The Life Story of an Old Rebel by John Denvir
page 66 of 281 (23%)
page 66 of 281 (23%)
![]() | ![]() |
|
|
Many years afterwards "Rossa" called at the office of the Irish National
League in London, to see his old fellow-conspirator, James Francis Xavier O'Brien, then General Secretary of the constitutional organisation for the attainment of "Home Rule." As I was chief organiser for the League in Great Britain, and was in the, office at the time, I was introduced to his old comrade (who had, he said, often heard of me) by "J.F.X.," as we used to call him, and it was to me a delightful experience to hear the two old warriors, who had done and suffered so much for Ireland, fighting their battles over again. I was sitting in my office in Father Nugent's Refuge one day, about the beginning of 1866, when my old friend, John Ryan, was shown in to me. As we had not seen each other for several years, our greeting was a most cordial one. Though we had not met, I had heard of him from mutual friends from time to time as being actively connected with the physical force movement for the freedom of Ireland. During this time I had often wished to see him, and I found that exactly the same idea had been in _his_ mind regarding me; our object being the same--my initiation into the ranks of the Irish Revolutionary Brotherhood, of which he was an organiser. A word perhaps is due here--for I wish to pay respect to the opinion of every man--to those Irishmen who call themselves loyalists. On close analysis their language and arguments appear to me to be meaningless. A study of the history of the world and of the origins of civil power show that there is only one thing that is recognisable as giving a good and stable title to any government, and that is the consent of the governed. |
|


