The State And the Nation

Cover The State And the Nation
The State And the Nation
Jenks, Edward, 1861-1939
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But there the individualising ^ Ibi est setni'bos. The problem would be solved by supplying one ox at alternate ploughings.
INTRODUCTION OF AGRICULTURE 99 process sUq)s; until it is completed by the modem En- closure Movement (pp. 229-30).
Moreover, the supporters of this view point to the un- questioned fact, that this incomplete process of indivi- dualising barely touches the meadow and "waste" land of the village. Until the '^enclosures" of quite modem days, the meadow was only parcelled out
... during hay- growth and hay-harvest. For the rest of the year, it was grazed by the viUagers' cattle and sheep, in accordance with a ''stint" or fixed allowance, settled by the size of thdr req)ective arable holdings. These are the beasts levants and cauchatUs on the land, so well known to students of English land law. Over the waste or "common" (in the popular sense) , there were no individual rights. It remained open and unenclosed during the whole year; and to it the viUagers resorted for their wood and water, the turf for their fires, and their day and stone, for the feed of their inferior animals — their swine, asses, geese, goats, and the like — and, it is to be shrewdly suspected, for the gratifica- tion of their primeval hunting instincts in coney-trapping and fowling.

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