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authorRoger Frank <rfrank@pglaf.org>2025-10-15 02:35:55 -0700
committerRoger Frank <rfrank@pglaf.org>2025-10-15 02:35:55 -0700
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+<div lang="en" class="tei tei-text" style="margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em" xml:lang="en">
+ <div class="tei tei-front" style="margin-bottom: 6.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">
+ <div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 5.00em; margin-top: 5.00em">
+ <div id="pgheader" class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 4.00em; margin-top: 4.00em"><div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em"><p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 2.00em">The Project Gutenberg EBook of Principles Of Political Economy by William Roscher</p></div><div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em"><p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost
+ and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it,
+ give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project
+ Gutenberg License <a href="#pglicense" class="tei tei-ref">included with this
+ eBook</a> or online at <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/license" class="tei tei-xref">http://www.gutenberg.org/license</a></p></div><pre class="pre tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">Title: Principles Of Political Economy
+
+Author: William Roscher
+
+Release Date: January 4, 2009 [Ebook #27698]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: UTF-8
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL ECONOMY***
+</pre></div>
+ </div>
+ <div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 5.00em; margin-top: 5.00em">
+
+ </div>
+
+ <hr class="page" /><div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 5.00em; margin-top: 5.00em">
+ <p class="tei tei-p" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 1.73em"><span style="font-size: 173%">Principles Of Political Economy</span></p>
+ <p class="tei tei-p" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 1.20em"><span style="font-size: 120%">By</span></p>
+ <p class="tei tei-p" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 1.73em"><span style="font-size: 173%">William Roscher,</span></p>
+ <p class="tei tei-p" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 1.00em">Professor of Political Economy at the University of Leipzig,</p>
+ <p class="tei tei-p" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 1.00em">Corresponding Member of the Institute of France,</p>
+ <p class="tei tei-p" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 1.00em">Privy Counsellor To His Majesty,</p>
+ <p class="tei tei-p" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 1.00em">The King Of Saxony.</p>
+ <p class="tei tei-p" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 1.20em"><span style="font-size: 120%">From the Thirteenth (1877) German Edition.</span></p>
+ <p class="tei tei-p" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 1.20em"><span style="font-size: 120%">With Additional Chapters Furnished By The Author,</span></p>
+ <p class="tei tei-p" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 1.20em"><span style="font-size: 120%">For This First English And American Edition,</span></p>
+ <p class="tei tei-p" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 1.20em"><span style="font-size: 120%">On Paper Money, International Trade,</span></p>
+ <p class="tei tei-p" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 1.20em"><span style="font-size: 120%">And The Protective System;</span></p>
+ <p class="tei tei-p" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 1.00em">And A Preliminary Essay</p>
+ <p class="tei tei-p" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 1.20em"><span style="font-size: 120%">On The Historical Method In Political Economy</span></p>
+ <p class="tei tei-p" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 1.00em">(From the French)</p>
+ <p class="tei tei-p" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 1.20em"><span style="font-size: 120%">By</span></p>
+ <p class="tei tei-p" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 1.20em"><span style="font-size: 120%">L. Wolowski</span></p>
+ <p class="tei tei-p" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 1.00em">The Whole Translated By</p>
+ <p class="tei tei-p" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 1.44em"><span style="font-size: 144%">John J. Lalor, A. M.</span></p>
+ <p class="tei tei-p" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 1.20em"><span style="font-size: 120%">Vol. I.</span></p>
+ <p class="tei tei-p" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 1.00em">New York:</p>
+ <p class="tei tei-p" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 1.00em">Henry Holt &amp; Co.</p>
+ <p class="tei tei-p" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 1.00em">1878</p>
+ </div>
+ <hr class="page" /><div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 5.00em; margin-top: 5.00em">
+ <h1 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 3.46em; margin-top: 3.46em"><span style="font-size: 173%">Contents</span></h1>
+ <ul class="tei tei-index tei-index-toc"><li><a href="#toc1">Translator's Preface.</a></li><li><a href="#toc3">Author's Preface. (1st Edition.)</a></li><li><a href="#toc5">From The Author's Prefaces. (2d to 11th Edition.)</a></li><li><a href="#toc7">Preliminary Essay.</a></li><li><a href="#toc9">Introduction.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 2em"><a href="#toc11">Chapter I. Fundamental Ideas.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc13">Section I. Goods—Wants.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc15">Section II. Goods.—Economic Goods.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc17">Section III. Goods.—The Three Classes Of Goods.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc19">Section IV. Of Value.—Value In Use.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc21">Section V. Value.—Value In Exchange.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc23">Section VI. Value.—Alleged Contradiction Between Value In Use And Value In Exchange.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc25">Section VII. Resources Or Means (Vermögen).</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc27">Section VIII. Valuation Of Resources.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc29">Section IX. Wealth.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc31">Section X. Wealth.—Signs Of National Wealth.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc33">Section XI. Of Economy (Husbandry).</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc35">Section XII. Economy.—Grades Of Economy.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc37">Section XIII. Political Economy.—The Economic Organism.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc39">Section XIV. Origin Of A Nation's Economy.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc41">Section XV. Diseases Of The Social Organism.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 2em"><a href="#toc43">Chapter II. Position Of Political Economy In The Circle Of Related Sciences.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc45">Section XVI. Political Or National Economy.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc47">Section XVII. Sciences Relating To National Life.—The Science Of Public Economy.—The Science Of Finance.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc49">Section XVIII. Sciences Relating To National Life.—Statistics.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc51">Section XIX. Private Economy—Cameralistic Science.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc53">Section XX. Private Economy. (Continued.)</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc55">Section XXI. What Political Economy Treats Of.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 2em"><a href="#toc57">Chapter III. The Methods Of Political Economy.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc59">Section XXII. Former Methods.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc61">Section XXIII. The Idealistic Method.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc63">Section XXIV. The Idealistic Method. (Continued.)</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc65">Section XXV. The Idealistic Method. (Continued.)</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc67">Section XXVI. The Historical Method—The Anatomy And Physiology Of Public Economy.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc69">Section XXVII. Advantages Of The Historical Or Physiological Method.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc71">Section XXVIII. Advantages Of The Historical Method. (Continued.)</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc73">Section XXIX. The Practical Character Of The Historical Method In Political Economy.</a></li><li><a href="#toc75">Book I. The Production Of Goods.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 2em"><a href="#toc77">Chapter I. Factors Of Production.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc79">Section XXX. Meaning Of Production.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc81">Section XXXI. The Factors Of Production.—External Nature.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc83">Section XXXII. External Nature.—The Sea.—Climate.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc85">Section XXXIII. External Nature.—Gifts Of Nature With Value In Exchange.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc87">Section XXXIV. External Nature. (Continued.)</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc89">Section XXXV. External Nature.—Elements Of Agricultural Productiveness.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc91">Section XXXVI. External Nature.—Further Divisions Of Nature's Gifts.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc93">Section XXXVII. External Nature.—The Geographical Character Of A Country.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc95">Section XXXVIII. Of Labor.—Divisions Of Labor.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc97">Section XXXIX. Labor.—Taste For Labor.—Piece-Wages.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc99">Section XL. Labor.—Labor-Power Of Individuals.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc101">Section XLI. Labor.—Effect Of The Esteem In Which It Is Held.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc103">Section XLII. Of Capital.—The Classes Of Goods Of Which A Nation's Capital Is Made Up.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc105">Section XLIII. Capital.—Productive Capital.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc107">Section XLIV. Capital.—Fixed Capital, And Circulating Capital.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc109">Section XLV. Capital.—How It Originates.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 2em"><a href="#toc111">Chapter II. Co-Operation Of The Factors.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc113">Section XLVI. The Productive Coöperation Of The Three Factors.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc115">Section XLVII. Productive Co-Operation Of The Three Factors. The Three Great Periods Of A Nation's Economy.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc117">Section XLVIII. Critical History Of The Idea Of Productiveness.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc119">Section XLIX. Critical History Of The Idea Of Productiveness.—The Doctrine Of The Physiocrates.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc121">Section L. The Same Subject Continued.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc123">Section LI. The Same Subject Continued.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc125">Section LII. Idea Of Productiveness.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc127">Section LIII. The Same Subject Continued.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc129">Section LIV. Importance Of A Due Proportion In The Different Branches Of Productiveness.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc131">Section LV. The Degree Of Productiveness.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 2em"><a href="#toc133">Chapter III. The Organization Of Labor.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc135">Section LVI. Development Of The Division Of Labor.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc137">Section LVII. Development Of The Division Of Labor.—Its Extent At Different Periods.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc139">Section LVIII. Advantages Of The Division Of Labor.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc141">Section LIX. Conditions Of The Division Of Labor.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc143">Section LX. Influence Of The Extent Of The Market On The Division Of Labor.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc145">Section LXI. The Division Of Labor—Means Of Increasing It.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc147">Section LXII. The Reverse, Or Dark Side Of The Division Of Labor.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc149">Section LXIII. Dark Side Of The Division Of Labor.—Its Gain And Loss.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc151">Section LXIV. The Co-Operation Of Labor.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc153">Section LXV. The Principle Of Stability, Or Of The Continuity Of Work.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc155">Section LXVI. Advantage Of Large Enterprises.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 2em"><a href="#toc157">Chapter IV. Freedom And Slavery.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc159">Section LXVII. The Origin Of Slavery.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc161">Section LXVIII. The Same Subject Continued.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc163">Section LXIX. Origin Of Slavery.—Want Of Freedom.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc165">Section LXX. Emancipation.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc167">Section LXXI. Disadvantages Of Slavery.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc169">Section LXXII. Effect Of An Advance In Civilization On Slavery.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc171">Section LXXIII. The Same Subject Continued.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc173">Section LXXIV. The Same Subject Continued.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc175">Section LXXV. The Same Subject Continued.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc177">Section LXXVI. (Appendix To Chapter IV.) The Domestic Servant System.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 2em"><a href="#toc179">Chapter V. Community Of Goods And Private Property. Capital—Property.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc181">Section LXXVII. Capital.—Importance Of Private Property.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc183">Section LXXVIII. Socialism And Communism.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc185">Section LXXIX. Socialism And Communism. (Continued.)</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc187">Section LXXX. Socialism And Communism. (Continued.)</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc189">Section LXXXI. Community Of Goods.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc191">Section LXXXII. The Organization Of Labor.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc193">Section LXXXIII. The Organization Of Labor. (Continued.)</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc195">Section LXXXIV. The Organization Of Labor. (Continued.)</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc197">Section LXXXV. The Right Of Inheritance.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc199">Section LXXXVI. Economic Utility Of The Right Of Inheritance.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc201">Section LXXXVII. Landed Property.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc203">Section LXXXVIII. Landed Property. (Continued.)</a></li><li style="margin-left: 2em"><a href="#toc205">Chapter VI. Credit.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc207">Section LXXXIX. Credit In General.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc209">Section XC. Credit—Effects Of Credit.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc211">Section XCI. Debtor Laws.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc213">Section XCII. History Of Credit Laws.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc215">Section XCIII. Means Of Promoting Credit.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc217">Section XCIV. Letters Of Respite (Specialmoratorien).</a></li><li><a href="#toc219">Book II. The Circulation Of Goods.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 2em"><a href="#toc221">Chapter I. Circulation In General.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc223">Section XCV. Meaning Of The Circulation Of Goods.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc225">Section XCVI. Rapidity Of Circulation.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc227">Section XCVII. Freedom Of Competition.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc229">Section XCVIII. How Goods Are Paid For.—The Rent For Goods.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc231">Section XCIX. Freedom Of Competition And International Trade.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 2em"><a href="#toc233">Chapter II. Prices</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc235">Section C. Prices In General.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc237">Section CI. Effect Of The Struggle Of Opposing Interests On Price.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc239">Section CII. Demand.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc241">Section CIII. Demand.—Indispensable Goods.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc243">Section CIV. Influence Of Purchaser's Solvability On Prices.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc245">Section CV. Supply.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc247">Section CVI. The Cost Of Production.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc249">Section CVII. Equilibrium Of Prices.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc251">Section CVIII. Effect Of A Rise Of Price Much Above Cost.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc253">Section CIX. Effect Of A Decline Of Price Below Cost.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc255">Chapter CX. Different Cost Of Production Of The Same Goods.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc257">Section CXI. Different Cost Of Production Of The Same Goods. (Continued.)</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc259">Section CXII. Exceptions.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc261">Section CXIII. Exceptions. (Continued.)</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc263">Section CXIV. Prices Fixed By Government.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc265">Section CXV. Influence Of Growing Civilization On Prices.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 2em"><a href="#toc267">Chapter III. Money In General.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc269">Section CXVI. Instrument Of Exchange. Measure Of Value. Barter.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc271">Section CXVII. Effect Of The Introduction Of Money.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc273">Section CXVIII. The Different Kinds Of Money.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc275">Section CXIX. The Metals As Money.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc277">Section CXX. Money—The Precious Metals.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc279">Section CXXI. Value In Use And Value In Exchange Of Money.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc281">Section CXXII. Value In Exchange Of Money.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc283">Section CXXIII. The Quantity Of Money A Nation Needs.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc285">Section CXXIV. The Quantity Of Money A Nation Needs. (Continued.)</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc287">Section CXXV. Uniformity Of The Value In Exchange Of The Precious Metals.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc289">Section CXXVI. Uniformity Of The Value In Exchange Of The Precious Metals. (Continued.)</a></li><li style="margin-left: 2em"><a href="#toc291">Chapter IV. History Of Prices.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc293">Section CXXVII. Measure Of Prices,—Constant Measure.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc295">Section CXXVIII. Value In Exchange Estimated In Labor.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc297">Section CXXIX. The Precious Metals The Best Measure Of Prices.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc299">Section CXXX. History Of The Prices Of The Chief Wants Of Life.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc301">Section CXXXI. History Of The Prices Of The Chief Wants Of Life. (Continued.)</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc303">Section CXXXII. History Of The Prices Of The Chief Wants Of Life. (Continued.)</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc305">Section CXXXIII. History Of The Prices Of The Chief Wants Of Life. (Continued.)</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc307">Section CXXXIV. History Of The Prices Of The Chief Wants Of Life. (Continued.)</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc309">Section CXXXV. History Of The Values Of The Precious Metals.—In Antiquity And In The Middle Ages.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc311">Section CXXXVI. Effect On The Discovery Of American Mines Etc. On The Value Of The Precious Metals.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc313">Section CXXXVII. Revolution In Prices At The Beginning Of Modern History.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc315">Section CXXXVIII. Revolution In Prices.—Influence Of The Non-Monetary Use Of Gold And Silver.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc317">Section CXXXIX. History Of Prices.—Californian And Australian Discoveries.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc319">Section CXL. Revolution In Prices.—Its Influence On The National Resources.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc321">Section CXLI. Effect Of An Enhancement Of The Price Of The Precious Metals.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc323">Section CXLII. The Price Of Gold As Compared With That Of Silver.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc325">Section CXLIII. The Price Of Gold As Compared With That Of Silver. (Continued.)</a></li><li style="margin-left: 2em"><a href="#toc327">Appendix I. Paper Money.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc329">Section I. Paper Money And Money-Paper.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc331">Section II. Advantages And Disadvantages Of Paper Money.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc333">Section III. Kinds Of Redemption.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc335">Section IV. Compulsory Circulation.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc337">Section V. Resumption Of Specie Payments.</a></li><li style="margin-left: 4em"><a href="#toc339">Section VI. Paper Money—A Curse Or A Blessing?</a></li><li><a href="#toc341">Footnotes</a></li></ul>
+ </div>
+
+ </div>
+<div class="tei tei-body" style="margin-bottom: 6.00em; margin-top: 6.00em">
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="pageiii">[pg iii]</span><a name="Pgiii" id="Pgiii" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<hr class="page" /><div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 5.00em; margin-top: 5.00em">
+<h1 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 3.46em; margin-top: 3.46em"><span style="font-size: 173%">Dedication.</span></h1>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+TO<br />
+<br />
+WILLIAM H. GAYLORD, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-variant: small-caps">Esq</span></span>.,<br />
+<br />
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">COUNSELLOR AT LAW</span></span>,<br />
+<br />
+OF CLEVELAND, OHIO,<br />
+<br />
+TO WHOSE BROTHERLY CARE IT IS LARGELY DUE THAT I LIVED TO<br />
+TRANSLATE THEM,<br />
+<br />
+THESE VOLUMES<br />
+<br />
+ARE AFFECTIONATELY INSCRIBED.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="pagev">[pg v]</span><a name="Pgv" id="Pgv" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<hr class="page" /><div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 5.00em; margin-top: 5.00em">
+<a name="toc1" id="toc1"></a>
+<a name="pdf2" id="pdf2"></a>
+<h1 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 3.46em; margin-top: 3.46em"><span style="font-size: 173%">Translator's Preface.</span></h1>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Our literature is rich enough in works on the principles of
+Political Economy. So far as the translator is informed,
+however, it possesses none in which the science is treated in
+accordance with the historical method. We may therefore
+venture to express the hope that this translation will fill a
+place hitherto unoccupied in the literatures of England and
+America, and fill it all the more efficiently and acceptably,
+as Professor <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-variant: small-caps">Roscher</span></span> is the founder and still the leader of
+the historical school of Political Economy. Were this the
+only recommendation of our undertaking, it would not be a
+useless one. But a glance at Professor <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-variant: small-caps">Roscher's</span></span> book will
+convince even the most hasty reader that its pages fascinate
+by their interest and are rich in treasures of erudition which
+should not remain inaccessible to the English student from
+being locked up in a foreign tongue.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+The present translation has received, throughout, the revision
+of the author, and should any imperfections remain in the
+rendering of his thought into English, the blame is certainly
+not his, for his revision has been most minute.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+The three appendices have been supplied by Professor
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-variant: small-caps">Roscher</span></span> expressly for this edition. As they are intended to
+form a part of the work on the Political Economy of Industry
+and Commerce, on which he is now engaged, he authorizes
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="pagevi">[pg vi]</span><a name="Pgvi" id="Pgvi" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+their publication in English, only by the publishers of this
+edition of his principles; and only for the purpose of being
+added to the present translation. He desires especially that
+their appearance in their present shape should not in any way
+interfere with any of his rights in his forthcoming volume,
+and that they should not be translated into any language nor
+translated back into German.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+The essay of Mr. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-variant: small-caps">Wolowski</span></span>, on the historical method in
+Political Economy constitutes no part of Professor <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-variant: small-caps">Roscher's</span></span>
+book, and neither he nor its author, but only the translator, is
+responsible for its appearance here. In it the reader will find
+a short sketch of the life of Professor <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-variant: small-caps">Roscher</span></span>, brought
+down to the date at which the essay was written. The translator
+has little to add to that sketch, all the information he
+possesses in addition to what it contains being embraced in
+the following lines from a letter received by him from the
+author in answer to a request that he would supply the biographical
+data not to be found in <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-variant: small-caps">Wolowski's</span></span> essay: <span class="tei tei-q">“You
+might perhaps say ... that I have repeatedly declined calls
+to the Universities of Munich, Vienna and Berlin, but that
+I have never regretted remaining in Leipzig.”</span>
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+The acknowledgments of the translator are due, in the
+first place, to the eminent author himself, for the revision of
+the plate-proof of the entire work, and then to Professor
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-variant: small-caps">William F. Allen</span></span>, of the University of Wisconsin, for his
+interest in the progress of the enterprise, and for many valuable
+suggestions; also to Professor <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-variant: small-caps">W. G. Sumner</span></span>, of
+Yale College, for some excellent hints as to the best translation
+of certain words in the Appendix on Paper Money.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="pagevii">[pg vii]</span><a name="Pgvii" id="Pgvii" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<hr class="page" /><div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 5.00em; margin-top: 5.00em">
+<a name="toc3" id="toc3"></a>
+<a name="pdf4" id="pdf4"></a>
+<h1 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 3.46em; margin-top: 3.46em"><span style="font-size: 173%">Author's Preface. (1st Edition.)</span></h1>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+My <span lang="de" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="de"><span style="font-style: italic">System der Volkswirthschaft</span></span>
+shall, <span lang="la" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="la"><span style="font-style: italic">Deo volente</span></span>, be completed
+in four parts. The second shall contain the national economy
+of agriculture and the related branches of natural production;
+the third, the national economy of industry and commerce;
+the fourth, of the economy of the state and of the commune
+(<span lang="de" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="de"><span style="font-style: italic">Gemeindehaushalt</span></span>).
+While the entire work shall constitute
+one systematic whole, each part shall have its own appropriate
+title, constitute an independent treatise, and be sold separately.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Of the peculiar method which I have followed in this work,
+and which will produce still better fruits in the succeeding
+volumes, I have given a sufficient explanation in
+§§ <a href="#Section_26" class="tei tei-ref">26</a> ff., and
+all I desire now is to say a few words on the relation the notes
+bear to the text. The careful reader will soon be convinced
+that of the many citations in this work, not one has been made
+from a vain desire of the display of erudition. Part of them
+serves as the necessary proof of surprising facts adduced, but
+which are little known. Another part of them is intended to
+incite the reader to the study of certain questions nearly related
+to those treated in the text, but which are still different
+from them. The object of the greater number is to supply
+information concerning the history of economic principles. As
+far as the sources at my command permitted, I have endeavored
+to point out the first germs, the chief stages of development,
+the contrasts, and, finally, what has been thus far attained
+in economic science. This sometimes required some
+little victory over self, inasmuch as I was conscious of having
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="pageviii">[pg viii]</span><a name="Pgviii" id="Pgviii" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+independently discovered certain facts, when I afterwards
+found that some old and long-forgotten writer had made similar
+observations. Thus, this work may serve both as a handbook
+and as a history of the literature of Political Economy.
+Students of the science know how little has thus far been
+done by writers in this direction. And hence I shall be very
+grateful to those who labor in the same field, if they will, either
+by writing to me personally, or through the medium of the
+press, inform me when I have erred in ascribing a truth, or a
+scientifically important error, to its earliest author.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+I have already said in the title that this work is intended
+not for the learned only, but for all educated men, for men of
+a serious turn of mind, who desire truth and science for their
+own sake. Like that ancient historian, whom I honor above
+all others as my teacher, I desire that my work should be
+useful to those, ὅσοι βουλήσοντοι τῶν τε γενομένων τὸ σαφὲς
+σκοπεῖν καὶ τῶν μελλόντων ποτὲ αὖθις κατὰ τὸ ἀνθρώπειον τοιούτων
+καὶ παραπλησίων ἔσεσθαι. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Thucydides</span></span> I, 22.)
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-variant: small-caps">University of Leipzig</span></span>,<br />
+<br />
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">End of May, 1854.</span></span>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="pageix">[pg ix]</span><a name="Pgix" id="Pgix" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<hr class="page" /><div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 5.00em; margin-top: 5.00em">
+<a name="toc5" id="toc5"></a>
+<a name="pdf6" id="pdf6"></a>
+<h1 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 3.46em; margin-top: 3.46em"><span style="font-size: 173%">From The Author's Prefaces. (2d to 11th Edition.)</span></h1>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+The preface to the second edition is dated October, 1856;
+that to the third, April, 1858; that to the fourth, April, 1861;
+that to the fifth, November, 1863; that to the sixth, November,
+1865; that to the seventh, November, 1868; that to the
+eighth, August, 1869; that to the ninth, March, 1871; that to
+the tenth, May, 1873; that to the eleventh (unaltered), December,
+1873. Each successive edition, nearly, has been announced
+as an improved and enlarged one; and the tenth
+edition contains one hundred and fifty-six pages more than
+the first, although in places, a large number of abbreviations
+had been made from previous editions. There are many
+things in some of the previous editions which criticism induced
+me, long since, to change. I have considered it my duty to
+the public, who gave my work so warm and friendly a reception,
+to take into consideration, in each successive edition, not
+only my own new investigations, but those also of all others
+with which I became acquainted, and, whenever possible, to
+correct statistical illustrations from the latest sources. I have
+especially, in each following edition, enriched a number of
+paragraphs with here and there historical, ethnographic and
+statistical features. Plutarch is certainly right, spite of the
+fact that pedants may abuse him for it, when he says, that
+trifling acts, a word and even a jest, are often more important,
+as characterizing the life of a people or an age, than great
+battles which cost the lives of tens of thousands of men.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+I have changed the titles <span class="tei tei-q">“Ricardo's Law of Rent,”</span> and
+<span class="tei tei-q">“The Malthusian Law of the Increase of Population,”</span> which
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="pagex">[pg x]</span><a name="Pgx" id="Pgx" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+I formerly used, for others. But I would not be misunderstood
+here. I hold it to be a duty of reverence in the
+learned—as it has long been practiced in the case of the natural
+sciences—in the sciences of the human mind to call the
+natural laws, methods etc., in acquainting us with which, some
+one particular investigator has won very distinguished merit,
+by the name of that investigator. In the case of the law of
+rent, the application of this rule would as unquestionably entitle
+Ricardo to this honor as it would Malthus in that of
+the increase of population, spite of the fact that Ricardo may
+not have succeeded in finding the best possible form of the
+abstraction, and although Malthus even, in a one-sided reaction
+against a former still greater one-sidedness, was not
+always able to steer clear of positive and negative errors.
+Recent science has endeavored, and successfully, to examine
+the facts which contradict the Ricardoan and Malthusian formulations
+of the laws in question, and to extend the formulas
+accordingly. I have myself contributed hereto to the extent
+of my ability. But, in the interval, it is not hard to comprehend
+that, while this process of elucidation is going on,
+most scholars, those especially possessed more of a dogmatic
+than of a historical turn of mind, should estimate these two
+leaders more in accordance with their few defects than with
+the great merits of their discoveries. If, therefore, I now
+drop the title <span class="tei tei-q">“Malthusian law,”</span> it is to guard hasty readers
+from the illusion that §§ 242 seq.
+teach what the great crowd understand by Malthusianism; when they might, perhaps,
+omit that portion entirely. For my own part, I have no doubt
+that, when the process of elucidation above referred to shall
+have been thoroughly finished, the future will accord both to
+Ricardo and Malthus their full meed of honor as political
+economists and discoverers of the first rank.<a id="noteref_1" name="noteref_1" href="#note_1"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">1</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page001">[pg 001]</span><a name="Pg001" id="Pg001" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<hr class="page" /><div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 5.00em; margin-top: 5.00em">
+<a name="toc7" id="toc7"></a>
+<a name="pdf8" id="pdf8"></a>
+<h1 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 3.46em; margin-top: 3.46em"><span style="font-size: 173%">Preliminary Essay.</span></h1>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 1.00em">Preliminary Essay On The Application Of The Historical
+Method To The Study Of Political Economy,<br />
+<br />
+By M. Wolowski,<br />
+<br />
+Member Of The Institute Of France.
+</p>
+
+<div class="block tei tei-quote" style="margin-bottom: 1.80em; margin-left: 3.60em; margin-top: 1.80em; margin-right: 3.60em">
+<span class="tei tei-q"><span style="font-size: 90%">“</span><span lang="la" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="la"><span style="font-size: 90%; font-style: italic">Nunquam bene percipiemus usu
+necessarium nisi et noverimus jus illud usu
+non necessarium. Nexum est et colligatum alterum alteri. Nulli sunt servi
+nobis, cur quæstiones de servis vexamus? Digna imperito
+vox.</span></span><span style="font-size: 90%">”</span></span><span style="font-size: 90%">—</span><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-size: 90%; font-style: italic">Cuj.</span></span><span style="font-size: 90%">, vii, in
+titul. Dig. De Justitia et Jure.</span><a id="noteref_2" name="noteref_2" href="#note_2"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">2</span></span></a>
+</div>
+
+<div class="block tei tei-quote" style="margin-bottom: 1.80em; margin-left: 3.60em; margin-top: 1.80em; margin-right: 3.60em">
+<span class="tei tei-q"><span style="font-size: 90%">“</span><span lang="la" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="la"><span style="font-size: 90%; font-style: italic">Homo sum, humani nihil
+a me alienum
+puto.</span></span><span style="font-size: 90%">”</span></span><span style="font-size: 90%">—</span><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-size: 90%; font-style: italic">Terence.</span></span><a id="noteref_3" name="noteref_3" href="#note_3"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">3</span></span></a>
+</div>
+
+<div class="block tei tei-quote" style="margin-bottom: 1.80em; margin-left: 3.60em; margin-top: 1.80em; margin-right: 3.60em">
+<span class="tei tei-q"><span style="font-size: 90%">“</span><span lang="la" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="la"><span style="font-size: 90%; font-style: italic">Ista præpotens, ac gloriosa
+philosophia.</span></span><span style="font-size: 90%">”</span></span><span style="font-size: 90%">—</span><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-size: 90%; font-style: italic">Cicero</span></span><span style="font-size: 90%">, De Or., I,
+43.</span><a id="noteref_4" name="noteref_4" href="#note_4"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">4</span></span></a>
+</div>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 4.00em; margin-top: 4.00em">
+<h2 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.88em; margin-top: 2.88em"><span style="font-size: 144%">I.</span></h2>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+It is no foolish desire to make a vain display of citations, that
+induces us, at the beginning of this essay, intended to point out
+the results of the application of a new method to the study of
+Political Economy, to invoke the authority of a poet and moralist,
+of a jurisconsult and of a philosopher. The writer finds in
+the words just quoted the loftiest expression of the thought
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page002">[pg 002]</span><a name="Pg002" id="Pg002" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+which dictates these lines, viz.: that the impartial researches
+of history, a profound feeling of man's moral and material wants,
+and the light of philosophy, should govern in the teaching of
+a science, the object of which is to show us how those things
+which are intended to satisfy our wants are produced and distributed
+among the several classes or individuals of a nation;
+how they are exchanged one against another, and how they
+are consumed.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+The nineteenth century affords us something more than the
+admirable spectacle of the rapid and fertile development of
+mechanical power and natural forces. This is but one of the
+aspects, we might even say but one of the results, of the general
+progress of the human mind. The renovation of moral
+and intellectual studies has served as a starting point for the
+application to facts of the conquests of thought. Science has
+preceded art.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+In the foremost rank of the studies just referred to is
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">philosophy</span></span>, which initiates us into the knowledge of human nature,
+the basis of right, and which translates its legitimate aspirations
+into a language which we can understand; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">history</span></span>, that
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">prophetess</span></span> of the truth, as one of the ancients called it, which
+places before us the faithful picture of times past, not by
+simply putting together a skeleton of facts, but by following
+the living progress of events and the organic development of
+institutions. Such, at least, has been the work of those noble
+minds who have consecrated their energies to the resuscitation
+of ages past, in their true shape, and such is the service for
+which we are indebted to them for the successful accomplishment
+of the reformation of historical studies, which they
+attempted with such rare devotion and such marvelous sagacity.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+This renovation of history has exerted the most fertile influence
+in the region of philosophy, in that of law, and we
+believe that it will prove no less useful in that of Political Economy.
+It has served to put us on our guard against being
+easily misled by <span lang="la" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="la"><span style="font-style: italic">a priori</span></span> notions.
+</p>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page003">[pg 003]</span><a name="Pg003" id="Pg003" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+By exhibiting to us the results of the life and of the experience
+of centuries, by teaching us by what steps the human
+mind has risen to its present eminence, and what the education
+given it in the past has been, it has enabled us to ascend from
+phenomena to the principles which preside over them; from
+facts to the law; and it has substituted for arbitrary assumptions
+and purely ideal systems, the slow but progressive work
+of the genius of nations. Not that it turns a deaf ear to the
+exalted lessons of philosophy, nor that it denies the <em class="tei tei-emph"><span style="font-style: italic">eternal relations
+resulting from the nature of things</span></em>. Far from it. On
+the contrary, it supplies a solid basis to intellectual investigations,
+and, so to speak, an answer for all the moral sciences, to
+this saying of Rœderer: <span class="tei tei-q">“Politics is a field which has been
+traversed thus far only in a balloon; it is time to put foot on
+solid ground.”</span>
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Neither does history, as thus understood, confine itself to
+mere description; it also assumes the office of judge. While
+it pulls down much that passion and inaccuracy have reared, and
+thus restores respect for the past, it does not turn that past into
+a fetish. It looks it boldly in the face and questions it, instead
+of prostrating itself before it and worshipping it with downcast
+eyes. Thus, by plainly showing us the many bonds which tie
+us to it, it escapes at once both the rashness of impatience and
+the wearisomeness of routine.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+The impartiality it inculcates is not indifference; and there
+is no danger that the justice it metes out to past ages shall degenerate
+into a vain scepticism or a convenient optimism.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+The study of history, thus understood, has another advantage;
+it accustoms us to those patient and disinterested investigations,
+to those lengthy labors, the positive result of which at first
+escapes us for a time, only to burst on our eyes, with so much
+more brilliancy, when rigorous research has succeeded in discovering
+it. It frees us from the deadly constraint of immediate
+utility.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+There is nothing more fatal to science than the feverish impatience
+for results which obtains only too much in our own
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page004">[pg 004]</span><a name="Pg004" id="Pg004" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+days, and which induces people to run after him who is in the
+greatest hurry, and which leads to hasty conclusions.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+<span class="tei tei-q">“Research undertaken from a disinterested love of science,”</span>
+says the learned Hugo, one of the masters of the historical school
+of law in Germany,<a id="noteref_5" name="noteref_5" href="#note_5"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">5</span></span></a> <span class="tei tei-q">“that research which at first promises no
+other advantage but truth and the culture of the mind, is precisely
+that which brings us the richest rewards. Would we
+not be behind, in all the sciences, if we had clung only to those
+principles, the utility of which in practice was already known?
+Do we not, to-day, from many a discovery, reap advantages of
+which its author never dreamed?”</span>
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Doubtless this tendency, unless restrained by other demands,
+is not exempt from danger. We may be carried away by the
+attraction peculiar to these noble studies, withdraw into antiquity
+and fall into a species of historical mysticism which ends
+in the affirmation, that whatever has been is true, absolutely,
+and which, instead of confining itself to the explanation of
+transitory phenomena, invests them with all the dignity of principles.
+We shall endeavor to avoid the peril pointed out by
+Mallebranche. <span class="tei tei-q">“Learned men study rather to acquire a
+chimerical greatness in the imagination of other men, than to
+acquire greater breadth and strength of mind themselves.
+They make their heads a kind of store-room, into which they
+gather, without order or discrimination, everything which has
+a look of erudition,—I mean to say everything which may
+seem rare or extraordinary and excite the wonder of other
+people. They glory in getting together, in this archæological
+museum, antiques with nothing that is rich or solid about them,
+and the price of which depends on nothing but fancy, chance
+or passion.”</span>
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+A display of erudition may obscure the truth, and bury it under
+its weight, instead of bringing it out into relief. By concentrating
+the mind on the material vestiges of the past, it
+may withdraw it from the intellectual movement of the present,
+and give us a race of scholars, of great merit, doubtless,
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page005">[pg 005]</span><a name="Pg005" id="Pg005" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+but who move about like strangers among their contemporaries.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Without a sense for the practical, and without ideas of an
+elevated nature, a person may, indeed, be a man of erudition—he
+cannot be a historian. As the proverb says, the forest cannot
+be seen, for the trees. That this noble study may bear its
+best and most useful fruit; that is, that it should preserve us
+against ambitious <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">formulas</span></span> and destructive chimeras, we
+must pursue another way.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+<span class="tei tei-q">“The world,”</span> says Montaigne, <span class="tei tei-q">“is incapable of curing itself.
+It is so impatient of what burthens it, that it thinks only
+of how it shall rid itself of it, without inquiring at what price.
