[ 22 ]
who afterwards proved himself an efficient and loyal
colleague of Mr. Asquith, has long ago realised, not
merely the wisdom, but the absolute necessity of the
course pursued by the late Premier. To have further
postponed the enactment of Home Rule would have
meant utter disaster in Ireland, where it would be
regarded as a deliberate betrayal. It would have
infuriated in the highest degree Irish opinion alike in
Ireland and in America and in the Colonies, and it
would have been a death-blow to Irish recruiting.
Instead of the spasmodic rising of a few thousand
Sinn Feiners there would have probably been a real
Irish rebellion, supported by the great body of the
Irish people. That tremendous danger was averted
by Mr. Asquith’s statesmanship. The Irish Nation-
alists vied with the Unionists in devotion to the
Empire. Lord Kitchener described Ireland’s response
as “ magnificent.” Irish soldiers, crying “God save
Ireland” as they charged, proved themselves the
bravest of the brave in Flanders, Gallipoli, and
Serbia. Even Lord Selborne has a word of praise
for “the loyal and patriotic action of Mr, Redmond
during the two years stress of War.” So much has
the enactment of ‘Home Rule already accomplished.
Mr. Birrell was right in his emphatic declaration
in the House of Commons that the Sinn Fein rising
was not an Irish rebellion. Three or four thousand
men and boys at the most were concerned in the
rising.
It has been said that the sympathy with the Sinn
Feiners has largely increased since the suppression
of the insurrection and the wholesale execution and
imprisonment of the insurgents, and that there is far
more disaffection now in Ireland than at the time of
the rising. I think that is so. But the extreme
Unionists, who seek to draw from that fact an
argument against the concession of Home Rule, are
absolutely illogical. It was the delay in the con-