国立情報学研究所 - ディジタル・シルクロード・プロジェクト
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0458 Ruins of Desert Cathay : vol.1
中国砂漠地帯の遺跡 : vol.1
Ruins of Desert Cathay : vol.1 / 458 ページ(カラー画像)

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doi: 10.20676/00000213
引用形式選択: Chicago | APA | Harvard | IEEE

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284

A HIDDEN ARCHIVE

CH. XXIV

to clear the clay sealings on the documents which I had carried away to my tent carefully wrapped up, I discovered that almost all remained as fresh as when first impressed, and that most of them were from intaglios of classical workmanship representing Pallas Promachos, Heracles with club and lion-skin, Zeus, and helmeted busts (Fig. 95).

The fact that the majority of these tablets bore in

the sunk socket of their covers or envelopes the impressions of two, or in a few cases even three, seals strongly

supported the assumption of their containing agreements

or bonds executed before witnesses. Among the tablets with single seal impressions there were two showing the

official title of the Chinese commander at Shan-shan or

Lop-nor in Chinese lapidary characters (Fig. 95, 6). The importance attached to the preservation of the

sealings was illustrated by the silk wraps found tied closely for protection over the clay-filled seal sockets of several tablets.

The clearing resumed early next morning brought the total number of perfectly preserved documents close up to

three dozen, by far the largest series of complete records

which any of the ruins had yielded. I wondered when the time would come for having the strings cut which still

fastened them as securely as when they were first sealed

down. It was strange to find myself the de facto possessor of Sojaka's deeds probably referring to lands and other

real property. True enough, they had all lain buried for centuries under the silent dunes or those sombre sand-cones covered with tangled tamarisk scrub dead or dying. Yet so fond had I become of this great dead waste,

fascinating and peaceful, that I should have felt sorely   I

tempted to assert legal claims to any part of it, had there   I

been but an Amban ready to read `my' deeds and recognize their validity !

The circumstances in which these documents had come to be buried were, as I recognized from the first, deserving of the closest consideration ; for it was evident that they might throw light on the important question as to how this settlement was deserted. The care which had been taken to hide the deposit and at the same time to mark its