+A thousand examples show us that it cures itself ordinarily at
+its own cost. The getting rid of the present evil is not cure,
+unless there be a general amendment of condition. Good does
+not immediately succeed evil. One evil, and a worse, may
+follow another, like Cæsar's assassins, who brought the
+republic to such a pass, that they had reason to repent the
+meddling with it.”</span> Such, too frequently, is the lot of those
+who, abandoning themselves to their imagination, and without
+consulting the past, mix together promises of liberty and
+the despotism of Utopias which they would impose on nations
+under pretext of enfranchising them. Despising the work of
+the ages, they think they can build upon a soil shaken by destruction
+and crumbled, until it may be likened to moving sand.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Contempt for the past is associated with a passion for
+reform. Men think of destroying that which should only
+be transformed. They condemn everything that has been,
+unconditionally, and launch out towards a new future. The
+suffering which has been gone through irritates and troubles
+the mind. The work of pulling down is so easy, it is supposed
+that the work of building up is equally so. Hence systems
+rise, as if the world were to begin anew. The pride of
+liberty and of human action becomes the principle of science;
+and, like all new principles, it pretends to exclusive and absolute
+dominion. Rationalism governs; abstract philosophy
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page006">[pg 006]</span><a name="Pg006" id="Pg006" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+ignores the traditions and the requirements of the life of nations;
+and finds now in it, as in geometry, nothing but principles and
+deductions. The memory of recent oppression causes us
+to act as Tarquin did, and to level down the higher classes instead
+of elevating the inferior. Liberty and equality then govern
+by their negative side, instead of exercising the positive and
+beneficent influence they should have, to develop all forces to
+their utmost, to ennoble the mind, to give more elasticity to
+the soul and greater vigor to thought, to give birth to those
+varied forms and to that moral energy, which should bring us
+nearer to final equality in the bosom of
+God.<a id="noteref_6" name="noteref_6" href="#note_6"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">6</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+We forget that no one is born <em class="tei tei-emph"><span style="font-style: italic">free</span></em>, and that every one
+ought to endeavor to become so,
+</p>
+
+<div class="block tei tei-quote" style="margin-bottom: 1.80em; margin-left: 3.60em; margin-top: 1.80em; margin-right: 3.60em">
+<div class="tei tei-lg" style="margin-bottom: 0.90em; margin-top: 0.90em">
+<div class="tei tei-l" style="text-align: left"><span style="font-size: 90%">Feindlich ist des Mannes Streben</span></div>
+<div class="tei tei-l" style="text-align: left"><span style="font-size: 90%">Mit zermalmender Gewalt</span></div>
+<div class="tei tei-l" style="text-align: left"><span style="font-size: 90%">Geht der Wilde durch des Leben</span></div>
+<div class="tei tei-l" style="text-align: left"><span style="font-size: 90%">Ohne Rast und Aufenthalt,</span></div>
+</div>
+<div class="tei tei-lg" style="margin-bottom: 0.90em; margin-top: 0.90em">
+<div class="tei tei-l" style="text-align: left"><span style="font-size: 90%">—</span><span class="tei tei-hi" style="text-align: left"><span style="font-size: 90%; font-style: italic">Schiller</span></span><span style="font-size: 90%">.</span></div>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+and make himself worthy of liberty, by the exercise of manly
+virtue! Because the form has been changed, we believe that
+we have changed human nature.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+It is easy to understand, why, where these ideas prevail, the
+study of the past should be neglected and despised. Efforts
+are made to avoid it. Why, it is asked, revive memories of
+oppression and misery? The old world is wrecked. It is
+annihilated. Peace to its ashes! Or else, after it has been
+destroyed, it is sought for again; and, under pretext of eradicating
+the evils existing in it, an attack is made on the eternal
+basis on which human society rests, on the laws not made by
+man, and which it is not given to man to change. The world
+becomes one vast laboratory, in which the rashest experiments
+are multiplied in number, in which mankind is but clay in the
+hands of the potter which every pretended <span class="tei tei-q">“thinker”</span> may
+mould at will, by giving him the false appearances of independence
+and of an emancipated being.
+</p>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page007">[pg 007]</span><a name="Pg007" id="Pg007" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+And, indeed, if the will of man be all-powerful, if states are
+to be distinguished from one another only by their boundaries,
+if everything may be changed like the scenery in a play by a
+flourish of the magic wand of a system, if man may arbitrarily
+make the right, if nations can be put through evolutions like a
+regiment of troops; what a field would the world present for
+attempts at the realization of the wildest dreams, and what a
+temptation would be offered to take possession, by main force,
+of the government of human affairs, to destroy the rights of
+property and the rights of capital, to gratify ardent longings
+without trouble, and provide the much coveted means of enjoyment.
+The Titans have tried to scale the heavens, and
+have fallen into the most degrading materialism. Purely
+speculative dogmatism sinks into materialism.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+All is changed, both men and things. Yet we hear the
+same old style of declamation. There are those who wish to
+plough up the soil which the harrow of the revolution went
+over yesterday; and they believe they are marching in the
+way of progress. They do not see that they have mistaken
+their age, and that the bold attempts of the past have now
+come to possess a directly opposite meaning. Without stopping
+to inquire to what side the new world inclines, they repeat
+the same words, and swear <span lang="la" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="la"><span style="font-style: italic">in
+verba magistri</span></span>, and go the
+road of destruction, believing themselves to be creating the
+world anew!
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Nothing is more natural than that these excesses should
+produce other excesses, in a contrary direction. Moved by
+hatred or fear of revolutionary absolutism, nations seek an
+asylum in governmental absolutism, or they retrograde towards
+the middle ages, and consider the mutual bond of protection
+and dependence of that period as the ideal and the
+realization of true liberty. History is no longer the organic
+development of social life, and man, like a soldier that
+thoughtlessly and capriciously has gone beyond his place of
+supplies, is obliged to retrace his steps. The reaction is
+clearly defined. The past is opposed to the present, not as a
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page008">[pg 008]</span><a name="Pg008" id="Pg008" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+lesson to be turned to advantage, but as a model which must
+be hastily accepted; and men become revolutionary in a backward
+direction.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+However, history, rigorously studied, knows neither these
+complaisances nor these weaknesses. It does not descend to
+the apotheosis of a past which cannot return again. The real
+historical spirit consists in rightly discerning what belongs to
+each epoch. Its object is, by no means, to call back the dead
+to life, but to explain why and how they lived. In harmony
+with a healthy philosophy, it assigns a limit to the vagaries of
+arbitrary will, beyond which the latter cannot go. It unceasingly
+calls us back, from the heights of abstraction, to positive
+facts and things.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+In the creation of systems, only one thing was wont to be
+forgotten, men, who were treated, in them, like so many
+ciphers; for intellectual despotism has this in common with all
+despotic authority. History teaches us that we can reach
+nothing great or lasting, but by addressing ourselves to the
+soul. If the soul decays, there can be no longer great thoughts
+or great actions. Society lives by the spirit which inhabits it.
+It may, for an instant, submit to the empire of force, but, in the
+long run, it hearkens only to the voice of justice. It was thus
+that the greatest revolution which history records, that of
+Christianity, was accomplished. It addressed itself only to
+the soul; but by changing the hearts of men, it transformed
+society entirely.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+The violent struggle between an imperious dogmatism and
+an unintelligent and mistaken attempt at a retrogressive movement
+is resolved into a higher view, which permits the union
+of conservatism and progress. Violent attempts and rash endeavors
+made, threatened to bring contempt on the noblest
+teachings of philosophy, and to make them repulsive to man;
+and, on the other hand, a blind respect for the institutions consecrated
+by history threatened to stifle all examination and all
+freedom of judgment.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+But a healthier doctrine has permitted us to understand, that
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page009">[pg 009]</span><a name="Pg009" id="Pg009" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+we are continuing the work of preceding generations; that we
+are developing the germs which they successively sowed;
+that we are perfecting that which they had only sketched, and
+that we are letting drop that which has no support in the
+social condition of man. Every thing is connected; each
+thing is linked to every other; nothing is repeated. The
+hopes of sudden and total renovation, based on absolute formulas,
+vanish before the touch of this solid study. This shows
+us how firm and unshaken are those reforms which have begun
+by taking hold of the minds of men, the precise spirit of
+which had penetrated into the souls of whole nations before
+they had manifested themselves in facts.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Law and Economy constitute a part of the life of nations in
+the same way that language and customs do. The power of
+history in no way contradicts the supremacy of reason.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 4.00em; margin-top: 4.00em">
+<h2 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.88em; margin-top: 2.88em"><span style="font-size: 144%">II.</span></h2>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+These two tendencies, the rationalistic and the historical, are
+everywhere found face to face. They carry on an eternal
+warfare, which is renewed in every age, under new names
+and new forms. Accomplished facts and renovating thought
+divide the world between them. They at one time moderate
+its speed, and at others, spur it on its way. But these two
+forces, instead of compromising the destinies of humanity by
+their opposing action, maintain and balance them, as the contrary
+impulses given by the hand of the Great Architect has
+peopled the universe with worlds which gravitate in space.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Victor Cousin, a very competent authority on the subject,
+has said that the history of philosophy is the torch of philosophy
+itself. The remarkable works which have enriched it in
+this direction are well known. History, on its side, is enlightened
+by philosophy. Thus, it teaches us not to despise
+facts, but at the same time not to be slaves to precedent. It
+does equal justice to the incredulous and to the fanatic, to too
+supple practitioners and to intractable theorizers.
+</p>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page010">[pg 010]</span><a name="Pg010" id="Pg010" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+We may doubtless say with Henri Klimrath, who, in connection
+with a few others, had undertaken the work of the
+restoration of historical study in its application to French law,
+that there is an absolute, true, beautiful, good and just, the
+<span lang="la" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="la"><span style="font-style: italic">ratio recta summi
+Jovis</span></span>,<a id="noteref_7" name="noteref_7" href="#note_7"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">7</span></span></a> the supreme reason founded in the
+nature of things.<a id="noteref_8" name="noteref_8" href="#note_8"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">8</span></span></a> The eternal truths taught by philosophy
+constitute the higher law, a law which dates not from the day
+on which it was reduced to writing, but from the day of its
+birth; and it was born with the divine intelligence itself. <span class="tei tei-q">“<span lang="la" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="la"><span style="font-style: italic">Qui non tum denique incipit
+lex esse, cum scripta est, sed tum cum orta est. Orta autem simul est
+cum mente divina.</span></span>”</span><a id="noteref_9" name="noteref_9" href="#note_9"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">9</span></span></a> And
+Troplong rightly adds: <span class="tei tei-q">“There are rules anterior to all positive
+laws. I cannot grant that the action of conscience and
+the idea of right are the work of the legislator. It is not law
+that made the family, property, liberty, equality, the idea of
+good and evil. It may, indeed, give organization to all these
+things, but in doing so, it is only working on the foundation
+which nature has laid, and it is perfect in proportion as it
+comes nearer to the eternal, immutable laws which the Creator
+has engraved on our hearts. What changes is not the eternal
+law, the revelation of which comes to man incessantly and by
+a necessary action, but the form in which humanity clothes it,
+the institutions which man builds on its immutable
+foundation.”</span><a id="noteref_10" name="noteref_10" href="#note_10"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">10</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+We therefore believe in the law of nature, and regret that our
+opinion is not shared by Mr. Roscher, at least that he does
+not explicitly enough express his faith in it, nor apply it broadly
+enough in the beautiful work which we are happy to render
+accessible to the French public.<a id="noteref_11" name="noteref_11" href="#note_11"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">11</span></span></a> We believe in it in its
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page011">[pg 011]</span><a name="Pg011" id="Pg011" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+philosophical sense, and not simply in the juridical sense attached
+to it by Ulpian. <span class="tei tei-q">“Let us not,”</span> observes Portalis,
+<span class="tei tei-q">“confound the physical order of nature, common to all animated
+beings, with the natural law which is peculiar to man.
+We call <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">natural law</span></span>, the principles which govern man considered
+as a moral being, that is, as an intelligent and free being,
+intended to live in the society of other beings, intelligent and
+free like himself.”</span><a id="noteref_12" name="noteref_12" href="#note_12"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">12</span></span></a> Ulpian's famous tripartite division, of natural
+law, the law of nations, and the civil law, is proof, from
+the meaning he attaches to them, either of a misunderstanding
+or of the imperfect idea which the Stoics had conceived
+of the essence of natural law. In vain Cujas exhausted all
+the resources of his noble intellect to explain it.<a id="noteref_13" name="noteref_13" href="#note_13"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">13</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page012">[pg 012]</span><a name="Pg012" id="Pg012" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+It is necessary to draw a distinction between physical law
+and the law (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">droit</span></span>) of intelligent beings. Doubtless the existence
+of men as well as that of animals is limited by time.
+They both live and die; but the soul escapes the necessities
+of material nature.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+The moment there is question of <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">right</span></span>, intelligence governs,
+reason comes into play, and the science of right and wrong is
+appealed to as a guide. Hence the <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">natural</span></span> law of the human
+species is not the physical law which all creatures obey.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+It was necessary for us to insist upon these principles. It
+was necessary for us to show that there is a law independent
+of positive and local law, a law which is not the expression of
+an arbitrary will, but an emanation from the nature of
+things.<a id="noteref_14" name="noteref_14" href="#note_14"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">14</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Hence come the features in common which we meet with
+everywhere, and the variable forms which develop law in harmony
+with the special conditions of each civil society.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+We must descend into the very depths of human nature to
+discover these eternal and permanent laws; and if the mere
+effort of the mind should not reach them directly, they might
+be discovered in the phenomena of the life of nations. History
+affords us the counter-proof and confirmation of the philosophical
+doctrine.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+The development of society does not afford a mathematical
+expression of these higher truths. It gives them a form
+which is unceasingly modified in the written law. The person
+who discovers in them nothing but an absolute rule, looks
+upon the changes as evidences of caprice and error. He alone
+understands the revolutions of things who knows their cause
+and the necessity which produces them.
+</p>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page013">[pg 013]</span><a name="Pg013" id="Pg013" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Solon was right when he gave the Athenians not the most
+perfect laws, but the best which they could bear.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+It is not in the attempts contemporary with the infancy of
+society, or nearly so, that we are to look for the complete realization
+of the precepts of the natural law; for principles obey
+the rule laid down by Aristotle. <span class="tei tei-q">“The nature of each thing
+is precisely that which constitutes its end; and when each being
+has attained its entire development, we say that that is its
+own proper nature.”</span><a id="noteref_15" name="noteref_15" href="#note_15"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">15</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+The ideas of natural law are purified in proportion as society
+grows enlightened and free; but the truth appears only
+successively in the phases it passes through. It allows us to
+grasp one aspect of itself after another, but does not surrender
+itself entirely, at any one moment, to the investigations of the
+historian or the jurisconsult.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+History and philosophy interpenetrate and complement one
+another.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 4.00em; margin-top: 4.00em">
+<h2 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.88em; margin-top: 2.88em"><span style="font-size: 144%">III.</span></h2>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+The two schools, that of philosophy and that of history
+have met in our day, in the field of law. Who is there that
+does not remember the great and noble contest carried on,
+about the beginning of this century, between two descendants
+of Frenchmen who had sought a refuge in Germany,
+and who united in their own persons, and in so marvelous a
+manner, the different aptitudes of the country they owed their
+origin to, and of the land that gave them birth,—between Thibaut
+and Savigny?
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+It would be difficult to find a scientific question of a higher
+character, debated by champions more worthy to throw light
+upon it.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+The <span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">Code Napoléon</span></span>
+had appeared. It had, to use Rossi's
+happy expression, transferred into law the social revolution
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page014">[pg 014]</span><a name="Pg014" id="Pg014" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+produced by the destruction of privilege. It was the practical
+formula expressive of the conquests which had been made.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+The philosophy of the eighteenth century had previously
+inspired the Prussian Code. And yet, it was on the question of
+codification that this memorable controversy was carried on.
+The two principal combatants, while manfully battling, the one
+against the other, continued to hold each other in high esteem,
+and the profound study of law was developed in the midst of
+the <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">melée</span></span>.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+We cannot delay long on this subject, nor analyze the arguments
+advanced by Thibaut<a id="noteref_16" name="noteref_16" href="#note_16"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">16</span></span></a>
+and Savigny.<a id="noteref_17" name="noteref_17" href="#note_17"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">17</span></span></a> What interests
+us at present is not so much the question debated, as the
+intellectual movement to which it gave birth. Savigny sustained
+the ancient law, Thibaut attacked it. Numerous and
+distinguished jurisconsults ranged themselves on the one side
+and the other. A new school grew up which, with the most
+brilliant success, made law throw light on history and history
+on law.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+The application of the historical method to the study of law
+was productive of the most happy results.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Without acknowledging it to themselves, the chiefs of the
+contending parties were each obeying a political impulse.
+Savigny was by his birth and his tastes carried into the camp
+of conservatism; Thibaut, led by his convictions, into the liberal
+ranks. Nevertheless, the natural elevation of their genius
+preserved them from all exaggeration. The glorious defender
+of tradition preserved a liberal spirit, and the ardent advocate
+of reform desired no upheaval.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+In what more nearly concerns the question with which we
+are now occupied, Savigny—while he maintained that law was
+something contingent, human, national; and while he brought
+out into relief the practical and exalted character of its successive
+developments which introduced reform and guarded
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page015">[pg 015]</span><a name="Pg015" id="Pg015" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+against revolution—developments which, not confiding in the
+letter of the written law, unceasingly feed the living and
+created law, that law called in the energetic language of a
+great jurisconsult, a law <span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">écrit
+es coeurs des citoyens</span></span>—is
+far from denying the importance of a high and healthy philosophy
+which directs man in the uninterrupted labor to which he is
+called, in the sphere of jurisprudence.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Men can no more renounce law than language, the forms of
+which last they have gradually modified in order to better
+translate their thoughts into words. The legislator's task is
+the successive elaboration of obligatory provisions. He will
+sometimes oppose and sometimes second the natural progress
+of law; but, in doing so, it will ever be necessary for him to
+ascend to the nature of things, and grasp their relations, if he
+would not go astray in practice, or lose himself among the
+successive and partial changes to which the illustrious Berlin
+professor would confine the legitimate ambition of legislative
+power. To go beyond this, in an age like ours, seemed to
+him to be a work of destruction. However, far from denying
+the influence of thought, and therefore of philosophy, acting
+within its sphere, Savigny invokes its fertile aid.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Thibaut, on the other hand, with more confidence in the
+powers of the spirit of modern times, did not believe a good
+codification to be impossible. His starting point had been a
+cry for national independence. He well knew how much veneration
+was due those institutions which were the slow and progressive
+work of national genius, and what was the power they
+possessed. He wished, therefore, to reform, not to abolish
+them. He well understood that the greatness of the
+<span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">Code Napoléon</span></span>
+itself, and the respect which it inspired were due to the
+fact that its roots ran deep into the soil of the past, even while
+the modern idea it contained shone like a bright light in the
+world of things. Hence, without contesting the value of history,
+he refused to acknowledge its right to exclusive reign.<a id="noteref_18" name="noteref_18" href="#note_18"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">18</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page016">[pg 016]</span><a name="Pg016" id="Pg016" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+The life and activity prevailing in the study of law, and the
+brilliant successes that study has recently achieved, are due, in
+great part, to the illustrious representatives of the historical
+school. We may add, here, that the French historical school,
+which has so worthily inherited the spirit of Montesquieu, has
+not achieved less in this direction than the older German
+school. It has reconciled the opposing but not mutually hostile,
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page017">[pg 017]</span><a name="Pg017" id="Pg017" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+tendencies of Savigny and Thibaut. It has conscientiously
+scrutinized facts to show their concatenation, and to
+allow their meaning and bearing to be clearly grasped. A
+French jurisconsult, who is at the same time our highest authority
+in the natural law, opened the way by his excellent essays
+on the necessity of reforming the historical studies applicable
+to law; on the influence of the legists on French civilization<a id="noteref_19" name="noteref_19" href="#note_19"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">19</span></span></a>
+etc.; and by his prefaces, equal in value to whole works,
+on hypothecation, sales, loans, partnership, charter-parties etc.
+He may truly be said to have renewed the ancient and prolific
+alliance of history and law.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Instead of pursuing a pure abstraction, this historical school
+has confined itself to the knowledge of the life of man and the
+evolution of society. It has applied to law, with what success
+is well known, the principle which has regenerated the social
+sciences, philosophy, letters, history, Political Economy,—sciences
+which are, so to speak, different provinces of one intellectual
+empire, which interpenetrate one another without being
+confounded one with another, between which no jealous barrier
+should be raised, and between which reciprocity of exchange
+should be encouraged by the suppression of factitious
+duties, which have existed only too long.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page018">[pg 018]</span><a name="Pg018" id="Pg018" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 4.00em; margin-top: 4.00em">
+<h2 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.88em; margin-top: 2.88em"><span style="font-size: 144%">IV.</span></h2>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+We need not dwell any longer on the character of the historical
+method as applied to law, nor on the services it has
+already rendered. On this point, there can be no two opinions.
+And, if any one wonders that we should speak of it at all, in a
+work on Political Economy, we can only say to him, that we
+have done so to call his attention to an instructive precedent,
+and for the further reason that the same method is peculiarly
+well adapted to the study of Political Economy. Its advantages
+are the same here, its tendencies the same, and the same motives
+exist to induce us to use it here. In describing the successive
+phases of the question in the case of law, we have
+performed an important part of the task we had imposed upon
+ourselves, of vindicating the employment of the historical
+method, in the sphere of Political Economy.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+The study of history is the best and most powerful antidote
+against social romances and ideal fancies. François Beaudouin
+was right when he said: <span class="tei tei-q">“<span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">Cæca
+sine historia jurisprudentia</span></span>;”</span>
+and we are very sure that, without history as an
+element in it, Political Economy runs a great risk of walking
+blindfold.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+The human mind has need of being able to know where it
+is at any moment, surrounded, as it is, by so many roads, running
+in so many different directions. It ought to account to
+itself for its progress, its deviations from the right path, and
+for its mistakes.<a id="noteref_20" name="noteref_20" href="#note_20"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">20</span></span></a>
+History alone can throw any light on questions
+which are not simply intellectual curiosities, but which,
+rather, are most deeply concerned with the vital interests of
+society. It confirms the noble teachings of philosophy, by
+showing how our life is made up of one unchanging tissue of
+relations, and how man, even if he may vary their colors, and
+change their design, cannot renew their texture.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+It teaches us to admire nothing, and to despise nothing, beyond
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page019">[pg 019]</span><a name="Pg019" id="Pg019" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+measure. It enlightens us concerning questions of a
+very complicated nature. Witnessing the evolutions of humanity,
+following the development of social facts and theories,
+we better discern principles, and grow wary in relation to the
+alchemists of thought, who imagine that society may be made
+to undergo a transformation between the rising and the setting
+of the sun.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+As there is a natural law, so, too, there are certain principles
+of Political Economy which emanate from philosophy, and
+may be reduced to one supreme principle; that of liberty and
+responsibility. The domain of Political Economy is the <em class="tei tei-emph"><span style="font-style: italic">labor</span></em>
+of generations. But we reject with all our strength, the materialistic
+doctrine which, inexplicably confusing matters, endeavors
+to assimilate ideas so distinct as intelligence and
+things; and which would descend so low as to employ the
+dynamometer to measure the creative force of man and its results,
+and which sees only figures where there is a living soul.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Man is an intelligent being, served by organs,<a id="noteref_21" name="noteref_21" href="#note_21"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">21</span></span></a> by <em class="tei tei-emph"><span style="font-style: italic">personal</span></em>
+organs, with which the Creator has endowed him, by giving
+him a body provided with marvellous aptitudes, by <em class="tei tei-emph"><span style="font-style: italic">external</span></em>
+organs which he finds in nature subjected to his power. Man
+was created in the image of God, say the Scriptures, and
+these words contain a deep meaning. He alone, of all terrestrial
+beings, possesses a spark of divine intelligence. He alone
+has been called to pursue the magnificent work of creation, by
+giving a new face to a world to which he cannot add so much
+as an atom.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Labor</span></span> is nothing but the action of spirit on itself and on
+matter.<a id="noteref_22" name="noteref_22" href="#note_22"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">22</span></span></a>
+Hence its dignity and grandeur. Hence, also, the
+difficulties in the way of economic studies; since, to consider
+them only as concerned with questions of material production,
+is to forget that the products of industry are made for man,
+not man for industrial products; to ignore the close relationship
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page020">[pg 020]</span><a name="Pg020" id="Pg020" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+between their fruitful investigations and the whole circle
+of the moral sciences; to debase them and to mutilate them.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+From the moment that science concerns itself with man
+only, and the action of the mind; from the moment that its end
+becomes not simply material enjoyment, but moral elevation,
+the questions it discusses become indeed more complex, but
+the answer, when found, is more prolific in results. Wealth,
+then, is treated only as one of the forces of civilization. Other
+interests than purely material ones occupy the first place.
+This matter-of-fact philosophy which, according to Bacon's
+precept, seeks to improve the conditions of life, bears in mind,
+that the most fruitful source of material development lies in
+intellectual development. It humbly recognizes that it is not
+the first-born of the family, and draws new strength from this
+avowal. From the moment that it is the mind which <em class="tei tei-emph"><span style="font-style: italic">produces</span></em>
+and which governs the world, intellectual and moral perfection
+become the cause and effect of material progress. <span class="tei tei-q">“But seek
+ye first the kingdom of God and his righteousness, and all
+these things shall be added unto you.”</span>
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+The increase of production, then, appears an instrument of
+elevation in the moral order.<a id="noteref_23" name="noteref_23" href="#note_23"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">23</span></span></a>
+It is energy of soul, intelligence
+and manly virtue which constitute the chief source of the wealth
+of nations; which create it, develop it, and preserve it. Wealth
+increases, declines, and disappears with the increase, decline
+and disappearance of these noble attributes of the soul.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Labor is the child of thought. Nothing happens in the external
+world which was not first conceived in the mind. The
+hand is the servant of the intellect; and its work is successful,
+beautiful or useful in proportion to the activity and development
+of the intellect, and in proportion as the just, the beautiful
+and the good exert their power over it.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Production is, therefore, not a material, but a spiritual, work.
+How, then, can acts and their morality be separated? How
+not understand that the market of labor has its own distinct
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page021">[pg 021]</span><a name="Pg021" id="Pg021" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+laws, and that education, even from a material stand-point, becomes
+the highest interest and the most important duty of
+society, since on it depends the efficiency of labor?
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+From the time that, after a long series of years, the doctrine
+of Christianity had permeated the law of the civilized world;
+from the time that the teaching of Paul, that all men are children
+of one Father, took form and body, and that the principle
+of the equality of all men before their Maker, was supplemented
+by the doctrine and by the practice of that equality
+before the laws, the thinking masses have endeavored to discover
+the wherefore of their actions, and the why of their sufferings.
+They have called the past to account, and inquired
+why they have obtained so limited a share.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+The people, therefore, think; and it is, therefore, a matter of
+importance that they should think aright. It is of importance,
+that they should be guarded against fallacious Utopian promises.
+Henceforth, there is no security for the stability of the
+world but in the contentment of minds. There is no rest for
+mankind, unless men will understand the conditions of their
+destiny; unless, instead of running,
+</p>
+
+<div class="block tei tei-quote" style="margin-bottom: 1.80em; margin-left: 3.60em; margin-top: 1.80em; margin-right: 3.60em">
+<div class="tei tei-lg" style="margin-bottom: 0.90em; margin-top: 0.90em">
+<div class="tei tei-l" style="text-align: left"><span class="tei tei-q" style="text-align: left"><span style="font-size: 90%">“</span><span style="font-size: 90%">Toujours insatiable et jamais assouvis,</span><span style="font-size: 90%">”</span></span></div>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+after the intoxicating cup of material enjoyment—for wants
+not governed by the intellect and the heart are infinite in number,
+and the gratification of one gives birth to another—they
+submit to the law of sacrifice, and give play to the noblest
+faculty with which the Creator has endowed us, moral empire
+over self.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+We shall meet on this road, hard of ascent, not only peace
+of soul, but goods, more real and more numerous, than those
+with which the allurements of error would dazzle our eyes.
+The greatest obstacles to be overcome are not material ones,
+but moral difficulties. As Franklin says, in substance, he that
+tells you you can succeed, in any way but by labor and economy,
+is a quack.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+But labor is more productive in proportion as it is more intelligent,
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page022">[pg 022]</span><a name="Pg022" id="Pg022" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+as hand and mind keep pace with each other, as
+good moral habits generate order and voluntary discipline.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Economy is sacrifice, binding the present to the future,
+widening the horizon of thought, inspiring foresight, lengthening
+the lever of human activity, by providing it with new instruments.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Life ceases to be a worry about how the body shall be sustained,
+and the material world becomes the shadow of the
+spiritual. The former is made to serve the latter, and man's
+free effort lifts him into a higher region of thought, and into a
+larger field of action. The more mind there is put into a piece
+of work, says Channing, the more it is worth.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+We, men of to-day, are lookers-on at a marvelous spectacle.
+Steam furrows the earth. Industry has taken an immense
+start. Mechanical force bends the most rebellious materials.
+Chemistry, physics and the natural sciences are discovering a
+new world. But whence all this? What is the principle of
+this new life? We answer: intellectual and moral progress.
+Mind has grown; the soul has been expanded. God has permitted
+man to be free, and furnished him with the means to
+be so.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Thus man, as Mignet has said, becomes that mighty creature
+to whom God has given the earth for the vast theater of his
+action, the universe as the inexhaustible object of his knowledge,
+the forces of nature for the growing service of his wants,
+by allowing him, by ever increasing information, to obtain an
+ever increasing amount of well-being.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Man is free.—1789 put in action the sublime precept of the
+gospel. He holds his destiny in his own hands. But the
+rights which he enjoys impose new duties on him. If <em class="tei tei-emph"><span style="font-style: italic">equality</span></em>
+be the sentiment which predominates in our day, we should
+take care not to confound it with the leveling of Communism.
+Nor is it externally to us, but within ourselves, that it should
+be developed, by intellectual and moral culture.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+History preserves the student from being led astray by a too
+servile adherence to any system. It exposes the folly of the
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page023">[pg 023]</span><a name="Pg023" id="Pg023" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+<span class="tei tei-q">“social contract,”</span> and of the idyllic dreams of the advantages
+of savage life. It shows that nature, instead of being prodigal
+of her treasures, distributes them with a niggardly hand, and
+that it is necessary to conquer her by labor, intelligence and patience
+before we can control her.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+It shows us human liberty growing stronger every day,
+thanks to moral and intellectual progress, supported by the
+two powerful props of property, the complement of man, the
+material reflection of his spiritual power; and capital, the fruit
+of abstinence, the symbol of moral power and the result of
+enlightened activity.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+History walks with a firm step, because it feels secure in a
+knowledge of the laws of human nature, and in its experience
+of the successive manifestations of social life. Instead of the
+vagueness of ideal conceptions, it allows us to grasp and to
+appreciate what is real in life. It does not confine itself to the
+study of man. It makes us acquainted with <em class="tei tei-emph"><span style="font-style: italic">men</span></em>, whose
+wants extend and are ennobled in proportion to the perfection
+of their faculties. The feelings and the intellect are simultaneously
+developed in man. The savage is the most egotistical
+of men.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Hence, we believe that Political Economy cannot dispense
+with the services of morals and philosophy, of history and
+law; for these are branches of one common trunk, through
+all of which the self-same sap circulates.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 4.00em; margin-top: 4.00em">
+<h2 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.88em; margin-top: 2.88em"><span style="font-size: 144%">V.</span></h2>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+The isolation of the theory of Political Economy is peculiar
+to our own day. In more remote times, we find this study
+confounded with the other moral sciences, of which it was an
+integral part. When the genius of Adam Smith gave it a
+distinct character, he did not desire to separate it from those
+branches of knowledge without which it could only remain a
+bleached plant from the absence of the sunlight of ethics.
+</p>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page024">[pg 024]</span><a name="Pg024" id="Pg024" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+We must renounce the singular idea,<a id="noteref_24" name="noteref_24" href="#note_24"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">24</span></span></a> that thousands of
+years could pass away without leaving any trace of what enlightened
+men had thought and elaborated in the matter of
+Political Economy, among so many nations, and that people
+should never have thought of cultivating this rich intellectual
+domain, while in every other direction, it is easy for us to ascend
+by a road already cleared up to the most remote antiquity.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+It has already been acknowledged, that the <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">classic domain</span></span>,
+fertilized by intellectual culture on a large scale and on a small
+one, was exceedingly rich in valuable indications, although
+they do not present themselves under the distinct form, which
+later affected the different branches of public life.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+As to the pretended <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">primitive simplicity</span></span> of the middle ages,
+which it is claimed, prevailed during that period, a species of
+economic vegetation, those who maintain it forget the long
+series of communistic theories which, at near intervals, found
+expression in many a bloody struggle, and whose repression required
+the combined efforts of Church and State.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Doubtless, it is not in their modern forms that the elements
+of politico-economical science are to be found, in the past. But
+when we succeed in reuniting the scattered and broken parts;
+when we have made our way into the customs, decrees, ordinances,
+capitularies, laws and regulations of those times; when,
+so to speak, we come, unaware, upon the life of nations, in the
+most ingenuous and confidential documents which reflect it
+most faithfully because most simply, we may well be astonished
+at the results obtained. Where we expected, perhaps, to find
+only erudition, we reap a rich harvest of lessons which are all
+the more valuable for being disinterested.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Legislative and administrative acts frequently develop real
+economic doctrines. It is easy to discover in them the onward
+course of a theory which plunges directly into practical applications.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+What results might we not expect from these efforts, if the
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page025">[pg 025]</span><a name="Pg025" id="Pg025" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+genius of investigation and of divination, which has so elevated
+historical studies in our day, should have an observing
+and penetrating eye in this direction! How limited was the
+field on which Guérard erected the scientific monument which
+he has left us in his <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Polyptique d'Irminon</span></span>; and how precious
+are the lessons he leaves us, since we have here to do, not
+with the history of professed doctrines or unlooked-for events,
+but with the historical development of economic society which
+shows us the living march of principles.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 4.00em; margin-top: 4.00em">
+<h2 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.88em; margin-top: 2.88em"><span style="font-size: 144%">VI.</span></h2>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Political Economy is not, as we have just said, a new science.
+It has been a distinct science only a short time. Until
+the eighteenth century, it was confounded with philosophy,
+morals, politics, law and history. But it does not follow, that,
+because it has grown so in importance, as to deserve a place
+of its own, its intimate relationship with the noble studies
+which had until then absorbed it should cease. There is another
+consequence also to be deduced from this. From the
+moment that Political Economy ceases to be considered a new
+science, it finds a long series of ancestors behind it, since it
+is compelled to investigate a past to which so many bonds
+unite it. This duty may increase its difficulties, but, at the same
+time, it singularly adds to the attractions of a study which, instead
+of presenting us only with the arid deductions of dogmatism,
+comes to us with all the freshness and all the color of
+life.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+We may allow those who make Political Economy simply a
+piece of arithmetic to ignore these retrospective studies and
+their importance; for mathematics has little to do with history.
+But it is otherwise with the life of nations. These
+would discover whence they come, in order to learn whither
+they are tending.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+They are not obeying a vain interest of curiosity, as J. B.
+Say supposed, when, in sketching a short history of the progress
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page026">[pg 026]</span><a name="Pg026" id="Pg026" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+of Political Economy, he said: <span class="tei tei-q">“However, every kind
+of history has a right to gratify curiosity.”</span> It is a thing to be
+regretted, that this eminent thinker could thus ignore one of
+the essential elements of the science to which he rendered
+such great and unquestioned services. A sense for the historical
+was wanting in him. <span class="tei tei-q">“The history of a science,”</span> he
+writes,<a id="noteref_25" name="noteref_25" href="#note_25"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">25</span></span></a> <span class="tei tei-q">“is not like the narration of things that have happened.
+What would it profit us to make a collection of absurd opinions,
+of decried doctrines which deserved to be decried? It
+would be at once useless and fastidious to thus exhume them
+in case we perfectly knew the public economy of social bodies.
+It can be of little concern to us to learn what our predecessors
+have dreamed about this subject, and to describe the
+long series of mistakes in practice which have retarded man's
+progress in the research after truth. Error is a thing to be
+forgotten, not learned.”</span> As if that which was once to be
+found in time is not to-day to be found in space; as if there
+ever was an institution that did not have its
+<span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">raison d' etre</span></span> and
+had not constituted a resting place in the search after a higher
+truth or of a more intelligent and salutary application of an old
+one! There are a great many actual systems and a great
+many present facts which can be understood only by the help
+of history; and how frequently would not an acquaintance
+with history serve to keep us from taking for marvelous inventions
+the antiquated machinery of other ages, whose only
+advantage and only merit are that they have remained unknown.
