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Who fears to speak of politics? John Kells Ingram and hypothetical nationalism

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 March 2016

G.K. Peatling*
Affiliation:
Oxford University Libraries Automation Service

Extract

John Kells Ingram was born in County Donegal in 1823. His ancestry was Scottish Presbyterian, but his grandparents had converted to Anglicanism. He was educated at Trinity College, Dublin, the most prestigious academic institution in nineteenth-century Ireland. In a brilliant academic career spanning over fifty years he proceeded to occupy a succession of chairs at the college. His published work included an important History of political economy (1888), and he delivered a significant presidential address to the economics and statistics section of the British Association for the Advancement of Science (1878). Ingram influenced, and was respected by, many contemporary social and economic thinkers in the British Isles and elsewhere. In an obituary one of Ingram’s friends exaggerated only slightly in describing him as ‘probably the best educated man in the world’.

Yet contemporary perspectives on Ingram’s career were warped by one act of his youth which was to create a curious disjunction in his life. In 1843, when only nineteen years old, Ingram was a sympathiser with the nationalist Young Ireland movement. One night, stirred by the lack of regard shown for the Irish rebels of 1798 by the contemporary O’Connellite nationalist movement, he wrote a poem entitled ‘The memory of the dead’, eulogising these ‘patriots’. Apparently without much thought, Ingram submitted the poem anonymously to the Nation newspaper. It appeared in print on 1 April 1843 and, better known by its first line, ‘Who fears to speak of ’Ninety-Eight?’, became a popular Irish nationalist anthem.

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Research Article
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Copyright © Irish Historical Studies Publications Ltd 1998

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References

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33 Ingram to Allman, 6 Oct. 1899 (P.R.O.N.I., Ingram papers, D/2808/36/8); Ingram, Sonnets, pp 79–82.

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35 T. D. Ingram to J. K. Ingram, 6 Apr. 1898 (P.R.O.N.I., Ingram papers, D/2808/C/2E).

36 Ingram, Outlines, p. 20.

37 Ingram, Sonnets, p. 67.

38 Ibid., p.6.

39 Ibid., pp 104–6.

40 Ibid., p. 6. See also Quin to Ingram, 7 June 1900 (P.R.O.N.I., Ingram papers, D/2808/47/19). According to Quin, Ingram included the poem in this collection on his suggestion: see Quin, Memoirs, pp 169–71.

41 Ingram, The final transition, p. 59n.

42 Ibid., pp 57–9; Ingram to Swinny, 13 Apr. 1905, quoted in P.R., xv (1907), pp 132–3.

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69 The Observer, 10 Aug. 1924.

70 Ibid., 23 Jan. 1938, 25 June 1916; Garvin to Sandars, 29 Jan. 1910 (Bodl., Robert Sandars papers, MS eng. hist. c. 761, ff 29–30); Garvin to Plunkett, 1 Aug. 1910 (Plunkett Foundation Library, Long Hanborough, Oxfordshire, Sir Horace Plunkett papers, box 4, Gar 1).

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74 The Observer, 16 May 1921.

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79 Ingram to Swinny, 17 Apr. 1905, quoted in P.R., xv (1907), pp 132–3.

80 The Observer, 28 Sept. 1924.

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87 This article is largely based upon the John Kells Ingram papers in the Public Record Office of Northern Ireland. I am obliged to the following for permission to cite and quote copyrighted materials: the Deputy Keeper of the Records, Public Record Office of Northern Ireland; Martin, King, French & Ingram, solrs, Limavady, County Londonderry; the Council of Trustees, National Library of Ireland; Professor John Leadingham; Mrs Patricia Wildblood; Dr J. A. F. Spence; and Dr Paul Adelman. I would also like to thank Professor Roy Foster for his advice and encouragement.