It's funny the way that history gets written, isn't it?
Robert Emmet wasn't terribly successful as a patriot. I know that for the entire timeline until we gained independence all patriots would be liable to be considered unsuccessful, but Robert Emmet particularly so.
Anyone in anyway familiar with Irish history will be familiar with the type of circumstances that caused Emmet's uprising to fail - lack of arms, bad communicating between the various organisations involved, etc etc. But instead of being one of those noble-but-ultimately-doomed endeavours on the scale of '98 or '16, Emmet's 1803 effort was more like a mid-sized riot.
So it would not be unfair to assume that Emmet would remain but a footnote in this nation's long and troubled history. And no doubt he would have, had Emmet not the foresight to have a star-crossed relationship with a girl named Sarah Curran, and had he not made a compelling speech from the dock ordering that no man should write his epitaph until Ireland had taken her place among the nations of the world.
How very eloquent
So Emmet became a romantic hero with a statue of himself on Stephen's Green, while more effective but less dashing patriots like Pádraic Pearse (leader of the larger-scale rebellion but with an unfortunate penchant for boys) remain statueless.
The caprices of history, wha'? read more