Catholic Emancipation
OConnell now had complete control of the national mind. And his
voice was the voice of Ireland. The unquestioning faith of his multitudinous following put
in his hands a power which he unsparingly wielded to work out the peoples emancipation.
The Catholic Board, under OConnells direction of course, passed the celebrated
"witchery" resolution, which gave to the scandal-mongering multitude the tid-bit
that it was a bigoted anti-Catholic mistress who had compelled the Princes anti-Irish
attitude. To cap the absurdity, OConnell was not more delighted at lavishing servile
homage upon his royal master than the royal master himself was childishly delighted to
receive it. OConnell in organising the reception so worked upon his faithful people
with his lavish eloquence that, arising out to welcome George with wild delight, they
seethed with enthusiasm during every day of his stay. So touched was George with his
reception by his "beloved Irish subjects", that he bestowed on Lord Fingall, the
ranking Catholic layman, the Order of St Patrick. And immediately after his return to
England he sent to the Lord Lieutenant of Ireland a message of gratitude, and hope for the
bright future of his Irish people - which assured OConnell and his followers, if
assurance were needed, that their fondest hopes for religious freedom would now at length
be satisfied. It is true that in 21 the English House of Commons passed the Catholic
Relief Bill which, while proposing to make Catholics eligible for Parliament and for
offices under the Crown was again saddled with the impossible veto, and with another
equally un-acceptable condition, namely, that the Roman Catholic clergy should take oath
to elect only bishops who were loyal to the British Crown. He found it a particularly good
time for agitation because it was a particularly bad time for the country. The year
22 and again 23 brought with them much want and hardship to the nation.
Richard Lalor Shiel, orator and Catholic leader, who had differed with and separated from
OConnell, now consented to join forces with him. So OConnell founded a new
Catholic Association and resolving to bring into politics a new great power that had never
before been systematically enlisted, namely, the priests, organised the Association by
parishes with the priest in each case as natural leader. The Association, too, was more
virile and determined in its demands. So dangerous became the peoples attitude that the
English Government was forced to take a decisive step. The Catholic Association was
suppressed, and an Emancipation Bill brought in. OConnell, nothing daunted, started
to build anew. Hen the Catholic Association was suppressed, he penned a valedictory,
wherein, still strong with irrepressible loyalty he urged upon the people attachment
to the British Constitution, and unqualified loyalty to the king. Though the general
election in England went very happily for the n-popery party, the new no-popery Government
was frightened to discover that the election in Ireland had gone entirely the other way.
The mighty power of combined priest and people was taking form, and the Irish nation now
realise the solidity of their power more surely and more boldly than ever before. Lecky
says that this election of 26 won Emancipation. But with far more force, it can be
said that Emancipation was won by the epoch making Clare election. That was the first
truly golden milestone met by the Irish people upon their weary march from the centurys
beginning. The Clare election was to Ireland a joyful surprise and a fearful one to
England. County Clare had conquered England. The Emancipation Bill was brought in - and
passed - but not without fierce opposition. The Emancipation Bill was passed, the
commonest citizen rights from which Irish people had hitherto been debarred, because they
were heretics and idolaters, were now permitted by law. And civil offices from which they
had been, for their crime, shut out, were supposedly thrown open to them. But practically
speaking Irish Catholics continued, for many decades after, to labour under their former
disability. And in many parts of Ireland, even down to a short generation ago, they were
in practice still shut out from all offices except the most menial.
