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#I am from a celtic country myself and it is never not raining
intothedysphoria · 15 days
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Billy loved rain.
The heavy, earthy feel of it. The way the clouds went dark. The smell.
Steve was surprised at first. Billy was so adoring of California, surfing, glorious sunshine, that there was no logical reason for him to love being cold and damp, covered in waterproofs.
Spending some time with Billys grandparents made the love make slightly more sense.
The first thing Steve had learnt when Billy invited him to Inverness was that it rained all the fucking time.
Having a family who were mainly from Italy and Syria had not prepared Steve for just how wet it was going to be. He immediately caught a cold and spent most of the time hoarding blankets like some kind of house based dragon.
Billy was having a fantastic time.
He took the rain completely in his stride, leaping in puddles with his little cousins and collecting leaves he found on the ground. He’d also insisted on buying what he lovingly called a deep fried Mars bar, which was surprisingly delicious.
If his partner was loving it so much, Steve could give it a go too.
The leaves really were beautiful this time of year.
Maybe Steve could learn to love the rain too.
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mynachopaper · 4 years
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Heyo...I’d like you to answer all of the weird questions that say a lot please...😇🖤
That’s very naughty of you. I expect payment when I’m done...
1. coffee mugs, teacups, wine glasses, water bottles, or soda cans?
Wine glasses. I love their shape
2. chocolate bars or lollipops?
Chocolate
3. bubblegum or cotton candy?
Bubble gum, I like the oral fixation
4. how did your elementary school teachers describe you?
Wierd, creepy, creative. “He needs to find an outlet or have a beating”- My arabic teacher
5. do you prefer to drink soda from soda cans, soda bottles, plastic cups or glass cups?
Glass bottles
6. pastel, boho, tomboy, preppy, goth, grunge, formal or sportswear?
Tomboy
7. earbuds or headphones?
Headphones
8. movies or tv shows?
Both
9. favorite smell in the summer?
river in the cedar forest
10. game you were best at in p.e.?
Fencing
11. what you have for breakfast on an average day?
Nothing (sometimes fruit if I need to)
12. name of your favorite playlist?
SHmood
13. lanyard or key ring?
key ring
14. favorite non-chocolate candy?
Turkish delights
15. favorite book you read as a school assignment?
Simon versus the Homosapien agenda
16. most comfortable position to sit in?
Legs to my chest on a chair
17. most frequently worn pair of shoes?
My trainers
18. ideal weather?
Thunder and rain
19. sleeping position?
Curled up on my side
20. preferred place to write (i.e., in a note book, on your laptop, sketchpad, post-it notes, etc.)?
Notebook but laptops are great for convenience
21. obsession from childhood?
Horror stories and or occult (Yes I cringe too)
22. role model?
Don’t have one
23. strange habits?
I like to practice voices and movements (mostly for DnD) anywhere. Shopping, cooking, with the cat. normally I’m on my own but I’ve been caught a few times.
24. favorite crystal?
Obsidian
25. first song you remember hearing?
Wide, wide as the ocean- My dad sang it to me as a kid
26. favorite activity to do in warm weather?
Swimming
27. favorite activity to do in cold weather?
Bonfire jumping (used to do it with the scout kids)
28. five songs to describe you?
Fall into me- Alev Lenz
Rush- I am waiting for you last summer
Smile- Nat King Cole
Limb to limb- Fatal
Kiss breakdown- Micheal Brook (Perks of being a wallflower soundtrack) 
29. best way to bond with you?
Discuss your passions and your fears. Other than that, play silly games with me.
30. places that you find sacred?
Anywhere that is deemed so. 
31. what outfit do you wear to kick ass and take names?
My pajamas (honestly no idea)
32. top five favorite vines?
Don’t have favourites.
33. most used phrase in your phone?
I love you to the moon and back.
34. advertisements you have stuck in your head?
I have adblock so I don’t hear enough for them to get stuck. Maybe the old spice commercial.
35. average time you fall asleep?
12-1am
36. what is the first meme you remember ever seeing?
The orly owl
37. suitcase or duffel bag?
Duffel bag
38. lemonade or tea?
lemonade
39. lemon cake or lemon meringue pie?
Lemon meringue pie (obviously)
40. weirdest thing to ever happen at your school?
Nothing too weird. We did have a slew of dead birds that were killed and placed in weird positions. They were claimed to be omens.
The culprit was never caught. But I did have an old journal where I kept notes on them. I lost it in the move though..
41. last person you texted?
My online friend in the uk
42. jacket pockets or pants pockets?
Jacket pockets
43. hoodie, leather jacket, cardigan, jean jacket or bomber jacket?
Hoodie, I need the soft
44. favorite scent for soap?
sandalwood
45. which genre: sci-fi, fantasy or superhero?
Fantasy, DnD for life
46. most comfortable outfit to sleep in?
Shirt and underwear
47. favorite type of cheese?
Brie
48. if you were a fruit, what kind would you be?
Orange
49. what saying or quote do you live by?
Already answered
50. what made you laugh the hardest you ever have?
When my friend and I got stuck in traffic so we listened to the John Mulaney story about the salt and pepper diner. Afterward we actually made the playlist and listened to it. We died, the song got to us and we lost our minds.
