248 ENGLISH SAGA Yet the leader was forthcoming. He was a Protestant, an aristocrat and a landowner: the last man in the world any one would have predicted as a lawgiver to poor, squalid, rebel Ireland. He despised the arts of the demagogue: loathed crowds and politicians, and had an icy pride and reserve which few even of his closest lieutenants could penetrate. But he had three supreme assets: brilliant intellectual power, unshakable resolve and a cold burning passion which nothing could quench. That icy flame Charles Stewart Parndl applied for twenty years to a single task: the breaking of the link -that bound Ireland to England. His work began in the 'seventies when he first entered the House of Commons as member for County Meath. Until that time the Irish members had been an ineffective body, regarded by the desperate men who rode the stormy anarchy of Irish assassination and land agitation as helpless prisoners of England. Parndl realised from the first that the key to the Irish future lay at Westminster. If he could weld the four score or more members whom Catholic Ireland returned to the imperial parliament into a single disciplined body, he might use the balanced rivalry of the English parties to wring legal concessions that would open the road to Irish independence. In the new Parliament of 1880 Parndl began to make his power fdt He discovered that by taking advantage of the intricate rules of parliamentary procedure which had grown up in the course of centuries, he could trepan the conservative English with their own love of legality. His quick penetrating mind made him master of these, and he taught his followers how to use them. There ensued an extraordinary situation. Night after night the most dignified and orderly parliamentary assembly in the world was hdd up by an interminable succession of unnecessary speeches, questions and interruptions as Irish member after member rose to dday business. The administration of a great Empire was hamstrung because, through an irony of fate, a handful of resolute and alien obstructionists happened to be members of its sovereign assembly. By his success Parndl achieved two things. He became the most hated man jn EnglandL He united the Irish nationalists. It became realised that the battle of wits that the Irish members were waging nightly at Westminster was a struggle for the rebirth of a nation. It was more. It was a gauntlet flung down