[Ireland Under Coercion (2nd ed.) (1 of 2) (1888) by William Henry Hurlbert]@TWC D-Link book
Ireland Under Coercion (2nd ed.) (1 of 2) (1888)

PROLOGUE
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These arrangements he carried out in 1881-82, publishing in 1881, in America, his treatise on the Irish Land question, while Mr.Davitt, who had been arrested after his return to Europe by Mr.Gladstone's Government in February 1881, on a revocation of his ticket-of-leave, lay a prisoner at Portland.

Mr.George himself, while travelling in Ireland with an academical English friend, came under "suspicion" in the eyes of one of Mr.Forster's officers, and was arrested, but at once released.

During the protracted confinement of Mr.
Davitt at Portland, the utter incapacity of Mr.Parnell and his Parliamentary associates to manage the social revolution initiated by the founder of the Land League became fully apparent, not only to impartial, but even to sympathetic observers in America, long before it was demonstrated by the incarceration of Mr.Parnell in Kilmainham, the disavowal, under pressure, of the no-rent manifesto by Archbishop Croke, and the suppression of the Land League.

In sequestrating Mr.Davitt, Mr.
Forster, as was shown by the extraordinary scenes which in the House of Commons followed his arrest, had struck at the core of the revolution, and had the Irish Secretary not been deserted by Mr.Gladstone, under influences which originated at Kilmainham, and were reinforced by the pressure of the United States Government in the spring of 1882, history might have had a very different tale to tell of the last six years in Ireland and in Great Britain.[6] V.
It was after the return of Mr.George from Ireland to New York in 1882 that the first black point appeared on the horizon, of the conflict, inevitable in the nature of things, between the social revolution and the Catholic Church, which assumed such serious proportions two years ago in America, and which is now developing itself in Ireland.

Among the ablest and the most earnest converts in America to the doctrine of the new social revolution was the Rev.Dr.M'Glynn, a Catholic priest, standing in the front rank of his order in New York, in point alike of eloquence in the pulpit, and of influence in private life.


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