51. current stresses?
My Father being ok back home. Me not finishing uni. Breaking my promise to my friends back home of making something of myself.
52. favorite font?
Bree Serif
53. what is the current state of your hands?
Their ok, quite dexterous. My nails have grown out too
54. what did you learn from your first job?
People take production for granted. The public opinion of a show means little. The entertainment industry is weaker than everyone treats it.
55. favorite fairy tale?
The Bloody Chamber
Book by Angela Carter
56. favorite tradition?
Our family does breakfast in bed for the birthday person
57. the three biggest struggles you’ve overcome?
Self harm, the invasion of my country, getting out of my old life.
58. four talents you’re proud of having?
I improvise well, I remain calm in an emergency, and am often the first to act. I have good emotional skills. I will always find a way, though it often comes at great cost.
59. if you were a video game character, what would your catchphrase be?
After someone tells me I can’t do something “HAVE YOU MET ME?!”
60. if you were a character in an anime, what kind of anime would you want it to be?
Probably Shonen. Love me some JoJoBA
61. favorite line you heard from a book/movie/tv show/etc.?
Yeah, I stayed. I stayed, because every time you threw a brick at my head, or said I smelled, it *hurt*; but it could never hurt more than every day of my life just being *me*! I *stayed* because I thought, if anyone can change me, can make me... *not* me, it was you! - Kung Fu Panda
62. seven characters you relate to?
Tarzan-Stich-Quisimodo-Ginger (From Chicken run)- Po (Kung fu Panda)- Mulan (Yes really)- Charlie (Perks of being a wallflower)
63. five songs that would play in your club?
Shut up and dance with me- Walk the moon
Suzy- Caravan Palace
Rocket Fuel feat. De La Soul - DJ Shadow
Come with me now - KONGOS
Dance with me tonight - Olly Murs
64. favorite website from your childhood?
Miniclip
65. any permanent scars?
Some on my arms and a large one on my forearm 
66. favorite flower(s)?
I’m a cliche, I love roses
67. good luck charms?
My Celtic ring and my pride pin
68. worst flavor of any food or drink you’ve ever tried?
It was chocolate shrimp in Sanfrancisco. Fad food with an abhorrent mixture.
69. a fun fact that you don’t know how you learned?
Spiders don’t kill every prey that falls into their web. Sometimes they just wrap them up and let them squirm helpessly.
70. left or right handed?
Right, unless eating
71. least favorite pattern?
Uh... not sure
72. worst subject?
Maths
73. favorite weird flavor combo?
Fries and Icecream
74. at what pain level out of ten (1 through 10) do you have to be at before you take an advil or ibuprofen?
8
75. when did you lose your first tooth?
I was 5
76. what’s your favorite potato food (i.e. tater tots, baked potatoes, fries, chips, etc.)?
Baked potatoes, especially with Sour cream and garlic 
77. best plant to grow on a windowsill?
A succulent?
78. coffee from a gas station or sushi from a grocery store?
Sushi from grocery
79. which looks better, your school id photo or your driver’s license photo?
School Id (not by much though)
80. earth tones or jewel tones?
Jewel tones
81. fireflies or lightning bugs?
Fireflies
82. pc or console?
PC
83. writing or drawing?
Writing, though I wish I could draw
84. podcasts or talk radio?
Podcasts
84. barbie or polly pocket?
Neither
85. fairy tales or mythology?
Mythology
86. cookies or cupcakes?
Cookies
87. your greatest fear?
That I had no impact on anything
88. your greatest wish?
To gain the power to change the world
89. who would you put before everyone else?
The one I love. A partner (If we had a child then it falls to them)
90. luckiest mistake?
When I had an accident at work over my selfharm wounds. Some metal staging scraped against my arm.
91. boxes or bags?
Bags
92. lamps, overhead lights, sunlight or fairy lights?
Fairylights
93. nicknames?
Teddy, Monster, Quis
94. favorite season?
Winter
95. favorite app on your phone?
Reddit is fun
96. desktop background?
My current Pfp
97. how many phone numbers do you have memorized?
2 My parents
98. favorite historical era?
Don’t really have a favourite
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Tag Game~
Oh, why did I wait so long to do this? So many people tagged me! So many~
Placing everything under a read more cause this is about 40 questions long
@sebthur
1. do you like pineapples on your pizza?
I'll fully admit I've never tried it. But I am squarely in the 'no' category. It's just unappetizing to me.
2. how much bubble you want when you take a bath? all of them? none at all?
ALL THE BUBBLES! The tub will be overflowing with bubbles!
3. favorite scent?
Rain, specifically rain on asphalt. It's just, soothing, and can pull me right out of a bad mood.
4. what's your all time favorite movie?
I don't really watch a lot of movies. But I do love the Phantom of the Opera!
5. if money DID grow on trees... what is the first thing u would buy?
I'd move into a nice little home, no HOA, no super close neighbors, it'd be peaceful.
6. did u drink water today?
Uuhh...not water specifically. Gatoraid doesn't really count as water, it's mostly sugar.
7. if not, do it now! stay hydrated! did u eat?
I ate! Fast food, cause I live super far away from where I work, and I can't cook for nuthin, but I ate!
8. whats ur dream job?