+How much of the pretended daring of innovators has
+been old trumpery which the wisdom of the times had cast
+off as rubbish. Besides, as Bacon has said: <span class="tei tei-q">“Verumtamen
+sæpe necessarium est, quod non est optimum.”</span>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page027">[pg 027]</span><a name="Pg027" id="Pg027" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 4.00em; margin-top: 4.00em">
+<h2 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.88em; margin-top: 2.88em"><span style="font-size: 144%">VII.</span></h2>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+It is not the result of mere chance that the greatest economists
+have been both historians and philosophers. We need
+only mention Adam Smith, Turgot, Malthus, Sismondi, Droz,
+Rossi and Léon Faucher. It is too frequently forgotten that
+the father of modern Political Economy, Adam Smith, looked
+upon the science as only one part of the course of moral philosophy
+which he taught at Glasgow, and which embraced
+four divisions:
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+1. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Universal theology.</span></span>—The existence and attributes of
+God; principles or faculties of the human mind, the basis of
+religion.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+2. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ethics.</span></span>—Theory of the moral sentiments.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+3. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Moral principles relating to justice.</span></span>—In
+this, as we learn from one of Adam Smith's pupils in a sketch preserved by
+David Stewart, he followed a plan which seems to have been
+suggested to him by Montesquieu. He endeavored to trace the
+successive advances of jurisprudence from the most barbarous
+times to the most polished. He carefully showed how the
+arts which minister to subsistence, and to the accumulation of
+property, act on laws and governments, and are productive
+of advances and changes in them analogous to those they experience
+themselves.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+In the first part of his course, as we learn from the same
+authority, he examined the various political regulations not
+founded on the principle of justice but in expediency, the
+object of which is to increase the wealth, the power and the
+prosperity of the state. From this point of view, he considered
+the political institutions relating to commerce, finance, the
+ecclesiastical and military establishments. His lectures on the
+different subjects constitute the substance of the work he afterwards
+published on the wealth of nations. A pupil of Hutcheson,
+Adam Smith always applied the experimental method,
+<span class="tei tei-q">“which, instead of losing itself in magnificent and hazardous
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page028">[pg 028]</span><a name="Pg028" id="Pg028" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+speculations, attaches itself to certain and universal facts discovered
+to us by our own consciousness, by language, literature,
+history and society.”</span><a id="noteref_26" name="noteref_26" href="#note_26"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">26</span></span></a>
+Before taking the professorship
+of philosophy, Adam Smith had taught belleslettres and rhetoric
+in Edinburgh, in 1748. He had written a work on the
+origin and formation of languages; and it was because he had
+profoundly studied the moral sciences that it was given to him
+to inaugurate a new science and to become a great economist.
+Mr. Cousin has laid great stress on Adam Smith's taste and
+talent for history. <span class="tei tei-q">“Whatever the subject he treats, he turns
+his eyes backward over the road traversed before himself, and
+he illuminates every object on his path by the aid of the torch
+which reflection has placed in his hand. Thus, in Political
+Economy, his principles not only prepare the future but renew
+the past, and discover the reason, heretofore unknown, of
+ancient facts which history had gathered together without understanding
+them. It is not saying enough to remark that
+Adam Smith possessed a great variety of historical information;
+we must add that he possessed the real historical spirit.”</span>
+Thanks to this eminent faculty of his, the Glasgow philosopher
+acquired great influence over minds. In 1810, when the
+French empire had reached the zenith of its greatness, Marwitz
+wrote: <span class="tei tei-q">“There is a monarch as powerful as Napoleon:
+Adam Smith.”</span> We need not recall Turgot's historical researches.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Malthus' chief title to distinction, his work on Population,
+is as much a historical work as a politico-economical one; and
+it is not sufficiently known that he was professor of history
+and Political Economy in the college of the East India Company
+at Aylesbury.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+We need say no more on this subject. The works of the
+other writers whom we have mentioned are too well known
+to permit any one to think that they excluded history and
+moral science from the study of Political Economy. Hence
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page029">[pg 029]</span><a name="Pg029" id="Pg029" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+the school which has risen up in Germany,<a id="noteref_27" name="noteref_27" href="#note_27"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">27</span></span></a> and which is endeavoring
+to do for Political Economy what Savigny, Eichhorn,
+Schrader, Mommsen, Rudorff, and so many other illustrious
+scholars have done for jurisprudence, cannot be rightly
+accused of rashness. It has done nothing but unfurl the noble
+banner borne by the most venerated masters of the science.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 4.00em; margin-top: 4.00em">
+<h2 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.88em; margin-top: 2.88em"><span style="font-size: 144%">VIII.</span></h2>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+At the head of this school stands William Roscher, professor
+of Political Economy at the University of Leipzig, whose
+excellent work, The Principles of Political Economy, in which
+he follows <em class="tei tei-emph"><span style="font-style: italic">the historical method</span></em>, we have just translated.
+William Roscher is (1857) scarcely forty years of age. He
+was born at Hanover, October 21, 1817. His laborious
+and simple life is that of a worthy representative of the science.
+<span class="tei tei-q">“You ask me,”</span> he wrote us recently, <span class="tei tei-q">“to give you some information
+concerning the incidents of my life. I have, thank
+God, but very little to tell you. Lives whose history it is interesting
+to relate are seldom happy lives.”</span> He confined
+himself to giving us a few dates which are, so to say, the
+landmarks of a career full of usefulness. Roscher, from 1835
+to 1839, studied jurisprudence and philology at the universities
+of Göttingen and Berlin. The learned teachers who exercised
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page030">[pg 030]</span><a name="Pg030" id="Pg030" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+the greatest influence on his intellectual development
+were the historians Gervinus and Ranke, the philologist K. O.
+Müller and the Germanist Albrecht. It is easy to see that he
+went to a good school, and that he profited by it. He was
+made doctor in 1838; admitted in 1840 as <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Privat-docent</span></span> at
+Göttingen; appointed in 1843 professor extraordinary at the
+same university, and called in 1844 to fill the chair of titular
+professor at Erlangen. Since 1848 he has acted in the same
+capacity in the University of Leipzig, where he was for six
+years member of the Poor Board, where he teaches also in the
+agricultural college. His fame has grown rapidly. Many of
+the German universities have emulated one another for the
+honor of possessing him, but he has not been willing to leave
+Leipzig. His first remarkable work was his doctor's thesis:
+<span lang="la" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="la"><span style="font-style: italic">De historicæ doctrinæ
+apud sophistas majores vestigiis</span></span>, written
+in 1838. In 1842, he published his excellent work, which has
+since become classical: <span class="tei tei-q">“The Life, Labors and age of
+Thucydides.”</span><a id="noteref_28" name="noteref_28" href="#note_28"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">28</span></span></a>
+From that time, important works, all bearing the
+stamp of varied and profound scientific acquirements, and of
+an erudition remarkable for sagacity and elegance, have followed
+one another without interruption. In 1843, he treated
+the question of luxury<a id="noteref_29" name="noteref_29" href="#note_29"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">29</span></span></a>
+with a master hand, and laid the foundation
+of his great work—only the first part of which has
+thus far appeared—at the same time tracing on a large scale
+the programme of a course of Political Economy according
+to the historical method.<a id="noteref_30" name="noteref_30" href="#note_30"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">30</span></span></a> In 1844, he published his historical
+study on Socialism and Communism,<a id="noteref_31" name="noteref_31" href="#note_31"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">31</span></span></a> and in 1845 and 1846,
+his ideas on the politics and the statistics of systems of agriculture.
+He is, besides, author of an excellent work on the
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page031">[pg 031]</span><a name="Pg031" id="Pg031" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+corn-trade;<a id="noteref_32" name="noteref_32" href="#note_32"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">32</span></span></a> of a remarkable book on the colonial
+system;<a id="noteref_33" name="noteref_33" href="#note_33"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">33</span></span></a>
+of a sketch on the three forms of the state;<a id="noteref_34" name="noteref_34" href="#note_34"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">34</span></span></a>
+of a memoir on the relations between Political Economy and classical
+antiquity;<a id="noteref_35" name="noteref_35" href="#note_35"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">35</span></span></a> of
+a work of the greatest interest, on the history of economic
+doctrines in England in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries—a
+work full of the most curious researches;<a id="noteref_36" name="noteref_36" href="#note_36"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">36</span></span></a> of a book on
+the economic principle of forest economy,<a id="noteref_37" name="noteref_37" href="#note_37"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">37</span></span></a> and lastly, of the
+great work, the first part of which we have translated, under the
+title of The Principles of Political Economy, and which is to
+be completed by the successive publication of three other volumes,
+on the Political Economy of Agriculture, and the related
+branches of primitive production, the Political Economy of
+Industry and Commerce, and one on the Political Economy of
+the State and the Commune. This work, when completed,
+will be a real cyclopedia of the
+science.<a id="noteref_38" name="noteref_38" href="#note_38"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">38</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Side by side with William Roscher, we must mention a
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page032">[pg 032]</span><a name="Pg032" id="Pg032" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+young economist, Knies, formerly professor at the University
+of Marburg, but whom political persecution compelled to accept
+a secondary position at the gymnasium of Schaffhausen,
+for a time, and who fills, to-day, in the University of Freiburg,
+in Breisgau, a position more worthy of his great talent. We
+hope, in a work which we intend to publish, on Political
+Economy in Germany, to make the public acquainted with the
+works of this writer. They deserve to attract the most serious
+attention. We know of few works which equal his Political
+Economy, written on the historical method.<a id="noteref_39" name="noteref_39" href="#note_39"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">39</span></span></a> We shall
+also have something to say of another economist, formerly
+professor at Marburg, a victim, also, of the power of the
+elector of Hesse, Hildebrand, now professor at the University
+of Zurich. His National-Œkonomie<a id="noteref_40" name="noteref_40" href="#note_40"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">40</span></span></a> is a book replete
+with interest, and we have nowhere met with a better criticism
+of Proudhon's system, than in its pages. If the new
+school had produced but these three men, it would still have
+left its impress on the history of the science.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Other works, no less important, will claim our attention in
+the book to which we have already devoted many years of
+labor. If we carry out our intention, we shall review the
+works of a great many scholars, of great merit, whose names
+only are, unfortunately, known outside of Germany. The
+works of Rau, of Hermann, of Robert Mohl, of Hannsen,
+Helferich, Schütz, Kosegarten, Wirth etc., are a rich mine,
+from which we hope to draw much valuable information.
+Nor shall we neglect the original productions of J. Moser, the
+Franklin of Germany, nor the quaint, but sometimes striking,
+ideas of Adam Müller. Lastly, our learned friend, Professor
+Stein of Vienna, will afford us an opportunity to show forth
+the merit of important and extensive works, animated by the
+philosophic spirit. For the present, we must confine ourselves
+to a view of the application of the historical method to Political
+Economy.
+</p>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page033">[pg 033]</span><a name="Pg033" id="Pg033" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+There is a rather widespread prejudice existing against this
+order of works, a souvenir of the struggle carried on formerly,
+between Thibaut and Savigny, which inclines people to suppose
+that the historical school leans towards the political doctrines
+of the past, and that it is hostile to the liberal spirit
+of modern times. Nothing can be farther from the truth.
+The names of Roscher, Knies and Hildebrand are sufficient to
+remove this prejudice. Their works, inspired by an enlightened
+love for progress, do not allow of such a misconstruction.
+The historical point of view does not consist in the worship of
+the past, any more than in the depreciation of the present. It
+does not view the succession of phenomena as a fluctuation of
+events without unity or purpose. On the contrary, the historical
+method harmonizes wonderfully well with the wants of
+genuine progress. The changes accomplished bear testimony
+to the free and creative power of man, acting within the limit
+permitted to it by the degrees of intelligence reached, of the
+development of morals, and of individual liberty. The philosophy
+of Political Economy, which is the result of this calm
+teaching, free from the passions of party—for science acknowledges
+no adherence to party—is like that of law, opposed
+to the, more or less, ingenious or rash dreams, which
+build the world over again in thought. In showing how, at
+all times, humanity has understood and applied the principles
+which govern the production of wealth, it may say, with the
+Roman jurisconsult: <span class="tei tei-q">“Justitiam namque colimus ... æquum
+ab iniquo separantes ... veram nisi fallor philosophiam, non
+simulatam affectantes.”</span> <span class="tei tei-q">“The human mind,”</span> says Rossi,
+<span class="tei tei-q">“endeavoring to attain to a knowledge of itself, estimating its
+strength, taking a method, and applying it with a consciousness
+of its mode of procedure to the knowledge of all things;
+such is philosophy. Without it, there is no science in any
+branch of human knowledge.”</span> Thus do we rise, with the aid
+of a critical mind, by careful investigation and great sagacity,
+to the truths founded on observations made.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page034">[pg 034]</span><a name="Pg034" id="Pg034" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 4.00em; margin-top: 4.00em">
+<h2 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.88em; margin-top: 2.88em"><span style="font-size: 144%">IX.</span></h2>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+There is another method, which, starting out from principles,
+evident of themselves, develops science by way of
+conclusions drawn, after the manner of the geometricians.
+The apparent severity and simplicity of this method are very
+seductive, and very dangerous, when we have to deal not with
+figures, but with men; when the varied, complex and delicate
+exigencies which accumulate when human nature comes into
+play do not exactly square with the formula; and, when instead
+of dealing with abstractions, we have to tackle realities.
+One of our venerated teachers, the illustrious Rossi, thought
+he might remove the difficulty by drawing a distinction between
+<em class="tei tei-emph"><span style="font-style: italic">pure</span></em> Political Economy and <em class="tei tei-emph"><span style="font-style: italic">applied</span></em> Political Economy.
+It is not without a certain amount of hesitation that we dare
+differ with so high an authority; but confess we must, this distinction
+is far from satisfying us. The doubt it has left in our
+mind has been the principal cause which has inclined us to
+the historical method. <span class="tei tei-q">“Rational Political Economy,”</span> says
+Rossi, <span class="tei tei-q">“is the science which investigates the nature, the causes
+and the movement of wealth, by basing itself on the general
+and constant facts of human nature, and of the external world.
+In applied Political Economy, the science is taken as the mean.
+Account is taken of external facts. Nationality, time and
+place play an important part.”</span>
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Let us for a moment accept these definitions; what is the
+consequence? That there are two sciences, the one of which,
+purely speculative, has more to do with philosophy than with
+the permanent conflicts which agitate the world; the other of
+which could not alone furnish us with rules in practice, nor
+with a formulary for the measures to be taken in a given
+case, since such a pretension would be both vain and ridiculous,
+but which would inform the practical judgment of men
+charged with the solution of the numberless difficult and complicated
+questions which come up every day. If pure science
+refuses to interfere in the affairs of this world; if, as the learned
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page035">[pg 035]</span><a name="Pg035" id="Pg035" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+originator of the doctrine we are just now considering gives
+us to understand, it would compromise the solution of questions
+by the intoxication of logic, and the ambition of perfect
+system; if, consequently, it is to be worshipped like a motionless
+and inactive divinity, how could this platonic satisfaction
+suffice us? Would not the opponents of economic doctrines
+be disposed to acknowledge all the principles, provided
+the consequences to be drawn from them were left to themselves;
+and would they not come to us, bristling with arguments
+drawn from the circumstances of nationality, time and
+space, to refute the possibility of applying pure science?
+</p>
+
+<div class="block tei tei-quote" style="margin-bottom: 1.80em; margin-left: 3.60em; margin-top: 1.80em; margin-right: 3.60em">
+<div class="tei tei-lg" style="margin-bottom: 0.90em; margin-top: 0.90em">
+<div class="tei tei-l" style="text-align: left"><span style="font-size: 90%">On ne vaincra jamais les Romains que dans Rome.</span></div>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+This, therefore, is the ground we must explore. We must
+develop applied Political Economy which takes cognizance of
+external circumstances. To do this, no one will question that
+the best and most decisive of methods is the historical, which
+concerns itself with time, space and nationality, and which
+leads to proper reformation where reformation is wanted.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Moreover, principles will be no less firmly established by
+historical induction than by dogmatic deduction, and, moreover,
+science will be inseparable from art. We are not of
+those who deny principles, or who challenge them. What
+we desire is, that they should not be worshiped as fetiches,
+but that they should enter into the very life-blood of nations.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Further: the abstract deductions of pure science do not
+leave us without disquietude, since they treat man much more
+like a material than like a moral force. Under the vigorous
+procedure of speculative mathematics, man becomes a constant
+quantity for all times and all countries, whereas he is, in reality,
+a variable quantity. All the elements put in play are
+ideal entities, the reverse of which we find in poetry, where
+</p>
+
+<div class="block tei tei-quote" style="margin-bottom: 1.80em; margin-left: 3.60em; margin-top: 1.80em; margin-right: 3.60em">
+<div class="tei tei-lg" style="margin-bottom: 0.90em; margin-top: 0.90em">
+<div class="tei tei-l" style="text-align: left"><span style="font-size: 90%">Tout prend un corps, une ame, un esprit, un visage!</span></div>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+and where everything loses the character of life, and is transformed
+into inanimate units. Man is something different from
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page036">[pg 036]</span><a name="Pg036" id="Pg036" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+the sum of the services he may be made to render, and from
+the sum of enjoyments which may be procured for him. We
+must not run the risk of lowering him to the level of a living
+tool; and from the moment that we are required to take his
+moral destiny into account, what becomes of abstract calculation?
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 4.00em; margin-top: 4.00em">
+<h2 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.88em; margin-top: 2.88em"><span style="font-size: 144%">X.</span></h2>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+We have been wrong, says Rossi, in reproaching Quesnay
+for his famous <span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">laissez faire,
+laissez passer</span></span>, which is pure science.
+We, also, are of opinion that the reproach was ill
+founded, for it proceeded from a wrong conception of the
+principle itself. But it seems to us that, far from condemning
+this doctrine in its serious application, the historical method
+may serve to explain and to justify it. Employing less of
+rigidity and dryness in form, it reaches consequences more in
+harmony with social life. But it is not to be imagined that
+we do not meet in this way with many ancient and glorious
+precedents. The great principles of industrial liberty, as well
+as those of commercial liberty, originated in France. Forbonnais
+was right when he said: <span class="tei tei-q">“We may congratulate
+ourselves on being able to find, in our old books and ancient
+ordinances, wherewith to vindicate for ourselves the right to
+that light which we generally supposed to have been revealed
+to the English and Dutch before us.”</span> The further Forbonnais
+carried his researches into our annals, the greater the number
+of traces of opposition to the prejudices in favor of exclusion
+and monopoly, so long made principles of administrative policy,
+did he find.<a id="noteref_41" name="noteref_41" href="#note_41"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">41</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+The famous axiom, <span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">laissez
+faire</span></span>, and <span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">laissez
+passer</span></span>, the subversive
+tendencies of which people affect to condemn, was not
+invented by Quesnay. He only gave a scientific bearing to
+what was the inspiration of a merchant called Legendre.
+The latter, consulted by Colbert on the best means of protecting
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page037">[pg 037]</span><a name="Pg037" id="Pg037" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+commerce, dropped these words which have since become
+so celebrated.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+We must not lose sight of their real meaning, nor misunderstand
+the intention which dictated them. What Quesnay
+said was this: <span class="tei tei-q">“Let everything alone which is injurious,
+neither to good morals, nor to liberty, nor to property, nor to
+personal security. Allow everything to be sold which has
+been produced without crime.”</span> And he added: <span class="tei tei-q">“Only freedom
+judges aright; only competition never sells too dear, and
+always pays a reasonable and legitimate price.”</span> Far from
+being the absence of rule, liberty is the rule itself. To
+<span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">laisser faire</span></span>
+the good is to prevent evil.<a id="noteref_42" name="noteref_42" href="#note_42"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">42</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+There is need of institutions to complete the exercise of the
+independence acquired by labor, and of laws to regulate that
+exercise. The <span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">laisser faire</span></span>
+and <span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">laisser passer</span></span> of economists
+is, in no way, like the absolute formula, which some have denounced
+and others sought to utilize, as relieving authority of
+all care and all intervention.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+To understand this maxim aright, we must go back to the
+oppressive regime of ancient society. Quesnay's formula was,
+first of all, a protest against the restraints which hampered the
+free development of labor. But it did not tend to abrogate
+the office of legislator, nor to deprive society or the individual
+of the support of the public power which watches over the
+fulfillment of our destiny.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+It may have seemed convenient to find in the gravity of a
+politico-economical principle, an excuse for the sweets of legislative
+and administrative <span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">far niente</span></span>,
+but it is generally conceded
+that the role of authority has grown, rather than diminished,
+under the regime of the liberty of labor. The task is, in our
+days, a hard one, both for individuals and nations; for liberty
+dispenses its favors only to the masculine virtues of a laborious
+and an enlightened people.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Liberty is not license. It refuses to bend under the yoke,
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page038">[pg 038]</span><a name="Pg038" id="Pg038" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+but it submits to rule. The mission of authority is not to constrain,
+but to counsel; not to command, but to help accomplish;
+not to absorb individual activity, but to develop it. It
+does not pretend to raise a convenient indifference on the part
+of government, nor the indolent withdrawal of all protective
+influence to the dignity of a principle. To say, on the other
+hand, that the <span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">laisser
+faire</span></span> and <span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">laisser
+passer</span></span> of the economists
+means: Let robbery alone; let fraud alone etc., is to amuse
+one's self playing upon words, and to argue in a manner unworthy
+of any serious answer. Under pretext of painting a
+picture of economic doctrine, we are given its caricature.
+Such has never been the system, to the elaboration of which
+the purest hearts and noblest intellects have devoted themselves.
+A negation does not constitute the science of Political
+Economy.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+It is very convenient to inclose humanity within a circle of
+action, drawn with rigorous precision, and to govern movements
+seen in advance. But such artificial conceptions mutilate
+the activity of man. To guarantee man all liberty, and
+prevent its abuse—such are the data of the problem. The
+work is a great and difficult one. Far from yielding in point
+of elevation to ideal systems, it is superior to them in extent
+and variety of combinations. Those who ignore its bearing,
+yield, it may be, to a certain indolence of intellect. Restrained
+within its natural limits, the famous
+<span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">laisser faire</span></span>
+and <span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">laisser
+passer</span></span> of the Physiocrates deserves even to-day our respect
+and our confidence. It ought to be preserved in the grateful
+memory of men, side by side with the maxim which Quesnay
+succeeded in having printed at Versailles, by the hand of
+Louis XV himself: <span class="tei tei-q">“Pauvres paysans, pauvre royaume;
+pauvre royaume, pauvre souverain.”</span><a id="noteref_43" name="noteref_43" href="#note_43"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">43</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page039">[pg 039]</span><a name="Pg039" id="Pg039" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 4.00em; margin-top: 4.00em">
+<h2 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.88em; margin-top: 2.88em"><span style="font-size: 144%">XI.</span></h2>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+To return to the question of method. Rossi made use of
+an ingenious example to explain his thought:<a id="noteref_44" name="noteref_44" href="#note_44"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">44</span></span></a> <span class="tei tei-q">“Are,”</span> he inquires,
+<span class="tei tei-q">“these deductions [of pure science] perfectly legitimate;
+are these consequences always true? It is incontestably true
+that a projectile, discharged at a certain angle, will describe a
+certain curve; this is a mathematical truth. It is equally true,
+that the resistance offered to the projectile by the medium
+through which it moves modifies the speculative result in
+practice, to some extent; this is a truth of observation. Is the
+mathematical deduction false? By no means; but it supposes
+a vacuum. I hasten to acknowledge it. Speculative economy
+also neglects certain facts and leaves certain resistances out of
+account.”</span> Now, from the moment that we have to deal with
+human interests, it is not possible to suppose a vacuum, to
+neglect the most vulgar facts, and the most common instances
+of resistance, nor to lose one's self in abstraction. The correctives
+of applied Political Economy either may not wipe out this
+original sin, or else they run great danger of covering up the
+principles themselves. In ballistics, again, we may measure
+the resistance which the medium in which we are obliged
+to operate, makes the force of impulsion and the target both
+obey the same law, and yield to the same process of calculation.
+But is it thus when you touch upon man's innermost
+and most sensitive part? Is there not danger that the hypotheses
+may be deceitful, and that you may be accused of toiling
+in a vacuum? We well know the solid reason that may be
+opposed to sarcasm of this nature; but is it expedient to lay
+one's self open to it?
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Moreover, the consequences are not great enough to warrant
+us to expose ourselves to the danger. The principles of
+pure science are very small in number. They might even, be
+easily reduced to one, of which M. Cousin has been the eloquent
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page040">[pg 040]</span><a name="Pg040" id="Pg040" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+interpreter—human liberty. This liberty has no need
+of Political Economy to shine with the luster of evidence;
+nothing can prevail against it. We can prove that it is as
+fecund as it is respectable; but if the science of wealth should
+endeavor to demonstrate the contrary, the primordial bases
+of society, liberty, property and the family would not be less
+sacred nor less necessary, for they are the right of humanity.
+They could not be put aside, even under pretext of any mechanism
+which would claim to produce more.<a id="noteref_45" name="noteref_45" href="#note_45"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">45</span></span></a> These sovereign
+principles of economy flow from the moral law, and they have
+no reason to dread the power of facts, for the prosperity of nations
+depends on the respect with which they are surrounded
+and the guarantees by which they are protected.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+We have spoken of the moral law; and, indeed, in our opinion,
+it is impossible to banish it from the domain of public
+economy. Any other point of view seems to us too narrow.
+And when we see eminent men go astray in the pursuit of an
+ideal which fails to take the human soul into account, and
+which finds nothing but equations where there are feelings and
+ideas, we cannot help thinking that they are unfaithful to the
+thought of the founder of the science, Adam Smith. Man is
+not simply a piece of machinery. He does not blindly submit
+to external impulse. Rather is he himself, the greatest of impulses.
+But to govern things, he must first learn to conquer
+himself. Personal interest is the powerful motive which he
+obeys. Man does not live alone, in a state of isolation, in the
+world. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Væ soli!</span></span> He lives in society and profits by the relations
+which he forms with other beings, intelligent like himself,
+and for whom he has a natural feeling of sympathy.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+The good that comes to them yields satisfaction to him, and
+the evil that befalls them falls on him likewise. He cannot turn
+back entirely upon his own personality. Besides his own interest,
+he feels and shares another interest—the interest of all.
+Personal interest is perfectly legitimate. The love of self cannot
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page041">[pg 041]</span><a name="Pg041" id="Pg041" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+be condemned. The Savior himself has enjoined us to love
+our neighbor as ourselves. To love him more than ourselves
+is a very high and beautiful virtue. It is the self-abnegation
+which inspired Christian heroes. But heroism is rare, and cannot
+be imposed, nor taken, as a rule. Personal interest is a
+powerful stimulant, and the superior harmony of social relations
+makes it contribute to the general good.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+What must be condemned is a fatal deviation of this sentiment
+which destroys its effect and narrows its actions. What
+we need to prevent is the degeneration of personal interest into
+an egotism which parches, instead of fertilizing, and which
+compromises the future by the exclusive search after present
+advantage; for egotism is short-sighted. On the other hand,
+the broader and more generous feeling which inclines us to
+sympathize with our fellow beings in their sorrows, and to
+unite our destiny to theirs; that is, the feeling of the general
+interest, has a limit too.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+It would be falsified if it absorbed the individual; if it destroyed
+the most powerful motive-force by drying up the abundant
+source of activity; if it attacked moral energy by enervating
+responsibility; if it extended the circle of results obtained
+to such an extent that scarcely any one should feel the rebound.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+The evil produced by egotism, that sad travesty of personal
+interest, appears under a form quite as formidable when the
+general interest takes the form of communism. The coöperation
+of personal interest and of the general interest is always
+necessary, both for individual profit and social advantage.
+There is as much danger in annihilating the individual as in
+exalting him. History furnishes us with memorable examples
+of this. It does not allow us to go astray in the narrow ways
+of a peevish and jealous personality, nor to lose ourselves in
+the vague labyrinth of a chimerical and false communism.
+The latter would destroy what constitutes the power and dignity
+of man. It would wipe out the most prominent features
+of his noble nature, by destroying the support of energy and
+activity and the food of moral force.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page042">[pg 042]</span><a name="Pg042" id="Pg042" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 4.00em; margin-top: 4.00em">
+<h2 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.88em; margin-top: 2.88em"><span style="font-size: 144%">XII.</span></h2>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+But, we are told, Political Economy is only the science of
+selfishness; Adam Smith is the prophet of individualism; grow
+rich <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">per fas et nefas</span></span> is its ultimate teaching. Such a judgment
+is evidence of much levity and little enlightenment.
+How could the man who conceived the study of human interests
+on so large a scale, the philosopher who acknowledged
+Hutcheson as his master and gave his ideas a still more expansive
+character, be the apostle of egotism; and how can the
+science which he founded be its gospel? There is here an
+error of fact and a defect of appreciation. Hutcheson had
+based moral philosophy on the feeling which, according to
+him, engendered all the other virtues, on benevolence, which
+is disinterested, busied with the welfare of others, with the
+public weal and the general interest. Adam Smith went further,
+and sought to base it on a still more energetic feeling,
+on sympathy.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+The first sentence of his Theory of the Moral Sentiments,
+which is a full resumé of his theory, is as follows: <span class="tei tei-q">“How
+selfish soever man may be supposed, there are evidently some
+principles in his nature which interest him in the fortune of
+others, and render their happiness necessary to him, though
+he derives nothing from it, except the pleasure of seeing it.”</span>
+And this is no empty declaration on his part. It is the thought
+which of all in his book is nearest to his heart; and hence he
+energetically assails those philosophers who look upon self-love
+and the refinements of self-love as the universal cause of
+all our sentiments, and seek to explain sympathy by self-love.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+La Rochefoucauld, Mandeville and Helvetius never met
+with a more determined or energetic adversary. Nowhere
+have the sweet and amiable virtues, such as ingenuous condescension,
+indulgent humanity, and the respectable and severe
+virtues, such as disinterestedness and self-control which subject
+our movements to the requirements of the dignity of our
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page043">[pg 043]</span><a name="Pg043" id="Pg043" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+nature, been better understood or interpreted. Adam Smith
+is the philosopher of sympathy.<a id="noteref_46" name="noteref_46" href="#note_46"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">46</span></span></a> His theory triumphs over
+the cowardly and shameful egotism which concentrates the
+moral life of the individual in himself, and separates it from
+the life of the human race of the
+<span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">outré</span></span> stoicism which refuses
+the aid of sentiment to reason.<a id="noteref_47" name="noteref_47" href="#note_47"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">47</span></span></a> According to him, the law
+of private morals is sympathy; the law of natural jurisprudence,
+justice; the law of the production of wealth, free labor.
+But while he defended this principle with energy, he did not
+become guilty of a real recantation by worshiping the idol he
+had just overthrown. He would have been culpable of the
+strangest of all contradictions if he had made the vice which
+he had just lacerated the very pivot of another part of his
+teaching.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+We regret that this essay, which has already very much
+exceeded the limits we assigned it in the beginning, will not
+permit us to reproduce here Knies' beautiful demonstration, in
+which he so learnedly and eloquently vindicates Adam Smith
+from this strange imputation, thereby placing Political Economy
+on its true basis, the basis of morals, by removing in a
+decisive way, all pretext of error and all means of subterfuge.
+This part is one of the best features in his most excellent work
+on <span class="tei tei-q">“Political Economy, from the historical Point of View.”</span>
+We shall return to this matter.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 4.00em; margin-top: 4.00em">
+<h2 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.88em; margin-top: 2.88em"><span style="font-size: 144%">XIII.</span></h2>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+What is there that political economists have not been charged
+with? They have been accused, above all, of a cold heartedness
+and cruelty, and the sentence passed on them has been
+resumed in these words: <span class="tei tei-q">“Political Economy has no bowels!”</span>
+Indeed, the representative of the science, who has been most
+attacked and who has been held up as a picture of impassible
+insensibility; on whom have been heaped the most bloody outrages,
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page044">[pg 044]</span><a name="Pg044" id="Pg044" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+is Malthus. Let us hear him. He tells us in his work
+on Political Economy, that if a country had no other means
+to grow rich, except by seeking for success in the struggle
+with other countries, at the cost of a reduction of the wages of
+labor, he would unhesitatingly say: Away with such riches;
+that it is much to be desired that the working classes should
+be well remunerated, and this for a reason much more important
+than all the considerations relating to wealth; that is, the
+happiness of the great mass of society. And he goes on to
+say, that he knows nothing more detestable than the idea of
+knowingly condemning the laboring classes to cover themselves
+with rags, to lodge in wretched huts, to enable us to
+sell a few more stuffs and calicoes to foreign countries. Certain
+it is, that no defender, however determined, of the laboring
+classes, has said anything stronger or more deeply felt. The
+reason is, that nothing was more foreign to Malthus' ideas
+than the systematic rigidity of mathematical theories of wealth;
+that, a minister of the Gospel, he had meditated on its high
+precepts. His whole doctrine is based on the moral idea.
+<span class="tei tei-q">“He was profoundly convinced that there are principles in
+Political Economy which are true only in as far as they are
+restricted within certain limits. He saw the principal difficulty
+of the science in the frequent combination of complicated
+causes, in the action and reaction of causes on one another,
+and in the necessity of setting limits or making exceptions to a
+great number of important propositions.”</span> Here we are ever
+brought back to the undulating ground of living science, instead
+of having to follow the rectilineal way traced out by the dead
+letter. We are always driven back, whatever may be pretended
+to the contrary, to the realities of which history alone
+possesses the secret. The idea of wealth cannot absorb everything
+when there is question of judging and enlightening men.
+To do this, it is necessary to know the various phases of social
+housekeeping, what nations have thought of economic interests
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page045">[pg 045]</span><a name="Pg045" id="Pg045" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+which have never ceased to interest them greatly, what they
+have attempted and what they have attained.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Hence, we must turn over the leaves of the book of the past,
+and study its economic aspect, as we have studied its political
+and literary aspect. We must follow living nations through
+their divers periods of development, and fathom the causes of
+the destruction of those that are dead. When we are dealing
+with the comparative study of the economic destinies of nations,
+our investigations are limited to a small number of individual
+nations—a further reason not to omit any, and above
+all, to scrutinize, as an anatomist would with his scalpel, the
+principle of life of those which are no more. We may, by
+accounting to ourselves for the immense variety of phenomena
+which are brought to light by the <em class="tei tei-emph"><span style="font-style: italic">application</span></em> of principles to
+facts, and in which nothing is absolute or permanent, in which,
+on the contrary, everything is relative and successive, acquire
+that sureness of touch and correctness of vision which are
+among the most valuable conquests of science.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+It would be a mistake to suppose that theory simplifies practical
+solutions. Far from providing us with a sort of formulary,
+it teaches us to put our finger on a number of difficulties.
+It brings to the surface the many aspects and fertile and varied
+considerations, the examination of which is the mission of the
+real statesman and legislator. In this way, the action of thought
+and the power of the moral idea are revealed with most <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">éclat</span></span>.
+Man ceases to be an inert element, and manifests himself as a
+sensible being, and the sublime thought of Pascal: <span class="tei tei-q">“Humanity
+is like one man who lives and learns always,”</span> is verified by
+the result. The wish to violently abdicate the past, it would
+be vain and rash to attempt to realize. The lessons it transmits
+to us are as instructive as the picture it unrolls before our
+eyes is attractive. We have no longer but to see and hear, to
+be cured of the most generous impatience with what is, and to
+retreat from the most perilous attempts.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page046">[pg 046]</span><a name="Pg046" id="Pg046" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 4.00em; margin-top: 4.00em">
+<h2 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.88em; margin-top: 2.88em"><span style="font-size: 144%">XIV.</span></h2>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+The unvarying testimony of ages affirms the continued and
+gradual amelioration of man by individual energy and moral
+thought.<a id="noteref_48" name="noteref_48" href="#note_48"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">48</span></span></a> Want and suffering have urged him forward.
+Foresight, labor, sacrifice and virtue have in part redeemed
+him. No right has been lessened or usurped, and every step
+in civilization has been a step in the way of freedom. Instead
+of making the latter responsible for a material and moral
+wretchedness which it is called upon to cure, we may prove,
+that, in proportion as real liberty and legal guarantees increase,
+evil diminishes.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+We do not desire to yield to a convenient optimism, and deny
+the sufferings which weigh only too heavily on the world.
+We are far from having reached the end assigned to our efforts;
+but let not the hope we entertain of further progress blind
+us to that which has already been accomplished. This latter
+shows us that we are on the right road, and that we have not
+done unwisely in giving free rein to the human faculties.
+Sudden changes are made only in theaters. In the real world,
+the march of progress is slow and laborious. It may be accelerated
+by a happy hit; but it would be vain to try to hurry it.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Man still suffers. No one desires to deny the evil, but only
+to estimate its extent. Yet it cannot be gainsaid that its fatal
+empire is narrowing instead of enlarging. Especially is it the
+progress accomplished in the higher regions of intellect and of
+the feelings which here exerts its beneficent influence. On
+our moral greatness depends our material power. The elevation
+or debasement of character, the energy or debility of
+the will—such is the first source of good or evil. The world,
+a Chalmers rightly says, is so constituted that we should be
+materially happy if we were morally good.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Industrial progress helps, we have said, towards moral perfection.
