance, how low England is sinking, and how vitally necessary
+ it is for her to redress the balance of her own excess of
+ "militants" over males by kidnapping Irish youths into her
+ emasculated services and by fomenting French and Russian
+ enmities against the fruitful German people.</p>
+
+ <p>Germany 1910, males, 32,031,967; females, 32,871,456; total,
+ 64,925,993. Excess of females, 739,489.</p>
+
+ <p>Great Britain, 1911:</p>
+
+ <p>England and Wales&mdash;Males, 17,448,476; females,
+ 18,626,793; total, 36,075,269. Excess of females,
+ 1,178,317.</p>
+
+ <p>Scotland&mdash;Males, 2,307,603; females, 2,251,842; total,
+ 4,759,445. Excess of females, 144,239.</p>
+
+ <p>Total for Great Britain, 40,834,714. Excess of females,
+ 1,322,556.</p>
+
+ <p>Thus on a population much less than two thirds that of
+ Germany Great Britain has almost twice as many females in
+ excess over males as Germany has, and this disproportion of
+ sexes tends yearly to increase. We read in every fresh return
+ of emigration that it is men and not women who are leaving
+ England and Scotland. That Irish emigration, appalling as its
+ ravages have been since 1846, is still maintained on a
+ naturally healthier basis the sex returns for 1911 make clear.
+ The figures for Ireland at the census were as follows:</p>
+
+ <p>Ireland&mdash;Males, 2,186,802; females, 2,195,147; total,
+ 4,381,949. Excess of females, 8,346.</p>
+
+ <p>Ireland, it is seen, can still spare 100,000 or 150,000
+ males for the British armed forces and be in no unhealthier sex
+ plight than Scotland or England is in. It is to get this
+ surplus of stout Irish brawn
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page68"
+ id="page68"></a>[pg 68]</span> and muscle that Mr. Churchill
+ and the British War Office are now touting in Ireland.</p>
+
+ <p>I take the following Government advertisement from the Cork
+ <i>Evening Echo</i> (of March, 1913), in illustration:</p>
+
+ <p>"Notice&mdash;Any person that brings a recruit for the
+ Regular or Special Reserve Branches of the Army to the
+ Recruiting Officer at Victoria Barracks, Cork, will be paid the
+ money reward allowed for each recruit which ranges from 1/6 to
+ 5/- each."</p>
+
+ <p>From whatever point of view we survey it we shall find that
+ England's Empire at bottom rests upon Ireland to make good
+ British deficiencies. The Dominions are far off, and while they
+ may give battleships they take men. Ireland is close at
+ hand&mdash;she gives all and takes nothing. Men, mind, food and
+ money&mdash;all these she has offered through the centuries,
+ and it is upon these and the unrestricted drain of these four
+ things from that rich mine of human fertility and wealth that
+ the British Empire has been founded and maintained. To secure
+ to-day the goodwill and active co-operation of the Irish race
+ abroad as well as in Ireland, and through that goodwill to
+ secure the alliance and support of the United States has become
+ the guiding purpose of British statesmanship.</p>
+
+ <p>The Home Rule Bill of the present Liberal Government is
+ merely the petty party expression of what all English statesmen
+ recognize as a national need. Were the present Liberal
+ Government thrown out to-morrow their Unionist successors would
+ hasten to bind Ireland (and America) to them by a measure that,
+ if necessary, would go much further. Every Unionist knows this.
+ Ireland is always the key to the situation.</p>
+
+ <p>I will quote two pronouncements, one English and one
+ American, to show that Home Rule has now become an imperial
+ necessity for England.</p>
+
+ <p>Speaking in the House of Lords on the Home Rule Bill, Earl
+ Grey, the late Governor-General of Canada, said on January
+ 27th, 1913:</p>
+
+ <p>"In the interests of the Empire I feel very strongly that it
+ is imperative that the Irish question should be settled on
+ lines which will satisfy the sentiment of the over-sea
+ democracies, both in our self-governing colonies and in the
+ United States. Everyone, I think will agree that it is most
+ important and in the highest interests of the empire that there
+ should be the friendliest feelings of generous affection and
+ goodwill, not only between the self-governing
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page69"
+ id="page69"></a>[pg 69]</span> Dominions and the Motherland,
+ but also between America and England.... I need not
+ elaborate this point. We are all agreed upon it. A heavy
+ shadow at present exists, and it arises from our treatment
+ of Ireland.... If this be so is it not our duty to remove
+ the obstacle that prevents that relationship with America
+ from being that which we all desire?"</p>
+
+ <p>The American utterance came from one equally representative
+ of American Imperial interests. It is that of Mr. Roosevelt,
+ published in the <i>Irish World</i> of New York, Feb. 8th,
+ 1913.</p>
+
+ <p>"I feel that the enactment into law of this measure ... bids
+ fair to establish goodwill among the English-speaking peoples.
+ This has been prevented more than by any other one thing by
+ this unhappy feud that has raged for centuries, and the
+ settlement of which, I most earnestly hope, and believe, will
+ be a powerful contribution to the peace of the world, based on
+ international justice and goodwill. I earnestly feel that the
+ measure is as much in the interests of Great Britain as of
+ Ireland."</p>
+
+ <p>Did we judge of Ireland only by many of the public
+ utterances made in her name, then, indeed might we despair of a
+ people who having suffered so much and so valiantly resisted
+ for so many centuries were now to be won to their oppressor's
+ side, by, perhaps, the most barefaced act of bribery ever
+ attempted by a Government against a people.</p>
+
+ <p>"Injured nations cannot so entirely forgive their enemies
+ without losing something of their virility, and it grates upon
+ me to hear leader after leader of the Parliamentary Party
+ declaring without shame that Home Rule when it is won for
+ Ireland is to be used for a new weapon of offence in England's
+ hands against the freedom of the world elsewhere."</p>
+
+ <p>Did the Irish Parliamentary Party indeed represent Ireland
+ in this, Mr. Wilfred Blunt's noble protest in his recent work,
+ <i>The Land War in Ireland</i>, would stand for the
+ contemptuous impeachment, not of a political party but of a
+ nation.</p>
+
+ <p>Mr. Redmond in his latest speech shows how truly Mr. Blunt
+ has depicted his party's aim; but to the credit of Ireland it
+ is to be recorded that Mr. Redmond had to choose not Ireland,
+ but England for its delivery. Speaking at St. Patrick's Day
+ dinner in London on March 17th, 1913, Mr. Redmond, to a
+ non-Irish audience, thus hailed the future part his country is
+ to play under the restoration of what he describes as a
+ "National Parliament."</p>
+
+ <p>"We will, under Home Rule, devote our attention to
+ education, <span class="pagenum"><a name="page70"
+ id="page70"></a>[pg 70]</span> reform of the Poor Law, and
+ questions of that kind which are purely domestic, which are,
+ if you like, hum-drum Irish questions, and the only way in
+ which we will attempt to interfere in any Imperial question
+ will be by our representatives on the floor of the Imperial
+ Parliament in Westminster doing everything in our power to
+ increase the strength and the glory of what will then be our
+ empire at long last; and by sending in support of the empire
+ the strong arms and brave hearts of Irish soldiers and Irish
+ sailors, to maintain the traditions of Irish valour in every
+ part of the world. That is our ambition."</p>
+
+ <p>Were this indeed the ambition of Ireland, did this represent
+ the true feeling of Irishmen towards England, and the Empire of
+ England, then Home Rule, on such terms, would be a curse and a
+ crime. Thierry, the French historian, is a truer exponent of
+ the passionate aspirations of the Irish heart than anyone who
+ to-day would seek to represent Ireland as willing to sell her
+ soul no less than the strong arms and brave hearts of her sons
+ in an unholy cause.</p>
+
+ <p>".... For notwithstanding the mixture of races, the
+ intercommunion of every kind brought about by the course of
+ centuries, hatred of the English Government still subsists as a
+ native passion in the mass of the Irish nation. Ever since the
+ hour of invasion this race of men has invariably desired that
+ which their conquerors did not desire, detested that which they
+ liked, and liked that which they detested ... This indomitable
+ persistency, this faculty of preserving through centuries of
+ misery the remembrance of lost liberty, and of never despairing
+ of a cause always defeated, always fatal to those who dared to
+ defend it, is perhaps the strangest and noblest example ever
+ given by any nation." (<i>Histoire De La Conquete De
+ L'Angleterre Par Les Normands</i>, Paris edition, 1846. London,
+ 1891.)</p>
+
+ <p>The French writer here saw deeper and spoke truer than many
+ who seek to-day not to reveal the Irish heart, whose deep
+ purpose they have forgotten, but barter its life-blood for a
+ concession that could be won to-morrow by half that blood if
+ shed at home, thus offered without warrant "as a new weapon of
+ offence to England's hands against the freedom of the world
+ elsewhere."</p>
+
+ <p>The Irishman, who in the belief that Home Rule has come or
+ that any measure of Home Rule the London Parliament will offer
+ can be a substitute for his country's freedom, joins the
+ British army or navy is a voluntary traitor to his country.
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page71"
+ id="page71"></a>[pg 71]</span> Almost everything that
+ Ireland produces, or consumes, must all go out or come
+ solely through England and on payment of a transit and
+ shipping tax to English trade.</p>
+
+ <p>The London press has lately waxed indignant over Servia
+ denied by Austria a port on the Adriatic, and we have been told
+ a Servia without a port is a Servia held in "economic slavery,"
+ and that her independence is illusory unless she have free
+ outlet to the sea. But what of Ireland? With not one, but forty
+ ports, the finest in all Western Europe, they lie idle and
+ empty. With over 1,000 miles of seaboard, facing the West and
+ holding the seaway between Europe and America, Ireland, in the
+ grip of England, has been reduced to an economic slavery that
+ has no parallel in civilization.</p>
+
+ <p>And it is to this island, to this people that the appeal is
+ now made that we should distrust the Germans and aid our
+ enslavers. Better far, were that the only outcome, the fate of
+ Alsace-Lorraine (who got their Home Rule Parliament years ago)
+ than the "friendship" of England. We have survived the open
+ hate, the prolonged enslavement, the secular robbery of England
+ and now the England smiles and offers us with one hand Home
+ Rule to take it away with the other, are we going to forget the
+ experience of our forefathers? A Connacht proverb of the Middle
+ Ages should come back to us&mdash;"Three things for a man to
+ avoid; the heels of a horse, the horns of a bull; and the smile
+ of an Englishman."</p>
+
+ <p>That Ireland must be involved in any war that Great Britain
+ undertakes goes without saying; but that we should willingly
+ throw ourselves into the fray on the wrong side to avert a
+ British defeat, is the counsel of traitors offered to
+ fools.</p>
+
+ <p>We must see to it that what Thierry wrote of our fathers is
+ not shamefully belied by their sons. Our "indomitable
+ persistency" has up to this excelled and subdued the unvarying
+ will applied to one unvarying purpose of those who, by dint of
+ that quality, have elsewhere subjugated the universe. We who
+ have preserved through centuries of misery, the remembrance of
+ lost liberty, are not now going to merge our unconquered souls
+ in the base body of our oppressor.</p>
+
+ <p>One of the few Liberal statesmen England has produced,
+ certainly the only Liberal politician she has ever produced,
+ the late Mr. Gladstone, compared the union between Great
+ Britain and Ireland to "the union between the mangled corpse of
+ Hector and the headlong chariot of Achilles." (1890.)</p>
+
+ <p>But, while I cannot admit that England is an Achilles, save,
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page72"
+ id="page72"></a>[pg 72]</span> perhaps, that she may be
+ wounded like him in the heel, I will not admit, I will not
+ own that Ireland, however mangled, however "the plowers have
+ ploughed upon her back and made long furrows," is in truth
+ dead, is indeed a corpse. No; there is a juster analogy, and
+ one given us by the only Englishman who was in every clime,
+ and in every circumstance a Liberal; one who died fighting
+ in the cause of liberty, even as in life he sang it. Byron
+ denounced the union between England and Ireland as "the
+ union of the shark with its prey."</p>
+
+ <h3 class="sc">Chapter VIII</h3>
+
+ <h2>IRELAND, GERMANY AND THE NEXT WAR</h2>
+
+ <p>In the February, 1913, <i>Fortnightly Review</i>, Sir Arthur
+ Conan Doyle at the end of an article, "Great Britain and the
+ Next War," thus appeals to Ireland to recognize that her
+ interests are one with those of Great Britain in the eventual
+ defeat of the latter:</p>
+
+ <p>"I would venture to say one word here to my Irish
+ fellow-countrymen of all political persuasions. If they imagine
+ that they can stand politically or economically while Britain
+ falls they are woefully mistaken. The British fleet is their
+ one shield. If it be broken Ireland will go down. They may well
+ throw themselves heartily into the common defence, for no sword
+ can transfix England without the point reaching Ireland behind
+ her...."</p>
+
+ <p>I propose to briefly show that Ireland, far from sharing the
+ calamities that must necessarily fall on Great Britain from
+ defeat by a great power, might conceivably thereby emerge into
+ a position of much prosperity.</p>
+
+ <p>I will agree with Sir A. Conan Doyle up to this&mdash;that
+ the defeat of Great Britain by Germany must be the cause of a
+ momentous change to Ireland: but I differ from him in believing
+ that that change must necessarily be disastrous to Ireland. On
+ the contrary, I believe that the defeat of Great Britain by
+ Germany might conceivably (save in one possible condition)
+ result in great gain to Ireland.</p>
+
+ <p>The conclusion that Ireland must suffer all the disasters
+ and eventual losses defeat would entail on Great Britain is
+ based on what may be termed the fundamental maxim that has
+ governed British dealings with Ireland throughout at least
+ three centuries. <span class="pagenum"><a name="page73"
+ id="page73"></a>[pg 73]</span> That maxim may be given in
+ the phrase, "Separation is unthinkable." Englishmen have
+ come to invincibly believe that no matter what they may do
+ or what may betide them, Ireland must inseparably be theirs,
+ linked to them as surely as Wales or Scotland, and forming
+ an eternal and integral part of a whole whose fate is
+ indissolubly in their hands. While Great Britain, they
+ admit, might well live apart (and happily) from an Ireland
+ safely "sunk under the sea" they have never conceived of an
+ Ireland, still afloat, that could possibly exist, apart from
+ Great Britain. Sometimes, as a sort of bogey, they hold out
+ to Ireland the fate that would be hers if, England defeated,
+ somebody else should "take" her. For it is a necessary
+ corollary to the fundamental maxim already stated, that
+ Ireland, if not owned by England, must necessarily be
+ "owned" by someone else than her own inhabitants.</p>
+
+ <p>The British view of the fate of Ireland in the event of
+ British defeat may be stated as twofold. Either Ireland would
+ remain after the war as she is to-day, tied to Great Britain,
+ or she <i>might</i> be (this is not very seriously entertained)
+ annexed by the victor. No other solution, I think, has ever
+ been suggested. Let us first discuss No. I.</p>
+
+ <p>This, the ordinary man in the street view, is that as
+ Ireland would be as much a part and belonging to Great Britain
+ after a war as before it, whatever the termination of that war
+ might be, she could not fail to share the losses defeat must
+ bring to a common realm. The partnership being indissoluble, if
+ the credit of the house were damaged and its properties
+ depreciated, all members of the firm must suffer. In this view,
+ an Ireland weaker, poorer, and less recuperative than Great
+ Britain, would stand to lose even more from a British defeat
+ than the predominant partner itself. Let us at once admit that
+ this view is correct. If on the condition of a great war
+ Ireland were still to remain, as she is to-day, an integral
+ portion of a defeated United Kingdom, it is plain she would
+ suffer, and might be made to suffer possibly more even than
+ fell to the share of Great Britain.</p>
+
+ <p>But that is not the only ending defeat might bring to the
+ two islands. We must proceed then to discuss No. 2, the
+ alternative fate reserved for Ireland in the unlikely event of
+ a great British overthrow. This is, that if the existing
+ partnership were to be forcibly dissolved, by external shock,
+ it would mean for Ireland "out of the frying pan into the
+ fire." The idea here is that I have earlier designated as the
+ "bogey man" idea. Germany, or the other victor in the great
+ conflict, would proceed to "take" Ireland.
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page74"
+ id="page74"></a>[pg 74]</span> An Ireland administered, say,
+ by Prussians would soon bitterly regret the milder manners
+ of the Anglo-Saxon and pine for the good old days of "doles"
+ from Westminster. I know many Irishmen who admit that as
+ between England and Germany they would prefer to remain in
+ the hands of the former&mdash;on the principle that it is
+ better to keep the devil you know than fall into the hands
+ of a new devil.</p>
+
+ <p>German rule, you are asked to believe, would be so bad, so
+ stern, that under it Ireland, however much she might have
+ suffered from England in the past, would soon yearn to be
+ restored to the arms of her sorrowing sister. Assuming, for the
+ sake of argument, that Germany "annexed" Ireland, is it at all
+ clear that she would (or even could) injure Ireland more than
+ Great Britain has done? To what purpose and with what end in
+ view? "Innate brutality"&mdash;the Englishman
+ replied&mdash;"the Prussian always ill-treats those he lays
+ hands on&mdash;witness the poor Poles." Without entering into
+ the Polish language question, or the Polish agrarian question,
+ it is permissible for an Irishman to reply that nothing by
+ Prussia in those respects has at all equalled English handling
+ of the Irish language or England land dealings in Ireland. The
+ Polish language still lives in Prussian Poland and much more
+ vigorously than the Irish language survives in Ireland.</p>
+
+ <p>But it is not necessary to obscure the issue by reference to
+ the Prussian Polish problem. An Ireland annexed to the German
+ Empire (supposing this to be internationally possible) as one
+ of the fruits of a German victory over Great Britain would
+ clearly be administered as a common possession of the German
+ people, and not as a Prussian province. The analogy, if one can
+ be set up in conditions so dissimilar, would lie not between
+ Prussia and her Polish provinces, but between the German Empire
+ and Alsace-Lorraine. What, then, would be the paramount object
+ of Germany in her administration of an overseas Reichsland of
+ such extraordinary geographical importance to her future as
+ Ireland would be?</p>
+
+ <p>Clearly not to impoverish and depress that new-won
+ possession but to enhance its exceeding strategic importance by
+ vigorous and wise administration, so as to make it the main
+ counterpoise to any possible recovery of British maritime
+ supremacy, so largely due as this was in the past to Great
+ Britain's own possession of this island.</p>
+
+ <p>A prosperous and flourishing Ireland, recognizing that her
+ own <span class="pagenum"><a name="page75"
+ id="page75"></a>[pg 75]</span> interests lie with those of
+ the new Administration, would assuredly be the first and
+ chief aim of German statesmanship.</p>
+
+ <p>The very geographical situation of Ireland would alone
+ ensure wise and able administration by her new rulers had
+ Germany no other and special interest in advancing Irish
+ well-being; for to rule from Hamburg and Berlin a remote island
+ and a discontented people, with a highly discontented and
+ separated Britain intervening, by methods of exploitation and
+ centralization, would be a task beyond the capacity of German
+ statecraft. German effort, then, would be plainly directed to
+ creating an Ireland satisfied with the change, and fully
+ determined to maintain it.</p>
+
+ <p>And it might be remembered that Germany is possibly better
+ equipped, intellectually and educationally, for the task of
+ developing Ireland than even 20th century England. She has
+ already faced a remarkable problem, and largely solved it in
+ her forty years' administration of Alsace-Lorraine. There is a
+ province torn by force from the bleeding side of France and
+ alien in sentiment to her new masters to a degree that Ireland
+ could not be to any changes of authority imposed upon her from
+ without, has, within a short lifetime, doubled in prosperity
+ and greatly increased her population, despite the open arms and
+ insistent call of France, and despite a rule denounced from the
+ first as hateful.</p>
+
+ <p>However hateful, the Prussian has proved himself an able
+ administrator and an honest and most capable instructor. In his
+ strong hands Strasburg has expanded from being an ill-kept,
+ pent-in French garrison town to a great and beautiful city.
+ Already a local Parliament gives to the population a sense of
+ autonomy, while the palace and constant presence of an Imperial
+ prince affirms the fact that German Imperialism, far from
+ engrossing and centralizing all the activities and powers of
+ the empire in Berlin, recognizes that German nationality is
+ large enough and great enough to admit of many capitals, many
+ individualities, and many separate State growths within the
+ sure compass of one great organism.</p>
+
+ <p>That an Ireland severed by force of arms from the British
+ Empire and annexed to the German Empire would be ill-governed
+ by her new masters is inconceivable. On the contrary, the
+ ablest brains in Germany, scientific, commercial, and
+ financial, no less than military and strategic, would be
+ devoted to the great task of making sure the conquest not only
+ of an island but of the intelligence of a not unintelligent
+ people, and by wisely developing so priceless a possession to
+ reconcile its inhabitants through growing
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page76"
+ id="page76"></a>[pg 76]</span> prosperity and an excellent
+ administration, to so great a change in their political
+ environment. Can it be said that England, even in her most
+ lucid intervals, has brought to the Government of Ireland
+ her best efforts, her most capable men, or her highest
+ purpose? The answer may be given by Li Hung Chang, whose
+ diary we have so lately read. Recording his interview with
+ Mr. Gladstone, the Chinese statesman says: "He spoke about
+ ... Ireland; and I was certain that he hoped to see that
+ unhappy country governed better before he died. 'They have
+ given their best to England,' he said, 'and in return have
+ been given only England's worst.'" It is certain that
+ Germany, once in possession of Ireland, would assuredly not
+ give to that country only Germany's worst.</p>
+
+ <p>In a score of ways Ireland would stand to gain from the
+ change of direction, of purpose, of intention, and, I will add,
+ of inspiration and capacity in her newly-imposed rulers.</p>
+
+ <p>Whether she liked them or not, at the outset, would be
+ beside the question. In this they would differ but little from
+ those she had so long and wearily had measure of, and if they
+ brought to their new task a new spirit and a new intellectual
+ equipment Irishmen would not be slow to realize that if they
+ themselves were never to rule their own country, they had, at
+ least, found in their new masters something more than
+ emigration agents.</p>
+
+ <p>Moreover, to Germany there would be no "Irish question," no
+ "haggard and haunting problem" to palsy her brain and miscredit
+ her hand with its old tags and jibes and sordid impulses to
+ deny the obvious.</p>
+
+ <p>To Germany there would be only an English question. To
+ prevent that from ever again imperilling her world future would
+ be the first purpose of German overseas statesmanship. And it
+ is clear that a wise and capable Irish Administration, designed
+ to build up and strengthen from within and not to belittle and
+ exploit from without, would be the sure and certain purpose of
+ a victorious Germany.</p>
+
+ <p>I have now outlined the two possible dispositions of Ireland
+ that up to this British opinion admits as conceivable in die
+ improbable event of a British defeat by Germany. Only these two
+ contingencies are ever admitted. First that Ireland, sharing
+ the common disaster, must endure with her defeated partner all
+ the evils that a great overthrow must inflict upon the United
+ Kingdom. Second, that Ireland, if Great Britain should be
+ completely defeated, might conceivably be "taken" or annexed by
+ the victor and held as a <span class="pagenum"><a name="page77"
+ id="page77"></a>[pg 77]</span> conquered territory, and in
+ this guise would bitterly regret the days of her union with
+ Great Britain. I have sought to show, in answer to the
+ latter argument, that were annexation by the victor indeed
+ to follow a British defeat Ireland might very conceivably
+ find the changed circumstances greatly to her advantage.</p>
+
+ <p>But there is a third contingency I have nowhere seen
+ discussed or hinted at, and yet it is at least as likely as No.
+ 1, and far more probable than No. 2&mdash;for I do not think
+ that the annexation of Ireland by a European power is
+ internationally possible, however decisive might be the
+ overthrow of England. It is admitted (and it is upon this
+ hypothesis that the discussion is proceeding) that Great
+ Britain might be defeated by Germany, and that the British
+ fleet might be broken and an enemy's sword might transfix
+ England. Such an overthrow would be of enormous import to
+ Europe and to the whole world. The trident would have changed
+ hands, for the defeat of England could only be brought about by
+ the destruction of her sea supremacy. Unless help came from
+ without, a blockaded Britain would be more at the mercy of the
+ victor than France was after Sedan and Paris. It would lie with
+ the victor to see that the conditions of peace he imposed were
+ such as, while ensuring to him the objects for which he had
+ fought, would be the least likely conditions to provoke
+ external intervention or a combination of alarmed world
+ interests. Now, putting aside lesser consideration, the chief
+ end Germany would have in a war with England would be to ensure
+ her own free future on the seas. For with that assured and
+ guaranteed by a victory over England, all else that she seeks
+ must in the end be hers. To annex resisting British colonies
+ would be in itself an impossible task&mdash;physically a much
+ more impossible task than to annex Ireland.</p>
+
+ <p>To annex Ireland would be, as a military measure, once
+ command of the seas was gained, a comparatively easy task. No
+ practical resistance to one German army corps even could be
+ offered by any force Ireland contains, or could of herself, put
+ into the field. No arsenal or means of manufacturing arms
+ exists. The population has been disarmed for a century, and by
+ bitter experience has been driven to regard the use of arms as
+ a criminal offence. Patriotism has been treated as felony.
+ Volunteers and Territorials are not for Ireland. To expect that
+ a disarmed and demoralized population who have been sedulously
+ batoned into a state of physical and moral dejection, should
+ develop military virtues in face of a disciplined army is to
+ attribute to Irishmen the very
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page78"
+ id="page78"></a>[pg 78]</span> qualities their critics unite
+ in denying them. "The Irishman fights well everywhere except
+ in Ireland," has passed into a commonplace: and since every
+ effort of government has been directed to ensuring the
+ abiding application of the sneer, Englishmen would find, in
+ the end, the emasculating success of their rule completely
+ justified in the physical submission of Ireland to the new
+ force that held her down. With Great Britain cut off and the
+ Irish Sea held by German squadrons, no power from within
+ could maintain any effective resistance to a German
+ occupation of Dublin and a military administration of the
+ island. To convert that into permanent administration could
+ not be opposed from within, and with Great Britain down and
+ severed from Ireland by a victorious German navy, it is
+ obvious that opposition to the permanent retention of
+ Ireland by the victor must come from without, and it is for
+ this international reason that I think a German annexation
+ of any part of a defeated United Kingdom need not be
+ seriously considered. Such a complete change in the
+ geography of Europe as a German-owned Ireland could not but
+ provoke universal alarm and a widespread combination to
+ forbid its realization. The bogey that Ireland, if not John
+ Bull's other island, must necessarily be somebody else's
+ other island will not really bear inspection at close
+ quarters.</p>
+
+ <p>Germany would have to attain her end, the permanent
+ disabling of the maritime supremacy of Great Britain, by
+ another and less provocative measure. It is here and in just
+ these circumstances that the third contingency, and one no
+ Englishman I venture to think, has ever dreamed of, would be
+ born on the field of battle and baptized a Germanic godchild
+ with European diplomacy as sponsor. Germany, for her own
+ imperial ends and in pursuit of a great world policy, might
+ successfully accomplish what Louis XIV and Napoleon only
+ contemplated. An Ireland, already severed by a sea held by
+ German warships, and temporarily occupied by a German army,
+ might well be permanently and irrevocably severed from Great
+ Britain, and with common assent erected into a neutralized,
+ independent European State under international guarantees. An
+ independent Ireland would, of itself, be no threat or hurt to
+ any European interest. On the contrary, to make of Ireland an
+ Atlantic Holland, a maritime Belgium, would be an act of
+ restoration to Europe of this the most naturally favoured of
+ European islands that a Peace Congress should, in the end, be
+ glad to ratify at the instance of a victorious Germany. That
+ Germany should propose this form of dissolution of the United
+ Kingdom in any interests but
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page79"
+ id="page79"></a>[pg 79]</span> her own, or for the <i>beaux
+ yeux</i> of Ireland I do not for a moment assert. Her main
+ object would be the opening of the seas and their permanent
+ freeing from that overwhelming control Great Britain has
+ exercised since the destruction of the French navy, largely
+ based, as all naval strategists must perceive on the
+ unchallenged possession of Ireland.</p>
+
+ <p>That Ireland is primarily a European island inhabited by a
+ European people who are not English, and who have for centuries
+ appealed to Europe and the world to aid them in ceasing to be
+ politically controlled by England, is historic fact. And since
+ the translation of this historic fact into practice European
+ politics would undoubtedly effect the main object of the
+ victorious power, it is evident that, Great Britain once
+ defeated, Germany would carry the Irish question to a European
+ solution in harmony with her maritime interests, and could
+ count on the support of the great bulk of European opinion to
+ support the settlement those interests imposed. And if
+ politically and commercially an independent and neutral Irish
+ State commended itself to Europe, on moral and intellectual
+ grounds the claim could be put still higher. Nothing advanced
+ on behalf of England could meet the case for a free Ireland as
+ stated by Germany. Germany would attain her ends as the
+ champion of national liberty and could destroy England's naval
+ supremacy for all time by an act of irreproachable morality.
+ The United States, however distasteful from one point of view
+ the defeat of England might be, could do nothing to oppose a
+ European decision that could dearly win an instant support from
+ influential circles&mdash;Irish and German&mdash;within her own
+ borders.</p>
+
+ <p>In any case the Monroe Doctrine cuts both ways, and unless
+ at the outset the United States could be drawn into an
+ Anglo-Teutonic conflict, it is clear that the decision of a
+ European Congress to create a new European State out of a very
+ old European people could not furnish ground for American
+ interference.</p>
+
+ <p>I need not further labour the question. If Englishmen will
+ but awaken from the dream that Ireland "belongs" to them and
+ not to the Irish people, and that that great and fertile
+ island, inhabited by a brave, a chivalrous and an intellectual
+ race (qualities they have alas! done their utmost to expel from
+ the island) is a piece of real estate they own and can dispose
+ of as they will, they cannot fail to perceive that the Irish
+ question cannot much longer be mishandled with impunity, and
+ that far from being, as they now think it, merely a party
+ question&mdash;and not even a "domestic question"
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page80"
+ id="page80"></a>[pg 80]</span> or one the colonies have a
+ voice in&mdash;it may in a brief epoch become a European
+ question.</p>
+
+ <p>With the approaching disappearance of the Near Eastern
+ question (which England is hastening to the detriment of
+ Turkey) a more and more pent-in Central Europe may discover
+ that there is a Near Western question, and that Ireland&mdash;a
+ free Ireland&mdash;restored to Europe is the key to unlock the
+ western ocean and open the seaways of the world.</p>
+
+ <p>Again it is Mr. Gladstone who comes to remind Englishmen
+ that Ireland, after all, is a European island, and that Europe
+ has some distant standing in the issue.</p>
+
+ <p>"I would beseech Englishmen to consider how they would
+ behave to Ireland, if instead of having 5,000,000 of people,
+ she had 25,000,000; or if instead of being placed between us
+ and the ocean she were placed between us and the Continent."
+ (Notes and queries on the Irish Demand, February, 1887.) While
+ the geographical positions of the islands to each other and to
+ Europe have not changed, and cannot change, the political
+ relation of one to the other, and so the political and
+ economical relation of both to Europe, to the world and to the
+ carrying trade of the world and the naval policies of the
+ powers may be gravely altered by agencies beyond the control of
+ Great Britain.</p>
+
+ <p>The changes wrought in the speed and capacity of steam
+ shipping, the growth and visible trend of German naval power,
+ and the increasing possibilities of aerial navigation, all
+ unite to emphasize the historian Niebuhr's warning, and to
+ indicate for Ireland a possible future of restored communion
+ with Europe, and less and less the continued wrong of that
+ artificial exclusion in which British policy has sought to
+ maintain her&mdash;"an island beyond an island."</p>
+
+ <h3 class="sc">Chapter IX</h3>
+
+ <h2>THE ELSEWHERE EMPIRE</h2>
+
+ <p>Every man born in Ireland holds a "hereditary brief" for the
+ opponents of English sway, wherever they may be. The tribunal
+ of history in his own land is closed to him; he must appeal to
+ another court; he must seek the ear of those who make history
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page81"
+ id="page81"></a>[pg 81]</span> elsewhere. The Irishman is
+ denied the right of having a history, as he is denied the
+ right of having a country. He must recover both. For him
+ there is no past any more than a future. And if he seeks the
+ record of his race in the only schools or books open to him
+ he will find that hope has been shut out of the school and
+ fame taken out of the story.</p>
+
+ <p>The late John Richard Green, one of the greatest of English
+ historians, was attracted to Ireland by a noble sympathy for
+ the fallen which he shared with very few of his
+ fellow-countrymen. We are told that he sympathized with the
+ spirit of Irish nationality. "A State," he would say, "is
+ accidental; it can be made or unmade; but a nation is something
+ real which can be neither made nor destroyed."</p>
+
+ <p>He had once planned a history of Ireland, "but abandoned the
+ idea because the continuous record of misery and misgovernment
+ was too painful to contemplate." All pleasure lies in contrast.
+ The history of Ireland offers no contrast; it is a tale of
+ unmitigated wrong.</p>
+
+ <p>It is too full of graves and the ghosts are not laid yet. As
+ well write the history of a churchyard. Forty years before John
+ Richard Green thus explained why he had abandoned the plan of
+ the graveyard, Victor Hugo lashed the front of England with
+ this very thong. "Ireland turned into a cemetery; Poland
+ transported to Siberia; all Italy a galleys&mdash;there is
+ where we stand in this month of November, 1831!"</p>
+
+ <p>The history of Ireland remains to be written, because the
+ purpose of Ireland remains yet to be achieved. The widow of
+ John Richard Green has laid the foundations of that temple of
+ hope in which the youth of Ireland must enter and be sworn to
+ the task that yet remains for Irishmen to accomplish.</p>
+
+ <p>And so in closing the days of 1913 I bring, with a message
+ of hope, these scattered thoughts upon the British Empire and
+ its approaching dissolution to lay before the youth of Ireland.
+ I say approaching dissolution advisedly, for the signs are
+ there to be read. "Home Rule" will not save it. The attempt now
+ being made to bribe Ireland and the greater Ireland beyond the
+ seas, to the side of the Elsewhere Empire by what has been
+ aptly termed a "ticket-of-leave" bill, will not suffice. The
+ issue lies in stronger hands. Even could the two Irelands be
+ won by the dole now offered, of a subordinate Parliament in
+ Dublin, its hands tied so that it must be impotent for any
+ national effort, "a Parliament"
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page82"
+ id="page82"></a>[pg 82]</span> as Mr. Herbert Samuel says,
+ "for the local affairs of Irishmen," there are other and
+ more powerful agencies that no measure of conciliation
+ within the Empire can permanently win to that system of
+ world exploitation centred in London.</p>
+
+ <p>"I would let the Irish have Home Rule," said recently Mr.
+ Winston Churchill, "for their own idiotic affairs." But the
+ last word came from Lord Morley, the "father of Home Rule."
+ "Give it them," he said, in friendly, private counsel, "give it
+ them; let them have the full savour of their own dunghill
+ civilization."</p>
+
+ <p>But the last word of all will come, not from Lord Morley, or
+ "Home Rule," but from the land and the myriad peoples whose
+ ancient civilization, Lord Morley, like every preceding
+ Viceroy, has striven to bury under the dunghill of British
+ supremacy in India, and to hide the very outlines of the
+ ancient body of the set designs of a new purpose. The capital
+ of British India is to be the "new Delhi," planned in
+ Whitehall, but paid for in India&mdash;the apotheosis of dung.
+ The new India will make short work of "the new Delhi."</p>
+
+ <p>"An unplumbed, salt, estranging sea" of moral and spiritual
+ separation sets between the imperial conception as nourished in
+ Britain and the growing hope of the great millions of mankind
+ who make up the greatest realm of her empire.</p>
+
+ <p>Ireland <i>might</i> be bought or bribed, at any rate in
+ this generation, to forfeit her national ideals and barter the
+ aspiration that six centuries of contact with England have
+ failed to kill; but the 350,000,000 of Indian mankind can never
+ be, or bought, or bribed in the end.</p>
+
+ <p>Even if Ireland forgot the deathless words of Grattan,
+ delivered in the subordinate Parliament of 1780, those words
+ will find a response in the hearts of men who never heard of
+ Grattan. For the voice of the Irish patriot was, in truth, a
+ world voice&mdash;a summons to every audience wherever men
+ gather in quest of freedom. The prophesy Grattan uttered in the
+ name of Ireland assuredly will be fulfilled, and that in the
+ life time of many of us, in that greater Ireland England holds
+ in the eastern seas by the very same tide of raid, conquest and
+ spoliation that has given her our own land.</p>
+
+ <p>Substitute India for Ireland and the Grattan of 1780 becomes
+ the Indian patriot of to-day.</p>
+
+ <p>"I will never be satisfied so long as the meanest cottager
+ in Ireland has a link of the British chain clanking in his
+ rags; he may be naked, he shall not be in irons; and I do see
+ the time is at hand; <span class="pagenum"><a name="page83"
+ id="page83"></a>[pg 83]</span> the spirit has gone forth,
+ the declaration is planted; and though great men should
+ apostasize, yet the cause will live; and though the public
+ speaker should die, yet the immortal fire shall outlast the
+ organ which conveyed it, and the breath of liberty, like the
+ word of holy men, will not die with the prophet, but survive
+ him."</p>
+
+ <p>Were Ireland to accept the bribe now offered she would
+ indeed justify the reproach of Wilfred Blunt; but she would
+ become some thing else than a "weapon of offence in England's
+ hands against the freedom of the world elsewhere;" she would
+ share, and rightly share the fate of the parasite growth that,
+ having gripped her trunk so tightly, has by that aid reached
+ the sunlight. The British Empire is no northern oak tree. It is
+ a creeping, climbing plant that has fastened on the limbs of
+ others and grown great from a sap not its own. If we seek an
+ analogy for it in the vegetable and not in the animal world we
+ must go to the forests of the tropics and not to the northland
+ woodlands. In the great swamps at the mouth of the Amazon the
+ naturalist Bates describes a monstrous liana, the "Sipo
+ Matador" or Murdering Creeper, that far more fitly than the oak
+ tree of the north typifies John Bull and the place he has won
+ in the sunlight by the once strong limbs of Ireland.</p>
+
+ <p>Speaking of the forests round Para, Bates says:&mdash;"In
+ these tropical forests each plant and tree seems to be striving
+ to outvie its fellows, struggling upwards towards light and
+ air&mdash;branch and leaf and stem&mdash;regardless of its
+ neighbours. Parasitic plants are seen fastening with firm grip
+ on others, making use of them with reckless indifference as
+ instruments for their own advancement. Live and let live is
+ clearly not the maxim taught in these wildernesses. There is
+ one kind of parasitic tree very common near Para which exhibits
+ this feature in a very prominent manner. It is called the "Sipo
+ Matador," or Murderer Liana. It belongs to the fig order, and
+ has been described and figured by Von Martius as the Atlas to
+ Spix and Martius' Travels. I observed many specimens. <i>The
+ base of its stem would be unable to bear the weight of the
+ upper growth</i>; it is obliged therefore to support itself on
+ a tree of <i>another species</i>. In this it is not essentially
+ different from other climbing trees and plants, but the way the
+ Matador sets about it is peculiar and produces certainly a
+ disagreeable impression. It springs up close to the tree on
+ which it intends to fix itself, and the wood of its stem grows
+ by spreading itself like a plastic mould over one side of the
+ trunk of its supporter. It then puts forth, from each side, an
+ armlike branch, which grows rapidly, and looks as though a
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page84"
+ id="page84"></a>[pg 84]</span> stream of sap were flowing
+ and hardening as it went. This adheres closely to the trunk
+ of the victim, and the two arms meet at the opposite side
+ and blend together. These arms are put forth at somewhat
+ regular intervals in mounting upwards, and the victim, when
+ its strangler is full grown, becomes tightly clasped by a
+ number of inflexible rings. These rings gradually grow
+ larger as the Murderer flourishes, rearing its crown of
+ foliage to the sky mingled with that of its neighbour, and
+ in course of time they kill it, by stopping the flow of its
+ sap. The strange spectacle now remains of the selfish
+ parasite clasping in its arms the lifeless and decaying body
+ of its victim, which had been a help to its own growth. Its
+ ends have been served&mdash;it has flowered and fruited,
+ reproduced and disseminated its kind; and <i>now when the
+ dead trunk moulders away its own end approaches; its support
+ is gone and itself also falls</i>."</p>
+
+ <p>The analogy is almost the most perfect in literature, and if
+ we would not see it made perfect in history we must get rid of
+ the parasite grip before we are quite strangled. If we would
+ not share the coming darkness we must shake off the murderer's
+ hold, before murderer and victim fall together. That fall is
+ close at hand. A brave hand may yet cut the "Sipo Matador," and
+ the slayer be slain before he has quite stifled his victim.</p>
+
+ <p>If that hand be not a European one, then may it come,
+ bronzed, keen, and supple from the tropic calm! The birds of
+ the forest are on the wing.</p>
+
+ <p>Regions Caesar never knew, including Hibernia, have come
+ under the eagles, nay the vultures, of imperial Britain. But
+ the lion's maw is full.</p>
+
+ <p>At length the overgorged beast of prey, with all the
+ diseases in his veins that over-eating brings, finds that his
+ claws are not so sharp as they were, that his belly is much
+ heavier when he tries to leap and that it is now chiefly by his
+ voice he still scares his enemies.</p>
+
+ <p>The Empire of England dates from Tudor times. Henry VIII was
+ the first John Bull. When the conquered Irish and the wealth
+ derived from their rich country England set out to lay low
+ every free people that had a country worth invading and who, by
+ reasons of their non-imperial instinct were not prepared to
+ meet her on equal terms. India she overran by the same methods
+ as had given her Ireland.</p>
+
+ <p>Wholesale plunder, treachery and deceit met at her council
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page85"
+ id="page85"></a>[pg 85]</span> board under a succession of
+ Governors and Viceroys, whose policy was that of Captain
+ Kidd, and whose ante-room of state led every native prince
+ to the slippery plank. The thing became the most colossal
+ success upon earth. No people were found able to withstand
+ such a combination. How could peoples still nursed in the
+ belief of some diviner will ruling men's minds resist such
+ an attack?</p>
+
+ <p>For one brief space Napoleon reared his head; and had he
+ cast his vision to. Ireland instead of to Egypt he would have
+ found out the secret of the pirate's stronghold. But the fates
+ willed otherwise; the time was not yet. He sailed for
+ Alexandria, lured by a dream, instead of for Cork; and the
+ older Imperialists beat the new Imperialists and secured a
+ fresh century of unprecedented triumph. The Pyramids looked
+ down on Waterloo; but the headlands of Bantry Bay concealed the
+ mastery, and the mystery, of the seas.</p>
+
+ <p>With 1811 was born the era of Charles Peace, no less than of
+ John Bull&mdash;on Sundays and Saint's days a churchwarden, who
+ carried the plate; on week days a burglar who lifted it. Truly,
+ as John Mitchel said on his convict hulk: "On English felony
+ the sun never sets." May it set in 1915.</p>
+
+ <p>From Napoleon's downfall to the battle of Colenso, the
+ Empire founded by Henry VIII has swelled to monstrous size.
+ Innumerable free peoples have bit the dust and died with
+ plaintive cries to heaven. The wealth of London has increased a
+ thousand fold, and the giant hotels and caravanserais have
+ grown, at the millionaire's touch, to rival the palaces of the
+ Caesars.</p>
+
+ <p>"All's well with God's world"&mdash;and poet and plagiarist,
+ courtier and courtesan, Kipling and cant&mdash;these now dally
+ by the banks of the Thames and dine off the peoples of the
+ earth, just as once the degenerate populace of imperial Rome
+ fed upon the peoples of the Pyramids. But the thing is near the
+ end. The "secret of Empire" is no longer the sole possession of
+ England. Other peoples are learning to think imperially. The
+ Goths and the Visigoths of modern civilisation are upon the
+ horizon. Action must soon follow thought. London, like Rome,
+ will have strange guests. They will not pay their hotel bills.
+ Their day is not yet but it is at hand. "Home Rule" assemblies
+ and Indian "Legislative Councils" may prolong the darkness; but
+ the dawn is in die sky. And in the downfall of the Tudor
+ Empire, both Ireland and India shall escape from the
+ destruction and join again the free civilizations of the
+ earth.</p>
+
+ <p>The birds of the forest are on the
+ wing.</p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page86"
+ id="page86"></a>[pg 86]</span>
+
+ <p>It is an Empire in these straights that turns to America,
+ through Ireland, to save it. And the price it offers
+ is&mdash;war with Germany. France may serve for a time, but
+ France like Germany, is in Europe, and in the end it is all
+ Europe and not only Germany England assails. Permanent
+ confinement of the white races, as distinct from the
+ Anglo-Saxon variety, can only be achieved by the active support
+ and close alliance of the American people. These people are
+ to-day, unhappily republicans and free men, and have no
+ ill-will for Germany and a positive distaste for imperialism.
+ It is not really in their blood. That blood is mainly Irish and
+ German, the blood of men not distinguished in the past for
+ successful piracy and addicted rather to the ways of peace. The
+ wars that Germany has waged have been wars of defence, or wars
+ to accomplish the unity of her people. Irish wars have been
+ only against one enemy, and ending always in material disaster
+ they have conferred always a moral gain. Their memory uplifts
+ the Irish heart; for no nation, no people, can reproach Ireland
+ with having wronged them. She has injured no man.</p>
+
+ <p>And now, to-day, it is the great free race of this common
+ origin of peace-loving peoples, filling another continent, that
+ is being appealed to by every agency of crafty diplomacy, in
+ every garb but that of truth, to aid the enemy of both and the
+ arch-disturber of the old world. The jailer of Ireland seeks
+ Irish-American support to keep Ireland in prison; the intriguer
+ against Germany would win German-American good-will against its
+ parent stock. There can be no peace for mankind, no limit to
+ the intrigues set on foot to assure Great Britain "the mastery
+ of the seas."</p>
+
+ <p>If "America" will but see things aright, as a good
+ "Anglo-Saxon" people should, she will take her place beside,
+ nay, even a little in front of John Bull in the plunder of the
+ earth. Were the "Anglo-Saxon Alliance" ever consummated it
+ would be the biggest crime in human history. That alliance is
+ meant by the chief party seeking it to be a perpetual threat to
+ the peoples of Europe, nay, to the whole of mankind outside the
+ allied ranks. And instead of bringing peace it must assuredly
+ bring the most distracting and disastrous conflict that has
+ ever stained the world with blood.</p>
+
+ <p>John Bull has now become the great variety artist, one in
+ truth whose infinite variety detention cannot stale any more
+ than Customs officers can arrest the artist's baggage.</p>
+
+ <p>At one moment the "Shirt King," being prosecuted for the
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page87"
+ id="page87"></a>[pg 87]</span> sale of cheap cottons as
+ "Irish Linen" in London; the next he lands the "Bloater
+ King" in New York, offering small fish as something very
+ like a whale. And the offer in both cases is made in the
+ tongue of Shakespeare.</p>
+
+ <p>The tongue has infinite uses; from China it sounds the "call
+ for prayer," and lo, the Book of Dividends opens at the right
+ text. Were Bull ever caught in the act, and put from the trade
+ of international opium-dosing to that of picking oakum and the
+ treadmill we should hear him exclaim, as he went out of sight,
+ "Behold me weaving the threads of democratic destiny as I climb
+ the golden stair."</p>
+
+ <p>The rôles are endless! In Ireland, the conversion of
+ Irishmen into cattle; in England, the conversion of Irish
+ cattle into men; in India and Egypt the suppression of the
+ native press; in America the subsidising of the non-native
+ press; the tongue of Shakespeare has infinite uses. He only
+ poached deer&mdash;it would poach dreadnoughts. The emanations
+ of Thames sewage are all over the world, and the sewers are
+ running still. The penalty for the pollution of the Thames is a
+ high one; but the prize for the pollution of the Mississippi is
+ still higher; the fountains of the deep, the mastery of the
+ great waters, these are the things John Bull seeks on the shore
+ of the "Father of Waters."</p>
+
+ <p>The sunset of the fading Empire would turn those waters into
+ blood. The British Empire was not founded in peace; how, then
+ can it be kept by peace, or ensured by peace-treaties? It was
+ born of pillage and blood-shed, and has been maintained by
+ both; and it cannot now be secured by a common language any
+ more than a common Bible. The lands called the British Empire
+ belong to many races, and it is only by the sword and not by
+ the Book of Peace or any pact of peace that those races can be
+ kept from the ownership of their own countries.</p>
+
+ <p>The "Anglo-Saxon Alliance" means a compact to ensure slavery
+ and beget war. The people who fought the greatest war in modern
+ history to release slaves are not likely to begin the greatest
+ war in all history to beget slaves.</p>
+
+ <p>Let the truth be known in America that England wants to turn
+ the great Republic of free men into die imperial ally of the
+ great Empire of bought men, and that day die "Anglo-Saxon
+ Alliance" gives place to the Declaration of Independence.</p>
+
+ <p>The true alliance to aim at for all who love peace is the
+ friendly Union of Germany, America and Ireland. These are the
+ true United States of the world.</p>
+
+ <p>Ireland, the link between Europe and America, must be freed
+ by both.</p>
+
+ <p>Denied to-day free intercourse with either, she yet forms in
+ the great designs of Providence the natural bond to bring the
+ old world and the new together.</p>
+
+ <p>May 1915 lay the foundation of this&mdash;the true Hundred
+ Years of Peace!</p>
+
+<div>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 14728 ***</div>
+</body>
+</html>
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #14728 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/14728)
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Crime Against Europe, by Roger Casement
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Crime Against Europe
+ A Possible Outcome of the War of 1914
+
+Author: Roger Casement
+
+Release Date: January 18, 2005 [EBook #14728]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE CRIME AGAINST EUROPE ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David Starner, William Flis, and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team.
+
+
+
+
+
+THE
+
+Crime Against Europe
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_A Possible Outcome of the War of 1914_
+
+BY
+
+SIR ROGER CASEMENT
+
+ * * * * *
+
+COPYRIGHTED 1915
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+INTRODUCTION.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The reader must remember that these articles were written before
+the war began. They are in a sense prophetic and show a remarkable
+understanding of the conditions which brought about the present great
+war in Europe.
+
+The writer has made European history a life study and his training in
+the English consular service placed him in a position to secure the
+facts upon which he bases his arguments.
+
+Sir Roger Casement was born in Ireland in September, 1864. He was made
+consul to Lorenzo Marques in 1889, being transferred to a similar
+post in the Portuguese Possessions in West Africa, which included the
+consulate to the Gaboon and the Congo Free State. He held this post
+from 1898 to 1905, when he was given the consulate of Santos. The
+following year he was appointed consul to Hayti and San Domingo, but
+did not proceed, going instead to Para, where he served until 1909,
+when he became consul-general to Rio de Janeiro. He was created a
+knight in 1911.
+
+He was one of the organizers of the Irish Volunteers at Dublin in
+November, 1913, being one of their provisional committee. At present
+he is a member of the governing body of that organization. He spent
+the summer of this year in the United States. Sir Roger is at present
+in Berlin, where, after a visit paid to the foreign office by him,
+the German Chancellor caused to be issued the statement that "should
+the German forces reach the shores of Ireland they would come not as
+conquerors but as friends."
+
+Sir Roger is well known for his investigation into the Putomayo rubber
+district atrocities in 1912.
+
+December, 1914.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter I
+
+THE CAUSES OF THE WAR AND THE FOUNDATION OF PEACE
+
+
+Since the war, foreshadowed in these pages, has come and finds public
+opinion in America gravely shocked at a war it believes to be solely
+due to certain phases of European militarism, the writer is now
+persuaded to publish these articles, which at least have the merit of
+having been written well before the event, in the hope that they may
+furnish a more useful point of view. For if one thing is certain it is
+that European militarism is no more the cause of this war than of any
+previous war. Europe is not fighting to see who has the best army,
+or to test mere military efficiency, but because certain peoples wish
+certain things and are determined to get and keep them by an appeal to
+force. If the armies and fleets were small the war would have broken
+out just the same, the parties and their claims, intentions, and
+positions being what they are. To find the causes of the war we must
+seek the motives of the combatants, and if we would have a lasting
+peace the foundations upon which to build it must be laid bare by
+revealing those foundations on which the peace was broken. To find
+the causes of the war we should turn not to Blue Books or White
+Papers, giving carefully selected statements of those responsible
+for concealing from the public the true issues that move nations to
+attack each other, but should seek the unavowed aims of those nations
+themselves.
+
+Once the motive is found it is not hard to say who it is that broke
+the peace, whatever the diplomats may put forward in lieu of the real
+reason.
+
+The war was, in truth, inevitable, and was made inevitable years ago.
+It was not brought about through the faults or temper of Sovereigns
+or their diplomats, not because there were great armies in Europe,
+but because certain Powers, and one Power in particular, nourished
+ambitions and asserted claims that involved not only ever increasing
+armaments but insured ever increasing animosities. In these cases
+peace, if permitted, would have dissipated the ambitions and upset
+claims, so it was only a question of time and opportunity when those
+whose aims required war would find occasion to bring it about.
+
+As Mr. Bernard Shaw put it, in a recent letter to the press: "After
+having done all in our power to render war inevitable it is no use now
+to beg people not to make a disturbance, but to come to London to be
+kindly but firmly spoken to by Sir Edward Grey."
+
+To find the motive powerful enough to have plunged all Europe into war
+in the short space of a few hours, we must seek it, not in the pages
+of a "white paper" covering a period of only fifteen days (July 20th
+to August 4th, 1914), but in the long anterior activities that led the
+great Powers of Europe into definite commitments to each other. For
+the purposes of this investigation we can eliminate at once three of
+the actual combatants, as being merely "accessories after the fact,"
+viz.:--Servia, Belgium and Japan, and confine our study of the
+causes of the conflict to the aims and motives of the five principal
+combatants. For it is clear that in the quarrel between Servia and
+Austria, Hungary is only a side issue of the larger question that
+divides Europe into armed camps. Were categoric proof sought of how
+small a part the quarrel between Vienna and Belgrade played in the
+larger tragedy, it can be found in the urgent insistence of the
+Russian Government itself in the very beginning of the diplomatic
+conversations that preceded the outbreak of hostilities.
+
+As early as the 24th of July, the Russian Government sought to prevail
+upon Great Britain to proclaim its complete solidarity with Russia and
+France, and on the British Ambassador in St. Petersburg pointing out
+that "direct British interests in Servia were nil, and a war on behalf
+of that country would never be sanctioned by British public opinion,"
+the Russian Minister of Foreign Affairs replied that "we must not
+forget that the _general European_ question was involved, the Servian
+question being but a part of the former, and that Great Britain
+could not afford to efface herself from the problem _now at issue_."
+(Despatch of Sir G. Buchanan to Sir E. Grey, 24th July, 1914).
+
+Those problems involved far mightier questions than the relations of
+Servia to Austria, the neutrality of Belgium or the wish of Japan to
+keep the peace of the East by seizing Kiao-Chau.
+
+The neutrality never became a war issue until long after war had been
+decided on and had actually broken out; while Japan came into the
+contest solely because Europe had obligingly provided one, and because
+one European power preferred, for its own ends, to strengthen an
+Asiatic race to seeing a kindred white people it feared grow stronger
+in the sun.
+
+Coming then to the five great combatants, we can quickly reduce them
+to four. Austria-Hungary and Germany in this war are indivisible.
+While each may have varying aims on many points and ambitions that,
+perhaps, widely diverge both have one common bond, self-preservation,
+that binds them much more closely together than mere formal "allies."
+In this war Austria fights of necessity as a Germanic Power, although
+the challenge to her has been on the ground of her Slav obligations
+and activities. Germany is compelled to support Austria by a law of
+necessity that a glance at the map of Europe explains. Hence, for
+the purpose of the argument, we may put the conflict as between the
+Germanic peoples of Central Europe and those who have quarreled with
+them.
+
+We thus arrive at the question, "why should such strangely consorted
+allies as England, Russia and France be at war with the German
+people?"
+
+The answer is not to be found in the White Book, or in any statement
+publicly put forward by Great Britain, Russia or France.
+
+But the answer must be found, if we would find the causes of the war,
+and if we would hope to erect any lasting peace on the ruins of this
+world conflict.
+
+To accept, as an explanation of the war the statement that Germany
+has a highly trained army she has not used for nearly half a century
+and that her people are so obsessed with admiration for it that they
+longed to test it on their neighbours, is to accept as an explanation
+a stultifying contradiction. It is of course much easier to put
+the blame on the Kaiser. This line of thought is highly popular: it
+accords, too, with a fine vulgar instinct.
+
+The German people can be spared the odium of responsibility for a
+war they clearly did nothing to provoke, by representing them as the
+victims of an autocracy, cased in mail and beyond their control.
+We thus arrive at "the real crime against Germany," which explains
+everything but the thing it set out to explain. It leaves unexplained
+the real crime against Europe.
+
+To explain the causes of the war we must find the causes of the
+alliances of England, France and Russia against Germany.
+
+For the cause of the war is that alliance--that and nothing else. The
+defence of the _Entente Cordiale_ is that it is an innocent pact of
+friendship, designed only to meet the threat of the Triple Alliance.
+But the answer to that is that whereas the Triple Alliance was formed
+thirty years ago, it has never declared war on anyone, while the
+_Triple Entente_ before it is eight years old has involved Europe,
+America, Africa, and Asia in a world conflict. We must find the motive
+for England allying herself with France and Russia in an admittedly
+anti-German "understanding" if we would understand the causes of the
+present war and why it is that many besides Bernard Shaw hold that
+"after having done all in our power to render war inevitable" it was
+idle for the British Government to assume a death-bed solicitude
+for peace, having already dug its grave and cast aside the shovel
+for the gun. When that motive is apparent we shall realise who it
+was preferred war to peace and how impossible it is to hope for any
+certain peace ensuing from the victory of those who ensured an appeal
+to arms.
+
+The _Entente Cordiale_, to begin with, is unnatural. There is nothing
+in common between the parties to it, save antagonism to someone
+else. It is wrongly named. It is founded not on predilections but on
+prejudices--not on affection but on animosity. To put it crudely it is
+a bond of hate not of love. None of the parties to it like or admire
+each other, or have consistent aims, save one.
+
+That satisfied, they will surely fall out among themselves, and the
+greater the plunder derived from their victory the more certain their
+ensuing quarrel.
+
+Great Britain, in her dealings with most white people (not with all)
+is a democracy.
+
+Russia in her dealings with all, is an autocracy.
+
+Great Britain is democratic in her government of herself and in her
+dealings with the great white communities of Canada, Australia, New
+Zealand, and South Africa. She is not democratic in her dealings with
+subject races within the Empire--the Indians, notably, or the Irish.
+To the Indians her rule is that of an absentee autocracy, differing
+in speech, colour, religion and culture from those submitted to it by
+force; to the Irish that of a resident autocracy bent on eliminating
+the people governed from residence in their own country, and replacing
+them with cattle for British consumption.
+
+In both instances Britain is notably false to her professions of
+devotion to democratic principles. Her affinity with Russia is found
+then, not in the cases where her institutions are good, but in those
+where they are bad.
+
+An alliance founded on such grounds of contact can only produce evil.
+
+To such it gave birth in Persia, to such it must give birth in the
+present war.
+
+In Persia we saw it betray the principles of democratic government,
+destroy an infant constitution and disembowel the constitutionalists,
+whilst it divided their country into "spheres of influence" and to-day
+we see it harvesting with hands yet red with the blood of Persian
+patriots the redder fruit of the seed then sown.
+
+The alliance with France, while more natural than that with Russia if
+we regard Great Britain as a democracy (by eliminating India, Egypt,
+Ireland) had the same guilty end in view, and rests less on affinity
+of aims than on affinity of antipathies.
+
+The _Entente Cordiale_, the more closely we inspect it, we find is
+based not on a cordial regard of the parties to it for each other, but
+on a cordial disregard all three participants share for the party it
+is aimed against.
+
+It will be said that Germany must have done something to justify the
+resentment that could bring about so strangely assorted a combination
+against herself. What has been the crime of Germany against the powers
+now assailing her? She has doubtless committed many crimes, as have
+all the great powers, but in what respect has she so grievously sinned
+against Europe that the Czar, the Emperor of India, the King of
+Great Britain and Ireland, the Mikado and the President of the French
+Republic--to say nothing of those minor potentates who like Voltaire's
+minor prophets seem _capable de tout_--should now be pledged, by
+irrevocable pact, to her destruction as a great power?
+
+"German militarism," the reply that springs to the lips, is no more a
+threat to civilisation than French or Russian militarism. It was born,
+not of wars of aggression, but of wars of defence and unification.
+Since it was welded by blood and iron into the great human organism of
+the last forty years it has not been employed beyond the frontiers of
+Germany until last year.
+
+Can the same be said of Russian militarism or of French militarism or
+of British navalism?
+
+We are told the things differ in quality. The answer is what about the
+intent and the uses made. German militarism has kept peace and has
+not emerged beyond its own frontier until threatened with universal
+attack. Russian militarism has waged wars abroad, far beyond the
+confines of Russian territory; French militarism, since it was
+overthrown at Sedan, has carried fire and sword across all Northern
+Africa, has penetrated from the Atlantic to the Nile, has raided
+Tonquin, Siam, Madagascar, Morocco, while English navalism in the last
+forty years has bombarded the coast lines, battered the ports, and
+landed raiding parties throughout Asia and Africa, to say nothing of
+the well nigh continuous campaigns of annexation of the British army
+in India, Burma, South Africa, Egypt, Tibet, or Afghanistan, within
+the same period.
+
+As to the quality of the materialism of the great Continental Powers
+there is nothing to prefer in the French and Russian systems to
+the German system. Each involved enormous sacrifices on the people
+sustaining it. We are asked, however, to believe that French
+militarism is maintained by a "democracy" and German militarism by an
+"autocracy." Without appealing to the captive Queen of Madagascar for
+an opinion on the authenticity of French democracy we may confine the
+question to the elected representatives of the two peoples.
+
+In both cases the war credits are voted by the legislative bodies
+responsible to French and German opinion. The elected representatives
+of Germany are as much the spokesman of the nation as those of France,
+and the German Reichstag has sanctioned every successive levy for
+the support of German armaments. As to Russian militarism, it may be
+presumed no one will go quite so far as to assert that the Russian
+Duma is more truly representative of the Russian people than the
+Parliament of the Federated peoples of Germany at Berlin.
+
+The machines being then approximately the same machines, we must seek
+the justification for them in the uses to which they have been put.
+
+For what does France, for what does Russia maintain a great army? Why
+does Germany call so many youthful Germans to the colours? On what
+grounds of moral sanction does Great Britain maintain a navy, whose
+cost far exceeds all the burdens of German militarism?
+
+Russia stretches across the entire area of Central Asia and comprises
+much of the greater part of Europe as well. In its own territory, it
+is unassailable, and never has been invaded with success. No power
+can plunder or weaken Russia as long as she remains within her own
+borders. Of all the great powers in Europe she is the one that after
+England has the least need of a great army.
+
+She cannot be assailed with success at home, and she has no need
+to leave her own territories in search of lands to colonize. Her
+population, secure in its own vast numbers and vast resources has, for
+all future needs of expansion the continent of Siberia into which to
+overflow. Russia cannot be threatened within Russia and has no need
+to go outside Russia. A Russian army of 4,000,000 is not necessary to
+self-defence. Its inspiration can be due only to a policy of expansion
+at the cost of others, and its aim to extend and to maintain existing
+Russian frontiers. As I write it is engaged not in a war of defence
+but in a war of invasion, and is the instrument of a policy of avowed
+aggression.
+
+Not the protection of the Slavs from Austria, herself so largely a
+Slavic power and one that does not need to learn the principles of
+good government from Russia, but the incorporation of the Slavs within
+the mightiest empire upon earth--this is the main reason why Russia
+maintains the mightiest army upon earth. Its threat to Germany, as the
+protector of Austria-Hungary, has been clear, and if we would find
+the reason for German militarism we shall find at least one half of it
+across the Russian frontier.
+
+The huge machine of the French army, its first line troops almost
+equal to Germany's, is not a thing of yesterday.
+
+It was not German aggression founded it--although Germany felt it once
+at Jena. Founded by kings of France, French militarism has flourished
+under republic, empire, constitutional monarchy, and empire again
+until to-day we find its greatest bloom full blown under the mild
+breath of the third republic. What is the purpose of this perfect
+machine? Self-defence? From what attack? Germany has had it in her
+power, again and again within the last thirty years to attack
+France at a disadvantage, if not even with impunity. Why has she
+refrained--whose hand restrained her? Not Russia's--not England's.
+During the Russo-Japanese war or during the Boer war, France could
+have been assailed with ease and her army broken to pieces. But German
+militarism refrained from striking that blow. The object of the great
+army France maintains is not to be found in reasons of self-defence,
+but may be found, like that of Russia in hopes of armed expansion.
+Since the aim in both cases was the same, to wage a war of aggression
+to be termed of "recovery" in one case and "protection" in the other,
+it was not surprising that Czar and President should come together,
+and that the cause of the Slavs should become identified with the
+cause of Strasburg.
+
+To "protect" the Slavs meant assailing Austria-Hungary (another way of
+attacking Germany), and to "recover" Strasburg meant a _mes-alliance_
+between democrat of France and Cossack of the Don.
+
+We come now to the third party to die Entente, and it is now we begin
+to perceive how it was that a cordial understanding with England
+rendered a Russo-French attack upon Germany only a question of time
+and opportunity. Until England appeared upon the scene neither Russia
+nor France, nor both combined, could summon up courage to strike the
+blow. Willing to wound they were both afraid to strike. It needed a
+third courage, a keener purpose and a greater immunity.
+
+German militarism was too formidable a factor in the life of
+65,000,000 of the most capable people in Europe to be lightly assailed
+even by France and Russia combined. Russia needed money to perfect the
+machinery of invasion, so sorely tried by the disastrous failure to
+invade Korea and Manchuria. France had the money to advance, but she
+still doubted the ability of her stagnant population of 40,000,000 to
+face the growing magnitude of the great people across the Rhine. It
+needed another guarantee--and England brought it.
+
+From the day that Great Britain and her mighty fleet joined the
+separated allies with their mighty armies, the bond between them and
+the circle round Germany grew taut. From that day the counsels of
+the allies and their new found "friend" thickened and quickened. The
+immovable "menace across the Rhine" in one case had become the active
+"menace across the North Sea" in the other case.
+
+The sin of German militarism was at last out. It could take to the
+water as kindly as to the land. As long as the war machine guaranteed
+the inviolability of German territory it was no threat to European
+peace, but when it assumed the task of safe-guarding German rights
+at sea it became the enemy of civilization. These trading people not
+content with an army that kept French "revanche" discreetly silent
+and Slav "unity" a dream of the future presumed to have a sea-born
+commerce that grew by leaps and bounds, and they dared to build a navy
+to defend and even to extend it. _Delenda est Carthago!_ From that day
+the doom of "German militarism" was sealed; and England, democratic
+England, lay down with the Czar in the same bed to which the French
+housewife had already transferred her republican counterpane.
+
+The duration of peace became only a question of time, and the war of
+to-day only a question of opportunity and pretext. Each of the parties
+to the understanding had the same clear purpose to serve, and while
+the aim to each was different the end was the same. Germany's power
+of defence must be destroyed. That done each of the sleeping partners
+to the unsigned compact would get the share of the spoils, guarded by
+armed German manhood, he coveted.
+
+To Russia, the dismemberment of Austria-Hungary and the incorporation
+of the Slav elements in part into her own vast empire, in part into a
+vassal and subordinate Balkan Confederacy.
+
+To France the restoration of Lorraine, with Metz, and of Alsace with
+Strasburg and their 1,500,000 of German speaking Teutons to the French
+Empire.
+
+To England, the destruction of German sea-power and along with it the
+permanent crippling of German competition in the markets of the world.
+
+Incidentally German colonies would disappear along with German
+shipping, and with both gone a German navy would become a useless
+burden for a nation of philosophers to maintain, so that the future
+status of maritime efficiency in Europe could be left to the power
+that polices the seas to equitably fix for all mankind, as well as for
+the defeated rival.
+
+Such an outline was the altruistic scope of the unsigned agreement
+entered into by the three parties of the _Triple Entente_; and it only
+remained to get ready for the day when the matter could be brought
+to issue. The murder of the Archduke Ferdinand furnished Russia with
+the occasion, since she felt that her armies were ready, the sword
+sharpened, and the Entente sure and binding.
+
+The mobilization by Russia was all that France needed "to do that
+which might be required of her by her interests." (Reply of the French
+Government to the German Ambassador at Paris, August 1st, 1914.)
+
+Had the neutrality of Belgium been respected as completely as the
+neutrality of Holland, England would have joined her "friends" in the
+assault on Germany, as Sir Edward Grey was forced to admit when the
+German Ambassador in vain pressed him to state his own terms as the
+price of English neutrality.
+
+The hour had struck. Russia was sure of herself, and the rest followed
+automatically since all had been provided for long before. The French
+fleet was in the Mediterranean, as the result of the military compact
+between France and England signed, sealed and delivered in November,
+1912, and _withheld from the cognizance of the British Parliament
+until after war had been declared_. The British fleet had been
+mobilized early in July in anticipation of Russia's mobilization on
+land--and here again it is Sir Edward Grey who incidentally supplies
+the proof.
+
+In his anxiety, while there was still the fear that Russia might hold
+her hand, he telegraphed to the British Ambassador in St. Petersburg
+on 27th of July, requiring him to assure the Russian Foreign Minister,
+that the British Fleet, "which is concentrated, _as it happens_" would
+not disperse from Portland.
+
+That "as it happens" is quite the most illuminating slip in the
+British White Paper, and is best comprehended by those who know what
+have been the secret orders of the British fleet since 1909, and what
+was the end in view when King George reviewed it earlier in the month,
+and when His Majesty so hurriedly summoned the unconstitutional
+"Home Rule" conference at Buckingham Palace on 18th of July. Nothing
+remained for the "friends" but to so manoeuvre that Germany should be
+driven to declare war, or see her frontiers crossed. If she did the
+first, she became the "aggressor"; if she waited to be attacked she
+incurred the peril of destruction.
+
+Such, in outline, are the causes and steps that led to the outbreak of
+war. The writer has seen those steps well and carefully laid, tested
+and tried beforehand. Every rung of the scaling ladder being raised
+for the storming of the German defences on land and sea was planed and
+polished in the British Foreign Office.
+
+As Sir Edward Grey confessed three years ago, he was "but the fly on
+the wheel." That wheel was the ever faster driven purpose of Great
+Britain to destroy the growing sea-power and commerce of Germany. The
+strain had reached the breaking point.
+
+During the first six months of 1914, German export trade almost
+equalled that of Great Britain. Another year of peace, and it would
+certainly have exceeded it, and for the first time in the history of
+world trade Great Britain would have been put in the second place.
+German exports from January to June had swelled to the enormous total
+of $1,045,000,000 as against the $1,075,000,000 of Great Britain. A
+war against such figures could not be maintained in the markets, it
+must be transferred to the seas.
+
+Day by day as the war proceeds, although it is now only six weeks old,
+the pretences under which it was begun are being discarded. England
+fights not to defend the neutrality of Belgium, not to destroy German
+militarism, but to retain, if need be by involving the whole world in
+war, her supreme and undisputed ownership of the seas.
+
+This is the crime against Europe, the crime against the world that,
+among other victims the United States are invited to approve, in order
+that to-morrow their own growing navy may be put into a like posture
+with that of a defeated Germany.
+
+With the Kiel Canal "handed to Denmark," as one of the fruits of
+British victory, as Lord Charles Beresford yesterday magnanimously
+suggested, how long may it be before the Panama Canal shall be found
+to be "a threat to peace" in the hands of those who constructed it?
+
+A rival fleet in being, whether the gunners be Teuton or Anglo-Saxon
+unless the Admiralty controlling it is seated at Whitehall, will
+always be an eyesore to the Mistress of the seas, in other words, "a
+threat to the peace of the world."
+
+The war of armaments cannot be ended by the disarming of the German
+people. To hand Europe over to a triumphal alliance of Russian and
+French militarism, while England controls the highways and waterways
+of mankind by a fleet whose function is "to dictate the maritime
+law of nations," will beget indeed a new Europe, but a Europe
+whose acquiescence is due to fear and the continued pressure of
+well-sustained force--a Europe submitted to the despotism of unnatural
+alliances designed to arrest the laws of progress.
+
+The laws of progress demand that efficiency shall prevail. The crime
+of Germany has been superior efficiency, not so much in the arts
+of war as in the products of peace. If she go down to-day before a
+combination of brute force and unscrupulous intelligence her fall
+cannot be permanent. Germany has within herself the forces that ensure
+revival, and revival means recovery. Neither France nor Russia nor
+both combined, can give to Europe what Britain now designs to take
+from it by their help.
+
+Whatever may be the result of this war on the field of battle, to
+France indeed it can bring only one end. For her there is no future
+save that of a military empire. Her life blood is dried up. This war
+will sweep away all power of recuperation. She will remain impotent
+to increase her race, sterile of new forces for good, her young men's
+blood gone to win the barren fields of Alsace. Her one purpose in the
+new Europe will be to hold a sword, not her own, over the struggling
+form of a resurgent Germany in the interests of another people. Let
+Germany lose 1,000,000 men in the fighting of to-day, she can recover
+them in two years of peace. But to France the losses of this war,
+whether she win or lose, cannot be made good in a quarter of a century
+of child births. Whatever comes to Russia, to England, France as a
+great free power is gone. Her future function will be to act in a
+subordinate capacity alone; supported and encouraged by England she
+will be forced to keep up a great army in order that the most capable
+people of the continent, with a population no defeat can arrest,
+shall not fill the place in Europe and in the world they are called
+on surely to fill, and one that conflicts only with British aims and
+appetites.
+
+German expansion was no threat to France. It was directed to other
+fields, chiefly those of commerce. In order to keep it from those
+fields England fanned the dying fires of French resentment and strove
+by every agency to kindle a natural sentiment into an active passion.
+
+The historian of the future will record that whatever the immediate
+fate of Germany may be, the permanent victim was France.
+
+The day England won her to an active policy of vengeance against
+the victor of 1870, she wooed her to abiding loss. Her true place in
+Europe was one of friendship with Germany. But that meant, inevitably,
+the discovery by Europe that the chief barrier to European concord
+lay not in the armies of the powers, but in the ring of hostile
+battleships that constrained her peoples into armed camps.
+
+European militarism rests on English navalism. English navalism
+requires for its continued existence a disunited Europe; and a Europe
+kept apart is a Europe armed, anxious and watchful, bent on mutual
+attack, its eyes fixed on the _earth_. Europe must lift its eyes
+to the sea. There lies the highway of the nations, the only road to
+freedom--the sole path to peace.
+
+For the pent millions of Europe there can be no peace, no laying aside
+of arms, no sincere development of trade or culture while one people,
+_in Europe but not of Europe_, immune themselves from all attack,
+and sure that whatever suffering they inflict on others can never be
+visited on their own shores, have it in their power to foment strife
+with impunity and to call up war from the ends of the earth while they
+themselves enjoy the blessing of peace.
+
+England, the soul and brain of this confederacy of war abroad remains
+at peace at home. As I write these words a despatch from Sir Alfred
+Sharpe, the correspondent of a London paper in France, comes to hand.
+It should be placarded in every Foreign Office of the world, in every
+temple of justice, in every house of prayer.
+
+"It is difficult for the people in England to realize the condition of
+Northern France at the present time. Although the papers are full of
+accounts of desolation and destruction caused by the German invasion,
+it is only by an actual experience that a full realization of the
+horror comes. To return to England after visiting the French war zone
+is to come back to a land of perfect peace, where everything is normal
+and where it is not easy to believe we are almost within hearing
+distance of the cannonade on the Aisne."
+
+(Sir Alfred Sharpe, to the _Daily Chronicle_ from the Front, September
+2nd, 1914.)
+
+It is this immunity from the horror of war that makes all Englishmen
+jingoes. They are never troubled by the consequences of belligerency.