I'd like to be a voice actor someday~
9. have you ever heard of upgamers?
No, I haven't. It sounds like updog though, so I am wary.
10. Can you play an instrument? which one?
I don't really count this as being able to play, but I used to own a guitar and I liked to pluck the strings when I got stressed. I don't know why I got rid of it.
11. have you listened to your favorite song today? do it now
I haven't listened to hardly any music for the past week, I need some music~
@nocturnofshadow
1. Dream vacation destination, go!
Home, in my bed, and not having to leave it for about a week. Sounds like heaven.
If I had to pick an ACTUAL location though, Ireland, it just sounds so beautiful there.
2. if you got any novels laying about, go and flip though and pick the twenty-second line - what's it say?
I'm assuming we're going by sentences here. "Psychologically warped; possessed by demons." - 22nd sentence of Wicked.
3. Got any favourite stims? Plastic click-clacks, squishy things, rubbing into a specific spot til it's smooth, ect. Tell me about it!
Hmm. I have a pretty rainbow metallic fidjet spinner, though I don't really use it. Mostly cause when I really need a stim I'm at work where I'm not allowed to have them. So I usually click or tap my pen when I get antsy at work.
4. Favourite scene in a viddy game? (alternatively, fave scene in a book, movie, ect.)
Currently my favorite scene in a game is in Red Dead Redemption 2! When the gang leaves the snowy mountains to head to Horseshoe overlook, the scene with the music is just absolutely beautiful, and it's my absolute favorite thing ever!
5. Favourite aesthetic and why! (old west, european gothic, ect.)
A sort of witchy style, a little bit gothic, but beautiful crystals hanging around, with herbs and flowers and AH~ :D
6. What's your go-to song when you're seeing red? Does it help calm you down, or add fuel to the fire?
Pretty much any music has a calming effect on me, it helps me drift off into my own little world. I don't have a specific song, but I usually listen to softer rock songs.
7. If you write as a hobby, do you still use pen and paper? Or do you prefer typing?
Typing, all the way. My handwriting is an absolute mess and sometimes even I can't decipher the symbols on the page.
8. How long do dishes normally sit in your sink before you get around to them? If you have any sitting around, this is your reminder to get them done!
All of my plates and stuff are disposable for this very reason. I rarely eat at home anyway.
9. Do you have a favourite Hozier song?
I actually had to look up who this was, I never really pay much attention to singer's and bands, and I have heard a few of his songs. I particularly like the Arsonist's Lullaby and In The Woods Somewhere.
10. Do you hoard music playlists? If so, whats the general vibe of those playlists and on which platform? (youtube, spotify, ect.)
I don't really hoard playlists, I usually hear a song and go; 'I wanna hear more like this' and make a new playlist. I use Pandora, and my playlists are mostly rock with a few country, pop, and, I'm not sure how to describe it, celtic? I guess.
@cupofcowboys / @fangirl-ramblings
1. Are you a book reader? if so what are you reading currently?
I am a book reader, though I'm not AVID. Nor am I currently reading anything, too in deep of reading and writing RDR2 fanfiction.
2. If you could time travel where in time would you go?
OH NONONONONO! I know the butterfly effect, thank you but no. I'm also rather happy in the timezone I'm in.
3. Is it hot or cold (weather) where you are in the world right now
Very hot, it's what I get for living in a desert, but hey, it don't snow here~
4. Start your current music playlist, put it on random and tell me what the next song is.
I use Pandora, so it's already random buut, Something's missing by Sheppard.
5. Pizza or Burgers?
But I like both. ;^;
6. Favourite movie/s
Pretty much anything animated by Disney. Though if I had to pick particular movies, The Lion King, Aladdin, The Little Mermaid, Brave, ect.
7. Favourite band/s
Fall Out Boy, Panic at the Disco, Linkin Park, Nickelback, Halestorm, My Chemical Romance. About the only band names I remember, lol.
8. How many concerts have you been to?
That I bought a ticket for? None.
Though, My Chemical Romance did a free gig here about 3 or 4 years ago and I went to see that.
9. If you won millions and millions of dollars what would be the first thing you do.
I would become a literal hermit. Lol, I'd move into a cute little house, and never be seen again.
Maybe I'd pop out every now and again and become a cryptid. Lol
10. One thing you like about yourself?
About myself? I like my hair, took me years to admit, I used to absolutely hate it as a child, I had a mop of curly ginger hair and it always got me unwanted attention. It still does, but I'm a BIT better at just taking the compliment.
@madnessismylover
1. Sun or Moon?
Moon, so soft and gentle and sweet.
2. Would you rather have 20 cats or 20 dogs?
Cats, much as I'd love being smothered by 20 puppies, cats are a little less... needy?
3. Who was your first celebrate crush (that you can remember)?
Steve Irwin. I was 2 or 3.
4. What was your first video game? (and if you don’t play those then what was your first movie)
That I played? Pokemon Blue or Pokemon Gold.
That I owned? Pokemon Ruby.
5. Favorite kid show? (either watched as a kid or watch now)
I love cartoons~ Though I'm particularly fond of Steven Universe, Star VS the Forces of Evil, and Gravity Falls.
