[John Redmond’s Last Years by Stephen Gwynn]@TWC D-Link bookJohn Redmond’s Last Years CHAPTER VIII 77/154
Yet there was a marked feeling that the Convention, and the tone which prevailed in the Convention, had done good in the country.
This was admitted by the Grand Master of the Orange Order, Colonel Wallace, in a speech which led to an important illustration of the mutual process of education, for it raised with great frankness the issue of religious differences and alluded specially to the recent Papal decrees over which so much controversy had raged. The Bishop of Raphoe rose to reply and expounded, as an ex-professor of Canon Law, the true bearing of these documents.
His speech was a masterpiece; its candour and its lucidity commended itself to all hearers, but most of all to the Ulstermen, who applauded at once Lord Oranmore's comment that the _odium theologicum_ had been replaced by _divina caritas_; and at a very late stage in our proceedings, Mr. Barrie referred back to this speech of the Bishop's as one of the things which they would never forget. The Primate, who in this month of September was one of the hopeful hearts ("My confidence has grown daily," he said), used words which met with widespread response: "We can never leave this hall and speak of men whom we have met here as we have spoken of them in the past." There was good will in the air--good will to each other and to the enterprise.
At the close of the proceedings in Cork the Lord Mayor of Belfast moved a vote of thanks to the citizens through their Lord Mayor, and he closed on a note of hope--anticipating "something in store for Ireland." Yet already these anticipations were overcast.
During this week, while all seemed going so well, one of the endless unhappy and preventible things happened.
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