登陆注册
18983900000315

第315章

In the Parliament of 1641 the Catholics were in the majority, and they insisted that the "Graces" must be confirmed. The king granted their demands, and the bill was actually on its way to Ireland when the Lords Justices, Parsons and Borlase, who administered the government of the country prorogued the session. They wished for no settlement with the Catholics lest a settlement might put an end to their hopes of a plantation, and the Earl of Ormond tried also to block the passage of the bill in the hope of saving the king from the odium which he would incur in England and Scotland by granting toleration to the Irish Catholics. The Catholic noblemen of Ireland, whether Irish or Anglo-Irish, had good reason to complain. They had seen the Catholics driven out of the good lands of Ulster to make way for English and Scottish planters, and they well knew that the danger of similar transactions in Connaught, Munster, and Leinster had not passed away with the death of Strafford. They had seen the operation of the Court of Wards, and they could not fail to realise that as a result of its work the landowners of Ireland would soon be dispossessed or Protestantised. They knew something of the Protestant Inquisition courts as run by the ministers and bishops, of the persecution of their clergy, the fees and fines levied on the unfortunate Catholic peasantry, and of the still graver danger that lay before them in case the Covenanters and the Puritans were to overthrow Charles I., or to succeed in forcing him to accept their policy. Were they to remain passive, they believed, they could have no hope of redress or even of safety, and hence many of them made up their minds that the time for negotiations had passed, and that they could rely only on force. Never again were they likely to get such a favourable opportunity. England was torn by internal dissensions; the disbanded Irish soldiers, who had been trained for service against the Scots, were still in the country; and with so many distinguished Irishmen scattered through the countries of Europe there was good hope that they might get assistance from their co-religionists on the Continent. The distinguished Waterford Franciscan, Father Luke Wadding, who had founded the College of St. Isidore in Rome and had taken such a prominent part in the foundation of the Irish College, was in Rome ready to plead the cause of his countrymen at the Papal Court. His fame as a scholar was known throughout Europe, and his active support could not fail to produce its effect in Europe, and particularly in Spain where he was esteemed so highly by Philip IV.

Owen Roe O'Neill, who had achieved a remarkable distinction in the army of Spain by his gallant defence of Arras against the French, Colonel Preston, uncle of Lord Gormanston, and a host of others, who had learned the art of war in France, Spain, and the Netherlands, were willing to return to Ireland and to place their swords at the disposal of their country.

Early in 1641[50] Rory O'More, who was closely connected with both the Irish and the Anglo-Irish nobles, suggested to Lord Maguire of Enniskillen the idea of an appeal to arms, and hinted at the possibility of a union between the Irish nobles and the Lords of the Pale. In a short time most of the important leaders of the North, Sir Phelim O'Neill, Turlogh O'Neill, Lord Maguire, Hugh MacMahon, Arthur MacGennis of Down, Philip and Miles O'Reilly of Cavan had come to an understanding. The war was to begin in Ulster on the night of the 23rd October 1641, and on the same night an attempt was made to seize Dublin Castle. The latter portion of the programme could not be carried out owing to the action of an informer who betrayed Maguire and Hugh MacMahon to the Lords Justices; but at the appointed time the Irish Catholics of Ulster rose almost to a man, and in a very short time most of the strong places in the province were in their hands. In such a movement it was almost impossible for the leaders to prevent some excesses, particularly as many of the men who took part in it had been driven from their lands to make way for the Planters, and had suffered terribly from the harshness and cruelty to which they and their families had been subjected. Naturally they seized their own again, and in some cases they may have used more violence than the situation required, but it is now admitted by impartial historians[51]

that the wild stories of a wholesale massacre of Protestants are without any more solid foundation than the fact that the Protestants were for the most part driven out of Ulster in much the same way as the Catholics had been driven to the mountains thirty years before.

Most of the few who were killed were probably struck down while attempting to defend their homes, and in no case is there evidence to prove that the leaders countenanced unnecessary violence or murder. If the historian wishes to look for organised lawlessness and murder he can find it much more easily in the campaign of the infamous Sir Charles Coote or in the raids carried out by the forces of the Scotch Covenanters of the North. The Catholic Lords of the Pale hastened to Dublin Castle to offer their services against the Northern rebels, but they were received so discourteously by the Lords Justices that they recognised the absolute necessity of joining with the Catholics of Ulster. In announcing their defection the Lords Justices positively gloated over the splendid prospect of having the province of Leinster planted with English settlers (Dec. 1641).[52] The action of the English Parliament in decreeing that for the future there should be no toleration allowed to Irish Catholics (Dec. 1641) and in putting up for sale two million five hundred thousand acres of fertile land in Ireland, the proceeds to be expended in a war of extermination, strengthened the hands of the Irish leaders, and helped to bring over the waverers to their side.