+Since it is only by "an actual experience that the full realization of
+the horror comes." Until that horror strikes deep on English soil her
+statesmen, her Ministers, her Members of Parliament, her editors, will
+never sincerely love peace, but will plan always to ensure war abroad,
+whenever British need or ambition demands it.
+
+Were England herself so placed that responsibility for her acts could
+be enforced on her own soil, among her own people, and on the head
+of those who devise her policies, then we might talk of arbitration
+treaties with hope, and sign compacts of goodwill sure that they were
+indeed cordial understandings.
+
+But as long as Great Britain retains undisputed ownership of the chief
+factor that ensures at will peace or war on others, there can be only
+armaments in Europe, ill-will among men and war fever in the blood of
+mankind.
+
+British democracy loves freedom of the sea in precisely the same
+spirit as imperial Rome viewed the spectacle of Celtic freedom beyond
+the outposts of the Roman legions; as Agricola phrased it, something
+"to wear down and take possession of so that freedom may be put out of
+sight."
+
+The names change but the spirit of imperial exploitation, whether it
+call itself an empire or a democracy, does not change.
+
+Just as the Athenian Empire, in the name of a democracy, sought to
+impose servitude at sea on the Greek world, so the British Empire, in
+the name of a democracy, seeks to encompass mankind within the long
+walls of London.
+
+The modern Sparta may be vanquished by the imperial democrats
+assailing her from East and West. But let the world be under no
+illusions.
+
+If Germany go down to-day, vanquished by a combination of Asiatic,
+African, American, Canadian and European enemies, the gain will not be
+to the world nor to the cause of peace.
+
+The mistress of the seas will remain to ensure new combinations of
+enmity to prohibit the one league of concord that alone can bring
+freedom and peace to the world. The cause that begot this war will
+remain to beget new wars.
+
+The next victim of universal sea-power may not be on the ravaged
+fields of mid-Europe, but mid the wasted coasts and bombarded seaports
+of the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans.
+
+A permanent peace can only be laid on a sure foundation. A sure
+foundation of peace among men can only be found when mastery of the
+sea by one people has been merged in freedom of the seas for all.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter II
+
+THE KEEPER OF THE SEAS
+
+
+As long ago as 1870 an Irishman pointed out that if the English press
+did not abandon the campaign of prejudiced suspicion it was even then
+conducting against Germany, the time for an understanding between
+Great Britain and the German people would be gone for ever.
+
+It was Charles Lever who delivered this shrewd appreciation of the
+onlooker.
+
+Writing from Trieste on August 29th, 1870, to John Blackwood, he
+stated:
+
+"Be assured the _Standard_ is making a great blunder by its
+anti-Germanism and English opinion has _just now_ a value in Germany
+which if the nation be once disgusted with us will be gone for ever."
+
+Lever preserved enough of the Irishman through all his official
+connection to see the two sides of a question and appreciate the point
+of view of the other man.
+
+What Lever pointed out during the early stages of the Franco-German
+war has come to pass. The _Standard_ of forty years ago is the British
+press of to-day, with here and there the weak voice of an impotent
+Liberalism crying in the wilderness. Germany has, indeed, become
+thoroughly disgusted and the hour of reconciliation has long since
+gone by. In Lever's time it was now or never; the chance not taken
+then would be lost for ever, and the English publicist of to-day
+is not in doubt that it is now too late. His heart-searchings need
+another formula of expression--no longer a conditional assertion of
+doubt, but a positive questioning of impending fact, "is it too soon."
+That the growing German navy must be smashed he is convinced, but how
+or when to do it he is not so clear.
+
+The situation is not yet quite intolerable, and so, although many urge
+an immediate attack before the enemy grows too strong, the old-time
+British love of compromise and trust in luck still holds his hand. The
+American "alliance" too, may yet come off. The Entente with France,
+already of great value, can be developed into something more assuredly
+anti-German, and if present-day relations of friendship with the
+United States can be but tightened into a mutual committal of both
+Powers to a common foreign policy, then the raid on Germany may never
+be needed. She can be bottled up without it. No man who studies the
+British mind can have any doubt of the fixed trend of British thought.
+
+It can be summed up in one phrase. German expansion is not to be
+tolerated. It can only be a threat to or attained at the expense of
+British interests. Those interests being world-wide, with the seas
+for their raiment nay, with the earth for their footstool--it follows
+that wherever Germany may turn for an outlet she is met by the British
+challenge: "Not there!" British interests interdict the Old World; the
+Monroe Doctrine, maintained, it is alleged by British naval supremacy,
+forbids the New.
+
+Let Germany acquire a coaling station, a sanitorium, a health resort,
+the ground for a hotel even, on some foreign shore, and "British
+interests" spring to attention, English jealousy is aroused. How
+long this state of tension can last without snapping could, perhaps,
+be best answered in the German naval yards. It is evident that some
+7,000,000 of the best educated race in the world, physically strong,
+mentally stronger, homogeneous, highly trained, highly skilled,
+capable and energetic and obedient to a discipline that rests upon and
+is moulded by a lofty conception of patriotism, cannot permanently be
+confined to a strictly limited area by a less numerous race, less well
+educated, less strong mentally and physically and assuredly less well
+trained, skilled and disciplined. Stated thus the problem admits of a
+simple answer; and were there no other factor governing the situation,
+that answer would have been long since given.
+
+It is not the ethical superiority of the English race that accounts
+for their lead, but the favourable geographical situation from which
+they have been able to develop and direct their policy of expansion.
+
+England has triumphed mainly from her position. The qualities of
+her people have, undoubtedly, counted for much, but her unrivalled
+position in the lap of the Atlantic, barring the seaways and closing
+the tideways of Central and North-eastern Europe, has counted for
+more.
+
+With this key she has opened the world to herself and closed it to her
+rivals.
+
+The long wars with France ended in the enhancement of this position by
+the destruction of the only rival fleet in being.
+
+Europe, without navies, without shipping became for England a mere
+westward projection of Asia, dominated by warlike peoples who
+could always be set by the ears and made to fight upon points of
+dynastic honour, while England appropriated the markets of mankind.
+Thenceforth, for the best part of a century, while Europe was spent
+in what, to the superior Britain were tribal conflicts, the seas and
+coasts of the world lay open to the intrusions of his commerce, his
+colonists, his finance, until there was seemingly nothing left outside
+the two Americas worth laying hands on. This highly favoured maritime
+position depends, however, upon an unnamed factor, the unchallenged
+possession and use of which by England has been the true foundation
+of her imperial greatness. Without Ireland there would be to-day
+no British Empire. The vital importance of Ireland to England is
+understood, but never proclaimed by every British statesman. To subdue
+that western and ocean-closing island and to exploit its resources,
+its people and, above all its position, to the sole advantage of the
+eastern island, has been the set aim of every English Government from
+the days of Henry VIII onwards. The vital importance of Ireland to
+Europe is not and has not been understood by any European statesman.
+To them it has not been a European island, a vital and necessary
+element of European development, but an appanage of England, an island
+beyond an island, a mere geographical expression in the titles of the
+conqueror. Louis XIV, came nearest, perhaps, of European rulers to
+realizing its importance in the conflict of European interests when
+he sought to establish James II on its throne as rival to the monarch
+of Great Britain and counterpoise to the British sovereignty in
+the western seas. Montesquieu alone of French writers grasped the
+importance of Ireland in the international affairs of his time, and he
+blames the vacillation of Louis, who failed to put forth his strength,
+to establish James upon the throne of Ireland and thus by a successful
+act of perpetual separation to _affaiblir le voisin_. Napoleon,
+too late, in St. Helena, realized his error: "Had I gone to Ireland
+instead of to Egypt the Empire of England was at an end."
+
+With these two utterances of the French writer and of the French ruler
+we begin and end the reference of Ireland to European affairs which
+continental statecraft has up to now emitted, and so far has failed to
+apply.
+
+To-day there is probably no European thinker (although Germany
+produced one in recent times), who, when he faces the over-powering
+supremacy of Great Britain's influence in world affairs and the
+relative subordination of European rights to the asserted interests
+of that small island, gives a thought to the other and smaller island
+beyond its shores. And yet the key to British supremacy lies there.
+Perhaps the one latter day European who perceived the true relation of
+Ireland to Great Britain was Neibuhr.
+
+"Should England," he said, "not change her conduct, Ireland may still
+for a long period belong to her, but not always; and the loss of that
+country is the death day, not only to her greatness, but of her very
+existence."
+
+I propose to point out as briefly as may be possible in dealing
+with so unexpected a proposition, that the restoration of Ireland to
+European life lies at the bottom of all successful European effort to
+break the bonds that now shackle every continental people that would
+assert itself and extend its ideals, as opposed to British interests,
+outside the limits of Europe.
+
+It may be well first to define "British interests" and to show that
+these are not necessarily synonymous with European interests. British
+interests are: first, the control of all the seas of all the world--in
+full military and commercial control. If this be not challenged peace
+is permitted: to dispute it seriously means war.
+
+Next in order of British interests stands the right of pre-emption to
+all healthy, fertile, "unoccupied" lands of the globe not already in
+possession of a people capable of seriously disputing invasion, with
+the right of reversion to such other regions as may, from time to
+time prove commercially desirable or financially exploitable, whether
+suitable for British colonization or not.
+
+In a word, British interests assume that the future of the world shall
+be an English-speaking future. It is clear that sooner or later the
+British colonies, so called, must develop into separate nationalities,
+and that the link of a common crown cannot bind them forever. But, as
+Sir Wilfred Laurier said at the recent Imperial Conference: "We bring
+you British institutions"--English language, English law, English
+trade, English supremacy, in a word--this is the ideal reserved for
+mankind and summed up in words "British interests."
+
+Turn where you will these interests are in effective occupation, and
+whether it be Madeira, Teneriffe, Agadir, Tahiti, Bagdad, the unseen
+flag is more potent to exclude the non-British intruder than the
+visible standard of the occupying tenant. England is the landlord of
+civilization, mankind her tenantry, and the earth her estate. If this
+be not a highly exaggerated definition of British interests, and in
+truth it is but a strongly coloured chart of the broad outline of
+the design, then it is clear that Europe has a very serious problem
+to face if European civilization and ideals, as differing from the
+British type, are to find a place for their ultimate expansion in any
+region favoured by the sun.
+
+The actual conflict of European interests in Morocco is a fair
+illustration of English methods.[1]
+
+[Footnote 1: This was written in August, 1911.]
+
+In the past France was the great antagonist, but since she is to-day
+no longer able to seriously dispute the British usufruct of the
+overseas world she is used (and rewarded) in the struggle now
+maintained to exclude Germany at all costs from the arena. Were France
+still dangerous she would never have been allowed to go to Algeciras,
+or from Algeciras to Fez. She has uses, however, in the anti-German
+prize ring and so Morocco is the price of her hire. That Germany
+should presume to inspect the transaction or claim a share in the
+settlement has filled the British mind with profound indignation, the
+echoes of which are heard rumbling round the world from the Guildhall
+to Gaboon and from the Congo to Tahiti. The mere press rumour that
+France might barter Tahiti for German goods filled the British
+newspaper world with supermundane wrath. That France should presume
+to offer or Germany should accept a French Pacific island in part
+discharge of liabilities contracted at Algeciras was a threat to
+British interests. Tahiti in the hands of a decadent republic, the
+greatest if you will, but still one of the dying nations, is a thing
+to be borne with, but Tahiti possibly in the hands of Germany becomes
+at once a challenge and a threat.
+
+And so we learn that "Australasia protests" to the Home Government
+at the mere rumour that France may choose to part with one of her
+possessions to win German goodwill in Morocco. Neither France nor
+Germany can be permitted to be a free agent in a transaction that
+however regarded as essential to their own interests might affect,
+even by a shadow on the sea, the world orbit of British interests.
+These interests it will be noted have reached such a stage of
+development as to require that all foreign States that cannot be used
+as tools, or regarded as agencies, must be treated as enemies. Germany
+with her growing population, her advancing industries, her keen
+commercial ability, and her ever expanding navy has become the enemy
+of civilization. Far too strong to be openly assailed on land she must
+at all costs be pent up in Central Europe and by a ring-fence of armed
+understandings prohibited from a wider growth that would certainly
+introduce a rival factor to those British institutions and that world
+language that are seriously if not piously meditated as the ordained
+future for mankind.
+
+For English mentality is such that whatever England does is divinely
+ordained, and whether she stamps out a nation or merely sinks a ship
+the hymn of action is "Nearer My God, to Thee." In a recent deputation
+to King George V it will be remembered that certain British religious
+bodies congratulated that monarch on the third centenary of the
+translation into English of the Bible.
+
+Both the addresses of the subjects, eminent, religious and cultured
+men, and the sovereign's reply were highly informative of the mental
+attitude of this extraordinary people. The Bible, it appeared, was the
+"greatest possession of the English race." "The British Bible" was the
+first and greatest of British investments and upon the moral dividends
+derived from its possession was founded the imperial greatness of this
+Island Empire. That other peoples possessed the Bible and had even
+translated it before England was not so much as hinted at. That the
+Bible was Greek and Hebrew in origin was never whispered. It began and
+ended with the English Authorised Version. The British Bible was the
+Bible that counted. It was the Bible upon which the sun never sets,
+the Bible that had blown Indian mutineers from its muzzle in
+the 'fifties and was prepared to-day to have a shot at any other
+mutineers, Teuton or Turk, who dared to dispute its claim that the
+meek shall inherit the earth. The unctuous rectitude that converts the
+word of God into wadding for a gun is certainly a formidable opponent,
+as Cromwell proved. To challenge English supremacy becomes not merely
+a threat to peace, it is an act of sacrilege. And yet this world-wide
+empire broad based upon the British Bible and the English navy, and
+maintained by a very inflexible interpretation of the one and a very
+skilful handling of the other, rests upon a sunk foundation that is
+older than both and will surely bring both to final shipwreck.
+
+The British Empire is founded not upon the British Bible or the
+British dreadnought but upon Ireland. The empire that began upon an
+island, ravaged, sacked and plundered shall end on an island, "which
+whether it proceed from the very genius of the soil, or the influence
+of the stars, or that Almighty God hath not yet appointed the time of
+her reformation, or that He reserveth her in this unquiet state still
+for some secret scourge which shall by her come unto England, it is
+hard to be known but yet much to be feared." Thus Edmund Spenser
+340 years ago, whose muse drew profit from an Irish estate (one of
+the first fruits of empire) and who being a poet had imagination
+to perceive that a day of payment must some day be called and that
+the first robbed might be the first to repay. The Empire founded on
+Ireland by Henry and Elizabeth Tudor has expanded into mighty things.
+England deprived of Ireland resumes her natural proportions, those of
+a powerful kingdom. Still possessing Ireland she is always an empire.
+For just as Great Britain bars the gateways of northern and west
+central Europe, to hold up at will the trade and block the ports of
+every coast from the Baltic to the Bay of Biscay, so Ireland stands
+between Britain and the greater seas of the west and blocks for
+her the highways of the ocean. An Ireland strong, independent and
+self-contained, a member of the European family of nations, restored
+to her kindred, would be the surest guarantee for the healthy
+development of European interests in those regions whence they are
+to-day excluded by the anti-European policy of England.
+
+The relation of Ireland to Great Britain has been in no wise
+understood on the continent. The policy of England has been for
+centuries to conceal the true source of her supplies and to prevent
+an audit of transactions with the remoter island. As long ago as the
+reign of Elizabeth Tudor this shutting off of Ireland from contact
+with Europe was a settled point of English policy. The three "German
+Earls" with letters from the Queen who visited Dublin in 1572 were
+prevented by the Lord Deputy from seeing for themselves anything
+beyond the walls of the city.[2]
+
+[Footnote 2: This time-honoured British precept--that foreigners
+should not see for themselves the workings of English rule in
+Ireland--finds frequent expression in the Irish State Papers. In
+a letter from Dublin Castle of August, 1572, from the Lord Deputy
+Fitzwilliam to Burghley Elizabeth's chief Minister, we are told that
+the "three German Earls" with "their conductor," Mr. Rogers, have
+arrived. The Viceroy adds, as his successors have done up to the
+present day: "According to Your Lordship's direction they shall
+travell as little way into the cuntry as I can."]
+
+To represent the island as a poverty striken land inhabited by a
+turbulent and ignorant race whom she has with unrewarded solicitude
+sought to civilise, uplift and educate has been a staple of England's
+diplomatic trade since modern diplomacy began. To compel the trade of
+Ireland to be with herself alone; to cut off all direct communication
+between Europe and this second of European islands until no channel
+remained save through Britain; to enforce the most abject political
+and economic servitude one people ever imposed upon another; to
+exploit all Irish resources, lands, ports, people, wealth, even her
+religion, everything in fine that Ireland held, to the sole profit
+and advancement of England, and to keep all the books and rigorously
+refuse an audit of the transaction has been the secret but determined
+policy of England.
+
+We have read lately something of Mexican peonage, of how a people
+can be reduced to a lawless slavery, their land expropriated, their
+bodies enslaved, their labour appropriated, and how the nexus of this
+fraudulent connection lies in a falsified account. The hacenade holds
+the peon by a debt bondage. His palace in Mexico City, or on the sisal
+plains of Yucatan is reared on the stolen labour of a people whose
+bondage is based on a lie. The hacenade keeps the books and debits
+the slave with the cost of the lash that scourges him into the fields.
+Ireland is the English peon, the great peon of the British Empire.
+The books and the palaces are in London but the work and the wealth
+have come from peons on the Irish Estate. The armies that overthrew
+Napoleon; the fleets that swept the navies of France and Spain from
+the seas were recruited from this slave pen of English civilisation.
+During the last 100 years probably 2,000,000 Irishmen have
+been drafted into the English fleets and armies from a land
+purposely drained of its food. Fully the same number, driven by
+executive-controlled famines have given cheap labour to England and
+have built up her great industries, manned her shipping, dug her
+mines, and built her ports and railways while Irish harbours silted up
+and Irish factories closed down. While England grew fat on the crops
+and beef of Ireland, Ireland starved in her own green fields and
+Irishmen grew lean in the strife of Europe.
+
+While a million Irishmen died of hunger on the most fertile plains
+of Europe, English Imperialism drew over one thousand million pounds
+sterling for investment in a world policy from an island that was
+represented to that world as too poor to even bury its dead. The
+profit to England from Irish peonage cannot be assessed in terms of
+trade, or finance, or taxation. It far transcends Lord MacDonnell's
+recent estimate at Belfast of £320,000,000--"an Empire's ransom," as
+he bluntly put it.
+
+Not an Empire's ransom but the sum of an Empire's achievement, the
+cost of an Empire's founding, and to-day the chief bond of an Empire's
+existence. Detach Ireland from the map of the British Empire and
+restore it to the map of Europe and that day England resumes her
+native proportions and Europe assumes its rightful stature in the
+empire of the world. Ireland can only be restored to the current of
+European life, from which she has so long been purposely withheld by
+the act of Europe. What Napoleon perceived too late may yet be the
+purpose and achievement of a congress of nations. Ireland, I submit,
+is necessary to Europe, is essential to Europe, to-day she is retained
+against Europe, by a combination of elements hostile to Europe and
+opposed to European influence in the world. Her strategic importance
+is a factor of supreme weight to Europe and is to-day used in the
+scales against Europe. Ireland is appropriated and used, not to the
+service of European interests but to the extension of anti-European
+interests. The _arbitium mundi_ claimed and most certainly exercised
+by England is maintained by the British fleet, and until that power
+is effectively challenged and held in check it is idle to talk of
+European influence outside of certain narrow continental limits.
+
+The power of the British fleet can never be permanently restrained
+until Ireland is restored to Europe. Germany has of necessity become
+the champion of European interests as opposed to the world domination
+of England and English-speaking elements. She is to-day a dam, a great
+reservoir rapidly filling with human life that must some day find an
+outlet. England instead of wisely digging channels for the overflow
+has hardened her heart, like Pharaoh, and thinks to prevent it or
+to so divert the stream that it shall be lost and drunk up in the
+thirsty sands of an ever expanding Anglo-Saxondom. German laws, German
+language, German civilization are to find no ground for replenishing,
+no soil to fertilize and make rich.
+
+I believe this to be not only the set policy of England, but to
+be based on the temperamental foundations of the English character
+itself, from which that people could not, even if they would, depart.
+The lists are set. The English mind, the English consciousness are
+such, that to oppose German influence in the world is to this people
+a necessity. They oppose by instinct, against argument, in the face
+of reason, they will do it blindly come what may and at all costs, and
+they will do it to the end.
+
+Their reasoning, if reason exists in what is after all a matter of
+primal instinct, might find expression somewhat as follows:
+
+"German influence cannot but be hostile to British interests. The
+two peoples are too much alike. The qualities that have made England
+great they possess in a still greater degree. Given a fair field and
+no favour they are bound to beat us. They will beat us out of every
+market in the world, and we shall be reduced ultimately to a position
+like that of France to-day. Better fight while we are still die
+stronger. Better hinder now ere it be too late. We have bottled up
+before and destroyed our adversaries by delay, by money, by alliances.
+To tolerate a German rivalry is to found a German empire and to
+destroy our own."
+
+Some such obscure argument as this controls the Englishman's reasoning
+when he faces the growing magnitude of the Teutonic people. A bitter
+resentment, with fear at the bottom, a hurried clanging of bolt and
+rivet in the belt of a new warship and a muffled but most diligent
+hammering at the rivets of an ever building American Alliance--the
+real Dreadnought this, whose keel was laid sixteen years ago and whose
+slow, secret construction has cost the silent swallowing of many a
+cherished British boast.
+
+English Liberalism might desire a different sort of reckoning with
+Germany, but English Liberalism is itself a product of the English
+temperament, and however it may sigh, by individuals, for a better
+understanding between the two peoples, in the mass, it is a part of
+the national purpose and a phase of the national mind and is driven
+relentlessly to the rivets and the hammering, the "Dreadnoughts"
+in being and that mightier Dreadnought yet to be, the Anglo-Saxon
+Alliance which Germany must fight if she is to get out.
+
+Doubtless she has already a naval policy and the plans for a naval
+war, for the fight will be settled on the sea, but the fate will be
+determined on an island.
+
+The Empire that has grown from an island and spread with the winds and
+the waves to the uttermost shores will fight and be fought for on the
+water and will be ended where it began, on an island.
+
+That island, I believe, will be Ireland and not Great Britain.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter III
+
+THE BALANCE OF POWER
+
+
+A conflict between England and Germany exists already, a conflict of
+aims.
+
+England rich, prosperous, with all that she can possibly assimilate
+already in her hands, desires peace on present conditions of world
+power. These conditions are not merely that her actual possessions
+should remain intact, but that no other Great Power shall, by
+acquiring colonies and spreading its people and institutions into
+neighbouring regions, thereby possibly affect the fuller development
+of those pre-existing British States. For, with England equality
+is an offence and the Power that arrives at a degree of success
+approximating to her own and one capable of being expanded into
+conditions of fair rivalry, has already committed the unpardonable
+sin. As Curran put it in his defence of Hamilton Rowan in 1797,
+"England is marked by a natural avarice of freedom which she is
+studious to engross and accumulate, but most unwilling to impart;
+whether from any necessity of her policy or from her weakness, or from
+her pride, I will not presume to say."
+
+Thus while England might even be the attacking party, and in all
+probability will be the attacking party, she will embark on a war
+with Germany at an initial disadvantage. She will be on her defence.
+Although, probably, the military aggressor from reasons of strategy,
+she will be acting in obedience to an economic policy of defence and
+not of attack. Her chief concern will be not to advance and seize,
+always in war the more inspiring task, but to retain and hold. At best
+she could come out of the war with no new gain, with nothing added
+worth having to what she held on entering it. Victory would mean for
+her only that she had secured a further spell of quiet in which to
+consolidate her strength and enjoy the good things already won.
+
+Germany will fight with far other purpose and one that must inspire a
+far more vigorous effort; she will fight, not merely to keep what she
+already has, but to escape from an intolerable position of inferiority
+she knows to be unmerited and forced not by the moral or intellectual
+superiority of her adversary or due to her own short comings, but
+maintained by reason of that adversary's geographical position and
+early seizure of the various points of advantage.
+
+Her effort will be not merely military, it will be an intellectual
+assertion, a fight in very truth for that larger freedom, that
+citizenship of the world England is studious to "engross and
+accumulate" for herself alone and to deny to all others. Thus, while
+English attack at the best will be actuated by no loftier feeling
+than that of a man who, dwelling in a very comfortable house with an
+agreeable prospect resists an encroachment on his outlook from the
+building operations of his less well lodged neighbour, Germany will be
+fighting not only to get out of doors into the open air and sunshine,
+but to build a loftier and larger dwelling, fit tenement for a
+numerous and growing offspring.
+
+Whatever the structure Germany seeks to erect England objects to the
+plan and hangs out her war sign "Ancient Lights."
+
+Who can doubt that the greater patriotism and stronger purpose must
+inspire the man who fights for light, air, and freedom, the right to
+walk abroad, to learn, to teach, aye, and to inspire others, rather
+than him whose chief concern it is to see that no one but himself
+enjoys these opportunities. The means, moreover, that each combatant
+will bring to the conflict are, in the end, on the side of Germany.
+Much the same disproportion of resources exists as lay between Rome
+and Carthage.
+
+England relies on money. Germany on men. And just as Roman men beat
+Carthaginian mercenaries, so must German manhood, in the end, triumph
+over British finance. Just as Carthage in the hours of final shock,
+placing her gold where Romans put their gods, and never with a soul
+above her ships, fell before the people of United Italy, so shall
+the mightier Carthage of the North Seas, in spite of trade, shipping,
+colonies, the power of the purse and the hired valour of the foreign
+(Irish, Indian, African), go down before the men of United Germany.
+
+But if the military triumph of Germany seems thus likely, the ultimate
+assurance, nay even the ultimate safety of German civilization can
+only be secured by a statemanship which shall not repeat the mistake
+of Louis XIV and Napoleon. The military defeat of England by Germany
+is a wholly possible achievement of arms, _if the conflict be between
+these two alone_, but to realize the economic and political fruits
+of that victory, Ireland must be detached from the British Empire.
+To leave a defeated England still in the full possession of Ireland
+would be, not to settle the question of German rights at sea or in
+world affairs, but merely to postpone the settlement to a second and
+possibly far greater encounter. It would be somewhat as if Rome, after
+the first Punic war had left Sicily to Carthage. But Ireland is far
+more vital to England than Sicily was to Carthage, and is of far more
+account to the future of Europe on the ocean than the possession of
+Sicily was to the future of the Mediterranean.
+
+If Germany is to permanently profit from a victory over England, she
+must free the narrow seas, not only by the defeat of British fleets
+in being, but by ensuring that those seas shall not again be closed
+by British fleets yet to be. The German gateway to a free Atlantic
+can only be kept open through a free Ireland. For just as the English
+Channel under the existing arrangement, whereby Ireland lies hidden
+from the rest of Europe, can be closed at will by England, so with
+Ireland no longer tied to the girdle of England, that channel cannot
+be locked. The key to the freedom of European navigation lies at
+Berehaven and not at Dover. With Berehaven won from English hands,
+England might close the Channel in truth, but Ireland could shut the
+Atlantic. As Richard Dox put it in 1689, quaintly but truly, in his
+dedication to King William III, and Queen Mary of his "History of
+Ireland from the Earliest Times."
+
+"But no cost can be too great where the prize is of such value, and
+whoever considers the situation, ports, plenty and other advantages
+of Ireland will confess that it must be retained at what rate soever;
+because if it should come into an enemy's hands, England would find
+it impossible to _flourish_ and perhaps difficult to _subsist_ without
+it. To demonstrate this assertion it is enough to say that Ireland
+lies in the Line of Trade and that all the English vessels that
+sail to the East, West, and South must, as it were, run the gauntlet
+between the harbours of Brest and Baltimore; and I might add that
+the Irish Wool being transported would soon ruin the English Clothing
+Manufacture. Hence it is that all Your Majesty's Predecessors have
+kept close to this fundamental maxim of retaining Ireland inseparably
+united to the Crown of England."
+
+The sole and exclusive appropriation of Ireland and of all her
+resources has indeed formed, since the Recorder of Kinsale wrote, the
+mainstay and chief support of British greatness.
+
+The natural position of Ireland lying "in the line of trade," was
+possibly its chief value, but that "Irish Wool" which was by no means
+to be allowed free access to world markets typifies much else that
+Ireland has been relentlessly forced to contribute to her neighbour's
+growth and sole profit.
+
+I read but yesterday "Few people realise that the trade of Ireland
+with Great Britain is equal to that of our trade with India, is
+13,000,000 pounds greater than our trade with Germany, and 40,000,000
+pounds greater than the whole of our trade with the United States."
+How completely England has laid hands on all Irish resources is
+made clear from a recent publication that Mr. Chamberlain's "Tariff
+Commission" issued towards the end of 1912.
+
+This document, entitled "The Economic Position of Ireland and its
+relation to Tariff Reform," constitutes, in fact, a manifesto calling
+for the release of Ireland from the exclusive grip of Great Britain.
+Thus, for instance, in the section "External Trade of Ireland,"
+we learn that Ireland exported in 1910, £63,400,000 worth of Irish
+produce. Of this Great Britain took £52,600,000 worth, while some
+£10,800,000 went either to foreign countries, or to British colonies,
+over £4,000,000 going to the United States. Of these eleven million
+pounds worth of Irish produce sent to distant countries, only £700,000
+was shipped direct from Irish ports.
+
+The remainder, more than £10,000,000, although the market it was
+seeking lay chiefly to the West, had to be shipped East into and to
+pay a heavy transit toll to that country for discharge, handling,
+agency, commission, and reloading on British vessels in British ports
+to steam back past the shores of Ireland it had just left. While
+Ireland, indeed, lies in the "line of trade," between all Northern
+Europe and the great world markets, she has been robbed of her trade
+and artificially deprived of the very position assigned to her by
+nature in the great tides of commercial intercourse. It is not only
+the geographical situation and the trade and wealth of Ireland that
+England has laid hands on for her own aggrandizement, but she has
+also appropriated to her own ends the physical manhood of the island.
+Just as the commerce has been forcibly annexed and diverted from
+its natural trend, so the youth of Ireland has been fraudulently
+appropriated and diverted from the defence of their own land to the
+extension of the power and wealth of the realm that impoverished it
+at home. The physical qualities of the Irish were no less valuable
+than "Irish wool" to Empire building, provided always they were not
+displayed in Ireland.
+
+So long ago as 1613 we find a candid admission in the State papers
+that the Irish were the better men in the field. "The next rebellion
+whenever it shall happen, doth threaten more danger to the State than
+any heretofore, when the cities and walled towns were always faithful;
+(1) because they have the same bodies they ever had and therein they
+had and have advantage of us; (2) from infancy they have been and
+are exercised in the use of arms; (3) the realm by reason of the long
+peace was never so full of youths; (4) that they are better soldiers
+than heretofore, their continental employment in wars abroad assures
+us, and they do conceive that their men are better than ours."
+
+This testimony to Irish superiority, coming as it does from English
+official sources just three hundred years ago, would be convincing
+enough did it stand alone. But it is again and again reaffirmed by
+English commanders themselves as the reason for their failure in some
+particular enterprise. In all else they were superior to the Irish; in
+arms, armaments, munitions, supplies of food and money, here the long
+purse, settled organization and greater commerce of England, gave
+her an overwhelming advantage. Moreover the English lacked the moral
+restraints that imposed so severe a handicap on the Irish in their
+resistance. They owned no scruple of conscience in committing any
+crime that served their purpose. Beaten often in open fight by the
+hardier bodies, stouter arms and greater courage of the Irishmen,
+they nevertheless won the game by recourse to means that no Irishman,
+save he who had joined them for purposes of revenge or in pursuit of
+selfish personal aims, could possibly have adopted. The fight from
+the first was an unequal one. Irish valour, chivalry, and personal
+strength were matched against wealth, treachery and cunning. The Irish
+better bodies were overcome by the worse hearts. As Curran put it in
+1817--"The triumph of England over Ireland is the triumph of guilt
+over innocence."
+
+The Earl of Essex who came to Ireland in 1599 with one of the largest
+forces of English troops that, up to then, had ever been dispatched
+into Ireland (18,000 men), had ascribed his complete failure, in
+writing to the Queen, to the physical superiority of the Irish:
+
+"These rebels are more in number than your Majesty's army and have
+(though I do unwillingly confess it), better bodies, and perfecter
+use of their arms, than those men who your Majesty sends over."
+
+The Queen, who followed the war in Ireland with a swelling wrath on
+each defeat, and a growing fear that the Spaniards would keep their
+promise to land aid to the Irish princes, O'Neill and O'Donnell,
+issued "instructions" and a set of "ordinances" for the conduct of the
+war in Ireland, which, while enjoining recourse to the usual methods
+outside the field of battle--(i.e. starvation, "politic courses,"
+assassination of leaders; and the sowing of dissension by means of
+bribery and promises), required for the conflict, that her weaker
+soldiers should be protected against the onslaught of the unarmoured
+Irishmen by head pieces of steel. She ordered "every soldier to be
+enforced to wear a murrion, because the enemy is encouraged by
+the advantage of arms to _come to the sword_ wherein he commonly
+prevaileth."
+
+One of the generals of the Spanish King, Philip III, who came to
+Ireland in the winter of 1601 with a handful of Spanish troops (200
+men), to reinforce the small expedition of de Aguila in Kinsale, thus
+reported on the physical qualities of the Irish in a document that
+still lies in Salamanca in the archives of the old Irish College. it
+was written by Don Pedro De Zubiarr on the 16th of January, 1602, on
+his return to the Asturias. Speaking of the prospect of the campaign,
+he wrote: "If we had brought arms for 10,000 men we could have had
+them, for they are very eager to carry on the war against the English.
+The Irish are very strong and well shaped, accustomed to endure hunger
+and toil, and very courageous in fight."
+
+Perhaps the most vivid testimony to the innate superiority of the
+Irishman as a soldier is given in a typically Irish challenge issued
+in the war of 1641. The document has a lasting interest for it
+displays not only the "better body" of the Irishman of that day, but
+something of his better heart as well, that still remains to us.
+
+One Parsons, an English settler in Ireland, had written to a friend
+to say that, among other things, the head of the Colonel of an Irish
+regiment then in the field against the English, would not be allowed
+to stick long on its shoulders. The letter was intercepted by the very
+regiment itself, and a captain in it, Felim O'Molloy, wrote back to
+Parsons:
+
+"I will do this if you please: I will pick out sixty men and fight
+against one hundred of your choice men if you do but pitch your camp
+one mile out of your town, and then if you have the victory, you may
+threaten my Colonel; otherwise, do not reckon your chickens before
+they are hatched."
+
+The Anglo-Saxon preferred "politic courses" to accepting the Irish
+soldier's challenge, even where all the advantage was conceded by
+the Irishman to his foe and all the risks, save that of treachery (a
+very necessary precaution in dealing with the English in Ireland),
+cheerfully accepted by the Celt.
+
+This advantage of the "better bodies" the Irish retained beyond all
+question up to the Famine. It was upon it alone that the Wexford
+peasantry relied in 1798, and with and by it alone that they again and
+again, armed with but pike and scythe swept disciplined regiments of
+English mercenaries in headlong rout from the field.
+
+This physical superiority of his countrymen was frequently referred to
+by O'Connell as one of the forces he relied on. With the decay of all
+things Irish that has followed the Famine, these physical attributes
+have declined along with so much else that was typical of the nation
+and the man.
+
+It could not to-day be fearlessly affirmed that sixty Irishmen were
+more than a match for one hundred Englishmen; yet depleted as it is
+by the emigration of its strongest and healthiest children, by growing
+sickness and a changed and deteriorated diet the Irish race still
+presents a type, superior physically, intellectually and morally to
+the English. It was on Irish soldiers that the English chiefly relied
+in the Boer War, and it is no exaggeration to say that could all
+the Irishmen in the ranks of the British army have been withdrawn, a
+purely British force would have failed to end the war and the Dutch
+would have remained masters of the field in South Africa.
+
+It was the inglorious part of Ireland to be linked with those "methods
+of barbarism" she herself knew only too well, in extinguishing the
+independence of a people who were attacked by the same enemy and
+sacrificed to the same greed that had destroyed her own freedom.
+
+Unhappy, indeed, is it for mankind, as for her own fate and honour
+that Ireland should be forced by dire stress of fortune to aid her
+imperial wrecker in wrecking the fortune and freedom of brave men
+elsewhere.
+
+That these physical qualities of Irishmen, even with a population now
+only one tenth that of Great Britain are still of value to the empire,
+Mr. Churchill's speech on the Home Rule Bill made frankly clear
+(February, 1913). We now learn that the First Lord of the Admiralty
+has decided to establish a new training squadron, "with a base
+at Queenstown," where it is hoped to induce with the bribe of
+"self-government" the youth of Cork and Munster to again man the
+British fleet as they did in the days of Nelson, and we are even told
+that the prospects of brisk recruiting are "politically favourable."
+
+Carthage got her soldiers from Spain, her seamen, her slingers from
+the Balearic Islands and the coasts of Africa, her money from the
+trade of the world. Rome beat her, but she did not leave a defeated
+Carthage to still levy toll of men and mind on those external sources
+of supply.
+
+Germany must fight, not merely to defeat the British fleet of to-day,
+but to neutralize the British fleet of to-morrow. Leave Ireland to
+Great Britain and that can never be. Neutralize Ireland and it is
+already accomplished.
+
+One of the conditions of peace, and _for this reason_ the most
+important condition of peace that a victorious Germany must impose
+upon her defeated antagonist is that Ireland shall be separated
+and erected into an independent European State under international
+guarantees. England, obviously would resist such conditions to the
+last, but then the last has already come before England would consent
+to any peace save on terms she dictated.
+
+A defeated England is a starved England. She would have to accept
+whatever terms Germany imposed unless those terms provoked external
+intervention on behalf of the defeated power.
+
+The prize Germany seeks to win from victory is not immediate
+territorial aggrandizement obtained from annexing British possessions,
+not a heavy money indemnity wrung from British finance and trade
+(although this she might have), but German freedom throughout the
+world on equal terms with Britain. This is a prize worth fighting for,
+for once gained the rest follows as a matter of course.
+
+German civilization released from the restricted confines and unequal
+position in which Britain had sought to pen it must, of itself win
+its way to the front, and of necessity acquire those favoured spots
+necessary to its wide development.
+
+"This is the meaning of his (the German's) will for power; safety from
+interference with his individual and national development. Only one
+thing is left to the nations that do not want to be left behind in the
+peaceful rivalry of human progress--that is to become the equals of
+Germany in untiring industry, in scientific thoroughness, in sense of
+duty, in patient persistence, in intelligent, voluntary submission
+to organization." (History of German Civilization, by Ernst Richard,
+Columbia University, New York.)
+
+Once she had reduced Great Britain to an opposition based on _peaceful
+rivalry_ in human progress, Germany would find the path of success
+hers to tread on more than equal terms, and many fields of expansion
+now closed would readily open to German enterprise without that
+people incurring and inflicting the loss and injury that an attempted
+invasion of the great self-governing dominions would so needlessly
+involve. Most of the British self-governing colonies are to-day great
+States, well able to defend themselves from overseas attack. The
+defeat of the British navy would make scarcely at all easier the
+landing of German troops in, say, Australia, South Africa or New
+Zealand. A war of conquest of those far-distant regions would be,
+for Germany, an impossible and a stupidly impossible task.
+
+A defeated England could not cede any of these British possessions as
+a price of peace, for they are inhabited by free men who, however
+they might deplore a German occupation of London, could in no wise be
+transferred by any pact or treaty made by others, to other rule than
+that of themselves. Therefore, to obtain those British dominions,
+Germany would have to defeat not only England, but after that to begin
+a fresh war, or a series of fresh wars, at the ends of the earth, with
+exhausted resources and probably a crippled fleet.
+
+The thing does not bear inspection and may be dismissed from our
+calculation.
+
+The only territories that England could cede by her own act to
+a victorious power are such as, in themselves, are not suited
+to colonization by a white race. Doubtless, Germany would seek
+compensation for the expense of the war in requiring the transfer
+of some of these latter territories of the British Crown to herself.
+There are points in tropical Africa, in the East, islands in the ocean
+to-day flying the British flag that might, with profit to German
+trade and influence, be acquired by a victorious Germany. But none of
+these things in itself, not all of them put together, would meet the
+requirements of the German case, or ensure to Germany that future
+tranquil expansion and peaceful rivalry the war had been fought to
+secure. England would be weakened, and to some extent impoverished by
+a war ending with such results; but her great asset, her possession
+beyond price would still be hers--her geographical position. Deprive
+her to-day, say of the Gold Coast, the Niger, Gibraltar, even of
+Egypt, impose a heavy indemnity, and while Germany would barely have
+recouped herself for the out-of-pocket losses of the war, England in
+fact would have lost nothing, and ten years hence the Teuton would
+look out again upon the same prospect, a Europe still dominated beyond
+the seas by the Western islanders.
+
+The work would have to be done all over again. A second Punic war
+would have to be fought with this disadvantage--that the Atlantic
+Sicily would be held and used still against the Northern Rome, by the
+Atlantic Carthage.
+
+A victorious Germany, in addition to such terms as she may find
+it well to impose in her own immediate financial or territorial
+interests, must so draft her peace conditions as to preclude her great
+antagonist from ever again seriously imperilling the freedom of the
+seas. I know of no way save one to make sure the open seas. Ireland,
+in the name of Europe, and in the exercise of European right to
+free the seas from the over-lordship of one European island, must be
+resolutely withdrawn from British custody. A second Berlin Conference,
+an international Congress must debate, and clearly would debate, with
+growing unanimity the German proposal to restore Ireland to Europe.
+
+The arguments in favour of that proposal would soon become so clear
+from the general European standpoint, that save England and her
+defeated allies, no power would oppose it.
+
+Considerations of expediency no less than naval, mercantile, and
+moral claims would range themselves on the side of Germany and a free
+Ireland. For a free Ireland, not owned and exploited by England, but
+appertaining to Europe at large, its ports available in a sense they
+never can be while under British control for purposes of general
+navigation and overseas intercourse, would soon become of such
+first-rank importance in continental affairs as to leave men stupified
+by the thought that for five hundred years they had allowed one
+sole member of their community the exclusive use and selfish
+misappropriation of this, the most favoured of European islands.
+
+Ireland would be freed, not because she deserved or asked for freedom,
+not because English rule has been a tyranny, a moral failure, a
+stupidity and sin against the light; not because Germany cared for
+Ireland, but because her withdrawal from English control appeared to
+be a very necessary step in international welfare and one very needful
+to the progress of German and European expansion.
+
+An Ireland released from the jail in which England had confined
+her would soon become a populous State of possibly 10,000,000 to
+12,000,000 people, a commercial asset of Europe in the Atlantic of the
+utmost general value, one holding an unique position between the Old
+and New Worlds, and possibly an intellectual and moral asset of no
+mean importance. This, and more, a sovereign Ireland means to Europe.
+Above all it means security of transit, equalizing of opportunity,
+freedom of the seas--an assurance that the great waterways of the
+ocean should no longer be at the absolute mercy of one member of the
+European family, and that one the least interested in general European
+welfare.
+
+The stronger a free Ireland grew the surer would be the guarantee that
+the rôle of England "consciously assumed for many years past, to be
+an absolute and wholly arbitrary judge of war and peace" had gone for
+ever, and that at last the "balance of power" was kept by fair weight
+and fair measure and not with loaded scales.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter IV
+
+THE ENEMY OF PEACE
+
+
+I believe England to be the enemy of European peace, and that until
+her "mastery of the sea" is overmastered by Europe, there can be
+no peace upon earth or goodwill among men. Her claim to rule the
+seas, and the consequences, direct and indirect, that flow from its
+assertion are the chief factors of international discord that now
+threaten the peace of the world.
+
+In order to maintain that indefensible claim she is driven to
+aggression and intrigue in every quarter of the globe; to setting
+otherwise friendly peoples by the ears; to forming "alliances" and
+ententes, to dissolving friendships, the aim always being the old one,
+_divide et impera_.
+
+The fact that Europe to-day is divided into armed camps is mainly due
+to English effort to retain that mastery of the sea. It is generally
+assumed, and the idea is propagated by English agencies, that Europe
+owes her burden of armaments to the antagonism between France and
+Germany, to the loss of Alsace-Lorraine by France, and the spirit and
+hope of a _revanche_ thereby engendered. But this antagonism has long
+ceased to be the chief factor that moulds European armaments.
+
+Were it not for British policy, and the unhealthy hope it proffers
+France would ere this have resigned herself, as the two provinces
+have done, to the solution imposed by the war of 1870. It is England
+and English ambition that beget the state of mind responsible for
+the enormous growth of armaments that now over-shadows continental
+civilization. Humanity, hemmed in in Central Europe by a forest of
+bayonets and debarred all egress to the light of a larger world by a
+forbidding circle of dreadnoughts, is called to peace conferences and
+arbitration treaties by the very power whose fundamental maxim of rule
+ensures war as the normal outlook for every growing nation of the Old
+World.
+
+If Europe would not strangle herself with her own hands she must
+strangle the sea serpent whose coils enfold her shores.
+
+Inspect the foundation of European armaments where we will, and we
+shall find that the master builder is he who fashioned the British
+Empire. It is that empire, its claim to universal right of pre-emption
+to every zone and region washed by the waves and useful and necessary
+for the expansion of the white races, and its assertion of a right to
+control at will all the seas of all the world that drives the peoples
+of Europe into armed camps. The policy of the Boer War is being tried
+on a vaster scale against Europe. Just as England beat the Boers by
+concentration camps and not by arms, by money and not by men, so she
+seeks to-day to erect an armourplate barrier around the one European
+people she fears to meet in the field, and to turn all Central Europe
+into a vast concentration camp. By use of the longest purse she has
+already carried this barrier well towards completion. One gap remains,
+and it is to make sure that this opening, too, shall be closed that
+she now directs all the force of her efforts. Here the longest purse
+is of less avail, so England draws upon another armoury. She appeals
+to the longest tongue in history--the longest and something else.
+
+In order to make sure the encompassing of Europe with a girdle of
+steel it is necessary to circle the United States with a girdle of
+lies. With America true to the great policy of her great founder,
+an America, "the friend of all powers but the ally of none," English
+designs against European civilization must in the end fail. Those
+plans can succeed only by active American support, and to secure this
+is now the supreme task and aim of British stealth and skill. Every
+tool of her diplomacy, polished and unpolished, from the trained
+envoy to the boy scout and the minor poet has been tried in turn. The
+pulpit, the bar, the press; the society hostess, the Cabinet Minister
+and the Cabinet Minister's wife, the ex-Cabinet Minister and the Royal
+Family itself, and last, but not least, even "Irish nationality"--all
+have been pilgrims to that shrine; and each has been carefully primed,
+loaded, well aimed, and then turned full on the weak spots in the
+armour of republican simplicity. To the success of these resources
+of panic the falsification of history becomes essential and the
+vilification of the most peace-loving people of Europe. The past
+relations of England with the United States are to be blotted out,
+and the American people who are by blood so largely Germanic, are to
+be entrapped into an attitude of suspicion, hostility and resentment
+against the country and race from whom they have received nothing
+but good. Germany is represented as the enemy, not to England's
+indefensible claim to own the seas, but to American ideals on the
+American continent. Just as the Teuton has become the "enemy of
+civilization" in the Old World because he alone has power, strength of
+mind, and force of purpose to seriously dispute the British hegemony
+of the seas, so he is assiduously represented as the only threat to
+American hegemony of the New World.
+
+This, the key note of the attack on Germany, is sounded from every
+corner of the British Empire, wherever the Imperial editor, resting on
+the labours of the lash he wields against the coloured toilers in mine
+and camp, directs his eyes from the bent forms of these indentured
+slaves of dividend to the erect and stalwart frames of the new Goths
+who threaten the whole framework of Imperial dividend from across
+the North Sea. From the _Times_ to the obscurest news-sheet of the
+remotest corner of the British Dominions the word has gone forth.
+
+The Monroe Doctrine, palladium of the Anglo-Saxon world empire, is
+imperilled by German ambitions, and were it not for the British
+fleet, America would be lost to the Americans. Wherever Englishmen are
+gathered to-day their journals, appealing possibly to only a handful
+of readers, assert that the function of the British fleet is to
+exclude the European States, with Germany at their head, from
+South America, not because in itself that is a right and worthy
+end to pursue, but because that continent is earmarked for future
+exploitation and control by their "kinsmen" of the United States,
+and they need the support of those "kinsmen" in their battle against
+Germany.
+
+I need quote but a single utterance from the mass of seditious libels
+of this character before me to show how widespread is the propaganda
+of falsehood and how sustained is the effort being made to poison
+the American mind against the only people in Europe England genuinely
+fears, and therefore wholeheartedly hates.
+
+The _Natal Mercury_ for instance, a paper written for the little town
+of Durban and appealing to a population of only some 30,000 whites,
+in a recent issue (March, 1913), devoted a leader to the approaching
+"Peace Centennial" of 1914, to be held in commemoration of the signing
+of the Treaty of Ghent, which ended the second war between Great
+Britain and the American people in 1814.
+
+"After all, blood is thicker than water," quotes the Natal journal
+with satisfaction, and after pointing out some latter day indications
+of rapprochement between England and the United States, it goes on to
+proclaim the chief function of the British navy and the claim thereby
+established on the goodwill of America.
+
+"We make mention of them because such incidents are likely to repeat
+themselves more and more frequently in that competition for naval
+supremacy in Europe which compels the United States to put her own
+fleets into working order and to join in the work that England has
+hitherto been obliged to perform _unaided_.
+
+"It is England that polices the Seven Seas, and America has reaped no
+small benefits from the _self-imposed task_, an aspect of the matter
+to which every thoughtful American is alive. There is a real and
+hearty recognition in the New World of the _silent barrier_ that Great
+Britain has set up to what might become something more than a dream
+of expansion into South America on the part of _one_ potent European
+State. It is, indeed, hardly too much to say that the maintenance
+of the Monroe Doctrine is at the present moment almost as fully
+guaranteed by England as it is by the country that enunciated the
+policy and is the chief gainer by it. It is a case in which a _silent
+understanding_ is of far greater value than a formal compact that
+'would serve as a target for casual discontent on this side or that'."
+
+The article concludes by proclaiming "the precious permanence of an
+unseen bond" and the lofty and enduring worth of "good faith mutually
+acknowledged and the ultimate solidarity of mutual interests rightly
+perceived." "The ultimate solidarity" aimed at by those who direct
+these world-wide pronouncements is not one of mere sterile friendship
+between the American and the British peoples. American friendship with
+England is only worth having when it can be translated by world acts
+into enmity against Germany.
+
+It might truly be said of the British Empire to-day that where two or
+three are gathered together, there hatred of Germany shall be in the
+midst of them. Turn where he will, from the Colonies to England, from
+England to her fleet, from the seas to the air, the Englishman lives
+and moves and has his being in an atmosphere not of love but of
+hatred. And this too, a hatred, fear, and jealousy of a people who
+have never injured him, who have never warred upon him, and whose sole
+crime is that they are highly efficient rivals in the peaceful rivalry
+of commerce, navigation, and science.
+
+We are told, for instance, in one of the popular London magazines
+for January, 1913, in an article upon the financial grievances of
+the British navy that were it not for Germany there would be to-day
+another Spithead. "Across the North Sea is a nation that some fifty
+years ago was so afraid of the British navy that it panicked itself
+into building an iron-clad fleet.
+
+"To-day, as the second naval power, its menace is too great for any
+up-to-date Spithead mutiny to come off. But the pay question was
+so acute that it is possibly only the Germans and their 'menace'
+that saved us from the trouble." But while the "patriotism" of the
+"lower-deck" may have been sufficiently stout to avert this peril,
+the patriotism of the "quarter-deck" is giving us a specimen of its
+quality that certainly could not be exhibited in any other country in
+the world.
+
+Even as I write I read in the "British Review" how Admiral Sir
+Percy Scott attacks Admiral Lord Charles Beresford, dubs him the
+"laughing-stock of the fleet," accuses him of publishing in his book
+_The Betrayal_ a series of "deliberate falsehoods," and concludes by
+saying that the gallant Admiral is "not a seaman."
+
+And it is a fleet commanded by such Admirals as these that is to sweep
+the German navy from the seas!
+
+During the Crimean war the allied British and French navies
+distinguished themselves by their signal failure to effect the
+reduction of such minor fortresses as Sveaborg, Helsingfors, and
+the fortified lighthouses upon the Gulf of Finland. Their respective
+Admirals fired their severest broadsides into each other, and the
+bombardment of the forts was silenced by the smart interchange of
+nautical civilities between the two flagships. Napoleon III, who
+sought an explanation of this failure of his fleet, was given a reply
+that I cannot refrain from recommending to the British Admiralty
+to-day. "Well, Sire," replied the French diplomatist, who knew the
+circumstances, "both the Admirals were old women, but ours was at
+least a lady." If British Admirals cannot put to sea without incurring
+this risk, they might, at least, take the gunboat woman with them to
+prescribe the courtesies of naval debate.
+
+That England to-day loves America, no one who goes to the private
+opinions of Englishmen, instead of to their public utterances, or the
+interested eulogies of their press, can for a moment believe.
+
+The old dislike is there, the old supercilious contempt for the
+"Yankee" and all his ways. "God's Englishman" no more loves an
+American citizen now than in 1846 when he seriously contemplated an
+invasion of the United States, and the raising of the negro-slave
+population against his "Anglo-Saxon kinsmen."
+
+To-day, when we hear so much of the Anglo-Saxon Alliance it may be
+well to revert to that page of history. For it will show us that if a
+British premier to-day can speak as Mr. Asquith did on December 16th,
+1912, in his reference to the late American Ambassador as "a great
+American and a kinsman," one "sprung from a common race, speaking our
+own language, sharing with us by birth as by inheritance not a few of
+our most cherished traditions and participating when he comes here by
+what I may describe as _his natural right in our domestic interests
+and celebrations_," then this new-found kinship takes its birth not in
+a sense of common race, indeed, but in a very common fear of Germany.
+
+In the year 1846, the British army was engaged in robbing the Irish
+people of their harvest in order that the work of the famine should
+be complete and that the then too great population of Ireland should
+be reduced within the limits "law and order" prescribed, either by
+starvation or flight to America.
+
+Fleeing in hundreds and thousands from the rule of one who claimed
+to be their Sovereign, expelled in a multitude exceeding the Moors of
+Spain, whom a Spanish king shipped across the seas with equal pious
+intent, the fugitive Irish Nation found friendship, hope, and homes in
+the great Celtic Republic of the West. All that was denied to them in
+their own ancient land they found in a new Ireland growing up across
+the Atlantic.
+
+The hate of England pursued them here and those who dared to give help
+and shelter. The United States were opening wide their arms to receive
+the stream of Irish fugitives and were saying very harsh things of
+England's infamous rule in Ireland. This could not be brooked. England
+in those days had not invented the Anglo-Saxon theory of mankind, and
+a united Germany had not then been born to vex the ineptitude of her
+statesmen or to profit from the shortcomings of her tradesmen.
+
+So the greatest Ministers of Queen Victoria seriously contemplated war
+with America and naturally looked around for some one else to do the
+fighting. The Duke of Wellington hoped that France might be played
+on, just as in a later day a later Minister seeks to play France in a
+similar rôle against a later adversary.[3]
+
+[Footnote 3: Sir Edward Grey and the _Entente Cordiale_.]
+
+The Mexicans, too, might be induced to invade the Texan frontier.
+But a greater infamy than this was seriously planned. Again it is an
+Irishman who tells the story and shows us how dearly the English loved
+their trans-Atlantic "kinsmen" when there was no German menace to
+threaten nearer home.
+
+Writing from Carlsruhe, on January 26th, 1846, to his friend,
+Alexander Spencer, in Dublin, Charles Lever said: "As to the war the
+Duke[4] says he could smash the Yankees, and ought to do so while
+France in her present humour and Mexico opens the road to invasion
+from the South--not to speak of the terrible threat that Napier
+uttered, that with two regiments of infantry and a field battery he'd
+_raise the slave population in the United States_."
+
+[Footnote 4: The Duke of Wellington: the report was brought to Lever
+by the Marquis of Douro, the Duke's heir.]
+
+The infamy of this suggestion cannot be surpassed. The brilliant
+soldier who conceived it was the chivalrous Englishman who conquered
+Scinde, one of the chief glories of the Britannic hierarchy of
+soldier-saints.
+
+The Government planning it was that of the late Queen Victoria with
+the Duke of Wellington's advice, and the people against whom the
+black-slave millions were to be loosed were the "kith and kin" of
+those meditating this atrocious form of massacre. Truly, as an old
+Irish proverb, old even in the days of Henry VIII. put it, "the pride
+of France, the _treason of England_ and the warre of Ireland shall
+never have end."
+
+As a latter day witness of that treason, one who had suffered it from
+birth to the prison cell, a dead Irishman speaks to us from the grave.
+Michael Davitt in a letter to Morrison Davidson on August 2701, 1902,
+thus summed up in final words what every Irishman feels in his heart:
+
+"The idea of being ruled by Englishmen is to me the chief agony
+of existence. They are a nation without faith, truth or conscience
+enveloped in a panoplied pharisaism and an incurable hypocrisy. Their
+moral appetite is fed on falsehood. They profess Christianity and
+believe only in Mammon. They talk of liberty while ruling India and
+Ireland against the principles of a constitution, professed as
+a political faith, but prostituted to the interests of class and
+landlord rule."
+
+Have Englishmen in less than two generations substituted love for
+the hate that Napier, Wellington, and the Queen's Ministers felt and
+expressed in 1846 for the people of the United States? Is it love
+to-day for America or fear of someone else that impels to the
+"Arbitration Treaties" and the celebration of the "Hundred years of
+Peace?"
+
+The Anglo-American "Peace Movement" was to be but the first stage in
+an "Anglo-Saxon Alliance," intended to limit and restrict all further
+world changes, outside of certain prescribed continental limits, to
+these two peoples alone on the basis of a new "Holy Alliance," whose
+motto should be _Beati possidentes_.
+
+Since England and America, either in fact or by reservation enjoy
+almost all the desirable regions of the earth, why not bring about
+a universal agreement to keep everyone in his right place, to stay
+"just as we are," and to kindly refer all possible differences to an
+"International Tribunal?"
+
+Once again the British Bible was thrown into the scale, and the
+unrighteousness of Germany, who did not see her way to join in the
+psalm singing, was exposed in a spirit of bitter resignation and
+castigated with an appropriate selection of texts. The Hague Tribunal
+would be so much nicer than a war of armaments! With no reckless
+rivalries and military expenditure there could be no question of the
+future of mankind.
+
+An idyllic peace would settle down upon the nations, contentedly
+possessing each in its own share of the good things of life, and no
+questionable ambitions would be allowed to disturb the buying and
+selling of the smaller and weaker peoples. The sincerity of the wish
+for universal arbitration can be best shown by England, when she,
+or any of the Powers to whom she appeals, will consent to submit the
+claim of one of the minor peoples she or they hold in subjection to
+the Hague Tribunal. Let France submit Madagascar and Siam, or her
+latest victim, Morocco, to the franchise of the Court. Let Russia
+agree to Poland or Finland seeking the verdict of this bench of
+appeal. Let England plead her case before the same high moral tribunal
+and allow Ireland, Egypt, or India to have the law of her. Then, and
+not until then, the world of little States and beaten peoples may
+begin to believe that the Peace Crusade has some foundations in honour
+and honesty--but not till then.
+
+Germany has had the straightforwardness and manliness to protest that
+she is still able to do her own shooting and that what she holds she
+will keep, by force if need be, and what she wants she will, in her
+own sure time, take, and by force too, if need be. Of the two cults
+the latter is the simpler, sincerer, and certainly the less dishonest.
+
+Irish-American linked with German-American keen-sighted hostility did
+the rest. The rivalry of Mr. Roosevelt and Mr. Taft aided, and the
+effort (for the time at any rate) has been wrecked, thereby plunging
+England into a further paroxysm of religious despondency and grave
+concern for German morals. This mood eventuated in Lord Haldane's
+"week end" trip to Berlin. The voice was the voice of Jacob, in spite
+of the hand of Esau. Mr. Churchill at Glasgow, showed the real hand
+and the mess of pottage so amiably offered at Berlin bought no German
+birthright. The Kreuz Zeitung rightly summed up the situation by
+pointing out that "Mr. Churchill's testimony can now be advanced
+as showing that the will of England alone comes in question as
+the exponent of peace, and that England for many years past has
+consciously assumed the rôle of an absolute and perfectly arbitrary
+judge of war and peace. It seems to us all the more significant that
+Mr. Churchill proposes also in the future to control, with the help of
+the strong navies of the Dominions, the trade and naval movements of
+all the Powers on the face of the earth--that is to say, his aim is to
+secure a world monopoly for England." There has never been any other
+thought in the English mind. As I said in Part I. of this paper,
+"British interests are first the control of all the seas of all
+the world in full military and commercial control. If this be not
+challenged peace is permitted; to dispute it seriously means war."
+
+Germany is driven by necessity to dispute it seriously and to overcome
+it. She cannot get out to play her part in world life, _nay, she
+cannot hope to ultimately maintain herself at home_ until that battle
+has been fought and won.
+
+Arrangements with England, detentes, understandings, call them what
+you will, are merely parleys before the fight. The assault must be
+delivered, the fortress carried, or else Germany, and with her
+Europe, must resign the mission of the white races and hand over the
+government and future of the world to one chosen people.
+
+Europe reproduces herself yearly at the present time at the rate of
+about five million souls. Some three-fifths of the number are to-day
+absorbed into the life of the Continent, the balance go abroad and
+principally to North America, to swell the English-speaking world.
+Germany controls about one-fifth of Europe's natural annual increase,
+and realising that emigration to-day means only to lose her people and
+build up her antagonist's strength, she has for years now striven to
+keep her people within German limits, and hitherto with successful
+results far in excess of any achieved by other European States. But
+the limit must be reached, and that before many years are past.
+Where is Germany to find the suitable region, both on a scale and
+under conditions of climate, health and soil that a people of say
+90,000,000 hemmed in a territory little larger than France, will find
+commensurate to their needs? No European people is in such plight.
+
+Russia has the immense and healthy world of Siberia into which to
+overflow. France, far from needing outlets, increases not at all, and
+during 1911 showed an excess of close on 40,000 deaths over births.
+For France the day of greatness is past. A French Empire, in any other
+sense than the Roman one of commercial and military exploitation of
+occupied territories and subjugated peoples is gone forever.
+
+France has no blood to give except in war. French blood will not
+colonize even the Mediterranean littoral. Italy is faced with
+something of the same problem as Germany, but to a lesser extent. Her
+surplus population already finds a considerable outlet in Argentina
+and South Brazil, among peoples, institutions, and language largely
+approximating to those left behind. While Italy has, indeed need of a
+world policy as well as Germany, her ability to sustain a great part
+abroad cannot be compared to that of the Teutonic people. Her claim is
+not so urgent; her need not so insistent, her might inadequate.
+
+The honesty and integrity of the German mind, the strength of the
+German intellect, the skill of the German hand and brain, and justice
+and vigour of German law, the intensity of German culture, science,
+education and social development, these need a great and healthy field
+for their beneficial display, and the world needs these things more
+than it needs the British mastery of the seas. The world of European
+life needs to-day, as it needed in the days of a decadent Roman
+Empire, the coming of another Goth, the coming of the Teuton. The
+interposing island in the North Sea alone intervenes. How to surmount
+that obstacle, how to win the freedom of the "Seven Seas" for Europe
+must be the supreme issue for Germany.
+
+If she falls she is doomed to sterility. The supreme test of German
+genius, of German daring, of German discipline and imagination lies
+there.
+
+Where Louis XIV., the Directory, and Napoleon failed, will the heirs
+of Karl the Great see clearly?
+
+And then, when that great hour has struck, will Germany, will Europe,
+produce the statesman soldier who shall see that the key to ocean
+freedom lies in that island beyond an island, whose very existence
+Europe has forgotten?
+
+Till that key is out from the Pirate's girdle, Germany may win a
+hundred "Austerlitzes" on the Vistula, the Dnieper, the Loire, but
+until she restores that key to Europe, to paraphrase Pitt, she may
+"roll up that map of the world; it will not be wanted these fifty
+years."
+
+
+
+
+Chapter V
+
+THE PROBLEM OF THE NEAR WEST
+
+
+The foregoing reflections and the arguments drawn from them were
+penned before the outbreak of the war between Turkey and the Balkan
+Allies.
+
+That war is still undecided as I write (March 1913), but whatever its
+precise outcome may be, it is clear that the doom of Turkey as a great
+power is sealed, and that the complications of the Near East will,
+in future, assume an entirely fresh aspect. Hitherto, there was only
+the possibility that Germany might find at least a commercial and
+financial outlet in the Asiatic dominions of the Sultan. There was
+even the possibility, had Turkey held together, that England, to
+mitigate pressure elsewhere, would have conceded to an expanding and
+insistent Germany, a friendly interest and control in Asia Minor. It
+is true that the greatest possible development, and under the most
+favoured conditions of German interests in that region, could not have
+met the needs or satisfied the ever increasing necessities of Teutonic
+growth; but at least it would have offered a safety valve, and could
+have involved preoccupations likely to deflect the German vision, for
+a time, from the true path to greatness, the Western highways of the
+sea.
+
+An occupation or colonisation of the Near East by the Germanic peoples
+could never have been a possible solution under any circumstances of
+the problem that faces German statemanship. As well talk of reviving
+the Frank Kingdom of Jerusalem.
+
+The occupation by the fair-haired peoples of the Baltic and North Seas
+of the lands of Turk and Tartar, of Syrian and Jew, of Armenian and
+Mesopotamian, was never a practical suggestion or one to be seriously
+contemplated. "East is East and West is West," sings the poet of
+Empire, and Englishmen cannot complain if the greatest of Western
+peoples, adopting the singer, should apply the dogma to themselves.
+Germany, indeed, might have looked for a considerable measure of
+commercial dominance in the Near East, possibly for a commercial
+protectorate such as France applies to Tunis and Algeria and hopes
+to apply to morocco, or such as England imposes on Egypt, and this
+commercial predominance could have conferred considerable profits on
+Rhenish industries and benefited Saxon industrialism, but it could
+never have done more than this. A colonisation of the realms of
+Bajazet and Saladin by the fair-skinned peoples of the North, or the
+planting of Teutonic institutions in the valley of Damascus, even with
+the benevolent neutrality of England, is a far wider dream (and one
+surely no German statesman ever entertained) than a German challenge
+to the sea supremacy of England.
+
+The trend of civilized man in all great movements since modern
+civilization began, has been from East to West, not from West to East.
+The tide of the peoples moved by some mysterious impulse from the
+dawn of European expansion has been towards the setting sun. The
+few movements that have taken place in the contrary direction have
+but emphasized the universality of this rule, from the days of the
+overthrow of Rome, if we seek no earlier date. The Crusades furnished,
+doubtless, the classic example. The later contrary instance, that of
+Russia towards Siberia, scarcely, if at all affects the argument, for
+there the Russian overthrow is filling up Northern rather than Eastern
+lands, and the movement involves to the Russian emigrant no change
+of climate, soil, law, language or environment while that emigrant
+himself belongs, perhaps, as much to Asia as to Europe.
+
+But whatever value to German development the possible chances of
+expansion in the Near East may have offered before the present Balkan
+war, those chances to-day, as the result of that war, scarcely exist.
+It is probably the perception of this outcome of the victory of the
+Slav States that has influenced and accelerated the characteristic
+change of English public opinion that has accompanied with shouts of
+derision the dying agonies of the Turk. "In matters of mind," as a
+recent English writer says in the _Saturday Review_, "the national
+sporting instinct does not exist. The English public invariably backs
+the winner." And just as the English public invariably backs the
+winner, British policy invariably backs the anti-German, or supposedly
+anti-German side in all world issues. "What 1912 seems to have
+effected is a vast aggrandizement of the Slavonic races in their
+secular struggle against the Teutonic races. Even a local and
+temporary triumph of Austria over Servia cannot conceal the fact that
+henceforth the way south-east to the Black Sea and the Aegean Sea is
+barred to the Germans."[5]
+
+[Footnote 5: Mr. Frederick Harrison in the _English Review_, Jan.,
+1913.]
+
+That is the outstanding fact that British public opinion perceives
+with growing pleasure from the break up of Turkey.
+
+No matter where the dispute or what the purpose of conflict may be,
+the supreme issue for England is "Where is Germany?"
+
+Against that side the whole weight of Great Britain will, openly or
+covertly, be thrown. German expansion in the Near East has gone by
+the board, and in its place the development of Greek naval strength
+in the Mediterranean, to take its stand by the Triple Entente, comes
+to be jauntily considered, while the solid wedge of a Slav Empire
+or Federation, commanding in the near future 2,000,000 of armed men
+is agreeably seen to be driven across South-eastern Europe between
+Austro-German efforts and the fallow lands of Asia Minor. These latter
+can safely be left in Turkish hands yet a while longer, until the day
+comes for their partition into "spheres of influence," just as Persia
+and parts of China are to-day being apportioned between Russia and
+England. This happy consummation, moreover, has fallen from heaven,
+and Turkey is being cut up for the further extension of British
+interests clearly by the act of God.
+
+The victory of the Balkan States becomes another triumph for the
+British Bible; it is the victory of righteousness over wrong-doing.
+
+The true virtue of the Balkan "Christians" lies in the possibility of
+their being moulded into an anti-German factor of great weight in the
+European conflict, clearly impending, and in their offering a fresh
+obstacle, it is hoped, to German world policy.
+
+Let us first inspect the moral argument on the lips of these
+professors. We are assured, by it, that the claim of the Balkan Allies
+to expel Turkey from Europe rests upon a just and historic basis.
+
+Briefly stated it is that the Turk has held his European provinces
+by a right of conquest only. What the sword took, die sword may take
+away. When the sword was struck from the Ottoman's grasp his right
+to anything it had given him fell too. Thus Adrianople, a city he has
+held for over five hundred years, must be given up to a new conqueror
+who never owned it in the past and who certainly has far less moral
+claim to be there to-day than the descendants of Selim's soldiers.
+
+But the moral argument brings strange revenges.
+
+If Turkey has no right to Adrianople, to Thrace--"right of sword to be
+shattered by the sword"--what right has England to Ireland, to Dublin,
+to Cork? She holds Ireland by exactly the same title as that by which
+Turkey has hitherto held Macedonia, Thrace, Salonika--a right of
+invasion, of seizure, of demoralization. If Turkey's rights, nearly
+six hundred years old, can be shattered in a day by one successful
+campaign, and if the powers of Europe can insist, with justice, that
+this successful sword shall outweigh the occupation of centuries,
+then, indeed, have the Powers, led by England, furnished a precedent
+in the Near East which the victor in the next great struggle should
+not be slow to apply to the Near West, when a captive Ireland shall be
+rescued from the hands of a conqueror whose tide is no better, indeed
+somewhat worse than that of Turkey to Macedonia. And when the day of
+defeat shall strike for the Turkey of the Near West, then shall an
+assembled Europe remember the arguments of 1912-13 and a freed Ireland
+shall be justified on the very grounds England to-day has been the
+first to advance against a defeated Turkey.
+
+"But the Turk is an Asiatic," say the English Bashaws: to which
+indeed, Europe might aptly reply, "and are the English European or
+non-European?" The moral argument, and the "Asiatic argument" are
+strange texts for the desecrater of Christian Ireland to appeal to
+against that continent which she would fain hem in with Malayan and
+Indian battleships, and Canadian and Australasian dreadnoughts. Not
+the moral argument, but the anti-German argument, furnishes the real
+ground for the changed British attitude in the present war.
+
+The moral failure of Turkey, her inability to govern her Christian
+peoples is only the pretext: but just as the moral argument brings
+its strange revenges and shows an Ireland that has suffered all that
+Macedonia has suffered, and this at the hands of Christians, and not
+of Moslems, so the triumph of the Balkan Allies, far from benefiting
+Britain, must, in the end, react to her detriment.
+
+The present apparent injury to German interests by the closing of
+South-eastern Europe, and the road to Asia Minor, will inevitably
+force Germany to still more resolutely face the problem of opening the
+Western seaways. To think otherwise is to believe that Germany will
+accept a quite impossible position tamely and without a struggle.
+
+Hemmed in by Russia on the East and the new Southern Slav States on
+the South-east, with a vengeful France being incited on her Western
+frontier to fresh dreams of conquest, Germany sees England preparing
+still mightier armaments to hold and close the seaways of the world.
+The Canadian naval vote, the Malayan "gift" of a battleship come as
+fresh rivets in the chain forged for the perpetual binding of the
+seas, or it might more truly be said, for the perpetual binding of the
+hands of die German people.
+
+We read in a recent London periodical how these latest naval
+developments portend the coming of the day when "the Imperial navy
+shall keep the peace of the seas as a policeman does the peace of the
+streets. The time is coming when a naval war (except by England), will
+be as relentlessly suppressed as piracy on the high seas." (_Review of
+Reviews_, December, 1912.)
+
+The naïve arrogance of this utterance is characteristically English.
+It is, after all, but the journalistic echo of the Churchill Glasgow
+speech, and the fullest justification of the criticism of the
+Kreuz Zeitung already quoted. It does not stand alone; it could be
+paralleled in the columns of any English paper--Liberal as much as
+Conservative--every day in the week. Nothing is clearer than that
+no Englishman can think of other nations save in terms of permanent
+inferiority. Thus, for instance, in a November (1912) issue of the
+_Daily News_ we find a representative Englishman (Sir R. Edgecumbe),
+addressing that Liberal journal in words that no one but an Englishman
+would dream of giving public utterance to. Sir R. Edgecumbe deprecated
+a statement that had gone round to the effect that the Malayan
+battleship was not a free gift of the toiling Tamils, Japanese,
+Chinese, and other rubber workers who make up, with a few Malays, the
+population of that peninsula, but was really the fruit of an arbitrary
+tax imposed upon these humble, but indifferent Asiatics by their
+English administration.
+
+Far from being indifferent, Sir R. Edgecumbe asserted these poor
+workers nourished a reverence "bordering on veneration" for the
+Englishman. "This is shown in a curious way by their refusing to
+call any European 'a white man' save the Englishman alone. The German
+trader, the Italian and Frenchman all are, in their speech coloured
+men."
+
+After this appreciation of themselves the English cannot object to the
+present writer's view that they are non-Europeans.
+
+Thus while the Eastern question is being settled while I write, by the
+expulsion of the Turk from Europe, England, who leads the cry in the
+name of Europe, is preparing the exclusion of Europe from all world
+affairs that can be dominated by sea power. Lands and peoples held
+for centuries by Turkey by a right not less moral than that by which
+England has held Ireland, are being forcibly restored to Europe. So be
+it.
+
+With settlement of the Eastern question by this act of restitution
+Europe must inevitably gain the clarity of vision to deal with the
+Western question by a similar act of restoration.
+
+The Western Macedonia must go the way of its Eastern fellow. Like
+those of the Orient, the problems of the Occident for Europe are
+twofold--a near Western and a far Western question. Ireland, keeper
+of the seas, constitutes for Europe the near Western question.
+
+The freedom of those seas and their opening to all European effort
+alike on equal terms constitutes the far Western question. But in both
+cases the antagonist of Europe, the non-European power is the same.
+The challenge of Europe must be to England, and the champion of Europe
+must be and can be only Germany. No other European people has the
+power, the strength of mind, of purpose and of arm to accomplish the
+great act of deliverance. Europe too long blinded to her own vital
+interests while disunited, must now, under the guidance of a united
+Germany, resolutely face the problem of freeing the seas.
+
+_That war of the seas is inevitable_. It may be fought on a continent;
+it may be waged in the air--it must be settled on the seas and it must
+mean either the freeing of those seas or the permanent exclusion
+of Europeans from the affairs of the world. It means for Europe the
+future, the very existence of European civilization as opposed to
+the Anglo-Saxon world domination. In that war, Germany will stand not
+alone as the champion of Europe, she will fight for the freedom of the
+world.
