Farewell the Trumpets: An Imperial Retreat (28 page)

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This declaration, with its archaic echoes, its undertones of pendantry, its Olde English script, was a recognizably imperialist document, but then Ulster had always been an imperialist place. Half the generals of the British Army, it sometimes seemed, were Ulstermen, and all over the Empire Irish Protestants flew the Union Jack above the Orange Lodge. In many ways the UVF was a truly imperial army. Some of its senior commanders were retired Indian Army men—they sometimes used Hindustani as a code, as in previous imperial crises the British had used schoolboy Greek. Many more had seen service in the Empire, and absorbed its styles and methods. The force commander, Sir George Richardson, was
the grandson of an East India Company soldier, the son of an Indian Army officer, and he himself, besides fighting in many a frontier skirmish, had commanded the cavalry brigade which stormed the Temple of Heaven at Peking in 1900. His chief of staff was an Indian Army colonel, his commander in Antrim was a retired general of the Royal Marines, his supply chief had been the youngest officer on the British General Staff, until he resigned in sympathy with the Ulster cause. One of the most active officers of the force was Patterson of Tsavo, whom we have already met leading his Zionist mulemen into action at Gallipoli.

Across the water, too, many men of Empire pledged their support. Bonar Law, the Canadian-born leader of the Conservative opposition, was a son of the manse, and an implacable opponent of Home Rule. He had been described as being ‘as unimaginative as a ledger’, but in the Ulster cause he was almost recklessly outspoken. ‘I can conceive of no length of resistance to which Ulster men might go’, he once said, ‘in which I would not be prepared to support them.’ There were things more important than Parliamentary majorities: if the Home Rule Bill went through the King himself should use the Royal Veto, never brought into action since the days of Queen Anne. Lord Milner was just as fervent. He devised a British Covenant, a kind of rider to Carson’s, which was signed by nearly two million people, and he presided over a magazine called
The
Covenanter,
whose motto was ‘Put your trust in God and keep your powder dry’: if the Government tried to coerce Ulster, he wrote in it, ‘we may hope to paralyse the arm which is uplifted to strike.’
1

Lord Roberts had nominated the commander of the Volunteer Force, and might have taken on the job himself if he were not eighty-two years old. The Chief of Military Operations at the War Office, General Sir Henry Wilson, was an Ulsterman, and had signed the Covenant. Other eminent supporters included Lord Rothschild the
banker, Edward Elgar, Starr Jameson of the Jameson Raid, and Rudyard Kipling, who gave
£
30,000 to the cause, and printed a poem about it in the ultra-Conservative
Morning
Post
(a pointed change from his usual outlet,
The
Times,
which supported Home Rule):

The
blood
our
fathers
spilt,

Our
love,
our
toils,
our
pains,

Are
counted
us
for
guilt,

And
only
bind
our
chains.

Before
an
Empire

s
eyes,

The
traitor
claims
his
price.

What
need
of
further
lies?

We
are
the
sacrifice.

When in March 1914 officers at the Curragh, the British military base outside Dublin, were asked for an assurance that they would be ready to deal with the Ulstermen by force, fifty-eight of them, including their commanding general, threatened to resign rather than march against the Ulster Volunteers. The King himself had doubts about coercing Ulster—‘Will it be wise,’ he asked, ‘will it be fair to the Sovereign as head of the Army, to subject the discipline and indeed the loyalty of his troops to such a strain?’—and the proposed operations were cancelled. Bonar Law was highly gratified, and assured the Ulster Unionists that they were holding the pass not just for Ulster, but for the British Empire—‘You will save the Empire by your example.’

4

This was the inflammatory situation, then, into which the
Clyde
valley
sailed that April night. Her arrival at Larne had been the conclusion of a complex and hazardous operation. The guns, acquired by cloak-and-dagger, had been shipped from Hamburg first in a lighter, then in a Norwegian steamer, the
Fanny.
When the ship was inspected by Danish officials as it passed through the Kattegat, her master decided to run for it, and, leaving his papers behind, slipped moorings in the night and sailed into the North Sea.
Next day the story was in every newspaper in Europe, and everybody guessed that the
Fanny’s
arms were bound for Ulster.

