“A Million Dead. A Million Fled.”
Michael Nicholson: Famine novel changed my mind on England’s guilt
Britain’s most 
decorated reporter set out to write a Famine novel to restore England’s 
reputation but the facts confounded him.  He tells how Trevelyan earned 
his scorn.
“A million dead. A million fled.”  
It was those few 
words that had such an impact on me. Think of it. Try to visualise. Try 
putting it into a modern context, something happening today, something 
you are watching on television news, an apocalyptic disaster on an 
unheard-of scale, something that dwarfs Hiroshima. 
 
A million dying because a foreign blight had turned a
 potato crop into rotten, stinking, putrefying mush. Try to picture 
families of living skeletons whispering their last prayer in the shelter
 of a ditch as they watch others turning black with the fever that 
spread like a summer fire across bracken from Skibbereen to Donegal, 
from Wicklow to Clare. Imagine another million, still untouched by it, 
desperately fleeing their motherland to find safety and sanctuary 
anywhere and with anyone who would take them. This was Ireland in the 
Famine years. 
 
As a foreign correspondent for ITN, travelling the 
globe for more than 30 years, I reckon I have seen more than my fair 
share of man’s inhumanity to man. It is said that we reporters suffer 
from an overdose of everything, saturated as we are in the world’s woes.
 In places like Bangladesh, Sudan, Ethiopia, Rwanda, I became used to 
dealing in numbers; the dead and dying in their hundreds, or in their 
thousands, even their tens of thousands. But a million corpses in a 
forgotten corner of what was then the world’s greatest and wealthiest 
Empire is inconceivable. 
Dark Rosaleen is the story of murder and betrayal, of
 a starving people held captive, of a failed rebellion and a love that 
grew out of it during those years of the Great Hunger. In 1845, when the
 potato crop failed yet again, the British government sent a 
commissioner to Ireland to oversee the distribution of food aid. In my 
story his spoilt, overprivileged young daughter Kate is obliged to go 
with him to what, in her tantrums, she calls “this hateful land of 
saints and savages”. In her first few months, isolated in her father 
mansion overlooking Cork, she cares nothing for the suffering outside. 
Then the scale of the disaster gradually overwhelms her and her selfish 
arrogance turns to pity and anger. Finally, despairingly, she turns 
against both her father and her country. She is condemned as a traitor 
when she joins the rebellious Young Irelanders in their fight to end 
British rule. 
 
You might think this would have been better written 
by an Irish author rather than an Englishman. I had a reason. At the 
start, my intention was to defend the government of Prime Minister Peel,
 to illustrate the immense physical and political problems trying to 
feed a starving nation across the Irish Sea. My mindset was that we 
English had been badly judged, that both England and Scotland were also 
suffering from the ravages of the blight, that communication between 
London and Dublin was slow and unreliable, that transporting food aid to
 the hinterland was a massive problem. In short, I thought there was 
good reason to reduce England’s blame.  
 
I had read the famine novels of Liam O’Flaherty and 
Walter Macken, and was moved by their simplicity and pathos. I had 
listened at length to Ireland’s historical grievances in Dublin and 
Liverpool, in Cork and in Boston, Massachusetts, wherever Irishmen 
gathered over a pint of porter or a Jamesons. They spoke of a deliberate
 policy of imposed starvation, of land clearances, of ethnic cleansing, 
of exporting Irish peasants in coffin ships that might never reach the 
far shores of the Atlantic, and all this said as if it was proven 
historical fact. 
 
Given an Irishman’s well-known considerable verbal 
licence I was happy to persuade myself that much of it was exaggerated 
blarney. But as I ploughed even deeper in my research, my characters 
took over and my storyline went into reverse. It was if I was a 
prosecuting counsel who had his side changed midway. I was a convert and
 I ended up with a novel I had not intended to write. 
Kate is my heroine and Sir Charles Trevelyan, the 
government’s director of famine relief, is the villain. This is his real
 name and all that he does and says in my novel is as they appear, word 
for word, in the historical records of the time. I make this point 
because so much of what he said and did is barely believable. 
 