+
+As an Irishman I have no fear of the result to Ireland of a German
+triumph. I pray for it; for with the coming of that day the "Irish
+question" so dear to British politicians, becomes a European, a world
+question.
+
+With the humbling of Great Britain and the destruction of her sea
+ownership, European civilization assumes a new stature, and Ireland,
+oldest and yet youngest of the European peoples, shall enter into free
+partnership with the civilization, culture, and prosperity that that
+act of liberation shall bring to mankind.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter VI
+
+THE DUTY OF CHRISTENDOM
+
+
+It is only the truth that wounds. An Irishman to-day in dealing with
+Englishmen is forced, if he speak truly, to wound. That is why so
+many Irishmen do not speak the truth. The Irishman, whether he be a
+peasant, a farm labourer, however low in the scale of Anglicization
+he may have sunk, is still in imagination, if not always in manner,
+a gentleman. The Englishman is a gentleman by chance, by force of
+circumstances, by luck of birth, or some rare opportunity of early
+fellowship. The Irishman is a gentleman by instinct and shrinks from
+wounding the feelings of another man and particularly of the man who
+has wounded him. He scorns to take it out of him that way. That is
+why the task of misgoverning him has been so easy and has come so
+naturally to the Englishman. One of the chief grievances of the
+Irishman in the middle ages was that the man who robbed him was such
+a boor. Insult was added to injury in that the oppressor was no knight
+in shining armour, but a very churl of men; to the courteous and
+cultured Irishman a "bodach Sassenach," a man of low blood, of low
+cunning, caring only for the things of the body, with no veneration
+for the things of the spirit--with, in fine, no music in his soul.
+The things that the Irishman loved he could not conceive of. Without
+tradition or history himself he could not comprehend the passionate
+attachment of the Irishman to both, and he proceeded to wipe both out,
+so far as in him lay, from off the map of Ireland and from out the
+Irishman's consciousness.
+
+Having, as he believed, with some difficulty accomplished his task,
+he stands to-day amazed at the result. The Irishman has still a
+grievance--nay more, Ireland talks of "wrongs." But has she not got
+him? What more can she want except his purse? And, that too, she
+is now taking. In the indulgence of an agreeable self-conceit which
+supplies for him the want of imagination he sees Ireland to-day as a
+species of "sturdy beggar," half mendicant, half pickpocket--making
+off with the proceeds of his hard day's work. The past slips from
+him as a dream. Has he not for years now, well, for thirty years
+certainly, a generation, a life time, done all in his power to meet
+the demands of this incessant country that more in sorrow than in
+anger he will grant you, was misgoverned in the past. That was its
+misfortune, never his fault. This is a steadily recurring phase of the
+fixed hallucination in his blood. Ireland never _is_, but only always
+has been cursed by English rule. He himself, the Englishman of the
+day, is always a simple, bluff, good-hearted fellow. His father if you
+like, his grandfather very probably, misgoverned Ireland, but never he
+himself. Why, just look at him now, his hand never out of his pocket
+relieving the shrill cries of Irish distress. There she stands, a
+poverty-stricken virago at his door, shaking her bony fist at him,
+Celtic porter in her eye, the most fearful apparition in history, his
+charwoman, shaming him before the neighbours and demanding payment for
+long past spring cleanings that he, good soul, has forgotten all about
+or is quite certain were settled at the time. Yes, there she stands,
+the Irish charwoman, the old broom in her hand and preparing for
+one last sweep that shall make the house sweet and fit for her own
+children. And John Bull, honest, sturdy John Bull, believing the house
+to be his, thinks that the only thing between him and the woman is
+the matter of wages; that all she wants is an extra shilling. Ireland
+wants but one thing in the world. She wants her house to herself, and
+the stranger out of her house.
+
+While he is, in his heart, perfectly aware of this, John Bull (for the
+reasons given by Richard Cox), is quite determined that nothing shall
+get him out of the house. "Separation is unthinkable," say English
+Ministers. The task of Ireland is to-day what it always has been--to
+get the stranger out of the house. It is no shame to Ireland or her
+sons, that up to this they have failed in each attempt. Those attempts
+are pillars of fire in her history, beacons of light in the desert of
+sin, where the Irish Israel still wanders in search of the promised
+land. Few of the peoples in Europe who to-day make up the concert of
+powers, have, unaided, expelled the invader who held them down, and
+none has been in the situation of Ireland.
+
+As Mr. Gladstone wrote in 1890, "can anyone say we should have treated
+Ireland as we have done had she lain not between us and the ocean, but
+between us and Europe?"
+
+In introducing the scheme of mild Home Rule termed the Councils Bill
+in 1907, Mr. Birrell prefaced it with the remark that "separation was
+unthinkable--save in the event of some great world cataclysm." World
+cataclysms up to this have not reached Ireland--England intervened too
+well. She has maintained her hold by sea power. The lonely Andromeda
+saw afar off the rescuing Perseus, a nude figure on the coast of Spain
+or France, but long ere his flight reached her rock-bound feet she
+beheld him fall, bruised and mangled, and devoured by the watching sea
+monster.
+
+Had Italy been placed as Ireland is, cut off from all external succour
+save across a sea held by a relentless jailor, would she have been
+to-day a free people, ally of Austria on terms of high equality?
+
+The blood shed by the founders of modern Italy would all have been
+shed in vain--that blood that sanctified the sword of Garibaldi--had
+it not been for the selfish policy of Louis Napoleon and the invading
+armies of France. Italy, no more than Ireland, could have shaken
+herself free had it not been for aid from abroad. The late Queen
+Victoria saw clearly the parallel, and as hereditary custodian of
+Ireland, Her Majesty protested against the effort then being made to
+release Italy from an Austrian prison, when she herself was so hard
+put to it to keep Ireland in an English jail. Writing to her Prime
+Minister on July 25th, 1848, Her Majesty said:--
+
+"The Queen must tell Lord John (Russell) what she has repeatedly told
+Lord Palmerston, but without apparent effect, that the establishment
+of an entente cordiale with the French Republic, for the purpose
+of driving the Austrians out of their dominions in Italy would be a
+disgrace to this country. That the French would attach the greatest
+importance to it and gain the greatest advantage from it, there can
+be no doubt of. But how will England appear before the world at the
+moment she is struggling for her supremacy in Ireland?..." and on Oct.
+10th following Her Majesty wrote to her uncle, the first King of
+the Belgians (who owed his new minted crown to the Belgian people
+depriving the Dutch Sovereign of his "lawful possessions") in the
+following memorable words:
+
+"Really it is quite immoral, with Ireland quivering in our grasp,
+and ready to throw off her allegiance at any moment, for us to force
+Austria to give up her lawful possessions. What shall we say if
+Canada, Malta, etc., begin to trouble us? It hurts me terribly." (Page
+237, Queen Victoria's letters, published by order of His Majesty, King
+Edward VII.)
+
+It hurt Ireland much more terribly, that failure to throw off the
+hand that held her "quivering in our grasp," so soon to stretch her
+"a corpse upon the dissecting table."
+
+Ireland has failed to win her freedom, not so much because she has
+failed to shed her blood, but because her situation in the world
+is just that unique situation I have sought to depict. Belonging to
+Europe, she has not been of Europe; and England with a persistency
+that would be admirable were it not so criminal in intention and
+effect, has bent all her efforts, all her vigour, an unswerving
+policy, and a pitiless sword to extend the limits of exclusion. To
+approach Ireland at all since the first English Sovereign laid hands
+upon it was "quite immoral." When Frederick of Hohenstaufen (so long
+ago as that!) sent his secretary (an Irishman) to Ireland we read that
+Henry III of England declared "it hurt him terribly," and ordered all
+the goings out and comings in of the returned Irish-German statesman
+to be closely watched.
+
+The dire offence of Hugh O'Neill to Elizabeth was far less his
+rebellion than his "practises" with Spain. At every cessation of
+arms during the Nine Years War he waged with England, she sought to
+obtain from him an abjuration of "foreign aid," chiefly "that of the
+Spaniard." "Nothing will become the traitor (O'Neill) more than his
+public confession of any Spanish practices, and his abjuration of any
+manner of harkening or combining with any foreigners."
+
+Could O'Neill be brought to publicly repudiate help from abroad it
+would have, the Queen thought, the effect that "in Spain... the hopes
+of such attempts might be extinguished."
+
+As long as the sea was open to Spain there was grave danger. If
+Spaniard and Irishman came close together O'Neill's offence was
+indeed "fit to be made vulgar"--all men would see the strength of
+combination, the weakness of isolation.
+
+"Send me all the news you receive from Spain for Tyrone doth fill all
+these parts with strange lies, although some part be true, that there
+came some munition." It was because O'Neill was a statesman and knew
+the imperative need to Ireland of keeping in touch with Europe that
+for Elizabeth he became "the chief traitor of Ireland--a reprobate
+from God, reserved for the sword."
+
+Spain was to Elizabethan Englishmen what Germany is to-day.
+
+"I would venture to say one word here to my Irish fellow countrymen of
+all political persuasions. If they imagine they can stand politically
+or economically while Britain falls they are woefully mistaken. The
+British fleet is their one shield. It if be broken Ireland will go
+down. They may well throw themselves heartily into the common defence,
+for no sword can transfix England without the point reaching behind
+her." (Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, in the _Fortnightly Review_, Feb.,
+1913, "Great Britain and the Next War.")
+
+The voice is a very old one, and the bogey has done duty for a long
+time in Ireland. When, to-day, it is from Germany that freedom may
+be feared, Ireland is warned against the German. When, three hundred
+years ago the beacon of hope shone on the coast of Spain, it was the
+Spaniards who were the bad people of history.
+
+Fray Mattheo de Oviedo, who had been sent to Ireland as Archbishop,
+wrote to King Philip III from O'Neill's stronghold, Dungannon, on
+June 24, 1600. We might be listening to the voice of the _Fortnightly
+Review_ of yesterday. "The English are making great efforts to bring
+about a peace, offering excellent terms, and for this purpose the
+Viceroy sent messengers twice to O'Neill, saying among other things,
+that Your Majesty is making peace with the Queen, and that his
+condition will be hopeless. At other times he says that no greater
+misfortune could happen to the country than to bring Spaniards into
+it, because they are haughty and vicious and they would destroy and
+ruin the country." The Irish princes were no fools. "To all this they
+reply most honourably that they will hold out as long as they have one
+soldier or there remains a cow to eat."
+
+Hugh O'Neill saw clearly that all compromise between Ireland and
+England was futile, and that the way of escape was by complete
+separation and lay only through Europe. He again and again begged
+the Spanish King to sever Ireland and erect it into an allied State.
+He offered the crown of Ireland to a Spanish prince, just as three
+centuries earlier another and a great O'Neill offered the crown of
+Ireland to Edward Bruce in 1315.
+
+The coming of the Bruce saved Gaelic Ireland for three centuries. Had
+Philip of Spain sent his son as King to Ireland, her fate had been
+settled then instead of remaining three centuries later to still
+confront European statesmanship with an unsolved problem.
+
+In many letters addressed by the Irish leaders to Philip II and Philip
+III we find the constantly recurring note of warning that to leave
+England in possession of Ireland meant the downfall of Spain. The
+Irish princes knew that in fighting England they were in truth
+fighting the battle of European civilization.
+
+Writing to Philip II from Lifford, on May 16th, 1596, O'Neill and
+O'Donnell drew the King's attention to the cause of Ireland as the
+cause of Europe, and in the name of Ireland offered the crown to
+a Spanish prince. "But inasmuch as we have felt to our great and
+indescribably harm the evil doings and crimes of those whom the Queen
+of England is in the habit of sending amongst us, we beg and beseech
+Your Majesty to send someone well known to you and perfectly fit to
+be the King of this island, for his own welfare, ours, and that of the
+Christian State (Christendom)."
+
+They asked for a prince "who will not be unwilling to rule over and
+live amongst us and to direct and guide our nation, well and wisely."
+They pointed out how "he will obtain much advantage and glory by so
+doing," and finally they begged "would that Your Majesty would appoint
+the Archduke of Austria, now Governor of Flanders, a famous man and
+worthy of all praise, than whom none would be more acceptable." (The
+original is in Latin and in the archives of Simancas.)
+
+No more statesmanlike appeal was ever made from Ireland; and had
+the Archduke of Austria assumed the crown of Ireland in 1596, "now
+or never" would indeed have become "now and forever." Had Philip II
+carried out his often repeated promises of sending aid to that country
+the fate of his own kingdom must have been a very different one.
+
+"I wish it were possible for me, by word of mouth, to show the
+importance of this undertaking and the great service that would be
+rendered thereby to God and His Church, and _the great advantage it
+would be to the service of Your Majesty and the peace of Your States
+to attack the enemy here_."
+
+So wrote in 1600 to Philip II, the Archbishop of Dublin, already
+quoted, Mattheo de Oviedo.
+
+This prelate had been specially sent to Ireland "to see and understand
+the state of the country misrepresented by English emissaries at
+foreign courts."
+
+The wrath of Elizabeth against O'Neill was largely due to his keeping
+in touch with the continent, whereby the lies of her agents abroad
+were turned to her own ridicule. To Essex, her Viceroy, she wrote:
+"Tyrone hath blazed in foreign parts the defeat of regiments, the
+death of captains, and loss of men of quality in every quarter."
+
+O'Neill not only for years beat her generals in the field, her beat
+herself and her councillors at their own game. To Essex, in an ecstacy
+of rage at the loss of the last great army sent, she wrote (September
+17th, 1599): "To trust this traitor upon oath is to trust the devil
+upon his religion. Only this we are sure (for we see it in effect),
+that you have prospered so ill for us by your warfare, as we cannot
+but be very jealous lest we should be as well overtaken by the
+treaty."
+
+(Essex wished to bring O'Neill in by a treaty which, while ostensibly
+conceding the terms of the Irish prince was to allow the Queen time to
+carry out her purpose.)
+
+The Irish princes knew Elizabeth and her Ministers, as well as she
+read Essex. "Believe no news from Ireland of any agreement in this
+country," they had written to Philip II in 1597, "great offers have
+been made by the Queen of England, but we will not break our word and
+promise to your." In a letter written a year earlier (Oct. 18, 1596),
+replying to the special envoy sent by the king, they said: "Since
+the former envoys left us we have used every means in our power, as
+we promised we should do, to gain time and procrastination from one
+day to another. But how could we impose on so clever an enemy so
+skilled in every kind of cunning and cheating if we did not use much
+dissimulation, and especially if we did not pretend we were anxious
+for peace? We will keep firm and unshaken the promises which we made
+to Your Majesty with our last breath; if we do not we shall incur at
+once the wrath of God and the contempt of men."
+
+How faithfully they kept those promises and how the Spanish King
+failed in his, their fate and the bitter ruin of their country shows.
+That men fighting for Ireland had to meet Elizabeth and her statesmen
+with something of her own cunning is made very clear to anyone reading
+the State papers in Ireland.
+
+Essex, in one of his "answers" wrote: "I advise Her Majesty to allow
+me, at my return to Dublin, to conclude this treaty, yielding some
+of their grants in the present; and when Her Majesty has made secret
+preparations to enable me to prosecute, I will find quarrels enough to
+break and give them a deadly blow."
+
+The Irish, however, failed in this contest. They were not sufficiently
+good liars, and lacked the higher flights of villainy necessary to
+sustain the encounter. The essential English way in Tudor days, and
+much later, for administering a deadly blow to an Irish patriot was
+"assassination." Poison frequently took the place of the knife, and
+was often administered wrapped in a leaf of the British Bible. A
+certain Atkinson, knowing the religious nature of Cecil, the Queen's
+Prime Minister, the founder of a long line of statesmen, foremost as
+champions of Church and Book, suggested the getting rid of O'Neill by
+some "poisoned Hosts." This proposal to use the Blessed Sacrament as
+a veritable Last Supper for the last great Irish chief remains on
+record, was endorsed by Cecil.
+
+Another Briton, named Annyas, was charged to poison "the most
+dangerous and open rebel in Munster," Florence MacCarthy More, the
+great MacCarthy. Elizabeth's Prime Minister piously endorsed the
+deed--"though his soul never had the thought to consent to the
+poisoning of a dog, much less a Christian ."
+
+To Carew, the President of Munster, Cecil wrote enjoining the
+assassination of the young Earl of Desmond, then "in the keeping
+of Carew": "Whatever you do to abridge him out of Providence shall
+never be imputed to you for a fault, but exceedingly commended
+by the Queen." After this, we are not surprised to learn that in
+her instructions to Mountjoy, the successor of Essex, the Queen
+recommended "to his special care to preserve the true exercise of
+religion among her loving subjects." As O'Neill was still in the field
+with a large army, she prudently pointed out, however, that the time
+"did not permit that he should intermeddle by any severity or violence
+in matters of religion until her power was better established there
+to countenance his action." That the character of their adversary was
+faithfully appreciated by contemporary Irish opinion stands plain in
+a letter written by James Fitzthomas, nephew of the great Earl Gerald
+of Desmond, to Philip II. "The government of the English is such as
+Pharaoh himself never used the like; for they content not themselves
+with all temporal prosperity, but by cruelty desire our blood and
+perpetual destruction to blot out the whole remembrance of our
+posterity--for that Nero, in his time, was far inferior to that Queen
+in cruelty."
+
+The Irish chiefs well sustained their part in meeting this combination
+of power and perfidy, and merited, on the highest grounds of policy
+the help so often promised by the King of Spain. They showed him not
+only by their valour on the field but by their sagacious council how
+great a part was reserved for Ireland in the affairs of Europe if he
+would but profit from it and do his part.
+
+In this the Spanish King failed. Philip II had died in 1598, too
+immersed in religious trials to see that the centre of his griefs was
+pivoted on the possession of Ireland by the female Nero. With his son
+and successor communication was maintained and in a letter of Philip
+III to O'Neill, dated from Madrid, Dec. 24th, 1599, we read: "Noble
+and well beloved I have already written a joint letter to you and your
+relative O'Donnell, in which I replied to a letter of both of you. By
+this, which I now write to you personally I wish to let you know my
+good will towards you, and I mean to prove it, not only by word, but
+by deed." That promise was not fulfilled, or so inadequately fulfilled
+that the help, when it came, was insufficient to meet the needs of the
+case.
+
+History tells us what the sad consequences were to the cause of
+civilisation in Ireland, from the failure of the Spanish King to
+realize the greatness of his responsibilities. But the evil struck
+deeper than to Ireland alone. Europe lost more than her historians
+have yet realised from the weakness of purpose that let Ireland go
+down transfixed by the sword of Elizabeth.
+
+Had the fate of Europe been then controlled by a Hohenzollern, instead
+of by a Spanish Hapsburg, how different might have been the future of
+the world!
+
+Although Europe had forgotten Ireland, Ireland had never forgotten
+Europe. Natural outpost and sentinel of that continent in the West for
+three-hundred years now gagged and bound, since the flight to Rome of
+her last native Princes, she stands to-day as in the days of Philip
+III, if an outcast from European civilization non the less rejecting
+the insular tradition of England, as she has rejected her insular
+Church. And now once more in her career she turns to the greatest of
+European Sovereigns, to win his eyes to the oldest, and certainly the
+most faithful of European peoples. Ireland already has given and owes
+much to Germany.
+
+In the dark ages intercourse between the Celtic people of the
+West and the Rhinelands and Bavaria was close and long sustained.
+Irish monasteries flourished in the heart of Germany, and German
+architecture gave its note possibly to some of the fairest cathedral
+churches in Ireland.
+
+Clonfert and Cashel are, perhaps amongst the most conspicuous examples
+of the influence of that old-time intercourse with Germany. To-day,
+when little of her past remains to venerate, her ancient language on
+what seemed its bed of death owes much of its present day revival
+to German scholarship and culture. Probably the foremost Gaelic
+scholar of the day is the occupant of the Chair of Celtic at Berlin
+University, and Ireland recognises with a gratitude she is not easily
+able to express, all that her ancient literature owes to the genius
+and loving intellect of Dr. Kuno Meyer.
+
+The name of Ireland may be known on the Bourses or in the
+Chancelleries of Europe; it is not without interest, even fame, in the
+centres of German academical culture. But that the German State may
+also be interested in the political fate of Ireland is believed by the
+present writer.
+
+Maurice Fitzgerald, the outlawed claimant to the Earldom of Desmond,
+wrote to Philip II, from Lisbon on September 4th, 1593:
+
+"We have thought it right to implore your Majesty to send the aid
+you will think fit and with it to send us (the Irish refugees in the
+Peninsula) to defend and uphold the same undertaking; for we hope,
+with God's help Your Majesty will be victorious and conquer and hold
+as your own the kingdom of Ireland.--We trust in God that Your Majesty
+and the Council will weigh well the advantages that will ensue to
+Christendom from this enterprise--since the opportunity is so good
+and the cause so just and weighty, and the undertaking so easily
+completed."
+
+The history of human freedom is written in letters of blood. It is the
+law of God. No people who clutch to safety, who shun death are worthy
+of freedom.
+
+The dead who die for Ireland are the only live men in a free Ireland.
+The rest are cattle. Freedom is kept alive in man's blood only by
+shedding of that blood. It was not an act of a foreign Parliament they
+were seeking, those splendid "scorners of death," the lads and young
+men of Mayo, who awaited with a fearless joy the advance of the
+English army fresh from the defeat of Humbert in 1798. Then, if ever,
+Irishmen might have run from a victorious and pitiless enemy who,
+having captured the French General and murdered in cold blood the
+seven hundred Killala peasants who were with his colours, were now
+come to Killala itself to wreak vengeance on the last stronghold of
+Irish rebellion.
+
+The ill-led and half armed peasants, the last Irishmen in Ireland
+to stand the pitched fight for their country's freedom, went to
+meet the army of England, as the Protestant Bishop, who saw them,
+says:--"running upon death with as little appearance of reflection
+or concern as if they were hastening to a show."
+
+The late Queen Victoria, in one of her letters to her uncle, the King
+of the Belgians, wrote thus of the abortive rising of fifty years
+later in 1848:
+
+"There are ample means of crushing the rebellion in Ireland, and I
+think it is very likely to go off without any contest, which people
+(and I think rightly) rather regret. The Irish should receive _a
+good lesson or they will begin again_." (Page 223, Vol. II, Queen
+Victoria's letters.) Her Majesty was profoundly right. Ireland needed
+that lesson in 1848, as she needs it still more to-day. Had Irishmen
+died in 1848 as they did in 1798 Ireland would be to-day fifty years
+nearer to freedom. It is because a century has passed since Europe
+saw Ireland willing to die that to-day Europe has forgotten that she
+lives.
+
+As I began this essay with a remark of Charles Lever on Germany so
+shall end it here with a remark of Lever on his own country, Ireland.
+
+In a letter to a friend in Dublin, he thus put the epitaph of Europe
+on the grave of a generation who believed that "no human cause was
+worth the shedding one drop of human blood."
+
+"As to Ireland all foreign sympathy is over owing to the late
+cowardice and poltroonery of the patriots. _Even Italians can fight_"
+(Letter of C. Lever from Florence, August 19th, 1848).
+
+It is only the truth that wounds. It is that reproach that has cursed
+Ireland for a century.
+
+Sedition, the natural garment for an Irishman to wear, has been for a
+hundred years a bloodless sedition. It is this fiery shirt of Nessus
+that has driven our strong men mad. How to shed our blood with honour,
+how to give our lives for Ireland--that has been, that is the problem
+of Irish nationality.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter VII
+
+THE FREEDOM OF THE SEAS
+
+
+It would be idle to attempt to forecast the details of a struggle
+between Great Britain and Germany. That is a task that belongs to the
+War Department of the two States. I have assigned myself merely to
+point out that such a struggle is inevitable, and to indicate what
+I believe to be the supreme factors in the conflict, and how one of
+these, Ireland, and that undoubtedly the most important factor, has
+been overlooked by practically every predecessor of Germany in the
+effort to make good at sea. The Spaniards in Elizabeth's reign,
+the French of Louis XIV and of the Directory took some steps, it
+is true, to challenge England's control of Ireland, but instead of
+concentrating their strength upon that line of attack they were
+content to dissipate it upon isolated expeditions and never once to
+push home the assault on the one point that was obviously the key
+to the enemy's whole position. At any period during that last three
+centuries, with Ireland gone, England was, if not actually at the
+mercy of her assailants, certainly reduced to impotency beyond her own
+shores. But while England knew the value to herself of Ireland, she
+appreciated to the full the fact that this profitable juxtaposition
+lay on her right side hidden from the eyes of Europe.
+
+"Will anyone assert," said Gladstone, "that we would have dared to
+treat Ireland as we have done had she lain, not between us and the
+ocean, but between us and the continent?" And while the bulk of
+England, swollen to enormous dimensions by the gains she drew from
+Ireland interposed between her victim and Europe, her continental
+adversaries were themselves the victims of that strange mental disease
+psychologists term the collective illusion. All the world saw that
+which in fact did not exist. The greatness of England as they beheld
+it, imposing, powerful, and triumphant, existed not on the rocky base
+they believed they saw, but on the object, sacked, impoverished, and
+bled, they never saw. And so it is to-day. The British Empire is the
+great illusion. Resembling in much the Holy Roman Empire it is not
+British, it is not an Empire, and assuredly it is not holy. It lives
+on the life-blood and sufferings of some, on the suffrance and mutual
+jealousy of others, and on the fixed illusion of all. Rather is it a
+great Mendicity Institute. England now, instead of "robbing from Pole
+to Pole," as John Mitchel once defined her activities, goes begging
+from Pole to Pole that all and every one shall give her a helping hand
+to keep the plunder. Chins, Goorkhas, Sikhs, Malays, Irish, Chinese,
+South African Dutch, Australasians, Maoris, Canadians, Japanese, and
+finally "Uncle Sam"--these are the main components that when skilfully
+mixed from London, furnish the colouring material for the world-wide
+canvas. If we take away India, Egypt and the other coloured races the
+white population that remains is greatly inferior to the population of
+Germany, and instead of being a compact, indivisible whole, consists
+of a number of widely scattered and separated communities, each with
+separate and absorbing problems of its own, and more than one of them
+British neither in race, speech, nor affection. Moreover if we turn
+to the coloured races we find that the great mass of the subjects of
+this Empire have less rights within it than they possess outside its
+boundaries, and occupy there a lower status than that accorded to most
+foreigners.
+
+The people of India far out number all other citizens of the British
+Empire put together, and yet we find the British Indians resident in
+Canada, to take but one instance, petitioning the Imperial Government
+in 1910 for as favourable terms of entry into that British possession
+as the Japanese enjoyed.
+
+They pointed out that a Japanese could enter Canada on showing that he
+held from six pounds to ten pounds, but that no British Indian could
+land unless he had forty pounds and had come direct from India,--a
+physical impossibility, since no direct communication exists. But they
+went further, for they showed that their "citizenship" of the British
+Empire entailed penalties that no foreign state anywhere imposed upon
+them.
+
+"We appeal," they said, "and most forcibly bring to your notice
+that no such discriminating laws are existing against us in foreign
+countries like the United States of America, Germany, Japan, and
+Africa, to whom we do not owe any allegiance whatsoever."
+
+So that outside its white or European races it is clear the Empire has
+no general or equal citizenship, and that, far from being one, it is
+more divided racially against itself than are even opposing Asiatic
+and European nations which have the good fortune not to be united in a
+common, imperial bond.
+
+The total white population of this incongruous mass in 1911 consisted
+of some 59,000,000 human beings made up of various national and racial
+strains, as against 66,000,000 of white men in the German Empire the
+vast majority of them of German blood. And while the latter form a
+disciplined, self-contained, and self-supporting and self-defending
+whole, the former are swelled by Irish, French-Canadians, and Dutch
+South Africans who, according to Sir R. Edgcumbe, must be reckoned as
+"coloured."
+
+It is one thing to paint the map red, but you must be sure that your
+colours are fast and that the stock of paints wont run out. England,
+apart from her own perplexities is now faced with this prospect. Great
+Britain can no longer count on Ireland, that most prolific source
+of supply of her army, navy, and industrial efforts during the last
+century, while she is faced with a declining birth-rate, due largely,
+be it noted, to the diminished influx of the Irish, a more prolific
+and virile race. While her internal powers of reproduction are
+failing, her ability to keep those already born is diminishing still
+more rapidly. Emigration threatens to remove the surplus of births
+over deaths.
+
+As long as it was only the population of Ireland that fell (8,500,000
+in 1846 to 4,370,000 in 1911), Great Britain was not merely untroubled
+but actually rejoiced at a decrease in numbers that made the Irish
+more manageable, and yet just sufficiently starvable to supply her
+with a goodly surplus for army, navy, and industrial expansion in
+Great Britain. Now that the Irish are gone with a vengeance it is
+being perceived that they did not take their vengeance with them and
+that the very industrial expansion they built up from their starving
+bodies and naked limbs contains within itself the seeds of a great
+retribution.
+
+"Since Free Trade has ruined our agriculture, our army has become
+composed of starving slum dwellers who, according to the German notion
+are better at shouting than at fighting. German generals have pointed
+out that in the South African war our regular and auxiliary troops
+often raised the white flag and surrendered, without necessity,
+sometimes to a few Boers, and they may do the same to a German
+invading force. Free Trade which "benefits the consumer" and the
+capitalist has, unfortunately, through the destruction of our
+agriculture and through forcing practically the whole population of
+Great Britain into the towns, destroyed the manhood of the nation."
+(Modern Germany page 251, by J. Ellis Barker, 1907). An army of slum
+dwellers is a poor base on which to build the structure of a perpetual
+world dominion.
+
+While the navy shows an imposing output of new battleships
+and cruisers for 1913, the record, we are told, of all warship
+construction in the world, it takes blood as well as iron to cement
+empires. Battleships may become so much floating scrap iron (like the
+Russian fleet at Tsushima), if the men behind the guns lack the right
+stamina and education.
+
+We learn, too, that it is not only the slum dwellers who are failing,
+but that to meet the shortage of officers a large number of transfers
+from the merchant marine to the Royal Navy are being sanctioned.
+To this must be added the call of the Great Dominions for men and
+officers to man their local fleets. As the vital resources of England
+become more and more inadequate to meet the menace of German naval and
+moral strength, she turns her eyes to Ireland, and we learn from the
+London _Daily Telegraph_ that Mr. Churchill's scheme of recruiting at
+Queenstown may furnish "matter for congratulation, as Irish boys make
+excellent bluejackets happy of disposition, amenable to discipline,
+and extremely quick and handy."
+
+As I can recall an article in this same journal, written during the
+course of the Boer War, in which Ireland was likened to a "serpent
+whose head must be crushed beneath the heel," the _Daily Telegraph's_
+praise to-day of the Irish disposition should leave Irish boys
+profoundly unmoved--and still ashore.
+
+There is yet another aspect of the growing stream of British
+emigration. "Death removes the feeble, emigration removes the strong.
+Canada, New Zealand, Australia, and South Africa, have no use for the
+sick and palsied, or of those incapable of work through age or youth.
+They want the workers and they get them. Those who have left the
+United Kingdom during 1912 are not the scum of our islands, but the
+very pick. And they leave behind, for our politicians to grapple with,
+a greater proportion of females, of children and of disabled than ever
+before." (_London Magazine_!)
+
+The excess of females over males, already so noteworthy a feature
+of England's decay, becomes each year more accentuated and doubtless
+accounts for the strenuous efforts now being made to entrap Irish boys
+into the British army and navy.
+
+If we compare the figures of Germany and Great Britain, and then
+contrast them with those of Ireland, we shall see, at a glance, how
+low England is sinking, and how vitally necessary it is for her to
+redress the balance of her own excess of "militants" over males by
+kidnapping Irish youths into her emasculated services and by fomenting
+French and Russian enmities against the fruitful German people.
+
+Germany 1910, males, 32,031,967; females, 32,871,456; total,
+64,925,993. Excess of females, 739,489.
+
+Great Britain, 1911:
+
+England and Wales--Males, 17,448,476; females, 18,626,793; total,
+36,075,269. Excess of females, 1,178,317.
+
+Scotland--Males, 2,307,603; females, 2,251,842; total, 4,759,445.
+Excess of females, 144,239.
+
+Total for Great Britain, 40,834,714. Excess of females, 1,322,556.
+
+Thus on a population much less than two thirds that of Germany Great
+Britain has almost twice as many females in excess over males as
+Germany has, and this disproportion of sexes tends yearly to increase.
+We read in every fresh return of emigration that it is men and not
+women who are leaving England and Scotland. That Irish emigration,
+appalling as its ravages have been since 1846, is still maintained on
+a naturally healthier basis the sex returns for 1911 make clear. The
+figures for Ireland at the census were as follows:
+
+Ireland--Males, 2,186,802; females, 2,195,147; total, 4,381,949.
+Excess of females, 8,346.
+
+Ireland, it is seen, can still spare 100,000 or 150,000 males for the
+British armed forces and be in no unhealthier sex plight than Scotland
+or England is in. It is to get this surplus of stout Irish brawn and
+muscle that Mr. Churchill and the British War Office are now touting
+in Ireland.
+
+I take the following Government advertisement from the Cork _Evening
+Echo_ (of March, 1913), in illustration:
+
+"Notice--Any person that brings a recruit for the Regular or Special
+Reserve Branches of the Army to the Recruiting Officer at Victoria
+Barracks, Cork, will be paid the money reward allowed for each recruit
+which ranges from 1/6 to 5/- each."
+
+From whatever point of view we survey it we shall find that England's
+Empire at bottom rests upon Ireland to make good British deficiencies.
+The Dominions are far off, and while they may give battleships they
+take men. Ireland is close at hand--she gives all and takes nothing.
+Men, mind, food and money--all these she has offered through the
+centuries, and it is upon these and the unrestricted drain of these
+four things from that rich mine of human fertility and wealth that
+the British Empire has been founded and maintained. To secure to-day
+the goodwill and active co-operation of the Irish race abroad as well
+as in Ireland, and through that goodwill to secure the alliance and
+support of the United States has become the guiding purpose of British
+statesmanship.
+
+The Home Rule Bill of the present Liberal Government is merely the
+petty party expression of what all English statesmen recognize as
+a national need. Were the present Liberal Government thrown out
+to-morrow their Unionist successors would hasten to bind Ireland
+(and America) to them by a measure that, if necessary, would go much
+further. Every Unionist knows this. Ireland is always the key to the
+situation.
+
+I will quote two pronouncements, one English and one American, to show
+that Home Rule has now become an imperial necessity for England.
+
+Speaking in the House of Lords on the Home Rule Bill, Earl Grey, the
+late Governor-General of Canada, said on January 27th, 1913:
+
+"In the interests of the Empire I feel very strongly that it is
+imperative that the Irish question should be settled on lines which
+will satisfy the sentiment of the over-sea democracies, both in our
+self-governing colonies and in the United States. Everyone, I think
+will agree that it is most important and in the highest interests of
+the empire that there should be the friendliest feelings of generous
+affection and goodwill, not only between the self-governing Dominions
+and the Motherland, but also between America and England.... I need
+not elaborate this point. We are all agreed upon it. A heavy shadow
+at present exists, and it arises from our treatment of Ireland....
+If this be so is it not our duty to remove the obstacle that prevents
+that relationship with America from being that which we all desire?"
+
+The American utterance came from one equally representative of
+American Imperial interests. It is that of Mr. Roosevelt, published in
+the _Irish World_ of New York, Feb. 8th, 1913.
+
+"I feel that the enactment into law of this measure ... bids fair to
+establish goodwill among the English-speaking peoples. This has been
+prevented more than by any other one thing by this unhappy feud that
+has raged for centuries, and the settlement of which, I most earnestly
+hope, and believe, will be a powerful contribution to the peace of the
+world, based on international justice and goodwill. I earnestly feel
+that the measure is as much in the interests of Great Britain as of
+Ireland."
+
+Did we judge of Ireland only by many of the public utterances made
+in her name, then, indeed might we despair of a people who having
+suffered so much and so valiantly resisted for so many centuries
+were now to be won to their oppressor's side, by, perhaps, the most
+barefaced act of bribery ever attempted by a Government against a
+people.
+
+"Injured nations cannot so entirely forgive their enemies without
+losing something of their virility, and it grates upon me to hear
+leader after leader of the Parliamentary Party declaring without shame
+that Home Rule when it is won for Ireland is to be used for a new
+weapon of offence in England's hands against the freedom of the world
+elsewhere."
+
+Did the Irish Parliamentary Party indeed represent Ireland in this,
+Mr. Wilfred Blunt's noble protest in his recent work, _The Land War
+in Ireland_, would stand for the contemptuous impeachment, not of a
+political party but of a nation.
+
+Mr. Redmond in his latest speech shows how truly Mr. Blunt has
+depicted his party's aim; but to the credit of Ireland it is to be
+recorded that Mr. Redmond had to choose not Ireland, but England for
+its delivery. Speaking at St. Patrick's Day dinner in London on March
+17th, 1913, Mr. Redmond, to a non-Irish audience, thus hailed the
+future part his country is to play under the restoration of what he
+describes as a "National Parliament."
+
+"We will, under Home Rule, devote our attention to education, reform
+of the Poor Law, and questions of that kind which are purely domestic,
+which are, if you like, hum-drum Irish questions, and the only way
+in which we will attempt to interfere in any Imperial question will
+be by our representatives on the floor of the Imperial Parliament in
+Westminster doing everything in our power to increase the strength and
+the glory of what will then be our empire at long last; and by sending
+in support of the empire the strong arms and brave hearts of Irish
+soldiers and Irish sailors, to maintain the traditions of Irish valour
+in every part of the world. That is our ambition."
+
+Were this indeed the ambition of Ireland, did this represent the true
+feeling of Irishmen towards England, and the Empire of England, then
+Home Rule, on such terms, would be a curse and a crime. Thierry, the
+French historian, is a truer exponent of the passionate aspirations of
+the Irish heart than anyone who to-day would seek to represent Ireland
+as willing to sell her soul no less than the strong arms and brave
+hearts of her sons in an unholy cause.
+
+"... For notwithstanding the mixture of races, the intercommunion of
+every kind brought about by the course of centuries, hatred of the
+English Government still subsists as a native passion in the mass of
+the Irish nation. Ever since the hour of invasion this race of men
+has invariably desired that which their conquerors did not desire,
+detested that which they liked, and liked that which they detested
+... This indomitable persistency, this faculty of preserving through
+centuries of misery the remembrance of lost liberty, and of never
+despairing of a cause always defeated, always fatal to those who dared
+to defend it, is perhaps the strangest and noblest example ever given
+by any nation." (_Histoire De La Conquete De L'Angleterre Par Les
+Normands_, Paris edition, 1846. London, 1891.)
+
+The French writer here saw deeper and spoke truer than many who seek
+to-day not to reveal the Irish heart, whose deep purpose they have
+forgotten, but barter its life-blood for a concession that could be
+won to-morrow by half that blood if shed at home, thus offered without
+warrant "as a new weapon of offence to England's hands against the
+freedom of the world elsewhere."
+
+The Irishman, who in the belief that Home Rule has come or that
+any measure of Home Rule the London Parliament will offer can be a
+substitute for his country's freedom, joins the British army or navy
+is a voluntary traitor to his country. Almost everything that Ireland
+produces, or consumes, must all go out or come solely through England
+and on payment of a transit and shipping tax to English trade.
+
+The London press has lately waxed indignant over Servia denied by
+Austria a port on the Adriatic, and we have been told a Servia
+without a port is a Servia held in "economic slavery," and that her
+independence is illusory unless she have free outlet to the sea. But
+what of Ireland? With not one, but forty ports, the finest in all
+Western Europe, they lie idle and empty. With over 1,000 miles of
+seaboard, facing the West and holding the seaway between Europe and
+America, Ireland, in the grip of England, has been reduced to an
+economic slavery that has no parallel in civilization.
+
+And it is to this island, to this people that the appeal is now made
+that we should distrust the Germans and aid our enslavers. Better far,
+were that the only outcome, the fate of Alsace-Lorraine (who got their
+Home Rule Parliament years ago) than the "friendship" of England. We
+have survived the open hate, the prolonged enslavement, the secular
+robbery of England and now the England smiles and offers us with one
+hand Home Rule to take it away with the other, are we going to forget
+the experience of our forefathers? A Connacht proverb of the Middle
+Ages should come back to us--"Three things for a man to avoid;
+the heels of a horse, the horns of a bull; and the smile of an
+Englishman."
+
+That Ireland must be involved in any war that Great Britain undertakes
+goes without saying; but that we should willingly throw ourselves into
+the fray on the wrong side to avert a British defeat, is the counsel
+of traitors offered to fools.
+
+We must see to it that what Thierry wrote of our fathers is not
+shamefully belied by their sons. Our "indomitable persistency"
+has up to this excelled and subdued the unvarying will applied to
+one unvarying purpose of those who, by dint of that quality, have
+elsewhere subjugated the universe. We who have preserved through
+centuries of misery, the remembrance of lost liberty, are not
+now going to merge our unconquered souls in the base body of our
+oppressor.
+
+One of the few Liberal statesmen England has produced, certainly the
+only Liberal politician she has ever produced, the late Mr. Gladstone,
+compared the union between Great Britain and Ireland to "the union
+between the mangled corpse of Hector and the headlong chariot of
+Achilles." (1890.)
+
+But, while I cannot admit that England is an Achilles, save, perhaps,
+that she may be wounded like him in the heel, I will not admit, I
+will not own that Ireland, however mangled, however "the plowers have
+ploughed upon her back and made long furrows," is in truth dead, is
+indeed a corpse. No; there is a juster analogy, and one given us by
+the only Englishman who was in every clime, and in every circumstance
+a Liberal; one who died fighting in the cause of liberty, even as in
+life he sang it. Byron denounced the union between England and Ireland
+as "the union of the shark with its prey."
+
+
+
+
+Chapter VIII
+
+IRELAND, GERMANY AND THE NEXT WAR
+
+
+In the February, 1913, _Fortnightly Review_, Sir Arthur Conan Doyle at
+the end of an article, "Great Britain and the Next War," thus appeals
+to Ireland to recognize that her interests are one with those of Great
+Britain in the eventual defeat of the latter:
+
+"I would venture to say one word here to my Irish fellow-countrymen
+of all political persuasions. If they imagine that they can stand
+politically or economically while Britain falls they are woefully
+mistaken. The British fleet is their one shield. If it be broken
+Ireland will go down. They may well throw themselves heartily into the
+common defence, for no sword can transfix England without the point
+reaching Ireland behind her...."
+
+I propose to briefly show that Ireland, far from sharing the
+calamities that must necessarily fall on Great Britain from defeat
+by a great power, might conceivably thereby emerge into a position of
+much prosperity.
+
+I will agree with Sir A. Conan Doyle up to this--that the defeat of
+Great Britain by Germany must be the cause of a momentous change to
+Ireland: but I differ from him in believing that that change must
+necessarily be disastrous to Ireland. On the contrary, I believe that
+the defeat of Great Britain by Germany might conceivably (save in one
+possible condition) result in great gain to Ireland.
+
+The conclusion that Ireland must suffer all the disasters and eventual
+losses defeat would entail on Great Britain is based on what may be
+termed the fundamental maxim that has governed British dealings with
+Ireland throughout at least three centuries. That maxim may be given
+in the phrase, "Separation is unthinkable." Englishmen have come to
+invincibly believe that no matter what they may do or what may betide
+them, Ireland must inseparably be theirs, linked to them as surely
+as Wales or Scotland, and forming an eternal and integral part of a
+whole whose fate is indissolubly in their hands. While Great Britain,
+they admit, might well live apart (and happily) from an Ireland
+safely "sunk under the sea" they have never conceived of an Ireland,
+still afloat, that could possibly exist, apart from Great Britain.
+Sometimes, as a sort of bogey, they hold out to Ireland the fate that
+would be hers if, England defeated, somebody else should "take" her.
+For it is a necessary corollary to the fundamental maxim already
+stated, that Ireland, if not owned by England, must necessarily be
+"owned" by someone else than her own inhabitants.
+
+The British view of the fate of Ireland in the event of British defeat
+may be stated as twofold. Either Ireland would remain after the war as
+she is to-day, tied to Great Britain, or she _might_ be (this is not
+very seriously entertained) annexed by the victor. No other solution,
+I think, has ever been suggested. Let us first discuss No. I.
+
+This, the ordinary man in the street view, is that as Ireland would
+be as much a part and belonging to Great Britain after a war as before
+it, whatever the termination of that war might be, she could not
+fail to share the losses defeat must bring to a common realm. The
+partnership being indissoluble, if the credit of the house were
+damaged and its properties depreciated, all members of the firm must
+suffer. In this view, an Ireland weaker, poorer, and less recuperative
+than Great Britain, would stand to lose even more from a British
+defeat than the predominant partner itself. Let us at once admit that
+this view is correct. If on the condition of a great war Ireland were
+still to remain, as she is to-day, an integral portion of a defeated
+United Kingdom, it is plain she would suffer, and might be made to
+suffer possibly more even than fell to the share of Great Britain.
+
+But that is not the only ending defeat might bring to the two islands.
+We must proceed then to discuss No. 2, the alternative fate reserved
+for Ireland in the unlikely event of a great British overthrow. This
+is, that if the existing partnership were to be forcibly dissolved, by
+external shock, it would mean for Ireland "out of the frying pan into
+the fire." The idea here is that I have earlier designated as the
+"bogey man" idea. Germany, or the other victor in the great conflict,
+would proceed to "take" Ireland. An Ireland administered, say,
+by Prussians would soon bitterly regret the milder manners of
+the Anglo-Saxon and pine for the good old days of "doles" from
+Westminster. I know many Irishmen who admit that as between England
+and Germany they would prefer to remain in the hands of the former--on
+the principle that it is better to keep the devil you know than fall
+into the hands of a new devil.
+
+German rule, you are asked to believe, would be so bad, so stern, that
+under it Ireland, however much she might have suffered from England in
+the past, would soon yearn to be restored to the arms of her sorrowing
+sister. Assuming, for the sake of argument, that Germany "annexed"
+Ireland, is it at all clear that she would (or even could) injure
+Ireland more than Great Britain has done? To what purpose and with
+what end in view? "Innate brutality"--the Englishman replied--"the
+Prussian always ill-treats those he lays hands on--witness the poor
+Poles." Without entering into the Polish language question, or the
+Polish agrarian question, it is permissible for an Irishman to reply
+that nothing by Prussia in those respects has at all equalled English
+handling of the Irish language or England land dealings in Ireland.
+The Polish language still lives in Prussian Poland and much more
+vigorously than the Irish language survives in Ireland.
+
+But it is not necessary to obscure the issue by reference to the
+Prussian Polish problem. An Ireland annexed to the German Empire
+(supposing this to be internationally possible) as one of the fruits
+of a German victory over Great Britain would clearly be administered
+as a common possession of the German people, and not as a Prussian
+province. The analogy, if one can be set up in conditions so
+dissimilar, would lie not between Prussia and her Polish provinces,
+but between the German Empire and Alsace-Lorraine. What, then,
+would be the paramount object of Germany in her administration of an
+overseas Reichsland of such extraordinary geographical importance to
+her future as Ireland would be?
+
+Clearly not to impoverish and depress that new-won possession but
+to enhance its exceeding strategic importance by vigorous and wise
+administration, so as to make it the main counterpoise to any possible
+recovery of British maritime supremacy, so largely due as this was in
+the past to Great Britain's own possession of this island.
+
+A prosperous and flourishing Ireland, recognizing that her own
+interests lie with those of the new Administration, would assuredly be
+the first and chief aim of German statesmanship.
+
+The very geographical situation of Ireland would alone ensure wise and
+able administration by her new rulers had Germany no other and special
+interest in advancing Irish well-being; for to rule from Hamburg
+and Berlin a remote island and a discontented people, with a highly
+discontented and separated Britain intervening, by methods of
+exploitation and centralization, would be a task beyond the capacity
+of German statecraft. German effort, then, would be plainly directed
+to creating an Ireland satisfied with the change, and fully determined
+to maintain it.
+
+And it might be remembered that Germany is possibly better equipped,
+intellectually and educationally, for the task of developing Ireland
+than even 20th century England. She has already faced a remarkable
+problem, and largely solved it in her forty years' administration of
+Alsace-Lorraine. There is a province torn by force from the bleeding
+side of France and alien in sentiment to her new masters to a degree
+that Ireland could not be to any changes of authority imposed upon her
+from without, has, within a short lifetime, doubled in prosperity and
+greatly increased her population, despite the open arms and insistent
+call of France, and despite a rule denounced from the first as
+hateful.
+
+However hateful, the Prussian has proved himself an able administrator
+and an honest and most capable instructor. In his strong hands
+Strasburg has expanded from being an ill-kept, pent-in French garrison
+town to a great and beautiful city. Already a local Parliament
+gives to the population a sense of autonomy, while the palace and
+constant presence of an Imperial prince affirms the fact that German
+Imperialism, far from engrossing and centralizing all the activities
+and powers of the empire in Berlin, recognizes that German nationality
+is large enough and great enough to admit of many capitals, many
+individualities, and many separate State growths within the sure
+compass of one great organism.
+
+That an Ireland severed by force of arms from the British Empire and
+annexed to the German Empire would be ill-governed by her new masters
+is inconceivable. On the contrary, the ablest brains in Germany,
+scientific, commercial, and financial, no less than military and
+strategic, would be devoted to the great task of making sure the
+conquest not only of an island but of the intelligence of a not
+unintelligent people, and by wisely developing so priceless a
+possession to reconcile its inhabitants through growing prosperity and
+an excellent administration, to so great a change in their political
+environment. Can it be said that England, even in her most lucid
+intervals, has brought to the Government of Ireland her best efforts,
+her most capable men, or her highest purpose? The answer may be given
+by Li Hung Chang, whose diary we have so lately read. Recording his
+interview with Mr. Gladstone, the Chinese statesman says: "He spoke
+about ... Ireland; and I was certain that he hoped to see that unhappy
+country governed better before he died. 'They have given their best
+to England,' he said, 'and in return have been given only England's
+worst.'" It is certain that Germany, once in possession of Ireland,
+would assuredly not give to that country only Germany's worst.
+
+In a score of ways Ireland would stand to gain from the change of
+direction, of purpose, of intention, and, I will add, of inspiration
+and capacity in her newly-imposed rulers.
+
+Whether she liked them or not, at the outset, would be beside the
+question. In this they would differ but little from those she had so
+long and wearily had measure of, and if they brought to their new task
+a new spirit and a new intellectual equipment Irishmen would not be
+slow to realize that if they themselves were never to rule their own
+country, they had, at least, found in their new masters something more
+than emigration agents.
+
+Moreover, to Germany there would be no "Irish question," no "haggard
+and haunting problem" to palsy her brain and miscredit her hand with
+its old tags and jibes and sordid impulses to deny the obvious.
+
+To Germany there would be only an English question. To prevent that
+from ever again imperilling her world future would be the first
+purpose of German overseas statesmanship. And it is clear that a wise
+and capable Irish Administration, designed to build up and strengthen
+from within and not to belittle and exploit from without, would be the
+sure and certain purpose of a victorious Germany.
+
+I have now outlined the two possible dispositions of Ireland that up
+to this British opinion admits as conceivable in die improbable event
+of a British defeat by Germany. Only these two contingencies are
+ever admitted. First that Ireland, sharing the common disaster, must
+endure with her defeated partner all the evils that a great overthrow
+must inflict upon the United Kingdom. Second, that Ireland, if Great
+Britain should be completely defeated, might conceivably be "taken" or
+annexed by the victor and held as a conquered territory, and in this
+guise would bitterly regret the days of her union with Great Britain.
+I have sought to show, in answer to the latter argument, that were
+annexation by the victor indeed to follow a British defeat Ireland
+might very conceivably find the changed circumstances greatly to her
+advantage.
+
+But there is a third contingency I have nowhere seen discussed or
+hinted at, and yet it is at least as likely as No. 1, and far more
+probable than No. 2--for I do not think that the annexation of Ireland
+by a European power is internationally possible, however decisive
+might be the overthrow of England. It is admitted (and it is upon this
+hypothesis that the discussion is proceeding) that Great Britain might
+be defeated by Germany, and that the British fleet might be broken and
+an enemy's sword might transfix England. Such an overthrow would be
+of enormous import to Europe and to the whole world. The trident would
+have changed hands, for the defeat of England could only be brought
+about by the destruction of her sea supremacy. Unless help came
+from without, a blockaded Britain would be more at the mercy of the
+victor than France was after Sedan and Paris. It would lie with the
+victor to see that the conditions of peace he imposed were such as,
+while ensuring to him the objects for which he had fought, would be
+the least likely conditions to provoke external intervention or a
+combination of alarmed world interests. Now, putting aside lesser
+consideration, the chief end Germany would have in a war with England
+would be to ensure her own free future on the seas. For with that
+assured and guaranteed by a victory over England, all else that she
+seeks must in the end be hers. To annex resisting British colonies
+would be in itself an impossible task--physically a much more
+impossible task than to annex Ireland.
+
+To annex Ireland would be, as a military measure, once command of the
+seas was gained, a comparatively easy task. No practical resistance
+to one German army corps even could be offered by any force Ireland
+contains, or could of herself, put into the field. No arsenal or means
+of manufacturing arms exists. The population has been disarmed for a
+century, and by bitter experience has been driven to regard the use
+of arms as a criminal offence. Patriotism has been treated as felony.
+Volunteers and Territorials are not for Ireland. To expect that a
+disarmed and demoralized population who have been sedulously batoned
+into a state of physical and moral dejection, should develop military
+virtues in face of a disciplined army is to attribute to Irishmen
+the very qualities their critics unite in denying them. "The
+Irishman fights well everywhere except in Ireland," has passed into a
+commonplace: and since every effort of government has been directed
+to ensuring the abiding application of the sneer, Englishmen would
+find, in the end, the emasculating success of their rule completely
+justified in the physical submission of Ireland to the new force that
+held her down. With Great Britain cut off and the Irish Sea held by
+German squadrons, no power from within could maintain any effective
+resistance to a German occupation of Dublin and a military
+administration of the island. To convert that into permanent
+administration could not be opposed from within, and with Great
+Britain down and severed from Ireland by a victorious German navy, it
+is obvious that opposition to the permanent retention of Ireland by
+the victor must come from without, and it is for this international
+reason that I think a German annexation of any part of a defeated
+United Kingdom need not be seriously considered. Such a complete
+change in the geography of Europe as a German-owned Ireland could not
+but provoke universal alarm and a widespread combination to forbid its
+realization. The bogey that Ireland, if not John Bull's other island,
+must necessarily be somebody else's other island will not really bear
+inspection at close quarters.
+
+Germany would have to attain her end, the permanent disabling of the
+maritime supremacy of Great Britain, by another and less provocative
+measure. It is here and in just these circumstances that the third
+contingency, and one no Englishman I venture to think, has ever
+dreamed of, would be born on the field of battle and baptized a
+Germanic godchild with European diplomacy as sponsor. Germany, for
+her own imperial ends and in pursuit of a great world policy, might
+successfully accomplish what Louis XIV and Napoleon only contemplated.
+An Ireland, already severed by a sea held by German warships, and
+temporarily occupied by a German army, might well be permanently and
+irrevocably severed from Great Britain, and with common assent erected
+into a neutralized, independent European State under international
+guarantees. An independent Ireland would, of itself, be no threat or
+hurt to any European interest. On the contrary, to make of Ireland an
+Atlantic Holland, a maritime Belgium, would be an act of restoration
+to Europe of this the most naturally favoured of European islands that
+a Peace Congress should, in the end, be glad to ratify at the instance
+of a victorious Germany. That Germany should propose this form of
+dissolution of the United Kingdom in any interests but her own, or
+for the _beaux yeux_ of Ireland I do not for a moment assert. Her main
+object would be the opening of the seas and their permanent freeing
+from that overwhelming control Great Britain has exercised since
+the destruction of the French navy, largely based, as all naval
+strategists must perceive on the unchallenged possession of Ireland.
+
+That Ireland is primarily a European island inhabited by a European
+people who are not English, and who have for centuries appealed
+to Europe and the world to aid them in ceasing to be politically
+controlled by England, is historic fact. And since the translation of
+this historic fact into practice European politics would undoubtedly
+effect the main object of the victorious power, it is evident that,
+Great Britain once defeated, Germany would carry the Irish question to
+a European solution in harmony with her maritime interests, and could
+count on the support of the great bulk of European opinion to support
+the settlement those interests imposed. And if politically and
+commercially an independent and neutral Irish State commended itself
+to Europe, on moral and intellectual grounds the claim could be put
+still higher. Nothing advanced on behalf of England could meet the
+case for a free Ireland as stated by Germany. Germany would attain her
+ends as the champion of national liberty and could destroy England's
+naval supremacy for all time by an act of irreproachable morality.
+The United States, however distasteful from one point of view the
+defeat of England might be, could do nothing to oppose a European
+decision that could dearly win an instant support from influential
+circles--Irish and German--within her own borders.
+
+In any case the Monroe Doctrine cuts both ways, and unless at the
+outset the United States could be drawn into an Anglo-Teutonic
+conflict, it is clear that the decision of a European Congress to
+create a new European State out of a very old European people could
+not furnish ground for American interference.
+
+I need not further labour the question. If Englishmen will but awaken
+from the dream that Ireland "belongs" to them and not to the Irish
+people, and that that great and fertile island, inhabited by a brave,
+a chivalrous and an intellectual race (qualities they have alas! done
+their utmost to expel from the island) is a piece of real estate they
+own and can dispose of as they will, they cannot fail to perceive that
+the Irish question cannot much longer be mishandled with impunity,
+and that far from being, as they now think it, merely a party
+question--and not even a "domestic question" or one the colonies have
+a voice in--it may in a brief epoch become a European question.
+
+With the approaching disappearance of the Near Eastern question (which
+England is hastening to the detriment of Turkey) a more and more
+pent-in Central Europe may discover that there is a Near Western
+question, and that Ireland--a free Ireland--restored to Europe is the
+key to unlock the western ocean and open the seaways of the world.
+
+Again it is Mr. Gladstone who comes to remind Englishmen that Ireland,
+after all, is a European island, and that Europe has some distant
+standing in the issue.
+
+"I would beseech Englishmen to consider how they would behave to
+Ireland, if instead of having 5,000,000 of people, she had 25,000,000;
+or if instead of being placed between us and the ocean she were placed
+between us and the Continent." (Notes and queries on the Irish Demand,
+February, 1887.) While the geographical positions of the islands
+to each other and to Europe have not changed, and cannot change,
+the political relation of one to the other, and so the political
+and economical relation of both to Europe, to the world and to the
+carrying trade of the world and the naval policies of the powers may
+be gravely altered by agencies beyond the control of Great Britain.
+
+The changes wrought in the speed and capacity of steam shipping, the
+growth and visible trend of German naval power, and the increasing
+possibilities of aerial navigation, all unite to emphasize the
+historian Niebuhr's warning, and to indicate for Ireland a possible
+future of restored communion with Europe, and less and less the
+continued wrong of that artificial exclusion in which British policy
+has sought to maintain her--"an island beyond an island."
+
+
+
+
+Chapter IX
+
+THE ELSEWHERE EMPIRE
+
+
+Every man born in Ireland holds a "hereditary brief" for the opponents
+of English sway, wherever they may be. The tribunal of history in his
+own land is closed to him; he must appeal to another court; he must
+seek the ear of those who make history elsewhere. The Irishman is
+denied the right of having a history, as he is denied the right of
+having a country. He must recover both. For him there is no past any
+more than a future. And if he seeks the record of his race in the only
+schools or books open to him he will find that hope has been shut out
+of the school and fame taken out of the story.
+
+The late John Richard Green, one of the greatest of English
+historians, was attracted to Ireland by a noble sympathy for the
+fallen which he shared with very few of his fellow-countrymen. We
+are told that he sympathized with the spirit of Irish nationality. "A
+State," he would say, "is accidental; it can be made or unmade; but a
+nation is something real which can be neither made nor destroyed."
+
+He had once planned a history of Ireland, "but abandoned the idea
+because the continuous record of misery and misgovernment was too
+painful to contemplate." All pleasure lies in contrast. The history of
+Ireland offers no contrast; it is a tale of unmitigated wrong.
+
+It is too full of graves and the ghosts are not laid yet. As well
+write the history of a churchyard. Forty years before John Richard
+Green thus explained why he had abandoned the plan of the graveyard,
+Victor Hugo lashed the front of England with this very thong. "Ireland
+turned into a cemetery; Poland transported to Siberia; all Italy a
+galleys--there is where we stand in this month of November, 1831!"
+
+The history of Ireland remains to be written, because the purpose of
+Ireland remains yet to be achieved. The widow of John Richard Green
+has laid the foundations of that temple of hope in which the youth
+of Ireland must enter and be sworn to the task that yet remains for
+Irishmen to accomplish.
+
+And so in closing the days of 1913 I bring, with a message of hope,
+these scattered thoughts upon the British Empire and its approaching
+dissolution to lay before the youth of Ireland. I say approaching
+dissolution advisedly, for the signs are there to be read. "Home Rule"
+will not save it. The attempt now being made to bribe Ireland and the
+greater Ireland beyond the seas, to the side of the Elsewhere Empire
+by what has been aptly termed a "ticket-of-leave" bill, will not
+suffice. The issue lies in stronger hands. Even could the two Irelands
+be won by the dole now offered, of a subordinate Parliament in Dublin,
+its hands tied so that it must be impotent for any national effort,
+"a Parliament" as Mr. Herbert Samuel says, "for the local affairs of
+Irishmen," there are other and more powerful agencies that no measure
+of conciliation within the Empire can permanently win to that system
+of world exploitation centred in London.
+
+"I would let the Irish have Home Rule," said recently Mr. Winston
+Churchill, "for their own idiotic affairs." But the last word came
+from Lord Morley, the "father of Home Rule." "Give it them," he said,
+in friendly, private counsel, "give it them; let them have the full
+savour of their own dunghill civilization."
+
+But the last word of all will come, not from Lord Morley, or "Home
+Rule," but from the land and the myriad peoples whose ancient
+civilization, Lord Morley, like every preceding Viceroy, has striven
+to bury under the dunghill of British supremacy in India, and to
+hide the very outlines of the ancient body of the set designs of a
+new purpose. The capital of British India is to be the "new Delhi,"
+planned in Whitehall, but paid for in India--the apotheosis of dung.
+The new India will make short work of "the new Delhi."
+
+"An unplumbed, salt, estranging sea" of moral and spiritual separation
+sets between the imperial conception as nourished in Britain and the
+growing hope of the great millions of mankind who make up the greatest
+realm of her empire.
+
+Ireland _might_ be bought or bribed, at any rate in this generation,
+to forfeit her national ideals and barter the aspiration that six
+centuries of contact with England have failed to kill; but the
+350,000,000 of Indian mankind can never be, or bought, or bribed in
+the end.
+
+Even if Ireland forgot the deathless words of Grattan, delivered in
+the subordinate Parliament of 1780, those words will find a response
+in the hearts of men who never heard of Grattan. For the voice of
+the Irish patriot was, in truth, a world voice--a summons to every
+audience wherever men gather in quest of freedom. The prophesy Grattan
+uttered in the name of Ireland assuredly will be fulfilled, and that
+in the life time of many of us, in that greater Ireland England
+holds in the eastern seas by the very same tide of raid, conquest and
+spoliation that has given her our own land.
+
+Substitute India for Ireland and the Grattan of 1780 becomes the
+Indian patriot of to-day.
+
+"I will never be satisfied so long as the meanest cottager in Ireland
+has a link of the British chain clanking in his rags; he may be naked,
+he shall not be in irons; and I do see the time is at hand; the spirit
+has gone forth, the declaration is planted; and though great men
+should apostasize, yet the cause will live; and though the public
+speaker should die, yet the immortal fire shall outlast the organ
+which conveyed it, and the breath of liberty, like the word of holy
+men, will not die with the prophet, but survive him."
+
+Were Ireland to accept the bribe now offered she would indeed justify
+the reproach of Wilfred Blunt; but she would become some thing else
+than a "weapon of offence in England's hands against the freedom of
+the world elsewhere;" she would share, and rightly share the fate of
+the parasite growth that, having gripped her trunk so tightly, has
+by that aid reached the sunlight. The British Empire is no northern
+oak tree. It is a creeping, climbing plant that has fastened on the
+limbs of others and grown great from a sap not its own. If we seek an
+analogy for it in the vegetable and not in the animal world we must
+go to the forests of the tropics and not to the northland woodlands.
+In the great swamps at the mouth of the Amazon the naturalist Bates
+describes a monstrous liana, the "Sipo Matador" or Murdering Creeper,
+that far more fitly than the oak tree of the north typifies John Bull
+and the place he has won in the sunlight by the once strong limbs of
+Ireland.
+
+Speaking of the forests round Para, Bates says:--"In these tropical
+forests each plant and tree seems to be striving to outvie its
+fellows, struggling upwards towards light and air--branch and leaf
+and stem--regardless of its neighbours. Parasitic plants are seen
+fastening with firm grip on others, making use of them with reckless
+indifference as instruments for their own advancement. Live and let
+live is clearly not the maxim taught in these wildernesses. There is
+one kind of parasitic tree very common near Para which exhibits this
+feature in a very prominent manner. It is called the "Sipo Matador,"
+or Murderer Liana. It belongs to the fig order, and has been described
+and figured by Von Martius as the Atlas to Spix and Martius' Travels.
+I observed many specimens. _The base of its stem would be unable
+to bear the weight of the upper growth_; it is obliged therefore
+to support itself on a tree of _another species_. In this it is not
+essentially different from other climbing trees and plants, but the
+way the Matador sets about it is peculiar and produces certainly a
+disagreeable impression. It springs up close to the tree on which it
+intends to fix itself, and the wood of its stem grows by spreading
+itself like a plastic mould over one side of the trunk of its
+supporter. It then puts forth, from each side, an armlike branch,
+which grows rapidly, and looks as though a stream of sap were flowing
+and hardening as it went. This adheres closely to the trunk of the
+victim, and the two arms meet at the opposite side and blend together.
+These arms are put forth at somewhat regular intervals in mounting
+upwards, and the victim, when its strangler is full grown, becomes
+tightly clasped by a number of inflexible rings. These rings gradually
+grow larger as the Murderer flourishes, rearing its crown of foliage
+to the sky mingled with that of its neighbour, and in course of time
+they kill it, by stopping the flow of its sap. The strange spectacle
+now remains of the selfish parasite clasping in its arms the lifeless
+and decaying body of its victim, which had been a help to its own
+growth. Its ends have been served--it has flowered and fruited,
+reproduced and disseminated its kind; and _now when the dead trunk
+moulders away its own end approaches; its support is gone and itself
+also falls_."
+
+The analogy is almost the most perfect in literature, and if we would
+not see it made perfect in history we must get rid of the parasite
+grip before we are quite strangled. If we would not share the coming
+darkness we must shake off the murderer's hold, before murderer and
+victim fall together. That fall is close at hand. A brave hand may yet
+cut the "Sipo Matador," and the slayer be slain before he has quite
+stifled his victim.
+
+If that hand be not a European one, then may it come, bronzed, keen,
+and supple from the tropic calm! The birds of the forest are on the
+wing.
+
+Regions Caesar never knew, including Hibernia, have come under the
+eagles, nay the vultures, of imperial Britain. But the lion's maw is
+full.
+
+At length the overgorged beast of prey, with all the diseases in his
+veins that over-eating brings, finds that his claws are not so sharp
+as they were, that his belly is much heavier when he tries to leap and
+that it is now chiefly by his voice he still scares his enemies.
+
+The Empire of England dates from Tudor times. Henry VIII was the first
+John Bull. When the conquered Irish and the wealth derived from their
+rich country England set out to lay low every free people that had
+a country worth invading and who, by reasons of their non-imperial
+instinct were not prepared to meet her on equal terms. India she
+overran by the same methods as had given her Ireland.
+
+Wholesale plunder, treachery and deceit met at her council board
+under a succession of Governors and Viceroys, whose policy was that of
+Captain Kidd, and whose ante-room of state led every native prince to
+the slippery plank. The thing became the most colossal success upon
+earth. No people were found able to withstand such a combination. How
+could peoples still nursed in the belief of some diviner will ruling
+men's minds resist such an attack?
+
+For one brief space Napoleon reared his head; and had he cast his
+vision to. Ireland instead of to Egypt he would have found out the
+secret of the pirate's stronghold. But the fates willed otherwise; the
+time was not yet. He sailed for Alexandria, lured by a dream, instead
+of for Cork; and the older Imperialists beat the new Imperialists and
+secured a fresh century of unprecedented triumph. The Pyramids looked
+down on Waterloo; but the headlands of Bantry Bay concealed the
+mastery, and the mystery, of the seas.
+
+With 1811 was born the era of Charles Peace, no less than of John
+Bull--on Sundays and Saint's days a churchwarden, who carried the
+plate; on week days a burglar who lifted it. Truly, as John Mitchel
+said on his convict hulk: "On English felony the sun never sets." May
+it set in 1915.
+
+From Napoleon's downfall to the battle of Colenso, the Empire founded
+by Henry VIII has swelled to monstrous size. Innumerable free peoples
+have bit the dust and died with plaintive cries to heaven. The wealth
+of London has increased a thousand fold, and the giant hotels and
+caravanserais have grown, at the millionaire's touch, to rival the
+palaces of the Caesars.
+
+"All's well with God's world"--and poet and plagiarist, courtier
+and courtesan, Kipling and cant--these now dally by the banks of
+the Thames and dine off the peoples of the earth, just as once the
+degenerate populace of imperial Rome fed upon the peoples of the
+Pyramids. But the thing is near the end. The "secret of Empire" is no
+longer the sole possession of England. Other peoples are learning to
+think imperially. The Goths and the Visigoths of modern civilisation
+are upon the horizon. Action must soon follow thought. London, like
+Rome, will have strange guests. They will not pay their hotel bills.
+Their day is not yet but it is at hand. "Home Rule" assemblies and
+Indian "Legislative Councils" may prolong the darkness; but the dawn
+is in die sky. And in the downfall of the Tudor Empire, both Ireland
+and India shall escape from the destruction and join again the free
+civilizations of the earth.
+
+The birds of the forest are on the wing.
+
+It is an Empire in these straights that turns to America, through
+Ireland, to save it. And the price it offers is--war with Germany.
+France may serve for a time, but France like Germany, is in Europe,
+and in the end it is all Europe and not only Germany England assails.
+Permanent confinement of the white races, as distinct from the
+Anglo-Saxon variety, can only be achieved by the active support
+and close alliance of the American people. These people are to-day,
+unhappily republicans and free men, and have no ill-will for Germany
+and a positive distaste for imperialism. It is not really in their
+blood. That blood is mainly Irish and German, the blood of men not
+distinguished in the past for successful piracy and addicted rather to
+the ways of peace. The wars that Germany has waged have been wars of
+defence, or wars to accomplish the unity of her people. Irish wars
+have been only against one enemy, and ending always in material
+disaster they have conferred always a moral gain. Their memory uplifts
+the Irish heart; for no nation, no people, can reproach Ireland with
+having wronged them. She has injured no man.
+
+And now, to-day, it is the great free race of this common origin
+of peace-loving peoples, filling another continent, that is being
+appealed to by every agency of crafty diplomacy, in every garb but
+that of truth, to aid the enemy of both and the arch-disturber of
+the old world. The jailer of Ireland seeks Irish-American support
+to keep Ireland in prison; the intriguer against Germany would win
+German-American good-will against its parent stock. There can be no
+peace for mankind, no limit to the intrigues set on foot to assure
+Great Britain "the mastery of the seas."
+
+If "America" will but see things aright, as a good "Anglo-Saxon"
+people should, she will take her place beside, nay, even a little in
+front of John Bull in the plunder of the earth. Were the "Anglo-Saxon
+Alliance" ever consummated it would be the biggest crime in human
+history. That alliance is meant by the chief party seeking it to be
+a perpetual threat to the peoples of Europe, nay, to the whole of
+mankind outside the allied ranks. And instead of bringing peace it
+must assuredly bring the most distracting and disastrous conflict that
+has ever stained the world with blood.
+
+John Bull has now become the great variety artist, one in truth whose
+infinite variety detention cannot stale any more than Customs officers
+can arrest the artist's baggage.
+
+At one moment the "Shirt King," being prosecuted for the sale of cheap
+cottons as "Irish Linen" in London; the next he lands the "Bloater
+King" in New York, offering small fish as something very like a whale.
+And the offer in both cases is made in the tongue of Shakespeare.
+
+The tongue has infinite uses; from China it sounds the "call for
+prayer," and lo, the Book of Dividends opens at the right text. Were
+Bull ever caught in the act, and put from the trade of international
+opium-dosing to that of picking oakum and the treadmill we should hear
+him exclaim, as he went out of sight, "Behold me weaving the threads
+of democratic destiny as I climb the golden stair."
+
+The rôles are endless! In Ireland, the conversion of Irishmen into
+cattle; in England, the conversion of Irish cattle into men; in
+India and Egypt the suppression of the native press; in America the
+subsidising of the non-native press; the tongue of Shakespeare has
+infinite uses. He only poached deer--it would poach dreadnoughts. The
+emanations of Thames sewage are all over the world, and the sewers are
+running still. The penalty for the pollution of the Thames is a high
+one; but the prize for the pollution of the Mississippi is still
+higher; the fountains of the deep, the mastery of the great waters,
+these are the things John Bull seeks on the shore of the "Father of
+Waters."
+
+The sunset of the fading Empire would turn those waters into blood.
+The British Empire was not founded in peace; how, then can it be kept
+by peace, or ensured by peace-treaties? It was born of pillage and
+blood-shed, and has been maintained by both; and it cannot now be
+secured by a common language any more than a common Bible. The lands
+called the British Empire belong to many races, and it is only by the
+sword and not by the Book of Peace or any pact of peace that those
+races can be kept from the ownership of their own countries.
+
+The "Anglo-Saxon Alliance" means a compact to ensure slavery and
+beget war. The people who fought the greatest war in modern history to
+release slaves are not likely to begin the greatest war in all history
+to beget slaves.
+
+Let the truth be known in America that England wants to turn the great
+Republic of free men into die imperial ally of the great Empire of
+bought men, and that day die "Anglo-Saxon Alliance" gives place to the
+Declaration of Independence.
+
+The true alliance to aim at for all who love peace is the friendly
+Union of Germany, America and Ireland. These are the true United
+States of the world.
+
+Ireland, the link between Europe and America, must be freed by both.
+
+Denied to-day free intercourse with either, she yet forms in the great
+designs of Providence the natural bond to bring the old world and the
+new together.
+
+May 1915 lay the foundation of this--the true Hundred Years of Peace!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's The Crime Against Europe, by Roger Casement
+
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+ <title>The Crime Against Europe, by Sir Roger Casement.</title>
+ <style type="text/css">
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+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Crime Against Europe, by Roger Casement
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Crime Against Europe
+ A Possible Outcome of the War of 1914
+
+Author: Roger Casement
+
+Release Date: January 18, 2005 [EBook #14728]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE CRIME AGAINST EUROPE ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David Starner, William Flis, and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+ <h3>THE</h3>
+
+ <h1>Crime Against Europe</h1>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <h3><i>A Possible Outcome of the War of 1914</i></h3>
+
+ <h4>BY</h4>
+
+ <h3>SIR ROGER CASEMENT</h3>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <h4>COPYRIGHTED 1915</h4>
+ <hr />
+
+ <h2>INTRODUCTION.</h2>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <p>The reader must remember that these articles were written
+ before the war began. They are in a sense prophetic and show a
+ remarkable understanding of the conditions which brought about
+ the present great war in Europe.</p>
+
+ <p>The writer has made European history a life study and his
+ training in the English consular service placed him in a
+ position to secure the facts upon which he bases his
+ arguments.</p>
+
+ <p>Sir Roger Casement was born in Ireland in September, 1864.
