[Ulster’s Stand For Union by Ronald McNeill]@TWC D-Link book
Ulster’s Stand For Union

CHAPTER VII
13/19

That help will come, and when the crisis is over men will say to you in words not unlike those used by Pitt--you have saved yourselves by your exertions and you will save the Empire by your example." The overwhelming ovation with which Sir Edward Carson was received upon taking the president's chair at the chief platform, in the absence through illness of the Duke of Abercorn, proved that he had already won the confidence and the affection of the Ulster people to a degree that seemed to leave little room for growth, although every subsequent appearance he made among them in the years that lay ahead seemed to add intensity to their demonstrations of personal devotion.

The most dramatic moment at Balmoral--if for once the word so hackneyed and misused by journalists may be given its true signification--the most dramatic moment was when the Ulster leader and the leader of the whole Unionist Party each grasped the other's hand in view of the assembled multitude, as though formally ratifying a compact made thus publicly on the eve of battle.

It was the consummation of the purpose of this assembly of the Unionist hosts on Ulster soil, and gave assurance of unity of aim and undivided command in the coming struggle.
Of the other speeches delivered, many of them of a high quality, especially, perhaps, those of Lord Hugh Cecil, Sir Robert Finlay, and Mr.Scott Dickson, it is enough to say that they all conveyed the same message of encouragement to Ulster, the same promise of undeviating support.

One detail, however, deserves mention, because it shows the direction in which men's thoughts were then moving.

Mr.Walter Long, whose great services to the cause of the Union procured him a welcome second in warmth to that of no other leader, after thanking Londonderry and Carson "for the great lead they have given us in recent difficult weeks "-- an allusion to the Churchill incident that was not lost on the audience--added with a blunt directness characteristic of the speaker: "If they are going to put Lord Londonderry and Sir Edward Carson into the dock, they will have to find one large enough to hold the whole Unionist Party." The Balmoral demonstration was recognised on all sides as one of the chief landmarks in the Ulster Movement.


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