“We will do what is necessary but no more. The Irish 
peasants are perverse and prefer to beg than borrow. They would rather 
eat free English food than labour for their own. It would be unjust and 
unwise to pamper them when our own people are pleading for assistance. I
 do not intend to transfer famine from one country to another.”
 
Trevelyan was guided not by any agreed government 
policy because there was none. He was guided by God. A pious, stubborn, 
uncompromising, devout evangelist, he saw the blight and the suffering 
as an act of Providence and to deny it was tantamount to blasphemy. The 
Anglo-Irish landowners, who considered the Irish peasants vermin, were 
loud and constant in their support and applause. 
 
Here I must end this historical explainer for fear 
you will think my novel is yet another academic heavyweight. But against
 this background is the sequel, the story of Kate and the man who loved 
her, based on John Mitchel, leader of the rebellious Young Irelanders, 
the forefathers of Sein Féin. Kate rode with them as they preached their
 revolutionary gospel, as they attacked the landlords, set fire to their
 estates, ambushed the Redcoats and stole from the rich to feed the 
hungry. She became the legendary Dark Rosaleen, named after a banned 
nationalist poem by James Clarence Mangan. 
“The Erne shall run with blood
The earth will rock beneath our tread
 
And flames wrap hill and wood 
And gun-peal and slogan cry wake many a glen serene
 
Ere you shall fade, ere you should die
 
My Dark Rosaleen” 
 
In order to turn history into a novel, an author is 
obliged to dramatise, to put words into mouths that might never have 
been spoken, to lay blame that perhaps was not entirely deserved. My 
heroine and her revolutionary lover may not have existed as I portray 
them. But some part of them will have lived those times and helped forge
 those times.
 
Nothing in my pages, not the people nor the lives 
they lived, is wholly fictional. Almost all I have written happened in 
real life. I have exaggerated nothing. There was no need. The truth is 
appalling enough and if the reader finds the descriptions of people, 
events and their outcome hard to believe, then go to the history books 
and be convinced. 
Michael Nicholson is one of the world’s most 
decorated journalists, reporting from 18 different war zones over a 
45-year career. He was Senior Foreign Correspondent for ITN for ten 
years, recipient of three Royal Society Journalist of the Year Awards, 
one BAFTA, the Falkland and Gulf Campaign medals, and an OBE for 
Services to Television. Dark Rosaleen - a famine novel, is published by 
The History Press Ireland. 
Dark
 Rosaleen is a story of love, murder and betrayal, of a failed rebellion
 and a national scandal.
 