+ He was made consul to Lorenzo Marques in 1889, being
+ transferred to a similar post in the Portuguese Possessions in
+ West Africa, which included the consulate to the Gaboon and the
+ Congo Free State. He held this post from 1898 to 1905, when he
+ was given the consulate of Santos. The following year he was
+ appointed consul to Hayti and San Domingo, but did not proceed,
+ going instead to Para, where he served until 1909, when he
+ became consul-general to Rio de Janeiro. He was created a
+ knight in 1911.</p>
+
+ <p>He was one of the organizers of the Irish Volunteers at
+ Dublin in November, 1913, being one of their provisional
+ committee. At present he is a member of the governing body of
+ that organization. He spent the summer of this year in the
+ United States. Sir Roger is at present in Berlin, where, after
+ a visit paid to the foreign office by him, the German
+ Chancellor caused to be issued the statement that "should the
+ German forces reach the shores of Ireland they would come not
+ as conquerors but as friends."</p>
+
+ <p>Sir Roger is well known for his investigation into the
+ Putomayo rubber district atrocities in 1912.</p>
+
+ <p>December, 1914.</p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page3"
+ id="page3"></a>[pg 3]</span>
+
+ <h3 class="sc">Chapter I</h3>
+
+ <h2>THE CAUSES OF THE WAR AND THE FOUNDATION OF PEACE</h2>
+
+ <p>Since the war, foreshadowed in these pages, has come and
+ finds public opinion in America gravely shocked at a war it
+ believes to be solely due to certain phases of European
+ militarism, the writer is now persuaded to publish these
+ articles, which at least have the merit of having been written
+ well before the event, in the hope that they may furnish a more
+ useful point of view. For if one thing is certain it is that
+ European militarism is no more the cause of this war than of
+ any previous war. Europe is not fighting to see who has the
+ best army, or to test mere military efficiency, but because
+ certain peoples wish certain things and are determined to get
+ and keep them by an appeal to force. If the armies and fleets
+ were small the war would have broken out just the same, the
+ parties and their claims, intentions, and positions being what
+ they are. To find the causes of the war we must seek the
+ motives of the combatants, and if we would have a lasting peace
+ the foundations upon which to build it must be laid bare by
+ revealing those foundations on which the peace was broken. To
+ find the causes of the war we should turn not to Blue Books or
+ White Papers, giving carefully selected statements of those
+ responsible for concealing from the public the true issues that
+ move nations to attack each other, but should seek the unavowed
+ aims of those nations themselves.</p>
+
+ <p>Once the motive is found it is not hard to say who it is
+ that broke the peace, whatever the diplomats may put forward in
+ lieu of the real reason.</p>
+
+ <p>The war was, in truth, inevitable, and was made inevitable
+ years ago. It was not brought about through the faults or
+ temper of Sovereigns or their diplomats, not because there were
+ great armies in Europe, but because certain Powers, and one
+ Power in particular, nourished ambitions and asserted claims
+ that involved not only ever increasing armaments but insured
+ ever increasing animosities. In these cases peace, if
+ permitted, would have dissipated the ambitions and upset
+ claims, so it was only a question of time and
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page4"
+ id="page4"></a>[pg 4]</span> opportunity when those whose
+ aims required war would find occasion to bring it about.</p>
+
+ <p>As Mr. Bernard Shaw put it, in a recent letter to the press:
+ "After having done all in our power to render war inevitable it
+ is no use now to beg people not to make a disturbance, but to
+ come to London to be kindly but firmly spoken to by Sir Edward
+ Grey."</p>
+
+ <p>To find the motive powerful enough to have plunged all
+ Europe into war in the short space of a few hours, we must seek
+ it, not in the pages of a "white paper" covering a period of
+ only fifteen days (July 20th to August 4th, 1914), but in the
+ long anterior activities that led the great Powers of Europe
+ into definite commitments to each other. For the purposes of
+ this investigation we can eliminate at once three of the actual
+ combatants, as being merely "accessories after the fact,"
+ viz.:&mdash;Servia, Belgium and Japan, and confine our study of
+ the causes of the conflict to the aims and motives of the five
+ principal combatants. For it is clear that in the quarrel
+ between Servia and Austria, Hungary is only a side issue of the
+ larger question that divides Europe into armed camps. Were
+ categoric proof sought of how small a part the quarrel between
+ Vienna and Belgrade played in the larger tragedy, it can be
+ found in the urgent insistence of the Russian Government itself
+ in the very beginning of the diplomatic conversations that
+ preceded the outbreak of hostilities.</p>
+
+ <p>As early as the 24th of July, the Russian Government sought
+ to prevail upon Great Britain to proclaim its complete
+ solidarity with Russia and France, and on the British
+ Ambassador in St. Petersburg pointing out that "direct British
+ interests in Servia were nil, and a war on behalf of that
+ country would never be sanctioned by British public opinion,"
+ the Russian Minister of Foreign Affairs replied that "we must
+ not forget that the <i>general European</i> question was
+ involved, the Servian question being but a part of the former,
+ and that Great Britain could not afford to efface herself from
+ the problem <i>now at issue</i>." (Despatch of Sir G. Buchanan
+ to Sir E. Grey, 24th July, 1914).</p>
+
+ <p>Those problems involved far mightier questions than the
+ relations of Servia to Austria, the neutrality of Belgium or
+ the wish of Japan to keep the peace of the East by seizing
+ Kiao-Chau.</p>
+
+ <p>The neutrality never became a war issue until long after war
+ had been decided on and had actually broken out; while Japan
+ came into the contest solely because Europe had obligingly
+ provided one, and because one European power preferred, for its
+ own ends, to <span class="pagenum"><a name="page5"
+ id="page5"></a>[pg 5]</span> strengthen an Asiatic race to
+ seeing a kindred white people it feared grow stronger in the
+ sun.</p>
+
+ <p>Coming then to the five great combatants, we can quickly
+ reduce them to four. Austria-Hungary and Germany in this war
+ are indivisible. While each may have varying aims on many
+ points and ambitions that, perhaps, widely diverge both have
+ one common bond, self-preservation, that binds them much more
+ closely together than mere formal "allies." In this war
+ Austria fights of necessity as a Germanic Power, although the
+ challenge to her has been on the ground of her Slav obligations
+ and activities. Germany is compelled to support Austria by a
+ law of necessity that a glance at the map of Europe explains.
+ Hence, for the purpose of the argument, we may put the conflict
+ as between the Germanic peoples of Central Europe and those who
+ have quarreled with them.</p>
+
+ <p>We thus arrive at the question, "why should such strangely
+ consorted allies as England, Russia and France be at war with
+ the German people?"</p>
+
+ <p>The answer is not to be found in the White Book, or in any
+ statement publicly put forward by Great Britain, Russia or
+ France.</p>
+
+ <p>But the answer must be found, if we would find the causes of
+ the war, and if we would hope to erect any lasting peace on the
+ ruins of this world conflict.</p>
+
+ <p>To accept, as an explanation of the war the statement that
+ Germany has a highly trained army she has not used for nearly
+ half a century and that her people are so obsessed with
+ admiration for it that they longed to test it on their
+ neighbours, is to accept as an explanation a stultifying
+ contradiction. It is of course much easier to put the blame on
+ the Kaiser. This line of thought is highly popular: it accords,
+ too, with a fine vulgar instinct.</p>
+
+ <p>The German people can be spared the odium of responsibility
+ for a war they clearly did nothing to provoke, by representing
+ them as the victims of an autocracy, cased in mail and beyond
+ their control. We thus arrive at "the real crime against
+ Germany," which explains everything but the thing it set out
+ to explain. It leaves unexplained the real crime against
+ Europe.</p>
+
+ <p>To explain the causes of the war we must find the causes of
+ the alliances of England, France and Russia against
+ Germany.</p>
+
+ <p>For the cause of the war is that alliance&mdash;that and
+ nothing else. The defence of the <i>Entente Cordiale</i> is
+ that it is an innocent pact of friendship, designed only to
+ meet the threat of the Triple Alliance.
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page6"
+ id="page6"></a>[pg 6]</span> But the answer to that is that
+ whereas the Triple Alliance was formed thirty years ago, it
+ has never declared war on anyone, while the <i>Triple
+ Entente</i> before it is eight years old has involved
+ Europe, America, Africa, and Asia in a world conflict. We
+ must find the motive for England allying herself with France
+ and Russia in an admittedly anti-German "understanding" if
+ we would understand the causes of the present war and why it
+ is that many besides Bernard Shaw hold that "after having
+ done all in our power to render war inevitable" it was idle
+ for the British Government to assume a death-bed solicitude
+ for peace, having already dug its grave and cast aside the
+ shovel for the gun. When that motive is apparent we shall
+ realise who it was preferred war to peace and how impossible
+ it is to hope for any certain peace ensuing from the victory
+ of those who ensured an appeal to arms.</p>
+
+ <p>The <i>Entente Cordiale</i>, to begin with, is unnatural.
+ There is nothing in common between the parties to it, save
+ antagonism to someone else. It is wrongly named. It is founded
+ not on predilections but on prejudices&mdash;not on affection
+ but on animosity. To put it crudely it is a bond of hate not of
+ love. None of the parties to it like or admire each other, or
+ have consistent aims, save one.</p>
+
+ <p>That satisfied, they will surely fall out among themselves,
+ and the greater the plunder derived from their victory the more
+ certain their ensuing quarrel.</p>
+
+ <p>Great Britain, in her dealings with most white people (not
+ with all) is a democracy.</p>
+
+ <p>Russia in her dealings with all, is an autocracy.</p>
+
+ <p>Great Britain is democratic in her government of herself and
+ in her dealings with the great white communities of Canada,
+ Australia, New Zealand, and South Africa. She is not democratic
+ in her dealings with subject races within the Empire&mdash;the
+ Indians, notably, or the Irish. To the Indians her rule is that
+ of an absentee autocracy, differing in speech, colour, religion
+ and culture from those submitted to it by force; to the Irish
+ that of a resident autocracy bent on eliminating the people
+ governed from residence in their own country, and replacing
+ them with cattle for British consumption.</p>
+
+ <p>In both instances Britain is notably false to her
+ professions of devotion to democratic principles. Her affinity
+ with Russia is found then, not in the cases where her
+ institutions are good, but in those where they are
+ bad.</p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page7"
+ id="page7"></a>[pg 7]</span>
+
+ <p>An alliance founded on such grounds of contact can only
+ produce evil.</p>
+
+ <p>To such it gave birth in Persia, to such it must give birth
+ in the present war.</p>
+
+ <p>In Persia we saw it betray the principles of democratic
+ government, destroy an infant constitution and disembowel the
+ constitutionalists, whilst it divided their country into
+ "spheres of influence" and to-day we see it harvesting with
+ hands yet red with the blood of Persian patriots the redder
+ fruit of the seed then sown.</p>
+
+ <p>The alliance with France, while more natural than that with
+ Russia if we regard Great Britain as a democracy (by
+ eliminating India, Egypt, Ireland) had the same guilty end in
+ view, and rests less on affinity of aims than on affinity of
+ antipathies.</p>
+
+ <p>The <i>Entente Cordiale</i>, the more closely we inspect it,
+ we find is based not on a cordial regard of the parties to it
+ for each other, but on a cordial disregard all three
+ participants share for the party it is aimed against.</p>
+
+ <p>It will be said that Germany must have done something to
+ justify the resentment that could bring about so strangely
+ assorted a combination against herself. What has been the crime
+ of Germany against the powers now assailing her? She has
+ doubtless committed many crimes, as have all the great powers,
+ but in what respect has she so grievously sinned against Europe
+ that the Czar, the Emperor of India, the King of Great Britain
+ and Ireland, the Mikado and the President of the French
+ Republic&mdash;to say nothing of those minor potentates who
+ like Voltaire's minor prophets seem <i>capable de
+ tout</i>&mdash;should now be pledged, by irrevocable pact, to
+ her destruction as a great power?</p>
+
+ <p>"German militarism," the reply that springs to the lips, is
+ no more a threat to civilisation than French or Russian
+ militarism. It was born, not of wars of aggression, but of wars
+ of defence and unification. Since it was welded by blood and
+ iron into the great human organism of the last forty years it
+ has not been employed beyond the frontiers of Germany until
+ last year.</p>
+
+ <p>Can the same be said of Russian militarism or of French
+ militarism or of British navalism?</p>
+
+ <p>We are told the things differ in quality. The answer is what
+ about the intent and the uses made. German militarism has kept
+ peace and has not emerged beyond its own frontier until
+ threatened with universal attack. Russian militarism has waged
+ wars abroad, far beyond the confines of Russian territory;
+ French militarism, <span class="pagenum"><a name="page8"
+ id="page8"></a>[pg 8]</span> since it was overthrown at
+ Sedan, has carried fire and sword across all Northern
+ Africa, has penetrated from the Atlantic to the Nile, has
+ raided Tonquin, Siam, Madagascar, Morocco, while English
+ navalism in the last forty years has bombarded the coast
+ lines, battered the ports, and landed raiding parties
+ throughout Asia and Africa, to say nothing of the well nigh
+ continuous campaigns of annexation of the British army in
+ India, Burma, South Africa, Egypt, Tibet, or Afghanistan,
+ within the same period.</p>
+
+ <p>As to the quality of the materialism of the great
+ Continental Powers there is nothing to prefer in the French and
+ Russian systems to the German system. Each involved enormous
+ sacrifices on the people sustaining it. We are asked, however,
+ to believe that French militarism is maintained by a
+ "democracy" and German militarism by an "autocracy." Without
+ appealing to the captive Queen of Madagascar for an opinion on
+ the authenticity of French democracy we may confine the
+ question to the elected representatives of the two peoples.</p>
+
+ <p>In both cases the war credits are voted by the legislative
+ bodies responsible to French and German opinion. The elected
+ representatives of Germany are as much the spokesman of the
+ nation as those of France, and the German Reichstag has
+ sanctioned every successive levy for the support of German
+ armaments. As to Russian militarism, it may be presumed no one
+ will go quite so far as to assert that the Russian Duma is more
+ truly representative of the Russian people than the Parliament
+ of the Federated peoples of Germany at Berlin.</p>
+
+ <p>The machines being then approximately the same machines, we
+ must seek the justification for them in the uses to which they
+ have been put.</p>
+
+ <p>For what does France, for what does Russia maintain a great
+ army? Why does Germany call so many youthful Germans to the
+ colours? On what grounds of moral sanction does Great Britain
+ maintain a navy, whose cost far exceeds all the burdens of
+ German militarism?</p>
+
+ <p>Russia stretches across the entire area of Central Asia and
+ comprises much of the greater part of Europe as well. In its
+ own territory, it is unassailable, and never has been invaded
+ with success. No power can plunder or weaken Russia as long as
+ she remains within her own borders. Of all the great powers in
+ Europe she is the one that after England has the least need of
+ a great army.</p>
+
+ <p>She cannot be assailed with success at home, and she has no
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page9"
+ id="page9"></a>[pg 9]</span> need to leave her own
+ territories in search of lands to colonize. Her population,
+ secure in its own vast numbers and vast resources has, for
+ all future needs of expansion the continent of Siberia into
+ which to overflow. Russia cannot be threatened within Russia
+ and has no need to go outside Russia. A Russian army of
+ 4,000,000 is not necessary to self-defence. Its inspiration
+ can be due only to a policy of expansion at the cost of
+ others, and its aim to extend and to maintain existing
+ Russian frontiers. As I write it is engaged not in a war of
+ defence but in a war of invasion, and is the instrument of a
+ policy of avowed aggression.</p>
+
+ <p>Not the protection of the Slavs from Austria, herself so
+ largely a Slavic power and one that does not need to learn the
+ principles of good government from Russia, but the
+ incorporation of the Slavs within the mightiest empire upon
+ earth&mdash;this is the main reason why Russia maintains the
+ mightiest army upon earth. Its threat to Germany, as the
+ protector of Austria-Hungary, has been clear, and if we would
+ find the reason for German militarism we shall find at least
+ one half of it across the Russian frontier.</p>
+
+ <p>The huge machine of the French army, its first line troops
+ almost equal to Germany's, is not a thing of yesterday.</p>
+
+ <p>It was not German aggression founded it&mdash;although
+ Germany felt it once at Jena. Founded by kings of France,
+ French militarism has flourished under republic, empire,
+ constitutional monarchy, and empire again until to-day we find
+ its greatest bloom full blown under the mild breath of the
+ third republic. What is the purpose of this perfect machine?
+ Self-defence? From what attack? Germany has had it in her
+ power, again and again within the last thirty years to attack
+ France at a disadvantage, if not even with impunity. Why has
+ she refrained&mdash;whose hand restrained her? Not
+ Russia's&mdash;not England's. During the Russo-Japanese war or
+ during the Boer war, France could have been assailed with ease
+ and her army broken to pieces. But German militarism refrained
+ from striking that blow. The object of the great army France
+ maintains is not to be found in reasons of self-defence, but
+ may be found, like that of Russia in hopes of armed expansion.
+ Since the aim in both cases was the same, to wage a war of
+ aggression to be termed of "recovery" in one case and
+ "protection" in the other, it was not surprising that Czar and
+ President should come together, and that the cause of the Slavs
+ should become identified with the cause of Strasburg.</p>
+
+ <p>To "protect" the Slavs meant assailing Austria-Hungary
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page10"
+ id="page10"></a>[pg 10]</span> (another way of attacking
+ Germany), and to "recover" Strasburg meant a
+ <i>mes-alliance</i> between democrat of France and Cossack
+ of the Don.</p>
+
+ <p>We come now to the third party to die Entente, and it is now
+ we begin to perceive how it was that a cordial understanding
+ with England rendered a Russo-French attack upon Germany only a
+ question of time and opportunity. Until England appeared upon
+ the scene neither Russia nor France, nor both combined, could
+ summon up courage to strike the blow. Willing to wound they
+ were both afraid to strike. It needed a third courage, a keener
+ purpose and a greater immunity.</p>
+
+ <p>German militarism was too formidable a factor in the life of
+ 65,000,000 of the most capable people in Europe to be lightly
+ assailed even by France and Russia combined. Russia needed
+ money to perfect the machinery of invasion, so sorely tried by
+ the disastrous failure to invade Korea and Manchuria. France
+ had the money to advance, but she still doubted the ability of
+ her stagnant population of 40,000,000 to face the growing
+ magnitude of the great people across the Rhine. It needed
+ another guarantee&mdash;and England brought it.</p>
+
+ <p>From the day that Great Britain and her mighty fleet joined
+ the separated allies with their mighty armies, the bond between
+ them and the circle round Germany grew taut. From that day the
+ counsels of the allies and their new found "friend" thickened
+ and quickened. The immovable "menace across the Rhine" in one
+ case had become the active "menace across the North Sea" in the
+ other case.</p>
+
+ <p>The sin of German militarism was at last out. It could take
+ to the water as kindly as to the land. As long as the war
+ machine guaranteed the inviolability of German territory it was
+ no threat to European peace, but when it assumed the task of
+ safe-guarding German rights at sea it became the enemy of
+ civilization. These trading people not content with an army
+ that kept French "revanche" discreetly silent and Slav "unity"
+ a dream of the future presumed to have a sea-born commerce that
+ grew by leaps and bounds, and they dared to build a navy to
+ defend and even to extend it. <i>Delenda est Carthago!</i> From
+ that day the doom of "German militarism" was sealed; and
+ England, democratic England, lay down with the Czar in the same
+ bed to which the French housewife had already transferred her
+ republican
+ counterpane.</p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page11"
+ id="page11"></a>[pg 11]</span>
+
+ <p>The duration of peace became only a question of time, and
+ the war of to-day only a question of opportunity and pretext.
+ Each of the parties to the understanding had the same clear
+ purpose to serve, and while the aim to each was different the
+ end was the same. Germany's power of defence must be destroyed.
+ That done each of the sleeping partners to the unsigned compact
+ would get the share of the spoils, guarded by armed German
+ manhood, he coveted.</p>
+
+ <p>To Russia, the dismemberment of Austria-Hungary and the
+ incorporation of the Slav elements in part into her own vast
+ empire, in part into a vassal and subordinate Balkan
+ Confederacy.</p>
+
+ <p>To France the restoration of Lorraine, with Metz, and of
+ Alsace with Strasburg and their 1,500,000 of German speaking
+ Teutons to the French Empire.</p>
+
+ <p>To England, the destruction of German sea-power and along
+ with it the permanent crippling of German competition in the
+ markets of the world.</p>
+
+ <p>Incidentally German colonies would disappear along with
+ German shipping, and with both gone a German navy would become
+ a useless burden for a nation of philosophers to maintain, so
+ that the future status of maritime efficiency in Europe could
+ be left to the power that polices the seas to equitably fix for
+ all mankind, as well as for the defeated rival.</p>
+
+ <p>Such an outline was the altruistic scope of the unsigned
+ agreement entered into by the three parties of the <i>Triple
+ Entente</i>; and it only remained to get ready for the day when
+ the matter could be brought to issue. The murder of the
+ Archduke Ferdinand furnished Russia with the occasion, since
+ she felt that her armies were ready, the sword sharpened, and
+ the Entente sure and binding.</p>
+
+ <p>The mobilization by Russia was all that France needed "to do
+ that which might be required of her by her interests." (Reply
+ of the French Government to the German Ambassador at Paris,
+ August 1st, 1914.)</p>
+
+ <p>Had the neutrality of Belgium been respected as completely
+ as the neutrality of Holland, England would have joined her
+ "friends" in the assault on Germany, as Sir Edward Grey was
+ forced to admit when the German Ambassador in vain pressed him
+ to state his own terms as the price of English neutrality.</p>
+
+ <p>The hour had struck. Russia was sure of herself, and the
+ rest followed automatically since all had been provided for
+ long before. The French fleet was in the Mediterranean, as the
+ result of the <span class="pagenum"><a name="page12"
+ id="page12"></a>[pg 12]</span> military compact between
+ France and England signed, sealed and delivered in November,
+ 1912, and <i>withheld from the cognizance of the British
+ Parliament until after war had been declared</i>. The
+ British fleet had been mobilized early in July in
+ anticipation of Russia's mobilization on land&mdash;and here
+ again it is Sir Edward Grey who incidentally supplies the
+ proof.</p>
+
+ <p>In his anxiety, while there was still the fear that Russia
+ might hold her hand, he telegraphed to the British Ambassador
+ in St. Petersburg on 27th of July, requiring him to assure the
+ Russian Foreign Minister, that the British Fleet, "which is
+ concentrated, <i>as it happens</i>" would not disperse from
+ Portland.</p>
+
+ <p>That "as it happens" is quite the most illuminating slip in
+ the British White Paper, and is best comprehended by those who
+ know what have been the secret orders of the British fleet
+ since 1909, and what was the end in view when King George
+ reviewed it earlier in the month, and when His Majesty so
+ hurriedly summoned the unconstitutional "Home Rule" conference
+ at Buckingham Palace on 18th of July. Nothing remained for the
+ "friends" but to so manoeuvre that Germany should be driven to
+ declare war, or see her frontiers crossed. If she did the
+ first, she became the "aggressor"; if she waited to be attacked
+ she incurred the peril of destruction.</p>
+
+ <p>Such, in outline, are the causes and steps that led to the
+ outbreak of war. The writer has seen those steps well and
+ carefully laid, tested and tried beforehand. Every rung of the
+ scaling ladder being raised for the storming of the German
+ defences on land and sea was planed and polished in the British
+ Foreign Office.</p>
+
+ <p>As Sir Edward Grey confessed three years ago, he was "but
+ the fly on the wheel." That wheel was the ever faster driven
+ purpose of Great Britain to destroy the growing sea-power and
+ commerce of Germany. The strain had reached the breaking
+ point.</p>
+
+ <p>During the first six months of 1914, German export trade
+ almost equalled that of Great Britain. Another year of peace,
+ and it would certainly have exceeded it, and for the first time
+ in the history of world trade Great Britain would have been put
+ in the second place. German exports from January to June had
+ swelled to the enormous total of $1,045,000,000 as against the
+ $1,075,000,000 of Great Britain. A war against such figures
+ could not be maintained in the markets, it must be transferred
+ to the seas.</p>
+
+ <p>Day by day as the war proceeds, although it is now only six
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page13"
+ id="page13"></a>[pg 13]</span> weeks old, the pretences
+ under which it was begun are being discarded. England fights
+ not to defend the neutrality of Belgium, not to destroy
+ German militarism, but to retain, if need be by involving
+ the whole world in war, her supreme and undisputed ownership
+ of the seas.</p>
+
+ <p>This is the crime against Europe, the crime against the
+ world that, among other victims the United States are invited
+ to approve, in order that to-morrow their own growing navy may
+ be put into a like posture with that of a defeated Germany.</p>
+
+ <p>With the Kiel Canal "handed to Denmark," as one of the
+ fruits of British victory, as Lord Charles Beresford yesterday
+ magnanimously suggested, how long may it be before the Panama
+ Canal shall be found to be "a threat to peace" in the hands of
+ those who constructed it?</p>
+
+ <p>A rival fleet in being, whether the gunners be Teuton or
+ Anglo-Saxon unless the Admiralty controlling it is seated at
+ Whitehall, will always be an eyesore to the Mistress of the
+ seas, in other words, "a threat to the peace of the world."</p>
+
+ <p>The war of armaments cannot be ended by the disarming of the
+ German people. To hand Europe over to a triumphal alliance of
+ Russian and French militarism, while England controls the
+ highways and waterways of mankind by a fleet whose function is
+ "to dictate the maritime law of nations," will beget indeed a
+ new Europe, but a Europe whose acquiescence is due to fear and
+ the continued pressure of well-sustained force&mdash;a Europe
+ submitted to the despotism of unnatural alliances designed to
+ arrest the laws of progress.</p>
+
+ <p>The laws of progress demand that efficiency shall prevail.
+ The crime of Germany has been superior efficiency, not so much
+ in the arts of war as in the products of peace. If she go down
+ to-day before a combination of brute force and unscrupulous
+ intelligence her fall cannot be permanent. Germany has within
+ herself the forces that ensure revival, and revival means
+ recovery. Neither France nor Russia nor both combined, can give
+ to Europe what Britain now designs to take from it by their
+ help.</p>
+
+ <p>Whatever may be the result of this war on the field of
+ battle, to France indeed it can bring only one end. For her
+ there is no future save that of a military empire. Her life
+ blood is dried up. This war will sweep away all power of
+ recuperation. She will remain impotent to increase her race,
+ sterile of new forces for good, her young men's blood gone to
+ win the barren fields of Alsace.
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page14"
+ id="page14"></a>[pg 14]</span> Her one purpose in the new
+ Europe will be to hold a sword, not her own, over the
+ struggling form of a resurgent Germany in the interests of
+ another people. Let Germany lose 1,000,000 men in the
+ fighting of to-day, she can recover them in two years of
+ peace. But to France the losses of this war, whether she win
+ or lose, cannot be made good in a quarter of a century of
+ child births. Whatever comes to Russia, to England, France
+ as a great free power is gone. Her future function will be
+ to act in a subordinate capacity alone; supported and
+ encouraged by England she will be forced to keep up a great
+ army in order that the most capable people of the continent,
+ with a population no defeat can arrest, shall not fill the
+ place in Europe and in the world they are called on surely
+ to fill, and one that conflicts only with British aims and
+ appetites.</p>
+
+ <p>German expansion was no threat to France. It was directed to
+ other fields, chiefly those of commerce. In order to keep it
+ from those fields England fanned the dying fires of French
+ resentment and strove by every agency to kindle a natural
+ sentiment into an active passion.</p>
+
+ <p>The historian of the future will record that whatever the
+ immediate fate of Germany may be, the permanent victim was
+ France.</p>
+
+ <p>The day England won her to an active policy of vengeance
+ against the victor of 1870, she wooed her to abiding loss. Her
+ true place in Europe was one of friendship with Germany. But
+ that meant, inevitably, the discovery by Europe that the chief
+ barrier to European concord lay not in the armies of the
+ powers, but in the ring of hostile battleships that constrained
+ her peoples into armed camps.</p>
+
+ <p>European militarism rests on English navalism. English
+ navalism requires for its continued existence a disunited
+ Europe; and a Europe kept apart is a Europe armed, anxious and
+ watchful, bent on mutual attack, its eyes fixed on the
+ <i>earth</i>. Europe must lift its eyes to the sea. There lies
+ the highway of the nations, the only road to freedom&mdash;the
+ sole path to peace.</p>
+
+ <p>For the pent millions of Europe there can be no peace, no
+ laying aside of arms, no sincere development of trade or
+ culture while one people, <i>in Europe but not of Europe</i>,
+ immune themselves from all attack, and sure that whatever
+ suffering they inflict on others can never be visited on their
+ own shores, have it in their power to foment strife with
+ impunity and to call up war from the ends of the earth while
+ they themselves enjoy the blessing of
+ peace.</p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page15"
+ id="page15"></a>[pg 15]</span>
+
+ <p>England, the soul and brain of this confederacy of war
+ abroad remains at peace at home. As I write these words a
+ despatch from Sir Alfred Sharpe, the correspondent of a London
+ paper in France, comes to hand. It should be placarded in every
+ Foreign Office of the world, in every temple of justice, in
+ every house of prayer.</p>
+
+ <p>"It is difficult for the people in England to realize the
+ condition of Northern France at the present time. Although the
+ papers are full of accounts of desolation and destruction
+ caused by the German invasion, it is only by an actual
+ experience that a full realization of the horror comes. To
+ return to England after visiting the French war zone is to come
+ back to a land of perfect peace, where everything is normal and
+ where it is not easy to believe we are almost within hearing
+ distance of the cannonade on the Aisne."</p>
+
+ <p>(Sir Alfred Sharpe, to the <i>Daily Chronicle</i> from the
+ Front, September 2nd, 1914.)</p>
+
+ <p>It is this immunity from the horror of war that makes all
+ Englishmen jingoes. They are never troubled by the consequences
+ of belligerency. Since it is only by "an actual experience that
+ the full realization of the horror comes." Until that horror
+ strikes deep on English soil her statesmen, her Ministers, her
+ Members of Parliament, her editors, will never sincerely love
+ peace, but will plan always to ensure war abroad, whenever
+ British need or ambition demands it.</p>
+
+ <p>Were England herself so placed that responsibility for her
+ acts could be enforced on her own soil, among her own people,
+ and on the head of those who devise her policies, then we might
+ talk of arbitration treaties with hope, and sign compacts of
+ goodwill sure that they were indeed cordial understandings.</p>
+
+ <p>But as long as Great Britain retains undisputed ownership of
+ the chief factor that ensures at will peace or war on others,
+ there can be only armaments in Europe, ill-will among men and
+ war fever in the blood of mankind.</p>
+
+ <p>British democracy loves freedom of the sea in precisely the
+ same spirit as imperial Rome viewed the spectacle of Celtic
+ freedom beyond the outposts of the Roman legions; as Agricola
+ phrased it, something "to wear down and take possession of so
+ that freedom may be put out of sight."</p>
+
+ <p>The names change but the spirit of imperial exploitation,
+ whether it call itself an empire or a democracy, does not
+ change.</p>
+
+ <p>Just as the Athenian Empire, in the name of a democracy,
+ sought to impose servitude at sea on the Greek world, so the
+ British <span class="pagenum"><a name="page16"
+ id="page16"></a>[pg 16]</span> Empire, in the name of a
+ democracy, seeks to encompass mankind within the long walls
+ of London.</p>
+
+ <p>The modern Sparta may be vanquished by the imperial
+ democrats assailing her from East and West. But let the world
+ be under no illusions.</p>
+
+ <p>If Germany go down to-day, vanquished by a combination of
+ Asiatic, African, American, Canadian and European enemies, the
+ gain will not be to the world nor to the cause of peace.</p>
+
+ <p>The mistress of the seas will remain to ensure new
+ combinations of enmity to prohibit the one league of concord
+ that alone can bring freedom and peace to the world. The cause
+ that begot this war will remain to beget new wars.</p>
+
+ <p>The next victim of universal sea-power may not be on the
+ ravaged fields of mid-Europe, but mid the wasted coasts and
+ bombarded seaports of the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans.</p>
+
+ <p>A permanent peace can only be laid on a sure foundation. A
+ sure foundation of peace among men can only be found when
+ mastery of the sea by one people has been merged in freedom of
+ the seas for all.</p>
+
+ <h3 class="sc">Chapter II</h3>
+
+ <h2>THE KEEPER OF THE SEAS</h2>
+
+ <p>As long ago as 1870 an Irishman pointed out that if the
+ English press did not abandon the campaign of prejudiced
+ suspicion it was even then conducting against Germany, the time
+ for an understanding between Great Britain and the German
+ people would be gone for ever.</p>
+
+ <p>It was Charles Lever who delivered this shrewd appreciation
+ of the onlooker.</p>
+
+ <p>Writing from Trieste on August 29th, 1870, to John
+ Blackwood, he stated:</p>
+
+ <p>"Be assured the <i>Standard</i> is making a great blunder by
+ its anti-Germanism and English opinion has <i>just now</i> a
+ value in Germany <span class="pagenum"><a name="page17"
+ id="page17"></a>[pg 17]</span> which if the nation be once
+ disgusted with us will be gone for ever."</p>
+
+ <p>Lever preserved enough of the Irishman through all his
+ official connection to see the two sides of a question and
+ appreciate the point of view of the other man.</p>
+
+ <p>What Lever pointed out during the early stages of the
+ Franco-German war has come to pass. The <i>Standard</i> of
+ forty years ago is the British press of to-day, with here and
+ there the weak voice of an impotent Liberalism crying in the
+ wilderness. Germany has, indeed, become thoroughly disgusted
+ and the hour of reconciliation has long since gone by. In
+ Lever's time it was now or never; the chance not taken then
+ would be lost for ever, and the English publicist of to-day is
+ not in doubt that it is now too late. His heart-searchings need
+ another formula of expression&mdash;no longer a conditional
+ assertion of doubt, but a positive questioning of impending
+ fact, "is it too soon." That the growing German navy must be
+ smashed he is convinced, but how or when to do it he is not so
+ clear.</p>
+
+ <p>The situation is not yet quite intolerable, and so, although
+ many urge an immediate attack before the enemy grows too
+ strong, the old-time British love of compromise and trust in
+ luck still holds his hand. The American "alliance" too, may yet
+ come off. The Entente with France, already of great value, can
+ be developed into something more assuredly anti-German, and if
+ present-day relations of friendship with the United States can
+ be but tightened into a mutual committal of both Powers to a
+ common foreign policy, then the raid on Germany may never be
+ needed. She can be bottled up without it. No man who studies
+ the British mind can have any doubt of the fixed trend of
+ British thought.</p>
+
+ <p>It can be summed up in one phrase. German expansion is not
+ to be tolerated. It can only be a threat to or attained at the
+ expense of British interests. Those interests being world-wide,
+ with the seas for their raiment nay, with the earth for their
+ footstool&mdash;it follows that wherever Germany may turn for
+ an outlet she is met by the British challenge: "Not there!"
+ British interests interdict the Old World; the Monroe Doctrine,
+ maintained, it is alleged by British naval supremacy, forbids
+ the New.</p>
+
+ <p>Let Germany acquire a coaling station, a sanitorium, a
+ health resort, the ground for a hotel even, on some foreign
+ shore, and "British interests" spring to attention, English
+ jealousy is aroused. How long this state of tension can last
+ without snapping could, <span class="pagenum"><a name="page18"
+ id="page18"></a>[pg 18]</span> perhaps, be best answered in
+ the German naval yards. It is evident that some 7,000,000 of
+ the best educated race in the world, physically strong,
+ mentally stronger, homogeneous, highly trained, highly
+ skilled, capable and energetic and obedient to a discipline
+ that rests upon and is moulded by a lofty conception of
+ patriotism, cannot permanently be confined to a strictly
+ limited area by a less numerous race, less well educated,
+ less strong mentally and physically and assuredly less well
+ trained, skilled and disciplined. Stated thus the problem
+ admits of a simple answer; and were there no other factor
+ governing the situation, that answer would have been long
+ since given.</p>
+
+ <p>It is not the ethical superiority of the English race that
+ accounts for their lead, but the favourable geographical
+ situation from which they have been able to develop and direct
+ their policy of expansion.</p>
+
+ <p>England has triumphed mainly from her position. The
+ qualities of her people have, undoubtedly, counted for much,
+ but her unrivalled position in the lap of the Atlantic, barring
+ the seaways and closing the tideways of Central and
+ North-eastern Europe, has counted for more.</p>
+
+ <p>With this key she has opened the world to herself and closed
+ it to her rivals.</p>
+
+ <p>The long wars with France ended in the enhancement of this
+ position by the destruction of the only rival fleet in
+ being.</p>
+
+ <p>Europe, without navies, without shipping became for England
+ a mere westward projection of Asia, dominated by warlike
+ peoples who could always be set by the ears and made to fight
+ upon points of dynastic honour, while England appropriated the
+ markets of mankind. Thenceforth, for the best part of a
+ century, while Europe was spent in what, to the superior
+ Britain were tribal conflicts, the seas and coasts of the world
+ lay open to the intrusions of his commerce, his colonists, his
+ finance, until there was seemingly nothing left outside the two
+ Americas worth laying hands on. This highly favoured maritime
+ position depends, however, upon an unnamed factor, the
+ unchallenged possession and use of which by England has been
+ the true foundation of her imperial greatness. Without Ireland
+ there would be to-day no British Empire. The vital importance
+ of Ireland to England is understood, but never proclaimed by
+ every British statesman. To subdue that western and
+ ocean-closing island and to exploit its resources, its people
+ and, above all its position, to the sole advantage of the
+ eastern island, has been the set aim of every English
+ Government from the days <span class="pagenum"><a name="page19"
+ id="page19"></a>[pg 19]</span> of Henry VIII onwards. The
+ vital importance of Ireland to Europe is not and has not
+ been understood by any European statesman. To them it has
+ not been a European island, a vital and necessary element of
+ European development, but an appanage of England, an island
+ beyond an island, a mere geographical expression in the
+ titles of the conqueror. Louis XIV, came nearest, perhaps,
+ of European rulers to realizing its importance in the
+ conflict of European interests when he sought to establish
+ James II on its throne as rival to the monarch of Great
+ Britain and counterpoise to the British sovereignty in the
+ western seas. Montesquieu alone of French writers grasped
+ the importance of Ireland in the international affairs of
+ his time, and he blames the vacillation of Louis, who failed
+ to put forth his strength, to establish James upon the
+ throne of Ireland and thus by a successful act of perpetual
+ separation to <i>affaiblir le voisin</i>. Napoleon, too
+ late, in St. Helena, realized his error: "Had I gone to
+ Ireland instead of to Egypt the Empire of England was at an
+ end."</p>
+
+ <p>With these two utterances of the French writer and of the
+ French ruler we begin and end the reference of Ireland to
+ European affairs which continental statecraft has up to now
+ emitted, and so far has failed to apply.</p>
+
+ <p>To-day there is probably no European thinker (although
+ Germany produced one in recent times), who, when he faces the
+ over-powering supremacy of Great Britain's influence in world
+ affairs and the relative subordination of European rights to
+ the asserted interests of that small island, gives a thought to
+ the other and smaller island beyond its shores. And yet the key
+ to British supremacy lies there. Perhaps the one latter day
+ European who perceived the true relation of Ireland to Great
+ Britain was Neibuhr.</p>
+
+ <p>"Should England," he said, "not change her conduct, Ireland
+ may still for a long period belong to her, but not always; and
+ the loss of that country is the death day, not only to her
+ greatness, but of her very existence."</p>
+
+ <p>I propose to point out as briefly as may be possible in
+ dealing with so unexpected a proposition, that the restoration
+ of Ireland to European life lies at the bottom of all
+ successful European effort to break the bonds that now shackle
+ every continental people that would assert itself and extend
+ its ideals, as opposed to British interests, outside the limits
+ of Europe.</p>
+
+ <p>It may be well first to define "British interests" and to
+ show that these are not necessarily synonymous with European
+ interests. <span class="pagenum"><a name="page20"
+ id="page20"></a>[pg 20]</span> British interests are: first,
+ the control of all the seas of all the world&mdash;in full
+ military and commercial control. If this be not challenged
+ peace is permitted: to dispute it seriously means war.</p>
+
+ <p>Next in order of British interests stands the right of
+ pre-emption to all healthy, fertile, "unoccupied" lands of the
+ globe not already in possession of a people capable of
+ seriously disputing invasion, with the right of reversion to
+ such other regions as may, from time to time prove commercially
+ desirable or financially exploitable, whether suitable for
+ British colonization or not.</p>
+
+ <p>In a word, British interests assume that the future of the
+ world shall be an English-speaking future. It is clear that
+ sooner or later the British colonies, so called, must develop
+ into separate nationalities, and that the link of a common
+ crown cannot bind them forever. But, as Sir Wilfred Laurier
+ said at the recent Imperial Conference: "We bring you British
+ institutions"&mdash;English language, English law, English
+ trade, English supremacy, in a word&mdash;this is the ideal
+ reserved for mankind and summed up in words "British
+ interests."</p>
+
+ <p>Turn where you will these interests are in effective
+ occupation, and whether it be Madeira, Teneriffe, Agadir,
+ Tahiti, Bagdad, the unseen flag is more potent to exclude the
+ non-British intruder than the visible standard of the occupying
+ tenant. England is the landlord of civilization, mankind her
+ tenantry, and the earth her estate. If this be not a highly
+ exaggerated definition of British interests, and in truth it is
+ but a strongly coloured chart of the broad outline of the
+ design, then it is clear that Europe has a very serious problem
+ to face if European civilization and ideals, as differing from
+ the British type, are to find a place for their ultimate
+ expansion in any region favoured by the sun.</p>
+
+ <p>The actual conflict of European interests in Morocco is a
+ fair illustration of English methods.<a id="footnotetag1"
+ name="footnotetag1"></a><a href="#footnote1"><sup>1</sup></a></p>
+
+ <p>In the past France was the great antagonist, but since she
+ is to-day no longer able to seriously dispute the British
+ usufruct of the overseas world she is used (and rewarded) in
+ the struggle now maintained to exclude Germany at all costs
+ from the arena. Were France still dangerous she would never
+ have been allowed to go to Algeciras, or from Algeciras to Fez.
+ She has uses, however, in the anti-German prize ring and so
+ Morocco is the price of her hire. That Germany should presume
+ to inspect the transaction or claim a share in the settlement
+ has filled the British mind with profound
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page21"
+ id="page21"></a>[pg 21]</span> indignation, the echoes of
+ which are heard rumbling round the world from the Guildhall
+ to Gaboon and from the Congo to Tahiti. The mere press
+ rumour that France might barter Tahiti for German goods
+ filled the British newspaper world with supermundane wrath.
+ That France should presume to offer or Germany should accept
+ a French Pacific island in part discharge of liabilities
+ contracted at Algeciras was a threat to British interests.
+ Tahiti in the hands of a decadent republic, the greatest if
+ you will, but still one of the dying nations, is a thing to
+ be borne with, but Tahiti possibly in the hands of Germany
+ becomes at once a challenge and a threat.</p>
+
+ <p>And so we learn that "Australasia protests" to the Home
+ Government at the mere rumour that France may choose to part
+ with one of her possessions to win German goodwill in Morocco.
+ Neither France nor Germany can be permitted to be a free agent
+ in a transaction that however regarded as essential to their
+ own interests might affect, even by a shadow on the sea, the
+ world orbit of British interests. These interests it will be
+ noted have reached such a stage of development as to require
+ that all foreign States that cannot be used as tools, or
+ regarded as agencies, must be treated as enemies. Germany with
+ her growing population, her advancing industries, her keen
+ commercial ability, and her ever expanding navy has become the
+ enemy of civilization. Far too strong to be openly assailed on
+ land she must at all costs be pent up in Central Europe and by
+ a ring-fence of armed understandings prohibited from a wider
+ growth that would certainly introduce a rival factor to those
+ British institutions and that world language that are seriously
+ if not piously meditated as the ordained future for
+ mankind.</p>
+
+ <p>For English mentality is such that whatever England does is
+ divinely ordained, and whether she stamps out a nation or
+ merely sinks a ship the hymn of action is "Nearer My God, to
+ Thee." In a recent deputation to King George V it will be
+ remembered that certain British religious bodies congratulated
+ that monarch on the third centenary of the translation into
+ English of the Bible.</p>
+
+ <p>Both the addresses of the subjects, eminent, religious and
+ cultured men, and the sovereign's reply were highly informative
+ of the mental attitude of this extraordinary people. The Bible,
+ it appeared, was the "greatest possession of the English race."
+ "The British Bible" was the first and greatest of British
+ investments and upon the moral dividends derived from its
+ possession was founded the imperial greatness of this Island
+ Empire. That other peoples possessed the Bible and had even
+ translated it before England was
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page22"
+ id="page22"></a>[pg 22]</span> not so much as hinted at.
+ That the Bible was Greek and Hebrew in origin was never
+ whispered. It began and ended with the English Authorised
+ Version. The British Bible was the Bible that counted. It
+ was the Bible upon which the sun never sets, the Bible that
+ had blown Indian mutineers from its muzzle in the 'fifties
+ and was prepared to-day to have a shot at any other
+ mutineers, Teuton or Turk, who dared to dispute its claim
+ that the meek shall inherit the earth. The unctuous
+ rectitude that converts the word of God into wadding for a
+ gun is certainly a formidable opponent, as Cromwell proved.
+ To challenge English supremacy becomes not merely a threat
+ to peace, it is an act of sacrilege. And yet this world-wide
+ empire broad based upon the British Bible and the English
+ navy, and maintained by a very inflexible interpretation of
+ the one and a very skilful handling of the other, rests upon
+ a sunk foundation that is older than both and will surely
+ bring both to final shipwreck.</p>
+
+ <p>The British Empire is founded not upon the British Bible or
+ the British dreadnought but upon Ireland. The empire that began
+ upon an island, ravaged, sacked and plundered shall end on an
+ island, "which whether it proceed from the very genius of the
+ soil, or the influence of the stars, or that Almighty God hath
+ not yet appointed the time of her reformation, or that He
+ reserveth her in this unquiet state still for some secret
+ scourge which shall by her come unto England, it is hard to be
+ known but yet much to be feared." Thus Edmund Spenser 340 years
+ ago, whose muse drew profit from an Irish estate (one of the
+ first fruits of empire) and who being a poet had imagination to
+ perceive that a day of payment must some day be called and that
+ the first robbed might be the first to repay. The Empire
+ founded on Ireland by Henry and Elizabeth Tudor has expanded
+ into mighty things. England deprived of Ireland resumes her
+ natural proportions, those of a powerful kingdom. Still
+ possessing Ireland she is always an empire. For just as Great
+ Britain bars the gateways of northern and west central Europe,
+ to hold up at will the trade and block the ports of every coast
+ from the Baltic to the Bay of Biscay, so Ireland stands between
+ Britain and the greater seas of the west and blocks for her the
+ highways of the ocean. An Ireland strong, independent and
+ self-contained, a member of the European family of nations,
+ restored to her kindred, would be the surest guarantee for the
+ healthy development of European interests in those regions
+ whence they are to-day excluded by the anti-European policy of
+ England.</p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page23"
+ id="page23"></a>[pg 23]</span>
+
+ <p>The relation of Ireland to Great Britain has been in no wise
+ understood on the continent. The policy of England has been for
+ centuries to conceal the true source of her supplies and to
+ prevent an audit of transactions with the remoter island. As
+ long ago as the reign of Elizabeth Tudor this shutting off of
+ Ireland from contact with Europe was a settled point of English
+ policy. The three "German Earls" with letters from the Queen
+ who visited Dublin in 1572 were prevented by the Lord Deputy
+ from seeing for themselves anything beyond the walls of the
+ city.<a id="footnotetag2"
+ name="footnotetag2"></a><a href="#footnote2"><sup>2</sup></a></p>
+
+ <p>To represent the island as a poverty striken land inhabited
+ by a turbulent and ignorant race whom she has with unrewarded
+ solicitude sought to civilise, uplift and educate has been a
+ staple of England's diplomatic trade since modern diplomacy
+ began. To compel the trade of Ireland to be with herself alone;
+ to cut off all direct communication between Europe and this
+ second of European islands until no channel remained save
+ through Britain; to enforce the most abject political and
+ economic servitude one people ever imposed upon another; to
+ exploit all Irish resources, lands, ports, people, wealth, even
+ her religion, everything in fine that Ireland held, to the sole
+ profit and advancement of England, and to keep all the books
+ and rigorously refuse an audit of the transaction has been the
+ secret but determined policy of England.</p>
+
+ <p>We have read lately something of Mexican peonage, of how a
+ people can be reduced to a lawless slavery, their land
+ expropriated, their bodies enslaved, their labour appropriated,
+ and how the nexus of this fraudulent connection lies in a
+ falsified account. The hacenade holds the peon by a debt
+ bondage. His palace in Mexico City, or on the sisal plains of
+ Yucatan is reared on the stolen labour of a people whose
+ bondage is based on a lie. The hacenade keeps the books and
+ debits the slave with the cost of the lash that scourges him
+ into the fields. Ireland is the English peon, the great peon of
+ the British Empire. The books and the palaces are in London but
+ the work and the wealth have come from peons on the Irish
+ Estate. The armies that overthrew Napoleon; the fleets that
+ swept the navies of France and Spain from the seas were
+ recruited from this slave pen of English civilisation. During
+ the last 100 years <span class="pagenum"><a name="page24"
+ id="page24"></a>[pg 24]</span> probably 2,000,000 Irishmen
+ have been drafted into the English fleets and armies from a
+ land purposely drained of its food. Fully the same number,
+ driven by executive-controlled famines have given cheap
+ labour to England and have built up her great industries,
+ manned her shipping, dug her mines, and built her ports and
+ railways while Irish harbours silted up and Irish factories
+ closed down. While England grew fat on the crops and beef of
+ Ireland, Ireland starved in her own green fields and
+ Irishmen grew lean in the strife of Europe.</p>
+
+ <p>While a million Irishmen died of hunger on the most fertile
+ plains of Europe, English Imperialism drew over one thousand
+ million pounds sterling for investment in a world policy from
+ an island that was represented to that world as too poor to
+ even bury its dead. The profit to England from Irish peonage
+ cannot be assessed in terms of trade, or finance, or taxation.
+ It far transcends Lord MacDonnell's recent estimate at Belfast
+ of £320,000,000&mdash;"an Empire's ransom," as he bluntly put
+ it.</p>
+
+ <p>Not an Empire's ransom but the sum of an Empire's
+ achievement, the cost of an Empire's founding, and to-day the
+ chief bond of an Empire's existence. Detach Ireland from the
+ map of the British Empire and restore it to the map of Europe
+ and that day England resumes her native proportions and Europe
+ assumes its rightful stature in the empire of the world.
+ Ireland can only be restored to the current of European life,
+ from which she has so long been purposely withheld by the act
+ of Europe. What Napoleon perceived too late may yet be the
+ purpose and achievement of a congress of nations. Ireland, I
+ submit, is necessary to Europe, is essential to Europe, to-day
+ she is retained against Europe, by a combination of elements
+ hostile to Europe and opposed to European influence in the
+ world. Her strategic importance is a factor of supreme weight
+ to Europe and is to-day used in the scales against Europe.
+ Ireland is appropriated and used, not to the service of
+ European interests but to the extension of anti-European
+ interests. The <i>arbitium mundi</i> claimed and most certainly
+ exercised by England is maintained by the British fleet, and
+ until that power is effectively challenged and held in check it
+ is idle to talk of European influence outside of certain narrow
+ continental limits.</p>
+
+ <p>The power of the British fleet can never be permanently
+ restrained until Ireland is restored to Europe. Germany has of
+ necessity become the champion of European interests as opposed
+ to the world domination of England and English-speaking
+ elements. <span class="pagenum"><a name="page25"
+ id="page25"></a>[pg 25]</span> She is to-day a dam, a great
+ reservoir rapidly filling with human life that must some day
+ find an outlet. England instead of wisely digging channels
+ for the overflow has hardened her heart, like Pharaoh, and
+ thinks to prevent it or to so divert the stream that it
+ shall be lost and drunk up in the thirsty sands of an ever
+ expanding Anglo-Saxondom. German laws, German language,
+ German civilization are to find no ground for replenishing,
+ no soil to fertilize and make rich.</p>
+
+ <p>I believe this to be not only the set policy of England, but
+ to be based on the temperamental foundations of the English
+ character itself, from which that people could not, even if
+ they would, depart. The lists are set. The English mind, the
+ English consciousness are such, that to oppose German influence
+ in the world is to this people a necessity. They oppose by
+ instinct, against argument, in the face of reason, they will do
+ it blindly come what may and at all costs, and they will do it
+ to the end.</p>
+
+ <p>Their reasoning, if reason exists in what is after all a
+ matter of primal instinct, might find expression somewhat as
+ follows:</p>
+
+ <p>"German influence cannot but be hostile to British
+ interests. The two peoples are too much alike. The qualities
+ that have made England great they possess in a still greater
+ degree. Given a fair field and no favour they are bound to beat
+ us. They will beat us out of every market in the world, and we
+ shall be reduced ultimately to a position like that of France
+ to-day. Better fight while we are still die stronger. Better
+ hinder now ere it be too late. We have bottled up before and
+ destroyed our adversaries by delay, by money, by alliances. To
+ tolerate a German rivalry is to found a German empire and to
+ destroy our own."</p>
+
+ <p>Some such obscure argument as this controls the Englishman's
+ reasoning when he faces the growing magnitude of the Teutonic
+ people. A bitter resentment, with fear at the bottom, a hurried
+ clanging of bolt and rivet in the belt of a new warship and a
+ muffled but most diligent hammering at the rivets of an ever
+ building American Alliance&mdash;the real Dreadnought this,
+ whose keel was laid sixteen years ago and whose slow, secret
+ construction has cost the silent swallowing of many a cherished
+ British boast.</p>
+
+ <p>English Liberalism might desire a different sort of
+ reckoning with Germany, but English Liberalism is itself a
+ product of the English temperament, and however it may sigh, by
+ individuals, for a better understanding between the two
+ peoples, in the mass, it is a part of the national purpose and
+ a phase of the national mind
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page26"
+ id="page26"></a>[pg 26]</span> and is driven relentlessly to
+ the rivets and the hammering, the "Dreadnoughts" in being
+ and that mightier Dreadnought yet to be, the Anglo-Saxon
+ Alliance which Germany must fight if she is to get out.</p>
+
+ <p>Doubtless she has already a naval policy and the plans for a
+ naval war, for the fight will be settled on the sea, but the
+ fate will be determined on an island.</p>
+
+ <p>The Empire that has grown from an island and spread with the
+ winds and the waves to the uttermost shores will fight and be
+ fought for on the water and will be ended where it began, on an
+ island.</p>
+
+ <p>That island, I believe, will be Ireland and not Great
+ Britain.</p>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote1"
+ name="footnote1"></a><b>Footnote 1:</b>
+ <a href="#footnotetag1">(return)</a>
+
+ <p>This was written in August, 1911.</p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote2"
+ name="footnote2"></a><b>Footnote 2:</b>
+ <a href="#footnotetag2">(return)</a>
+
+ <p>This time-honoured British precept&mdash;that foreigners
+ should not see for themselves the workings of English rule
+ in Ireland&mdash;finds frequent expression in the Irish
+ State Papers. In a letter from Dublin Castle of August,
+ 1572, from the Lord Deputy Fitzwilliam to Burghley
+ Elizabeth's chief Minister, we are told that the "three
+ German Earls" with "their conductor," Mr. Rogers, have
+ arrived. The Viceroy adds, as his successors have done up
+ to the present day: "According to Your Lordship's direction
+ they shall travell as little way into the cuntry as I
+ can."</p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <h3 class="sc">Chapter III</h3>
+
+ <h2>THE BALANCE OF POWER</h2>
+
+ <p>A conflict between England and Germany exists already, a
+ conflict of aims.</p>
+
+ <p>England rich, prosperous, with all that she can possibly
+ assimilate already in her hands, desires peace on present
+ conditions of world power. These conditions are not merely that
+ her actual possessions should remain intact, but that no other
+ Great Power shall, by acquiring colonies and spreading its
+ people and institutions into neighbouring regions, thereby
+ possibly affect the fuller development of those pre-existing
+ British States. For, with England equality is an offence and
+ the Power that arrives at a degree of success approximating to
+ her own and one capable of being expanded into conditions of
+ fair rivalry, has already committed the unpardonable sin. As
+ Curran put it in his defence of Hamilton Rowan in 1797,
+ "England is marked by a natural avarice of freedom which she is
+ studious to engross and accumulate, but most unwilling to
+ impart; whether from any necessity of her policy or from her
+ weakness, or from her pride, I will not presume to say."</p>
+
+ <p>Thus while England might even be the attacking party, and in
+ all probability will be the attacking party, she will embark on
+ a war with Germany at an initial disadvantage. She will be on
+ her defence. Although, probably, the military aggressor from
+ reasons <span class="pagenum"><a name="page27"
+ id="page27"></a>[pg 27]</span> of strategy, she will be
+ acting in obedience to an economic policy of defence and not
+ of attack. Her chief concern will be not to advance and
+ seize, always in war the more inspiring task, but to retain
+ and hold. At best she could come out of the war with no new
+ gain, with nothing added worth having to what she held on
+ entering it. Victory would mean for her only that she had
+ secured a further spell of quiet in which to consolidate her
+ strength and enjoy the good things already won.</p>
+
+ <p>Germany will fight with far other purpose and one that must
+ inspire a far more vigorous effort; she will fight, not merely
+ to keep what she already has, but to escape from an intolerable
+ position of inferiority she knows to be unmerited and forced
+ not by the moral or intellectual superiority of her adversary
+ or due to her own short comings, but maintained by reason of
+ that adversary's geographical position and early seizure of the
+ various points of advantage.</p>
+
+ <p>Her effort will be not merely military, it will be an
+ intellectual assertion, a fight in very truth for that larger
+ freedom, that citizenship of the world England is studious to
+ "engross and accumulate" for herself alone and to deny to all
+ others. Thus, while English attack at the best will be actuated
+ by no loftier feeling than that of a man who, dwelling in a
+ very comfortable house with an agreeable prospect resists an
+ encroachment on his outlook from the building operations of his
+ less well lodged neighbour, Germany will be fighting not only
+ to get out of doors into the open air and sunshine, but to
+ build a loftier and larger dwelling, fit tenement for a
+ numerous and growing offspring.</p>
+
+ <p>Whatever the structure Germany seeks to erect England
+ objects to the plan and hangs out her war sign "Ancient
+ Lights."</p>
+
+ <p>Who can doubt that the greater patriotism and stronger
+ purpose must inspire the man who fights for light, air, and
+ freedom, the right to walk abroad, to learn, to teach, aye, and
+ to inspire others, rather than him whose chief concern it is to
+ see that no one but himself enjoys these opportunities. The
+ means, moreover, that each combatant will bring to the conflict
+ are, in the end, on the side of Germany. Much the same
+ disproportion of resources exists as lay between Rome and
+ Carthage.</p>
+
+ <p>England relies on money. Germany on men. And just as Roman
+ men beat Carthaginian mercenaries, so must German manhood, in
+ the end, triumph over British finance. Just as Carthage in the
+ hours of final shock, placing her gold where Romans put their
+ gods, and <span class="pagenum"><a name="page28"
+ id="page28"></a>[pg 28]</span> never with a soul above her
+ ships, fell before the people of United Italy, so shall the
+ mightier Carthage of the North Seas, in spite of trade,
+ shipping, colonies, the power of the purse and the hired
+ valour of the foreign (Irish, Indian, African), go down
+ before the men of United Germany.</p>
+
+ <p>But if the military triumph of Germany seems thus likely,
+ the ultimate assurance, nay even the ultimate safety of German
+ civilization can only be secured by a statemanship which shall
+ not repeat the mistake of Louis XIV and Napoleon. The military
+ defeat of England by Germany is a wholly possible achievement
+ of arms, <i>if the conflict be between these two alone</i>, but
+ to realize the economic and political fruits of that victory,
+ Ireland must be detached from the British Empire. To leave a
+ defeated England still in the full possession of Ireland would
+ be, not to settle the question of German rights at sea or in
+ world affairs, but merely to postpone the settlement to a
+ second and possibly far greater encounter. It would be somewhat
+ as if Rome, after the first Punic war had left Sicily to
+ Carthage. But Ireland is far more vital to England than Sicily
+ was to Carthage, and is of far more account to the future of
+ Europe on the ocean than the possession of Sicily was to the
+ future of the Mediterranean.</p>
+
+ <p>If Germany is to permanently profit from a victory over
+ England, she must free the narrow seas, not only by the defeat
+ of British fleets in being, but by ensuring that those seas
+ shall not again be closed by British fleets yet to be. The
+ German gateway to a free Atlantic can only be kept open through
+ a free Ireland. For just as the English Channel under the
+ existing arrangement, whereby Ireland lies hidden from the rest
+ of Europe, can be closed at will by England, so with Ireland no
+ longer tied to the girdle of England, that channel cannot be
+ locked. The key to the freedom of European navigation lies at
+ Berehaven and not at Dover. With Berehaven won from English
+ hands, England might close the Channel in truth, but Ireland
+ could shut the Atlantic. As Richard Dox put it in 1689,
+ quaintly but truly, in his dedication to King William III, and
+ Queen Mary of his "History of Ireland from the Earliest
+ Times."</p>
+
+ <p>"But no cost can be too great where the prize is of such
+ value, and whoever considers the situation, ports, plenty and
+ other advantages of Ireland will confess that it must be
+ retained at what rate soever; because if it should come into an
+ enemy's hands, England would find it impossible to
+ <i>flourish</i> and perhaps difficult
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page29"
+ id="page29"></a>[pg 29]</span> to <i>subsist</i> without it.
+ To demonstrate this assertion it is enough to say that
+ Ireland lies in the Line of Trade and that all the English
+ vessels that sail to the East, West, and South must, as it
+ were, run the gauntlet between the harbours of Brest and
+ Baltimore; and I might add that the Irish Wool being
+ transported would soon ruin the English Clothing
+ Manufacture. Hence it is that all Your Majesty's
+ Predecessors have kept close to this fundamental maxim of
+ retaining Ireland inseparably united to the Crown of
+ England."</p>
+
+ <p>The sole and exclusive appropriation of Ireland and of all
+ her resources has indeed formed, since the Recorder of Kinsale
+ wrote, the mainstay and chief support of British greatness.</p>
+
+ <p>The natural position of Ireland lying "in the line of
+ trade," was possibly its chief value, but that "Irish Wool"
+ which was by no means to be allowed free access to world
+ markets typifies much else that Ireland has been relentlessly
+ forced to contribute to her neighbour's growth and sole
+ profit.</p>
+
+ <p>I read but yesterday "Few people realise that the trade of
+ Ireland with Great Britain is equal to that of our trade with
+ India, is 13,000,000 pounds greater than our trade with
+ Germany, and 40,000,000 pounds greater than the whole of our
+ trade with the United States." How completely England has laid
+ hands on all Irish resources is made clear from a recent
+ publication that Mr. Chamberlain's "Tariff Commission" issued
+ towards the end of 1912.</p>
+
+ <p>This document, entitled "The Economic Position of Ireland
+ and its relation to Tariff Reform," constitutes, in fact, a
+ manifesto calling for the release of Ireland from the exclusive
+ grip of Great Britain. Thus, for instance, in the section
+ "External Trade of Ireland," we learn that Ireland exported in
+ 1910, £63,400,000 worth of Irish produce. Of this Great Britain
+ took £52,600,000 worth, while some £10,800,000 went either to
+ foreign countries, or to British colonies, over £4,000,000
+ going to the United States. Of these eleven million pounds
+ worth of Irish produce sent to distant countries, only £700,000
+ was shipped direct from Irish ports.</p>
+
+ <p>The remainder, more than £10,000,000, although the market it
+ was seeking lay chiefly to the West, had to be shipped East
+ into and to pay a heavy transit toll to that country for
+ discharge, handling, agency, commission, and reloading on
+ British vessels in British ports to steam back past the shores
+ of Ireland it had just left. While Ireland, indeed, lies in the
+ "line of trade," between all Northern Europe and the great
+ world markets, she has been robbed
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page30"
+ id="page30"></a>[pg 30]</span> of her trade and artificially
+ deprived of the very position assigned to her by nature in
+ the great tides of commercial intercourse. It is not only
+ the geographical situation and the trade and wealth of
+ Ireland that England has laid hands on for her own
+ aggrandizement, but she has also appropriated to her own
+ ends the physical manhood of the island. Just as the
+ commerce has been forcibly annexed and diverted from its
+ natural trend, so the youth of Ireland has been fraudulently
+ appropriated and diverted from the defence of their own land
+ to the extension of the power and wealth of the realm that
+ impoverished it at home. The physical qualities of the Irish
+ were no less valuable than "Irish wool" to Empire building,
+ provided always they were not displayed in Ireland.</p>
+
+ <p>So long ago as 1613 we find a candid admission in the State
+ papers that the Irish were the better men in the field. "The
+ next rebellion whenever it shall happen, doth threaten more
+ danger to the State than any heretofore, when the cities and
+ walled towns were always faithful; (1) because they have the
+ same bodies they ever had and therein they had and have
+ advantage of us; (2) from infancy they have been and are
+ exercised in the use of arms; (3) the realm by reason of the
+ long peace was never so full of youths; (4) that they are
+ better soldiers than heretofore, their continental employment
+ in wars abroad assures us, and they do conceive that their men
+ are better than ours."</p>
+
+ <p>This testimony to Irish superiority, coming as it does from
+ English official sources just three hundred years ago, would be
+ convincing enough did it stand alone. But it is again and again
+ reaffirmed by English commanders themselves as the reason for
+ their failure in some particular enterprise. In all else they
+ were superior to the Irish; in arms, armaments, munitions,
+ supplies of food and money, here the long purse, settled
+ organization and greater commerce of England, gave her an
+ overwhelming advantage. Moreover the English lacked the moral
+ restraints that imposed so severe a handicap on the Irish in
+ their resistance. They owned no scruple of conscience in
+ committing any crime that served their purpose. Beaten often in
+ open fight by the hardier bodies, stouter arms and greater
+ courage of the Irishmen, they nevertheless won the game by
+ recourse to means that no Irishman, save he who had joined them
+ for purposes of revenge or in pursuit of selfish personal aims,
+ could possibly have adopted. The fight from the first was an
+ unequal one. Irish valour, chivalry, and personal strength were
+ matched against wealth, treachery and cunning. The Irish better
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page31"
+ id="page31"></a>[pg 31]</span> bodies were overcome by the
+ worse hearts. As Curran put it in 1817&mdash;"The triumph of
+ England over Ireland is the triumph of guilt over
+ innocence."</p>
+
+ <p>The Earl of Essex who came to Ireland in 1599 with one of
+ the largest forces of English troops that, up to then, had ever
+ been dispatched into Ireland (18,000 men), had ascribed his
+ complete failure, in writing to the Queen, to the physical
+ superiority of the Irish:</p>
+
+ <p>"These rebels are more in number than your Majesty's army
+ and have (though I do unwillingly confess it), better bodies,
+ and perfecter use of their arms, than those men who your
+ Majesty sends over."</p>
+
+ <p>The Queen, who followed the war in Ireland with a swelling
+ wrath on each defeat, and a growing fear that the Spaniards
+ would keep their promise to land aid to the Irish princes,
+ O'Neill and O'Donnell, issued "instructions" and a set of
+ "ordinances" for the conduct of the war in Ireland, which,
+ while enjoining recourse to the usual methods outside the field
+ of battle&mdash;(i.e. starvation, "politic courses,"
+ assassination of leaders; and the sowing of dissension by means
+ of bribery and promises), required for the conflict, that her
+ weaker soldiers should be protected against the onslaught of
+ the unarmoured Irishmen by head pieces of steel. She ordered
+ "every soldier to be enforced to wear a murrion, because the
+ enemy is encouraged by the advantage of arms to <i>come to the
+ sword</i> wherein he commonly prevaileth."</p>
+
+ <p>One of the generals of the Spanish King, Philip III, who
+ came to Ireland in the winter of 1601 with a handful of Spanish
+ troops (200 men), to reinforce the small expedition of de
+ Aguila in Kinsale, thus reported on the physical qualities of
+ the Irish in a document that still lies in Salamanca in the
+ archives of the old Irish College. it was written by Don Pedro
+ De Zubiarr on the 16th of January, 1602, on his return to the
+ Asturias. Speaking of the prospect of the campaign, he wrote:
+ "If we had brought arms for 10,000 men we could have had them,
+ for they are very eager to carry on the war against the
+ English. The Irish are very strong and well shaped, accustomed
+ to endure hunger and toil, and very courageous in fight."</p>
+
+ <p>Perhaps the most vivid testimony to the innate superiority
+ of the Irishman as a soldier is given in a typically Irish
+ challenge issued in the war of 1641. The document has a lasting
+ interest for it displays not only the "better body" of the
+ Irishman of that <span class="pagenum"><a name="page32"
+ id="page32"></a>[pg 32]</span> day, but something of his
+ better heart as well, that still remains to us.</p>
+
+ <p>One Parsons, an English settler in Ireland, had written to a
+ friend to say that, among other things, the head of the Colonel
+ of an Irish regiment then in the field against the English,
+ would not be allowed to stick long on its shoulders. The letter
+ was intercepted by the very regiment itself, and a captain in
+ it, Felim O'Molloy, wrote back to Parsons:</p>
+
+ <p>"I will do this if you please: I will pick out sixty men and
+ fight against one hundred of your choice men if you do but
+ pitch your camp one mile out of your town, and then if you have
+ the victory, you may threaten my Colonel; otherwise, do not
+ reckon your chickens before they are hatched."</p>
+
+ <p>The Anglo-Saxon preferred "politic courses" to accepting the
+ Irish soldier's challenge, even where all the advantage was
+ conceded by the Irishman to his foe and all the risks, save
+ that of treachery (a very necessary precaution in dealing with
+ the English in Ireland), cheerfully accepted by the Celt.</p>
+
+ <p>This advantage of the "better bodies" the Irish retained
+ beyond all question up to the Famine. It was upon it alone that
+ the Wexford peasantry relied in 1798, and with and by it alone
+ that they again and again, armed with but pike and scythe swept
+ disciplined regiments of English mercenaries in headlong rout
+ from the field.</p>
+
+ <p>This physical superiority of his countrymen was frequently
+ referred to by O'Connell as one of the forces he relied on.
+ With the decay of all things Irish that has followed the
+ Famine, these physical attributes have declined along with so
+ much else that was typical of the nation and the man.</p>
+
+ <p>It could not to-day be fearlessly affirmed that sixty
+ Irishmen were more than a match for one hundred Englishmen; yet
+ depleted as it is by the emigration of its strongest and
+ healthiest children, by growing sickness and a changed and
+ deteriorated diet the Irish race still presents a type,
+ superior physically, intellectually and morally to the English.
+ It was on Irish soldiers that the English chiefly relied in the
+ Boer War, and it is no exaggeration to say that could all the
+ Irishmen in the ranks of the British army have been withdrawn,
+ a purely British force would have failed to end the war and the
+ Dutch would have remained masters of the field in South
+ Africa.</p>
+
+ <p>It was the inglorious part of Ireland to be linked with
+ those "methods of barbarism" she herself knew only too well, in
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page33"
+ id="page33"></a>[pg 33]</span> extinguishing the
+ independence of a people who were attacked by the same enemy
+ and sacrificed to the same greed that had destroyed her own
+ freedom.</p>
+
+ <p>Unhappy, indeed, is it for mankind, as for her own fate and
+ honour that Ireland should be forced by dire stress of fortune
+ to aid her imperial wrecker in wrecking the fortune and freedom
+ of brave men elsewhere.</p>
+
+ <p>That these physical qualities of Irishmen, even with a
+ population now only one tenth that of Great Britain are still
+ of value to the empire, Mr. Churchill's speech on the Home Rule
+ Bill made frankly clear (February, 1913). We now learn that the
+ First Lord of the Admiralty has decided to establish a new
+ training squadron, "with a base at Queenstown," where it is
+ hoped to induce with the bribe of "self-government" the youth
+ of Cork and Munster to again man the British fleet as they did
+ in the days of Nelson, and we are even told that the prospects
+ of brisk recruiting are "politically favourable."</p>
+
+ <p>Carthage got her soldiers from Spain, her seamen, her
+ slingers from the Balearic Islands and the coasts of Africa,
+ her money from the trade of the world. Rome beat her, but she
+ did not leave a defeated Carthage to still levy toll of men and
+ mind on those external sources of supply.</p>
+
+ <p>Germany must fight, not merely to defeat the British fleet
+ of to-day, but to neutralize the British fleet of to-morrow.
+ Leave Ireland to Great Britain and that can never be.
+ Neutralize Ireland and it is already accomplished.</p>
+
+ <p>One of the conditions of peace, and <i>for this reason</i>
+ the most important condition of peace that a victorious Germany
+ must impose upon her defeated antagonist is that Ireland shall
+ be separated and erected into an independent European State
+ under international guarantees. England, obviously would resist
+ such conditions to the last, but then the last has already come
+ before England would consent to any peace save on terms she
+ dictated.</p>
+
+ <p>A defeated England is a starved England. She would have to
+ accept whatever terms Germany imposed unless those terms
+ provoked external intervention on behalf of the defeated
+ power.</p>
+
+ <p>The prize Germany seeks to win from victory is not immediate
+ territorial aggrandizement obtained from annexing British
+ possessions, not a heavy money indemnity wrung from British
+ finance and trade (although this she might have), but German
+ freedom throughout the world on equal terms with Britain. This
+ is a prize <span class="pagenum"><a name="page34"
+ id="page34"></a>[pg 34]</span> worth fighting for, for once
+ gained the rest follows as a matter of course.</p>
+
+ <p>German civilization released from the restricted confines
+ and unequal position in which Britain had sought to pen it
+ must, of itself win its way to the front, and of necessity
+ acquire those favoured spots necessary to its wide
+ development.</p>
+
+ <p>"This is the meaning of his (the German's) will for power;
+ safety from interference with his individual and national
+ development. Only one thing is left to the nations that do not
+ want to be left behind in the peaceful rivalry of human
+ progress&mdash;that is to become the equals of Germany in
+ untiring industry, in scientific thoroughness, in sense of
+ duty, in patient persistence, in intelligent, voluntary
+ submission to organization." (History of German Civilization,
+ by Ernst Richard, Columbia University, New York.)</p>
+
+ <p>Once she had reduced Great Britain to an opposition based on
+ <i>peaceful rivalry</i> in human progress, Germany would find
+ the path of success hers to tread on more than equal terms, and
+ many fields of expansion now closed would readily open to
+ German enterprise without that people incurring and inflicting
+ the loss and injury that an attempted invasion of the great
+ self-governing dominions would so needlessly involve. Most of
+ the British self-governing colonies are to-day great States,
+ well able to defend themselves from overseas attack. The defeat
+ of the British navy would make scarcely at all easier the
+ landing of German troops in, say, Australia, South Africa or
+ New Zealand. A war of conquest of those far-distant regions
+ would be, for Germany, an impossible and a stupidly impossible
+ task.</p>
+
+ <p>A defeated England could not cede any of these British
+ possessions as a price of peace, for they are inhabited by free
+ men who, however they might deplore a German occupation of
+ London, could in no wise be transferred by any pact or treaty
+ made by others, to other rule than that of themselves.
+ Therefore, to obtain those British dominions, Germany would
+ have to defeat not only England, but after that to begin a
+ fresh war, or a series of fresh wars, at the ends of the earth,
+ with exhausted resources and probably a crippled fleet.</p>
+
+ <p>The thing does not bear inspection and may be dismissed from
+ our calculation.</p>
+
+ <p>The only territories that England could cede by her own act
+ to a victorious power are such as, in themselves, are not
+ suited to colonization by a white race. Doubtless, Germany
+ would seek <span class="pagenum"><a name="page35"
+ id="page35"></a>[pg 35]</span> compensation for the expense
+ of the war in requiring the transfer of some of these latter
+ territories of the British Crown to herself. There are
+ points in tropical Africa, in the East, islands in the ocean
+ to-day flying the British flag that might, with profit to
+ German trade and influence, be acquired by a victorious
+ Germany. But none of these things in itself, not all of them
+ put together, would meet the requirements of the German
+ case, or ensure to Germany that future tranquil expansion
+ and peaceful rivalry the war had been fought to secure.