同类推荐
  • 李煜集

    李煜集

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 知空蕴禅师语录

    知空蕴禅师语录

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 浮山法句

    浮山法句

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • REGINALD

    REGINALD

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 风俗通义

    风俗通义

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 血裔继承者的野望

    血裔继承者的野望

    巨龙翱翔于天际!泰坦在高山之巅筑起智慧的壁垒!这是一个并不以人类为主导的世界……这是一路充满神秘旅程的冒险!这是一个穿越者在异界苦心经营的历程!
  • 一夜迷情:女人哪里跑

    一夜迷情:女人哪里跑

    为了摆脱20年的处女之身,一夜居然中奖了。意外得到两个性格不同的双胞胎与意想不到的超能力!在接下来的生活各种穿梭各种“通缉”。--------------------小剧情------------------哈?他们居然亲手把我送进狼的嘴里!“呵,女人,你居然背着我偷藏我的孩子,看你怎么跑!”“你这自恋的家伙,谁说他们是你孩子了,明明从我的肚子里出来的,是我的孩子!”“如果不是我的精子,你能顺利的生出这两小家火,恩!”“你。。。。。”我跑!--------“嘿,小屁孩们,我们去不一样的世界玩玩吧。”“我们能带上粑粑去嘛”“NO!”
  • 以她之名:第一次接触

    以她之名:第一次接触

    在指挥官欧文. 迈克拉伦的带领下,奥罗拉参加了一次秘密的航空调查任务中,去寻找地球以外的适合人类生存的星球,他们此行的目的地是一个在星图中未曾标注的地方,数据显示那里似乎拥有两个可适合人类的外星球,这种可能性让人们十分兴奋,从而甘愿冒险去探索那片神秘的未知领域。
  • 上帝也疯狂

    上帝也疯狂

    一觉醒来,成了婴儿。不是谁谁谁的孩子,也没有XXX的父辈,因为母亲只是奴役。这个世界有许多种族,许多的国家,但没有人类的国度,因为,人类只是被食人魔圈养在后花园的直立牲畜。一本圣经与十字架,这就是他的所有,他给这个世界的自己取了一个新名字,王耶稣。种族林立的世界,战争频发的世界,王耶稣与他的圣经,会为这个世界带来什么呢?【上帝也疯狂】让我们一起狂想!!!
  • 在北大听到的24堂幸福课

    在北大听到的24堂幸福课

    挖掘、撷取了很多北大先哲、当代北大人和各界精英的哲思妙语,并根据写作需要加入了相应的经典案例,当然也不乏作者的一点儿管窥之见,希图站在巨人的肩膀上,感染更多的读者。阅读《在北大听到的24堂幸福课》,让北大精神在每一个读者心中延续她的辉煌。
  • 浮世瞳

    浮世瞳

    为了隐埋在双瞳深处的真正秘密,他毅然走进都市……国术与异能的碰撞,异术与超术的对决,谁主沉浮!阴谋阳谋,诡计百出。前世今生,轮回不止。以强者的决心笑傲花都,以帝皇的姿态俯瞰世界!浮华乱世,浮沉俗世,浮萍若世,浮生随世,它名——浮世瞳。
  • 网游之大话西游记

    网游之大话西游记

    曾经的经典网游。今日在此续写辉煌,挖神兵;抓神兽;大闹天宫;日赚千万;看网游小菜鸟如何在新的大话中风生水起。
  • 靖难功臣录

    靖难功臣录

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 重生之都市逍遥

    重生之都市逍遥

    一个小混混重生了,会创造出什么样的精彩,当他获得一身异能的时候又会出现什么样的变化?金钱,美女……
  • 我是个阴婚司仪

    我是个阴婚司仪

    我叫田萧,阴年阴月阴时出生,我是一个拥有特殊的职业的人,而这个特殊职业就是阴婚司仪,帮助鬼结婚。而凭借着阴阳学术,我打恶鬼,打大鬼,打水鬼,打厉鬼,打色鬼,收小鬼小弟,收僵尸小弟。又凭借着神秘玉佩,竟然和阎王做起了兄弟,就这样我就成为了阴阳两界的传奇人物…