FaDe
03-08-2003, 12:14 PM
by Jim Langcuster
Introduction
Ireland, poor Ireland.
Fate did not shine brightly on her in the 19th century.
Her great national awakening, which had erupted like sunlight after a drenching summer rain, faded into darkness after a series of courageous, but futile uprisings between 1798 and 1803.
By the turn of the century, the national vision of a republican Ireland entirely separated from England had been almost thoroughly discredited and would remain, for the foreseeable future, the dream of only a pitifully small circle of zealots.
Wretched and prostrate, her revolutionaries smoldering in graves or exiled to distant lands, Ireland seemed destined for national and cultural dispossession and oblivion.
It was a prospect that suited many in Ireland just fine, especially the Anglo-Irish, the wealthy land-owning descendants of Protestant English colonizers, who feared an independent Ireland would imperil the political power they had wielded for centuries. Determined to squelch Irish separatist sentiment once and for all, they successfully colluded with their British overlords to dissolve the Dublin Parliament, which theoretically enjoyed full legislative sovereignty under the crown, and turn all responsibility for the island’s governance to the British Parliament at Westminster.
Ireland’s fate -- or so it seemed at the time -- had been effectively sealed. Safely within Albion‘s grasp, the gentry reasoned, she would begin her slow, but inexorable transformation from an aspirant nation into a backwater province of Britain.
Grattan’s Prophesy
Yet, even in Ireland‘s darkest hours, a few Irish patriots understood that this strategy of political and cultural dispossession would fail utterly in the end. It always had.
“The Constitution (of 1782 establishing the independent Irish Parliament) may, for a time, be lost -- the character of the country cannot be so lost,” proclaimed the Henry Grattan, the father of the Irish Parliament, in a statement that would prove eerily prophetic little more than a century later.
Ireland, after all, had absorbed all previous interlopers -- the Vikings and the Normans, most notably -- and if history provided any measure of what was to follow, the privileged Anglo-Irish would be no exception. Indeed, the process was already well under way: Grattan himself was a Protestant, and so were Wolfe Tone, Lord Edward Fitzgerald and Robert Emmett, three of the principal Irish national martyrs of the era.
Yes, Irish character would prevail again, patriots reasoned, but how and when? At the time, things looked desperately grim. With Republican separatism thoroughly discredited after 1803, many believed Ireland needed a new kind of national hero with an entirely new vision better suited to the bitter realities of the times -- someone who could give vent to Irish national grievances and restore a measure of Irish national identity and honor, while adapting to the radically changed social and political climate of post-revolutionary Ireland.
The Rise of Daniel O’Connell
Ireland eventually found her new hero: Daniel O’Connell, an Irish Catholic barrister and political activist descended from some of the oldest Gaelic stock in Ireland. His efforts enabled Irish nationalism to recover and sally forth after what was widely presumed to be permanent defeat in 1803. Some would even credit O‘Connell, more than any other Irishman of the 19th century, with placing his country firmly on the road to national independence that was finally completed in 1921 with the establishment of the Irish Free State.
O’Connell’s stellar achievements were rooted in his character and heritage. He was, by every measure, a resourceful man born into a resourceful Catholic family from Kerry County that had used a variety of means to preserve their large landholdings in an age when Catholic proprietorship was not sanctioned by law.
Throughout his life, perhaps partly as a result of the degradations his own family had endured, O’Connell remained a liberal-minded reformer. He abhorred slavery, argued for the full rights of Jews in Britain and supported policies to curtail aristocratic excesses in Ireland. Yet, he was far from radical.
Like most prominent Catholic Irishmen, O’Connell was sent to France to complete his education and had the opportunity to witness first-hand the ferment of revolutionary France. He left France on the day of King Louis XVI’s execution permanently sickened by the horror and suffering that occurs when reform is accompanied by fanatical zeal.
The Catholic Emancipation Movement
O’Connell is most often remembered for his first major political undertaking: organizing a mass struggle to secure full Catholic citizenship that evolved into one of the most successful political and cultural movements in Irish history. The overwhelming public support for Catholic Emancipation generated by O’Connell’s Catholic Association forced the British government to pass the Emancipation Act of 1829 with the grudging assent of the Crown. O’Connell topped it off by becoming the first Catholic in more than 140 years to be elected to a seat in the British Parliament.
