This is one of the most enjoyable entries in the "16 Lives" series, in part because it tells a story very different from many of the Easter martyrs. Unlike the others, MacBride earned his revolutionary credentials years before The Rising, by literally going to war againsgt the British as a member of "The Irish Brigade" that fought with the Dutch South Africans in the Second Boer War (1899-1902). Also, unlike the other martyrs, he was married to Maud Gonne--actress, notorious revolutionary, and muse of poet W.B. Yeats.
The story of McBride and his contribution to the Irish Brigade is exciting. He distinguished himself in the advance on Ladysmith, and, in the intense fighting at Colenso, had his horse shot from under him. Eventually, though, the British crushed the Boer republic, and its death became a powerful symbol among those who espoused republican sentiments in Ireland. MacBride was much admired for his deeds, but fearing he would be arrested for treason, he avoided Ireland and went to Paris instead.
In Paris he met Maud Gonne. She was a celebrated beauty and a passionate Irish nationalist, attracted to this military man who was an authentic hero of Ireland. They grew closer during a speaking tour of America and soon married, but it was a marriage made in hell. She was free-spirited, self-dramatizing, and narcissistic; he was a man of conventional morals, jealous and surly when drunk. The disintegration of the marriage of this "power couple" of Irish revolution--which produced a son but survived little more than a year--was a public scandal, and caused many politically engaged Irish to choose sides. Fallon's account of their divorce and its effects on Ireland is absorbing.
Equally absorbing, though, is his account of MacBride's subsequent decline after the British allowed him to return to Ireland, and his almost casual involvement in The Rising, during a Easter Monday walk. No longer a revolutionary insider, he was not even aware of the rebel's plans, but joined them when he saw the Volunteers assemble. A military man to the end, he acquitted himself well at Jacob's Biscuit Factory. Executed by the British, he died twice a hero.