The 12th of March speech from H.L. Bennet in the English Parliament.
"First of all, I must do what many in this parliament wish to do, and that is to congratulate the Irish. For Ireland has done what many of us here dream of, take back control of their own destiny.
But that is not the reason why I stand here today. I wish to address a more pressing issue. I sit here as a representative of the North East Somerset constituency. As many of you know, that lies deeply within the Anglois territories of England. And many of you here are here in the same manner as me, representatives of a constituency that has not elected them, representatives that have never visited their constituency, representatives that have never spoken with their constituents, representatives that have never represented. I wish to change that. Whilst I have not spoken to any of my constituents, I do have a strong feeling that I understand the worries of the Anglois population of our green and pleasant land.
We're afraid. We're afraid that we'll become a people without a home. We're afraid that this land, that is our home, that we have built over the centuries, will become foreign to us and that we'll become foreigners in this land. And that I why we fight, to retain our rights to this land.
And is that not why we, the English, fight? Do we not see ourselves as a people without a home? Do we not see the Anglois control as a foreign control, and thus this country as a foreign one? Are we not just like the Anglois?
We English see the Anglois as a foreign ruling class, but is that the case? For the French Anglois, yes, but those on our side of the Channel, no. Ever since 1066, when William the Conqueror conquered England, have the aristocratic classes of England and France become so intertwined, that they have become one, they are the true Anglois. But what has been their effect on the people they rule over? Here, in Northern England, in Wales, in Ireland, in Brittany, in the French hinterlands and in Occitania, it has been negligible. The control from Paris over those lands has been to small to have any effect on the peoples. But in the heartland of the Dual Monarchy, the regions around Paris, London and the Channel, that hybridized culture created by the merging of the English and French aristocracy has spread into every part of the population.
Have England and France known massive migrations between them ever since 1066? No! That means that the Anglois of Southern England are just as English as we are!
I think this conflict that we are having is a unnecessary one. It pits brother against brother, it pits Englishmen against Englishmen and it pits England against France, wholly unnecessary things. Whilst I'm completely opposed to the union, the split up doesn't need to end in bad relations between the nations that will come out of the wreckage. If we wish to work towards an independent England, we must recognize that both English English and Anglois English have just as much rights to the land as the other! If we wish to overcome the challenges that face England in the following decades, we must do it together, as Englishmen. England for the English, and this means together with the Anglois, for the Anglois are English too.
Til we have built Jerusalem, in England's green and pleasant land."