Dryhurst supported a number of different countries attempting to gain independence. She became secretary of the Nationalities and Subject Races Committee and used her writing in working towards Irish Independence. She wrote for various Irish newspapers and assisted with the creation of
The Irish Citizen. A friend of
W. B. Yeats, she appeared in his play
The Land of Heart’s Desire in June 1904. She spoke
Georgian having learned it from
Varlam Cherkezov, a close associate of Kropotkin. In 1906 she was a member of the Georgian Relief Committee and travelled to the country. She spoke at an international conference at
The Hague in support of Georgia. After the executions of 15 leaders of the
Easter Rising in Dublin, Dryhurst spent her time campaigning unsuccessfully for the reprieve of
Roger Casement. Dryhurst had a long affair with
Henry Nevinson, a journalist she met in 1892. The affair ended in 1912. Dryhurst died in 1930. Her papers are kept in the Irish National Library. ==Bibliography==