In the course of his parliamentary career, O’Connell became a major figure in Parliament, striving for prison and law reform, free trade, the abolition of slavery and Jewish emancipation. British radicals, so taken with his political successes in Ireland, eventually adapted his methods of organizing and employing the power of mass public opinion to conditions in England and Scotland.
The Repeal Movement
The lessons O’Connell gained organizing and leading the Catholic Emancipation movement and serving in Parliament would prove invaluable as he embarked on his next big undertaking: emancipating Ireland.
One key to his success was the way in which he approached the whole issue of nationalism: step-by-step, first by dealing with issues of immediate, emotional interest to the Irish.
Unlike the earlier separatists who demanded full-blown separation from Britain, O’Connell sought nothing more, or less, that the repeal of the Union of 1803 and the return of Ireland to the position she had occupied “when I was born.” Endowed once again with its own sovereign Parliament, O’Connell contended, Ireland would no longer be a “subordinate province” but a “a limb of the empire“ -- a “distinct country, subject to the same King.”
As political visions go, it was ingeniously simple and straightforward -- a bit too simple and straightforward for the wealthy Anglo-Irish landowners who watched helplessly as O’Connell began garnering a huge following for his approach.
First, he stressed loyalty to the British Crown -- to “Sovereign Queen Victoria and her heirs and successors forever.”
Second, he disavowed any approach aimed at securing Irish sovereignty by physical force.
In essence, what O’Connell sought was a vision of dual loyalty -- loyalty both to a sovereign monarch and to a sovereign Ireland.
Predictably, many wealthy Anglo-Irish landowners feared even this would constitute a slippery slope that ultimately would lead to a complete break with the British Crown and the formation of a wholly separate Ireland along the lines envisioned by Wolfe, Fitzgerald, Emmett and the other republican separatists.
O’Connell was determined to put these fears to rest.
“I want you,” he said at a repeal meeting at Trim in 1843, “I want you not to violate your allegiance to the lovely and beautiful being that fills the throne -- our gracious Queen, long life to her (great cheers). I want you to preserve your allegiance unbroken to her as I do mine, but I want you, at the same time, to remember that you have another allegiance equally dear and higher in its quality, though not so binding in law, but equally binding in an Irish heart, and that is the allegiance to your country (cheers). I call on you to be loyal men -- loyal to the Queen and loyal to your country.”
O’Connell earned the undying enmity of diehard republican separatists who viewed this dual loyalty as a contradiction in terms, if not an outright betrayal of the republican vision of self-determination.
Yet, not once during his long political career did O’Connell ever question the British connection or the Crown‘s authority in Ireland. Late in life he even vowed that he would end his political struggle if it ever threatened Ireland’s historic connection to the British Empire or allegiance to the Crown.
O’Connell, simply knew better than to challenge British authority in Ireland. From his standpoint, breaking the historic connection was a nonnegotiable issue.
O’Connell’s Political Realism
Granted, O’Connell’s repeated affirmations of loyalty did not stem from any sense of mystical loyalty to the British connection. His was a fealty motivated entirely by political realism. Previous separatist attempts to break the connection had brought dreadful suffering to the Irish people -- tragedies that O’Connell was determined not to repeat. Moreover, these uprisings, rather than increasing the desire for Irish liberation, had produced entirely the opposite effect. No, he believed, the Irish “were not sufficiently enlightened to hear the sun of freedom” -- not yet, at least.
Repeal and the restoration of a sovereign Irish Parliament was the most any reasonable Irishman could hope for in the early 19th century, O‘Connell believed, and he was determined to stick to this course despite the unremitting criticism of radical separatists or the veiled threats of the British authorities.
Using the same highly successful strategy he had employed with Catholic Emancipation, O’Connell eventually built the Repeal Movement into what historian Robert Kee has described as “the first real, effective organization of Irish mass opinion since the days of James II.”
The movement was organized around the National Repeal Association, established in 1840 and symbolically headed by an old Protestant Volunteer from the 1782 era (when Ireland gained parliamentary sovereignty.) In the following year, however, it was reorganized and renamed the Loyal National Repeal Association, underscoring the loyalty to the British connection. Like the old Catholic Association on which the Emancipation Movement was built, the Repeal Association required only a penny-a-month subscription for associate membership -- a practice that was later nicknamed the “repeal rent,” underscoring the exorbitant land rents the tenants paid to landlords.
