RESISTANCE IN ARMS OBJECTIONS
I
Having stated the case for resistance,
it will serve us to consider some objections.
Many inquiring minds may be made happy by a clear view
of the doctrine, till some clever opponent holds them
up with remarks on prudence, possibly sensible, or
remarks on revolutionists, most probably wild, with,
perhaps, the authority of a great name, or unfailing
refuge in the concrete. It is curious that while
often noticed how men, trying to evade a concrete
issue, take refuge in the abstract, it is not noticed
that men, trying to avoid acknowledging the truth of
some principle, take refuge in the concrete.
A living and pressing difficulty, though transient,
looms larger than any historical fact or coming danger.
Seeing this, we may restore confidence to a baffled
mind, by helping it to distinguish the contingent
from the permanent. Thus, by disposing of objections,
we make our ground secure.
II
To the name of prudence the most imprudent
people frequently appeal. Those whose one effort
is to evade difficulties, who to cover their weakness
plead patience, would be well advised to consider how
men passionately in earnest, enraged by these evasions,
pour their scorn on patience as a thing to shun.
The plea does not succeed; it only for the moment
damages the prestige of a great name. Patience
is not a virtue of the weak but of the strong.
An objector says: “Of course, all this is
right in the abstract, but consider the frightful abuses
in practice,” and some apt replies spring to
mind. Dr. Murray, writing on “Mental Reservation,”
in his Essays, chiefly Theological, speaks thus:
“But it is no objection to any principle of
morals to say that unscrupulous men will abuse it,
or that, if publicly preached to such and such an
audience or in such and such circumstances, it will
lead to mischief.” This is admirable, to
which the objector can only give some helpless repetitions.
With Balmez, we reply: “But in recommending
prudence to the people let us not disguise it under
false doctrines let us beware of calming
the exasperation of misfortune by circulating errors
subversive of all governments, of all society.”
(European Civilisation, Cha.) Of men who
shrink from investigating such questions, Balmez wrote:
“I may be permitted to observe that their prudence
is quite thrown away, that their foresight and precaution
are of no avail. Whether they investigate these
questions or not, they are investigated, agitated
and decided, in a manner that we must deplore.”
(Ibid. Cha.) Take with this Turner on France
under the old regime and the many and serious
grievances of the people: “The Church, whose
duty it was to inculcate justice and forbearance,
was identified, in the minds of the people, with the
Monarchy which they feared and detested.” (History
of Philosophy, Cha.) The moral is that when
injustice and evil are rampant, let us have no palliation,
no weakness disguising itself as a virtue. What
we cannot at once resist, we can always repudiate.
To ignore these things is the worst form of imprudence an
imprudence which we, for our part at least, take the
occasion here heartily to disclaim.
III
There is so much ill-considered use
of the word revolutionist, we should bear in mind
it is a strictly relative term. If the freedom
of a people is overthrown by treachery and violence,
and oppression practised on their once thriving land,
that is a revolution, and a bad revolution. If,
with tyranny enthroned and a land wasting under oppression,
the people rise and by their native courage, resource
and patience re-establish in their original independence
a just government, that is a revolution, and a good
revolution. The revolutionist is to be judged
by his motives, methods and ends; and, when found
true, his insurrection, in the words of Mackintosh,
is “an act of public virtue.” It is
the restoration of, Truth to its place of honour among
men.
IV
Balmez mentions Bossuet as apparently
one who denies the right here maintained; and we may
with profit read some things Bossuet has said in another
context, yet which touches closely what is our concern.
Writing of Les Empires, thus Bossuet:
“Les revolutions des empires sont
reglees par la providence, et servent a humilier
les princes.” This is hardly
calculated to deter us from a bid for freedom; and
if we go on to read what he has written further under
this heading, we get testimony to the hardihood and
love of freedom and country that distinguished early
Greece and Rome in language of eloquence that might
inflame any people to liberty. Of undegenerate
Greece, free and invincible: “Mais
ce que la Grèce avait de
plus grand était une politique
ferme et prevoyante, qui savait abandonner,
hasarder et défendre, ce qu’il
fallait; et, ce qui est plus
grand encore, un courage que l’amour
de la liberté et celui de
la patrie rendaient invincible.”
Of undegenerate Rome, her liberty: “La
liberté leur était donc un
trésor qu’ils preferoient a toutes
les richesses de l’univers.”
Again: “La maxime fondamentale
de la république était de
regarder la liberté comme une
chose inseparable du nom Roman.”
And her constancy: “Voila de fruit glorieux
de la patience Romaine. Des peuples qui
s’enhardissaient et se fortifiaient
par leurs malheurs avaient bien
raison de croire qu’on sauvait
tout pourvu qu’on ne perdit pas l’esperance.”
And again: “Parmi eux, dans
les états les plus tristes,
jamais les faibles conseils n’ont
été seulement écoutes.”
The reading of such a fine tribute to the glory of
ancient liberties is not likely to diminish our desire
for freedom; rather, to add to the natural stimulus
found in our own splendid traditions, the further
stimulus of this thought that must whisper to us:
“Persevere and conquer, and to-morrow our finest
opponent will be our finest panegyrist when the battle
has been fought and won.”
V
In conclusion, in the concrete this
simple fact will suffice: we have established
immutable principles; the concrete circumstances are
contingent and vary. It is admirably put in the
following passage: “The historical and
sociological sciences, so carefully cultivated in modern
times, have proved to evidence that social conditions
vary with the epoch and the country, that they
are the resultant of quite a number of fluctuating
influences, and that, accordingly, the science of Natural
Right should not merely establish immutable
principles bearing on the moral end of man, but should
likewise deal with the contingent circumstances
accompanying the application of those principles.”
(De Wulf, Scholasticism, Old and New, Part
2, Cha, Se.) Yes, and if we apply principles
to-morrow, it is not with the conditions of to-day
we must deal, but “with the contingent circumstances
accompanying the application of those principles.”
Let that be emphasised. The conditions of twenty
years ago are vastly changed to-day; and how altered
the conditions of to-morrow can be, how astonishing
can be the change in the short span of twenty years,
let this fact prove. Ireland in ’48 was
prostrate after a successful starvation and an unsuccessful
rising to all appearances this time hopelessly
crushed; yet within twenty years another rising was
planned that shook English government in Ireland to
its foundations. Let us bear in mind this further
from De Wulf: “Sociology, understood in
the wider and larger sense, is transforming the methods
of the science of Natural Right.” In view
of that transformation he is wise who looks to to-morrow.
What De Wulf concludes we may well endorse, when he
asks us to take facts as they are brought to light
and study “each question on its merits, in the
light of these facts and not merely in its present
setting but as presented in the pages of history.”
It can be fairly said of those who have always stood
for the separation of Ireland from the British Empire,
that they alone have always appealed to historical
evidence, have always regarded the conditions of the
moment as transient, have always discussed possible
future contingencies. The men who temporised were
always hypnotised by the conditions of the hour.
But in the life-story of a nation stretching over
thousands of years, the British occupation is a contingent
circumstance, and the immutable principle is the Liberty
of the Irish People.