[ 17]
Nationalists support Home Rule, Unionists denounce
it, but all Irishmen unite in opposing the dismem-
berment of Ireland. Once convince the Ulster
Unionists that Home Rule is inevitable, and they
will accept the inclusion of Ulster as the lesser of
two evils.
It is not hard to show that the policy of exclusion
was never supported on its merits by any section of
Irishmen. The real issue between Irish Nationalists
and Unionists was, Home Rule or no Home Rule for
a united Ireland. For more than a century the
battle was fought on this issue by O’Connell, Butt,
Parnell, McCarthy, and Redmond. Home Rule was
denounced by the Unionists as “treason,” “rebellion,”
and “dismemberment of the Empire” It was ap-
plauded by the Nationalists as the liberation and
regeneration of Ireland ; but through all those years
there was never a hint from any party that the solu-
tion of the question could be found in the dismem-
berment of Ireland.
In the strenuous second reading debate in 1886, .
when Mr. Gladstone first raised the question, Home
Rule for all Ireland was the only issue before Parlia-
ment. In 1893 I was present every day in the
House when Home Rule was discussed, week after
week, month after month, on second reading, com-
mittee, and report, and I never heard from any
quarter the faintest suggestion that any part of Ire-
land should be excluded from the jurisdiction of the
Irish Parliament.
During the fierce agitation in Ulster in the autumn
of 1912 there was never a hint of exclusion. The
famous Covenant, so enthusiastically adopted, so
universally signed by the Unionists of Ulster, was in
effect a repudiation of the policy of exclusion. It is
important for the right understanding of the present
Irish situation to recall the pledge of mutual support
contained in the Covenant :—