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![]() Email: info@searcs-web.com Searc's Web Guide to 20th Century Ireland - Roger Casement (1864-1916) Roger Casement was born in Sandycove, County Dublin and educated at Ballymena Academy, County Antrim. In 1884 he joined the British Colonial Service and worked in the British Consul in the Congo in which capacity he published a Report on the working conditions in the Belgian Congo (1904). He was subsequently appointed British Consul General in Rio de Janeiro. Casement's investigations into conditions in Peruvian rubber plantations earned him a Knighthood in 1911. In 1912 Casement retired to Ireland and in 1913 he joined the Irish Volunteers whom he drilled. In 1914 he published Ireland, Germany and the Freedom of the Seas before travelling to Germany to solicit aid for an Irish rising and to organise Irish POWs into Volunteer units. In 1915 Casement published The Cause of War & the Foundations of Peace. Casement negotiated a German ship, The Aud, to sail for Ireland in April, 1916 with 'several machine-guns, 20,000 rifles and a million rounds of ammunition' for the Volunteers. But he unwittingly told a British spy about the consignment and the authorities were in a state of alert when The Aud arrived off the Irish coast. The German Captain skuttled the ship rather than allow it to fall into British hands and Casement, who had travelled to Ireland in a German submarine, was arrested in Tralee Bay, County Kerry. He was imprisoned in Pentonville Prison, London for three months awaiting trial during which time his diaries, containing references to his sexual orientation, were circulated in order to discredit his defence. Casement was convicted of High-Treason and was hung and buried in Pentonville Prison on August 3rd, 1916. Casement's Some Poems (1918) was published posthumously and his collected writings were published in 1958. On March 1st, 1965 Casement's body was re-interred after a State funeral in Glasnevin Cemetery, Dublin. This extract is Casement's 'Address to the Irish POWS at Limburg, May 15th, 1915' and was first published in Objects of an Irish Brigade in the Present War (1915).© | ![]() Roger Casement under arrest in London, 1916 |
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You have been told, I daresay, that I am trying to form an Irish Brigade to fight for
Germany; that I am a German agent; and that an attempt is being made to suborn you, or
tempt you to do something dishonest and insincere for the sake of the German Government and
not for the welfare of Ireland. Well, you may believe me, or disbelieve me (and nothing I
could say would convince you as to my own motives) but I can convince you, and I owe to
yourselves as well as to my self to convince you that the effort to form an Irish Brigade
is based on Irish interests only, and is a sincere and honest one, so far as my actions
with the German Government is concerned and so far as their action in the matter goes. An Irish Brigade, if it be formed today, will rest on a clear and definite agreement wherein the German Government is pledged to aid the cause of Irish independence by force of arms, and above all, to aid Irish men to themselves fight for their own freedom. The agreement that is the basis on which an Irish Brigade is one now in my hands, and which I will read to you. It was signed on 28th of December last by the duly authorized representative [under Secretary for State] of the German Government and is an honest and sincere offer on the part of a great European Government to help Irishmen to fight their own battle for the freedom of their country. It is the first time in history that such an offer has been made and embodied in clear straightforward terms. Hitherto, in the past, Irish Brigades have existed on the Continent but they were, in every case, formed to fight the battles not of Ireland, but of France, or Spain or of Austria. The foreign governments who took Irishmen, and formed them into a fighting force, did so, in all these cases not for the sake of Ireland but for the cause of these foreign governments. When Patrick Sarsfield died at Lauden in Flanders in 1691 he said on the field of his death: 'Would that this blood were shed for Ireland.' He was giving his life for France in the battles of France, not for Ireland. Today the case is different and if any Irish man in the Irish Brigade today loses his life he can at least say that he is giving his blood for Ireland. The agreement leaves no doubt that he is pledged to one cause only and that the cause is not of Germany but of Ireland... Your Oath binds you to serve your king and country. Now a man has only one country and he cannot have a divided allegiance. The only country that can claim an Irishman's allegiance is Ireland. The king you agreed to serve is, in law, King of Great Britain and Ireland. There is no such person as the King of England in law. How have these sovereigns discharged their duty to their Irish subjects? For remember these obligations are mutual. Our Kings, whose sole title to our allegiance is that they are Kings of Ireland, as well as Kings of Great Britain, have not once in all these centuries performed their duties to their Irish people or fulfilled any of the sacred obligations laid upon them by the title and the allegiance they claim from their subjects. I could cite many instances: I will give only two here. King George III was as much King of Ireland as he was King of Great Britain. He drew every year from the pockets of the Irish people the sum of £145,000 for his own purse. He never performed a public act for the welfare of his Irish people; he never set foot in Ireland, but he hired foreign soldiers, and Germans even, to come to Ireland to cut the throats of his Irish people and to burn their houses and devastate their country. That was in 1798, when the grandfathers of some of us were alive and were fighting for Irish rights. King George III of Ireland, as much as of Great Britain, paid £2,400,000 to hire foreign mercenaries to murder his Irish and his American subjects and the public accounts are on record showing who received this money - some of which was money from Ireland. That was one view of a King of England's duty to his people in Ireland. In 1848, the granddaughter of George III, Queen Victoria, who was also Queen of Ireland as much as Great Britain, regretted very much, in a letter to her uncle the King of the Belgians that the starving and disarmed Irish people did not openly rebel, so that her ample army in Ireland might have a good chance of shedding Irish blood and teaching 'the Irish a lesson'. That was her sovereign view of her duties to the people she called her subjects - she only regretted that they did not come up to the scratch to give her well armed troops a chance of shooting down unarmed and starving men. I do not know what moral claims such sovereigns have to the loyality of the people they thus treat as enemies and have never regarded as having any claim upon their consciences. I am not the only Irishman who holds this view. Others before us today, when it came to the question of fighting for Ireland, have not hesitated to break the Oath of Allegiance that bound them to such false Kings as these. Lord Edward Fitzgerald in 1798 was an Officer in the British army and had taken that form of the Oath of Allegiance. But he did not hesitate to break it and to lose his life fighting for Ireland. So with Smith O'Brien in 1848. He had taken two Oaths of Allegiance to the Crown - first in Parliament as Member for Clare, and also as a magistrate for that county. These men were not afraid to risk their lives for Ireland: They were brave enough to know where their duty to their country lay, and to try at all costs to discharge it. If an Irishman serves another country then he is not loyally doing his duty to his own. It is idle to talk of Irish liberty if we are not men enough to fight for it ourselves. We are told sometimes that Ireland will be made free by acts of others; that if Germany were to win the war there would be a free Ireland. If Irishmen men themselves are not prepared to fight for Ireland and to risk their lives in that cause then it is idle to talk of Irish liberty, and cowardly too. To expect Germany or others to free our country when we are not prepared ourselves to risk anything for it is cowardly and contemptible in the extreme. Germany has already publicly declared her goodwill and good intentions towards Ireland and has given every proof in her power of her wish to see an independent Ireland. She declares formally, and in binding terms, that she will assist Irishmen with arms, and military help to secure Irish independence, and that she will recognise that independence if gained and do all that she can to secure it. © Searc's Web Guide 1997-2008 |
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