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<author>P&aacute;draic H. Pearse</author>
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<listBibl>
<head>Select editions</head>
<bibl n="1">P.H. Pearse, An sgoil: a direct method course in Irish (Dublin: Maunsel, 1913).</bibl>
<bibl n="2">P.H. Pearse, How does she stand? : three addresses (The Bodenstown series no. 1) (Dublin: Irish Freedom Press, 1915).</bibl>
<bibl n="3">P.H. Pearse, From a hermitage (The Bodenstown series no. 2)(Dublin: Irish Freedom Press, 1915).</bibl>
<bibl n="4">P.H. Pearse, The murder machine (The Bodenstown series no. 3) (Dublin: Whelan, 1916). Repr. U.C.C.: Department of Education, 1959.</bibl>
<bibl n="5">P.H. Pearse, Ghosts (Tracts for the Times) (Dublin: Whelan, 1916.</bibl>
<bibl n="6">P.H. Pearse, The Spiritual Nation (Tracts for the Times) (Dublin: Whelan, 1916.</bibl>
<bibl n="7">P.H. Pearse, The Sovereign People (Tracts for the Times) (Dublin: Whelan, 1916.</bibl>
<bibl n="8">P.H. Pearse, The Separatist Idea (Tracts for the Times) (Dublin: Whelan, 1916.</bibl>
<bibl n="9">P&aacute;draic Colum, E.J. Harrington O'Brien (ed), Poems of the Irish revolutionary brotherhood, Thomas MacDonagh, P.H. Pearse  (P&aacute;draic MacPiarais), Joseph Mary Plunkett, Sir Roger Casement. (New and enl. ed.) (Boston: Small, Maynard &amp; Company, 1916). First edition, July, 1916; second edition, enlarged, September, 1916.</bibl>
<bibl n="10">Michael Henry Gaffney, The stories of P&aacute;draic Pearse (Dublin [etc.]: The Talbot Press Ltd. 1935). Contains ten plays by M.H. Gaffney based upon stories by P&aacute;draic Pearse, and three plays by P&aacute;draic Pearse edited by M.H. Gaffney.</bibl>
<bibl n="11">Proinsias Mac Aonghusa, Liam &Oacute; Reagain (ed), The best of Pearse (1967).</bibl>
<bibl n="12">Seamus &Oacute; Buachalla (ed), The literary writings of Patrick Pearse: writings in English (Dublin: Mercier, 1979).</bibl>
<bibl n="13">Seamus &Oacute; Buachalla, A significant Irish educationalist: the educational writings of P.H. Pearse (Dublin: Mercier, 1980).</bibl>
<bibl n="14">Seamus &Oacute; Buachalla (ed), The letters of P. H. Pearse  (Gerrards Cross, Bucks.: Smythe, 1980). </bibl>
<bibl n="15">P&aacute;draic Mac Piarais (ed), Bodach an ch&oacute;ta lachtna (Baile &Aacute;tha Cliath: Chonnradh na Gaedhilge, 1906).</bibl>
<bibl n="16">P&aacute;draic Mac Piarais, Bruidhean chaorthainn: sg&eacute;al Fianna&iacute;dheachta (Baile &Aacute;tha Cliath: Chonnradh na Gaedhilge, 1912).</bibl>
<bibl n="17">P&aacute;draic Pearse, Collected works of P&aacute;draic H.
Pearse (Dublin: Phoenix Publishing Co. ? 1910 1919). 4 vols. v. 1. Political writings and speeches. - v. 2. Plays,  stories, poems. - v. 3. Songs of the Irish rebels and specimens from an Irish anthology. Some aspects of Irish literature. Three lectures on Gaelic topics. - v. 4. The story of a success, edited by Desmond Ryan, and The man called Pearse, by Desmond Ryan.</bibl>
<bibl n="18">P&aacute;draic Pearse,   Collected works of P&aacute;draic H.
