summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
path: root/76102-h
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
authornfenwick <nfenwick@pglaf.org>2025-05-16 07:21:04 -0700
committernfenwick <nfenwick@pglaf.org>2025-05-16 07:21:04 -0700
commit20a06d6591f01b450811e6350325a1b41289e387 (patch)
tree145a75f54b50ed3933d8afb47d285637b51ab079 /76102-h
Initial commitHEADmain
Diffstat (limited to '76102-h')
-rw-r--r--76102-h/76102-h.htm11014
-rw-r--r--76102-h/images/cover.jpgbin0 -> 413502 bytes
2 files changed, 11014 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/76102-h/76102-h.htm b/76102-h/76102-h.htm
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..b9c6bff
--- /dev/null
+++ b/76102-h/76102-h.htm
@@ -0,0 +1,11014 @@
+<!DOCTYPE html>
+<html lang="en">
+ <head>
+ <meta charset="UTF-8">
+ <title>Illustrations of Political Economy Vol 9 of 9 | Project Gutenberg</title>
+ <link rel="icon" href="images/cover.jpg" type="image/x-cover">
+ <style>
+ body { margin-left: 8%; margin-right: 10%; }
+ h1 { text-align: center; font-weight: normal; font-size: 1.4em; }
+ h2 { text-align: center; font-weight: normal; font-size: 1.2em; }
+ h3 { text-align: center; font-weight: normal; font-size: 1.2em; }
+ .pageno { right: 1%; font-size: x-small; background-color: inherit; color: silver;
+ text-indent: 0em; text-align: right; position: absolute;
+ border: thin solid silver; padding: .1em .2em; font-style: normal;
+ font-variant: normal; font-weight: normal; text-decoration: none; }
+ p { text-indent: 0; margin-top: 0.5em; margin-bottom: 0.5em; text-align: justify; }
+ sup { vertical-align: top; font-size: 0.6em; }
+ .fss { font-size: 75%; }
+ .sc { font-variant: small-caps; }
+ .large { font-size: large; }
+ .small { font-size: small; }
+ .lg-container-b { text-align: center; }
+ .x-ebookmaker .lg-container-b { clear: both; }
+ .linegroup { display: inline-block; text-align: left; }
+ .x-ebookmaker .linegroup { display: block; margin-left: 1.5em; }
+ .linegroup .group { margin: 1em auto; }
+ .linegroup .line { text-indent: -3em; padding-left: 3em; }
+ div.linegroup > :first-child { margin-top: 0; }
+ .linegroup .in4 { padding-left: 5.0em; }
+ .linegroup .in6 { padding-left: 6.0em; }
+ div.footnote > :first-child { margin-top: 1em; }
+ div.footnote p { text-indent: 1em; margin-top: 0.0em; margin-bottom: 0.0em; }
+ div.pbb { page-break-before: always; }
+ hr.pb { border: none; border-bottom: thin solid; margin-bottom: 1em; }
+ .x-ebookmaker hr.pb { display: none; }
+ .chapter { clear: both; page-break-before: always; }
+ .figcenter { clear: both; max-width: 100%; margin: 2em auto; text-align: center; }
+ .figcenter img { max-width: 100%; height: auto; }
+ .id001 { width:60%; }
+ .x-ebookmaker .id001 { margin-left:20%; width:60%; }
+ .ig001 { width:100%; }
+ .table0 { margin: auto; margin-left: 0%; margin-right: 0%; width: 100%;
+ border-collapse: collapse; }
+ .table1 { margin: auto; width: 90%; }
+ .brt { border-right: thin solid; }
+ .colwidth12 { width:12% ; }
+ .colwidth18 { width:18% ; }
+ .colwidth36 { width:36% ; }
+ .colwidth6 { width:6% ; }
+ .colwidth69 { width:69% ; }
+ .colwidth7 { width:7% ; }
+ .nf-center { text-align: center; }
+ .nf-center-c0 { text-align: left; margin: 0.5em 0; }
+ .c000 { margin-top: 1em; }
+ .c001 { text-indent: 1em; margin-top: 0.0em; margin-bottom: 0.0em; }
+ .c002 { page-break-before: always; margin-top: 1em; }
+ .c003 { margin-top: 2em; }
+ .c004 { margin-top: 4em; }
+ .c005 { page-break-before:auto; margin-top: 4em; }
+ .c006 { border: none; border-bottom: thin solid; margin-top: 1em;
+ margin-bottom: 1em; margin-left: 47%; width: 5%; margin-right: 48%;
+ margin-top: 2em; }
+ .c007 { vertical-align: top; text-align: center; padding-left: .5em;
+ padding-right: .5em; }
+ .c008 { vertical-align: top; text-align: justify; text-indent: -1em;
+ padding-left: 1em; padding-right: .5em; }
+ .c009 { vertical-align: top; text-align: right; padding-left: .5em;
+ padding-right: .5em; }
+ .c010 { vertical-align: top; text-align: justify; text-indent: -1em;
+ padding-left: 1.5em; padding-right: .5em; }
+ .c011 { page-break-before: always; margin-top: 4em; }
+ .c012 { margin-top: 2em; text-indent: 1em; margin-bottom: 0.0em; }
+ .c013 { text-decoration: none; }
+ .c014 { margin-top: 1em; font-size: 95%; }
+ .c015 { margin-top: 1em; text-indent: 1em; margin-bottom: 0.0em; }
+ .c016 { margin-top: 4em; text-indent: 1em; margin-bottom: 0.0em; }
+ .c017 { margin-right: 5.56%; text-align: right; }
+ .c018 { margin-right: 5.56%; text-indent: 1em; margin-top: 0.0em;
+ margin-bottom: 0.0em; }
+ .c019 { border: none; border-bottom: thin solid; margin-top: 1em;
+ margin-bottom: 1em; margin-left: 33%; width: 33%; margin-right: 34%;
+ margin-top: 2em; }
+ .c020 { page-break-before: always; margin-top: 2em; }
+ .c021 { margin-right: 5.56%; margin-top: 2em; text-indent: 1em;
+ margin-bottom: 0.0em; }
+ .c022 { border: none; border-bottom: thin solid; margin-top: 1em;
+ margin-bottom: 1em; margin-left: 40%; width: 20%; margin-right: 40%; }
+ .c023 { margin-right: 5.56%; }
+ .c024 { margin-left: 2.78%; margin-right: 5.56%; text-indent: 1em;
+ margin-top: 0.0em; margin-bottom: 0.0em; }
+ .c025 { margin-left: 11.11%; margin-right: 5.56%; text-indent: -2.78%;
+ margin-top: 0.0em; margin-bottom: 0.0em; }
+ .c026 { margin-left: 8.33%; margin-right: 5.56%; text-indent: -2.78%;
+ margin-top: 0.0em; margin-bottom: 0.0em; }
+ .c027 { border: none; border-bottom: thin solid; margin-top: 1em;
+ margin-bottom: 1em; margin-left: 45%; width: 10%; margin-right: 45%; }
+ .c028 { margin-left: 8.33%; margin-right: 5.56%; text-indent: -8.33%;
+ margin-top: 0.0em; margin-bottom: 0.0em; }
+ .c029 { margin-left: 5.56%; margin-right: 5.56%; text-indent: 0; margin-top: 0.0em;
+ margin-bottom: 0.0em; }
+ .c030 { border: none; border-bottom: thin solid; margin-top: 1em;
+ margin-bottom: 1em; margin-left: 33%; width: 33%; margin-right: 34%;
+ margin-top: 4em; }
+ .c031 { margin-right: 5.56%; margin-top: 1em; text-indent: 1em;
+ margin-bottom: 0.0em; }
+ .c032 { margin-left: 11.11%; margin-right: 5.56%; text-indent: -5.56%;
+ margin-top: 0.0em; margin-bottom: 0.0em; }
+ .c033 { margin-left: 2.78%; margin-right: 5.56%; text-indent: -2.78%;
+ margin-top: 1em; margin-bottom: 0.0em; }
+ .c034 { margin-left: 5.56%; margin-right: 5.56%; text-indent: 1em;
+ margin-top: 0.0em; margin-bottom: 0.0em; }
+ .c035 { margin-left: 5.56%; margin-right: 5.56%; text-indent: -2.78%;
+ margin-top: 0.0em; margin-bottom: 0.0em; }
+ .c036 { border: none; border-bottom: thin solid; margin-top: 1em;
+ margin-bottom: 1em; margin-left: 33%; width: 33%; margin-right: 34%; }
+ .c037 { margin-right: 5.56%; text-indent: 0; margin-top: 1em; margin-bottom: 0.0em;
+ }
+ .c038 { margin-right: 5.56%; margin-top: 4em; }
+ .c039 { border: none; border-bottom: thin solid; width: 10%; margin-left: 0;
+ margin-top: 1em; text-align: left; }
+ .c040 { vertical-align: top; text-align: center; }
+ .c041 { vertical-align: top; text-align: left; }
+ .c042 { vertical-align: top; text-align: left; padding-right: 1em; }
+ a:link { text-decoration: none; }
+ div.tnotes { padding-left:1em;padding-right:1em;background-color:#E3E4FA;
+ border:1px solid silver; margin:1em 5% 0 5%; text-align: justify; }
+ .blackletter { font-family: "Old English Text MT", Gothic, serif; }
+ .epubonly {visibility: hidden; display: none; }
+ .htmlonly {visibility: visible; display: inline; }
+ .x-ebookmaker .htmlonly { visibility: hidden; display: none; }
+ .x-ebookmaker .epubonly { visibility: visible; display: inline; }
+ div.footnote { font-size:90%; }
+ .column-container{ margin: auto; clear: both; }
+ .left { display: inline-block; text-align: left; vertical-align: bottom;
+ width:49%; }
+ .right { display: inline-block; text-align: right; vertical-align: top; width:49%;
+ }
+ ins.correction { text-decoration:none; border-bottom: thin dotted gray; }
+ .quote { font-size: 95%; margin-top: 1.0em; margin-bottom: 1.0em; }
+ .linegroup .group { margin: 0em auto; }
+ .smaller { font-size:90%; }
+ .larger { font-size:95%; }
+ </style>
+ </head>
+ <body>
+<div style='text-align:center'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 76102 ***</div>
+
+<div class='pbb'>
+ <hr class='pb c000'>
+</div>
+<div class='tnotes'>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>Transcriber’s Note:</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c001'>The volume is a collection of two already published texts,
+each with its own title page and pagination.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>Minor errors, attributable to the printer, have been corrected. Please
+see the transcriber’s <a href='#endnote'>note</a> at the end of this text
+for details regarding the handling of any textual issues encountered
+during its preparation.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>The image of the blank front cover has been cleaned up and enhanced
+with basic data from the title page, and, so modified, is placed in the
+public domain.</p>
+
+<div class='htmlonly'>
+
+<p class='c001'>Any corrections are indicated using an <ins class='correction' title='original'>underline</ins>
+highlight. Placing the cursor over the correction will produce the
+original text in a small popup.</p>
+
+<div class='figcenter id001'>
+<img src='images/cover.jpg' alt='' class='ig001'>
+</div>
+
+</div>
+<div class='epubonly'>
+
+<p class='c001'>Any corrections are indicated as hyperlinks, which will navigate the
+reader to the corresponding entry in the corrections table in the
+note at the end of the text.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+</div>
+<div class='pbb'>
+ <hr class='pb c000'>
+</div>
+
+<div>
+ <h1 class='c002'>ILLUSTRATIONS <br> <span class='small'>OF</span> <br> <span class='large'>POLITICAL ECONOMY.</span></h1>
+</div>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+<div class='nf-center c003'>
+ <div><span class='small'>BY</span></div>
+ <div>HARRIET MARTINEAU.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+<div class='nf-center c003'>
+ <div>——o——</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+<div class='nf-center c003'>
+ <div>THE FARRERS OF BUDGE-ROW.</div>
+ <div>THE MORAL OF MANY FABLES.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+<div class='nf-center c000'>
+ <div>——o——</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+<div class='nf-center c000'>
+ <div><i>IN NINE VOLUMES.</i></div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+<div class='nf-center c003'>
+ <div>VOL. IX.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+<div class='nf-center c003'>
+ <div>——o——</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+<div class='nf-center c003'>
+ <div>LONDON:</div>
+ <div>CHARLES FOX, PATERNOSTER-ROW.</div>
+ <div>MDCCCXXXIV.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+<div class='nf-center c004'>
+ <div>LONDON:</div>
+ <div class='c000'>Printed by <span class='sc'>William Clowes</span>,</div>
+ <div>Duke-street, Lambeth.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <h2 class='c005'>CONTENTS.</h2>
+</div>
+
+<hr class='c006'>
+
+<table class='table0'>
+<colgroup>
+<col class='colwidth6'>
+<col class='colwidth36'>
+<col class='colwidth7'>
+<col class='colwidth6'>
+<col class='colwidth36'>
+<col class='colwidth7'>
+</colgroup>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c007' colspan='6'><a href='#v1'>THE FARRERS OF BUDGE-ROW.</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c008'><span class='small'>CHAP.</span></td>
+ <td class='c008'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='brt c009'><span class='small'>PAGE</span></td>
+ <td class='c010'><span class='small'>CHAP.</span></td>
+ <td class='c010'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c009'><span class='small'>PAGE</span></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c008'>1.</td>
+ <td class='c008'>Budge-row again!</td>
+ <td class='brt c009'><a href='#ch1.1'>1</a></td>
+ <td class='c010'>5.</td>
+ <td class='c010'>How to entertain Strangers</td>
+ <td class='c009'><a href='#ch1.5'>90</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c008'>2.</td>
+ <td class='c008'>Being Roman at Rome</td>
+ <td class='brt c009'><a href='#ch1.2'>2</a></td>
+ <td class='c010'>6.</td>
+ <td class='c010'>How to entertain Borrowers</td>
+ <td class='c009'><a href='#ch1.6'>105</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c008'>3.</td>
+ <td class='c008'>Death-Chamber Soothings</td>
+ <td class='brt c009'><a href='#ch1.3'>35</a></td>
+ <td class='c010'>7.</td>
+ <td class='c010'>Farewell to Budge-row</td>
+ <td class='c009'><a href='#ch1.7'>113</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c008'>4.</td>
+ <td class='c008'>Gossiping Authorship</td>
+ <td class='brt c009'><a href='#ch1.4'>55</a></td>
+ <td class='c010'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c010'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c008'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c008'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='brt c009'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c010'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c010'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c007' colspan='6'><a href='#v2'>THE MORAL OF MANY FABLES.</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c008'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c008'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='brt c009'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c010'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c010'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c008' colspan='2'>Introduction</td>
+ <td class='brt c009'><a href='#Page_2.1'>1</a></td>
+ <td class='c010' colspan='2'>—— Emigration</td>
+ <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_2.76'>76</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c008' colspan='2'><span class='sc'>Part I.</span>-—<span class='sc'>Production</span></td>
+ <td class='brt c009'><a href='#Page_2.2'>2</a></td>
+ <td class='c010' colspan='2'><span class='sc'>Part III.</span>—<span class='sc'>Exchange</span></td>
+ <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_2.85'>85</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c008' colspan='2'>—— Large Farms</td>
+ <td class='brt c009'><a href='#Page_2.21'>21</a></td>
+ <td class='c010' colspan='2'>—— Currency</td>
+ <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_2.88'>88</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c008' colspan='2'>—— Slavery</td>
+ <td class='brt c009'><a href='#Page_2.27'>27</a></td>
+ <td class='c010' colspan='2'>—— Free Trade</td>
+ <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_2.96'>96</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c008' colspan='2'><span class='sc'>Part II.</span>—<span class='sc'>Distribution</span></td>
+ <td class='brt c009'><a href='#Page_2.32'>32</a></td>
+ <td class='c010' colspan='2'>—— Corn-Laws and Restrictions on Labour</td>
+ <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_2.116'>116</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c008' colspan='2'>—— Rent, Wages, and Profits</td>
+ <td class='brt c009'><a href='#Page_2.41'>41</a></td>
+ <td class='c010' colspan='2'><span class='sc'>Part IV.</span>—<span class='sc'>Consumption</span></td>
+ <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_2.127'>127</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c008' colspan='2'>—— Combinations of Workmen</td>
+ <td class='brt c009'><a href='#Page_2.48'>48</a></td>
+ <td class='c010' colspan='2'>—— Taxes</td>
+ <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_2.133'>133</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c008' colspan='2'>—— Pauperism</td>
+ <td class='brt c009'><a href='#Page_2.62'>62</a></td>
+ <td class='c010' colspan='2'>Conclusion</td>
+ <td class='c009'><a href='#Page_2.140'>140</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c008' colspan='2'>—— Ireland</td>
+ <td class='brt c009'><a href='#Page_2.74'>74</a></td>
+ <td class='c010'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c010'>&#160;</td>
+ <td class='c009'>&#160;</td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_1'>1</span>
+ <h2 id='v1' class='c005'>THE <br> <br> FARRERS OF BUDGE-ROW.</h2>
+</div>
+
+<h3 id='ch1.1' class='c011'><span class='sc'>Chapter I.</span><br> <br> BUDGE-ROW AGAIN!</h3>
+
+<p class='c012'>“Pray open the window, Morgan,” said Jane
+Farrer to the old servant who was assisting her
+to arrange for tea the room in which the family
+had dined.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Perhaps you don’t know, Ma’am, what a
+cutting wind it is. More like December than
+March, Miss Jane; bitter enough to help on your
+rheumatism, my dear.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>And Morgan paused, with her hand on the sash.
+Miss Farrer chose that the room should be refreshed.
+She was aware that the scents from the
+shop were at all times strong enough for the
+nerves of any one unaccustomed to the atmosphere
+she lived in; and she did not wish that
+her brother Henry should have to encounter in
+addition those which the dinner had left behind.
+She tied a handkerchief over her head while the
+March wind blew in chilly, and Morgan applied
+herself to light the fire. When the dinner-table
+was set back against the wall, and the small
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2'>2</span>Pembroke table brought forward, and the sofa,
+with its brown cotton cover, wheeled round,
+and the two candlesticks, with whole candles
+in them, placed in front of the tea-tray, Miss
+Farrer thought she would go up into Henry’s
+room, and see that all was right there, before she
+put off her black stuff apron, and turned down
+the cuffs of her gown, and took her seat beside
+the fire.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>She tried to look at everything with the eyes
+she fancied her young brother would bring from
+the university. She, who had lived for five-and-thirty
+years in this very house, at the corner of
+Budge Row, among this very furniture, could
+not reasonably expect to view either the one or
+the other as it would appear to a youth of two-and-twenty,
+who had lived in a far different scene,
+and among such companions as Jane had no idea
+of. It was some vague notion of this improbability
+that made her linger about Henry’s little
+apartment, and wonder whether he would think
+she ought to have put up a stuff curtain before
+the window, and whether he had been accustomed
+to a bit of carpet, and whether the soap out of
+her father’s shop was such as he could use. Then
+came the odd mixture of feelings,—that her father’s
+youngest son ought not to dream of luxuries
+that his elder brother and sisters had not had,—and
+yet that Henry was a scholar and a gentleman,
+and therefore unavoidably held in awe by
+the family. When she reverted to the time, well
+remembered, when she upheld the little fellow,
+and coaxed him to set one tiny plump foot before
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_3'>3</span>the other, the idea of being now half afraid to
+receive him made her smile and then sigh, and
+hope that good might come of her father’s ambition
+to give a son of his a university education.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>Before she had finished making herself as neat
+as usual, and rather more dressed, she heard,
+amidst all the noises that came in from the narrow
+bustling street, her own name called from the
+bottom of the stairs.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“I’m coming, father!—It never can be Henry
+yet. The postman’s bell is but just gone by, and
+the six o’clock cries are not all over; and there
+sound the chimes. It is full five minutes’ walk
+from Lad-lane, too. Perhaps there is something
+more to be done at the books: so I will carry
+down my apron.—Why, Morgan, it is well I did
+not throw you down stairs.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>Morgan’s face, entrenched in its mob cap, was
+just visible in the twilight, peeping into the room
+from the steep, narrow stair upon which the
+chamber-door directly opened. She came to say
+that her master wanted Miss Jane; that he was
+in a great hurry, and seemed to have some good
+news to tell.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>Mr. Farrer was bustling about, apparently in
+a state of great happiness. His brown wig
+seemed to sit lightly on his crown; his shoes
+creaked very actively; his half whistle betokened
+a light heart, and he poked the fire as if he had
+forgotten how much coals were a bushel. He
+stretched out his arms when his daughter came
+down with a look of inquiry, and kissed her on
+either cheek, saying,</p>
+
+<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_4'>4</span>“I have news for thee, my dear. I say,
+Morgan, let us have plenty of buttered toast,—plenty
+and hot. Well, Jenny,—life is short
+enough to some folks. Of all people, who do
+you think are dead?”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>Jane saw that it was nobody that she would
+be expected to grieve about. She had fallen
+enough into her father’s way of thinking to conjecture
+aright,—that some of the lot of lives with
+which her father and she were joined in a tontine
+annuity had failed.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Poor souls! Yes: Jerry Hill and his brother,—both
+gone together of a fever, in the same
+house. Who would have thought it? Both
+younger lives than mine, by some years. I have
+no doubt they thought, many a time, that mine
+would be the first to fail. But this is a fine
+invention,—this way of purchasing annuities,—though
+I was against it at first, as being too
+much like a lottery for a sober man to venture
+upon. But, I say, Jane, I hope you are glad I
+made you invest your money in this way. You
+had a right to look to coming into their lives,
+sooner or later; but one would hardly have expected
+it in my time; though, somehow, I always
+had a notion it would turn out so.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>Jane’s colour had been much raised, from the
+first disclosure of the news. She now asked
+whether these were not the last lives of the lot,
+out of their own family;—whether her father’s,
+her brother Michael’s, and her own were not the
+only ones now left.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“To be sure they are! We have the whole
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_5'>5</span>thing to ourselves from this time. I think the
+minister will be for sending Michael and me to
+the wars, to have us killed off; though I hope,
+in that case, you would live on and on, and enjoy
+your own for many a year, to disappoint him.
+But, to be sure,” said the old man, checking his
+exultation as he saw his daughter look grave,
+“life is a very uncertain thing, as we may see by
+what has just happened.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“I am sure it is the last thing I thought of,”
+observed Jane.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Ay. It is a pretty yearly addition to us
+three;—two dropping together in this way: and,
+as I said, I hope you will enjoy it for many a
+year when I am dead and gone; as I am sure
+you deserve, for you have been a good daughter
+to me,—keeping the house as well as your mother
+did before you, and the books better than I
+could myself, leaving me free to attend to the
+shop. But, let us see. The room is half full of
+smoke still; and you will say that comes of
+my poking the fire. What have you got for
+Harry’s tea? The lad will want something solid,
+though he be a student. I remember his telling
+me last time that no folks are more hungry than
+those that have been a long while over their
+books.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>Jane moved about like one in a dream, till, the
+shop-boy’s heavy tread having been heard in the
+passage, Morgan put her head in at the parlour
+door to say that Michael and a gentleman with
+him might be seen from the shop-door to have
+turned the corner at the other end of the Row.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_6'>6</span>“’Tis a pity Patience can’t be here to-night,
+now really,” said the old man: “but she always
+manages to be confined just when we have a
+merry-making. ’Tis as perverse as her husband
+not choosing to buy a tontine annuity when he
+had the cash by him. He will find now he had
+better have done it. I wish I had thought of it
+in time to have made it a condition of his marrying
+Patience.—Well, Harry, lad! I hope you
+are come home hearty. What! You are not
+ashamed of your kin, though you have been
+seeing lords at every turn?”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“How well Jane looks!” was Henry’s first
+remark, after all the greetings were over. “She
+is not like the same person that she was the last
+time I came home.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>Henry was not the only one who saw a change
+in Jane, this evening. Her eyes shone in the light
+of the fire, and there was a timidity in her manner
+which seemed scarcely to belong to the sober age
+she had attained. Instead of making tea in the
+shortest and quietest way, as usual, she was hesitating
+and absent, and glanced towards Henry as
+often as her father and Michael joked, or the
+opening of the door let in a whiff of the scent of
+cheese and the et ceteras of a grocer’s establishment.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>Mr. Farrer remarked that Henry would find
+London a somewhat busier place just now than
+he had been accustomed to. London had been
+all in a bustle since the King’s speech, so that
+there was no such thing as getting shop-boys
+back when they had been sent of an errand.
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_7'>7</span>What with the soldiers in the Parks, and the fuss
+upon the river when any news came, and the
+forces marching to embark, and the shows some
+of the emigrants made in the streets, there was
+enough to entice idle boys from their duty.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Not only from their duty of coming home,”
+said Michael. “There was our Sam to-day,—’tis
+a fact,—left the shop while I was half a mile
+off, and the Taylors’ maid came in for half a
+pound of currants, and would have gone away
+again if Morgan had not chanced to pass the
+inside door and look over the blind at the moment.
+’Tis a fact: and Sam had nothing to say but that
+he heard firing, and the newsmen’s horns blowing
+like mad, and he went to learn what it was
+all about.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“I’ll teach him! I’ll make him remember
+it!” cried Mr. Farrer. “But we want another
+pair of eyes in the shop, sure enough. ’Tis not
+often that you and I want to be away at the same
+time; but——”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>And the father and son talked over their shop
+plans, and prepared vengeance for Sam, while
+Henry told his sister what signs of public rejoicing
+he had seen this day on his journey;—flags
+on the steeples, processions of little boys,
+and evergreen boughs on the stage coaches. The
+war seemed a very amusing thing to the nation
+at present.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Stocks are up to-day. The people are in
+high spirits.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“When people are bent on being in high
+spirits, anything will do to make them so. We
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_8'>8</span>were in high spirits six years ago because a few
+bad taxes were taken off; and now we are merrier
+than ever under the necessity of laying on
+more.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Come, come, Hal,” said his father, “don’t
+grudge the people a taste of merriment while they
+can get it. You will see long faces enough when
+these new taxes come to be paid. I hope you
+are not so dead set against the minister as you
+used to be when younger; or so given to find
+fault with all that is done.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“So far from being an enemy to the minister,
+father, I think it is very hard that the nation, or
+the part of them that makes itself heard by the
+minister, should be so fond of war as to encourage
+him to plunge us into it. These very people will
+not abuse him the less, in the long run, for getting
+the nation into debt.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Well, well. We won’t abuse the debt, and
+loans, and that sort of thing to-day,—eh, Jane!”
+And Mr. Farrer chuckled, and Michael laughed
+loudly.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“For my part,” continued the old man, “I
+think the debt is no bad thing for showing what
+sort of spirits the nation is in. You may depend
+upon it, Peek, and all other husbands who have
+wives apt to be high and low, would be very glad
+of such a thermometer to measure the ladies’
+humour by. ’Tis just so, I take it, with Mr. Pitt
+and the nation. If he wants to know his mistress’s
+humour, he has only just to learn the
+state of the stocks.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Just the same case,” said Michael, laughing.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_9'>9</span>“Not quite,” said Henry. “Peek would rather
+do without such a thermometer, or barometer, if
+Patience must ruin herself to pay for it: much
+more, if she must leave it to her children to pay
+it after her. I should not have expected, father,
+to find you speaking up for war and the debt.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Why, as for war, it seems to make a pretty
+sort of bustle that rather brings people to the
+shop than keeps them away, and that will help
+us to pay our share of the new taxes, if we only
+keep to the shop, instead of fancying to be fine
+gentlemen. But I am of your mind about the
+minister. If the people are eager for war,—and
+full of hope—of—of——”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Ah! of what? What is the best that can
+come of it?”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“O, every true Englishman hopes to win, you
+know. But if they will go headlong into war,
+they have no right to blame the minister, as if it
+was all his doing that they have to pay heavy
+taxes.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Yet he ought to know better than to judge
+of the people by a parliament that claps its hands
+the more the more burdens are laid on their children’s
+children. He ought to question their
+right to tax posterity in any such way. I cannot
+see how it is at all more just for us to make a war
+which our grandchildren must pay for, than for
+our allies to make a war which the English must
+pay for.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“I am sure we are paying as fast as we can,”
+replied Mr. Farrer. “It has kept me awake
+more nights than one, I can tell you,—the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_10'>10</span>thinking what will come of these new taxes on
+many things that we sell. As for the debt, it
+has got so high, it can get little higher; that is
+one comfort. To think that in my father’s young
+days, it was under seven hundred thousand
+pounds; and now, in my day, it is near three
+hundred millions!”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“What makes you so sure it will soon stop,
+father?”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“That it can’t go on without ruining the nation,
+son. I suppose you don’t think any minister
+on earth would do that. No, no. Three
+hundred millions is debt enough, in all conscience,
+for any nation. No minister will venture
+beyond that.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Not unless the people choose. And I, for
+one, will do all in my power to prevent its proceeding
+further.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“And pray how?”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“That depends on what your plans are for me,
+sir.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“True enough. Well, eat away now, and
+let us see whether book-learning spoils buttered
+toast. Come, tell us what you think of us, after
+all the fine folks you have been amongst.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>Jane was astonished that her father could
+speak in this way to the gentleman in black, who,
+however simple in his manners, and accommodating
+in his conversation, was quite unlike every
+other person present in his quiet tone, and gentle
+way of talking. She could not have asked
+him what he thought of the place and the party.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>Henry replied that he was, as he had said,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_11'>11</span>much struck by his sister’s looking so well; and
+as for Morgan, she was not a day older since the
+time when he used to run away with her Welsh
+beaver——</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“And make yourself look like a girl, with your
+puny pale face,” interrupted Michael.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Well, but, the place,—how does the old
+house look?” persisted Mr. Farrer. “You used
+to be fond of prying through that green curtain
+to see the folks go in and out of the shop; and
+then you raised mustard and cress at the back
+window; and you used to whistle up and down
+stairs to your attic till your poor mother could
+bear it no longer. The old place looks just as it
+did to you, I dare say?”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>Henry could say no more than that he remembered
+all these things. By recalling many others,
+he hoped to divert the course of investigation; but
+his father insisted on his saying that the dingy, confined,
+shabby rooms looked to the grown wise man
+the very same as to the thoughtless child who had
+seen no other house. It was as impossible for
+Henry to say this as to believe still, as he once
+did, that his father was the wisest man in the
+world; and Mr. Farrer was disconcerted accordingly.
+He thought within himself that this was
+a poor reward for all that he had spent on his
+son Harry, and pushed away his cup with the
+spoon in it when it had been filled only four
+times.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Are you tired, Jane?” asked Henry, setting
+down his tin candlestick with its tall thin candle,
+when his father had done bidding him be careful
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_12'>12</span>not to set the house on fire, and Michael was gone
+to see that all was safe in the shop. Jane was
+quite disposed for more conversation; and would
+indeed have been darning stockings for at least
+another hour if Henry had gone to sleep at ten,
+like his brother. She brought out her knitting,
+carefully piled the embers, extinguished one
+candle, and was ready to hear Henry’s questions
+and remarks, and to offer some of her own. She
+could not return the compliment she had received
+as to her looks. She thought Harry
+was thin, and nearly as pale as in the old days
+when his nankeen frock and drab beaver matched
+his complexion.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>Henry had been studying hard; and he acknowledged
+that his mind had been anxious of
+late. It was so strange that nothing had been
+said to him respecting his destination in life,
+that he could not help speculating on the future
+more than was quite good for health and spirits.
+Could Jane give him any idea what his father’s
+intentions were?</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>Henry now looked so boyish, with feet on
+fender, and fingers busy with an unemployed
+knitting-needle, that Jane’s ancient familiarity
+began to return. She hoped there were no
+matrimonial thoughts at the bottom of Henry’s
+anxiety about the future.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Must no man be anxious about his duties
+and his prospects till he thinks of marrying,
+Jane? But why have you hopes and fears about
+it?”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Because I am sure my father will not hear
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_13'>13</span>of such a thing as your marrying. You know
+how steady he is when he once makes up his
+mind.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>Henry glanced up in his sister’s face, and
+away again when he saw that she met his eye.
+She continued,</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“I am not speaking of my own case in particular;
+but he has expressed his will to Michael,
+very plainly, and told him what sort of connexion
+he must make if he marries at all. And Michael
+has in consequence given up all talk of marriage
+with a young woman he had promised himself to.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Given up the connexion! A grown man
+like Michael give up the woman he had engaged
+himself to, at another man’s bidding!
+How can he sit laughing as he did to-night?”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“I did not say he had given up the connexion,”
+replied Jane, very quietly; “but he
+has given up all talk of marriage. So you see——”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“I see I shall have nothing to say to my
+father on this part of the subject of settling in
+life. But you, Jane,—what are you doing and
+thinking of? My father knows that he is on
+safer ground with you than he can be with his
+sons. How is it with you, sister?”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“What you say is very true. If he chooses
+to speak for his daughter, keeping her in the
+dark all the while, what can she do but make
+herself content to be in the dark, and turn her
+mind upon something else? If mine is too full
+of one object or another, I hope God will be
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_14'>14</span>merciful with me, since I have been under another’s
+bidding all my days.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“It <i>is</i> hard—very hard.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“It is hard that others,—that Morgan, and I
+dare say Michael, should know more of what has
+been said and written in my name than I do myself.
+Yes, Morgan. It is from her that I know——”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“About Peek? That he wanted you before
+he thought of Patience?”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Not only that. Patience is welcome to her
+lot,—though I do not see what need have prevented
+her taking my place at the books, if my
+father had not made up his mind to keep me by
+him. But that is nothing in comparison with—some
+other things that have been done in my name;
+the treating a friend as if he were an impostor,
+and I a royal princess; while, all the time, I had
+no such proud thoughts myself, God knows.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“How came Morgan to tell you anything
+about it?” cried Henry, eager to find some one
+on whom to vent the indignation that he was unwilling
+to express in relation to his father.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Morgan was made a friend of by that person;
+and she is the kindest friend I have, you
+may believe it, Henry. She would have upheld
+me in anything I might have chosen to do or to
+say. But I was doubtful whether it was not too
+late then; and altogether I fancy it was best to
+get on as I did for a time. And now I am settled
+to my lot, you see, and grown into it. I
+am fully satisfied now with my way of life; and
+it is not likely to change.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_15'>15</span>“Do you mean that you expect to keep the
+books, and be a thrifty housewife, as long as you
+live? If it was necessary, well and good. But
+my father must be enormously rich.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>Jane shook her head as she carefully mended
+the fire, and observed that the times were such as
+to alarm the wealthiest. While her brother
+made inquiries about the business, and her share
+of profit for her toils, she answered with her
+habitual caution, and made no communication
+about the increased income which the three
+members of the family would receive in consequence
+of the deaths of which she had this afternoon
+<a id='corr1.15.14'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='heard.”'>heard.</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_1.15.14'><ins class='correction'>heard.</ins></a></span></p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“So you have no idea,” said Henry, “how
+long I am to remain here, and what I am to do
+next?”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Ah! indeed I am afraid you will hardly
+know what to do with your days here, Henry.
+I have been thinking what can be managed as
+to that. You see we have no books but the one
+shelf-full that you have read many times already.
+And we have no friends; and we dine so early;
+and the house itself, I am afraid, is the kind of
+thing you have been little used to. You may
+speak out to me more than you liked to do to my
+father.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>Henry was looking about him with a half
+smile, and owned that the slanting glass between
+the windows did not appear quite so grand a
+mirror as when he looked up into it fearfully, in
+his childhood, wondering by what magic the
+straight floor could be made to look so like a
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_16'>16</span>very steep carpeted hill. He then thought that
+no entertainment could be grander than the new
+year’s eve, when Mr. Jerry Hill and his brother
+used to come to drink punch, and were kind
+enough to take each a boy between his knees.
+But now, it seemed as if there would be barely
+room for Mr. Jerry Hill and his brother to turn
+themselves round in this very same parlour.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>They would never spend another new year’s
+eve here! They were dead! How? When?
+Where? The news only arrived this day! and
+his father and Michael so merry! Henry could
+not understand this.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“But, Jane, do not trouble your head about
+what amusement I am to find at home. If it
+comes to that, I can sit in my old place in the
+window-seat and read, let the carts clatter and
+the sashes rattle as they may. What I want to
+know is how I am to employ myself. I shall
+not live idly, as you may suppose. I will not
+accept of food and clothes, to be led about for a
+show as my father’s learned son that was bred up
+at the university.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Certainly not,” said Jane, uneasily. “Perhaps
+in two or three days something may turn
+up to settle the matter. I dare say you had
+rather go back to college than do anything else?”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>No. Henry now fell into praises of the life
+of a country clergyman, living in just such a
+parsonage as he saw at Allansford, when he was
+staying there with his friend, John Stephens.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Are there any ladies at Mr. Stephens’s?”
+inquired Jane.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_17'>17</span>“Mrs. Stephens and her daughter, and a friend
+of Miss Stephens’s. Ah! that is just the kind
+of settlement that I should like; and how easily
+my father might, if he would—But, as you
+say, a few days will show; and I will have patience
+till then. I cannot conceive what made
+him send for me, unless he has something in
+view.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>Jane knitted in silence.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Will you go with me to-morrow morning,
+Jane, to see poor Patience?”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>Jane could not be spared in the mornings;
+but she could step over before dark in the evening,
+and should be glad to introduce to Henry
+some of his new nephews and nieces; there
+having been two brace of twins since Harry had
+crossed the threshold. Harry thought Peek was
+a very dutiful king’s man. He not only raised
+taxes wherewith to carry on the king’s wars, but
+reared men to fight in them.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Why, Morgan,” said he, “I thought you
+had gone to bed without bestowing a word on
+me. Cannot you sit down with us for five minutes?”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>Morgan set down the little tray with hot water
+and a bottle of home-made wine, which she had
+brought unbidden and half fearfully. She was
+relieved by seeing her mistress bring out the
+sugar and glasses cheerfully from the cupboard,
+and invite her brother to help himself. He did
+so when he had filled a glass for Morgan.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>When the candlewicks had grown long, and
+the fire had fallen low, so prodigious a knocking
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_18'>18</span>was heard overhead as nearly prevented Morgan
+from carrying her last mouthful straight to its
+destination. Mr. Farrer had heard their voices
+on waking from his first sleep, and had no idea
+of thoughtless young people wasting his coals and
+candles in such an idle way,—as if they could
+not talk by day-light! The glasses were deposited
+so carefully as to make no jingle; the
+slender candles were once more lighted, and
+Henry found time just to assure his sister, in a
+whisper, that he had not seen a truer lady than
+Morgan since they had last parted. He picked
+out one favourite volume from the single row of
+books, to carry to his chamber; shook hands
+with his sister, and edged his way up the narrow
+stairs. As he found that the room seemed made
+to forbid all reading, unless it were in bed, he
+left his book unopened till the morning. It was
+the first volume of poetry that he had ever
+studied; but as the window-curtain was puffed
+to and fro, and a cutting draught entered under
+the door, and the whole room was divided between
+the two, he put out his flaring candle, and
+lay thinking poetry instead of reading it, while
+the gleams on the ceiling, and the drowsy sounds
+from below, called up visions of his childhood,
+which at last insensibly mingled with those of
+sleep.</p>
+
+<div>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_19'>19</span>
+ <h3 id='ch1.2' class='c011'><span class='sc'>Chapter II.</span> <br> <br> BEING ROMAN AT ROME.</h3>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c012'>Morgan need not have exercised her old office
+of calling Henry the next morning. Her knock
+was heard at the accustomed hour; but Henry
+had been wakened long before by horns, bells,
+cries, and rumbling, which seemed to proceed
+from “above, about, and underneath,” and
+which made him wonder how, in his childhood,
+he could find it as difficult to open his eyes when
+told that the day was come, as to be persuaded
+to go to bed when he had laid hold of a new book.
+A certain childish question of Henry’s was held
+in mirthful remembrance by his family, and
+brought up by his father every time that he
+showed his face at home,—“Why must one go
+to bed? One no sooner goes to bed than one
+has to get up again.” Such a happy oblivion of
+the many intervening hours was no longer found
+practicable in the little apartment that shook
+with every passing waggon; and how it could
+ever have been attained was at least as great a
+mystery now as the perpetual motion.
+“Well, Harry,” said his father, “what a pity
+you should have troubled yourself to pull off your
+clothes, as you had to put them on again directly!
+Hey? But I thought you were of the same mind
+last night, by the time you sat up. What kept
+you up so late?”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“We had a great deal to say, father, after
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_20'>20</span>such a long absence. Jane had but little time
+for writing letters, you know, while I was away.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“I think you might have your talk by daylight.
+What are you going to do with yourself to-day?”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>There was no lack of something to do this
+first day. First, there was seeing the shop,—being
+shown the new contrivance for obtaining
+half a foot more room behind the counter,
+and the better plan for securing the till, and
+the evidence of Michael’s pretty taste in the
+shape of a yellow lamb of spun butter, with two
+currants for eyes, and a fine curly fleece, which
+might keep its beauty a whole fortnight longer,
+if this seasonable March weather should last.
+Opposite to the lamb was a tower of Babel, of
+cheese, which had been crumbling for some time.
+But, though the tower was infested with mice, it
+was the general opinion that it would outlast the
+lamb. Then, while Jane settled herself, aproned,
+shawled, and mittened, at her desk, there was a
+long story to be told,—a story really interesting
+to Henry,—of the perplexities which had been
+introduced into the trade by the fluctuations of
+the duties on various articles. When tobacco
+was sometimes to pay a tax of 350 per cent., and
+then no more than 200, and then, on a sudden,
+1200, how should custom be regular, and the
+trader know what to expect? A man must be
+as wise as a Scripture prophet to know what stock
+to lay in when there was no depending on custom.
+People would use twice as much tobacco
+one year as another; and a third more sugar;
+and a fourth more tea; or would drop one article
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_21'>21</span>after another in a way that no mortal could foretell.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>Why not foretell? Was it not certain that
+when a tax on an article of consumption was increased,
+the consumption fell off in a definite proportion?</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>Quite certain; but then came in another sort
+of disturbance. When duties rose very high,
+smuggling was the next thing; and there was
+no calculating how smuggling might keep up the
+demand.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Nor what new taxes it may lead to,” observed
+Henry. “If the consumption of taxed
+articles falls off, the revenue suffers; and if, at
+the same time, smuggling increases, new expenses
+are incurred for guarding the coast. The
+people must pay both for the one and the other;
+and so, the next thing is to lay on new taxes.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Ah!” groaned the old man. “They begin
+to talk of an income tax.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>Whatever Henry’s opinion of an income tax
+might be, he was aware that few inflictions could
+be so dreadful to his father. Mr. Farrer, possessed,
+it was supposed, of nearly half a million,
+managed to pay less in taxes than most of his
+neighbours who happened to have eight hundred
+a year, and spent it. Mr. Farrer eschewed luxuries,
+except a few of the most unexpensive; he
+was sparing of comforts, and got off paying more
+to the state than any other man who must have
+common food, clothing, and house-room. His
+contributions must be prodigiously increased if
+he was to be made to pay in proportion to his
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_22'>22</span>income. It was a subject on which none of his
+family dared to speak, even on this morrow of a
+piece of good fortune. The most moderate income
+tax would sweep away more than the addition
+gained by the dropping of the two lives in
+the joint annuity.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“They had better mend their old ways than
+try new,” said Michael. “If they knew how,
+they might get more by every tax than it has
+yielded yet. Peek says so. He says there is
+not a taxed article eaten or drunk, or used, that
+would not yield more if the tax was lowered; and
+Peek ought to know.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“And you ought to know, Mike, that you are
+the last man that should wish for such a change,”
+said his father, with a sly wink. Michael’s laugh
+made his brother uneasy; he scarcely knew
+why.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“It is a great wrong, I think,” said Henry,
+“to keep the poorer classes from the use of comforts
+and luxuries that they might have, if the
+state managed its plan of taxation better.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Well, and so it is, Henry; and I often say
+so when I see a poor man come for his tobacco,
+and grumble at the price, and threaten it shall be
+the last time; and a poor woman cheapen her
+ounce of tea, and taste the butter and smell at
+the cheese, and go away without buying any of
+them. As long as good management would serve
+to satisfy such poor creatures as these, without
+bringing an income tax upon their betters, it is
+a shame there is no such management.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“How much more would be consumed in your
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_23'>23</span>family, sir, if taxes on commodities were lowered
+as you would have them?”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“O, as for us, we have every thing we want,
+as far as I know. There might be little or no
+difference in our own family; but I know there
+would be among our customers. Shopkeepers
+would wonder where all the crowd of buyers came
+from.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“And the smugglers might turn tax-gatherers,
+hey, father?”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“And there need be no more talk of an income
+tax,” said the old man; “let the French
+brazen their matters out as they will.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>Henry was not very sure of this, in his own
+mind. It seemed to him that the more support
+the state derived from taxes on commodities, the
+more clearly the people would see the injustice
+of levying the taxes upon those who were compelled
+to spend their whole income in the purchase
+of commodities, while the rich, who chose
+to live very frugally and hoard, might escape the
+payment of their due share. A customer now
+came in; and then the cheese-cellar had to be
+visited; and then Mr. Farrer wanted Henry to
+go with him to two or three neighbours’ houses,
+where there was a due admiration of the blessings
+of a learned education on the one side, and on
+the other a prodigious self-complacency about
+the liberality, and the generosity, and the wisdom,
+and the glory of making one member of the
+family a great man, who should do honour to his
+kith and kin.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>The evening was spent at Mrs. Peek’s.
+Mrs. Peek was able to receive her family at
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_24'>24</span>home, though she had not yet left the house
+since her confinement. She was proud of having
+a brother who had been at college, though no
+one grumbled more at the expense than she did
+by her own fireside. She was unwilling to lose
+this opportunity of showing him off to some
+neighbours; and when the party from Budge
+Row entered Peek’s house, at five o’clock, they
+perceived several shawls and calashes on the
+window-seat in the passage which was called the
+hall. One of Mr. Farrer’s candles was flaring
+in this passage, and two in the waiting-room, as
+the children’s play-place was called, and six in
+the parlour, it being Mrs. Peek’s wish to have
+every thing smart for the reception of her genteel
+brother. The ample sofa and two arm-chairs
+were ranged on one side, and four chairs on the
+other. When the door was thrown open, the
+party in the ante-room saw two young ladies
+take flight from the sofa across the room; and
+by the time that all had entered the parlour, five
+maidens were wedged in a close rank, in front of
+the three chairs which were next Mrs. Peek’s.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>They stood looking shy during the introduction,
+and were made more awkward still by the
+old gentleman insisting, as he settled himself by
+the fire, that one of those young ladies should
+come and sit on the sofa beside him. None of
+them stirred.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Miss Mills, suppose you take a seat on the
+sofa,” observed Mrs. Peek.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“No, thank you, ma’am,” said Miss Mills.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Miss Anne Mills, won’t you take a seat on
+the sofa?”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_25'>25</span>“No, ma’am, thank you.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Then, Miss Baker, or Miss Grace——. My
+fourth girl, Grace, is called after that young lady,
+Henry;—(Grace Baker is a great favourite of
+ours). Grace, my dear, you will sit on the sofa,
+I am sure. What! none of you!” (seeing the
+five edge themselves down on the three chairs.)
