Patrick Pearse: Hero of 1916

AND I say to my people's masters: Beware,
Beware of the thing that is coming, beware of the risen people,
Who shall take what ye would not give. Did ye think to conquer the people,
Or that Law is stronger than life and than men's desire to be free?
We will try it out with you, ye that have harried and held,
Ye that have bullied and bribed, ....... tyrants, hypocrites, liars!
-- From "The Rebel" by Patrick Pearse

Perhaps on Nov. 10, 1879, at 27 Great Brunswick St., Dublin, as the mother and father gazed down at their new born son, they had a vision of what his future held. That may explain why they named him Patrick Henry Pearse. Their son would grow to be the very embodiment of the words of the American patriot whose name he bore, "I know not what course others might take, but as for me, give me liberty or give me death!" (In the Virginia Convention, March 23, 1775.) Indeed, these words would have formed a very proper epitaph on the gravestone of the leader of the Easter Rising of 1916, Patrick Henry Pearse.
Like many other uncompromising Irish rebels, Pearse was not of pure Irish blood; he was the product of a mixed English-Irish marriage. His father was a monumental sculptor and an Englishman, his mother was a native of Co. Meath. Pearse began his life-long study of the Irish language at age eleven; perhaps his strident nationalism was a by product of his study of the language which the British had tried so hard to destroy over the centuries.
After graduation from Royal University of Ireland he was called to the bar, but he never practiced. He joined the Gaelic League in 1895 and in 1908, along with friends Thomas MacDonagh, Con Colbert, and his brother William, Pearse founded an Irish language school called St. Enda's at Cullenwood House in Rathmines outside Dublin. Their school prospered and in 1910 they moved it to The Hermitage, Rathfarnham, where Robert Emmett had courted Sarah Curran. The school stayed in operation until 1935, run eventually by Pearse's mother and sister, but none of the four founders of the school would see that day, all four would be executed within 5 days of each other in May of 1916.
Through these years Pearse was writing a great deal of prose and poetry, some in Irish and some in English, much of which was published after his death, and contributing articles to Arthur Griffith's The United Irishman. He was becoming more and more radical in his outlook on Irish freedom, evolving from a supporter of Home Rule to a republican. In 1913 he was one of the founders of the Irish Volunteers, a native Irish militia that would evolve into the Irish Republican Army. Later the same year Pearse joined the Irish Republican Brotherhood.
In Feb. of 1914 Pearse traveled to the US seeking money from Irish America for his school and for the Irish Volunteers. He made contact with Joseph McGarrity and former Fenian John Devoy, who helped him on both counts. In July of 1914, in the famous Howth gun running incident, the Irish Volunteers obtained weapons and ammunition. The organization now had the weapons and financial support it needed to consider the military action that many of them, including Patrick Pearse, believed was the only thing that would ever convince the British pull out of Ireland.
"There are many things more horrible than bloodshed;" Pearse had once written, "and slavery is one of them." The powder keg was laid, the fuse was in place, it awaited only a man to light it. Patrick Henry Pearse was that man. In the summer of 1915 the body of Fenian Jeremiah O'Donovan Rossa was brought home from America for burial. At Dublin's famous Glasnevin cemetery, Pearse delivered one of the most famous graveside orations in the long history of the Irish revolutionary movement. Pearse's speech electrified the nation. "But I hold it a Christian thing, as O'Donovan Rossa held it, to hate evil, to hate oppression, and hating them, to strive to overthrow them," said Pearse. ".... Life springs from death; and from the graves of patriot men and women spring living nations." The fuse was now lit, the keg would go off on April 14, 1916.