+It is not the source of that perfection, but its instrument;
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page047">[pg 047]</span><a name="Pg047" id="Pg047" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+for ignorance and misery, its habitual attendants, are
+poor advisers. Political Economy shows how the goods of
+this world are multiplied. It shows how modest comfort may
+become more and more general, and thus an impetus be given
+to all noble virtues without awakening a blind passion for riches.
+It teaches moderation instead of exciting covetousness, nor
+does it come in conflict with the sublime words of Saint Augustine:
+<span class="tei tei-q">“The family of men, living by faith, use the goods of the
+earth as strangers here, not to be captivated by them or turned
+away by them from the goal to which they tend, which is God,
+but to find in them a support which, far from aggravating,
+lightens the burthen of this perishable body which weighs
+down the soul.”</span>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 4.00em; margin-top: 4.00em">
+<h2 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.88em; margin-top: 2.88em"><span style="font-size: 144%">XV.</span></h2>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Looked at from below, all things diverge. Looked at from
+above, all things run into one another and combine with one
+another. It is one of the great merits of the historical method,
+that it raises the point of observation and gives the observer
+the support of tradition and good sense, that master of life;
+that it prevents a divorce between different branches of knowledge
+of the same order, which constitute but one intellectual
+family, which there is no question of confounding, and which
+it would be dangerous to isolate.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Aristotle, that universal genius, had discovered Political
+Economy, and it was the historical method which revealed it to
+him. Be it added, that the great philosopher had seen but
+one phase of the science, chrematistics, and that his ideas here
+bear the impress of the age in which he lived. Aristotle,
+however, distinguished this science from all others and from
+domestic economy, which is so akin to it. Doubtless, he did
+not found the modern study of Political Economy, but his
+powerful intellect gave him a presentiment of it.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+The honor of producing at once, Adam Smith, Quesnay and
+Turgot belongs to the eighteenth century. It was in the
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page048">[pg 048]</span><a name="Pg048" id="Pg048" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+course of philosophy at Glasgow that this study found a definite
+place. The illustrious founder of the science of Political
+Economy did not contemplate dissolving the ancient alliance
+between it and the moral sciences, history, philosophy, jurisprudence,
+belles-lettres—all of which he had explored and
+studied profoundly. Let those whose ambition it is to walk,
+even at a distance, in the footsteps of Adam Smith, not forget
+what was the cradle of the noble study to which they have
+devoted their intellects.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+L. WOLOWSKI.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+</div>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page051">[pg 051]</span><a name="Pg051" id="Pg051" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<hr class="page" /><div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 5.00em; margin-top: 5.00em">
+<a name="toc9" id="toc9"></a>
+<a name="pdf10" id="pdf10"></a>
+<h1 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 3.46em; margin-top: 3.46em"><span style="font-size: 173%">Introduction.</span></h1>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 4.00em; margin-top: 4.00em">
+<a name="toc11" id="toc11"></a>
+<a name="pdf12" id="pdf12"></a>
+<h2 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">Chapter I.</span></h2>
+<h2 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.88em; margin-top: 2.88em"><span style="font-size: 144%">Fundamental Ideas.</span></h2>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc13" id="toc13"></a>
+<a name="pdf14" id="pdf14"></a>
+<a name="Section_1" id="Section_1" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section I.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">Goods—Wants.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+The starting point, as well as the object-point of our science
+is Man.<a id="noteref_49" name="noteref_49" href="#note_49"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">49</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Every man has numberless wants, physical and intellectual.<a id="noteref_50" name="noteref_50" href="#note_50"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">50</span></span></a><a id="noteref_51" name="noteref_51" href="#note_51"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">51</span></span></a>
+Wants are either necessaries, decencies
+(<span lang="de" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="de"><span style="font-style: italic">Anstandsbedürfnisse</span></span>)
+or luxuries. The non-satisfaction of necessary wants causes
+disease or death; that of the wants of decency endangers one's
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page052">[pg 052]</span><a name="Pg052" id="Pg052" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+social position.<a id="noteref_52" name="noteref_52" href="#note_52"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">52</span></span></a> The much greater number, and the longer
+continuance of his wants are among the most striking differences
+between man and the brute:<a id="noteref_53" name="noteref_53" href="#note_53"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">53</span></span></a> wants such as clothing,
+fuel,<a id="noteref_54" name="noteref_54" href="#note_54"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">54</span></span></a> tools, and those resulting
+from his much longer period
+of infancy; which last, together with other causes, has contributed
+so largely to make marriage necessary and universal.
+While the lower animals have no wants, but necessities, and
+while their aggregate-want, even in the longest series of
+generations, admits of no qualitative increase, the circle of
+man's wants is susceptible of indefinite extension.<a id="noteref_55" name="noteref_55" href="#note_55"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">55</span></span></a> And,
+indeed, every advance in culture made by man finds expression
+in an increase in the number and in the keenness of his
+rational wants. No man who distinguishes himself in anything,
+but feels spurred thereto by a peculiar want; and this
+want is both the cause and the effect of the power which is
+peculiar to him. No one but the poet feels the want of poetizing;
+no one but the philosopher, of philosophizing. In
+every particular, intellectual or physical, in which the man is
+in advance of the child, he experiences new wants unknown
+to the child. Our education consists, for the most part, in
+awakening wants and providing for their satisfaction.
+</p>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page053">[pg 053]</span><a name="Pg053" id="Pg053" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Goods are anything which can be used, whether directly or
+indirectly, for the satisfaction of any true<a id="noteref_56" name="noteref_56" href="#note_56"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">56</span></span></a>
+or legitimate human want,<a id="noteref_57" name="noteref_57" href="#note_57"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">57</span></span></a> and whose utility, for this purpose, is recognized.
+Hence, the idea goods is an essentially relative one. Every
+change in man's wants, or knowledge, is accompanied by a
+rapid, corresponding change, either in the limits of the circle<a id="noteref_58" name="noteref_58" href="#note_58"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">58</span></span></a>
+of goods, or in their relative importance. Thus, the tobacco plant
+has, probably, existed thousands of years. It became goods,
+however, only from the time that man recognized its use for
+smoking, snuffing etc., and experienced the want of it for these
+purposes. In a similar way, the limestone of the Solenhofen
+quarries has become <em class="tei tei-emph"><span style="font-style: italic">goods</span></em>, of considerable importance, only
+since the invention of lithography; decaying bones, only since
+that of bone-dust manure; caoutchouc since about 1825, and
+gutta-percha, only since 1844. On the other hand, charms,<a id="noteref_59" name="noteref_59" href="#note_59"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">59</span></span></a>
+philters, and even relics, since the decay of faith in their efficacy,
+have lost the quality of goods. If the aggregate income
+of all mankind were, by some sudden revolution, to be
+equally divided among all, diamonds, for instance, would
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page054">[pg 054]</span><a name="Pg054" id="Pg054" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+greatly decline in value, for the reason that it is dependent, in
+great part, on the wants generated by vanity, or by the desire
+of outshining others. Beer, tobacco etc., would rise in the
+scale as goods, because the circle of those to whose wants
+they minister would have been very greatly extended. On
+the whole, advancement in civilization has uniformly the effect,
+of itself, to increase the quantity and number of goods, the
+wants and knowledge of men being thereby increased. We
+should reach the ideal here, if all men experienced only true
+or legitimate wants, but these completely; if they could see
+their way, clearly, to the satisfaction of them, and find the
+means of satisfying them with just the amount of effort most
+conducive to their physico-intellectual development.<a id="noteref_60" name="noteref_60" href="#note_60"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">60</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc15" id="toc15"></a>
+<a name="pdf16" id="pdf16"></a>
+<a name="Section_2" id="Section_2" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section II.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">Goods.—Economic Goods.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+By economy (<span lang="de" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="de"><span style="font-style: italic">Wirthschaft</span></span>=husbandry
+or housekeeping), we mean the systematized activity of man, to satisfy his need
+(<span lang="de" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="de"><span style="font-style: italic">Bedarf</span></span>=requisite) of external
+goods.<a id="noteref_61" name="noteref_61" href="#note_61"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">61</span></span></a>
+This treatise is concerned only with economic goods (ends or means of
+economy).<a id="noteref_62" name="noteref_62" href="#note_62"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">62</span></span></a>
+The greater the advance of civilization or human culture,
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page055">[pg 055]</span><a name="Pg055" id="Pg055" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+the less apt are men to pursue the satisfaction of their
+wants, isolated from their fellows, or, in other words, to carry
+on their economies or husbandries apart from one another.
+The more numerous the wants of men, and the more different
+in kind their faculties are, the more natural does exchange<a id="noteref_63" name="noteref_63" href="#note_63"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">63</span></span></a> become.
+Since all goods derive their character as goods from
+the fact that they are destined to satisfy human wants, the
+very possibility of exchange must greatly increase the possibility
+of things to become goods. Think of the machinist,
+whose products are used only by the astronomer, while the
+latter is never in a way to manufacture them for himself.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hufeland.</span></span>) Commerce is the series of combinations, created
+by the interchange of services: <span class="tei tei-q">“a living net of relations,
+which wants and services are ever weaving and unweaving.”</span>
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hermann.</span></span>) As a rule, with an advance in civilization, there
+is an increase in the number of goods, which become economic
+goods, and in the number of economic goods which become
+commercial goods (objects or means promotive of commerce).<a id="noteref_64" name="noteref_64" href="#note_64"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">64</span></span></a>
+But this is to be considered a real advancement only to the
+extent that that which is obtained is superior to that which
+was possessed before, in consequence of the specialization of
+callings or the greater division of labor (§ <a href="#Section_48" class="tei tei-ref">48</a> ff.).
+When a little street Arab exacts money from a stranger for pointing
+out the way, we rightly censure him; but no one would find
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page056">[pg 056]</span><a name="Pg056" id="Pg056" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+it improper if he should first fit himself to play the part of a
+guide, and then live by his calling.<a id="noteref_65" name="noteref_65" href="#note_65"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">65</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc17" id="toc17"></a>
+<a name="pdf18" id="pdf18"></a>
+<a name="Section_3" id="Section_3" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section III.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">Goods.—The Three Classes Of Goods.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+All economic goods are divided into three classes:
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+A. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Persons or personal services.</span></span> It is entirely repugnant to
+the feeling of humanity to regard a man's person in its entirety
+as an instrument intended to satisfy the wants of
+another.<a id="noteref_66" name="noteref_66" href="#note_66"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">66</span></span></a>
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page057">[pg 057]</span><a name="Pg057" id="Pg057" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+Yet this happens wherever slavery exists; in its coarsest form,
+in cannibalism. Among civilized nations, we can speak, under
+this head, only of individual services or capabilities of persons;
+or, indeed, of the aggregate of the services rendered by them
+during a time determined at pleasure, or a short
+time.<a id="noteref_67" name="noteref_67" href="#note_67"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">67</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+B. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Things</span></span>, both moveable and
+immovable.<a id="noteref_68" name="noteref_68" href="#note_68"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">68</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+C. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Relations</span></span> to persons or things which may frequently be
+estimated just as accurately as material goods. (The <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">res
+incorporales</span></span>
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page058">[pg 058]</span><a name="Pg058" id="Pg058" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+of the Roman law.) I need only mention what is
+called good-will, which freely, and to the advantage of customers
+themselves, but still with a limited amount of certainty,
+attaches to certain localities, and for which tavern-keepers,
+sometimes, as in theaters, dépôts and clubs, pay so enormous
+a rent.<a id="noteref_69" name="noteref_69" href="#note_69"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">69</span></span></a>
+When a newspaper is sold, the purchaser frequently
+buys nothing but the existing relations between his colaborers,
+subscribers etc. No small part of the value of a good business
+firm consists in the confidence with which it inspires all
+who deal with it, thus sparing them a world of care and
+trouble.<a id="noteref_70" name="noteref_70" href="#note_70"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">70</span></span></a> A general may be of incalculable value to an army
+which he has himself helped organize. In another, or in the
+service of a country not his own, he might be entirely valueless,
+incapable of accomplishing anything.<a id="noteref_71" name="noteref_71" href="#note_71"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">71</span></span></a> With the progress
+of civilization, as man becomes more social, the number of
+valuable relations increases, while that of legalized monopolies
+is wont to decrease. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Schäffle.</span></span>)<a id="noteref_72" name="noteref_72" href="#note_72"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">72</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page059">[pg 059]</span><a name="Pg059" id="Pg059" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc19" id="toc19"></a>
+<a name="pdf20" id="pdf20"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section IV.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">Of Value.—Value In Use.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+The economic value of goods is the importance they possess
+for the purposes of man, considered as engaged in economy
+(housekeeping, husbandry.<a id="noteref_73" name="noteref_73" href="#note_73"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">73</span></span></a>)
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Looked at from the point of view of the person who wishes
+to employ them in his use directly, doubtless the oldest point of
+view, value appears first as value in use; and here, according
+to the difference of subjective purposes it is intended to subserve,
+we may speak of production value or enjoyment-value;
+and of this last, in turn, as utilization-value, or consumption-value.
+The value in use of goods, is greater in proportion as
+the number of wants they are calculated to satisfy are more general
+and more urgent, and in proportion as they are gratified
+by them more fully, surely, durably, easily and
+pleasantly.<a id="noteref_74" name="noteref_74" href="#note_74"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">74</span></span></a>
+Hence, it is seldom possible to find an accurate mathematical
+expression of the relation which exists between the value in
+use of different goods.<a id="noteref_75" name="noteref_75" href="#note_75"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">75</span></span></a>
+Thus, it is possible to estimate the
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page060">[pg 060]</span><a name="Pg060" id="Pg060" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+nutritive power of different kinds of goods, the value of wheat
+or of hay for instance, but not the goodness or quality of their
+taste, of the attractiveness of their appearance, etc.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+But, the more men become used to comparing the aggregate
+of human wants, and the aggregate of the goods which minister
+to the satisfaction of these wants, as if they were two great
+wholes, gradually shading each into the other, the more does
+the value in use of the different kinds of goods assume, for
+purposes of social rating or estimation, a fungible character.<a id="noteref_76" name="noteref_76" href="#note_76"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">76</span></span></a>
+If a new kind of goods be produced or discovered, which satisfies
+the same wants in a more complete manner than another,
+the latter, although it has suffered no change, generally
+loses in the value put upon it, especially if the new goods can
+be produced in any desired quantity. An instance of this is
+the change effected in the value of the dyers weed, woad, by
+the introduction of indigo.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Things present in quantities greater than the amount
+necessary to supply the want they satisfy, preserve their full
+value in use, to the limit of that want, after which they are
+simply an element of possible future value, dependent on an
+increase of the want; but they have no value for present
+use.<a id="noteref_77" name="noteref_77" href="#note_77"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">77</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+The economic valuation of goods, however, is by no
+means exhausted, so far as the isolated individual housekeeper
+is concerned, by the mere establishing of its value in
+use. As the systematic effort of every rational individual in
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page061">[pg 061]</span><a name="Pg061" id="Pg061" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+his household management is directed towards the obtaining,
+by a minimum of sacrifice of pleasure and energy, a maximum
+satisfaction of his wants, even an Adam or a Crusoe is,
+in his economy, compelled to estimate not only what the goods
+to be acquired accomplish (value in use) but also what they
+will cost—cost-value. Even the most indispensable kind of
+goods, for instance atmospheric air, is considered to have no
+value, when it can be obtained in sufficient quantity, without
+any sacrifice whatever.<a id="noteref_78" name="noteref_78" href="#note_78"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">78</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc21" id="toc21"></a>
+<a name="pdf22" id="pdf22"></a>
+<a name="Section_5" id="Section_5" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section V.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">Value.—Value In Exchange.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+The value in exchange of goods, or the quality which makes
+them exchangeable against other goods, is based on a combination
+of their value in use with their cost-value, such as men
+in their intercourse with one another will make.<a id="noteref_79" name="noteref_79" href="#note_79"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">79</span></span></a> Without
+value in use, value in exchange<a id="noteref_80" name="noteref_80" href="#note_80"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">80</span></span></a> is unthinkable.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+But there are many, and even indispensable goods which
+are not at all susceptible of being exchanged; for instance,
+the light and heat of the sun, the open sea etc.<a id="noteref_81" name="noteref_81" href="#note_81"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">81</span></span></a> Other goods,
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page062">[pg 062]</span><a name="Pg062" id="Pg062" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+although capable of being exchanged, have no value in exchange,
+because they exist in superabundance, and may be
+obtained by everyone, without trouble and without reward;
+for instance, drinking-water in most places, ice in winter, and
+wood in the primeval forest.<a id="noteref_82" name="noteref_82" href="#note_82"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">82</span></span></a>
+Moreover, the idea of such
+<span class="tei tei-q">“free goods”</span> is in great part relative. The water of a river
+may, for drinking purposes, be <span class="tei tei-q">“free”</span> goods, and yet, for purposes
+of irrigation, have great value in exchange. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">John
+Stuart Mill</span></span>).
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+But, goods, to obtain value in exchange, must, in addition to
+their value in use, a value which must be recognized<a id="noteref_83" name="noteref_83" href="#note_83"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">83</span></span></a> by
+a certain number of persons, at least, have the capacity of becoming
+the exclusive property of some one individual, and
+therefore of being alienated or transferred; and this alienation
+or transfer must be desired because of the difficulty to become
+possessed of them in any other way.<a id="noteref_84" name="noteref_84" href="#note_84"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">84</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page063">[pg 063]</span><a name="Pg063" id="Pg063" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc23" id="toc23"></a>
+<a name="pdf24" id="pdf24"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section VI.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">Value.—Alleged Contradiction Between Value In
+Use And Value In Exchange.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Recent, and especially socialistic,<a id="noteref_85" name="noteref_85" href="#note_85"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">85</span></span></a> writers have alluded to
+the great <span class="tei tei-q">“contradiction”</span> between value in use and value in
+exchange. This contradiction, however, vanishes when the
+above idea of economy, and the two sides or aspects, which
+economic value presents, are kept steadily in view. It is said,
+for instance, that a pound of gold has a much greater value in
+exchange than a pound of iron; while the value in use of
+iron, is incomparably greater than that of gold. I question
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page064">[pg 064]</span><a name="Pg064" id="Pg064" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+this latter statement. True it is, that the need of iron is much
+more universal and urgent than the need of gold. On the
+other hand, a pound of gold yields satisfaction to the want of
+that metal, much greater than is yielded by a pound of iron, to
+the want of iron. We may speak of a contradiction between
+value in use and value in exchange, at the farthest, only in case
+the existing quantity of an article in trade, which can be done
+without, is not estimated correspondingly lower than the whole
+existing supply of a thing which is indispensable. But this is
+a case which cannot often occur. When, for instance, wheat is
+very dear, as in years of scarcity, people prefer to pay a very
+high price for it rather than to dispense, even in part, with its
+use; and so of all the necessaries of life. As people progress
+in economic culture, they become more expert in adapting the
+value in exchange of related goods, not only to their cost-value,
+but also to their value in use.<a id="noteref_86" name="noteref_86" href="#note_86"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">86</span></span></a><a id="noteref_87" name="noteref_87" href="#note_87"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">87</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+The lower the state of a nation's economy, the more isolated
+men live from one another, the greater is the prominence given
+by them to value in use, as compared with value in exchange,
+a fact which makes a valuation of resources, which shall be
+universally applicable, a more difficult matter.<a id="noteref_88" name="noteref_88" href="#note_88"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">88</span></span></a><a id="noteref_89" name="noteref_89" href="#note_89"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">89</span></span></a><a id="noteref_90" name="noteref_90" href="#note_90"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">90</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page065">[pg 065]</span><a name="Pg065" id="Pg065" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc25" id="toc25"></a>
+<a name="pdf26" id="pdf26"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section VII.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">Resources Or Means (Vermögen).</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Resources</span></span>, or <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">means</span></span>, in the sense in which
+we here use the term, are the aggregate of economic goods owned by a physical
+or legal person, after deduction is made of the person's
+debts, and all valuable and rightful claims have been
+added.<a id="noteref_91" name="noteref_91" href="#note_91"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">91</span></span></a>
+Hence, there are private resources, corporative resources,
+municipal resources, etc., state resources, national resources
+and the world's resources. In estimating the resources of a
+whole people, it is, of course, necessary to make deduction of
+the debts due by the individual members of the nation to their
+fellow countrymen.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page066">[pg 066]</span><a name="Pg066" id="Pg066" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc27" id="toc27"></a>
+<a name="pdf28" id="pdf28"></a>
+<a name="Section_8" id="Section_8" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section VIII.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">Valuation Of Resources.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+It has often been made a question, whether the valuation of
+resources should be based on the value in use, or the value in exchange
+of their constituent parts.<a id="noteref_92" name="noteref_92" href="#note_92"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">92</span></span></a>
+The latter has, of course,
+no interest, except in so far as we are concerned with the possibility
+of obtaining the control of part of the resources, or
+means, of another, by the surrender of a part of one's own
+goods. In estimating the value of private resources, which
+require to be made continually an object of trade, this point is,
+of course, of the greatest importance. If certain of their component
+elements, lands, for instance, belonging to a <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">fidei commissum</span></span>,
+are incapable of entering immediately into the market,
+at least the revenue they yield is measured by its value in exchange.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+It is quite otherwise, even with the resources of a whole
+nation. Such resources are, evidently, much more independent,
+and have much less need of being exchanged against
+their equals, than private resources. The foreign commerce,
+of the greatest and most advanced nations, has, hitherto, been
+but a small quota of their internal commerce.<a id="noteref_93" name="noteref_93" href="#note_93"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">93</span></span></a> A valuation,
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page067">[pg 067]</span><a name="Pg067" id="Pg067" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+therefore, based on value in exchange, however interesting it
+might be to enable us to determine how property is shared by
+the different classes and persons that compose the nation,
+would afford but little information concerning the absolute
+amount of the national wealth. This, of course, applies in a
+much higher degree to the resources of the whole world.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+If, now, we were to estimate the resources of an entire
+people, or even of the world, by summing up the value in exchange
+of their several component parts, many very important
+elements would be left out of the account entirely; as for instance,
+harbors, navigable streams, numberless relations which
+have, indeed, no value in exchange whatever, but which are
+of the highest importance, because promotive of the economy
+of the nation. The same may be said of made roads of every
+description, the politico-economical value of which may be
+much greater than the value in exchange of their stock, than
+their cost of production etc. The increase of the value in
+exchange of any of the branches of the resources of a
+physical or legal person contributes towards really enriching
+the nation or the world, only in case that the increased
+value in exchange is based on an increased utility in quality
+or quantity. Should an earthquake suddenly dry up a
+number of our springs, and thus give value in exchange to
+the drinking water from the remaining ones, we should, indeed,
+witness the introduction of a new object into the list of
+exchangeable goods; the owners of springs would be able to
+command a larger portion of the national resources, but at the
+expense of the rest of the population; and the whole country
+would have become poorer in goods by the catastrophe. Even
+the value in exchange of the national resources would not be
+increased; for all other goods, which, hitherto, as compared
+with water, had an unlimited capacity for exchange, would
+lose just as much of that capacity as water had gained, as
+compared with them.<a id="noteref_94" name="noteref_94" href="#note_94"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">94</span></span></a>
+On the other hand, if a new mineral
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page068">[pg 068]</span><a name="Pg068" id="Pg068" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+spring should be discovered, the great value in use of the
+water of which gave it value in exchange, the resources of the
+nation would be really increased, not only in point of utility,
+but in exchange value; for no other goods, formerly known,
+would, in consequence of the discovery, lose in their exchange
+power.<a id="noteref_95" name="noteref_95" href="#note_95"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">95</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc29" id="toc29"></a>
+<a name="pdf30" id="pdf30"></a>
+<a name="Section_9" id="Section_9" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section IX.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">Wealth.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+The possession of large and also of potentially lasting resources;
+objectively, such resources themselves, we call wealth.
+But it must be large in a two-fold sense; large as compared with
+the rational wants of its possessor, and large, also, as compared
+with the resources of other people, especially with the resources
+of those in the same condition of life. To be called rich, it
+is not enough <span class="tei tei-q">“to have a sufficiency,”</span> (the individual side); it
+is necessary to have more than
+others.<a id="noteref_96" name="noteref_96" href="#note_96"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">96</span></span></a> If all men were possessed
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page069">[pg 069]</span><a name="Pg069" id="Pg069" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+of a great deal, but all of an exactly equal amount, each
+would be compelled, it may be conjectured, to be his own
+chimney-sweep, his own scavenger and <span class="tei tei-q">“boot-black.”</span> And
+how could anyone, then, be properly called wealthy? This is
+the social side of the idea of wealth.<a id="noteref_97" name="noteref_97" href="#note_97"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">97</span></span></a>
+Hence, a person, with the same resources, might be very wealthy in a provincial town,
+while, in the capital, he could enjoy only moderate
+comfort.<a id="noteref_98" name="noteref_98" href="#note_98"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">98</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page070">[pg 070]</span><a name="Pg070" id="Pg070" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc31" id="toc31"></a>
+<a name="pdf32" id="pdf32"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section X.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">Wealth.—Signs Of National Wealth.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+We should have a very imperfect idea of the wealth of a
+people (§ <a href="#Section_8" class="tei tei-ref">8</a>) if we should estimate it at the value in
+exchange
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page071">[pg 071]</span><a name="Pg071" id="Pg071" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+of the sum<a id="noteref_99" name="noteref_99" href="#note_99"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">99</span></span></a>-total of the component parts of
+the national resources.
+By the following signs, however, an approximative
+notion of the value in use of the resources of a nation may be
+obtained:
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+A. When, even the lower classes, who compose everywhere
+the greatest portion of the people, are comfortable, in a condition
+worthy of human beings. Thus, C. Dupin is surprised
+at the great quantities of meat, butter, cheese and tea entered
+on the accounts of the poor-houses in England, and the great
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page072">[pg 072]</span><a name="Pg072" id="Pg072" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+care taken to have these of the best quality.<a id="noteref_100" name="noteref_100" href="#note_100"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">100</span></span></a>
+A good symptom of such a state of things is a high average duration of
+human life, especially when there is a relatively large number
+of births. (§ 246.)
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+B. When a considerable outlay, devoted to the satisfaction
+of the more refined wants, is voluntarily made, and by
+those only possessed of a proper economic sense. Thus, in
+England, the various mission, bible, and tract societies had,
+in 1841, an aggregate income of £630,000. The expeditions
+in search of Franklin cost over a million pounds sterling. The
+state outlay also belongs to this category, provided, that taxes
+are collected and loans obtained, without any noticeable oppression.
+The sum of 20,000,000 pounds sterling, voted, in
+1833, by the British Parliament for the abolition of slavery, is
+one of the happiest signs of the national wealth of England.<a id="noteref_101" name="noteref_101" href="#note_101"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">101</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+C. A large number of valuable buildings, and permanent
+improvements; for instance, roads of every description, works
+for purposes of irrigation and drainage. Thus, in London,
+from September, 1843, to September, 1845, there were constructed
+squares and streets with an aggregate length of 11.1
+geographical miles. The number of newly built houses in
+London, between 1843 and 1847, was nearly 27,000. And so,
+in England and Wales there are 492 geographical miles of
+navigable canals, while their navigable rivers are estimated to
+have a length of only 449 miles. The number of miles of
+railroad, in the British Empire, in 1865, was 2,897 geographical
+miles, and they cost 459 million of pounds; in 1870, it was
+3,270 geographical miles, at an aggregate cost of 650 millions
+sterling.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+D. The frequent occurrence of heavy commercial payments,
+which finds expression especially in the magnitude and costliness
+of the most usual medium of exchange. Thus, all payments
+are made in England in paper (for sums of at least five
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page073">[pg 073]</span><a name="Pg073" id="Pg073" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+pounds sterling) or in gold coin. Silver is used only as small
+change, like copper in most other countries. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Infra</span></span>, §
+<a href="#Section_118" class="tei tei-ref">118</a>,
+seq.)<a id="noteref_102" name="noteref_102" href="#note_102"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">102</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+E. Frequent loans to foreign nations. Hence, Storch divides
+all countries into borrowing or poor countries, loaning or rich
+countries, and independent countries which hold a middle
+place between the two former.<a id="noteref_103" name="noteref_103" href="#note_103"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">103</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc33" id="toc33"></a>
+<a name="pdf34" id="pdf34"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section XI.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">Of Economy (Husbandry).</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+All normal economy<a id="noteref_104" name="noteref_104" href="#note_104"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">104</span></span></a>
+(husbandry) aims at securing a maximum of personal advantage with a minimum of cost or
+outlay.<a id="noteref_105" name="noteref_105" href="#note_105"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">105</span></span></a> And there are always two intellectual incentives at the
+foundation of this economy. There is, first, self-interest, the
+positive manifestation of which is the effort to acquire as much
+of the world's goods as possible, and the negative expression
+of which, the effort to lose as little of them as
+possible—acquisitiveness—saving. Self-interest, losing its moral, and
+assuming a guilty, character, degenerates into egotism; acquisitiveness,
+into covetousness; and the disposition to save, into
+avarice—the <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">solipsismus</span></span> of Kant. The incentive to ameliorate
+one's condition is common to all men, no matter how varied
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page074">[pg 074]</span><a name="Pg074" id="Pg074" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+the form or different the intensity of its manifestation. It
+guides us all from the cradle to the grave. It may be restricted
+within certain limits, but never entirely extinguished.
+It is, in the domain of economy, what the instinct of self-preservation
+is to our physical existence, a powerful principle of
+creation, preservation and of renewed life (I. Thessal., 4, 11,
+seq.).<a id="noteref_106" name="noteref_106" href="#note_106"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">106</span></span></a> Then there is the incentive of the demand of God's
+voice within us, the voice of conscience, whether we call it, in
+philosophic outline <span class="tei tei-q">“the adumbration of the ideas of equity,
+right, benevolence, of perfection and inner freedom,”</span> or, framing
+our lives in accordance with them, the striving after the
+Kingdom of God.<a id="noteref_107" name="noteref_107" href="#note_107"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">107</span></span></a> It matters not, how much the image of
+God may have been disfigured in most men, there is no one
+in whom the longing for it has so far disappeared as to leave
+no trace behind. This puts bounds to our self-interest, and
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page075">[pg 075]</span><a name="Pg075" id="Pg075" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+transmutes it into an earthly means to enable us to approximate
+to an eternal ideal.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+As, in the structure of the world, the apparently opposing
+tendencies of the centrifugal and centripetal forces produce
+the harmony of the spheres, so, in the social life of man, self-interest
+and conscience produce in him the feeling for the common
+good.<a id="noteref_108" name="noteref_108" href="#note_108"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">108</span></span></a> This sentiment of the common interest is the
+foundation on which rise in successive gradation, the life of
+the family, of the community, of the nation and of humanity,
+the last of which should be coincident with the life of the
+Church. It, alone, can realize the kingdom of heaven on earth.
+Through this sentiment alone can religion be made active and
+moral. Only through it, can self-interest be made really sure
+and always to the purpose. Even the most calculating mind
+must acknowledge, that numberless institutions, relations etc.,
+are useful and even necessary to many individuals, which can
+be established or maintained only from a sense of the general
+welfare, for the reason that no one individual could make the
+sacrifice required to establish or maintain them. And so, since
+commerce has wrought the interests of all men into one great
+piece of net-work, the best means of obtaining wherewith to
+satisfy our own wants is to help others satisfy theirs. Self-interest
+causes every one to choose the course in life in which
+he shall meet with the least competition and the most abundant
+patronage; in other words, that which answers to the most
+pressing and least satisfied want of the community. As a rule,
+the physician who cures the greatest number of patients with
+the greatest skill, and the manufacturer who produces the
+best goods cheapest, will grow to be the richest. It is, moreover,
+easy to see that, according as the circle of common interests
+grows smaller, it approximates to self-interest; and
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page076">[pg 076]</span><a name="Pg076" id="Pg076" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+to <span class="tei tei-q">“the Kingdom of God”</span><a id="noteref_109" name="noteref_109" href="#note_109"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">109</span></span></a> as it grows larger. And yet, all
+these circles respectively condition one another. Cosmopolitanism
+or church-zeal, without love of country; patriotism,
+without fidelity to the community in which one lives, or love
+of one's family, are more than suspicious. The reverse is
+also true. This is a chief connecting link between the great
+apparent opposites.<a id="noteref_110" name="noteref_110" href="#note_110"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">110</span></span></a><a id="noteref_111" name="noteref_111" href="#note_111"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">111</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page077">[pg 077]</span><a name="Pg077" id="Pg077" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc35" id="toc35"></a>
+<a name="pdf36" id="pdf36"></a>
+<a name="Section_12" id="Section_12" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section XII.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">Economy.—Grades Of Economy.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Thanks to this feeling for the common weal, the eternal and
+destructive war—the <span lang="la" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="la"><span style="font-style: italic">bellum omnium
+contra omnes</span></span>—which an
+unscrupulous self-interest would not fail to generate among
+men engaged in the isolated prosecution of their own economic
+interests, ceases in the higher, well-ordered
+organization<a id="noteref_112" name="noteref_112" href="#note_112"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">112</span></span></a> of
+society. On it are based the various forms of economy in
+common: family-economy, corporation or association-economy,
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page078">[pg 078]</span><a name="Pg078" id="Pg078" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+municipal economy, and national economy.<a id="noteref_113" name="noteref_113" href="#note_113"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">113</span></span></a> And these forms
+of economy in common are so essentially the condition and
+complement of individual economy, that the latter, without
+them, could either not be maintained at all, or, at least, only in
+the very lowest stage of civilization.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Although the higher science of Political Economy has,
+nearly always, been conceived<a id="noteref_114" name="noteref_114" href="#note_114"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">114</span></span></a> as treating of the aggregate
+national activity of a people, there have been many, recently,
+who consider Political Economy as no real whole, but only as
+a mere abstraction. This is true, especially of many unconditional
+free-trade theorizers, partly from a repugnance toward
+the governmental guardianship of private businesses or economy.
+It is true, also, of certain philosophers who consider
+the idea, <span class="tei tei-q">“the people,”</span> as merely nominal.<a id="noteref_115" name="noteref_115" href="#note_115"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">115</span></span></a> There are, however,
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page079">[pg 079]</span><a name="Pg079" id="Pg079" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+two things necessary to warrant us to call a thing made
+up of a number of parts, one real whole: the parts and the
+whole must have a reciprocal action upon one another, and the
+whole, as such, must have a demonstrable action of its own.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Drobisch.</span></span>) In this sense, <span class="tei tei-q">“the people”</span> is, unquestionably, a
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page080">[pg 080]</span><a name="Pg080" id="Pg080" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+reality, and not alone the individuals who constitute the <span class="tei tei-q">“people.”</span>
+Besides, it is truly said that all husbandry or economy
+supposes a will (<span class="tei tei-q">“systematized activity”</span> etc., <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">supra</span></span>, §
+<a href="#Section_2" class="tei tei-ref">2</a>).
+Such a will is ascribed to individuals, to legal persons, to the
+state, but not, however, to <span class="tei tei-q">“the people,”</span> as a whole. But this
+will need not be an entirely conscious one, as is plain from the
+case of the less gifted and less cultured individuals engaged in
+household economy. The systemization in the public economy
+of a people finds its clearest expression in economic laws,
+and in the institutions of the state. But it finds expression,
+also, without the intervention of the state, in the laws established
+by use, and by the opinions of jurists or courts, in community
+of speech, of customs and tastes etc.: things which
+have an important economic meaning, which depend on the
+common nature of the land, of race and history, and which
+influence the state, at least as much as they are influenced
+by it.<a id="noteref_116" name="noteref_116" href="#note_116"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">116</span></span></a><a id="noteref_117" name="noteref_117" href="#note_117"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">117</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+The most that can be said, at present, so far as an economy
+of mankind, or a world-economy, is concerned, is, that it may
+be shown that important preparations have been made for it.
