No. 135 Reprinted from Official correspondence relating to the peace negotiations June-September 1921 (Dublin, 1921)
London, 24 June 1921
Sir
The British Government are deeply anxious that, so far as they can assure
it, the King's appeal for reconciliation in Ireland shall not have not been made
in vain. Rather than allow yet another opportunity of settlement in Ireland to
be cast aside, they felt it incumbent upon them to make a final appeal, in the
spirit of the King's words,1 for a conference between themselves and the representatives of Southern and Northern Ireland.
I write, therefore, to convey the following invitation to you as the chosen leader of the great majority in Southern Ireland, and to Sir James Craig, the Premier of Northern Ireland:-
We make this invitation with a fervent desire to end the ruinous conflict which has for centuries divided Ireland and embittered the relations of the peoples of these two islands, who ought to live in neighbourly harmony with each other, and whose co-operation would mean so much not only to the Empire but to humanity.
We wish that no endeavour should be lacking on our part to realise the King's prayer, and we ask you to meet us, as we will meet you, in the spirit of conciliation for which His Majesty appealed.
The Royal Irish Academy's Documents on Irish Foreign Policy series has published an eBook of confidential correspondence on the 1921 Anglo-Irish Treaty negotiations.
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