6. Favorite decade’s aesthetic? (70s, 80s, 90s, etc,)
I'm a complete 90s kid.
7. Where do you wish you could live?
Not really any location in particular, though I guess Ireland would be nice, maybe Germany or England.
8. Did you have an imaginary friend as a kid? If so what was their name?
I don't remember much about them IMO, I do remember their name was Ash, and they were TALL, like Slenderman levels of tall.
9. What’s something not a lot of people know about you?
I'm actually part Native American! Admittedly, it's a very SMALL part, about five or six generations back but there is a bit in me! And I'm very proud of that small bit.
10. If you had to listen to one song for the rest of your life what would it be?
Oh, that would be torture~ If i HAD to pick, it'd probably be High Hopes by Panic at the Disco, but, it'd still be torture.
MY Questions!
1. How tall are you? Have you dreamed being ever taller?
2. Favorite Youtuber?
3. What is your favorite fairytale?
4. Do you prefer kissing or cuddling?
5. What is the strangest thing you believed as a child?
6. So, what is the funniest pickup line you have ever heard of?
7. On days, when you feel completely bored and demotivated, what helps you to feel energized?
8. 3 things that make you happy?
9. If you could have a superpower what would it be and why?
10. If you had to describe yourself as an animal, which one would it be?
I’m tagging~ @septembershower @i-love-charles @crimsonredemption @mountainhymn aaannnd...I dunno, go for it if you wanna. Lol
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afrozenspring · 4 years
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Ulster on the Brink - part 1
Ulster on the brink
An edited text of a paper presented to the 15th Conference on 20th Century European History, New York, June 23rd 2012.
An understanding of the Irish Emergency is essential for any study of the War of 1914-1920. The events of the Emergency were hugely significant in their impact on Britain's capacity to respond to German aggression at the beginning of the War and later efforts to contain Communist revolutionary movements across Europe between 1917 and 1923.
First Rumblings
The roots of the emergency lie of course in Britain's troubled, centuries old, relationship with Ireland, but the direct cause was Unionist fears of a Dublin government in the event of Home Rule. These fears often seemed paranoid to English politicians, not versed in the unique Irish capacity to hold a grudge for centuries. From time to time statements emerged from the Unionist camp that, given the many protestations of loyalty to the Crown, seemed so bizarre as to make any attempt at rational debate a futile exercise. In January 1911 for example, Captain James Craig, the main organiser of Unionist resistance wrote to a friend:
Germany and the German Emperor would be preferred to the rule of John Redmond, Patrick Ford and the Molly Maguires.
He wasn't alone. On 23rd September Carson spoke at a vast rally of Unionists at Craigavon (Craig's house), attended by some 50,000.
We are faced with perhaps the most nefarious conspiracy that has ever been hatched against a free people, but make no mistake – we will fight., even though those we fight are going to play with loaded dice. Our demand is a very simple one. We ask for no privileges, but we are determined that no one shall have privileges over us. We ask for no special rights, but we claim the same rights from the same Government as every other part of the United Kingdom. We ask for nothing more; we will take nothing less. It is our inalienable right as citizens of the British Empire, and heaven help the men who try to take it from us. Whatever happens we must be prepared...and time is precious in these things – the morning Home Rule is passed, ourselves to become responsible for the government of the Protestant Province of Ulster.
But - if we are to be put from the Union, and left to the mercies of Mr Redmond and his crew, I would infinitely prefer to change my allegiance right over to Germany and the German Emperor, or to anyone else who has a proper and stable government.
Statements like this were of course seditious and placed the Asquith government in some difficulty. It was clear from the rapturous response that Carson was gaining huge support and he would not be easily silenced. Probably as much from a desire for what they wished for to be true as anything else, the Liberals therefore convinced themselves that Carson was bluffing and did nothing. “We must not attach too much importance to the frothings of Sir Edward Carson” said Churchill. The Republicans were equally dismissive with Jerry MacVeagh, the secretary of the Irish Party, saying “Sir Edward will not discard his wig and gown for a spiked helmet and a khaki suit.”
And so matters rested in an uneasy standoff until the new year, with an announcement that Winston Churchill, by then First Lord of the Admiralty, would speak in Belfast on Home Rule, alongside Messrs Redmond and Dillon from the Nationalist Party. This meeting was moreover billed to take place, not in some neutral venue, but at the Ulster Hall, the symbolic heart of Unionism in the North. Unsurprisingly the Ulster Unionist Council, outraged at what they described as 'a deliberate challenge thrown down by Mr Churchill', declared their intention of preventing the meeting taking place at all. Implicit in this response was the message that if he insisted he should be prepared to take the consequences.
Having no doubt achieved what he intended, Churchill agreed to move his speech to another venue, although this proved hard to find. The Opera House remained unavailable, despite rumours of a knighthood for the manager, and eventually the Government was reduced to shipping in a marquee from Scotland and erecting it on the Celtic Football Ground. Fearful of unrest, Dublin Castle also moved five battalions of infantry, two companies of cavalry and many extra police into the Belfast area.