They changed the appearance of the ship, they changed her name first to
Bethia,
then to
Doreen,
for days they steamed here and there, evading patrols and pilot boats—to Yarmouth on the east coast of England, to Lundy Island in the Bristol Channel, to Tuskar Rock off Rosslare in the Irish Sea: and there on the night of April 19 they met at last the innocuous old
Clydevalley,
and transhipped the guns at sea—the ships lashed together with one set of navigation lights, as the crates passed from one to the other.

At Larne all was ready for them. Every member of the Motor Car Corps had received a warning instruction: ‘
Sir,
in
accordance
with
your
kind
agreement
to
place
a
motor-car
at
the
disposal
of
the
Provisional
Government
in
a
case
of
necessity,
it
is
absolutely
necessary
that
your
car
should
arrive
at
Larne
on
the
night
of
Friday/
Saturday
24th/
25th
instant

for
a
very
secret
and
important
duty.

Larne was virtually commandeered. A regiment of volunteers was assembled in the demesne of the Dowager Lady Smiley, at Drumalis House; another, under Lord Massereene and Ferrard, formed a cordon on the hills above, blocking every road into the town. Telephones were cut. Food was prepared for 300 men. Down at the docks the arrangements were supervised by the chairman of the harbour company, and the local Volunteers, nearly all dockers, stood by to unload the ship. It was raining slightly.

As night fell the first of the cars and lorries approached Larne, in slow convoys down the narrow lanes, until watchers in the town could see the flashes of their headlights all over the hills, and hear the distant throbbing of their engines. All the lights in the harbour were switched on; at eleven o’clock the
Clydevalley
slipped into harbour and made fast. The arrangements went perfectly. Methodically the dockers worked there in the rain, and one by one the cars made off into the darkness with their loads of guns, and the cranes swung in the arc-lights, and the nurses in the harbour buildings kept their tea-urns on the boil. Lady Smiley looked out approvingly from her tall windows at Drumalis, young Lord Massereene inspected his check-points through the night, and the Catholic citizens of Larne, like the police, tactfully kept to their beds.

By 2.30 a.m. the last of the cars was away, and the guns were on their way across Ulster.
Clydevalley
had done her job. The army of Ulster had weapons, and Home Rule could never be imposed upon the Irish Protestants without a civil war.
1

5

In the south a very different populace reacted to these events. The solid Protestants of the north were vehement in rejecting Home Rule: the volatile Catholics of the south awaited it more phlegmatically. The worst of the Irish miseries were over now, the famines, the evictions, the laws which condemned Catholics to permanent helotry, and the Conservative policy of ‘killing Home Rule by kindness’ seemed to many observers to have worked. The patriot cause had lost much of its fire since the great days of Parnell, and most Irish Catholics were not actively anti-British. The Irish Nationalist Party at Westminster was led by moderate Home Rulers, Irish volunteers still filled the ranks of the British Army, and it was generally assumed that Home Rule was on the way.

The Crown’s chief representatives in Dublin were anything but bullies, and Augustine Birrell in particular, the Chief Secretary, seemed to personify the very spirit of conciliation. A charming fellow of literary tastes, the son of a Methodist minister, he loved the company of Irishmen, believed the best of them, and was a popular guest at the homes of the Dublin intelligentsia, where Gaelic art and literature were all the rage. Birrell’s ambition was to be the last Chief Secretary of Ireland, and he admitted that the plays at the Abbey Theatre, where W. B. Yeats and J. M. Synge were in
their glory, meant far more to him than security reports from the Royal Irish Constabulary. There really seemed a chance that all the centuries of bitterness would be peaceably concluded. The days of the old rebellious mobs, singing their wild ballads, brandishing their knobkerries, cheered on by poteen whiskey and led by passionate demagogues—the high old days of Irish fury seemed long ago and half forgotten.