+“Dear me! and there’s so much room on the
+other side! I believe I must go to the sofa, and
+then Henry will take my seat.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>Miss Mills looked disposed to fly back again
+to the sofa when Henry took his seat beside her,
+as directed. She twisted the tips of her gloves,
+looked down, said “Yes, sir,” and “No, sir,”
+to all he observed, and soon found she must go
+and ask Mrs. Peek after the dear little baby. At
+this unexpected movement, two out of the remaining
+four halfstarted from their chair, but
+settled themselves again with a muttered, “Now,
+how——!” and then the next began to twist her
+gloves and look down, leaving, however, full a
+third of a chair between herself and the scholar.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>Nothing could be done till Mr. Peek came in,
+further than to tell Henry which of the young
+ladies could play and which could draw. Henry
+could only hope to hear them play, and to see
+their drawings; upon which Mrs. Peek was sorry
+that her piano was put away in a room up stairs
+till her girls should be qualified to use it; but she
+rang for a servant, who was desired to tell master
+Harry to step across for Miss Mills’ sketch-book,
+and Master Michael to run to Mr. Baker’s for
+Miss Grace Baker’s portfolio.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_26'>26</span>“The blue portfolio, ma’am,” Miss Baker
+leaned forward to say on her sister’s behalf.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“O! the blue portfolio, tell Master Michael.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>Mr. Peek came in, at length, rubbing his
+hands, and apologizing for having kept the ladies
+waiting for their tea; but it was the privilege of
+such a business as his to take, in some measure,
+his own times and seasons for doing things; and
+this afternoon he had been paying one of his
+official visits where he was least expected.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>When Jane had stationed herself at the tea-table,
+with a Miss Mills to aid her, and Peek had
+ordered one little table to be brought for himself
+and another for his father-in-law, he addressed
+his conversation chiefly to the latter, observing
+that the young scholar’s part was to entertain the
+young ladies.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“You know the Browns,—the way they behaved
+to my wife and me about our nursemaid
+that they tempted away?” said Peek to Mr.
+Farrer.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“O yes; I hope you have served them out.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“That I have, pretty well! They should have
+taken care what they were about in offending
+me. I can always make out what are their busy
+days, and then I pop in, and there is no end of
+the stock-taking I make them go through. What
+with measuring the canisters, and weighing, and
+peeping, and prying, I keep them at it a pretty
+time; and that is what I have been about this
+afternoon.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Can’t you catch them with a pound of smuggled
+stuff?”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_27'>27</span>“Not an ounce. They know I would if I
+could; and that makes them take care and look
+sharp. What did you think of the last rummer
+of toddy you got here?”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Capital! Had Brown anything to do with
+that?”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Not he; but you shall have another to-night,
+since you liked the last so much; and
+Mr. Henry too, if he likes. But I suppose he
+will be too busy playing commerce with the
+ladies? That fine spirit was one of the good
+things that one gets by being gentle in one’s
+vocation, as I tell Patience when she is cross;
+and then I hold back some nice present that I
+was thinking of giving her.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Aye, aye. A little convenient blindness, I
+suppose, you find your account in sometimes;
+and who finds it out, among all the multitude of
+articles that pay taxes? Yes, yes, that is one of
+the understood things in the business; as our
+men of your tribe give us to understand.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“I hope you find them accommodating, sir?”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Yes; now we know how to manage them.
+And they are wonderfully kind to Mike, considering
+all things.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>Mike assented, with one of his loud laughs.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>Henry was listening to all this not the less for
+his civility in handing tea, and amusing his next
+neighbour. By taking in all that passed now
+and when he was seated at cards, after Mrs. Peek
+had made her excuses and withdrawn, he learned
+more than he had known before of the facilities
+afforded to the collector of taxes on commodities,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_28'>28</span>of oppressing the humble, and teasing the proud,
+and sheltering the shabby, and aiding the fraudulent.
+He felt that he would rather be a
+street-sweep than such an exciseman as Peek.
+At best, the office was a most hateful one.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>He grew less and less able to give good
+counsel at cards, and to admire figures and
+landscapes, the louder grew Michael’s mirth,
+and the more humorous Peek’s stories of how
+he treated his victims, the small tradesmen. He
+would not touch the spirit and water so strongly
+recommended, but bore rallying on preferring
+the more lady-like refreshment of negus and
+sweet cake. He roused himself to do what was
+proper in shawling Miss Grace Baker; but it
+was feared by his family that the young ladies
+would not be able to give so enthusiastic an
+account of him at home as might have been, if
+he had done himself justice. It was a great
+pity!</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“What a clever fellow Peek is; he is made
+for his business! Eh, Harry?” observed Mr.
+Farrer, as they turned homewards, after having
+deposited the Misses Mills.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“He is made for his business as you say,
+father. What a cold night it is!”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Well; I hoped you caught a bit of what
+Peek was saying; I thought it would entertain
+you. We’ll have him some evening soon; and
+then I’ll make him tell some stories as good as
+any you heard to-night, only not so new. Do
+you hear, Jenny; mind you fix Peek and
+Patience for the first afternoon they can name
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_29'>29</span>next week, and we will have them all to ourselves.
+Come, Mike, ring again. It is gone ten. I warrant
+Morgan and Sam are nodding at one another
+on each side the fire. Give it them well.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>Day after day was filled up in somewhat a similar
+manner, nothing being said of the purpose for
+which Henry was brought home, or of his future
+destination. He soon became more reconciled
+than at first to his strange position, not only
+from becoming familiarized with it, but because
+London was astir with rumours of strange events
+abroad, and with speculations on what curious
+chapters in the history of nations were about to
+be presented for men’s reading. Mr. Farrer
+made no objection to his son’s disappearance
+during the greater part of the day, as he was
+sure of bringing home all the news at the end
+of it. Sometimes he fell in with a procession
+going to plant the tree of liberty on Kennington
+Common; sometimes he had interesting tales
+to tell of the misfortunes of the emigrants, whom
+his father ceased for the time to compare to
+locusts devouring the fruits of the land, or to the
+wasps that swarmed among his sugars in
+summer. Henry could bring the latest tidings
+of the progress of the riots in the country on
+account of the high price of food, and of certain
+trials for sedition in which his heart seemed to be
+deeply engaged, though he let his father rail on
+at the traitors who encouraged the people to
+think that governments could do wrong. Henry
+saw all the reviews, and heard of all the embarkations
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_30'>30</span>of soldiers, and could tell how many new
+clerks were taken on at the Bank, and what a
+demand there was for servants at the government
+offices, and what spirits every body was in at
+Portsmouth and Birmingham, while no one
+knew what was to be done with the poor
+wretches who tried an ineffectual riot in the
+manufacturing districts from time to time. All
+this passed with Mr. Farrer for a very natural
+love of news, and was approved in as far as it
+enabled him to say to his superior customers,
+“My son who was at the University hears this,”
+or says that, or knows the other. But Jane
+saw that Henry the student was not interested in
+these vast movements of humanity as a mere
+amusement to pass the time. Not in pursuit of
+mere amusement was he often without food from
+breakfast-time till he returned by lamp-light.
+Not in pursuit of mere amusement was he sometimes
+content to be wet through twice in a day;
+sometimes feverish with excitement, and sometimes
+so silent that she left him unquestioned to
+the deep emotions that were stirring within. She
+occasionally wondered whether he had any
+thoughts of entering the army. If he was really
+anxious to be doing something, this seemed a
+ready means; yet she had some suspicion that his
+patriotism was not of a kind to show itself in
+that way; and that if he fought at all, it would
+not be to avenge the late French King. However
+it might be, Jane felt her affection for this
+brother grow with her awe of his mysterious
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_31'>31</span>powers and tastes. She listened for his step
+when he was absent; intimated her dissent from
+any passing censure upon him uttered by his
+father; saw that dry shoes were always ready
+for him when he came in; received gratefully all
+that he had to tell her, and asked no questions.
+She struggled with all the might that was to
+prove at last too feeble a barrier to a devastating
+passion, against the daily thoughts of food eaten
+and clothes worn by one who was earning
+nothing; satisfied herself that though Henry
+was no longer enjoying the advantages of
+college, he was living more cheaply than he
+could do there; and trusted, on the whole, that
+this way of life might continue some time.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>One morning, Michael’s cup of tea having
+stood till it was cold, the discovery was made
+that Michael was not at home. Mr. Farrer
+dropped, with apparent carelessness, the news
+that he would not return for two or three days;
+and when Jane had helped herself to the cold
+tea, in order that it might not be wasted, nobody
+seemed to think more of the matter.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>Half an hour after breakfast, before Henry
+had closed a certain pocket volume in Greek
+which he had been observed to read in at all odd
+times, Mr. Farrer put his head in at the parlour-door,
+with</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“I say, Harry, we are very busy in the shop
+to-day, and Mike away.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Indeed, sir! Shall I go out and find somebody
+to help you?”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Very pretty! And you sitting here with
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_32'>32</span>nothing to do! Come yourself; I will help you
+to find Mike’s apron.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>Henry first laughed, and then, after an instant’s
+hesitation, pocketed his book, and followed his
+father. While he was somewhat awkwardly
+tying on his apron, his sister saw him through
+the tiny window which gave her, in her retirement
+a view of the shop; and she called out to
+know what he was doing.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“I am going to try to cut bacon and weigh
+butter as well as Michael.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Is it your own fancy?”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“My father put it into my head; but it is
+my own will to do it till Michael comes back.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>There was no more to be said; but Jane
+reddened all over; and when she saw the first
+customer come in, and Mr. Farrer stand over
+Henry to see him guess at the weight of soap
+required, Jane lost all power of casting up the
+column of figures over which her pen was suspended.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>It was told in many a neighbour’s house that
+day that there was a new shopman at Farrer’s,
+who was dead-slow at tying up parcels, and
+hacked sadly at the cheese, as if he did not
+know an ounce from a pound at sight. Henry
+was not aware how far he was from being worthy
+to rival Michael. It requires some practice to
+achieve the peculiar twirl and jerk with which
+an adroit shopman ties up and delivers a parcel
+to a fair dealer; and Henry knew nothing yet
+of the art of joking with the maidens and
+coaxing the matrons among his customers.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_33'>33</span>When weary, sick, and inwardly troubled to a
+degree for which he could scarcely account, he
+came in from seeing that the shutters were
+properly closed, and from purifying himself from
+the defilements of the counter, his father hailed
+him with,</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Well done, Harry! You will do very well
+soon, and make up for the cheese you have
+crumbled to-day. You will manage not to spill
+so much sugar to-morrow, perhaps. And by
+the end of the year, we shall see what sort of a
+younger partner’s share we can afford you.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“You do not mean that I am to spend a
+whole year as I have spent to-day, father?”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Indeed but I do, though; and as many more
+years as you have to live. My father made his
+fortune in this same business, and I mean my
+sons to do the same.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>Henry answered by handing his father the
+candle to light his pipe.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“I say, Harry,” the old man resumed, after a
+long silence, “you go into the shop to-morrow
+morning.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Certainly; till Michael comes back; if, as
+you said this morning, he returns before the end
+of the week.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“And after he comes back. He will put you
+in the way better than I can, you’ll find.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“After he comes back, I hope to find means
+of using the education you have given me, father.
+It would be all lost if I were to be a grocer.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>Mr. Farrer could see nothing but loss in
+following any other occupation, and ingratitude
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_34'>34</span>in hesitating to accept a provision which would
+enable Henry to become, like his brother and
+sisters, a public creditor on very advantageous
+terms. He let his son more into the secret of
+his wealth than he had ever done before; and
+when he found this confidence of no avail to his
+purpose, was vexed at his communicativeness,
+grew very angry, threw down his pipe, and
+ordered the family to bed.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>The next day, and the next, all went on so
+smoothly in the shop that each party hoped the
+other had relented. On the Friday evening,
+Michael returned, in high spirits, his talk savouring
+of the sea as his clothes did of tobacco. On
+Saturday morning, Henry was missing in his
+turn. Morgan appeared with red eyes to say
+that he had gone out with his blue bag very
+early, and had left the letter she now delivered
+to her master.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>This letter was read, crumpled up and thrown
+under the grate in silence. Jane afterwards
+took possession of it; and found that Henry
+valued his education too highly not to make the
+best use he could of it; that he was quite of his
+father’s opinion that it was a sin to remain at
+home in idleness; that he would therefore
+endeavour to obtain immediate employment and
+independence; that he would come and see his
+father as soon as he had anything to communicate,
+and should be always on the watch to
+repay by any duty and attention in his power
+the obligation he was under for the advantages
+he had enjoyed.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_35'>35</span>Morgan had no intelligence to give of where
+Henry was gone. He had left his love for his
+sister, and an assurance that he would see her
+soon and often. Morgan trusted she might
+take his word for his not feeling himself “put
+upon” or ill-regarded in the family. He had
+assured her that his feelings for them were as
+kind as ever, as he hoped to show, if occasion
+should arise. Might she believe this?</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>Jane trusted that she might;—would not let
+his chamber be disarranged just at present; and
+went to her place of business to start at every
+black coat that passed the window.</p>
+
+<h3 id='ch1.3' class='c011'><span class='sc'>Chapter III.</span><br> <br> DEATH-CHAMBER SOOTHINGS.</h3>
+
+<p class='c012'>Mr. Farrer seemed to be somewhat surprised
+to see that Henry’s coat was still black and still
+glossy when he called, as he promised, to see his
+family. A vague image of a tattered shirt, a
+wallet and mouldy crusts, had floated before the
+old man’s mind as often as he prophesied that
+Harry would come begging to his father’s door;
+whereas Henry seemed to have nothing to
+complain of, did not ask for anything to eat,
+never mentioned money, and looked very
+cheerful. It was impossible to pronounce him
+paler than usual; and, what was more surprising,
+he made no mysteries, but told all that he was
+asked to tell. Nobody inquired whether he
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_36'>36</span>was married, and none but Jane desired to know
+where he lived. But the circumstance of his
+having obtained employment that would suffice
+for the present was related; and he endeavoured
+to explain to his father the nature of the literary
+occupations in which he was engaged; but when
+he had once acknowledged that they did not
+bring him in so much per week as his brother’s
+labours afforded, Mr. Farrer did not desire to
+hear anything more.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Jane, you will come and see me?” said
+Henry, when they were alone.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“My father says you had better come here.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Well, so I shall; but you will look in upon
+me some day? I have something to show you.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Perhaps you can bring it here. My father——”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Oh, he forbids your visiting me. Yes, I shall
+certainly come here, and soon. Do you know,
+Jane, I think my father looks ill.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“He is harassed about business just now;—not
+about the part you have taken; for he said
+yesterday that people are better out of business
+in such times.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“What is the matter? Does his custom fall
+off?”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Very much; and his profits are less and
+less. Everything is so taxed,—everything that
+the common people must have,—(and they are
+the customers that signify most, from their number)—that
+they go without tea and sugar, and
+save in soap and candles more than you would
+suppose; and besides, all this dearness makes
+wages rise every where; and we feel that directly
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_37'>37</span>in the fall of our profits. If things get much
+worse, we shall soon be laying by nothing. It
+will be as much as we can do to make the year’s
+gains answer the year’s expenses.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“That will be a very bad thing if it comes to
+be the case of the whole nation, Jane: but I do
+not think that my father and you need mind it,—so
+much as you have both accumulated. It is a
+bad state of things, however. Have you seen
+Dr. Say about my father?”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Why, no. I think that he would be alarmed
+at my mentioning such a thing; and as I know
+his ailments to be from an uneasy mind——However,
+I will watch him, and if he does not
+get better——But he looks particularly ill to-day.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“He does indeed.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>Morgan was waiting near the door when
+Henry went out.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“I take shame, Mr. Henry, my dear,” said
+she, “that I did not half believe you in what you
+said, the morning you went away, about coming
+again, and going to be happy.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Well, Morgan, you believe me now?”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Yes, my dear, I do; and I feel, by your
+looks, that there is some great reason behind.
+Do you know, I should say, if it was not a
+strange thing to say, Mr. Henry,—I should say
+you were married.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“That is a strange guess, Morgan. Suppose
+you come, some day, and see; and, if you
+bring Jane with you, so much the better.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Ah! my dear, it would be a wholesome
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_38'>38</span>change for her, so much as she goes through
+with my master. You may believe me I hear
+her half the night, stealing about to watch his
+sleep, when by chance he gets any quiet sleep;
+and at other times comforting him.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Do you mean that he suffers much?”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“In mind, Mr. Henry. What can they expect
+whom God permits to be deluded about what
+they should seek? Be sure you take care, Sir,
+to provide for your own household; but I hope
+never to hear you tossing in your bed because of
+the doubt whether you will have three times or
+only twice as much gold as you can use.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Treat him tenderly, Morgan; and send for
+me whenever you think I can be of any use.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“My dear, there is not a sick child crying for
+its broken toy that I would treat so tenderly as
+your father,—even if I had not Miss Jane before
+me for a pattern. I will send for you, I promise
+you; but it is little that any of us can do when
+it comes to be a matter of serious illness. We
+brought neither gold nor friends into this world,
+and ’tis certain we cannot carry them out; but
+what you can do for your father, you shall be
+called to do, Sir. However, as Michael says, if
+there comes a flow of custom to make his mind
+easy, he may be as well as ever.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>No such flow of custom came, and various
+circumstances concurred to lower Mr. Farrer’s
+spirits, and therefore aggravate his disease.
+Within the next eight months, nearly a thousand
+bankruptcies bore testimony to the grievous
+nature of the burdens under which trade was
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_39'>39</span>suffering. Rumours of the approaching downfall
+of church and state were circulated with
+sufficient emphasis to shake the nerves of a
+sick man who had very little notion of a dependence
+on anything but church and state. Besides
+this, he did not see that it was now possible for
+him to be well against New Year’s Eve,—the
+festival occasion of those whose lives had afforded
+a subject of mutual money-speculation; and if
+he could not be well on this anniversary, he was
+convinced he should be dead. Every time that
+Henry went, he thought worse of his father’s
+case, however flattering might be the physician’s
+reports and assurances. There was no thought
+of removing him; for the first attempt would
+have been the death of him. Where he was
+born and bred, there he must die; and the best
+kindness was to wrap him in his great-coat, and
+let him sit behind the counter, ordering, and
+chatting, and weighing pennyworths, and finding
+fault with every body, from Mr. Pitt down to
+Sam the shop-boy.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>The last morning of the year broke bright
+and cheery. When Morgan issued from the
+shop, dressed in her red cloak and round beaver
+over a mob-cap,—the Welsh costume which she
+continued to wear,—the copper sun showed
+himself behind the opposite chimney, and
+glistened on the candies in the window and the
+icicles which hung from the outside cornice.
+Many a cheery sound was in the frosty air,—the
+laughter of children sliding in the Row, the
+newsman’s call, the clatter of horses’ feet over
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_40'>40</span>the slippery pavement, and the jangle of cans at
+the stall where hot coffee was sold at the street-corner.
+All this was strange to the eyes and
+ears of Morgan, not only from her being unaccustomed
+to walk abroad, but from its contrast
+with the scene she had just left.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>When she had quitted Mr. Farrer’s sick
+chamber, the red daylight had begun to glimmer
+through the green stuff window curtain, giving a
+signal to have done with the yellow candlelight,
+and to speak some words of cheer to the patient
+on the coming of a new day. Mr. Farrer had
+looked dreadfully ill in the flickering gleam of
+the fire, as he sat in the arm-chair from which his
+oppressed breathing forbade him to move;
+but in the daylight he looked absolutely ghastly,
+and Morgan felt that no time was to be lost in
+summoning Henry, under pretence of purchasing
+a gallon of wine.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>Her master had called her back to forbid her
+buying wine while there was so much in the house;
+but she was gone beyond the reach of his feeble
+voice, and the other persons who were in the
+room were for the wine being bought. Dr. Say,
+an apothecary who passed very well for a physician
+in this neighbourhood, declared that home-made
+raisin wine was by no means likely to agree
+with the patient, or support his strength; and
+Peek, the son-in-law, reminded the old gentleman
+that the cost of the wine would come out of his
+estate, as it was little likely that he would live to
+pay the bill.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“You yourself said,” uttered the old man in
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_41'>41</span>the intervals of his pantings, “you said, only last
+week, that few drink foreign wine that spend less
+than their six hundred a-year. I don’t spend six
+hundred a-year; and Jane’s raisin wine might
+serve my turn.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“That was in talking about the taxes,—the
+tax that doubles the cost of wine. I don’t see
+why people of three hundred a-year should not
+drink as much as those that spend six, if the cost
+of wine was but half what it is; especially if they
+be sick and dying.—And a fine thing it would be
+for the wine trade, seeing that there are many
+more people who spend three hundred a-year than
+six. So both the makers and the drinkers have
+reason to be vexed that for every gallon of wine
+that ought to cost five shillings, they have to pay
+ten.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Now, Mr. Peek, do not make my father discontented
+with his wine before he tastes it,” said
+Jane, observing the shade that came over the old
+man’s face at the mention of the price.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“O, that need not be. He must have had
+wine for to-night, you know, if he had been well,
+and brandy into the bargain, if Jerry Hill and
+his brother had been alive.—But, sir, if you find
+fault with the wine-duty, what would you have?
+There is no help for it but an income tax, and
+you don’t like that, you tell me.—Dear me, Dr.
+Say, look how white he turns, and how his teeth
+chatter. He is failing very fast, poor soul!”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Confound the income tax! The very talk
+of it has been the death of me,” Mr. Farrer had
+still strength to say.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_42'>42</span>“Mr. Peek, I wish you would leave off talking
+about such things,” said Jane. “Do not you
+see that my father cannot bear it?”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Why, dear me, Jane, don’t you know that
+there is nothing he is so fond of talking about as
+that that he and I know most about? Why, he
+is never tired of asking me about what I meet
+with in the way of my business!”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Well! tell him stories to amuse him, if you
+like; but don’t threaten him with the income tax
+any more.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“With all my heart. He shall carry none but
+pleasant ideas to his grave for me.—I say, sir,
+I should think you must sell a good many
+more candles since the duty came off, don’t you?—Ah!
+I find the difference in some of the
+poorer houses I go into. A halfpenny a pound
+on tallow candles was a tax——”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“That prevented many a patient of mine from
+being properly nursed,” said Dr. Say. “When
+people are just so poor as not to afford much
+candlelight, such a tax as that dooms many sick
+to toss about in the dark, frightened at their own
+fancies, when a light, to show things as they are,
+would have composed them to sleep. That was a
+bad tax: the rich using few tallow candles.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“If that be bad, the others were worse;—that
+on cottages with less than seven windows! Lord!
+I shall never forget what work I used to have
+and to hear of about that tax. He must have
+been a perverse genius that thought of that tax,
+and deserved to be put into a cottage of two windows
+himself.—Do you hear, Mr. Farrer, that is
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_43'>43</span>over and gone; and I suppose you used to pay
+a tax upon Morgan that you are not asked for
+now?”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>Mr. Farrer now proved himself still able to
+laugh, while he told how he never paid a farthing
+for Morgan before the tax on female servants
+had been repealed. Morgan believed herself to
+be the fiftieth cousin of the family; and on the
+days when the tax-gatherer was expected, Farrer
+always contrived that Morgan should be seated
+at some employment found for her in the parlour,
+and called a relation of the family. Jane now
+understood for the first time why her father was
+upon occasion so strangely peremptory about the
+sofa cover being patched, or his shirts mended, by
+no one but Morgan, and nowhere but in the parlour.
+The repeal of these three assessed taxes, and of a
+fourth,—on carts and waggons,—was acknowledged
+to be an improvement on old management,
+however grievous might be the actual burdens,
+and the great one now in prospect.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>In pursuance of his plan to give Mr. Farrer
+none but pleasant ideas to carry to the grave,
+Peek proceeded to observe on the capability of
+the country to bear much heavier burdens than
+formerly. Arkwright alone had provided the
+means of paying a large amount of taxes, by endowing
+the country with the vast resources of the
+cotton manufacture.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“And what came of it all?” muttered Mr.
+Farrer. “There is Arkwright in his grave, just
+like any other man.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_44'>44</span>“That’s very true; and just as if he had had
+no more than his three hundred a-year all his
+days. But it was a noble thing that he did,—the
+enabling the country to bear up in such times
+as we live in. For my part, I think the minister
+may very fairly ask for more money when such
+a piece of good luck has befallen us as our cotton
+manufacture turns out to be. I’m not so much
+against the war, since there is this way of paying
+for it.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“You forget we are in debt, Peek. ‘Duty
+first, and pleasure afterwards,’ I say. ‘Charity
+begins at home,’ say I. Pay the debt first, and
+then go to war, if you must.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'><a id='corr1.44.15'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='Some'>“Some</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_1.44.15'><ins class='correction'>“Some</ins></a></span> other improvements will turn up, time
+enough to pay the debt, I dare say. When the
+war is done, the minister has only to find somebody,
+like Arkwright, that will make a grand
+invention, and then he can pay off the debt at
+his leisure.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“No, never,” cried Farrer, in a stronger voice
+than Jane thought he could now exert. “You
+will see Arkwright in the next world before you
+see his like in this. I knew Arkwright. And
+as for the debt,—how is that ever to be paid?
+The country is ruined, and God knows what will
+become of my little savings!”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>And the old man wept as if he had already
+lost his all. It was always a melancholy fact to
+him that Arkwright, whom he had been wont to
+consider the happiest of men, had been obliged to
+go away from his wealth;—to die like other men.
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_45'>45</span>Peek attempted to comfort him, regardless of
+the frowning looks of Dr. Say, and of Jane’s
+hints to hold his tongue.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Why, all that requires to be taken care of
+will go to Jane, I suppose, though some of your
+things would be more suitable to my wife than
+to any single woman. That is a nice mattress;
+and indeed the bedding altogether is just what
+would suit our brown chamber, as I was saying
+to my wife. But I suppose Jane is to have all
+that sort of thing?”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Mr. Peek, you will either go away or leave
+off talking in that manner,” said Jane, moving
+away the empty tankard from which he had drunk
+his morning ale.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Mr. Farrer will enjoy many a good night in
+that very bed, when we have subdued the little
+obstruction that affects the breathing,” observed
+Dr. Say, soothingly.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“We all know better than that,” said Peek,
+with an ostentatious sigh. “It is hard to leave
+what it costs such a world of pains to get. I’ve
+heard you say, Mr. Farrer, how proud you
+were when you got a watch, as a young man.
+That’s it, I suppose, over the chimney-piece; and
+a deal of silver there must be in it, from the
+weight. I suppose this falls to Jane too? It will
+go on, tick, tick, just the same as ever.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>Mr. Farrer forgot his pain while he watched
+Peek’s method of handling the old watch, and
+followed his speculations about the disposal of
+his property.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“And do you think that singing-bird will miss
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_46'>46</span>you?” asked Peek, nodding to the siskin in its
+cage. “I have heard of birds that have pined,
+as they say dogs do, from the day of their master’s
+death. But my children would soon teach your
+Teddy a merry ditty, and cure him of moping.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Jane, don’t let any body but Morgan move
+that bird out of the house: do you hear?” said
+Farrer.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“It is nobody’s bird but your’s, father. Nobody
+shall touch it.” And Jane set Teddy singing,
+in hopes of stopping Peek’s speculations.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“And there’s the old punch-bowl,” continued
+the son-in-law, as soon as there was again silence.
+“That will be yours of course, Jane?”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“O, our good friend will make punch many a
+time yet out of that bowl, when we shall have set
+up his appetite,” declared Dr. Say.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“No, no, Doctor. He will never make punch
+again in this world.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>There was a pause after this positive declaration,
+which was broken by Farrer saying to his
+daughter,</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“You don’t say anything against it. You
+don’t think you had rather not have the things.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>Jane replied in a manner which showed great
+conflict and agony of mind. She should feel like
+a child, if her father must leave her. She had
+never lived without him. She did not know that
+she could conduct herself and her affairs without
+him. She was in a terror when she thought of
+it, and her mind was full of reproach——</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Ah! you’ll be marrying, next thing, and all
+my things will be going nobody knows where.
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_47'>47</span>But as for reproaching yourself,—no need of
+that, so far, for you have been a good daughter
+to me.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>Jane declared that she had no thoughts of
+marrying.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Come, Doctor, which way are you going?
+Will you walk with me?” said Peek, whose apprehensions
+about the final destination of the
+property were roused by the sentimental regards
+which Dr. Say began to cast upon Jane, when
+the conversation took this turn. Dr. Say was in
+no hurry; could not think of leaving his patient;
+would stay to see the effect of the wine,—and so
+forth. The old man stretched his feeble hand
+towards the doctor’s skirt, and begged him to
+remain.—One reason of his wish was that he felt
+as if he should not die whilst his doctor was by
+his side; and another was that he wished for the
+presence of a stranger while Henry was with
+him, and Henry was now coming up stairs.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“They say I am going, Harry; and now
+perhaps you will be sorry that you did not do
+all that I bade you.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“I always have been sorry, father, that I could
+not.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“I should like to know, Doctor, how one
+should manage one’s sons now-a-days. Here’s
+Harry won’t follow my business for all I can say;
+and Mike is leaving the shop to take care of
+itself, while I am laid fast in this way. He was
+to have been back three days ago; and not a word
+have we heard of him, and don’t know where to
+send to him. One must look to one’s daughters,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_48'>48</span>after all—though my father never had to say that
+of me. I was in the very middle of counting
+our stock of short moulds when I was called up
+stairs to see him die.—Well, Henry; I have left
+you nothing, I give you notice.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Indeed, father, I am able to earn what I
+want; and I have to thank you for this. You
+have given me already more than the wealth of
+the world; and I shall never forget it.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“I don’t very well know what you mean; but
+I can fancy about the not forgetting. I saw a
+moon over the church there——”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>The old man was evidently wandering after
+some idea of what he had observed on the night
+after his father’s death, and many nights since;
+and with this he mixed up some strange anxieties
+about the neglect of the shop this day. Within
+a few minutes, Peek was gone to be a Job’s comforter
+to his dawdling wife, assuring her that she
+could not, by any exertion, arrive in Budge Row
+in time to see her father alive; Jane was trying
+to pacify the old man by attending behind the
+counter; while Dr. Say and Henry remained with
+the patient. Henry did not choose to be alone
+with him, lest any fit of generosity should seize
+his father, and cause dissension among the more
+dutiful of the children.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>A few more hours were spent in the restless,
+fruitless, disheartening cares which form the
+greatest part of the humiliation of the sick-room:
+the shutting out the light that is irksome, and
+then restoring it because the darkness is oppressive;
+the preparing food which is not to be
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_49'>49</span>tasted, and offering drink which cannot be swallowed;
+the changing the posture perpetually,
+because each is more uneasy than the last. A
+few hours of this, and of mutterings about Jerry
+Hill and his brother, which indicated that some
+idea of the day and its circumstances was present
+to the dying man,—a few hours of extraordinary
+self-restraint to Jane, and anxiety to
+Morgan, and all was over.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>Patience came five minutes too late. She
+found the shop-boy standing with eyes and mouth
+wide, instead of attending to a customer. He
+could only relate that Morgan had just shown
+herself at the inside door, looking very grave,
+and that Miss Farrer had turned very white, and
+gone up stairs; so that he was sure his master
+was dead. The customer was officious in helping
+to half-close the shutters, and so obliging as to
+go elsewhere for what he wanted, spreading as
+he went the news of the death of the rich old
+fellow, Farrer the grocer.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>Where was Michael? This was a question
+asked many times before night-fall by one or
+other of the household. None could answer it;
+not even she who knew most about Michael’s
+proceedings, and to whom Morgan condescended
+to go in person in search of information. The
+young woman was as much at a loss as any
+body, and so extremely uneasy that Morgan
+found in her heart to pity her.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>Where was Michael? This was the question
+that returned upon Jane’s mind and heart in the
+dead stillness of the night, when, by her own
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_50'>50</span>desire, she was sitting up alone beside her father’s
+corpse. She would not hear of Henry’s staying,
+and forbade Morgan’s remaining beyond the
+usual early hours of the house.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>She turned the watch with its face to the wall,
+when she had wound it up; for she did not wish
+to know when midnight and the new year came.
+It was a gusty night, and she hoped not to hear
+the church-clock strike. She heard instead the
+voices of the party assembled in the house that
+day twelvemonth,—the little party of friends
+whose hopes of wealth depended individually on
+the chance of surviving the rest. What would
+she not now give to be set back to that time!
+The intervening year had disclosed to her something
+that she did not fully know before,—that
+she was being devoured by the growing passion
+of avarice. She had felt joy at the death of
+Jerry Hill’s brother, though the time had been
+when the bare idea of his death weighed upon
+her heart for days! She had been unable to tell
+her father that she did not wish for what he had
+to leave. And now,—what did she desire to
+hear about Michael? If he had formed bad
+connexions,—if he was playing a desperate game
+with smugglers,—if he should now marry the
+mother of his children, and thus distribute by
+wholesale the wealth his father had saved, and
+squander the large annuity which had fallen to
+him as to her, from their being the sole survivors
+of the lot of lives,—what, in such a risk, would
+be the best news she could hear of Michael?
+She started from her seat in horror as soon as
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_51'>51</span>she became conscious that she had entertained
+the question. She uncovered the face of the
+corpse. She had never before seen those restless
+features immoveable,—not even in sleep. The
+eyes had never before refused to look upon her,
+the lips to answer to her. If he no longer cared
+for her, who should care? The feeling of desolation
+came over her strongly; and when her
+heart bounded for an instant at the thought of
+her wealth, and then sank, as a vivid picture came
+before her of Michael struggling and sinking in
+this night’s stormy sea, she was completely over-powered.
+The light swam before her eyes, the
+corpse seemed to rise up in the bed; the gust
+that swept along the narrow street, and the clatter
+of hail against the window at the instant, terrified
+her unaccountably. Something grasped her
+tight round the throat; something pulled her
+clothes behind; something looked down from the
+top of the bed. Shrieks woke Morgan from the
+sleep which had just overtaken her, and brought
+her down in the dark, stumbling against the shivering
+shop-boy, who had come out upon the stairs
+because he dared not stay in his own room.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>At the sight of Morgan, standing half dressed
+at the door, Jane became instantly quiet. She
+sank into a chair, while Morgan walked straight
+to the bed; her first idea being that the old man
+was not dead, and that some movement of his had
+terrified her mistress. When she saw that all
+was still, she turned to Jane with an anxious look
+of inquiry.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_52'>52</span>“Morgan, Michael is dead; I think he is. I
+killed him; I am sure I did!”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“No, Miss Jane; there is some difference between
+wishing a man dead and killing him!”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“How do you know? Who told you about
+it?”, asked Jane, with chattering teeth.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“There is a light in your eyes, and a heat on
+your cheeks, that told me long ago more than
+you knew yourself. I have seen you grow a
+child again, my dear, when every body got to
+regard you as a staid woman.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“No, no; I wish I was—I wish I was a child
+again.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Why, my dear, what can be more childish
+than grasping at what you cannot use, and giving
+up all that is precious for the sake of what you
+grow less and less able to enjoy?”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“God knows I have nothing left that is precious,”
+murmured Jane, sinking into tears.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Yes, you have. Even they that did you the
+cruelest harm,—that turned your heart in upon
+itself for their own selfish ends, could not take
+from you all that is precious, as long as God
+makes men into families. My dear, if you see
+nothing to make you forget your gold in what I
+saw this morning, you deserve nothing better
+than gold, and I shall consider you given over
+entirely. If you do not despise your money in
+comparison with your brother Henry and his
+lady, it is a pity you are their sister.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“His lady! What lady?”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“His wife, ma’am; I saw her this morning.
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_53'>53</span>A pretty lady she is,—so young, and speaking
+English that I could hardly make out without the
+help of her bright face. And there was her father
+too, who could not speak to me at all,
+though he talked fast enough with his daughter.
+And Mr. Henry was very busy with his books
+and papers, in a corner of the room where they
+have hung up a curtain, that he may be, in a
+manner, by himself; for they have not over-much
+room. You will see no gold by going
+there; but——”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“But why——? I am his sister, and he never
+took me there; and——”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“You were too rich, Miss Jane, not to want
+more money; so they waited till you could not
+tax them with interfering with your dues. If you
+had asked, Mr. Henry would have told you every
+thing. As it is, he will bring his wife to-morrow,
+and you will be all the better friends for
+there being no talk of dividing money between
+you.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Ah! Morgan,” said Jane, becoming calm
+in proportion as she was humbled, “you will
+leave me and go to them; you will leave me to
+such service as gold can buy!”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Never, my dear. You must have some one
+to put you in mind what great things you can
+do, and what great things you have done for one
+whom not even you could make happy, after all.”
+And she cast a sorrowful look upon the corpse.
+“You will want some one to hush you and
+bring you round again when you take such fits
+as you have had to-night; and this one of to-night
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_54'>54</span>will not be the last, my dear, if you keep
+your mind and conscience on the rack about
+money. You will want somebody to help you to
+be thankful if Providence should be graciously
+pleased to lessen your wealth. And if the worst
+comes to the worst, my dear, you will want somebody
+to cover your sin before the world, and to
+watch privately for any fair moment for softening
+your heart. So I shall stay by you, and
+always maintain what a noble and tender heart
+you once had, up to this very midnight, Miss
+Jane.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>For the next hour,—while her father’s remains
+lay at hand, and she was hearing of Henry, and
+meditating on his story,—Jane felt some of the
+disgust at mere wealth, as an object, that is often
+expressed, but which was a new feeling to her.
+Her mind gradually became confused while contemplating
+the uncertainty and emptiness of the
+life that lay before her; and she dropped asleep
+in her father’s chair, giving her old friend opportunity
+at last to shed the many tears she had
+repressed under the appearance of sternness,
+when to be stern was the truest kindness. She
+afterwards preserved a much more distinct recollection
+than Jane of the conversation of the
+night.</p>
+
+<div>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_55'>55</span>
+ <h3 id='ch1.4' class='c011'><span class='sc'>Chapter IV.</span><br> <br> GOSSIPING AUTHORSHIP.</h3>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c012'>The only article of his father’s property that
+Henry coveted was the bird, which Peek had
+rightly supposed was to be Jane’s. Henry believed
+that Teddy had originally been admitted
+into the household for his sake, so expressly
+had it been given into his boyish charge; but
+he would not now ask for it the more for this.
+He would not have allowed his wife to pick up a
+pin from any floor of that house, or have stopped
+a cough, unasked, with a morsel of candy
+from the window. But there was one who remembered
+how he had begged candy for the bird,
+in old days, and helped it to sing, and been mindful
+of its wants when every one else was too
+busy to attend to them. There was one who not
+only remembered this, (for Jane had quite as good
+a memory,) but acted upon the suggestion. Morgan
+made bold to carry the bird to Mr. Henry’s
+lodgings, with his sister’s love, and moreover
+with an ample supply of seeds, and a choice bit of
+candy to peck at.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>There was it amusing itself, now gently twittering,
+and now pouring out its song, as one of
+the short days of winter closed in, and the little
+party in Henry’s lodgings prepared for their
+evening labours. These three,—Henry, his wife,
+and his father-in-law,—were at no leisure to loll
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_56'>56</span>by the fireside and talk of war and revolution;
+or to pass from gaiety to gaiety, shaking their
+heads the while about the mine of treason which
+was about to be sprung beneath their feet, the
+perversity of the people, and the approaching
+downfall of monarchy. They were neither treasonable
+nor perverse, nor desirous of overthrowing
+the monarchy; but they resembled the people
+in so far as it was necessary for them to work
+in order to live. These long winter evenings were
+favourable to their objects; and now Marie
+lighted the lamp, brought out paper and ink, and
+applied herself to her task, while her father and
+her husband sat down together to compose that
+which she should afterwards transcribe. Henry’s
+literary occupation was not merely classical proof-correcting;
+though this was his principal resource
+for bread. He was the largest,—almost the sole
+contributor to a very popular publication, which,
+by its talent, and, yet more, its plain speaking,
+gave great annoyance to certain of the ministry,
+much satisfaction to the opposition, and to a
+large proportion of the reading population of
+London. Henry would have acknowledged to
+all the world, if he could, that the work owed
+much of its value and attraction to the assistance
+of his father-in-law, who had lived long enough
+in England to understand a great deal of its
+domestic as well as foreign political interests,
+and brought to his task a large share of knowledge
+and wisdom from his observation of the
+affairs of the continent, and his experience of
+their vicissitude. M. Verblanc was one of the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_57'>57</span>earliest emigrants to this country, whither he
+came intending to deposit his daughter, and return
+to be useful; but the march of events was
+too rapid. Moderate men had lost their influence,
+and ran but too much risk of losing their heads,
+and he stayed to be useful here till his country
+should stretch forth her arms again to welcome
+such men as he. Henry Farrer had become attached
+to his daughter while she was residing with the
+Stephenses; and as there seemed to M. Verblanc
+a strong probability that the children of two very
+rich fathers would not long remain very poor,
+he countenanced their early marriage, resolving
+to work to the utmost in their service till he should
+be able to recover some of Marie’s intended
+dower.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>Marie was writing out an article from her
+husband’s short-hand,—an act to which she had
+become so accustomed that it did not interfere
+with her attention to what was going on at the
+other end of the table, or prevent her interposing
+an occasional remark.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“And are the Mexican cocks benefited?”
+she asked, in allusion to something they were
+talking about. “Do the cock-fighters give up
+their sport on account of this tax?”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“The sport is much checked, my dear. The
+government gets only about 45,000 dollars a year
+by this tax, so that there cannot be much cock-fighting.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Well, then, I wish you would put in your
+advice for a very heavy tax on guillotining.
+Where is there so barbarous a sport?”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_58'>58</span>“You are for putting a moral power into the
+hands of government, Marie,—a power of controlling
+the people’s pursuits and tastes. Is such
+a power a good?”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Is it not? Cock-fighting may be checked;
+therefore may the drinking of spirits, and the
+playing with dice. And no one thinks worse
+than you of gin and gaming. I am just copying
+what you say about gin.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“But the same power may tempt the people to
+game in lotteries, and drive them to engage in
+smuggling; and tyrannize over them in many
+ways. When taxes are raised upon what men eat
+and drink and use, there may be, and there
+always is, a great inconsistency in the moral lectures
+that they practically give the people. They
+say, for instance,—‘You must not use hair-powder
+or corn; but come and try your luck for
+a 30,000<i>l.</i> prize.’ ‘If you wish for tobacco, you
+must smuggle it: but we must make you pay for
+keeping yourself clean with soap, and putting
+salt into your children’s food, and trying to let
+light and air enough into your house for them
+to live by.’”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Well, but this would be abusing their power.
+Could they not do like the Mexican people—tax
+bad sports—tax luxuries?”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“And who is to decide what sports are bad,
+and what articles are luxuries? If there is nobody
+to contend that cock-fighting and bull-baiting
+are virtuous sports, there are many opinions on
+fox-hunting, and snipe-shooting, and country
+fairs, and village dances. And as for luxuries,—where
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_59'>59</span>is the line which separates them from necessaries?”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Ah! our washerwoman looked very earnest
+indeed when she said, ‘I must have my little
+dish of tea—I am fit for nothing without.’ And
+I suppose our landlord says the same of his port-wine;
+and certainly every nobleman thinks he
+must have men-servants and horses and carriages.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“I do not see, for my part, how government
+has any more business to decide upon what articles
+must be made dear to the people, than an
+emperor has to settle how his subjects shall fasten
+their shoes.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Well, but what are they to tax?”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Property. All that government has a right
+to do in taxation, is to raise what money is necessary;
+and its main duty is to do it in the
+fairest proportion possible. It has nothing to do
+with how people spend the rest of their money,
+and has no business to alter the prices of things,
+for the sake of exercising a moral power, or any
+power.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Perhaps the meddling would be saved by the
+government taking the articles of luxury themselves,
+instead of taking money upon them. But
+they would need large warehouses for all the
+strange things that would be gathered in; and
+they must turn merchants. I wonder whether
+that plan has ever been tried?”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Yes, in China. The Sun of the Celestial
+Empire took his taxes in kind,—chiefly in food.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“And so became a great rice-merchant.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_60'>60</span>“And agriculture was improved to a prodigious
+degree.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Improved! then I suppose there would be a
+great increase of whatever good things your government
+might choose to levy?”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Up to a certain point, taxation of every kind
+acts as a stimulus. But that point is easily and
+usually passed. The necessity of answering the
+calls of the state rouses men’s industry and invention;
+and if the taxation continue moderate,
+the people may be gainers, on the whole, by
+the stimulus. But if the burden grows heavier as
+men’s exertions increase, they not only lose heart,
+but that which should produce future wealth goes
+to be consumed without profit; and the means of
+further improvement are taken away.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Ah! how often,” exclaimed M. Verblanc,
+“have the late rulers of France been told that
+taxation takes from the people, not only the
+wealth which is brought into the treasury, and the
+cost of collecting it, but all the values of which
+it obstructs the creation! How often were they
+exhorted to look at Holland, and take warning!”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“There is a case <i>apropos</i> to what we are writing.
+Down with it! ‘What country could
+compare itself with Holland, when Holland was
+the empress of commerce, and the nursing mother
+of wealth? What befell her? Her industry
+slackened, her traffic declined, her wealth wasted,
+and she knew, at length, the curse of pauperism.
+Why? Her own committees of investigation
+have declared that this change is owing to the
+devouring taxation, which, not content with appropriating
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_61'>61</span>her revenue, next began to absorb her
+capital. First, the creation of values was limited;
+then it was encroached upon; and from that day
+has Holland been sliding from her pre-eminence.
+From the very nature of the decline, it must proceed
+with accelerated speed, if it be not vigorously
+checked; so that Holland seems all too
+likely to forfeit her place among the nations.’—Will
+that do, Marie?”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“O yes; but you must give two or three
+more examples. At least, when I wrote themes
+at school, I was bidden to give always three examples.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“With all my heart. It would be but too
+easy to find three times three. What next, sir?
+Spain?”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Spain, if you will. But one need go no
+farther than Marie’s own unhappy country.
+Would her king have been murdered,—would
+the people have defiled their emancipation with
+atrocities, if they had not been sunk in poverty,
+and steeped in injuries, by a devouring taxation?
+That taxation might, I verily believe, have been
+borne, as to its amount; but that amount was
+taken, not at all from the rich and noble, but
+wholly from the industrious. The rich and noble
+spent their revenue as much as if they had been
+duly taxed; while the industrious paid, first their
+income, and then their capital, till the labourers,
+whose hire was thus kept back from them, rose up
+against the rich, and scattered them to the winds
+of heaven. The oppressors are removed; but
+there is no recovery of the substance which they
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_62'>62</span>wasted. The impoverished may now come forth,
+and raise their cry of famine before the face of
+heaven, but the food that was taken from them
+there is none to restore.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“So much for poor France!” said Henry,
+writing rapidly. “Now for Spain.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Take but one Spanish tax,—take but the
+Alcavala, and you have sufficient reason why,
+with her prime soil, her wealth of metals, her
+colonies whither to send her superfluous consumers,
+Spain is wretched in her poverty. The
+alcavala (the monstrous per centage on all articles,
+raw or manufactured, as often as they are
+sold) must encroach more and more largely on
+the capital which is the material of wealth. Under
+the alcavala, Spain could not but be ruined.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Except in those provinces where there was no
+alcavala—Catalonia and Valencia. They bore
+up long after all others had sunk. There, Marie!
+There are your three examples. We have no
+room for the many more that rise up.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Not for England?”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“England! You do not think England on the
+road to ruin, my dear? You do not yet understand
+England’s resources.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Perhaps not. But you told me of eight
+hundred bankruptcies within the last seven
+months. Have you no practice of taxing your
+capital?”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“We have a few taxes,—bad taxes,—which
+are paid out of capital,—as my sister Jane will
+tell you. She knows something now of how legacies
+are reduced by the duties government demands.
