S
Rule, has, through its Washington correspondent,
collected a vast body of evidence in favour of an
Irish settlement. Here is a summary of the conclu-
sions at which he has himself arrived :—
“ The future of the world, in the opinion of most far-
sighted Americans, depends upon the closest co-operation
between the two great Anglo-Saxon democracies. There
are many obstacles that will have to be overcome before
that co-operation can be reached; . . . but, as things
stand, the worst of all these obstacles may easily be the
Irish question. This not only because of the direct poli-
tical influence of Irish irreconcilables. This is considerable,
but it might be overcome. It is because Americans in
general are Home Rulers. They are inclined to attribute
the tragedy of our relations with Ireland to the same John
Bullish stupidity that produced the American Revolution.”
England can no longer ignore the opinion of the
whole civilised world, especially the opinion of
America, to whom she is bound by so many ties.
Still less can she ignore the professions of her Allies,
and of herself, that they are waging war for the
liberation of small nations. She cannot persist in
the face of the protests of her friends and the taunts
of her enemies in forcing a foreign domination on
Ireland. She cannot deny to Ireland the freedom for
which she is fighting with such desperate energy,
and with such limitless expenditure of blood and
treasure, for other small nationalities. Ireland is as
well deserving of liberty as the Poles, the Belgians,
the Serbians, the Roumanians, the Montenegrins,
the Slavs, the Czechs, and the Slovacs. There is,
moreover, this vital distinction: the other small
nations must wait for their liberation till the end of
the war : it is in the sole power of the British Par-
liament to establish forthwith self-government in
Ireland.