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SIR G. C. DUFFY ON AUSTRALIA AND IRELAND.

SirXlharles Gavan Duffy, in a communication toiLord Carnarvon, the new Viceroy of Ireland, in advocacy^of local self-* government for Ireland, 1 says*:-*— • I: ( ; Addressing an ex-Minister of the" Colonies, I can confidently appeal to your knowledge and experience on the significant lessons which Colonial liistory furnishes to guide a statesman in dealing with the affairs of Ireland at present. Between 40 and 50 years ago, when I came' to this city a young student and journalist, the great colonies were more disturbed than Ireland ir 1880. 'Lower Canada was organising insurrection under Catholic gentlemen of French descent, and Upper Canada was in arms under a Scotch Presbyterian.; Australia was then only a great pastoral settlement, but bitter discontent and angry menaces were heard in all its centres of population, provoked by the shameful: practice ... of discharging the criminals: of England like a deluge of filth on that young country. A few years later the Cape Colony boycotted the Governor and the local executive in the ; same quarrel more effectually than the device has ever been employed in Ireland. It was the same.^n the Bmaller settlements. ~\ \ ,? yThere j tjvas.\ confusion throughout the Colonial possessions of the Empire in both hemispheres. But Sir Robert Peel set the example of granting to the Colonies the control of their own affairs, and now Melbourne or Montreal is more exhuberantly loyal to the Empire than London or Edinburgh. The New South Wales expedition tb the Soudan the other day was received with 'a roar of exultationthroughoutEngland; butltearthat remarkable transaction, however warmly it was applauded, was imperfectly understood. The true moral it teaches is this — that it is safe and wise -to be' just. The acting Prime Minister of the Colony despatched that expedition is an Australian Catholic, of Irish descent. If his native country were governed ah Ireland has bet- n ( governed, he has the stuff in him to be a leader of revolt. But it is permitted to govern itself, and we see the result. The policy of the expedition was sharply questioned in the Colony ; but it was successfully vindicated at a public meeting, where the chair was occupied by the Chief Justice of New South Wales, the son of an Irish Catholic, and where the principal Bpeaker was himself a Catholic, born in this island. In Victoria, where the policy and conduct of the Soudanese expedition may perhaps have mitigated popular enthusiasm with that enterprise, the risk of war with Russia called out a demonstration as energetic as the one in the Mother Colony. A recent' telegram announces that the Irish population of Victoria undertook to raise a regiment of a thousand, men for the defence of the territory where they found liberty and prosperity. Their spokesman was a young r Irish Catholic, who has been a Minister of State at Melbourne at an age when his father was a prisoner of State in Dublin, for the crime of insisting that Ireland should possess the complete l autonomy which his children now enjoy in the new country. These are some of the natural consequences of fairplay in Australia. Is there any reason to doubt that a like cause here would produce like effects? Nothing that the blackest pessimist- predicts on the danger of entrusting Ireland with the manageagement of her own affairs is more offensive or alarming than the vaticinations of Colonial officials half a century ago on the perils of entrusting colonists with political power. Human nature has the same spiritual warf and woof in the Old World as in the New, and what has made Irish Catholics contented and loyal on the banks of the Parramatta and Yarra Yarra would make them contented and loyal on the banks of the Liffey or the Shannon. What was the subtle device, what was the mighty magic which wrought the change in the sentiments beyond the Atlantic and Pacific ? Fair play, I repeat — simply, fair play."

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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/GRA18851006.2.15

Bibliographic details

Grey River Argus, Volume XXXI, Issue 5312, 6 October 1885, Page 4

Word Count
661

SIR G. C. DUFFY ON AUSTRALIA AND IRELAND. Grey River Argus, Volume XXXI, Issue 5312, 6 October 1885, Page 4

SIR G. C. DUFFY ON AUSTRALIA AND IRELAND. Grey River Argus, Volume XXXI, Issue 5312, 6 October 1885, Page 4

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