On 8th Feb 1912, a day later than originally planned, Churchill arrived at Larne to be met by a huge crowd, defiantly singing the National Anthem. At lunch in the Grand Central Hotel in Belfast another large – and loud – congregation of Orangemen gathered outside. Their mood was aggressive and it probably only the presence of Carson and Lord Londonderry standing on the balcony of the Ulster Club opposite prevented an outright attack on Churchill's car as he left for the football ground. Even so his car was several times surrounded by the crowd and only extricated with some difficulty by escorting police. Indeed on one occasion it seemed likely that it would be overturned, an event later described by one Unionist as being a consequence of the crowd's 'involuntary swaying', although other reports suggested that the presence of Mrs Churchill alongside him was more of a factor with cries of 'Mind the wumman' as the crowds pressed in on the vehicle.
The speech, to a carefully controlled audience, was something of an anti-climax. A huge rainstorm had kept many away. The marquee was partially flooded and only about two thirds full. The only interruptions came from suffragists, one calling out in a broad Belfast accent to demand suffrage for women, while another shouted out “Women are being tortured.” Churchill, perhaps conscious that he was in enough trouble, ignored the interruptions and the women were swiftly removed.
It was after the speech however that trouble really began. Perhaps because of their close shave on the journey out, Mrs Churchill was sent, by circuitous and dingy back streets to the station and thence to Larne while Churchill, never one to duck a fight, returned to his hotel by the same route as before. Here despite the rain the crowd of Orange protesters had grown and this time in the absence of Mrs Churchill they proved less willing to refrain from mobbing the car, rocking it back and fore until it overturned. Having vented their feelings and no doubt prompted by the appearance of a troop of cavalry the crowd then dispersed singing ribald anti-Catholic songs as they went.
Churchill and his companions were eventually recovered from the upturned vehicle. All had only minor injuries apart from Churchill who suffered a broken leg and serious damage to his dignity. The injury was to be leave him with a serious limp and beset by pain for rest of his life. It also left him an implacable enemy of Carson and Unionism.
For King and Country?
Partially as a riposte to Churchill's speech earlier in the month and partially as a demonstration of strength, the Unionists held another huge rally on 24 February 1912 at the Agricultural Society show grounds on the edge of Belfast. Around 60,000 Unionists turned out despite bitter cold and driving rain to hear Bonar Law and Carson speak. In an uncompromising speech, delivered in front of a Union Jack some 50 feet across, Bonar Law assured those present that the Conservative Party would support Ulstermen if they resisted Home Rule by force.
Your cause is not that of Ulster alone. Your cause is the Empire's. I can imagine no length of resistance to which Ulster can go, in which I would not be prepared to support them, in which my Party would not support them and in which, in my belief, they would not be supported by the vast majority of the British People.
In his turn Carson returned to his constant theme of Ulster's willingness to fight.
I recognise my responsibility; Heaven knows I am always thinking about it. From morn till night, I think of the grave tragedies that may lie before us. It doesn’t make me shrink one iota as regards myself; no man in my position can help but think of others who have to fight out this battle. I contemplate what may happen, it is natural to feel – even the bravest heart – I shall not say with fear, but with a sense of responsibility that is almost appalling. But I know this, I am dealing in all parts with brave men who have made up their minds and if we have to go into a fight – which God forbid – we will do so knowing that for the last thirty years, for no fault on our part which can alleged against us, we have been a threatened and an outraged people and we will also be conscious in our minds that every warning which it was possible to give the government from the very first day on which this wicked conspiracy was put forward against us – every opportunity was taken warning them that under no circumstances would we submit to be thrust out of the government under which we were born by the most unscrupulous government that I have ever known or read of.
Ulstermen will not suffer to be handed over to a Catholic government in Dublin. We will not suffer to see our loyalty dismissed, set aside and denigrated. Ulster will resist, by force of arms if needed - Ulster will fight.
Carson did not elaborate further how that fight would be organised but that became clear the next day with two announcements by the Ulster Unionist Council. The first was the creation of a Volunteer Army of 100,000 men willing to be trained in the use of arms and ready to use those arms in the defence of Ulster if need be. The second was the launch of a Covenant to be signed by every adult Ulsterman, declaring themselves ready to stand for Ulster and the Union.
BEING CONVINCED in our consciences that Home Rule would be disastrous to the material well-being of Ulster as well as of the whole of Ireland, subversive of our civil and religious freedom, destructive of our citizenship, and perilous to the unity of the Empire, we, whose names are underwritten, men of Ulster, loyal subjects of His Gracious Majesty King George V., humbly relying on the God whom our fathers in days of stress and trial confidently trusted, do hereby pledge ourselves in solemn Covenant, to stand by one another in defending, for ourselves and our children, our cherished position of equal citizenship in the United Kingdom, and in using all means which may be found necessary to defeat a Home Rule Parliament in Ireland. And in the event of such a Parliament being forced upon us, we further solemnly and mutually pledge ourselves to refuse to recognise its authority and to resist its imposition. In sure confidence that God will defend the right, we hereto subscribe our names.
And further, we individually declare that we have not already signed this Covenant.
The choice of words 'men of Ulster' was deliberate. Carson and the others saw the Covenant as a prerequisite for the creation of an armed force in which women were to have no part. A 'Declaration' to be signed by the women of Ulster was launched in parallel which made clear their subservient role.