Throughout his political career, O’Connell strove to connect the Repeal movement with the rent issue and other social concerns of vital interest to the Irish masses, although he was careful not to spell out in too much detail how he intended to address these issues when Irish sovereignty was finally secured.
Mass Appeal
In time, the emotive appeal of O’Connell’s message forged a mystical bond between the Irish masses and the Repeal movement.
By foreswearing republican separatism and accepting the reality of the British connection, O’Connell won the support of the Catholic priesthood and many bishops who had viewed republican separatism with profound skepticism, fearing it would degenerate into the same sort of anti-clericalism that had characterized post-Revolutionary Republican France.
O’Connell also openly embraced individuals who supported more modest visions of Irish autonomy. As the Repeal movement began gaining steam and winning over large sectors of the Irish population, some members of the Anglo-Irish gentry attempted to craft a strategy for meeting O’Connell halfway. This middle way, known as Federalism, envisioned an independent domestic legislature concerned with internal Irish issues, while the Parliament of Westminster would still be entrusted with wider imperial issues.
Some Repeal advocates dismissed Federalism as nothing more than a half-measure designed to stave off full-blown repeal. O’Connell, on the other hand, viewed Federalism as an important first step, and welcomed Federalists into Repeal Association ranks. Since establishing even a domestic legislature would require the repeal of the hated Union Act of 1801, Federalists were, in effect, Repealers, O’Connell reasoned -- a good enough reason to include them within his growing ranks.
“We will not require him (the Federalist) to go the full length with us in every particular -- we will go that that length ourselves and never give it up,” O’Connell asserted. “But we will take the assistance of every man that is for a domestic legislature of any kind in Ireland.”
Even so, the Repeal Movement, never garnered more than a modest following among Protestant Irish. Still, O’Connell was determined not to construct high ideological and ethnic barriers. The return of Irish sovereignty, he assured Protestants, would be accompanied by the restoration of an Irish House of Lords comprised almost exclusively of wealthy Anglo-Irish landowners, and this would provide a permanent safeguard against any threat to the Protestant privileges within Ireland.
Young Ireland
While O’Connell never succeeded in making steep inroads into Protestant or Dissenter ranks, he did attract a circle of gifted, middle-class young men, half of them Protestant, whose corporate talents advanced Ireland even farther down the road toward national independence. Eventually known as “Young Ireland,” this talented circle of intellectuals complemented O’Connell’s work in a variety of ways, especially by appealing to a broader cross-section of the population. They also enabled O’Connell to responded to charges that the Repeal Association was little more than a stalking horse for Catholic hegemony in Ireland.
“We must sink the distinctions of blood as well as sect,” wrote Young Irelander Thomas Davis. “The Milesian, the Dane, the Norman, the Welshman, the Scotsman and the Saxon, naturalized here, must combine regardless of their blood -- the Strong-bownian must sit with the Ulster Scot and him whose ancestor came from Tyre or Spain must confide in an work with the Cromwellian and the Williamite… If a union of all Irish-born men ever be accomplished Ireland will have the greatest and most varied materials for an illustrious nationality and for a tolerant and flexible character in literature, manners, religion and life of any nation on earth.”
The writing of Young Ireland intellectuals, featured in The Nation, the official publication of movement, sparked a passion for Irish literature and folkways and won over a generation of writers, poets, playwrights and activists to the cause of Irish independence. Many of these individuals were descended from prominent Anglo-Irish families, including Jane Francesca Elgee, John Mitchell and, later, Maude Gonne and William Butler Yeats.
Monster Meetings and the Arrest of O’Connell
No one could have ever predicted the phenomenal success of the Repeal Movement. By January 1, 1843, the hundreds of thousands of Irishmen who had turned out for a series of repeal rallies, later dubbed “Monster Meetings,” convinced O’Connell that he could achieve repeal by the end of the year. Either support repeal, he warned British authorities, or face civil war.
This veiled threat was too much for British Prime Minister Robert Peel, who subsequently banned a public meeting scheduled for Clontarf and arrested O’Connell for sedition, even though O’Connell had urged his fellow Irishmen to obey the ban.
After being found guilty and serving a year in prison, O’Connell was released after the Law Lords reversed the decision. As is often the case, O’Connell’s time in prison only increased his stature as a nationalist and a defender of civil liberties.
