The Irish problem: what lacks the backward farmer most: security or skills?. Hibernicus

The Irish problem: what lacks the backward farmer most: security or skills? - Hibernicus


Скачать книгу
tion>

       Hibernicus

      The Irish problem: what lacks the backward farmer most: security or skills?

      Published by Good Press, 2020

       [email protected]

      EAN 4064066062552

       The Irish problem: what lacks the backward farmer most: security or skills?

       A plea for the Irish land

       About leases

       About leases (part 2nd)

       Landlord and tenant in England

       Hope for Ireland!

      The Irish problem: what lacks the backward farmer most: security or skills?

       Table of Contents

      ​The five following papers, written by Hibernicus, are reprints from the Tyrone Constitution. Their object is chiefly to show that instead of less landlord influence more (but that of an elevated type) is required in those parts of Ireland, the backwardness of which calls most loudly for legislation.

      The writer had not perused Master Fitzgibbon's recent pamphlet when the above papers were penned. He now feels gratified to find himself in accord, in so many points, with so able a thinker.

      December 1869.

      Essays(not individually listed)

        A plea for the Irish land

        About leases

        About leases (part 2nd)

        Landlord and tenant in England

        Hope for Ireland!

      ​

      THE IRISH PROBLEM.

       I.

      A PLEA FOR THE IRISH LAND.

       Table of Contents

      We are going to beg of our readers to join us for a while in considering the Irish Land Question from a new point of view—one at which both Landlord and Tenant can meet, and for a while cast off that cloak of selfish considerations which hinders each in his progress to a practicable solution of the difficulty. "We propose to regard the question neither from the Landlord's point of view nor from the Tenant's point of view, but, with due regard to the reasonable rights of both, from the point at which that oft-quoted personage—the Intelligent Foreigner—would take his stand if asked for his opinion as to what would be best for the community at large. The Intelligent Foreigner regarding the question in the abstract would say—"Here is an island abounding in the elements of productiveness. Much of it is well-cultivated and fertile; but a great deal of it is ill-cultivated and not made to produce two-thirds of what it might. The soil of this island is chiefly owned by large proprietors who have no stimulus save that of a sense of moral obligation, in a greater or lesser stage of development, to induce them to advance the condition of their tenantries. They lack the stimulus of self-interest; for they can raise their rents, whether they have contributed to the improvement of the soil or not, so that an increase of their incomes is not dependant on their own careful thought and consideration as to the means by which the greatest quantity of produce may be elicited from the soil. They have nothing to do, unless impelled hj their own good feeling, save to eat, drink, and be merry, while others without are toiling 'to make up the rent.' If the property of any given landlord wears a poor and neglected aspect, no odium falls upon him from the side of his fellow-landlords. He is not shunned as a man who does not meet his obligations. But what can you expect? Dirt and rags are proverbial in Ireland: and what wonder if some of her lords of the soil are 'clad width a dirty and ragged estate' on which nearly every cottage and field tells its tale of listlessness and neglect on the part 13oth of the tenant whose abode is there, and of the landlord who does not stimulate the tenant to better things."

      But are the landlords only to blame for this prevalence of ragged houses and tattered land? "No"—the Intelligent Foreigner will continue—"I have found ample evidence," he will say, "in ​my journeyings through this island, of every effort being made by resident landlords and their families, to improve the condition of the people committed to their charge; and many a tale have I heard of heart-breaking disappointment—of the most persistent efforts to civilize the small farming community being met not only by a want of inclination, but also by what appears to be a downright inaptitude to improve.

      "Make some of them dykes to drain their meadows, and they will not be at the trouble to clear out the weeds periodically unless absolutely goaded to it. Drain their fields and they will let the outfall get stopped up, till by-and-by the wet boils up worse than ever. Rag-weeds and thistles are suffered to infest their pastures. Nothing will induce them to make straight rigs, nor to keep their fences in anything like decent repair. The pig is always in the kitchen, and a noxious pool in front of the door occupies the spot which amongst the English cottagers a trim flower bed would adorn. They stick perversely to antiquated modes of cropping; and exhaust your land thereby to the uttermost; and then turn round good-humouredly—for they are always good-humoured—and tell you that 'it's no odds, so long as it makes them enough to live on after they have paid the rent.' To such men, Ulster Tenant Eight is the Eight to carry on a half civilized existence, no man hindering them."

      This is the sort of sketch which the Intelligent Foreigner would make of our country and our countrymen; admitting of course that he had only picked out the salient points of backwardness and neglect, on the principle that good landlords and well-to-do tenants and trim farms, however plentiful they might be throughout the country, were nothing more than one had a right to expect to find in any civilized land at the end of the 19th century, so that only the negligent landlords or tenants were deserving of special attention as causing blots on the face of the landscape which had no business to be there.

      What cure, then, would be devised for the evil by the impartial observer? Again, and again the words are being reiterated, until they will soon become a bye-word:—"Compel the had landlord by law to do that which the good landlord would do from a sense of duty!" Well and good—but is that sufficient? Is there no counterpart to such an obligation? If the good landlord's efforts to advance his tenants to their proper place in the march of progress are often unavailing, what can you expect of the bad landlord, even if he is put under legal pressure? You must go still further, and you must compel not only the had landlord^ hut also the had tenant, by law, to do that which the good tenant would do voluntarily and as a matter of course! And this is our "Plea for ​the Irish Land." Neither


Скачать книгу