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_63'>63</span>It is a bad practice to lessen property in
+the act of transference. Such taxes consume
+capital, and obstruct its circulation. But we have
+not many such. In one sense or another, to be
+sure, every tax may be proved to come out of
+capital, more or less; but almost all ours are
+paid out of our revenue: and so will be almost
+any that can be proposed, provided the amount
+be not increased. With the revenue that England
+has, and the ambition that her people entertain
+not to sink in society, exertion will be made
+to keep her capital entire, as long as there is any
+reasonable hope of success. We shall invent,
+and improve, and save, to a vast extent, before
+we let our capital be sacrificed.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“In the case of your property tax?”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Why not? The purpose of a property tax
+would be to take from us, not more but less than
+we pay already; less by the cost of collection
+which would be saved. If our revenue now pays
+the greater sum, it would then well serve for the
+lesser; and all the better from taxation being
+then equalized;—the rich man thus diverting a
+portion of his unproductive expenditure,—to the
+great relief of the industrious capitalist who now
+pays much more than his due share. O, it must
+be a huge property tax indeed that would trench
+upon our capital! Why, my dear, we might pay
+off our great national debt of nearly 300,000,000<i>l.</i>
+next year, without using our capital for the purpose.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Then I think you had better do it before your
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_64'>64</span>great debt gets any larger. Do you think it will
+go on growing?”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Our ministry and parliament seem determined
+that it shall. Meantime, we are playing
+with a Sinking Fund, and making believe to pay
+off, while we are only slipping the Dead Weight
+round and round our necks, and feeling it grow
+heavier at every turn.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“I think this is child’s play but too much like
+our poor French administrations that have beggared
+a nation,” observed M. Verblanc. “Get
+rid of your debt, you wise English; let a Frenchman
+advise you. If indeed you can pay off your
+300,000,000<i>l.</i> without impairing your capital, do
+it quickly.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“We are at war,” said Henry, despondingly;
+“and, what is worse, the debt is declared to be
+popular.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“The time will come when a burdened peace
+will find you tired of your debt.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Or rather our children. Even then I would
+advise an immediate exertion to pay it off,—yes,
+even if it should amount to twice three hundred
+millions.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Six hundred millions! Was ever such a
+debt heard of! What must your future rulers be
+if they thus devise the ruin of your fine country!”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“If they exceed that sum again, I would still
+struggle to pay it,” persisted Henry. “To be
+sure, one can hardly conceive of a debt of more
+than 600,000,000<i>l.</i>; but one can still less conceive
+of a nation being willing to pay the annual
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_65'>65</span>interest upon it. Let us see! I dare say
+nearly thirty millions<a id='rA'></a><a href='#fA' class='c013'><sup>[A]</sup></a>.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Ah! that interest is the great grievance. If
+the debt be allowed to accumulate, your nation
+may be subjected, within half a century from this
+time, to a permanent charge of interest which
+would of itself have sufficed to pay for all the
+wars from the time the debt began. Yes, this
+annual raising of interest is the grievance;—the
+transferring such enormous sums from the pockets
+of some classes of men into hands where it would
+never naturally find its way. Your ministers
+may say what they will about the debt being no
+actual loss to the country, since the whole transaction
+passes within the country;—this does not
+lessen the burden to those who have to pay over
+their earnings to the national creditor, whose
+capital has been blown away in gunpowder at
+sea, and buried with the dead bodies of their
+countrymen abroad.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Besides,” suggested Marie, “if there is no
+mischief in carrying on the debt because the
+transaction passes within the country, there could
+be no harm in paying it off, since that transaction
+would also be only a transference.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Very true. If all were assessed to pay off
+the public creditor, there would be no total loss.
+And as for the real evils,—the diversion of capital
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_66'>66</span>from its natural channels, and the oppression
+of industry,—the remedy of these would be so
+inestimable a relief, that in a little while the parties
+who paid the largest share would wonder at
+their own ease, and at the long delay of the nation
+in shaking off its burdens.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Like the heir who has resolution to sell a
+part of his mortgaged estate in order to disencumber
+the remainder. But who are they that
+would pay the largest share?”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“The richest, of course. All must contribute
+something. Even the labourer would willingly
+spare a portion of his earnings for the sake of
+having his earnings to himself for ever after. But
+by the aristocracy was this debt proposed; for
+their sakes was it incurred; by them is it accumulated;
+while it is certain that the burden is very
+far from being duly borne by them. From them,
+therefore, should the liquidation chiefly proceed.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“But did not you say that parliament claps its
+hands at every proposal to burden posterity?”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Yes: but what kind of a parliament? If
+Mr. Grey should ever obtain his great object,—if
+there should ever be a parliament through which
+the people may speak, and if the people should
+then declare themselves content to go on bearing
+the burden that the aristocracy of this day is imposing
+upon them, why, let the people have their
+way; and I, for one, shall wish them joy of their
+patience. But if, when the people can protest,
+and make their protests heard, they call for such
+an assessment as shall include all, but fall heaviest
+on those through whom the debt was incurred,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_67'>67</span>they will do that which is not only just in the
+abstract, but (like all that is essentially just) that
+which is most easy, most prudent, and must prove
+most fortunate.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“So you venture to write that down as you
+speak it,” said Marie. “Will you let the word
+‘easy’ stand?”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Yes; because it is used as a comparative term.
+Almost any plan would be more easy than sustaining
+this burden from year to year. A temporary
+inconvenience only would be the result of
+getting rid of it. I question whether any one
+person would be ruined; and of the many who
+must sacrifice a part of their property, every one
+would reap certain advantages which must in
+time compensate, or more than compensate, himself
+or his children. To the bulk of the people
+the blessing would be incalculable. It is not for
+those who most proudly boast of the resources of
+the country to doubt whether the thing can be
+done.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“A rich and noble country is yours,” observed
+M. Verblanc; “and the greater is the
+wonder and the shame that it contains so much
+misery,—such throngs of the destitute. Enormous
+as has been and now is the expenditure of
+your government, how have you not only sustained
+your resources, but augmented them! How
+have you, while paying for your wars, improved
+your lands, and your shipping, and your manufactures,
+and built docks, and opened canals, and
+stretched out roads! And while the nation has
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_68'>68</span>thus been growing rich, what crowds of your
+people have been growing poor!”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“And how should it be otherwise, when the
+pressure of public loans falls so unequally as in
+England? Fearful as is the amount, the inequality
+of pressure is a far greater evil. It is
+very possible,—when we consider the excitement
+afforded to industry and invention by a popular
+war,—that the capital of the country would not
+have been very much greater than now if we had
+been spared the wars and other wasteful expenditure
+of the public money of the last twenty years;
+but the distribution is in consequence most faulty,
+and the future incumbrances of the people fearful
+to contemplate.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“From your rulers having carried their system
+of borrowing too far. There is, to be sure, all
+the difference in the world between an individual
+borrowing for the sake of trade, or profit in some
+form or other, and governments borrowing that
+which is to be dissipated in the air or the sea, or
+shed upon the ground, so that it can be no more
+gathered up again than the rain which sinks into
+the thirsty soil.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Why cannot war-money be raised from year
+to year,” asked Marie, “so that the nation
+might know what it was about in undertaking a
+war? When my father rebuilt his château, he
+paid for each part as it proceeded, and so brought
+away with him no reproach of debt.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“When people are careless of their heirs,
+love, as rulers are of the people’s posterity, they
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_69'>69</span>find it easier to borrow and spend, than to make
+their spendings and their levies agree. When
+rulers are afraid to ask for so much as they desire
+to spend, they escape, by proposing loans, the
+unpleasantness of taxing. Heavily as our governments
+have taxed us, they have been actually
+afraid to tax us enough;—enough for the purposes
+proposed to the nation.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“They were afraid of making the people impatient.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Just so; and the people have shown what
+the rulers of many centuries have considered an
+‘ignorant impatience of taxation.’ That is, the
+nominal representatives of the people have encouraged
+expensive projects for which <a id='corr1.69.14'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='tke'>the</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_1.69.14'><ins class='correction'>the</ins></a></span> people
+have shown themselves unwilling to pay. The
+rulers and the people thus appear unreasonable
+to each other; while the blame chiefly rests in
+calling those the representatives of the people
+who are really not so. Mr. Grey and the friends
+of the people are doing what they can to bring
+the two parties to an understanding. When this
+is done, I trust there will be no going to war at
+the expense of future generations,—no running
+into expenses for which the means are not already
+provided.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“They who first devised these public loans
+could not have guessed what they were doing,
+Henry.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“They never imagined that any one would so
+improve upon their practice of borrowing, as not
+to provide for the payment at some definite time.
+If,—as may happen on the unexpected breaking
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_70'>70</span>out of a war when the nation is not in very favourable
+circumstances,—it is perilous to tax it
+heavily and suddenly, it may be expedient to raise
+the supplies in a way which will enable the people
+to pay more conveniently, at their own leisure.
+But the period should be fixed when the money
+is raised. The money should be raised upon
+terminable annuities; so that, at least, every one
+may know how long the burden is to endure.
+This is a plain rule; and happy would it have
+been for the country if it had been observed from
+the day when——”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“When its system of loans began?”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“I would hardly say that; for I do not see
+how the rulers in the troubled times of the Revolution
+could have governed the country without
+loans. The tax-payers were so divided in
+their loyalty at the time, that King William and his
+councillors would not have been able to raise money
+enough for the struggle by taxation, and would
+only have made themselves hated for the attempt.
+But a foreign war, undertaken by an undivided
+people, is a wholly different affair; and the advisers
+of George II. had no business to carry on
+the borrowing system.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“They found the debt large, I suppose, and
+left it larger; according to the methods of
+borrowers from posterity.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Yes; it amounted, when it came into their
+hands, to fifty-two millions, having grown to this
+since the Revolution, when it was only 664,000<i>l.</i>
+It is now five times fifty-two millions.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“O, make haste and tell these things to your
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_71'>71</span>rich men; and they will plan how soon this
+monstrous charge may be got rid of.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“There is a great deal to be done first, my
+dear. We have first to convince them that this
+debt is not a very good thing.—As long as they
+escape paying their due share of the interest, and
+are aware that the liquidation must, in a considerable
+proportion, proceed from them, there is
+no lack of reasons, convincing to their minds, why
+a large national debt must be a great national
+blessing.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“It attaches the people to the government,
+perhaps. Is that what they say?”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Yes; as if the people will not always be the
+most attached to the government that most consults
+their prosperity. What can they think of a
+government that——”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>He stopped suddenly as Marie put her fingers
+on her lips, and appeared to be listening. She
+ran to the door and threw it wide open,—in time
+to hear a shuffling down the dark stair-case.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“I am sure there was somebody at the door,”
+said she, hesitating whether to shut it again.
+Her father shrugged his shoulders as the cold air
+blew in. Henry observed that if the people of
+the house wanted anything, they would come
+again; and Marie therefore, after calling from
+the landing and receiving no answer, returned to
+her seat as before; observing that it was not the
+first time she had believed some person to have
+remained outside the door.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>Her husband was writing down to her father’s
+dictation about fallacies in regard to the debt;—such
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_72'>72</span>fallacies as that the parchment securities of
+the public creditor were an absolute creation of
+capital; whereas they were only the representatives
+of values which were actually sunk and lost;—that
+the annual transfer of the millions required
+for the interest was so much added to the circulation;
+whereas this very sum would, in the absence
+of the debt, have been circulating in a more
+profitable manner;—that the public funds afforded
+a convenience for the prompt investment of unemployed
+capital; whereas there would be no
+lack of good investments for capital if industry
+were left free;—and, finally, that the stocks are
+an admirable instrument for the ascertainment of
+public opinion; whereas a very small amount of
+debt would answer this purpose as well as the
+largest. Nobody would object to retaining the
+664,000<i>l.</i> of the revolutionary times for this
+simple object.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>Marie could not settle well to her employment
+after this interruption. Henry forgot it in a
+moment. He grew earnest; he grew eloquent;
+and, in proportion, he grew loud. Nobody came
+from below, as he had predicted. Nobody could
+have wanted anything at the door when Henry
+was asking so loudly how it was “possible for
+the people to be attached to a government which,
+&#38;c.” And now, when he was insisting on the
+first principle of taxation,—equality,—when he
+was offering a variety of illustrative cases, all of
+which resolved themselves into equality or inequality,—his
+little wife came behind him, and
+laying her hand on his shoulder, asked him in a
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_73'>73</span>whisper whether it was necessary to speak quite
+so loud.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“My love, I beg your pardon. I am afraid
+I have been half-stunning you. Why did not
+you speak before? I am very apt to forget the
+dimensions of our room,” and he started up
+laughing, and showed that he could touch the
+ceiling with the extremities of his long fingers;—“I
+am apt to forget the difference between this
+chamber and the lofty places where I used to
+hold forth at college. Was I very boisterous,
+love?”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“O, no: but loud enough to be heard beyond
+these four walls.” And she glanced towards the
+door.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“If that be all, any one is welcome to hear
+what I have to say on taxation. It will be all
+printed to-morrow, you know, my dear.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>Marie did know this: but she was not the
+more willing that her husband should be overheard
+exclaiming vehemently about equality,—a
+word held in very bad repute in those days, when,
+if a lady made inquiries of her linen-draper about
+the equality of wear of a piece of gingham or
+calico, the shopman would shake his head at
+her for a leveller, as soon as she had turned
+her back.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“How,” said M. Verblanc, looking tenderly at
+his daughter, “how shall I forgive those who
+have put dread into the heart that was once as
+light as the morning gossamer? How shall I
+forgive those who taught my child suspicion?”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_74'>74</span>“O, father, remember the night——”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Yes, Marie; I knew it was the thought of
+that night that prompted you to caution now.—The
+night,” he continued to Henry, “when our
+poor friend La Raye was arrested at our house.
+We have reason to believe that we had all been
+watched for hours,—that eyes had peeped from
+every cranny, and that ears were planted all round
+us. I myself saw the shadow of a man in ambuscade,
+when a passing gleam from the court shone
+into my hall. I took no notice, and rejoined La
+Raye and my child. He slipped out by a back
+way, but was immediately taken in the street;
+and for words spoken that night, coupled with
+preceding deeds, he suffered.—Well may my
+Marie have learned dread and suspicion!”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“No, father; not well! Nay, Henry, you
+do not know what warning I had against it;—warning
+from one who knew not dread, and
+would not have saved her life by so vile an instrument
+as suspicion.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>Henry bent himself to listen with his whole
+soul, for now he knew that Marie spoke of her
+friend, Madame Roland.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Yes, I was warned by her that the last impiety
+is to fear; and the worst penalty of adversity
+to suspect. I was warned by her that the
+chief danger in civil revolution is to forget green
+meadows and bright skies in fields of blood and
+clouds of smoke; and that those who shrink from
+looking fully and kindly even upon those who
+may be the reptiles of their race, are less wise
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_75'>75</span>than the poor prisoner in the Bastile who made
+friendship with his spider instead of trying to flee
+from it.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“And she observed her own warning, Marie.
+How her murderers quailed before her open gaze!”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Ah, yes! In her prison, she brought home
+to her the materials of happiness; and with them
+neither dread nor suspicion can co-exist. She
+brought back into her own bosom the wild flowers
+which she had worn there in her childhood; and
+the creations of her father, the artist; and the
+speculations of her husband, the philosopher;
+and opened up again the springs of the intellect,
+which may gush from the hardest dungeon walls;
+and wakened up the voice of her mother to thrill
+the very heart of silence; and dismissed one
+obedient faculty at morn to travel with the sun,
+and ride at eve down his last slanting ray with
+tidings of how embryo man is working his way
+into light and freedom; and summoned another
+obedient faculty at midnight to paint upon the
+darkness the image of regenerated man, with his
+eye fixed upon science, and his hand supporting
+his fellow man, and his foot treading down the
+painted trifles and deformed usurpations of the
+world that is passing away. Having gazed upon
+this, what were any spectres of darkness to her,—whether
+the scowls of traitors, or an axe hanging
+by a hair?”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Would that all who desire that women should
+have kindliness, and domestic thoughtfulness, and
+cheerfulness, and grace, knew your friend as you
+knew her, Marie!”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_76'>76</span>“Then would they learn from what quarter of
+the moral heavens these endowments may be
+fetched by human aspiration. Would they behold
+kindliness and lightness of spirit? They must
+give the consciousness of being able to bestow,
+instead of the mere craving to receive, the support
+which intellect must yield to intellect, if
+heart is to answer to heart. Would they have
+homely thoughtfulness? They must not obstruct
+that full intellectual light in which small things
+dress themselves in their most shining beauty,
+as the little fly that looks dark beneath a candle
+shows itself burnished at noon. Let men but lay
+open the universe for the spirit of woman to
+exercise itself in, and they may chance to see again
+with what grace a woman about to die can beseech
+the favour to suffer more than her companions.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>Of this friend, Marie could not yet speak long.
+Few and frequent were her words of remembrance;
+and Henry had learned that the best
+kindness was to let her break off, and go, to
+carry her strong associations of love and admiration
+into her daily business. She now slipped
+away, and stood tending her bird, and flattering
+herself that her dropping tears were unnoticed,
+because her face was not seen. Then she filled
+a chafing dish, and carried it into the little closet
+that served her father for a bedchamber. Then
+she busied herself about Henry’s coffee, while he,
+for her sake, applied himself to finish his task.
+Presently, even he was convinced that there was
+some one at the door who had not knocked.—Without
+a moment’s delay he threw open the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_77'>77</span>door, and there stood—no political or domestic
+spy—but Jane, with a somewhat pale countenance,
+wearing a very unusual expression.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“We are glad to see you here at last, Jane.
+You are just in time to see what coffee Marie
+makes.—But where is Morgan?” looking out
+on the dark landing. “You did not come alone
+in the dark?”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Yes, I did. I have something to tell you,
+Henry. Michael is home.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Thank God! I hope it is the last time he
+will alarm you so thoughtlessly. I dare say he
+knew all that has happened, though he hid himself
+from us.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“O yes; there was one who must have known
+where he was all the time, and told him every
+thing; for, do you know, he has come home in
+a curricle of his own! The first thing he had
+to say to me was about his horses; and the next
+was——”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“What?”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“He is going to be married to-morrow morning!”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>In spite of a strong effort, Jane’s countenance
+was painfully moved while she announced this.
+Henry did not convey the comfort he intended
+by not being sorry to hear any of the news. He
+was much relieved by learning that that which
+was by nature a marriage long ago, was now to
+be made so by law. As for the curricle and
+horses, though such an equipage might be unsuitable
+in appearance with the establishment of
+a grocer in Budge-row, this was altogether a
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_78'>78</span>matter of taste. It was certain that Michael
+could afford himself the indulgence, and it was
+therefore a very harmless one.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>Henry’s cheerful air and open countenance
+made his sister feel half envious. He did not
+seem to dread the risk of her father’s hard-earned
+money being spent much more easily than it had
+been gained. He seemed to have forgotten what
+it is to have made many hundred thousand
+pounds; and he certainly knew nothing about
+the anxiety of keeping it. How should he?</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>Marie laughed as she asked how Michael
+looked in his curricle: it must be such a strange
+situation to him! She had never seen Michael.
+She wondered whether he looked at all like
+Henry; and then she sighed. She thought of
+the carriages that had been at her disposal in
+France, and that she now had not one to offer to
+her disinherited husband.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Some more sugar, Marie,” said M. Verblanc,
+when he had tasted his last cup of coffee.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>Marie went to her cupboard, and brought out
+the little powdered sugar that remained at the
+bottom of the last parcel she had bought. She
+had tasted no sugar for some time; and it was
+by very nice management that she had been able
+to procure any for her father. She hoped that
+what had been written this week might supply
+comforts for the next. Meantime, Jane’s <a id='corr1.78.29'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='enrance'>entrance</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_1.78.29'><ins class='correction'>entrance</ins></a></span>
+had baffled her calculations about the
+sugar. Henry smiled at the disclosure, and
+helped himself to another cup of coffee, without
+sugar. Marie would have borrowed from the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_79'>79</span>woman of the house; but her father would not
+allow it. His daughter rightly imagined that he
+felt uncertain of being able to pay a debt of a
+mere luxury, and therefore did not choose to
+incur it.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Ah, well!” said she; “everything will cost
+us less money, let us hope, when men have left
+off fighting like dogs, that they may render
+peaceable men beggars. They make us pay for
+their wars out of our tea and our sugar,—and
+out of our heart’s blood, papa, when they make
+us deny our parents what they expect at our
+hands.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>M. Verblanc wished that Marie could have,
+during this time of war, the sugar that was now
+growing in her beloved garden at home. Beet-root
+was now largely used for making sugar in
+France; and M. Verblanc had learned that the
+produce of his estates was considerable. These
+estates had been bought in by a friend; and it
+was hoped that they would in time be restored to
+the rightful owner.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>Marie’s scorn was excited by the idea of beet-root
+growing where her parterres had looked gay,
+and where the urns, and statues, and small fountains,
+originated by her taste, could have little
+congeniality with so thoroughly common and
+useful a produce as beet-root. She mentioned
+one field, and another, and another, which would
+answer the purpose quite as well as her garden.
+As she lightly mapped out the places she mentioned,
+Jane’s eye followed her pencil as eagerly
+as Henry’s. She asked of M. Verblanc, at
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_80'>80</span>length, whether the tenure of land was yet considered
+secure in France.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Of some lands, yes,” answered he. “If,
+for example, you will buy our estates, and grow
+beet-root, no one will turn you out; and it will
+give us true satisfaction to see our lands pass
+into such honourable hands.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>To Henry’s surprise, his sister seemed meditative.
+Marie looked up, smiling. “Will you
+buy our lands?”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“She cannot,” said Henry. “The law is
+against investing capital in an enemy’s country.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Is it?” said Jane, quickly.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“One would suppose you were really thinking
+of it, Jane. If you want to try your hand at
+farming, there is abundance of land in England.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>Jane muttered that in England there would
+also be an income tax immediately.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“And what of that? If you invested your
+money abroad, you would not go and live there,
+would you?”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“I am sure an income tax is enough to drive
+away all who have any substance. To leave one
+no choice! To make one pay, whether one will
+or not! I should not wonder to see every independent
+man in the kingdom contrive to get
+abroad with his money, somehow or other.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“I should. Every person of substance has
+not a brother Michael, with a doubtful wife and
+an ambiguous family; or a brother Henry, living
+in two small rooms, with a little Frenchwoman
+for a wife.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_81'>81</span>“’Tis not that, Henry. But, as I said, this
+way of taxing leaves one no choice——”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“But of paying one’s due share of what ought
+to fall equally upon all. Now tell me, Jane, what
+choice has the man whose family obliges him to
+spend his whole income in commodities? What
+choice have Patience and her husband, for instance,
+of how much they shall pay to the state?
+It is not with them as it is with you, that you
+may contribute to the war or not, according as
+you choose to have wine, and servants, and a
+carriage. The necessaries that you and Morgan
+consume cannot cost you much, I should think,—cannot
+yield much to the state.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>Jane cautiously replied that everything depended
+on what was meant by much and little.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Well; I mean that Patience’s eight children
+and three servants must consume much more
+butter, and fuel, and calicoes, and bread, and
+soap, and shoes, than you and Morgan.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>This could not be denied.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“What choice, then, is left to them? Under
+the system of taxing commodities, there is a
+choice left to those who least need it; while, if
+they do not choose to contribute, the poorer, who
+have no choice, must bear an increased burden.
+Oh, Jane! I could not be sorry to see you contributing
+as much from your wealth—money,—as
+the man who makes your shoes in his wealth—labour!
+He pays something to the state from
+every shilling that passes through his hands.
+Whether you pay something from every guinea
+you touch, I need not ask you. Has Peek told
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_82'>82</span>you of the rhyme that our labourers have at their
+tongues’ ends just now?”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Peek has not; but Michael told me of one
+he had heard several sing by the road-side,—something
+about how they divide their labour
+between one and another;—among all but themselves,
+they seem to think.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“It is the same:—</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line in4'>‘For the Debt till eight,</div>
+ <div class='line in6'>For the Church till ten:</div>
+ <div class='line in4'>To defend the State</div>
+ <div class='line in6'>With guns and men,</div>
+ <div class='line'>I must work till noon, so weary, O!</div>
+ <div class='line in4'>Then a spell for the Judge,</div>
+ <div class='line in6'>And two for the Crown;</div>
+ <div class='line in4'>Sure they need not grudge,</div>
+ <div class='line in6'>When the sun goes down,</div>
+ <div class='line'>One hour for myself and my deary, O!’”</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c015'>While Marie was pitying the labourer, and
+wondering how far his statement was exaggerated,
+Jane was thinking aloud how willing she
+should be to work with head and hands for
+Church and State, the Army and the Law.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“You had rather do this than pay, because
+your labour is not to you the wealth that labour
+is to a poor man.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“And partly because I really have not enough
+to do,” said Jane. “Michael does not seem to
+wish that I should keep the books any longer;
+and I cannot be making frocks for Patience’s
+children all day long, so little as I have been accustomed
+to needle-work for some time. I wish
+you could put me in the way of paying my taxes
+in the way the poor man does.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_83'>83</span>“And so take the work out of the poor man’s
+hands? No, Jane. You must pay in gold,
+sister.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Is there no sort of work that poor labourers
+cannot do?” asked Marie, with a private view to
+earning sugar and snuff for her father.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Not that will serve the purposes of the government,
+my dear. I remember hearing, some
+time ago, of a benevolent lady who was making
+bread seals to convert the Jews.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“And I,” said M. Verblanc, “of at least
+twenty gentle creatures who distilled rose-water
+one whole summer——”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“To wash the blackamoor white?”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“To civilize the Hottentot. But the results——”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“History does not record, any more than
+Jane’s feats of knitting, and other worthy exercises.
+Why, Jane, when you have the money
+ready—the very thing wanted—why should you
+offer your taxes in any other form? If you
+really want to help the state, suppose you raise a
+regiment yourself. You and Morgan can make
+the red coats, if you want something to do; or,
+if that is too fearful a service for a peaceable
+woman, you can take upon yourself the half-pay
+of some fine old officer or two; or you might
+build a bridge, or set up a Preventive establishment,
+(nothing is more wanted just now,) or do
+a hundred things that would save the poor labourer’s
+pocket, and not interfere with his market
+for labour. Such a free gift to the state would
+immortalize you; and, depend upon it, it would
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_84'>84</span>be far better for you than buying French land in
+violation of English law.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“How they make a mockery of us helpless
+women, whom they have first made helpless!”
+said Marie, while wrapping Jane in her shawl.
+“We will not mind them till we have reason for
+shame at being helpless.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>Neither Jane nor any one else could feel uncomfortable
+at anything that Henry said, his
+manner was so playful and kind. He was now
+reaching his hat, in order to walk home with his
+sister, whom no inducement was strong enough
+to tempt into a vehicle which must be hired. She
+preferred walking, she always declared, being
+conscientious enough, however, to protest invariably
+against any one accompanying her; but
+Henry actually wished to carry his manuscript to
+the printer this evening, and the brother and
+sister set off together.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>The weather was most disagreeable,—bitterly
+cold, with a fog, irritating alike to the windpipe,
+the vision, and the temper. The glow-worm
+lamps, with each its faint green halo, lost their
+use among the moving lights that perplexed the
+middle of the street. Jane had judged rightly
+this time in wishing to walk; for the groping on
+the foot-way was undoubtedly a less evil than
+the confusion of carriages. The occasional backing,
+the frequent clash, the yells, the oaths of the
+drivers, and now and then the snorting of a
+frightened horse, and the groans of a wounded
+one, showed that riding in a carriage is not
+always the extremity of bliss that some little
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_85'>85</span>children believe it to be. Henry held his sister’s
+arm tight within his, and she held her peace no
+less tenaciously while they were every moment
+walking point blank up against a broad man, or
+a slender lamp-post, or innocently knocking
+down a wearied woman, or a child who was
+tracing his mother’s apron upwards in hopes of
+at length finding her hand. After a while, it
+struck Jane that this was a case in which the
+longest way about would prove the nearest way
+home. By striking down one of the small
+streets leading to the river, they might escape all
+the carriages, and most of the people, and get to
+Budge Row all the sooner for making a small
+circuit. She believed she could engage not to
+lead her brother into the river; which was the
+chief peril in this path.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“I think there is an opening to the left, here,
+Jane.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Which way does the fog drift? I think
+there is a draught from the right, from the
+west.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Nay: surely it comes in our faces. No
+matter! you shall not go a step farther till I
+have made out whether we cannot now turn
+eastwards. Do stand still a moment.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>While he was down on his knees, poring over
+the pavement, to see which way the stones were
+laid, Jane observed that it was a shame they had
+no more light from the lamps, as they paid for
+the great new improvement in lighting,—viz:
+adding two threads to each <a id='corr1.85.32'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='burner.”'>burner.</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_1.85.32'><ins class='correction'>burner.</ins></a></span></p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“It is no fault of any one’s,” said Henry. “We
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_86'>86</span>may go on thickening wicks till we use up all our
+cotton, and we shall make no progress in lighting.
+We must make out some new principle.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“What principle?”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“O, if I knew, I should not have left it to be
+told now. All I know is that our streets are not
+perfectly lighted, and so I conclude that some
+better principle remains to be discovered. That
+is all.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“All!” thought Jane. “I think it means
+much;—every thing,” she continued within
+herself, while rapidly following out the clew
+afforded by this simple act of faith of her
+brother’s.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>There was an opening to the eastward; and
+they pursued it, feeling rather than seeing that
+the river lay open on their right hand. They
+seemed to have this bank all to themselves.
+Except a public house or two, with open door
+and lighted windows, all was dark and silent;—so
+silent, that when three clocks had done striking
+their long story, one after the other, the plash
+of oars was heard from the water. Presently,
+there was a little clatter among the boats moored
+near the margin, and the walkers pitied the rowers
+who had to encounter worse perils than those of
+Holborn and the Strand. In another instant,
+they stood stock still in a prodigious consternation.
+The yells and oaths left behind in Fleet-street
+were nothing to those which now burst
+forth immediately in front of them. There
+seemed to be threatening, struggling, grappling,
+fighting,—all in noise and darkness.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_87'>87</span>“Back! let us go back!” cried Jane.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>There was no use in attempting it. People
+poured out of the public houses, and seemed by
+their multitude, to drop from the clouds or come
+up in swarms from the river. As soon as Jane
+moved back, she met with a buffet; and was so
+pushed about, that she began to fear slipping
+into the water if she left the spot she occupied.
+The only thing to be done was to plant themselves
+against a house, and wait for an open way,
+or for light. Light came;—a gleam or two from
+an opened upper window, whence black heads
+projected, marvellously exaggerated by the fog;
+and then, after several abortive experiments with
+naked candles, a torch,—a flaring red torch,
+which did more execution on the gloom than all
+the cotton wicks in Cheapside could have done.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“A smuggling fray! Those are smugglers.
+How daring! to come up so far,” said Henry.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>Jane was making her observations, and correcting
+her imaginings. She was scarcely aware
+till now that she had always fancied a smuggler
+a large, stout, grim man, with a bit of red drapery
+dangling somewhere about him; a leathern
+belt; a pistol in his hand, and a keg just before,
+or just behind, or just on one side of him. But
+one of these men was slight and wan; and
+another was deformed; and a third wore a brown
+coat, like any other man; and none scowled as
+smugglers and patriots always do in pictures, but
+one laughed, and the rest looked vexed or angry
+in a plain way. She even thought that the one
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_88'>88</span>in a brown coat looked very like a shopman,—very
+like Michael.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>Thus much was ascertainable while the shifting
+light from the torch danced from tub to face,
+and from the packages on the shore to the
+shadowy boat behind, with still a black figure or
+two in it.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“How very daring!” exclaimed Henry again.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Yes,” said a voice from a window immediately
+in their rear. “These are the days
+for smuggling frolics. These fellows hold that
+they are in favour with the minister, as ’tis certain
+they are maintained by him.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“By his multiplying the customs and excise
+duties, you mean.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Ay, sir. Multiplying and raising them.
+The story goes that these fellows drink the
+minister’s health first, in every keg they open;
+and the saying is, that if the seditious do as they
+say,—pull the minister’s carriage about his ears
+some day,—he will have a guard of smugglers
+rise up of their own accord to bear him harmless.
+But they don’t like the talk of an income tax,
+sir.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“It is no longer mere talk. The assessment
+has begun.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Sure, sir, it has. And that may have made
+them desperate in their daring, which their
+coming here looks like. But they could not
+have chosen their night better. ’Tis a wonder
+to me how any body could watch them. Fudge!
+What are they after now?”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_89'>89</span>A struggle ended in making the torch more
+efficacious than was contemplated. A smuggler
+staved a cask. Whether by accident or design
+was never known,—but the torch dropped into
+the rivulet of spirit, and it turned to fire. The
+blue flame shot up, waved, hovered, looked very
+beautiful in itself, but cast a fearful light on the
+brawlers who rushed over one another to extricate
+their shins from the flame. Jane saw a really
+grim face at last. A man in a prodigious rage
+had been fighting with the brown-coated
+smuggler who was like Michael. The angry
+man had got the better of the other, and was
+now lifting him up at arms length, with the
+strength of an elephant, and the ferocity of a
+tiger. He dashed him down with a sound that
+was heard through the din.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“It <i>is</i> Michael!” cried the brother and sister
+at the same moment. They had both seen his
+face high in the air. They burst through the
+throng, and reached the body,—the dead body;
+for the neck was broken against a cask.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>As Jane kneeled beside him, in front of the
+flickering blaze, she replaced the head, horribly
+bent backwards as it was, and then looked up in
+Henry’s face with kindled eyes, to say,</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“He is gone; and he is not married. He is
+gone this time.”</p>
+
+<div>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_90'>90</span>
+ <h3 id='ch1.5' class='c011'><span class='sc'>Chapter V.</span> <br> <br> HOW TO ENTERTAIN STRANGERS.</h3>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c016'>It was long before Henry could get back. He
+had to convey Jane home, and recover her to a
+safer state of mind, and then to communicate
+the intelligence to Patience; and then,—more
+painful still,—to the young woman whom he
+always regarded as Michael’s wife. At the end
+of four hours, when it was nearly one in the
+morning, he knocked at the door of his lodgings,
+and was instantly let in by his landlord. He
+perceived that Mr. Price looked very sulky; and
+he could obtain no answer to his enquiries about
+whether Mrs. Farrer had been uneasy at his not
+returning. He bounded up stairs, and Marie was
+in his arms before he saw how pale was her face,
+and how swollen her eyes. The fire burned
+dull, the lamp only glimmered, and there was an
+air of indescribable confusion in the room; so
+that, occupied as Henry was with what had
+happened, he could not help feeling almost
+bewildered as to whether this was his lodging or
+not.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“I thought you never, never would have come,”
+sobbed Marie.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“My love, there has been but too much reason
+for my staying so long.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“But there was so much reason for your being
+at home! Henry, they have carried away my
+father.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_91'>91</span>Marie could not tell where they had taken
+him. She knew nothing of English law and
+justice. She had had no one to help her; for
+Price himself introduced the officers of justice;
+and Mrs. Price was so stiff and cold in her
+manner, that Marie was obliged to leave off
+appealing to her. All she knew was that some
+men walked in while her father was reading, and
+she writing; that they showed a paper which her
+father did not know the use of; searched every
+corner of the apartments, turning every article of
+furniture out of its place, and taking possession at
+last of a pocket-pistol, of beautiful workmanship,
+which M. Verblanc valued as the gift of an old
+military friend. M. Verblanc himself was also
+carried off, because he had not given notice to the
+magistrates of having come to live in this place.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“How is this?” enquired Henry of Price who
+now entered the room. “The arrest of aliens,
+and the search for weapons, can legally take place
+only in the day time.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“They reckon it day time in this sort of thing
+till nine o’clock, and it wanted full ten minutes
+to nine when they came.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“What did you know about this before I
+went out?” enquired Henry, turning the light of
+the lamp full upon Price’s face.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Only what most lodging-house keepers know
+in these days. I was called upon to give an
+account in writing of all the aliens in my house.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>Henry conjectured very truly that the Prices
+were at the bottom of the whole affair. Mrs.
+Price had a very vigorous imagination; and she
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_92'>92</span>had given out among her neighbours that M.
+Verblanc was certainly a man of high rank;
+that he scribbled over more writing paper than
+any body she ever saw, except the gentleman
+that called himself his son-in-law; and that the
+writing must be letters, because nobody ever
+knew what became of it, and he went out
+regularly once a day,—no doubt to the post-office,
+for he never was known to send letters
+there by any other hand.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>Marie was obliged to be comforted with the
+assurance that this arrest would be only a
+temporary inconvenience; that such things were
+constantly happening in these days; and that
+there was no doubt of her father’s being released
+the next morning. Henry would go at the
+earliest practicable hour, and he did not doubt of
+bringing M. Verblanc home with him.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>Before the earliest practicable hour, however,
+other engagements occurred to prevent Henry’s
+executing his design. Price came in, while the
+husband and wife were standing by the fire,
+mournfully discussing their plans for this day
+when so much was to be done. Price wished
+to give notice that he must have his rent this
+morning. He had gone without it too long, and
+he had no intention of waiting any longer.
+Henry was not aware that the time of payment
+was past. He understood that it was to be
+quarterly: but Marie produced the little that she
+had laid by for the purpose; and Henry was
+reminded to feel in his pocket for the manuscripts
+that were to have been carried to their destination
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_93'>93</span>the night before. They were gone. His pocket
+was empty.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>Never mind! This was no time to think about
+disappointments in the way of authorship; and,
+as for the gain,—it was but too probable that
+Henry would presently have more money than
+he desired. Price seemed to have some idea of
+this kind; but not the less did he give notice
+that his lodgers must turn out at the end of the
+week. The rooms were already let; so there
+was no use in saying any thing about it. Henry
+could only suppose that tidings of Michael’s
+death, and the manner of it, had reached the
+house, and that it was concluded that, as the one
+brother had been a smuggler, the other must be
+a swindler.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>Before Price was out of the room, came the
+printer’s man for the manuscript which had been
+lost. While he was still shaking his head over
+Marie’s calculation of how soon she could make
+another copy from the short-hand notes she had
+happily preserved, the matter was settled by the
+publisher sending to ask for the last Greek proof
+Henry had had to correct, and to give notice that
+this was his final transaction with Mr. Farrer,
+who need not trouble himself to write any thing
+more for the publication of which he had been the
+chief support. No further communication from
+his pen would be accepted. A receipt in form for
+the money now sent was requested and given, and
+the cash immediately paid over to Price in discharge
+of the remainder of the rent. The few
+shillings left were, when the husband and wife
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_94'>94</span>were alone again, pushed from one to the other
+with the strange impulse of mirth which often
+arises under the extremest pressure of vexation
+and sorrow.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Marie, what do you think of all this?” asked
+her husband, meeting her eye, which was fixed
+wistfully upon him.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“I think that if my poor countrymen have
+their errors, the English have at least their whims.
+It is at least remarkable that on this morning,
+when there is so much to call you abroad, one
+after another should come to keep you at home.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Very remarkable!” was all that Henry said
+before he relapsed into reverie. He roused himself,
+and snatched up his hat, assuring his wife,
+however, that it was yet, he believed, too early
+for him to obtain access to her father, or justice
+on his behalf. He had not proceeded far down
+stairs when he was met by three gentlemen, who
+requested two minutes’ conversation with him.
+They came to invite him to be present at a meeting
+to be held for the purpose of declaring attachment
+to the constitution.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Impossible, gentlemen. You are not aware
+that my only brother died suddenly last night. I
+cannot appear needlessly in public to-day.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>And he would have bowed them out; but they
+had something more to say than condolence. As
+his attending the meeting was thus unfortunately
+rendered impossible, perhaps he would sign the
+address to his Majesty.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“That will depend on what it contains. I
+own I do not see the immediate occasion for such
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_95'>95</span>a protestation; but if the address should express
+what I think and feel, I shall have no objection
+to put my name to it.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>The spokesman conceived that, as every true
+Englishman must be attached to the constitution,
+there could be no risk to any true Englishman in
+engaging to declare his attachment.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Certainly, sir, if we were all agreed as to
+what the constitution is; but this is the very
+point on which men differ. One person thinks
+that a dozen or two of trials and transportations
+of ignorant and educated men for sedition, and
+a doubling of the taxes, and an overawing of
+the House of Commons, are measures of support
+to the constitution; while others consider them
+as violations. Therefore I must fully understand
+what is involved in the address before I sign it;
+and can, in the mean time, pledge myself to
+nothing, gentlemen.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>The visitors looked at one another, and departed,—one
+sighing, another giggling, and the
+third looking back till the last moment,—like a
+child who is bidden to look at a traitor, and almost
+expects to see him turn into some rare animal,—a
+Turk or an ourang-outang.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>This time Henry got as far as the house-door.
+There he was turned back by the commissioners
+who were employed in making the returns for the
+income tax. In vain Henry assured them that
+he had hitherto had no income, and that, as soon
+as he could ascertain whether he was to have
+any of his brother’s money, and how much, he
+would let the gentlemen know. They were not
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_96'>96</span>content with assertions given in the street, and,
+as Henry had no doubt of finally satisfying them
+in two minutes, he invited them up stairs.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“You are aware, sir, that we are sworn to the
+most inviolable secrecy as to the affairs of individuals;
+that we are empowered, when dissatisfied,
+to call for written explanations of the resources
+of living, and even to impose an oath, if
+necessary.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Very needful precautions, I should think,
+considering how strong is the temptation to concealment
+and fraud, and how very easy evasion
+must be in a great number of cases. Very necessary
+precautions, if they could but be effectual.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Effectual, sir! Do you suppose we shall
+violate our oath of secrecy?”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“By no means; but it is impossible that confidence
+should not often be reciprocally shaken,
+when the affairs of individuals are thus involuntarily
+exposed. This inquisition is a heavy
+grievance, indeed, and it opens the door to a very
+pernicious use of influence.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Well, sir, every tax must have its disadvantages;
+and when a large revenue must be
+raised——”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“True; every tax is bad, in one way or another;
+yet, taxes there must be. I do not know
+that there can be a better than an income tax, if
+it can be fairly raised, and duly proportioned to
+the tenure of incomes. If I find myself soon in
+possession of an income, I shall offer my proportion
+with pleasure; you will not need to impose
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_97'>97</span>the oath on me. But I do wish, as this tax affords
+the means, as you say, of raising a large revenue,—I
+do wish that we were relieved of some
+of our indirect taxes. An income tax may be
+very cheerfully borne when it is imposed instead
+of the indirect taxes which fall so unequally as
+we know they do; but the same tax may be felt
+as a heavy grievance when it is imposed in addition,—filling
+up the measure of hardship. Now,
+we have a load of partial taxes which can be
+conveniently paid; and also a fair tax,—fair in
+principle,—which must be vexatiously levied.
+Let us have the one or the other, but not both.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“But, Mr. Farrer, you are aware that the evils
+of this income tax will be lessened perpetually.
+We are now just in the bustle and confusion of
+making new returns; but when we can establish a
+system of ascertainment of the wages of various
+employments, and the interests upon loans, and
+the averages of capital invested by the commercial
+men in our districts,—in somewhat the same
+manner as we can already learn the rental of
+landlords from the terms of their leases, and the
+profits of the tenants from the proportion profits
+are considered to bear to rent,—when this is
+arranged, there will be much less occasion for
+vexatious questioning.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“And much less facility of evasion. Very
+true. After all, this tax is a violation of a subordinate
+rule of taxation, while our indirect taxes
+violate the first and chief. In fact, it seems to
+me to violate only that which regards the convenience
+of the contributors as to the mode of
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_98'>98</span>payment; while it agrees with the principle,—to
+equalize the contributions; with another,—to
+make the amount, and the time and manner certain;
+and with a third,—to keep out of the
+pockets of the people as little as possible over
+and above what goes into the treasury. Whenever
+I have an income, I had much rather see
+you on an appointed day, and pay my portion
+as I would pay my house-rent, knowing that
+what I pay goes straight to its professed destination,
+than be treated like a child, and inveigled
+into paying a little here and a little there, without
+knowing it; or, if knowing it, with a pretty
+strong assurance that plenty of pockets are gaping
+to swallow some of it by the way.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>Marie thought this was like sweetening physic
+for a child. She wondered that, in a nation of
+men, such devices should be allowed to be still
+enacted.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“We are not yet a nation of men, my dear,
+because we are not yet an educated nation. These
+taxes on commodities are taxes on ignorance.
+When, as a nation, we grow wise enough to settle
+rationally what we shall spend, and why, and
+how, we shall grow manly enough to come forward
+with our contribution, instead of letting it
+be filched from us while we are winking.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“And yet, sir, it is the rich, and not the
+ignorant who complain of this new tax, and are
+all in favour of the old system. They had rather
+pay double for their tea and their wine than have
+more money raised in this new way.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Yes; no doubt. And the poor man had
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_99'>99</span>much rather have his bread and beer bear their
+natural price, and pay his taxes out of his wages.
+Thus he is sure of paying no more than his due;
+while the rich man will be properly compelled to
+contribute in proportion to the protection he
+derives from government. He owes so much
+more than the poor man to the state which guards
+his greater substance, that it is most unfair to
+leave his payment to the chance of how much
+wine, and tea, and other articles he may consume.
+He cannot himself consume more bread
+and beer than his poor neighbour; and it is a
+matter of choice whether he shall keep servants
+to consume much more. Such choice ought not
+to be left, when the alternative is the poor man
+paying the more for the rich man’s spending less.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Why, indeed, it cannot be justified that the
+cobbler who patches a miser’s shoes should pay
+fifty per cent. to the state, when the miser himself
+pays only one per cent. If it be a good rule,—(and
+it is the rule on which we proceed, sir,)—that
+a just taxation will leave individuals in the
+same relation in which it found them, the advantage
+will be entirely on the side of the measure
+we have now in hand.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“And then comes the question whether there
+may not be a better tax still. An income tax is
+immeasurably better than a system of indirect
+taxation; but there may be means of avoiding
+the inequalities which remain even under the improved
+system. If you once begin to graduate
+your income tax according to the value of the
+tenure of incomes——”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_100'>100</span>“Why, it is hard that the physician, whose
+large income expires on his becoming infirm,
+should pay more than the fundholder or landowner,
+whose income is permanently yielded to
+himself and his children.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“And then, from the fundholders, you must
+except those who hold terminable annuities. Five
+per cent. is a much larger payment from a man
+whose income is to terminate in ten or twenty
+years, than five per cent. would be from the
+owner of land. And again; if you lay a tax of
+five per cent. on the labourers’ wages, the tax
+falls upon the capital; for the wages must rise
+just so much as the tax amounts to. It follows
+of course that the receiver of rent ought to pay
+a higher per centage, because the capitalist pays
+for himself and his labourers too. Now, if we
+once begin making these modifications, (which
+justice requires,) it seems the most direct and
+efficacious method to have a property tax; <i>i. e.</i>,
+to tax those incomes which are derived from invested
+capital. Ah! I see you shake your heads;
+I see what you would say about the difficulty of
+defining what is property; and the hardship in a
+few cases,—as in those of small annuitants; and
+the tendency,—the very slight,—the practically
+imperceptible tendency to check accumulation.
+We agreed before that all taxes are bad; that
+there are some difficulties attending all.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“But do not you allow these evils, sir?”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“I do; but I hold them to be so much smaller
+than those we have been submitting to all this
+while as to be almost lost in the comparison,—except
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_101'>101</span>for the difficulty that there always is in
+changing taxes. As for the defining of what
+property is, distinctions have been made quite as
+subtle as between investments that are too transient
+to come under the title of property, and
+those that are not; between the landlord’s possession
+of a field that yields rent, and the tenant’s
+investment in marl which is to fertilize it for a
+season or two. Wherever legislation interferes
+with the gains of industry, nice distinctions have
+to be made; and this case will hardly rival our
+excise regulations. As for the small annuitants,
+though their case may be a less favourable one
+than that of richer men, it will be a far more
+favourable one than it is now, when their small
+incomes must yield enormously to the state
+through the commodities they buy. As for the
+tendency to check accumulation, it is also nothing
+in comparison with that which at present exists.
+What can check accumulation so much as the
+enhancement of the price of every thing that the
+capitalist and labourer must buy, when part of the
+added price goes to pay for the trouble and trickery
+attendant on a roundabout method of taxation?
+No, no. While, besides this enhancement of price,
+five or six sevenths of the taxation of the kingdom
+is borne by the labouring and accumulating
+classes, I cannot think that our capital would
+grow the slower for the burden being shifted
+upon the class of proprietors who can best afford
+the contribution, which would, after all, leave
+them in the same relation to other individuals in
+which it found them.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_102'>102</span>“It would certainly issue in that equality, since
+income from skill and labour would proportion
+itself presently to the amount of property. The
+physician who received a guinea-fee from the
+till now lightly-taxed proprietor, would then receive
+a pound; and so on, through all occupations.