Introduction
Ireland, poor Ireland.
Fate did not shine brightly on her in the 19th century.
Her great national awakening, which had erupted like sunlight after a drenching summer rain, faded into darkness after a series of courageous, but futile uprisings between 1798 and 1803.
By the turn of the century, the national vision of a republican Ireland entirely separated from England had been almost thoroughly discredited and would remain, for the foreseeable future, the dream of only a pitifully small circle of zealots.
Wretched and prostrate, her revolutionaries smoldering in graves or exiled to distant lands, Ireland seemed destined for national and cultural dispossession and oblivion.
It was a prospect that suited many in Ireland just fine, especially the Anglo-Irish, the wealthy land-owning descendants of Protestant English colonizers, who feared an independent Ireland would imperil the political power they had wielded for centuries. Determined to squelch Irish separatist sentiment once and for all, they successfully colluded with their British overlords to dissolve the Dublin Parliament, which theoretically enjoyed full legislative sovereignty under the crown, and turn all responsibility for the island’s governance to the British Parliament at Westminster.
Ireland’s fate -- or so it seemed at the time -- had been effectively sealed. Safely within Albion‘s grasp, the gentry reasoned, she would begin her slow, but inexorable transformation from an aspirant nation into a backwater province of Britain.
Grattan’s Prophesy
Yet, even in Ireland‘s darkest hours, a few Irish patriots understood that this strategy of political and cultural dispossession would fail utterly in the end. It always had.
“The Constitution (of 1782 establishing the independent Irish Parliament) may, for a time, be lost -- the character of the country cannot be so lost,” proclaimed the Henry Grattan, the father of the Irish Parliament, in a statement that would prove eerily prophetic little more than a century later.
Ireland, after all, had absorbed all previous interlopers -- the Vikings and the Normans, most notably -- and if history provided any measure of what was to follow, the privileged Anglo-Irish would be no exception. Indeed, the process was already well under way: Grattan himself was a Protestant, and so were Wolfe Tone, Lord Edward Fitzgerald and Robert Emmett, three of the principal Irish national martyrs of the era.
Yes, Irish character would prevail again, patriots reasoned, but how and when? At the time, things looked desperately grim. With Republican separatism thoroughly discredited after 1803, many believed Ireland needed a new kind of national hero with an entirely new vision better suited to the bitter realities of the times -- someone who could give vent to Irish national grievances and restore a measure of Irish national identity and honor, while adapting to the radically changed social and political climate of post-revolutionary Ireland.
The Rise of Daniel O’Connell
Ireland eventually found her new hero: Daniel O’Connell, an Irish Catholic barrister and political activist descended from some of the oldest Gaelic stock in Ireland. His efforts enabled Irish nationalism to recover and sally forth after what was widely presumed to be permanent defeat in 1803. Some would even credit O‘Connell, more than any other Irishman of the 19th century, with placing his country firmly on the road to national independence that was finally completed in 1921 with the establishment of the Irish Free State.
O’Connell’s stellar achievements were rooted in his character and heritage. He was, by every measure, a resourceful man born into a resourceful Catholic family from Kerry County that had used a variety of means to preserve their large landholdings in an age when Catholic proprietorship was not sanctioned by law.
Throughout his life, perhaps partly as a result of the degradations his own family had endured, O’Connell remained a liberal-minded reformer. He abhorred slavery, argued for the full rights of Jews in Britain and supported policies to curtail aristocratic excesses in Ireland. Yet, he was far from radical.
Like most prominent Catholic Irishmen, O’Connell was sent to France to complete his education and had the opportunity to witness first-hand the ferment of revolutionary France. He left France on the day of King Louis XVI’s execution permanently sickened by the horror and suffering that occurs when reform is accompanied by fanatical zeal.
The Catholic Emancipation Movement
O’Connell is most often remembered for his first major political undertaking: organizing a mass struggle to secure full Catholic citizenship that evolved into one of the most successful political and cultural movements in Irish history. The overwhelming public support for Catholic Emancipation generated by O’Connell’s Catholic Association forced the British government to pass the Emancipation Act of 1829 with the grudging assent of the Crown. O’Connell topped it off by becoming the first Catholic in more than 140 years to be elected to a seat in the British Parliament.