+We are approaching more nearly to it by the ways of the
+more and more cosmopolitan character of science, the increasing
+international coöperation of labor, the improvement in the
+means of transportation, growing emigration, the greater love
+of peace, and the greater toleration of nations etc.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page081">[pg 081]</span><a name="Pg081" id="Pg081" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc37" id="toc37"></a>
+<a name="pdf38" id="pdf38"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section XIII.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">Political Economy.—The Economic Organism.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+The idea conveyed by the word <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">organism</span></span>, is doubtless, one
+of the most obscure of all ideas; and I am so far from desiring
+to explain<a id="noteref_118" name="noteref_118" href="#note_118"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">118</span></span></a> by that idea, the meaning of public or national
+economy, that I would only use the word <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">organism</span></span> as
+the shortest and most familiar expression of a number of
+problems, which it is the purpose of the following investigation
+to solve.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+There are two points, especially, of importance here. In the
+motion of any machine, it is possible to distinguish with the
+utmost accuracy, between the cause and the effect of the motion:
+the blowing of the wind, for instance, is simply and purely,
+the cause of the friction of the mill-stones in a wind-mill,
+and is not in the least influenced or conditioned by the latter.
+But, in the public economy of every people, patient thought
+soon shows the observer, that the most important simultaneous
+events or phenomena mutually condition one another. Thus,
+a flourishing state of agriculture is impossible without flourishing
+industries; but, conversely, the prosperity of the latter
+supposes the prosperity of the former, as a condition precedent.
+It is as in the human body. The motions of respiration are
+produced by the action of the spinal cord; and the spinal
+cord, in turn, continues to work only through the blood, that is,
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page082">[pg 082]</span><a name="Pg082" id="Pg082" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+by the help of respiration. In all cases like this, we are forced,
+when accounting for phenomena, to move about in a circle, unless
+we admit the existence of an organic life, of which every
+individual fact is only the manifestation.<a id="noteref_119" name="noteref_119" href="#note_119"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">119</span></span></a><a id="noteref_120" name="noteref_120" href="#note_120"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">120</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+It is, also, undeniable, that human insight into the operation
+and utility of a machine must always precede the existence of
+the machine itself. This human insight is parent to the plan,
+and the plan, in turn, is parent to the machine. The very reverse
+of this is true in the case of organisms, those <span class="tei tei-q">“divine
+machines”</span> as Leibnitz called them. Men had digested food
+and reproduced their kind, thousands of years before physiologists
+had attained to a true theory of digestion or reproduction.
+I do not, indeed, by any means, pretend, that the public
+economy of nations is governed by natural necessity, in the
+same degree, as for instance, the human body. We shall find,
+however, that the minute arbitrary variations usual here and
+there in the course of its development, generally compensate
+for one another, in accordance with the law of large numbers.
+Here, too, we find harmonies, frequently of wonderful beauty,
+which existed long before any one dreamt of them; innumerable
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page083">[pg 083]</span><a name="Pg083" id="Pg083" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">natural laws</span></span>,<a id="noteref_121" name="noteref_121" href="#note_121"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">121</span></span></a> whose operation does not depend on their
+recognition by individuals, and, over which, only he can obtain
+power who has learned to obey them.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Bacon</span></span>)<a id="noteref_122" name="noteref_122" href="#note_122"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">122</span></span></a><a id="noteref_123" name="noteref_123" href="#note_123"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">123</span></span></a><a id="noteref_124" name="noteref_124" href="#note_124"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">124</span></span></a> But
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page084">[pg 084]</span><a name="Pg084" id="Pg084" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+it should never be lost sight of, that the natural laws governing
+the public economy of a people, like those of the human
+mind, are distinguished in one very essential point from those
+of the material world. They have to do with free rational beings,
+who, because they are thus free and rational, are responsible
+to God and their conscience, and constitute in their aggregate
+a species capable of progress.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc39" id="toc39"></a>
+<a name="pdf40" id="pdf40"></a>
+<a name="Section_14" id="Section_14" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section XIV.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">Origin Of A Nation's Economy.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+The public economy of a people has its origin simultaneously
+with the people. It is neither the invention of man nor
+the revelation of God. It is the natural product of the faculties
+and propensities which make man man.<a id="noteref_125" name="noteref_125" href="#note_125"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">125</span></span></a> Just as it may
+be shown, that the family which lives isolated from all others,
+contains, in itself, the germs of all political organization,<a id="noteref_126" name="noteref_126" href="#note_126"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">126</span></span></a> so
+may it be demonstrated, that every independent household
+management contains the germs of all politico-economical
+activity. The public economy of a nation grows with the
+nation. With the nation, it blooms and ripens. Its season
+of blossoming and of maturity is the period of its greatest
+strength, and, at the same time, of the most perfect development
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page085">[pg 085]</span><a name="Pg085" id="Pg085" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+of all its more important organs.<a id="noteref_127" name="noteref_127" href="#note_127"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">127</span></span></a> In respect to it, the
+economic endeavors of any epoch may be said to be represented
+by two great parties, the one progressive, the other,
+conservative. The former would hasten the period of the nation's
+richest and most varied development, the latter postpone
+its departure as long as possible; and hence it comes, that a
+people's economic decline is sometimes taken for progress, by
+the former class, and their progress for decline, by the latter.
+As a rule, the union and equilibrium of these parties are wont
+to be the greatest at the period of maturity, because, then, intelligence
+and the spirit of sacrifice for the common good are
+most general.<a id="noteref_128" name="noteref_128" href="#note_128"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">128</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Finally, the public economy of a nation declines with the
+people. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Infra</span></span>, § 263 ff.)
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc41" id="toc41"></a>
+<a name="pdf42" id="pdf42"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section XV.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">Diseases Of The Social Organism.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+If the public economy of a people be an organism, we must
+expect to find that the perturbations, which affect it, present
+some analogies to the diseases of the body physical. We
+may, therefore, hope to learn much that may be of use in
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page086">[pg 086]</span><a name="Pg086" id="Pg086" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+practice, from the tried methods of medicine.<a id="noteref_129" name="noteref_129" href="#note_129"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">129</span></span></a> In the diseases
+of the body economic, it is necessary to distinguish accurately,
+between the nature of the disease and its external symptoms,
+although it may be necessary to combat the latter directly,
+and not merely with a view to alleviation. Following the
+example of the physician, we should particularly direct our
+attention to the curative method which nature itself would
+pursue, were art not to intervene. <span class="tei tei-q">“The curative power of
+nature is no peculiar power; it is the result of a series of happy
+adjustments, by means of which the morbid perturbation itself
+sets in motion the springs which may either destroy the evil
+or paralyze its action. It is, in fact, nothing but the original
+power which formed the body and preserves its life in contact
+with the external causes of perturbation and the internal disorder
+provoked by these causes.”</span> (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ruete.</span></span>)
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+</div>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page087">[pg 087]</span><a name="Pg087" id="Pg087" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<hr class="page" /><div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 4.00em; margin-top: 4.00em">
+<a name="toc43" id="toc43"></a>
+<a name="pdf44" id="pdf44"></a>
+<h2 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">Chapter II.</span></h2>
+<h2 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.88em; margin-top: 2.88em"><span style="font-size: 144%">Position Of Political Economy In
+The Circle Of Related Sciences.</span></h2>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc45" id="toc45"></a>
+<a name="pdf46" id="pdf46"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section XVI.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">Political Or National Economy.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+By the science of national,<a id="noteref_130" name="noteref_130" href="#note_130"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">130</span></span></a>
+or Political Economy, we understand
+the science which has to do with the laws of the development
+of the economy of a nation, or with its economic national
+life. (Philosophy of the history of Political Economy,
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page088">[pg 088]</span><a name="Pg088" id="Pg088" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+according to von Mangoldt.) Like all the political sciences, or
+sciences of <em class="tei tei-emph"><span style="font-style: italic">national life</span></em>, it is concerned, on the one hand, with
+the consideration of the individual man, and on the other, it
+extends its investigations to the whole of human kind.<a id="noteref_131" name="noteref_131" href="#note_131"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">131</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+National life, like all life, is a whole, the various phenomena
+of which are most intimately connected with one another.
+Hence it is, that to understand one side of it scientifically, it is
+necessary to know all its sides. But, especially, is it necessary
+to fix one's attention on the following seven: language, religion,
+art, science, law, the state and economy.<a id="noteref_132" name="noteref_132" href="#note_132"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">132</span></span></a> Without
+language, all higher mental activity is unthinkable; without religion,
+all else would lose its firmest foundation and highest
+aim. Through art, alone, do all these sides attain to beauty;
+through science, alone, to clearness. Law arises, the moment
+conflicts of will become inevitable and an adjustment is desired.
+The state has to do with them, in so far as they have any external
+force or validity. Indeed, there is no human relation,
+not even the highest and the sweetest, but has its economic
+interests. It is, therefore, natural, that each of the sciences
+which relate to these various regions of human life should, in
+part, presuppose all others, and, in part, serve as a basis for
+them.<a id="noteref_133" name="noteref_133" href="#note_133"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">133</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page089">[pg 089]</span><a name="Pg089" id="Pg089" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+But in the midst of this universal relationship, it is easy to
+see that law, the state and economy constitute a family, as
+it were apart and more closely connected. (The social sciences,
+in the narrower sense of the expression.)
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+They are confined almost exclusively to what Schleiermacher
+has called <span class="tei tei-q">“effective action”</span> (<span lang="de" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="de"><span style="font-style: italic">wirksame Handeln</span></span>), while art and
+science belong almost entirely to the <span class="tei tei-q">“action of representation”</span>
+(<span lang="de" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="de"><span style="font-style: italic">darstellenden Handeln</span></span>);
+and religion and language combine both kinds. Law, the state, and economy too, have
+their roots so deep in the physical and intellectual imperfection
+of man, that we can scarcely imagine their continuance
+beyond his life on earth (Gospel of Matthew, 22, 30). But
+within these limits, their several provinces and the subjects
+with which they are concerned are almost coincident. They
+only consider these from different points of view: the science
+of politics from that of sovereignty; the science of Political
+Economy from that of the satisfaction of the requirement of
+external goods by the people; the science of law from that of
+the prevention or the peaceable adjustment of conflicts of will.
+As every economic act, consciously or unconsciously, supposes
+forms of law, so, by far the greater number of the laws relating
+to rights, and the greater number of judgments in the
+matter of rights, contain an economic element. In numberless
+cases, the science of law gives us only the external <em class="tei tei-emph"><span style="font-style: italic">how</span></em>; the
+deeper <em class="tei tei-emph"><span style="font-style: italic">why</span></em> is revealed to us by the science of Political
+Economy.<a id="noteref_134" name="noteref_134" href="#note_134"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">134</span></span></a><a id="noteref_135" name="noteref_135" href="#note_135"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">135</span></span></a>
+And, as to the state, who, for instance, can appreciate
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page090">[pg 090]</span><a name="Pg090" id="Pg090" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+the political significance of a nobility, without understanding
+the economic character of rent, and of the possession of large
+landed estates? Who can politically appreciate the inferior
+classes of society, unless initiated into a knowledge of the laws
+that govern wages and population? It were much easier to
+cultivate psychology without physiology! <span class="tei tei-q">“The state is
+society protected by force”</span> (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Herbart</span></span>). There are two bases
+to all material power:<a id="noteref_136" name="noteref_136" href="#note_136"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">136</span></span></a> wealth and warlike ability (χρήματα—ναυτικά,
+according to Thucydides); and how much the latter
+has need of the former is well expressed by the familiar saying
+of Montecuccoli: <span class="tei tei-q">“Money is not only the first, but the second and
+third condition of war.”</span><a id="noteref_137" name="noteref_137" href="#note_137"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">137</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Frederick the Great calls finance the pulse of the state,
+and Richelieu, the point of support which Archimedes was in
+search of, to move the world. In all modern nations, the history
+of the debates on the raising of revenue and of the passing
+of budgets is, at the same time, the history of parliamentary
+life; and most great revolutions, the Reformation of the sixteenth
+century not excepted, if not caused have been promoted,
+by financial embarrassment.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page091">[pg 091]</span><a name="Pg091" id="Pg091" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc47" id="toc47"></a>
+<a name="pdf48" id="pdf48"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section XVII.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">Sciences Relating To National Life.—The Science
+Of Public Economy.—The Science Of Finance.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+If, by the public economy of a nation, we understand economic
+legislation and the governmental guidance or direction
+of the economy of private persons,<a id="noteref_138" name="noteref_138" href="#note_138"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">138</span></span></a> the science of public economy
+becomes, so far as its form is concerned, a branch of
+political science, while as to its matter, its subject is almost coincident
+with that of Political Economy. Hence it is, that so
+many writers use the terms public economy, or the economy
+of the state (<span lang="de" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="de"><span style="font-style: italic">Staatswirthschaft</span></span>),
+and National Economy (<span lang="de" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="de"><span style="font-style: italic">Volkswirthschaft</span></span>),
+as synonymous.<a id="noteref_139" name="noteref_139" href="#note_139"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">139</span></span></a> The hypothesis, in accordance
+with which, this science should discard all consideration of the
+state, or should refuse to presuppose its formation,<a id="noteref_140" name="noteref_140" href="#note_140"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">140</span></span></a> would lead
+us into an ideal region, difficult to define, probably entirely impossible,
+and inaccessible to experience.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Just as clear, is the close connection between politics and
+Political Economy, in the case of the science of finance, or
+of the science of governmental house-keeping, otherwise the
+administration of public affairs. The latter, evidently, so far
+as its end is concerned, belongs to politics, but so far as the
+means to that end are concerned, to National Economy. As
+the physiologist cannot understand the action of the human
+body, without understanding that of the head; so we would
+not be able to grasp the organic whole of national economy, if
+we were to leave the state, the greatest economy of all, the
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page092">[pg 092]</span><a name="Pg092" id="Pg092" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+one which uninterruptedly and irresistibly acts on all others,
+out of consideration.<a id="noteref_141" name="noteref_141" href="#note_141"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">141</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+By the term <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">police</span></span>, we mean the state power whose office it
+is, without mediation, to prevent all disturbances of external order
+among the people.<a id="noteref_142" name="noteref_142" href="#note_142"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">142</span></span></a>
+It may extend its action into all the
+domains of national life mentioned above, whenever external
+order is there threatened, or calls for protection; but its action is
+important especially in the domains of law and economy. The
+science of the <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">police power</span></span>, therefore, of all those doctrines
+resulting from investigation into national life, takes up only
+one phase of each of them; and the phases of doctrine thus
+taken up, it combines into a whole, for practical ends. Its relation
+to those sciences is like that of surgery to the medical sciences,
+or like the science of legal procedure to the science of
+law.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page093">[pg 093]</span><a name="Pg093" id="Pg093" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc49" id="toc49"></a>
+<a name="pdf50" id="pdf50"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section XVIII.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">Sciences Relating To National Life.—Statistics.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Statistics we call the picture or representation of social life
+at given periods of time, and especially at the present time,
+drawn on a scale in accordance with the laws of development
+discovered by means of the theoretical sciences above named;
+as it were, a section through the stream. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Schlözer</span></span> calls
+them: history standing still.)<a id="noteref_143" name="noteref_143" href="#note_143"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">143</span></span></a>
+Statistics, as thus defined, are
+as far removed from saying too much as from saying too little.
+To give a complete tableau of their object, statistics should,
+of course, take in the life of a people, in all its aspects. But
+they should look upon such facts only as their own property,
+the meaning of which they are able to understand; that is,
+such only as can be ranged under known laws of development.
+Unintelligible facts are collected only in the hope of
+penetrating into their meaning in the future, by comparing
+them with one another. In the meantime, they are to the statistician
+only what unfinished experiments are to the investigator
+of nature.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+The view is daily gaining ground, that statistics should be
+occupied—without, however, confining themselves to them—with
+present facts, with <span class="tei tei-q">“facts affecting society and the state,
+which are susceptible of being expressed in figures.”</span><a id="noteref_144" name="noteref_144" href="#note_144"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">144</span></span></a> The
+more deceptive the immediate observation of an individual,
+isolated fact is, in cases where a great number of simultaneous
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page094">[pg 094]</span><a name="Pg094" id="Pg094" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+or scattered individual isolated facts of national life should be
+observed, the more important it is to discover proper numerical
+relations, by noting all the like acts or experiences of men,
+the time and place in question, and the relation of the aggregate
+of these phenomena, to the sum-total of the population,
+or to the sum-total of corresponding phenomena in other
+places. When this is done, and the facts are completely enumerated
+and correctly recorded, there is no danger of subjective
+error. And this species of <span class="tei tei-q">“political and social measuring,”</span>
+as Hildebrand calls it, may be applied, not only to
+quantities, but to all qualities accessible to the observation of
+the senses; since the individual or isolated qualities of the
+things enumerated, may be again made objects of enumeration.
+Without doubt, this mode of numerical procedure is the
+most perfect for all those divisions of statistics in which it can
+be followed; and hence, it should be our endeavor to make
+the numerical side of statistics as comprehensive as possible.
+But, one side of a science is not a science itself. As there is
+no natural science proper called microscopy, embracing all
+the observations made by means of the microscope, so care
+should be taken not to deduce the principle of a science from
+the chief instrument it employs. There will always be many
+and important facts in national life which can not be subjected
+to numerical calculation, although they may be established
+with the usual amount of historical certainty. Were statistics
+to be limited, in the manner mentioned above, they would remain
+a collection of fragments, and instead of being a science,
+properly so-called, become a method.<a id="noteref_145" name="noteref_145" href="#note_145"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">145</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Besides, it is evident, that, of statistics in general, economic
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page095">[pg 095]</span><a name="Pg095" id="Pg095" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+statistics constitute a chief part, and precisely the part most
+accessible to numerical treatment. As these economic statistics
+need to be always directed by the light of Political Economy,
+they also furnish it with rich materials for the continuation
+of its structure, and for the strengthening of such foundations
+as it already has. They, are, moreover, the indispensable condition
+of the application of economic theorems to practice.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc51" id="toc51"></a>
+<a name="pdf52" id="pdf52"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section XIX.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">Private Economy—Cameralistic Science.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+The meaning of the term cameralistic science (<span lang="de" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="de"><span style="font-style: italic">Cameralwissenschaft</span></span>)
+can be explained only by the history of the cameralistic
+system.<a id="noteref_146" name="noteref_146" href="#note_146"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">146</span></span></a>
+From the end of the middle ages, we find,
+in most German countries, an institution called the Council
+(<span lang="de" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="de"><span style="font-style: italic">Kammer</span></span>) whose
+province it was to administer the public
+domain, and to watch over regal rights. At first, a mere
+governmental commission, it was not long before it developed
+into an independent board. This change had taken place in
+Burgundy as early as the year 1409. It was in that country
+that the emperor Maximilian became acquainted with the institution;
+and by the erection of the aulic councils at Innspruck
+and Vienna (1498 and 1501), he gave the principal impulse to
+the imitation of it in Germany. As, at that time, the division
+of labor was very little developed, and personal and collegial
+authority all the more developed in consequence, it is easy to
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page096">[pg 096]</span><a name="Pg096" id="Pg096" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+conceive that a great part of all the new and rapidly increasing
+business of police administration was confided to these
+councils. They were charged especially with what is known
+to-day as economic police (<span lang="de" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="de"><span style="font-style: italic">Wirthschaftspolizei</span></span>) and an important
+part of the administration of justice, in its lower departments,
+was turned over to their subordinates. The most
+eminent men who wrote, in the seventeenth century, on cameralistic
+matters, laid great stress on the point, that it was the
+duty of the aulic councils to entertain not only fiscal questions,
+but that it was within their province also, to determine questions
+of economic police.<a id="noteref_147" name="noteref_147" href="#note_147"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">147</span></span></a>
+The interest of absolute princes
+must have greatly favored these cameralistic institutions, for
+they were in their hands docile tools, which escaped the annoying
+intervention of the states of their realms.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+By degrees, the knowledge necessary to these council
+officials, and which found no place in the lectures on law, were
+formed into a special body of doctrine. After such men as
+Morhof and Thomasius had prepared the way,<a id="noteref_148" name="noteref_148" href="#note_148"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">148</span></span></a> Frederick
+William I., himself a clever cameralist, and author of the masterly
+financial system of Prussia, took the important step of
+founding, at Halle and Frankfurt on the Oder, special chairs
+of economy and cameralistic science; which, considering the
+time, were very ably filled by Gasser and Dithmar. (1727.)
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page097">[pg 097]</span><a name="Pg097" id="Pg097" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+There was thus formed in the German universities a distinct
+school of cameralists, which, through Jung, Rössig and
+Schmalz, reached to the nineteenth century. The term cameralistic
+science, the creature of chance, was used, it must be
+said, with very various limits to its meaning.<a id="noteref_149" name="noteref_149" href="#note_149"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">149</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+However, Political Economy in Germany developed out of
+the science of law and the cameralistic sciences, while in England
+and Italy it had its origin chiefly in the study of questions
+of finance and foreign commerce.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc53" id="toc53"></a>
+<a name="pdf54" id="pdf54"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section XX.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">Private Economy. (Continued.)</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+If we abstract from cameralistic science as it was understood
+in the last century, what it has in common with all economy,<a id="noteref_150" name="noteref_150" href="#note_150"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">150</span></span></a>
+and therefore with public economy, next that which belongs to
+the aggregate of governmental economy, there remains only a
+number of rules, such as those which govern the principal
+branches of private business, and which indicate how they are
+to be carried on with the greatest advantage to those who engage
+in them. Such are forest and rural economy, mining
+science, technology, including architecture, and all that concerns
+founderies, and commercial science. Now that the expression
+cameralistic science is altogether obsolete, the aggregate
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page098">[pg 098]</span><a name="Pg098" id="Pg098" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+of these might be designated by the name private economy.
+Obviously, we should have here, neither a simple nor pure science,
+but only a compilation of natural-philosophical and economic
+lemmas. Thus, in agriculture, for instance, a knowledge
+of the different kinds of soil, of the tillage of land, of the
+different plants and animals etc., belongs to the domain of natural
+science; while all that relates to the cost of production, the
+employment of capital, the wages of labor, the exchange of
+products, net product and the price of land, are purely politico-economical.
+The political economists also require a knowledge
+of the natural side of the cameralistic sciences. Such a
+knowledge is indispensable to every detailed and living theory,
+and especially to the application of economic science to practice.
+The great difference lies in this, that the cameralist interests
+himself in the production of material goods for their own
+sake, while the political economist regards them only in their
+relations to national life.<a id="noteref_151" name="noteref_151" href="#note_151"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">151</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+It would seem, moreover, that political economists, especially
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page099">[pg 099]</span><a name="Pg099" id="Pg099" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+in Germany, have attached too much importance to putting
+formal bounds to their special science. Why not rather follow
+the example of the students of nature who care little
+whether this or that discovery belongs to physics or chemistry,
+to astronomy or mathematics, provided, only, very many
+and important discoveries are made?<a id="noteref_152" name="noteref_152" href="#note_152"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">152</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc55" id="toc55"></a>
+<a name="pdf56" id="pdf56"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section XXI.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">What Political Economy Treats Of.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Political Economy treats chiefly of the material interests of
+nations. It inquires how the various wants of the people of a
+country, especially those of food, clothing, fuel, shelter, of the
+sexual instinct etc., may be satisfied; how the satisfaction of
+these wants influences the aggregate national life, and how
+in turn, they are influenced by the national life. (Gospel of
+Matth., 4, 4.) This alone suffices to enable us to estimate the
+importance of the science. The relation of virtue to wealth
+is likened by Bacon to that of an army to its baggage. In
+Xenophon's opinion, wealth is really useful only to him who
+knows how to make a good use of it. From an economic point
+of view, the happiest man is he who has accumulated most,
+honorably, and used it best.<a id="noteref_153" name="noteref_153" href="#note_153"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">153</span></span></a> That, even in a material sense,
+the intellect of a people is their most important element, is evident
+from the example of the Chinese, who were so long acquainted
+with printing, powder, and the mariner's compass,
+without, by their means, attaining to intelligent public opinion,
+forming a good army, or coming to an understanding of the
+art of navigation, to any great extent.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+The undervaluing of economic matters, for which ages of
+inferior cultivation, our own middle ages for instance, are now
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page100">[pg 100]</span><a name="Pg100" id="Pg100" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+praised and now blamed, was really a rare exception even
+during these ages.<a id="noteref_154" name="noteref_154" href="#note_154"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">154</span></span></a>
+Other kinds of acquisition and enjoyment
+then occupied the foreground; but there never was a time,
+when gain and enjoyment in general were not favorite objects
+of pursuit, and held in high esteem. The physical wants of
+uncultured men cry out much louder than intellectual ones.
+(§ <a href="#Section_2" class="tei tei-ref">2</a>,
+<a href="#Section_14" class="tei tei-ref">14</a>.)<a id="noteref_155" name="noteref_155" href="#note_155"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">155</span></span></a> On the other hand, in over-cultivated ages, when
+decay begins, an over-estimation of material things is wont to
+become general.<a id="noteref_156" name="noteref_156" href="#note_156"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">156</span></span></a>
+The mere servants of mammon, whether
+as political economists or as private individuals, may see their
+depravity faithfully reflected in communism as in a mirror.
+We should not overlook the fact that it is with whole nations
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page101">[pg 101]</span><a name="Pg101" id="Pg101" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+as with the individual man who amasses his own fortune. He
+reaches the culminating point of his wealth generally after he
+has passed the prime of life. The most flourishing period of
+a nation's existence is wont just to precede its decay, and to
+introduce it.<a id="noteref_157" name="noteref_157" href="#note_157"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">157</span></span></a> Hence, here nothing could be more untrue, as
+Macchiavelli has remarked, than the general opinion that
+money is the sinew of war.<a id="noteref_158" name="noteref_158" href="#note_158"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">158</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+</div>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page102">[pg 102]</span><a name="Pg102" id="Pg102" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<hr class="page" /><div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 4.00em; margin-top: 4.00em">
+<a name="toc57" id="toc57"></a>
+<a name="pdf58" id="pdf58"></a>
+<h2 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">Chapter III.</span></h2>
+<h2 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.88em; margin-top: 2.88em"><span style="font-size: 144%">The Methods Of Political Economy.</span></h2>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc59" id="toc59"></a>
+<a name="pdf60" id="pdf60"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section XXII.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">Former Methods.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+The methods<a id="noteref_159" name="noteref_159" href="#note_159"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">159</span></span></a>
+which would apply to any science of national
+life, principles borrowed from any other science, are now generally
+looked upon as obsolete. This is true, especially, of
+the theological method which prevailed, almost exclusively
+during the middle ages,<a id="noteref_160" name="noteref_160" href="#note_160"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">160</span></span></a> and of the juridical method of the
+seventeenth century.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+It would be much more in harmony with the intellectual
+tendencies of the time, to adopt a mathematical mode of treatment
+in Political Economy, involving, as such a mode of treatment
+does, not the matter of the science, but only a formal
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page103">[pg 103]</span><a name="Pg103" id="Pg103" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+principle. That which is general in Political Economy has,
+it must be acknowledged, much that is analogous to the mathematical
+sciences. Like the latter, it swarms with abstractions.<a id="noteref_161" name="noteref_161" href="#note_161"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">161</span></span></a>
+Just as there are, strictly speaking, no mathematical
+lines or points in nature, and no mathematical lever, there is
+nowhere such a thing as production or rent, entirely pure and
+simple. The mathematical laws of motion operate in a hypothetical
+vacuum, and, where applied, are subjected to important
+modifications, in consequence of atmospheric resistance. Something
+similar is true of most of the laws of our science; as, for
+instance, those in accordance with which the price of commodities
+is fixed by the buyer and seller. It also, always supposes
+the parties to the contract to be guided only by a sense
+of their own best interest, and not to be influenced by secondary
+considerations. It is not, therefore, to be wondered at, that
+many authors have endeavored to clothe the laws of Political
+Economy in algebraic formulæ.<a id="noteref_162" name="noteref_162" href="#note_162"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">162</span></span></a> And, indeed, wherever magnitudes
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page104">[pg 104]</span><a name="Pg104" id="Pg104" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+and the relations of magnitudes to one another are
+treated of, it must be possible to subject them to calculation.
+Herbart has shown that this is so in the case of psychology;<a id="noteref_163" name="noteref_163" href="#note_163"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">163</span></span></a>
+and all the sciences which treat of national life, especially our
+own, are psychological.<a id="noteref_164" name="noteref_164" href="#note_164"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">164</span></span></a> But the advantages of the mathematical
+mode of expression diminish as the facts to which it is applied
+become more complicated. This is true even in the ordinary
+psychology of the individual. How much more, therefore,
+in the portraying of national life! Here the algebraic
+formulæ would soon become so complicated, as to make all
+further progress in the operation next to impossible.<a id="noteref_165" name="noteref_165" href="#note_165"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">165</span></span></a> Their
+employment, especially in a science whose sphere it is, at present,
+to increase the number of the facts observed, to make
+them the object of exhaustive investigation, and vary the combinations
+into which they may be made to enter, is a matter of
+great difficulty, if not entirely impossible.<a id="noteref_166" name="noteref_166" href="#note_166"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">166</span></span></a> For, most assuredly,
+as our science has to do with men, it must take them and
+treat them as they actually are, moved at once by very different
+and non-economic motives, belonging to an entirely definite
+people, state, age etc. The abstraction according to which
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page105">[pg 105]</span><a name="Pg105" id="Pg105" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+all men are by nature the same, different only in consequence
+of a difference of education, position in life etc., all equally
+well equipped, skillful and free in the matter of economic production
+and consumption, is one which, as Ricardo and von
+Thünen have shown, must pass as an indispensable stage in
+the preparatory labors of political economists. It would be
+especially well, when an economic fact is produced by the cooperation
+of many different factors, for the investigator to mentally
+isolate the factor of which, for the time being, he wishes
+to examine the peculiar nature. All other factors should, for
+a time, be considered as not operating, and as unchangeable,
+and then the question asked, What would be the effect of a
+change in the factor to be examined, whether the change be
+occasioned by enlarging or diminishing it? But it never should
+be lost sight of, that such a one is only an abstraction after all,
+for which, not only in the transition to practice, but even in finished
+theory, we must turn to the infinite variety of real life.<a id="noteref_167" name="noteref_167" href="#note_167"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">167</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+There are two important inquiries in all sciences whose subject
+matter is national or social life: 1. What <em class="tei tei-emph"><span style="font-style: italic">is</span></em>? (What has
+been? How did it become so? etc.) 2. What <em class="tei tei-emph"><span style="font-style: italic">should be</span></em>? The
+greater number of political economists have confounded these
+questions one with the other, but not all to the same extent.<a id="noteref_168" name="noteref_168" href="#note_168"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">168</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page106">[pg 106]</span><a name="Pg106" id="Pg106" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+When a careful distinction is made between them, the contrast
+between the (realistic) physiological or historical, and the idealistic
+methods is brought out.<a id="noteref_169" name="noteref_169" href="#note_169"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">169</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc61" id="toc61"></a>
+<a name="pdf62" id="pdf62"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section XXIII.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">The Idealistic Method.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Any one who has read a goodly number of idealistic works
+treating of public economy (the state, law etc.) cannot have
+failed to be struck by the enormous differences, and even contradictions,
+as to what theorizers have considered desirable and
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page107">[pg 107]</span><a name="Pg107" id="Pg107" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+necessary. There is scarcely an important point which the
+highest authorities may not be cited for or against. We must
+not close our eyes to this fact. <span class="tei tei-q">“The giddiness that comes
+from contemplating the depths of knowledge is the beginning
+of philosophy, as the god Thaumas was, according to the fable,
+the father of Iris.”</span> (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Plato.</span></span>) In a precisely similar manner,
+the student of public economy (politics, the philosophy of
+law etc.) must familiarize himself with the variations that have
+taken place in what men, at different periods of history, have
+required of the state and public economy, until he is lost in
+wonder at the contemplation.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc63" id="toc63"></a>
+<a name="pdf64" id="pdf64"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section XXIII.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">The Idealistic Method. (Continued.)</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+It is impossible to fail to notice at once that those ideal descriptions
+which have enjoyed great fame and exerted great
+influence, depart very little from the real conditions of the public
+economy (of the state, law etc.) surrounding their authors.<a id="noteref_170" name="noteref_170" href="#note_170"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">170</span></span></a>
+This is not mere chance. The power of great theorizers, as,
+indeed, of all great men, lies, as a rule, in this, that they satisfy
+the want of their own time to an unusual extent; and it is the
+peculiar task of theorizers to give expression to this want
+with scientific clearness, and to justify it with scientific depth.
+But the real wants of a people will, in the long run, be satisfied
+in life,<a id="noteref_171" name="noteref_171" href="#note_171"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">171</span></span></a>
+so far as this is possible to the moral imperfection
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page108">[pg 108]</span><a name="Pg108" id="Pg108" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+of man. We should at least be on our guard when we
+hear it said that whole nations have been forced into an <span class="tei tei-q">“unnatural”</span>
+course by priests, tyrants and cavilers. For, to leave
+human freedom and divine Providence out of consideration
+entirely, how is such a thing possible? The supposed tyrants
+are generally part and parcel of the people themselves; all
+their resources are derived from the people. They must have
+been new Archimedeses standing outside of their own world.
+(Compare, however, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">infra</span></span>, § 263.)
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+It is true, that if the result of the growth of generations be
+to gradually produce a different people, these different men
+may require different institutions. Then a struggle arises between
+the old and those of the younger generation; the former
+wish to retain what has been tested by time, the latter to seek
+for the satisfaction of their new wants by new means. As the
+sea always oscillates between the flowing and ebbing of the
+tides, so the life of nations, between periods of repose and of
+crisis: periods of repose, when existing forms answer to the
+real substance of things, and of crisis, when the changed substance
+or contents seeks to build up a new form for itself.
+Such crises are called <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">reforms</span></span> when they are effected in a
+peaceful way, and in accordance with positive law. When
+accomplished in violation of law, they are called revolutions.<a id="noteref_172" name="noteref_172" href="#note_172"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">172</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+That every revolution, it matters not how great the need of
+the change produced by it, is as such an enormous evil, a serious,
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page109">[pg 109]</span><a name="Pg109" id="Pg109" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+and sometimes, fatal disease of the body politic, is self-evident.
+The injury to morals which the spectacle of victorious
+wrong almost always produces can be healed, as a rule, only
+in the following generation. Where law has been once trampled
+on, the <span class="tei tei-q">“right of the stronger”</span> will prevail; and the
+stronger is, to some extent, the most unscrupulous and reckless
+in the choice of the means to be employed. Hence, the
+well-known fact, that in revolutionary times the worst so frequently
+remain the victors. The counter-revolution which is
+wont to follow on the heels of revolution, and with a corresponding
+violence, is a compensation only to the most shortsighted.
+It allows the disease, the familiarizing of the people
+with the infringement of law, to continue, until the hitherto
+sound parts are attacked. Hence, a people should, if they
+would have it go well with them, in the changes in the form
+of things which they make, take as their model Time, whose
+reforms are the surest and most irresistible, but, at the same
+time, as Bacon says, so gradual that they cannot be seen or
+observed at any one moment. It is true, that, as all that is
+great is difficult, so also is the carrying out of uninterrupted
+reform. Its carrying out, indeed, supposes two things: a constitution
+so wisely planned as to keep the doors open both to
+the disappearing institutions of the past and to the coming
+institutions of the future; and, among all classes of the people,
+a moral control of themselves, so absolute that, no matter what
+the inconvenience, or how great the sacrifice, legal ways shall
+alone be used. In this manner, two of the greatest and apparently
+most contradictory wants of every legal or moral
+person, the want of uninterrupted continuity and that of free
+development, may be satisfied.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page110">[pg 110]</span><a name="Pg110" id="Pg110" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc65" id="toc65"></a>
+<a name="pdf66" id="pdf66"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section XXV.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">The Idealistic Method. (Continued.)</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+It is doubtless true that all economic laws, and all economic
+institutions are made for the people, not the people for such laws
+and institutions. Their mutability is, therefore, by no means
+such an evil as mankind should endeavor to remove, but is
+wholesome and laudable, so far as it runs parallel with the
+transformation of the people, and the changes which their
+wants have undergone.<a id="noteref_173" name="noteref_173" href="#note_173"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">173</span></span></a>
+Hence, there is no reason why the
+most various ideal systems should contradict one another. Any
+one of them may be right, but, of course, only for one people
+and one age. In this case, the only error would be, if they
+should claim to be universally applicable. There can no more
+be an economic ideal adapted to the various wants of every
+people, than a garment which should fit every individual.