Pearse (Dublin; Belfast: Phoenix, ? 1916 1917). 5 vols. [v. 1] Plays, stories, poems.&mdash;[v. 2.] Political writings and speeches.&mdash;[v. 3]  Story of a success. Man called Pearse.&mdash;[v. 4]  Songs of the Irish rebels. Specimens from an Irish anthology. Some aspects of irish literature.&mdash;[v. 5] Scrivinni.</bibl>
<bibl n="19">P&aacute;draic Pearse, Collected works of P&aacute;draic H. Pearse &hellip; (New York: Frederick A. Stokes Company 1917). 3rd ed. Translated by Joseph Campbell, introduction by Patrick Browne.</bibl>
<bibl n="20">P&aacute;draic Pearse, Collected works of P&aacute;draic H. Pearse. 6th ed. (Dublin: Phoenix, 1924 1917) v. 1. Political writings and speeches &mdash; v. 2. Plays, stories, poems.</bibl>
<bibl n="21">P&aacute;draic Pearse, Collected works of P&aacute;draic H. Pearse (Dublin: Phoenix Pub. Co., 1924). 5 vols. [v. 1] Songs of the Irish rebels and specimens from an Irish anthology.  Some aspects of Irish literature.  Three lectures on Gaelic topics. &mdash; [v. 2] Plays, stories, poems. &mdash; [v. 3] Scr&iacute;binn&iacute;. &mdash; [v. 4] The story of a success [being a record of St. Enda's College]  The man called Pearse / by Desmond Ryan. &mdash; [v. 5] Political writings and speeches.</bibl>
<bibl n="22">P&aacute;draic Pearse,  Short stories of P&aacute;draic Pearse (Cork: Mercier Press, 1968 1976 1989). (Iosagan, Eoineen of the birds, The roads, The black chafer, The keening woman).</bibl>
<bibl n="23">P&aacute;draic Pearse,  Political writing and speeches (Irish prose writings, 20) (Tokyo: Hon-no-tomosha, 1992). Originally published: Dublin: Maunsel &amp; Roberts, 1922.</bibl>
<bibl n="24">P&aacute;draic Pearse, Political writings and speeches (Collected works of P&aacute;draic H. Pearse)  (Dublin and London: Maunsel &amp; Roberts Ltd., 1922).</bibl>
<bibl n="25">P&aacute;draic Pearse, Political writings and Speeches (Collected works of P&aacute;draic H. Pearse)  (Dublin: Phoenix 1916). 6th ed. (Dublin [etc.]: Phoenix, 1924).</bibl>
<bibl n="26">P&aacute;draic Pearse,  Plays Stories Poems (Collected works of P&aacute;draic H. Pearse) (Dublin, London: Maunsel &amp; Company Ltd., 1917). 5th ed. 1922. Also pubd. by Talbot Press, Dublin, 1917, repr. 1966.  Repr. New York: AMS Press, 1978. </bibl>
<bibl n="27">P&aacute;draic Pearse, Fil&iacute;ocht Ghaeilge P&aacute;draig Mhic Phiarais (&Aacute;th Cliath: Cl&oacute;chomhar, 1981) Leabhair thaighde ; an 35u iml.</bibl>
<bibl n="28">P&aacute;draic Pearse, Collected works of P&aacute;draic H. Pearse (New York: Stokes, 1918). Contains The Singer, The King, The Master, &Iacute;osag&aacute;n.</bibl>
<bibl n="29">P&aacute;draic Pearse, Songs of the Irish rebels and specimens from an Irish anthology: some aspects of Irish literature : three lectures on Gaelic topics (Collected works of P&aacute;draic H. Pearse) (Dublin: The Phoenix Publishing Co. 1910).</bibl>
<bibl n="30">P&aacute;draic Pearse, Songs of the Irish rebels (Collected works of P&aacute;draic H. Pearse) (Dublin: Phoenix Pub. Co., 1917).</bibl>
<bibl n="31">P&aacute;draic Pearse, Songs of the Irish rebels, and Specimens from an Irish anthology (Collected works of P&aacute;draic H. Pearse) (Dublin: Maunsel, 1918).</bibl>
<bibl n="32">P&aacute;draic Pearse, The story of a success (The complete works of P. H. Pearse) (Dublin: Phoenix Pub. Co., 1917) .</bibl>
<bibl n="33">P&aacute;draic Pearse, Scr&iacute;binn&iacute; (The complete works of P. H. Pearse) (Dublin: Phoenix Pub. Co., 1917).</bibl>
<bibl n="34">Julius Pokorny, Die Seele Irlands: Novellen und Gedichte aus dem Irisch-Galischen des Patrick Henry Pearse und Anderer zum ersten Male ins Deutsche &uuml;bertragen (Halle a.S.: Max Niemeyer 1922)</bibl>
<bibl n="35">James Simmons, Ten Irish poets: an anthology of poems by George Buchanan, John Hewitt,  P&aacute;draic Fiacc, Pearse Hutchinson, James Simmons, Michael Hartnett, Eilean N&iacute; Chuillean&aacute;in, Michael Foley, Frank Ormsby &amp; Tom Mathews (Cheadle: Carcanet Press, 1974).</bibl>
<bibl n="36">Cathal &Oacute; hAinle (ed), Gearrsc&eacute;alta an Phiarsaigh (Dublin: Helicon, 1979).</bibl>