Sir William McCauley was appointed Director of the Famine Relief 
Programme at a time when hunger raged across Ireland and antipathy 
towards the plight of the Irish infused the politics of Britain. 
Kathryn, William’s daughter, was forced to join her father, and felt no 
sympathy until the very scale of the tragedy became all too obvious. 
Joining the underground, she preached insurrection, stole food for the 
starving and became the lover of the leader of the rebellion. Known as 
Dark Rosaleen, the heroine of banned nationalist poem, she was branded 
both traitor and cause celebré. This is her story. 
Review
Sometimes it is deemed best to ignore history. For all the debate on the
 rights and wrongs of the British Empire, the enduring feeling for we 
British is it was largely a good thing. Did we not counter our role in 
the slave trade by a change of tack, a conversion on our road to 
Damascus, and subsequently police the oceans of the scourge? History is 
written by the victorious and thus, as we all learnt at school, the rosy
 countries on the map were blessed by those of our green and pleasant 
land.
And then there was Ireland. Dark Rosaleen, by Michael Nicholson, reaches into an episode of our history and pulls out a tale to make one reconsider. The Irish Potato Famine is here writ large. There is a challenge at the start of the novel to check the facts if one thinks the author has been too imaginative in the misery inflicted by an incompetent government - I did. If anything the deaths of so many thousands is understated.
Dark Rosaleen is a dark book born of the struggles of the Irish Catholic population. Kate, a rich, English girl, is forced to accompany her father to distribute food to the starving. From spoilt child, to horrified onlooker, to an involved sympathiser, Kate is at the core of the story. It can be seen that the Potato Famine occurred in a land of plenty which was part of the richest empire on Earth. The potato crop failed, so the tenants were starved. Should it be renamed The Irish Potato Starvation? Ireland became the place where the stereotypical British 'uncaring rich' polarised into fact. All that was bad was manifest here, and since reading Dark Rosaleen, I have had to reconsider the black and white prejudices I grew up with. Uncomfortable as it may be the Irish did have good reason to hit back. That they were ultimately successful is a wonder, but it came down to strength and the absolute conviction that nothing would change without a fight.
Dark Rosaleen can be heartbreaking and make one question the validity of the author's words. But take the challenge and read the real history along with the book - it will make you weep. There are heroes and light, but I leave that to the reader to find. This novel will adjust your perspective on accepted recent history. In the end I was happy that I have Irish DNA, then thought, without the Famine, I would not be here... Such is life. A good read.
And then there was Ireland. Dark Rosaleen, by Michael Nicholson, reaches into an episode of our history and pulls out a tale to make one reconsider. The Irish Potato Famine is here writ large. There is a challenge at the start of the novel to check the facts if one thinks the author has been too imaginative in the misery inflicted by an incompetent government - I did. If anything the deaths of so many thousands is understated.
Dark Rosaleen is a dark book born of the struggles of the Irish Catholic population. Kate, a rich, English girl, is forced to accompany her father to distribute food to the starving. From spoilt child, to horrified onlooker, to an involved sympathiser, Kate is at the core of the story. It can be seen that the Potato Famine occurred in a land of plenty which was part of the richest empire on Earth. The potato crop failed, so the tenants were starved. Should it be renamed The Irish Potato Starvation? Ireland became the place where the stereotypical British 'uncaring rich' polarised into fact. All that was bad was manifest here, and since reading Dark Rosaleen, I have had to reconsider the black and white prejudices I grew up with. Uncomfortable as it may be the Irish did have good reason to hit back. That they were ultimately successful is a wonder, but it came down to strength and the absolute conviction that nothing would change without a fight.
Dark Rosaleen can be heartbreaking and make one question the validity of the author's words. But take the challenge and read the real history along with the book - it will make you weep. There are heroes and light, but I leave that to the reader to find. This novel will adjust your perspective on accepted recent history. In the end I was happy that I have Irish DNA, then thought, without the Famine, I would not be here... Such is life. A good read.
Dark
 Rosaleen is a story of love, murder and betrayal, of a failed rebellion
 and a national scandal.
 
Sir William McCauley was appointed Director of the Famine Relief 
Programme at a time when hunger raged across Ireland and antipathy 
towards the plight of the Irish infused the politics of Britain. 
Kathryn, William’s daughter, was forced to join her father, and felt no 
sympathy until the very scale of the tragedy became all too obvious. 
Joining the underground, she preached insurrection, stole food for the 
starving and became the lover of the leader of the rebellion. Known as 
Dark Rosaleen, the heroine of banned nationalist poem, she was branded 
both traitor and cause celebré. This is her story.          - See more 
at: 
http://www.thehistorypress.co.uk/index.php/historical-fiction-books/dark-rosaleen.html#sthash.Dps3qb7G.dpuf
Dark
 Rosaleen is a story of love, murder and betrayal, of a failed rebellion
 and a national scandal.
 
Sir William McCauley was appointed Director of the Famine Relief 
Programme at a time when hunger raged across Ireland and antipathy 
towards the plight of the Irish infused the politics of Britain. 
Kathryn, William’s daughter, was forced to join her father, and felt no 
sympathy until the very scale of the tragedy became all too obvious. 
Joining the underground, she preached insurrection, stole food for the 
starving and became the lover of the leader of the rebellion. Known as 
Dark Rosaleen, the heroine of banned nationalist poem, she was branded 
both traitor and cause celebré. This is her story.          - See more 
at: 
http://www.thehistorypress.co.uk/index.php/historical-fiction-books/dark-rosaleen.html#sthash.Dps3qb7G.dpuf








 
 
 
 
 
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