+The leading-strings of children and the staff of age would
+be great annoyances to the man. <span class="tei tei-q">“Reason becomes nonsense
+and beneficence a torment.”</span> Hence, whoever would
+elaborate the ideal of the best public economy—and the greater
+number of political economists have really wished to do this—should,
+if he would be perfectly true, and at the same time practical,
+place in juxta position as many different ideals as there
+are different types of people.<a id="noteref_174" name="noteref_174" href="#note_174"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">174</span></span></a>
+He would, moreover, have
+to revise his work every few years; for, in proportion as
+a people change, and new wants originate, the economic
+ideal suitable to them must change also. But it is impossible
+to accomplish this on so large a scale. Besides, to appreciate
+the present thus instantaneously, and to perfectly feel the pulse
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page111">[pg 111]</span><a name="Pg111" id="Pg111" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+of time thus uninterruptedly, requires a species of talent different
+from what even the most distinguished scientists are
+wont to possess; talents of an entirely practical nature, such as
+become a great minister of the interior or of finance. And it is
+an acknowledged fact, that even the cleverest of such practicioners,
+as the younger Pitt said of himself, generally feel
+their way instinctively, and do not see it with the clearness
+necessary to indicate it to others.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc67" id="toc67"></a>
+<a name="pdf68" id="pdf68"></a>
+<a name="Section_26" id="Section_26" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section XXVI.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">The Historical Method—The Anatomy And Physiology
+Of Public Economy.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+We refuse entirely to lend ourselves in theory to the construction
+of such ideal systems. Our aim is simply to describe
+man's economic nature and economic wants, to investigate the
+laws and the character of the institutions which are adapted to
+the satisfaction of these wants, and the greater or less amount
+of success by which they have been attended.<a id="noteref_175" name="noteref_175" href="#note_175"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">175</span></span></a> Our task is,
+therefore, so to speak, the anatomy and physiology of social
+or national economy!
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+These are matters to be found within the domain of reality,
+susceptible of demonstration or refutation by the ordinary operations
+of science; entirely true or entirely false, and, therefore,
+in the former case, not liable to become obsolete. We
+proceed after the manner of the investigator of nature. We,
+too, have our dissecting knife and microscope, and we have
+an advantage over the student of nature in this, that the self-observation
+of the body is exceedingly limited, while that of
+mind is almost unlimited. There are other respects, however,
+in which he has the advantage over us. When he wishes to
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page112">[pg 112]</span><a name="Pg112" id="Pg112" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+study a given species, he may make a hundred or a thousand
+experiments, and use a hundred or a thousand individuals for
+his purpose. Hence, he can easily control each separate observation,
+and distinguish the exception from the rule. But,
+how many nations are there which we can make use of for
+purposes of comparison? Their very fewness makes it all the
+more imperative to compare them all. Doubtless, comparison
+cannot supply the place of observation; but observation may
+be thus rendered more thorough, many-sided, and richer in
+the number of its points of view. Interested alike in the differences
+and resemblances, we must first form our rules from
+the latter, consider the former as the exceptions, and then endeavor
+to explain them. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Infra</span></span>, § 266).
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc69" id="toc69"></a>
+<a name="pdf70" id="pdf70"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section XXVII.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">Advantages Of The Historical Or Physiological
+Method.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+The thorough application of this method will do away with
+a great number of controversies on important questions.<a id="noteref_176" name="noteref_176" href="#note_176"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">176</span></span></a> Men
+are as far removed from being devils as from being angels.
+We meet with few who are only guided by ideal motives, but
+with few, also, who hearken only to the voice of egotism, and
+care for nothing but themselves. It may, therefore, be assumed,
+that any view current on certain tangible interests
+which concern man very nearly, and which has been shared
+by great parties and even by whole peoples for generations, is
+not based only on ignorance or a perverse love of wrong. The
+error consists more frequently in applying measures wholesome
+and even absolutely necessary under certain circumstances, to
+circumstances entirely different. And here, a thorough insight
+into the conditions of the measure suffices to compose the
+differences between the two parties. Once the natural laws
+of Political Economy are sufficiently known and recognized,
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page113">[pg 113]</span><a name="Pg113" id="Pg113" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+all that is needed, in any given instance, is more exact and
+reliable statistics of the fact involved, to reconcile all party
+controversies on questions of the politics of public economy,
+so far, at least, as these controversies arise from a difference
+of opinion. It may be that science may never attain to this,
+in consequence of the new problems which are ever arising
+and demanding a solution. It may be, too, that in the greater
+number of party controversies, the opposed purposes of the
+parties play a more important part even than the opposed
+views. Be this as it may, it is necessary, especially in an age
+as deeply agitated as our own, when every good citizen is in
+duty bound to ally himself to party, that every honest party-man
+should seek to secure, amid the ocean of ephemeral opinions,
+a firm island of scientific truth, as universally recognized
+as truth as are the principles of mathematical physics by
+physicians of the most various schools.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc71" id="toc71"></a>
+<a name="pdf72" id="pdf72"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section XXVIII.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">Advantages Of The Historical Method.
+(Continued.)</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Another characteristic feature of the historical method is
+that it does away with the feeling of self-sufficiency, and the
+braggadocio which cause most men to ridicule what they do
+not understand, and the higher to look down with contempt on
+lower civilizations. Whoever is acquainted with the laws of
+the development of the plant, cannot fail to see in the seed the
+germ of its growth, and in its flower, the herald of decay. If
+there were inhabitants of the moon, and one of them should
+visit our earth, and find children and grown people side by
+side, while ignorant of the laws of human development, would
+he not look upon the most beautiful child as a mere monster,
+with an enormous head, with arms and legs of stunted growth,
+useless genitals, and destitute of reason? The folly of such a
+judgment would be obvious to every one; and yet we meet
+with thousands like it on the state and the public economy of
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page114">[pg 114]</span><a name="Pg114" id="Pg114" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+nations when in lower stages of civilization, and this, even
+among the most distinguished writers.<a id="noteref_177" name="noteref_177" href="#note_177"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">177</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+We may, indeed, make a critical comparison of different
+forms, each of which answers perfectly to its object or contents;
+but such a comparison can possess historical objectivity,
+only when it is based on a correct view of the peculiar
+course of development followed by the people in question.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+The forms of the period of maturity may be considered the
+most perfect; earlier forms as the immature, and the later as
+those of the age of decline.<a id="noteref_178" name="noteref_178" href="#note_178"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">178</span></span></a> But it is a matter of the greatest
+difficulty, accurately to determine the culminating point of
+a people's civilization. The old man believes, as a rule, that
+the times are growing worse, because he is no longer in a
+way to utilize them; the young man, as a rule, that they are
+growing better, because he hopes to turn them to account.
+It is, however, always a purely empirical question; and in the
+solution of it, the observer's eye may acquire a singular acuteness
+by the comparative study of as many nations as possible,
+especially of those which have already passed away.<a id="noteref_179" name="noteref_179" href="#note_179"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">179</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Could anyone contemplate the history of mankind as a
+a whole, of which the histories of individual nations are but the
+parts, the successive steps in the evolution of humanity would
+of course afford him a similar objective rule for all these
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page115">[pg 115]</span><a name="Pg115" id="Pg115" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+points in which whole peoples permanently differ from one
+another.<a id="noteref_180" name="noteref_180" href="#note_180"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">180</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc73" id="toc73"></a>
+<a name="pdf74" id="pdf74"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section XXIX.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">The Practical Character Of The Historical
+Method In Political Economy.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Before I close, I must refer to a possible objection which
+may be made to historical or physiological Political Economy:
+that it may indeed be taught, but that it cannot be a practical
+science. If it be assumed that those principles only are practical,
+which may be applied immediately by every reader, in
+practice, this work must disclaim all pretensions to that title.
+I doubt very much if, in this sense, there is a single science
+susceptible of a practical exposition.<a id="noteref_181" name="noteref_181" href="#note_181"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">181</span></span></a> Genuine practitioners,
+who know life with its thousands of relations by experience,
+will be the first to grant that such a collection of prescriptions,
+when the question is the knowledge and guidance of men,
+would be misleading and dangerous in proportion as such
+prescriptions were positive and apodictic, that is non-practical
+and doctrinarian.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Our endeavor has been, not to write a practical book, but
+to train our readers to be practical. To this end, we have
+sought to describe the laws of nature which man cannot control,
+but, at most, only utilize. We call the attention of the
+reader to the different points of view, from which every economic
+fact must be observed, to do justice to every claim. We
+would like to accustom the reader, when he is examining the
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page116">[pg 116]</span><a name="Pg116" id="Pg116" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+most insignificant politico-economical fact, never to lose sight
+of the whole, not only of public economy but of national life.
+We are very strongly of the opinion, that only he can form a
+correct judgment and defend his views against all objections,
+on such questions as to where, how and when certain liens
+and charges, monopolies, privileges, services etc., should be
+abolished, who fully understands why they were once imposed
+or introduced. Especially, do we not desire to impress a certain
+number of rules of action on those who have confided
+themselves to our guidance, after having first demonstrated
+their excellence. Our highest ambition is to put our readers
+in a way to discover such rules of direction for themselves,
+after they have conscientiously weighed all the facts, untrammeled
+by any earthly authority whatever.<a id="noteref_182" name="noteref_182" href="#note_182"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">182</span></span></a><a id="noteref_183" name="noteref_183" href="#note_183"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">183</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+</div>
+
+</div>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page119">[pg 119]</span><a name="Pg119" id="Pg119" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<hr class="page" /><div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 5.00em; margin-top: 5.00em">
+<a name="toc75" id="toc75"></a>
+<a name="pdf76" id="pdf76"></a>
+<h1 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.88em; margin-top: 2.88em"><span style="font-size: 144%">Book I.</span></h1>
+<h1 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 3.46em; margin-top: 3.46em"><span style="font-size: 173%">The Production Of Goods.</span></h1>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 4.00em; margin-top: 4.00em">
+<a name="toc77" id="toc77"></a>
+<a name="pdf78" id="pdf78"></a>
+<h2 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">Chapter I.</span></h2>
+<h2 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.88em; margin-top: 2.88em"><span style="font-size: 144%">Factors Of Production.</span></h2>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc79" id="toc79"></a>
+<a name="pdf80" id="pdf80"></a>
+<a name="Section_30" id="Section_30" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section XXX.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">Meaning Of Production.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+To create new matter is more than it is given to man to do.
+Hence, by the term production, in its widest sense, we mean
+simply the bringing forth of new goods—the discovery of new
+utilities, the change or transformation of already existing
+goods into new utilities,<a id="noteref_184" name="noteref_184" href="#note_184"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">184</span></span></a> the creation of means for the satisfaction
+of human wants, out of the aggregate of matter originally
+present in the world. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Producere!</span></span>) We confine ourselves,
+however, in this to economic goods, as defined in § <a href="#Section_2" class="tei tei-ref">2</a>.
+In a secondary and more limited sense, production is an increase
+of resources, in so far as the goods produced satisfy a greater
+human want, than those employed in the production itself.<a id="noteref_185" name="noteref_185" href="#note_185"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">185</span></span></a><a id="noteref_186" name="noteref_186" href="#note_186"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">186</span></span></a><a id="noteref_187" name="noteref_187" href="#note_187"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">187</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page120">[pg 120]</span><a name="Pg120" id="Pg120" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+It would, however, be an error to suppose, that the creation
+of certain utilities for the producer himself, or for others,
+constitutes the only end of economic production. The
+more perfect economic production becomes, the greater grows
+the pleasure the producer feels in his products, which pleasure
+is at once the effect and the cause of his success. Hence,
+production is to a great extent its own end. That this is
+so in the case of artists is well known. <span class="tei tei-q">“If you want only
+progeny from her, a mortal can beget them as well. Let
+him who rejoices in the goddess, not seek in her the woman,”</span>
+says Schiller. There is not a really clever workman but has
+something artistic in his mode of production. And even the
+meanest productive activity, provided it is neither over-driven
+nor misdirected, must of itself exert a good influence on the
+physical and moral development or preservation of the producer.
+An idle brain is the devil's workshop.<a id="noteref_188" name="noteref_188" href="#note_188"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">188</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc81" id="toc81"></a>
+<a name="pdf82" id="pdf82"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section XXXI.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">The Factors Of Production.—External Nature.</span><a id="noteref_189" name="noteref_189" href="#note_189"><span class="tei tei-noteref" style="text-align: left"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">189</span></span></a></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+The division of natural forces which formerly obtained, into
+organic, chemical and mechanical, is of no great importance
+in Political Economy. The tendency is more and more to resolve
+organic forces partly into chemical and partly into mechanical.
+Between mechanical and chemical forces, again, the
+boundary is not fixed, heat being always capable of producing
+motion, and motion always of producing heat. Hence, it is
+all the more important for us to find a division of the economic
+gifts (matter, forces<a id="noteref_190" name="noteref_190" href="#note_190"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">190</span></span></a> and relations) of external nature, into such
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page121">[pg 121]</span><a name="Pg121" id="Pg121" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+as are capable of acquiring exchange value, and such as are
+not. (See § <a href="#Section_5" class="tei tei-ref">5</a>.)
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+A. Those gifts of nature which, because they cannot be
+appropriated by any one, or which at least are inexhaustible
+as compared with the wants of man, and therefore never have
+a direct value in exchange, belong either to the class of <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">free</span></span>
+goods, in the fullest sense of the word, as, for instance, sunlight
+and the atmosphere (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">supra</span></span>, §
+<a href="#Section_5" class="tei tei-ref">5</a>);<a id="noteref_191" name="noteref_191" href="#note_191"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">191</span></span></a> or they constitute, by reason
+of their peculiar and intransmissible connection with the
+whole country, an essential element of the national resources.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc83" id="toc83"></a>
+<a name="pdf84" id="pdf84"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section XXXII.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">External Nature.—The Sea.—Climate.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+To the last category belongs, for instance, the sea, the only
+natural boundary of a country, which from a military point
+of view, constitutes a protection to it, without, at the same
+time, disturbing peaceful traffic. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Riedel.</span></span>) Here, also belong
+ocean currents, especially when uniformly supported by
+regular winds,<a id="noteref_192" name="noteref_192" href="#note_192"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">192</span></span></a> the ebb and flow of the tides, which
+constitute
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page122">[pg 122]</span><a name="Pg122" id="Pg122" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+a piece of commercial machinery of the very greatest
+importance, particularly when they affect the waters of rivers
+to a great distance.<a id="noteref_193" name="noteref_193" href="#note_193"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">193</span></span></a>
+In this age, when the love of travel is
+so great and so universal, what prices are paid in many
+places by strangers for the beauty of a landscape, to its
+owner.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Special mention should be here made of climate, and of its
+heat or moisture. The lines called isothermal, that is, lines of
+equal annual heat, are, therefore, of greatest importance to
+public economy, because the <span class="tei tei-q">“zones of production”</span> depend
+mainly on them.<a id="noteref_194" name="noteref_194" href="#note_194"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">194</span></span></a> However, we are concerned here, not only
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page123">[pg 123]</span><a name="Pg123" id="Pg123" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+with the average temperature of the whole year, but especially
+with the distribution of heat among the several parts of
+the day and the different seasons of the year, and the maximum
+summer heat and winter cold (the isothermal and iso-cheimenal
+lines). Coast lands are wont to have a milder winter
+and a cooler summer than continental ones with an equal average
+yearly heat. This produces a great difference in vegetation,
+because there are a great many plants which can endure
+the winter's cold very well, but require a hot summer; and
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">vice versa</span></span>.<a id="noteref_195" name="noteref_195" href="#note_195"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">195</span></span></a> Were it not for this
+fact, in connection with the winter-sleep of plants, a
+large portion of the north would be entirely uninhabitable.
+Besides, the temperature of a place does not depend
+exclusively on its latitude, or on its height
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page124">[pg 124]</span><a name="Pg124" id="Pg124" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+above the sea-level.<a id="noteref_196" name="noteref_196" href="#note_196"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">196</span></span></a> The humidity of the climate is,
+as a rule, great in proportion to the quantity of water in its neighborhood,
+and to the height of its temperature; although, for instance,
+in Europe, the number of rainy days increases, the
+further we advance towards the north.<a id="noteref_197" name="noteref_197" href="#note_197"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">197</span></span></a> Although the distance
+of a place from the equator and its height above the
+level of the sea have, in many respects, a similar effect (vertical,
+horizontal isothermal lines and zones of production), mountainous
+regions are uniformly distinguished by a greater
+degree of humidity, which makes them better adapted for
+pasturage and forest-culture. But the flora of a locality, being
+the resultant of all its conditions, affords us a much better
+criterion of the value of the climate for economic purposes,
+than the most accurate thermometric observations. Other
+things being equal, the productive force of nature operates,
+doubtless, with most energy, in warm climates. The more
+remote a country is from the equator, the more is its fertility
+confined to its lowest parts.<a id="noteref_198" name="noteref_198" href="#note_198"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">198</span></span></a>
+Greater heat will, as a rule, ripen the same product sooner,
+and thus permit the same land to be used several times in
+the same year.<a id="noteref_199" name="noteref_199" href="#note_199"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">199</span></span></a> Each individual
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page125">[pg 125]</span><a name="Pg125" id="Pg125" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+harvest, as a rule, is more abundant,<a id="noteref_200" name="noteref_200" href="#note_200"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">200</span></span></a> and the products better in
+many respects. The fruit, for instance, and wine, contain
+more sugar,<a id="noteref_201" name="noteref_201" href="#note_201"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">201</span></span></a>
+and oleaginous plants contain more oil. Lastly,
+since nature in warm countries is so much more generous, it
+may be utilized by man with less regard for consequences.
+There is less need of extensive woods, of large winter supplies,
+especially for animals;<a id="noteref_202" name="noteref_202" href="#note_202"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">202</span></span></a> fewer
+buildings are demanded, and there is also less demand for human and brute labor, since
+the work of plowing, sowing etc., extends over a greater portion
+of the year.<a id="noteref_203" name="noteref_203" href="#note_203"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">203</span></span></a>
+It is true, on the other hand, that also the
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page126">[pg 126]</span><a name="Pg126" id="Pg126" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+destructive force of nature is greater in warmer than in colder
+countries. (§ 209.)<a id="noteref_204" name="noteref_204" href="#note_204"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">204</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc85" id="toc85"></a>
+<a name="pdf86" id="pdf86"></a>
+<a name="Section_33" id="Section_33" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section XXXIII.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">External Nature.—Gifts Of Nature With Value In
+Exchange.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+B. Those gifts of external nature which may become objects
+of private property, and at the same time possess sufficient
+relative scarcity to give them value in exchange, are
+either movable, and exhaustible in a given place, or firmly
+connected with the land. The first category embraces, for
+instance, such wild animals and plants as serve some useful
+purpose, minerals, above all, fossil combustible matter<a id="noteref_205" name="noteref_205" href="#note_205"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">205</span></span></a>—the
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page127">[pg 127]</span><a name="Pg127" id="Pg127" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+<span class="tei tei-q">“black diamonds,”</span> coal, of which, with its canals, Franklin
+said that it had made England what it is. The economical
+effect of their moveable character is best seen, when the use
+made of an ordinary stratum of coal is compared with that of
+a protracted subterranean fire in a coal mine.<a id="noteref_206" name="noteref_206" href="#note_206"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">206</span></span></a> The latter can
+be directly useful only to those in its immediate vicinity.
+Every lower layer of the burning coal would be less useful.
+An increase of its actual power by accumulation in time or
+place is scarcely possible. In all these respects, the movable
+coal is incomparably better adapted to the satisfaction of man's
+wants. It may be said that the capacity of heat for drying,
+distilling, melting and hardening purposes, of imparting rapid
+motion to heavy objects by the production of confined steam,
+is, at least, a thousand times as great when a thousand bushels
+of coal are consumed as when one is consumed. In most cases
+even the concentration of a large quantity of coal will increase,
+the result not only absolutely, but relatively.<a id="noteref_207" name="noteref_207" href="#note_207"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">207</span></span></a><a id="noteref_208" name="noteref_208" href="#note_208"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">208</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page128">[pg 128]</span><a name="Pg128" id="Pg128" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc87" id="toc87"></a>
+<a name="pdf88" id="pdf88"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section XXXIV.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">External Nature. (Continued.)</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+The materials, forces and relations or conditions of external
+nature, immovably connected with parts of the land, even
+when in themselves exhaustless, either allow only of a definite
+amount of economic utilization, as, for instance, the mechanical
+force of a given waterfall, which can drive only a definite number
+of mills of a definite size;<a id="noteref_209" name="noteref_209" href="#note_209"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">209</span></span></a> or their increased utilization is
+accompanied by difficulties which increase with still greater
+rapidity. This last is the case, especially in the employment
+of land for agricultural purposes. It is, according to Senior,
+one of the four fundamental axioms of Political Economy, that
+additional labor, spent on a given quantity of land, produces,
+as a rule, a relatively smaller yield; assuming, of course, that
+the art of agriculture remains the same. It is not possible to
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page129">[pg 129]</span><a name="Pg129" id="Pg129" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+determine either generally, or in particular cases, the precise
+point at which agriculture should stop, to prevent relatively
+smaller returns from increased expenditure of labor and capital.
+Improvements in the art of agriculture may remove it a
+great distance. But, that there is such a point admits of no
+doubt. No one will believe that an acre of land can be made
+to produce a quantity of the means of subsistence sufficient to
+support all Europe, no matter what the amount of seed used,
+or of manure etc. employed.<a id="noteref_210" name="noteref_210" href="#note_210"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">210</span></span></a>
+This is most apparent in forest-economy,
+where the absolute increase of the so-called wood-capital
+becomes, after a certain time, smaller from year to
+year.<a id="noteref_211" name="noteref_211" href="#note_211"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">211</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page130">[pg 130]</span><a name="Pg130" id="Pg130" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc89" id="toc89"></a>
+<a name="pdf90" id="pdf90"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section XXXV.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">External Nature.—Elements Of Agricultural Productiveness.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+In treating of the agricultural productiveness of a piece of
+land, it is necessary to distinguish three things,—its bearing-capacity,
+its capacity for cultivation, and its direct capacity to
+afford food to plants.<a id="noteref_212" name="noteref_212" href="#note_212"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">212</span></span></a> Plants grow by drawing a part of the
+elements which enter into their composition from the atmosphere,
+and a part from the earth through the agencies of sunlight
+and of water. While the air, the sun's heat, and in most
+parts of the world, water, are free and inexhaustible goods,
+the earth's supply of food for plants must be considered as analogous,
+so far as its exhaustibility and capacity to be appropriated
+are concerned, to the beds of coal and of ore etc. which
+occur in mining districts. This is certainly true, with a few
+important differences, however, as for instance, that, as a rule,
+it is impossible, except through the cultivation of plants, to obtain
+from the earth the stores of plant food which it contains;<a id="noteref_213" name="noteref_213" href="#note_213"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">213</span></span></a>
+and that it is possible to husbandry to replace the portion of
+these stores taken from the earth by the harvest, through the
+agency of manures.<a id="noteref_214" name="noteref_214" href="#note_214"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">214</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Incomparably more important in the economic valuation of
+a piece of land is its capacity for cultivation, because this depends
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page131">[pg 131]</span><a name="Pg131" id="Pg131" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+much less on the good or bad quality of the husbandman's
+art. I mean here the so-called physical constitution of
+the vegetable soil; its water-holding power, its consistency
+(light or heavy soil) on which the difficulty of working it depends;
+its ability to dry, in a shorter or longer time, and its
+accompanying diminution in volume; its ability to draw moisture
+from the atmosphere and to absorb the various kinds of
+gases; its heat-absorbing and heat-containing power (hot,
+warm and cold soils).<a id="noteref_215" name="noteref_215" href="#note_215"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">215</span></span></a> Much depends here on the depth of
+the vegetable soil and on the constitution of the sub-soil,
+which, for instance, when it is very permeable, improves a
+very moist soil, but in the form of meadow iron-ore (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Wiesenerz</span></span>),
+works great injury. The vertical form of the land is
+also a very important element in estimating the natural fertility
+of the soil. In mountainous districts, the quantity of land
+which can be used (and with what labor!) is wont to be relatively
+smaller than in low lands. Hence it is, that the former
+become too small for their inhabitants; who, therefore,
+swarm over the plains lying before them either as settlers or
+conquerors.<a id="noteref_216" name="noteref_216" href="#note_216"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">216</span></span></a> In the eastern hemisphere, the northern slopes
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page132">[pg 132]</span><a name="Pg132" id="Pg132" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+of mountain regions are most unfavorably situated, although
+the southern slopes are frequently subjected to more trying
+and more sudden variations of thawing and freezing weather.<a id="noteref_217" name="noteref_217" href="#note_217"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">217</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+But all these more special qualities of the soil must be distinguished
+from their general basis, the bearing or carrying capacity
+which land possesses as a mere superficies, and which
+the most naked rock (Malta!), and the bed of a flowing
+stream (the floating gardens of China!) possess to some extent,
+since there is a possibility of establishing a plant-feeding
+surface on them. This bearing capacity, which in most instances
+is given only by nature, and which can be added to
+only to a very limited extent and at great outlay, is wont,
+when the population is very dense, to acquire considerable exchange
+value in the vicinity.<a id="noteref_218" name="noteref_218" href="#note_218"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">218</span></span></a><a id="noteref_219" name="noteref_219" href="#note_219"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">219</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page133">[pg 133]</span><a name="Pg133" id="Pg133" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc91" id="toc91"></a>
+<a name="pdf92" id="pdf92"></a>
+<a name="Section_36" id="Section_36" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section XXXVI.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">External Nature.—Further Divisions Of Nature's
+Gifts.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+The gifts of nature, we further divide into those which can
+be directly enjoyed and those which are of use only indirectly,
+by facilitating production. (Natural means of enjoyment,—means
+of acquisition.)<a id="noteref_220" name="noteref_220" href="#note_220"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">220</span></span></a>
+An extreme superfluity of the former
+is as disastrous to civilization as a too great scarcity of them.
+How simple the economy of a tropical country! A banana
+field will support twenty-five times as many men as a wheat
+field (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">K. Ritter</span></span>); and with infinitely less labor; for all that
+is needed is to cut the stems with their ripened fruit, to
+loosen the earth a little and very superficially, when new
+stems shoot up.<a id="noteref_221" name="noteref_221" href="#note_221"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">221</span></span></a>
+At the base of the mountains of Mexico, a
+father needs labor only two days in the week to support his
+family. Hence, nothing so much excites the wonder of the
+traveler there as the diminutiveness of the cultivated ground
+surrounding each Indian hut.<a id="noteref_222" name="noteref_222" href="#note_222"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">222</span></span></a> But in these earthly paradises,
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page134">[pg 134]</span><a name="Pg134" id="Pg134" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+where, as Byron said, even bread is gathered like fruit, the
+powers of man slumber as certainly as they grow torpid in
+polar deserts.<a id="noteref_223" name="noteref_223" href="#note_223"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">223</span></span></a>
+The sentence: <span class="tei tei-q">“In the sweat of thy brow shalt
+thou eat bread,”</span> has been a blessing to mankind. Athens was
+not only the literary and political, but also the economic capital
+of Greece; and yet Attica was one of the most sterile countries
+in the world.<a id="noteref_224" name="noteref_224" href="#note_224"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">224</span></span></a>
+Unfortunate Messina, on the other hand,
+was the most fertile province of Greece. In modern times, no
+countries of equal extent have produced as many great captains,
+statesmen, savants and artists as Holland, whose securest portions
+are as unfertile as those which are fertile are threatened
+by the sea. On the other hand, how lately and imperfectly
+has the so-called black-earth of southern Russia fallen under
+the influence of civilization!<a id="noteref_225" name="noteref_225" href="#note_225"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">225</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page135">[pg 135]</span><a name="Pg135" id="Pg135" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc93" id="toc93"></a>
+<a name="pdf94" id="pdf94"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section XXXVII.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">External Nature.—The Geographical Character
+Of A Country.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+The geographical character of a country is, as a rule,<a id="noteref_226" name="noteref_226" href="#note_226"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">226</span></span></a> most
+intimately connected, not only with its flora and fauna, but also
+with the character of its people. One of the crowning glories
+of the progress of modern science is, that it has recognized
+anew the power of this wonderful organism, and that it has
+made geography an explanatory medium between nature and
+history. The conditions most favorable to the development of
+civilization are found in a well developed country which slopes
+gradually through a series of intermediate terraces from a
+mountain summit to a plain; especially when they are connected
+with one another by a good system of streams; since
+here the opposite peculiarities of the populations of the highlands
+and coast-lands<a id="noteref_227" name="noteref_227" href="#note_227"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">227</span></span></a> tend to produce a nationality both one
+and varied. Where the transitions are too abrupt, as for instance,
+in New Holland, they easily impede inter-communication;
+and, still more, where the several parts of the country
+are of very great extent; as, for example, the desert of North
+Africa, the plateau of South Africa or that of Central Asia.
+Europe is favored above all other parts of the world by the
+happy combination of mountain and plain.<a id="noteref_228" name="noteref_228" href="#note_228"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">228</span></span></a> We might pursue
+the parallel existing between the soil and the character of
+a people into the minutest details, and discover, even in the
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page136">[pg 136]</span><a name="Pg136" id="Pg136" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+difference between Spanish, French, German and Hungarian
+wines, a reflection of the different characters of the people.<a id="noteref_229" name="noteref_229" href="#note_229"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">229</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+But whence is this? Can it be that dead nature has thus
+irresistibly affected the living mind? We do not need to give
+a materialistic answer to the question.<a id="noteref_230" name="noteref_230" href="#note_230"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">230</span></span></a> Almost every people
+has migrated at some period of its existence. Urged on by
+their peculiar tastes and tendencies, they settled in the places
+most in harmony with their character. A higher hand was
+over them; one which, we should unreservedly trust, placed
+them in such external circumstances as were most favorable
+to the development of all their faculties.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+But the influences of man on nature are no less notable than
+those of nature upon man. The greater number of domestic
+animals and plants which Europe possesses to-day, it has been
+obliged to introduce from other parts of the globe.<a id="noteref_231" name="noteref_231" href="#note_231"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">231</span></span></a> In the interior of Gaul, the vine rarely ripened, at the time of
+Christ.<a id="noteref_232" name="noteref_232" href="#note_232"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">232</span></span></a>
+On the other hand, Mesopotamia, formerly one of the gardens
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page137">[pg 137]</span><a name="Pg137" id="Pg137" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+of the world, is now covered with dried-up canals, filled a
+little below the surface with heaps of brick and broken vases,
+the remains and other vestiges of a once dense population.
+Its former rich alluvial soil, now almost calcined, produces
+at present scarcely anything except a few saline plants, mimosas
+etc.<a id="noteref_233" name="noteref_233" href="#note_233"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">233</span></span></a>
+The higher the civilization of a people, the less
+does it depend on the nature of the country.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc95" id="toc95"></a>
+<a name="pdf96" id="pdf96"></a>
+<a name="Section_38" id="Section_38" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section XXXVIII.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">Of Labor.—Divisions Of Labor.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Man's capacity for most economic labor is so closely connected
+with the exquisite articulation of the human hand, that
+Buffon could say without exaggeration that reason and the
+hand made man man.<a id="noteref_234" name="noteref_234" href="#note_234"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">234</span></span></a>
+But it is true of economic labor, as of
+all other labor, that it is more efficient in proportion as mind
+predominates over matter.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+The best division of economic labor is the following:<a id="noteref_235" name="noteref_235" href="#note_235"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">235</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+A. Discoveries and inventions.<a id="noteref_236" name="noteref_236" href="#note_236"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">236</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+B. Occupation of the spontaneous gifts of nature, as, for instance,
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page138">[pg 138]</span><a name="Pg138" id="Pg138" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+of wild plants, wild animals, and of minerals.<a id="noteref_237" name="noteref_237" href="#note_237"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">237</span></span></a> Where
+this is the only kind of economic labor, man is necessarily dependent
+on nature in a high degree.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+C. The production of raw materials; that is, a direction
+given to nature in order to the production of raw materials,
+by stock-raising, agriculture, forest-culture etc., but not by
+mining.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+D. The transformation (<span lang="de" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="de"><span style="font-style: italic">Verarbeitung</span></span>) of raw material by
+means of manufactories, factories, the trades etc.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+E. The distribution of stores of goods among those who
+are to use them directly, whether from people to people or
+from place to place (wholesale), or among the individuals of
+the same place (retail).<a id="noteref_238" name="noteref_238" href="#note_238"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">238</span></span></a>
+To this class also belong leasing,
+renting, loaning, etc.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+F. Services, in the more limited sense of the term, which
+embraces personal as well as incorporeal goods; as, for instance,
+the labors of the doctor, teacher; virtuoso, of the statesman,
+judge, and of preachers, whose office it is, by way of
+eminence, to produce and preserve the immaterial wealth,
+known as the State and the Church.<a id="noteref_239" name="noteref_239" href="#note_239"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">239</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+The order followed in the above classification is that in
+which the different classes of labor are wont to be historically
+developed.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page139">[pg 139]</span><a name="Pg139" id="Pg139" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc97" id="toc97"></a>
+<a name="pdf98" id="pdf98"></a>
+<a name="Section_39" id="Section_39" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section XXXIX.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">Labor.—Taste For Labor.—Piece-Wages.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Man's taste for labor is conditioned especially by the extent
+to which, and the security with which, he may hope to enjoy
+the fruit of his labor himself. Hence it is that, as a rule, the
+slave (§ <a href="#Section_71" class="tei tei-ref">71</a>, ff.) and socager work least willingly, the
+day laborer with less industry than the piece-worker,<a id="noteref_240" name="noteref_240" href="#note_240"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">240</span></span></a> who is at the
+same time more satisfied with himself, and gives most satisfaction
+to his master,<a id="noteref_241" name="noteref_241" href="#note_241"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">241</span></span></a> since
+he acquires more both for himself and for his master. The superiority of piece-paid
+labor is
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page140">[pg 140]</span><a name="Pg140" id="Pg140" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+greater in proportion as the workman calculates his own advantage.
+It is, therefore, smallest in the case of ingenuous uneducated
+workmen, and in that of the really conscientious.<a id="noteref_242" name="noteref_242" href="#note_242"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">242</span></span></a>
+The fear of seeing one's condition grow worse, through want
+of industry, exerts an influence precisely similar to the hope of
+improving it. In both respects, free competition (§ <a href="#Section_97" class="tei tei-ref">97</a>)
+must be considered one of the principal means of furthering the
+taste for labor.<a id="noteref_243" name="noteref_243" href="#note_243"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">243</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Among the causes which have contributed to make England
+the first country in the world, viewed from a politico-economical
+stand-point, English writers on Political Economy
+have pointed out as one of the principal, the prevalence there
+of piece-wages.<a id="noteref_244" name="noteref_244" href="#note_244"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">244</span></span></a> Payment by the piece should, of course, be
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page141">[pg 141]</span><a name="Pg141" id="Pg141" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+practiced, only in cases in which the work may be broken up
+into a series of isolated tasks, and is completed by such a series.
+Hence, it is not applicable where a great many different
+things are required of the same workman; nor in relations
+in which continuity, as, for instance, of the inclination
+or disposition of the workman is the chief thing.<a id="noteref_245" name="noteref_245" href="#note_245"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">245</span></span></a> The further
+the division of labor is carried in our day, the greater
+the part money plays in our social economy, and the more
+lasting relations are dissolved, the more general becomes piece-work,
+which, with all its material advantages, has, speaking
+morally, its dark side. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Atomism!</span></span>)<a id="noteref_246" name="noteref_246" href="#note_246"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">246</span></span></a> In a great many branches
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page142">[pg 142]</span><a name="Pg142" id="Pg142" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+of manufactures it has been relinquished because the excellence
+of his work suffered from the workman's haste, and because
+he could not be properly controlled.<a id="noteref_247" name="noteref_247" href="#note_247"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">247</span></span></a> It is rather the quantity
+than the quality of work which increases with piece-work,
+and where the quality of the work is what is desired,
+this system has not the same field. And where it obtains, as,
+for instance, in the case of ordinary type-setters, resort is had
+to payment by the day for compositors engaged on mathematical
+treatises, fac-similes, inscriptions etc. On the side of the
+workman, it is generally only the idle and awkward who oppose
+piece-work on principle. It is a subject of regret that
+the best and most industrious workmen are carried away by
+it to an extent detrimental to their health.<a id="noteref_248" name="noteref_248" href="#note_248"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">248</span></span></a> However, many
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page143">[pg 143]</span><a name="Pg143" id="Pg143" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+of the deficiencies of the piece-wage principle may be removed
+by agreements made with whole groups of workmen; provided,
+always, that the groups are not too large to prevent
+the mutual knowledge and surveillance of their members.<a id="noteref_249" name="noteref_249" href="#note_249"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">249</span></span></a> The quantity of work is greatest, its quality best, and the
+material<a id="noteref_250" name="noteref_250" href="#note_250"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">250</span></span></a>
+employed used most sparingly, when the workman works
+on his own account, or has a share in the profits. This last is
+proper only in those branches of the business the success of
+which depends on the quality of the work. To compel the
+workman to share in the profits alone will not do, because he
+is generally too poor to run any risk or to do long without his
+earnings. The system of paying <span class="tei tei-q">“commissions,”</span> therefore, is
+to be recommended all the more strongly, since it is a combination
+of fixed wages with a share in the profits. This system
+is very prevalent in North America, where a great deal
+has to be confided to the workmen. It is practiced, also, in
+the whale fisheries, and on the Greek ships in the Levant engaged
+in coasting, where much more depends on the care of
+the sailors than on the ability of the captain.<a id="noteref_251" name="noteref_251" href="#note_251"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">251</span></span></a> It presupposes
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page144">[pg 144]</span><a name="Pg144" id="Pg144" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+good workmen, equal almost to their master in education,<a id="noteref_252" name="noteref_252" href="#note_252"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">252</span></span></a>
+for instance, in the case of overseers of labor; since every better
+inducement to the taste for labor which is not only juster
+but more complicative, is not only a condition but also the effect
+of higher culture. But if the economy of a people is ripe
+for share-wages, and masters begin to introduce them in earnest
+in individual cases, the work produced will be improved to
+such a degree that it can not be long before all others will be
+necessitated to follow them.<a id="noteref_253" name="noteref_253" href="#note_253"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">253</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+If, however, workmen are to enjoy the fruit of their industry,
+it is necessary, first of all, that public order should be secure.
