[Ulster’s Stand For Union by Ronald McNeill]@TWC D-Link bookUlster’s Stand For Union CHAPTER VII 16/19
"F.C.G." summarised the Balmoral meeting pictorially in a _Westminster Gazette_ cartoon as a costermonger's donkey-cart in which Carson, Londonderry, and Bonar Law, refreshed by "Orangeade," took "an Easter Jaunt in Ulster," and other caricaturists used their pencils with less humour and more malice with the same object of belittling the demonstration with ridicule.
But ridicule is not so potent a weapon in England or in Ulster as it is said to be in France.
It did nothing to weaken the Ulster cause; it even strengthened it in some ways.
It was about this time that hostile writers began to refer to "King Carson," and to represent him as exercising regal sway over his "subjects" in Ulster.
Those "subjects" were delighted; they took it as a compliment to their leader's position and power, and did not in the least resent the role assigned to themselves. On the other hand, they did resent very hotly the vulgar insolence often levelled at their "Sir Edward." He himself was always quite indifferent to it, sometimes even amused by it.
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