"If you strike at, imprison, or kill us, out of our prisons or graves we will still evoke a spirit that will thwart you, and perhaps, raise a force that will destroy you! We defy you! Do your worst!"
About this Quote
Connolly is doing something more dangerous than threatening violence: he is threatening inevitability. The line turns state power into a kind of blunt instrument that only manufactures its own opposition. Strike, imprison, kill: the familiar toolbox of empire and capital. Connolly’s counter is to make repression look not merely immoral but strategically stupid, a self-defeating overreach that converts militants into martyrs and grievances into a shared legend.
The rhetoric is engineered for circulation. “Out of our prisons or graves” is propaganda-proofing; it anticipates the censor and keeps speaking anyway. By shifting from the individual “us” to the impersonal “a spirit,” Connolly detaches the movement from any one body, including his own. That’s the subtext: you can remove leaders, you can’t remove the conditions that made them. The “spirit” is not mysticism so much as political sociology made vivid: solidarity, memory, and outrage as renewable resources.
Context sharpens the edge. Connolly, a socialist and Irish republican executed after the 1916 Easter Rising, is speaking from a world where the British state’s legitimacy in Ireland was already eroding, and where labor politics and national liberation were cross-pollinating. His defiance reads as both rallying cry and psychological warfare: he wants supporters to hear certainty, and opponents to hear futility.
“Do your worst!” isn’t bravado for its own sake. It dares the authorities to reveal their true face, betting that every escalation will widen the conflict and recruit the undecided. It’s an invitation to overreaction - and a warning that the consequences won’t stay neatly confined to a prison cell or a firing squad.
The rhetoric is engineered for circulation. “Out of our prisons or graves” is propaganda-proofing; it anticipates the censor and keeps speaking anyway. By shifting from the individual “us” to the impersonal “a spirit,” Connolly detaches the movement from any one body, including his own. That’s the subtext: you can remove leaders, you can’t remove the conditions that made them. The “spirit” is not mysticism so much as political sociology made vivid: solidarity, memory, and outrage as renewable resources.
Context sharpens the edge. Connolly, a socialist and Irish republican executed after the 1916 Easter Rising, is speaking from a world where the British state’s legitimacy in Ireland was already eroding, and where labor politics and national liberation were cross-pollinating. His defiance reads as both rallying cry and psychological warfare: he wants supporters to hear certainty, and opponents to hear futility.
“Do your worst!” isn’t bravado for its own sake. It dares the authorities to reveal their true face, betting that every escalation will widen the conflict and recruit the undecided. It’s an invitation to overreaction - and a warning that the consequences won’t stay neatly confined to a prison cell or a firing squad.
Quote Details
| Topic | Freedom |
|---|---|
| Source | Help us find the source |
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