[The Felon’s Track by Michael Doheny]@TWC D-Link book
The Felon’s Track

CHAPTER V
8/36

Mr.Mitchel, Mr.O'Gorman and Mr.Meagher, who attended the committee, vainly remonstrated against the betrayal of Dungarvan, as well as the Peace Resolutions.

They saw that the real object of the resolutions was to blind the country to the other important question, whether the Irish constituencies were to be transferred once more to Whig placemen; and they confined their opposition principally to the Dungarvan case.

It must be admitted, too, that the falsehood involved in the Peace Resolutions, escaped their attention in the first instance; and they were under the impression that the pledge they contained extended no farther than the action of the Association itself was concerned.

On consideration, they found it was of far wider scope, and would engage them to a false principle, embracing all men, all countries and all tunes; and having stated this at the public meeting of the Association, they allowed the resolutions to pass without further opposition.
The original resolution on which the Association was framed is this:-- "The total disclaimer of, and absence from, all physical force, violence or breach of the law." The resolution, reported on the 13th of July, 1846, is as follows:-- "That, to promote political amelioration, peaceable means alone should be used, to the exclusion of all others, save those that are peaceful, legal and constitutional." Sometimes, it has been averred lately that these two resolutions are, in principle and effect, the same.

Mr.O'Connell himself declared the latter was introduced by him, "_to draw a line of demarcation between Old and Young Ireland_." Indeed, if there were no distinction, the introduction would be eminently absurd as well as pernicious.


<<Back  Index  Next>>

D-Link book Top

TWC mobile books