<bibl n="37">Ciar&aacute;n &Oacute; Coigligh (ed), Fil&iacute;ocht Ghaeilge: Ph&aacute;draig Mhic Phiarais (Baile &Aacute;tha Cliath: Cl&oacute;chomhar, 1981).</bibl>
<bibl n="38">P&aacute;draig Mac Piarais, et al., Une &icirc;le et d'autres &icirc;les: po&egrave;mes gaeliques XXeme si&egrave;cle (Quimper:  Calligrammes, 1984).</bibl>
</listBibl>
<listBibl>
<head>Select bibliography</head>
<bibl n="1">P&aacute;draic Mac Piarais : Pearse from documents (Dublin : Co-ordinating committee for Educational Services, 1979). Facsimile documents. National Library of Ireland. facsimile documents.</bibl>
<bibl n="2">Xavier Carty, In bloody protest&mdash;the tragedy of Patrick Pearse (Dublin: Able 1978).</bibl>
<bibl n="3">Helen Louise Clark, P&aacute;draic Pearse: a Gaelic idealist (1933). (Thesis (M.A.)&mdash;Boston College, 1933).</bibl>
<bibl n="4">Mary Maguire Colum, St. Enda's School, Rathfarnham, Dublin.
Founded by P&aacute;draic H. Pearse. (New York: Save St. Enda's Committee 1917).</bibl>
<bibl n="5">P&aacute;draic H. Pearse ([s.l. : s.n., C. F. Connolly) 1920).</bibl>
<bibl n="6">Elizabeth Katherine Cussen, Irish motherhood in the drama of William Butler Yeats, John Millington Synge, and P&aacute;draic Pearse: a comparative study. (1934) Thesis (M.A.)&mdash;Boston College, 1934.</bibl>
<bibl n="7">Ruth Dudley Edwards, Patrick Pearse: the triumph of failure (London: Gollancz, 1977).</bibl>
<bibl n="8">Stefan Fodor, Douglas Hyde, Eoin MacNeill, and P&aacute;draic Pearse of the Gaelic League: a study in Irish cultural nationalism and separatism, 1893-1916 (1986). Thesis (M.A.)&mdash;Southern Illinois University at Carbondale, 1986.</bibl>
<bibl n="9">James Hayes, Patrick H. Pearse, storyteller (Dublin: Talbot, 1920).</bibl>
<bibl n="10">John J. Horgan, Parnell to Pearse: some recollections and reflections (Dublin: Browne &amp; Nolan, 1948).</bibl>
<bibl n="11">Louis N. Le Roux, La vie de Patrice Pearse (Rennes: Imprimerie Commerciale de Bretagne, 1932). Translated into English by Desmond Ryan (Dublin: Talbot, 1932).</bibl>
<bibl n="12">Proinsias Mac Aonghusa, Quotations from P.H. Pearse, (Dublin: Mercier, 1979).</bibl>
<bibl n="13">Mary Benecio McCarty (Sister), P&aacute;draic Henry Pearse: an educator in the Gaelic tradition (1939) (Thesis (M.A.)&mdash;Marquette
University, 1939).</bibl>
<bibl n="14">Hedley McCay, P&aacute;draic Pearse; a new biography (Cork: Mercier Press, 1966).</bibl>
<bibl n="15">John Bernard Moran, Sacrifice as exemplified by the life and writings of P&aacute;draic Pearse is true to the Christian and Irish ideals; that portrayed in the Irish plays of Sean O'Casey is futile (1939). Submitted to Dept. of English. Thesis (M.A.)&mdash;Boston College, 1939.</bibl>
<bibl n="15">Sean Farrell Moran, Patrick Pearse and the politics of redemption: the mind of the Easter rising, 1916 (Washington, D.C.: Catholic University of America, 1994).</bibl>
<bibl n="17">P.S. O'Hegarty, A bibliography of books written by P. H. Pearse (s.l.: 1931).</bibl>
<bibl n="18">M&aacute;iread O'Mahony, The political thought of Padraig H. Pearse: pragmatist or idealist (1994). Theses&mdash;M.A. (NUI, University College Cork).</bibl>
<bibl n="19">Daniel J. O'Neill, The Irish revolution and the cult of the leader: observations on Griffith, Moran, Pearse and Connolly (Boston: Northeastern U.P., 1988).</bibl>
<bibl n="20">Mary Brigid Pearse (ed), The home-life of Padraig Pearse as told by himself, his family and friends (Dublin: Browne &amp; Nolan 1934). Repr. Cork,  Mercier 1979.</bibl>
<bibl n="21">Maureen Quill, P&aacute;draic H. Pearse&mdash;his philosophy of Irish education (1996). Theses&mdash;M.A. (NUI, University College Cork).</bibl>
<bibl n="22">Desmond Ryan, The man called Pearse (Dublin: Maunsel, 1919).</bibl>
<bibl n="23">Nicholas Joseph Wells, The meaning of love and patriotism as seen in the plays, poems, and stories of P&aacute;draic Pearse (1931). (Thesis (M.A.)&mdash;Boston College, 1931).</bibl>
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<div0 type="essay" lang="en">