+All would enjoy the relief from the diminished
+cost of collection, as I hope we shall all
+do under our present commission, sir. Well, you
+will not oblige us to put you upon your oath as
+to your amount of income. You really have not
+an income above 60<i>l.</i> a year, Mr. Farrer? that
+is our lowest denomination, sir; we tax none
+under 60<i>l.</i> a year.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“If you choose to swear me, you may; but
+my wife and I can assure you that we have no
+income beyond the few guineas that I may chance
+to earn from week to week. We have not been
+married many months; and we have never dared
+yet to think of such a thing as a regular yearly
+income. Well, it might be imprudent; but that
+is all over, I believe. If I find that I now am
+to have money——”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>The commissioners disclaimed all intention of
+judging the principles or impulses under which
+Henry’s matrimonial affairs had proceeded,—hoped
+to hear from him soon, if their good wishes
+should be fulfilled, and left him looking at his
+watch, and assuring Marie that even yet it was
+very early.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“But who are these?” cried the unhappy lady,
+as two men entered the room, without the ceremony
+of bowing, with which the late visiters had
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_103'>103</span>departed. “My husband, there is a conspiracy
+against us!”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“I believe there is, Marie: but the innocent
+can in this country confound conspiracies.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>Henry was arrested on a charge of seditious
+words spoken at divers times; and also, of not
+having given due notice of an alien residing
+within the realm without complying with the provisions
+of the Alien Act.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>The word “sedition” sounded fearful to Marie,
+who had talked over with her husband, again and
+again, the fates of Muir and Palmer, of Frost
+and Winterbottom, and many other victims of the
+tyranny of the minister of that day. Her first
+thought was,</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“They will send you to Botany Bay. But I
+will go with you.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>Henry smilingly told her he should not have
+to trouble her to get ready to go so far, he believed;
+but if she would put on her bonnet now,
+he had no doubt she would be permitted to accompany
+him, and learn for herself where the
+mistake lay which had led to this absurd arrest.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>She went accordingly, trembling,—but making
+a great effort to shed no tears. In those days of
+tyrannical and vaguely-expressed laws, of dread
+and prejudice in high places, a prisoner’s fate
+depended mainly on the strength and clearness of
+mind of the magistrate before whom he might
+be brought. Henry was fortunate in this respect.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>Some surprising stories were told,—newer to
+Henry and Marie than to anybody else,—of
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_104'>104</span>Henry’s disaffection,—of his having dined with
+old college friends who, to the disgrace of their
+education, had toasted the French republic, and
+laughed as the king’s health was proposed;
+of his having been overheard asking how the
+people could help hating a government which
+had Mr. Pitt at the head of it, and talked vehemently
+with some foreigners in praise of equality;
+and of his having finally refused to declare his
+attachment to the constitution.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>This story was not very formidable when it
+was first told; and after the magistrate had questioned
+the witnesses, and heard Henry’s own
+plain statement, he believed that no ground remained
+for commitment, or for asking bail. Not
+a single seditious word could be sworn to; and,
+as to any imprudent ones that might have been
+dropped, the assertions of the witnesses were
+much more imprudent, inasmuch as they could in
+no way be made to agree with themselves or one
+another. This charge was dismissed, and Marie
+found she should not have to go to Botany Bay.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>The other accusation was better substantiated.
+M. Verblanc had forgotten to give the required
+account of himself when he had changed his
+residence, and it had never occurred to Henry to
+lodge an information against him, though he
+knew, (if he had happened to recollect,) that the
+forms of the alien law had not been complied
+with. The magistrate had no alternative but to
+fine him, and, as the amount was not forthcoming,
+to commit him to prison till the fine should
+be paid.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_105'>105</span>Marie’s duty was now clear. She must go to
+Henry’s sisters, and obtain the money from them,
+in order to set her husband free to assist her
+father.</p>
+
+<h3 id='ch1.6' class='c011'><span class='sc'>Chapter VI.</span><br> <br> HOW TO ENTERTAIN BORROWERS.</h3>
+
+<p class='c012'>It was a strange way of visiting the old house in
+Budge-Row for the first time.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>Sam was standing two inches taller than usual,
+from being left in sole charge of the shop. He
+did not know exactly how his master had died;
+and, with all his self-importance, was more likely
+to receive the information from the many inquisitive
+customers who came for pennyworths than
+to give them any. Morgan had not thought it
+necessary to be explicit with him. She advised
+him to mind his business, and let Miss Farrer
+see what he could do in a time of family distress.
+He was profuse in his assurances to Marie that
+his mistress could see no visitors to-day. Perceiving
+that she was a foreigner, he concluded
+that she was a stranger, and was very unwilling
+to let even Morgan know that any one wished
+to speak with her.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>Marie thought she had never seen anything
+more forlorn than Jane’s aspect as she sat in her
+little parlour. She seemed to be doing nothing,
+not even listening to Dr. Say, who was attempting
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_106'>106</span>soft condolence. There was not even the
+occupation of making mourning, which had been
+a resource on a former occasion. The bible lay
+open on the table; but Jane was sitting by the
+darkened window as Marie entered,—Dr. Say
+having established himself by the fire.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“You will thank me,” said Marie, “for bringing
+you occupation,—for enabling you to help
+us, sister.” And she told her story, and what it
+was that she desired Jane to do.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>Jane seemed duly shocked at first; but when
+she found that Henry was in no danger, and that
+the whole case resolved itself into a money matter,
+her sympathy seemed to cool. She was silent
+and thoughtful.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Come,” said Marie, rising, “bring out the
+money; and will you not go with me?”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>But Jane had something to say; or rather,
+she seemed to be thinking aloud. Who knew
+whether Michael had left a will, and whether
+Henry would have any of the money? Besides,
+she had not so much in her purse; and it seemed
+to her that this would not be the end of the business.
+If there was a conspiracy against Henry,
+and his enemies knew that his family had money,
+they would soon make up another charge, and
+nobody could foresee where it might end. Perhaps
+the best kindness to Henry would be for
+his family to do nothing, that it might be seen
+that there was no use in pursuing him for evil.
+Perhaps——</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>Dr. Say emphatically assented to the whole of
+Jane’s reasoning.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_107'>107</span>“I am afraid of mistaking your English,”
+said Marie, losing her breath. “Do you mean
+that you will not help Henry?”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Perhaps some other friend——It might
+be better for him that some one else——Henry
+must have many friends.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Perhaps. But in France we have sisters
+who have begged alms for their brother’s defence,
+and thereby found a place beside them
+under the axe from which they could not save
+them. I thought there was one universal sister’s
+heart.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>Jane called after her in vain. She was gone
+like lightning. Morgan, however, detained her
+an instant at the door.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Wait, my dear young lady! They will
+follow you in the streets if you look so wild,
+ma’am!”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Then I will tell them how I scorn your
+London rich sisters that keep their brothers prisoners
+for paltry gold!”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Do not go, ma’am! Do stay till one can
+think a little,” urged the horror-struck Morgan.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“No, I will not stay. But I will not judge
+all till I have seen another sister.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Ah! Mrs. Peek. Go to Mrs. Peek, ma’am;
+and I would go with you, but——”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>Marie thought this was a land of “buts.” She
+could not, however, have stayed till Morgan could
+get ready. She made all haste to Mrs. Peek’s
+house.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>She did not know how to believe that the woman
+she saw, nursing a baby, could be a sister
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_108'>108</span>of Henry’s. The house was as noisy as Jane’s
+was quiet; and the mistress as talkative and
+pliable as Jane was reserved and stiff.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>In her untidy black bombazeen dress, she
+looked more like a servant than did her children’s
+nursemaid in her black coarse stuff; and the
+various sounds of complaint that came from little
+folks in every corner of the house were less wearing
+than the mamma’s incessant chiding and repining.—She
+did not know anything about whether
+her brother Henry was really married or not,
+she was sure; for Henry never came near them
+to let them know what he was doing.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“No wonder,” thought Marie, when she
+looked back upon the confusion of children’s toys,
+stools of all sizes, and carpets (apparently spread
+to trip up the walker), among which she had
+worked her way to the seat she occupied.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“There are so many calls upon one, you see,
+ma’am; and those that have large families,—(what
+a noise those boys do make!)—so much
+is required for a large family like ours, that it is
+no easy matter to bring up children as some
+people do in these days. The burdens are so
+great! and I am sure we could never think of
+sending a son of ours to the university, if we were
+sure of his settling ever so well.—O, to be sure,
+as you would say, ma’am, that should make no
+difference in our helping Henry, hoping he would
+not get into any such scrapes again. Well,
+ma’am, I will ask Mr. Peek when he comes
+home, to see if anything can be done.—O, that
+would be too late, would it? Well, I don’t know
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_109'>109</span>that that signifies so much, for I have a notion
+that as Mr. Peek is a king’s servant, it might not
+be so well for him to appear. Dear me! I never
+have any money by me, ma’am, but just for my
+little bills for the family; and I should not think
+of parting with it while my husband is out.—Why,
+really, I have no idea where you could find
+him. My little girl shall see whether he is at
+home, though I am quite sure he is not. Grace,
+my dear, go and see whether your father is in the
+back room. O, you won’t. Then, Jenny, you
+must go. There! you see they won’t go, ma’am;
+but it is of no consequence, for I do assure you
+he went out after breakfast. I saw him go.
+Did not you, Harry?”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“To dare to call one of their dirty, rude boys
+after my Henry!” thought Marie, as she ran out
+of the house. Mrs. Peek stood looking after her,
+wondering one thing and another about her, till
+the baby cried so loud that she could not put off
+attending to him any longer.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>Marie could think of no further resource but
+to go back to Morgan for advice. She was now
+very weary, and parched with thirst. She was
+not accustomed to much exercise, and had never
+before walked alone through crowded streets; her
+restless and anxious night was also a bad preparation
+for so much toil. She was near sinking
+at once when, on returning to the shop, she
+found from Sam that Morgan had just gone out,
+he did not know whither.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“She could not go out with me!” thought
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_110'>110</span>Marie. “My Henry is the only English person
+worthy to be French, after all.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Sure, mistress, you had better sit down,”
+observed Sam, wiping a stool with his apron.
+On being asked whether he could let her have a
+glass of water, he did more than fulfil the request.
+He found, in a dark place under the counter, part
+of a bottle of some delicious syrup, which he
+mixed with water, with something of the grace of
+an apothecary. Marie could not help enjoying
+it, miserable as she was; and Sam could not
+help smiling broadly at the effect of what he had
+done, grave as his demeanour was in duty bound
+to be this day.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>Morgan’s “but” proved one of the most
+significant words she had ever spoken. She did
+better than go with Marie.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>She entered Jane’s parlour, and stood beside
+the door when she had closed it.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“I must trouble you, ma’am, to pay me my
+wages, if you please.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>Jane stared at her in astonishment.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“What do you mean, Morgan?”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“I mean, ma’am, that I have had no wages
+for these eleven years last past, and I wish to
+have them now.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Morgan, I think you have lost your senses!
+You never asked my father for these wages.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“No, Miss Jane, because I held his promise of
+being provided for otherwise and better, and my
+little money from elsewhere was all that I wanted
+while here. But I have it under your hand,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_111'>111</span>ma’am, what wages I was to have as long as I
+lived with you.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“And you have my promise also that I would
+remember you in my will.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Yes; but I would rather have my due wages
+now instead.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>Jane could understand nothing of all this.
+People were not accustomed to be asked for
+money in so abrupt a way, especially by an old
+friend.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Because, ma’am, people of my class are not
+often so much in want of their money as I am to-day.
+If I had not known that you have the
+money in the house, I should not have asked for
+it so suddenly. I will bring down the box,
+ma’am.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>She presently appeared, hauling along a heavy
+box with so much difficulty as to oblige Jane to
+offer to assist her. Morgan next presented a key.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“How came you by this key?” asked Jane,
+quickly, as she tried it, and the box lid flew open.
+Jane felt in her bosom for her own key, which
+was there, safe enough, on its stout black ribbon.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>Morgan’s master had secretly given her this
+key years before. He kept one thousand pounds
+in hard cash in this box; and it now appeared
+that he had set Morgan’s fidelity and Jane’s
+avarice as a check upon each other. Each was
+to count over the money once a-month.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“You can count it now, ma’am, at your leisure,
+when you have paid me. I shall not touch that
+key any more.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“O, yes, do, Morgan,” said her mistress,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_112'>112</span>with a look of distress. “All this is too much
+for me. I cannot take care of everything myself.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Then let it go, Miss Jane. I have not had
+this box under my charge so many years, to be
+now followed about by your eyes, every time I go
+near the place where it is kept. Better you were
+robbed than that.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“And you are too proud to expect a legacy
+from me? That is the reason you want your
+money now? You would cut off all connexion
+between us?”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Such is not my present reason, ma’am; but
+I do not say that I should like to see you planning
+and planning how you could——But I won’t
+follow it out, my dear. My wages, if you
+please.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>And she laid down a formal receipt for the
+sum, and produced the canvass bag in which to
+deposit her wealth. She then observed that she
+must walk abroad for two or three hours, but
+hoped to be back before she was much wanted.
+If her mistress could spare her till dark, she
+should take it as a particular favour; but she
+could not say it was necessary to be gone more
+than three hours at farthest.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>Jane seemed too much displeased or amazed
+to reply; and Morgan left her counting the
+guineas. She heard the parlour-door bolted behind
+her, so that no more Maries could gain
+access to her mistress.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>How Marie reproached herself for her secret
+censure of Morgan, when she found Henry at
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_113'>113</span>liberty,—the fine having been paid by his faithful
+old friend! Morgan had slipped away as
+soon as the good deed was done. She awaited
+Henry and Marie, however, in their humble
+home, whither she had proceeded to prepare a
+delicate little dinner for them, and see that all
+was comfortable for their repose from the troubles
+of the day. It was no fault of hers that they
+brought heavy cares with them; that Henry had
+to console his Marie under her father’s misfortune,—his
+month of imprisonment, and sentence
+to leave the country at the end of it. What
+more could any one do than join with them in
+reprobating the tyranny of the Alien Act?</p>
+
+<h3 id='ch1.7' class='c011'><span class='sc'>Chapter VII.</span><br> <br> FAREWELL TO BUDGE-ROW.</h3>
+
+<p class='c012'>Michael was quietly buried when the verdict of
+“accidental death” had been duly agreed upon;
+and there was ample employment for Henry
+during the month of M. Verblanc’s imprisonment
+in settling the affairs. There was no will; and
+he therefore felt that the children, and she whom
+he considered as the widow, though the law did
+not so recognize her, had the first claim upon his
+justice. He was resolved that an ample provision
+should be made for them; and that it should
+be done without encroaching on Mrs. Peek’s
+share. Jane ought to have given the largest
+proportion, not only because she had no claims
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_114'>114</span>upon her, but because her survivorship enriched
+her by means of this very death. She did contribute;
+but Henry’s portion was much larger;
+and it soon appeared that Jane would not be at
+hand in future, if further assistance should be required.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>Henry had, in his investigation of the affairs,
+learned that which prevented his being surprised
+on hearing from Morgan that Jane meant to go
+abroad. She had known so much of the smuggling
+transactions of the firm, that she had probably
+a good understanding with certain persons
+out at sea, who could aid her in getting away
+from the country she no longer loved, and in
+placing her where she might invest her money so
+as to avoid either an income or a property tax.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“It is a strange freak of my mistress’s, sir, is
+not it?” said Morgan. “She must feel it so
+herself, or she would not have left me to tell you
+the story.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“It would be strange in most people, Morgan.
+I know it is said by some that an income or a
+property tax must drive individuals to invest their
+money abroad; but I am sure that except in a
+few rare cases, it would not be so. A man has
+so much more confidence in the stability of the institutions
+of his own country than in those of any
+other,—there are so many inducements to keep
+his treasure where his heart is,—near his kindred
+and his father’s house,—his obligations are so
+much more calculable at home than abroad,—and,
+above all, it is so clear that the substitution
+of a direct for an indirect tax must set free the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_115'>115</span>exercise of his capital and his industry,—that a
+man must be burdened indeed before he would
+think, for this reason alone, of placing his capital
+elsewhere. Jane’s case is different.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Ah! Mr. Henry, she has left off loving her
+kindred and her father’s house.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Not so, I hope: but she is no longer happy
+among them, for reasons which we can understand.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“She owned as much to me, sir, as that she
+could not bear to think of yon poor young woman
+and her children having what had been so hardly
+earned; or to see the waste and dawdling going
+on in Mrs. Peek’s family; or to pay her taxes in
+a heavy lump when the government chose to call
+for it, instead of buying a little of this and a little
+of that, when she liked, without having to remember
+that she was paying taxes.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Ah! that is the reason why people like those
+indirect taxes. But I should have thought that
+Jane had seen enough of the waste that there is
+in the collecting them, to think very ill of
+them.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“The taking stock of my master’s tea, sir,
+once a-month—what a farce it was! How many
+officers were paid for little more than not seeing
+cheats! and when one thinks of the permits,
+and the entry books, and the army of spies,—for
+so they are,—that have to be paid out of the
+duties collected, one wonders that Miss Jane, or
+anybody else, should be found to speak up for
+such an extravagant plan.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Those will be most ready to do so who are
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_116'>116</span>unwilling to pay in proportion for the protection
+which is of most importance to those who have
+the most property. But they forget the plain rule
+that when the people’s money is raised to be
+spent for the good of the people, as little as possible
+ought to be wasted by the way. It is a
+shame that the cost of collection should be seven
+pound ten in every hundred pounds, when the
+odd shillings would be enough under good management.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“But is that true, sir?”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Quite true; and the less this particular matter
+is looked to, the wider will the difference be
+between what is and what ought to be. My wife
+will tell you that there was a time in France when
+the nation paid five times as much in taxes as
+ever arrived at the treasury. Under a wiser management,
+the same people afterwards paid no
+more than a tenth part of their taxes to the collectors,
+though there were above two hundred
+thousand persons employed in the collection.
+O, yes, these were far too many; but you may
+see what a difference it makes to the people whether
+this point be managed well or ill; and it is
+very clear that it must be a great advantage to
+have a plan of taxation which would employ a
+few persons, at regular times; so that people
+would know what they had to pay and when, and
+that as little as possible would be lost by the
+way.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“They say that an immensity of money will
+be raised by this income tax.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“A great deal; and so there ought to be.
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_117'>117</span>Something great ought to come out of so disagreeable
+a process. It is <i>very</i> disagreeable to be
+examined, and have one’s concerns pryed into in
+the way that these commissioners must do. I am
+sure I do not wonder at my sister’s dislike of it.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“O, sir, I never saw such a conflict as she
+had to go through with herself. I determined
+never to be present again when the gentlemen
+came. When she did bring herself to give an
+account, I know what a struggle she had to tell
+the truth. I would not for the world that any
+one else had been there; but, sir, the commissioners
+laughed, and winked, and threatened her
+with the oath.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“One is exposed to the impertinence of tax-gatherers
+under any system; and I do not know
+that it need be worse under this tax than any
+other. But it is provoking that this must be
+added to what we had to bear before. Prices are
+just as high as ever. There has been no reduction
+of the old taxes yet. Our producers of food
+and clothing, and all that we want, go on paying
+their taxes in commodities, and not only charging
+these on the articles when sold, but the interest
+on their advance of money for the tax. And so
+does the consumer’s money run out in many a
+channel.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“All this helps my mistress abroad. But,
+sir, is it true that she cannot go safely?”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Yes, and she must know it.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“She does. She hinted as much to me. Do
+you suppose anybody will stop her?”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“If they can get hold of her; but her friends
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_118'>118</span>are those who will convey her safely, if anybody
+can. She knows that at present it is high treason
+to invest money in an enemy’s country, particularly
+in land——”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“O dear; and I believe it is your French
+gentleman’s lands that she has in view.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“We cannot prevent her going, if she chooses
+to run the risk; but a great risk it is. The sale
+of their lands is supposed to be the principal means
+that our enemies have for carrying on the war;
+and no English person is allowed, under the penalty
+of death, to purchase land or to buy into
+the French funds. But what will be done about
+Jane’s annuity?”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“She says she has laid a plan for getting it,—whether
+by coming over once a year in the same
+way that she goes, or by some other device, I do
+not know. Surely, sir, those tontine annuities
+are very bad things! Worse than lotteries, since
+they make people jealous of their neighbours’
+lives, and rejoiced to hear of their deaths.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Very bad! No gaming is much worse.
+The advantage to the annuitants is, in its nature,
+most unequal; and it is so disadvantageous to the
+government, that none of its money is set free
+till the last of the lot is dead, that I wonder the
+system is persevered in.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“I am sure I wish the government had had
+the Mr. Hills’, and my master’s; for Miss Jane
+has never been like the same person since. Do
+you know, sir, I believe there is one who will be
+particularly disappointed at her going away?”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“You mean Dr. Say. Do you think he has
+ever had any chance with her?”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_119'>119</span>“Sometimes I have thought he had; and I
+should not wonder, after all, if she thinks to take
+him on——”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“No, no, Morgan. She never can mean to
+marry that man.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Why, sir, when people of her spirit have
+been cruelly disappointed once, as I know her to
+have been, they are apt to find too late the want
+of a friend to join themselves to; and yet they
+do not like to give up their sway. Now, Dr. Say
+is so yielding——”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Ay, at present."</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“True, sir; but he is very yielding indeed, to
+judge from the coldness he has put up with from
+my mistress, and his hanging to her still. But
+she will not have him yet; not till she has gained
+her particular end in going abroad; and then,
+perhaps——”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“This is the way human creatures do when
+they are perverted and injured like my poor
+sister. They must finish some trifling thing,
+gain some petty point, and then begin to think
+of the realities of life. Poor Jane! what can a
+few more thousands be to her? Morgan, have
+you ever thought of going with her?”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“It would have been my desire, if it had not
+been my promise, to stay with her as long as we
+both lived; but from her saying nothing to me
+about it, and her talking of things that I believe
+are to be left for me to do after she is gone, I
+suppose that she does not wish for me.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Then where will you go? What do you
+think of doing?”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_120'>120</span>“Just what Providence may prepare to my
+hand. I have scarcely cast my mind that way
+yet.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>Nor did Morgan settle her thoughts on her
+own concerns till compelled to do so. There
+was much to be thought of and accomplished;
+and it was the way of everybody to look to Morgan
+in all cases of bustle and difficulty. The
+business, shop, and house thereto belonging, were
+immediately disposed of; and they had to be
+prepared for the new tenant, and vacated in a
+short time. Jane would not sell the furniture;
+she could not find in her heart to let it go for so
+little as it would now bring; still less to give it to
+Patience. Her green stuff curtains, and threadbare
+carpets, and battered tables, and shabby fire-irons,
+were all valuable in her eyes, because of
+some of these she had known no others, and of
+some she still thought as new. How many recurrences
+of mind had she to these articles,—now
+reddening at the idea of the insulting price
+that was offered for them, and then sighing at
+the thought of the extravagance of hiring a room
+expressly for their reception! This last was the
+plan finally decided upon, however; and, by dint
+of such close packing as nobody else would have
+formed an idea of, the greater part of the lumber
+was stowed, while there was still space left to
+turn round.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>Everything was gone from the kitchen but
+one chair and a few cooking utensils when Morgan
+sat before the fire, knitting worsted stockings,
+and rocking herself to the time of the old
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_121'>121</span>Welsh air she was singing low to herself. The
+clock that ticked was gone; and the monotonous
+singing of the kettle was the only sound besides
+her own voice. She was thinking about Wales,
+as she always did when she sang,—of the farm-house
+in the valley where she was born; and of
+how lightly she tripped to the spring the morning
+she was told that there were thoughts of sending
+her with her uncle, the carrier, to London to win
+her bread; and then of the evening when she
+emerged from among the last hills, and saw the
+plain, with its clusters of trees, and its innumerable
+hedge-rows, and its few hamlets, and a
+church steeple or two, all glowing in the sunset;
+and how she admired a flat country, and fancied
+how happy people must be who lived in a flat
+country; and then how little she imagined that,
+after having become familiar with London life,
+she should ever be sitting alone, seeing the comfort
+of the abode demolished, day by day, and
+waiting to know what should become of her when
+the last of the family she had served so long was
+about to wander away from the old house. The
+clatter without went on just as if all was as formerly
+within. The cries, the bustle, and the loud
+laughs in the street seemed very like a mockery;
+and Morgan, who had never, all these years,
+complained of the noise of Budge-Row, was very
+nearly being put out of temper about it this evening.
+In the midst of it, she thought she heard
+her mistress’s hand-bell ring, and stopped her
+chanting to answer the summons. She released
+from its place under her gown the canvass bag,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_122'>122</span>which must have proved a great burden to her
+right side, and carried the kettle in the other
+hand, supposing, with the allowable freedom of
+an old servant, that Miss Farrer might be wishing
+for her tea a little earlier than usual, and that
+there could be no harm in saving her turns along
+the passage.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Ma’am, I’m afraid your rheumatism troubles
+you,” said she, seeing that Jane had drawn her
+shawl over her head. “I thought it would be
+so when you took the curtains down in such bitter
+weather.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Never mind that, Morgan: I must meet
+more cold at sea.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“But you had better get well first, ma’am.
+Would you wish that I should step for Dr. Say?”
+and Morgan put some stiffness into her manner.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>Jane looked round upon the disfurnished apartment,
+and probably thought that it looked too
+comfortless to be seen by Dr. Say; for she desired
+that if he called he should be told that she
+was too tired to see any one.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“I think, Morgan,” she proceeded, “there is
+nothing left but what you can take care of for
+me, if I must go in a hurry. It will hardly take
+you two hours to stow these few things with the
+rest of the furniture; and an hour or two of
+your time, now and then, will keep them in good
+order for me.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>And then followed sundry directions about
+airing, dusting, brushing, &#38;c., all which implied
+that Morgan would remain near at hand.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“I have said nothing about your going with
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_123'>123</span>me,” continued Jane. “I suppose you never
+thought of it?”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“I considered myself bound, Miss Jane, after
+what we once said together, to follow you for
+life, if you had so pleased. Since you do not——”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“It would be too much for you, Morgan. I
+would not expose you to the risk, or to the fatigue.
+You know nothing of the fatigues of
+such a voyage as I am going upon. In a regular
+vessel it is very great; but——”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Ma’am, I have no wish to go otherwise than
+at your desire. I am old now, and——”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Yes, it will be much better for you to be
+with Patience, or with Henry.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“No, ma’am; if I leave you, it must be to go
+back to my own place. The same day that you
+dismiss me I shall plan my way home. I do not
+wish to be turned over from service to service,
+knowing that I shall never attach myself to any
+as I did, from the first, to you, my dear.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“But what will you do with yourself in Wales?
+Everybody you knew there must be dead, or
+grown up out of knowledge.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Perhaps so; but it will serve my turn to sit
+and knit by the farmhouse fire; and I should like
+to be doing something in a dairy again. I have
+not put my hand to a churn, much less seen a
+goat, these seventeen years, except once, when
+your father sent me, in a hurry, to Islington, and
+there, Miss, I saw a goat; and, for the life of
+me, I could not help following it down a lane to
+see where it went to, and to watch its habits.
+When I saw it browsing and cropping, even
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_124'>124</span>though it was in a brick-field, I could not help
+standing behind it; and the thing led me such a
+round, I had much ado to get home to tea. My
+master found out that something had kept me;
+but I was ashamed to tell him what it was.
+However, our Welsh goats——but I am taking
+up your time. Yes, I shall go back into Wales.
+But first, ma’am, there is a little thing to be
+settled. I gave up to you my key of that box,
+or I would have put the money in without troubling
+you; but here is the sum you paid me the
+other day, and I will trouble you for the receipt
+back again.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“What can you mean, Morgan, by demanding
+your wages so strangely, and then bringing
+them back again?”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“I meant to keep the promise I made to you,
+Miss Jane,—to cover your faults when I could.
+You refused to pay the fine for Mr. Henry, and
+so I paid it in your name; that was what I
+wanted the money for. I did not think of having
+it back again; but Mr. Henry seemed so
+uneasy about not discharging it, that I let him
+take his own way.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>Jane made some objections, which Morgan
+would not listen to. She would neither suffer
+any allusion to the legacy nor to her own circumstances.
+She briefly declared that she had
+enough. Her small wants were supplied from
+the savings of her young days, and she had
+no further use for money, besides having taken
+something of a disgust to it lately. She possessed
+herself of the key from her mistress’s
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_125'>125</span>side without being opposed, unlocked the box
+before her face, and deposited the cash, showing,
+at the same time, that she resumed the receipt.
+While she was doing this, Jane drew her shawl
+farther over her head, as if she suffered from the
+cold. Morgan saw that it was to conceal her tears.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Oh, Miss Jane! only say that you wish it,
+and I will give up Wales and go with you; or if
+you would but be content to go back to my
+home, you might think about money as much as
+ever, if you must, and be happy at living in such
+a cheap country. But you might there forget
+all such troubles to the mind, if you would.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>Jane hastily observed that it was too late
+for this: she had given her word to sail, and she
+must sail directly; she could hear nothing to the
+contrary.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>Morgan said no more, but brought tea, and
+prepared everything for her mistress’s early
+going to rest, and then came to take away the
+tea-things.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“You will make it early bed-time to-night,
+ma’am?” said she.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>Jane assented.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Then I have a strong belief that this is the
+last speech I shall have of you, Miss Jane; and
+I would not part from you without a farewell, as
+I fear others, nearer and dearer, must do.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“None are nearer and dearer,” exclaimed
+Jane, in a tone which upset Morgan’s fortitude.
+She then checked herself, and coldly added, “I
+mean to call on my brother and Patience before
+I go.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_126'>126</span>“What I am least sorry about,” said Morgan,
+“is, that you are going out upon the great and
+wide sea. I am glad that you will see a million
+of dashing waves, and feel the sweeping winds,
+both of which I used to know something of from
+the top of our mountain. We have both seen
+too much of brick walls, and heard too much of
+the noise of a city. Your spirits have failed you
+sadly of late, my dear; and I myself have been
+less lightsome than I have always held that a
+trusting creature should be. Ah! your tears will
+dry up when you are among the deeps; and you
+will find, as the waters heave up and about you,
+how little worth is in all worldly care, take my
+word for it, my dear. You on the sea by starlight,
+and I in the valley when the early buds
+come out—oh! we shall grow into a more wholesome
+mind than all the changes here have left us
+in. Meantime, we must part; and if we should
+never meet again——”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Oh, but there is no fear: it is a very safe
+voyage, indeed, they tell me. I cannot have any
+fancies put into my head about not coming back,
+Morgan.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Well, let it be so then,—let it be that you
+will certainly come back; still I am old,—ay,
+not what you will allow to be old, if you reach
+my years, but what I like to think so. You cannot,
+in your heart, say that you would be taken
+by surprise any day to hear that old Morgan was
+gone. Well, then, God bless you! and give you
+a better relish of this life before he calls you <a id='corr1.126.32'></a><span class='htmlonly'><ins class='correction' title='t'>to</ins></span><span class='epubonly'><a href='#c_1.126.32'><ins class='correction'>to</ins></a></span>
+another!”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_127'>127</span>“Indeed I am not happy,” was the feeling
+expressed by Jane’s manner, and by her tears, as
+much as by her words. She could neither control
+her feelings nor endure to expose their intensity,
+and she therefore hastened to bed, seemingly
+acquiescing in Morgan’s advice not to be
+in a hurry to rise in the morning.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>Morgan’s sleep was not very sound; partly
+from the sense of discomfort in the naked house,
+and more from busy and anxious thoughts—such
+as she had never known among the green hills
+of Wales, and such as were likely, she therefore
+supposed, to be laid to rest when she should be
+at home again. She fancied several times that
+she heard Jane stirring, and then dropped into a
+doze again, when she dreamed that her mistress
+was sleeping very quietly. At last she started
+up, uneasy at finding that it was broad daylight,
+and sorry that the alarum had not been one of
+the last things to be taken away, as she feared
+that her mistress might be kept waiting for her
+breakfast. She bustled about, made a particularly
+good fire, ventured to take in, of her own
+accord, a tempting hot roll, and, as her mistress
+was still not down stairs, made a basin of tea,
+and carried up the tray to the chamber.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“I hope you find your head better this morning,
+ma’am?” said she, drawing up the blind
+which kept the room in darkness.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>No answer. Morgan saw no traces of clothes,
+and hastily pulled aside the bed-curtain: no one
+was there. A little farther search convinced her
+that Jane was gone.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_128'>128</span>The people in the shop testified to two stout
+porters having arrived early, and asked permission
+to go in and out through the shop. They
+had each carried a heavy box, and been accompanied
+by the lady in deep black, whose veil was
+over her face when she went out. She had not
+gone without another word, as Morgan at first, in
+the bitterness of her heart, reproached her for doing.
+She had left a note, with an affectionate assurance
+of remembering her old friend, not only in her
+will, but during every day of her life. Morgan
+would also find that a sum of money had been
+left in Henry’s hands for her, as some acknowledgment
+of her long services. There was also
+advice about purchasing an annuity with it, which
+Morgan did not read to-day.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>The shop-boy had the benefit of the hot roll.
+Morgan set off to discover how much Mr. Henry
+knew of Jane’s proceedings. Marie could tell
+no more than that she had missed the bird on
+coming down into the cheerful breakfast-room of
+their new lodgings. Their maid had admitted a
+lady in black to write a note there this morning,
+as the family were not down. The bird had not
+been seen since; and it could only be supposed
+that it was carried away in its cage under the
+lady’s long black cloak.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>Jane acknowledged this in her note to Henry.
+She could not resist carrying away this living
+relic of old times. It must be more precious to
+her than to them; and she should send Marie
+from abroad some pet to be cherished for her
+sake, if Marie cared enough for her to do so.
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_129'>129</span>They had better not enquire where she was gone,
+or how; but trust to hearing of her through
+M. Verblanc (when he should be again abroad)
+or his agents.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>Patience seemed to be the only one who had
+seen her sister, while thus scattering her ghostly
+adieus. Patience related that the house was in
+such confusion when Jane came in, (so unreasonably
+early!) that she had no very clear recollection
+of what had passed, further than that Jane
+cried very much, so that the elder children did
+not know what to make of it; and that her black
+veil frightened the little ones when she was
+kissing them all round. She hoped Jane did not
+really mean that she was going away for any
+length of time. She somehow had not half
+believed that; but as Morgan did believe it,
+Patience began at last to be very sorry indeed.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>Morgan could not quit London these two or
+three days, if she was to leave her mistress’s little
+concerns in the exact order in which she desired
+them to remain. She would not be persuaded
+to pass her few days any where but in the old
+kitchen, or to leave unvisited for a single night
+the chamber where her master died. This evening
+was cold and stormy. She thought first of her
+mistress’s rheumatism; and, as the wind rose,
+and whistled under the doors, and roared in the
+chimney, she wandered to the window to see
+how things looked in the Row. The flame of
+the lamps flickered and flared within the glass;
+women held on their bonnets, and the aprons of
+workmen and the pinafores of children fluttered
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_130'>130</span>about. Morgan was but too sure that it must
+be a bad night on the river, or at sea. She
+wished she knew whether Mr. Henry thought so.
+This would have settled the matter with Morgan,
+for she believed Mr. Henry knew every thing;
+but it was too late to intrude upon him to-night.
+She would go in the morning.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>In the morning, when she got up early, to
+observe the heavy clouds still drifting rapidly
+over the narrow slip of sky which was all that
+could be seen from even the back of the house,
+she found a little bird cowering down on the
+window-sill, as if drowsy through fatigue and
+cold. There was no mistaking the bird, and in
+another moment it was warming itself against
+Morgan’s cheek and in her bosom, while the
+hand which was not employed in guarding it was
+preparing its holiday mess of crumbs, milk and
+sugar.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“O, my bird!” exclaimed Marie, the moment
+Morgan produced it from beneath her red cloak.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Did not my mistress say something to you,
+ma’am, of sending you some living thing for a
+remembrance? Do you think it likely she should
+send you this bird?”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>No: nobody thought it likely. But how the
+creature could have escaped from such guardianship
+as Jane’s was very unaccountable. There
+was no connecting it with the gales of last night;
+yet Morgan could not forget her own words
+about the wide and rough waters, and what Jane
+would feel when she saw them in their might.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>While Marie was yet weeping over the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_131'>131</span>departure of her father, on the expiration of his
+month of imprisonment, and listening to her
+husband’s cheering assurances that peace must
+come, and with it, liberty for all to go to and fro,
+she said,</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Meanwhile, there may be comfort for you
+in hearing through him of Jane. Will she not
+send us tidings, as she said?”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>No such intelligence came; and in M.
+Verblanc’s frequent letters was always contained
+the assurance that no tidings of the estimable
+lady, the sister of his son-in-law, had reached
+his agent or himself.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>Henry had been long settled down to his duties
+and enjoyments as a country clergyman, when
+he received a letter from Peek containing the
+following intelligence, which was immediately
+forwarded to Morgan.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“I had been applied to several times,” Peek
+wrote, “about Jane Farrer, spinster, the surviving
+claimant of the tontine annuity last year, on
+whose behalf no claim has been made this year.
+You will see presently that government has had
+a lucky bargain of that annuity, which is more
+than can often be said of that sort of transaction.
+The whole thing has come to light; and Patience
+was in great distress about it, all yesterday. We
+have had a rare catch of smugglers; and one of
+them let out, when he began to be chop-fallen,
+that it was very odd he had escaped such a many
+risks, to be trapped at last. Among the rest, he
+told us of one surprising get off when he thought
+he was sent for to the bottom where all the rest
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_132'>132</span>went. After a windy day, which had blown their
+boat out of the river at a fine rate, till they were
+almost within sight of their smuggling vessel,
+their cockle-shell could not stand the gale. He
+swears that they should have done very well but
+for the heavy chests that they were carrying for a
+gentlewoman who wanted to be smuggled abroad.
+She was almost desperate when they heaved both
+chests overboard, though she had been quiet
+enough while the gale was rising. She went
+down quietly enough too, when the boat filled,
+and sunk from under them all, leaving such as
+could to save themselves on any thing they
+could find to float on; by which means he and
+one other only got to shore. All he remembers
+about the gentlewoman is that she wore a black
+cloak, and noticed nobody, more or less, but a
+siskin that she had with her in a cage. One of
+the last things she did,—and he remembers it by
+a joke that went round, of her caring about a
+brute creature’s life when her own was not worth
+a farthing,—the last thing she did was letting
+fly the bird, and she looked after it, to see how
+it fared in the wind, when the water was up to
+her own knees. From the oddness of this, and
+the black cloak, we feel convinced it must have
+been sister Jane, besides the date being the same.
+Patience fretted a good deal about it yesterday,
+as I mentioned. We suppose that we shall now
+see you in town about the affairs, and you know
+where you may always find a pipe and a bit of
+chat.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Do not go, Henry,” said Marie. “Let
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_133'>133</span>Peek have all the wealth. Do not let us touch
+that which has poisoned the lives of three of your
+family.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“It poisoned the peace of their lives, Marie,
+and it caused their deaths. We will not die of
+such solicitude, nor, if any of our children must
+die by violence or accident, shall it be for such a
+cause. They must be taught the uses of wealth;
+and fearfully has Providence qualified us for
+teaching this lesson.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“That wealth is but an instrument, and that
+they are responsible for the use of it?”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“Responsible, not only to Him who maketh
+rich and maketh poor, but to society,—to the
+state. We will teach our children that to evade
+or repine at their due contribution to the state is
+to be ungrateful to their best earthly protector, and
+to be the oppressors of those who should rather be
+spared in proportion as their means are less. If
+to lay on burdens too heavy to be borne be one
+crime, it is another to refuse a just burden.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>Henry checked himself on perceiving that he
+was reproaching the memory of his deceased
+brother and sister. He regarded them, however,
+as victims rather than aggressors,—victims to
+their father’s false views, and to the policy of the
+time, which, by making the state a spendthrift,
+rendered too many of its members sordid.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“This is the favourite that Jane sent me to be
+cherished for her sake,” said Marie, approaching
+the bird. “It shall be cherished.”</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>“I failed in my trust,” thought Morgan, as
+she went out to call home the kids from the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_134'>134</span>mountain,—“I failed in my trust when I doubted
+about Miss Jane’s old age. What did I know
+about whether she would ever be old; or, if she
+should be, whether there would not by that time
+be peace, and a less heavy burdening of the
+people, so that they might be free to see more
+clearly whether or not they were made to struggle
+with low things all their lives, like a sick person
+in a dream who is always trying to fly, and is for
+ever baffled?—I don’t know whether one ought
+to be sorry that Miss Jane has been wakened up
+untimely from such a dream; but I mourn that
+she did not come here to see what a fearful
+mistaking of Providence it is to dream on in that
+restless bed when here are such wide fields of
+sweet thyme for one’s eyes and one’s heart to rest
+upon. Let men live in cities, if they will; but
+why should they think that the fields and the
+brooks are for those only who live among them?
+These brooks must run over silver sands, and
+yonder harvest fields must bear ears of real gold
+before men may fancy that gold is in favour with
+God, and that it should therefore be sought as a
+main thing by men. I wish it had pleased God
+that Miss Jane had but once come here.”</p>
+
+<div>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_135'>135</span>
+ <h3 class='c011'><i>Summary of Principles illustrated in this Volume.</i></h3>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c012'>All the members of a society who derive protection
+from its government owe a certain proportion of the produce
+of their labour or capital to the support of that government,—that
+is, are justly liable to be taxed.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>The proportion contributed should be determined by
+the degree of protection enjoyed,—of protection to property,—for
+all are personally protected.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>In other words, a just taxation must leave all the
+members of society in precisely the same relation in
+which it found them.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>This equality of contribution is the first principle of
+a just taxation.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>Such equality can be secured only by a method of
+direct taxation.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>Taxes on commodities are, from their very nature, unequal,
+as they leave it in the choice of the rich man how
+much he shall contribute to the support of the state;
+while the man whose whole income must be spent in the
+purchase of commodities has no such choice. This inequality
+is aggravated by the necessity, in order to make
+these taxes productive, of imposing them on necessaries
+more than on luxuries.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>Taxes on commodities are further injurious by entailing
+great expense for the prevention of smuggling, and
+a needless cost of collection.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>They could not have been long tolerated but for their
+quality of affording a convenient method of tax-paying,
+and for the ignorance of the bulk of the people of their
+injurious operation.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>The method of direct taxation which best secures
+equality is the imposition of a tax on income or on property.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>There is so much difficulty in ascertaining to the general
+satisfaction the relative values of incomes held on
+different tenures, and the necessary inquisition is so
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_136'>136</span>odious, that if a tax on the source of incomes can be
+proved equally equitable, it is preferable, inasmuch as it
+narrows the province of inquisition.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>There is no reason to suppose that an equitable graduation
+of a tax on invested capital is impracticable;
+and as it would equally affect all incomes derived from
+this investment (that is, all incomes whatsoever), its operation
+must be singularly impartial, if the true principle
+of graduation be once attained.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>A graduated property tax is free from all the evils belonging
+to taxes on commodities; while it has not their
+single recommendation—of favouring the subordinate
+convenience of the tax-payer.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>This last consideration will, however, become of less
+importance in proportion as the great body of tax-payers
+advances towards that enlightened agreement which is
+essential to the establishment of a just system of taxation.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>The grossest violation of every just principle of taxation
+is the practice of burdening posterity by contracting
+permanent loans, of which the nation is to pay the
+interest.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>The next grossest violation of justice is the transmitting
+such an inherited debt unlessened to posterity, especially
+as every improvement in the arts of life furnishes
+the means of throwing off a portion of the national burdens.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>The same rule of morals which requires state-economy
+on behalf of the present generation, requires, on behalf
+of future generations, that no effort should be spared to
+liquidate the National Debt.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>THE END.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+ <div class='nf-center'>
+ <div>London: Printed by <span class='sc'>William Clowes</span>, Duke-street, Lambeth.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<div>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_v'>v</span>
+ <h3 class='c011'>PREFACE.</h3>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c012'>The task which I originally proposed to myself is
+now finished. I have done what I could to illustrate
+the leading principles of Political Economy.
+But I cannot leave off without attempting something
+more which I believe will improve the purpose
+of what I have already done. Now that
+<span class='sc'>Taxation</span> is everywhere considered a subject of
+deep importance,—attention having been called to
+it in a remarkable degree since my series was
+planned,—I feel that my work is not complete
+without a further illustration of the practice as well
+as the principle of Taxation. In the present doubtful
+state of our financial policy, the few Numbers
+which I am about to issue may be expected to be
+of greater temporary, and of less permanent, interest
+than those which have preceded them. However
+this may be, I believe myself called upon to
+offer them, before laying aside my pen for a long
+interval.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>That I should be permitted to complete, without
+interruption, my original plan of monthly publication,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_vi'>vi</span>for two years, was more than, in the uncertainty
+of human affairs and the inconsistency of
+human projects, I ventured to anticipate with any
+degree of assurance. This is not the place in
+which to express more than a mere acknowledgment
+of the fact. But I must be allowed to add
+that so long a continuance of health and leisure
+is less surprising to me than the steadiness of the
+favour by which my exertions have been supported.
+Unless I could explain how far my achievements
+have fallen short of my aims, I could not express
+my sense of the patience with which the wise have
+borne with my failures, and the ardour with which
+(for the sake of the science) they have stimulated
+my successes: while those who have done me the
+honour of learning anything from me, have given
+me a yet higher pleasure by their studious appreciation
+of my object. I know not that my friends
+of either class can be better thanked than by the
+assurance, that while in their service I have not
+experienced a single moment of discouragement or
+weariness about my task. I have been often conscious
+of weakness, amounting to failure; but I
+have never been disheartened. Long after my
+slight elementary work shall have been (I trust)
+superseded, I shall, if I live, recur with quiet delight
+to the time when it formed my chief occupation,
+and shall hope that the wide friendships which
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_vii'>vii</span>it has originated will subsist when my little volumes
+are forgotten.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>It must be perfectly needless to explain what I
+owe to preceding writers on the science of which I
+have treated. Such an acknowledgment could
+only accompany a pretension of my own to have
+added something to the science—a pretension
+which I have never made. By dwelling, as I have
+been led to do, on their discoveries, I have become
+too much awakened to the glory to dream of
+sharing the honour. Great men must have their
+hewers of wood and drawers of water; and scientific
+discoverers must be followed by those who will
+popularize their discoveries. When the woodman
+finds it necessary to explain that the forest is not
+of his planting, I may begin to particularize my
+obligations to Smith and Malthus, and others of
+their high order.</p>
+
+<p class='c001'>I proceed to my short remaining task untired,
+and happy to delay, for a few months, the period
+when I must bid my readers a temporary farewell.</p>
+
+<div class='c017'>H. M.</div>
+
+<p class='c018'><i>February</i>, 1834.</p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_2.1'>1</span>
+ <h2 id='v2' class='c005'>THE <br> <br> MORAL OF MANY FABLES.</h2>
+</div>
+
+<hr class='c019'>
+
+<h3 class='c020'>PART I.</h3>
+
+<p class='c021'>My many fables have all been melancholy. This
+is the fault which has been more frequently found
+with them than any other. Instead of disputing
+the ground of complaint, or defending myself by
+an appeal to fact, I have always entreated the
+objectors to wait and see if the moral of my
+fables be melancholy also. I have been sustained
+throughout by the conviction that it is not;
+and I now proceed to exhibit the grounds of my
+confidence.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Is it not true, however, that in the science
+under review, as in every other department of
+moral science, we must enter through tribulation
+into truth? The discipline of the great family
+of the earth is strictly analogous with that of the
+small household which is gathered under the
+roof of the wise parent. It is only by the experience
+consequent on the conscious or unconscious
+transgression of laws that the children of
+either family can fully ascertain the will of the
+Ruler, and reach that conformity from which
+alone can issue permanent harmony and progressive
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.2'>2</span>happiness. What method, then, is so direct
+for one who would ascertain those laws, as to make
+a record of the transgressions and their consequences,
+in order to educe wise principles from
+foolish practices, permanent good from transient
+evil? Whatever be the degree of failure, through
+the unskilfulness of the explorer, the method can
+scarcely be a faulty one, since it is that by which
+all attainments of moral truth are made. Could
+I, by any number of tales of people who have <i>not</i>
+suffered under an unwise administration of social
+affairs, have shown that that administration was
+unwise? In as far as an administration is wise,
+there is no occasion to write about it; for its
+true principles are already brought to a practical
+recognition, and nothing remains to be done.
