Alfred
Russel Wallace : Alfred Wallace : A. R. Wallace :
Russel Wallace : Alfred Russell Wallace (sic)
Letter
to Morrison Davidson on Home Rule
for Scotland (S597a: 1902)
Editor Charles H. Smith's
Note: Printed as an Appendix to Davidson's book Scotland for the Scots:
Scotland Revisited. Original pagination indicated within double brackets.
To link directly to this page connect with: http://people.wku.edu/charles.smith/wallace/S597A.htm
[[p. 93]]
Dear Mr. Davidson,--I am now in the position of the man who, when bidden
to a feast, said he had "bought a piece of ground," and could
not come--for I have bought a piece of ground, and am building
a house upon it, and am myself superintending it--and making a
new garden--involving joys and troubles and anxieties which perhaps
you know not of, and which, added to an ever-increasing correspondence
and quantities of books, MSS., &c., sent me by cranks of all kinds--mostly
Americans--(as well as by non-cranks), leave me no time for reading anything
beyond light literature when tired out with the fatigues of the day. Therefore
I am quite unable to read your proofs, but as I am in favour of absolute
"Home Rule" for every community, [[p.
94]] however small (or large), which wishes to have it,
I can heartily wish you success in claiming "Home Rule" for
Scotland.
But,
as the majority of Englishmen are, apparently, against permitting it to
Ireland, where an overwhelming majority demand it, and have
just taken it away from two Republics which were governed much better
than we are, how is it likely they will give it to Scotland where,
so far as I know, there is no majority and no very strong
feeling in its favour? You have first got to convert
the Scots, as we have to convert the English--and in this I wish
you every success. I believe in "home rule" for every parish
even, since they could not all of them make a more deplorable
mess of it than England does now, and at all events some would
develop really good and just government, and they would show others what
could and should be done. Now, we have no such
object-lessons, because the ignorant upper 10,000 who are allowed to rule
us think--as fools often do--that no one is capable of ruling but themselves.
Really,
as I said before, the most important thing is to convert the English,
who have got the power, to some little appreciation of elementary
justice. Till that is done nothing can be done.--Yours very truly,
Alfred
R. Wallace. Parkstone, Dorset, August 10, 1902.
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