But as Gladstone had warned Parliament long before, Irish nationalism was not a passing mood, but an inextinguishable passion. Beneath the placid surface of things, as always the Irish revolutionaries were at work. Their motives and attitudes varied. Some were simply patriots, some social revolutionaries. Some did not believe that Home Rule would ever really come, some thought it inadequate anyway. Some hoped violence would not be necessary; some thought it inevitable; some wanted it for its own sake, believing that the shedding of blood, in sacrifice or in sacrament, was necessary for the cleansing of the Irish soul, and the fulfilment of true liberty.

The defiance of Ulster came as a shock to moderate Catholics, and foreseeing that Protestant resistance might prevent Home Rule and wreck the cherished unity of Ireland, thousands of Irishmen joined their own private armies and nationalist organizations, the Gaelic League, the League of Women, the Gaelic Athletic Association. Boys of patriotic families were recruited into Fianna na h’Eireann, ‘the Fianna Boys’. Socialists and Marxists had their own Citizen Army, founded by the powerful trade unionist James Larkin and trained by Captain Jack White, ex-Gordon Highlander and son of Field Marshal Sir George White, the defender of Ladysmith in the Boer War.
1

Much the largest organization was the Irish Volunteer Force, formed in 1913 in direct emulation of the Ulster volunteers. Its 10,000 men wore grey-green uniforms with peaked caps, and drilled openly enough in parks and squares across Ireland. It too had its agents and sympathizers everywhere, in every police station, in
every Government office, and especially in every post office, giving it an excellent intelligence system. It was, though, quite unlike the tight-lipped and splendidly organized militia of the north. There were no retired generals to command it, no traditions of Empire to sustain it, few great demesnes to offer it parade grounds, munition stores or refuges. It was a ramshackle, amateurish, thoroughly Irish affair, all at odds. Its commander was a lecturer in Gaelic literature, and it numbered in its ranks many teachers, not a few poets, cranks, eccentrics and folk-enthusiasts of all kinds, together with a mass of simple Irishmen who joined it out of guileless patriotism.

Authority, having turned a blind eye to the Ulster Volunteer Force, could hardly suppress the Irish volunteers. The last thing Birrell wanted was to antagonize the Irish public on the eve of their emancipation, but balancing security with benevolence was a difficult problem for him—one horn of the dilemma, it was said, was as sharp as the other.
1
At least the movement had no arms. The Irish patriots had many friends abroad, powerful bodies of Irish exiles in America and Australia, enemies of Britain everywhere: the Irish had been the most consistent of all the Empire’s opponents, and wherever there were dissidents of Empire, or critics of the imperial philosophies, they had their supporters. But though there was always money available, weapons there were not. The Volunteers continued to drill with broomsticks and wooden rifles, and they looked with envy and chagrin upon the exploit of the
Clyde
valley.

6

Two remarkable members of the old Ascendancy, in particular, believed that Ireland must be ready to fight for her independence. The first was Sir Roger Casement, one of the saddest figures of the whole imperial story. Like many another patriot of Catholic Ireland, he was a Protestant, the son of a British Army officer. His devotion to the Irish cause was not inherited, nor exactly personal, nor even basically political: it was imaginative, aesthetic perhaps. An instinctive and often muddled supporter of underdogs, wherever
they were, Casement identified himself with the oppressed not out of reason but out of sensuality. He was a very sensual man, tall, distinguished, rather quixotic, melancholy, whose urges were homosexual, and whose life seemed to lead him unerringly down dark and terrible paths. He had great beauty. He looked beautiful, he spoke beautifully, and there was beauty to the sense of tragedy that attended him, first to last.

Casement had become well known as a member of the British consular service in West Africa. A report he made about conditions on the rubber estates of the Belgian Congo horrified the British public with its revelations of cruelty, and later he repeated the performance after a visit to the rubber estates of Peru. His reputation stood high in England. He was knighted in 1911, retired in 1913, and went home to Ireland apparently full of honour, achievement and duty satisfied. There in his late forties he became possessed by the enchantment of the island—‘bewitched’, so a contemporary wrote, ‘by the beauty of his own country’—and devoted himself to its causes as to a late love affair.

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