+Would that we had more cheering tales of happy
+societies than we have! They will abound in
+time; but they will be told for other purposes
+than that of proving the principles of a new
+science.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Thus much in defence,—not of my tales, but
+of the venerable experimental method which is
+answerable for their being sad.</p>
+
+<hr class='c022'>
+
+<div class='smaller'>
+
+<p class='c018'>To cure us of our sadness, however, let us
+review the philosophy of Labour and Capital;—the
+one the agent, the other the instrument of</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+<div class='nf-center c023'>
+ <div><span class='fss'>PRODUCTION.</span></div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c018'><span class='sc'>Wealth</span> consists of such commodities as are
+useful,—that is, necessary or agreeable to mankind.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'><span class='pageno' id='Page_2.3'>3</span>Wealth is to be obtained by the employment of
+labour on materials furnished by Nature.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>As the materials of Nature appear to be inexhaustible,
+and as the supply of labour is continually
+progressive, no other limits can be assigned to the
+operations of labour than those of human intelligence.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Productive labour being a beneficial power, whatever
+stimulates and directs this power is beneficial
+also.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Many kinds of unproductive labour do this.
+Many kinds of unproductive labour are, therefore,
+beneficial.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>All labour for which there is a fair demand is
+equally respectable.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Labour being a beneficial power, all economy of
+that labour must be beneficial.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Labour is economized,</p>
+
+<p class='c024'>I. By division of labour; in three ways.</p>
+
+<p class='c025'>1. Men do best what they are accustomed
+to do.</p>
+
+<p class='c025'>2. Men do the most quickly work which
+they stick to.</p>
+
+<p class='c025'>3. It is a saving of time to have several
+parts of a work going on at once.</p>
+<p class='c018'>Labour is economized,</p>
+<p class='c024'>II. By the use of machinery, which</p>
+<p class='c025'>1. Eases man’s labour.</p>
+
+<p class='c025'>2. Shortens man’s labour; and thus, by
+doing his work, sets him at liberty for
+other work.</p>
+<p class='c018'>Labour should be protected by securing its natural
+liberty; that is,—</p>
+
+<p class='c026'>1. By showing no partiality.</p>
+
+<p class='c026'>2. By removing the effects of former partiality.</p>
+<p class='c018'><span class='pageno' id='Page_2.4'>4</span><span class='sc'>Capital</span> is something produced with a view to
+employment in further production.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Labour is the origin, and</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Saving is the support, of capital.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Capital consists of</p>
+
+<p class='c026'>1. Implements of labour.</p>
+
+<p class='c026'>2. Material, simple or compound, on which
+labour is employed.</p>
+
+<p class='c026'>3. Subsistence of labourers.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Of these three parts, the first constitutes fixed
+capital; the second and third reproducible capital.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Since capital is derived from labour, whatever
+economizes labour assists the growth of capital.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Machinery economizes labour, and therefore
+assists the growth of capital.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>The growth of capital increases the demand for
+labour.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Machinery, by assisting the growth of capital,
+therefore increases the demand for labour.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>In other words, productive industry is proportioned
+to capital, whether that capital be fixed or
+reproducible.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>The interests of the two classes of producers,
+labourers and capitalists, are therefore the same;
+the prosperity of both depending on the accumulation
+of <span class='sc'>Capital</span>.</p>
+
+</div>
+<hr class='c022'>
+
+<p class='c018'>Of that which is necessary and agreeable to
+mankind, no measure can be taken; the materials
+being apparently inexhaustible, and the power of
+appropriation incessantly progressive. There is
+nothing very melancholy in this; and it is as true
+as if it was the saddest proposition that ever was
+made. Is there any known commodity which
+has failed from off the earth when men desired to
+retain it? Is it not true of every commodity,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.5'>5</span>that in proportion as men desire to have more of
+it, its quantity is increased? The desire prompts
+to the requisite labour; and we know of no instance
+where the requisite labour has been universally
+stopped for want of materials. The
+Norwegians may want more wheat, and the
+Kamtchatkadales will certainly wish for better
+clothing by and by; but we know that neither
+corn nor broadcloth are failing, and that the labour
+is already being multiplied, and the accumulation
+of capital going on, which may, at length,
+supply both the one and the other party with
+what each needs. Even if every man, woman,
+and child should take a fancy for the scarcest
+productions of nature,—for diamonds, perhaps,—we
+have no reason to suppose that there are not,
+or will not in time be, diamonds enough to supply
+the human race; and if diamonds inspired as
+vehement a desire,—<i>i. e.</i>, were as necessary,—as
+daily bread, there would assuredly be no lack
+of the labour requisite to procure them.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Besides the primary materials which Nature
+casts forth from every cleft of the earth, and every
+cave of the sea,—which she makes to sprout
+under every passing cloud, and expand beneath
+every sunbeam, there are new and illimitable
+classes of productions perpetually attainable by
+bringing her forces to bear upon each other. By
+such combination, not only new materials, but
+fresh powers are discovered, which, in their turn,
+develop further resources, and confound our
+imaginations with the prospect of the wealth
+which awaits man’s reception. It is a great
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.6'>6</span>thing to possess improved breeds of animals in
+the place of their forefathers,—the lean wild
+cattle with which our forefathers were content;
+and to see golden corn-fields where coarse, sour
+grasses once struggled scantily through a hard
+soil: but it is a much greater thing to have
+made even the little progress we have made in
+chemical and mechanical science;—to have
+learned how to change at will the qualities of the
+very soil, and bring new agents to increase its
+fertility and vary its productions;—to have
+learned to originate and perpetuate motion, and
+guide to purposes of production the winds of
+heaven and the streams of earth;—to have learned
+how to bind the subtlest fluids in the chains of
+our servitude, and appoint their daily labour to
+the flying vapours. Truly the Psalmist would
+scarcely have called man lower than the angels
+if he could have foreseen that such as these
+would in time be his slaves. While there was
+nothing known but a spontaneous or comparatively
+simple production,—while men reaped only
+what Nature had sown, or sowed at random,
+trusting that Nature would bring forth the harvest,—while
+there existed only the brute labour
+of the coral insect, or the barbaric labour which
+reared the wall of China, and planted the pyramids,
+and scooped out the temples of Elora,
+there was assurance of incalculable wealth in
+the bosom of Nature and in the sinews of men.
+What is there not now, when a more philosophic
+labour has won a kingdom from the ocean, and
+planted a beacon in the region of storms, and
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.7'>7</span>made an iron pathway from steep to steep before
+bridged only by clouds, and realized the old
+imagery of vapoury wings and steeds of fire,
+promising, not only to ransack the sea and the
+far corners of the earth for wealth which already
+exists, but to produce more than had been
+hitherto imagined? There is nothing dark in
+this prospect. What dimness there is, is in the
+eyes of some who look upon it.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>It seems strange that any should quarrel with
+this increase of wealth;—that there should be
+any wish to leave off soliciting Nature, and any
+preference of brute or barbaric over philosophic
+labour. It seems strange that men should wish
+rather to go on working like the ass and the caterpillar
+than to turn over such labour to brute
+agents, and betake themselves to something
+higher;—that they had rather drag their loads
+through the mire than speed them on a railroad,
+and spin thread upon thread than see it
+done for them a thousand times better than they
+could do it themselves. It seems strange that
+these objections should proceed from those who
+most need a larger share of the offered wealth.
+There are honourable ways of refusing wealth
+and power, but this is assuredly not one of
+them. If there be reasons why man should hesitate
+to accept large gifts from his fellow-men,
+there can be none for his declining the bounty of
+Providence.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>The reason why some men do not like to hear
+of the opening up of new sources of wealth and
+fresh powers of industry is, that they believe
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.8'>8</span>that whatsoever is given to the race is taken
+from certain individuals; and that they had rather
+that all should suffer privation than that they
+themselves should undergo loss. The mention
+of lighting London streets with gas was hateful
+to certain persons connected with the northern
+fisheries, as it would lessen the demand for oil.
+They would have had all future generations
+grope in darkness rather than that their own speculations
+should suffer. In like manner, an
+increased importation of palm oil was a great
+blessing to the African date-gatherers, and will
+prove no less to the British public; but this pure
+good was at first regarded as a great evil by a
+few soap-manufacturers, who hoped to have been
+able to keep up the price of their commodity by
+controlling the supply of its component materials;
+and for the same reasons, the same persons
+sighed over the removal of the salt-duty.
+Perhaps no improvement of human resources
+ever took place without being greeted by some
+such thankless murmurs as these; and, too probably,
+it will be long before such murmurs will
+be perceived to be thankless, though happily experience
+proves that they are useless.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>While there are human wants, there will be no
+end to discoveries and improvements. Till all
+are supplied with soap, or something better than
+soap, there will be more and more palm oil, and
+a further cheapening of alkalies. The soap-manufacturers
+must not comfort themselves with
+the hope that they can stop the supplies, but
+with the certainty that the more soap there is,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.9'>9</span>the more users of soap there will be; and that
+their business will extend and prosper in proportion
+as there are more clean faces among cottage
+children, and more wholesome raiment among
+the lower classes of our towns. Since it is vain
+to think of persuading the poor native of Fernando
+Po to refrain from gathering his dates
+when he has once learned that there are thousands
+of British who demand them, the only
+thing to be done is to speed the new commerce,
+and welcome the reciprocation of benefits.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Thus is it also with improvements in art. The
+race cannot submit to permanent privation for
+the sake of the temporary profits of individuals;
+and so it has been found by such short-sighted
+individuals, as often as they have attempted to
+check the progress of art. No bridge was ever
+yet delayed in the building for the sake of the
+neighbouring ferryman; and no one will say
+that it ought to have been so delayed. When
+it comes to be a question whether drivers and
+drovers, carriers and pedlars, shopkeepers, farmers,
+and market-people shall be inconvenienced or
+excluded, or one man be compelled to carry his
+labour elsewhere, few will hesitate on the decision;
+and the case would be no less clear if a
+machine were invented to-morrow for turning out
+handsome stone houses at the rate of six in a day.
+There would be great suffering among bricklayers
+and builders for a time: but it would not
+be the less right that society should be furnished
+with abundance of airy dwellings at a cheap rate;
+and the new wants which would arise out of such
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.10'>10</span>an invention, and the funds set free by it, would
+soon provide bricklayers and builders, and their
+children after them, with other employment in administering
+to other wants. From huts of boughs
+to hovels of clay was an advance which called
+more labour into action, though the weavers of
+twigs might not like to be obliged to turn their
+skill to the making of fences instead of huts.
+From hovels of clay to cottages of brick was a
+further step still, as, in addition to the brick-makers,
+there must be carpenters and glaziers.
+From cottages of brick to houses of stone was
+a yet greater advance, as there must be masons,
+sawyers, painters, upholsterers, ironmongers,
+cabinetmakers, and all their train of workmen.
+So far, the advance has been made by means of
+an accumulation of capital, and a division of
+labour, each dwelling requiring an ampler finishing
+than the last, and a wider variety as well as
+a larger amount of labour. If, by a stupendous
+invention, ready-made mansions should succeed,
+to be had at half the cost, the other half of the
+present cost would remain to be given for a yet
+ampler furnishing, or for providing conservatories,
+or hanging gardens, or museums, or whatever
+else might have become matters of taste:
+while the poor would remove into the vacated
+brick-houses, and the cottages be left to be
+inhabited by cows, and the cowsheds, perhaps,
+by pigs, and the pigsties be demolished; and so
+there would be a general advance, every one
+being a gainer in the end.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Perhaps a few people were very well content,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.11'>11</span>once upon a time, with their occupation of
+wading in the ponds and ditches of Egypt, to
+gather the papyrus, and with pressing and drying
+the leaves, and glueing them crosswise, and
+polishing them for the style with which they were
+to be written upon: and these people might
+think it very hard that any better paper should
+ever be used to the exclusion of theirs. Yet
+wide-spreading generations of their children are
+now employed in the single department of providing
+the gums and oils required in the composition
+of the inks which would never have been
+known if papyrus had been used at this day. If
+we consider the labour employed in the other departments
+of inkmaking, and in the preparation
+of the rags of which paper is made, and in the
+making and working of the mills from which the
+beautiful substance issues as if created by invisible
+hands, and in packing, carrying, and selling
+the quires and reams, and in printing them, and
+in constructing and managing the stupendous
+machinery by which this part of the process is
+carried on, we shall be quite willing to leave the
+papyrus to be the home of the dragon-fly, as before
+the art of writing was known. Saying nothing
+of the effects of the enlarged communication
+of minds by means of paper, looking only
+to the amount of labour employed, who will now
+plead the cause of the papyrus-gatherers against
+the world?</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>A distinction is, however, made by those who
+complain of human labour being superseded,
+between a new provision of material, and a
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.12'>12</span>change in the method of working it up. They
+allow that, as rags make better writing material
+than papyrus, rags should be used; but contend
+that if men can dip sieves of the pulp of rags
+into water, and press the substance between felt,
+it is a sin to employ a cylinder of wire and a mechanical
+press to do the same. But this distinction
+is merely imaginary. If we could employ a
+man to sow rags and reap paper, we should think
+it a prodigious waste of time and pains to get
+paper in the old method; and we do sow rags
+in the cistern and reap paper from the cylinder;
+the only difference being, that instead of dew
+we use spring water, and iron wheels instead of
+the plough and harrow, and artificial heat instead
+of sunshine. We might as well wish to keep our
+agricultural labourers busy all the year trying to
+manufacture wheat in our farm-house kitchens
+as recur to the old methods of making paper;
+and the consumers of bread and of books would
+fall off in numbers alike in either case.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Instances without end might be adduced to
+prove the inevitable progress of art and extension
+of wealth; and they might not be useless, since
+there is still a strong prevailing prejudice against
+the beneficent process by which the happiness of
+the greatest number is incessantly promoted, and
+a remarkable blindness as to the tendency and
+issues of the ordination by which an economy of
+labour is made at the same time the inevitable
+result of circumstances, and the necessary condition
+of increased happiness. But though the
+time already spent upon a subject not new may
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.13'>13</span>be no more than its importance demands, my
+remaining space may be better employed in a
+sketch of the spread of one ingredient of human
+comfort than in the mere mention of a variety of
+similar cases. The instance I have chosen is
+one where the advance has been wholly owing to
+improvement in the use of a material which seems
+to have always abounded.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>There is no record of a time when there were
+not goats and sheep enough to supply clothing
+to the keepers of the herds, or when their fleeces
+were not used for this purpose in some parts of
+the world. While the barbarians of the north
+dressed themselves in skins, the inhabitants of
+temperate regions seem to have enjoyed the
+united lightness and warmth of fabrics of wool.
+The patriarchs of Asia gathered their flocks
+about their tents in the earliest days of which
+history tells; and it was the recorded task of
+their slaves to wash the fleeces, and of their
+wives to appoint the spinning of the wool to the
+maidens of their train. The Arabian damsels
+carried with them their primitive looms wherever
+they journeyed; and set up their forked sticks in
+the sand when they stopped for the night, and
+fixed the warp and wrought the woof before the
+sun went down. The most ancient of Egyptian
+mummies has its woven bandages. In the most
+remote traffic of the Tartar tribes fleeces were a
+medium of exchange; and the distaff is found
+among the imagery of even the earliest Scandinavian
+poetry. When the Romans, skilled in the
+choice of fabrics and of dyes, came over to this
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.14'>14</span>island, they taught its barbarian dames to leave
+off rubbing wolf-skins with stones to make them
+smooth, and dipping them in water to make them
+soft, and put into their hands the distaff, which
+was to be found in every home of the Roman
+dependencies, and instructed them in the use of a
+more convenient loom than that of the Arabian
+wanderers. For several hundred years it seems
+that this remained a purely domestic manufacture;
+but, as the arts of life improved, it became worth
+while for the housewives to relax in their spinning
+and weaving, and exchange the products of their
+own or their husbands’ labour for the cloth of
+the manufacturers. There was better cloth in
+Flanders, however, by the beginning of the
+thirteenth century; and it was found profitable to
+weave less, and grow more wool for exportation.
+The British dames might still carry their spindles
+when they went out to look for their pet lambs
+on the downs, but it was less with a view to
+broad cloths than to hose,—not knitted, for
+knitting was unknown, but made of a ruder kind
+of cloth. There were abundance of English who
+would have been very glad of the occupation of
+weaving fine cloth which the Flemings had now
+all to themselves; but they could not obtain it
+till they had adopted and accustomed themselves
+to the improved methods of the Flemings; and
+as they were slow in doing this, they were assisted
+by Edward III., who invited over Flemish
+manufacturers, to teach these improved methods.
+Having brought them over, the next step necessary
+was to guard their lives from their English
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.15'>15</span>pupils, who would not hear of spinning by wheel,
+because the wheel did twice as much work as the
+distaff; or of winding the yarn and arranging the
+warp and woof otherwise than by the fingers,
+because many fingers wanted to be employed;
+or of using new drugs lest the old druggists
+should be superseded, or of fulling by any other
+means than treading the cloth in water. If it
+had not been that the King was more long-sighted
+than his people, these Flemings would
+have been torn to pieces, or, at best, sent home
+in a panic; and the English would have lost the
+woollen manufacture for many a year, or for
+ever.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Woollen cloth was very dear in those days. In
+the fourth year of Henry VII., it was ordered by
+law what should be the highest price given per
+yard for "a broad yard of the finest scarlet
+grained, or of other grained cloth of the finest
+making;"—viz., as much labour and subsistence
+as could be exchanged for 6<i>l.</i> 16<i>s.</i> of our present
+money. Now, there could not be any very large
+number of customers in England at that time
+who could afford to pay 6<i>l.</i> 16<i>s.</i> per yard for fine
+cloth, even if they had not had the temptation of
+getting it cheaper and better from Flanders.
+The manufacture must have been a very trifling
+one, and there must have been a sad number of
+sufferers from cold and damp, who, in those days
+of ill-built and ill-furnished houses, would have
+been very glad of the woollen clothing which none
+but the very rich could obtain. If their rulers
+had allowed them to get it cheaper and better
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.16'>16</span>from Flanders, the home manufacture would have
+been thereby stimulated, extended, and improved;
+but, under the idea of protecting the English
+manufacture, it was made a punishable offence to
+buy cloth woven by any but Englishmen, and to
+send wool out of the kingdom. Laws like these
+(and there were many such during many reigns)
+did all that could be done for keeping the
+manufacture in few hands, and preventing the
+spread of this great article of comfort: but nature
+was too strong for governments; and it was shown
+that while there were flocks on the hills, and
+sickly people shivering in the damps of the
+valleys, no human power could prevent their
+striving to have garments of wool for the day and
+coverlets of wool for the night. In the remote
+country places of Yorkshire, the people began to
+encourage one another in spreading the manufacture,
+to the great discomfiture of the weavers
+of York, who dreaded nothing so much as that
+the fabric should become cheaper and commoner.
+Henry VIII. declared that York had been upheld,
+and should be upheld, by this exclusive
+manufacture; that Worcester alone should supply
+its county and neighbourhood, and that
+worsted yarn was the private commodity of the
+city of Norwich: but Henry VIII. spoke in vain.
+As long as there were streams among the Yorkshire
+hills where fulling-mills could be worked,
+the people of York might go on treading with
+the feet, and offering inferior cloth at a higher
+price; the people would not have it. The cloth
+from the fulling mills, and the engine-wound
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.17'>17</span>yarn, were sold as fast as they could be prepared,
+and the men of York and Norwich were obliged to
+use fulling mills and winding machinery, or give
+up their trade. They submitted, and sold more
+cloth than ever, and gained more as their fabric
+became cheaper and commoner. Queen Elizabeth
+allowed wool to be freely carried out of the
+kingdom; and the prosperity of the manufacture
+increased wonderfully in consequence. More
+wool was grown, and there was inducement to
+take pains with its quality. Not only did the
+gentlemen of the court delight themselves in the
+superior fineness of their scarlet and purple stuffs,
+but many a little maiden in farmhouse or cottage
+rejoiced in a Christmas present of a substantial
+petticoat of serge or cloak of kersey.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>The more was wanted, the further inducement
+there was to make a greater quantity with the
+same capital; in other words, to abridge the
+labour: and then followed improvement upon
+improvement in the machinery employed, which
+again extended the demand and caused more
+labour to be employed. The being able to get
+more cloth for less money served as a far better
+encouragement of the manufacture than Charles
+the Second’s law that all the dead should be buried
+in woollen shrouds. From this time, nothing could
+stop the spread of comfortable clothing. Even
+the cotton manufacture,—the most prodigious
+addition to national resources that ever arose,—proved
+a pure addition. Society has not worn
+the less wool for it, but only the more cotton.
+How stands the case now?</p>
+
+<p class='c018'><span class='pageno' id='Page_2.18'>18</span>The value of the woollen manufactured articles
+of Great Britain alone now exceeds 20,000,000<i>l.</i>
+a year; and the manufacture employs 500,000
+persons:—and these, not spinning and weaving,
+with all imaginable awkwardness and toil, just
+enough for their own families, but producing
+with rapidity and ease finished fabrics with which
+to supply not only the multitudes of their own
+country, but the Russian boors in their winter
+dwellings, the Greek maidens on the shores of
+their islands, the boatmen of the Nile, the dancing
+girls of Ceylon, the negro slaves of Jamaica, the
+fishermen of Java and the peasantry of Hayti, the
+sunburnt Peruvian when he goes out defended
+against the chilly dews of the evening, and the
+half-frozen Siberian when he ventures to face the
+icy wind for the sake of the faint gleams of noon.
+Our looms and mills are at work in Prussian
+villages and beside Saxon streams. The Turk
+meets the Frank on the Oder, to exchange the
+luxuries of the one for the comforts of the other.
+The merchants of the world meet at the great fair
+of Leipsic, and thence drop the fabrics of
+European looms in every region through which
+they pass. There are shepherds on the wide
+plains of Van Diemen’s Land, and on the hills of
+the Western World, preparing employment and
+custom for the operative who sits at his loom at
+Leeds, and the spinner who little dreams from
+what remote parts gain will come to him at
+Bradford. And the market is only beginning to
+be opened yet. Besides the multitudes still to
+arise in the countries just named, there are
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.19'>19</span>innumerable tribes of Chinese, of Hindoos, of
+Persians, of dwellers in Africa and South America,
+who yet have to learn the comfort of woollen
+clothing. Will not the Greenlanders seek it too?
+And who needs it so much as the Esquimaux?
+All these will in time be customers, if we do but
+permit the commodity to be brought naturally
+within their reach.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Would it have been right that all these should
+be sacrificed to the wishes of the little company
+of spinners by hand and treaders with the feet?
+Would not that little company and their children’s
+children have been sacrificed at the same time?</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>In all other instances of the introduction of
+machinery, as in this, the interests of masters and
+men are identical. To make more with less cost
+is the true policy of the one, in order that it may
+bring the advantage of obtaining more with less
+cost to the other. That is, the utmost economy
+of labour and capital should be the common aim
+of both.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>A real cause of regret is that the invention of
+machinery has not yet advanced far enough.
+This is an evil which is sure to be remedied as
+time passes on; and perhaps the advance has
+been as rapid as has been consistent with the
+safety of society. But as long as there are
+purely mechanical employments which shorten
+life and stunt the intellect, we may be sure that
+man has not risen to his due rank in the scale of
+occupation, and that he is doing the work of
+brute matter. As long as the sharpener of
+needles bends coughing over his work, and young
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.20'>20</span>children grow puny amidst the heated atmosphere
+of spinning factories, and the life of any human
+being is passed in deep places where God’s sunshine
+never reaches, and others grope with the
+hands after one servile task in a state of mental
+darkness, we may be sure that we have not
+discovered all the means and applied all the
+powers which are placed within our reach. It is
+necessary that steel should be ground; but the
+day will come when it shall be a marvel that men
+died to furnish society with sharp needles. It is
+necessary that cotton threads should be tied as
+they break; but it cannot for ever be that life
+should be made a long disease, and the spirit be
+permitted to lie down in darkness in the grave for
+such a purpose as this. If society understood its
+true interest, all its members would unite to hasten
+the time when there shall be no unskilled labour
+appointed to human hands. It is far nobler to
+superintend an engine than to be an engine; and
+when all experience proves that a hundred such
+superintendents are wanted in the place of one of
+the ancient human instruments, it appears truly
+wonderful that men should resist a progression
+which at once increases the comforts of multitudes,
+ensures the future prosperity of multitudes more,
+and enhances the dignity of man by making him
+the master of physical forces instead of the slave
+of his fellow man.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Next to providing for the increase of Capital
+by direct saving, and by economy of the labour
+which is the source of capital, it is important to
+economize capital in its application. One principle
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.21'>21</span>of this economy,—that capital is most productive
+when applied in large quantities to large
+objects,—is illustrated by the comparative results
+of large and small farming.</p>
+
+<hr class='c027'>
+
+<div class='smaller'>
+
+<p class='c018'><span class='sc'>Production</span> being the great end in the employment
+of labour and capital, that application of both
+which secures the largest production is the best.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Large capitals, well managed, produce in a larger
+proportion than small.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>In its application to land, for instance, a large
+capital employs new powers of production,—as in
+the cultivation of wastes;</p>
+
+<p class='c028'>– – – enables its owner to wait for ample but distant
+returns,—as in planting;</p>
+
+<p class='c028'>– – – facilitates the division of labour;</p>
+
+<p class='c028'>– – – – – the succession of crops, or division of
+time;</p>
+
+<p class='c028'>– – – – – reproduction, by economizing the investment
+of fixed capital;</p>
+
+<p class='c028'>– – – – – the economy of convertible husbandry;</p>
+
+<p class='c028'>– – – – – the improvement of soils by manuring,
+irrigation, &#38;c.;</p>
+
+<p class='c028'>– – – – – the improvement of implements of husbandry;</p>
+
+<p class='c028'>– – – – – the improvement of breeds of live stock.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Large capitals also provide</p>
+<p class='c026'>for the prevention of famine, by furnishing a
+variety of food; and for the regular supply
+of the market, by enabling capitalists to wait
+for their returns.</p>
+<p class='c018'>Large capitals, therefore, are preferable to an
+equal aggregate amount of small capitals, for two
+reasons, viz.:</p>
+<p class='c029'>they occasion a large production in proportion;
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.22'>22</span>and they promote, by means peculiar to
+themselves, the general safety and convenience.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Capitals may, however, be too large. They are
+so when they become disproportioned to the managing
+power.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>The interest of capitalists best determines the
+extent of capital; and any interference of the law
+is, therefore, unnecessary.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>The interference of the law is injurious; as may
+be seen by the tendency of the law of Succession in
+France to divide properties too far, and of the law of
+Primogeniture in England to consolidate them too
+extensively.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>The increase of agricultural capital provides a
+fund for the employment of manufacturing and
+commercial, as well as agricultural, labour.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>The interests of the manufacturing and agricultural
+classes are therefore not opposed to each other,
+but closely allied.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<hr class='c022'>
+
+<p class='c018'>The same principle applies, of course, in all
+cases where an extensive production is the object,
+and points out the utility of associations of
+capitalists for many of the higher aims of human
+industry. A union of capitals is perhaps as
+excellent an expedient as a division of labour,
+and will probably be universally so considered
+ere long. If it be an advantageous agreement
+for six cabinet-makers that two should saw the
+wood for a table, and one square it, and another
+turn the legs, and a fifth put it together, and the
+sixth polish it, one set instead of six of each kind
+of tool being made to suffice, it is no less obvious
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.23'>23</span>that six owners of so many fields will also gain
+by uniting their forces,—by making one set of
+farm-buildings suffice, by using fewer and better
+implements, and securing a wider range for a
+variety of crops and for the management of their
+live stock. In like manner, twenty fishermen,
+instead of having twenty cockle-shell boats among
+them, in which no one can weather a stormy
+night, may find prodigious gain in giving up
+their little boats for one or two substantial vessels,
+in which they may make a wide excursion, and
+bring home an ample prey to divide among
+them. This is the principle of mining associations,
+and of fishing and commercial companies;
+and it might ere this have become the principle of
+all extensive undertakings for purposes of
+production, if some of the evils which crowd
+round the early operations of good principles had
+not been in their usual punctual attendance.
+Such associations have led to monopoly, and have
+been injured by wastefulness in the management
+of their affairs. But the evils savour of
+barbarism, while the principle is one of high
+civilization. The evils are easily remediable and
+will certainly be remedied, while the principle
+cannot be overthrown.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Many, however, who do not dispute the principle,
+object to its application in particular cases,
+on moral grounds. They say “Let there be mining
+companies, for not one man in a million is
+rich enough to work a mine by himself; but let
+the race of little farmers be preserved, for we
+have seen that one man, though not rich, may
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.24'>24</span>cultivate his little farm;” and then follow praises,
+not undeserved in their season, of the position
+and occupation of the small farmer, and lamentations,
+but too well-founded, over the condition
+of agricultural labourers at the present time.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>The question is, <i>can</i> the race of small farmers
+be revived? It cannot. The question is not
+now, as it was when the country was underpeopled,
+and the nation comparatively unburdened,
+whether the labouring class cannot be kept more
+innocent when scattered in the service of small
+proprietors than when banded in companies as
+now; or whether the small proprietor was not
+happier as a complacent owner than as a humbled
+labourer? The days are past when this
+might be a question. The days are past of animal
+satisfaction and rural innocence in a rambling
+old farm-house. The days of a competition
+for bread are come, and rural innocence has fled
+away under the competition;—to give place to
+something better, no doubt, when the troubled
+stage of transition is passed,—but, still, not to
+be recalled. A very small capital stands no
+chance when the tax-gatherer is at the farmer’s
+heels, and the pressing cry for bread can be met
+only by practising new, and more costly, and
+more extensive methods of tillage every day. The
+partial tax-gatherers may and will be got rid of;
+but the land will not again be underpeopled, and
+therefore tillage will not revert to the ancient
+methods, nor fields be held under the ancient
+tenure. Production is now the great aim; and
+unless small farming can be shown to be more
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.25'>25</span>productive than large, small farming must come
+to an end, unless in cases where it is pursued for
+amusement. Whenever the oak shall be persuaded
+to draw back its suckers into the ground,
+whenever the whole of the making of each pin
+shall be done by one hand, the old system of
+farming may be revived. Then an ounce of pins
+must serve a city, and a loaf a month must suffice
+for a household; and if corn is brought in from
+abroad to supply the deficiency, the home-farmer
+must be immediately ruined by the dearness of
+his own corn in comparison with that which is
+grown in far places. Large capitalists can alone
+bear up against taxation and protection, at present;
+and large capitalists alone can stand the
+competition when freedom of trade in corn shall
+at length be obtained. Since the time for a
+country being underpeopled must cease, and the
+most extensive production must then become for
+a period the chief object, nothing can be plainer
+than that it has been settled, from the beginning
+of time, that small farming capitals must merge
+in large. It is not our present business to inquire
+what state of things will next succeed.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Let us not leave the topic, however, under an
+impression that the state we are passing through
+is one of unmixed gloom and perplexity. Our
+agricultural population is in a very deplorable
+condition,—ill-fed, untaught, and driven by hardship
+to the very verge of rebellion; but these
+evils are caused by the inadequateness of ancient
+methods, and not by the trial of new ones. More
+food and other comforts must be found for them,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.26'>26</span>and they must be instructed not to increase the
+pressure upon the supply of food. In the mean
+time, it is a decided gain to have discovered and
+to be discovering methods of securing a greater
+production at a less cost. If such discoveries go
+on, (and go on they must,) and our agricultural
+population grows wiser by instruction and experience
+as to the means of living, independence
+of spirit and of action will revive, (though there
+be no small farms,) virtue may take the place of
+mere innocence, and bands of labourers may be
+as good and happy in their cottages as ever farmer
+and his servants were when collected in the
+farm-house kitchen. They may meet in church
+as efficaciously when the bell calls them each
+from his own home, as when they walked, many
+at the heels of one. In one essential respect,
+there is a probability of a grand improvement on
+the good old times. In those times, the farmer’s
+eldest son too often followed the plough with little
+more sense of what was about him than the tiller
+he held. His much boasted innocence neither
+opened his eyes to the lights of heaven nor gladdened
+his heart amidst the vegetation which he resembled
+much more than he admired. Hereafter,
+the youngest child of the meanest servant of the
+farm will look and listen among God’s works
+with the intellectual eye and ear, with which the
+enlightened mechanic already explores the widely-different
+field in which he is placed. Whencesoever
+came the demon breath which kindled our
+farm-yard fires, they have flashed wisdom on the
+minds of our rulers, and are lighting the labourer’s
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.27'>27</span>path to knowledge. The evil, though deplorable,
+is calculable and remediable. Who shall estimate
+the approaching good?</p>
+
+<hr class='c022'>
+
+<p class='c018'>There is in my Series one other chapter of
+principles, under the head of <span class='sc'>Production</span>. The
+time for its insertion in this place is past; and,
+on the principle of “forgetting those things
+which are behind,” I should have omitted all
+allusion to it, if the Number I am writing had
+been destined to circulate only in this country.
+But a large proportion of my readers are of a
+nation which has not yet absolved itself from the
+tremendous sin of holding man as property. Of
+the difficulties in the way of such absolution, it
+is for them, not for me, to speak. My business
+is with principles. Those which have obtained
+my assent are offered in the subjoined note, and
+humbly commended to my foreign readers.<a id='rB'></a><a href='#fB' class='c013'><sup>[B]</sup></a> The
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.28'>28</span>summary is placed there because I wish to introduce
+into the body of my text nothing which
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.29'>29</span>is irrelevant to the state and prospects of British
+society. A stronger acknowledgment than this
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.30'>30</span>of the blessedness of our penitent state, it is not
+in my power to make,—or I would make it. It
+may be that for centuries we may have to witness
+the remaining sufferings and degradation of those
+whom we have injured, and perhaps even yet to
+bear many painful consequences of our long
+transgression against the rights of man. But the
+weight of guilt is thrown off, the act of confession
+is made, and that of atonement is about to
+follow; and all the rest may well be borne.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>The next duty to reparation for injury is silence
+upon the sin: there is contamination in the contemplation
+of every indulged sin, even when the
+indulgence is past. Such a sin as this should be
+to a nation what an act of shame is to an individual—a
+remembrance to be strenuously banished,
+lest it weaken the energy which should press forward
+to better things. This should be one of
+the secrets known to all—a circumstance plunged
+in significant oblivion, like that in which the historians
+of the Jews have striven to bury the event
+of the crucifixion. May the consequences in the
+two cases, however, be as widely different as
+penitent and impenitent shame! The wonder of
+succeeding ages at our guilt must be endured;
+but it will not, let us hope, be made a by-word
+of reproach against us for ever. When kindred
+nations shall have been induced to share our
+emancipation, rebuke and recrimination may
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.31'>31</span>cease; the dead will have buried their dead, and
+the silence of the grave will rest upon them. If
+we now do our duty fully to those whom we have
+injured, even they may, perhaps, spare us all
+future mention of their wrongs. Meantime, it is
+an unspeakable blessing that, ignorant and unjust
+as we may still be in the distribution of
+the wealth which Providence gives us, there is
+now no crying sin connected with the methods
+of its production; no national remorse need now
+silence our acknowledgments of the bounty by
+which the gratification of human wishes is destined
+to advance, according to a law of perpetual
+progression.</p>
+<hr class='c030'>
+
+<div>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_2.32'>32</span>
+ <h3 class='c020'>PART II.</h3>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c031'>In the early days of society, it is natural enough
+for men to take what they can find or make, without
+giving themselves any trouble about analyzing
+their wealth, or philosophizing about its
+distribution. When, however, the desires of
+some begin to interfere with those of others,
+and production does not, in particular instances,
+abound as was expected, and sudden and manifold
+claims for a provision arise, and can with
+difficulty be met, men necessarily begin, however
+late, to examine their resources, and investigate
+the demands upon them. Only very remote approaches
+to a true analysis may be made at first;
+and the consequences of a hundred pernicious
+mistakes must probably be borne before any
+thing like a fair distribution can be so much as
+conceived of. But time and experience are certain
+to originate the conception, as is proved by
+the rise of the science of Political Economy;
+and there is every reason to believe that time
+and experience will exalt the conception into
+action, and lead to a wise application of the
+splendid apparatus of human happiness which
+has been confided to the hands of society. Every
+mistake has hitherto issued in the furtherance of
+this end, according to the uniform plan under
+which the affairs of men are administered. It
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.33'>33</span>has been discovered that the race cannot live
+upon labour without its reward, and that to be
+numerous is not of itself to be happy; and there
+is a relaxation of effort to force the multiplication
+of the race. It has been discovered that
+land of itself is not wealth, and that our condition
+would be deplorable if it were so, since land
+does not improve of itself, but deteriorates as the
+race which subsists upon it is multiplied. It is
+discovered that money is not wealth; that the
+tenants of different localities do not flourish at
+one another’s expense; and that wealth cannot
+be distributed according to the arbitrary pleasure
+of rulers. Many other ancient convictions are
+now found to be delusions; and, what is better
+still, the grand principles are fully established
+which may serve as a key to all the mysteries
+relating to the distribution of wealth. Their application
+may require much time and patience;
+but we have them safe. Their final general adoption
+may be regarded as certain, and an incalculable
+amelioration of the condition of society
+must follow of course.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>These principles are two:—That, owing to
+the inequality of soils (the ultimate capital of
+society), the natural tendency of capital is to
+yield a perpetually diminishing return;—and that
+the consumers of capital increase at a perpetually
+accelerated rate.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>The operation of these principles may be modified
+to any extent by the influence of others:
+but they exist; they are fully ascertained; and
+must henceforth serve as guides to all wise
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.34'>34</span>attempts to rectify an unjust distribution of the
+wealth of society. It is difficult to conceive how
+any sound mind can have withheld its assent to
+these grand principles, after they had once been
+clearly announced. It is very evident that some
+soils possess a far inferior power of producing
+food to others; and that, in the natural course of
+things, society will till the best soils first, and
+then the next best, and then soils of the third
+degree, and so on, as the demand for food increases;
+and that, as each adopted soil will yield
+less than the last, every application of capital will
+yield a smaller return—all applications of capital
+being regulated by the primary application of
+capital to land. It is difficult to see how this
+general principle can be disputed, however large
+may be the allowance required for the influence
+of other principles. Improvements in tillage,
+yet undreamed of, may increase the produce incalculably;
+but this increased produce will still
+be subjected to the same law. There will be an
+inequality of improved as of unimproved soils.
+New powers, chemical and mechanical, may be
+brought to bear on the soil for ever and ever;
+and still the same law must hold good while
+there is an original inequality in the material on
+which those powers are employed. Whether we
+obtain our food from the sea, or from new regions
+of the earth,—if we could fetch it down from the
+moon, or up from the centre of the globe,—the
+principle must hold good as long as there are
+limited and varying facilities for obtaining this
+food, and an increasing demand for it. More
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.35'>35</span>labour and more would be given to answer each
+new demand; and the return would still be less,
+till it came to a vanishing point.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>If this labour were that of stocks and stones
+in the service of a reasonable number of men,
+the simple fact would be that this reasonable
+number of men must live upon the produce of
+the labour already set in motion. But the labour
+in question is human labour, which eats in
+proportion as it works, and multiplies itself faster
+by far than it can augment its supply of food.
+The proprietor of a field feeds his five children
+from it, till they each have five children, and
+each of these five children in their turn. Does
+the produce of the paternal field augment itself
+five times, and then twenty-five times, to suit the
+growing wants of the new generations? It may
+possibly be made to yield double, and then three
+times, and then four times what it once did; but
+no kind or degree of skill can make the ratio of
+its productiveness the same as that of human
+increase. What primary rule of practice follows
+from the combination of these two principles?</p>
+
+<hr class='c022'>
+
+<div class='smaller'>
+
+<p class='c018'>The increase of population is necessarily limited
+by the means of subsistence.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Since successive portions of capital yield a less and
+less return, and the human species produce at a
+constantly accelerated rate, there is a perpetual
+tendency in population to press upon the means of
+subsistence.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>The ultimate checks by which population is kept
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.36'>36</span>down to the level of the means of subsistence, are
+vice and misery.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Since the ends of life are virtue and happiness,
+these checks ought to be superseded by the milder
+methods which exist within man’s reach.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>These evils may be delayed by promoting the
+increase of capital, and superseded by restraining
+the increase of population.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Towards the one object, a part of society may do
+a little; towards the other, all may do much.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>By rendering property secure, expenditure frugal,
+and production easy, society may promote the growth
+of capital.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>By bringing no more children into the world than
+there is a subsistence provided for, society may
+preserve itself from the miseries of want. In other
+words, the timely use of the mild preventive check
+may avert the horrors of any positive check.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>The preventive check becomes more, and the
+positive checks less powerful, as society advances.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>The positive checks, having performed their office
+in stimulating the human faculties, and originating
+social institutions, must be wholly superseded by
+the preventive check before society can attain its
+ultimate aim,—the greatest happiness of the
+greatest number.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<hr class='c022'>
+
+<p class='c018'>However the wealth of society may be distributed,—whether
+among the three classes who,
+at present, in all civilized countries, divide it, or
+among the partakers of a common stock, (according
+to the desire of some who mourn our
+evils, and look, as others think, in a wrong place
+for the remedy),—however the wealth of society
+may be distributed, the above principles are of
+the highest concern to the whole of society.
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.37'>37</span>Some may feel sooner than others the pressure of
+population against the means of subsistence; but
+it ultimately concerns all, to the last degree, that
+there should be subsistence for the race. This
+consideration is prior to all others which relate
+only to the modes and degrees in which wealth
+shall be shared by various classes. There is
+little wisdom in fixing a scale of enjoyments
+while society is laid open to vice, disease, and
+death,—the awful retribution for a careless administration
+of the common possession.—Yet the
+policy of rulers,—of rulers by office and by influence,—has,
+till very lately, been to stimulate
+population without any regard to the subsistence
+provided for it. The plea has always been that
+every man born into the world brings with him
+the labour which will support more than himself:
+but each must also bring with him the land on
+which his labour is to be employed, or he may
+find it no more possible to live upon labour than
+to live upon air. There is never any fear that
+population will not increase fast enough, as its
+increase is absolutely determined by the existing
+means for its support. But there is a perpetual
+danger that it may increase too fast for the purposes
+of the ruler; and, for what has but too seldom
+entered into his purposes,—the happiness
+of his people. If he looks to the narratives of
+wars, he may find that the subsistence of armies
+has always failed sooner than men, though its
+armed force can never compose more than a
+small portion of any nation. He will find in the
+history of every state that when the over-pressure
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.38'>38</span>of the people upon its food, partially and
+most painfully kept down by the death of its
+infants and its aged, and of those who have
+grown sickly through want, has been yet more
+fearfully relieved by the agency of famine and
+pestilence, a new impulse is invariably given, far
+more efficacious than the bidding of any sovereign.
+It is folly, he may thus see, to lash the
+dull tide of a swollen river when banked up so
+that it cannot flow; and when a portion of its
+waters are drawn off, the stream runs fast enough
+of itself. If the power of a ruler were to be estimated
+by the rate at which he could induce the
+increase of his subjects, which would be the most
+powerful,—the Emperor of China or the King
+of Hayti? The Haytian empire is insignificant
+enough in comparison of the Chinese; but the
+Haytian king sees his subjects multiplying,
+amidst their superabundance of food, at a rate
+hitherto unsurpassed; while the Chinese can
+multiply no more till they can enlarge the extent
+of their food. Under the stimulus of royal promises,
+children may be born; but by the command
+of a higher authority, they die. The laws
+of nature are too strong for kings. In this case,
+the bidding is either needless or unavailing.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Any power of stimulus which rulers possess
+should be otherwise applied,—to the production
+of subsistence. If the plain rule were followed,
+of making increased subsistence <i>precede</i> an increase
+of population, the great work of the distribution
+of wealth would follow its own natural
+laws; and men would only have to participate and
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.39'>39</span>be content. When the final cause of the arrangement
+by which population has been ordained to
+press against the means of subsistence shall have
+wrought its work in stimulating the human faculties,
+and opening up new resources to the
+race, there will be as ample an enjoyment of the
+blessings of life as the warmest advocate of numbers
+can desire,—an enjoyment infinitely greater
+for the absence of all deadly struggle or pining
+desire for a due share of the bounties of nature’s
+mighty feast.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>At present, however, while we have the pride
+of luxury within our palaces, and famine at their
+gates, it is necessary to ascertain how the two
+principles announced above affect the distribution
+of the wealth of society.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>The uncontrolled operation of these principles
+will be found the main cause of the tremendous
+inequality of possession in society; and if society
+wishes to put an end to such inequality, it
+must be done by suiting the proceedings of society
+to these principles, and not by any temporary
+measures. If the possessions of the richest
+of our peers were to-morrow to be divided among
+the poorest of our operatives and country labourers,
+no permanent relief to the latter class
+would be obtained by beggaring the former, and
+the same principles would go on working, the
+day after, to produce in time precisely similar
+results. Even if it were the practice with us, as
+it was with the Jews, that land should revert to
+the original possessors, at certain fixed periods,
+the same laws would work; and to even greater
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.40'>40</span>disadvantage than now, as the land-owners would
+not be so rich, while the labourers would be quite
+as poor. Property would run less into masses;
+but there would be less wealth to be amassed.