OConnells
Power and Popularity
Though it was in his character as political leader that he was greatest
to his people, it was undeniably in his capacity as lawyer that Daniel OConnell -
"Dan" as they affectionately called him - got nearest to their hearts. They who
had always been condemned before they were heard, were accorded human rights in the courts
of law after OConnell had successfully stormed those citadels of injustice. To the
regular Crown prosecutors he made his name a name of fear. And indeed it was not much less
a terror to those irregular Crown prosecutors who, on the Bench, masqueraded as judges. He
was one of the most powerful pleaders that the Bar ever knew. His enemy, Peel, once said
that if he wanted an efficient and eloquent advocate, he would readily barter all the best
of the English Bar for the Irish OConnell. In conducting an important case he called
into play all of his wonderful faculties. He went from grave to gay, from the sublime to
the ludicrous. He played with ease upon every human feeling. He carried away the judge,
the jury, the witness that he was handling, and the very prisoner himself in the dock. He
could in a few minutes cross-examination tear the ablest witness to shreds, and show the
pitying court the paltry stuff he was made of. He might at first play his man, go with
him, blarney him, flatter him, convince him that Dan OConnell had become his most
enthusiastic admirer and dearest friend. And when he had thus taken him off his guard, led
him by hand into a trap, the Counsellor would come down upon his man with a crash that
stunned and shattered him and left him a piteous victim at the great cross-examiners feet.
And to judge and jury and the whole court it was now the witness, not the prisoner in the
dock who was on trial for his life.
In the years when he was in his climax his word was to the Irish people electric, and his
power was invincible. With joyous thrill these long-suffering ones felt that when Dan
spoke there was fearful trembling in the seats of the mighty. In him the nation that was
dumb had found a voice. The despised had found a champion and the cruelly wronged an
avenger. He was to them in the ranks of the gods. After Emancipation was won
OConnell abandoned his law practice to devote himself entirely to the peoples cause.
When Emancipation was won, Repeal of the false and corruptly purchase
"Union" of Ireland with England was the great issue that the Leader started. In
1810, the grand jurors of Dublin, all of them of course Tories and British-Irish, tried to
start the Repeal movement. Now that Dan was free to throw himself into the repeal
movement, and the Catholics almost to a man were behind him, no support could be got from
their Protestant fellow-countrymen. There were two reasons for this - the fierceness of
the fight for Emancipation had embittered the Protestants against their Catholic fellows;
and besides all the offices and patronage of the country which had been securely theirs in
pre-Emancipation days were getting shaky in their grasp now that Catholic disabilities
were by law removed, Repeal of the Union would finally break their monopoly; so the
overwhelmingly body of the Protestant population was henceforth as bitterly anti-Repeal as
they had formerly been anti-Union - and more bitterly than they had been
anti-Emancipation. To help the English Whigs in their great fight for Parliamentary
Reform, OConnell much against the wish of many wise ones, slackened the Repeal
fight, while he let the popular fight against tithes forge to the front. And he cast all
his weight to the English Whigs in their Reform struggle.
The established Protestant Church was supported in Ireland by the farmers of all religions
paying to it tithes, a tenth of their products. The tithe war spread like wildfire. The
people refused to pay the iniquitous imposition. Thousands of troops were poured into the
country to protect the tithe proctors and process-servers. The Protestant clergy, unable
to collect the tithes, were now in such real distress that the Government had to provide a
Relief Fund for them. OConnell wanted the tithe reduced two-fifths. The tithe-war
dragged on, in varying intensity, till in 38 was passed the Act which reduced the
tithe by a fourth, and shifted it to the landlord. In his desire to help the English Whigs
in their Reform struggle, OConnell had put Parliamentary Reform temporarily before
Repeal, worked for it with might and main, and with his Irish following finally gave the
Whigs the margin of majority that carried the Reform Bill. When in 31 he had been
warned against abandoning Irish Repeal for British Parliamentary Reform, he said to the
people: Let no one deceive you and say that I have abandoned anti-Unionism. It is
false. But I am decidedly of opinion that it is only in a reformed Parliament that the
question can properly, truly, and dispassionately, be discussed. Throughout the
Thirties OConnell seemed to work in complete forgetfulness of the one big fact
which the agitation of the Twenties should have stamped indelibly on his mind,
namely, that an Ireland lulled by the opiate of English friendship always proved to be an
Ireland fooled; while an Ireland rebellious was an Ireland successful. It was little
wonder that in the late Thirties the Whig-befooled Dan found his popularity waning,
got down-hearted, depressed, discouraged and in 39 made retreat in Mt Melleray to
regain his calm.
He came out of his Mount Melleray retreat - with a mind much calmed - able collectedly to
review his position and make his plans. But only a miracle could rehabilitate him.