<pb n="91">
<head>The Coming Revolution</head>
<head><date>(November 1913)</date></head>
<p>I have come to the conclusion that the <on>Gaelic League</on>, as the
<on>Gaelic League</on>, is a spent force; and I am glad of it. I do not
mean that no work remains for the <on>Gaelic League</on>, or that the
<on>Gaelic League</on> is no longer equal to work; I mean that the vital
work to be done in the new Ireland will be done not so much by the
<on>Gaelic League</on> itself as by men and movements that have sprung
from the <on>Gaelic League</on> or have received from the <on>Gaelic
League</on> a new baptism and a new life of grace. The <on>Gaelic
League</on> was no reed shaken by the wind, no mere <frn lang="la">vox
clamantis</frn>: it was a prophet and more than a prophet. But it was
not the Messiah. I do not know if the Messiah has yet come, and I am not
sure that there will be any visible and personal Messiah in this
redemption: the people itself will perhaps be its own Messiah, the
people labouring, scourged, crowned with thorns, agonising and dying, to
rise again immortal and impassible. <pb n="92">For peoples are
divine and are the only things that can properly be spoken of under
figures drawn from the divine epos.</p>
<p>If we do not believe in the divinity of our people we have had no
business, or very little, all these years in the <on>Gaelic League</on>.
In fact, if we had not believed in the divinity of our people, we should
in all probability not have gone into the <on>Gaelic League</on> at all.
We should have made our peace with the devil, and perhaps might have
found him a very decent sort; for he liberally rewards with
attorney-generalships, bank balances, villa residences, and so forth,
the great and the little who serve him well. Now, we did not turn our
backs upon all these desirable things for the sake of <frn lang="ga">is</frn> and <frn lang="ga">t&aacute;</frn>. We did it for the
sake of Ireland. In other words, we had one and all of us (at least, I
had, and I hope that all you had) an ulterior motive in joining the
<on>Gaelic League</on>. We never meant to be Gaelic Leaguers and nothing
more than Gaelic Leaguers. We meant to do something for Ireland, each in
his own way. Our Gaelic League time was to be our tutelage: we had first
to learn to know Ireland, to read the lineaments of her face, <pb n="93"> to understand the accents of her voice; to re-possess ourselves,
disinherited as we were, of her spirit and mind, re-enter into our
mystical birthright. For this we went to school to the <on>Gaelic
League</on>. It was a good school, and we love its name and will
champion its fame throughout all the days of our later fighting and
striving. But we do not propose to remain schoolboys for ever.</p>
<p>I  often said (quoting, I think, Herbert Spencer) that education should be
a preparation for complete living; and I say now that our <on> Gaelic
League </on>education ought to have been a preparation for our complete
living as Irish Nationalists. In proportion as we have been faithful and
diligent Gaelic Leaguers, our work as Irish Nationalists (by which term
I mean people who accept the ideal of, and work for, the realisation of
an Irish Nation, by whatever means) will be earnest and thorough, a
valiant and worthy fighting, not the mere carrying out of a ritual. As
to what your work as an Irish Nationalist is to be, I cannot conjecture;
I know what mine is to be, and would have you know yours and buckle
yourself to it. And it may be (nay, it is) that yours and mine will lead<pb n="94">
 us to a common meeting-place, and that on a certain day
we shall stand together, with many more beside us, ready for a greater
adventure than any of us has yet had, a trial and a triumph to be
endured and achieved in common.</p>
<p>This is what I meant when I said that
our work hence forward must be done less and less through the <on>Gaelic
League</on> and more and more through the groups and the individuals
that have arisen, or are arising, out of the <on>Gaelic League</on>.
