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A Novelized History
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14380 |
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Section : |
BOOK WORLD
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| Issue
Date : |
6 / 1988 |
2,553 Words |
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John Lukacs John Lukacs, professor of history at Chestnut Hill College,
Philadelphia, is the author of many books, including
Historical Consciousness. |
THE TENANTS OF TIME
Thomas Flanagan
New York: E.P. Dutton, 1988
824 pp. $21.95
In 1858 an Irish revolutionary secret society was founded in New York. It bore the name of the Fenians, or the Fenian Brotherhood, a double derivation: one from the legendary hero of the misty Irish past, Finn MacCool, the other from the Phoenix National and Literary Society, a secret band of rebel patriots in Ireland. Within a few years, the Brotherhood spread to many conventicles in England, Ireland, Australia, Canada, and France. After the American Civil War some of its leaders came secretly to Ireland to gather people for the purposes of armed rebellion. In 1866 a Fenian armed group invaded Canada. In 1867 scattered risings occurred in the south and west of Ireland. It is then and there, that Thomas Flanagan's massive book begins.
All these rebellions failed, some of them ignominiously. By 1870 the name "Fenian" began to disappear, though other Irish Republican brotherhoods continued to exist, and outbursts of revolutionary terrorism persisted. But their focus shifted to matters involving land and politics. In Ireland the struggle became one between tenants and landlords. In the House of Commons in London, the issue of Irish self-government, and eventually that of Irish independence, had come to the fore. There was plenty of drama in both places. It involved, among other things, the popular ostracism of Anglo-Irish landowners such as Captain Boycott, whose name instantly became a widely known word in the English language. It involved the rise of an Irish constitutionalist party, led by Isaac Butt. It also involved its new leader Charles Steward Parnell and the secret intrigue and scandal leading to Parnell's fall and the divisions, not only among English liberals but, more importantly, among the Irish themselves, as well as the rise of a new generation of mostly Catholic political leaders in Ireland (Butt and Parnell had been Irish Protestants). By 1905, violence seemed to have subsided, but there was plenty of fire in the ashes. The Ulster rebellion and the eventual achievement of the Irish Free State were yet to come.
Readers may find it odd that a review of a novel should commence with such a relatively lengthy summary of the political history of a now fairly distant time. But in this case of Flanagan's book this is unavoidable. It is necessary not only for the more or less obvious reason: to enlighten the reader by giving him a minimum of information about the historical background of the
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