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Irish history
The great paradox of Irish
history is that because of it there are more Irishmen and Irishwomen living in
the United Stattons" >
The great paradox of Irish
history is that because of it there are more Irishmen and Irishwomen living in
the United States of America, in Canada, in Australia, in New Zealand, in South
America and in Great Britain, than there are living in the Emerald Isle today.
The historian, Lord Macaulay, wrote of the Irish Diaspora, "there were
Irish of great ability, energy, and ambition, but they were to be found
everywhere except in Ireland: at Versailles, and at St. Ildefonso, in the
armies of Frederick and in the armies of Maria Teresa. One exile became a
marshal of France, another became Prime Minister of Spain. Lecky, in Volume II of his
famous History of England, gives a fascinating list of Irishmen who attained
ranks of dignity and honor in literally every kingdom of Europe: "Abroad there was hardly a
Catholie country where Irish exiles or their children might not be found in
posts of dignity and honour. Lord Clare became Marshal of France. Browne, who
was one of the very ablest Austrian generals, and who took a leading part in
the first period of the Seven Years' War, was the son of Irish parents; and
Maguire, Lacy, Nugent and O'Donnell were all prominent generals in the Austrian
service during the same war. Another Browne, a cousin of the Austrian Commander,
was Field Marshal in the Russian service and Governor of Riga. Peter Lacy, who
also became a Russian Field Marshal, and who earned a reputation as one of the
finest soldiers of his time, was of Irish birth.... And so on, and so forth.
Surely some of the most
prophetic words concerning Ireland and her people were written by Thomas Davis,
the Poet of The Nation, in the concluding lines of his poem The Battle Eve of
the Brigade, about the "Wild Geese" fighting for Louis of France,
under the command of Count Thomond: "For in far foreign
fields, from Dunkirk to Belgrade, Lie the soldiers and chiefs of The Irish
Brigade. " Irish history