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lect03-第6部分
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There is probably great uniformity in the composition of the
various groups occupying; permanently or temporary; the tribal
territory。 Each seems to be more or less a miniature of the large
tribe which includes them all。 Each probably contains freemen and
slaves; or at all events men varying materially in personal
status; yet each calls itself in some sense a family。 Each very
possibly has its appropriated land and its waste; and conducts
tillage and grazing on the same principles。 Each is either under
a Chief who really represents the common ancestor of all the free
kinsmen; or under somebody who has undertaken the
responsibilities devolving according to primitive social idea
upon the natural head of the kindred。 In enquiries of the class
upon which we are engaged the important fact which I stated here
three years ago should always be borne in mind。 When the first
English emigrants settled in New England they distributed
themselves in village communities; so difficult is it to strike
out new paths of social life and new routes of social habit。 It
is all but certain that; in such a society as that of which we
are speaking; one single model of social organisation and social
practice would prevail; and none but slight or insensible
departures from it would be practicable or conceivable。
But still the society thus formed is not altogether
stationary。 The temporary occupation of the common tribe…land
tends to become permanent; either through the tacit sufferance or
the active consent of the tribesmen。 Particular families manage
to elude the theoretically periodical re…division of the common
patrimony of the group; others obtain allotments with its consent
as the reward of service or the appanage of office; and there is
a constant transfer of lands to the Church; and an intimate
intermixture of tribal rights with ecclesiastical rights。 The
establishment of Property in Severalty is doubtless retarded both
by the abundance of land and by the very law under which; to
repeat the metaphor of the Indian poetess; the tribal society has
crystallised; since each family which has appropriated a portion
of tribe…land tends always to expand into an extensive assemblage
of tribesmen having equal rights。 But still there is a
co…operation of causes always tending to result in Several
Property; and the Brehon law shows that by the time it was put
into shape they had largely taken effect。 As might be expected;
the severance of land from the common territory appears to have
been most complete in the case of Chiefs; many of whom have large
private estates held under ordinary tenure in addition to the
demesne specially attached to their signory。
Such is the picture of Irish tribal organisation in relation
to the land which I have been able to present to my own mind。 All
such descriptions must be received with reserve: among other
reasons; because even the evidence obtainable from the law…tracts
is still incomplete。 But if the account is in any degree correct;
all who have attended to this class of subjects will observe at
once that the elements of what we are accustomed to consider the
specially Germanic land system are present in the territorial
arrangements of the Irish tribe。 Doubtless there are material
distinctions。 Kinship as yet; rather than landed right; knits the
members of the Irish groups together。 The Chief is as yet a very
different personage from the Lord of the Manor。 And there are no
signs as yet even of the beginnings of great towns and cities。
Still the assertion; which is the text of Dr Sullivan's treatise;
may be hazarded without rashness; that everything in the Germanic
has at least its embryo in the Celtic land system。 The study of
the Brehon law leads to the same conclusion pointed at by so many
branches of modern research。 It conveys a stronger impression
than ever of a wide separation between the Aryan race and races
of other stocks; but it suggests that many; perhaps most; of the
differences in kind alleged to exist between Aryan sub…races are
really differences merely in degree of development。 It is to be
hoped that contemporary thought will before long make an effort
to emancipate itself from those habits of levity in adopting
theories of race which it seems to have contracted。 Many of these
theories appear to have little merit except the facility which
they give for building on them inferences tremendously out of
proportion to the mental labour which they cost the builder。
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