+Even the most industrious become discouraged where
+despotism or anarchy prevails. On the other hand, even the
+greatest security is no sufficient incentive to a nation of
+fatalists.<a id="noteref_254" name="noteref_254" href="#note_254"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">254</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page145">[pg 145]</span><a name="Pg145" id="Pg145" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc99" id="toc99"></a>
+<a name="pdf100" id="pdf100"></a>
+<a name="Section_40" id="Section_40" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section XL.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">Labor.—Labor-Power Of Individuals.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+The average labor-power of individuals varies very much
+in different nations.<a id="noteref_255" name="noteref_255" href="#note_255"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">255</span></span></a>
+The reason of this is, in part, doubtless
+a difference in natural endowments. Thus, for instance, no
+people surpass the English and Anglo-American in energy,
+none the German in intelligence in work or the French in taste.
+Where we can assume that the same meaning is attached to the
+expression, <span class="tei tei-q">“military capacity,”</span> by the different recruiting bureaus,
+important conclusions as to the physical labor-power of
+different localities may be drawn from the ratio existing between
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page146">[pg 146]</span><a name="Pg146" id="Pg146" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+the number of those fit for military service and those
+who are legally liable to military duty.<a id="noteref_256" name="noteref_256" href="#note_256"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">256</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+But these conclusions are greatly modified by the state of
+civilization and that of society. Where the laboring classes
+are despised and paid in a manner unworthy of human beings,
+the badness of their work will be in keeping with the estimation
+in which it is held. The reverse of this, also, is usually
+true under different circumstances. (§ 173.) Thus, it has been
+noticed in France, that native workmen, provided with as substantial
+food as English workmen, are scarcely inferior to the
+the latter in the technic value of their labor.<a id="noteref_257" name="noteref_257" href="#note_257"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">257</span></span></a> A Mecklenburg
+day laborer eats almost twice as much as a Thuringian
+workman, but then he accomplishes almost twice as much.
+Hence, employers gain in the long run by paying their workmen
+well. As civilization advances, the same number of workmen
+become, not only more industrious and more capable, but the
+same quantity and quality of labor becomes, as a rule, cheaper.<a id="noteref_258" name="noteref_258" href="#note_258"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">258</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page147">[pg 147]</span><a name="Pg147" id="Pg147" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+The moral culture of a people exerts the greatest influence
+here. In every private undertaking, a great part of the expense
+attending it, and in every state, a great part of the expense
+of its police system, and of its system of administering
+justice, is occasioned only by the dishonesty of men. If all
+this expense could be dispensed with, and full confidence placed
+in individuals, it would be possible to devote much more time
+and energy to positively useful labor.<a id="noteref_259" name="noteref_259" href="#note_259"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">259</span></span></a> In estimating the labor-power
+of different nations or different periods of time, the division
+of population according to age is also of importance.
+As a rule, the labor-power of males is greatest from the age
+of twenty-five to the age of forty-five. The more numerous,
+therefore, the class of the population between these ages is,
+the more favorably, other things being equal, is it situated as
+regards labor.<a id="noteref_260" name="noteref_260" href="#note_260"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">260</span></span></a><a id="noteref_261" name="noteref_261" href="#note_261"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">261</span></span></a>
+But, as a rule, the relative number of full-grown
+people is greatest in highly civilized nations. (§ 248.)<a id="noteref_262" name="noteref_262" href="#note_262"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">262</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page148">[pg 148]</span><a name="Pg148" id="Pg148" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc101" id="toc101"></a>
+<a name="pdf102" id="pdf102"></a>
+<a name="Section_41" id="Section_41" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section XLI.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">Labor.—Effect Of The Esteem In Which It Is Held.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+As civilization advances, labor becomes more honorable.
+All barbarous nations despise it as slavish. <span lang="la" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="la"><span style="font-style: italic">Pigrum et iners videtur sudore
+adquirere quod possis sanguine parare</span></span>: has been
+the motto of all medieval times. In heathen Iceland, the
+owner of a piece of land might be deprived of it by an adversary
+who could overpower him in single combat. This mode
+of acquisition was considered more honorable than purchase.
+It was Thor's own form of investiture. The ideas of the
+Romans on rightful acquisition may be inferred from the word
+<span lang="la" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="la"><span style="font-style: italic">mancipium</span></span>
+(manu capere).<a id="noteref_263" name="noteref_263" href="#note_263"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">263</span></span></a> Pure Christianity,
+on the other hand, preached the honorableness of labor from the first
+(Thess. 4, 11; II. Thess. 3, 8 seq.; Eph. 4, 28). And so in
+the time of the Reformation,<a id="noteref_264" name="noteref_264" href="#note_264"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">264</span></span></a>
+when Christendom was returning
+to its primitive purity.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+In keeping with this is the fact, that the most cultivated
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page149">[pg 149]</span><a name="Pg149" id="Pg149" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+nations, and the same may be said of individuals, value time
+most highly. <span class="tei tei-q">“Time is money.”</span> (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Benjamin Franklin.</span></span>) An
+English proverb calls time the stuff of which life is made.<a id="noteref_265" name="noteref_265" href="#note_265"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">265</span></span></a>
+While in negro nations, individuals do not even know their
+own age; while in Russia, there are very few clocks to
+strike the hours, even in the towers of churches, in England,
+a watch is considered an indispensable article of apparel, even
+for very young people and for some of the lower orders of
+society.<a id="noteref_266" name="noteref_266" href="#note_266"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">266</span></span></a>
+Railroads operate in this respect as a kind of national
+clock. The introduction of machinery and the more
+minute division of labor, make punctuality a necessity. While
+South Americans and West Indians are frightfully careless in
+their every movement, a carelessness which betrays itself even
+in their drawling speech,<a id="noteref_267" name="noteref_267" href="#note_267"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">267</span></span></a> the life of a New Englander has
+been compared to the rush of a locomotive. In the markets
+of Central Asia, nothing strikes the European with so much
+surprise as the little value put upon time by the merchants of
+India and Bucharia, who are fully satisfied when, after endless
+waiting, they succeed in obtaining a somewhat higher price
+for their wares.<a id="noteref_268" name="noteref_268" href="#note_268"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">268</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page150">[pg 150]</span><a name="Pg150" id="Pg150" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc103" id="toc103"></a>
+<a name="pdf104" id="pdf104"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section XLII.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">Of Capital.—The Classes Of Goods Of Which A
+Nation's Capital Is Made Up.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Capital<a id="noteref_269" name="noteref_269" href="#note_269"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">269</span></span></a> we call every product laid
+by for purposes of further production. (§ 220).<a id="noteref_270" name="noteref_270" href="#note_270"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">270</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page151">[pg 151]</span><a name="Pg151" id="Pg151" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Hence, the capital of a nation consists especially of the following
+classes of goods:
+</p>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page152">[pg 152]</span><a name="Pg152" id="Pg152" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+A. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Soil-improvements</span></span>, for instance, drainage and irrigation
+works, dikes, hedges etc., which are, indeed, sometimes so far
+part of the land itself that it is difficult to distinguish them
+from it.<a id="noteref_271" name="noteref_271" href="#note_271"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">271</span></span></a>
+To this class belong all permanent plantations.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+B. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Buildings</span></span>, which embrace workshops and storehouses
+as well as dwellings; also artificial roads of all kinds.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+C. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Tools, machines and utensils</span></span> of every
+description;<a id="noteref_272" name="noteref_272" href="#note_272"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">272</span></span></a> the
+latter especially for personal service, and for the preservation
+and transportation of other goods. A machine is distinguished
+from a tool in that the moving power of the former is not communicated
+to it immediately by the human body, which only
+directs it; while the latter serves as a species of equipment, or
+as a better substitute for some member of man's body.<a id="noteref_273" name="noteref_273" href="#note_273"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">273</span></span></a> To
+be of advantage, these three kinds of capital must save more
+labor or fatigue than it has cost to produce them. Tools are,
+however, older than machines. The aborigines of Australia
+used only a lance and a club in hunting; the somewhat more
+civilized American Indians, the bow and arrow; Europeans
+use firearms: in all of which a gradual progress is observable.
+Of the blind forces which communicate motion to machines,
+water was the first used, then the wind, and last of all,
+steam.<a id="noteref_274" name="noteref_274" href="#note_274"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">274</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page153">[pg 153]</span><a name="Pg153" id="Pg153" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+D. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Useful and laboring animals</span></span>, in so far as they are raised,
+fed and developed by human care.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+E. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Materials for transformation</span></span> (<span lang="de" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="de"><span style="font-style: italic">Verwandlungsstoffe</span></span>): either
+the principal material which constitutes the essential substance
+of a new product, the yarn of the weaver for instance, the
+raw wool, silk or cotton of the spinner; or the secondary material
+which, indeed, enters into the work, but only for purposes
+of ornamentation, as gold-leaf, lac, colors etc.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+F. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Auxiliary substances</span></span>, which are consumed in production,
+but do not constitute a visible part of the raw product,<a id="noteref_275" name="noteref_275" href="#note_275"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">275</span></span></a> as coal
+in a smithy, powder in the chase or in mining, muriatic acid,
+in the preparation of gelatin, chlorine in bleaching etc.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+G. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Means of subsistence</span></span> for the producers, which are advanced
+to them until production is complete.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+H. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Commercial stock</span></span>, which the merchant keeps always on
+hand to meet the wants of his customers.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+I. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Money</span></span> as the principal tool in every trade that is made.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+K. There is also what may be called <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">incorporeal capital</span></span>
+(quasi-capital according to <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Schmitthenner</span></span>), which is as much the
+result of production as any other capital, and is used in production,
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page154">[pg 154]</span><a name="Pg154" id="Pg154" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+but which, for the most part, is not exhausted by use.
+There are species of this kind of capital which may be transferred,
+as for instance, the good will of a well-established firm.
+Others are as inseparably connected with human capacity for
+labor as soil-improvements with a piece of land; e.g., the
+greater dexterity acquired by a workman through scientific
+study, or the greater confidence he has acquired by long trial.<a id="noteref_276" name="noteref_276" href="#note_276"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">276</span></span></a>
+The state itself is the most important incorporeal capital of
+every nation, since it is clearly indispensable, at least indirectly,
+to economic production.<a id="noteref_277" name="noteref_277" href="#note_277"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">277</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+The greater portion of the national capital is in a state of
+constant transformation. It is being continually destroyed and
+reproduced. But from the stand-point of private economy,
+as well as from that of the whole people, we say that capital
+is preserved, increased or diminished according as its value is
+preserved, increased or diminished.<a id="noteref_278" name="noteref_278" href="#note_278"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">278</span></span></a>
+<span lang="la" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="la"><span style="font-style: italic">Pretium succedit in locum
+roi et res in locum pretii.</span></span> <span class="tei tei-q">“The greater part in value of
+the wealth now existing in England, has been produced by human
+hands within the last twelve months. A very small proportion
+indeed of that large aggregate was in existence ten
+years ago; of the present productive capital of the country,
+scarcely any part except farm-houses and a few ships and machines;
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page155">[pg 155]</span><a name="Pg155" id="Pg155" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+and even these would not, in most cases, have survived
+so long, if fresh labor had not been employed within
+that period in putting them into repair.... Capital is kept
+in existence from age to age like population, not by preservation,
+but by reproduction.”</span> (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">J. S. Mill</span></span>.)
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc105" id="toc105"></a>
+<a name="pdf106" id="pdf106"></a>
+<a name="Section_43" id="Section_43" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section XLIII.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">Capital.—Productive Capital.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Capital, according to the employment that can be given it,
+may be divided into such as affects the production of material
+goods, and such as affects personal goods or useful relations.
+The former, under the name of productive capital, is, in recent
+politico-economical literature, usually opposed to capital in
+use.<a id="noteref_279" name="noteref_279" href="#note_279"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">279</span></span></a>
+Evidently any one of the two kinds of capital mentioned
+above, may be used for both purposes.<a id="noteref_280" name="noteref_280" href="#note_280"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">280</span></span></a> Indeed, the two
+classes are, in many respects, coincident. Thus, a livery-stable
+carriage or a circulating library is productive capital to its
+proprietor, and capital in use<a id="noteref_281" name="noteref_281" href="#note_281"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">281</span></span></a>
+(<span lang="de" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="de"><span style="font-style: italic">Gebrauchskapital</span></span>) to the nation
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page156">[pg 156]</span><a name="Pg156" id="Pg156" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+in general; although the circulating library from which an
+Arkwright obtains technic information, or the livery-stable
+vehicle which carries a Borsig to his counting-room, has certainly
+been used in the production of material goods. Almost
+all capital in use may be converted into productive capital,
+and hence, the former might be called quiescent capital, and
+the latter working capital.<a id="noteref_282" name="noteref_282" href="#note_282"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">282</span></span></a> One of the principal differences
+between productive capital and capital in use is, that the former,
+even when most judiciously employed, does not so immediately
+replace itself, as the latter, by its returns.<a id="noteref_283" name="noteref_283" href="#note_283"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">283</span></span></a> On the other
+hand, the real dividing line between capital in use, and objects
+consumed which are not capital, is, and it is in complete harmony
+with our definition of capital, that the latter are subject
+not only to a more speedy destruction and one which is always
+contemplated, while in the case of the former, its destruction
+is only the unintended reverse-side of its use.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Among a highly civilized people, a great amount of capital
+in use, as compared with the productive capital of the country,
+may be considered a sure sign of great wealth. When this
+is the case, the people, without losing the desire of further acquisition,
+think that they have enough to richly enjoy the
+present. I need only call to mind the munificence displayed
+by the middle classes in England, in their silver plate and
+other domestic utensils. But the people of Russia, and Mexico
+also, can make no mean display of silverware.<a id="noteref_284" name="noteref_284" href="#note_284"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">284</span></span></a> Here luxury
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page157">[pg 157]</span><a name="Pg157" id="Pg157" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+is only a symptom of the disinclination or inability of the
+inhabitants of the country to use their capital in the production
+of wealth. How much richer would Spain be to-day, if it had
+employed the idle capital spent in the ornamentation of its
+churches in constructing roads and canals!<a id="noteref_285" name="noteref_285" href="#note_285"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">285</span></span></a> Most nations in
+a low state of civilization suffer from the absence of legal guarantees.
+Each one is compelled to turn his property into a
+shape in which it can be most easily transferred from one
+place to another and hidden. This is the principal reason why
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page158">[pg 158]</span><a name="Pg158" id="Pg158" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+the Orientals possess, relatively speaking, so many precious
+stones and so much of the precious metals. The same cause
+accounts for the simplicity of their dwellings.<a id="noteref_286" name="noteref_286" href="#note_286"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">286</span></span></a> On the other
+hand, productive capital is to be found in the greatest proportion
+among civilized nations which are making very rapid strides
+towards wealth, the people of the United States, for instance.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc107" id="toc107"></a>
+<a name="pdf108" id="pdf108"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section XLIV.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">Capital.—Fixed Capital, And Circulating Capital.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Capital, according as it is employed, is divided into fixed
+capital and circulating capital. Fixed capital may be used
+many times in production by its owner; circulating capital
+only once. The value of the latter kind of capital passes
+wholly into the value of the new product. In the case of the
+former kind of capital, only the value of its use passes into the
+new product. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hermann.</span></span>) Hence, the farmer's beasts of
+burthen belong to his fixed capital; their food, and his cattle
+intended for the slaughter, to his circulating capital. In a
+manufactory of machines, a boiler intended for sale is circulating
+capital; while a similar one, held in reserve for the machines
+used in production, is fixed capital. Ricardo attributes
+a somewhat different meaning to these two terms: he calls
+fixed capital that which is slowly consumed, and circulating,
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page159">[pg 159]</span><a name="Pg159" id="Pg159" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+that which disappears rapidly.<a id="noteref_287" name="noteref_287" href="#note_287"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">287</span></span></a> Fixed capital is, indeed, produced
+and preserved by circulating capital; but it is, for the
+most part, transformed again into circulating capital.<a id="noteref_288" name="noteref_288" href="#note_288"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">288</span></span></a> Besides,
+it is only by means of the latter, that the former can be
+productively employed.<a id="noteref_289" name="noteref_289" href="#note_289"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">289</span></span></a> The relative importance of fixed
+and circulating capital to a country depends upon whether the
+country is an advanced or only an advancing one. A people
+with very much and very fixed capital are indeed very rich;
+but run the risk of offering many vulnerable points to an
+aggressive enemy, and of thus turning the easily jeopardized
+mammon into an idol. To make a passing sacrifice of the
+country that the people and the state may be saved, as did the
+Scythians against Darius, the Athenians against Xerxes, and
+the Russians against Napoleon, becomes difficult, in proportion
+as the nation has become richer in fixed capital.<a id="noteref_290" name="noteref_290" href="#note_290"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">290</span></span></a> But, as
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page160">[pg 160]</span><a name="Pg160" id="Pg160" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+the destination of the latter is changed with much greater difficulty
+than that of circulating capital, highly cultivated nations
+would find it very hard to satisfy new wants, if they
+could not always appropriate the results of additional savings
+to the production of new fixed capital.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc109" id="toc109"></a>
+<a name="pdf110" id="pdf110"></a>
+<a name="Section_45" id="Section_45" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section XLV.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">Capital.—How It Originates.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Capital is mainly the result of saving which withdraws new
+products from the immediate enjoyment-consumption of their
+possessor, and preserves them, or at least their value, to serve
+as the basis of a lasting use.<a id="noteref_291" name="noteref_291" href="#note_291"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">291</span></span></a> As capital represents the
+solidarity of the economic past, present and future, it, as a rule,
+reaches back into the past and forward into the future, through
+a period of time longer in proportion as its amount and efficiency
+are greater.<a id="noteref_292" name="noteref_292" href="#note_292"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">292</span></span></a> Those producers, too, whose products perish
+rapidly may, also, effect savings by exchanging their products
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page161">[pg 161]</span><a name="Pg161" id="Pg161" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+and capitalizing their counter-value. Thus, the actor, whose
+playing leaves after it nothing but a memory, may use the
+wheat received by him from a farmer who came to listen to
+him, in the employment of an iron-worker, and invest the
+product permanently in a railroad. The transformation may
+be effected by means of money, bonds etc., but it is none the
+less real on that account. Order, foresight and self-restraint
+are the intellectual conditions precedent of saving and capital.
+The childish and hail-fellow-well-met disposition which cares
+only for the present is inimical to it. True, the desire of saving
+can be developed only where there are legal guarantees to
+ownership;<a id="noteref_293" name="noteref_293" href="#note_293"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">293</span></span></a> guarantees which are both the conditions precedent
+and the effect of all economic civilization.<a id="noteref_294" name="noteref_294" href="#note_294"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">294</span></span></a> The Indians,
+Esquimaux etc., had to be taught for the first time by the missionaries
+and merchants—and it was with the greatest difficulty
+it was done—to save their booty, and spare the natural sources
+of their acquisition. Originally, they were, in the heat and
+excitement of their wild hunting and fishing, wont to destroy
+on the spot what they could not enjoy in the moment.<a id="noteref_295" name="noteref_295" href="#note_295"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">295</span></span></a> In the
+lowest stages of civilization, the first saving of capital of any
+importance is effected frequently through robbery or in the
+way of slavery.<a id="noteref_296" name="noteref_296" href="#note_296"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">296</span></span></a> In both cases, it is the stronger who compel
+the weaker to consume less than they produce. See <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">infra</span></span>,
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page162">[pg 162]</span><a name="Pg162" id="Pg162" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+§ <a href="#Section_68" class="tei tei-ref">68</a>. Where civilization is at its highest, the inclination
+to save, as a rule, is very marked.<a id="noteref_297" name="noteref_297" href="#note_297"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">297</span></span></a> It begins to decline where
+a people are themselves declining in civilization, and especially
+where legal guarantees have lost their force.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+But capital may be increased even without personal sacrifice;
+as for instance, by mere occupation, as of certain goods,
+not hitherto recognized as such. Thus, also, by the establishment
+of valuable relations, the advantages of which either become
+the common good of all; or which, because at the
+exclusive command of one individual, obtain value in exchange.
+The progress of civilization itself may increase the
+value of existing capital. Thus, for instance, a house, considered
+as capital, may double in value if a frequented street be
+opened in its neighborhood. To this category belong all improvements
+in the arts which enable existing capital to achieve
+more than it could before. The invention of the compass increased
+the value of the capital employed in the merchant
+marine to an extent that cannot be calculated.<a id="noteref_298" name="noteref_298" href="#note_298"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">298</span></span></a> The increase
+of capital effected by saving soon finds a limit unless such
+limit is widened by the progress of civilization.<a id="noteref_299" name="noteref_299" href="#note_299"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">299</span></span></a><a id="noteref_300" name="noteref_300" href="#note_300"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">300</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+</div>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page163">[pg 163]</span><a name="Pg163" id="Pg163" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<hr class="page" /><div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 4.00em; margin-top: 4.00em">
+<a name="toc111" id="toc111"></a>
+<a name="pdf112" id="pdf112"></a>
+<h2 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">Chapter II.</span></h2>
+<h2 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.88em; margin-top: 2.88em"><span style="font-size: 144%">Co-Operation Of The Factors.</span></h2>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc113" id="toc113"></a>
+<a name="pdf114" id="pdf114"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section XLVI.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">The Productive Coöperation Of The Three Factors.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+All economic production generally demands the coöperation
+of the three factors: external nature, labor and capital.
+But with the political economist, labor is the principal thing;
+and not merely because all capital presupposes labor, nor because
+every combination of the three factors is an act of labor;
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page164">[pg 164]</span><a name="Pg164" id="Pg164" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+but, in general, because <span class="tei tei-q">“the human mind's idea of means and
+ends makes all goods goods for the first time.”</span> (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hufeland.</span></span>)
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Leaving the free forces of nature, surrounded by which we
+live and work, out of consideration, and also the fact that all
+raw material is due to nature, land is the indispensable foundation
+of all economy. But how little can unassisted nature do
+to satisfy human wants! How much less to produce goods
+possessed of value in exchange! A virgin forest, for instance,
+sold in its natural state, has, indeed, value in exchange, but
+only because it is taken into account that it can be cleared,
+and that there are means of transportation already existing.<a id="noteref_301" name="noteref_301" href="#note_301"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">301</span></span></a>
+The greater part of the forces of nature are latent to nomads
+and nations of hunters. When labor develops, they are set
+free to assist it.<a id="noteref_302" name="noteref_302" href="#note_302"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">302</span></span></a> It is very seldom that any thing can be produced
+without capital. Even the poorest gatherer of wild berries
+needs a basket and must be clothed.<a id="noteref_303" name="noteref_303" href="#note_303"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">303</span></span></a> Were there no
+capital, every individual would have to begin at the very beginning
+every moment. Life would be possible only in a
+tropical climate. No man, since the days of Adam, has been
+able to labor, except on the condition that a considerable advance
+of capital had been made upon him. There is not a
+nail in all England, says Senior, which cannot directly or indirectly
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page165">[pg 165]</span><a name="Pg165" id="Pg165" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+directly be traced back to savings made before the Norman
+conquest.<a id="noteref_304" name="noteref_304" href="#note_304"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">304</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc115" id="toc115"></a>
+<a name="pdf116" id="pdf116"></a>
+<a name="Section_47" id="Section_47" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section XLVII.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">Productive Co-Operation Of The Three Factors.
+The Three Great Periods Of A Nation's Economy.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+The relation of the three factors to one another is necessarily
+very different in different branches of production. For instance,
+in the case of cattle-raising on a prairie, labor does
+very little, land almost everything. Hence an extensive, thinly
+populated country is best adapted to this species of production.
+But where land is scarce, as in wealthy and populous
+cities, human activity should be directed into those branches
+of industry which need capital and labor, as manufactures and
+the trades. (§ 198.)<a id="noteref_305" name="noteref_305" href="#note_305"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">305</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Looked at from this point of view, the history of the development
+of the public economy of every people may be
+divided into three great periods. In the earliest period, nature
+is the element that predominates everywhere. The woods,
+waters and meadows afford food almost spontaneously to a
+scanty population. This is the Saturnian or golden age of
+which the sagas tell. Wealth, properly speaking, does not
+exist here, and those who do not possess a piece of land run
+the risk of becoming completely dependent on, or even the
+slave of a land owner. In the second period, that through
+which all modern nations have passed since the later part of
+the middle ages, the element, labor, acquires an ever increasing
+importance. Labor favors the origin and development of
+cities as well as exclusive rights, the rights of boroughs and
+guilds by means of which labor is, so to speak, capitalized. A
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page166">[pg 166]</span><a name="Pg166" id="Pg166" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+middle class is formed intermediate between the serfs and the
+owners of the soil. In the third period, capital, if we may so
+speak, gives tone to everything. The value of land is vastly
+increased by the expenditure of capital on it, and in manufactures,
+machine labor preponderates over the labor of the human
+hand.<a id="noteref_306" name="noteref_306" href="#note_306"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">306</span></span></a>
+The national wealth undergoes a daily increase;
+and it is the <span class="tei tei-q">“capitalism”</span> which first gives an independent
+existence to the economic activity of man; just in the same
+way that law is, as it were, emancipated from land-ownership,
+from the church and the family only in the constitutional
+state (<span lang="de" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="de"><span style="font-style: italic">Rechtsstaat</span></span>).<a id="noteref_307" name="noteref_307" href="#note_307"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">307</span></span></a>
+But, during this period, the
+middle class with its moderate ease and solid culture may decrease
+in numbers, and colossal wealth be confronted with the
+most abject misery.<a id="noteref_308" name="noteref_308" href="#note_308"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">308</span></span></a> Although these three periods may be
+shown to exist in the history of all highly civilized countries,
+the nations of antiquity, relatively speaking, never advanced
+far beyond the second, even in their palmiest days. A great
+part of that which is accomplished among us by means of capital
+and of machines, the Greeks and Romans performed by
+the labor of slaves. Leaving Christianity out of the question,
+nearly all the minor differences between the public economy of
+the ancients and that of the moderns may be reduced to this
+fundamental distinction.<a id="noteref_309" name="noteref_309" href="#note_309"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">309</span></span></a><a id="noteref_310" name="noteref_310" href="#note_310"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">310</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page167">[pg 167]</span><a name="Pg167" id="Pg167" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc117" id="toc117"></a>
+<a name="pdf118" id="pdf118"></a>
+<a name="Section_48" id="Section_48" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section XLVIII.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">Critical History Of The Idea Of Productiveness.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+In this chapter, the dogma-historical (<span lang="de" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="de"><span style="font-style: italic">dogmengeschichtliche</span></span>)
+part is of the utmost importance, because it treats of the connection
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page168">[pg 168]</span><a name="Pg168" id="Pg168" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+between the deepest fundamental notions and the principal
+branches of practical life. It is clear that every political
+economist must construct his exposition of productiveness on
+his prior notions of goods and value. We must, therefore,
+draw a distinction between expositions which are logical but
+altogether too narrow, and wholly erroneous ones.<a id="noteref_311" name="noteref_311" href="#note_311"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">311</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page169">[pg 169]</span><a name="Pg169" id="Pg169" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Thus, the Mercantile System admits every mode of applying
+the three factors of production, but considers them
+really productive only in so far as they increase the quantity
+of the precious metals possessed by the nation, either through
+the agency of mining at home, or by means of foreign trade.
+This view stands and falls with the altogether too limited idea
+of national wealth before mentioned (§ <a href="#Section_9" class="tei tei-ref">9</a>), which this system
+advocated.<a id="noteref_312" name="noteref_312" href="#note_312"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">312</span></span></a> The majority of the followers of the Mercantile
+System ascribe more power to industry to attract gold and silver
+from foreign parts, than to agriculture, and to the finer
+kinds of industry than to the coarser; to active and direct
+trade, more than to passive and indirect trade.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page170">[pg 170]</span><a name="Pg170" id="Pg170" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc119" id="toc119"></a>
+<a name="pdf120" id="pdf120"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section XLIX.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">Critical History Of The Idea Of Productiveness.—The
+Doctrine Of The Physiocrates.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+The doctrine of the Physiocrates is to be explained in part
+by a very natural reaction from the narrow-heartedness of the
+Mercantile System, and at the same time, by a presentiment,
+misunderstood, of the true theory of rent. (§ 150 ff.). Of
+the six classes of labor mentioned above (§ <a href="#Section_38" class="tei tei-ref">38</a>),
+those only are called productive which increase the quantity of raw material
+useful for human ends. All the other classes, it matters not
+how useful, are called sterile, salaried, because they draw their
+income only from the superabundance of land-owners and the
+workers of the soil. Tradesmen, in the narrower sense of the
+term, produce only a change in the form of the material, the
+higher value of which depends on the quantity of other material
+consumed for the purposes of the tradesman's labor. If
+any of this material is saved, the value of their products
+sinks, although to the advantage of the economy of the whole
+nation. In any case, industry could create no wealth, but only
+make existing wealth more lasting. It might, so to speak, accumulate
+the value of the quantity of food consumed during
+the building of a house in the house itself.<a id="noteref_313" name="noteref_313" href="#note_313"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">313</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page171">[pg 171]</span><a name="Pg171" id="Pg171" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+But if tradesmen really earned, in the value of their products,
+only what they had consumed during their labor, it would
+be difficult for them to find employers to provide them with
+capital. Everyone will acknowledge, that a Thorwaldsen and
+an ordinary stone-cutter, with the same block of marble, the
+same implements, the same food, would necessarily, after the
+same time, turn out exceedingly different values.<a id="noteref_314" name="noteref_314" href="#note_314"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">314</span></span></a> And, even
+in the case that industry should add to the raw material only
+precisely the same amount of value as had been consumed by
+the workmen, can it be said that the work ceases to be productive
+simply because it is consumed by the workmen themselves?
+If that were so, agriculture even, would, in most
+countries with a low civilization, be unproductive.<a id="noteref_315" name="noteref_315" href="#note_315"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">315</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Commerce, according to the theory of the Physiocrates,
+only transfers already existing wealth from one hand to another.
+What the merchants gain by it is at the cost of
+the nation. Hence, it is desirable that this loss should be as
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page172">[pg 172]</span><a name="Pg172" id="Pg172" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+small as possible. Hence sterility!<a id="noteref_316" name="noteref_316" href="#note_316"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">316</span></span></a> But, the more important
+branches of business, especially wholesale trade, are connected
+with a transportation of goods (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Verri</span></span>), either from one place
+or from one period of time, into another. Here the genuine
+merchant speculates essentially on the difference of the values
+in use which are afterwards greater than before.<a id="noteref_317" name="noteref_317" href="#note_317"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">317</span></span></a> The ice
+shipped yearly from Boston to tropical lands met a much
+more urgent and wide-spread want there than it would if it
+had remained at home. And thus the storage of grain in
+large quantities after a bountiful harvest withdraws, indeed,
+an object of enjoyment from the consumption of the people;
+but its sale, after a bad harvest, undoubtedly increases their
+enjoyment in a much greater degree than it was before diminished.
+Besides, the condition of both parties to the contract
+is usually improved in all normal trade. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Condillac.</span></span>)<a id="noteref_318" name="noteref_318" href="#note_318"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">318</span></span></a> No one
+parts with exchangeable goods unless they are of less use to
+him than the ones he receives in return.<a id="noteref_319" name="noteref_319" href="#note_319"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">319</span></span></a> And so, the value in
+use of a nation's resources is really increased by commerce. To
+the other attributes of goods it adds one of the principal conditions
+of all use, accessibility (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Kudler</span></span>), with which it either
+newly endows them, or which it increases in degree. To this
+end, the merchant makes use of tools, just as the manufacturer
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page173">[pg 173]</span><a name="Pg173" id="Pg173" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+does. What spinning-wheels, looms and workshops are to the
+latter, ships, warehouses, cranes etc., are to the former. If
+production be not complete until the thing produced is made
+fit for its last end, consumption, commerce may be looked upon
+as the last link in the chain of productive labor. It, at the
+same time, constitutes a series of intermediate links; as without
+it no division of labor is possible, and without a division
+of labor, no higher economic productiveness.<a id="noteref_320" name="noteref_320" href="#note_320"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">320</span></span></a> How commerce
+may increase the value in exchange of goods, and without
+in any way injuring the purchaser, needs no further illustration.<a id="noteref_321" name="noteref_321" href="#note_321"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">321</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc121" id="toc121"></a>
+<a name="pdf122" id="pdf122"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section L.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">The Same Subject Continued.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Even Adam Smith called services, in the narrower sense of
+the term (§ <a href="#Section_3" class="tei tei-ref">3</a>), the grave and important ones of
+the statesman, clergyman and physician, as well as the <span class="tei tei-q">“frivolous”</span> ones of
+the opera singer, ballet-dancer and buffoon, unproductive.
+The labor of none of these can be fixed or incorporated in any
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page174">[pg 174]</span><a name="Pg174" id="Pg174" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+particular object.<a id="noteref_322" name="noteref_322" href="#note_322"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">322</span></span></a><a id="noteref_323" name="noteref_323" href="#note_323"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">323</span></span></a>
+But how strange it is that the labor of
+a violin-maker is called productive, while that of the violin-player
+is called unproductive; although the product of the
+former has no other object than to be played on by the latter?
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Garnier</span></span>.) Is it not strange that the hog-raiser should be
+called productive, and the educator of man unproductive
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">List</span></span>); the apothecary, who prepares a salve which alleviates
+for the moment, productive, the physician, unproductive, spite
+of the fact that his prescription in relation to diet, or his surgical
+operation, may radically cure the severest disease?