+There is no use in opposition to these principles,
+or in discontent at their natural results. The
+true wisdom is in modifying the results by practically
+recognizing the principle. We must control
+the rise of rent by stimulating agricultural
+improvements, and preventing the demand for
+food from outstripping them. We must moderate
+the pressure upon the subsistence, or wages
+fund, by regulating the numbers who are to share
+it. We must moderate the pressure against the
+profits fund, by keeping the demands upon the
+wages fund within due bounds.<a id='rC'></a><a href='#fC' class='c013'><sup>[C]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class='c018'><span class='pageno' id='Page_2.41'>41</span>The wealth of society naturally distributes itself
+between two classes of capitalists, from one
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.42'>42</span>of which a portion descends to a third class,—the
+labourers. The two classes of capitalists
+are, first, the owners of land or water,—of
+the natural agents of production,—and next,
+the farmers of land or water, or those who
+employ, by the application of capital, the natural
+agents of production. Each of the three classes
+obtains his share by purchase,—original, or perpetually
+renewed—the landowner by the secondary
+or hoarded labour of his ancestors or of
+his youth; the capitalist by hoarded labour, and
+the purchased labour of his servants; and the
+labourer by primary labour. The landowner receives
+his share as rent; the capitalist as profits;
+the labourer as wages.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Real <span class='sc'>Rent</span> is that which is paid to the landowner
+for the use of the original, indestructible powers of
+the soil. The total rent paid by a farmer includes
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.43'>43</span>also the profits of the capital laid out by the landowner
+upon the estate.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Land possesses its original, indestructible powers
+in different degrees.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>The most fertile being all appropriated, and more
+produce wanted, the next best soil is brought into
+cultivation; then land of the third degree, and so
+on, till all is tilled that will repay tillage.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>An unequal produce being yielded by these different
+lands, the surplus return of all above the
+lowest goes to the landowner in the form of rent.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>The same thing happens when repeated applications
+of capital are made to the same land for the
+sake of increasing its productiveness. The produce
+which remains over the return to the least productive
+application of capital goes to the landowner in
+the form of rent.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'><span class='sc'>Rent</span>, therefore, consists of that part of the return
+made to the more productive portions of capital,
+by which it exceeds the return made to the least
+productive portion.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>New lands are not tilled, and capital is not employed
+for a less return, unless the produce will
+pay the cost of production.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>A rise of prices, therefore, creates, and is not
+created by, rent.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>When more capital is employed in agriculture,
+new land is tilled, a further outlay is made on land
+already tilled; and thus also rent arises from increase
+of capital.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>When capital is withdrawn from agriculture, inferior,
+<i>i. e.</i> the most expensive soils, are let out of cultivation;
+and thus rent falls.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>A rise of rent is, therefore, a symptom, and not a
+cause, of wealth.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>The tendency of rent is, therefore, to rise for ever
+in an improving country. But there are counteracting
+causes.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'><span class='pageno' id='Page_2.44'>44</span>Art increases production beyond the usual returns
+to capital laid out: prices fall in proportion
+to the abundance of the supply, and rent declines.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Improved facilities for bringing produce to market,
+by increasing the supply, cause prices to fall
+and rent to decline.</p>
+
+<p class='c031'><span class='sc'>Commodities</span>, being produced by capital and labour,
+are the joint property of the capitalist and
+labourer.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>The capitalist pays in advance to the labourers
+their share of the commodity, and thus becomes its
+sole owner.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>The portion thus paid is <span class='sc'>Wages</span>.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'><span class='sc'>Real Wages</span> are the articles of use and consumption
+that the labourer receives in return for his
+labour.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'><span class='sc'>Nominal Wages</span> are the portion he receives of
+these things reckoned in money.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>The fund from which wages are paid in any
+country consists of the articles required for the use
+and consumption of labourers which that country
+contains.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'><span class='sc'>The proportion of this fund received by
+individuals must mainly depend on the number
+among whom the fund is divided.</span></p>
+
+<p class='c018'>The rate of wages in any country depends, therefore,
+not on the wealth which that country contains,
+but on the proportion between its capital and its population.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>As population has a tendency to increase faster
+than capital, wages can be prevented from falling to
+the lowest point only by adjusting the proportion of
+population to capital.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>The lowest point to which wages can be permanently
+reduced, is that which affords a bare subsistence
+to the labourer.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'><span class='pageno' id='Page_2.45'>45</span>The highest point to which wages can be permanently
+raised is that which leaves to the capitalist
+just profit enough to make it worth his while to invest
+capital.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>The variations of the rate of wages between these
+extreme points depending mainly on the supply of
+labour offered to the capitalist, the rate of wages is
+mainly determined by the sellers, not the buyers of
+labour.</p>
+
+<p class='c031'>The produce of labour and capital, after rent has
+been paid, is divided between the labourer and the
+capitalist, under the name of wages and profits.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Where there are two shares, each determines
+the other, provided they press equally upon one
+another.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>The increase of the supply of labour, claiming
+reward, makes the pressure in the present case unequal,
+and renders wages the regulator of profits.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>The restriction of the supply of food causes the
+fall of both profits and wages.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>The increased expense of raising food enhances
+its price: labour, both agricultural and manufacturing,
+becomes dearer (without advantage to the
+labourer): this rise of wages causes profits to fall;
+and this fall brings after it a reduction of the labourer’s
+share, or a fall of wages.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>The fall of profits and wages is thus referable to
+the same cause which raises rent;—to an inequality
+in the fertility of soils.</p>
+
+<hr class='c022'>
+
+<p class='c018'>Thus it appears that, owing to the inequality
+of soils, and the principle of increase in the
+number of consumers, the natural tendency of
+rent is to rise; and to rise in proportion to the
+increase in the number of consumers. The tendency
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.46'>46</span>of profits is to fall as rent rises, <i>i. e.</i> as
+the production of food becomes more expensive.
+The fall of profits brings after it, as a necessary
+consequence, the fall of wages; and the individual
+shares of wages are still further reduced by
+every increase of the numbers among whom the
+wages’ fund is to be divided.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>These are important truths, and by no means
+discouraging, if we know how to make use of
+them. There is no need hastily to suppose that
+our landowners must inevitably get all the
+wealth of society into their own hands, so that
+there will in time be only two classes in the
+state,—landowners and paupers. It is possible
+that this might happen, as it is possible that we
+may all die of famine from nobody choosing to
+be at the trouble of tilling the ground. The two
+cases are possible, and the catastrophes about
+equally probable. No one can deny the strong
+tendency to famine to which we are all liable
+unless we exert ourselves to avoid it; and the
+undue rise of rent, and fall of profits and wages,
+is quite as certainly avoided by moderate caution—by
+bringing natural laws to bear upon each
+other, and not (as some desire) a law of human
+will to control that which is beyond the reach of
+the unassisted human will.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Some who toil and earn but little recompense
+cry out upon the wealth of the landowners, and
+desire a law which shall forbid their receiving
+more than so much for a certain quantity and
+quality of land. A law that men should not die
+in a famine would be as much to the purpose.
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.47'>47</span>The way to prevent men dying of hunger is to
+sow grain for them; and the way to prevent the
+landlords growing unduly rich is to provide more
+food;—whether by improving the methods of
+tillage at home, or inventing and improving productions
+of other kinds which may exchange for
+food from abroad. Another way is by making
+machinery (which does not eat and drink) supersede
+human labour, so that we may have the
+increased production without the accompanying
+consumption; but the most certain method of all,
+and that which is in the power of all, is to proportion
+the number of consumers to the existing
+supply of food. As soon as this is done, rents
+will be stationary, and will be certain to fall after
+the next improvement in tillage or manufacture.
+Meantime, the landowner can no more help the
+rise of his rents than the poorest operative in the
+next town; and, in fact, not so much, if that
+operative is bringing up a large family to depreciate
+the value of labour, and increase the excessive
+pressure upon food. The landlord, meantime,
+declares truly that he is growing no richer. He
+is told that his rents have risen since such a
+time; but (from various causes) his tenants
+cannot pay the whole; and he is besides burdened
+with the maintenance of the indigent who have
+been pauperized by the undue depression of
+wages. No one would be more glad than he, to
+have his rents nominally lowered so that he
+might receive the whole, and do what he pleased
+with it. No one would be more glad than he, if
+he be wise, at the tidings of fresh discoveries in
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.48'>48</span>science or inventions in art, or of new resources
+opened beyond sea, or of increased providence in
+the habits of the poorer classes, which should
+cause his income to fall with the price of food,
+but render his lessened income more secure.</p>
+
+<hr class='c022'>
+
+<p class='c018'>It is of even greater consequence to ascertain
+the relative position of the other two parties,
+since any quarrel about their respective shares
+cannot but cause a diminution of that which is to
+be divided between them. Each party being
+dependent upon the other, any interruption of
+their harmony cannot but be injurious to both:
+but dissension is especially disastrous where, as
+in the present case, the dependence is unequal.
+The capitalists have the great advantage over the
+labourers of being able to wait longer for the
+adjustment of disputes which may arise between
+them. Deplorable as are the consequences to
+individuals and to society of living upon capital
+from the absence of revenue, the case of those
+who are driven to live upon their capital is, at
+least, better than that of the party which has no
+capital to live upon.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>The consequence of this inequality of dependence
+is that power of a different kind is more
+frequently put in action by the more dependent
+than by the less dependent party. The power of
+combination to obtain a larger share of the
+subsistence fund is in the hands of both parties,
+and is occasionally used by both; but much more
+frequently by the labourers than by the capitalists.
+For this there are obvious reasons.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'><span class='pageno' id='Page_2.49'>49</span>If the proportion of labour to capital be equal,
+there is little inducement to either party to quarrel
+with the other, as their shares of gain are
+balanced: but if any capitalists choose to press
+upon the labourers, it is to their own ultimate
+disadvantage, as well as that of the labourers; for
+there can never be a combination so extensive as
+to include all capitalists; and those who are not
+included will find it their interest to lower the
+prices of their commodities, paying the same
+wages as the united capitalists, and being content
+with the ordinary rate of profit. By means of this
+underselling, the extraordinary rate of profit is
+necessarily brought down, and the capitalists are
+just as they were at first, the reduction having
+fallen upon the wages of the labourer. Matters
+can seldom, however, proceed so far as to the
+infliction of this gratuitous injury. If the proportion
+of labour to capital be equal, a very short
+resistance of the labourers to the reduction of
+their wages suffices to make the capitalists repent
+of their endeavours to grasp more than their
+share: and such endeavours are consequently
+extremely rare where capital and labour are duly
+proportioned.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>If there be a superabundance of capital, the
+capitalists are in no condition to gain any thing
+by combination. To pay high wages answers
+better to them than to live upon their capital.
+In such a case, therefore, the capitalists never
+combine.—Or rather,—and I say it with sorrow,—if
+such a case should arise, they would not
+combine. Such cases can scarcely be spoken of
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.50'>50</span>in this country as matters of actual experience,
+since there are but too few instances of capital
+being abundant in proportion to labour.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>On the third supposition,—that labour abounds
+in proportion to capital,—there is no need for
+the capitalists to use their power of combination.
+They can obtain what they want without it. The
+labourers are the weaker party, inasmuch as they
+must have food, and depend on the capitalists for
+it:—not for the quantity;—that depends on
+themselves,—on the numbers they bring to
+divide a certain quantity;—and the capitalists can
+resist their claims no further than to secure the
+rate of profit, without which no capitalist would do
+business. Not for the quantity of food to each
+man do the labourers depend on the capitalists;
+but for the purchase of their labour at all; and
+therefore, the capitalists do not need to combine
+when labour superabounds.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>For the same reasons, the labourers do not
+need to combine when capital superabounds.
+They can naturally obtain as large a share of the
+subsistence fund as will leave ordinary profits to
+the capitalist: and this happens of course, as is
+well known from the examples of newly settled
+countries, and newly invented manufactures,
+where the profits of the capitalist are invariably
+prevented by the dearness of labour from much
+exceeding the ordinary rate.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>In cases of equal proportion, the labourers run
+even a greater risk from a strike than the
+capitalists. Some of the capitalists will, if the
+balance be exact, withdraw their capital from
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.51'>51</span>business rather than stand a strike; and thus is
+caused an immediate superabundance of labour,
+with all its disadvantages to the labourers. But
+if no capitalist withdraws, the waste of capital
+necessarily caused by a strike causes also a
+superabundance of labour; and thus also the
+labourers suffer for having destroyed the balance.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>But when combination is resorted to in the
+absence of all other power, its results are the
+most disastrous to the weak party which employs
+it. The labourers who superabound are already
+at a disadvantage, which can only be increased
+by any resistance which helps to impoverish the
+capitalists. They may injure the capitalists by
+impairing the capitalists’ share of the subsistence
+fund: but they injure themselves much more by
+impairing, at the same time, the labourers’ share.
+That such means of injuring capitalists are ever
+resorted to in such a condition of affairs proves
+most forcibly that the largest of the parties concerned
+is not yet fully aware how the case stands,
+and that a far greater power of competition with
+the capitalists is lodged with them than that
+which they are too ready to employ to the injury
+of both parties and the good of neither.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>If it had been, indeed, true that, by any natural
+laws of distribution, any class of society could
+be placed in a position of necessary and permanent
+inferiority of rights to any other class, all
+writers on the philosophy of society would have
+shrunk from relating any fables which must convey
+so sad a moral. But there is a very cheering
+moral involved in every melancholy story that
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.52'>52</span>we hear of the contentions of masters and
+men, and of the sufferings which thence arise.
+The fact is that, so far from the masters having
+any natural power,—even if they had the wish,—to
+oppress the working classes, the working
+classes hold a power which may make them the
+equals in independence of any class in society.
+That they have not yet used it is less their fault
+than their misfortune. Whether fault or misfortune,
+it is destined to be remedied, if we may
+trust to experience working its invariable work,
+and communicating that wisdom and power
+which can by no other means be gained. The
+only control over the price of labour resides
+with those who can control its quantity. Overstock
+the market with labour, and the most compassionate
+of capitalists can do nothing to prevent
+its being ill rewarded. Understock the
+market with labour, and the veriest miser that
+ever employed gold for profit cannot prevent labour
+fetching a high price. And with whom
+does it rest to overstock or understock the market
+with labour? With whom does it rest to determine
+whether the subsistence fund which exists
+shall be divided among a moderate number or
+among a scrambling multitude? Most assuredly
+not with the capitalists but the labourers.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>When the labouring class fully comprehends
+the extent of the power which it holds,—a power
+of obtaining not only its own terms from the
+capitalists, but all the necessaries and comforts
+of life, and with them the ease and dignity which
+become free-born men, they will turn their other
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.53'>53</span>power of combination to better purposes than
+those of annoyance and injury. The common
+plea of those labourers who already understand
+their own case is that there is little use in scattered
+individuals being careful to proportion their
+families to their means of subsistence, while the
+greater number multiply thoughtlessly, and prepare
+for new encroachments on the subsistence
+fund. The same plea has been in use for ever
+on the first proposal of any great social amelioration;
+and it has ever been found that amelioration
+has followed with unexpected speed upon
+the virtuous efforts of scattered individuals. They
+work round to each other, they combine, they
+bring others into the combination, and these
+again bring more, till there are hundreds of followers
+for every leader, and for every follower
+there is a foe the less. Why should it not be so
+with this greatest of all ameliorations that has
+ever been proposed? If the working classes can
+still combine for objects which have been a thousand
+times proved unattainable or hurtful when
+attained, why should they not combine for purposes
+of providence and mutual support in a
+better system of economy? Such combinations
+have already begun; for every society which has
+for its objects the economy of the resources of
+the working people, and the encouragement of
+provident habits, is a society for limiting the
+population within the means of subsistence. Many
+such associations are so well founded as to give
+assurance that they will be persevered in; if persevered
+in, it cannot be very long before some one
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.54'>54</span>class or band of labourers feels the benefits of prudence,
+and exhibits the truth that moderate self-denial
+in one direction brings means of rational
+indulgence in others: and when this happens, the
+work of amelioration will be fairly begun. The
+working men’s day will be at hand, and no one
+will hail it more joyfully than the capitalists;—for
+willingly would they exchange such power as
+is given them by the helplessness of their labourers,
+for security against the waste of capital
+which is caused by the opposition of their work-people
+and the pauperism of their dependents.</p>
+
+<hr class='c022'>
+
+<div class='smaller'>
+
+<p class='c018'>Combinations of labourers against capitalists
+(whatever other effects they may have) cannot secure
+a permanent rise of wages unless the supply
+of labour falls short of the demand;—in which case,
+strikes are usually unnecessary.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Nothing can permanently affect the rate of wages
+which does not affect the proportion of population
+to capital.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Legislative interference does not affect this proportion,
+and is therefore useless.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Strikes affect it only by wasting capital, and are
+therefore worse than useless.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Combinations may avail or not, according to the
+reasonableness of their objects.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Whether reasonable or not, combinations are not
+subjects for legislative interference; the law having
+no cognizance of their causes.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Disturbance of the peace being otherwise provided
+against, combinations are wisely therefore
+now left unregarded by the law.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>The condition of labourers may be best improved,—</p>
+
+<p class='c032'>1. By inventions and discoveries which create
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.55'>55</span>capital; and by husbanding instead of wasting
+capital;—for instance, by making savings
+instead of supporting strikes.</p>
+
+<p class='c032'>2. <span class='sc'>By adjusting the proportion of population
+to capital.</span></p>
+
+</div>
+
+<hr class='c022'>
+
+<p class='c018'>This is not the place in which to show how
+tremendous is the waste of capital in a turn-out;
+nor have I been able to do it in that one of my
+fables which treats of combinations of workmen.
+I felt myself bound to present the fairest instance,
+in order to show the badness of the principle of
+a strike in the best case; but I have the means
+of showing, if I had but the space, that the
+members of a combination are often—are commonly—the
+victims of a far more despotic tyranny
+than they themselves ascribe to the masters,
+and a more ruinous spoliation than the discontented
+suppose the rich desirous to inflict
+upon the poor. I trust and believe that there
+are many William Allens among the class of
+operatives; but I also believe that few of these
+are leaders of strikes. Allen was an unwilling
+leader of a strike; and there are many who see
+even more clearly than he did the hopelessness
+and mischievousness of the contest, who have
+either more selfishness to keep them out of it, or
+more nerve to make a protest against a bad principle,
+and a stand against a bad practice. I believe
+that the most intelligent and the best men
+among the working-classes now decline joining
+a turn-out; and it is very certain that not only
+the most ignorant, but the worst, are among the
+first to engage. The reasons for this will be
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.56'>56</span>sufficiently obvious to those who consider what
+facilities these associations afford for such practices
+as ignorant and bad men like,—for meddling
+and governing, for rioting, for idling, and
+tippling, and journeying, and speechifying at
+other people’s expense. No better occasion
+could be devised for exposing the simple, and
+timid, and unwary to be robbed, and jobbed, and
+made tools of by a few sharpers and idle busybodies.
+It is very certain that three or four individuals
+have often succeeded, for their own purposes,
+in setting three or four hundred, or thousand,
+better men than themselves at enmity with
+their masters. It is difficult to imagine a case
+of more spirit-rousing hardship than that of the
+labourer who is compelled or inveigled into a
+contest which he knows, or may know, to be bad
+in principle, and hopeless in its issue,—who must,
+against his will or his reason, give up a subsistence
+which is already too scanty, in order that
+he may find it still further reduced when he returns
+to it. In consideration of such cases,
+which everybody knows to be very common, I
+shall state a few facts, which may assist and
+strengthen the determination of some who may
+be striving against the now prevalent disposition
+to strike for wages. The circumstances of the
+time will excuse a disproportioned enlargement
+on a very obvious point.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>In order to bring the principle of strikes to
+the test, we have only to ask whether they increase
+capital or check population?—one or other
+of which they must do if they are to benefit the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.57'>57</span>struggling party. It is known to everybody that
+they do neither; but it is not so well known that
+they do the direct contrary,—that they not only
+waste capital, but increase the supply of labour,
+the very thing of which there is already too
+much. They do this by driving the capitalists to
+find those silent labourers who never ask subsistence
+or refuse their masters’ bidding—the machines,
+which are the workmen’s abhorrence.
+It is unreasonable as it is vain to abhor machinery;
+and that its use is facilitated by strikes
+will be regarded hereafter as one of the few compensating
+circumstances which arise out of the
+miseries of such a struggle for power or for
+bread. But, however great may be the ultimate
+good of this issue, the issue is certainly the very
+reverse of that contemplated and desired by those
+who turn out. Yet the time is come for them to
+meet it; and they will do well to take heed to
+the state of the labour-market at this period.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>After long depression and many fluctuations,
+it appears that there is a revival of a steady demand
+for labour. The condition of our capitalists
+is, however, different from what it was in most
+former periods of prosperity. They are now
+busy; but they work for very low profits in
+almost every branch of manufacture or trade.
+Their men must also work hard for little pay,
+till some of the many circumstances which tend
+to raise profits shall have occurred. Never, however,
+were our working-class less disposed to take
+the low wages which alone the masters are able
+to give. Combinations to secure a rise are
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.58'>58</span>everywhere spreading, and grand preparations
+are thus making for securing a fall. The low
+profits of the masters will not stand encroachment.
+There is a brisk foreign competition,
+which forbids trifling with any present demand.
+Under these circumstances, if our working men
+choose to stand idle, what remains to be done
+but to use machinery to the utmost extent that
+ingenuity can devise on the spur of a great occasion?
+The quantity of human labour already
+thus superseded is very considerable; and there
+will be more, in proportion to the failure of harmony
+between capitalists and labourers, till not a
+visible chance is left for the employment of half
+our working men in the way they themselves
+propose. Happy will it be for them if the usual
+consequences of the improvement of machinery
+follow in the extension of our manufactures, so
+that there may still be room for such as can
+learn a new business! and happy will it be for
+them if they have become convinced, in their
+time of hardship, that to moderate the supply of
+labour is the only way of securing its desired
+recompense!</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>The following case illustrates the method by
+which human labour is driven out of demand:
+it is only one of many which have arisen out of
+the tyranny of the leaders of strikes, who, not
+satisfied with turning out themselves, compel
+their weaker, but reluctant, brethren to be idle
+also. In the case in question, the turning out of
+the head spinners in a cotton factory, compelling
+the idleness of six or seven work-people subordinate
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.59'>59</span>to each spinner, has led the head spinner’s
+master to find that he can do without him, and
+the six or seven subordinates to rejoice in their
+freedom from dependence on his movements.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Six or seven different machines are employed
+in the production of cotton-yarn from raw cotton.
+All but the last are called “preparation machinery,”
+and one person waits upon each. The
+office of this preparation machinery is to form
+the raw cotton into a thick and tender thread,
+called a “roving.” The office of the last machine
+is to twist and draw out the roving into a
+finer and stronger thread: this operation is called
+“spinning,” and the spun thread is “yarn.” This
+machine is called the “hand-mule.” Hand-mules
+are worked in pairs, each pair requiring the head
+spinner above-mentioned to direct its operation,
+and two or more children to place the rovings
+in the machine, and piece the threads that break.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>The head spinner, though paid in proportion
+to the superiority of his work, has always been
+the one to turn out; and his subordinates must
+go with him of necessity, however averse they
+might be to do so. It was not to be borne that
+the discontents of the comparatively few should
+derange the whole manufacture, and deprive the
+many of their bread; and nothing could be more
+natural than for some expedient to be sought by
+which the masters and the subordinates might be
+made independent of the head spinners. Twenty
+years ago, attempts were made to invent some
+apparatus which might be attached to the mule,
+and discharge the spinner’s task. The apparatus
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.60'>60</span>first used was either too complex or too uncertain
+in its operation to answer the purpose; and, as
+often as it failed, the spinners clapped their
+hands, believed the manufacture more in their
+power than ever, and advanced in their demands
+accordingly. They went somewhat too far in
+1824, when they refused very high wages, and
+drove the Manchester capitalists to vigorous
+measures of self-defence. The requisite talent
+was sought and found for the object required;
+and, early in 1825, a patent for the “self-acting
+mule” was taken out, nothing being wanting to
+its efficacy but the simplification which time and
+practice were sure to bring, and which would
+lessen its cost so as to qualify it for common
+adoption. No sooner had it been set to work,
+and begun to gain reputation, than a great part
+of the establishment where it was in use was
+destroyed by fire, and the machine was not heard
+of for some months. As soon as it began to be
+again attended to, so great a stagnation of
+trade took place, that the spirit of the spinner
+was subdued: the master was unwilling to mortify
+him in his distress, and all mention of the
+self-acting mule was dropped. This was very
+hard upon the patentees, who had been originally
+forced into the business, and had spent, not only
+much time and pains, but a great deal of money
+on the invention. They rightly supposed, however,
+that the head spinners would give them
+their turn on the first opportunity. They went
+on improving and improving their invention,
+while awaiting another strike on the revival of
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.61'>61</span>trade. This happened at the close of 1829; and
+then several leading houses provided themselves
+with each a pair of self-acting mules, by way of
+trial: but the adoption of the machine went on
+languidly till the great strike of 1831 achieved
+its triumph. It is now used in upwards of fifty
+mills, and seems likely soon to be adopted in all
+others. The head spinners have not a chance
+against it; for it not only saves their wages, and
+leaves their subordinates at peace, but does their
+work better than they could do it themselves;—an
+unexpected result with which the perseverance
+of the inventors has been rewarded. The quantity
+of yarn is greater than could before be produced
+in the same time and with the same number of
+spindles: the yarn is of greater strength and
+more uniform quality: there is a material saving
+of waste in the subsequent processes, from the
+regularity with which the yarn is wound on the
+spindle; and, from the same cause, a greater
+quantity of a better fabric than before issues
+from the loom of the weaver.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>This story preaches its own moral. Every
+one ought to be glad to hear of improvements in
+the comforts of mankind; but all would rather
+pay any other purchase-money for them than
+the subsistence of a useful and often suffering
+class of society. It is in the power of our working
+class to provide that all such improvements
+shall henceforth arise otherwise than through
+their opposition, and for their destruction. With
+them rests the choice of controlling the labour-market
+on the one hand, and pauperism on the
+other.</p>
+
+<hr class='c022'>
+
+<p class='c018'><span class='pageno' id='Page_2.62'>62</span>If no moral reaches us from the long tragedy
+of pauperism which has been enacted before the
+eyes of many generations, we are past teaching.
+For the last three generations, especially, the
+state of the indigent has been an object of primary
+attention to all classes in our society.
+Statesmen have legislated, magistrates have administered,
+the clergy have preached, tradesmen
+and manufacturers have contributed, the farmers
+have been burdened: almost the sole employment
+of women, next to the care of their own
+families, has been the charge of the poor; almsgiving
+has been the first virtue to which infant
+enthusiasm has been roused, and charity, in this
+sense, has been made the test of moral sincerity
+and religious proficiency. And what has all this
+done for society? The number of the indigent
+has increased from day to day, and at a perpetually
+increasing rate, till it has absorbed, in a
+legal charity alone, nine millions per annum of
+the subsistence-fund, which is the clear right of
+the independent labourer. It is no small consideration
+that the habitually indigent become, as
+a matter of course, as their doom, the most profligate
+portion of society. But this fearful consideration
+is not all. We not only defraud the
+industrious classes of their due, now tempting
+and now forcing them down into a state of indigence,
+and by the same act condemning them to
+hopelessness and vice, but we, at the same time,
+put in motion an apparatus of moral evil among
+every class which has to communicate with the
+indigent, which would bear down the preaching
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.63'>63</span>of the twelve apostles themselves. If account
+could be taken of the unjust partialities of magistrates,
+of the abuse of power by open vestries,
+and the jobbing by select vestries; of the heart-wringing
+oppression sustained by the tradesman
+and farmer; of the open licentiousness and concealed
+fraud, the ungodly conspiracies and diabolical
+hatreds nourished by our system of legal
+charity, and the daily repeated, cruel injustice
+inflicted by our methods of public and private
+charity, we might well doubt whether some fiend
+had not been making sport of us under the holy
+semblance of charity. It may be doubted whether
+the most profligate tyranny ever broke or
+depraved so many hearts as the charities of our
+Christian nation. If our practices are to be
+judged by their fruits, there are none, next to
+slavery, for which we need so much pardon as
+for our methods of charity.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>There is no use in pleading our good intentions.
+The fathers of the Inquisition are ever
+ready with their plea of good intentions. The
+parent who breaks the spirit, and thus annihilates
+the moral liberty of his child, does it with the
+best intentions. The manœuvrer tells twenty
+lies a-day with the best intentions. There is,
+perhaps, no crime in whose defence good intentions
+may not with sincerity have been pleaded.
+The question is why, with evidence that we were
+wrong, daily and hourly before our eyes, we did
+not mend our methods. Thence arises the moral
+of this dreary lesson, that virtue, whether beneficence
+or any other, does not consist in formal and
+arbitrary practices, but in conformity to vital
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.64'>64</span>principles. Without regard to this essential
+truth, virtue may turn to vice before we are
+aware; and as a proof of it, we have been doing
+the pleasure of fiends under a persuasion that we
+were discharging the duty of Christians. We
+have exercised self-denial in our charity: but so
+did Simeon Stylobates in his piety, when he lived
+on the top of a pillar. We have toiled and suffered
+in our charity: but so did the pilgrims who
+walked with peas in their shoes to the sepulchre.
+Their piety and their sufferings were a mockery
+of Him they worshipped; and our charity has
+proved a scandal to the religion we profess.
+What follows? Not that piety and charity are
+a mockery and a delusion; but that Simeon did
+not understand the one, and we have most assuredly
+mistaken the other.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>One essential distinction between a comparatively
+rich and poor society is in the moral right
+which individuals have to dispose of their money
+in certain modes. Where capital abounds in proportion
+to the consumers, individuals are fully
+justified in giving away in whatsoever form and to
+whomsoever they please; as they give away that
+which leaves nobody destitute. But in a society
+where population abounds in proportion to capital,
+to give food and clothing to the idle while
+the industrious are debarred from earning it, is
+to take subsistence from him whose due it is, to
+give it to one who has no claim. Thus to violate
+justice can be no true charity. Where consumers
+abound in proportion to capital, it is obvious
+that the way to bestow most happiness is,
+not to take away one man’s share to give it to
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.65'>65</span>another, but to do what is possible towards
+creating another share in such a way as not to
+cause more want. In other words, almsgiving
+is the mode of charity appropriate to one state
+of society, and the establishment of provident
+associations, and the encouragement of emigration,
+and especially of education, are the modes
+of charity appropriate to another state of society.
+We have need enough of charity in our present
+state;—with hundreds of thousands of paupers
+in our parishes, and of half-starved artizans in
+our towns, and broken-spirited labourers in our
+villages. We have need enough of charity,—of
+the time of such as have leisure, and of the
+attention of the thoughtful, and of the exertions
+of the active, and of the wealth of the opulent.
+All these will be too little for the removal of the
+evil which our own mistakes have caused. We
+have need enough of charity; and if we would
+learn how to apply it, there are those among the
+sufferers who can instruct us. There is in existence
+a letter from a poor operative living in a
+district where charities of food and clothing
+abound, entreating the influential parties whom
+he addresses to put an end to the almsgiving
+which leaves no chance of a just provision to the
+high-souled working man. There is in existence
+a petition from a body of agricultural labourers
+to the House of Lords, last year, praying for
+the abolition of legal charity which condemns
+the labourer to starvation or degradation. These
+documents are signs of the times which are not
+to be mistaken, and which may well strike us
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.66'>66</span>silent with shame at our incessant complaints of
+the poor for having lost their spirit of independence,
+and become a degraded race. Where is
+our Christian charity, when we first wrest from
+them their independence, and then taunt them
+with the loss? when we invite them to encroach,
+and then spurn them for encroaching?</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Even from this enormous evil, however, good
+is at this moment arising. The rapid, the appalling
+increase of the mischief has directed the
+general attention towards it; and the two grand
+principles with which we set out afford the suggestion
+of remedies which are actually in preparation.
+It is now many years since certain commissioners,
+appointed by the French government
+to investigate our pauper system, pronounced it
+the great political gangrene of England, which
+it was equally dangerous to remove and to let
+alone. The mischief has been on the increase
+ever since, and yet there is hope of cure. If it
+were not that we had sound principles to go upon,—if
+we had all this vice and misery on our hands
+to be got rid of we knew not how, our condition
+would indeed be deplorable. But, once having
+got hold of the truth that ours is a society where
+labour abounds in proportion to capital, we know
+at least how to look about for a remedy, and
+with what aim to direct our proceedings. We
+must lessen the inducements to indigence,
+(strange that such should exist!) by making the
+condition of the pauper inferior to that of the
+independent labourer, and ensure its remaining
+universally so by appointing a rigid, impartial,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.67'>67</span>and uniform administration of the funds of our
+legal charity. Every diminution of the inducements
+to indigence is necessarily an increase
+of the inducements to independence; both by
+giving the right bias to the inclinations of the
+labourer, and by saving a portion of the subsistence-fund.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>In proportion to the savings effected in the
+subsistence-fund by a rigid administration of the
+legal charity, the surplus labour of our parishes
+will be absorbed; and if, by a wise scheme of
+emigration, the disproportion between our capital
+and labour can be still further reduced, a way
+will be open for the total abolition of a legal
+charity,—the most demoralizing agency, perhaps,
+which can be introduced into any state,—a curse
+beneath which no society can prosper. We shall
+then be at liberty to apply our charity wholly to
+that object which should now be uppermost with
+all the truly benevolent,—to prevent indigence
+instead of providing for it, in the full confidence
+that “accidental cases will be relieved by accidental
+succour.” There are many who believe
+that an immediate abolition of our legal charity
+would cause less misery than its long continuance:
+but there is happily no occasion to
+contemplate the alternative. There is a strong
+hope afforded by various instances of partial
+reformation that a way remains for us out of our
+difficulties,—toilsome and painful, no doubt, but
+practicable and safe;—a way of so rectifying the
+administration of our poor-laws as to give us
+the power of at length abolishing them. Honoured
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.68'>68</span>be the rulers who shall set us forward on this
+path; and blessed be every one who bestirs
+himself to remove obstructions by the substitution
+of a true for a spurious charity!<a id='rD'></a><a href='#fD' class='c013'><sup>[D]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Here is the statement of the evil and of one of
+the appropriate remedies.</p>
+
+<hr class='c022'>
+
+<div class='smaller'>
+
+<p class='c018'>In a society composed of a natural gradation of
+ranks, some must be poor; <i>i.e.</i> have nothing more
+than the means of present subsistence.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Any suspension of these means of subsistence,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.69'>69</span>whether through disaster, sickness, or decrepitude,
+converts the poor into the indigent.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Since indigence occasions misery, and disposes to
+vice, the welfare of society requires the greatest
+possible reduction of the number of the indigent.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Charity, public and private, or an arbitrary distribution
+of the subsistence-fund, has hitherto failed to
+effect this object; the proportion of the indigent to
+the rest of the population having increased from age
+to age.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>This is not surprising, since an arbitrary distribution
+of the subsistence-fund, besides rendering
+consumption unproductive, and encouraging a multiplication
+of consumers, does not meet the difficulty
+arising from the disproportion of numbers to the
+means of subsistence.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>The small unproductive consumption occasioned
+by the relief of sudden accidents and rare infirmities
+is necessary, and may be justifiably provided for by
+charity, since such charity does not tend to the
+increase of numbers; but, with this exception, all
+arbitrary distribution of the necessaries of life is
+injurious to society, whether in the form of private
+almsgiving, public charitable institutions, or a legal
+pauper-system.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>The tendency of all such modes of distribution
+having been found to be to encourage improvidence
+with all its attendant evils,—to injure the good
+while relieving the bad,—to extinguish the spirit of
+independence on one side, and of charity on the
+other,—to encourage peculation, tyranny, and fraud,—and
+to increase perpetually the evil they are
+meant to remedy,—but one plea is now commonly
+urged in favour of a legal provision for the indigent.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>This plea is, that every individual born into a state
+has a right to subsistence from the state.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'><span class='pageno' id='Page_2.70'>70</span>This plea, in its general application, is grounded
+on a false analogy between a state and its members,
+and a parent and his family.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>A parent has a considerable influence over the
+subsistence-fund of his family, and an absolute control
+over the numbers to be supported by that fund;
+whereas the rulers of a state, from whom a legal
+provision emanates, have little influence over its
+subsistence-fund, and no control whatever over the
+number of its members.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>If the plea of right to subsistence be grounded
+on the faults of national institutions, the right ought
+rather to be superseded by the rectification of those
+institutions, than admitted at the cost of perpetuating
+an institution more hurtful than all the others
+combined.</p>
+
+<hr class='c022'>
+
+<p class='c018'>What then must be done to lessen the number of
+the indigent now so frightfully increasing?</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>The subsistence-fund must be employed productively,
+and capital and labour be allowed to take
+their natural course; <i>i. e.</i> the pauper system must,
+by some means or other, be extinguished.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>The number of consumers must be proportioned
+to the subsistence-fund. To this end, encouragements
+to the increase of population should be withdrawn,
+and every sanction given to the preventive
+check; <i>i. e.</i> charity must be directed to the enlightenment
+of the mind instead of to the relief of
+bodily wants.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>If not adopted speedily, all measures will be too
+late to prevent the universal prevalence of poverty
+in this kingdom, the legal provision for the indigent
+now operating the extinction of our national resources
+at a perpetually increasing rate.</p>
+
+<hr class='c022'>
+
+<p class='c018'>The objects of voluntary emigration, directed by
+the state, are three-fold:—</p>
+
+<p class='c026'><span class='pageno' id='Page_2.71'>71</span>1. To improve the condition of those who emigrate,
+by placing them where they may
+obtain subsistence at less cost than at home.</p>
+
+<p class='c026'>2. To improve the condition of those who remain,
+by increasing the ratio of capital to
+population.</p>
+
+<p class='c026'>3. To improve the condition of the colonized
+region.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>To fulfil the first of these objects, the colony
+must be so located as to insure health and abundance
+to its members; and it must be so organized
+as to secure the due co-operation of labour and
+capital.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>To fulfil the second object, the removal of each
+individual must be less costly than his maintenance
+at home would be; and the selection must be made
+with a view to lessening the amount of human productiveness
+at home.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>To fulfil the third object, the colonists must be
+selected with a view to their productiveness, both as
+regards capital and population; which includes a
+moral fitness to compose an orderly society.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>It follows from all these considerations that a new
+settlement should be composed of young, healthy,
+and moral persons; that all should not be labourers,
+nor all capitalists; and that there should be a sufficient
+concentration of their numbers on the new
+lands to ensure a facility of exchanges.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<hr class='c022'>
+
+<p class='c018'>All other proposed remedies must be subjected
+to, as this must be regulated by, the test, whether
+they assist in proportioning labour and capital.
+The Home Colonization system here fails, on the
+double ground that it ensures a smaller return to
+capital and labour than could be had abroad, and
+serves as a direct premium on population.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'><span class='pageno' id='Page_2.72'>72</span>Home colonies may afford a temporary relief to a
+redundant population, and also increase the productiveness
+of the lands which they appropriate;
+but this is done by alienating capital from its natural
+channels; and with the certainty of ultimately injuring
+society by increasing the redundancy of
+population over capital.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Home colonization then, though less injurious
+than the unproductive distribution of the charity-fund,
+is inferior to foreign colonization, inasmuch
+as the one yields temporary benefit to a few at the
+expense of ultimate injury to many; and the other
+produces permanent benefit to all.</p>
+
+<hr class='c022'>
+
+<p class='c018'>All provisions for rewarding forethought and
+economy, and especially all for the diffusion of
+sound moral and political knowledge, approve
+themselves by this test. All contrivance and
+care in the production and economy of capital
+approve themselves also; but Emigration is
+conspicuous in its merits, since it not only immediately
+reaches the seat of the evil in the
+mother country, but affords the greatest of blessings
+to the colonized regions. If regulated by
+a due regard to the infallible test, it is scarcely
+possible to conceive of an arrangement more apt
+to all the purposes of society. Where it has
+failed, the reason of failure has commonly been
+that one link in the chain of operating causes
+has been wanting. Land and labourers cannot
+mutually prosper without the capital which has
+too often been deficient. We have not yet made
+the experiment of sending out small societies
+completely organized, and amply provided to
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.73'>73</span>settle down at once in a state of sufficient civilization
+to spare the mother-country all further
+anxiety about the expedition. It can be no
+objection to this that it abstracts capital and the
+most useful species of labour from the mother-country:
+since the capital so sent out will yield
+a more rapid and ample increase to us in a new
+market for commerce than it could have done at
+home; and the labour is that which we least
+want at home,—however good its quality may
+be,—and that which we most want in our possessions
+on the other side the world. Such an
+organized society, however, would be able to bear
+a much larger proportion of children than a
+similar society could take charge of at home,—the
+labour of children being of as much more
+value than their maintenance abroad, as it is less
+at home. If for every old person naturally belonging
+to such a company, left behind, two children
+were taken out, this country would be immediately
+compensated for the abstraction of
+prime labour, and a provision would be made for
+the future contraction of the population. All
+details, however, from the greatest to the least,
+will be arranged with infinitely less trouble than
+our parochial mismanagements have cost us when
+we have once, as a nation, surveyed the dreary
+haunts of our pauperized classes, and then taken
+a flight in spirit to the fair regions abroad which
+invite their labour with a sure promise of rich
+recompense. The time must come when it will
+be a matter of wonder how we could so long be
+oppressed with a redundancy of labour at home,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.74'>74</span>while our foreign lands were dreary only for want
+of labour, while an open sea lay between, while
+we had shipping to spare to traverse it, and while
+we were spending nine millions a year in the
+fruitless support of our paupers, and as a premium
+on the production of yet more and more labour.
+The best plea for us in that day will be that we
+did not understand our own case. By the time
+we have spent nine millions, or the half of nine
+millions, in relieving our labour market, we may
+have discovered how inferior is that superstitious,
+spurious charity which doles out bread at its own
+door to an unlawful petitioner because to give
+bread was once charity, and that enlightened,
+genuine benevolence which causes plenty to
+spring in the far corners of the world, nourishing
+at home the ancient household virtues which have
+been well nigh starved among us, but which are
+not dead.</p>
+
+<hr class='c022'>
+
+<p class='c018'>What decision does our test give out in regard
+to Ireland? That, as a redundancy of population
+is her universally acknowledged curse, it is unreasonable
+to expect relief from the introduction
+of a legal charity,—the most efficacious of all
+premiums on population. The conclusion is so
+obvious, that it can be got rid of only by proving
+either that a redundant population is not the great
+grievance of Ireland, or that there may be a legal
+charity which does not act as a premium on
+population. Where are the materials for either
+the one proof or the other?</p>
+
+<p class='c018'><span class='pageno' id='Page_2.75'>75</span>Whatever affects the security of property, or intercepts
+the due reward of labour, impairs the subsistence-fund
+by discouraging industry and forethought.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Partnership tenantcies affect the security of property
+by rendering one tenant answerable for the
+obligations of all his partners, while he has no control
+over the management of their portions.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>A gradation of landlords on one estate has the
+same effect, by rendering one tenant liable to the
+claims of more than one landlord.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>The levying of fines on a whole district for an
+illegal practice going on in one part of it has the
+same effect, by rendering the honest man liable for
+the malpractices of the knave.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>The imposition of a church establishment on those
+who already support another church, intercepts the
+due reward of labour, by taking from the labourer a
+portion of his earnings for an object from which he
+derives no benefit.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>The practice of letting land to the highest bidder,
+without regard to former service, or to the merits of
+the applicants, intercepts the due reward of the
+labourer, by decreeing his gains to expire with his
+lease.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>All these practices having prevailed in <span class='sc'>Ireland</span>,
+her subsistence-fund is proportionably impaired,
+though the reduction is somewhat more than compensated
+by the natural growth of capital.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>While capital has been growing much more
+slowly than it ought, population has been increasing
+much more rapidly than the circumstances of
+the country have warranted; the consequences of
+which are, extensive and appalling indigence, and
+a wide spread of the moral evils which attend it.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>An immediate palliation of this indigence would
+be the result of introducing a legal pauper-system
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.76'>76</span>into Ireland; but it would be at the expense of an
+incalculable permanent increase of the evil.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>To levy a poor-rate on the country at large would
+be impolitic, since it would only increase the primary
+grievance of an insufficiency of capital, by
+causing a further unproductive consumption of it.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>To throw the burthen of a pauper-system on
+absentees would be especially unjust, since they
+bear precisely the same relation to the wealth of
+their country as its resident capitalists.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>In the case of Ireland, as in all analogous cases,
+permanent relief can be effected only by adjusting
+the proportions of capital and population; and this
+must be attempted by means suited to her peculiar
+circumstances.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>The growth of capital should be aided by improvements
+in agricultural and domestic economy,
+and by the removal of political grievances; from
+which would follow a union in place of an opposition
+of interests.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Population should be reduced within due limits,</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>In the present emergency, by well-conducted
+schemes of emigration; and</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Permanently, by educating the people till they
+shall have become qualified for the guardianship of
+their own interests.</p>
+
+<p class='c031'>A sameness in the natural laws of distribution
+exactly reverses the order of possession in new
+countries, i. e., in those where capital abounds
+in proportion to population. There the landowner
+(if any one finds it worth his while to be
+a landowner without being either a capitalist or
+a labourer at the same time) gains no real rent
+till the best land is all under cultivation, and then
+very little till a third degree is resorted to. The
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.77'>77</span>capitalist, meanwhile, makes less than the labourer;
+or would gain less if he were not, like
+the landowner, a labourer also. Where labour
+is so dear, all are labourers; and the labourer,
+by a very natural process, soon becomes a capitalist
+and a landowner; and then he may chance
+to learn what a strange thing it seems to a man
+from the mother-country to let land of a fine
+quality for no better rent than a small share of
+the produce; and how vexatious it is, after having
+reaped splendid returns to capital, to have
+to pay away, in the purchase of labour, all but
+little more than the ordinary profits of stock.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>The want of a due consideration of the difference
+in relative condition of labourers at home
+and labourers in new countries has led to some
+serious errors<a id='rE'></a><a href='#fE' class='c013'><sup>[E]</sup></a> in the formation and execution
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.78'>78</span>of some of our plans of colonization. Such a
+scheme as that of penal colonization could never
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.79'>79</span>have been adopted if the case of the working
+class in both countries had been understood.
+Besides the many other objections which might
+be and have been forcibly urged, there must remain
+the insurmountable one that labour is better
+rewarded in a new colony than at home. It
+does not appear that any arbitrary severity, short
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.80'>80</span>of the infliction of such life-long misery as no
+crime can deserve, can counteract the natural
+law by which the labourer is more prosperous in
+our penal colonies than in England. They are
+places of privilege, and the carrying him there
+is putting him in a condition of privilege, sooner
+or later, however severely we may punish him
+for any terminable period. This is so notoriously
+the case, that it has become matter of very serious
+consideration how the lot of the convict can be
+rendered harder, and be made known at home to
+be so; and arrangements have been made, within
+a short period, by which the disproportion in the
+lot of the innocent and the guilty is considerably
+lessened. Still, however far the convict may be
+placed below the virtuous emigrant in the scale
+of comfort, no power can, in the present state of
+our labour-market, prevent his being much better
+off than the independent labourer at home. The
+power of rulers may ordain chains, whipping, and
+other penalties to the convict; but it cannot prevent
+his having, during a pressing demand for
+his labour, that abundance of the necessaries of
+life which the virtuous labourer cannot obtain at
+home. Bob Castle<a id='rF'></a><a href='#fF' class='c013'><sup>[F]</sup></a> would not now, perhaps,
+be able to purchase an estate on which his honest
+brother Frank was a labourer; but Bob, however
+he might have been punished for seven or fourteen
+years, could not but have a fairer prospect
+before him at the end of that time than honest
+Frank would have had in England. This necessity
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.81'>81</span>forms, of itself, a conclusive argument against
+penal colonization as a secondary punishment.
+That mode of punishment can never command
+respect or success which wanders so far from the
+principle of retribution as to inflict studied
+miseries as a set-off against advantages which
+cannot be excluded.</p>
+
+<p class='c031'>The objects of penal colonization are—</p>
+<p class='c026'>1. The security of society by the removal of the
+offender.</p>
+
+<p class='c026'>2. The security of society by the effect of his
+example.</p>
+
+<p class='c026'>3. The reformation of the offender.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>There has hitherto been an entire failure of all
+these objects: and no wonder; since,—</p>
+
+<p class='c026'>1. The offender is only transferred from one
+portion of society to another; and besides,
+frequently returns to his old haunts.</p>
+
+<p class='c026'>2. His punishment, as far as it is punishment,
+takes place at too great a distance to be
+conspicuous as a warning; and in as far
+as his lot does not involve punishment, the
+effect of his example is precisely the reverse
+of what is desired.</p>
+
+<p class='c026'>3. Our convict arrangements tend to the further
+corruption of the offender, by letting
+him experience a great improvement in
+his condition as a direct consequence of
+his crimes.</p>
+
+<p class='c031'>The junction of penal with voluntary emigration
+tends equally to disappoint the purposes of the one,
+and to extinguish the benefits of the other; since
+convict labourers find themselves in a state of privilege,
+in a region where their labour procures them
+large rewards; and new settlers find their community
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.82'>82</span>deeply injured by the vice and disease consequent
+on the introduction of a convict population.</p>
+
+<p class='c031'>Before closing this part, it may be well to observe
+that much vain reluctance to acknowledge
+the two grand principles which primarily regulate
+the distribution of wealth, arises from too small
+an allowance having been asked for subordinate
+influences, which may justify a much greater degree
+of hopefulness respecting the condition of
+an advanced country than some economists have
+ventured to indulge. It is no wonder that the
+kind-hearted turn away, and refuse to listen to a
+doctrine which is thought to forbid much hope
+that the whole of any society can be comfortably
+provided with the necessaries of life. It is no
+wonder that the timid cease from trying to lop
+off evils, if they must believe that every head of
+the social hydra will grow again,—that for every
+redundancy drawn off there will be a speedy over-filling.
