Tom Swift and His Motor-Boat, or, the Rivals of Lake Carlopa
TOM SWIFT AND HIS MOTOR-BOAT Or The Rivals of Lake Carlopa By VICTOR APPLETON CONTENTS I ----- A Motor-boat Auction II ---- Some Lively Bidding III --- A Timely Warning IV ---- Tom And Andy Clash V ----- A Test Of Speed VI ---- Towing Some Girls VII --- A Brush With Andy VIII -- Off On A Trip IX ---- Mr. Swift Is Alarmed X ----- A Cry For Help XI ---- A Quick Run XII --- Suspicious Characters XIII -- Tom In Danger
history anything like a peaceful cultivation of the soil or a regular
election to the office of chief was out of the question. It was quite
an ordinary thing for a chief to obtain his position by murdering his
predecessor. The annalists give us a long list of Kings of Ireland
dating from before the Christian era until the arrival of the Normans.
Of course the word "king" can mean little more than "prominent
chief," for no one man ever had real authority over the whole of the
distracted land. Even of these prominent chiefs, however, according
to the annalists, very few died natural deaths. Some fell in battle,
others were assassinated; but the most common fate for a monarch was
to be "slain by his successor." If this was true of the most powerful
men in the country, to speak of the office of chief as elective is
really absurd. But more than this: there is no evidence that the
"tribal system," in the sense of all the tribe being related by blood
and all owning their lands in common, ever existed in Ireland even
in theory. At the earliest date of which we possess any distinct
information on the subject, wealth, representing physical force, had
become the acknowledged basis of political power and private right;
and the richer members of the community were rapidly reducing the
poorer freemen--many of whom were the descendants of an earlier race
or of conquered tribes--to a state of serfdom. The system (if such
a word can be applied at all) was in fact a bad form of feudalism
without its advantages. There was no central overlord (like those
in other countries who gradually developed into the sovereigns of
mediaeval kingdoms and thus became able to enforce peace and progress),
each petty chief being independent; and on the other hand the dues
TOM SWIFT AND HIS MOTOR-BOAT Or The Rivals of Lake Carlopa By VICTOR APPLETON CONTENTS I ----- A Motor-boat Auction II ---- Some Lively Bidding III --- A Timely Warning IV ---- Tom And Andy Clash V ----- A Test Of Speed VI ---- Towing Some Girls VII --- A Brush With Andy VIII -- Off On A Trip IX ---- Mr. Swift Is Alarmed X ----- A Cry For Help XI ---- A Quick Run XII --- Suspicious Characters XIII -- Tom In Danger