WE, whose names are underwritten, women of Ulster, and loyal subjects of our gracious King, being firmly persuaded that Home Rule would be disastrous to our Country, desire to associate ourselves with the men of Ulster in their uncompromising opposition to the Home Rule Bill now before Parliament, whereby it is proposed to drive Ulster out of her cherished place in the Constitution of the United Kingdom, and to place her under the domination and control of a Parliament in Ireland.
Praying that from this calamity God will save Ireland, we hereto subscribe our names.
The campaign began in the West at Enniskillen, moving daily closer to Belfast and its climax. At the first rally, 50,000 Orange men marched past the platform in military order. The same pattern continued as the campaign developed; Orangemen paraded in force and the same resolution was passed by acclamation - “We won't have Home Rule”, soon to be abbreviated to “We won't have it” and chanted at every opportunity. The culmination of the campaign came in May in a ceremony at the Ulster Hall in Belfast where Craig handed to Carson a faded banner that had been carried, it was claimed, at the Battle of the Boyne. Unfurling it before the crowd, Carson declaimed “May this flag for ever fly over a free Ulster.”
The next day was a Sunday, with services all over the Province at which the signing of the Covenant was presented as a religious obligation as much as a political one. The Protestant churches gave it their full support, with Charles D'Arcy, Bishop of Down, Connor and Dromore announcing from the pulpit "We hold that no power, not even the British Parliament, has the right to deprive us of our heritage of British citizenship." After the services had ended Carson and other Unionist leaders walked the short distance from the Ulster Hall to Belfast City Hall, preceded by the Boyne Standard presented to him the previous evening and with a guard of men wearing bowler hats and carrying sticks. At the City Hall entrance – no difficulties were offered for this use – Carson was welcomed by the Lord Mayor and Corporation in their Robes, the Poor Law Guardians, the Harbour Commissioners and even the Water Board. Inside, the Covenant was set on a circular table draped with the Union Flag. Carson was the first to sign, followed by Lord Londonderry and then by representatives from the Protestant Churches.
Outside City Hall, under the command of Major Frederick Crawford, another Ulster activist of long standing, Carson's guard had been supplemented by others drawn from Unionist Clubs and Orange Lodges across the Province, and now made a force of some 2,500 men. These marshals admitted the general public to sign in batches of four or five hundred at a time until 11pm that night. Similar enthusiastic scenes were to be found across the Province. Meanwhile, at the Ulster Hall women signed the Declaration of Support, although not without some disruption from suffragists. The treatment given to these women on the day was brutal and something that would rebound on the Unionist movement over the next few years. In public buildings, church halls and Market Squares across the Province, similar signing ceremonies were taking place. By the end of the day, it was claimed by Carson that some 20,000 people had signed the Covenant and 12,000 women the Declaration. Eventually some 300,000 men signed the Covenant and 240,000 women, the Declaration.
In June a British Covenant was announced at a massive rally in London's Hyde Park with probably 300,000 people assembling to hear Lord Milner and Carson speak.
BEING CONVINCED in our consciences that Home Rule would be disastrous to the material well-being of the whole of this United Kingdom and perilous to the unity of the Empire, we, whose names are underwritten, loyal subjects of His Gracious Majesty King George V., do hereby pledge ourselves in solemn Covenant before God, to stand by our fellow countrymen in Ulster in defending, by all means which may be found necessary, their cherished position of equal citizenship in the United Kingdom, and in taking or supporting any action that may be effective to prevent the Home Rule Bill being put into operation, and more particularly to prevent the armed forces of the Crown being used to deprive the people of Ulster of their rights as citizens of the United Kingdom. And in the event of such a Bill being forced upon us, we further solemnly and mutually pledge ourselves to refuse to recognise its authority and to resist its imposition. In sure confidence that God will defend the right, we hereto subscribe our names.
 And further, we individually declare that we have not already signed this Covenant.
The signature campaign for this was largely organised through the Primrose League and the Union Defence League. By the end of the summer, two million signatures were obtained. Prominent signatories included Field-Marshal Lord Roberts, Admiral of the Fleet Sir Edward Seymour, Rudyard Kipling, and Sir William Ramsay FRS together with many servicing officers of the Army and Navy.
Despite the huge level of support, many condemned the campaign. The Daily Herald described the signatories as being:
... all members of that treasonous and seditious conspiracy known as the 'British Covenant' in support of armed revolution in Ulster.
Tom Mann, in a speech in Birmingham, was caustic in comparing his treatment for publishing a leaflet calling on troops not to shoot striking workers, while “Knights and Peers of the Realm create private armies” without fear of penalty. Labour MPs in the House of Commons were equally acerbic denouncing Carson and Bonar Law alike as unpatriotic, treasonous and seditious. On several occasions the session had to be suspended by the Speaker with near brawls between members.
Another report in the Daily Herald captured something of the character of the debate.