+ England would be weakened, and to some extent impoverished
+ by a war ending with such results; but her great asset, her
+ possession beyond price would still be hers&mdash;her
+ geographical position. Deprive her to-day, say of the Gold
+ Coast, the Niger, Gibraltar, even of Egypt, impose a heavy
+ indemnity, and while Germany would barely have recouped
+ herself for the out-of-pocket losses of the war, England in
+ fact would have lost nothing, and ten years hence the Teuton
+ would look out again upon the same prospect, a Europe still
+ dominated beyond the seas by the Western islanders.</p>
+
+ <p>The work would have to be done all over again. A second
+ Punic war would have to be fought with this
+ disadvantage&mdash;that the Atlantic Sicily would be held and
+ used still against the Northern Rome, by the Atlantic
+ Carthage.</p>
+
+ <p>A victorious Germany, in addition to such terms as she may
+ find it well to impose in her own immediate financial or
+ territorial interests, must so draft her peace conditions as to
+ preclude her great antagonist from ever again seriously
+ imperilling the freedom of the seas. I know of no way save one
+ to make sure the open seas. Ireland, in the name of Europe, and
+ in the exercise of European right to free the seas from the
+ over-lordship of one European island, must be resolutely
+ withdrawn from British custody. A second Berlin Conference, an
+ international Congress must debate, and clearly would debate,
+ with growing unanimity the German proposal to restore Ireland
+ to Europe.</p>
+
+ <p>The arguments in favour of that proposal would soon become
+ so clear from the general European standpoint, that save
+ England and her defeated allies, no power would oppose it.</p>
+
+ <p>Considerations of expediency no less than naval, mercantile,
+ and moral claims would range themselves on the side of Germany
+ and a free Ireland. For a free Ireland, not owned and exploited
+ by England, but appertaining to Europe at large, its ports
+ available in a sense they never can be while under British
+ control for purposes <span class="pagenum"><a name="page36"
+ id="page36"></a>[pg 36]</span> of general navigation and
+ overseas intercourse, would soon become of such first-rank
+ importance in continental affairs as to leave men stupified
+ by the thought that for five hundred years they had allowed
+ one sole member of their community the exclusive use and
+ selfish misappropriation of this, the most favoured of
+ European islands.</p>
+
+ <p>Ireland would be freed, not because she deserved or asked
+ for freedom, not because English rule has been a tyranny, a
+ moral failure, a stupidity and sin against the light; not
+ because Germany cared for Ireland, but because her withdrawal
+ from English control appeared to be a very necessary step in
+ international welfare and one very needful to the progress of
+ German and European expansion.</p>
+
+ <p>An Ireland released from the jail in which England had
+ confined her would soon become a populous State of possibly
+ 10,000,000 to 12,000,000 people, a commercial asset of Europe
+ in the Atlantic of the utmost general value, one holding an
+ unique position between the Old and New Worlds, and possibly an
+ intellectual and moral asset of no mean importance. This, and
+ more, a sovereign Ireland means to Europe. Above all it means
+ security of transit, equalizing of opportunity, freedom of the
+ seas&mdash;an assurance that the great waterways of the ocean
+ should no longer be at the absolute mercy of one member of the
+ European family, and that one the least interested in general
+ European welfare.</p>
+
+ <p>The stronger a free Ireland grew the surer would be the
+ guarantee that the rôle of England "consciously assumed for
+ many years past, to be an absolute and wholly arbitrary judge
+ of war and peace" had gone for ever, and that at last the
+ "balance of power" was kept by fair weight and fair measure and
+ not with loaded
+ scales.</p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page37"
+ id="page37"></a>[pg 37]</span>
+
+ <h3 class="sc">Chapter IV</h3>
+
+ <h2>THE ENEMY OF PEACE</h2>
+
+ <p>I believe England to be the enemy of European peace, and
+ that until her "mastery of the sea" is overmastered by Europe,
+ there can be no peace upon earth or goodwill among men. Her
+ claim to rule the seas, and the consequences, direct and
+ indirect, that flow from its assertion are the chief factors of
+ international discord that now threaten the peace of the
+ world.</p>
+
+ <p>In order to maintain that indefensible claim she is driven
+ to aggression and intrigue in every quarter of the globe; to
+ setting otherwise friendly peoples by the ears; to forming
+ "alliances" and ententes, to dissolving friendships, the aim
+ always being the old one, <i>divide et impera</i>.</p>
+
+ <p>The fact that Europe to-day is divided into armed camps is
+ mainly due to English effort to retain that mastery of the sea.
+ It is generally assumed, and the idea is propagated by English
+ agencies, that Europe owes her burden of armaments to the
+ antagonism between France and Germany, to the loss of
+ Alsace-Lorraine by France, and the spirit and hope of a
+ <i>revanche</i> thereby engendered. But this antagonism has
+ long ceased to be the chief factor that moulds European
+ armaments.</p>
+
+ <p>Were it not for British policy, and the unhealthy hope it
+ proffers France would ere this have resigned herself, as the
+ two provinces have done, to the solution imposed by the war of
+ 1870. It is England and English ambition that beget the state
+ of mind responsible for the enormous growth of armaments that
+ now over-shadows continental civilization. Humanity, hemmed in
+ in Central Europe by a forest of bayonets and debarred all
+ egress to the light of a larger world by a forbidding circle of
+ dreadnoughts, is called to peace conferences and arbitration
+ treaties by the very power whose fundamental maxim of rule
+ ensures war as the normal outlook for every growing nation of
+ the Old World.</p>
+
+ <p>If Europe would not strangle herself with her own hands she
+ must strangle the sea serpent whose coils enfold her
+ shores.</p>
+
+ <p>Inspect the foundation of European armaments where we will,
+ and we shall find that the master builder is he who fashioned
+ the British Empire. It is that empire, its claim to universal
+ right of pre-emption to every zone and region washed by the
+ waves and useful and necessary for the expansion of the white
+ races, and its assertion of a right to control at will all the
+ seas of all the world that drives the peoples of Europe into
+ armed camps. The policy <span class="pagenum"><a name="page38"
+ id="page38"></a>[pg 38]</span> of the Boer War is being
+ tried on a vaster scale against Europe. Just as England beat
+ the Boers by concentration camps and not by arms, by money
+ and not by men, so she seeks to-day to erect an armourplate
+ barrier around the one European people she fears to meet in
+ the field, and to turn all Central Europe into a vast
+ concentration camp. By use of the longest purse she has
+ already carried this barrier well towards completion. One
+ gap remains, and it is to make sure that this opening, too,
+ shall be closed that she now directs all the force of her
+ efforts. Here the longest purse is of less avail, so England
+ draws upon another armoury. She appeals to the longest
+ tongue in history&mdash;the longest and something else.</p>
+
+ <p>In order to make sure the encompassing of Europe with a
+ girdle of steel it is necessary to circle the United States
+ with a girdle of lies. With America true to the great policy of
+ her great founder, an America, "the friend of all powers but
+ the ally of none," English designs against European
+ civilization must in the end fail. Those plans can succeed only
+ by active American support, and to secure this is now the
+ supreme task and aim of British stealth and skill. Every tool
+ of her diplomacy, polished and unpolished, from the trained
+ envoy to the boy scout and the minor poet has been tried in
+ turn. The pulpit, the bar, the press; the society hostess, the
+ Cabinet Minister and the Cabinet Minister's wife, the
+ ex-Cabinet Minister and the Royal Family itself, and last, but
+ not least, even "Irish nationality"&mdash;all have been
+ pilgrims to that shrine; and each has been carefully primed,
+ loaded, well aimed, and then turned full on the weak spots in
+ the armour of republican simplicity. To the success of these
+ resources of panic the falsification of history becomes
+ essential and the vilification of the most peace-loving people
+ of Europe. The past relations of England with the United States
+ are to be blotted out, and the American people who are by blood
+ so largely Germanic, are to be entrapped into an attitude of
+ suspicion, hostility and resentment against the country and
+ race from whom they have received nothing but good. Germany is
+ represented as the enemy, not to England's indefensible claim
+ to own the seas, but to American ideals on the American
+ continent. Just as the Teuton has become the "enemy of
+ civilization" in the Old World because he alone has power,
+ strength of mind, and force of purpose to seriously dispute the
+ British hegemony of the seas, so he is assiduously represented
+ as the only threat to American hegemony of the New World.</p>
+
+ <p>This, the key note of the attack on Germany, is sounded from
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page39"
+ id="page39"></a>[pg 39]</span> every corner of the British
+ Empire, wherever the Imperial editor, resting on the labours
+ of the lash he wields against the coloured toilers in mine
+ and camp, directs his eyes from the bent forms of these
+ indentured slaves of dividend to the erect and stalwart
+ frames of the new Goths who threaten the whole framework of
+ Imperial dividend from across the North Sea. From the
+ <i>Times</i> to the obscurest news-sheet of the remotest
+ corner of the British Dominions the word has gone forth.</p>
+
+ <p>The Monroe Doctrine, palladium of the Anglo-Saxon world
+ empire, is imperilled by German ambitions, and were it not for
+ the British fleet, America would be lost to the Americans.
+ Wherever Englishmen are gathered to-day their journals,
+ appealing possibly to only a handful of readers, assert that
+ the function of the British fleet is to exclude the European
+ States, with Germany at their head, from South America, not
+ because in itself that is a right and worthy end to pursue, but
+ because that continent is earmarked for future exploitation and
+ control by their "kinsmen" of the United States, and they need
+ the support of those "kinsmen" in their battle against
+ Germany.</p>
+
+ <p>I need quote but a single utterance from the mass of
+ seditious libels of this character before me to show how
+ widespread is the propaganda of falsehood and how sustained is
+ the effort being made to poison the American mind against the
+ only people in Europe England genuinely fears, and therefore
+ wholeheartedly hates.</p>
+
+ <p>The <i>Natal Mercury</i> for instance, a paper written for
+ the little town of Durban and appealing to a population of only
+ some 30,000 whites, in a recent issue (March, 1913), devoted a
+ leader to the approaching "Peace Centennial" of 1914, to be
+ held in commemoration of the signing of the Treaty of Ghent,
+ which ended the second war between Great Britain and the
+ American people in 1814.</p>
+
+ <p>"After all, blood is thicker than water," quotes the Natal
+ journal with satisfaction, and after pointing out some latter
+ day indications of rapprochement between England and the United
+ States, it goes on to proclaim the chief function of the
+ British navy and the claim thereby established on the goodwill
+ of America.</p>
+
+ <p>"We make mention of them because such incidents are likely
+ to repeat themselves more and more frequently in that
+ competition for naval supremacy in Europe which compels the
+ United States to put her own fleets into working order and to
+ join in the work that England has hitherto been obliged to
+ perform
+ <i>unaided</i>.</p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page40"
+ id="page40"></a>[pg 40]</span>
+
+ <p>"It is England that polices the Seven Seas, and America has
+ reaped no small benefits from the <i>self-imposed task</i>, an
+ aspect of the matter to which every thoughtful American is
+ alive. There is a real and hearty recognition in the New World
+ of the <i>silent barrier</i> that Great Britain has set up to
+ what might become something more than a dream of expansion into
+ South America on the part of <i>one</i> potent European State.
+ It is, indeed, hardly too much to say that the maintenance of
+ the Monroe Doctrine is at the present moment almost as fully
+ guaranteed by England as it is by the country that enunciated
+ the policy and is the chief gainer by it. It is a case in which
+ a <i>silent understanding</i> is of far greater value than a
+ formal compact that 'would serve as a target for casual
+ discontent on this side or that'."</p>
+
+ <p>The article concludes by proclaiming "the precious
+ permanence of an unseen bond" and the lofty and enduring worth
+ of "good faith mutually acknowledged and the ultimate
+ solidarity of mutual interests rightly perceived." "The
+ ultimate solidarity" aimed at by those who direct these
+ world-wide pronouncements is not one of mere sterile friendship
+ between the American and the British peoples. American
+ friendship with England is only worth having when it can be
+ translated by world acts into enmity against Germany.</p>
+
+ <p>It might truly be said of the British Empire to-day that
+ where two or three are gathered together, there hatred of
+ Germany shall be in the midst of them. Turn where he will, from
+ the Colonies to England, from England to her fleet, from the
+ seas to the air, the Englishman lives and moves and has his
+ being in an atmosphere not of love but of hatred. And this too,
+ a hatred, fear, and jealousy of a people who have never injured
+ him, who have never warred upon him, and whose sole crime is
+ that they are highly efficient rivals in the peaceful rivalry
+ of commerce, navigation, and science.</p>
+
+ <p>We are told, for instance, in one of the popular London
+ magazines for January, 1913, in an article upon the financial
+ grievances of the British navy that were it not for Germany
+ there would be to-day another Spithead. "Across the North Sea
+ is a nation that some fifty years ago was so afraid of the
+ British navy that it panicked itself into building an iron-clad
+ fleet.</p>
+
+ <p>"To-day, as the second naval power, its menace is too great
+ for any up-to-date Spithead mutiny to come off. But the pay
+ question was so acute that it is possibly only the Germans and
+ their 'menace' that saved us from the trouble."
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page41"
+ id="page41"></a>[pg 41]</span> But while the "patriotism" of
+ the "lower-deck" may have been sufficiently stout to avert
+ this peril, the patriotism of the "quarter-deck" is giving
+ us a specimen of its quality that certainly could not be
+ exhibited in any other country in the world.</p>
+
+ <p>Even as I write I read in the "British Review" how Admiral
+ Sir Percy Scott attacks Admiral Lord Charles Beresford, dubs
+ him the "laughing-stock of the fleet," accuses him of
+ publishing in his book <i>The Betrayal</i> a series of
+ "deliberate falsehoods," and concludes by saying that the
+ gallant Admiral is "not a seaman."</p>
+
+ <p>And it is a fleet commanded by such Admirals as these that
+ is to sweep the German navy from the seas!</p>
+
+ <p>During the Crimean war the allied British and French navies
+ distinguished themselves by their signal failure to effect the
+ reduction of such minor fortresses as Sveaborg, Helsingfors,
+ and the fortified lighthouses upon the Gulf of Finland. Their
+ respective Admirals fired their severest broadsides into each
+ other, and the bombardment of the forts was silenced by the
+ smart interchange of nautical civilities between the two
+ flagships. Napoleon III, who sought an explanation of this
+ failure of his fleet, was given a reply that I cannot refrain
+ from recommending to the British Admiralty to-day. "Well,
+ Sire," replied the French diplomatist, who knew the
+ circumstances, "both the Admirals were old women, but ours was
+ at least a lady." If British Admirals cannot put to sea without
+ incurring this risk, they might, at least, take the gunboat
+ woman with them to prescribe the courtesies of naval
+ debate.</p>
+
+ <p>That England to-day loves America, no one who goes to the
+ private opinions of Englishmen, instead of to their public
+ utterances, or the interested eulogies of their press, can for
+ a moment believe.</p>
+
+ <p>The old dislike is there, the old supercilious contempt for
+ the "Yankee" and all his ways. "God's Englishman" no more loves
+ an American citizen now than in 1846 when he seriously
+ contemplated an invasion of the United States, and the raising
+ of the negro-slave population against his "Anglo-Saxon
+ kinsmen."</p>
+
+ <p>To-day, when we hear so much of the Anglo-Saxon Alliance it
+ may be well to revert to that page of history. For it will show
+ us that if a British premier to-day can speak as Mr. Asquith
+ did on December 16th, 1912, in his reference to the late
+ American Ambassador as "a great American and a kinsman," one
+ "sprung from a common race, speaking our own language, sharing
+ with us by birth as by inheritance not a few of our most
+ cherished traditions <span class="pagenum"><a name="page42"
+ id="page42"></a>[pg 42]</span> and participating when he
+ comes here by what I may describe as <i>his natural right in
+ our domestic interests and celebrations</i>," then this
+ new-found kinship takes its birth not in a sense of common
+ race, indeed, but in a very common fear of Germany.</p>
+
+ <p>In the year 1846, the British army was engaged in robbing
+ the Irish people of their harvest in order that the work of the
+ famine should be complete and that the then too great
+ population of Ireland should be reduced within the limits "law
+ and order" prescribed, either by starvation or flight to
+ America.</p>
+
+ <p>Fleeing in hundreds and thousands from the rule of one who
+ claimed to be their Sovereign, expelled in a multitude
+ exceeding the Moors of Spain, whom a Spanish king shipped
+ across the seas with equal pious intent, the fugitive Irish
+ Nation found friendship, hope, and homes in the great Celtic
+ Republic of the West. All that was denied to them in their own
+ ancient land they found in a new Ireland growing up across the
+ Atlantic.</p>
+
+ <p>The hate of England pursued them here and those who dared to
+ give help and shelter. The United States were opening wide
+ their arms to receive the stream of Irish fugitives and were
+ saying very harsh things of England's infamous rule in Ireland.
+ This could not be brooked. England in those days had not
+ invented the Anglo-Saxon theory of mankind, and a united
+ Germany had not then been born to vex the ineptitude of her
+ statesmen or to profit from the shortcomings of her
+ tradesmen.</p>
+
+ <p>So the greatest Ministers of Queen Victoria seriously
+ contemplated war with America and naturally looked around for
+ some one else to do the fighting. The Duke of Wellington hoped
+ that France might be played on, just as in a later day a later
+ Minister seeks to play France in a similar rôle against a later
+ adversary.<a id="footnotetag3"
+ name="footnotetag3"></a><a href="#footnote3"><sup>3</sup></a></p>
+
+ <p>The Mexicans, too, might be induced to invade the Texan
+ frontier. But a greater infamy than this was seriously planned.
+ Again it is an Irishman who tells the story and shows us how
+ dearly the English loved their trans-Atlantic "kinsmen" when
+ there was no German menace to threaten nearer home.</p>
+
+ <p>Writing from Carlsruhe, on January 26th, 1846, to his
+ friend, Alexander Spencer, in Dublin, Charles Lever said: "As
+ to the war the Duke<a id="footnotetag4"
+ name="footnotetag4"></a><a href="#footnote4"><sup>4</sup></a>
+ says he could smash the Yankees, and ought to do so while
+ France in her present humour and Mexico opens the road to
+ invasion from the South&mdash;not to speak of the terrible
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page43"
+ id="page43"></a>[pg 43]</span> threat that Napier uttered,
+ that with two regiments of infantry and a field battery he'd
+ <i>raise the slave population in the United States</i>."</p>
+
+ <p>The infamy of this suggestion cannot be surpassed. The
+ brilliant soldier who conceived it was the chivalrous
+ Englishman who conquered Scinde, one of the chief glories of
+ the Britannic hierarchy of soldier-saints.</p>
+
+ <p>The Government planning it was that of the late Queen
+ Victoria with the Duke of Wellington's advice, and the people
+ against whom the black-slave millions were to be loosed were
+ the "kith and kin" of those meditating this atrocious form of
+ massacre. Truly, as an old Irish proverb, old even in the days
+ of Henry VIII. put it, "the pride of France, the <i>treason of
+ England</i> and the warre of Ireland shall never have end."</p>
+
+ <p>As a latter day witness of that treason, one who had
+ suffered it from birth to the prison cell, a dead Irishman
+ speaks to us from the grave. Michael Davitt in a letter to
+ Morrison Davidson on August 2701, 1902, thus summed up in final
+ words what every Irishman feels in his heart:</p>
+
+ <p>"The idea of being ruled by Englishmen is to me the chief
+ agony of existence. They are a nation without faith, truth or
+ conscience enveloped in a panoplied pharisaism and an incurable
+ hypocrisy. Their moral appetite is fed on falsehood. They
+ profess Christianity and believe only in Mammon. They talk of
+ liberty while ruling India and Ireland against the principles
+ of a constitution, professed as a political faith, but
+ prostituted to the interests of class and landlord rule."</p>
+
+ <p>Have Englishmen in less than two generations substituted
+ love for the hate that Napier, Wellington, and the Queen's
+ Ministers felt and expressed in 1846 for the people of the
+ United States? Is it love to-day for America or fear of someone
+ else that impels to the "Arbitration Treaties" and the
+ celebration of the "Hundred years of Peace?"</p>
+
+ <p>The Anglo-American "Peace Movement" was to be but the first
+ stage in an "Anglo-Saxon Alliance," intended to limit and
+ restrict all further world changes, outside of certain
+ prescribed continental limits, to these two peoples alone on
+ the basis of a new "Holy Alliance," whose motto should be
+ <i>Beati possidentes</i>.</p>
+
+ <p>Since England and America, either in fact or by reservation
+ enjoy almost all the desirable regions of the earth, why not
+ bring <span class="pagenum"><a name="page44"
+ id="page44"></a>[pg 44]</span> about a universal agreement
+ to keep everyone in his right place, to stay "just as we
+ are," and to kindly refer all possible differences to an
+ "International Tribunal?"</p>
+
+ <p>Once again the British Bible was thrown into the scale, and
+ the unrighteousness of Germany, who did not see her way to join
+ in the psalm singing, was exposed in a spirit of bitter
+ resignation and castigated with an appropriate selection of
+ texts. The Hague Tribunal would be so much nicer than a war of
+ armaments! With no reckless rivalries and military expenditure
+ there could be no question of the future of mankind.</p>
+
+ <p>An idyllic peace would settle down upon the nations,
+ contentedly possessing each in its own share of the good things
+ of life, and no questionable ambitions would be allowed to
+ disturb the buying and selling of the smaller and weaker
+ peoples. The sincerity of the wish for universal arbitration
+ can be best shown by England, when she, or any of the Powers to
+ whom she appeals, will consent to submit the claim of one of
+ the minor peoples she or they hold in subjection to the Hague
+ Tribunal. Let France submit Madagascar and Siam, or her latest
+ victim, Morocco, to the franchise of the Court. Let Russia
+ agree to Poland or Finland seeking the verdict of this bench of
+ appeal. Let England plead her case before the same high moral
+ tribunal and allow Ireland, Egypt, or India to have the law of
+ her. Then, and not until then, the world of little States and
+ beaten peoples may begin to believe that the Peace Crusade has
+ some foundations in honour and honesty&mdash;but not till
+ then.</p>
+
+ <p>Germany has had the straightforwardness and manliness to
+ protest that she is still able to do her own shooting and that
+ what she holds she will keep, by force if need be, and what she
+ wants she will, in her own sure time, take, and by force too,
+ if need be. Of the two cults the latter is the simpler,
+ sincerer, and certainly the less dishonest.</p>
+
+ <p>Irish-American linked with German-American keen-sighted
+ hostility did the rest. The rivalry of Mr. Roosevelt and Mr.
+ Taft aided, and the effort (for the time at any rate) has been
+ wrecked, thereby plunging England into a further paroxysm of
+ religious despondency and grave concern for German morals. This
+ mood eventuated in Lord Haldane's "week end" trip to Berlin.
+ The voice was the voice of Jacob, in spite of the hand of Esau.
+ Mr. Churchill at Glasgow, showed the real hand and the mess of
+ pottage so amiably offered at Berlin bought no German
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page45"
+ id="page45"></a>[pg 45]</span> birthright. The Kreuz Zeitung
+ rightly summed up the situation by pointing out that "Mr.
+ Churchill's testimony can now be advanced as showing that
+ the will of England alone comes in question as the exponent
+ of peace, and that England for many years past has
+ consciously assumed the rôle of an absolute and perfectly
+ arbitrary judge of war and peace. It seems to us all the
+ more significant that Mr. Churchill proposes also in the
+ future to control, with the help of the strong navies of the
+ Dominions, the trade and naval movements of all the Powers
+ on the face of the earth&mdash;that is to say, his aim is to
+ secure a world monopoly for England." There has never been
+ any other thought in the English mind. As I said in Part I.
+ of this paper, "British interests are first the control of
+ all the seas of all the world in full military and
+ commercial control. If this be not challenged peace is
+ permitted; to dispute it seriously means war."</p>
+
+ <p>Germany is driven by necessity to dispute it seriously and
+ to overcome it. She cannot get out to play her part in world
+ life, <i>nay, she cannot hope to ultimately maintain herself at
+ home</i> until that battle has been fought and won.</p>
+
+ <p>Arrangements with England, detentes, understandings, call
+ them what you will, are merely parleys before the fight. The
+ assault must be delivered, the fortress carried, or else
+ Germany, and with her Europe, must resign the mission of the
+ white races and hand over the government and future of the
+ world to one chosen people.</p>
+
+ <p>Europe reproduces herself yearly at the present time at the
+ rate of about five million souls. Some three-fifths of the
+ number are to-day absorbed into the life of the Continent, the
+ balance go abroad and principally to North America, to swell
+ the English-speaking world. Germany controls about one-fifth of
+ Europe's natural annual increase, and realising that emigration
+ to-day means only to lose her people and build up her
+ antagonist's strength, she has for years now striven to keep
+ her people within German limits, and hitherto with successful
+ results far in excess of any achieved by other European States.
+ But the limit must be reached, and that before many years are
+ past. Where is Germany to find the suitable region, both on a
+ scale and under conditions of climate, health and soil that a
+ people of say 90,000,000 hemmed in a territory little larger
+ than France, will find commensurate to their needs? No European
+ people is in such plight.</p>
+
+ <p>Russia has the immense and healthy world of Siberia into
+ which to overflow. France, far from needing outlets, increases
+ not at all, <span class="pagenum"><a name="page46"
+ id="page46"></a>[pg 46]</span> and during 1911 showed an
+ excess of close on 40,000 deaths over births. For France the
+ day of greatness is past. A French Empire, in any other
+ sense than the Roman one of commercial and military
+ exploitation of occupied territories and subjugated peoples
+ is gone forever.</p>
+
+ <p>France has no blood to give except in war. French blood will
+ not colonize even the Mediterranean littoral. Italy is faced
+ with something of the same problem as Germany, but to a lesser
+ extent. Her surplus population already finds a considerable
+ outlet in Argentina and South Brazil, among peoples,
+ institutions, and language largely approximating to those left
+ behind. While Italy has, indeed need of a world policy as well
+ as Germany, her ability to sustain a great part abroad cannot
+ be compared to that of the Teutonic people. Her claim is not so
+ urgent; her need not so insistent, her might inadequate.</p>
+
+ <p>The honesty and integrity of the German mind, the strength
+ of the German intellect, the skill of the German hand and
+ brain, and justice and vigour of German law, the intensity of
+ German culture, science, education and social development,
+ these need a great and healthy field for their beneficial
+ display, and the world needs these things more than it needs
+ the British mastery of the seas. The world of European life
+ needs to-day, as it needed in the days of a decadent Roman
+ Empire, the coming of another Goth, the coming of the Teuton.
+ The interposing island in the North Sea alone intervenes. How
+ to surmount that obstacle, how to win the freedom of the "Seven
+ Seas" for Europe must be the supreme issue for Germany.</p>
+
+ <p>If she falls she is doomed to sterility. The supreme test of
+ German genius, of German daring, of German discipline and
+ imagination lies there.</p>
+
+ <p>Where Louis XIV., the Directory, and Napoleon failed, will
+ the heirs of Karl the Great see clearly?</p>
+
+ <p>And then, when that great hour has struck, will Germany,
+ will Europe, produce the statesman soldier who shall see that
+ the key to ocean freedom lies in that island beyond an island,
+ whose very existence Europe has forgotten?</p>
+
+ <p>Till that key is out from the Pirate's girdle, Germany may
+ win a hundred "Austerlitzes" on the Vistula, the Dnieper, the
+ Loire, but until she restores that key to Europe, to paraphrase
+ Pitt, she may "roll up that map of the world; it will not be
+ wanted these fifty years."</p>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote3"
+ name="footnote3"></a><b>Footnote 3:</b>
+ <a href="#footnotetag3">(return)</a>
+
+ <p>Sir Edward Grey and the <i>Entente Cordiale</i>.</p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote4"
+ name="footnote4"></a><b>Footnote 4:</b>
+ <a href="#footnotetag4">(return)</a>
+
+ <p>The Duke of Wellington: the report was brought to Lever
+ by the Marquis of Douro, the Duke's heir.</p>
+ </blockquote><span class="pagenum"><a name="page47"
+ id="page47"></a>[pg 47]</span>
+
+ <h3 class="sc">Chapter V</h3>
+
+ <h2>THE PROBLEM OF THE NEAR WEST</h2>
+
+ <p>The foregoing reflections and the arguments drawn from them
+ were penned before the outbreak of the war between Turkey and
+ the Balkan Allies.</p>
+
+ <p>That war is still undecided as I write (March 1913), but
+ whatever its precise outcome may be, it is clear that the doom
+ of Turkey as a great power is sealed, and that the
+ complications of the Near East will, in future, assume an
+ entirely fresh aspect. Hitherto, there was only the possibility
+ that Germany might find at least a commercial and financial
+ outlet in the Asiatic dominions of the Sultan. There was even
+ the possibility, had Turkey held together, that England, to
+ mitigate pressure elsewhere, would have conceded to an
+ expanding and insistent Germany, a friendly interest and
+ control in Asia Minor. It is true that the greatest possible
+ development, and under the most favoured conditions of German
+ interests in that region, could not have met the needs or
+ satisfied the ever increasing necessities of Teutonic growth;
+ but at least it would have offered a safety valve, and could
+ have involved preoccupations likely to deflect the German
+ vision, for a time, from the true path to greatness, the
+ Western highways of the sea.</p>
+
+ <p>An occupation or colonisation of the Near East by the
+ Germanic peoples could never have been a possible solution
+ under any circumstances of the problem that faces German
+ statemanship. As well talk of reviving the Frank Kingdom of
+ Jerusalem.</p>
+
+ <p>The occupation by the fair-haired peoples of the Baltic and
+ North Seas of the lands of Turk and Tartar, of Syrian and Jew,
+ of Armenian and Mesopotamian, was never a practical suggestion
+ or one to be seriously contemplated. "East is East and West is
+ West," sings the poet of Empire, and Englishmen cannot complain
+ if the greatest of Western peoples, adopting the singer, should
+ apply the dogma to themselves. Germany, indeed, might have
+ looked for a considerable measure of commercial dominance in
+ the Near East, possibly for a commercial protectorate such as
+ France applies to Tunis and Algeria and hopes to apply to
+ morocco, or such as England imposes on Egypt, and this
+ commercial predominance could have conferred considerable
+ profits on Rhenish industries and benefited Saxon
+ industrialism, but it could never have done more than this. A
+ colonisation of the realms of Bajazet and Saladin by the
+ fair-skinned peoples of the North, or the planting of Teutonic
+ institutions in the valley of Damascus, even with the
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page48"
+ id="page48"></a>[pg 48]</span> benevolent neutrality of
+ England, is a far wider dream (and one surely no German
+ statesman ever entertained) than a German challenge to the
+ sea supremacy of England.</p>
+
+ <p>The trend of civilized man in all great movements since
+ modern civilization began, has been from East to West, not from
+ West to East. The tide of the peoples moved by some mysterious
+ impulse from the dawn of European expansion has been towards
+ the setting sun. The few movements that have taken place in the
+ contrary direction have but emphasized the universality of this
+ rule, from the days of the overthrow of Rome, if we seek no
+ earlier date. The Crusades furnished, doubtless, the classic
+ example. The later contrary instance, that of Russia towards
+ Siberia, scarcely, if at all affects the argument, for there
+ the Russian overthrow is filling up Northern rather than
+ Eastern lands, and the movement involves to the Russian
+ emigrant no change of climate, soil, law, language or
+ environment while that emigrant himself belongs, perhaps, as
+ much to Asia as to Europe.</p>
+
+ <p>But whatever value to German development the possible
+ chances of expansion in the Near East may have offered before
+ the present Balkan war, those chances to-day, as the result of
+ that war, scarcely exist. It is probably the perception of this
+ outcome of the victory of the Slav States that has influenced
+ and accelerated the characteristic change of English public
+ opinion that has accompanied with shouts of derision the dying
+ agonies of the Turk. "In matters of mind," as a recent English
+ writer says in the <i>Saturday Review</i>, "the national
+ sporting instinct does not exist. The English public invariably
+ backs the winner." And just as the English public invariably
+ backs the winner, British policy invariably backs the
+ anti-German, or supposedly anti-German side in all world
+ issues. "What 1912 seems to have effected is a vast
+ aggrandizement of the Slavonic races in their secular struggle
+ against the Teutonic races. Even a local and temporary triumph
+ of Austria over Servia cannot conceal the fact that henceforth
+ the way south-east to the Black Sea and the Aegean Sea is
+ barred to the Germans."<a id="footnotetag5"
+ name="footnotetag5"></a><a href="#footnote5"><sup>5</sup></a></p>
+
+ <p>That is the outstanding fact that British public opinion
+ perceives with growing pleasure from the break up of
+ Turkey.</p>
+
+ <p>No matter where the dispute or what the purpose of conflict
+ may be, the supreme issue for England is "Where is
+ Germany?"</p>
+
+ <p>Against that side the whole weight of Great Britain will,
+ openly or covertly, be thrown. German expansion in the Near
+ East has <span class="pagenum"><a name="page49"
+ id="page49"></a>[pg 49]</span> gone by the board, and in its
+ place the development of Greek naval strength in the
+ Mediterranean, to take its stand by the Triple Entente,
+ comes to be jauntily considered, while the solid wedge of a
+ Slav Empire or Federation, commanding in the near future
+ 2,000,000 of armed men is agreeably seen to be driven across
+ South-eastern Europe between Austro-German efforts and the
+ fallow lands of Asia Minor. These latter can safely be left
+ in Turkish hands yet a while longer, until the day comes for
+ their partition into "spheres of influence," just as Persia
+ and parts of China are to-day being apportioned between
+ Russia and England. This happy consummation, moreover, has
+ fallen from heaven, and Turkey is being cut up for the
+ further extension of British interests clearly by the act of
+ God.</p>
+
+ <p>The victory of the Balkan States becomes another triumph for
+ the British Bible; it is the victory of righteousness over
+ wrong-doing.</p>
+
+ <p>The true virtue of the Balkan "Christians" lies in the
+ possibility of their being moulded into an anti-German factor
+ of great weight in the European conflict, clearly impending,
+ and in their offering a fresh obstacle, it is hoped, to German
+ world policy.</p>
+
+ <p>Let us first inspect the moral argument on the lips of these
+ professors. We are assured, by it, that the claim of the Balkan
+ Allies to expel Turkey from Europe rests upon a just and
+ historic basis.</p>
+
+ <p>Briefly stated it is that the Turk has held his European
+ provinces by a right of conquest only. What the sword took, die
+ sword may take away. When the sword was struck from the
+ Ottoman's grasp his right to anything it had given him fell
+ too. Thus Adrianople, a city he has held for over five hundred
+ years, must be given up to a new conqueror who never owned it
+ in the past and who certainly has far less moral claim to be
+ there to-day than the descendants of Selim's soldiers.</p>
+
+ <p>But the moral argument brings strange revenges.</p>
+
+ <p>If Turkey has no right to Adrianople, to Thrace&mdash;"right
+ of sword to be shattered by the sword"&mdash;what right has
+ England to Ireland, to Dublin, to Cork? She holds Ireland by
+ exactly the same title as that by which Turkey has hitherto
+ held Macedonia, Thrace, Salonika&mdash;a right of invasion, of
+ seizure, of demoralization. If Turkey's rights, nearly six
+ hundred years old, can be shattered in a day by one successful
+ campaign, and if the powers of Europe can insist, with justice,
+ that this successful sword shall outweigh the occupation of
+ centuries, then, indeed, have the Powers, led by
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page50"
+ id="page50"></a>[pg 50]</span> England, furnished a
+ precedent in the Near East which the victor in the next
+ great struggle should not be slow to apply to the Near West,
+ when a captive Ireland shall be rescued from the hands of a
+ conqueror whose tide is no better, indeed somewhat worse
+ than that of Turkey to Macedonia. And when the day of defeat
+ shall strike for the Turkey of the Near West, then shall an
+ assembled Europe remember the arguments of 1912-13 and a
+ freed Ireland shall be justified on the very grounds England
+ to-day has been the first to advance against a defeated
+ Turkey.</p>
+
+ <p>"But the Turk is an Asiatic," say the English Bashaws: to
+ which indeed, Europe might aptly reply, "and are the English
+ European or non-European?" The moral argument, and the "Asiatic
+ argument" are strange texts for the desecrater of Christian
+ Ireland to appeal to against that continent which she would
+ fain hem in with Malayan and Indian battleships, and Canadian
+ and Australasian dreadnoughts. Not the moral argument, but the
+ anti-German argument, furnishes the real ground for the changed
+ British attitude in the present war.</p>
+
+ <p>The moral failure of Turkey, her inability to govern her
+ Christian peoples is only the pretext: but just as the moral
+ argument brings its strange revenges and shows an Ireland that
+ has suffered all that Macedonia has suffered, and this at the
+ hands of Christians, and not of Moslems, so the triumph of the
+ Balkan Allies, far from benefiting Britain, must, in the end,
+ react to her detriment.</p>
+
+ <p>The present apparent injury to German interests by the
+ closing of South-eastern Europe, and the road to Asia Minor,
+ will inevitably force Germany to still more resolutely face the
+ problem of opening the Western seaways. To think otherwise is
+ to believe that Germany will accept a quite impossible position
+ tamely and without a struggle.</p>
+
+ <p>Hemmed in by Russia on the East and the new Southern Slav
+ States on the South-east, with a vengeful France being incited
+ on her Western frontier to fresh dreams of conquest, Germany
+ sees England preparing still mightier armaments to hold and
+ close the seaways of the world. The Canadian naval vote, the
+ Malayan "gift" of a battleship come as fresh rivets in the
+ chain forged for the perpetual binding of the seas, or it might
+ more truly be said, for the perpetual binding of the hands of
+ die German people.</p>
+
+ <p>We read in a recent London periodical how these latest naval
+ developments portend the coming of the day when "the Imperial
+ navy shall keep the peace of the seas as a policeman does the
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page51"
+ id="page51"></a>[pg 51]</span> peace of the streets. The
+ time is coming when a naval war (except by England), will be
+ as relentlessly suppressed as piracy on the high seas."
+ (<i>Review of Reviews</i>, December, 1912.)</p>
+
+ <p>The naïve arrogance of this utterance is characteristically
+ English. It is, after all, but the journalistic echo of the
+ Churchill Glasgow speech, and the fullest justification of the
+ criticism of the Kreuz Zeitung already quoted. It does not
+ stand alone; it could be paralleled in the columns of any
+ English paper&mdash;Liberal as much as Conservative&mdash;every
+ day in the week. Nothing is clearer than that no Englishman can
+ think of other nations save in terms of permanent inferiority.
+ Thus, for instance, in a November (1912) issue of the <i>Daily
+ News</i> we find a representative Englishman (Sir R.
+ Edgecumbe), addressing that Liberal journal in words that no
+ one but an Englishman would dream of giving public utterance
+ to. Sir R. Edgecumbe deprecated a statement that had gone round
+ to the effect that the Malayan battleship was not a free gift
+ of the toiling Tamils, Japanese, Chinese, and other rubber
+ workers who make up, with a few Malays, the population of that
+ peninsula, but was really the fruit of an arbitrary tax imposed
+ upon these humble, but indifferent Asiatics by their English
+ administration.</p>
+
+ <p>Far from being indifferent, Sir R. Edgecumbe asserted these
+ poor workers nourished a reverence "bordering on veneration"
+ for the Englishman. "This is shown in a curious way by their
+ refusing to call any European 'a white man' save the Englishman
+ alone. The German trader, the Italian and Frenchman all are, in
+ their speech coloured men."</p>
+
+ <p>After this appreciation of themselves the English cannot
+ object to the present writer's view that they are
+ non-Europeans.</p>
+
+ <p>Thus while the Eastern question is being settled while I
+ write, by the expulsion of the Turk from Europe, England, who
+ leads the cry in the name of Europe, is preparing the exclusion
+ of Europe from all world affairs that can be dominated by sea
+ power. Lands and peoples held for centuries by Turkey by a
+ right not less moral than that by which England has held
+ Ireland, are being forcibly restored to Europe. So be it.</p>
+
+ <p>With settlement of the Eastern question by this act of
+ restitution Europe must inevitably gain the clarity of vision
+ to deal with the Western question by a similar act of
+ restoration.</p>
+
+ <p>The Western Macedonia must go the way of its Eastern fellow.
+ Like those of the Orient, the problems of the Occident for
+ Europe are twofold&mdash;a near Western and a far Western
+ question. Ireland, <span class="pagenum"><a name="page52"
+ id="page52"></a>[pg 52]</span> keeper of the seas,
+ constitutes for Europe the near Western question.</p>
+
+ <p>The freedom of those seas and their opening to all European
+ effort alike on equal terms constitutes the far Western
+ question. But in both cases the antagonist of Europe, the
+ non-European power is the same. The challenge of Europe must be
+ to England, and the champion of Europe must be and can be only
+ Germany. No other European people has the power, the strength
+ of mind, of purpose and of arm to accomplish the great act of
+ deliverance. Europe too long blinded to her own vital interests
+ while disunited, must now, under the guidance of a united
+ Germany, resolutely face the problem of freeing the seas.</p>
+
+ <p><i>That war of the seas is inevitable</i>. It may be fought
+ on a continent; it may be waged in the air&mdash;it must be
+ settled on the seas and it must mean either the freeing of
+ those seas or the permanent exclusion of Europeans from the
+ affairs of the world. It means for Europe the future, the very
+ existence of European civilization as opposed to the
+ Anglo-Saxon world domination. In that war, Germany will stand
+ not alone as the champion of Europe, she will fight for the
+ freedom of the world.</p>
+
+ <p>As an Irishman I have no fear of the result to Ireland of a
+ German triumph. I pray for it; for with the coming of that day
+ the "Irish question" so dear to British politicians, becomes a
+ European, a world question.</p>
+
+ <p>With the humbling of Great Britain and the destruction of
+ her sea ownership, European civilization assumes a new stature,
+ and Ireland, oldest and yet youngest of the European peoples,
+ shall enter into free partnership with the civilization,
+ culture, and prosperity that that act of liberation shall bring
+ to mankind.</p>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote5"
+ name="footnote5"></a><b>Footnote 5:</b>
+ <a href="#footnotetag5">(return)</a>
+
+ <p>Mr. Frederick Harrison in the <i>English Review</i>,
+ Jan., 1913.</p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <h3 class="sc">Chapter VI</h3>
+
+ <h2>THE DUTY OF CHRISTENDOM</h2>
+
+ <p>It is only the truth that wounds. An Irishman to-day in
+ dealing with Englishmen is forced, if he speak truly, to wound.
+ That is why so many Irishmen do not speak the truth. The
+ Irishman, whether he be a peasant, a farm labourer, however low
+ in the scale of Anglicization he may have sunk, is still in
+ imagination, if not always in manner, a gentleman.
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page53"
+ id="page53"></a>[pg 53]</span> The Englishman is a gentleman
+ by chance, by force of circumstances, by luck of birth, or
+ some rare opportunity of early fellowship. The Irishman is a
+ gentleman by instinct and shrinks from wounding the feelings
+ of another man and particularly of the man who has wounded
+ him. He scorns to take it out of him that way. That is why
+ the task of misgoverning him has been so easy and has come
+ so naturally to the Englishman. One of the chief grievances
+ of the Irishman in the middle ages was that the man who
+ robbed him was such a boor. Insult was added to injury in
+ that the oppressor was no knight in shining armour, but a
+ very churl of men; to the courteous and cultured Irishman a
+ "bodach Sassenach," a man of low blood, of low cunning,
+ caring only for the things of the body, with no veneration
+ for the things of the spirit&mdash;with, in fine, no music
+ in his soul. The things that the Irishman loved he could not
+ conceive of. Without tradition or history himself he could
+ not comprehend the passionate attachment of the Irishman to
+ both, and he proceeded to wipe both out, so far as in him
+ lay, from off the map of Ireland and from out the Irishman's
+ consciousness.</p>
+
+ <p>Having, as he believed, with some difficulty accomplished
+ his task, he stands to-day amazed at the result. The Irishman
+ has still a grievance&mdash;nay more, Ireland talks of
+ "wrongs." But has she not got him? What more can she want
+ except his purse? And, that too, she is now taking. In the
+ indulgence of an agreeable self-conceit which supplies for him
+ the want of imagination he sees Ireland to-day as a species of
+ "sturdy beggar," half mendicant, half pickpocket&mdash;making
+ off with the proceeds of his hard day's work. The past slips
+ from him as a dream. Has he not for years now, well, for thirty
+ years certainly, a generation, a life time, done all in his
+ power to meet the demands of this incessant country that more
+ in sorrow than in anger he will grant you, was misgoverned in
+ the past. That was its misfortune, never his fault. This is a
+ steadily recurring phase of the fixed hallucination in his
+ blood. Ireland never <i>is</i>, but only always has been cursed
+ by English rule. He himself, the Englishman of the day, is
+ always a simple, bluff, good-hearted fellow. His father if you
+ like, his grandfather very probably, misgoverned Ireland, but
+ never he himself. Why, just look at him now, his hand never out
+ of his pocket relieving the shrill cries of Irish distress.
+ There she stands, a poverty-stricken virago at his door,
+ shaking her bony fist at him, Celtic porter in her eye, the
+ most fearful apparition in history, his charwoman, shaming
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page54"
+ id="page54"></a>[pg 54]</span> him before the neighbours and
+ demanding payment for long past spring cleanings that he,
+ good soul, has forgotten all about or is quite certain were
+ settled at the time. Yes, there she stands, the Irish
+ charwoman, the old broom in her hand and preparing for one
+ last sweep that shall make the house sweet and fit for her
+ own children. And John Bull, honest, sturdy John Bull,
+ believing the house to be his, thinks that the only thing
+ between him and the woman is the matter of wages; that all
+ she wants is an extra shilling. Ireland wants but one thing
+ in the world. She wants her house to herself, and the
+ stranger out of her house.</p>
+
+ <p>While he is, in his heart, perfectly aware of this, John
+ Bull (for the reasons given by Richard Cox), is quite
+ determined that nothing shall get him out of the house.
+ "Separation is unthinkable," say English Ministers. The task of
+ Ireland is to-day what it always has been&mdash;to get the
+ stranger out of the house. It is no shame to Ireland or her
+ sons, that up to this they have failed in each attempt. Those
+ attempts are pillars of fire in her history, beacons of light
+ in the desert of sin, where the Irish Israel still wanders in
+ search of the promised land. Few of the peoples in Europe who
+ to-day make up the concert of powers, have, unaided, expelled
+ the invader who held them down, and none has been in the
+ situation of Ireland.</p>
+
+ <p>As Mr. Gladstone wrote in 1890, "can anyone say we should
+ have treated Ireland as we have done had she lain not between
+ us and the ocean, but between us and Europe?"</p>
+
+ <p>In introducing the scheme of mild Home Rule termed the
+ Councils Bill in 1907, Mr. Birrell prefaced it with the remark
+ that "separation was unthinkable&mdash;save in the event of
+ some great world cataclysm." World cataclysms up to this have
+ not reached Ireland&mdash;England intervened too well. She has
+ maintained her hold by sea power. The lonely Andromeda saw afar
+ off the rescuing Perseus, a nude figure on the coast of Spain
+ or France, but long ere his flight reached her rock-bound feet
+ she beheld him fall, bruised and mangled, and devoured by the
+ watching sea monster.</p>
+
+ <p>Had Italy been placed as Ireland is, cut off from all
+ external succour save across a sea held by a relentless jailor,
+ would she have been to-day a free people, ally of Austria on
+ terms of high equality?</p>
+
+ <p>The blood shed by the founders of modern Italy would all
+ have been shed in vain&mdash;that blood that sanctified the
+ sword of Garibaldi&mdash;had it not been for the selfish policy
+ of Louis Napoleon and <span class="pagenum"><a name="page55"
+ id="page55"></a>[pg 55]</span> the invading armies of
+ France. Italy, no more than Ireland, could have shaken
+ herself free had it not been for aid from abroad. The late
+ Queen Victoria saw clearly the parallel, and as hereditary
+ custodian of Ireland, Her Majesty protested against the
+ effort then being made to release Italy from an Austrian
+ prison, when she herself was so hard put to it to keep
+ Ireland in an English jail. Writing to her Prime Minister on
+ July 25th, 1848, Her Majesty said:&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>"The Queen must tell Lord John (Russell) what she has
+ repeatedly told Lord Palmerston, but without apparent effect,
+ that the establishment of an entente cordiale with the French
+ Republic, for the purpose of driving the Austrians out of their
+ dominions in Italy would be a disgrace to this country. That
+ the French would attach the greatest importance to it and gain
+ the greatest advantage from it, there can be no doubt of. But
+ how will England appear before the world at the moment she is
+ struggling for her supremacy in Ireland?..." and on Oct. 10th
+ following Her Majesty wrote to her uncle, the first King of the
+ Belgians (who owed his new minted crown to the Belgian people
+ depriving the Dutch Sovereign of his "lawful possessions") in
+ the following memorable words:</p>
+
+ <p>"Really it is quite immoral, with Ireland quivering in our
+ grasp, and ready to throw off her allegiance at any moment, for
+ us to force Austria to give up her lawful possessions. What
+ shall we say if Canada, Malta, etc., begin to trouble us? It
+ hurts me terribly." (Page 237, Queen Victoria's letters,
+ published by order of His Majesty, King Edward VII.)</p>
+
+ <p>It hurt Ireland much more terribly, that failure to throw
+ off the hand that held her "quivering in our grasp," so soon to
+ stretch her "a corpse upon the dissecting table."</p>
+
+ <p>Ireland has failed to win her freedom, not so much because
+ she has failed to shed her blood, but because her situation in
+ the world is just that unique situation I have sought to
+ depict. Belonging to Europe, she has not been of Europe; and
+ England with a persistency that would be admirable were it not
+ so criminal in intention and effect, has bent all her efforts,
+ all her vigour, an unswerving policy, and a pitiless sword to
+ extend the limits of exclusion. To approach Ireland at all
+ since the first English Sovereign laid hands upon it was "quite
+ immoral." When Frederick of Hohenstaufen (so long ago as that!)
+ sent his secretary (an Irishman) to Ireland we read that Henry
+ III of England declared "it hurt him terribly," and ordered all
+ the goings out and comings in of
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page56"
+ id="page56"></a>[pg 56]</span> the returned Irish-German
+ statesman to be closely watched.</p>
+
+ <p>The dire offence of Hugh O'Neill to Elizabeth was far less
+ his rebellion than his "practises" with Spain. At every
+ cessation of arms during the Nine Years War he waged with
+ England, she sought to obtain from him an abjuration of
+ "foreign aid," chiefly "that of the Spaniard." "Nothing will
+ become the traitor (O'Neill) more than his public confession of
+ any Spanish practices, and his abjuration of any manner of
+ harkening or combining with any foreigners."</p>
+
+ <p>Could O'Neill be brought to publicly repudiate help from
+ abroad it would have, the Queen thought, the effect that "in
+ Spain... the hopes of such attempts might be extinguished."</p>
+
+ <p>As long as the sea was open to Spain there was grave danger.
+ If Spaniard and Irishman came close together O'Neill's offence
+ was indeed "fit to be made vulgar"&mdash;all men would see the
+ strength of combination, the weakness of isolation.</p>
+
+ <p>"Send me all the news you receive from Spain for Tyrone doth
+ fill all these parts with strange lies, although some part be
+ true, that there came some munition." It was because O'Neill
+ was a statesman and knew the imperative need to Ireland of
+ keeping in touch with Europe that for Elizabeth he became "the
+ chief traitor of Ireland&mdash;a reprobate from God, reserved
+ for the sword."</p>
+
+ <p>Spain was to Elizabethan Englishmen what Germany is
+ to-day.</p>
+
+ <p>"I would venture to say one word here to my Irish fellow
+ countrymen of all political persuasions. If they imagine they
+ can stand politically or economically while Britain falls they
+ are woefully mistaken. The British fleet is their one shield.
+ It if be broken Ireland will go down. They may well throw
+ themselves heartily into the common defence, for no sword can
+ transfix England without the point reaching behind her." (Sir
+ Arthur Conan Doyle, in the <i>Fortnightly Review</i>, Feb.,
+ 1913, "Great Britain and the Next War.")</p>
+
+ <p>The voice is a very old one, and the bogey has done duty for
+ a long time in Ireland. When, to-day, it is from Germany that
+ freedom may be feared, Ireland is warned against the German.
+ When, three hundred years ago the beacon of hope shone on the
+ coast of Spain, it was the Spaniards who were the bad people of
+ history.</p>
+
+ <p>Fray Mattheo de Oviedo, who had been sent to Ireland as
+ Archbishop, wrote to King Philip III from O'Neill's stronghold,
+ Dungannon, on June 24, 1600. We might be listening to the voice
+ of the <i>Fortnightly Review</i> of yesterday. "The English are
+ making <span class="pagenum"><a name="page57"
+ id="page57"></a>[pg 57]</span> great efforts to bring about
+ a peace, offering excellent terms, and for this purpose the
+ Viceroy sent messengers twice to O'Neill, saying among other
+ things, that Your Majesty is making peace with the Queen,
+ and that his condition will be hopeless. At other times he
+ says that no greater misfortune could happen to the country
+ than to bring Spaniards into it, because they are haughty
+ and vicious and they would destroy and ruin the country."
+ The Irish princes were no fools. "To all this they reply
+ most honourably that they will hold out as long as they have
+ one soldier or there remains a cow to eat."</p>
+
+ <p>Hugh O'Neill saw clearly that all compromise between Ireland
+ and England was futile, and that the way of escape was by
+ complete separation and lay only through Europe. He again and
+ again begged the Spanish King to sever Ireland and erect it
+ into an allied State. He offered the crown of Ireland to a
+ Spanish prince, just as three centuries earlier another and a
+ great O'Neill offered the crown of Ireland to Edward Bruce in
+ 1315.</p>
+
+ <p>The coming of the Bruce saved Gaelic Ireland for three
+ centuries. Had Philip of Spain sent his son as King to Ireland,
+ her fate had been settled then instead of remaining three
+ centuries later to still confront European statesmanship with
+ an unsolved problem.</p>
+
+ <p>In many letters addressed by the Irish leaders to Philip II
+ and Philip III we find the constantly recurring note of warning
+ that to leave England in possession of Ireland meant the
+ downfall of Spain. The Irish princes knew that in fighting
+ England they were in truth fighting the battle of European
+ civilization.</p>
+
+ <p>Writing to Philip II from Lifford, on May 16th, 1596,
+ O'Neill and O'Donnell drew the King's attention to the cause of
+ Ireland as the cause of Europe, and in the name of Ireland
+ offered the crown to a Spanish prince. "But inasmuch as we have
+ felt to our great and indescribably harm the evil doings and
+ crimes of those whom the Queen of England is in the habit of
+ sending amongst us, we beg and beseech Your Majesty to send
+ someone well known to you and perfectly fit to be the King of
+ this island, for his own welfare, ours, and that of the
+ Christian State (Christendom)."</p>
+
+ <p>They asked for a prince "who will not be unwilling to rule
+ over and live amongst us and to direct and guide our nation,
+ well and wisely." They pointed out how "he will obtain much
+ advantage and glory by so doing," and finally they begged
+ "would that Your Majesty would appoint the Archduke of Austria,
+ now Governor of Flanders, a famous man and worthy of all
+ praise, <span class="pagenum"><a name="page58"
+ id="page58"></a>[pg 58]</span> than whom none would be more
+ acceptable." (The original is in Latin and in the archives
+ of Simancas.)</p>
+
+ <p>No more statesmanlike appeal was ever made from Ireland; and
+ had the Archduke of Austria assumed the crown of Ireland in
+ 1596, "now or never" would indeed have become "now and
+ forever." Had Philip II carried out his often repeated promises
+ of sending aid to that country the fate of his own kingdom must
+ have been a very different one.</p>
+
+ <p>"I wish it were possible for me, by word of mouth, to show
+ the importance of this undertaking and the great service that
+ would be rendered thereby to God and His Church, and <i>the
+ great advantage it would be to the service of Your Majesty and
+ the peace of Your States to attack the enemy here</i>."</p>
+
+ <p>So wrote in 1600 to Philip II, the Archbishop of Dublin,
+ already quoted, Mattheo de Oviedo.</p>
+
+ <p>This prelate had been specially sent to Ireland "to see and
+ understand the state of the country misrepresented by English
+ emissaries at foreign courts."</p>
+
+ <p>The wrath of Elizabeth against O'Neill was largely due to
+ his keeping in touch with the continent, whereby the lies of
+ her agents abroad were turned to her own ridicule. To Essex,
+ her Viceroy, she wrote: "Tyrone hath blazed in foreign parts
+ the defeat of regiments, the death of captains, and loss of men
+ of quality in every quarter."</p>
+
+ <p>O'Neill not only for years beat her generals in the field,
+ her beat herself and her councillors at their own game. To
+ Essex, in an ecstacy of rage at the loss of the last great army
+ sent, she wrote (September 17th, 1599): "To trust this traitor
+ upon oath is to trust the devil upon his religion. Only this we
+ are sure (for we see it in effect), that you have prospered so
+ ill for us by your warfare, as we cannot but be very jealous
+ lest we should be as well overtaken by the treaty."</p>
+
+ <p>(Essex wished to bring O'Neill in by a treaty which, while
+ ostensibly conceding the terms of the Irish prince was to allow
+ the Queen time to carry out her purpose.)</p>
+
+ <p>The Irish princes knew Elizabeth and her Ministers, as well
+ as she read Essex. "Believe no news from Ireland of any
+ agreement in this country," they had written to Philip II in
+ 1597, "great offers have been made by the Queen of England, but
+ we will not break our word and promise to your." In a letter
+ written a year earlier (Oct. 18, 1596), replying to the special
+ envoy sent by the <span class="pagenum"><a name="page59"
+ id="page59"></a>[pg 59]</span> king, they said: "Since the
+ former envoys left us we have used every means in our power,
+ as we promised we should do, to gain time and
+ procrastination from one day to another. But how could we
+ impose on so clever an enemy so skilled in every kind of
+ cunning and cheating if we did not use much dissimulation,
+ and especially if we did not pretend we were anxious for
+ peace? We will keep firm and unshaken the promises which we
+ made to Your Majesty with our last breath; if we do not we
+ shall incur at once the wrath of God and the contempt of
+ men."</p>
+
+ <p>How faithfully they kept those promises and how the Spanish
+ King failed in his, their fate and the bitter ruin of their
+ country shows. That men fighting for Ireland had to meet
+ Elizabeth and her statesmen with something of her own cunning
+ is made very clear to anyone reading the State papers in
+ Ireland.</p>
+
+ <p>Essex, in one of his "answers" wrote: "I advise Her Majesty
+ to allow me, at my return to Dublin, to conclude this treaty,
+ yielding some of their grants in the present; and when Her
+ Majesty has made secret preparations to enable me to prosecute,
+ I will find quarrels enough to break and give them a deadly
+ blow."</p>
+
+ <p>The Irish, however, failed in this contest. They were not
+ sufficiently good liars, and lacked the higher flights of
+ villainy necessary to sustain the encounter. The essential
+ English way in Tudor days, and much later, for administering a
+ deadly blow to an Irish patriot was "assassination." Poison
+ frequently took the place of the knife, and was often
+ administered wrapped in a leaf of the British Bible. A certain
+ Atkinson, knowing the religious nature of Cecil, the Queen's
+ Prime Minister, the founder of a long line of statesmen,
+ foremost as champions of Church and Book, suggested the getting
+ rid of O'Neill by some "poisoned Hosts." This proposal to use
+ the Blessed Sacrament as a veritable Last Supper for the last
+ great Irish chief remains on record, was endorsed by Cecil.</p>
+
+ <p>Another Briton, named Annyas, was charged to poison "the
+ most dangerous and open rebel in Munster," Florence MacCarthy
+ More, the great MacCarthy. Elizabeth's Prime Minister piously
+ endorsed the deed&mdash;"though his soul never had the thought
+ to consent to the poisoning of a dog, much less a Christian
+ ."</p>
+
+ <p>To Carew, the President of Munster, Cecil wrote enjoining
+ the assassination of the young Earl of Desmond, then "in the
+ keeping of Carew": "Whatever you do to abridge him out of
+ Providence shall never be imputed to you for a fault, but
+ exceedingly commended by the Queen." After this, we are not
+ surprised to learn <span class="pagenum"><a name="page60"
+ id="page60"></a>[pg 60]</span> that in her instructions to
+ Mountjoy, the successor of Essex, the Queen recommended "to
+ his special care to preserve the true exercise of religion
+ among her loving subjects." As O'Neill was still in the
+ field with a large army, she prudently pointed out, however,
+ that the time "did not permit that he should intermeddle by
+ any severity or violence in matters of religion until her
+ power was better established there to countenance his
+ action." That the character of their adversary was
+ faithfully appreciated by contemporary Irish opinion stands
+ plain in a letter written by James Fitzthomas, nephew of the
+ great Earl Gerald of Desmond, to Philip II. "The government
+ of the English is such as Pharaoh himself never used the
+ like; for they content not themselves with all temporal
+ prosperity, but by cruelty desire our blood and perpetual
+ destruction to blot out the whole remembrance of our
+ posterity&mdash;for that Nero, in his time, was far inferior
+ to that Queen in cruelty."</p>
+
+ <p>The Irish chiefs well sustained their part in meeting this
+ combination of power and perfidy, and merited, on the highest
+ grounds of policy the help so often promised by the King of
+ Spain. They showed him not only by their valour on the field
+ but by their sagacious council how great a part was reserved
+ for Ireland in the affairs of Europe if he would but profit
+ from it and do his part.</p>
+
+ <p>In this the Spanish King failed. Philip II had died in 1598,
+ too immersed in religious trials to see that the centre of his
+ griefs was pivoted on the possession of Ireland by the female
+ Nero. With his son and successor communication was maintained
+ and in a letter of Philip III to O'Neill, dated from Madrid,
+ Dec. 24th, 1599, we read: "Noble and well beloved I have
+ already written a joint letter to you and your relative
+ O'Donnell, in which I replied to a letter of both of you. By
+ this, which I now write to you personally I wish to let you
+ know my good will towards you, and I mean to prove it, not only
+ by word, but by deed." That promise was not fulfilled, or so
+ inadequately fulfilled that the help, when it came, was
+ insufficient to meet the needs of the case.</p>
+
+ <p>History tells us what the sad consequences were to the cause
+ of civilisation in Ireland, from the failure of the Spanish
+ King to realize the greatness of his responsibilities. But the
+ evil struck deeper than to Ireland alone. Europe lost more than
+ her historians have yet realised from the weakness of purpose
+ that let Ireland go down transfixed by the sword of
+ Elizabeth.</p>
+
+ <p>Had the fate of Europe been then controlled by a
+ Hohenzollern, <span class="pagenum"><a name="page61"
+ id="page61"></a>[pg 61]</span> instead of by a Spanish
+ Hapsburg, how different might have been the future of the
+ world!</p>
+
+ <p>Although Europe had forgotten Ireland, Ireland had never
+ forgotten Europe. Natural outpost and sentinel of that
+ continent in the West for three-hundred years now gagged and
+ bound, since the flight to Rome of her last native Princes, she
+ stands to-day as in the days of Philip III, if an outcast from
+ European civilization non the less rejecting the insular
+ tradition of England, as she has rejected her insular Church.
+ And now once more in her career she turns to the greatest of
+ European Sovereigns, to win his eyes to the oldest, and
+ certainly the most faithful of European peoples. Ireland
+ already has given and owes much to Germany.</p>
+
+ <p>In the dark ages intercourse between the Celtic people of
+ the West and the Rhinelands and Bavaria was close and long
+ sustained. Irish monasteries flourished in the heart of
+ Germany, and German architecture gave its note possibly to some
+ of the fairest cathedral churches in Ireland.</p>
+
+ <p>Clonfert and Cashel are, perhaps amongst the most
+ conspicuous examples of the influence of that old-time
+ intercourse with Germany. To-day, when little of her past
+ remains to venerate, her ancient language on what seemed its
+ bed of death owes much of its present day revival to German
+ scholarship and culture. Probably the foremost Gaelic scholar
+ of the day is the occupant of the Chair of Celtic at Berlin
+ University, and Ireland recognises with a gratitude she is not
+ easily able to express, all that her ancient literature owes to
+ the genius and loving intellect of Dr. Kuno Meyer.</p>
+
+ <p>The name of Ireland may be known on the Bourses or in the
+ Chancelleries of Europe; it is not without interest, even fame,
+ in the centres of German academical culture. But that the
+ German State may also be interested in the political fate of
+ Ireland is believed by the present writer.</p>
+
+ <p>Maurice Fitzgerald, the outlawed claimant to the Earldom of
+ Desmond, wrote to Philip II, from Lisbon on September 4th,
+ 1593:</p>
+
+ <p>"We have thought it right to implore your Majesty to send
+ the aid you will think fit and with it to send us (the Irish
+ refugees in the Peninsula) to defend and uphold the same
+ undertaking; for we hope, with God's help Your Majesty will be
+ victorious and conquer and hold as your own the kingdom of
+ Ireland.&mdash;We trust in God that Your Majesty and the
+ Council will weigh well <span class="pagenum"><a name="page62"
+ id="page62"></a>[pg 62]</span> the advantages that will
+ ensue to Christendom from this enterprise&mdash;since the
+ opportunity is so good and the cause so just and weighty,
+ and the undertaking so easily completed."</p>
+
+ <p>The history of human freedom is written in letters of blood.
+ It is the law of God. No people who clutch to safety, who shun
+ death are worthy of freedom.</p>
+
+ <p>The dead who die for Ireland are the only live men in a free
+ Ireland. The rest are cattle. Freedom is kept alive in man's
+ blood only by shedding of that blood. It was not an act of a
+ foreign Parliament they were seeking, those splendid "scorners
+ of death," the lads and young men of Mayo, who awaited with a
+ fearless joy the advance of the English army fresh from the
+ defeat of Humbert in 1798. Then, if ever, Irishmen might have
+ run from a victorious and pitiless enemy who, having captured
+ the French General and murdered in cold blood the seven hundred
+ Killala peasants who were with his colours, were now come to
+ Killala itself to wreak vengeance on the last stronghold of
+ Irish rebellion.</p>
+
+ <p>The ill-led and half armed peasants, the last Irishmen in
+ Ireland to stand the pitched fight for their country's freedom,
+ went to meet the army of England, as the Protestant Bishop, who
+ saw them, says:&mdash;"running upon death with as little
+ appearance of reflection or concern as if they were hastening
+ to a show."</p>
+
+ <p>The late Queen Victoria, in one of her letters to her uncle,
+ the King of the Belgians, wrote thus of the abortive rising of
+ fifty years later in 1848:</p>
+
+ <p>"There are ample means of crushing the rebellion in Ireland,
+ and I think it is very likely to go off without any contest,
+ which people (and I think rightly) rather regret. The Irish
+ should receive <i>a good lesson or they will begin again</i>."
+ (Page 223, Vol. II, Queen Victoria's letters.) Her Majesty was
+ profoundly right. Ireland needed that lesson in 1848, as she
+ needs it still more to-day. Had Irishmen died in 1848 as they
+ did in 1798 Ireland would be to-day fifty years nearer to
+ freedom. It is because a century has passed since Europe saw
+ Ireland willing to die that to-day Europe has forgotten that
+ she lives.</p>
+
+ <p>As I began this essay with a remark of Charles Lever on
+ Germany so shall end it here with a remark of Lever on his own
+ country, Ireland.</p>
+
+ <p>In a letter to a friend in Dublin, he thus put the epitaph
+ of Europe on the grave of a generation who believed that "no
+ human <span class="pagenum"><a name="page63"
+ id="page63"></a>[pg 63]</span> cause was worth the shedding
+ one drop of human blood."</p>
+
+ <p>"As to Ireland all foreign sympathy is over owing to the
+ late cowardice and poltroonery of the patriots. <i>Even
+ Italians can fight</i>" (Letter of C. Lever from Florence,
+ August 19th, 1848).</p>
+
+ <p>It is only the truth that wounds. It is that reproach that
+ has cursed Ireland for a century.</p>
+
+ <p>Sedition, the natural garment for an Irishman to wear, has
+ been for a hundred years a bloodless sedition. It is this fiery
+ shirt of Nessus that has driven our strong men mad. How to shed
+ our blood with honour, how to give our lives for
+ Ireland&mdash;that has been, that is the problem of Irish
+ nationality.</p>
+
+ <h3 class="sc">Chapter VII</h3>
+
+ <h2>THE FREEDOM OF THE SEAS</h2>
+
+ <p>It would be idle to attempt to forecast the details of a
+ struggle between Great Britain and Germany. That is a task that
+ belongs to the War Department of the two States. I have
+ assigned myself merely to point out that such a struggle is
+ inevitable, and to indicate what I believe to be the supreme
+ factors in the conflict, and how one of these, Ireland, and
+ that undoubtedly the most important factor, has been overlooked
+ by practically every predecessor of Germany in the effort to
+ make good at sea. The Spaniards in Elizabeth's reign, the
+ French of Louis XIV and of the Directory took some steps, it is
+ true, to challenge England's control of Ireland, but instead of
+ concentrating their strength upon that line of attack they were
+ content to dissipate it upon isolated expeditions and never
+ once to push home the assault on the one point that was
+ obviously the key to the enemy's whole position. At any period
+ during that last three centuries, with Ireland gone, England
+ was, if not actually at the mercy of her assailants, certainly
+ reduced to impotency beyond her own shores. But while England
+ knew the value to herself of Ireland, she appreciated to the
+ full the fact that this profitable juxtaposition lay on her
+ right side hidden from the eyes of Europe.</p>
+
+ <p>"Will anyone assert," said Gladstone, "that we would have
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page64"
+ id="page64"></a>[pg 64]</span> dared to treat Ireland as we
+ have done had she lain, not between us and the ocean, but
+ between us and the continent?" And while the bulk of
+ England, swollen to enormous dimensions by the gains she
+ drew from Ireland interposed between her victim and Europe,
+ her continental adversaries were themselves the victims of
+ that strange mental disease psychologists term the
+ collective illusion. All the world saw that which in fact
+ did not exist. The greatness of England as they beheld it,
+ imposing, powerful, and triumphant, existed not on the rocky
+ base they believed they saw, but on the object, sacked,
+ impoverished, and bled, they never saw. And so it is to-day.
+ The British Empire is the great illusion. Resembling in much
+ the Holy Roman Empire it is not British, it is not an
+ Empire, and assuredly it is not holy. It lives on the
+ life-blood and sufferings of some, on the suffrance and
+ mutual jealousy of others, and on the fixed illusion of all.
+ Rather is it a great Mendicity Institute. England now,
+ instead of "robbing from Pole to Pole," as John Mitchel once
+ defined her activities, goes begging from Pole to Pole that
+ all and every one shall give her a helping hand to keep the
+ plunder. Chins, Goorkhas, Sikhs, Malays, Irish, Chinese,
+ South African Dutch, Australasians, Maoris, Canadians,
+ Japanese, and finally "Uncle Sam"&mdash;these are the main
+ components that when skilfully mixed from London, furnish
+ the colouring material for the world-wide canvas. If we take
+ away India, Egypt and the other coloured races the white
+ population that remains is greatly inferior to the
+ population of Germany, and instead of being a compact,
+ indivisible whole, consists of a number of widely scattered
+ and separated communities, each with separate and absorbing
+ problems of its own, and more than one of them British
+ neither in race, speech, nor affection. Moreover if we turn
+ to the coloured races we find that the great mass of the
+ subjects of this Empire have less rights within it than they
+ possess outside its boundaries, and occupy there a lower
+ status than that accorded to most foreigners.</p>
+
+ <p>The people of India far out number all other citizens of the
+ British Empire put together, and yet we find the British
+ Indians resident in Canada, to take but one instance,
+ petitioning the Imperial Government in 1910 for as favourable
+ terms of entry into that British possession as the Japanese
+ enjoyed.</p>
+
+ <p>They pointed out that a Japanese could enter Canada on
+ showing that he held from six pounds to ten pounds, but that no
+ British Indian could land unless he had forty pounds and had
+ come direct <span class="pagenum"><a name="page65"
+ id="page65"></a>[pg 65]</span> from India,&mdash;a physical
+ impossibility, since no direct communication exists. But
+ they went further, for they showed that their "citizenship"
+ of the British Empire entailed penalties that no foreign
+ state anywhere imposed upon them.</p>
+
+ <p>"We appeal," they said, "and most forcibly bring to your
+ notice that no such discriminating laws are existing against us
+ in foreign countries like the United States of America,
+ Germany, Japan, and Africa, to whom we do not owe any
+ allegiance whatsoever."</p>
+
+ <p>So that outside its white or European races it is clear the
+ Empire has no general or equal citizenship, and that, far from
+ being one, it is more divided racially against itself than are
+ even opposing Asiatic and European nations which have the good
+ fortune not to be united in a common, imperial bond.</p>
+
+ <p>The total white population of this incongruous mass in 1911
+ consisted of some 59,000,000 human beings made up of various
+ national and racial strains, as against 66,000,000 of white men
+ in the German Empire the vast majority of them of German blood.
+ And while the latter form a disciplined, self-contained, and
+ self-supporting and self-defending whole, the former are
+ swelled by Irish, French-Canadians, and Dutch South Africans
+ who, according to Sir R. Edgcumbe, must be reckoned as
+ "coloured."</p>
+
+ <p>It is one thing to paint the map red, but you must be sure
+ that your colours are fast and that the stock of paints wont
+ run out. England, apart from her own perplexities is now faced
+ with this prospect. Great Britain can no longer count on
+ Ireland, that most prolific source of supply of her army, navy,
+ and industrial efforts during the last century, while she is
+ faced with a declining birth-rate, due largely, be it noted, to
+ the diminished influx of the Irish, a more prolific and virile
+ race. While her internal powers of reproduction are failing,
+ her ability to keep those already born is diminishing still
+ more rapidly. Emigration threatens to remove the surplus of
+ births over deaths.</p>
+
+ <p>As long as it was only the population of Ireland that fell
+ (8,500,000 in 1846 to 4,370,000 in 1911), Great Britain was not
+ merely untroubled but actually rejoiced at a decrease in
+ numbers that made the Irish more manageable, and yet just
+ sufficiently starvable to supply her with a goodly surplus for
+ army, navy, and industrial expansion in Great Britain. Now that
+ the Irish are gone with a vengeance it is being perceived that
+ they did not take their vengeance with them and that the very
+ industrial expansion they
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page66"
+ id="page66"></a>[pg 66]</span> built up from their starving
+ bodies and naked limbs contains within itself the seeds of a
+ great retribution.</p>
+
+ <p>"Since Free Trade has ruined our agriculture, our army has
+ become composed of starving slum dwellers who, according to the
+ German notion are better at shouting than at fighting. German
+ generals have pointed out that in the South African war our
+ regular and auxiliary troops often raised the white flag and
+ surrendered, without necessity, sometimes to a few Boers, and
+ they may do the same to a German invading force. Free Trade
+ which "benefits the consumer" and the capitalist has,
+ unfortunately, through the destruction of our agriculture and
+ through forcing practically the whole population of Great
+ Britain into the towns, destroyed the manhood of the nation."
+ (Modern Germany page 251, by J. Ellis Barker, 1907). An army of
+ slum dwellers is a poor base on which to build the structure of
+ a perpetual world dominion.</p>
+
+ <p>While the navy shows an imposing output of new battleships
+ and cruisers for 1913, the record, we are told, of all warship
+ construction in the world, it takes blood as well as iron to
+ cement empires. Battleships may become so much floating scrap
+ iron (like the Russian fleet at Tsushima), if the men behind
+ the guns lack the right stamina and education.</p>
+
+ <p>We learn, too, that it is not only the slum dwellers who are
+ failing, but that to meet the shortage of officers a large
+ number of transfers from the merchant marine to the Royal Navy
+ are being sanctioned. To this must be added the call of the
+ Great Dominions for men and officers to man their local fleets.
