The Irish Labor Movement From the Twenties to Our Own Day

Cover The Irish Labor Movement From the Twenties to Our Own Day
The Irish Labor Movement From the Twenties to Our Own Day
W P William Patrick Ryan
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British trade unionism had gathered to itself a large proportion of the skilled element, especially of the engineers. There had been democratic moves of a kind : a " Clarion Fellow- ship, " and eventually a full-blown socialist society that tried hard to keep clear of Irish national issues. William Walker and others, whose spirit was expressed in a Labor Chronicle, had done a good deal of campaigning, including a couple of unsuccessful incursions into the parliamentarian arena. The nature of Wi...lliam's political and [204] social-democratic faith was shown in the course of a controversy with Connolly at a later stage in Forward. The only particular point in a welter of words was his declaration that he spoke the same language and studied the same literature as British socialists, and so (to put it briefly) was of their fold and spirit. The Orange toilers, who in their human capacity were no more appreciated by the capitalists than the hand-loom weavers had been, had begun to give some thought to their position as wage-slaves, but were still concerned and confused by the Battle of the Boyne, and still blissfully ignorant of the fact that in the struggle of which that practically drawn battle was an epi- sode the Pope was on the side of King William!

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