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CONDITION AND PROSPECTS

OF IRELAND.

THE

CONDITION AND PROSPECTS

OF

IRELAND

AND

THE EVILS ARISING FROM THE PRESENT DISTRIBUTION

OF LANDED PROPERTY :

WITH

SUGGESTIONS FOR A REMEDY.

BY JONATHAN PIM.

DUBLIN :

HODGES AND SMITH, GRAFTON STREET.

1848.

DA

PS11 1848

"Something must be done to restrain the enormous accumulation of property in single hands, to facilitate its acquisition, and secure its possession to the mass of the community. Men must distinguish clearly between small tenancies and small properties; the former, as in Ireland, are but a source of servility, wretchedness, and crime; the latter, as in Norway, and in every other country where they have ever existed, have been a source no less sure of independence, comfort, and virtue."

Arnold's Miscellaneous Works, page 501.

"No one seems to deny the benefit of the division, and above all of the divisibility, of property within reasonable limits; and to such an extent as the force of circumstanceshe rise and decay of fortunes-the mutual relations of the money and land markets may egitimately require."

Quarterly Review, No. CLVII. Art. VII. on Division of Property in France.

PRINTED BY WEBB AND CHAPMAN, GREAT BRUNSWICK STREET.

GL

243-6462

GLRET

2-27-84

PREFACE.

In the early part of last year, the author published a small pamphlet entitled, "Observations on the Evils resulting to Ireland from the insecurity of title and the existing Laws of Real Property, with some Suggestions towards a Remedy." The various information which has since come before him, as one of the secretaries to the Central Relief Association of the Society of Friends, has greatly strengthened the conviction previously entertained, that the circumstances under which the landed property of Ireland has been placed, have, more than any other cause, contributed to the poverty of the people, and have greatly increased the effects of the recent calamity.

In the hope of rendering a more extended view of this subject interesting to the public, he has attempted to shew why the failure of the potato crop has been so severely felt in Ireland, and to point out what have appeared to him the best

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