+ As the vital resources of England become more and more
+ inadequate to meet the menace of German naval and moral
+ strength, she turns her eyes to Ireland, and we learn from the
+ London <i>Daily Telegraph</i> that Mr. Churchill's scheme of
+ recruiting at Queenstown may furnish "matter for
+ congratulation, as Irish boys make excellent bluejackets happy
+ of disposition, amenable to discipline, and extremely quick and
+ handy."</p>
+
+ <p>As I can recall an article in this same journal, written
+ during the course of the Boer War, in which Ireland was likened
+ to a "serpent whose head must be crushed beneath the heel," the
+ <i>Daily Telegraph's</i> praise to-day of the Irish disposition
+ should leave Irish boys profoundly unmoved&mdash;and still
+ ashore.</p>
+
+ <p>There is yet another aspect of the growing stream of British
+ emigration. "Death removes the feeble, emigration removes the
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page67"
+ id="page67"></a>[pg 67]</span> strong. Canada, New Zealand,
+ Australia, and South Africa, have no use for the sick and
+ palsied, or of those incapable of work through age or youth.
+ They want the workers and they get them. Those who have left
+ the United Kingdom during 1912 are not the scum of our
+ islands, but the very pick. And they leave behind, for our
+ politicians to grapple with, a greater proportion of
+ females, of children and of disabled than ever before."
+ (<i>London Magazine</i>!)</p>
+
+ <p>The excess of females over males, already so noteworthy a
+ feature of England's decay, becomes each year more accentuated
+ and doubtless accounts for the strenuous efforts now being made
+ to entrap Irish boys into the British army and navy.</p>
+
+ <p>If we compare the figures of Germany and Great Britain, and
+ then contrast them with those of Ireland, we shall see, at a
+ glance, how low England is sinking, and how vitally necessary
+ it is for her to redress the balance of her own excess of
+ "militants" over males by kidnapping Irish youths into her
+ emasculated services and by fomenting French and Russian
+ enmities against the fruitful German people.</p>
+
+ <p>Germany 1910, males, 32,031,967; females, 32,871,456; total,
+ 64,925,993. Excess of females, 739,489.</p>
+
+ <p>Great Britain, 1911:</p>
+
+ <p>England and Wales&mdash;Males, 17,448,476; females,
+ 18,626,793; total, 36,075,269. Excess of females,
+ 1,178,317.</p>
+
+ <p>Scotland&mdash;Males, 2,307,603; females, 2,251,842; total,
+ 4,759,445. Excess of females, 144,239.</p>
+
+ <p>Total for Great Britain, 40,834,714. Excess of females,
+ 1,322,556.</p>
+
+ <p>Thus on a population much less than two thirds that of
+ Germany Great Britain has almost twice as many females in
+ excess over males as Germany has, and this disproportion of
+ sexes tends yearly to increase. We read in every fresh return
+ of emigration that it is men and not women who are leaving
+ England and Scotland. That Irish emigration, appalling as its
+ ravages have been since 1846, is still maintained on a
+ naturally healthier basis the sex returns for 1911 make clear.
+ The figures for Ireland at the census were as follows:</p>
+
+ <p>Ireland&mdash;Males, 2,186,802; females, 2,195,147; total,
+ 4,381,949. Excess of females, 8,346.</p>
+
+ <p>Ireland, it is seen, can still spare 100,000 or 150,000
+ males for the British armed forces and be in no unhealthier sex
+ plight than Scotland or England is in. It is to get this
+ surplus of stout Irish brawn
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page68"
+ id="page68"></a>[pg 68]</span> and muscle that Mr. Churchill
+ and the British War Office are now touting in Ireland.</p>
+
+ <p>I take the following Government advertisement from the Cork
+ <i>Evening Echo</i> (of March, 1913), in illustration:</p>
+
+ <p>"Notice&mdash;Any person that brings a recruit for the
+ Regular or Special Reserve Branches of the Army to the
+ Recruiting Officer at Victoria Barracks, Cork, will be paid the
+ money reward allowed for each recruit which ranges from 1/6 to
+ 5/- each."</p>
+
+ <p>From whatever point of view we survey it we shall find that
+ England's Empire at bottom rests upon Ireland to make good
+ British deficiencies. The Dominions are far off, and while they
+ may give battleships they take men. Ireland is close at
+ hand&mdash;she gives all and takes nothing. Men, mind, food and
+ money&mdash;all these she has offered through the centuries,
+ and it is upon these and the unrestricted drain of these four
+ things from that rich mine of human fertility and wealth that
+ the British Empire has been founded and maintained. To secure
+ to-day the goodwill and active co-operation of the Irish race
+ abroad as well as in Ireland, and through that goodwill to
+ secure the alliance and support of the United States has become
+ the guiding purpose of British statesmanship.</p>
+
+ <p>The Home Rule Bill of the present Liberal Government is
+ merely the petty party expression of what all English statesmen
+ recognize as a national need. Were the present Liberal
+ Government thrown out to-morrow their Unionist successors would
+ hasten to bind Ireland (and America) to them by a measure that,
+ if necessary, would go much further. Every Unionist knows this.
+ Ireland is always the key to the situation.</p>
+
+ <p>I will quote two pronouncements, one English and one
+ American, to show that Home Rule has now become an imperial
+ necessity for England.</p>
+
+ <p>Speaking in the House of Lords on the Home Rule Bill, Earl
+ Grey, the late Governor-General of Canada, said on January
+ 27th, 1913:</p>
+
+ <p>"In the interests of the Empire I feel very strongly that it
+ is imperative that the Irish question should be settled on
+ lines which will satisfy the sentiment of the over-sea
+ democracies, both in our self-governing colonies and in the
+ United States. Everyone, I think will agree that it is most
+ important and in the highest interests of the empire that there
+ should be the friendliest feelings of generous affection and
+ goodwill, not only between the self-governing
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page69"
+ id="page69"></a>[pg 69]</span> Dominions and the Motherland,
+ but also between America and England.... I need not
+ elaborate this point. We are all agreed upon it. A heavy
+ shadow at present exists, and it arises from our treatment
+ of Ireland.... If this be so is it not our duty to remove
+ the obstacle that prevents that relationship with America
+ from being that which we all desire?"</p>
+
+ <p>The American utterance came from one equally representative
+ of American Imperial interests. It is that of Mr. Roosevelt,
+ published in the <i>Irish World</i> of New York, Feb. 8th,
+ 1913.</p>
+
+ <p>"I feel that the enactment into law of this measure ... bids
+ fair to establish goodwill among the English-speaking peoples.
+ This has been prevented more than by any other one thing by
+ this unhappy feud that has raged for centuries, and the
+ settlement of which, I most earnestly hope, and believe, will
+ be a powerful contribution to the peace of the world, based on
+ international justice and goodwill. I earnestly feel that the
+ measure is as much in the interests of Great Britain as of
+ Ireland."</p>
+
+ <p>Did we judge of Ireland only by many of the public
+ utterances made in her name, then, indeed might we despair of a
+ people who having suffered so much and so valiantly resisted
+ for so many centuries were now to be won to their oppressor's
+ side, by, perhaps, the most barefaced act of bribery ever
+ attempted by a Government against a people.</p>
+
+ <p>"Injured nations cannot so entirely forgive their enemies
+ without losing something of their virility, and it grates upon
+ me to hear leader after leader of the Parliamentary Party
+ declaring without shame that Home Rule when it is won for
+ Ireland is to be used for a new weapon of offence in England's
+ hands against the freedom of the world elsewhere."</p>
+
+ <p>Did the Irish Parliamentary Party indeed represent Ireland
+ in this, Mr. Wilfred Blunt's noble protest in his recent work,
+ <i>The Land War in Ireland</i>, would stand for the
+ contemptuous impeachment, not of a political party but of a
+ nation.</p>
+
+ <p>Mr. Redmond in his latest speech shows how truly Mr. Blunt
+ has depicted his party's aim; but to the credit of Ireland it
+ is to be recorded that Mr. Redmond had to choose not Ireland,
+ but England for its delivery. Speaking at St. Patrick's Day
+ dinner in London on March 17th, 1913, Mr. Redmond, to a
+ non-Irish audience, thus hailed the future part his country is
+ to play under the restoration of what he describes as a
+ "National Parliament."</p>
+
+ <p>"We will, under Home Rule, devote our attention to
+ education, <span class="pagenum"><a name="page70"
+ id="page70"></a>[pg 70]</span> reform of the Poor Law, and
+ questions of that kind which are purely domestic, which are,
+ if you like, hum-drum Irish questions, and the only way in
+ which we will attempt to interfere in any Imperial question
+ will be by our representatives on the floor of the Imperial
+ Parliament in Westminster doing everything in our power to
+ increase the strength and the glory of what will then be our
+ empire at long last; and by sending in support of the empire
+ the strong arms and brave hearts of Irish soldiers and Irish
+ sailors, to maintain the traditions of Irish valour in every
+ part of the world. That is our ambition."</p>
+
+ <p>Were this indeed the ambition of Ireland, did this represent
+ the true feeling of Irishmen towards England, and the Empire of
+ England, then Home Rule, on such terms, would be a curse and a
+ crime. Thierry, the French historian, is a truer exponent of
+ the passionate aspirations of the Irish heart than anyone who
+ to-day would seek to represent Ireland as willing to sell her
+ soul no less than the strong arms and brave hearts of her sons
+ in an unholy cause.</p>
+
+ <p>".... For notwithstanding the mixture of races, the
+ intercommunion of every kind brought about by the course of
+ centuries, hatred of the English Government still subsists as a
+ native passion in the mass of the Irish nation. Ever since the
+ hour of invasion this race of men has invariably desired that
+ which their conquerors did not desire, detested that which they
+ liked, and liked that which they detested ... This indomitable
+ persistency, this faculty of preserving through centuries of
+ misery the remembrance of lost liberty, and of never despairing
+ of a cause always defeated, always fatal to those who dared to
+ defend it, is perhaps the strangest and noblest example ever
+ given by any nation." (<i>Histoire De La Conquete De
+ L'Angleterre Par Les Normands</i>, Paris edition, 1846. London,
+ 1891.)</p>
+
+ <p>The French writer here saw deeper and spoke truer than many
+ who seek to-day not to reveal the Irish heart, whose deep
+ purpose they have forgotten, but barter its life-blood for a
+ concession that could be won to-morrow by half that blood if
+ shed at home, thus offered without warrant "as a new weapon of
+ offence to England's hands against the freedom of the world
+ elsewhere."</p>
+
+ <p>The Irishman, who in the belief that Home Rule has come or
+ that any measure of Home Rule the London Parliament will offer
+ can be a substitute for his country's freedom, joins the
+ British army or navy is a voluntary traitor to his country.
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page71"
+ id="page71"></a>[pg 71]</span> Almost everything that
+ Ireland produces, or consumes, must all go out or come
+ solely through England and on payment of a transit and
+ shipping tax to English trade.</p>
+
+ <p>The London press has lately waxed indignant over Servia
+ denied by Austria a port on the Adriatic, and we have been told
+ a Servia without a port is a Servia held in "economic slavery,"
+ and that her independence is illusory unless she have free
+ outlet to the sea. But what of Ireland? With not one, but forty
+ ports, the finest in all Western Europe, they lie idle and
+ empty. With over 1,000 miles of seaboard, facing the West and
+ holding the seaway between Europe and America, Ireland, in the
+ grip of England, has been reduced to an economic slavery that
+ has no parallel in civilization.</p>
+
+ <p>And it is to this island, to this people that the appeal is
+ now made that we should distrust the Germans and aid our
+ enslavers. Better far, were that the only outcome, the fate of
+ Alsace-Lorraine (who got their Home Rule Parliament years ago)
+ than the "friendship" of England. We have survived the open
+ hate, the prolonged enslavement, the secular robbery of England
+ and now the England smiles and offers us with one hand Home
+ Rule to take it away with the other, are we going to forget the
+ experience of our forefathers? A Connacht proverb of the Middle
+ Ages should come back to us&mdash;"Three things for a man to
+ avoid; the heels of a horse, the horns of a bull; and the smile
+ of an Englishman."</p>
+
+ <p>That Ireland must be involved in any war that Great Britain
+ undertakes goes without saying; but that we should willingly
+ throw ourselves into the fray on the wrong side to avert a
+ British defeat, is the counsel of traitors offered to
+ fools.</p>
+
+ <p>We must see to it that what Thierry wrote of our fathers is
+ not shamefully belied by their sons. Our "indomitable
+ persistency" has up to this excelled and subdued the unvarying
+ will applied to one unvarying purpose of those who, by dint of
+ that quality, have elsewhere subjugated the universe. We who
+ have preserved through centuries of misery, the remembrance of
+ lost liberty, are not now going to merge our unconquered souls
+ in the base body of our oppressor.</p>
+
+ <p>One of the few Liberal statesmen England has produced,
+ certainly the only Liberal politician she has ever produced,
+ the late Mr. Gladstone, compared the union between Great
+ Britain and Ireland to "the union between the mangled corpse of
+ Hector and the headlong chariot of Achilles." (1890.)</p>
+
+ <p>But, while I cannot admit that England is an Achilles, save,
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page72"
+ id="page72"></a>[pg 72]</span> perhaps, that she may be
+ wounded like him in the heel, I will not admit, I will not
+ own that Ireland, however mangled, however "the plowers have
+ ploughed upon her back and made long furrows," is in truth
+ dead, is indeed a corpse. No; there is a juster analogy, and
+ one given us by the only Englishman who was in every clime,
+ and in every circumstance a Liberal; one who died fighting
+ in the cause of liberty, even as in life he sang it. Byron
+ denounced the union between England and Ireland as "the
+ union of the shark with its prey."</p>
+
+ <h3 class="sc">Chapter VIII</h3>
+
+ <h2>IRELAND, GERMANY AND THE NEXT WAR</h2>
+
+ <p>In the February, 1913, <i>Fortnightly Review</i>, Sir Arthur
+ Conan Doyle at the end of an article, "Great Britain and the
+ Next War," thus appeals to Ireland to recognize that her
+ interests are one with those of Great Britain in the eventual
+ defeat of the latter:</p>
+
+ <p>"I would venture to say one word here to my Irish
+ fellow-countrymen of all political persuasions. If they imagine
+ that they can stand politically or economically while Britain
+ falls they are woefully mistaken. The British fleet is their
+ one shield. If it be broken Ireland will go down. They may well
+ throw themselves heartily into the common defence, for no sword
+ can transfix England without the point reaching Ireland behind
+ her...."</p>
+
+ <p>I propose to briefly show that Ireland, far from sharing the
+ calamities that must necessarily fall on Great Britain from
+ defeat by a great power, might conceivably thereby emerge into
+ a position of much prosperity.</p>
+
+ <p>I will agree with Sir A. Conan Doyle up to this&mdash;that
+ the defeat of Great Britain by Germany must be the cause of a
+ momentous change to Ireland: but I differ from him in believing
+ that that change must necessarily be disastrous to Ireland. On
+ the contrary, I believe that the defeat of Great Britain by
+ Germany might conceivably (save in one possible condition)
+ result in great gain to Ireland.</p>
+
+ <p>The conclusion that Ireland must suffer all the disasters
+ and eventual losses defeat would entail on Great Britain is
+ based on what may be termed the fundamental maxim that has
+ governed British dealings with Ireland throughout at least
+ three centuries. <span class="pagenum"><a name="page73"
+ id="page73"></a>[pg 73]</span> That maxim may be given in
+ the phrase, "Separation is unthinkable." Englishmen have
+ come to invincibly believe that no matter what they may do
+ or what may betide them, Ireland must inseparably be theirs,
+ linked to them as surely as Wales or Scotland, and forming
+ an eternal and integral part of a whole whose fate is
+ indissolubly in their hands. While Great Britain, they
+ admit, might well live apart (and happily) from an Ireland
+ safely "sunk under the sea" they have never conceived of an
+ Ireland, still afloat, that could possibly exist, apart from
+ Great Britain. Sometimes, as a sort of bogey, they hold out
+ to Ireland the fate that would be hers if, England defeated,
+ somebody else should "take" her. For it is a necessary
+ corollary to the fundamental maxim already stated, that
+ Ireland, if not owned by England, must necessarily be
+ "owned" by someone else than her own inhabitants.</p>
+
+ <p>The British view of the fate of Ireland in the event of
+ British defeat may be stated as twofold. Either Ireland would
+ remain after the war as she is to-day, tied to Great Britain,
+ or she <i>might</i> be (this is not very seriously entertained)
+ annexed by the victor. No other solution, I think, has ever
+ been suggested. Let us first discuss No. I.</p>
+
+ <p>This, the ordinary man in the street view, is that as
+ Ireland would be as much a part and belonging to Great Britain
+ after a war as before it, whatever the termination of that war
+ might be, she could not fail to share the losses defeat must
+ bring to a common realm. The partnership being indissoluble, if
+ the credit of the house were damaged and its properties
+ depreciated, all members of the firm must suffer. In this view,
+ an Ireland weaker, poorer, and less recuperative than Great
+ Britain, would stand to lose even more from a British defeat
+ than the predominant partner itself. Let us at once admit that
+ this view is correct. If on the condition of a great war
+ Ireland were still to remain, as she is to-day, an integral
+ portion of a defeated United Kingdom, it is plain she would
+ suffer, and might be made to suffer possibly more even than
+ fell to the share of Great Britain.</p>
+
+ <p>But that is not the only ending defeat might bring to the
+ two islands. We must proceed then to discuss No. 2, the
+ alternative fate reserved for Ireland in the unlikely event of
+ a great British overthrow. This is, that if the existing
+ partnership were to be forcibly dissolved, by external shock,
+ it would mean for Ireland "out of the frying pan into the
+ fire." The idea here is that I have earlier designated as the
+ "bogey man" idea. Germany, or the other victor in the great
+ conflict, would proceed to "take" Ireland.
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page74"
+ id="page74"></a>[pg 74]</span> An Ireland administered, say,
+ by Prussians would soon bitterly regret the milder manners
+ of the Anglo-Saxon and pine for the good old days of "doles"
+ from Westminster. I know many Irishmen who admit that as
+ between England and Germany they would prefer to remain in
+ the hands of the former&mdash;on the principle that it is
+ better to keep the devil you know than fall into the hands
+ of a new devil.</p>
+
+ <p>German rule, you are asked to believe, would be so bad, so
+ stern, that under it Ireland, however much she might have
+ suffered from England in the past, would soon yearn to be
+ restored to the arms of her sorrowing sister. Assuming, for the
+ sake of argument, that Germany "annexed" Ireland, is it at all
+ clear that she would (or even could) injure Ireland more than
+ Great Britain has done? To what purpose and with what end in
+ view? "Innate brutality"&mdash;the Englishman
+ replied&mdash;"the Prussian always ill-treats those he lays
+ hands on&mdash;witness the poor Poles." Without entering into
+ the Polish language question, or the Polish agrarian question,
+ it is permissible for an Irishman to reply that nothing by
+ Prussia in those respects has at all equalled English handling
+ of the Irish language or England land dealings in Ireland. The
+ Polish language still lives in Prussian Poland and much more
+ vigorously than the Irish language survives in Ireland.</p>
+
+ <p>But it is not necessary to obscure the issue by reference to
+ the Prussian Polish problem. An Ireland annexed to the German
+ Empire (supposing this to be internationally possible) as one
+ of the fruits of a German victory over Great Britain would
+ clearly be administered as a common possession of the German
+ people, and not as a Prussian province. The analogy, if one can
+ be set up in conditions so dissimilar, would lie not between
+ Prussia and her Polish provinces, but between the German Empire
+ and Alsace-Lorraine. What, then, would be the paramount object
+ of Germany in her administration of an overseas Reichsland of
+ such extraordinary geographical importance to her future as
+ Ireland would be?</p>
+
+ <p>Clearly not to impoverish and depress that new-won
+ possession but to enhance its exceeding strategic importance by
+ vigorous and wise administration, so as to make it the main
+ counterpoise to any possible recovery of British maritime
+ supremacy, so largely due as this was in the past to Great
+ Britain's own possession of this island.</p>
+
+ <p>A prosperous and flourishing Ireland, recognizing that her
+ own <span class="pagenum"><a name="page75"
+ id="page75"></a>[pg 75]</span> interests lie with those of
+ the new Administration, would assuredly be the first and
+ chief aim of German statesmanship.</p>
+
+ <p>The very geographical situation of Ireland would alone
+ ensure wise and able administration by her new rulers had
+ Germany no other and special interest in advancing Irish
+ well-being; for to rule from Hamburg and Berlin a remote island
+ and a discontented people, with a highly discontented and
+ separated Britain intervening, by methods of exploitation and
+ centralization, would be a task beyond the capacity of German
+ statecraft. German effort, then, would be plainly directed to
+ creating an Ireland satisfied with the change, and fully
+ determined to maintain it.</p>
+
+ <p>And it might be remembered that Germany is possibly better
+ equipped, intellectually and educationally, for the task of
+ developing Ireland than even 20th century England. She has
+ already faced a remarkable problem, and largely solved it in
+ her forty years' administration of Alsace-Lorraine. There is a
+ province torn by force from the bleeding side of France and
+ alien in sentiment to her new masters to a degree that Ireland
+ could not be to any changes of authority imposed upon her from
+ without, has, within a short lifetime, doubled in prosperity
+ and greatly increased her population, despite the open arms and
+ insistent call of France, and despite a rule denounced from the
+ first as hateful.</p>
+
+ <p>However hateful, the Prussian has proved himself an able
+ administrator and an honest and most capable instructor. In his
+ strong hands Strasburg has expanded from being an ill-kept,
+ pent-in French garrison town to a great and beautiful city.
+ Already a local Parliament gives to the population a sense of
+ autonomy, while the palace and constant presence of an Imperial
+ prince affirms the fact that German Imperialism, far from
+ engrossing and centralizing all the activities and powers of
+ the empire in Berlin, recognizes that German nationality is
+ large enough and great enough to admit of many capitals, many
+ individualities, and many separate State growths within the
+ sure compass of one great organism.</p>
+
+ <p>That an Ireland severed by force of arms from the British
+ Empire and annexed to the German Empire would be ill-governed
+ by her new masters is inconceivable. On the contrary, the
+ ablest brains in Germany, scientific, commercial, and
+ financial, no less than military and strategic, would be
+ devoted to the great task of making sure the conquest not only
+ of an island but of the intelligence of a not unintelligent
+ people, and by wisely developing so priceless a possession to
+ reconcile its inhabitants through growing
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page76"
+ id="page76"></a>[pg 76]</span> prosperity and an excellent
+ administration, to so great a change in their political
+ environment. Can it be said that England, even in her most
+ lucid intervals, has brought to the Government of Ireland
+ her best efforts, her most capable men, or her highest
+ purpose? The answer may be given by Li Hung Chang, whose
+ diary we have so lately read. Recording his interview with
+ Mr. Gladstone, the Chinese statesman says: "He spoke about
+ ... Ireland; and I was certain that he hoped to see that
+ unhappy country governed better before he died. 'They have
+ given their best to England,' he said, 'and in return have
+ been given only England's worst.'" It is certain that
+ Germany, once in possession of Ireland, would assuredly not
+ give to that country only Germany's worst.</p>
+
+ <p>In a score of ways Ireland would stand to gain from the
+ change of direction, of purpose, of intention, and, I will add,
+ of inspiration and capacity in her newly-imposed rulers.</p>
+
+ <p>Whether she liked them or not, at the outset, would be
+ beside the question. In this they would differ but little from
+ those she had so long and wearily had measure of, and if they
+ brought to their new task a new spirit and a new intellectual
+ equipment Irishmen would not be slow to realize that if they
+ themselves were never to rule their own country, they had, at
+ least, found in their new masters something more than
+ emigration agents.</p>
+
+ <p>Moreover, to Germany there would be no "Irish question," no
+ "haggard and haunting problem" to palsy her brain and miscredit
+ her hand with its old tags and jibes and sordid impulses to
+ deny the obvious.</p>
+
+ <p>To Germany there would be only an English question. To
+ prevent that from ever again imperilling her world future would
+ be the first purpose of German overseas statesmanship. And it
+ is clear that a wise and capable Irish Administration, designed
+ to build up and strengthen from within and not to belittle and
+ exploit from without, would be the sure and certain purpose of
+ a victorious Germany.</p>
+
+ <p>I have now outlined the two possible dispositions of Ireland
+ that up to this British opinion admits as conceivable in die
+ improbable event of a British defeat by Germany. Only these two
+ contingencies are ever admitted. First that Ireland, sharing
+ the common disaster, must endure with her defeated partner all
+ the evils that a great overthrow must inflict upon the United
+ Kingdom. Second, that Ireland, if Great Britain should be
+ completely defeated, might conceivably be "taken" or annexed by
+ the victor and held as a <span class="pagenum"><a name="page77"
+ id="page77"></a>[pg 77]</span> conquered territory, and in
+ this guise would bitterly regret the days of her union with
+ Great Britain. I have sought to show, in answer to the
+ latter argument, that were annexation by the victor indeed
+ to follow a British defeat Ireland might very conceivably
+ find the changed circumstances greatly to her advantage.</p>
+
+ <p>But there is a third contingency I have nowhere seen
+ discussed or hinted at, and yet it is at least as likely as No.
+ 1, and far more probable than No. 2&mdash;for I do not think
+ that the annexation of Ireland by a European power is
+ internationally possible, however decisive might be the
+ overthrow of England. It is admitted (and it is upon this
+ hypothesis that the discussion is proceeding) that Great
+ Britain might be defeated by Germany, and that the British
+ fleet might be broken and an enemy's sword might transfix
+ England. Such an overthrow would be of enormous import to
+ Europe and to the whole world. The trident would have changed
+ hands, for the defeat of England could only be brought about by
+ the destruction of her sea supremacy. Unless help came from
+ without, a blockaded Britain would be more at the mercy of the
+ victor than France was after Sedan and Paris. It would lie with
+ the victor to see that the conditions of peace he imposed were
+ such as, while ensuring to him the objects for which he had
+ fought, would be the least likely conditions to provoke
+ external intervention or a combination of alarmed world
+ interests. Now, putting aside lesser consideration, the chief
+ end Germany would have in a war with England would be to ensure
+ her own free future on the seas. For with that assured and
+ guaranteed by a victory over England, all else that she seeks
+ must in the end be hers. To annex resisting British colonies
+ would be in itself an impossible task&mdash;physically a much
+ more impossible task than to annex Ireland.</p>
+
+ <p>To annex Ireland would be, as a military measure, once
+ command of the seas was gained, a comparatively easy task. No
+ practical resistance to one German army corps even could be
+ offered by any force Ireland contains, or could of herself, put
+ into the field. No arsenal or means of manufacturing arms
+ exists. The population has been disarmed for a century, and by
+ bitter experience has been driven to regard the use of arms as
+ a criminal offence. Patriotism has been treated as felony.
+ Volunteers and Territorials are not for Ireland. To expect that
+ a disarmed and demoralized population who have been sedulously
+ batoned into a state of physical and moral dejection, should
+ develop military virtues in face of a disciplined army is to
+ attribute to Irishmen the very
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page78"
+ id="page78"></a>[pg 78]</span> qualities their critics unite
+ in denying them. "The Irishman fights well everywhere except
+ in Ireland," has passed into a commonplace: and since every
+ effort of government has been directed to ensuring the
+ abiding application of the sneer, Englishmen would find, in
+ the end, the emasculating success of their rule completely
+ justified in the physical submission of Ireland to the new
+ force that held her down. With Great Britain cut off and the
+ Irish Sea held by German squadrons, no power from within
+ could maintain any effective resistance to a German
+ occupation of Dublin and a military administration of the
+ island. To convert that into permanent administration could
+ not be opposed from within, and with Great Britain down and
+ severed from Ireland by a victorious German navy, it is
+ obvious that opposition to the permanent retention of
+ Ireland by the victor must come from without, and it is for
+ this international reason that I think a German annexation
+ of any part of a defeated United Kingdom need not be
+ seriously considered. Such a complete change in the
+ geography of Europe as a German-owned Ireland could not but
+ provoke universal alarm and a widespread combination to
+ forbid its realization. The bogey that Ireland, if not John
+ Bull's other island, must necessarily be somebody else's
+ other island will not really bear inspection at close
+ quarters.</p>
+
+ <p>Germany would have to attain her end, the permanent
+ disabling of the maritime supremacy of Great Britain, by
+ another and less provocative measure. It is here and in just
+ these circumstances that the third contingency, and one no
+ Englishman I venture to think, has ever dreamed of, would be
+ born on the field of battle and baptized a Germanic godchild
+ with European diplomacy as sponsor. Germany, for her own
+ imperial ends and in pursuit of a great world policy, might
+ successfully accomplish what Louis XIV and Napoleon only
+ contemplated. An Ireland, already severed by a sea held by
+ German warships, and temporarily occupied by a German army,
+ might well be permanently and irrevocably severed from Great
+ Britain, and with common assent erected into a neutralized,
+ independent European State under international guarantees. An
+ independent Ireland would, of itself, be no threat or hurt to
+ any European interest. On the contrary, to make of Ireland an
+ Atlantic Holland, a maritime Belgium, would be an act of
+ restoration to Europe of this the most naturally favoured of
+ European islands that a Peace Congress should, in the end, be
+ glad to ratify at the instance of a victorious Germany. That
+ Germany should propose this form of dissolution of the United
+ Kingdom in any interests but
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page79"
+ id="page79"></a>[pg 79]</span> her own, or for the <i>beaux
+ yeux</i> of Ireland I do not for a moment assert. Her main
+ object would be the opening of the seas and their permanent
+ freeing from that overwhelming control Great Britain has
+ exercised since the destruction of the French navy, largely
+ based, as all naval strategists must perceive on the
+ unchallenged possession of Ireland.</p>
+
+ <p>That Ireland is primarily a European island inhabited by a
+ European people who are not English, and who have for centuries
+ appealed to Europe and the world to aid them in ceasing to be
+ politically controlled by England, is historic fact. And since
+ the translation of this historic fact into practice European
+ politics would undoubtedly effect the main object of the
+ victorious power, it is evident that, Great Britain once
+ defeated, Germany would carry the Irish question to a European
+ solution in harmony with her maritime interests, and could
+ count on the support of the great bulk of European opinion to
+ support the settlement those interests imposed. And if
+ politically and commercially an independent and neutral Irish
+ State commended itself to Europe, on moral and intellectual
+ grounds the claim could be put still higher. Nothing advanced
+ on behalf of England could meet the case for a free Ireland as
+ stated by Germany. Germany would attain her ends as the
+ champion of national liberty and could destroy England's naval
+ supremacy for all time by an act of irreproachable morality.
+ The United States, however distasteful from one point of view
+ the defeat of England might be, could do nothing to oppose a
+ European decision that could dearly win an instant support from
+ influential circles&mdash;Irish and German&mdash;within her own
+ borders.</p>
+
+ <p>In any case the Monroe Doctrine cuts both ways, and unless
+ at the outset the United States could be drawn into an
+ Anglo-Teutonic conflict, it is clear that the decision of a
+ European Congress to create a new European State out of a very
+ old European people could not furnish ground for American
+ interference.</p>
+
+ <p>I need not further labour the question. If Englishmen will
+ but awaken from the dream that Ireland "belongs" to them and
+ not to the Irish people, and that that great and fertile
+ island, inhabited by a brave, a chivalrous and an intellectual
+ race (qualities they have alas! done their utmost to expel from
+ the island) is a piece of real estate they own and can dispose
+ of as they will, they cannot fail to perceive that the Irish
+ question cannot much longer be mishandled with impunity, and
+ that far from being, as they now think it, merely a party
+ question&mdash;and not even a "domestic question"
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page80"
+ id="page80"></a>[pg 80]</span> or one the colonies have a
+ voice in&mdash;it may in a brief epoch become a European
+ question.</p>
+
+ <p>With the approaching disappearance of the Near Eastern
+ question (which England is hastening to the detriment of
+ Turkey) a more and more pent-in Central Europe may discover
+ that there is a Near Western question, and that Ireland&mdash;a
+ free Ireland&mdash;restored to Europe is the key to unlock the
+ western ocean and open the seaways of the world.</p>
+
+ <p>Again it is Mr. Gladstone who comes to remind Englishmen
+ that Ireland, after all, is a European island, and that Europe
+ has some distant standing in the issue.</p>
+
+ <p>"I would beseech Englishmen to consider how they would
+ behave to Ireland, if instead of having 5,000,000 of people,
+ she had 25,000,000; or if instead of being placed between us
+ and the ocean she were placed between us and the Continent."
+ (Notes and queries on the Irish Demand, February, 1887.) While
+ the geographical positions of the islands to each other and to
+ Europe have not changed, and cannot change, the political
+ relation of one to the other, and so the political and
+ economical relation of both to Europe, to the world and to the
+ carrying trade of the world and the naval policies of the
+ powers may be gravely altered by agencies beyond the control of
+ Great Britain.</p>
+
+ <p>The changes wrought in the speed and capacity of steam
+ shipping, the growth and visible trend of German naval power,
+ and the increasing possibilities of aerial navigation, all
+ unite to emphasize the historian Niebuhr's warning, and to
+ indicate for Ireland a possible future of restored communion
+ with Europe, and less and less the continued wrong of that
+ artificial exclusion in which British policy has sought to
+ maintain her&mdash;"an island beyond an island."</p>
+
+ <h3 class="sc">Chapter IX</h3>
+
+ <h2>THE ELSEWHERE EMPIRE</h2>
+
+ <p>Every man born in Ireland holds a "hereditary brief" for the
+ opponents of English sway, wherever they may be. The tribunal
+ of history in his own land is closed to him; he must appeal to
+ another court; he must seek the ear of those who make history
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page81"
+ id="page81"></a>[pg 81]</span> elsewhere. The Irishman is
+ denied the right of having a history, as he is denied the
+ right of having a country. He must recover both. For him
+ there is no past any more than a future. And if he seeks the
+ record of his race in the only schools or books open to him
+ he will find that hope has been shut out of the school and
+ fame taken out of the story.</p>
+
+ <p>The late John Richard Green, one of the greatest of English
+ historians, was attracted to Ireland by a noble sympathy for
+ the fallen which he shared with very few of his
+ fellow-countrymen. We are told that he sympathized with the
+ spirit of Irish nationality. "A State," he would say, "is
+ accidental; it can be made or unmade; but a nation is something
+ real which can be neither made nor destroyed."</p>
+
+ <p>He had once planned a history of Ireland, "but abandoned the
+ idea because the continuous record of misery and misgovernment
+ was too painful to contemplate." All pleasure lies in contrast.
+ The history of Ireland offers no contrast; it is a tale of
+ unmitigated wrong.</p>
+
+ <p>It is too full of graves and the ghosts are not laid yet. As
+ well write the history of a churchyard. Forty years before John
+ Richard Green thus explained why he had abandoned the plan of
+ the graveyard, Victor Hugo lashed the front of England with
+ this very thong. "Ireland turned into a cemetery; Poland
+ transported to Siberia; all Italy a galleys&mdash;there is
+ where we stand in this month of November, 1831!"</p>
+
+ <p>The history of Ireland remains to be written, because the
+ purpose of Ireland remains yet to be achieved. The widow of
+ John Richard Green has laid the foundations of that temple of
+ hope in which the youth of Ireland must enter and be sworn to
+ the task that yet remains for Irishmen to accomplish.</p>
+
+ <p>And so in closing the days of 1913 I bring, with a message
+ of hope, these scattered thoughts upon the British Empire and
+ its approaching dissolution to lay before the youth of Ireland.
+ I say approaching dissolution advisedly, for the signs are
+ there to be read. "Home Rule" will not save it. The attempt now
+ being made to bribe Ireland and the greater Ireland beyond the
+ seas, to the side of the Elsewhere Empire by what has been
+ aptly termed a "ticket-of-leave" bill, will not suffice. The
+ issue lies in stronger hands. Even could the two Irelands be
+ won by the dole now offered, of a subordinate Parliament in
+ Dublin, its hands tied so that it must be impotent for any
+ national effort, "a Parliament"
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page82"
+ id="page82"></a>[pg 82]</span> as Mr. Herbert Samuel says,
+ "for the local affairs of Irishmen," there are other and
+ more powerful agencies that no measure of conciliation
+ within the Empire can permanently win to that system of
+ world exploitation centred in London.</p>
+
+ <p>"I would let the Irish have Home Rule," said recently Mr.
+ Winston Churchill, "for their own idiotic affairs." But the
+ last word came from Lord Morley, the "father of Home Rule."
+ "Give it them," he said, in friendly, private counsel, "give it
+ them; let them have the full savour of their own dunghill
+ civilization."</p>
+
+ <p>But the last word of all will come, not from Lord Morley, or
+ "Home Rule," but from the land and the myriad peoples whose
+ ancient civilization, Lord Morley, like every preceding
+ Viceroy, has striven to bury under the dunghill of British
+ supremacy in India, and to hide the very outlines of the
+ ancient body of the set designs of a new purpose. The capital
+ of British India is to be the "new Delhi," planned in
+ Whitehall, but paid for in India&mdash;the apotheosis of dung.
+ The new India will make short work of "the new Delhi."</p>
+
+ <p>"An unplumbed, salt, estranging sea" of moral and spiritual
+ separation sets between the imperial conception as nourished in
+ Britain and the growing hope of the great millions of mankind
+ who make up the greatest realm of her empire.</p>
+
+ <p>Ireland <i>might</i> be bought or bribed, at any rate in
+ this generation, to forfeit her national ideals and barter the
+ aspiration that six centuries of contact with England have
+ failed to kill; but the 350,000,000 of Indian mankind can never
+ be, or bought, or bribed in the end.</p>
+
+ <p>Even if Ireland forgot the deathless words of Grattan,
+ delivered in the subordinate Parliament of 1780, those words
+ will find a response in the hearts of men who never heard of
+ Grattan. For the voice of the Irish patriot was, in truth, a
+ world voice&mdash;a summons to every audience wherever men
+ gather in quest of freedom. The prophesy Grattan uttered in the
+ name of Ireland assuredly will be fulfilled, and that in the
+ life time of many of us, in that greater Ireland England holds
+ in the eastern seas by the very same tide of raid, conquest and
+ spoliation that has given her our own land.</p>
+
+ <p>Substitute India for Ireland and the Grattan of 1780 becomes
+ the Indian patriot of to-day.</p>
+
+ <p>"I will never be satisfied so long as the meanest cottager
+ in Ireland has a link of the British chain clanking in his
+ rags; he may be naked, he shall not be in irons; and I do see
+ the time is at hand; <span class="pagenum"><a name="page83"
+ id="page83"></a>[pg 83]</span> the spirit has gone forth,
+ the declaration is planted; and though great men should
+ apostasize, yet the cause will live; and though the public
+ speaker should die, yet the immortal fire shall outlast the
+ organ which conveyed it, and the breath of liberty, like the
+ word of holy men, will not die with the prophet, but survive
+ him."</p>
+
+ <p>Were Ireland to accept the bribe now offered she would
+ indeed justify the reproach of Wilfred Blunt; but she would
+ become some thing else than a "weapon of offence in England's
+ hands against the freedom of the world elsewhere;" she would
+ share, and rightly share the fate of the parasite growth that,
+ having gripped her trunk so tightly, has by that aid reached
+ the sunlight. The British Empire is no northern oak tree. It is
+ a creeping, climbing plant that has fastened on the limbs of
+ others and grown great from a sap not its own. If we seek an
+ analogy for it in the vegetable and not in the animal world we
+ must go to the forests of the tropics and not to the northland
+ woodlands. In the great swamps at the mouth of the Amazon the
+ naturalist Bates describes a monstrous liana, the "Sipo
+ Matador" or Murdering Creeper, that far more fitly than the oak
+ tree of the north typifies John Bull and the place he has won
+ in the sunlight by the once strong limbs of Ireland.</p>
+
+ <p>Speaking of the forests round Para, Bates says:&mdash;"In
+ these tropical forests each plant and tree seems to be striving
+ to outvie its fellows, struggling upwards towards light and
+ air&mdash;branch and leaf and stem&mdash;regardless of its
+ neighbours. Parasitic plants are seen fastening with firm grip
+ on others, making use of them with reckless indifference as
+ instruments for their own advancement. Live and let live is
+ clearly not the maxim taught in these wildernesses. There is
+ one kind of parasitic tree very common near Para which exhibits
+ this feature in a very prominent manner. It is called the "Sipo
+ Matador," or Murderer Liana. It belongs to the fig order, and
+ has been described and figured by Von Martius as the Atlas to
+ Spix and Martius' Travels. I observed many specimens. <i>The
+ base of its stem would be unable to bear the weight of the
+ upper growth</i>; it is obliged therefore to support itself on
+ a tree of <i>another species</i>. In this it is not essentially
+ different from other climbing trees and plants, but the way the
+ Matador sets about it is peculiar and produces certainly a
+ disagreeable impression. It springs up close to the tree on
+ which it intends to fix itself, and the wood of its stem grows
+ by spreading itself like a plastic mould over one side of the
+ trunk of its supporter. It then puts forth, from each side, an
+ armlike branch, which grows rapidly, and looks as though a
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page84"
+ id="page84"></a>[pg 84]</span> stream of sap were flowing
+ and hardening as it went. This adheres closely to the trunk
+ of the victim, and the two arms meet at the opposite side
+ and blend together. These arms are put forth at somewhat
+ regular intervals in mounting upwards, and the victim, when
+ its strangler is full grown, becomes tightly clasped by a
+ number of inflexible rings. These rings gradually grow
+ larger as the Murderer flourishes, rearing its crown of
+ foliage to the sky mingled with that of its neighbour, and
+ in course of time they kill it, by stopping the flow of its
+ sap. The strange spectacle now remains of the selfish
+ parasite clasping in its arms the lifeless and decaying body
+ of its victim, which had been a help to its own growth. Its
+ ends have been served&mdash;it has flowered and fruited,
+ reproduced and disseminated its kind; and <i>now when the
+ dead trunk moulders away its own end approaches; its support
+ is gone and itself also falls</i>."</p>
+
+ <p>The analogy is almost the most perfect in literature, and if
+ we would not see it made perfect in history we must get rid of
+ the parasite grip before we are quite strangled. If we would
+ not share the coming darkness we must shake off the murderer's
+ hold, before murderer and victim fall together. That fall is
+ close at hand. A brave hand may yet cut the "Sipo Matador," and
+ the slayer be slain before he has quite stifled his victim.</p>
+
+ <p>If that hand be not a European one, then may it come,
+ bronzed, keen, and supple from the tropic calm! The birds of
+ the forest are on the wing.</p>
+
+ <p>Regions Caesar never knew, including Hibernia, have come
+ under the eagles, nay the vultures, of imperial Britain. But
+ the lion's maw is full.</p>
+
+ <p>At length the overgorged beast of prey, with all the
+ diseases in his veins that over-eating brings, finds that his
+ claws are not so sharp as they were, that his belly is much
+ heavier when he tries to leap and that it is now chiefly by his
+ voice he still scares his enemies.</p>
+
+ <p>The Empire of England dates from Tudor times. Henry VIII was
+ the first John Bull. When the conquered Irish and the wealth
+ derived from their rich country England set out to lay low
+ every free people that had a country worth invading and who, by
+ reasons of their non-imperial instinct were not prepared to
+ meet her on equal terms. India she overran by the same methods
+ as had given her Ireland.</p>
+
+ <p>Wholesale plunder, treachery and deceit met at her council
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page85"
+ id="page85"></a>[pg 85]</span> board under a succession of
+ Governors and Viceroys, whose policy was that of Captain
+ Kidd, and whose ante-room of state led every native prince
+ to the slippery plank. The thing became the most colossal
+ success upon earth. No people were found able to withstand
+ such a combination. How could peoples still nursed in the
+ belief of some diviner will ruling men's minds resist such
+ an attack?</p>
+
+ <p>For one brief space Napoleon reared his head; and had he
+ cast his vision to. Ireland instead of to Egypt he would have
+ found out the secret of the pirate's stronghold. But the fates
+ willed otherwise; the time was not yet. He sailed for
+ Alexandria, lured by a dream, instead of for Cork; and the
+ older Imperialists beat the new Imperialists and secured a
+ fresh century of unprecedented triumph. The Pyramids looked
+ down on Waterloo; but the headlands of Bantry Bay concealed the
+ mastery, and the mystery, of the seas.</p>
+
+ <p>With 1811 was born the era of Charles Peace, no less than of
+ John Bull&mdash;on Sundays and Saint's days a churchwarden, who
+ carried the plate; on week days a burglar who lifted it. Truly,
+ as John Mitchel said on his convict hulk: "On English felony
+ the sun never sets." May it set in 1915.</p>
+
+ <p>From Napoleon's downfall to the battle of Colenso, the
+ Empire founded by Henry VIII has swelled to monstrous size.
+ Innumerable free peoples have bit the dust and died with
+ plaintive cries to heaven. The wealth of London has increased a
+ thousand fold, and the giant hotels and caravanserais have
+ grown, at the millionaire's touch, to rival the palaces of the
+ Caesars.</p>
+
+ <p>"All's well with God's world"&mdash;and poet and plagiarist,
+ courtier and courtesan, Kipling and cant&mdash;these now dally
+ by the banks of the Thames and dine off the peoples of the
+ earth, just as once the degenerate populace of imperial Rome
+ fed upon the peoples of the Pyramids. But the thing is near the
+ end. The "secret of Empire" is no longer the sole possession of
+ England. Other peoples are learning to think imperially. The
+ Goths and the Visigoths of modern civilisation are upon the
+ horizon. Action must soon follow thought. London, like Rome,
+ will have strange guests. They will not pay their hotel bills.
+ Their day is not yet but it is at hand. "Home Rule" assemblies
+ and Indian "Legislative Councils" may prolong the darkness; but
+ the dawn is in die sky. And in the downfall of the Tudor
+ Empire, both Ireland and India shall escape from the
+ destruction and join again the free civilizations of the
+ earth.</p>
+
+ <p>The birds of the forest are on the
+ wing.</p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page86"
+ id="page86"></a>[pg 86]</span>
+
+ <p>It is an Empire in these straights that turns to America,
+ through Ireland, to save it. And the price it offers
+ is&mdash;war with Germany. France may serve for a time, but
+ France like Germany, is in Europe, and in the end it is all
+ Europe and not only Germany England assails. Permanent
+ confinement of the white races, as distinct from the
+ Anglo-Saxon variety, can only be achieved by the active support
+ and close alliance of the American people. These people are
+ to-day, unhappily republicans and free men, and have no
+ ill-will for Germany and a positive distaste for imperialism.
+ It is not really in their blood. That blood is mainly Irish and
+ German, the blood of men not distinguished in the past for
+ successful piracy and addicted rather to the ways of peace. The
+ wars that Germany has waged have been wars of defence, or wars
+ to accomplish the unity of her people. Irish wars have been
+ only against one enemy, and ending always in material disaster
+ they have conferred always a moral gain. Their memory uplifts
+ the Irish heart; for no nation, no people, can reproach Ireland
+ with having wronged them. She has injured no man.</p>
+
+ <p>And now, to-day, it is the great free race of this common
+ origin of peace-loving peoples, filling another continent, that
+ is being appealed to by every agency of crafty diplomacy, in
+ every garb but that of truth, to aid the enemy of both and the
+ arch-disturber of the old world. The jailer of Ireland seeks
+ Irish-American support to keep Ireland in prison; the intriguer
+ against Germany would win German-American good-will against its
+ parent stock. There can be no peace for mankind, no limit to
+ the intrigues set on foot to assure Great Britain "the mastery
+ of the seas."</p>
+
+ <p>If "America" will but see things aright, as a good
+ "Anglo-Saxon" people should, she will take her place beside,
+ nay, even a little in front of John Bull in the plunder of the
+ earth. Were the "Anglo-Saxon Alliance" ever consummated it
+ would be the biggest crime in human history. That alliance is
+ meant by the chief party seeking it to be a perpetual threat to
+ the peoples of Europe, nay, to the whole of mankind outside the
+ allied ranks. And instead of bringing peace it must assuredly
+ bring the most distracting and disastrous conflict that has
+ ever stained the world with blood.</p>
+
+ <p>John Bull has now become the great variety artist, one in
+ truth whose infinite variety detention cannot stale any more
+ than Customs officers can arrest the artist's baggage.</p>
+
+ <p>At one moment the "Shirt King," being prosecuted for the
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page87"
+ id="page87"></a>[pg 87]</span> sale of cheap cottons as
+ "Irish Linen" in London; the next he lands the "Bloater
+ King" in New York, offering small fish as something very
+ like a whale. And the offer in both cases is made in the
+ tongue of Shakespeare.</p>
+
+ <p>The tongue has infinite uses; from China it sounds the "call
+ for prayer," and lo, the Book of Dividends opens at the right
+ text. Were Bull ever caught in the act, and put from the trade
+ of international opium-dosing to that of picking oakum and the
+ treadmill we should hear him exclaim, as he went out of sight,
+ "Behold me weaving the threads of democratic destiny as I climb
+ the golden stair."</p>
+
+ <p>The rôles are endless! In Ireland, the conversion of
+ Irishmen into cattle; in England, the conversion of Irish
+ cattle into men; in India and Egypt the suppression of the
+ native press; in America the subsidising of the non-native
+ press; the tongue of Shakespeare has infinite uses. He only
+ poached deer&mdash;it would poach dreadnoughts. The emanations
+ of Thames sewage are all over the world, and the sewers are
+ running still. The penalty for the pollution of the Thames is a
+ high one; but the prize for the pollution of the Mississippi is
+ still higher; the fountains of the deep, the mastery of the
+ great waters, these are the things John Bull seeks on the shore
+ of the "Father of Waters."</p>
+
+ <p>The sunset of the fading Empire would turn those waters into
+ blood. The British Empire was not founded in peace; how, then
+ can it be kept by peace, or ensured by peace-treaties? It was
+ born of pillage and blood-shed, and has been maintained by
+ both; and it cannot now be secured by a common language any
+ more than a common Bible. The lands called the British Empire
+ belong to many races, and it is only by the sword and not by
+ the Book of Peace or any pact of peace that those races can be
+ kept from the ownership of their own countries.</p>
+
+ <p>The "Anglo-Saxon Alliance" means a compact to ensure slavery
+ and beget war. The people who fought the greatest war in modern
+ history to release slaves are not likely to begin the greatest
+ war in all history to beget slaves.</p>
+
+ <p>Let the truth be known in America that England wants to turn
+ the great Republic of free men into die imperial ally of the
+ great Empire of bought men, and that day die "Anglo-Saxon
+ Alliance" gives place to the Declaration of Independence.</p>
+
+ <p>The true alliance to aim at for all who love peace is the
+ friendly Union of Germany, America and Ireland. These are the
+ true United States of the world.</p>
+
+ <p>Ireland, the link between Europe and America, must be freed
+ by both.</p>
+
+ <p>Denied to-day free intercourse with either, she yet forms in
+ the great designs of Providence the natural bond to bring the
+ old world and the new together.</p>
+
+ <p>May 1915 lay the foundation of this&mdash;the true Hundred
+ Years of Peace!</p>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's The Crime Against Europe, by Roger Casement
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Crime Against Europe, by Roger Casement
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Crime Against Europe
+ A Possible Outcome of the War of 1914
+
+Author: Roger Casement
+
+Release Date: January 18, 2005 [EBook #14728]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE CRIME AGAINST EUROPE ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David Starner, William Flis, and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team.
+
+
+
+
+
+THE
+
+Crime Against Europe
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_A Possible Outcome of the War of 1914_
+
+BY
+
+SIR ROGER CASEMENT
+
+ * * * * *
+
+COPYRIGHTED 1915
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+INTRODUCTION.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The reader must remember that these articles were written before
+the war began. They are in a sense prophetic and show a remarkable
+understanding of the conditions which brought about the present great
+war in Europe.
+
+The writer has made European history a life study and his training in
+the English consular service placed him in a position to secure the
+facts upon which he bases his arguments.
+
+Sir Roger Casement was born in Ireland in September, 1864. He was made
+consul to Lorenzo Marques in 1889, being transferred to a similar
+post in the Portuguese Possessions in West Africa, which included the
+consulate to the Gaboon and the Congo Free State. He held this post
+from 1898 to 1905, when he was given the consulate of Santos. The
+following year he was appointed consul to Hayti and San Domingo, but
+did not proceed, going instead to Para, where he served until 1909,
+when he became consul-general to Rio de Janeiro. He was created a
+knight in 1911.
+
+He was one of the organizers of the Irish Volunteers at Dublin in
+November, 1913, being one of their provisional committee. At present
+he is a member of the governing body of that organization. He spent
+the summer of this year in the United States. Sir Roger is at present
+in Berlin, where, after a visit paid to the foreign office by him,
+the German Chancellor caused to be issued the statement that "should
+the German forces reach the shores of Ireland they would come not as
+conquerors but as friends."
+
+Sir Roger is well known for his investigation into the Putomayo rubber
+district atrocities in 1912.
+
+December, 1914.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter I
+
+THE CAUSES OF THE WAR AND THE FOUNDATION OF PEACE
+
+
+Since the war, foreshadowed in these pages, has come and finds public
+opinion in America gravely shocked at a war it believes to be solely
+due to certain phases of European militarism, the writer is now
+persuaded to publish these articles, which at least have the merit of
+having been written well before the event, in the hope that they may
+furnish a more useful point of view. For if one thing is certain it is
+that European militarism is no more the cause of this war than of any
+previous war. Europe is not fighting to see who has the best army,
+or to test mere military efficiency, but because certain peoples wish
+certain things and are determined to get and keep them by an appeal to
+force. If the armies and fleets were small the war would have broken
+out just the same, the parties and their claims, intentions, and
+positions being what they are. To find the causes of the war we must
+seek the motives of the combatants, and if we would have a lasting
+peace the foundations upon which to build it must be laid bare by
+revealing those foundations on which the peace was broken. To find
+the causes of the war we should turn not to Blue Books or White
+Papers, giving carefully selected statements of those responsible
+for concealing from the public the true issues that move nations to
+attack each other, but should seek the unavowed aims of those nations
+themselves.
+
+Once the motive is found it is not hard to say who it is that broke
+the peace, whatever the diplomats may put forward in lieu of the real
+reason.
+
+The war was, in truth, inevitable, and was made inevitable years ago.
+It was not brought about through the faults or temper of Sovereigns
+or their diplomats, not because there were great armies in Europe,
+but because certain Powers, and one Power in particular, nourished
+ambitions and asserted claims that involved not only ever increasing
+armaments but insured ever increasing animosities. In these cases
+peace, if permitted, would have dissipated the ambitions and upset
+claims, so it was only a question of time and opportunity when those
+whose aims required war would find occasion to bring it about.
+
+As Mr. Bernard Shaw put it, in a recent letter to the press: "After
+having done all in our power to render war inevitable it is no use now
+to beg people not to make a disturbance, but to come to London to be
+kindly but firmly spoken to by Sir Edward Grey."
+
+To find the motive powerful enough to have plunged all Europe into war
+in the short space of a few hours, we must seek it, not in the pages
+of a "white paper" covering a period of only fifteen days (July 20th
+to August 4th, 1914), but in the long anterior activities that led the
+great Powers of Europe into definite commitments to each other. For
+the purposes of this investigation we can eliminate at once three of
+the actual combatants, as being merely "accessories after the fact,"
+viz.:--Servia, Belgium and Japan, and confine our study of the
+causes of the conflict to the aims and motives of the five principal
+combatants. For it is clear that in the quarrel between Servia and
+Austria, Hungary is only a side issue of the larger question that
+divides Europe into armed camps. Were categoric proof sought of how
+small a part the quarrel between Vienna and Belgrade played in the
+larger tragedy, it can be found in the urgent insistence of the
+Russian Government itself in the very beginning of the diplomatic
+conversations that preceded the outbreak of hostilities.
+
+As early as the 24th of July, the Russian Government sought to prevail
+upon Great Britain to proclaim its complete solidarity with Russia and
+France, and on the British Ambassador in St. Petersburg pointing out
+that "direct British interests in Servia were nil, and a war on behalf
+of that country would never be sanctioned by British public opinion,"
+the Russian Minister of Foreign Affairs replied that "we must not
+forget that the _general European_ question was involved, the Servian
+question being but a part of the former, and that Great Britain
+could not afford to efface herself from the problem _now at issue_."
+(Despatch of Sir G. Buchanan to Sir E. Grey, 24th July, 1914).
+
+Those problems involved far mightier questions than the relations of
+Servia to Austria, the neutrality of Belgium or the wish of Japan to
+keep the peace of the East by seizing Kiao-Chau.
+
+The neutrality never became a war issue until long after war had been
+decided on and had actually broken out; while Japan came into the
+contest solely because Europe had obligingly provided one, and because
+one European power preferred, for its own ends, to strengthen an
+Asiatic race to seeing a kindred white people it feared grow stronger
+in the sun.
+
+Coming then to the five great combatants, we can quickly reduce them
+to four. Austria-Hungary and Germany in this war are indivisible.
+While each may have varying aims on many points and ambitions that,
+perhaps, widely diverge both have one common bond, self-preservation,
+that binds them much more closely together than mere formal "allies."
+In this war Austria fights of necessity as a Germanic Power, although
+the challenge to her has been on the ground of her Slav obligations
+and activities. Germany is compelled to support Austria by a law of
+necessity that a glance at the map of Europe explains. Hence, for
+the purpose of the argument, we may put the conflict as between the
+Germanic peoples of Central Europe and those who have quarreled with
+them.
+
+We thus arrive at the question, "why should such strangely consorted
+allies as England, Russia and France be at war with the German
+people?"
+
+The answer is not to be found in the White Book, or in any statement
+publicly put forward by Great Britain, Russia or France.
+
+But the answer must be found, if we would find the causes of the war,
+and if we would hope to erect any lasting peace on the ruins of this
+world conflict.
+
+To accept, as an explanation of the war the statement that Germany
+has a highly trained army she has not used for nearly half a century
+and that her people are so obsessed with admiration for it that they
+longed to test it on their neighbours, is to accept as an explanation
+a stultifying contradiction. It is of course much easier to put
+the blame on the Kaiser. This line of thought is highly popular: it
+accords, too, with a fine vulgar instinct.
+
+The German people can be spared the odium of responsibility for a
+war they clearly did nothing to provoke, by representing them as the
+victims of an autocracy, cased in mail and beyond their control.
+We thus arrive at "the real crime against Germany," which explains
+everything but the thing it set out to explain. It leaves unexplained
+the real crime against Europe.
+
+To explain the causes of the war we must find the causes of the
+alliances of England, France and Russia against Germany.
+
+For the cause of the war is that alliance--that and nothing else. The
+defence of the _Entente Cordiale_ is that it is an innocent pact of
+friendship, designed only to meet the threat of the Triple Alliance.
+But the answer to that is that whereas the Triple Alliance was formed
+thirty years ago, it has never declared war on anyone, while the
+_Triple Entente_ before it is eight years old has involved Europe,
+America, Africa, and Asia in a world conflict. We must find the motive
+for England allying herself with France and Russia in an admittedly
+anti-German "understanding" if we would understand the causes of the
+present war and why it is that many besides Bernard Shaw hold that
+"after having done all in our power to render war inevitable" it was
+idle for the British Government to assume a death-bed solicitude
+for peace, having already dug its grave and cast aside the shovel
+for the gun. When that motive is apparent we shall realise who it
+was preferred war to peace and how impossible it is to hope for any
+certain peace ensuing from the victory of those who ensured an appeal
+to arms.
+
+The _Entente Cordiale_, to begin with, is unnatural. There is nothing
+in common between the parties to it, save antagonism to someone
+else. It is wrongly named. It is founded not on predilections but on
+prejudices--not on affection but on animosity. To put it crudely it is
+a bond of hate not of love. None of the parties to it like or admire
+each other, or have consistent aims, save one.
+
+That satisfied, they will surely fall out among themselves, and the
+greater the plunder derived from their victory the more certain their
+ensuing quarrel.
+
+Great Britain, in her dealings with most white people (not with all)
+is a democracy.
+
+Russia in her dealings with all, is an autocracy.
+
+Great Britain is democratic in her government of herself and in her
+dealings with the great white communities of Canada, Australia, New
+Zealand, and South Africa. She is not democratic in her dealings with
+subject races within the Empire--the Indians, notably, or the Irish.
+To the Indians her rule is that of an absentee autocracy, differing
+in speech, colour, religion and culture from those submitted to it by
+force; to the Irish that of a resident autocracy bent on eliminating
+the people governed from residence in their own country, and replacing
+them with cattle for British consumption.
+
+In both instances Britain is notably false to her professions of
+devotion to democratic principles. Her affinity with Russia is found
+then, not in the cases where her institutions are good, but in those
+where they are bad.
+
+An alliance founded on such grounds of contact can only produce evil.
+
+To such it gave birth in Persia, to such it must give birth in the
+present war.
+
+In Persia we saw it betray the principles of democratic government,
+destroy an infant constitution and disembowel the constitutionalists,
+whilst it divided their country into "spheres of influence" and to-day
+we see it harvesting with hands yet red with the blood of Persian
+patriots the redder fruit of the seed then sown.
+
+The alliance with France, while more natural than that with Russia if
+we regard Great Britain as a democracy (by eliminating India, Egypt,
+Ireland) had the same guilty end in view, and rests less on affinity
+of aims than on affinity of antipathies.
+
+The _Entente Cordiale_, the more closely we inspect it, we find is
+based not on a cordial regard of the parties to it for each other, but
+on a cordial disregard all three participants share for the party it
+is aimed against.
+
+It will be said that Germany must have done something to justify the
+resentment that could bring about so strangely assorted a combination
+against herself. What has been the crime of Germany against the powers
+now assailing her? She has doubtless committed many crimes, as have
+all the great powers, but in what respect has she so grievously sinned
+against Europe that the Czar, the Emperor of India, the King of
+Great Britain and Ireland, the Mikado and the President of the French
+Republic--to say nothing of those minor potentates who like Voltaire's
+minor prophets seem _capable de tout_--should now be pledged, by
+irrevocable pact, to her destruction as a great power?
+
+"German militarism," the reply that springs to the lips, is no more a
+threat to civilisation than French or Russian militarism. It was born,
+not of wars of aggression, but of wars of defence and unification.
+Since it was welded by blood and iron into the great human organism of
+the last forty years it has not been employed beyond the frontiers of
+Germany until last year.
+
+Can the same be said of Russian militarism or of French militarism or
+of British navalism?
+
+We are told the things differ in quality. The answer is what about the
+intent and the uses made. German militarism has kept peace and has
+not emerged beyond its own frontier until threatened with universal
+attack. Russian militarism has waged wars abroad, far beyond the
+confines of Russian territory; French militarism, since it was
+overthrown at Sedan, has carried fire and sword across all Northern
+Africa, has penetrated from the Atlantic to the Nile, has raided
+Tonquin, Siam, Madagascar, Morocco, while English navalism in the last
+forty years has bombarded the coast lines, battered the ports, and
+landed raiding parties throughout Asia and Africa, to say nothing of
+the well nigh continuous campaigns of annexation of the British army
+in India, Burma, South Africa, Egypt, Tibet, or Afghanistan, within
+the same period.
+
+As to the quality of the materialism of the great Continental Powers
+there is nothing to prefer in the French and Russian systems to
+the German system. Each involved enormous sacrifices on the people
+sustaining it. We are asked, however, to believe that French
+militarism is maintained by a "democracy" and German militarism by an
+"autocracy." Without appealing to the captive Queen of Madagascar for
+an opinion on the authenticity of French democracy we may confine the
+question to the elected representatives of the two peoples.
+
+In both cases the war credits are voted by the legislative bodies
+responsible to French and German opinion. The elected representatives
+of Germany are as much the spokesman of the nation as those of France,
+and the German Reichstag has sanctioned every successive levy for
+the support of German armaments. As to Russian militarism, it may be
+presumed no one will go quite so far as to assert that the Russian
+Duma is more truly representative of the Russian people than the
+Parliament of the Federated peoples of Germany at Berlin.
+
+The machines being then approximately the same machines, we must seek
+the justification for them in the uses to which they have been put.
+
+For what does France, for what does Russia maintain a great army? Why
+does Germany call so many youthful Germans to the colours? On what
+grounds of moral sanction does Great Britain maintain a navy, whose
+cost far exceeds all the burdens of German militarism?
+
+Russia stretches across the entire area of Central Asia and comprises
+much of the greater part of Europe as well. In its own territory, it
+is unassailable, and never has been invaded with success. No power
+can plunder or weaken Russia as long as she remains within her own
+borders. Of all the great powers in Europe she is the one that after
+England has the least need of a great army.
+
+She cannot be assailed with success at home, and she has no need
+to leave her own territories in search of lands to colonize. Her
+population, secure in its own vast numbers and vast resources has, for
+all future needs of expansion the continent of Siberia into which to
+overflow. Russia cannot be threatened within Russia and has no need
+to go outside Russia. A Russian army of 4,000,000 is not necessary to
+self-defence. Its inspiration can be due only to a policy of expansion
+at the cost of others, and its aim to extend and to maintain existing
+Russian frontiers. As I write it is engaged not in a war of defence
+but in a war of invasion, and is the instrument of a policy of avowed
+aggression.
+
+Not the protection of the Slavs from Austria, herself so largely a
+Slavic power and one that does not need to learn the principles of
+good government from Russia, but the incorporation of the Slavs within
+the mightiest empire upon earth--this is the main reason why Russia
+maintains the mightiest army upon earth. Its threat to Germany, as the
+protector of Austria-Hungary, has been clear, and if we would find
+the reason for German militarism we shall find at least one half of it
+across the Russian frontier.
+
+The huge machine of the French army, its first line troops almost
+equal to Germany's, is not a thing of yesterday.
+
+It was not German aggression founded it--although Germany felt it once
+at Jena. Founded by kings of France, French militarism has flourished
+under republic, empire, constitutional monarchy, and empire again
+until to-day we find its greatest bloom full blown under the mild
+breath of the third republic. What is the purpose of this perfect
+machine? Self-defence? From what attack? Germany has had it in her
+power, again and again within the last thirty years to attack
+France at a disadvantage, if not even with impunity. Why has she
+refrained--whose hand restrained her? Not Russia's--not England's.
+During the Russo-Japanese war or during the Boer war, France could
+have been assailed with ease and her army broken to pieces. But German
+militarism refrained from striking that blow. The object of the great
+army France maintains is not to be found in reasons of self-defence,
+but may be found, like that of Russia in hopes of armed expansion.
+Since the aim in both cases was the same, to wage a war of aggression
+to be termed of "recovery" in one case and "protection" in the other,
+it was not surprising that Czar and President should come together,
+and that the cause of the Slavs should become identified with the
+cause of Strasburg.
+
+To "protect" the Slavs meant assailing Austria-Hungary (another way of
+attacking Germany), and to "recover" Strasburg meant a _mes-alliance_
+between democrat of France and Cossack of the Don.
+
+We come now to the third party to die Entente, and it is now we begin
+to perceive how it was that a cordial understanding with England
+rendered a Russo-French attack upon Germany only a question of time
+and opportunity. Until England appeared upon the scene neither Russia
+nor France, nor both combined, could summon up courage to strike the
+blow. Willing to wound they were both afraid to strike. It needed a
+third courage, a keener purpose and a greater immunity.
+
+German militarism was too formidable a factor in the life of
+65,000,000 of the most capable people in Europe to be lightly assailed
+even by France and Russia combined. Russia needed money to perfect the
+machinery of invasion, so sorely tried by the disastrous failure to
+invade Korea and Manchuria. France had the money to advance, but she
+still doubted the ability of her stagnant population of 40,000,000 to
+face the growing magnitude of the great people across the Rhine. It
+needed another guarantee--and England brought it.
+
+From the day that Great Britain and her mighty fleet joined the
+separated allies with their mighty armies, the bond between them and
+the circle round Germany grew taut. From that day the counsels of
+the allies and their new found "friend" thickened and quickened. The
+immovable "menace across the Rhine" in one case had become the active
+"menace across the North Sea" in the other case.
+
+The sin of German militarism was at last out. It could take to the
+water as kindly as to the land. As long as the war machine guaranteed
+the inviolability of German territory it was no threat to European
+peace, but when it assumed the task of safe-guarding German rights
+at sea it became the enemy of civilization. These trading people not
+content with an army that kept French "revanche" discreetly silent
+and Slav "unity" a dream of the future presumed to have a sea-born
+commerce that grew by leaps and bounds, and they dared to build a navy
+to defend and even to extend it. _Delenda est Carthago!_ From that day
+the doom of "German militarism" was sealed; and England, democratic
+England, lay down with the Czar in the same bed to which the French
+housewife had already transferred her republican counterpane.
+
+The duration of peace became only a question of time, and the war of
+to-day only a question of opportunity and pretext. Each of the parties
+to the understanding had the same clear purpose to serve, and while
+the aim to each was different the end was the same. Germany's power
+of defence must be destroyed. That done each of the sleeping partners
+to the unsigned compact would get the share of the spoils, guarded by
+armed German manhood, he coveted.
+
+To Russia, the dismemberment of Austria-Hungary and the incorporation
+of the Slav elements in part into her own vast empire, in part into a
+vassal and subordinate Balkan Confederacy.
+
+To France the restoration of Lorraine, with Metz, and of Alsace with
+Strasburg and their 1,500,000 of German speaking Teutons to the French
+Empire.
+
+To England, the destruction of German sea-power and along with it the
+permanent crippling of German competition in the markets of the world.
+
+Incidentally German colonies would disappear along with German
+shipping, and with both gone a German navy would become a useless
+burden for a nation of philosophers to maintain, so that the future
+status of maritime efficiency in Europe could be left to the power
+that polices the seas to equitably fix for all mankind, as well as for
+the defeated rival.
+
+Such an outline was the altruistic scope of the unsigned agreement
+entered into by the three parties of the _Triple Entente_; and it only
+remained to get ready for the day when the matter could be brought
+to issue. The murder of the Archduke Ferdinand furnished Russia with
+the occasion, since she felt that her armies were ready, the sword
+sharpened, and the Entente sure and binding.
+
+The mobilization by Russia was all that France needed "to do that
+which might be required of her by her interests." (Reply of the French
+Government to the German Ambassador at Paris, August 1st, 1914.)
+
+Had the neutrality of Belgium been respected as completely as the
+neutrality of Holland, England would have joined her "friends" in the
+assault on Germany, as Sir Edward Grey was forced to admit when the
+German Ambassador in vain pressed him to state his own terms as the
+price of English neutrality.
+
+The hour had struck. Russia was sure of herself, and the rest followed
+automatically since all had been provided for long before. The French
+fleet was in the Mediterranean, as the result of the military compact
+between France and England signed, sealed and delivered in November,
+1912, and _withheld from the cognizance of the British Parliament
+until after war had been declared_. The British fleet had been
+mobilized early in July in anticipation of Russia's mobilization on
+land--and here again it is Sir Edward Grey who incidentally supplies
+the proof.
+
+In his anxiety, while there was still the fear that Russia might hold
+her hand, he telegraphed to the British Ambassador in St. Petersburg
+on 27th of July, requiring him to assure the Russian Foreign Minister,
+that the British Fleet, "which is concentrated, _as it happens_" would
+not disperse from Portland.
+
+That "as it happens" is quite the most illuminating slip in the
+British White Paper, and is best comprehended by those who know what
+have been the secret orders of the British fleet since 1909, and what
+was the end in view when King George reviewed it earlier in the month,
+and when His Majesty so hurriedly summoned the unconstitutional
+"Home Rule" conference at Buckingham Palace on 18th of July. Nothing
+remained for the "friends" but to so manoeuvre that Germany should be
+driven to declare war, or see her frontiers crossed. If she did the
+first, she became the "aggressor"; if she waited to be attacked she
+incurred the peril of destruction.
+
+Such, in outline, are the causes and steps that led to the outbreak of
+war. The writer has seen those steps well and carefully laid, tested
+and tried beforehand. Every rung of the scaling ladder being raised
+for the storming of the German defences on land and sea was planed and
+polished in the British Foreign Office.
+
+As Sir Edward Grey confessed three years ago, he was "but the fly on
+the wheel." That wheel was the ever faster driven purpose of Great
+Britain to destroy the growing sea-power and commerce of Germany. The
+strain had reached the breaking point.
+
+During the first six months of 1914, German export trade almost
+equalled that of Great Britain. Another year of peace, and it would
+certainly have exceeded it, and for the first time in the history of
+world trade Great Britain would have been put in the second place.
+German exports from January to June had swelled to the enormous total
+of $1,045,000,000 as against the $1,075,000,000 of Great Britain. A
+war against such figures could not be maintained in the markets, it
+must be transferred to the seas.
+
+Day by day as the war proceeds, although it is now only six weeks old,
+the pretences under which it was begun are being discarded. England
+fights not to defend the neutrality of Belgium, not to destroy German
+militarism, but to retain, if need be by involving the whole world in
+war, her supreme and undisputed ownership of the seas.
+
+This is the crime against Europe, the crime against the world that,
+among other victims the United States are invited to approve, in order
+that to-morrow their own growing navy may be put into a like posture
+with that of a defeated Germany.
+
+With the Kiel Canal "handed to Denmark," as one of the fruits of
+British victory, as Lord Charles Beresford yesterday magnanimously
+suggested, how long may it be before the Panama Canal shall be found
+to be "a threat to peace" in the hands of those who constructed it?
+
+A rival fleet in being, whether the gunners be Teuton or Anglo-Saxon
+unless the Admiralty controlling it is seated at Whitehall, will
+always be an eyesore to the Mistress of the seas, in other words, "a
+threat to the peace of the world."
+
+The war of armaments cannot be ended by the disarming of the German
+people. To hand Europe over to a triumphal alliance of Russian and
+French militarism, while England controls the highways and waterways
+of mankind by a fleet whose function is "to dictate the maritime
+law of nations," will beget indeed a new Europe, but a Europe
+whose acquiescence is due to fear and the continued pressure of
+well-sustained force--a Europe submitted to the despotism of unnatural
+alliances designed to arrest the laws of progress.
+
+The laws of progress demand that efficiency shall prevail. The crime
+of Germany has been superior efficiency, not so much in the arts
+of war as in the products of peace. If she go down to-day before a
+combination of brute force and unscrupulous intelligence her fall
+cannot be permanent. Germany has within herself the forces that ensure
+revival, and revival means recovery. Neither France nor Russia nor
+both combined, can give to Europe what Britain now designs to take
+from it by their help.
+
+Whatever may be the result of this war on the field of battle, to
+France indeed it can bring only one end. For her there is no future
+save that of a military empire. Her life blood is dried up. This war
+will sweep away all power of recuperation. She will remain impotent
+to increase her race, sterile of new forces for good, her young men's
+blood gone to win the barren fields of Alsace. Her one purpose in the
+new Europe will be to hold a sword, not her own, over the struggling
+form of a resurgent Germany in the interests of another people. Let
+Germany lose 1,000,000 men in the fighting of to-day, she can recover
+them in two years of peace. But to France the losses of this war,
+whether she win or lose, cannot be made good in a quarter of a century
+of child births. Whatever comes to Russia, to England, France as a
+great free power is gone. Her future function will be to act in a
+subordinate capacity alone; supported and encouraged by England she
+will be forced to keep up a great army in order that the most capable
+people of the continent, with a population no defeat can arrest,
+shall not fill the place in Europe and in the world they are called
+on surely to fill, and one that conflicts only with British aims and
+appetites.
+
+German expansion was no threat to France. It was directed to other
+fields, chiefly those of commerce. In order to keep it from those
+fields England fanned the dying fires of French resentment and strove
+by every agency to kindle a natural sentiment into an active passion.
+
+The historian of the future will record that whatever the immediate
+fate of Germany may be, the permanent victim was France.
+
+The day England won her to an active policy of vengeance against
+the victor of 1870, she wooed her to abiding loss. Her true place in
+Europe was one of friendship with Germany. But that meant, inevitably,
+the discovery by Europe that the chief barrier to European concord
+lay not in the armies of the powers, but in the ring of hostile
+battleships that constrained her peoples into armed camps.
+
+European militarism rests on English navalism. English navalism
+requires for its continued existence a disunited Europe; and a Europe
+kept apart is a Europe armed, anxious and watchful, bent on mutual
+attack, its eyes fixed on the _earth_. Europe must lift its eyes
+to the sea. There lies the highway of the nations, the only road to
+freedom--the sole path to peace.