In great anger at the penalties inflicted on the Syndicalists, Mr. George Lansbury, M.P., speaking in the House of Commons, endeavoured to persuade the Government to take action against the authorities in Ulster who are responsible for the alleged drilling of Ulstermen to resist Home Rule when it comes. Mr. Jerry MacVeagh, the wag who is secretary of the Irish Parliamentary party, referred to a statement of Lord Dunleath that it was not military drill, but squad drill, adding for himself that " the only object was to enable large bodies of Orangemen to turn round when they received a word of; command from their leaders.'' (Laughter.) Mr. Asquith said the Government was fully informed as to what was " going on, " the immediate object being, as I understand, to prepare for a party demonstration in a few weeks time," (Laughter.) If they suspected any seditious purpose they would take action, since no authority could sanction drilling for an illegal purpose. Mr. Lansbury asked if the law would not be called in should the Miners' Federation commence to teach its men drill. Mr. .Asquith: That is a hypothetical question, and I will answer it when it arises. Mr. Lansbury finished up by presenting Mr, Asquith with a leaflet circulated in Ulster informing the people that officers of the army had told their friends they would order their men not to fire on the people of Ulster if they rebelled against Home Rule.
Nationalist feeling elsewhere in the UK was aroused too. In Scotland, 'The Thistle' said:
Scotland has had to fight for years to get her most urgent needs attended to, the demands of her members of Parliament being largely ignored, whether the party in power be Liberal or Conservative. How then arises this difference of treatment? The answer is a sad one, but it is plain and undeniable. The brutal English majority in Parliament turns all but a deaf ear to the manifold requirements of Scotland, because the Scottish people are peaceful and law-abiding—but it truckles to the remonstrances and complaints—civil and religious—of the Irish people, because they resort to violent means if their demands are refused.
Other newspapers played down the Unionist call to arms in favour of attacks on the Home Rule plans. A Times editorial argued that “to shut [the Unionists] out of their present Constitutional position and to subject them to the Nationalists would be oppression of the grossest and most cruel kind” going on to say of the campaign – in Ulster and in the rest of the United Kingdom – that “it is by its gravity, its moderation, and its unflinching firmness that it will arrest the attention and secure the support of the English and the Scottish people.”
Ulster Mobilises
Despite the protestations of Loyalty to the Crown, the launch of the Covenant and the associated mobilisation of the UVF was nothing less than a declaration of willingness to use armed force against His Majesty's Government. Bonar Law repeated his pledge of Conservative Party support for the Unionist cause in numerous speeches both at public meetings and in the Commons. In a particularly heated exchange with Asquith he said:
Do you plan to hurl the full majesty and power of the law, supported on the bayonets of the British Army, against a million Ulstermen marching under the Union Flag and singing 'God Save The King'? Would the Army hold? Would the British people — would the Crown — stand for such a slaughter?
Across Ulster men were signing up in their hundreds for the new Ulster Volunteer Force and enthusiastic bands of men could everywhere be seen drilling, usually with crude wooden staves in place of rifles, although in a few cases armed with shotguns and the occasional rifle.
By the end of April 1912 it was clear to the Nationalists, if not the Government in London, that Unionists were becoming increasingly militarised. Weapons were appearing at parades and training was beginning to include firing exercises. In June the UUC went a step further, approving the creation of a Provisional Government for Ulster if Home Rule became law and setting up a Military Council to oversee the development and arming of the UVF. Lord Roberts of Kandahar was appointed to the command of the UVF. Rumours were already widespread of large scale purchases of arms by agents acting for the UUC and the creation of the Military Council appeared to confirm this. The UUC also launched a fund (underwritten by several wealthy Belfast businessmen) to create an indemnity guarantee for British Officers who resigned their commission or were dismissed for refusing to use force again Loyalists.
The Republicans responded in kind – twice. In May 1912 the creation of an Irish Volunteer Army was announced. Although not admitted in public, it was understood on all sides that the secretive Irish Republican Brotherhood were prime movers. The IRB were traditional Republican and not sympathetic to the concerns of workers or women. Everything was to be subordinated to the task of securing Irish Independence. Faced with this, supporters of Larkin and Connolly began recruiting volunteers for a proposed Irish Citizen Army in July.
Over the next few months all parties focussed on building positions of strength. The UVF by the end of June had reached 35,000 members across most of Ulster. From a slow start the IVA had reached only about 8,000 concentrated mostly in Dublin with some small groups in rural areas across the south. By the end of July the figures stood at UVF 40,000, IVA, 20,000 and ICA 1,500. The newly created ICA was concentrated in Dublin with smaller groups in Limerick, Waterford and Cork and Belfast.
As membership in these militias grew so did intercommunal tensions. On 29th June matters came to a head, when a Protestant Sunday School outing was attacked by a group of Republicans from the Ancient Order of Hibernians who took exception to the union jacks being waved in the procession. Seeing the attack under way, other locals joined in the affray. More by luck than anything else, the two groups were eventually separated by the few available local police officers without any serious physical injuries, who then managed to get the Protestant group onto their train back to Belfast. By Monday, the story of the attack had spread across Orange Belfast, no doubt multiplied in the telling, and the inevitable reprisals began. Roman Catholic workers in the ship yards were attacked and driven from the yards and more attacks took place on their homes. Retaliations by Republicans were swift. Throughout July and August tit for tat attacks continued with both Catholic and Protestant families attacked at work, on the streets and in their homes.
