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Title: The Land War
Author: Freedom Press (London)
Date: July, 1887
Language: en
Source: Freedom: A Journal of Anarchist Socialism, Vol. 1, No. 10, online source http://www.revoltlib.com/?id=3023, retrieved on April 12, 2020.

Freedom Press (London)

The Land War

It is a very common remark among the rank and file of Liberal Unionists

that whilst it is only too true that the past history of English rule in

Ireland is written in fire and blood, it is also a fact that the English

Government has of late years devoted its best energies to promoting the

welfare of the Irish people, and the said Irish people are a thankless

crew not to acknowledge the blessings they have received, and therewith

rest content.

It is not for an Anarchist to contest the point that the English

Government has done, and is doing, its best for Ireland. When men band

themselves together for the purpose of ruling their fellow men they

appear to lose, in their collective capacity, both head and heart, and

commit acts of folly and cruelty, of which each as a private individuals

would be thoroughly ashamed. There is not a government in the civilized

world, from the despotism of Russia to the democracy of America, which

is not guilty every year of a series of outrages upon humanity, any one

of which would consign any single individual to a prison or a lunatic

asylum. The "Representatives of the English people" are neither better

nor worse than the rest. The rulers, each and all, are as tyrannical and

as arbitrary as the ruled will permit; and the English Government of

Ireland is no exception. Let us concede that it is doing its best, and

turn to the result.

It is not four months since the British public was horrified by the

story of the blazing huts of Glenbeigh, of the sick child dragged out to

die in a pig-sty, of the sticks of furniture, the sole possession of the

peasants, destroyed in revenge for their inability to pay black mail to

a person calling himself the landlord. We had, perhaps, just been

reading some story of the black mail levied upon peaceful workers, by

the robber barons of old, and in our smug hypocrisy were thanking God we

were not as those men were, nor our days as theirs. And here before our

eyes in the common'-place pages of a daily paper started out a tale of

guilt and wrong, beside which the story of ancient robbers and their

deeds seemed idle and pale. Here were honest, hard-working men and

women, who by their labor had made a barren soil productive and

habitable, a soil so barren that like that of the Scotch crofters it is

some of the poorest under cultivation and yields no surplus produce, and

here was a man who had done no work, nor his fathers before him, but who

called himself the Lord of the land, and got the other people in a like

position in Ireland and England to stand by him in his monstrous claim;

they all had a fellow-feeling, for they or their ancestors had, all won

their property, as they call it, by cunning or force, and one and all

they feared the awakening of the people to consciousness of the theft.

This landlord levied black mail on the peasants of Glenbeigh, as a price

for leaving them in peace to till the soil. They could only get enough

to pay it by hiring themselves out as farm laborers and domestic

servants, or from the gifts of their friends in America, and when bad

times came and they could not get work, they could no longer pay and

live. The love of life is strong: they refused to pay, and were evicted

by the aid of an armed English force.

Since then the English Government has gone on doing its best for Ireland

in endeavoring to pass a Coercion Bill, the shameful provisions of which

we explained in our Notes last month, and in assisting the revenge of

other landlords upon those unfortunate peasants who refuse to pay black

mail.

Evictions are of daily occurrence, but of late the form of the evictions

of Glenbeigh has paled before that of the evictions of Bodyke. At the

cost of £1,000 a day to the English workers a posse of soldiers and

mounted police aids the hirelings of the land grabber to batter down the

walls of the peasants' cottages, break to pieces their poor furniture,

and drive off their cattle, whilst the sick youth moans by the roadside,

or the mother nurses her baby on the dung heap in the pouring rain.

Scenes to make a man's blood boil; and after witnessing them Michael

Davitt has spoken out words of weight and truth for the ears of all men

oppressed and enslaved, whether by landlords or capitalists.

"The chief criminals in Ireland are landlords and the only crime the

crime of eviction . . . . . I was disagreeably surprised at the little

resistance that was offered by those turned out . . . . . I have no

doubt more determination could have been shown in defense of their

rights and their hearthstones if it were not for the way in which men

like myself--for I accuse myself and others in this movement--have been

preaching to our people for the last seven or eight years: Don't commit

any outrage, don't be guilty of any violence, don't break the law . . .

. . I am heartily ashamed of ever having given such advice to the Irish

people . . . . . Just look at the example that has been set us now by

the farmers of North Wales. They are defending their rights-aye, as men

with hearts in their bosoms which claim to have the courage in their

manhood ought to stand by such rights . . . . ."

All honor to the man who, after soul wearying years of imprisonment,

dares thus to own himself in the wrong for his misplaced moderation, and

speak the truth that may once more consign him to a convict's cell. All

honor to the brave Irish peasantry, men and women, who, disregarding the

councils of politicians, resist the tyranny of the evictors by all means

at their disposal, who barricade their homes, and greet the crow-bar

brigade with boiling water and boiling meal, with swarms of bees, and

deluges of whitewash. All honor to kindly neighbors who lend all hands

to the task of re-instating the evicted, so that the last of the

red-coats has scarcely disappeared over the hill before the smoke is

rising again from the dismantled hut. All honor to the energetic Welsh

farmers, too, who have driven the tithe collectors from their valleys,

and defied the crack college of Oxford and the Ecclesiastical

Commissioners to exact a penny from the produce of their labor. All

honor to the heroic Kelts of Ireland, Scotland, and Wales, who are

leading the land war, and setting at naught that bogey of law which is

the formulated injustice of Society.

Let us leave the government of the property owners to do its best to

hold us peasants, laborers, and workmen alike beneath the heel of our

masters; and let us boldly recognize, with Michael Davitt, that it is

only by direct revolutionary action that the despoiled can meet the

violence, masked and unmasked, of the monopolists.