+
+For the pent millions of Europe there can be no peace, no laying aside
+of arms, no sincere development of trade or culture while one people,
+_in Europe but not of Europe_, immune themselves from all attack,
+and sure that whatever suffering they inflict on others can never be
+visited on their own shores, have it in their power to foment strife
+with impunity and to call up war from the ends of the earth while they
+themselves enjoy the blessing of peace.
+
+England, the soul and brain of this confederacy of war abroad remains
+at peace at home. As I write these words a despatch from Sir Alfred
+Sharpe, the correspondent of a London paper in France, comes to hand.
+It should be placarded in every Foreign Office of the world, in every
+temple of justice, in every house of prayer.
+
+"It is difficult for the people in England to realize the condition of
+Northern France at the present time. Although the papers are full of
+accounts of desolation and destruction caused by the German invasion,
+it is only by an actual experience that a full realization of the
+horror comes. To return to England after visiting the French war zone
+is to come back to a land of perfect peace, where everything is normal
+and where it is not easy to believe we are almost within hearing
+distance of the cannonade on the Aisne."
+
+(Sir Alfred Sharpe, to the _Daily Chronicle_ from the Front, September
+2nd, 1914.)
+
+It is this immunity from the horror of war that makes all Englishmen
+jingoes. They are never troubled by the consequences of belligerency.
+Since it is only by "an actual experience that the full realization of
+the horror comes." Until that horror strikes deep on English soil her
+statesmen, her Ministers, her Members of Parliament, her editors, will
+never sincerely love peace, but will plan always to ensure war abroad,
+whenever British need or ambition demands it.
+
+Were England herself so placed that responsibility for her acts could
+be enforced on her own soil, among her own people, and on the head
+of those who devise her policies, then we might talk of arbitration
+treaties with hope, and sign compacts of goodwill sure that they were
+indeed cordial understandings.
+
+But as long as Great Britain retains undisputed ownership of the chief
+factor that ensures at will peace or war on others, there can be only
+armaments in Europe, ill-will among men and war fever in the blood of
+mankind.
+
+British democracy loves freedom of the sea in precisely the same
+spirit as imperial Rome viewed the spectacle of Celtic freedom beyond
+the outposts of the Roman legions; as Agricola phrased it, something
+"to wear down and take possession of so that freedom may be put out of
+sight."
+
+The names change but the spirit of imperial exploitation, whether it
+call itself an empire or a democracy, does not change.
+
+Just as the Athenian Empire, in the name of a democracy, sought to
+impose servitude at sea on the Greek world, so the British Empire, in
+the name of a democracy, seeks to encompass mankind within the long
+walls of London.
+
+The modern Sparta may be vanquished by the imperial democrats
+assailing her from East and West. But let the world be under no
+illusions.
+
+If Germany go down to-day, vanquished by a combination of Asiatic,
+African, American, Canadian and European enemies, the gain will not be
+to the world nor to the cause of peace.
+
+The mistress of the seas will remain to ensure new combinations of
+enmity to prohibit the one league of concord that alone can bring
+freedom and peace to the world. The cause that begot this war will
+remain to beget new wars.
+
+The next victim of universal sea-power may not be on the ravaged
+fields of mid-Europe, but mid the wasted coasts and bombarded seaports
+of the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans.
+
+A permanent peace can only be laid on a sure foundation. A sure
+foundation of peace among men can only be found when mastery of the
+sea by one people has been merged in freedom of the seas for all.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter II
+
+THE KEEPER OF THE SEAS
+
+
+As long ago as 1870 an Irishman pointed out that if the English press
+did not abandon the campaign of prejudiced suspicion it was even then
+conducting against Germany, the time for an understanding between
+Great Britain and the German people would be gone for ever.
+
+It was Charles Lever who delivered this shrewd appreciation of the
+onlooker.
+
+Writing from Trieste on August 29th, 1870, to John Blackwood, he
+stated:
+
+"Be assured the _Standard_ is making a great blunder by its
+anti-Germanism and English opinion has _just now_ a value in Germany
+which if the nation be once disgusted with us will be gone for ever."
+
+Lever preserved enough of the Irishman through all his official
+connection to see the two sides of a question and appreciate the point
+of view of the other man.
+
+What Lever pointed out during the early stages of the Franco-German
+war has come to pass. The _Standard_ of forty years ago is the British
+press of to-day, with here and there the weak voice of an impotent
+Liberalism crying in the wilderness. Germany has, indeed, become
+thoroughly disgusted and the hour of reconciliation has long since
+gone by. In Lever's time it was now or never; the chance not taken
+then would be lost for ever, and the English publicist of to-day
+is not in doubt that it is now too late. His heart-searchings need
+another formula of expression--no longer a conditional assertion of
+doubt, but a positive questioning of impending fact, "is it too soon."
+That the growing German navy must be smashed he is convinced, but how
+or when to do it he is not so clear.
+
+The situation is not yet quite intolerable, and so, although many urge
+an immediate attack before the enemy grows too strong, the old-time
+British love of compromise and trust in luck still holds his hand. The
+American "alliance" too, may yet come off. The Entente with France,
+already of great value, can be developed into something more assuredly
+anti-German, and if present-day relations of friendship with the
+United States can be but tightened into a mutual committal of both
+Powers to a common foreign policy, then the raid on Germany may never
+be needed. She can be bottled up without it. No man who studies the
+British mind can have any doubt of the fixed trend of British thought.
+
+It can be summed up in one phrase. German expansion is not to be
+tolerated. It can only be a threat to or attained at the expense of
+British interests. Those interests being world-wide, with the seas
+for their raiment nay, with the earth for their footstool--it follows
+that wherever Germany may turn for an outlet she is met by the British
+challenge: "Not there!" British interests interdict the Old World; the
+Monroe Doctrine, maintained, it is alleged by British naval supremacy,
+forbids the New.
+
+Let Germany acquire a coaling station, a sanitorium, a health resort,
+the ground for a hotel even, on some foreign shore, and "British
+interests" spring to attention, English jealousy is aroused. How
+long this state of tension can last without snapping could, perhaps,
+be best answered in the German naval yards. It is evident that some
+7,000,000 of the best educated race in the world, physically strong,
+mentally stronger, homogeneous, highly trained, highly skilled,
+capable and energetic and obedient to a discipline that rests upon and
+is moulded by a lofty conception of patriotism, cannot permanently be
+confined to a strictly limited area by a less numerous race, less well
+educated, less strong mentally and physically and assuredly less well
+trained, skilled and disciplined. Stated thus the problem admits of a
+simple answer; and were there no other factor governing the situation,
+that answer would have been long since given.
+
+It is not the ethical superiority of the English race that accounts
+for their lead, but the favourable geographical situation from which
+they have been able to develop and direct their policy of expansion.
+
+England has triumphed mainly from her position. The qualities of
+her people have, undoubtedly, counted for much, but her unrivalled
+position in the lap of the Atlantic, barring the seaways and closing
+the tideways of Central and North-eastern Europe, has counted for
+more.
+
+With this key she has opened the world to herself and closed it to her
+rivals.
+
+The long wars with France ended in the enhancement of this position by
+the destruction of the only rival fleet in being.
+
+Europe, without navies, without shipping became for England a mere
+westward projection of Asia, dominated by warlike peoples who
+could always be set by the ears and made to fight upon points of
+dynastic honour, while England appropriated the markets of mankind.
+Thenceforth, for the best part of a century, while Europe was spent
+in what, to the superior Britain were tribal conflicts, the seas and
+coasts of the world lay open to the intrusions of his commerce, his
+colonists, his finance, until there was seemingly nothing left outside
+the two Americas worth laying hands on. This highly favoured maritime
+position depends, however, upon an unnamed factor, the unchallenged
+possession and use of which by England has been the true foundation
+of her imperial greatness. Without Ireland there would be to-day
+no British Empire. The vital importance of Ireland to England is
+understood, but never proclaimed by every British statesman. To subdue
+that western and ocean-closing island and to exploit its resources,
+its people and, above all its position, to the sole advantage of the
+eastern island, has been the set aim of every English Government from
+the days of Henry VIII onwards. The vital importance of Ireland to
+Europe is not and has not been understood by any European statesman.
+To them it has not been a European island, a vital and necessary
+element of European development, but an appanage of England, an island
+beyond an island, a mere geographical expression in the titles of the
+conqueror. Louis XIV, came nearest, perhaps, of European rulers to
+realizing its importance in the conflict of European interests when
+he sought to establish James II on its throne as rival to the monarch
+of Great Britain and counterpoise to the British sovereignty in
+the western seas. Montesquieu alone of French writers grasped the
+importance of Ireland in the international affairs of his time, and he
+blames the vacillation of Louis, who failed to put forth his strength,
+to establish James upon the throne of Ireland and thus by a successful
+act of perpetual separation to _affaiblir le voisin_. Napoleon,
+too late, in St. Helena, realized his error: "Had I gone to Ireland
+instead of to Egypt the Empire of England was at an end."
+
+With these two utterances of the French writer and of the French ruler
+we begin and end the reference of Ireland to European affairs which
+continental statecraft has up to now emitted, and so far has failed to
+apply.
+
+To-day there is probably no European thinker (although Germany
+produced one in recent times), who, when he faces the over-powering
+supremacy of Great Britain's influence in world affairs and the
+relative subordination of European rights to the asserted interests
+of that small island, gives a thought to the other and smaller island
+beyond its shores. And yet the key to British supremacy lies there.
+Perhaps the one latter day European who perceived the true relation of
+Ireland to Great Britain was Neibuhr.
+
+"Should England," he said, "not change her conduct, Ireland may still
+for a long period belong to her, but not always; and the loss of that
+country is the death day, not only to her greatness, but of her very
+existence."
+
+I propose to point out as briefly as may be possible in dealing
+with so unexpected a proposition, that the restoration of Ireland to
+European life lies at the bottom of all successful European effort to
+break the bonds that now shackle every continental people that would
+assert itself and extend its ideals, as opposed to British interests,
+outside the limits of Europe.
+
+It may be well first to define "British interests" and to show that
+these are not necessarily synonymous with European interests. British
+interests are: first, the control of all the seas of all the world--in
+full military and commercial control. If this be not challenged peace
+is permitted: to dispute it seriously means war.
+
+Next in order of British interests stands the right of pre-emption to
+all healthy, fertile, "unoccupied" lands of the globe not already in
+possession of a people capable of seriously disputing invasion, with
+the right of reversion to such other regions as may, from time to
+time prove commercially desirable or financially exploitable, whether
+suitable for British colonization or not.
+
+In a word, British interests assume that the future of the world shall
+be an English-speaking future. It is clear that sooner or later the
+British colonies, so called, must develop into separate nationalities,
+and that the link of a common crown cannot bind them forever. But, as
+Sir Wilfred Laurier said at the recent Imperial Conference: "We bring
+you British institutions"--English language, English law, English
+trade, English supremacy, in a word--this is the ideal reserved for
+mankind and summed up in words "British interests."
+
+Turn where you will these interests are in effective occupation, and
+whether it be Madeira, Teneriffe, Agadir, Tahiti, Bagdad, the unseen
+flag is more potent to exclude the non-British intruder than the
+visible standard of the occupying tenant. England is the landlord of
+civilization, mankind her tenantry, and the earth her estate. If this
+be not a highly exaggerated definition of British interests, and in
+truth it is but a strongly coloured chart of the broad outline of
+the design, then it is clear that Europe has a very serious problem
+to face if European civilization and ideals, as differing from the
+British type, are to find a place for their ultimate expansion in any
+region favoured by the sun.
+
+The actual conflict of European interests in Morocco is a fair
+illustration of English methods.[1]
+
+[Footnote 1: This was written in August, 1911.]
+
+In the past France was the great antagonist, but since she is to-day
+no longer able to seriously dispute the British usufruct of the
+overseas world she is used (and rewarded) in the struggle now
+maintained to exclude Germany at all costs from the arena. Were France
+still dangerous she would never have been allowed to go to Algeciras,
+or from Algeciras to Fez. She has uses, however, in the anti-German
+prize ring and so Morocco is the price of her hire. That Germany
+should presume to inspect the transaction or claim a share in the
+settlement has filled the British mind with profound indignation, the
+echoes of which are heard rumbling round the world from the Guildhall
+to Gaboon and from the Congo to Tahiti. The mere press rumour that
+France might barter Tahiti for German goods filled the British
+newspaper world with supermundane wrath. That France should presume
+to offer or Germany should accept a French Pacific island in part
+discharge of liabilities contracted at Algeciras was a threat to
+British interests. Tahiti in the hands of a decadent republic, the
+greatest if you will, but still one of the dying nations, is a thing
+to be borne with, but Tahiti possibly in the hands of Germany becomes
+at once a challenge and a threat.
+
+And so we learn that "Australasia protests" to the Home Government
+at the mere rumour that France may choose to part with one of her
+possessions to win German goodwill in Morocco. Neither France nor
+Germany can be permitted to be a free agent in a transaction that
+however regarded as essential to their own interests might affect,
+even by a shadow on the sea, the world orbit of British interests.
+These interests it will be noted have reached such a stage of
+development as to require that all foreign States that cannot be used
+as tools, or regarded as agencies, must be treated as enemies. Germany
+with her growing population, her advancing industries, her keen
+commercial ability, and her ever expanding navy has become the enemy
+of civilization. Far too strong to be openly assailed on land she must
+at all costs be pent up in Central Europe and by a ring-fence of armed
+understandings prohibited from a wider growth that would certainly
+introduce a rival factor to those British institutions and that world
+language that are seriously if not piously meditated as the ordained
+future for mankind.
+
+For English mentality is such that whatever England does is divinely
+ordained, and whether she stamps out a nation or merely sinks a ship
+the hymn of action is "Nearer My God, to Thee." In a recent deputation
+to King George V it will be remembered that certain British religious
+bodies congratulated that monarch on the third centenary of the
+translation into English of the Bible.
+
+Both the addresses of the subjects, eminent, religious and cultured
+men, and the sovereign's reply were highly informative of the mental
+attitude of this extraordinary people. The Bible, it appeared, was the
+"greatest possession of the English race." "The British Bible" was the
+first and greatest of British investments and upon the moral dividends
+derived from its possession was founded the imperial greatness of this
+Island Empire. That other peoples possessed the Bible and had even
+translated it before England was not so much as hinted at. That the
+Bible was Greek and Hebrew in origin was never whispered. It began and
+ended with the English Authorised Version. The British Bible was the
+Bible that counted. It was the Bible upon which the sun never sets,
+the Bible that had blown Indian mutineers from its muzzle in
+the 'fifties and was prepared to-day to have a shot at any other
+mutineers, Teuton or Turk, who dared to dispute its claim that the
+meek shall inherit the earth. The unctuous rectitude that converts the
+word of God into wadding for a gun is certainly a formidable opponent,
+as Cromwell proved. To challenge English supremacy becomes not merely
+a threat to peace, it is an act of sacrilege. And yet this world-wide
+empire broad based upon the British Bible and the English navy, and
+maintained by a very inflexible interpretation of the one and a very
+skilful handling of the other, rests upon a sunk foundation that is
+older than both and will surely bring both to final shipwreck.
+
+The British Empire is founded not upon the British Bible or the
+British dreadnought but upon Ireland. The empire that began upon an
+island, ravaged, sacked and plundered shall end on an island, "which
+whether it proceed from the very genius of the soil, or the influence
+of the stars, or that Almighty God hath not yet appointed the time of
+her reformation, or that He reserveth her in this unquiet state still
+for some secret scourge which shall by her come unto England, it is
+hard to be known but yet much to be feared." Thus Edmund Spenser
+340 years ago, whose muse drew profit from an Irish estate (one of
+the first fruits of empire) and who being a poet had imagination
+to perceive that a day of payment must some day be called and that
+the first robbed might be the first to repay. The Empire founded on
+Ireland by Henry and Elizabeth Tudor has expanded into mighty things.
+England deprived of Ireland resumes her natural proportions, those of
+a powerful kingdom. Still possessing Ireland she is always an empire.
+For just as Great Britain bars the gateways of northern and west
+central Europe, to hold up at will the trade and block the ports of
+every coast from the Baltic to the Bay of Biscay, so Ireland stands
+between Britain and the greater seas of the west and blocks for
+her the highways of the ocean. An Ireland strong, independent and
+self-contained, a member of the European family of nations, restored
+to her kindred, would be the surest guarantee for the healthy
+development of European interests in those regions whence they are
+to-day excluded by the anti-European policy of England.
+
+The relation of Ireland to Great Britain has been in no wise
+understood on the continent. The policy of England has been for
+centuries to conceal the true source of her supplies and to prevent
+an audit of transactions with the remoter island. As long ago as the
+reign of Elizabeth Tudor this shutting off of Ireland from contact
+with Europe was a settled point of English policy. The three "German
+Earls" with letters from the Queen who visited Dublin in 1572 were
+prevented by the Lord Deputy from seeing for themselves anything
+beyond the walls of the city.[2]
+
+[Footnote 2: This time-honoured British precept--that foreigners
+should not see for themselves the workings of English rule in
+Ireland--finds frequent expression in the Irish State Papers. In
+a letter from Dublin Castle of August, 1572, from the Lord Deputy
+Fitzwilliam to Burghley Elizabeth's chief Minister, we are told that
+the "three German Earls" with "their conductor," Mr. Rogers, have
+arrived. The Viceroy adds, as his successors have done up to the
+present day: "According to Your Lordship's direction they shall
+travell as little way into the cuntry as I can."]
+
+To represent the island as a poverty striken land inhabited by a
+turbulent and ignorant race whom she has with unrewarded solicitude
+sought to civilise, uplift and educate has been a staple of England's
+diplomatic trade since modern diplomacy began. To compel the trade of
+Ireland to be with herself alone; to cut off all direct communication
+between Europe and this second of European islands until no channel
+remained save through Britain; to enforce the most abject political
+and economic servitude one people ever imposed upon another; to
+exploit all Irish resources, lands, ports, people, wealth, even her
+religion, everything in fine that Ireland held, to the sole profit
+and advancement of England, and to keep all the books and rigorously
+refuse an audit of the transaction has been the secret but determined
+policy of England.
+
+We have read lately something of Mexican peonage, of how a people
+can be reduced to a lawless slavery, their land expropriated, their
+bodies enslaved, their labour appropriated, and how the nexus of this
+fraudulent connection lies in a falsified account. The hacenade holds
+the peon by a debt bondage. His palace in Mexico City, or on the sisal
+plains of Yucatan is reared on the stolen labour of a people whose
+bondage is based on a lie. The hacenade keeps the books and debits
+the slave with the cost of the lash that scourges him into the fields.
+Ireland is the English peon, the great peon of the British Empire.
+The books and the palaces are in London but the work and the wealth
+have come from peons on the Irish Estate. The armies that overthrew
+Napoleon; the fleets that swept the navies of France and Spain from
+the seas were recruited from this slave pen of English civilisation.
+During the last 100 years probably 2,000,000 Irishmen have
+been drafted into the English fleets and armies from a land
+purposely drained of its food. Fully the same number, driven by
+executive-controlled famines have given cheap labour to England and
+have built up her great industries, manned her shipping, dug her
+mines, and built her ports and railways while Irish harbours silted up
+and Irish factories closed down. While England grew fat on the crops
+and beef of Ireland, Ireland starved in her own green fields and
+Irishmen grew lean in the strife of Europe.
+
+While a million Irishmen died of hunger on the most fertile plains
+of Europe, English Imperialism drew over one thousand million pounds
+sterling for investment in a world policy from an island that was
+represented to that world as too poor to even bury its dead. The
+profit to England from Irish peonage cannot be assessed in terms of
+trade, or finance, or taxation. It far transcends Lord MacDonnell's
+recent estimate at Belfast of L320,000,000--"an Empire's ransom," as
+he bluntly put it.
+
+Not an Empire's ransom but the sum of an Empire's achievement, the
+cost of an Empire's founding, and to-day the chief bond of an Empire's
+existence. Detach Ireland from the map of the British Empire and
+restore it to the map of Europe and that day England resumes her
+native proportions and Europe assumes its rightful stature in the
+empire of the world. Ireland can only be restored to the current of
+European life, from which she has so long been purposely withheld by
+the act of Europe. What Napoleon perceived too late may yet be the
+purpose and achievement of a congress of nations. Ireland, I submit,
+is necessary to Europe, is essential to Europe, to-day she is retained
+against Europe, by a combination of elements hostile to Europe and
+opposed to European influence in the world. Her strategic importance
+is a factor of supreme weight to Europe and is to-day used in the
+scales against Europe. Ireland is appropriated and used, not to the
+service of European interests but to the extension of anti-European
+interests. The _arbitium mundi_ claimed and most certainly exercised
+by England is maintained by the British fleet, and until that power
+is effectively challenged and held in check it is idle to talk of
+European influence outside of certain narrow continental limits.
+
+The power of the British fleet can never be permanently restrained
+until Ireland is restored to Europe. Germany has of necessity become
+the champion of European interests as opposed to the world domination
+of England and English-speaking elements. She is to-day a dam, a great
+reservoir rapidly filling with human life that must some day find an
+outlet. England instead of wisely digging channels for the overflow
+has hardened her heart, like Pharaoh, and thinks to prevent it or
+to so divert the stream that it shall be lost and drunk up in the
+thirsty sands of an ever expanding Anglo-Saxondom. German laws, German
+language, German civilization are to find no ground for replenishing,
+no soil to fertilize and make rich.
+
+I believe this to be not only the set policy of England, but to
+be based on the temperamental foundations of the English character
+itself, from which that people could not, even if they would, depart.
+The lists are set. The English mind, the English consciousness are
+such, that to oppose German influence in the world is to this people
+a necessity. They oppose by instinct, against argument, in the face
+of reason, they will do it blindly come what may and at all costs, and
+they will do it to the end.
+
+Their reasoning, if reason exists in what is after all a matter of
+primal instinct, might find expression somewhat as follows:
+
+"German influence cannot but be hostile to British interests. The
+two peoples are too much alike. The qualities that have made England
+great they possess in a still greater degree. Given a fair field and
+no favour they are bound to beat us. They will beat us out of every
+market in the world, and we shall be reduced ultimately to a position
+like that of France to-day. Better fight while we are still die
+stronger. Better hinder now ere it be too late. We have bottled up
+before and destroyed our adversaries by delay, by money, by alliances.
+To tolerate a German rivalry is to found a German empire and to
+destroy our own."
+
+Some such obscure argument as this controls the Englishman's reasoning
+when he faces the growing magnitude of the Teutonic people. A bitter
+resentment, with fear at the bottom, a hurried clanging of bolt and
+rivet in the belt of a new warship and a muffled but most diligent
+hammering at the rivets of an ever building American Alliance--the
+real Dreadnought this, whose keel was laid sixteen years ago and whose
+slow, secret construction has cost the silent swallowing of many a
+cherished British boast.
+
+English Liberalism might desire a different sort of reckoning with
+Germany, but English Liberalism is itself a product of the English
+temperament, and however it may sigh, by individuals, for a better
+understanding between the two peoples, in the mass, it is a part of
+the national purpose and a phase of the national mind and is driven
+relentlessly to the rivets and the hammering, the "Dreadnoughts"
+in being and that mightier Dreadnought yet to be, the Anglo-Saxon
+Alliance which Germany must fight if she is to get out.
+
+Doubtless she has already a naval policy and the plans for a naval
+war, for the fight will be settled on the sea, but the fate will be
+determined on an island.
+
+The Empire that has grown from an island and spread with the winds and
+the waves to the uttermost shores will fight and be fought for on the
+water and will be ended where it began, on an island.
+
+That island, I believe, will be Ireland and not Great Britain.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter III
+
+THE BALANCE OF POWER
+
+
+A conflict between England and Germany exists already, a conflict of
+aims.
+
+England rich, prosperous, with all that she can possibly assimilate
+already in her hands, desires peace on present conditions of world
+power. These conditions are not merely that her actual possessions
+should remain intact, but that no other Great Power shall, by
+acquiring colonies and spreading its people and institutions into
+neighbouring regions, thereby possibly affect the fuller development
+of those pre-existing British States. For, with England equality
+is an offence and the Power that arrives at a degree of success
+approximating to her own and one capable of being expanded into
+conditions of fair rivalry, has already committed the unpardonable
+sin. As Curran put it in his defence of Hamilton Rowan in 1797,
+"England is marked by a natural avarice of freedom which she is
+studious to engross and accumulate, but most unwilling to impart;
+whether from any necessity of her policy or from her weakness, or from
+her pride, I will not presume to say."
+
+Thus while England might even be the attacking party, and in all
+probability will be the attacking party, she will embark on a war
+with Germany at an initial disadvantage. She will be on her defence.
+Although, probably, the military aggressor from reasons of strategy,
+she will be acting in obedience to an economic policy of defence and
+not of attack. Her chief concern will be not to advance and seize,
+always in war the more inspiring task, but to retain and hold. At best
+she could come out of the war with no new gain, with nothing added
+worth having to what she held on entering it. Victory would mean for
+her only that she had secured a further spell of quiet in which to
+consolidate her strength and enjoy the good things already won.
+
+Germany will fight with far other purpose and one that must inspire a
+far more vigorous effort; she will fight, not merely to keep what she
+already has, but to escape from an intolerable position of inferiority
+she knows to be unmerited and forced not by the moral or intellectual
+superiority of her adversary or due to her own short comings, but
+maintained by reason of that adversary's geographical position and
+early seizure of the various points of advantage.
+
+Her effort will be not merely military, it will be an intellectual
+assertion, a fight in very truth for that larger freedom, that
+citizenship of the world England is studious to "engross and
+accumulate" for herself alone and to deny to all others. Thus, while
+English attack at the best will be actuated by no loftier feeling
+than that of a man who, dwelling in a very comfortable house with an
+agreeable prospect resists an encroachment on his outlook from the
+building operations of his less well lodged neighbour, Germany will be
+fighting not only to get out of doors into the open air and sunshine,
+but to build a loftier and larger dwelling, fit tenement for a
+numerous and growing offspring.
+
+Whatever the structure Germany seeks to erect England objects to the
+plan and hangs out her war sign "Ancient Lights."
+
+Who can doubt that the greater patriotism and stronger purpose must
+inspire the man who fights for light, air, and freedom, the right to
+walk abroad, to learn, to teach, aye, and to inspire others, rather
+than him whose chief concern it is to see that no one but himself
+enjoys these opportunities. The means, moreover, that each combatant
+will bring to the conflict are, in the end, on the side of Germany.
+Much the same disproportion of resources exists as lay between Rome
+and Carthage.
+
+England relies on money. Germany on men. And just as Roman men beat
+Carthaginian mercenaries, so must German manhood, in the end, triumph
+over British finance. Just as Carthage in the hours of final shock,
+placing her gold where Romans put their gods, and never with a soul
+above her ships, fell before the people of United Italy, so shall
+the mightier Carthage of the North Seas, in spite of trade, shipping,
+colonies, the power of the purse and the hired valour of the foreign
+(Irish, Indian, African), go down before the men of United Germany.
+
+But if the military triumph of Germany seems thus likely, the ultimate
+assurance, nay even the ultimate safety of German civilization can
+only be secured by a statemanship which shall not repeat the mistake
+of Louis XIV and Napoleon. The military defeat of England by Germany
+is a wholly possible achievement of arms, _if the conflict be between
+these two alone_, but to realize the economic and political fruits
+of that victory, Ireland must be detached from the British Empire.
+To leave a defeated England still in the full possession of Ireland
+would be, not to settle the question of German rights at sea or in
+world affairs, but merely to postpone the settlement to a second and
+possibly far greater encounter. It would be somewhat as if Rome, after
+the first Punic war had left Sicily to Carthage. But Ireland is far
+more vital to England than Sicily was to Carthage, and is of far more
+account to the future of Europe on the ocean than the possession of
+Sicily was to the future of the Mediterranean.
+
+If Germany is to permanently profit from a victory over England, she
+must free the narrow seas, not only by the defeat of British fleets
+in being, but by ensuring that those seas shall not again be closed
+by British fleets yet to be. The German gateway to a free Atlantic
+can only be kept open through a free Ireland. For just as the English
+Channel under the existing arrangement, whereby Ireland lies hidden
+from the rest of Europe, can be closed at will by England, so with
+Ireland no longer tied to the girdle of England, that channel cannot
+be locked. The key to the freedom of European navigation lies at
+Berehaven and not at Dover. With Berehaven won from English hands,
+England might close the Channel in truth, but Ireland could shut the
+Atlantic. As Richard Dox put it in 1689, quaintly but truly, in his
+dedication to King William III, and Queen Mary of his "History of
+Ireland from the Earliest Times."
+
+"But no cost can be too great where the prize is of such value, and
+whoever considers the situation, ports, plenty and other advantages
+of Ireland will confess that it must be retained at what rate soever;
+because if it should come into an enemy's hands, England would find
+it impossible to _flourish_ and perhaps difficult to _subsist_ without
+it. To demonstrate this assertion it is enough to say that Ireland
+lies in the Line of Trade and that all the English vessels that
+sail to the East, West, and South must, as it were, run the gauntlet
+between the harbours of Brest and Baltimore; and I might add that
+the Irish Wool being transported would soon ruin the English Clothing
+Manufacture. Hence it is that all Your Majesty's Predecessors have
+kept close to this fundamental maxim of retaining Ireland inseparably
+united to the Crown of England."
+
+The sole and exclusive appropriation of Ireland and of all her
+resources has indeed formed, since the Recorder of Kinsale wrote, the
+mainstay and chief support of British greatness.
+
+The natural position of Ireland lying "in the line of trade," was
+possibly its chief value, but that "Irish Wool" which was by no means
+to be allowed free access to world markets typifies much else that
+Ireland has been relentlessly forced to contribute to her neighbour's
+growth and sole profit.
+
+I read but yesterday "Few people realise that the trade of Ireland
+with Great Britain is equal to that of our trade with India, is
+13,000,000 pounds greater than our trade with Germany, and 40,000,000
+pounds greater than the whole of our trade with the United States."
+How completely England has laid hands on all Irish resources is
+made clear from a recent publication that Mr. Chamberlain's "Tariff
+Commission" issued towards the end of 1912.
+
+This document, entitled "The Economic Position of Ireland and its
+relation to Tariff Reform," constitutes, in fact, a manifesto calling
+for the release of Ireland from the exclusive grip of Great Britain.
+Thus, for instance, in the section "External Trade of Ireland,"
+we learn that Ireland exported in 1910, L63,400,000 worth of Irish
+produce. Of this Great Britain took L52,600,000 worth, while some
+L10,800,000 went either to foreign countries, or to British colonies,
+over L4,000,000 going to the United States. Of these eleven million
+pounds worth of Irish produce sent to distant countries, only L700,000
+was shipped direct from Irish ports.
+
+The remainder, more than L10,000,000, although the market it was
+seeking lay chiefly to the West, had to be shipped East into and to
+pay a heavy transit toll to that country for discharge, handling,
+agency, commission, and reloading on British vessels in British ports
+to steam back past the shores of Ireland it had just left. While
+Ireland, indeed, lies in the "line of trade," between all Northern
+Europe and the great world markets, she has been robbed of her trade
+and artificially deprived of the very position assigned to her by
+nature in the great tides of commercial intercourse. It is not only
+the geographical situation and the trade and wealth of Ireland that
+England has laid hands on for her own aggrandizement, but she has
+also appropriated to her own ends the physical manhood of the island.
+Just as the commerce has been forcibly annexed and diverted from
+its natural trend, so the youth of Ireland has been fraudulently
+appropriated and diverted from the defence of their own land to the
+extension of the power and wealth of the realm that impoverished it
+at home. The physical qualities of the Irish were no less valuable
+than "Irish wool" to Empire building, provided always they were not
+displayed in Ireland.
+
+So long ago as 1613 we find a candid admission in the State papers
+that the Irish were the better men in the field. "The next rebellion
+whenever it shall happen, doth threaten more danger to the State than
+any heretofore, when the cities and walled towns were always faithful;
+(1) because they have the same bodies they ever had and therein they
+had and have advantage of us; (2) from infancy they have been and
+are exercised in the use of arms; (3) the realm by reason of the long
+peace was never so full of youths; (4) that they are better soldiers
+than heretofore, their continental employment in wars abroad assures
+us, and they do conceive that their men are better than ours."
+
+This testimony to Irish superiority, coming as it does from English
+official sources just three hundred years ago, would be convincing
+enough did it stand alone. But it is again and again reaffirmed by
+English commanders themselves as the reason for their failure in some
+particular enterprise. In all else they were superior to the Irish; in
+arms, armaments, munitions, supplies of food and money, here the long
+purse, settled organization and greater commerce of England, gave
+her an overwhelming advantage. Moreover the English lacked the moral
+restraints that imposed so severe a handicap on the Irish in their
+resistance. They owned no scruple of conscience in committing any
+crime that served their purpose. Beaten often in open fight by the
+hardier bodies, stouter arms and greater courage of the Irishmen,
+they nevertheless won the game by recourse to means that no Irishman,
+save he who had joined them for purposes of revenge or in pursuit of
+selfish personal aims, could possibly have adopted. The fight from
+the first was an unequal one. Irish valour, chivalry, and personal
+strength were matched against wealth, treachery and cunning. The Irish
+better bodies were overcome by the worse hearts. As Curran put it in
+1817--"The triumph of England over Ireland is the triumph of guilt
+over innocence."
+
+The Earl of Essex who came to Ireland in 1599 with one of the largest
+forces of English troops that, up to then, had ever been dispatched
+into Ireland (18,000 men), had ascribed his complete failure, in
+writing to the Queen, to the physical superiority of the Irish:
+
+"These rebels are more in number than your Majesty's army and have
+(though I do unwillingly confess it), better bodies, and perfecter
+use of their arms, than those men who your Majesty sends over."
+
+The Queen, who followed the war in Ireland with a swelling wrath on
+each defeat, and a growing fear that the Spaniards would keep their
+promise to land aid to the Irish princes, O'Neill and O'Donnell,
+issued "instructions" and a set of "ordinances" for the conduct of the
+war in Ireland, which, while enjoining recourse to the usual methods
+outside the field of battle--(i.e. starvation, "politic courses,"
+assassination of leaders; and the sowing of dissension by means of
+bribery and promises), required for the conflict, that her weaker
+soldiers should be protected against the onslaught of the unarmoured
+Irishmen by head pieces of steel. She ordered "every soldier to be
+enforced to wear a murrion, because the enemy is encouraged by
+the advantage of arms to _come to the sword_ wherein he commonly
+prevaileth."
+
+One of the generals of the Spanish King, Philip III, who came to
+Ireland in the winter of 1601 with a handful of Spanish troops (200
+men), to reinforce the small expedition of de Aguila in Kinsale, thus
+reported on the physical qualities of the Irish in a document that
+still lies in Salamanca in the archives of the old Irish College. it
+was written by Don Pedro De Zubiarr on the 16th of January, 1602, on
+his return to the Asturias. Speaking of the prospect of the campaign,
+he wrote: "If we had brought arms for 10,000 men we could have had
+them, for they are very eager to carry on the war against the English.
+The Irish are very strong and well shaped, accustomed to endure hunger
+and toil, and very courageous in fight."
+
+Perhaps the most vivid testimony to the innate superiority of the
+Irishman as a soldier is given in a typically Irish challenge issued
+in the war of 1641. The document has a lasting interest for it
+displays not only the "better body" of the Irishman of that day, but
+something of his better heart as well, that still remains to us.
+
+One Parsons, an English settler in Ireland, had written to a friend
+to say that, among other things, the head of the Colonel of an Irish
+regiment then in the field against the English, would not be allowed
+to stick long on its shoulders. The letter was intercepted by the very
+regiment itself, and a captain in it, Felim O'Molloy, wrote back to
+Parsons:
+
+"I will do this if you please: I will pick out sixty men and fight
+against one hundred of your choice men if you do but pitch your camp
+one mile out of your town, and then if you have the victory, you may
+threaten my Colonel; otherwise, do not reckon your chickens before
+they are hatched."
+
+The Anglo-Saxon preferred "politic courses" to accepting the Irish
+soldier's challenge, even where all the advantage was conceded by
+the Irishman to his foe and all the risks, save that of treachery (a
+very necessary precaution in dealing with the English in Ireland),
+cheerfully accepted by the Celt.
+
+This advantage of the "better bodies" the Irish retained beyond all
+question up to the Famine. It was upon it alone that the Wexford
+peasantry relied in 1798, and with and by it alone that they again and
+again, armed with but pike and scythe swept disciplined regiments of
+English mercenaries in headlong rout from the field.
+
+This physical superiority of his countrymen was frequently referred to
+by O'Connell as one of the forces he relied on. With the decay of all
+things Irish that has followed the Famine, these physical attributes
+have declined along with so much else that was typical of the nation
+and the man.
+
+It could not to-day be fearlessly affirmed that sixty Irishmen were
+more than a match for one hundred Englishmen; yet depleted as it is
+by the emigration of its strongest and healthiest children, by growing
+sickness and a changed and deteriorated diet the Irish race still
+presents a type, superior physically, intellectually and morally to
+the English. It was on Irish soldiers that the English chiefly relied
+in the Boer War, and it is no exaggeration to say that could all
+the Irishmen in the ranks of the British army have been withdrawn, a
+purely British force would have failed to end the war and the Dutch
+would have remained masters of the field in South Africa.
+
+It was the inglorious part of Ireland to be linked with those "methods
+of barbarism" she herself knew only too well, in extinguishing the
+independence of a people who were attacked by the same enemy and
+sacrificed to the same greed that had destroyed her own freedom.
+
+Unhappy, indeed, is it for mankind, as for her own fate and honour
+that Ireland should be forced by dire stress of fortune to aid her
+imperial wrecker in wrecking the fortune and freedom of brave men
+elsewhere.
+
+That these physical qualities of Irishmen, even with a population now
+only one tenth that of Great Britain are still of value to the empire,
+Mr. Churchill's speech on the Home Rule Bill made frankly clear
+(February, 1913). We now learn that the First Lord of the Admiralty
+has decided to establish a new training squadron, "with a base
+at Queenstown," where it is hoped to induce with the bribe of
+"self-government" the youth of Cork and Munster to again man the
+British fleet as they did in the days of Nelson, and we are even told
+that the prospects of brisk recruiting are "politically favourable."
+
+Carthage got her soldiers from Spain, her seamen, her slingers from
+the Balearic Islands and the coasts of Africa, her money from the
+trade of the world. Rome beat her, but she did not leave a defeated
+Carthage to still levy toll of men and mind on those external sources
+of supply.
+
+Germany must fight, not merely to defeat the British fleet of to-day,
+but to neutralize the British fleet of to-morrow. Leave Ireland to
+Great Britain and that can never be. Neutralize Ireland and it is
+already accomplished.
+
+One of the conditions of peace, and _for this reason_ the most
+important condition of peace that a victorious Germany must impose
+upon her defeated antagonist is that Ireland shall be separated
+and erected into an independent European State under international
+guarantees. England, obviously would resist such conditions to the
+last, but then the last has already come before England would consent
+to any peace save on terms she dictated.
+
+A defeated England is a starved England. She would have to accept
+whatever terms Germany imposed unless those terms provoked external
+intervention on behalf of the defeated power.
+
+The prize Germany seeks to win from victory is not immediate
+territorial aggrandizement obtained from annexing British possessions,
+not a heavy money indemnity wrung from British finance and trade
+(although this she might have), but German freedom throughout the
+world on equal terms with Britain. This is a prize worth fighting for,
+for once gained the rest follows as a matter of course.
+
+German civilization released from the restricted confines and unequal
+position in which Britain had sought to pen it must, of itself win
+its way to the front, and of necessity acquire those favoured spots
+necessary to its wide development.
+
+"This is the meaning of his (the German's) will for power; safety from
+interference with his individual and national development. Only one
+thing is left to the nations that do not want to be left behind in the
+peaceful rivalry of human progress--that is to become the equals of
+Germany in untiring industry, in scientific thoroughness, in sense of
+duty, in patient persistence, in intelligent, voluntary submission
+to organization." (History of German Civilization, by Ernst Richard,
+Columbia University, New York.)
+
+Once she had reduced Great Britain to an opposition based on _peaceful
+rivalry_ in human progress, Germany would find the path of success
+hers to tread on more than equal terms, and many fields of expansion
+now closed would readily open to German enterprise without that
+people incurring and inflicting the loss and injury that an attempted
+invasion of the great self-governing dominions would so needlessly
+involve. Most of the British self-governing colonies are to-day great
+States, well able to defend themselves from overseas attack. The
+defeat of the British navy would make scarcely at all easier the
+landing of German troops in, say, Australia, South Africa or New
+Zealand. A war of conquest of those far-distant regions would be,
+for Germany, an impossible and a stupidly impossible task.
+
+A defeated England could not cede any of these British possessions as
+a price of peace, for they are inhabited by free men who, however
+they might deplore a German occupation of London, could in no wise be
+transferred by any pact or treaty made by others, to other rule than
+that of themselves. Therefore, to obtain those British dominions,
+Germany would have to defeat not only England, but after that to begin
+a fresh war, or a series of fresh wars, at the ends of the earth, with
+exhausted resources and probably a crippled fleet.
+
+The thing does not bear inspection and may be dismissed from our
+calculation.
+
+The only territories that England could cede by her own act to
+a victorious power are such as, in themselves, are not suited
+to colonization by a white race. Doubtless, Germany would seek
+compensation for the expense of the war in requiring the transfer
+of some of these latter territories of the British Crown to herself.
+There are points in tropical Africa, in the East, islands in the ocean
+to-day flying the British flag that might, with profit to German
+trade and influence, be acquired by a victorious Germany. But none of
+these things in itself, not all of them put together, would meet the
+requirements of the German case, or ensure to Germany that future
+tranquil expansion and peaceful rivalry the war had been fought to
+secure. England would be weakened, and to some extent impoverished by
+a war ending with such results; but her great asset, her possession
+beyond price would still be hers--her geographical position. Deprive
+her to-day, say of the Gold Coast, the Niger, Gibraltar, even of
+Egypt, impose a heavy indemnity, and while Germany would barely have
+recouped herself for the out-of-pocket losses of the war, England in
+fact would have lost nothing, and ten years hence the Teuton would
+look out again upon the same prospect, a Europe still dominated beyond
+the seas by the Western islanders.
+
+The work would have to be done all over again. A second Punic war
+would have to be fought with this disadvantage--that the Atlantic
+Sicily would be held and used still against the Northern Rome, by the
+Atlantic Carthage.
+
+A victorious Germany, in addition to such terms as she may find
+it well to impose in her own immediate financial or territorial
+interests, must so draft her peace conditions as to preclude her great
+antagonist from ever again seriously imperilling the freedom of the
+seas. I know of no way save one to make sure the open seas. Ireland,
+in the name of Europe, and in the exercise of European right to
+free the seas from the over-lordship of one European island, must be
+resolutely withdrawn from British custody. A second Berlin Conference,
+an international Congress must debate, and clearly would debate, with
+growing unanimity the German proposal to restore Ireland to Europe.
+
+The arguments in favour of that proposal would soon become so clear
+from the general European standpoint, that save England and her
+defeated allies, no power would oppose it.
+
+Considerations of expediency no less than naval, mercantile, and
+moral claims would range themselves on the side of Germany and a free
+Ireland. For a free Ireland, not owned and exploited by England, but
+appertaining to Europe at large, its ports available in a sense they
+never can be while under British control for purposes of general
+navigation and overseas intercourse, would soon become of such
+first-rank importance in continental affairs as to leave men stupified
+by the thought that for five hundred years they had allowed one
+sole member of their community the exclusive use and selfish
+misappropriation of this, the most favoured of European islands.
+
+Ireland would be freed, not because she deserved or asked for freedom,
+not because English rule has been a tyranny, a moral failure, a
+stupidity and sin against the light; not because Germany cared for
+Ireland, but because her withdrawal from English control appeared to
+be a very necessary step in international welfare and one very needful
+to the progress of German and European expansion.
+
+An Ireland released from the jail in which England had confined
+her would soon become a populous State of possibly 10,000,000 to
+12,000,000 people, a commercial asset of Europe in the Atlantic of the
+utmost general value, one holding an unique position between the Old
+and New Worlds, and possibly an intellectual and moral asset of no
+mean importance. This, and more, a sovereign Ireland means to Europe.
+Above all it means security of transit, equalizing of opportunity,
+freedom of the seas--an assurance that the great waterways of the
+ocean should no longer be at the absolute mercy of one member of the
+European family, and that one the least interested in general European
+welfare.
+
+The stronger a free Ireland grew the surer would be the guarantee that
+the role of England "consciously assumed for many years past, to be
+an absolute and wholly arbitrary judge of war and peace" had gone for
+ever, and that at last the "balance of power" was kept by fair weight
+and fair measure and not with loaded scales.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter IV
+
+THE ENEMY OF PEACE
+
+
+I believe England to be the enemy of European peace, and that until
+her "mastery of the sea" is overmastered by Europe, there can be
+no peace upon earth or goodwill among men. Her claim to rule the
+seas, and the consequences, direct and indirect, that flow from its
+assertion are the chief factors of international discord that now
+threaten the peace of the world.
+
+In order to maintain that indefensible claim she is driven to
+aggression and intrigue in every quarter of the globe; to setting
+otherwise friendly peoples by the ears; to forming "alliances" and
+ententes, to dissolving friendships, the aim always being the old one,
+_divide et impera_.
+
+The fact that Europe to-day is divided into armed camps is mainly due
+to English effort to retain that mastery of the sea. It is generally
+assumed, and the idea is propagated by English agencies, that Europe
+owes her burden of armaments to the antagonism between France and
+Germany, to the loss of Alsace-Lorraine by France, and the spirit and
+hope of a _revanche_ thereby engendered. But this antagonism has long
+ceased to be the chief factor that moulds European armaments.
+
+Were it not for British policy, and the unhealthy hope it proffers
+France would ere this have resigned herself, as the two provinces
+have done, to the solution imposed by the war of 1870. It is England
+and English ambition that beget the state of mind responsible for
+the enormous growth of armaments that now over-shadows continental
+civilization. Humanity, hemmed in in Central Europe by a forest of
+bayonets and debarred all egress to the light of a larger world by a
+forbidding circle of dreadnoughts, is called to peace conferences and
+arbitration treaties by the very power whose fundamental maxim of rule
+ensures war as the normal outlook for every growing nation of the Old
+World.
+
+If Europe would not strangle herself with her own hands she must
+strangle the sea serpent whose coils enfold her shores.
+
+Inspect the foundation of European armaments where we will, and we
+shall find that the master builder is he who fashioned the British
+Empire. It is that empire, its claim to universal right of pre-emption
+to every zone and region washed by the waves and useful and necessary
+for the expansion of the white races, and its assertion of a right to
+control at will all the seas of all the world that drives the peoples
+of Europe into armed camps. The policy of the Boer War is being tried
+on a vaster scale against Europe. Just as England beat the Boers by
+concentration camps and not by arms, by money and not by men, so she
+seeks to-day to erect an armourplate barrier around the one European
+people she fears to meet in the field, and to turn all Central Europe
+into a vast concentration camp. By use of the longest purse she has
+already carried this barrier well towards completion. One gap remains,
+and it is to make sure that this opening, too, shall be closed that
+she now directs all the force of her efforts. Here the longest purse
+is of less avail, so England draws upon another armoury. She appeals
+to the longest tongue in history--the longest and something else.
+
+In order to make sure the encompassing of Europe with a girdle of
+steel it is necessary to circle the United States with a girdle of
+lies. With America true to the great policy of her great founder,
+an America, "the friend of all powers but the ally of none," English
+designs against European civilization must in the end fail. Those
+plans can succeed only by active American support, and to secure this
+is now the supreme task and aim of British stealth and skill. Every
+tool of her diplomacy, polished and unpolished, from the trained
+envoy to the boy scout and the minor poet has been tried in turn. The
+pulpit, the bar, the press; the society hostess, the Cabinet Minister
+and the Cabinet Minister's wife, the ex-Cabinet Minister and the Royal
+Family itself, and last, but not least, even "Irish nationality"--all
+have been pilgrims to that shrine; and each has been carefully primed,
+loaded, well aimed, and then turned full on the weak spots in the
+armour of republican simplicity. To the success of these resources
+of panic the falsification of history becomes essential and the
+vilification of the most peace-loving people of Europe. The past
+relations of England with the United States are to be blotted out,
+and the American people who are by blood so largely Germanic, are to
+be entrapped into an attitude of suspicion, hostility and resentment
+against the country and race from whom they have received nothing
+but good. Germany is represented as the enemy, not to England's
+indefensible claim to own the seas, but to American ideals on the
+American continent. Just as the Teuton has become the "enemy of
+civilization" in the Old World because he alone has power, strength of
+mind, and force of purpose to seriously dispute the British hegemony
+of the seas, so he is assiduously represented as the only threat to
+American hegemony of the New World.
+
+This, the key note of the attack on Germany, is sounded from every
+corner of the British Empire, wherever the Imperial editor, resting on
+the labours of the lash he wields against the coloured toilers in mine
+and camp, directs his eyes from the bent forms of these indentured
+slaves of dividend to the erect and stalwart frames of the new Goths
+who threaten the whole framework of Imperial dividend from across
+the North Sea. From the _Times_ to the obscurest news-sheet of the
+remotest corner of the British Dominions the word has gone forth.
+
+The Monroe Doctrine, palladium of the Anglo-Saxon world empire, is
+imperilled by German ambitions, and were it not for the British
+fleet, America would be lost to the Americans. Wherever Englishmen are
+gathered to-day their journals, appealing possibly to only a handful
+of readers, assert that the function of the British fleet is to
+exclude the European States, with Germany at their head, from
+South America, not because in itself that is a right and worthy
+end to pursue, but because that continent is earmarked for future
+exploitation and control by their "kinsmen" of the United States,
+and they need the support of those "kinsmen" in their battle against
+Germany.
+
+I need quote but a single utterance from the mass of seditious libels
+of this character before me to show how widespread is the propaganda
+of falsehood and how sustained is the effort being made to poison
+the American mind against the only people in Europe England genuinely
+fears, and therefore wholeheartedly hates.
+
+The _Natal Mercury_ for instance, a paper written for the little town
+of Durban and appealing to a population of only some 30,000 whites,
+in a recent issue (March, 1913), devoted a leader to the approaching
+"Peace Centennial" of 1914, to be held in commemoration of the signing
+of the Treaty of Ghent, which ended the second war between Great
+Britain and the American people in 1814.
+
+"After all, blood is thicker than water," quotes the Natal journal
+with satisfaction, and after pointing out some latter day indications
+of rapprochement between England and the United States, it goes on to
+proclaim the chief function of the British navy and the claim thereby
+established on the goodwill of America.
+
+"We make mention of them because such incidents are likely to repeat
+themselves more and more frequently in that competition for naval
+supremacy in Europe which compels the United States to put her own
+fleets into working order and to join in the work that England has
+hitherto been obliged to perform _unaided_.
+
+"It is England that polices the Seven Seas, and America has reaped no
+small benefits from the _self-imposed task_, an aspect of the matter
+to which every thoughtful American is alive. There is a real and
+hearty recognition in the New World of the _silent barrier_ that Great
+Britain has set up to what might become something more than a dream
+of expansion into South America on the part of _one_ potent European
+State. It is, indeed, hardly too much to say that the maintenance
+of the Monroe Doctrine is at the present moment almost as fully
+guaranteed by England as it is by the country that enunciated the
+policy and is the chief gainer by it. It is a case in which a _silent
+understanding_ is of far greater value than a formal compact that
+'would serve as a target for casual discontent on this side or that'."
+
+The article concludes by proclaiming "the precious permanence of an
+unseen bond" and the lofty and enduring worth of "good faith mutually
+acknowledged and the ultimate solidarity of mutual interests rightly
+perceived." "The ultimate solidarity" aimed at by those who direct
+these world-wide pronouncements is not one of mere sterile friendship
+between the American and the British peoples. American friendship with
+England is only worth having when it can be translated by world acts
+into enmity against Germany.
+
+It might truly be said of the British Empire to-day that where two or
+three are gathered together, there hatred of Germany shall be in the
+midst of them. Turn where he will, from the Colonies to England, from
+England to her fleet, from the seas to the air, the Englishman lives
+and moves and has his being in an atmosphere not of love but of
+hatred. And this too, a hatred, fear, and jealousy of a people who
+have never injured him, who have never warred upon him, and whose sole
+crime is that they are highly efficient rivals in the peaceful rivalry
+of commerce, navigation, and science.
+
+We are told, for instance, in one of the popular London magazines
+for January, 1913, in an article upon the financial grievances of
+the British navy that were it not for Germany there would be to-day
+another Spithead. "Across the North Sea is a nation that some fifty
+years ago was so afraid of the British navy that it panicked itself
+into building an iron-clad fleet.
+
+"To-day, as the second naval power, its menace is too great for any
+up-to-date Spithead mutiny to come off. But the pay question was
+so acute that it is possibly only the Germans and their 'menace'
+that saved us from the trouble." But while the "patriotism" of the
+"lower-deck" may have been sufficiently stout to avert this peril,
+the patriotism of the "quarter-deck" is giving us a specimen of its
+quality that certainly could not be exhibited in any other country in
+the world.
+
+Even as I write I read in the "British Review" how Admiral Sir
+Percy Scott attacks Admiral Lord Charles Beresford, dubs him the
+"laughing-stock of the fleet," accuses him of publishing in his book
+_The Betrayal_ a series of "deliberate falsehoods," and concludes by
+saying that the gallant Admiral is "not a seaman."
+
+And it is a fleet commanded by such Admirals as these that is to sweep
+the German navy from the seas!
+
+During the Crimean war the allied British and French navies
+distinguished themselves by their signal failure to effect the
+reduction of such minor fortresses as Sveaborg, Helsingfors, and
+the fortified lighthouses upon the Gulf of Finland. Their respective
+Admirals fired their severest broadsides into each other, and the
+bombardment of the forts was silenced by the smart interchange of
+nautical civilities between the two flagships. Napoleon III, who
+sought an explanation of this failure of his fleet, was given a reply
+that I cannot refrain from recommending to the British Admiralty
+to-day. "Well, Sire," replied the French diplomatist, who knew the
+circumstances, "both the Admirals were old women, but ours was at
+least a lady." If British Admirals cannot put to sea without incurring
+this risk, they might, at least, take the gunboat woman with them to
+prescribe the courtesies of naval debate.
+
+That England to-day loves America, no one who goes to the private
+opinions of Englishmen, instead of to their public utterances, or the
+interested eulogies of their press, can for a moment believe.
+
+The old dislike is there, the old supercilious contempt for the
+"Yankee" and all his ways. "God's Englishman" no more loves an
+American citizen now than in 1846 when he seriously contemplated an
+invasion of the United States, and the raising of the negro-slave
+population against his "Anglo-Saxon kinsmen."
+
+To-day, when we hear so much of the Anglo-Saxon Alliance it may be
+well to revert to that page of history. For it will show us that if a
+British premier to-day can speak as Mr. Asquith did on December 16th,
+1912, in his reference to the late American Ambassador as "a great
+American and a kinsman," one "sprung from a common race, speaking our
+own language, sharing with us by birth as by inheritance not a few of
+our most cherished traditions and participating when he comes here by
+what I may describe as _his natural right in our domestic interests
+and celebrations_," then this new-found kinship takes its birth not in
+a sense of common race, indeed, but in a very common fear of Germany.
+
+In the year 1846, the British army was engaged in robbing the Irish
+people of their harvest in order that the work of the famine should
+be complete and that the then too great population of Ireland should
+be reduced within the limits "law and order" prescribed, either by
+starvation or flight to America.
+
+Fleeing in hundreds and thousands from the rule of one who claimed
+to be their Sovereign, expelled in a multitude exceeding the Moors of
+Spain, whom a Spanish king shipped across the seas with equal pious
+intent, the fugitive Irish Nation found friendship, hope, and homes in
+the great Celtic Republic of the West. All that was denied to them in
+their own ancient land they found in a new Ireland growing up across
+the Atlantic.
+
+The hate of England pursued them here and those who dared to give help
+and shelter. The United States were opening wide their arms to receive
+the stream of Irish fugitives and were saying very harsh things of
+England's infamous rule in Ireland. This could not be brooked. England
+in those days had not invented the Anglo-Saxon theory of mankind, and
+a united Germany had not then been born to vex the ineptitude of her
+statesmen or to profit from the shortcomings of her tradesmen.
+
+So the greatest Ministers of Queen Victoria seriously contemplated war
+with America and naturally looked around for some one else to do the
+fighting. The Duke of Wellington hoped that France might be played
+on, just as in a later day a later Minister seeks to play France in a
+similar role against a later adversary.[3]
+
+[Footnote 3: Sir Edward Grey and the _Entente Cordiale_.]
+
+The Mexicans, too, might be induced to invade the Texan frontier.
+But a greater infamy than this was seriously planned. Again it is an
+Irishman who tells the story and shows us how dearly the English loved
+their trans-Atlantic "kinsmen" when there was no German menace to
+threaten nearer home.
+
+Writing from Carlsruhe, on January 26th, 1846, to his friend,
+Alexander Spencer, in Dublin, Charles Lever said: "As to the war the
+Duke[4] says he could smash the Yankees, and ought to do so while
+France in her present humour and Mexico opens the road to invasion
+from the South--not to speak of the terrible threat that Napier
+uttered, that with two regiments of infantry and a field battery he'd
+_raise the slave population in the United States_."
+
+[Footnote 4: The Duke of Wellington: the report was brought to Lever
+by the Marquis of Douro, the Duke's heir.]
+
+The infamy of this suggestion cannot be surpassed. The brilliant
+soldier who conceived it was the chivalrous Englishman who conquered
+Scinde, one of the chief glories of the Britannic hierarchy of
+soldier-saints.
+
+The Government planning it was that of the late Queen Victoria with
+the Duke of Wellington's advice, and the people against whom the
+black-slave millions were to be loosed were the "kith and kin" of
+those meditating this atrocious form of massacre. Truly, as an old
+Irish proverb, old even in the days of Henry VIII. put it, "the pride
+of France, the _treason of England_ and the warre of Ireland shall
+never have end."
+
+As a latter day witness of that treason, one who had suffered it from
+birth to the prison cell, a dead Irishman speaks to us from the grave.
+Michael Davitt in a letter to Morrison Davidson on August 2701, 1902,
+thus summed up in final words what every Irishman feels in his heart:
+
+"The idea of being ruled by Englishmen is to me the chief agony
+of existence. They are a nation without faith, truth or conscience
+enveloped in a panoplied pharisaism and an incurable hypocrisy. Their
+moral appetite is fed on falsehood. They profess Christianity and
+believe only in Mammon. They talk of liberty while ruling India and
+Ireland against the principles of a constitution, professed as
+a political faith, but prostituted to the interests of class and
+landlord rule."
+
+Have Englishmen in less than two generations substituted love for
+the hate that Napier, Wellington, and the Queen's Ministers felt and
+expressed in 1846 for the people of the United States? Is it love
+to-day for America or fear of someone else that impels to the
+"Arbitration Treaties" and the celebration of the "Hundred years of
+Peace?"
+
+The Anglo-American "Peace Movement" was to be but the first stage in
+an "Anglo-Saxon Alliance," intended to limit and restrict all further
+world changes, outside of certain prescribed continental limits, to
+these two peoples alone on the basis of a new "Holy Alliance," whose
+motto should be _Beati possidentes_.
+
+Since England and America, either in fact or by reservation enjoy
+almost all the desirable regions of the earth, why not bring about
+a universal agreement to keep everyone in his right place, to stay
+"just as we are," and to kindly refer all possible differences to an
+"International Tribunal?"
+
+Once again the British Bible was thrown into the scale, and the
+unrighteousness of Germany, who did not see her way to join in the
+psalm singing, was exposed in a spirit of bitter resignation and
+castigated with an appropriate selection of texts. The Hague Tribunal
+would be so much nicer than a war of armaments! With no reckless
+rivalries and military expenditure there could be no question of the
+future of mankind.
+
+An idyllic peace would settle down upon the nations, contentedly
+possessing each in its own share of the good things of life, and no
+questionable ambitions would be allowed to disturb the buying and
+selling of the smaller and weaker peoples. The sincerity of the wish
+for universal arbitration can be best shown by England, when she,
+or any of the Powers to whom she appeals, will consent to submit the
+claim of one of the minor peoples she or they hold in subjection to
+the Hague Tribunal. Let France submit Madagascar and Siam, or her
+latest victim, Morocco, to the franchise of the Court. Let Russia
+agree to Poland or Finland seeking the verdict of this bench of
+appeal. Let England plead her case before the same high moral tribunal
+and allow Ireland, Egypt, or India to have the law of her. Then, and
+not until then, the world of little States and beaten peoples may
+begin to believe that the Peace Crusade has some foundations in honour
+and honesty--but not till then.
+
+Germany has had the straightforwardness and manliness to protest that
+she is still able to do her own shooting and that what she holds she
+will keep, by force if need be, and what she wants she will, in her
+own sure time, take, and by force too, if need be. Of the two cults
+the latter is the simpler, sincerer, and certainly the less dishonest.
+
+Irish-American linked with German-American keen-sighted hostility did
+the rest. The rivalry of Mr. Roosevelt and Mr. Taft aided, and the
+effort (for the time at any rate) has been wrecked, thereby plunging
+England into a further paroxysm of religious despondency and grave
+concern for German morals. This mood eventuated in Lord Haldane's
+"week end" trip to Berlin. The voice was the voice of Jacob, in spite
+of the hand of Esau. Mr. Churchill at Glasgow, showed the real hand
+and the mess of pottage so amiably offered at Berlin bought no German
+birthright. The Kreuz Zeitung rightly summed up the situation by
+pointing out that "Mr. Churchill's testimony can now be advanced
+as showing that the will of England alone comes in question as
+the exponent of peace, and that England for many years past has
+consciously assumed the role of an absolute and perfectly arbitrary
+judge of war and peace. It seems to us all the more significant that
+Mr. Churchill proposes also in the future to control, with the help of
+the strong navies of the Dominions, the trade and naval movements of
+all the Powers on the face of the earth--that is to say, his aim is to
+secure a world monopoly for England." There has never been any other
+thought in the English mind. As I said in Part I. of this paper,
+"British interests are first the control of all the seas of all
+the world in full military and commercial control. If this be not
+challenged peace is permitted; to dispute it seriously means war."
+
+Germany is driven by necessity to dispute it seriously and to overcome
+it. She cannot get out to play her part in world life, _nay, she
+cannot hope to ultimately maintain herself at home_ until that battle
+has been fought and won.
+
+Arrangements with England, detentes, understandings, call them what
+you will, are merely parleys before the fight. The assault must be
+delivered, the fortress carried, or else Germany, and with her
+Europe, must resign the mission of the white races and hand over the
+government and future of the world to one chosen people.
+
+Europe reproduces herself yearly at the present time at the rate of
+about five million souls. Some three-fifths of the number are to-day
+absorbed into the life of the Continent, the balance go abroad and
+principally to North America, to swell the English-speaking world.
+Germany controls about one-fifth of Europe's natural annual increase,
+and realising that emigration to-day means only to lose her people and
+build up her antagonist's strength, she has for years now striven to
+keep her people within German limits, and hitherto with successful
+results far in excess of any achieved by other European States. But
+the limit must be reached, and that before many years are past.
+Where is Germany to find the suitable region, both on a scale and
+under conditions of climate, health and soil that a people of say
+90,000,000 hemmed in a territory little larger than France, will find
+commensurate to their needs? No European people is in such plight.
+
+Russia has the immense and healthy world of Siberia into which to
+overflow. France, far from needing outlets, increases not at all, and
+during 1911 showed an excess of close on 40,000 deaths over births.
+For France the day of greatness is past. A French Empire, in any other
+sense than the Roman one of commercial and military exploitation of
+occupied territories and subjugated peoples is gone forever.
+
+France has no blood to give except in war. French blood will not
+colonize even the Mediterranean littoral. Italy is faced with
+something of the same problem as Germany, but to a lesser extent. Her
+surplus population already finds a considerable outlet in Argentina
+and South Brazil, among peoples, institutions, and language largely
+approximating to those left behind. While Italy has, indeed need of a
+world policy as well as Germany, her ability to sustain a great part
+abroad cannot be compared to that of the Teutonic people. Her claim is
+not so urgent; her need not so insistent, her might inadequate.
+
+The honesty and integrity of the German mind, the strength of the
+German intellect, the skill of the German hand and brain, and justice
+and vigour of German law, the intensity of German culture, science,
+education and social development, these need a great and healthy field
+for their beneficial display, and the world needs these things more
+than it needs the British mastery of the seas. The world of European
+life needs to-day, as it needed in the days of a decadent Roman
+Empire, the coming of another Goth, the coming of the Teuton. The
+interposing island in the North Sea alone intervenes. How to surmount
+that obstacle, how to win the freedom of the "Seven Seas" for Europe
+must be the supreme issue for Germany.
+
+If she falls she is doomed to sterility. The supreme test of German
+genius, of German daring, of German discipline and imagination lies
+there.
+
+Where Louis XIV., the Directory, and Napoleon failed, will the heirs
+of Karl the Great see clearly?
+
+And then, when that great hour has struck, will Germany, will Europe,
+produce the statesman soldier who shall see that the key to ocean
+freedom lies in that island beyond an island, whose very existence
+Europe has forgotten?
+
+Till that key is out from the Pirate's girdle, Germany may win a
+hundred "Austerlitzes" on the Vistula, the Dnieper, the Loire, but
+until she restores that key to Europe, to paraphrase Pitt, she may
+"roll up that map of the world; it will not be wanted these fifty
+years."
+
+
+
+
+Chapter V
+
+THE PROBLEM OF THE NEAR WEST
+
+
+The foregoing reflections and the arguments drawn from them were
+penned before the outbreak of the war between Turkey and the Balkan
+Allies.
+
+That war is still undecided as I write (March 1913), but whatever its
+precise outcome may be, it is clear that the doom of Turkey as a great
+power is sealed, and that the complications of the Near East will,
+in future, assume an entirely fresh aspect. Hitherto, there was only
+the possibility that Germany might find at least a commercial and
+financial outlet in the Asiatic dominions of the Sultan. There was
+even the possibility, had Turkey held together, that England, to
+mitigate pressure elsewhere, would have conceded to an expanding and
+insistent Germany, a friendly interest and control in Asia Minor. It
+is true that the greatest possible development, and under the most
+favoured conditions of German interests in that region, could not have
+met the needs or satisfied the ever increasing necessities of Teutonic
+growth; but at least it would have offered a safety valve, and could
+have involved preoccupations likely to deflect the German vision, for
+a time, from the true path to greatness, the Western highways of the
+sea.
+
+An occupation or colonisation of the Near East by the Germanic peoples
+could never have been a possible solution under any circumstances of
+the problem that faces German statemanship. As well talk of reviving
+the Frank Kingdom of Jerusalem.
+
+The occupation by the fair-haired peoples of the Baltic and North Seas
+of the lands of Turk and Tartar, of Syrian and Jew, of Armenian and
+Mesopotamian, was never a practical suggestion or one to be seriously
+contemplated. "East is East and West is West," sings the poet of
+Empire, and Englishmen cannot complain if the greatest of Western
+peoples, adopting the singer, should apply the dogma to themselves.
+Germany, indeed, might have looked for a considerable measure of
+commercial dominance in the Near East, possibly for a commercial
+protectorate such as France applies to Tunis and Algeria and hopes
+to apply to morocco, or such as England imposes on Egypt, and this
+commercial predominance could have conferred considerable profits on
+Rhenish industries and benefited Saxon industrialism, but it could
+never have done more than this. A colonisation of the realms of
+Bajazet and Saladin by the fair-skinned peoples of the North, or the
+planting of Teutonic institutions in the valley of Damascus, even with
+the benevolent neutrality of England, is a far wider dream (and one
+surely no German statesman ever entertained) than a German challenge
+to the sea supremacy of England.
+
+The trend of civilized man in all great movements since modern
+civilization began, has been from East to West, not from West to East.
+The tide of the peoples moved by some mysterious impulse from the
+dawn of European expansion has been towards the setting sun. The
+few movements that have taken place in the contrary direction have
+but emphasized the universality of this rule, from the days of the
+overthrow of Rome, if we seek no earlier date. The Crusades furnished,
+doubtless, the classic example. The later contrary instance, that of
+Russia towards Siberia, scarcely, if at all affects the argument, for
+there the Russian overthrow is filling up Northern rather than Eastern
+lands, and the movement involves to the Russian emigrant no change
+of climate, soil, law, language or environment while that emigrant
+himself belongs, perhaps, as much to Asia as to Europe.
+
+But whatever value to German development the possible chances of
+expansion in the Near East may have offered before the present Balkan
+war, those chances to-day, as the result of that war, scarcely exist.
+It is probably the perception of this outcome of the victory of the
+Slav States that has influenced and accelerated the characteristic
+change of English public opinion that has accompanied with shouts of
+derision the dying agonies of the Turk. "In matters of mind," as a
+recent English writer says in the _Saturday Review_, "the national
+sporting instinct does not exist. The English public invariably backs
+the winner." And just as the English public invariably backs the
+winner, British policy invariably backs the anti-German, or supposedly
+anti-German side in all world issues. "What 1912 seems to have
+effected is a vast aggrandizement of the Slavonic races in their
+secular struggle against the Teutonic races. Even a local and
+temporary triumph of Austria over Servia cannot conceal the fact that
+henceforth the way south-east to the Black Sea and the Aegean Sea is
+barred to the Germans."[5]
+
+[Footnote 5: Mr. Frederick Harrison in the _English Review_, Jan.,
+1913.]
+
+That is the outstanding fact that British public opinion perceives
+with growing pleasure from the break up of Turkey.
+
+No matter where the dispute or what the purpose of conflict may be,
+the supreme issue for England is "Where is Germany?"
+
+Against that side the whole weight of Great Britain will, openly or
+covertly, be thrown. German expansion in the Near East has gone by
+the board, and in its place the development of Greek naval strength
+in the Mediterranean, to take its stand by the Triple Entente, comes
+to be jauntily considered, while the solid wedge of a Slav Empire
+or Federation, commanding in the near future 2,000,000 of armed men
+is agreeably seen to be driven across South-eastern Europe between
+Austro-German efforts and the fallow lands of Asia Minor. These latter
+can safely be left in Turkish hands yet a while longer, until the day
+comes for their partition into "spheres of influence," just as Persia
+and parts of China are to-day being apportioned between Russia and
+England. This happy consummation, moreover, has fallen from heaven,
+and Turkey is being cut up for the further extension of British
+interests clearly by the act of God.
+
+The victory of the Balkan States becomes another triumph for the
+British Bible; it is the victory of righteousness over wrong-doing.
+
+The true virtue of the Balkan "Christians" lies in the possibility of
+their being moulded into an anti-German factor of great weight in the
+European conflict, clearly impending, and in their offering a fresh
+obstacle, it is hoped, to German world policy.
+
+Let us first inspect the moral argument on the lips of these
+professors. We are assured, by it, that the claim of the Balkan Allies
+to expel Turkey from Europe rests upon a just and historic basis.
+
+Briefly stated it is that the Turk has held his European provinces
+by a right of conquest only. What the sword took, die sword may take
+away. When the sword was struck from the Ottoman's grasp his right
+to anything it had given him fell too. Thus Adrianople, a city he has
+held for over five hundred years, must be given up to a new conqueror
+who never owned it in the past and who certainly has far less moral
+claim to be there to-day than the descendants of Selim's soldiers.
+
+But the moral argument brings strange revenges.
+
+If Turkey has no right to Adrianople, to Thrace--"right of sword to be
+shattered by the sword"--what right has England to Ireland, to Dublin,
+to Cork? She holds Ireland by exactly the same title as that by which
+Turkey has hitherto held Macedonia, Thrace, Salonika--a right of
+invasion, of seizure, of demoralization. If Turkey's rights, nearly
+six hundred years old, can be shattered in a day by one successful
+campaign, and if the powers of Europe can insist, with justice, that
+this successful sword shall outweigh the occupation of centuries,
+then, indeed, have the Powers, led by England, furnished a precedent
+in the Near East which the victor in the next great struggle should
+not be slow to apply to the Near West, when a captive Ireland shall be
+rescued from the hands of a conqueror whose tide is no better, indeed
+somewhat worse than that of Turkey to Macedonia. And when the day of
+defeat shall strike for the Turkey of the Near West, then shall an
+assembled Europe remember the arguments of 1912-13 and a freed Ireland
+shall be justified on the very grounds England to-day has been the
+first to advance against a defeated Turkey.
+
+"But the Turk is an Asiatic," say the English Bashaws: to which
+indeed, Europe might aptly reply, "and are the English European or
+non-European?" The moral argument, and the "Asiatic argument" are
+strange texts for the desecrater of Christian Ireland to appeal to
+against that continent which she would fain hem in with Malayan and
+Indian battleships, and Canadian and Australasian dreadnoughts. Not
+the moral argument, but the anti-German argument, furnishes the real
+ground for the changed British attitude in the present war.
+
+The moral failure of Turkey, her inability to govern her Christian
+peoples is only the pretext: but just as the moral argument brings
+its strange revenges and shows an Ireland that has suffered all that
+Macedonia has suffered, and this at the hands of Christians, and not
+of Moslems, so the triumph of the Balkan Allies, far from benefiting
+Britain, must, in the end, react to her detriment.
+
+The present apparent injury to German interests by the closing of
+South-eastern Europe, and the road to Asia Minor, will inevitably
+force Germany to still more resolutely face the problem of opening the
+Western seaways. To think otherwise is to believe that Germany will
+accept a quite impossible position tamely and without a struggle.
+
+Hemmed in by Russia on the East and the new Southern Slav States on
+the South-east, with a vengeful France being incited on her Western
+frontier to fresh dreams of conquest, Germany sees England preparing
+still mightier armaments to hold and close the seaways of the world.
+The Canadian naval vote, the Malayan "gift" of a battleship come as
+fresh rivets in the chain forged for the perpetual binding of the
+seas, or it might more truly be said, for the perpetual binding of the
+hands of die German people.
+
+We read in a recent London periodical how these latest naval
+developments portend the coming of the day when "the Imperial navy
+shall keep the peace of the seas as a policeman does the peace of the
+streets. The time is coming when a naval war (except by England), will
+be as relentlessly suppressed as piracy on the high seas." (_Review of
+Reviews_, December, 1912.)
+
+The naive arrogance of this utterance is characteristically English.
+It is, after all, but the journalistic echo of the Churchill Glasgow
+speech, and the fullest justification of the criticism of the
+Kreuz Zeitung already quoted. It does not stand alone; it could be
+paralleled in the columns of any English paper--Liberal as much as
+Conservative--every day in the week. Nothing is clearer than that
+no Englishman can think of other nations save in terms of permanent
+inferiority. Thus, for instance, in a November (1912) issue of the
+_Daily News_ we find a representative Englishman (Sir R. Edgecumbe),
+addressing that Liberal journal in words that no one but an Englishman
+would dream of giving public utterance to. Sir R. Edgecumbe deprecated
+a statement that had gone round to the effect that the Malayan
+battleship was not a free gift of the toiling Tamils, Japanese,
+Chinese, and other rubber workers who make up, with a few Malays, the
+population of that peninsula, but was really the fruit of an arbitrary
+tax imposed upon these humble, but indifferent Asiatics by their
+English administration.
+
+Far from being indifferent, Sir R. Edgecumbe asserted these poor
+workers nourished a reverence "bordering on veneration" for the
+Englishman. "This is shown in a curious way by their refusing to
+call any European 'a white man' save the Englishman alone. The German
+trader, the Italian and Frenchman all are, in their speech coloured
+men."
+
+After this appreciation of themselves the English cannot object to the
+present writer's view that they are non-Europeans.
+
+Thus while the Eastern question is being settled while I write, by the
+expulsion of the Turk from Europe, England, who leads the cry in the
+name of Europe, is preparing the exclusion of Europe from all world
+affairs that can be dominated by sea power. Lands and peoples held
+for centuries by Turkey by a right not less moral than that by which
+England has held Ireland, are being forcibly restored to Europe. So be
+it.