+All experience of humanity contradicts
+such forebodings: and, though it would assuredly
+be our duty to make our own generation happier
+than the last, even under the certainty that the
+next must fall back again, it is much more animating
+to believe, as we are justified in doing,
+that every advance is a pledge of a further advance;
+that every taste of comfort, generated to
+the poor man by his own exertions, stimulates
+the appetite for more. It has ever been found
+that, when men have learned to prefer wheaten
+bread to potatoes, it is more likely that their
+children should be taught to seek butchers’ meat
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.83'>83</span>than allowed to fall back to potatoes. The father
+who has worked his way up into a glazed and
+tiled cottage, brings up his children to fear the
+mud hovel in which they were born. If we do
+but apply ourselves to nourish the taste for comfort
+in the poor,—to take for granted the most,
+instead of the least, that they ought to require,
+there is little fear but that, whenever circumstances
+allow, they will fall into our way of
+thinking, and prefer a home of comfort, earned
+by forethought and self-denial, to herding together
+in a state of reckless pauperism. With
+every increase of resources, let a vigorous exertion
+be made to rouse the complacency and exalt
+the tastes of the labouring class, and it will
+assuredly be found, in the interval before a new
+access of labour can be brought into the market,
+that the condition of the class has improved as a
+matter of theory, as well as practice, and that it
+must go hard with them but they will keep it up.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>All experience warrants this statement. There
+can be no question that the preventive check
+has largely superseded the positive in all advancing
+societies. There can be no doubt of the
+increased providence of the middling classes, and
+the enlargement of the domestic requirements of
+the poor, even though wars, famine, and pestilence
+have nearly ceased to make the awful
+vacancies in which the wants and desires of the
+survivors could expand. Though in some unhappy
+districts where the visitations of want have
+extinguished the moral check, multitudes still
+herd together, more like brutes than human
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.84'>84</span>beings, it is certain that there is a larger demand
+among the working classes of England for better
+food, clothing, habitations, and furniture, than
+their fathers thought of requiring. If this has
+taken place notwithstanding all the bad policy,
+public and private, with which we have weakened
+the spirit and the power of independence, there
+is ample reason for confidence in an accelerated
+progress in proportion as public and private influence
+shall work in an opposite direction. Since
+every one can, many will assist in this noble
+work; assured that not a single effort can be
+lost, and that its successful result will extend far
+beyond the present generation. Few are now
+found to advocate that species of prospective
+benevolence which acts by long-reaching pecuniary
+bequests; but it does not follow that
+benevolence may not be prospective. Let it
+extend its view to the remotest ages within ken
+of the human imagination. Let it do this by
+promoting the welfare of the parents of future
+generations;—a wide field enough, if we lived
+but for charity.</p>
+<hr class='c030'>
+
+<div>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_2.85'>85</span>
+ <h3 class='c020'>PART III.</h3>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c021'>The total wealth of society being distributed
+among three classes, according to the principles
+above announced, the next process is the exchange
+of commodities by individuals for purposes of
+individual enjoyment.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>The complication of this process arises chiefly
+from the diversity of production which takes
+place on the earth, occasioning not only a wide
+difference in the amount of labour required to
+produce the same results in different regions, but
+a perpetual variegation and augmentation of commodities,
+which affect the demand, and render
+uncertain the transactions of trade.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>This complication, however, involves no disastrous
+perplexity, unless meddled with by powers
+which bear no relation to it. All commodities
+will declare their own value, and obtain equivalents,
+to the ultimate satisfaction of the exchanging
+parties, if they are left to themselves; but
+when any power, which cannot regulate human
+wants and wishes, interferes to prescribe what
+provision shall be made for those wants and
+wishes, there is not only a certainty that the
+relative values of commodities will be temporarily
+deranged, to the disadvantage of one of the exchanging
+parties, but an uncertainty when the
+natural relation of values will be restored, and
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.86'>86</span>whether disorder will not first spread into every
+other department of exchange. Since human
+labour is the universal commodity which is
+brought to market, to be given and taken under
+all forms, (since capital is only hoarded labour,)
+there is no safety in ticketing any one commodity
+as containing more labour than it naturally includes,
+and thus destroying its balance with the
+rest, to the injury of its seller’s credit, and its
+buyer’s interest. This is what is done by every
+government which presumes to interfere with the
+barter of individuals, or authorizes such interference.
+The duty of government is precisely
+the reverse;—to secure the freedom of exchange
+as carefully as the freedom of labour, in the full
+assurance that it cannot determine relative values
+till it can determine the amount of labour and the
+extent of human wants in every region of the
+earth. This it may do when it has mastered
+the chemical and mechanical constitution of the
+globe, when it may not only gauge the rain
+in every region, but appoint the proportion of
+its fall.</p>
+
+<div class='smaller'>
+
+<p class='c031'>There are two kinds of Value: value in use, and
+value in exchange.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Articles of the greatest value in use may have
+none in exchange: as they may be enjoyed without
+labour; and it is labour which confers exchangeable
+value.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>This is not the less true for capital as well as
+labour being employed in production; for capital is
+hoarded labour.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>When equal quantities of any two articles require
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.87'>87</span>an equal amount of labour to produce them, they
+exchange exactly against one another. If one requires
+more labour than the other, a smaller quantity
+of the one exchanges against a larger quantity
+of the other.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>If it were otherwise, no one would bestow a larger
+quantity of labour for a less return; and the article
+requiring the most labour would cease to be produced.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Exchangeable value, therefore, naturally depends
+on cost of production.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Naturally, but not universally; for there are
+influences which cause temporary variations in exchangeable
+value.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>These are, whatever circumstances affect demand
+and supply. But these can act only temporarily;
+because the demand of any procurable article creates
+supply; and the factitious value conferred by scarcity
+soon has an end.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>When this end has arrived, cost of production
+again determines exchangeable value.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Its doing so may, therefore, stand as a general
+rule.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Though labour, immediate and hoarded, is the
+<i>regulator</i>, it is not the <i>measure</i> of exchangeable
+value; for the sufficient reason, that labour itself
+is perpetually varying in quality and quantity, from
+there being no fixed proportion between immediate
+and hoarded labour.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Since labour, the primary regulator, cannot serve
+as a measure of exchangeable value, none of the
+products of labour can serve as such a measure.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>There is, therefore, no measure of exchangeable
+value.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Such a measure is not needed; as a due regulation
+of the supply of labour, and the allowance of
+free scope to the principle of competition ensure
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.88'>88</span>sufficient stability of exchangeable value for all
+practical purposes.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>In these requisites are included security of property,
+and freedom of exchange, to which political
+tranquillity and legislative impartiality are essential.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Price is the exponent of exchangeable value.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Natural or necessary price,—regulated by cost
+of production,—includes the wages of the labourer,
+and the profits of the capitalist.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Market price varies from natural price with variations
+of demand and supply, and in proportion to
+the oppressiveness of public burdens and commercial
+restrictions.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>The more nearly and permanently market prices
+approach natural prices, the more prosperous is the
+state of commerce; and the two most essential
+requisites to this prosperity are social tranquillity
+and legislative impartiality.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='c031'>The ancient error, that some mysterious quality
+inherent in gold and silver money constituted it
+wealth, almost to the exclusion of every other
+commodity, is now so universally dismissed by all
+who know anything of our science, that there is
+no occasion to controvert it further than by presenting
+the appropriate Summary of Principles;
+and the kindred modern error, that an enlargement
+of its quantity can do more than give a temporary,
+and probably hurtful, stimulus to industry,
+requires now no more than a similar exposure.
+The sense of the country has lately been taken
+on this question; and the result proves that there
+is prevalent a sufficient knowledge of the philosophy
+and fact of the case to encourage a hope
+that no such hazardous sport with the circulating
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.89'>89</span>medium as the country has previously suffered
+from will be again attempted. The fate of the
+Berkeley<a id='rG'></a><a href='#fG' class='c013'><sup>[G]</sup></a> family, in consequence of actions on
+the currency, is only one instance from one class.
+A long series of sad stories might be told of
+sufferers of every rank, whose partial prosperity,
+enjoyed at the expense of one another’s ruin,
+was soon swallowed up in the destruction which
+universally attends a shock to public credit. The
+injured might be found dispersed through every
+dwelling in the land; and, however loudly the
+richer might complain of the magnitude of their
+losses, the most cruelly injured were those who
+had the least opportunity of accounting for their
+gains and their losses, and therefore the least
+power of meeting the pressure of circumstances
+by prudence and forethought.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>To stimulate the production of labour by the
+increase of the circulating medium, the fruits of
+which must be wrested away by an inevitable
+contraction, is a policy whose glory is not to be
+coveted; and surely no statesman will be found
+to adventure it till the last tradition of the consequent
+woes of our working-classes shall have
+died away. By that time, it is probable that the
+danger of such recurrence will be obviated by
+the adoption of some principle of security, which
+will give society the advantage of a free trade in
+money. It must be long before this can take
+place; for it must be long before the values of
+commodities are allowed to adjust themselves;
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.90'>90</span>and money must, from its importance, be very
+cautiously and gradually committed to the equalizing
+influences of the natural laws of demand.
+But, however long it may be, the woes of past
+convulsions will not till then be forgotten. That
+the time of arbitrary interference will, however,
+cease, can scarcely be doubted, if the following
+be true principles.</p>
+
+<div class='smaller'>
+
+<p class='c031'>In exchanging commodities for one another directly,
+that is, in the way of barter, much time is
+lost, and trouble incurred, before the respective
+wants of the exchanging parties can be supplied.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>This trouble and waste may be avoided by the
+adoption of a medium of exchange,—that is, a commodity
+generally agreed upon, which, in order to
+effect an exchange between two other commodities,
+is first received in exchange for the one, and then
+given in exchange for the other.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>This commodity is Money.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>The great requisites in a medium of exchange
+are, that it should be—</p>
+
+<p class='c026'>What all sellers are willing to receive;—</p>
+
+<p class='c026'>Capable of division into convenient portions;—</p>
+
+<p class='c026'>Portable, from including great value in small
+bulk;—</p>
+
+<p class='c026'>Indestructible, and little liable to fluctuations
+of value.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Gold and silver unite these requisites in an unequalled
+degree, and have also the desirable quality
+of beauty; gold and silver have therefore formed
+the principal medium of exchange hitherto adopted;
+usually prepared, by an appointed authority, in the
+form most suitable for the purposes of exchange, in
+order to avoid the inconveniences of ascertaining
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.91'>91</span>the value of the medium on every occasion of purchase.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Where the supply of money is left unrestricted,
+its exchangeable value will be ultimately determined,
+like that of all other commodities, by the
+cost of production.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Where the supply is restricted, its exchangeable
+value depends on the proportion of the demand to
+the supply.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>In the former case, it retains its character of a
+commodity, serving as a standard of value in preference
+to other commodities only in virtue of its
+superior natural requisites to that object.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>In the latter case, it ceases to be a commodity,
+and becomes a mere ticket of transference, or arbitrary
+sign of value; and then the natural requisites
+above described become of comparatively little importance.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>The quality by which money passes from hand
+to hand with little injury enables it to compensate
+inequalities of supply by the slackened or accelerated
+speed of its circulation.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>The rate of circulation serves as an index of the
+state of supply, and therefore tends, where no restriction
+exists, to an adjustment of the supply to
+the demand.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Where restriction exists, the rate of circulation
+indicates the degree of derangement introduced
+among the elements of exchangeable value, but
+has no permanent influence in its rectification.</p>
+
+<hr class='c022'>
+
+<p class='c018'>In proportion as the processes of exchange become
+extensive and complicated, all practicable economy
+of time, trouble, and expense, in the use of a
+circulating medium, becomes desirable.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Such economy is accomplished by making acknowledgment
+of debt circulate in place of the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.92'>92</span>actual payment,—that is, substituting credit, as represented
+by bank paper, for gold money.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>The adoption of paper money saves time, by
+making the largest sums as easily payable as the
+smallest.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>It saves trouble, by being more easily transferable
+than metal money.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>It saves expense, by its production being less
+costly than that of metal money, and by its setting
+free a quantity of gold to be used in other articles
+of production.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>A further advantage of paper money is, that its
+destruction causes no diminution of real wealth, like
+the destruction of gold and silver coin; the one
+being only a representative of value, the other also
+a commodity.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>The remaining requisites of a medium of exchange—viz.,
+that it should be what all sellers are
+willing to receive, and little liable to fluctuations of
+value, are not inherent in paper as they are in metallic
+money.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>But they may be obtained by rendering paper
+money convertible into metallic money, by limiting
+in other ways the quantity issued, and by guarding
+against forgery.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Great evils, in the midst of many advantages,
+have arisen out of the use of paper money, from the
+neglect of measures of security, or from the adoption
+of such as have proved false. Issues of inconvertible
+paper money have been allowed to a large extent,
+unguarded by any restrictions as to the quantity
+issued.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>As the issuing of paper money is a profitable
+business, the issue naturally became excessive
+when the check of convertibility was removed,
+while banking credit was not backed by sufficient
+security.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>The immediate consequences of a superabundance
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.93'>93</span>of money are, a rise of prices, an alteration
+in the conditions of contracts, and a consequent
+injury to commercial credit.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Its ulterior consequences are, a still stronger
+shock to commercial credit, the extensive ruin of
+individuals, and an excessive contraction of the currency,
+yet more injurious than its excessive expansion.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>These evils arise from buyers and sellers bearing
+an unequal relation to the quantity of money in the
+market.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>If all sold as much as they bought, and no more,
+and if the prices of all commodities rose and fell in
+exact proportion, all exchanges would be affected
+alike by the increase or diminution of the supply of
+money. But this is an impossible case; and therefore
+any action on the currency involves injury to
+some, while it affords advantage to others.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>A sudden or excessive contraction of the currency
+produces some effects exactly the reverse of the
+effects of a sudden or excessive expansion. It
+lowers prices and vitiates contracts, to the loss of
+the opposite contracting party.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>But the infliction of reverse evils does not compensate
+for the former infliction. A second action
+on the currency, though unavoidably following the
+first, is not a reparation, but a new misfortune.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Because the parties who are now enriched are
+seldom the same that were impoverished by a
+former change, and <i>vice versâ</i>; while all suffer
+from the injury to commercial credit which follows
+upon every arbitrary change.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>All the evils which have arisen from acting arbitrarily
+upon the currency prove that no such arbitrary
+action can repair past injuries; while it must
+inevitably produce further mischief.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>They do not prove that liability to fluctuation is
+an inherent quality of paper money, and that a metallic
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.94'>94</span>currency is therefore the best circulating medium.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>They do prove that commercial prosperity depends
+on the natural laws of demand and supply being
+allowed to work freely in relation to the circulating
+medium.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>The means of securing their full operation remain
+to be decided upon and tried.</p>
+
+<hr class='c022'>
+
+<p class='c018'>Nations exchange commodities as individuals do,
+for mutual accommodation, each imparting of its
+superfluity to obtain that in which it is deficient.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>The imparting is therefore only a means of obtaining:
+exportation is the means of obtaining importation—the
+end for which the traffic is instituted.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>The importation of money into a country where
+money is deficient is desirable on the same principle
+which renders desirable the supply of any deficient
+commodity.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>The importation of money into a country where
+money is not deficient is no more desirable than it
+is to create an excess of any other commodity.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>That money is the commodity most generally
+bought and sold is no reason for its being a more
+desirable article of importation than commodities
+which are as much wanted in the country which
+imports it.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>That money is the commodity most generally
+bought and sold is a reason for its being the commodity
+fixed upon for measuring the relative
+amounts of other articles of national interchange.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Money bearing different denominations in the
+different trading countries, a computation of the
+relative values of these denominations was made in
+the infancy of commerce, and the result expressed
+in terms which are retained through all changes in
+the value of these denominations.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'><span class='pageno' id='Page_2.95'>95</span>The term by which, in each country, the original
+equal proportion was expressed is adopted as the
+fixed point of measurement, called the par of exchange;
+and any variation in the relative amount
+of the total money debts of trading nations is called
+a variation from par.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>This variation is of two kinds—nominal and real.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>The nominal variation from par is caused by an
+alteration in the value of the currency of any country,
+which, of course, destroys the relative proportion
+of its denominations to the denominations of the
+currency of other countries; but it does not affect
+the amount of commodities exchanged.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>The real variation from par takes place when any
+two countries import respectively more money and
+less of other commodities, or less money and more
+of other commodities.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>This kind of variation is sure to correct itself,
+since the country which receives the larger proportion
+of money will return it for other commodities
+when it becomes a superfluity; and the country
+which receives the smaller proportion of money will
+gladly import more as it becomes deficient.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>The real variation from par can never, therefore,
+exceed a certain limit.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>This limit is determined by the cost of substituting
+for each other metal money and one of its representatives—viz.,
+that species of paper currency
+which is called Bills of Exchange.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>When this representative becomes scarce in proportion
+to commodities, and thereby mounts up to
+a higher value than the represented metal money,
+with the cost of transmission added, metal money
+is transmitted as a substitute for bills of exchange,
+and the course of exchange is reversed, and restored
+to par.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Even the range of variation above described is
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.96'>96</span>much contracted by the operations of dealers in
+bills of exchange, who equalize their value by transmitting
+those of all countries from places where
+they are abundant to places where they are scarce.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>A self-balancing power being thus inherent in
+the entire system of commercial exchange, all apprehensions
+about the results of its unimpeded operation
+are absurd.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<hr class='c022'>
+
+<p class='c018'>The crying philosophers of all times have
+mourned over the pertinacity of men and of
+nations in clinging to errors through all the
+sufferings thence arising; the suffering being
+ascribed to "fate, or Providence, or something,"—to
+any thing rather than to their favourite
+errors. The laughing philosophers cannot
+deny this; but, looking farther, they see that,
+error by error being exploded at length, there is
+no return to that which is clearly seen to be the
+cause of suffering,—unless such an experimental
+brief return as can only serve to confirm the
+truth. Commerce has now been instituted for a
+longer succession of ages than we have any distinct
+knowledge of;—ever since the first root-digger
+exchanged his vegetable food for the
+game of the first sportsman. From that time
+till now, an error has subsisted among all classes
+of exchangers which has caused enough of privation,
+of ill-will, of oppression and fraud, of war,
+pestilence and famine, to justify the tears of a
+long train of crying philosophers. But the error
+has been detected. Philosophers have laid their
+finger upon it; the press has denounced it;
+senates are preparing to excommunicate it; and
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.97'>97</span>its doom is sealed. This error is,—that commerce
+is directly productive. Hence arises the
+belief, that if one party gains by commerce,
+another must lose; and hence have arisen the
+efforts of clansmen to confine their exchanges
+within their own clan; of villagers within their
+own village; of citizens within their own state;
+of a nation within its own empire. Hence it
+arises that the inhabitants of one district have
+been afraid to enjoy the productions of any other
+district, and that they have been doomed by
+their rulers to pine and die in occasional dearth,
+and to quarrel with occasional superabundance
+when they might have had plenty in the one case,
+and an influx of new enjoyments in the other.
+Hence have arisen some of the most humbling
+scenes of human vice which have disgraced the
+species.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>The atrocious practice of wrecking was formerly
+pursued, not only as a method of robbery,
+but as a means of impairing the commercial resources
+of foreigners. There was connivance
+at pilots who ran a rich vessel upon rocks; and
+protection for the country people who gave their
+exertions to destroy instead of to save. If the
+cargo went to the bottom, something was supposed
+to be gained to the country, though those
+who looked upon the disaster were disappointed
+of their plunder. Next came the ridiculous and
+cruel practice of making aliens engaged in commerce
+answerable for the debts and offences of
+each other; and as a kind of set-off against the
+advantages which they were supposed to take
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.98'>98</span>from the people among whom they lived, they
+were compelled to pay much heavier duties than
+natives for all articles of import and export.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>The necessity thus arose for commercial treaties
+which should ensure the safety and proper
+treatment of commercial agents when any two
+powers agreed to exchange good offices. Edward
+II. made an agreement with Venice that its
+merchants and mariners should be permitted, <i>for
+ten years</i>, to come and go, and sell their merchandise
+in security, without having either their
+persons or goods stopped on account of other
+people’s crimes or debts. From the time of such
+partial relaxation,—such narrow openings to a
+foreign trade,—the wants of the multitude of
+each civilized people have forced one after another
+of the barriers raised by national jealousy,
+while all parties remained under the influence of
+the error that commerce is directly productive,
+and of course an advantage to be denied to
+enemies, except when a very hard bargain can
+be driven with them. Perhaps the most curious
+specimens in existence of attempts at mutual
+overreaching, of laborious arrangement to secure
+what must naturally happen, and of an
+expensive and tyrannical apparatus for achieving
+what is impossible, may be found in the commercial
+treaties from the infancy of commerce
+till now. The only idea which never seems to
+have struck the negotiators is, that commerce is
+valuable,—not because production takes place
+in the mere exchange of commodities,—but because
+systematic exchange facilitates the most
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.99'>99</span>extensive division of labour and the closest
+economy of capital,—advantages which must be
+shared by both if experienced by either of the
+exchanging parties. On the same principle that
+the shoemaker makes no hats, and the hatter no
+shoes, and that both find an advantage in supplying
+each other, without any new product
+arising from the mere act of exchange, the
+growers of tea and the makers of hardware respectively
+profit by supplying each other; and
+they can afford to employ an intermediate class,
+the merchants,—to conduct their traffic, since
+they can go on preparing their tea and grinding
+their cutlery, while the process of exchange is
+being transacted. The saving of capital is
+mutual also. It must be mutual and incalculable
+as long as the regions of the earth differ in their
+productions, yielding a superabundance in one
+place of some necessary or comfort which is
+rare in another. No commercial treaty bears
+the least reference to the obvious final purpose
+of all commerce;—that the greatest number shall
+obtain the largest amount of enjoyment at the
+least cost. Such a recognition of the ultimate
+principle would, indeed, be inconsistent with the
+very existence of commercial treaties, except as
+far as they relate to the personal protection of
+traders. But, while the people of each country
+have shown the most decided inclination to obtain
+more and more of what they cannot produce
+at home, the aim of governments, and generally
+of merchants, has been to sell as much as possible
+to other nations; to take from them as
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.100'>100</span>little as possible but money; and to get the
+greatest possible quantity of that. In furtherance
+of this view, money has been taken from
+the people at large, and given to their merchants
+to tempt them to go and sell at a loss, rather
+than not get hold of foreign money; and again,
+money has been exacted from foreigners who
+come to sell their goods in our ports. Nothing
+is gained by this to the nation, as the foreigners
+must be repaid these duties as well as the cost of
+their articles; and it is clear to every observer
+how much is lost to all the parties concerned. Yet
+such is the false principle on which commercial
+treaties have hitherto been founded. This child’s-play
+of universal circumvention is pursued less
+vigorously than it was; and some of the players
+are so tired of the wasteful and wearying sport
+as to be ready to give it up: but, owing to the
+false belief that no one could yield without the rest,
+the absurdity has endured longer than might
+have been expected.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>It was not perceived, till lately, that it is a
+good thing to any nation, as it would be to any
+man, to get what it wants, even if it be compelled
+to pay in money when it had rather pay
+in goods: especially when it is certain, from the
+ascertained self-balancing quality of money, that
+it will soon flow in from some other quarter in
+exchange for the goods wanted to be sold. When
+so plain a truth as this is once experienced, it
+cannot but spread; and fewer examples will be
+henceforth seen of nations keeping themselves
+poor, lest their neighbouring customers should
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.101'>101</span>grow rich. How rapidly such truth runs, when
+once sent off on its career, may be seen from the
+following facts: it being borne in mind that nations
+are educated by the experience of centuries,
+as men are of years.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>In 1703, a commercial treaty was concluded
+between Great Britain and Portugal, which was
+for many years lauded by the British as being in
+the highest degree favourable to the interests of
+her manufacturing classes, at a very slight expense.
+Our woollens were then excluded from
+Portugal. Mr. Methuen, who managed the
+treaty, obtained a free admission for them, in
+return for a concession which was considered a
+mere nothing in comparison with the advantage
+obtained. It was merely promised that port-wine
+should be admitted into Great Britain at
+one-third less duty than French wines. As for
+the woollens, their admission into Portugal duty-free
+was a much greater advantage to the Portuguese
+than to us. They obtained cheap an article
+which they very much wanted, and which we
+were sure of selling in one quarter or another, if
+we could produce it at such a cost as made its
+production worth while. As for the wine,—the
+Portuguese and the British have both been suffering
+ever since for the arbitrary preference
+given to that of Portugal over that of France.
+Portugal has, and has always had, too little capital
+for the capabilities of the country and the
+wants of the people. By the monopoly of the
+British market being given to Portugal, too large
+a proportion of its small capital has been devoted
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.102'>102</span>to the growth of wine, and the whole country is
+in a more backward state than it would have
+been if its capital had been allowed to find its
+own channels. We, meanwhile, lost the French
+market for our woollens, brought upon ourselves
+retaliatory restrictions on other articles, and were
+compelled to drink inferior wine at a greater cost
+than if the trade had been left to itself. France
+grew more pettish; we grew resentful, and raised
+the duties again, and again, and again. Thousands,
+who had been fond of French wines,
+found that they could afford the indulgence no
+longer, and took to port. Thousands more,
+who had drunk port because they could not afford
+French wines, left off drinking wine at all. In
+three years the revenue from the wine-duties fell
+off by more than 350,000<i>l.</i>, while the naturally
+wine-drinking population was increasing. The
+richest of our citizens, to whom the price of wine
+is not a very important consideration, had their
+cause of complaint. Guernsey was all this time
+receiving small quantities of wine, and sending
+out large quantities. A prosperous manufacture
+of wines was carried on there; and no gentleman
+could tell how much sloe-juice, apple-juice, and
+brandy he might be drinking under the name of
+wine. There is no good reason why a day-labourer
+should not drink French wines at his
+dinner instead of beer, if they are equally cheap;
+and no one knows how cheap they might have
+been by this time, if they had been allowed their
+fair chance; and the cheaper, and therefore the
+more abundant, those wines, the larger must be
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.103'>103</span>the quantity of our goods taken by the French in
+exchange. As it is, the Portuguese have profited
+where we meant they should not, and suffered
+where we meant they should be permitted to
+profit. Our Government has suffered a diminution
+of revenue; our rich men have drunk adulterated
+wines; our middling classes have been
+obliged to put up with dear port-wine or none;
+our working classes have been debarred from
+having wine at all, and have been shut out for
+more than a hundred years from one of the largest
+markets where their labour might have found
+its recompense.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Such are some of the consequences of the
+famous Methuen treaty, which was, for a considerable
+length of years, extolled as a model of
+commercial negotiation. These consequences,
+and others which followed similar blunders,
+wrought at length their natural effect upon the
+minds of those primarily interested in the principles
+and methods of commercial policy. On the
+8th of May, 1820, the following petition from
+the merchants of London was presented to the
+House of Commons. It was signed by all the
+principal merchants of London;—a class whose
+opinions on this question could not but be respectfully
+regarded, if they had been announced with
+less dignity and precision than we find in this
+memorable address. The time may and will
+come when its propositions will be regarded as
+a set of truisms scarcely worthy of announcement
+under such circumstances of formality; but
+it should in fairness be remembered in those days
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.104'>104</span>that it was drawn up at the very period when silk
+and tobacco were being smuggled into hundreds
+of creeks along our shores; when bread and wine
+were taxed for purposes of unjust protection at
+home, and wicked oppression abroad; and when
+our houses and ships were being built of bad
+wood at a higher cost than need have been paid
+for the best, in order to favour a colony which,
+after all, would flourish much more through our
+prosperity than at our expense. No change of
+times and convictions can impair the honour due
+to those who concurred in the following petition:—</p>
+
+<div class='smaller'>
+
+<p class='c033'>"To the Honourable the Commons, &#38;c., the Petition
+of the Merchants of the City of London.</p>
+<p class='c034'>"Sheweth,</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>"That foreign commerce is eminently conducive
+to the wealth and prosperity of a country, by
+enabling it to import the commodities for the production
+of which the soil, climate, capital, and
+industry of other countries are best calculated, and
+to export, in payment, those articles for which its
+own situation is better adapted.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>"That freedom from restraint is calculated to give
+the utmost extension to foreign trade, and the best
+direction to the capital and industry of the country.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>"That the maxim of buying in the cheapest
+market, and selling in the dearest, which regulates
+every merchant in his individual dealings, is strictly
+applicable, as the best rule for the trade of the
+whole nation.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>"That a policy founded on these principles would
+render the commerce of the world an interchange
+of mutual advantages, and diffuse an increase of
+wealth and enjoyments among the inhabitants of
+each state.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'><span class='pageno' id='Page_2.105'>105</span>"That, unfortunately, a policy the very reverse of
+this has been and is more or less adopted and acted
+upon by the government of this and every other
+country; each trying to exclude the productions of
+other countries, with the specious and well-meant
+design of encouraging its own productions: thus
+inflicting on the bulk of its subjects, who are
+consumers, the necessity of submitting to privations
+in the quantity or quality of commodities; and thus
+rendering what ought to be the source of mutual
+benefit and of harmony among states, a constantly
+recurring occasion of jealousy and hostility.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>"That the prevailing prejudices in favour of the
+protective or restrictive system may be traced to the
+erroneous supposition that every importation of
+foreign commodities occasions a diminution or discouragement
+of our own productions to the same
+extent; whereas it may be clearly shown, that,
+although the particular description of production
+which could not stand against unrestrained foreign
+competition would be discouraged, yet, as no importation
+could be continued for any length of time
+without a corresponding exportation, direct or indirect,
+there would be an encouragement for the
+purpose of that exportation, of some other production
+to which our situation might be better suited;
+thus affording at least an equal, and probably a
+greater, and certainly a more beneficial, employment
+to our own capital and labour.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>"That of the numerous protective and prohibitory
+duties of our commercial code, it may be proved
+that, while all operate as a very heavy tax on the
+community at large, very few are of any ultimate
+benefit to the classes in whose favour they were
+originally instituted, and none to the extent of the
+loss occasioned by them to other classes.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>"That among the other evils of the restrictive or
+protective system, not the least is that the artificial
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.106'>106</span>protection of one branch of industry or source of
+production against foreign competition, is set up as
+a ground of claim by other branches for similar
+protection; so that, if the reasoning upon which
+these restrictive or prohibitory regulations are
+founded were followed out consistently, it would not
+stop short of excluding us from all foreign commerce
+whatsoever. And the same train of argument,
+which, with corresponding prohibitions and protective
+duties, should exclude us from foreign trade, might
+be brought forward to justify the re-enactment of
+restrictions upon the interchange of productions
+(unconnected with public revenue) among the
+kingdoms composing the union, or among the
+counties of the same kingdom.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>"That an investigation of the effects of the
+restrictive system at this time is peculiarly called
+for, as it may, in the opinion of your petitioners, lead
+to a strong presumption that the distress which now
+so generally prevails is considerably aggravated by
+that system; and that some relief may be obtained
+by the earliest practicable removal of such of the
+restraints as may be shown to be most injurious to
+the capital and industry of the community, and to
+be attended with no compensating benefit to the
+public revenue.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>"That a declaration against the anti-commercial
+principles of our restrictive system is of the more
+importance at the present juncture; inasmuch as,
+in several instances of recent occurrence, the
+merchants and manufacturers of foreign countries
+have assailed their respective governments with
+applications for further protective or prohibitory
+duties and regulations, urging the example and
+authority of this country, against which they are
+almost exclusively directed, as a sanction for the
+policy of such measures. And certainly, if the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.107'>107</span>reasoning upon which our restrictions have been
+defended is worth anything, it will apply in behalf
+of the regulations of foreign states against us.
+They insist on our superiority in capital and
+machinery, as we do upon their comparative exemption
+from taxation; and with equal foundation.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>"That nothing would tend more to counteract
+the commercial hostility of foreign States, than the
+adoption of a more enlightened and more conciliatory
+policy on the part of this country.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>"That although, as a matter of mere diplomacy,
+it may sometimes answer to hold the removal of
+particular prohibitions, or high duties, as depending
+upon corresponding concessions by other states in
+our favour, it does not follow that we should continue
+our restrictions in cases where the desired
+concessions on their part cannot be obtained. Our
+restrictions would not be the less prejudicial to our
+own capital and industry, because other governments
+persisted in preserving impolitic regulations.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>"That, upon the whole, the most liberal would
+prove to be the most politic course on such occasions.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>"That, independent of the direct benefit to be
+derived by this country on every occasion of such
+concession or relaxation, a great incidental object
+would be gained, by the recognition of a sound
+principle or standard, to which all subsequent arrangements
+might be referred; and by the salutary
+influence which a promulgation of such just views,
+by the legislature and by the nation at large, could
+not fail to have on the policy of other states.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>"That in thus declaring, as your petitioners do,
+their conviction of the impolicy and injustice of the
+restrictive system, and in desiring every practicable
+relaxation of it, they have in view only such parts of
+it as are not connected, or are only subordinately so,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.108'>108</span>with the public revenue. As long as the necessity
+for the present amount of revenue subsists, your
+petitioners cannot expect so important a branch of it
+as the customs to be given up, nor to be materially
+diminished, unless some substitute less objectionable
+be suggested. But it is against every restrictive
+regulation of trade, not essential to the revenue,
+against all duties merely protective from foreign
+competition, and against the excess of such duties
+as are partly for the purpose of revenue, and partly
+for that of protection, that the prayer of the present
+petition is respectfully submitted to the wisdom of
+parliament.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>“May it therefore, &#38;c.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='c031'>In order to see how extensively and how
+effectually governments have interfered to
+pervert the natural distribution of the gifts of
+Providence, it would be necessary to review
+almost the whole list of spontaneous and artificial
+productions; for there are few or none whose
+spread has not been arbitrarily stopped in one
+direction or another. What Great Britain
+alone,—the most enlightened of commercial
+countries,—has done in damming up the streams
+of human enjoyment, is fearful to think of. In
+the vineyards of France and Portugal, the grapes
+have been trodden to waste, and the vinedressers’
+children have gone half clothed, because wines
+were not permitted to be brought in, and cottons
+and woollens were thereby forbidden to be
+carried out, at their natural cost. During the
+long series of years that good tea has been a too
+costly drink for many thousands of our population,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.109'>109</span>they would have been glad of the refreshment
+of chocolate, in some of its various preparations,
+if Spain had been permitted to send it to
+us from her colonies as cheap as Spain was
+willing to afford it. But the article has been
+loaded with a duty amounting to from 100 to
+230 per cent.; so that few but the rich could ever
+taste it; and they have been swallowing a
+curious compound of the nut, flour, and Castile
+soap. The silkworms of Italy would have
+wrought as busily for England as for France, if
+England had not been jealous of France, and
+thereby injured her own manufacture. England
+is wiser now, and new myriads of worms are
+hanging their golden balls on the mulberry trees,
+while the neighbouring peasantry are enjoying
+the use of our hardware, and looms are kept busy
+in Spitalfields. Time was when the northern
+nations welcomed our manufactures in return for
+their timber and iron of prime quality: but now,
+the ship and house-builders must pay higher for
+worse wood from Canada; and we have laid
+exorbitant duties on foreign iron, in order to
+encourage mining at home. The good people of
+Sweden and Norway, having nothing to offer us
+but timber and iron, must do without our
+manufactures; and thus are willing nations
+prevented from helping one another. Whatever
+may be thought of the indulgence of opium in
+this country, no one objects to its being used by
+the Hindoo and the Chinese as a stimulus appropriate
+to the climate in which they dwell. If
+we had allowed things to take their natural
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.110'>110</span>course, Persian husbandmen would have tended
+their vast poppy-fields, season by season,
+guarding the delicate plant from the injuries of
+insects, and sheltering it from unfavourable
+winds, while the Chinese and the Hindoos would
+have been busy preparing commodities to
+exchange with the Persian, and all would have
+been made rich enough by their traffic to keep
+British merchant-ships continually going and
+coming to supply their wants. But our India
+Company has chosen to force and monopolize
+the culture of opium. It has beggared and
+enslaved many thousands of reluctant cultivators;
+narrowed the demand; lessened its own revenue,
+year by year, and just lived to see China freely
+supplied with Turkey opium by American
+traders. Thousands of our lowly brethren in
+Hindostan and Ceylon have dropped unnoticed
+out of life because they have not been permitted
+to touch the crisped salt beneath their feet, or to
+pluck the spices which perfume the air they
+breathe. Millions more have sunk at the approach
+of famine, because no labour of theirs was
+permitted to provide them with what might be exchanged
+for food from some neighbouring coast.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>It is difficult to say whether we have injured
+China or Great Britain the most by our extraordinary
+fancy of sending functionaries invested
+at once with political and commercial power into
+a country where commerce is held by far too
+degrading an employment to be associated with
+political functions. This blunder was made by
+our monopolists, who were, but lately, keeping
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.111'>111</span>up a splendid establishment of important personages,
+who were regarded by the Chinese as
+being just above the rank of vagabonds;—no
+more respectable, in their possession of incomes
+graduating from 4000<i>l.</i> to 18,000<i>l.</i> a-year, than
+the American free-traders who turn their backs
+on the Hong merchants, and go into the open
+market, offering their furs with one hand, and
+receiving teas and nankeens with the other,
+cleverly stealing the trade of the British meantime
+with both. What wealth and comfort untold
+might the two vast empires of Britain and
+China have poured into one another by this time,
+if their original jealousies had not been perpetuated
+by English mismanagement! The
+Dutch and the Americans have both smuggled
+large quantities of tea into England, while the
+twelve supercargoes at Canton have been talking
+politics or yawning within the walls of their
+Factory! Truly did the Celestial Emperor say
+to our representatives, “Your good fortune has
+been small! You arrived at the gates of the
+imperial house, and were unable to lift your eyes
+to the face of heaven.” The day of exclusion is,
+however, over. It may be long before we can
+overcome the contempt of the nation, and make
+them forget that some of our politicians were
+traders: but we have the interests of the Chinese
+in our favour. They will import according to
+their needs; more of our weavers and cutlers will
+have money to buy tea with, and they will get
+more tea for their money; and no one can tell
+what new classes of productions may become
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.112'>112</span>common when the messengers of these two
+mighty empires shall go to and fro, and knowledge
+shall be increased.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Such are a few of the specimens which might
+be adduced of the mischiefs wrought in one
+hemisphere by interference with commerce.
+“To all things there cometh an end;” to all unjust
+and foolish things, at least. We are now
+in possession of so ample a stock of experience,
+that the day cannot be far off when all customs
+duties shall be repealed but those which are necessary
+for the purposes of revenue. There will
+be some half-objectors left; some importers who
+will admit the impolicy of protections of all
+articles but the one in which they happen to
+deal. Mr. Huskisson was pathetically appealed
+to to protect green glass bottles; and a last
+struggle may be tried with another minister in
+favour of liquorice or coral beads; but an immense
+majority of every civilised people are
+verging towards a mutual agreement to give, in
+order that to each may be given “full measure,
+pressed down, and shaken together, and running
+over.” Such is the plenty in which God showers
+his gifts among us; and such is the measure in
+which he would have us yield each to the other.</p>
+
+<div class='smaller'>
+
+<p class='c018'>The countries of the world differ in their facilities
+for producing the comforts and luxuries of life.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>The inhabitants of the world agree in wanting or
+desiring all the comforts and luxuries which the
+world produces.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>These wants and desires can be in no degree
+gratified but by means of mutual exchanges. They
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.113'>113</span>can be fully satisfied only by means of absolutely
+universal and free exchanges.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>By universal and free exchange,—that is, by each
+person being permitted to exchange what he wants
+least for what he wants most,—an absolutely perfect
+system of economy of resources is established;
+the whole world being included in the arrangement.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>The present want of agreement in the whole
+world to adopt this system does not invalidate its
+principle when applied to a single nation. It must
+ever be the interest of a nation to exchange what it
+wants little at home for what it wants more from
+abroad. If denied what it wants most, it will be
+wise to take what is next best; and so on, as long
+as anything is left which is produced better abroad
+than at home.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>In the above case, the blame of the deprivation
+rests with the prohibiting power; but the suffering
+affects both the trading nations,—the one being
+prevented getting what it wants most,—the other
+being prevented parting with what it wants least.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>As the general interest of each nation requires
+that there should be perfect liberty in the exchange
+of commodities, any restriction on such liberty, for
+the sake of benefiting any particular class or classes,
+is a sacrifice of a larger interest to a smaller,—that
+is a sin in government.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>This sin is committed when,—</p>
+<p class='c035'>First,—Any protection is granted powerful
+enough to tempt to evasion, producing disloyalty,
+fraud, and jealousy: when,</p>
+
+<p class='c035'>Secondly,—Capital is unproductively consumed
+in the maintenance of an apparatus of restriction:
+when,</p>
+
+<p class='c035'>Thirdly,—Capital is unproductively bestowed
+in enabling those who produce at home dearer
+than foreigners to sell abroad as cheap as
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.114'>114</span>foreigners,—that is, in bounties on exportation:
+and when,</p>
+
+<p class='c035'>Fourthly,—Capital is diverted from its natural
+course to be employed in producing at home
+that which is expensive and inferior, instead
+of in preparing that which will purchase the
+same article cheap and superior abroad,—that
+is, when restrictions are imposed on
+importation.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>But though the general interest is sacrificed, no
+particular interest is permanently benefited, by
+special protections: since</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Restrictive regulations in favour of the few are
+violated, when such violation is the interest of the
+many; and</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Every diminution of the consumer’s fund causes
+a loss of custom to the producer. Again,</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>The absence of competition and deprivation of
+custom combine to make his article inferior and
+dear; which inferiority and dearness cause his trade
+still further to decline.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Such are the evils which attend the protection of
+a class of producers who cannot compete with foreign
+producers of the same article.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>If home producers can compete with foreign producers,
+they need no protection, as, <i>cæteris paribus</i>,
+buying at hand is preferable to buying at a distance.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Free competition cannot fail to benefit all
+parties:—</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Consumers, by securing the greatest practicable
+improvement and cheapness of the article;</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Producers, by the consequent perpetual extension
+of demand;—and</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Society at large, by determining capital to its
+natural channels.</p>
+
+<hr class='c027'>
+
+<p class='c018'><span class='pageno' id='Page_2.115'>115</span>Colonies are advantageous to the mother-country
+as affording places of settlement for her emigrating
+members, and opening markets where her merchants
+will always have the preference over those of other
+countries, from identity of language and usages.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Colonies are not advantageous to the mother-country
+as the basis of a peculiar trade.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>The term “colony trade” involves the idea of
+monopoly; since, in a free trade, a colony bears the
+same relation as any other party to the mother-country.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Such monopoly is disadvantageous to the mother-country,
+whether possessed by the government, as
+a trading party, by an exclusive company, or by all
+the merchants of the mother-country.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>It is disadvantageous as impairing the resources
+of the dependency, which are a part of the resources
+of the empire, and the very material of the trade
+which is the object of desire.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>If a colony is forbidden to buy of any but the mother-country,
+it must do without some articles which
+it desires, or pay dear for them;—it loses the opportunity
+of an advantageous exchange, or makes a
+disadvantageous one. Thus the resources of the
+colony are wasted.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>If a colony is forbidden to sell its own produce to
+any but the mother-country, either the prohibition
+is not needed, or the colony receives less in exchange
+from the mother-country than it might obtain elsewhere.
+Thus, again, the resources of the colony
+are wasted.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>If a colony is forbidden either to buy of or sell to
+any but the mother-country, the resources of the
+colony are wasted according to both the above methods,
+and the colony is condemned to remain a
+poor customer and an expensive dependency.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>In proportion, therefore, as trade with colonies is
+distinguished from trade with other places, by restrictions
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.116'>116</span>on buyers at home, or on sellers in the
+colonies, that trade (involving the apparatus of restriction)
+becomes an occasion of loss instead of gain
+to the empire.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p class='c031'>If restrictive interference be impolitic,—oppressive,—impious,
+between empire and empire,
+it becomes absolutely monstrous when introduced
+among the different classes of the same country.
+The magistrates of a grazing county would do
+ill to prohibit intercourse with the manufacturing,
+and agricultural, and mining districts around;
+but much more oppressive and fatal would be
+the policy of a city corporation which should
+make the resources of the city depend on the
+will of the corn-dealers which it contained.—Such
+has been the policy of the rulers of Britain;
+and side by side with this restriction of the supply
+of food,—this abuse of capital,—may be placed
+the curious perversion of labour which is caused
+not only by the forcing of agriculture at the expense
+of manufactures, but by the existence of
+exclusive and injurious privileges to trading
+corporations, of certain ancient laws respecting
+apprenticeship, and of the iniquitous practice of
+the impressment of seamen.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>The system of restricting the supply of food
+would exhibit as many sins under the head of
+Production as of Distribution. To make an
+ever-increasing population depend on graduating
+soils for its support, is at once to enact that
+either a certain number shall die outright of
+hunger, or that a much larger number shall be
+half-fed; and that, in either, case, waste of capital
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.117'>117</span>must be made in proportion to the inferiority
+of our newly-cultivated soils compared with those
+which might yield us their produce from abroad.
+From this waste arises another and equally destructive
+species of waste in the preparation of
+our manufactured articles. Wages are higher
+than they need be to purchase the same necessaries;
+therefore our manufactured articles are
+higher priced than they need be; therefore they
+have not a fair chance in foreign markets; and
+therefore our ill-fed manufacturing population is
+wronged. Such are some of the evils of a restricted
+trade in corn, considered under the head
+of Production. As for the distribution of this
+prime necessary of life,—the circumstance of its
+being loaded with an artificial cost suggests the
+deplorable scenes and narratives of suffering
+which may be verified in every street of all our
+cities. No arrangement can be more utterly
+unprincipled than that by which a necessary of
+life, of which the richest can scarcely consume
+more than the poorest, is made needlessly expensive.
+We may linger in vain to find a comparison
+to illustrate the iniquity. It is the worst
+possible instance of legislative injustice; and
+when it is considered that this injustice is perpetrated
+for the benefit of a particular class, which
+class is brought by it to the verge of ruin, and
+that the injury spreads to every other class in
+turn, it will be seen that no words can describe
+its folly. Add to this our provisions for diverting
+labour from its natural channels, and for making
+it stagnate in one spot, and it will appear as if
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.118'>118</span>we had yet to learn the rights of labour and the
+uses of capital, or as if we openly defied the one,
+and abused the other. It is not so, however.
+The folly came before the iniquity; and, in cases
+of false legislation, the folly, originating in
+ignorance, must be long perceived and pointed
+out,—i.e. must become iniquity,—before it can
+be remedied. But the remedy is secured from
+the moment that the denunciation goes abroad.