In the course of his parliamentary career, O’Connell became a major figure in Parliament, striving for prison and law reform, free trade, the abolition of slavery and Jewish emancipation. British radicals, so taken with his political successes in Ireland, eventually adapted his methods of organizing and employing the power of mass public opinion to conditions in England and Scotland.
The Repeal Movement
The lessons O’Connell gained organizing and leading the Catholic Emancipation movement and serving in Parliament would prove invaluable as he embarked on his next big undertaking: emancipating Ireland.
One key to his success was the way in which he approached the whole issue of nationalism: step-by-step, first by dealing with issues of immediate, emotional interest to the Irish.
Unlike the earlier separatists who demanded full-blown separation from Britain, O’Connell sought nothing more, or less, that the repeal of the Union of 1803 and the return of Ireland to the position she had occupied “when I was born.” Endowed once again with its own sovereign Parliament, O’Connell contended, Ireland would no longer be a “subordinate province” but a “a limb of the empire“ -- a “distinct country, subject to the same King.”
As political visions go, it was ingeniously simple and straightforward -- a bit too simple and straightforward for the wealthy Anglo-Irish landowners who watched helplessly as O’Connell began garnering a huge following for his approach.
First, he stressed loyalty to the British Crown -- to “Sovereign Queen Victoria and her heirs and successors forever.”
Second, he disavowed any approach aimed at securing Irish sovereignty by physical force.
In essence, what O’Connell sought was a vision of dual loyalty -- loyalty both to a sovereign monarch and to a sovereign Ireland.
Predictably, many wealthy Anglo-Irish landowners feared even this would constitute a slippery slope that ultimately would lead to a complete break with the British Crown and the formation of a wholly separate Ireland along the lines envisioned by Wolfe, Fitzgerald, Emmett and the other republican separatists.
O’Connell was determined to put these fears to rest.
“I want you,” he said at a repeal meeting at Trim in 1843, “I want you not to violate your allegiance to the lovely and beautiful being that fills the throne -- our gracious Queen, long life to her (great cheers). I want you to preserve your allegiance unbroken to her as I do mine, but I want you, at the same time, to remember that you have another allegiance equally dear and higher in its quality, though not so binding in law, but equally binding in an Irish heart, and that is the allegiance to your country (cheers). I call on you to be loyal men -- loyal to the Queen and loyal to your country.”
O’Connell earned the undying enmity of diehard republican separatists who viewed this dual loyalty as a contradiction in terms, if not an outright betrayal of the republican vision of self-determination.
Yet, not once during his long political career did O’Connell ever question the British connection or the Crown‘s authority in Ireland. Late in life he even vowed that he would end his political struggle if it ever threatened Ireland’s historic connection to the British Empire or allegiance to the Crown.
O’Connell, simply knew better than to challenge British authority in Ireland. From his standpoint, breaking the historic connection was a nonnegotiable issue.
O’Connell’s Political Realism
Granted, O’Connell’s repeated affirmations of loyalty did not stem from any sense of mystical loyalty to the British connection. His was a fealty motivated entirely by political realism. Previous separatist attempts to break the connection had brought dreadful suffering to the Irish people -- tragedies that O’Connell was determined not to repeat. Moreover, these uprisings, rather than increasing the desire for Irish liberation, had produced entirely the opposite effect. No, he believed, the Irish “were not sufficiently enlightened to hear the sun of freedom” -- not yet, at least.
Repeal and the restoration of a sovereign Irish Parliament was the most any reasonable Irishman could hope for in the early 19th century, O‘Connell believed, and he was determined to stick to this course despite the unremitting criticism of radical separatists or the veiled threats of the British authorities.
Using the same highly successful strategy he had employed with Catholic Emancipation, O’Connell eventually built the Repeal Movement into what historian Robert Kee has described as “the first real, effective organization of Irish mass opinion since the days of James II.”
The movement was organized around the National Repeal Association, established in 1840 and symbolically headed by an old Protestant Volunteer from the 1782 era (when Ireland gained parliamentary sovereignty.) In the following year, however, it was reorganized and renamed the Loyal National Repeal Association, underscoring the loyalty to the British connection. Like the old Catholic Association on which the Emancipation Movement was built, the Repeal Association required only a penny-a-month subscription for associate membership -- a practice that was later nicknamed the “repeal rent,” underscoring the exorbitant land rents the tenants paid to landlords.
