[ 11]
But the number and influence of militant Sinn
Feiners, though it has been increased by the un-
merciful severity with which the Dublin Rising was
revenged, is negligible in comparison with the
number of constitutional Home Rulers. Irishmen
are shrewd enough to realise that an Irish Republic
and complete separation from England is impossible;
England could no more be expected to consent to
the secession of Ireland than America to the secession
of the Southern States, and no reasonable Irishman
could expect to defeat the military and naval powers
of Great Britain. By an overwhelming majority the
representative bodies in Ireland have rejected the
unpracticable policy of Count Plunkett involving
the complete severance of Ireland from the Empire
—the elections in Roscommon and Longford are
of no real political importance. Grattan, Flood,
O'Connell and Parnell all repudiated the suggestion
of such severance. It was one of the fundamental
propositions in Grattan’s famous address, 16th April,
1782, that the “Crown of Ireland is inseparably
annexed to the Crown of Great Britain.”—(Irish
Debates, Vol. L., p. 337). Whoever “wears the Crown
of England also wears the Imperial Crown of Ireland,”
declared Flood—(Irish Debates, Vol. I, p. 452).
Throughout O’Connell’s long agitation for Repeal of
the Union he insisted on the retention of “the golden
link of the Crown.” “The King de facto in England,”
he declared, “is the King de jure in Ireland.”
Parnell accepted Home Rule as a satisfactory
settlement of Ireland’s claims. Only fanatics or
factionists believe, or pretend to believe, in the possi-
bility of a complete severance of the British connec-
tion. Even Count Plunkett himself is a very recent
convert to the separatist policy. A little more than
a year ago he had no objection to the British con-
nection when he was pressing his claims to the
position of Under-Secretary at the Castle.