The essay examines the causes, social effects, and policy responses to the Irish famine, emphasizing the population's dependence on the potato, smallholdings and high rents, and the resulting poverty, isolation, and agricultural neglect. It traces how these conditions produced precarious domestic habits and limited skills, encouraged large families, and fueled agrarian unrest. The author analyzes debates over relief responsibility between landlords and government and the merits of public works versus employment on farms, and argues that the crisis could prompt lasting social and economic reforms if properly addressed.