+
+With settlement of the Eastern question by this act of restitution
+Europe must inevitably gain the clarity of vision to deal with the
+Western question by a similar act of restoration.
+
+The Western Macedonia must go the way of its Eastern fellow. Like
+those of the Orient, the problems of the Occident for Europe are
+twofold--a near Western and a far Western question. Ireland, keeper
+of the seas, constitutes for Europe the near Western question.
+
+The freedom of those seas and their opening to all European effort
+alike on equal terms constitutes the far Western question. But in both
+cases the antagonist of Europe, the non-European power is the same.
+The challenge of Europe must be to England, and the champion of Europe
+must be and can be only Germany. No other European people has the
+power, the strength of mind, of purpose and of arm to accomplish the
+great act of deliverance. Europe too long blinded to her own vital
+interests while disunited, must now, under the guidance of a united
+Germany, resolutely face the problem of freeing the seas.
+
+_That war of the seas is inevitable_. It may be fought on a continent;
+it may be waged in the air--it must be settled on the seas and it must
+mean either the freeing of those seas or the permanent exclusion
+of Europeans from the affairs of the world. It means for Europe the
+future, the very existence of European civilization as opposed to
+the Anglo-Saxon world domination. In that war, Germany will stand not
+alone as the champion of Europe, she will fight for the freedom of the
+world.
+
+As an Irishman I have no fear of the result to Ireland of a German
+triumph. I pray for it; for with the coming of that day the "Irish
+question" so dear to British politicians, becomes a European, a world
+question.
+
+With the humbling of Great Britain and the destruction of her sea
+ownership, European civilization assumes a new stature, and Ireland,
+oldest and yet youngest of the European peoples, shall enter into free
+partnership with the civilization, culture, and prosperity that that
+act of liberation shall bring to mankind.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter VI
+
+THE DUTY OF CHRISTENDOM
+
+
+It is only the truth that wounds. An Irishman to-day in dealing with
+Englishmen is forced, if he speak truly, to wound. That is why so
+many Irishmen do not speak the truth. The Irishman, whether he be a
+peasant, a farm labourer, however low in the scale of Anglicization
+he may have sunk, is still in imagination, if not always in manner,
+a gentleman. The Englishman is a gentleman by chance, by force of
+circumstances, by luck of birth, or some rare opportunity of early
+fellowship. The Irishman is a gentleman by instinct and shrinks from
+wounding the feelings of another man and particularly of the man who
+has wounded him. He scorns to take it out of him that way. That is
+why the task of misgoverning him has been so easy and has come so
+naturally to the Englishman. One of the chief grievances of the
+Irishman in the middle ages was that the man who robbed him was such
+a boor. Insult was added to injury in that the oppressor was no knight
+in shining armour, but a very churl of men; to the courteous and
+cultured Irishman a "bodach Sassenach," a man of low blood, of low
+cunning, caring only for the things of the body, with no veneration
+for the things of the spirit--with, in fine, no music in his soul.
+The things that the Irishman loved he could not conceive of. Without
+tradition or history himself he could not comprehend the passionate
+attachment of the Irishman to both, and he proceeded to wipe both out,
+so far as in him lay, from off the map of Ireland and from out the
+Irishman's consciousness.
+
+Having, as he believed, with some difficulty accomplished his task,
+he stands to-day amazed at the result. The Irishman has still a
+grievance--nay more, Ireland talks of "wrongs." But has she not got
+him? What more can she want except his purse? And, that too, she
+is now taking. In the indulgence of an agreeable self-conceit which
+supplies for him the want of imagination he sees Ireland to-day as a
+species of "sturdy beggar," half mendicant, half pickpocket--making
+off with the proceeds of his hard day's work. The past slips from
+him as a dream. Has he not for years now, well, for thirty years
+certainly, a generation, a life time, done all in his power to meet
+the demands of this incessant country that more in sorrow than in
+anger he will grant you, was misgoverned in the past. That was its
+misfortune, never his fault. This is a steadily recurring phase of the
+fixed hallucination in his blood. Ireland never _is_, but only always
+has been cursed by English rule. He himself, the Englishman of the
+day, is always a simple, bluff, good-hearted fellow. His father if you
+like, his grandfather very probably, misgoverned Ireland, but never he
+himself. Why, just look at him now, his hand never out of his pocket
+relieving the shrill cries of Irish distress. There she stands, a
+poverty-stricken virago at his door, shaking her bony fist at him,
+Celtic porter in her eye, the most fearful apparition in history, his
+charwoman, shaming him before the neighbours and demanding payment for
+long past spring cleanings that he, good soul, has forgotten all about
+or is quite certain were settled at the time. Yes, there she stands,
+the Irish charwoman, the old broom in her hand and preparing for
+one last sweep that shall make the house sweet and fit for her own
+children. And John Bull, honest, sturdy John Bull, believing the house
+to be his, thinks that the only thing between him and the woman is
+the matter of wages; that all she wants is an extra shilling. Ireland
+wants but one thing in the world. She wants her house to herself, and
+the stranger out of her house.
+
+While he is, in his heart, perfectly aware of this, John Bull (for the
+reasons given by Richard Cox), is quite determined that nothing shall
+get him out of the house. "Separation is unthinkable," say English
+Ministers. The task of Ireland is to-day what it always has been--to
+get the stranger out of the house. It is no shame to Ireland or her
+sons, that up to this they have failed in each attempt. Those attempts
+are pillars of fire in her history, beacons of light in the desert of
+sin, where the Irish Israel still wanders in search of the promised
+land. Few of the peoples in Europe who to-day make up the concert of
+powers, have, unaided, expelled the invader who held them down, and
+none has been in the situation of Ireland.
+
+As Mr. Gladstone wrote in 1890, "can anyone say we should have treated
+Ireland as we have done had she lain not between us and the ocean, but
+between us and Europe?"
+
+In introducing the scheme of mild Home Rule termed the Councils Bill
+in 1907, Mr. Birrell prefaced it with the remark that "separation was
+unthinkable--save in the event of some great world cataclysm." World
+cataclysms up to this have not reached Ireland--England intervened too
+well. She has maintained her hold by sea power. The lonely Andromeda
+saw afar off the rescuing Perseus, a nude figure on the coast of Spain
+or France, but long ere his flight reached her rock-bound feet she
+beheld him fall, bruised and mangled, and devoured by the watching sea
+monster.
+
+Had Italy been placed as Ireland is, cut off from all external succour
+save across a sea held by a relentless jailor, would she have been
+to-day a free people, ally of Austria on terms of high equality?
+
+The blood shed by the founders of modern Italy would all have been
+shed in vain--that blood that sanctified the sword of Garibaldi--had
+it not been for the selfish policy of Louis Napoleon and the invading
+armies of France. Italy, no more than Ireland, could have shaken
+herself free had it not been for aid from abroad. The late Queen
+Victoria saw clearly the parallel, and as hereditary custodian of
+Ireland, Her Majesty protested against the effort then being made to
+release Italy from an Austrian prison, when she herself was so hard
+put to it to keep Ireland in an English jail. Writing to her Prime
+Minister on July 25th, 1848, Her Majesty said:--
+
+"The Queen must tell Lord John (Russell) what she has repeatedly told
+Lord Palmerston, but without apparent effect, that the establishment
+of an entente cordiale with the French Republic, for the purpose
+of driving the Austrians out of their dominions in Italy would be a
+disgrace to this country. That the French would attach the greatest
+importance to it and gain the greatest advantage from it, there can
+be no doubt of. But how will England appear before the world at the
+moment she is struggling for her supremacy in Ireland?..." and on Oct.
+10th following Her Majesty wrote to her uncle, the first King of
+the Belgians (who owed his new minted crown to the Belgian people
+depriving the Dutch Sovereign of his "lawful possessions") in the
+following memorable words:
+
+"Really it is quite immoral, with Ireland quivering in our grasp,
+and ready to throw off her allegiance at any moment, for us to force
+Austria to give up her lawful possessions. What shall we say if
+Canada, Malta, etc., begin to trouble us? It hurts me terribly." (Page
+237, Queen Victoria's letters, published by order of His Majesty, King
+Edward VII.)
+
+It hurt Ireland much more terribly, that failure to throw off the
+hand that held her "quivering in our grasp," so soon to stretch her
+"a corpse upon the dissecting table."
+
+Ireland has failed to win her freedom, not so much because she has
+failed to shed her blood, but because her situation in the world
+is just that unique situation I have sought to depict. Belonging to
+Europe, she has not been of Europe; and England with a persistency
+that would be admirable were it not so criminal in intention and
+effect, has bent all her efforts, all her vigour, an unswerving
+policy, and a pitiless sword to extend the limits of exclusion. To
+approach Ireland at all since the first English Sovereign laid hands
+upon it was "quite immoral." When Frederick of Hohenstaufen (so long
+ago as that!) sent his secretary (an Irishman) to Ireland we read that
+Henry III of England declared "it hurt him terribly," and ordered all
+the goings out and comings in of the returned Irish-German statesman
+to be closely watched.
+
+The dire offence of Hugh O'Neill to Elizabeth was far less his
+rebellion than his "practises" with Spain. At every cessation of
+arms during the Nine Years War he waged with England, she sought to
+obtain from him an abjuration of "foreign aid," chiefly "that of the
+Spaniard." "Nothing will become the traitor (O'Neill) more than his
+public confession of any Spanish practices, and his abjuration of any
+manner of harkening or combining with any foreigners."
+
+Could O'Neill be brought to publicly repudiate help from abroad it
+would have, the Queen thought, the effect that "in Spain... the hopes
+of such attempts might be extinguished."
+
+As long as the sea was open to Spain there was grave danger. If
+Spaniard and Irishman came close together O'Neill's offence was
+indeed "fit to be made vulgar"--all men would see the strength of
+combination, the weakness of isolation.
+
+"Send me all the news you receive from Spain for Tyrone doth fill all
+these parts with strange lies, although some part be true, that there
+came some munition." It was because O'Neill was a statesman and knew
+the imperative need to Ireland of keeping in touch with Europe that
+for Elizabeth he became "the chief traitor of Ireland--a reprobate
+from God, reserved for the sword."
+
+Spain was to Elizabethan Englishmen what Germany is to-day.
+
+"I would venture to say one word here to my Irish fellow countrymen of
+all political persuasions. If they imagine they can stand politically
+or economically while Britain falls they are woefully mistaken. The
+British fleet is their one shield. It if be broken Ireland will go
+down. They may well throw themselves heartily into the common defence,
+for no sword can transfix England without the point reaching behind
+her." (Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, in the _Fortnightly Review_, Feb.,
+1913, "Great Britain and the Next War.")
+
+The voice is a very old one, and the bogey has done duty for a long
+time in Ireland. When, to-day, it is from Germany that freedom may
+be feared, Ireland is warned against the German. When, three hundred
+years ago the beacon of hope shone on the coast of Spain, it was the
+Spaniards who were the bad people of history.
+
+Fray Mattheo de Oviedo, who had been sent to Ireland as Archbishop,
+wrote to King Philip III from O'Neill's stronghold, Dungannon, on
+June 24, 1600. We might be listening to the voice of the _Fortnightly
+Review_ of yesterday. "The English are making great efforts to bring
+about a peace, offering excellent terms, and for this purpose the
+Viceroy sent messengers twice to O'Neill, saying among other things,
+that Your Majesty is making peace with the Queen, and that his
+condition will be hopeless. At other times he says that no greater
+misfortune could happen to the country than to bring Spaniards into
+it, because they are haughty and vicious and they would destroy and
+ruin the country." The Irish princes were no fools. "To all this they
+reply most honourably that they will hold out as long as they have one
+soldier or there remains a cow to eat."
+
+Hugh O'Neill saw clearly that all compromise between Ireland and
+England was futile, and that the way of escape was by complete
+separation and lay only through Europe. He again and again begged
+the Spanish King to sever Ireland and erect it into an allied State.
+He offered the crown of Ireland to a Spanish prince, just as three
+centuries earlier another and a great O'Neill offered the crown of
+Ireland to Edward Bruce in 1315.
+
+The coming of the Bruce saved Gaelic Ireland for three centuries. Had
+Philip of Spain sent his son as King to Ireland, her fate had been
+settled then instead of remaining three centuries later to still
+confront European statesmanship with an unsolved problem.
+
+In many letters addressed by the Irish leaders to Philip II and Philip
+III we find the constantly recurring note of warning that to leave
+England in possession of Ireland meant the downfall of Spain. The
+Irish princes knew that in fighting England they were in truth
+fighting the battle of European civilization.
+
+Writing to Philip II from Lifford, on May 16th, 1596, O'Neill and
+O'Donnell drew the King's attention to the cause of Ireland as the
+cause of Europe, and in the name of Ireland offered the crown to
+a Spanish prince. "But inasmuch as we have felt to our great and
+indescribably harm the evil doings and crimes of those whom the Queen
+of England is in the habit of sending amongst us, we beg and beseech
+Your Majesty to send someone well known to you and perfectly fit to
+be the King of this island, for his own welfare, ours, and that of the
+Christian State (Christendom)."
+
+They asked for a prince "who will not be unwilling to rule over and
+live amongst us and to direct and guide our nation, well and wisely."
+They pointed out how "he will obtain much advantage and glory by so
+doing," and finally they begged "would that Your Majesty would appoint
+the Archduke of Austria, now Governor of Flanders, a famous man and
+worthy of all praise, than whom none would be more acceptable." (The
+original is in Latin and in the archives of Simancas.)
+
+No more statesmanlike appeal was ever made from Ireland; and had
+the Archduke of Austria assumed the crown of Ireland in 1596, "now
+or never" would indeed have become "now and forever." Had Philip II
+carried out his often repeated promises of sending aid to that country
+the fate of his own kingdom must have been a very different one.
+
+"I wish it were possible for me, by word of mouth, to show the
+importance of this undertaking and the great service that would be
+rendered thereby to God and His Church, and _the great advantage it
+would be to the service of Your Majesty and the peace of Your States
+to attack the enemy here_."
+
+So wrote in 1600 to Philip II, the Archbishop of Dublin, already
+quoted, Mattheo de Oviedo.
+
+This prelate had been specially sent to Ireland "to see and understand
+the state of the country misrepresented by English emissaries at
+foreign courts."
+
+The wrath of Elizabeth against O'Neill was largely due to his keeping
+in touch with the continent, whereby the lies of her agents abroad
+were turned to her own ridicule. To Essex, her Viceroy, she wrote:
+"Tyrone hath blazed in foreign parts the defeat of regiments, the
+death of captains, and loss of men of quality in every quarter."
+
+O'Neill not only for years beat her generals in the field, her beat
+herself and her councillors at their own game. To Essex, in an ecstacy
+of rage at the loss of the last great army sent, she wrote (September
+17th, 1599): "To trust this traitor upon oath is to trust the devil
+upon his religion. Only this we are sure (for we see it in effect),
+that you have prospered so ill for us by your warfare, as we cannot
+but be very jealous lest we should be as well overtaken by the
+treaty."
+
+(Essex wished to bring O'Neill in by a treaty which, while ostensibly
+conceding the terms of the Irish prince was to allow the Queen time to
+carry out her purpose.)
+
+The Irish princes knew Elizabeth and her Ministers, as well as she
+read Essex. "Believe no news from Ireland of any agreement in this
+country," they had written to Philip II in 1597, "great offers have
+been made by the Queen of England, but we will not break our word and
+promise to your." In a letter written a year earlier (Oct. 18, 1596),
+replying to the special envoy sent by the king, they said: "Since
+the former envoys left us we have used every means in our power, as
+we promised we should do, to gain time and procrastination from one
+day to another. But how could we impose on so clever an enemy so
+skilled in every kind of cunning and cheating if we did not use much
+dissimulation, and especially if we did not pretend we were anxious
+for peace? We will keep firm and unshaken the promises which we made
+to Your Majesty with our last breath; if we do not we shall incur at
+once the wrath of God and the contempt of men."
+
+How faithfully they kept those promises and how the Spanish King
+failed in his, their fate and the bitter ruin of their country shows.
+That men fighting for Ireland had to meet Elizabeth and her statesmen
+with something of her own cunning is made very clear to anyone reading
+the State papers in Ireland.
+
+Essex, in one of his "answers" wrote: "I advise Her Majesty to allow
+me, at my return to Dublin, to conclude this treaty, yielding some
+of their grants in the present; and when Her Majesty has made secret
+preparations to enable me to prosecute, I will find quarrels enough to
+break and give them a deadly blow."
+
+The Irish, however, failed in this contest. They were not sufficiently
+good liars, and lacked the higher flights of villainy necessary to
+sustain the encounter. The essential English way in Tudor days, and
+much later, for administering a deadly blow to an Irish patriot was
+"assassination." Poison frequently took the place of the knife, and
+was often administered wrapped in a leaf of the British Bible. A
+certain Atkinson, knowing the religious nature of Cecil, the Queen's
+Prime Minister, the founder of a long line of statesmen, foremost as
+champions of Church and Book, suggested the getting rid of O'Neill by
+some "poisoned Hosts." This proposal to use the Blessed Sacrament as
+a veritable Last Supper for the last great Irish chief remains on
+record, was endorsed by Cecil.
+
+Another Briton, named Annyas, was charged to poison "the most
+dangerous and open rebel in Munster," Florence MacCarthy More, the
+great MacCarthy. Elizabeth's Prime Minister piously endorsed the
+deed--"though his soul never had the thought to consent to the
+poisoning of a dog, much less a Christian ."
+
+To Carew, the President of Munster, Cecil wrote enjoining the
+assassination of the young Earl of Desmond, then "in the keeping
+of Carew": "Whatever you do to abridge him out of Providence shall
+never be imputed to you for a fault, but exceedingly commended
+by the Queen." After this, we are not surprised to learn that in
+her instructions to Mountjoy, the successor of Essex, the Queen
+recommended "to his special care to preserve the true exercise of
+religion among her loving subjects." As O'Neill was still in the field
+with a large army, she prudently pointed out, however, that the time
+"did not permit that he should intermeddle by any severity or violence
+in matters of religion until her power was better established there
+to countenance his action." That the character of their adversary was
+faithfully appreciated by contemporary Irish opinion stands plain in
+a letter written by James Fitzthomas, nephew of the great Earl Gerald
+of Desmond, to Philip II. "The government of the English is such as
+Pharaoh himself never used the like; for they content not themselves
+with all temporal prosperity, but by cruelty desire our blood and
+perpetual destruction to blot out the whole remembrance of our
+posterity--for that Nero, in his time, was far inferior to that Queen
+in cruelty."
+
+The Irish chiefs well sustained their part in meeting this combination
+of power and perfidy, and merited, on the highest grounds of policy
+the help so often promised by the King of Spain. They showed him not
+only by their valour on the field but by their sagacious council how
+great a part was reserved for Ireland in the affairs of Europe if he
+would but profit from it and do his part.
+
+In this the Spanish King failed. Philip II had died in 1598, too
+immersed in religious trials to see that the centre of his griefs was
+pivoted on the possession of Ireland by the female Nero. With his son
+and successor communication was maintained and in a letter of Philip
+III to O'Neill, dated from Madrid, Dec. 24th, 1599, we read: "Noble
+and well beloved I have already written a joint letter to you and your
+relative O'Donnell, in which I replied to a letter of both of you. By
+this, which I now write to you personally I wish to let you know my
+good will towards you, and I mean to prove it, not only by word, but
+by deed." That promise was not fulfilled, or so inadequately fulfilled
+that the help, when it came, was insufficient to meet the needs of the
+case.
+
+History tells us what the sad consequences were to the cause of
+civilisation in Ireland, from the failure of the Spanish King to
+realize the greatness of his responsibilities. But the evil struck
+deeper than to Ireland alone. Europe lost more than her historians
+have yet realised from the weakness of purpose that let Ireland go
+down transfixed by the sword of Elizabeth.
+
+Had the fate of Europe been then controlled by a Hohenzollern, instead
+of by a Spanish Hapsburg, how different might have been the future of
+the world!
+
+Although Europe had forgotten Ireland, Ireland had never forgotten
+Europe. Natural outpost and sentinel of that continent in the West for
+three-hundred years now gagged and bound, since the flight to Rome of
+her last native Princes, she stands to-day as in the days of Philip
+III, if an outcast from European civilization non the less rejecting
+the insular tradition of England, as she has rejected her insular
+Church. And now once more in her career she turns to the greatest of
+European Sovereigns, to win his eyes to the oldest, and certainly the
+most faithful of European peoples. Ireland already has given and owes
+much to Germany.
+
+In the dark ages intercourse between the Celtic people of the
+West and the Rhinelands and Bavaria was close and long sustained.
+Irish monasteries flourished in the heart of Germany, and German
+architecture gave its note possibly to some of the fairest cathedral
+churches in Ireland.
+
+Clonfert and Cashel are, perhaps amongst the most conspicuous examples
+of the influence of that old-time intercourse with Germany. To-day,
+when little of her past remains to venerate, her ancient language on
+what seemed its bed of death owes much of its present day revival
+to German scholarship and culture. Probably the foremost Gaelic
+scholar of the day is the occupant of the Chair of Celtic at Berlin
+University, and Ireland recognises with a gratitude she is not easily
+able to express, all that her ancient literature owes to the genius
+and loving intellect of Dr. Kuno Meyer.
+
+The name of Ireland may be known on the Bourses or in the
+Chancelleries of Europe; it is not without interest, even fame, in the
+centres of German academical culture. But that the German State may
+also be interested in the political fate of Ireland is believed by the
+present writer.
+
+Maurice Fitzgerald, the outlawed claimant to the Earldom of Desmond,
+wrote to Philip II, from Lisbon on September 4th, 1593:
+
+"We have thought it right to implore your Majesty to send the aid
+you will think fit and with it to send us (the Irish refugees in the
+Peninsula) to defend and uphold the same undertaking; for we hope,
+with God's help Your Majesty will be victorious and conquer and hold
+as your own the kingdom of Ireland.--We trust in God that Your Majesty
+and the Council will weigh well the advantages that will ensue to
+Christendom from this enterprise--since the opportunity is so good
+and the cause so just and weighty, and the undertaking so easily
+completed."
+
+The history of human freedom is written in letters of blood. It is the
+law of God. No people who clutch to safety, who shun death are worthy
+of freedom.
+
+The dead who die for Ireland are the only live men in a free Ireland.
+The rest are cattle. Freedom is kept alive in man's blood only by
+shedding of that blood. It was not an act of a foreign Parliament they
+were seeking, those splendid "scorners of death," the lads and young
+men of Mayo, who awaited with a fearless joy the advance of the
+English army fresh from the defeat of Humbert in 1798. Then, if ever,
+Irishmen might have run from a victorious and pitiless enemy who,
+having captured the French General and murdered in cold blood the
+seven hundred Killala peasants who were with his colours, were now
+come to Killala itself to wreak vengeance on the last stronghold of
+Irish rebellion.
+
+The ill-led and half armed peasants, the last Irishmen in Ireland
+to stand the pitched fight for their country's freedom, went to
+meet the army of England, as the Protestant Bishop, who saw them,
+says:--"running upon death with as little appearance of reflection
+or concern as if they were hastening to a show."
+
+The late Queen Victoria, in one of her letters to her uncle, the King
+of the Belgians, wrote thus of the abortive rising of fifty years
+later in 1848:
+
+"There are ample means of crushing the rebellion in Ireland, and I
+think it is very likely to go off without any contest, which people
+(and I think rightly) rather regret. The Irish should receive _a
+good lesson or they will begin again_." (Page 223, Vol. II, Queen
+Victoria's letters.) Her Majesty was profoundly right. Ireland needed
+that lesson in 1848, as she needs it still more to-day. Had Irishmen
+died in 1848 as they did in 1798 Ireland would be to-day fifty years
+nearer to freedom. It is because a century has passed since Europe
+saw Ireland willing to die that to-day Europe has forgotten that she
+lives.
+
+As I began this essay with a remark of Charles Lever on Germany so
+shall end it here with a remark of Lever on his own country, Ireland.
+
+In a letter to a friend in Dublin, he thus put the epitaph of Europe
+on the grave of a generation who believed that "no human cause was
+worth the shedding one drop of human blood."
+
+"As to Ireland all foreign sympathy is over owing to the late
+cowardice and poltroonery of the patriots. _Even Italians can fight_"
+(Letter of C. Lever from Florence, August 19th, 1848).
+
+It is only the truth that wounds. It is that reproach that has cursed
+Ireland for a century.
+
+Sedition, the natural garment for an Irishman to wear, has been for a
+hundred years a bloodless sedition. It is this fiery shirt of Nessus
+that has driven our strong men mad. How to shed our blood with honour,
+how to give our lives for Ireland--that has been, that is the problem
+of Irish nationality.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter VII
+
+THE FREEDOM OF THE SEAS
+
+
+It would be idle to attempt to forecast the details of a struggle
+between Great Britain and Germany. That is a task that belongs to the
+War Department of the two States. I have assigned myself merely to
+point out that such a struggle is inevitable, and to indicate what
+I believe to be the supreme factors in the conflict, and how one of
+these, Ireland, and that undoubtedly the most important factor, has
+been overlooked by practically every predecessor of Germany in the
+effort to make good at sea. The Spaniards in Elizabeth's reign,
+the French of Louis XIV and of the Directory took some steps, it
+is true, to challenge England's control of Ireland, but instead of
+concentrating their strength upon that line of attack they were
+content to dissipate it upon isolated expeditions and never once to
+push home the assault on the one point that was obviously the key
+to the enemy's whole position. At any period during that last three
+centuries, with Ireland gone, England was, if not actually at the
+mercy of her assailants, certainly reduced to impotency beyond her own
+shores. But while England knew the value to herself of Ireland, she
+appreciated to the full the fact that this profitable juxtaposition
+lay on her right side hidden from the eyes of Europe.
+
+"Will anyone assert," said Gladstone, "that we would have dared to
+treat Ireland as we have done had she lain, not between us and the
+ocean, but between us and the continent?" And while the bulk of
+England, swollen to enormous dimensions by the gains she drew from
+Ireland interposed between her victim and Europe, her continental
+adversaries were themselves the victims of that strange mental disease
+psychologists term the collective illusion. All the world saw that
+which in fact did not exist. The greatness of England as they beheld
+it, imposing, powerful, and triumphant, existed not on the rocky base
+they believed they saw, but on the object, sacked, impoverished, and
+bled, they never saw. And so it is to-day. The British Empire is the
+great illusion. Resembling in much the Holy Roman Empire it is not
+British, it is not an Empire, and assuredly it is not holy. It lives
+on the life-blood and sufferings of some, on the suffrance and mutual
+jealousy of others, and on the fixed illusion of all. Rather is it a
+great Mendicity Institute. England now, instead of "robbing from Pole
+to Pole," as John Mitchel once defined her activities, goes begging
+from Pole to Pole that all and every one shall give her a helping hand
+to keep the plunder. Chins, Goorkhas, Sikhs, Malays, Irish, Chinese,
+South African Dutch, Australasians, Maoris, Canadians, Japanese, and
+finally "Uncle Sam"--these are the main components that when skilfully
+mixed from London, furnish the colouring material for the world-wide
+canvas. If we take away India, Egypt and the other coloured races the
+white population that remains is greatly inferior to the population of
+Germany, and instead of being a compact, indivisible whole, consists
+of a number of widely scattered and separated communities, each with
+separate and absorbing problems of its own, and more than one of them
+British neither in race, speech, nor affection. Moreover if we turn
+to the coloured races we find that the great mass of the subjects of
+this Empire have less rights within it than they possess outside its
+boundaries, and occupy there a lower status than that accorded to most
+foreigners.
+
+The people of India far out number all other citizens of the British
+Empire put together, and yet we find the British Indians resident in
+Canada, to take but one instance, petitioning the Imperial Government
+in 1910 for as favourable terms of entry into that British possession
+as the Japanese enjoyed.
+
+They pointed out that a Japanese could enter Canada on showing that he
+held from six pounds to ten pounds, but that no British Indian could
+land unless he had forty pounds and had come direct from India,--a
+physical impossibility, since no direct communication exists. But they
+went further, for they showed that their "citizenship" of the British
+Empire entailed penalties that no foreign state anywhere imposed upon
+them.
+
+"We appeal," they said, "and most forcibly bring to your notice
+that no such discriminating laws are existing against us in foreign
+countries like the United States of America, Germany, Japan, and
+Africa, to whom we do not owe any allegiance whatsoever."
+
+So that outside its white or European races it is clear the Empire has
+no general or equal citizenship, and that, far from being one, it is
+more divided racially against itself than are even opposing Asiatic
+and European nations which have the good fortune not to be united in a
+common, imperial bond.
+
+The total white population of this incongruous mass in 1911 consisted
+of some 59,000,000 human beings made up of various national and racial
+strains, as against 66,000,000 of white men in the German Empire the
+vast majority of them of German blood. And while the latter form a
+disciplined, self-contained, and self-supporting and self-defending
+whole, the former are swelled by Irish, French-Canadians, and Dutch
+South Africans who, according to Sir R. Edgcumbe, must be reckoned as
+"coloured."
+
+It is one thing to paint the map red, but you must be sure that your
+colours are fast and that the stock of paints wont run out. England,
+apart from her own perplexities is now faced with this prospect. Great
+Britain can no longer count on Ireland, that most prolific source
+of supply of her army, navy, and industrial efforts during the last
+century, while she is faced with a declining birth-rate, due largely,
+be it noted, to the diminished influx of the Irish, a more prolific
+and virile race. While her internal powers of reproduction are
+failing, her ability to keep those already born is diminishing still
+more rapidly. Emigration threatens to remove the surplus of births
+over deaths.
+
+As long as it was only the population of Ireland that fell (8,500,000
+in 1846 to 4,370,000 in 1911), Great Britain was not merely untroubled
+but actually rejoiced at a decrease in numbers that made the Irish
+more manageable, and yet just sufficiently starvable to supply her
+with a goodly surplus for army, navy, and industrial expansion in
+Great Britain. Now that the Irish are gone with a vengeance it is
+being perceived that they did not take their vengeance with them and
+that the very industrial expansion they built up from their starving
+bodies and naked limbs contains within itself the seeds of a great
+retribution.
+
+"Since Free Trade has ruined our agriculture, our army has become
+composed of starving slum dwellers who, according to the German notion
+are better at shouting than at fighting. German generals have pointed
+out that in the South African war our regular and auxiliary troops
+often raised the white flag and surrendered, without necessity,
+sometimes to a few Boers, and they may do the same to a German
+invading force. Free Trade which "benefits the consumer" and the
+capitalist has, unfortunately, through the destruction of our
+agriculture and through forcing practically the whole population of
+Great Britain into the towns, destroyed the manhood of the nation."
+(Modern Germany page 251, by J. Ellis Barker, 1907). An army of slum
+dwellers is a poor base on which to build the structure of a perpetual
+world dominion.
+
+While the navy shows an imposing output of new battleships
+and cruisers for 1913, the record, we are told, of all warship
+construction in the world, it takes blood as well as iron to cement
+empires. Battleships may become so much floating scrap iron (like the
+Russian fleet at Tsushima), if the men behind the guns lack the right
+stamina and education.
+
+We learn, too, that it is not only the slum dwellers who are failing,
+but that to meet the shortage of officers a large number of transfers
+from the merchant marine to the Royal Navy are being sanctioned.
+To this must be added the call of the Great Dominions for men and
+officers to man their local fleets. As the vital resources of England
+become more and more inadequate to meet the menace of German naval and
+moral strength, she turns her eyes to Ireland, and we learn from the
+London _Daily Telegraph_ that Mr. Churchill's scheme of recruiting at
+Queenstown may furnish "matter for congratulation, as Irish boys make
+excellent bluejackets happy of disposition, amenable to discipline,
+and extremely quick and handy."
+
+As I can recall an article in this same journal, written during the
+course of the Boer War, in which Ireland was likened to a "serpent
+whose head must be crushed beneath the heel," the _Daily Telegraph's_
+praise to-day of the Irish disposition should leave Irish boys
+profoundly unmoved--and still ashore.
+
+There is yet another aspect of the growing stream of British
+emigration. "Death removes the feeble, emigration removes the strong.
+Canada, New Zealand, Australia, and South Africa, have no use for the
+sick and palsied, or of those incapable of work through age or youth.
+They want the workers and they get them. Those who have left the
+United Kingdom during 1912 are not the scum of our islands, but the
+very pick. And they leave behind, for our politicians to grapple with,
+a greater proportion of females, of children and of disabled than ever
+before." (_London Magazine_!)
+
+The excess of females over males, already so noteworthy a feature
+of England's decay, becomes each year more accentuated and doubtless
+accounts for the strenuous efforts now being made to entrap Irish boys
+into the British army and navy.
+
+If we compare the figures of Germany and Great Britain, and then
+contrast them with those of Ireland, we shall see, at a glance, how
+low England is sinking, and how vitally necessary it is for her to
+redress the balance of her own excess of "militants" over males by
+kidnapping Irish youths into her emasculated services and by fomenting
+French and Russian enmities against the fruitful German people.
+
+Germany 1910, males, 32,031,967; females, 32,871,456; total,
+64,925,993. Excess of females, 739,489.
+
+Great Britain, 1911:
+
+England and Wales--Males, 17,448,476; females, 18,626,793; total,
+36,075,269. Excess of females, 1,178,317.
+
+Scotland--Males, 2,307,603; females, 2,251,842; total, 4,759,445.
+Excess of females, 144,239.
+
+Total for Great Britain, 40,834,714. Excess of females, 1,322,556.
+
+Thus on a population much less than two thirds that of Germany Great
+Britain has almost twice as many females in excess over males as
+Germany has, and this disproportion of sexes tends yearly to increase.
+We read in every fresh return of emigration that it is men and not
+women who are leaving England and Scotland. That Irish emigration,
+appalling as its ravages have been since 1846, is still maintained on
+a naturally healthier basis the sex returns for 1911 make clear. The
+figures for Ireland at the census were as follows:
+
+Ireland--Males, 2,186,802; females, 2,195,147; total, 4,381,949.
+Excess of females, 8,346.
+
+Ireland, it is seen, can still spare 100,000 or 150,000 males for the
+British armed forces and be in no unhealthier sex plight than Scotland
+or England is in. It is to get this surplus of stout Irish brawn and
+muscle that Mr. Churchill and the British War Office are now touting
+in Ireland.
+
+I take the following Government advertisement from the Cork _Evening
+Echo_ (of March, 1913), in illustration:
+
+"Notice--Any person that brings a recruit for the Regular or Special
+Reserve Branches of the Army to the Recruiting Officer at Victoria
+Barracks, Cork, will be paid the money reward allowed for each recruit
+which ranges from 1/6 to 5/- each."
+
+From whatever point of view we survey it we shall find that England's
+Empire at bottom rests upon Ireland to make good British deficiencies.
+The Dominions are far off, and while they may give battleships they
+take men. Ireland is close at hand--she gives all and takes nothing.
+Men, mind, food and money--all these she has offered through the
+centuries, and it is upon these and the unrestricted drain of these
+four things from that rich mine of human fertility and wealth that
+the British Empire has been founded and maintained. To secure to-day
+the goodwill and active co-operation of the Irish race abroad as well
+as in Ireland, and through that goodwill to secure the alliance and
+support of the United States has become the guiding purpose of British
+statesmanship.
+
+The Home Rule Bill of the present Liberal Government is merely the
+petty party expression of what all English statesmen recognize as
+a national need. Were the present Liberal Government thrown out
+to-morrow their Unionist successors would hasten to bind Ireland
+(and America) to them by a measure that, if necessary, would go much
+further. Every Unionist knows this. Ireland is always the key to the
+situation.
+
+I will quote two pronouncements, one English and one American, to show
+that Home Rule has now become an imperial necessity for England.
+
+Speaking in the House of Lords on the Home Rule Bill, Earl Grey, the
+late Governor-General of Canada, said on January 27th, 1913:
+
+"In the interests of the Empire I feel very strongly that it is
+imperative that the Irish question should be settled on lines which
+will satisfy the sentiment of the over-sea democracies, both in our
+self-governing colonies and in the United States. Everyone, I think
+will agree that it is most important and in the highest interests of
+the empire that there should be the friendliest feelings of generous
+affection and goodwill, not only between the self-governing Dominions
+and the Motherland, but also between America and England.... I need
+not elaborate this point. We are all agreed upon it. A heavy shadow
+at present exists, and it arises from our treatment of Ireland....
+If this be so is it not our duty to remove the obstacle that prevents
+that relationship with America from being that which we all desire?"
+
+The American utterance came from one equally representative of
+American Imperial interests. It is that of Mr. Roosevelt, published in
+the _Irish World_ of New York, Feb. 8th, 1913.
+
+"I feel that the enactment into law of this measure ... bids fair to
+establish goodwill among the English-speaking peoples. This has been
+prevented more than by any other one thing by this unhappy feud that
+has raged for centuries, and the settlement of which, I most earnestly
+hope, and believe, will be a powerful contribution to the peace of the
+world, based on international justice and goodwill. I earnestly feel
+that the measure is as much in the interests of Great Britain as of
+Ireland."
+
+Did we judge of Ireland only by many of the public utterances made
+in her name, then, indeed might we despair of a people who having
+suffered so much and so valiantly resisted for so many centuries
+were now to be won to their oppressor's side, by, perhaps, the most
+barefaced act of bribery ever attempted by a Government against a
+people.
+
+"Injured nations cannot so entirely forgive their enemies without
+losing something of their virility, and it grates upon me to hear
+leader after leader of the Parliamentary Party declaring without shame
+that Home Rule when it is won for Ireland is to be used for a new
+weapon of offence in England's hands against the freedom of the world
+elsewhere."
+
+Did the Irish Parliamentary Party indeed represent Ireland in this,
+Mr. Wilfred Blunt's noble protest in his recent work, _The Land War
+in Ireland_, would stand for the contemptuous impeachment, not of a
+political party but of a nation.
+
+Mr. Redmond in his latest speech shows how truly Mr. Blunt has
+depicted his party's aim; but to the credit of Ireland it is to be
+recorded that Mr. Redmond had to choose not Ireland, but England for
+its delivery. Speaking at St. Patrick's Day dinner in London on March
+17th, 1913, Mr. Redmond, to a non-Irish audience, thus hailed the
+future part his country is to play under the restoration of what he
+describes as a "National Parliament."
+
+"We will, under Home Rule, devote our attention to education, reform
+of the Poor Law, and questions of that kind which are purely domestic,
+which are, if you like, hum-drum Irish questions, and the only way
+in which we will attempt to interfere in any Imperial question will
+be by our representatives on the floor of the Imperial Parliament in
+Westminster doing everything in our power to increase the strength and
+the glory of what will then be our empire at long last; and by sending
+in support of the empire the strong arms and brave hearts of Irish
+soldiers and Irish sailors, to maintain the traditions of Irish valour
+in every part of the world. That is our ambition."
+
+Were this indeed the ambition of Ireland, did this represent the true
+feeling of Irishmen towards England, and the Empire of England, then
+Home Rule, on such terms, would be a curse and a crime. Thierry, the
+French historian, is a truer exponent of the passionate aspirations of
+the Irish heart than anyone who to-day would seek to represent Ireland
+as willing to sell her soul no less than the strong arms and brave
+hearts of her sons in an unholy cause.
+
+"... For notwithstanding the mixture of races, the intercommunion of
+every kind brought about by the course of centuries, hatred of the
+English Government still subsists as a native passion in the mass of
+the Irish nation. Ever since the hour of invasion this race of men
+has invariably desired that which their conquerors did not desire,
+detested that which they liked, and liked that which they detested
+... This indomitable persistency, this faculty of preserving through
+centuries of misery the remembrance of lost liberty, and of never
+despairing of a cause always defeated, always fatal to those who dared
+to defend it, is perhaps the strangest and noblest example ever given
+by any nation." (_Histoire De La Conquete De L'Angleterre Par Les
+Normands_, Paris edition, 1846. London, 1891.)
+
+The French writer here saw deeper and spoke truer than many who seek
+to-day not to reveal the Irish heart, whose deep purpose they have
+forgotten, but barter its life-blood for a concession that could be
+won to-morrow by half that blood if shed at home, thus offered without
+warrant "as a new weapon of offence to England's hands against the
+freedom of the world elsewhere."
+
+The Irishman, who in the belief that Home Rule has come or that
+any measure of Home Rule the London Parliament will offer can be a
+substitute for his country's freedom, joins the British army or navy
+is a voluntary traitor to his country. Almost everything that Ireland
+produces, or consumes, must all go out or come solely through England
+and on payment of a transit and shipping tax to English trade.
+
+The London press has lately waxed indignant over Servia denied by
+Austria a port on the Adriatic, and we have been told a Servia
+without a port is a Servia held in "economic slavery," and that her
+independence is illusory unless she have free outlet to the sea. But
+what of Ireland? With not one, but forty ports, the finest in all
+Western Europe, they lie idle and empty. With over 1,000 miles of
+seaboard, facing the West and holding the seaway between Europe and
+America, Ireland, in the grip of England, has been reduced to an
+economic slavery that has no parallel in civilization.
+
+And it is to this island, to this people that the appeal is now made
+that we should distrust the Germans and aid our enslavers. Better far,
+were that the only outcome, the fate of Alsace-Lorraine (who got their
+Home Rule Parliament years ago) than the "friendship" of England. We
+have survived the open hate, the prolonged enslavement, the secular
+robbery of England and now the England smiles and offers us with one
+hand Home Rule to take it away with the other, are we going to forget
+the experience of our forefathers? A Connacht proverb of the Middle
+Ages should come back to us--"Three things for a man to avoid;
+the heels of a horse, the horns of a bull; and the smile of an
+Englishman."
+
+That Ireland must be involved in any war that Great Britain undertakes
+goes without saying; but that we should willingly throw ourselves into
+the fray on the wrong side to avert a British defeat, is the counsel
+of traitors offered to fools.
+
+We must see to it that what Thierry wrote of our fathers is not
+shamefully belied by their sons. Our "indomitable persistency"
+has up to this excelled and subdued the unvarying will applied to
+one unvarying purpose of those who, by dint of that quality, have
+elsewhere subjugated the universe. We who have preserved through
+centuries of misery, the remembrance of lost liberty, are not
+now going to merge our unconquered souls in the base body of our
+oppressor.
+
+One of the few Liberal statesmen England has produced, certainly the
+only Liberal politician she has ever produced, the late Mr. Gladstone,
+compared the union between Great Britain and Ireland to "the union
+between the mangled corpse of Hector and the headlong chariot of
+Achilles." (1890.)
+
+But, while I cannot admit that England is an Achilles, save, perhaps,
+that she may be wounded like him in the heel, I will not admit, I
+will not own that Ireland, however mangled, however "the plowers have
+ploughed upon her back and made long furrows," is in truth dead, is
+indeed a corpse. No; there is a juster analogy, and one given us by
+the only Englishman who was in every clime, and in every circumstance
+a Liberal; one who died fighting in the cause of liberty, even as in
+life he sang it. Byron denounced the union between England and Ireland
+as "the union of the shark with its prey."
+
+
+
+
+Chapter VIII
+
+IRELAND, GERMANY AND THE NEXT WAR
+
+
+In the February, 1913, _Fortnightly Review_, Sir Arthur Conan Doyle at
+the end of an article, "Great Britain and the Next War," thus appeals
+to Ireland to recognize that her interests are one with those of Great
+Britain in the eventual defeat of the latter:
+
+"I would venture to say one word here to my Irish fellow-countrymen
+of all political persuasions. If they imagine that they can stand
+politically or economically while Britain falls they are woefully
+mistaken. The British fleet is their one shield. If it be broken
+Ireland will go down. They may well throw themselves heartily into the
+common defence, for no sword can transfix England without the point
+reaching Ireland behind her...."
+
+I propose to briefly show that Ireland, far from sharing the
+calamities that must necessarily fall on Great Britain from defeat
+by a great power, might conceivably thereby emerge into a position of
+much prosperity.
+
+I will agree with Sir A. Conan Doyle up to this--that the defeat of
+Great Britain by Germany must be the cause of a momentous change to
+Ireland: but I differ from him in believing that that change must
+necessarily be disastrous to Ireland. On the contrary, I believe that
+the defeat of Great Britain by Germany might conceivably (save in one
+possible condition) result in great gain to Ireland.
+
+The conclusion that Ireland must suffer all the disasters and eventual
+losses defeat would entail on Great Britain is based on what may be
+termed the fundamental maxim that has governed British dealings with
+Ireland throughout at least three centuries. That maxim may be given
+in the phrase, "Separation is unthinkable." Englishmen have come to
+invincibly believe that no matter what they may do or what may betide
+them, Ireland must inseparably be theirs, linked to them as surely
+as Wales or Scotland, and forming an eternal and integral part of a
+whole whose fate is indissolubly in their hands. While Great Britain,
+they admit, might well live apart (and happily) from an Ireland
+safely "sunk under the sea" they have never conceived of an Ireland,
+still afloat, that could possibly exist, apart from Great Britain.
+Sometimes, as a sort of bogey, they hold out to Ireland the fate that
+would be hers if, England defeated, somebody else should "take" her.
+For it is a necessary corollary to the fundamental maxim already
+stated, that Ireland, if not owned by England, must necessarily be
+"owned" by someone else than her own inhabitants.
+
+The British view of the fate of Ireland in the event of British defeat
+may be stated as twofold. Either Ireland would remain after the war as
+she is to-day, tied to Great Britain, or she _might_ be (this is not
+very seriously entertained) annexed by the victor. No other solution,
+I think, has ever been suggested. Let us first discuss No. I.
+
+This, the ordinary man in the street view, is that as Ireland would
+be as much a part and belonging to Great Britain after a war as before
+it, whatever the termination of that war might be, she could not
+fail to share the losses defeat must bring to a common realm. The
+partnership being indissoluble, if the credit of the house were
+damaged and its properties depreciated, all members of the firm must
+suffer. In this view, an Ireland weaker, poorer, and less recuperative
+than Great Britain, would stand to lose even more from a British
+defeat than the predominant partner itself. Let us at once admit that
+this view is correct. If on the condition of a great war Ireland were
+still to remain, as she is to-day, an integral portion of a defeated
+United Kingdom, it is plain she would suffer, and might be made to
+suffer possibly more even than fell to the share of Great Britain.
+
+But that is not the only ending defeat might bring to the two islands.
+We must proceed then to discuss No. 2, the alternative fate reserved
+for Ireland in the unlikely event of a great British overthrow. This
+is, that if the existing partnership were to be forcibly dissolved, by
+external shock, it would mean for Ireland "out of the frying pan into
+the fire." The idea here is that I have earlier designated as the
+"bogey man" idea. Germany, or the other victor in the great conflict,
+would proceed to "take" Ireland. An Ireland administered, say,
+by Prussians would soon bitterly regret the milder manners of
+the Anglo-Saxon and pine for the good old days of "doles" from
+Westminster. I know many Irishmen who admit that as between England
+and Germany they would prefer to remain in the hands of the former--on
+the principle that it is better to keep the devil you know than fall
+into the hands of a new devil.
+
+German rule, you are asked to believe, would be so bad, so stern, that
+under it Ireland, however much she might have suffered from England in
+the past, would soon yearn to be restored to the arms of her sorrowing
+sister. Assuming, for the sake of argument, that Germany "annexed"
+Ireland, is it at all clear that she would (or even could) injure
+Ireland more than Great Britain has done? To what purpose and with
+what end in view? "Innate brutality"--the Englishman replied--"the
+Prussian always ill-treats those he lays hands on--witness the poor
+Poles." Without entering into the Polish language question, or the
+Polish agrarian question, it is permissible for an Irishman to reply
+that nothing by Prussia in those respects has at all equalled English
+handling of the Irish language or England land dealings in Ireland.
+The Polish language still lives in Prussian Poland and much more
+vigorously than the Irish language survives in Ireland.
+
+But it is not necessary to obscure the issue by reference to the
+Prussian Polish problem. An Ireland annexed to the German Empire
+(supposing this to be internationally possible) as one of the fruits
+of a German victory over Great Britain would clearly be administered
+as a common possession of the German people, and not as a Prussian
+province. The analogy, if one can be set up in conditions so
+dissimilar, would lie not between Prussia and her Polish provinces,
+but between the German Empire and Alsace-Lorraine. What, then,
+would be the paramount object of Germany in her administration of an
+overseas Reichsland of such extraordinary geographical importance to
+her future as Ireland would be?
+
+Clearly not to impoverish and depress that new-won possession but
+to enhance its exceeding strategic importance by vigorous and wise
+administration, so as to make it the main counterpoise to any possible
+recovery of British maritime supremacy, so largely due as this was in
+the past to Great Britain's own possession of this island.
+
+A prosperous and flourishing Ireland, recognizing that her own
+interests lie with those of the new Administration, would assuredly be
+the first and chief aim of German statesmanship.
+
+The very geographical situation of Ireland would alone ensure wise and
+able administration by her new rulers had Germany no other and special
+interest in advancing Irish well-being; for to rule from Hamburg
+and Berlin a remote island and a discontented people, with a highly
+discontented and separated Britain intervening, by methods of
+exploitation and centralization, would be a task beyond the capacity
+of German statecraft. German effort, then, would be plainly directed
+to creating an Ireland satisfied with the change, and fully determined
+to maintain it.
+
+And it might be remembered that Germany is possibly better equipped,
+intellectually and educationally, for the task of developing Ireland
+than even 20th century England. She has already faced a remarkable
+problem, and largely solved it in her forty years' administration of
+Alsace-Lorraine. There is a province torn by force from the bleeding
+side of France and alien in sentiment to her new masters to a degree
+that Ireland could not be to any changes of authority imposed upon her
+from without, has, within a short lifetime, doubled in prosperity and
+greatly increased her population, despite the open arms and insistent
+call of France, and despite a rule denounced from the first as
+hateful.
+
+However hateful, the Prussian has proved himself an able administrator
+and an honest and most capable instructor. In his strong hands
+Strasburg has expanded from being an ill-kept, pent-in French garrison
+town to a great and beautiful city. Already a local Parliament
+gives to the population a sense of autonomy, while the palace and
+constant presence of an Imperial prince affirms the fact that German
+Imperialism, far from engrossing and centralizing all the activities
+and powers of the empire in Berlin, recognizes that German nationality
+is large enough and great enough to admit of many capitals, many
+individualities, and many separate State growths within the sure
+compass of one great organism.
+
+That an Ireland severed by force of arms from the British Empire and
+annexed to the German Empire would be ill-governed by her new masters
+is inconceivable. On the contrary, the ablest brains in Germany,
+scientific, commercial, and financial, no less than military and
+strategic, would be devoted to the great task of making sure the
+conquest not only of an island but of the intelligence of a not
+unintelligent people, and by wisely developing so priceless a
+possession to reconcile its inhabitants through growing prosperity and
+an excellent administration, to so great a change in their political
+environment. Can it be said that England, even in her most lucid
+intervals, has brought to the Government of Ireland her best efforts,
+her most capable men, or her highest purpose? The answer may be given
+by Li Hung Chang, whose diary we have so lately read. Recording his
+interview with Mr. Gladstone, the Chinese statesman says: "He spoke
+about ... Ireland; and I was certain that he hoped to see that unhappy
+country governed better before he died. 'They have given their best
+to England,' he said, 'and in return have been given only England's
+worst.'" It is certain that Germany, once in possession of Ireland,
+would assuredly not give to that country only Germany's worst.
+
+In a score of ways Ireland would stand to gain from the change of
+direction, of purpose, of intention, and, I will add, of inspiration
+and capacity in her newly-imposed rulers.
+
+Whether she liked them or not, at the outset, would be beside the
+question. In this they would differ but little from those she had so
+long and wearily had measure of, and if they brought to their new task
+a new spirit and a new intellectual equipment Irishmen would not be
+slow to realize that if they themselves were never to rule their own
+country, they had, at least, found in their new masters something more
+than emigration agents.
+
+Moreover, to Germany there would be no "Irish question," no "haggard
+and haunting problem" to palsy her brain and miscredit her hand with
+its old tags and jibes and sordid impulses to deny the obvious.
+
+To Germany there would be only an English question. To prevent that
+from ever again imperilling her world future would be the first
+purpose of German overseas statesmanship. And it is clear that a wise
+and capable Irish Administration, designed to build up and strengthen
+from within and not to belittle and exploit from without, would be the
+sure and certain purpose of a victorious Germany.
+
+I have now outlined the two possible dispositions of Ireland that up
+to this British opinion admits as conceivable in die improbable event
+of a British defeat by Germany. Only these two contingencies are
+ever admitted. First that Ireland, sharing the common disaster, must
+endure with her defeated partner all the evils that a great overthrow
+must inflict upon the United Kingdom. Second, that Ireland, if Great
+Britain should be completely defeated, might conceivably be "taken" or
+annexed by the victor and held as a conquered territory, and in this
+guise would bitterly regret the days of her union with Great Britain.
+I have sought to show, in answer to the latter argument, that were
+annexation by the victor indeed to follow a British defeat Ireland
+might very conceivably find the changed circumstances greatly to her
+advantage.
+
+But there is a third contingency I have nowhere seen discussed or
+hinted at, and yet it is at least as likely as No. 1, and far more
+probable than No. 2--for I do not think that the annexation of Ireland
+by a European power is internationally possible, however decisive
+might be the overthrow of England. It is admitted (and it is upon this
+hypothesis that the discussion is proceeding) that Great Britain might
+be defeated by Germany, and that the British fleet might be broken and
+an enemy's sword might transfix England. Such an overthrow would be
+of enormous import to Europe and to the whole world. The trident would
+have changed hands, for the defeat of England could only be brought
+about by the destruction of her sea supremacy. Unless help came
+from without, a blockaded Britain would be more at the mercy of the
+victor than France was after Sedan and Paris. It would lie with the
+victor to see that the conditions of peace he imposed were such as,
+while ensuring to him the objects for which he had fought, would be
+the least likely conditions to provoke external intervention or a
+combination of alarmed world interests. Now, putting aside lesser
+consideration, the chief end Germany would have in a war with England
+would be to ensure her own free future on the seas. For with that
+assured and guaranteed by a victory over England, all else that she
+seeks must in the end be hers. To annex resisting British colonies
+would be in itself an impossible task--physically a much more
+impossible task than to annex Ireland.
+
+To annex Ireland would be, as a military measure, once command of the
+seas was gained, a comparatively easy task. No practical resistance
+to one German army corps even could be offered by any force Ireland
+contains, or could of herself, put into the field. No arsenal or means
+of manufacturing arms exists. The population has been disarmed for a
+century, and by bitter experience has been driven to regard the use
+of arms as a criminal offence. Patriotism has been treated as felony.
+Volunteers and Territorials are not for Ireland. To expect that a
+disarmed and demoralized population who have been sedulously batoned
+into a state of physical and moral dejection, should develop military
+virtues in face of a disciplined army is to attribute to Irishmen
+the very qualities their critics unite in denying them. "The
+Irishman fights well everywhere except in Ireland," has passed into a
+commonplace: and since every effort of government has been directed
+to ensuring the abiding application of the sneer, Englishmen would
+find, in the end, the emasculating success of their rule completely
+justified in the physical submission of Ireland to the new force that
+held her down. With Great Britain cut off and the Irish Sea held by
+German squadrons, no power from within could maintain any effective
+resistance to a German occupation of Dublin and a military
+administration of the island. To convert that into permanent
+administration could not be opposed from within, and with Great
+Britain down and severed from Ireland by a victorious German navy, it
+is obvious that opposition to the permanent retention of Ireland by
+the victor must come from without, and it is for this international
+reason that I think a German annexation of any part of a defeated
+United Kingdom need not be seriously considered. Such a complete
+change in the geography of Europe as a German-owned Ireland could not
+but provoke universal alarm and a widespread combination to forbid its
+realization. The bogey that Ireland, if not John Bull's other island,
+must necessarily be somebody else's other island will not really bear
+inspection at close quarters.
+
+Germany would have to attain her end, the permanent disabling of the
+maritime supremacy of Great Britain, by another and less provocative
+measure. It is here and in just these circumstances that the third
+contingency, and one no Englishman I venture to think, has ever
+dreamed of, would be born on the field of battle and baptized a
+Germanic godchild with European diplomacy as sponsor. Germany, for
+her own imperial ends and in pursuit of a great world policy, might
+successfully accomplish what Louis XIV and Napoleon only contemplated.
+An Ireland, already severed by a sea held by German warships, and
+temporarily occupied by a German army, might well be permanently and
+irrevocably severed from Great Britain, and with common assent erected
+into a neutralized, independent European State under international
+guarantees. An independent Ireland would, of itself, be no threat or
+hurt to any European interest. On the contrary, to make of Ireland an
+Atlantic Holland, a maritime Belgium, would be an act of restoration
+to Europe of this the most naturally favoured of European islands that
+a Peace Congress should, in the end, be glad to ratify at the instance
+of a victorious Germany. That Germany should propose this form of
+dissolution of the United Kingdom in any interests but her own, or
+for the _beaux yeux_ of Ireland I do not for a moment assert. Her main
+object would be the opening of the seas and their permanent freeing
+from that overwhelming control Great Britain has exercised since
+the destruction of the French navy, largely based, as all naval
+strategists must perceive on the unchallenged possession of Ireland.
+
+That Ireland is primarily a European island inhabited by a European
+people who are not English, and who have for centuries appealed
+to Europe and the world to aid them in ceasing to be politically
+controlled by England, is historic fact. And since the translation of
+this historic fact into practice European politics would undoubtedly
+effect the main object of the victorious power, it is evident that,
+Great Britain once defeated, Germany would carry the Irish question to
+a European solution in harmony with her maritime interests, and could
+count on the support of the great bulk of European opinion to support
+the settlement those interests imposed. And if politically and
+commercially an independent and neutral Irish State commended itself
+to Europe, on moral and intellectual grounds the claim could be put
+still higher. Nothing advanced on behalf of England could meet the
+case for a free Ireland as stated by Germany. Germany would attain her
+ends as the champion of national liberty and could destroy England's
+naval supremacy for all time by an act of irreproachable morality.
+The United States, however distasteful from one point of view the
+defeat of England might be, could do nothing to oppose a European
+decision that could dearly win an instant support from influential
+circles--Irish and German--within her own borders.
+
+In any case the Monroe Doctrine cuts both ways, and unless at the
+outset the United States could be drawn into an Anglo-Teutonic
+conflict, it is clear that the decision of a European Congress to
+create a new European State out of a very old European people could
+not furnish ground for American interference.
+
+I need not further labour the question. If Englishmen will but awaken
+from the dream that Ireland "belongs" to them and not to the Irish
+people, and that that great and fertile island, inhabited by a brave,
+a chivalrous and an intellectual race (qualities they have alas! done
+their utmost to expel from the island) is a piece of real estate they
+own and can dispose of as they will, they cannot fail to perceive that
+the Irish question cannot much longer be mishandled with impunity,
+and that far from being, as they now think it, merely a party
+question--and not even a "domestic question" or one the colonies have
+a voice in--it may in a brief epoch become a European question.
+
+With the approaching disappearance of the Near Eastern question (which
+England is hastening to the detriment of Turkey) a more and more
+pent-in Central Europe may discover that there is a Near Western
+question, and that Ireland--a free Ireland--restored to Europe is the
+key to unlock the western ocean and open the seaways of the world.
+
+Again it is Mr. Gladstone who comes to remind Englishmen that Ireland,
+after all, is a European island, and that Europe has some distant
+standing in the issue.
+
+"I would beseech Englishmen to consider how they would behave to
+Ireland, if instead of having 5,000,000 of people, she had 25,000,000;
+or if instead of being placed between us and the ocean she were placed
+between us and the Continent." (Notes and queries on the Irish Demand,
+February, 1887.) While the geographical positions of the islands
+to each other and to Europe have not changed, and cannot change,
+the political relation of one to the other, and so the political
+and economical relation of both to Europe, to the world and to the
+carrying trade of the world and the naval policies of the powers may
+be gravely altered by agencies beyond the control of Great Britain.
+
+The changes wrought in the speed and capacity of steam shipping, the
+growth and visible trend of German naval power, and the increasing
+possibilities of aerial navigation, all unite to emphasize the
+historian Niebuhr's warning, and to indicate for Ireland a possible
+future of restored communion with Europe, and less and less the
+continued wrong of that artificial exclusion in which British policy
+has sought to maintain her--"an island beyond an island."
+
+
+
+
+Chapter IX
+
+THE ELSEWHERE EMPIRE
+
+
+Every man born in Ireland holds a "hereditary brief" for the opponents
+of English sway, wherever they may be. The tribunal of history in his
+own land is closed to him; he must appeal to another court; he must
+seek the ear of those who make history elsewhere. The Irishman is
+denied the right of having a history, as he is denied the right of
+having a country. He must recover both. For him there is no past any
+more than a future. And if he seeks the record of his race in the only
+schools or books open to him he will find that hope has been shut out
+of the school and fame taken out of the story.
+
+The late John Richard Green, one of the greatest of English
+historians, was attracted to Ireland by a noble sympathy for the
+fallen which he shared with very few of his fellow-countrymen. We
+are told that he sympathized with the spirit of Irish nationality. "A
+State," he would say, "is accidental; it can be made or unmade; but a
+nation is something real which can be neither made nor destroyed."
+
+He had once planned a history of Ireland, "but abandoned the idea
+because the continuous record of misery and misgovernment was too
+painful to contemplate." All pleasure lies in contrast. The history of
+Ireland offers no contrast; it is a tale of unmitigated wrong.
+
+It is too full of graves and the ghosts are not laid yet. As well
+write the history of a churchyard. Forty years before John Richard
+Green thus explained why he had abandoned the plan of the graveyard,
+Victor Hugo lashed the front of England with this very thong. "Ireland
+turned into a cemetery; Poland transported to Siberia; all Italy a
+galleys--there is where we stand in this month of November, 1831!"
+
+The history of Ireland remains to be written, because the purpose of
+Ireland remains yet to be achieved. The widow of John Richard Green
+has laid the foundations of that temple of hope in which the youth
+of Ireland must enter and be sworn to the task that yet remains for
+Irishmen to accomplish.
+
+And so in closing the days of 1913 I bring, with a message of hope,
+these scattered thoughts upon the British Empire and its approaching
+dissolution to lay before the youth of Ireland. I say approaching
+dissolution advisedly, for the signs are there to be read. "Home Rule"
+will not save it. The attempt now being made to bribe Ireland and the
+greater Ireland beyond the seas, to the side of the Elsewhere Empire
+by what has been aptly termed a "ticket-of-leave" bill, will not
+suffice. The issue lies in stronger hands. Even could the two Irelands
+be won by the dole now offered, of a subordinate Parliament in Dublin,
+its hands tied so that it must be impotent for any national effort,
+"a Parliament" as Mr. Herbert Samuel says, "for the local affairs of
+Irishmen," there are other and more powerful agencies that no measure
+of conciliation within the Empire can permanently win to that system
+of world exploitation centred in London.
+
+"I would let the Irish have Home Rule," said recently Mr. Winston
+Churchill, "for their own idiotic affairs." But the last word came
+from Lord Morley, the "father of Home Rule." "Give it them," he said,
+in friendly, private counsel, "give it them; let them have the full
+savour of their own dunghill civilization."
+
+But the last word of all will come, not from Lord Morley, or "Home
+Rule," but from the land and the myriad peoples whose ancient
+civilization, Lord Morley, like every preceding Viceroy, has striven
+to bury under the dunghill of British supremacy in India, and to
+hide the very outlines of the ancient body of the set designs of a
+new purpose. The capital of British India is to be the "new Delhi,"
+planned in Whitehall, but paid for in India--the apotheosis of dung.
+The new India will make short work of "the new Delhi."
+
+"An unplumbed, salt, estranging sea" of moral and spiritual separation
+sets between the imperial conception as nourished in Britain and the
+growing hope of the great millions of mankind who make up the greatest
+realm of her empire.
+
+Ireland _might_ be bought or bribed, at any rate in this generation,
+to forfeit her national ideals and barter the aspiration that six
+centuries of contact with England have failed to kill; but the
+350,000,000 of Indian mankind can never be, or bought, or bribed in
+the end.
+
+Even if Ireland forgot the deathless words of Grattan, delivered in
+the subordinate Parliament of 1780, those words will find a response
+in the hearts of men who never heard of Grattan. For the voice of
+the Irish patriot was, in truth, a world voice--a summons to every
+audience wherever men gather in quest of freedom. The prophesy Grattan
+uttered in the name of Ireland assuredly will be fulfilled, and that
+in the life time of many of us, in that greater Ireland England
+holds in the eastern seas by the very same tide of raid, conquest and
+spoliation that has given her our own land.
+
+Substitute India for Ireland and the Grattan of 1780 becomes the
+Indian patriot of to-day.
+
+"I will never be satisfied so long as the meanest cottager in Ireland
+has a link of the British chain clanking in his rags; he may be naked,
+he shall not be in irons; and I do see the time is at hand; the spirit
+has gone forth, the declaration is planted; and though great men
+should apostasize, yet the cause will live; and though the public
+speaker should die, yet the immortal fire shall outlast the organ
+which conveyed it, and the breath of liberty, like the word of holy
+men, will not die with the prophet, but survive him."
+
+Were Ireland to accept the bribe now offered she would indeed justify
+the reproach of Wilfred Blunt; but she would become some thing else
+than a "weapon of offence in England's hands against the freedom of
+the world elsewhere;" she would share, and rightly share the fate of
+the parasite growth that, having gripped her trunk so tightly, has
+by that aid reached the sunlight. The British Empire is no northern
+oak tree. It is a creeping, climbing plant that has fastened on the
+limbs of others and grown great from a sap not its own. If we seek an
+analogy for it in the vegetable and not in the animal world we must
+go to the forests of the tropics and not to the northland woodlands.
+In the great swamps at the mouth of the Amazon the naturalist Bates
+describes a monstrous liana, the "Sipo Matador" or Murdering Creeper,
+that far more fitly than the oak tree of the north typifies John Bull
+and the place he has won in the sunlight by the once strong limbs of
+Ireland.
+
+Speaking of the forests round Para, Bates says:--"In these tropical
+forests each plant and tree seems to be striving to outvie its
+fellows, struggling upwards towards light and air--branch and leaf
+and stem--regardless of its neighbours. Parasitic plants are seen
+fastening with firm grip on others, making use of them with reckless
+indifference as instruments for their own advancement. Live and let
+live is clearly not the maxim taught in these wildernesses. There is
+one kind of parasitic tree very common near Para which exhibits this
+feature in a very prominent manner. It is called the "Sipo Matador,"
+or Murderer Liana. It belongs to the fig order, and has been described
+and figured by Von Martius as the Atlas to Spix and Martius' Travels.
+I observed many specimens. _The base of its stem would be unable
+to bear the weight of the upper growth_; it is obliged therefore
+to support itself on a tree of _another species_. In this it is not
+essentially different from other climbing trees and plants, but the
+way the Matador sets about it is peculiar and produces certainly a
+disagreeable impression. It springs up close to the tree on which it
+intends to fix itself, and the wood of its stem grows by spreading
+itself like a plastic mould over one side of the trunk of its
+supporter. It then puts forth, from each side, an armlike branch,
+which grows rapidly, and looks as though a stream of sap were flowing
+and hardening as it went. This adheres closely to the trunk of the
+victim, and the two arms meet at the opposite side and blend together.
+These arms are put forth at somewhat regular intervals in mounting
+upwards, and the victim, when its strangler is full grown, becomes
+tightly clasped by a number of inflexible rings. These rings gradually
+grow larger as the Murderer flourishes, rearing its crown of foliage
+to the sky mingled with that of its neighbour, and in course of time
+they kill it, by stopping the flow of its sap. The strange spectacle
+now remains of the selfish parasite clasping in its arms the lifeless
+and decaying body of its victim, which had been a help to its own
+growth. Its ends have been served--it has flowered and fruited,
+reproduced and disseminated its kind; and _now when the dead trunk
+moulders away its own end approaches; its support is gone and itself
+also falls_."
+
+The analogy is almost the most perfect in literature, and if we would
+not see it made perfect in history we must get rid of the parasite
+grip before we are quite strangled. If we would not share the coming
+darkness we must shake off the murderer's hold, before murderer and
+victim fall together. That fall is close at hand. A brave hand may yet
+cut the "Sipo Matador," and the slayer be slain before he has quite
+stifled his victim.
+
+If that hand be not a European one, then may it come, bronzed, keen,
+and supple from the tropic calm! The birds of the forest are on the
+wing.
+
+Regions Caesar never knew, including Hibernia, have come under the
+eagles, nay the vultures, of imperial Britain. But the lion's maw is
+full.
+
+At length the overgorged beast of prey, with all the diseases in his
+veins that over-eating brings, finds that his claws are not so sharp
+as they were, that his belly is much heavier when he tries to leap and
+that it is now chiefly by his voice he still scares his enemies.
+
+The Empire of England dates from Tudor times. Henry VIII was the first
+John Bull. When the conquered Irish and the wealth derived from their
+rich country England set out to lay low every free people that had
+a country worth invading and who, by reasons of their non-imperial
+instinct were not prepared to meet her on equal terms. India she
+overran by the same methods as had given her Ireland.
+
+Wholesale plunder, treachery and deceit met at her council board
+under a succession of Governors and Viceroys, whose policy was that of
+Captain Kidd, and whose ante-room of state led every native prince to
+the slippery plank. The thing became the most colossal success upon
+earth. No people were found able to withstand such a combination. How
+could peoples still nursed in the belief of some diviner will ruling
+men's minds resist such an attack?
+
+For one brief space Napoleon reared his head; and had he cast his
+vision to. Ireland instead of to Egypt he would have found out the
+secret of the pirate's stronghold. But the fates willed otherwise; the
+time was not yet. He sailed for Alexandria, lured by a dream, instead
+of for Cork; and the older Imperialists beat the new Imperialists and
+secured a fresh century of unprecedented triumph. The Pyramids looked
+down on Waterloo; but the headlands of Bantry Bay concealed the
+mastery, and the mystery, of the seas.
+
+With 1811 was born the era of Charles Peace, no less than of John
+Bull--on Sundays and Saint's days a churchwarden, who carried the
+plate; on week days a burglar who lifted it. Truly, as John Mitchel
+said on his convict hulk: "On English felony the sun never sets." May
+it set in 1915.
+
+From Napoleon's downfall to the battle of Colenso, the Empire founded
+by Henry VIII has swelled to monstrous size. Innumerable free peoples
+have bit the dust and died with plaintive cries to heaven. The wealth
+of London has increased a thousand fold, and the giant hotels and
+caravanserais have grown, at the millionaire's touch, to rival the
+palaces of the Caesars.
+
+"All's well with God's world"--and poet and plagiarist, courtier
+and courtesan, Kipling and cant--these now dally by the banks of
+the Thames and dine off the peoples of the earth, just as once the
+degenerate populace of imperial Rome fed upon the peoples of the
+Pyramids. But the thing is near the end. The "secret of Empire" is no
+longer the sole possession of England. Other peoples are learning to
+think imperially. The Goths and the Visigoths of modern civilisation
+are upon the horizon. Action must soon follow thought. London, like
+Rome, will have strange guests. They will not pay their hotel bills.
+Their day is not yet but it is at hand. "Home Rule" assemblies and
+Indian "Legislative Councils" may prolong the darkness; but the dawn
+is in die sky. And in the downfall of the Tudor Empire, both Ireland
+and India shall escape from the destruction and join again the free
+civilizations of the earth.
+
+The birds of the forest are on the wing.
+
+It is an Empire in these straights that turns to America, through
+Ireland, to save it. And the price it offers is--war with Germany.
+France may serve for a time, but France like Germany, is in Europe,
+and in the end it is all Europe and not only Germany England assails.
+Permanent confinement of the white races, as distinct from the
+Anglo-Saxon variety, can only be achieved by the active support
+and close alliance of the American people. These people are to-day,
+unhappily republicans and free men, and have no ill-will for Germany
+and a positive distaste for imperialism. It is not really in their
+blood. That blood is mainly Irish and German, the blood of men not
+distinguished in the past for successful piracy and addicted rather to
+the ways of peace. The wars that Germany has waged have been wars of
+defence, or wars to accomplish the unity of her people. Irish wars
+have been only against one enemy, and ending always in material
+disaster they have conferred always a moral gain. Their memory uplifts
+the Irish heart; for no nation, no people, can reproach Ireland with
+having wronged them. She has injured no man.
+
+And now, to-day, it is the great free race of this common origin
+of peace-loving peoples, filling another continent, that is being
+appealed to by every agency of crafty diplomacy, in every garb but
+that of truth, to aid the enemy of both and the arch-disturber of
+the old world. The jailer of Ireland seeks Irish-American support
+to keep Ireland in prison; the intriguer against Germany would win
+German-American good-will against its parent stock. There can be no
+peace for mankind, no limit to the intrigues set on foot to assure
+Great Britain "the mastery of the seas."
+
+If "America" will but see things aright, as a good "Anglo-Saxon"
+people should, she will take her place beside, nay, even a little in
+front of John Bull in the plunder of the earth. Were the "Anglo-Saxon
+Alliance" ever consummated it would be the biggest crime in human
+history. That alliance is meant by the chief party seeking it to be
+a perpetual threat to the peoples of Europe, nay, to the whole of
+mankind outside the allied ranks. And instead of bringing peace it
+must assuredly bring the most distracting and disastrous conflict that
+has ever stained the world with blood.
+
+John Bull has now become the great variety artist, one in truth whose
+infinite variety detention cannot stale any more than Customs officers
+can arrest the artist's baggage.
+
+At one moment the "Shirt King," being prosecuted for the sale of cheap
+cottons as "Irish Linen" in London; the next he lands the "Bloater
+King" in New York, offering small fish as something very like a whale.
+And the offer in both cases is made in the tongue of Shakespeare.
+
+The tongue has infinite uses; from China it sounds the "call for
+prayer," and lo, the Book of Dividends opens at the right text. Were
+Bull ever caught in the act, and put from the trade of international
+opium-dosing to that of picking oakum and the treadmill we should hear
+him exclaim, as he went out of sight, "Behold me weaving the threads
+of democratic destiny as I climb the golden stair."
+
+The roles are endless! In Ireland, the conversion of Irishmen into
+cattle; in England, the conversion of Irish cattle into men; in
+India and Egypt the suppression of the native press; in America the
+subsidising of the non-native press; the tongue of Shakespeare has
+infinite uses. He only poached deer--it would poach dreadnoughts. The
+emanations of Thames sewage are all over the world, and the sewers are
+running still. The penalty for the pollution of the Thames is a high
+one; but the prize for the pollution of the Mississippi is still
+higher; the fountains of the deep, the mastery of the great waters,
+these are the things John Bull seeks on the shore of the "Father of
+Waters."
+
+The sunset of the fading Empire would turn those waters into blood.
+The British Empire was not founded in peace; how, then can it be kept
+by peace, or ensured by peace-treaties? It was born of pillage and
+blood-shed, and has been maintained by both; and it cannot now be
+secured by a common language any more than a common Bible. The lands
+called the British Empire belong to many races, and it is only by the
+sword and not by the Book of Peace or any pact of peace that those
+races can be kept from the ownership of their own countries.
+
+The "Anglo-Saxon Alliance" means a compact to ensure slavery and
+beget war. The people who fought the greatest war in modern history to
+release slaves are not likely to begin the greatest war in all history
+to beget slaves.
+
+Let the truth be known in America that England wants to turn the great
+Republic of free men into die imperial ally of the great Empire of
+bought men, and that day die "Anglo-Saxon Alliance" gives place to the
+Declaration of Independence.
+
+The true alliance to aim at for all who love peace is the friendly
+Union of Germany, America and Ireland. These are the true United
+States of the world.
+
+Ireland, the link between Europe and America, must be freed by both.
+
+Denied to-day free intercourse with either, she yet forms in the great
+designs of Providence the natural bond to bring the old world and the
+new together.
+
+May 1915 lay the foundation of this--the true Hundred Years of Peace!
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's The Crime Against Europe, by Roger Casement
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE CRIME AGAINST EUROPE ***
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