There will be in the Ireland of the next few years a multitudinous
activity of Freedom Clubs, Young Republican Parties, Labour
Organisations, Socialist Groups, and what not; bewildering enterprises
undertaken by sane persons and insane persons, by good men and bad men,
many of them seemingly contradictory, some mutually destructive, yet all
tending towards a common objective, and that objective: the Irish
Revolution.</p>
<p> For if there is one thing that has become plainer
than another it is that when the seven men met in O'Connell Street to
found the Gaelic League, they were commencing, had there been a
Liancourt there to make <pb n="95"> the epigram, not a revolt, but a
revolution. The work of the Gaelic League, its appointed work, was that:
and the work is done. To every generation its deed. The deed of the
generation that has now reached middle life was the Gaelic League: the
beginning of the Irish Revolution. Let our generation not shirk
<emph>its</emph> deed, which is to accomplish the revolution.</p>
<p>I believe that the
national movement of which the Gaelic League has been the soul has
reached the point which O'Connell's movement had reached at the close of
the series of monster meetings. Indeed, I believe that our movement
reached that point a few years ago&mdash;say, at the conclusion of the
fight for Essential Irish; and I said so at the time. The moment was
ripe then for a new Young Ireland Party, with a forward policy; and we
have lost much by our hesitation. I propose in all seriousness that we
hesitate no longer&mdash;that we push on. I propose that we leave
Conciliation Hall behind us and go into the Irish Confederation.
Whenever Dr. Hyde, at a meeting at which I have had a chance of speaking
after him, has produced his dove of peace, I have always <pb n="96">
been careful to produce my sword; and to tantalise him by saying that
the Gaelic League has brought into Ireland <q>Not Peace, but a
Sword</q>. But this does not show any fundamental difference of outlook
between my leader and me; for while he is thinking of peace between
brother-Irishmen, I am thinking of the sword-point between banded
Irishmen and the foreign force that occupies Ireland: and his peace is
necessary to my war. It is evident that there can be no peace between
the body politic and a foreign substance that has intruded itself into
its system: between them war only until the foreign substance is
expelled or assimilated.</p>
<p>Whether Home Rule means a loosening or a
tightening of England's grip upon Ireland remains yet to be seen. But
the coming of Home Rule, if come it does, will make no material
difference in the nature of the work that lies before us: it will affect
only the means we are to employ, our plan of campaign. There remains,
under Home Rule as in its absence, the substantial task of achieving the
Irish Nation. I do not think it is going to be achieved without stress
and trial, without suffering and bloodshed <pb n="97">at any rate,
it is not going to be achieved without <emph>work</emph>. Our business here and now
is to get ourselves into harness for such work as has to be done.</p>
<p>I
hold that before we can do any work, any <emph>men's</emph> work, we must first
realise ourselves as men. Whatever comes to Ireland she needs men. And
we of this generation are not in any real sense men, for we suffer
things that men do not suffer, and we seek to redress grievances by
means which men do not employ. We have, for instance, allowed ourselves
to be disarmed; and, now that we have the chance of re-arming, we are
not seizing it. Professor Eoin MacNeill pointed out last week that we
have at this moment an opportunity of rectifying the capital error we
made when we allowed ourselves to be disarmed; and such opportunities,
he reminds us, do not always come back to nations.</p>
<p>A thing that
stands demonstrable is that nationhood is not achieved otherwise than in
arms: in one or two instances there may have been no actual bloodshed,
but the arms were there and the ability to use them. Ireland unarmed
will attain just as much <pb n="98"> freedom as it is convenient for
England to give her; Ireland armed will attain ultimately just as much
freedom as she wants. These are matters which may not concern the
<on>Gaelic League</on>, as a body; but they concern every member of the
<on>Gaelic League</on>, and every man and woman of Ireland. I urged much
of this five or six years ago in addresses to the <frn lang="ga">Ard-Chraobh</frn>: but the League was too busy with
resolutions to think of revolution, and the only resolution that a
member of the League could not come to was the resolution to be a man.
My fellow-Leaguers had not (and have not) apprehended that the thing
which cannot defend itself, even though it may wear trousers, is no man.</p>
<p>I am glad, then, that the North has begun. I am glad that the
Orangemen have armed, for it is a goodly thing to see arms in Irish
hands. I should like to see the <on reg="Ancient Order of Hibernians">A. O. H.</on> armed. I should like to see the Transport Workers
armed. I should like to see any and every body of Irish citizens armed.
We must accustom ourselves to the thought of arms, to the sight of arms,
to the use of arms. We may make mistakes in the <pb n="99">
beginning and shoot the wrong people; but bloodshed is a cleansing and a
sanctifying thing, and the nation which regards it as the final horror
has lost its manhood. There are many things more horrible than
bloodshed; and slavery is one of them.</p>
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