Throughout his political career, O’Connell strove to connect the Repeal movement with the rent issue and other social concerns of vital interest to the Irish masses, although he was careful not to spell out in too much detail how he intended to address these issues when Irish sovereignty was finally secured.
Mass Appeal
In time, the emotive appeal of O’Connell’s message forged a mystical bond between the Irish masses and the Repeal movement.
By foreswearing republican separatism and accepting the reality of the British connection, O’Connell won the support of the Catholic priesthood and many bishops who had viewed republican separatism with profound skepticism, fearing it would degenerate into the same sort of anti-clericalism that had characterized post-Revolutionary Republican France.
O’Connell also openly embraced individuals who supported more modest visions of Irish autonomy. As the Repeal movement began gaining steam and winning over large sectors of the Irish population, some members of the Anglo-Irish gentry attempted to craft a strategy for meeting O’Connell halfway. This middle way, known as Federalism, envisioned an independent domestic legislature concerned with internal Irish issues, while the Parliament of Westminster would still be entrusted with wider imperial issues.
Some Repeal advocates dismissed Federalism as nothing more than a half-measure designed to stave off full-blown repeal. O’Connell, on the other hand, viewed Federalism as an important first step, and welcomed Federalists into Repeal Association ranks. Since establishing even a domestic legislature would require the repeal of the hated Union Act of 1801, Federalists were, in effect, Repealers, O’Connell reasoned -- a good enough reason to include them within his growing ranks.
“We will not require him (the Federalist) to go the full length with us in every particular -- we will go that that length ourselves and never give it up,” O’Connell asserted. “But we will take the assistance of every man that is for a domestic legislature of any kind in Ireland.”
Even so, the Repeal Movement, never garnered more than a modest following among Protestant Irish. Still, O’Connell was determined not to construct high ideological and ethnic barriers. The return of Irish sovereignty, he assured Protestants, would be accompanied by the restoration of an Irish House of Lords comprised almost exclusively of wealthy Anglo-Irish landowners, and this would provide a permanent safeguard against any threat to the Protestant privileges within Ireland.
Young Ireland
While O’Connell never succeeded in making steep inroads into Protestant or Dissenter ranks, he did attract a circle of gifted, middle-class young men, half of them Protestant, whose corporate talents advanced Ireland even farther down the road toward national independence. Eventually known as “Young Ireland,” this talented circle of intellectuals complemented O’Connell’s work in a variety of ways, especially by appealing to a broader cross-section of the population. They also enabled O’Connell to responded to charges that the Repeal Association was little more than a stalking horse for Catholic hegemony in Ireland.
“We must sink the distinctions of blood as well as sect,” wrote Young Irelander Thomas Davis. “The Milesian, the Dane, the Norman, the Welshman, the Scotsman and the Saxon, naturalized here, must combine regardless of their blood -- the Strong-bownian must sit with the Ulster Scot and him whose ancestor came from Tyre or Spain must confide in an work with the Cromwellian and the Williamite… If a union of all Irish-born men ever be accomplished Ireland will have the greatest and most varied materials for an illustrious nationality and for a tolerant and flexible character in literature, manners, religion and life of any nation on earth.”
The writing of Young Ireland intellectuals, featured in The Nation, the official publication of movement, sparked a passion for Irish literature and folkways and won over a generation of writers, poets, playwrights and activists to the cause of Irish independence. Many of these individuals were descended from prominent Anglo-Irish families, including Jane Francesca Elgee, John Mitchell and, later, Maude Gonne and William Butler Yeats.
Monster Meetings and the Arrest of O’Connell
No one could have ever predicted the phenomenal success of the Repeal Movement. By January 1, 1843, the hundreds of thousands of Irishmen who had turned out for a series of repeal rallies, later dubbed “Monster Meetings,” convinced O’Connell that he could achieve repeal by the end of the year. Either support repeal, he warned British authorities, or face civil war.
This veiled threat was too much for British Prime Minister Robert Peel, who subsequently banned a public meeting scheduled for Clontarf and arrested O’Connell for sedition, even though O’Connell had urged his fellow Irishmen to obey the ban.
After being found guilty and serving a year in prison, O’Connell was released after the Law Lords reversed the decision. As is often the case, O’Connell’s time in prison only increased his stature as a nationalist and a defender of civil liberties.