+We have passed through the necessary stages,
+and the issue is at hand. Our grandfathers
+legislated about corn on false principles, through
+ignorance; our fathers clung to these false
+principles in a less innocent state of doubt. We
+have perpetuated them wickedly, knowing their
+disastrous results; and a voice is going up
+through all the land which will almost immediately
+compel their relinquishment.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Very little can be done to improve the condition
+of the people till the Corn Laws are
+repealed. All practicable retrenchments, all
+ordinary reduction of taxation, all reforms in the
+organization of Church and State, important as
+they are, are trifles compared with this. The
+only measure of equal consequence is the reduction
+of the Debt; and this ought to accompany
+or immediately precede the establishment of a
+free trade in corn. Day and night, from week
+to week, from month to month, the nation should
+petition for a free trade in corn, urging how
+landlords, when freed from fluctuation of their revenues,
+will be able to bear their fair proportion of
+the national burdens; how the farmer, no longer
+tempted to a wasteful application of capital, will
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.119'>119</span>cease the so-called ungrateful clamour with which
+he repays legislative protection; how the
+manufacturing class will prosper and will
+multiply our resources when they are allowed the
+benefits of the free competition in which their
+ingenuity qualifies them to hold a distinguished
+place; and how our labourers will be, by one
+comprehensive act, raised, every man of them, a
+grade higher than any laborious, partial legislation
+can raise any one of their classes. An act
+which must, at once, prevent the waste of capital
+and the misapplication of labour, unclog the
+system of manufactures and commerce, and
+obviate the main distresses of our agriculturists,
+must do more for the improvement of our
+revenue, and the union of our nation than all
+less comprehensive measures put together. To
+untax the prime necessary of life is to provide at
+once a prospective remedy for all the worst evils
+of our social arrangements. This will scarcely
+be disputed by those who admit the principles of
+the following summary. It is important that
+such results of these principles should be traced
+out and made familiar to the mind, as it is certain
+that the days of free trading in corn are at
+hand.</p>
+
+<hr class='c027'>
+
+<div class='quote'>
+
+<p class='c018'>As exchangeable value is ultimately determined
+by the cost of production, and as there is an incessant
+tendency to an increase in the cost of producing
+food, (inferior soils being taken into cultivation
+as population increases,) there is a perpetual tendency
+in the exchangeable value of food to rise,
+however this tendency may be temporarily checked
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.120'>120</span>by accidents of seasons, and by improvements in
+agricultural arts.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>As wages rise (without advantage to the labourer)
+in consequence of a rise in the value of food, capitalists
+must either sell their productions dearer than
+is necessary where food is cheaper, or submit to a
+diminution of their profits.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Under the first alternative, the capitalist is incapacitated
+for competition with the capitalists of
+countries where food is cheaper: under the second,
+the capital of the country tends, through perpetual
+diminution, to extinction.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Such is the case of a thickly-peopled country depending
+for food wholly on its own resources.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>There are many countries in the world where
+these tendencies have not yet shown themselves;
+where there is so much fertile land, that the cost
+of producing food does not yet increase; and where
+corn superabounds, or would do so, if there was inducement
+to grow it.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Such inducement exists in the liberty to exchange
+the corn with which a thinly-peopled country may
+abound, for the productions in which it is deficient,
+and with which a populous country may abound.
+While, by this exchange, the first country obtains
+more corn in return for its other productions, and
+the second more of other productions in return for
+its corn, than could be extracted at home, both are
+benefited. The capital of the thickly-peopled country
+will perpetually grow; the thinly-peopled country
+will become populous; and the only necessary
+limit of the prosperity of all will be the limit to the
+fertility of the world.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<hr class='c027'>
+
+<p class='c018'>But the waste of capital caused by raising corn
+dear and in limited quantities at home, when it
+might be purchased cheap and in unlimited quantities
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.121'>121</span>abroad, is not the only evil attending a restriction
+of any country to its own resources of food;
+a further waste of capital and infliction of hardship
+are occasioned by other consequences of such restriction.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>As the demand for bread varies little within any
+one season, or few seasons, while the supply is perpetually
+varying, the exchangeable value of corn
+fluctuates more than that of any article whose return
+to the cost of production is more calculable.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Its necessity to existence causes a panic to arise
+on the smallest deficiency of supply, enhancing its
+price in undue proportion; and as the demand cannot
+materially increase on the immediate occasion
+of a surplus, and as corn is a perishable article, the
+price falls in an undue proportion.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>These excessive fluctuations, alternately wasting
+the resources of the consumers and the producers
+of corn, are avoided where there is liberty to the
+one class to buy abroad in deficient seasons, and to
+the other to sell abroad in times of superabundance.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>It is not enough that such purchase and sale are
+permitted by special legislation when occasion arises,
+as there can be no certainty of obtaining a sufficient
+supply, on reasonable terms, in answer to a
+capricious and urgent demand.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Permanently importing countries are thus more
+regularly and cheaply supplied than those which
+occasionally import and occasionally export; but
+these last are, if their corn-exchanges be left free,
+immeasurably more prosperous than one which is
+placed at the mercy of man and circumstance by
+a system of alternate restriction and freedom.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>By a regular importation of corn, the proper
+check is provided against capital being wasted on
+inferior soils; and this capital is directed towards
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.122'>122</span>manufactures, which bring in a larger return of
+food from abroad than could have been yielded by
+those inferior soils. Labour is at the same time
+directed into the most profitable channels. Any
+degree of restriction on this natural direction of
+labour and capital is ultimately injurious to every
+class of the community,—to land-owners, farming
+and manufacturing capitalists, and labourers.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Labourers suffer by whatever makes the prime
+necessary of life dear and uncertain in its supply,
+and by whatever impairs the resources of their employers.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Manufacturing capitalists suffer by whatever
+tends needlessly to check the reciprocal growth of
+capital and population, to raise wages, and disable
+them for competition abroad.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Farming capitalists suffer by whatever exposes
+their fortunes to unnecessary vicissitude, and tempts
+them to an application of capital which can be rendered
+profitable only by the maintenance of a system
+which injures their customers.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Landowners suffer by whatever renders their revenues
+fluctuating, and impairs the prosperity of
+their tenants, and of the society at large on which
+the security of their property depends.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>As it is the interest of all classes that the supply
+of food should be regular and cheap, and as regularity
+and cheapness are best secured by a free trade
+in corn, it is the interest of all classes that there
+should be a free trade in corn.</p>
+
+<hr class='c027'>
+
+<p class='c018'>The duty of government being to render secure
+the property of its subjects, and their industry being
+their most undeniable property, all interference of
+government with the direction and the rewards of
+industry is a violation of its duty towards its subjects.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'><span class='pageno' id='Page_2.123'>123</span>Such interference takes place when some are
+countenanced by legislation in engrossing labours
+and rewards which would otherwise be open to all;
+as in the case of privileged trading corporations;—</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>When arbitrary means of preparation are dictated
+as a condition of the exercise of industry, and
+the enjoyment of its fruits,—as in the case of the
+apprenticeship law;—</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>When labourers are compelled to a species of
+labour which they would not have chosen,—as in
+the case of the impressment of seamen.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>The same duty—of securing the free exercise of
+industry—requires that companies should be privileged
+to carry on works of public utility which are
+not within the reach of individual enterprise,—as
+in the case of roads, canals, bridges, &#38;c.; and
+also,</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>That the fruits of rare ingenuity and enterprise
+should be secured to the individual,—according to
+the design of our patent law.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>In the first-mentioned instances of interference,
+the three great evils arise of</p>
+
+<p class='c035'>The restraint of fair competition in some cases;</p>
+
+<p class='c035'>The arbitrary increase of competition in other
+cases;</p>
+
+<p class='c035'>The obstruction of the circulation of labour and
+capital from employment to employment,
+and from place to place.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>In the last-mentioned instances of protection,
+none of these evils take place.</p>
+
+<hr class='c027'>
+
+<p class='c018'>The general principles of Exchange are so few
+and obvious that there would be little need to
+enlarge upon them but for their perpetual
+violation. To leave all men free to seek the
+gratification of their wants seems a simple rule
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.124'>124</span>enough; and universal experience has shown,
+not only that wants freely expressed are sure to
+be supplied, generally to the advantage of both
+parties, but that every interference of authority,
+whether to check or stimulate the want,—to
+encourage or discourage the supply, proves an
+aggression on the rights of industry, and an
+eventual injury to all concerned. All that
+governments have to do with the exchanges of
+nations, as of individuals, is to protect their
+natural freedom; and, if a system of indirect
+taxation be the one adopted, to select those
+commodities for duty which are not necessary
+enough to subject the lowest class to this species
+of tax, while they are desirable enough to induce
+others to pay the additional cost. It may be a
+question whether this method of raising revenue
+be wise: there can be no question that a
+government directly violates its duty when it
+grants privileges (real or supposed) to one class
+above another.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>But, it is said, governments have always shown
+more or less of this partiality. May it be confidently
+anticipated that they will ever cease to
+transgress the legitimate bounds of their power?</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Yes; very confidently. Such transgression is
+a feudal barbarism. The feudal system has died
+out in theory; and it is impossible that its
+practical barbarism should long remain. The
+progress of freedom has been continuous and
+accountable, and its consummation is clearly a
+matter of confident prophecy. Sovereigns,
+grand and pretty, individual or consisting of a
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.125'>125</span>small number compacted into a government,
+have first exercised absolute power over the lives,
+properties and liberties of their subjects: this
+despotic grasp has been gradually relaxed, till
+life, property, and liberty have been made to
+depend on law, and not on arbitrary will. Next,
+the law has been improved, from being the agent
+of such arbitrary will, to being the expression of
+a more extended and abstract will. From this
+stage of improvement the progress has been
+regular. The province of rule has been narrowed,
+and that of law has been enlarged.
+Whatever may have been,—whatever may still
+be,—the faults in the methods of making the law,
+the absurdities of the law in some of its parts,
+and its inadequateness as a whole in every
+civilized country, the process of enlargement has
+still gone on, some unjust usurpation being
+abolished, some sore oppression removed from
+time to time, affording a clear prospect of a
+period when every natural and social right shall
+be released from the gripe of irresponsible
+authority. No king now strikes off heads at any
+moment when the fancy may seize him. No
+kings’ councillors now plunder their neighbours to
+carry on their wars or their sports, or are paid
+for their services by gifts of patents and
+monopolies. No parliaments now make laws
+according to the royal pleasure, without consulting
+the people; and, if they are slow to repeal
+some oppressive old laws with which the
+people are disgusted, it is certain that such laws
+could not at this day be proposed. What can
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.126'>126</span>be more eloquent than this language of events?
+What more prophetic than this progression?
+While the agents by which the advance has been
+achieved are multiplied and strengthened,—while
+its final purposes are more clearly revealed, day
+by day, what other expectation can be entertained
+than that it will advance more and more rapidly,
+till the meanest rights of industry shall be at
+length freed from the last aggressions of power?
+Then the humblest labourer may buy his loaf
+and sell his labour in what corner of the earth he
+pleases. Then legislators will no more dream of
+dictating what wine shall be drunk, and what
+fabrics shall be worn, and through what medium
+God’s free gifts must be sought, than they now
+dream of branding a man’s face on account of
+his theology. They will perceive that the office
+of dispensing the bounty of nature is not theirs
+but God’s; and that the agents he has appointed
+are neither kings, parliaments, nor custom-house
+officers, but those ever-growing desires with
+which he has vivified the souls of the haughtiest
+and the lowliest of his children.</p>
+
+<hr class='c036'>
+
+<div>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_2.127'>127</span>
+ <h3 class='c011'>PART IV.</h3>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c037'><span class='sc'>Consumption</span> is of two kinds—productive and unproductive.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>The object of the one is the restoration, with increase,
+in some new form, of that which is consumed.
+The object of the other is the enjoyment of some
+good through the sacrifice of that which is consumed.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>That which is consumed productively is capital,
+re-appearing for future use. That which is consumed
+unproductively ceases to be capital, or any
+thing else: it is wholly lost.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Such loss is desirable, or the contrary, in proportion
+as the happiness resulting from the sacrifice
+exceeds or falls short of the happiness belonging to
+the continued possession of the consumable commodity.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>The total of what is produced is called the gross
+produce.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>That which remains, after replacing the capital
+consumed, is called the net produce.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>While a man produces only that which he himself
+consumes, there is no demand and supply.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>If a man produces more of one thing than he
+consumes, it is for the sake of obtaining something
+which another man produces, over and above what
+he consumes.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Each brings the two requisites of a demand,—viz.,
+the wish for a supply, and a commodity wherewith
+to obtain it.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>This commodity, which is the instrument of
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.128'>128</span>demand, is, at the same time, the instrument of
+supply.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Though the respective commodities of no two
+producers may be exactly suitable to their respective
+wishes, or equivalent in amount, yet, as
+every man’s instrument of demand and supply is
+identical, the aggregate demand of society must
+be precisely equal to its supply.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>In other words, a general glut is impossible.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>A partial glut is an evil which induces its own
+remedy; and the more quickly the greater the evil;
+since, the aggregate demand and supply being
+always equal, a superabundance of one commodity
+testifies to the deficiency of another; and, all exchangers
+being anxious to exchange the deficient
+article for that which is superabundant, the production
+of the former will be quickened, and that of
+the latter slackened.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>A new creation of capital, employed in the production
+of the deficient commodity, may thus remedy
+a glut.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>A new creation of capital is always a benefit to
+society, by constituting a new demand.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>It follows that an unproductive consumption of
+capital is an injury to society, by contracting the
+demand. In other words, an expenditure which
+avoidably exceeds the revenue is a social crime.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>All interference which perplexes the calculations
+of producers, and thus causes the danger of a glut,
+is also a social crime.</p>
+
+<hr class='c027'>
+
+<p class='c018'>It is necessary to the security and advancement
+of a community that there should be an expenditure
+of a portion of its wealth for purposes of defence,
+of public order, and of social improvement.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>As public expenditure, though necessary, is unproductive,
+it must be limited; and as the means
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.129'>129</span>of such expenditure are furnished by the people for
+defined objects, its limit is easily ascertained.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>That expenditure alone which is necessary to defence,
+public order, and social improvement, is justifiable.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Such a direction of the public expenditure can
+be secured only by the public functionaries who
+expend being made fully responsible to the party in
+whose behalf they expend.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>For want of this responsibility, the public expenditure
+of an early age—determined to pageantry,
+war, and favouritism—was excessive, and perpetrated
+by the few in defiance of the many.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>For want of a due degree of this responsibility,
+the public expenditure of an after age—determined
+to luxury, war, and patronage—was excessive, and
+perpetrated by the few in fear of the many, by deceiving
+and defrauding them.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>For want of a due degree of this responsibility,
+the public expenditure of the present age—determined
+chiefly to the sustaining of burdens imposed
+by a preceding age—perpetuates many abuses;
+and though much ameliorated by the less unequal
+distribution of power, the public expenditure is yet
+as far from being regulated to the greatest advantage
+of the many, as the many are from exacting
+due responsibility and service from the few.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>When this service and responsibility shall be
+duly exacted, there will be—</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Necessary offices only, whose duties will be
+clearly defined, fully accounted for, and liberally
+rewarded;—</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Little patronage, and that little at the disposal of
+the people;—</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>No pomp, at the expense of those who can barely
+obtain support;—but</p>
+
+<p class='c018'><span class='pageno' id='Page_2.130'>130</span>Liberal provisions for the advancement of national
+industry and intelligence.</p>
+
+<hr class='c027'>
+
+<p class='c018'>If the above principles be true, a comparison
+of them with our experience will yield very animating
+conclusions. Consumption—that is, human
+enjoyment—is the end to which all the
+foregoing processes are directed. Demand is
+the index of human enjoyment. Every increase
+of capital creates a new demand. Capital is
+perpetually on the increase. To sum up the
+whole, human enjoyment is perpetually on the
+increase. The single exception to this happy
+conclusion is where, as in Ireland, the growth of
+capital is overmatched by the increase of population.
+But even in Ireland (the worst case which
+could be selected) the evil is so partial as to allow
+the good to spread. Though too large a portion
+of the demand comes in the form of a clamour
+for daily food, there is a new and spreading demand
+for a multitude of articles of less necessity.
+Portions of the population are rising to a region
+of higher and wider desires; and if this partial
+elevation has taken place under a most vicious
+political system, there need be no question that
+a more rapid improvement will grow up under
+that wiser and milder government which the civilized
+world will take care that Ireland shall at
+length enjoy. There is something so delightful
+in the review of the multiplication of comforts
+and enjoyments, that it is difficult to turn away
+from it at any time; and never is it more difficult
+than when establishing the moral of hopefulness.
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.131'>131</span>But I have dwelt largely on this happy truth in
+my story of “Briery Creek;” and probably no
+day passes in which my readers do not hear or
+say something about the wonderful improvements
+in art, the variety of new conveniences, and the
+spread downwards of luxuries to which the
+wealthy were formerly believed to have an exclusive
+title. Great as is still the number of those
+who are scorched by God’s vivifying sun, and
+chilled by his fertilizing rain, for want of shelter
+and clothing, the extension of enjoyment has
+kept its proportion (being both cause and effect)
+to the improvement of the subordinate processes.
+With every increase of production, with every
+improvement of distribution, with every extension
+of exchange, consumption has kept pace. The
+only checks it has ever received have arisen out
+of those legislative sins which have wrought, or
+must work, their own destruction.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>As for that species of consumption which has
+been always regarded with the least complacency,—the
+too long unprofitable consumption of government,—nothing
+can be more cheering than
+to mark the changes in its character from an
+early period of our empire till now. Viewed by
+itself, our government expenditure is a mournful
+spectacle enough; but the heaviest of the burdens
+we now bear were imposed by a former age;
+and our experience of their weight is a sufficient
+security against such being ever imposed again.
+We are no longer plundered by force or fraud,
+and denied the redress of a parliament; we are
+no longer hurried into wars, and seduced to tax
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.132'>132</span>our children’s children for their support. The
+sin is now that of omission, and not of perpetration.
+We do not shake off old burdens, or provide
+for public order and social improvement as
+we should; but we do not neglect the one and
+despise the other, as was done in days of old;
+and what is left undone there is a spreading
+movement to effect. The only irreclaimable human
+decree,—that of an enlightened multitude,—has
+gone forth against the abuses of the
+Church and the Law. The Army will follow;
+and there is reason to hope that a force is being
+already nourished which may grapple with the
+gigantic Debt itself. New and noble institutions
+are being demanded from all quarters as
+the natural growth from the renovation of the
+old ones. Religion must yield Education, and
+Law a righteous Penal Discipline. Schools must
+spring up around our churches, and prisons will
+be granted where the law must, if possible, mend
+criminals as effectually as it has hitherto made
+them. In time, we shall find that we have spare
+barracks, which may be converted into abodes of
+science; and many a parade may become an
+exercising place for laborious mechanics instead
+of spruce soldiers. Such are some of the modes
+of public expenditure which the nation is impatient
+to sanction. What further institutions will
+be made to grow out of these, we may hereafter
+learn in the schools which will presently be
+planted wherever families are congregated. All
+that we can yet presume is, that they will be as
+much wiser than ours as our extravagances are
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.133'>133</span>more innocent than the savage pageantries of the
+Henries, the cruel pleasantries of the Charleses,
+and the atrocious policy of the “heaven-born
+Ministers” who figure in our history.</p>
+
+<hr class='c022'>
+
+<p class='c018'>All the members of a society who derive protection
+from its government owe a certain proportion
+of the produce of their labour or capital to the support
+of that government—that is, are justly liable
+to be taxed.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>The proportion contributed should be determined
+by the degree of protection enjoyed—of protection
+to property; for all are personally protected.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>In other words, a just taxation must leave all the
+members of society in precisely the same relation
+in which it found them.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>This equality of contribution is the first principle
+of a just taxation.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Such equality can be secured only by a method
+of direct taxation.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Taxes on commodities are, from their very nature,
+unequal, as they leave it in the choice of the
+rich man how much he shall contribute to the support
+of the state; while the man whose whole income
+must be spent in the purchase of commodities
+has no such choice. This inequality is aggravated
+by the necessity, in order to make these taxes productive,
+of imposing them on necessaries more than
+on luxuries.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Taxes on commodities are further injurious by
+entailing great expense for the prevention of smuggling,
+and a needless cost of collection.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>They could not have been long tolerated, but for
+their quality of affording a convenient method of
+tax paying, and for the ignorance of the bulk of the
+people of their injurious operation.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>The method of direct taxation which best secures
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.134'>134</span>equality is the imposition of a tax on income or on
+property.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>There is so much difficulty in ascertaining, to the
+general satisfaction, the relative values of incomes
+held on different tenures, and the necessary inquisition
+is so odious, that if a tax on the source of
+incomes can be proved equally equitable, it is preferable,
+inasmuch as it narrows the province of
+inquisition.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>There is no reason to suppose that an equitable
+graduation of a tax on invested capital is impracticable;
+and as it would equally affect all incomes
+derived from this investment,—that is, all incomes
+whatsoever,—its operation must be singularly impartial,
+if the true principle of graduation be once
+attained.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>A graduated property-tax is free from all the evils
+belonging to taxes on commodities; while it has not
+their single recommendation—of favouring the subordinate
+convenience of the tax-payer.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>This last consideration will, however, become of
+less importance in proportion as the great body of
+tax-payers advances towards that enlightened agreement
+which is essential to the establishment of a
+just system of taxation.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>The grossest violation of every just principle of
+taxation is the practice of burdening posterity by
+contracting permanent loans, of which the nation
+is to pay the interest.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>The next grossest violation of justice is the transmitting
+such an inherited debt unlessened to posterity,
+especially as every improvement in the arts of
+life furnishes the means of throwing off a portion of
+the national burdens.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>The same rule of morals which requires state-economy
+on behalf of the present generation, requires,
+on behalf of future generations, that no
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.135'>135</span>effort should be spared to liquidate the National
+Debt.</p>
+
+<hr class='c027'>
+
+<p class='c018'>No sign of the times is more alarming,—more
+excusably alarming,—to the dreaders of
+change, than the prevailing unwillingness to pay
+taxes,—except such as, being indirect, are paid
+unawares. The strongest case which the lovers
+of old ways have now to bring in opposition to
+the reforming spirit which is abroad, is that of
+numbers, who enjoy protection of life and property,
+being reluctant to pay for such protection.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>This reluctance is a bad symptom. It tells ill
+for some of our social arrangements, and offers
+an impediment, at the same time, to their rectification;
+and thus gives as much concern to the
+reformers as to the preservers of abuses. This
+eagerness to throw off the burdens of the state
+is a perfectly natural result of the burdens of
+the state having been made too heavy; but it
+does not the less exhibit an ignorance of social
+duty which stands formidably in the way of improvements
+in the arrangement of social liabilities.
+We are too heavily taxed, and the first
+object is to reduce our taxation. Indirect taxes
+are proved to be by far the heaviest, and the
+way to gain our object is therefore to exchange
+indirect for direct taxes, to the greatest possible
+extent. But the direct taxes are those that the
+people quarrel with. What encouragement is
+there for a government to propose a commutation
+of all taxes for one on property, when there
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.136'>136</span>is difficulty in getting the assessed taxes paid?
+How is it to be supposed that men will agree to
+that on a larger scale which they quarrel with
+on a smaller? How can there be a stronger
+temptation offered to our rulers to filch the payment
+out of our raw materials, our tea, our beer,
+our newspapers, and the articles of our clothing?
+The more difficulty there is in raising the supplies,
+the more risk we run of being made to
+yield of our substance in ways that we are unconscious
+of, and cannot check. The less manliness
+and reasonableness we show in being
+ready to bear our just burden, the less chance
+we have of the burden being lightened to the
+utmost. It is more than mortifying to perceive
+that an overburdened nation must, even if it
+had a ministry of sages, submit for a long time
+to pay an enormous tax upon its own ignorance.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Such appears too plainly to be now the case
+with our nation, and with some other nations.
+A party of gentlemen may be found in any town,
+sitting over their wine and foreign fruits, repelling
+the idea of paying a yearly sum to the state,
+and laughing, or staring, when the wisest man
+among them informs them that they pay above
+100 per cent. on the collective commodities
+they use. Tradesmen may be found in every
+village who think it very grievous to pay a house-tax,
+while they overlook the price they have to
+give for their pipe of tobacco and their glass of
+spirit and water. Some noblemen, perhaps,
+would rather have higher tailors’ bills for liveries
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.137'>137</span>than pay so much a head for their servants. As
+long as this is the case,—as long as we show
+that we prefer paying thirty shillings with our
+eyes shut to a guinea with our eyes open, how
+can we expect that there will not be hands ready
+to pocket the difference on the way to the Treasury;
+and much disposition there to humour us
+in our blindness?</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>The cry for retrenchment is a righteous cry;
+but all power of retrenchment does not lie with
+the Government. The Government may do
+much; but the people can do more, by getting
+themselves taxed in the most economical, instead
+of the most wasteful, manner. It is a good
+thing to abolish a sinecure, and to cut down the
+salary of a bishop or a general; but it is an immeasurably
+greater to get a direct tax substituted
+for one on cider or paper. All opposition to the
+principle of a direct tax is an encouragement to
+the appointment of a host of excisemen and
+other tax-gatherers, who may, in a very short
+time, surpass a bench of bishops and a long gradation
+of military officers in expensiveness to the
+people. It is time for the people to take care
+that the greater retrenchments are not hindered
+through their mistakes, while they are putting
+their whole souls into the demand for the lesser.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Such mistakes are attributable to the absence
+of political knowledge among us; and the consequences
+should be charged, not to individuals,
+but to the State, which has omitted to provide
+them with such knowledge. The bulk of the
+people has yet to learn that, being born into a
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.138'>138</span>civilized society, they are not to live by chance,
+under laws that have been made they know not
+why nor how, to have a portion of their money
+taken from them by people they have nothing to
+do with, so that they shall be wise to save as
+much as they can from being so taken from them.
+This is the view which too large a portion of us
+take of our social position, instead of understanding
+that this complicated machine of society has
+been elaborated, and must be maintained, at a
+great expense; that its laws were constructed
+with much pains and cost; that under these laws
+capital and labour are protected and made productive,
+and every blessing of life enhanced; and
+that it is therefore a pressing obligation upon every
+member of society to contribute his share towards
+maintaining the condition of society to which he
+owes his security and social enjoyment. When
+this is understood,—when the lowest of our labourers
+perceives that he is, as it were, the member
+of a large club, united for mutual good,—none
+but rogues will think of shirking the payment
+of their subscription-money, or resist any
+particular mode of payment before the objections
+to it have been brought under the consideration
+of the Committee, or after the Committee has
+pronounced the mode to be a good one. They
+will watch over the administration of the funds;
+but they will manfully come forward with their
+due contributions, and resent, as an insult upon
+their good sense, all attempts to get these contributions
+from them by indirect means.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Till they are enabled thus to view their own
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.139'>139</span>position, it is not wonderful, however deplorable,
+that they should quarrel with a just tax because
+it is unequally imposed, ascribing to the principle
+the faults committed in its application. This
+is the less surprising too, because their teeth
+have been set on edge by the sour grapes with
+which their fathers were surfeited. A lavish expenditure
+and accumulating debt have rendered
+odious the name and notion of every tax under
+heaven. Great allowance must be made for the
+effects of such ignorance and such irritation.
+Let the time be hastened when a people, enlightened
+to its lowest rank, may behold its
+meanest members heard with deference instead
+of treated with allowance, if they shall see reason
+for remonstrance in regard to their contributions
+to the state! When they once know what is the
+waste in the department of the Customs, and
+the oppression and fraud in that of the Excise,—what
+are the effects of taxes on raw produce,
+and on the transfer of property, and how multiplied
+beyond all decency are the burdens of
+local taxation, they will value every approach
+towards a plan of direct levy, and will wonder at
+their own clamour about the house and window
+taxes, (except as to their inequality of imposition,)
+while so many worse remained unnoticed.
+I shall attempt to exhibit the effects on industry
+and happiness of our different kinds of taxes in
+a few more tales; and I only wish I had the
+power to render my picture of a country of untaxed
+commodities as attractive in fiction as I
+am sure it would be in reality. Meantime, I
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.140'>140</span>trust preparation will be making in other quarters
+for imparting to the people those political
+principles which they desire to have for guides
+in these stirring times, when every man must
+act: those principles which will stimulate them
+at once to keep watch over the responsibilities
+of their rulers, and to discharge their own.</p>
+
+<hr class='c027'>
+
+<p class='c018'>What, then, is the moral of my fables? That
+we must mend our ways and be hopeful;—or, be
+hopeful and mend our ways. Each of these
+comes of the other, and each is pointed out by
+past experience to be our duty, as it ought to
+be our pleasure. Enough has been said to prove
+that we must mend our ways: but I feel as if
+enough could never be said in the enforcement
+of hopefulness. When we see what an advance
+the race has already made, in the present infant
+stage of humanity,—when we observe the differences
+between men now living,—it seems absolute
+impiety to doubt man’s perpetual progression,
+and to question the means. The savage who
+creeps into a hollow tree when the wind blows
+keen, satisfying his hunger with grubs from the
+herbage, and the philosopher who lives surrounded
+by luxury which he values as intellectual food,
+and as an apparatus for securing him leisure to
+take account of the stars, and to fathom the uses
+of creation, now exist before our eyes,—the one
+a finished image of primeval man; the other a
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.141'>141</span>faint, shadowy outline of what man may be.—Why
+are these men so unlike? By observing
+every gradation which is interposed, an answer
+may be obtained.—They are mainly formed by
+the social circumstances amidst which they live.
+All other differences,—of bodily colour and form,
+and of climate,—are as nothing in comparison.
+Wherever there is little social circumstance,
+man remains a savage, whether he be dwarfed
+among the snows of the Pole, or stretches his
+naked limbs on the hot sands of the desert, or
+vegetates in a cell like Caspar Hauser. Where-ever
+there is much social circumstance, man becomes
+active, whether his activity be for good or
+for evil. In proportion as society is so far naturally
+arranged as that its relations become multitudinous,
+man becomes intellectual, and in certain
+situations and in various degrees, virtuous
+and happy. Is there not yet at least one other
+stage, when society shall be <i>wisely</i> arranged, so
+that all may become intellectual, virtuous, and
+happy; or, at least, so that the exceptions shall
+be the precise reverse of those which are the rare
+instances now? The belief is irresistible.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>There has been but one Socrates, some say;
+and he lived very long ago.—Who knows that
+there has been but one Socrates? Which of us
+can tell but that one of our forefathers, or some
+of ourselves, may have elbowed a second or a
+tenth Socrates in the street, or passed him in the
+church aisle? His philosophy may have lain
+silent within him. Servitude may have chained
+his tongue; hunger may have enfeebled his
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.142'>142</span>voice; he may have been shut up in the Canton
+Factory, or crushed under a distraint for poor-rates
+or tithes. Till it has been known how many
+noble intellects have been thus chained and silenced,
+let no one venture to say that there has
+been but one Socrates.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Supposing, however, that there has been but
+one, does it follow that the world has gone back,
+or has not got forward since his day? To judge
+of the effect of social institutions on character
+and happiness, we must contemplate a nation,
+and not the individual the most distinguished of
+that nation. What English artisan would change
+places with the Athenian mechanic of the days
+of Socrates, in respect of external accommodation?
+What English artisan has not better
+things to say on the rights of industry, the duties
+of governments, and the true principle of
+social morals, than the wisest orator among the
+Greek mechanics in the freest of their assemblies?
+It is true that certain of our most refined
+and virtuous philosophers are engaged
+nearly all day in servile labour, and that they
+wear patched clothes, and would fain possess
+another blanket. This proves that our state of
+society is yet imperfect; but it does not prove
+that we have not made a prodigious advance.
+Their social qualifications, their particular services,
+have not been allowed due liberty, or received
+their due reward; but the very circumstance
+of such men being found among us,
+banded together in the pursuit of good, is a sufficient
+test of progress, and earnest of further
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.143'>143</span>advancement. Such men are not only wiser, and
+more prosperous in their wisdom, than they were
+likely to have been while building a house for
+Socrates, or making sandals for Xantippe, but
+they have made a vast approach towards being
+employed according to their capacities, and rewarded
+according to their works,—that is, towards
+participating in the most perfect conceivable
+condition of society.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>When, till lately, has this condition of society
+been distinctly conceived of,—not as an abstract
+good, to be more imagined than expected,—but
+as a natural, inevitable consequence of labour
+and capital, and their joint products, being left
+free, and the most enlightened intellect having,
+in consequence, an open passage left accessible,
+by which it might rise to an influential rank?
+Such a conception as this differs from the ancient
+dreams of benevolent philosophers, as the astronomer’s
+predictions of the present day differ from
+the ancient mythological fables about the stars.
+The means of discernment are ascertained—are
+held in our hands. We do not presume to calculate
+the day and hour when any specified amelioration
+shall take place; but the event can be
+intercepted only by such a convulsion as shall
+make heaven a wreck and earth a chaos. In no
+presumption of human wisdom is this declaration
+pronounced. Truth has one appropriate organ,
+and principles are that organ; and every principle
+on which society has advanced makes the
+same proclamation. Each has delivered man
+over to a nobler successor, with a promise of
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2.144'>144</span>progression, and the promise has never yet been
+broken. The last and best principle which
+has been professed, if not acted upon, by our
+rulers, because insisted on by our nation, is
+“the greatest happiness of the greatest number.”
+Was there ever a time before when a
+principle so expanding and so enduring as this
+was professed by rulers, because insisted on by
+the ruled? While this fact is before our eyes,
+and this profession making music to our ears,
+we can have no fears of society standing still,
+though there be brute tyranny in Russia, and
+barbarian folly in China, and the worst form of
+slavery at New Orleans, and a tremendous pauper
+population at the doors of our own homes.
+The genius of society has before transmigrated
+through forms as horrid and disgusting as these.
+The prophecy which each has been made to give
+out has been fulfilled: therefore shall the heaven-born
+spirit be trusted while revealing and announcing
+at once the means and the end—<span class='fss'>THE
+EMPLOYMENT OF ALL POWERS AND ALL MATERIALS,
+THE NATURAL RECOMPENSE OF ALL ACTION,
+AND THE CONSEQUENT ACCOMPLISHMENT
+OF THE HAPPINESS OF THE GREATEST NUMBER,
+IF NOT OF ALL</span>.</p>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+<div class='nf-center c023'>
+ <div>THE END.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+<div class='nf-center c038'>
+ <div>London: Printed by W. Clowes, Duke-street, Lambeth.</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+<div class='nf-center c038'>
+ <div>Footnotes</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<hr class='c039'>
+<div class='footnote' id='fA'>
+<p class='c001'><a href='#rA'>A</a>. Lest there should be any man, woman, or child in
+England, who requires to be reminded of the fact, we
+mention that our national debt amounts at present to
+800,000,000<i>l.</i>, and that the annual interest upon it is
+28,000,000<i>l.</i></p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='fB'>
+<p class='c018'><a href='#rB'>B</a>. <span class='sc'>Property</span> is held by conventional, not natural,
+right.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>As the agreement to hold man in property never
+took place between the parties concerned, i. e., is not
+conventional, man has no right to hold man in
+property.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'><span class='sc'>Law</span>, i. e., the sanctioned agreement of the parties
+concerned, secures property.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Where one of the parties under the law is held
+as property by another party, the law injures the
+one or the other as often as they are opposed. More-over,
+its very protection injures the protected party:
+as when a rebellious slave is hanged.</p>
+
+<hr class='c022'>
+
+<p class='c018'>Human labour is more valuable than brute labour,
+only because actuated by reason; for human
+strength is inferior to brute strength.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>The origin of labour, human and brute, is the
+will.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>The reason of slaves is not subjected to exercise,
+nor their will to more than a few weak motives.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>The labour of slaves is therefore less valuable than
+that of brutes, inasmuch as their strength is inferior;
+and less valuable than that of free labourers,
+inasmuch as their reason and will are feeble and
+alienated.</p>
+
+<hr class='c022'>
+
+<p class='c018'>Free and slave labour are equally owned by the
+capitalist.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>When the labourer is not held as capital, the capitalist
+pays for labour only.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>When the labourer is held as capital, the capitalist
+not only pays a much higher price for an equal
+quantity of labour, but also for waste, negligence,
+and theft, on the part of the labourer.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Capital is thus sunk which ought to be reproduced.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>As the supply of slave labour does not rise and
+fall with the wants of the capitalist, like that of free
+labour, he employs his occasional surplus on works
+which could be better done by brute labour or machinery.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>By rejecting brute labour, he refuses facilities for
+convertible husbandry, and for improving the labour
+of his slaves by giving them animal food.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>By rejecting machinery, he declines the most
+direct and complete method of saving labour.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Thus, again, capital is sunk which ought to be
+reproduced.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>In order to make up for this loss of capital to
+slave-owners, bounties and prohibitions are granted
+in their behalf by government; the waste committed
+by certain capitalists abroad being thus paid for
+out of the earnings of those at home.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Sugar being the production especially protected,
+every thing is sacrificed by planters to the growth
+of sugar. The land is exhausted by perpetual cropping,
+the least possible portion of it is tilled for food,
+the slaves are worn out by overwork, and their numbers
+decrease in proportion to the scantiness of their
+food and the oppressiveness of their toil.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>When the soil is so far exhausted as to place the
+owner out of reach of the sugar-bounties, more food
+is raised, less toil is inflicted, and the slave population
+increases.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Legislative protection, therefore, not only taxes
+the people at home, but promotes ruin, misery, and
+death, in the protected colonies.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>A free trade in sugar would banish slavery altogether,
+since competition must induce an economy
+of labour and capital; i. e., a substitution of free for
+slave labour.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Let us see then what is the responsibility of the
+legislature in this matter.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>The slave system inflicts an incalculable amount
+of human suffering, for the sake of making a wholesale
+waste of labour and capital.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>Since the slave system is only supported by legislative
+protection, the legislature is responsible for
+the misery caused by direct infliction, and for the
+injury indirectly occasioned by the waste of labour
+and capital.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='fC'>
+<p class='c018'><a href='#rC'>C</a>. It is well known that there are persons in this
+country, as in France and elsewhere, who hold the opinion
+that the evils of unequal distribution would be annihilated
+by annihilating the distinctions of rent, profits,
+and wages; making the whole society the sole landowner
+and capitalist, and all its members labourers. It
+is impossible to doubt the benevolent intentions of the
+leading preachers of this doctrine, whose exertions have
+originated in sympathy with the most-suffering portion
+of the community; but it is equally impossible to their
+opponents to allow that any arbitrary arrangements
+of existing resources can exclude want, while the primary
+laws of proportion are left uncontrolled. When
+the advocates of a common stock can show that their
+system augments capital and regulates population more
+effectually than the system under which individual property
+is held, their pretensions will be regarded with
+more favour than they have hitherto engaged. At present,
+it is pretty evident that in no way is capital so
+little likely to be taken care of as when it belongs to
+every body,—<i>i.e.</i> to nobody; and that, but for the barriers
+of individual rights of property, the tide of population
+would flow in with an overwhelming force. There
+may be an age to come when the institution of property
+shall cease with the occasions for it; but such an age
+is barely within our ken. Meantime, our pauper system
+exhibits the consequences of a promise of maintenance
+without a restriction of numbers by the state. If it
+were possible now to establish common-stock institutions
+which should include the entire community, they would
+soon become so many workhouses, or pauper barracks.
+If any one doubts this, let him ask himself how capital
+is to be husbanded and cherished when it is nobody’s
+interest to take care of it, and how population is to be
+regulated when even the present insufficient restraints
+are taken away. If education is to supply the deficiency
+of other stimuli and restraints, let us have education in
+addition. We want it enough as an addition before we
+can think of trying it as a substitution. We must see
+our fathers of families exemplary in providing for their
+own offspring before they can be trusted to labour and
+deny themselves from an abstract sense of duty. As for
+the main principle of the objections to the abolition of
+proprietorship, it is contained in the following portion
+of one of my summaries of principles:—</p>
+
+<div class='larger'>
+
+<p class='c018'>It is supposed by some that these tendencies to
+the fall of wages and profits may be counteracted
+by abolishing the distinctions of shares, and casting
+the whole produce of land, capital, and labour, into
+a common stock. But this is a fallacy.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>For, whatever may be the saving effected by an
+extensive partnership, such partnership does not
+affect the natural laws by which population increases
+faster than capital. The diminution of the returns
+to capital must occasion poverty to a multiplying
+society, whether those returns are appropriated by
+individuals under the competitive system, or equally
+distributed among the members of a co-operative
+community.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>The same checks to the deterioration of the resources
+of society are necessary under each system.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>These are, (in addition to the agricultural improvements
+continually taking place,)—</p>
+
+<p class='c026'>1. The due limitation of the number of consumers.</p>
+
+<p class='c026'>2. The lightening of the public burdens, which
+at present abstract a large proportion of
+profits and wages.</p>
+
+<p class='c026'>3. A liberal commercial system which shall
+obviate the necessity of bringing poor soils
+into cultivation.</p>
+
+</div>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='fD'>
+<p class='c018'><a href='#rD'>D</a>. If a rebuke were needed for despondency respecting
+the prospects of society, it might be found in the experience
+of the change which a few months have wrought in
+the popular convictions as to the true direction of charity.
+Fifteen months ago, it required some resolution to give
+so much pain to kind hearts as was occasioned by such
+exposures as those contained in “Cousin Marshall,” and
+yet more to protest against poor-laws for Ireland. The
+publications of the Poor-Law Commissioners have since
+wrought powerfully in the right direction. Conviction
+has flashed from mind to mind; and now we hear from
+all quarters of Provident and Friendly Societies, of Emigration,
+of parish struggles for the rectification of abuses,
+of the regulation of workhouses, the shutting up of soup
+and blanket charities, and the revision of charitable constitutions,
+with a view to promote the employment of
+labour rather than the giving of alms. The extent of
+the change of opinion in the same time with regard to
+poor-laws for Ireland is scarcely less remarkable. On
+no subject has mistake been more prevalent, and never
+has it more rapidly given way before the statement of
+principles and facts. The noblest charity, after all,
+would be a provision for the regular statement, in a
+popular form, of principles and facts of like importance.
+When shall we have a Minister of Public Instruction
+who will be the angel of this new dispensation? It is for
+the people to say when.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='fE'>
+<p class='c018'><a href='#rE'>E</a>. It is incumbent on me to advert to the ill-success
+of one method of supplying labour to the Australian
+colonies, which I have represented in much too favourable
+a light in my tale of “Homes Abroad.” I find that,
+though I have pointed out (pp. 54, 55) the leading
+objections to the plan of indenturing servants to colonial
+settlers, I have represented the issue of such an experiment
+as more prosperous than it has been proved in fact.
+The true state of the case will be learned from the
+following extract from “Papers relating to the Crown
+Lands and Emigration to New South Wales,” printed
+by order of the House of Commons, October, 1831.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>"The Emigrant, in the cases to which we allude, has
+bound himself, previously to his departure from this
+country, to serve his employer for a time at wages which,
+though higher than those which he could have obtained
+at home, were much below the ordinary rate in the
+colony. No attempt has been made to render the
+advantage obtained by the employer in this manner an
+equivalent for the expense he has incurred in carrying
+out the Emigrants; and it can scarcely be doubted that
+in many instances the bargain, if strictly adhered to,
+would have been more than reasonably profitable to the
+employer. Indeed it has been the principal fault of
+these arrangements that the engagement of the Emigrant
+has not been on either side regarded as a mere undertaking
+to repay the expense incurred in his conveyance;
+and hence he has often been led to look upon the transaction
+as a disadvantageous hiring of himself, into which
+he had been misled by his ignorance of the circumstances
+of the place to which he was going. This has been the
+frequent cause of discontent on the part of indentured
+servants; and their masters, unable to derive any
+advantage from unwilling labourers, have found it more
+for their interest to discharge these servants than to
+insist on the right conveyed by their bond. It is obvious
+that no increased severity in the legal enactments for the
+protection of contracts could prevent those which we
+have described from being thus dissolved; for they have
+been so, not from any insufficiency in the obligations by
+which the Emigrants have been bound, but from the
+impossibility of rendering such obligations worth preserving,
+where one of the parties strongly desires them
+to be cancelled."—pp. 21, 22.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>These objections apply only to cases of <i>binding</i> for more
+than the repayment of the expenses of removal to the
+colony. Next to the education of the people at home,
+there is no way in which charity can now operate so
+beneficially as in making loans, under security of repayment,
+to enable working men, and yet more working
+<i>women</i>, to transport themselves to our Australian colonies;
+and by diffusing, as widely as possible, <i>correct</i> information
+respecting the condition and prospects of emigrants
+to our North American colonies. This correct information,
+which is to the last degree interesting, may be
+obtained from the Papers above referred to, and the
+“Reports of the Emigration Commissioners, for 1832;
+printed by order of the House of Commons.” Every
+active philanthropist ought to possess himself of the
+contents of these papers. The Report, dated 1832,
+contains the following.</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>“Before we close this account of our proceedings
+regarding New South Wales and Van Diemen’s Land,
+we must observe that the value of that which has been
+accomplished cannot be justly estimated by a mere
+reference to the number already gone out. The general
+scope and tendency of our measures must be taken into
+account, as well as the importance, in an endeavour to
+direct emigration to a quarter comparatively new, of
+having succeeded in making a <i>commencement</i>. For, after
+the impulse has once been given towards countries really
+adapted to emigration, the letters of the settlers themselves,
+more perhaps than the most elaborate statements
+from authority, serve to maintain and propagate the
+disposition to resort to the same quarter. Although,
+therefore, the measures that have been adopted this year
+may be limited in their immediate influence, and it may
+be also impossible to predict with certainty their ulterior
+results, yet, at least, they are of such a nature that, if
+successful, they may serve as the foundation of a system
+sufficient for many years to prevent the progress of the
+Australian colonies from being retarded by the want of
+an industrious population adequate to the development
+of their resources.” (p. 6.) And the mother-country, we
+may add, from being impeded, by an over-crowded population
+at home, in her efforts to exalt the social and
+moral condition of her mighty family.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='fF'>
+<p class='c018'><a href='#rF'>F</a>. See Homes Abroad.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='fG'>
+<p class='c018'><a href='#rG'>G</a>. Berkeley the Banker.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class='pbb'>
+ <hr class='pb c000'>
+</div>
+<p class='c018'><a id='endnote'></a></p>
+<div class='tnotes'>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+<div class='nf-center c023'>
+ <div><span class='large'>Transcriber’s Note</span></div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c018'>Hyphens appearing on a line or page break have been removed if the
+preponderance of other occurrences are unhyphenated. Those words
+occurring midline are retained regardless of other occurrences.
+The following variants were retained: land-owner(2), day-light(1),</p>
+
+<p class='c018'>On some occasions, a word spans a line break, but the hyphen itself
+has gone missing. These fragments are joined appropriately without further
+notice here.</p>
+
+<p class='c031'>Errors deemed most likely to be the printer’s have been corrected, and
+are noted here. The references are to the page and line in the original.</p>
+
+<table class='table1'>
+<colgroup>
+<col class='colwidth12'>
+<col class='colwidth69'>
+<col class='colwidth18'>
+</colgroup>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c040' colspan='3'>THE FARRERS OF BUDGE-ROW.</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c041' colspan='3'>&#160;</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c042'><a id='c_1.15.14'></a><a href='#corr1.15.14'>1.15.14</a></td>
+ <td class='c042'>of which she had this afternoon heard.[”]</td>
+ <td class='c041'>Removed.</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c042'><a id='c_1.44.15'></a><a href='#corr1.44.15'>1.44.15</a></td>
+ <td class='c042'>[“]Some other improvements</td>
+ <td class='c041'>Added.</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c042'><a id='c_1.69.14'></a><a href='#corr1.69.14'>1.69.14</a></td>
+ <td class='c042'>for which t[k/h]e people</td>
+ <td class='c041'>Replaced.</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c042'><a id='c_1.78.29'></a><a href='#corr1.78.29'>1.78.29</a></td>
+ <td class='c042'>Jane’s en[t]rance had baffled her calculations</td>
+ <td class='c041'>Inserted.</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c042'><a id='c_1.85.32'></a><a href='#corr1.85.32'>1.85.32</a></td>
+ <td class='c042'>to each burner.[”]</td>
+ <td class='c041'>Removed.</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c042'><a id='c_1.126.32'></a><a href='#corr1.126.32'>1.126.32</a></td>
+ <td class='c042'>before he calls you t[o] another!</td>
+ <td class='c041'>Restored.</td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+</div>
+
+<div style='text-align:center'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 76102 ***</div>
+ </body>
+ <!-- created with ppgen.py 3.57e on 2025-05-01 15:18:36 GMT -->
+</html>
+
diff --git a/76102-h/images/cover.jpg b/76102-h/images/cover.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..a1cda4e
--- /dev/null
+++ b/76102-h/images/cover.jpg
Binary files differ