By now the Government, while publicly dismissive, was beginning to be concerned. They were already faced by major disruption from labour disputes, with 10,000 troops committed to the North East of England and at least 40,000 troops deployed elsewhere to support hard pressed police. The prospect now of violence in Ulster was not appealing, especially given that Republicans were also mobilising against the perceived threat of an anti-Catholic and anti-Republican militia. To make matters worse, suffragist violence was also on the increase with intermittent arson attacks on Unionist properties and the property of prominent Unionists in Ulster and more generally in London and elsewhere.
The Committee Stage of Home Rule Bill was also considered in June. A late amendment to exclude Antrim, Armagh, Down and Londonderry was reluctantly accepted by the Unionists but after three days of debate was defeated by 69 votes, failing to secure Asquith's support. This was nevertheless a tactical victory for the Unionists since at least the Government had been forced to admit of the possibility of a separate Ulster. Speaking at a meeting in London, Carson admitted that the result was not unexpected. He went on to say however:
I think the time has come for us to take a step forward in our campaign and that is what I shall recommend be done.
Not for the first time Carson was ambiguous about the precise meaning of his statements. Publicly there was a large military style parade in Belfast at the beginning of September, where, for the first time armed members of the UVF appeared in public, although without any overt recognition of the fact from Carson or other members of the UUC. Similar parades took place over the next few weeks across the Province. The UUC also announced that a commission had been established to prepare a constitution for any Provisional Government that might need to be established with the aim of a report before the end of 1912.
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Followers Meme
Rules | Answer the 20 questions and tag 20 amazing followers you’d like to get to know better!
Tagged by: @wildehacked
name | Moran online, although people usually call me Starlight and I’m considering just giving up and switching to that ‘cause it’s nice.
nicknames | I answer to Moran IRL, people also call me R (yes, like Grantaire).  Also apparently I am now Vodka Tia Moran, which I am down with.
zodiac sign | LISTEN.  I flunk the zodiac.  I just do.  I am the worst at being a Pisces ever, literally EVER, and have been for my whole life.  And before you get clever and think “oh, well, what’s your ascendant/moon/sun/WHATEVER” just trust me, trust your resident ex-cult tia, someone has DONE THAT FIRST and drawn up my WHOLE DAMN CHART and I am The Worst At Zodiacking.  So just no.  Shhhhh.  Let it go.
height | Five-fucking-nothing and salty as hell
orientation | Queer, and yes I’ll fight you 
nationality | American and living in fear
favorite fruit | Pomegranates.  I will buy, peel, and eat an entire pomegranate for my own damn self and I don’t even care that it takes me forever to peel the damn things.
favorite season | I like all four seasons as long as they’re doing what they’re supposed to.  I do NOT like the messy in-between bits.
favorite book | WHAT KIND OF BULLSHIT CHEATING QUESTION IS THIS.  THERE ARE FOUR BOOKSHELVES IN MY LIVING ROOM ALONE AND FOUR MORE IN MY BEDROOM.  TO SAY NOTHING OF EVERY OTHER ROOM IN THE HOUSE.
favorite flower | Roses.  Also lilacs.
favorite scent | Earth and asphalt after a rain, roses under hot sunlight, honey and rising bread, the ozone after a lightning bolt.
favorite color | Jewel tones--blood red, royal purple, sapphire blue, satin black.  I like colors that commit to something.
favorite animal | Horses and wolves and cats and dogs and snakes and turtles, in no particular order.
coffee, tea, or hot cocoa | Ahaha, me and caffeine don’t get along so great.  Either it’s DO ALL THE THINGS or immediate sleep.  And I can’t stand coffee well enough to drink it without the advantage of caffeine.  Jasmine tea with lots of honey is where it’s at, my dudes.  And hot cocoa if it’s cold out.
average sleep hours | ...fewer than I should.  Maybe five.
cat or dog person | BOTH.  But also Charles (HIM BIG) and my own dear beasties demand that, for the moment, I am primarily a dog person.
favorite fictional character | ...Jamethiel Priest’s-bane.  And Rachel.  And Kitsune Yukiko.  And everyone on the Enterprise.  And Storm and Rogue and--look, we could be here all day.
number of blankets you sleep with | Whatever means I am warm but not physically dying.  This number is distinctly different between bedtime and getting up, because my body temperature spikes the second I fall asleep and then I die from heatstroke.  (You think I’m joking.  I have, in the past, actually given myself heatstroke if I have too many blankets on me while feverish.)
dream trip | OUT OF THE DAMN COUNTRY.  Shockingly this is not predicated on the existence of the loud yam, I’ve just never been out of the country.  I think it would be really cool to go to Wales, and to do the whole Arthuriana tour of the Celtic Isles, and also to see if I can find out where my family is from in Hungary and go there, and go to Mexico to test out my Spanish in the real world.  Also Rome.  Always wanted to go to Rome.
blog created | Halfway through sophomore year, so...wow, about two and a half years?  Maybe more like three?
number of followers | 525 and I forgot to put up a piece of original writing for 500 because I’m a mess, someone remind me to send around some kind of poll or send in a specific request.
Tagging: Twenty people is a DAMN LOT, so like @littlestartopaz, @lathori, @chromatographic (who I FORGOT I was mutuals with because I’m a mess, do you see a theme), @skymurdock, @flvffs, @slyrider, aaaaand @cadeteyes.  And whoever else feels really called to do the thing.
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