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+If the productiveness of an employment of the factors of
+production be made to depend on whether it is attended by a
+material result, no one will deny that the labor of the plowman,
+for instance, is productive; and no one, of Adam Smith's
+school, at least, that that of the clerk, who orders the raw
+material for the owner of the manufactory, is. They have
+participated indirectly in the production. But, has not the
+servant of the state, who protects the property of its citizens,
+or the physician, who preserves the health of the producer, an
+equally mediate but indispensable share in it? The field-guard
+who keeps the crows away, every one calls productive;
+why, not, then, the soldier, who keeps away a far worse
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page175">[pg 175]</span><a name="Pg175" id="Pg175" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+enemy from the whole land? (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">McCulloch.</span></span>) But the entire
+division of business into two branches, the one directly, and
+the other indirectly productive, can be defended only as respects
+certain kinds of goods. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Schmitthenner.</span></span>) The labor of
+the judge, for instance, is only indirectly productive in the
+manufacture of shoes, inasmuch as he guarantees the payment
+of the shoemaker's account. On the other hand, the shoemaker
+contributes only very indirectly to the general security
+which the law affords, by protecting the judge's foot.<a id="noteref_324" name="noteref_324" href="#note_324"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">324</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Nor can any effectual inferiority of service be claimed,
+simply because the productive power of one branch of business
+is, measured by the duration of its results, greater than
+another.<a id="noteref_325" name="noteref_325" href="#note_325"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">325</span></span></a> What is more perishable than a loaf of bread
+bought for dinner? What more imperishable than the <span lang="la" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="la"><span style="font-style: italic">monumentum ære perennius</span></span> of a Horace? The labor
+expended on persons and on relations (<span lang="de" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="de"><span style="font-style: italic">Verhältnissen</span></span>) is, both as to the extent
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page176">[pg 176]</span><a name="Pg176" id="Pg176" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+and duration of its results, much less capable of being
+estimated than any other; but its capacity of accumulation
+and its power of propagation are greater than any other. It
+is in the domain of the <span class="tei tei-q">“immaterial,”</span> that man is most <span class="tei tei-q">“creative.”</span>
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Lueder.</span></span>)<a id="noteref_326" name="noteref_326" href="#note_326"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">326</span></span></a>
+Finally, neither should the greater indispensableness
+of the more material branches of business be too
+generally asserted. Agriculture produces grain which is indispensable,
+and tobacco which is not; industry, cloth, as well as
+lace; commerce draws from the same part of the world rhubarb
+and edible bird's-nests; and so, to <em class="tei tei-emph"><span style="font-style: italic">services</span></em> belong the indispensable
+ones of the educator and judge, as well as those
+of the rope-dancer and bear-leader, which can be dispensed
+with.<a id="noteref_327" name="noteref_327" href="#note_327"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">327</span></span></a> Indeed, the dividing line between material and intellectual
+production cannot, by any means, be closely drawn.<a id="noteref_328" name="noteref_328" href="#note_328"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">328</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc123" id="toc123"></a>
+<a name="pdf124" id="pdf124"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section LI.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">The Same Subject Continued.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+The greater number of recent writers<a id="noteref_329" name="noteref_329" href="#note_329"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">329</span></span></a> have, therefore, come
+to be of the opinion that every useful business which ministers
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page177">[pg 177]</span><a name="Pg177" id="Pg177" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+to the whole people's requirement of external goods possesses
+economic productiveness.<a id="noteref_330" name="noteref_330" href="#note_330"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">330</span></span></a>
+But it makes a great difference
+to science, whether a view is considered true because
+no one has suggested a doubt of its correctness, or because
+all doubts as to its truth have been triumphantly removed.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page178">[pg 178]</span><a name="Pg178" id="Pg178" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc125" id="toc125"></a>
+<a name="pdf126" id="pdf126"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section LII.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">Idea Of Productiveness.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+It should never be lost sight of, that the public economy of
+a people should be considered an organism, which, when its
+growth is healthy, always develops more varied organs, but
+always in a due proportion, which are not only carried by the
+body, but also in turn serve to carry it. The aggregate of
+the wants of the entire public economy etc., is satisfied by the
+aggregate activity of the people. Every individual who employs
+his lands, labor or capital for the whole, receives his
+share of the aggregate produce, whether he contributed or
+not to the creation of the kind of produce in which he is paid.
+Thus, in a pin-manufactory, the workman who is occupied
+solely in making the heads of pins is not paid in pins or pin-heads,
+but in a part of the aggregate result of the manufacture,
+in money. Every department of business, therefore,
+for the achievements of which there is a rational demand, and
+which are remunerated in proportion to their deserts, has
+labored productively. It is unproductive only when no one
+will need what it has brought forth, or when no one will pay
+for it; but, in this case, what is true of the writer without
+readers—that he is unproductive—and of the singer without
+hearers, is equally true of the peasant whose corn rots in
+his granary, because he can find no sale for it.<a id="noteref_331" name="noteref_331" href="#note_331"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">331</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page179">[pg 179]</span><a name="Pg179" id="Pg179" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc127" id="toc127"></a>
+<a name="pdf128" id="pdf128"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section LIII.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">The Same Subject Continued.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+In this matter, again, there is an important difference to be
+observed between private or individual economy and economy
+in its widest sense, in the sense of a world-economy. The
+productiveness of labor is estimated in the case of the former,
+according to the value in exchange of its result; in the
+case of the latter, according to its value in use. There is a
+great number of employments which are very remunerative
+to private individuals, but which are entirely unproductive,
+and even injurious, so far as mankind is concerned; for the
+reason that they take from others as much as, or even more
+than they procure to those engaged in them. Here belong,
+besides formal crimes against property, games of chance,<a id="noteref_332" name="noteref_332" href="#note_332"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">332</span></span></a>
+usurious speculations (§ <a href="#Section_113" class="tei tei-ref">113</a>)
+and measures taken to entice customers
+away from other competitors. Again, scientific experiments,
+means of communication etc., may be entirely unproductive
+in the individual economy of the undertaker, and
+yet be of more profit to mankind in general, than they have
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page180">[pg 180]</span><a name="Pg180" id="Pg180" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+cost the former.<a id="noteref_333" name="noteref_333" href="#note_333"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">333</span></span></a> In this respect the nation's economy holds
+a middle place between individual economy and the world's
+economy.<a id="noteref_334" name="noteref_334" href="#note_334"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">334</span></span></a>
+Strictly speaking, only those employments should
+be called productive which increase the world's resources.
+Hence, the work of government should be called so, only in
+so far as its expenses are covered by the taxes paid willingly
+by the more reasonable portion of the citizens; and also only
+in so far as its work is really necessary to the attainment of
+its end.<a id="noteref_335" name="noteref_335" href="#note_335"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">335</span></span></a> The productiveness of an employment supposes,
+also, that it is not carried on at the cost of other employments
+which it is more difficult to do without. In a healthy nation
+we may, in this matter, rely, to a certain extent, on the judgment
+of public opinion, which knows how to appreciate, at
+their just value, professional gamblers, pettifoggers and the
+luxury of soldiers. The greater, freer and more cultivated a
+nation is, the more probable is it that the productiveness of
+private economy is also national-economical productiveness,
+and that national-economical productiveness is world-economical
+productiveness.<a id="noteref_336" name="noteref_336" href="#note_336"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">336</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc129" id="toc129"></a>
+<a name="pdf130" id="pdf130"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section LIV.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">Importance Of A Due Proportion In The Different
+Branches Of Productiveness.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Much always depends on the due proportion of the different
+branches of productiveness to one another. Thus, Spain,
+for instance, has remained poor under the most advantageous
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page181">[pg 181]</span><a name="Pg181" id="Pg181" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+circumstances in the world,<a id="noteref_337" name="noteref_337" href="#note_337"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">337</span></span></a> because it allowed a disproportionate
+preponderance of personal services. The character of
+the Spanish people has always given them a leaning towards
+aristocratic pride and economic idleness. Tradesmen, in that
+country, sought, as a rule, to amass merely enough to enable
+them to live on the interest of their capital; after which they,
+by way of preference, removed it into some other province,
+where they might be considered as among the nobility; or
+they withdrew into a monastery. Even in 1781, the Madrid
+Academy thought it incumbent on it to propose a prize for the
+best essay in support of the thesis: <span class="tei tei-q">“The useful trades in no
+way detract from personal honor.”</span><a id="noteref_338" name="noteref_338" href="#note_338"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">338</span></span></a> During the century in
+which the country was in its greatest glory, the whole people
+were bent on being to all Europe what nobles, officers and officials
+are to a single nation. <span class="tei tei-q">“Whoever wishes to make his
+fortune,”</span> said Cervantes, <span class="tei tei-q">“let him seek the church, the sea (i.e.,
+go as an adventurer to America) or the king's palace.”</span> Under
+Philip III., there were in Spain nine hundred and eighty-eight
+nunneries, and thirty-two thousand mendicant friars.
+The number of monasteries trebled between 1574 and 1624,
+and the number of monks increased in a yet greater ratio. A
+great many of its manufactories, much of its commerce, and not
+a few of its most important farms were controlled by foreigners,
+especially by Italians. There were, it seems, in 1610, one
+hundred and sixty thousand foreign tradesmen living in Castile.
+In 1787, there were still 188,625 priests, monks, nuns,
+etc.; 280,092 servants; 480,589 nobles; 964,571 day laborers;
+987,187 peasants; 310,739 mechanics and manufacturers;
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page182">[pg 182]</span><a name="Pg182" id="Pg182" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+34,339 merchants.<a id="noteref_339" name="noteref_339" href="#note_339"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">339</span></span></a> As a counterpart to this, the
+United States had, in 1840, about 77.5 per cent. of its population engaged
+in agriculture, 16.8 in manufactures and mining, 4.2 in shipping
+and commerce, 1.3 in the learned professions.<a id="noteref_340" name="noteref_340" href="#note_340"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">340</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page183">[pg 183]</span><a name="Pg183" id="Pg183" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+We might be tempted, in view of this contrast, to return
+once more to the unproductiveness of personal services. It is
+not, however, the direction given to the forces of production,
+but the squandering of them, that is injurious. When the
+Magyar, through mere vanity, drives a yoke of from four
+to six horses where two are enough; or when, as in 1831,
+Irish agriculture employed 1,131,715 workmen to produce a
+value of thirty-six million pounds sterling, while that of Great
+Britain<a id="noteref_341" name="noteref_341" href="#note_341"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">341</span></span></a> produced one hundred and fifty millions a year, and
+employed only 1,055,982 workmen, these causes are as sure to
+impoverish the country, as the waste of the Spaniards in supporting
+such an army of clergy and servants. Of course, the
+temptation to waste wealth on parks is greater than to waste
+it in vegetable gardens! The probability that a man will ruin
+himself by keeping too many servants is greater than that he
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page184">[pg 184]</span><a name="Pg184" id="Pg184" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+will do the same by employing too many operatives.<a id="noteref_342" name="noteref_342" href="#note_342"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">342</span></span></a> And
+all the more, as there are many and especially important services
+which regulate their own remuneration: thus, as a rule,
+those of the statesman, those of the military in times of war,
+and those of the priest in the age of superstition.<a id="noteref_343" name="noteref_343" href="#note_343"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">343</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc131" id="toc131"></a>
+<a name="pdf132" id="pdf132"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section LV.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">The Degree Of Productiveness.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Concerning the degree of productiveness, it may be remarked
+that that application of the factors of production is
+most productive, which, with the least expenditure of means,
+satisfies the greatest want in the economy of a people. Here,
+there is a continual change, corresponding precisely to the
+change in wants and faculties. After a bad harvest, for instance,
+the labor which procures grain from foreign countries
+or the supplies of former years, is most productive; and, after
+an earthquake which has destroyed a large city, the labor of
+the builder. Agriculture is, as a rule, the more productive
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page185">[pg 185]</span><a name="Pg185" id="Pg185" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+labor of undeveloped nations, and industry of highly developed
+nations.<a id="noteref_344" name="noteref_344" href="#note_344"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">344</span></span></a><a id="noteref_345" name="noteref_345" href="#note_345"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">345</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+</div>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page186">[pg 186]</span><a name="Pg186" id="Pg186" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<hr class="page" /><div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 4.00em; margin-top: 4.00em">
+<a name="toc133" id="toc133"></a>
+<a name="pdf134" id="pdf134"></a>
+<h2 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">Chapter III.</span></h2>
+<h2 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.88em; margin-top: 2.88em"><span style="font-size: 144%">The Organization Of Labor.</span></h2>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc135" id="toc135"></a>
+<a name="pdf136" id="pdf136"></a>
+<a name="Section_56" id="Section_56" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section LVI.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">Development Of The Division Of Labor.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+The larger a tree grows to be, the more boughs and
+branches does it put forth. The more perfect any species of
+animal is, the more does it stand in need of a special organ for
+each special purpose. And thus the division of labor has developed
+and kept pace with the development of human society.
+While Crusoe was obliged to provide for all his wants by his
+own labor, we find that in the wildest Indian family the male is
+employed in war, the chase, in fishing, in the manufacture of
+arms and boats, and in the transportation of the latter during
+long marches; the female, on the other hand, in the preparation
+of food, in the hewing of wood, the curing of skins, the
+sewing of clothes, in the building and preservation of the wig-wam,
+the care of children, and the carriage of baggage when
+on the march.<a id="noteref_346" name="noteref_346" href="#note_346"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">346</span></span></a> These occupations, at first entirely domestic,
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page187">[pg 187]</span><a name="Pg187" id="Pg187" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+became, by degrees, separate industries, which are constantly
+subject to further subdivision.<a id="noteref_347" name="noteref_347" href="#note_347"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">347</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc137" id="toc137"></a>
+<a name="pdf138" id="pdf138"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section LVII.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">Development Of The Division Of Labor.—Its Extent
+At Different Periods.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+In the middle age of a people, the division of labor is not
+carried to any great extent. The courtiers of King Frotho
+III. advised him to marry, <span class="tei tei-q">“since otherwise his majesty's ragged
+linen would never be mended.”</span> Saint Dunstan, although
+he occupied a high position in politics and in the Church, was
+an excellent blacksmith, bell-founder and designer of ladies'
+robes. Chriemhild in the Nibelungenlied was an industrious
+and skillful milliner. In the corresponding period of Grecian
+and Roman history, we find Penelope and Lucretia at
+the loom, Nausicaa, a laundress, the daughter of the king of
+the Lestrigons, fetching water from the spring, Odysseus, a
+carpenter, a queen of Macedonia as a cook, and finally the
+distaff of Tanaquil.<a id="noteref_348" name="noteref_348" href="#note_348"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">348</span></span></a> In the highlands of Scotland, in 1797,
+there were a great many peasants all of whose clothing was
+home-made, with the exception of their caps; nothing coming
+from abroad except the tailor, his needles and iron tools generally.
+But the peasant himself was the weaver, fuller, dyer,
+tanner, shoemaker etc. of his own family:<a id="noteref_349" name="noteref_349" href="#note_349"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">349</span></span></a> every man jack of
+all trades.<a id="noteref_350" name="noteref_350" href="#note_350"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">350</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page188">[pg 188]</span><a name="Pg188" id="Pg188" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+In present England, on the other hand, the manufacture of
+watches is divided into one hundred and two branches which
+have to be specially learned; only the so-called <span class="tei tei-q">“watch-finisher”</span>
+carries on other branches besides. In Wolverhampton, it may
+happen that a man, employed in the manufacture of keys,
+may not be able to make a whole key after an apprenticeship
+of ten years, for the reason that during all that time he may
+have been engaged only in filing.<a id="noteref_351" name="noteref_351" href="#note_351"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">351</span></span></a>
+In English agriculture
+there are, according to German notions, very few complete
+wholes. A well-marked distinction exists there between the
+cultivators of corn and breeders of cattle; and the latter
+are again divided into breeders of young cattle, into fatteners
+of cattle etc. Its industries are, in large part, separated
+into provinces. Thus, linen manufactures are confined
+almost exclusively to Leeds and Dundee, woolen manufactures,
+to Leeds,<a id="noteref_352" name="noteref_352" href="#note_352"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">352</span></span></a> cotton manufactures, to Manchester,
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page189">[pg 189]</span><a name="Pg189" id="Pg189" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+and Glasgow, pottery to Stafford, coarse iron to South Wales,
+hardwares to Birmingham, cutlery to Sheffield. And so in
+the different quarters of the city. Thus, in large towns, the
+banks, stores, offices etc., are found in one portion, with
+scarcely any intervening dwelling houses.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+On the division of labor depends all differences of estate
+and class, and all human culture. It cannot be claimed that a
+division of labor does not exist among animals;<a id="noteref_353" name="noteref_353" href="#note_353"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">353</span></span></a> but those animals
+among which something analogous to a division of labor
+among men exists, are raised far above all others by their human-like
+economy and the relative importance of their achievements.<a id="noteref_354" name="noteref_354" href="#note_354"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">354</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc139" id="toc139"></a>
+<a name="pdf140" id="pdf140"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section LVIII.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">Advantages Of The Division Of Labor.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+The advantages of all suitable division of labor, consequent
+upon the natural differences of human faculties and dispositions,
+are the following:
+</p>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page190">[pg 190]</span><a name="Pg190" id="Pg190" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+A. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">The greater skill of the workman.</span></span> Even physically,
+many capacities are, by an indefinite number of repetitions of
+the same operation, enhanced to an extraordinary degree;
+which, however, renders the performance of other operations
+more difficult. Thus, the man who has developed his muscles
+and hardened his hands working in a smithy, renders
+himself incapable of becoming a violin-player or an operating
+oculist.<a id="noteref_355" name="noteref_355" href="#note_355"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">355</span></span></a>
+Here belongs especially the possibility of turning
+every kind of labor-power to greatest account. Even children<a id="noteref_356" name="noteref_356" href="#note_356"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">356</span></span></a>
+and old men may be made, in this way, to play a part
+in the production of goods. It becomes practicable, too, to
+relieve men endowed with superior faculties from common
+labor, and allow them to devote themselves exclusively to the
+development of the peculiar powers with which nature has
+gifted them.<a id="noteref_357" name="noteref_357" href="#note_357"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">357</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+B. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">A great saving of time and trouble.</span></span> The simpler the
+operation performed by a single workman, the more easily
+is it learned; the smaller is the price paid or apprenticeship,
+which depends on this, at least, that beginners perform poorer
+work and are paid more poorly. <span class="tei tei-q">“The shortest way to the
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page191">[pg 191]</span><a name="Pg191" id="Pg191" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+end is most easily found when the end itself is near, and can
+be kept continually in view.”</span> (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">J. B. Say</span></span>.) Where the same
+workman combines different operations, a great deal of time
+is lost in changing tools etc. Besides, it always takes some
+time for a workman to get rightly under way of his work.
+The person who changes thus frequently becomes more easily
+indolent. Lastly, there is a great number of operations which
+demand the same aggregate amount of effort, no matter what
+the number of objects on which they are performed. It is
+thus, for instance, with shepherds, mail-carriers etc.<a id="noteref_358" name="noteref_358" href="#note_358"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">358</span></span></a> The
+post carries a thousand letters with almost as much ease as
+one; and the entire life of a wholesale dealer would scarcely
+suffice to carry all the letters which he mails in a single day,
+to their place of destination. During the middle ages, every
+man was obliged to watch over his own personal safety and
+the maintenance of his own rights; while in 1850, in Great
+Britain, twenty-one million people are protected in their persons
+and property, in an infinitely more effectual manner, and
+at less cost, by fifteen thousand soldiers, and by a much smaller
+number of policemen, whose place it is to preserve public
+order. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Senior</span></span>.) Something similar takes place among merchants,
+and it may be admitted as correct in principle, that
+every new intermediary, freely recognized by both sides in
+commerce,<a id="noteref_359" name="noteref_359" href="#note_359"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">359</span></span></a> makes labor better or less expensive.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+C. As the land of a country is, in a sense, the natural extension
+of the national body, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">the international division of labor</span></span>
+affords an indirect means, but frequently an indispensable one,
+of procuring the products of foreign countries and climates.<a id="noteref_360" name="noteref_360" href="#note_360"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">360</span></span></a>
+If the English people wished to obtain themselves, and without
+having recourse to any intermediary, the quantity of tea
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page192">[pg 192]</span><a name="Pg192" id="Pg192" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+which they annually consume, it is possible that its whole agricultural
+population would not suffice to procure it; while, at
+present, it is obtained by the labor of forty-five thousand industrial
+workmen. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Senior</span></span>.) Moreover, the division of labor
+increases not only the aptitude of the workman but also his
+incentive to productive labor, since it guarantees to every one
+the certainty of being able, by means of exchange, to enjoy
+the productions of every other person.<a id="noteref_361" name="noteref_361" href="#note_361"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">361</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc141" id="toc141"></a>
+<a name="pdf142" id="pdf142"></a>
+<a name="Section_59" id="Section_59" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section LIX.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">Conditions Of The Division Of Labor.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+It is by its division, that labor, considered as a factor of production,
+is raised to the highest degree of efficiency. Its results
+in any given industry are, therefore, more important in
+proportion as the element labor predominates in it. Hence,
+these results are much smaller, in agriculture, for instance, than
+in the trades, or in personal services.<a id="noteref_362" name="noteref_362" href="#note_362"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">362</span></span></a> The most expert sower or
+harvester cannot be employed the whole year through in sowing
+or harvesting. Some kind of rotation of crops, some kind of
+combination of tillage and stock-raising is necessary to every
+agriculturist. On this depends the importance of the technic
+secondary industries of agriculture, which are, in principle,
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page193">[pg 193]</span><a name="Pg193" id="Pg193" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+opposed to the division of labor. Hence, too, almost any person
+engaged in a trade, no matter of what kind, supposes a
+greater number of customers than a tiller of the land of the
+same rank.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+The more labor is divided, the greater is the amount of capital
+necessary to it.<a id="noteref_363" name="noteref_363" href="#note_363"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">363</span></span></a>
+It may be even said, that all preparatory
+labor becomes capital in its relation to subsequent labor. If
+ten isolated workmen can produce ten dozen articles of any
+kind, daily, and, after the introduction of a more efficient division
+of labor, fifty dozen, the employer must provide them, in
+the latter case, not only with five times as much capital, but
+probably with fifty times as much, as then, five hundred dozen
+are making continually.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc143" id="toc143"></a>
+<a name="pdf144" id="pdf144"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section LX.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">Influence Of The Extent Of The Market On The Division
+Of Labor.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+But it is the extent of the market especially which determines
+the limits of the division of labor; for there is a direct
+and necessary relation between the division of labor and the
+exchange of its surplus. Hence, the division of labor may be
+carried farthest in the case of those products which are most
+easily transported from place to place, and which, at the same
+time, possess the utility that is most widely recognized. The
+smallness of the market may depend upon the scantiness of
+the population, or upon its scattered condition;<a id="noteref_364" name="noteref_364" href="#note_364"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">364</span></span></a> upon their
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page194">[pg 194]</span><a name="Pg194" id="Pg194" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+smaller ability to pay, or upon the bad means of communication
+at their disposal.<a id="noteref_365" name="noteref_365" href="#note_365"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">365</span></span></a> Hence it is, that in villages, small cities, and
+still more on isolated farms, many branches of business are
+carried on by one person, which are divided among many in
+larger cities; and this is especially true in the case of businesses
+which have a chiefly local demand.<a id="noteref_366" name="noteref_366" href="#note_366"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">366</span></span></a>
+While, in small places,
+the barber is also frequently the physician, in larger ones there
+are dentists, oculists, accoucheurs, surgeons etc.<a id="noteref_367" name="noteref_367" href="#note_367"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">367</span></span></a>; and while, in
+the former, the tavern keeper is both dry goods merchant and
+grocer, there are, in the latter, tea merchants, cigar-dealers,
+dealers in mourning goods (in London childbed-linen warehouses)
+etc., and hotels for all the different classes of travelers.
+There can be a distinct class of porters, hack-men etc., only
+where commerce is very active.<a id="noteref_368" name="noteref_368" href="#note_368"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">368</span></span></a>
+And even in cities like Paris,
+where the costly industries that minister to luxury, that of the
+jeweler, for instance, admit of only a limited division of labor,
+this effect depends on the smallness of the market; a market, indeed,
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page195">[pg 195]</span><a name="Pg195" id="Pg195" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+which geographically may extend over the whole earth,
+but which, in an economic sense, must always remain small,
+on account of the small number of customers who have the
+ability to pay for their products. The real wonders produced
+by the division of labor and the employment of machinery we
+must look for in the manufacture of the cheapest and commonest
+commodities.<a id="noteref_369" name="noteref_369" href="#note_369"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">369</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc145" id="toc145"></a>
+<a name="pdf146" id="pdf146"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section LXI.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">The Division Of Labor—Means Of Increasing It.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Whoever, therefore, would increase the division of labor
+among the people, must, first of all, extend their market; and
+this is done most efficiently by improving the means of communication.
+Even in our day, it is over the water-highroads
+that the heaviest articles are carried with the least
+expenditure of force;<a id="noteref_370" name="noteref_370" href="#note_370"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">370</span></span></a>
+but where civilization is not advanced,
+these highroads possess still greater advantages, because
+of their safety, convenience and priority. And here is
+the explanation of the intimate connection of the beginnings of
+all civilizations with the existence, near the scene of such beginnings,
+of good natural water-roads. <span class="tei tei-q">“Even the wildest inhabitant
+of the sea coast very soon obtains the idea of distance,
+which is altogether wanting to the inhabitant of the primeval
+forest. No sooner does he catch sight of the far-off island than
+his yearning after the distant assumes a well-defined character.
+Bits of wood floating past him suggest to his mind the
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page196">[pg 196]</span><a name="Pg196" id="Pg196" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+best material to buoy himself up upon the water, and a fish
+the best form for his craft.”</span> (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Klemm.</span></span>) Hence the Mediterranean
+sea, especially the eastern portion, with the various
+peoples and products of its coasts, with its numerous
+islands, peninsulas and bays, its easy navigation, but little influenced
+by the tides or by ocean currents, was the principal
+seat of ancient civilization.<a id="noteref_371" name="noteref_371" href="#note_371"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">371</span></span></a>
+The literal meaning of Attica is
+coast-land. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Strabo.</span></span>) The colonization of a new country is
+wont, where possible, to begin on the coast, especially on islands
+near the coast; and to follow the course of rivers into the interior.
+Even whole continents occupy, for the most part, in
+the history of the world, the position assigned them by their
+coast-development.<a id="noteref_372" name="noteref_372" href="#note_372"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">372</span></span></a>
+While it is hard to determine whether,
+in the case of the European continent, its limbs predominate
+or its trunk, Africa may be said to be a trunk without members.
+Its islands, most of them insignificant in themselves,
+are almost entirely cut off from it by ocean currents. This explains
+why Madagascar had not, by any means, the influence
+on African civilization which Crete, Sicily and Britain
+have had on the civilization of Europe. Asia occupies, in this
+respect, about a middle position between Europe and Africa.
+The trunk of that continent bears to its members about the
+proportion of 670,000 to 150,000 square miles. And what is
+worst of all, the middle of the whole is an almost insurmountable
+wall between north, south, east and west Asia. Hence
+the tenacious peculiarity and isolated development of the
+Chinese, Malayan, Indian and Arabic civilizations; while the
+three peninsulas of southern Europe, for instance, have affected
+one another so largely, and in so many different ways.<a id="noteref_373" name="noteref_373" href="#note_373"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">373</span></span></a>
+The northern hemisphere compared with the southern, presents
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page197">[pg 197]</span><a name="Pg197" id="Pg197" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+a contrast similar to that between Europe and Africa, or
+of the rich coast-groups of the Atlantic compared with the
+poor ones of the Pacific.<a id="noteref_374" name="noteref_374" href="#note_374"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">374</span></span></a> But it is most especially, large,
+well-watered plains that are best adapted to the construction
+of roads, and thus to facilitate the division of labor. And
+while we find, in many countries, that the mountainous regions
+reached a certain stage of development earlier than any
+others, because they were more easily protected by military
+force, we find, too, that even here, plains, have, for the most
+part, had the largest share of power and of civilization (northern
+Italy, northern France, the plains of Switzerland and
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page198">[pg 198]</span><a name="Pg198" id="Pg198" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+north Germany). See § <a href="#Section_36" class="tei tei-ref">36</a>.<a id="noteref_375" name="noteref_375" href="#note_375"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">375</span></span></a> We must not, however, fail to
+consider the reverse side of the picture of the great highways
+of the world. The same reasons that raise them to the dignity
+of lines of commerce, make them lines of war; and even
+the contagion of great plagues and of the ruling vices follows,
+as a rule, the avenues of trade.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc147" id="toc147"></a>
+<a name="pdf148" id="pdf148"></a>
+<a name="Section_62" id="Section_62" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section LXII.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">The Reverse, Or Dark Side Of The Division Of Labor.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+There are hardships often attending the highly developed
+division of labor, the dark and bright sides of which are most
+strikingly observable only in large cities. However, when it
+is charged with adding to the natural inequality of men, the
+accusation can be met only by the answer, that, without the
+division of labor, we should be all equally poor and equally
+coarse; for each one would be absorbed by the necessity of
+providing for his lower wants, and no one would be in a way
+to develop his higher faculties. Even the poorest man has
+more enjoyment in consequence of the division of labor, than
+he could have living in a state of isolation from his fellow men.
+The most wretched among us, the invalid without property
+of any kind, the father of a family with more children than
+he can support, would simply starve in the primeval forest.
+</p>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page199">[pg 199]</span><a name="Pg199" id="Pg199" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Those socialists who never tire of preaching <span class="tei tei-q">“association,”</span>
+overlook for the most part, the great, free association which
+our needs, wants or tastes are ever changing, and which is
+given us, as of course, by the division of labor.<a id="noteref_376" name="noteref_376" href="#note_376"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">376</span></span></a> Yet the skill
+produced by the division of labor is unavoidably connected
+with a corresponding one-sidedness. The Russians, for instance,
+are exceedingly apt, but they rarely distinguish themselves
+in any thing.<a id="noteref_377" name="noteref_377" href="#note_377"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">377</span></span></a> Love of his avocation,
+or pride in it, is a thing unknown to the Russian workman. He shirks all continuous
+labor.<a id="noteref_378" name="noteref_378" href="#note_378"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">378</span></span></a> Experience has
+shown that the Neapolitans and Italians, in general, exhibit great skill when they work
+alone; but that when a great many of them work together,
+they become rapidly confused. The English, on the other
+hand, are slow to learn anything new, or to overcome unlooked
+for difficulties; but they have no equals as workmen in organized
+industries.<a id="noteref_379" name="noteref_379" href="#note_379"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">379</span></span></a>
+The difficulty experienced in seeking a new
+calling, where a high division of labor obtains, arises as much
+from the fact that each person here has received a more one-sided
+training, as from the necessity he is under of competing
+from the first with only consummate workers. Rousseau's
+school has laid too much stress on the tendency of higher civilization
+to diminish individual independence. <span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">Quand
+on sait creuser un canot, battre l'ennemi, construire une cabane, vivre de
+peu, faire cent lieues dans les forêts sans autre guide que le vent
+et le soleil, sans autre provision qu'un arc et des flêches; c'est
+</span><span class="tei tei-pb" id="page200">[pg 200]</span><a name="Pg200" id="Pg200" class="tei tei-anchor"></a><span style="font-style: italic">
+alors qu'on est un homme!</span></span><a id="noteref_380" name="noteref_380" href="#note_380"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">380</span></span></a> We might reply that to build a
+steamship or a palace, and to travel around the world are far
+better. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Dunoyer.</span></span>) Even physically, civilized man is superior
+to the savage, as might be inferred from the greater
+average duration of life of the former. Of course, extremes
+should not be compared, nor should we contrast the frame of
+a weaver or student with that of a savage chief.<a id="noteref_381" name="noteref_381" href="#note_381"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">381</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+In a similar way, the one-sidedness of the international
+division of labor may be pregnant with great danger to national
+independence.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc149" id="toc149"></a>
+<a name="pdf150" id="pdf150"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section LXIII.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">Dark Side Of The Division Of Labor.—Its Gain And
+Loss.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Where, indeed, the one-sidedness produced by the division
+of labor goes so far as to cause the degeneration<a id="noteref_382" name="noteref_382" href="#note_382"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">382</span></span></a> of the workman's
+personality, the human loss of the nation is greater than
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page201">[pg 201]</span><a name="Pg201" id="Pg201" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+the material gain purchased by it. Thus the occupation of
+polishing metals or gilding, when continued for a long time
+without interruption, invariably ruins the health. What must
+be the aspect of the soul of a workman who, for forty years has
+done nothing but watch the moment when silver has reached
+the degree of fusion which precedes vaporization! who is blind to all else, but
+receives a good fat salary for his services.<a id="noteref_383" name="noteref_383" href="#note_383"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">383</span></span></a>
+Schleiermacher rightly declared all human action which is
+purely mechanical, through which man becomes a living tool
+(slave!) immoral. When the division of labor has reached
+this point, machines should take the place of men. The morality
+of a profession may be measured by the degree in which it corresponds with the universal
+calling of the race.<a id="noteref_384" name="noteref_384" href="#note_384"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">384</span></span></a> It is
+not, therefore, a piece of inconsistency but rather a deeply felt
+want, when, where civilization is at its highest, so many demands
+are made that the division of labor should take a retrograde
+path. The practice of gymnastic exercises by the
+sedentary classes, universal military duty, the participation of
+citizens in municipal government and in political affairs, of laymen
+in the government of the church, of the wealthy in the
+administration of charity; all these things are, from a materialistic
+stand-point, considered a great squandering of time. It
+may be, that, if the division of labor were more rigidly carried
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page202">[pg 202]</span><a name="Pg202" id="Pg202" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+out, we might, by its means, obtain more perfect results
+with less economic expense. But the whole man is of more
+importance than the sum of his achievements and enjoyments.
+(Luke, 9:25.) Wo to the nation where only jurists have a
+developed sense of the right, where political judgment and
+cultivated patriotism are the portion of only officials and placemen,
+where only the standing army has warlike courage, and
+the clergy only conscious religiousness; where parents leave
+all care for education to the teachers of the various branches
+of learning, and where physical vigor is to be found only
+among the proletarians. Hence there is nothing more ruinous
+than premature one-sided education in a single trade or
+profession—a thing which often happens from poverty before
+the foundations of the general education becoming a human
+being have been laid. The higher a man's position, the
+more should he, so to speak, be a representative of the whole
+human race. Who, for instance, would wish to see a ruler
+brought up as men are to a special branch of science or to a
+special profession?<a id="noteref_385" name="noteref_385" href="#note_385"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">385</span></span></a><a id="noteref_386" name="noteref_386" href="#note_386"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">386</span></span></a> The best corrective for the one-sidedness
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page203">[pg 203]</span><a name="Pg203" id="Pg203" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+produced by a high division of labor consists in the extension
+and many-sided employment of leisure time, both of
+which are made more easy by the same high civilization which
+always accompanies the division of labor.<a id="noteref_387" name="noteref_387" href="#note_387"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">387</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc151" id="toc151"></a>
+<a name="pdf152" id="pdf152"></a>
+<a name="Section_64" id="Section_64" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section LXIV.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">The Co-Operation Of Labor.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+The coöperation or combination<a id="noteref_388" name="noteref_388" href="#note_388"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">388</span></span></a> of labor must, however,
+always correspond to the division of labor. Both are but different
+sides of the one idea of social labor; the separation of
+different kinds of labor, in so far as they would disturb one
+another, and the union or combination of them so far as they
+help one another.<a id="noteref_389" name="noteref_389" href="#note_389"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">389</span></span></a> The vintner or grower of flax would necessarily
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page204">[pg 204]</span><a name="Pg204" id="Pg204" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+die of hunger if he could not certainly count on the grower
+of corn. The workman in a pin-factory, who prepares only
+the heads of pins, must be sure of his colleagues who sharpen
+the points, if his labor would not be entirely in vain. The labor
+of the merchant is not even thinkable without that of the
+different producers between whom he mediates. Where the
+production of a certain article depends on the services of six
+different kinds of labor, one of which, however, demands thrice
+the time, and another twice the time of the rest, it is clear,
+that, in order that the business may be properly carried on, so
+many workmen should be employed that their number divided
+by 9 should leave no remainder. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Rau.</span></span>) The union or combination
+of different kinds of labor is most perfect when the
+workmen live nearest together; when, therefore, they are not
+separated by great difficulties of transportation; or in different
+countries, in which case, a war might tear all to pieces.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc153" id="toc153"></a>
+<a name="pdf154" id="pdf154"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section LXV.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">The Principle Of Stability, Or Of The Continuity
+Of Work.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Coöperation in time is of equal importance: the principle of
+the stability, or of the continuity of labor. When a workman
+dies, it is necessary to be able to calculate on a substitute. It
+is well known that it is much harder to begin a business, than
+it is, afterwards, to improve and enlarge it; and this, the more
+complicated it is. A new enterprise will take root easily, only
+where there are several similar ones already in existence; a
+new manufacturing establishment, for instance, where by the
+existence of other such establishments, the requisite habits of
+the workmen, of capitalists and of the public in general, have
+been previously developed. The skill of workmen is propagated
+especially by observation and the personal emulation of
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page205">[pg 205]</span><a name="Pg205" id="Pg205" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+the young; whence it is, that the introduction of new industries
+is best made by the immigration of skilled workmen.<a id="noteref_390" name="noteref_390" href="#note_390"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">390</span></span></a>
+Hence the baleful influence of such interruptions, as for instance,
+the repeal of the edict of Nantes. Hence too, it is,
+that despotism and the reign of the populace are so unfavorable
+to the economy of a country, where there can be no guarantee
+of a consistent observance and development of the laws.
+To the best applications of the principle of the continuity
+of labor belong the church-building of the middle ages, the
+national canals, the street and fortification systems of modern
+times; all of which have been created only by the coöperation
+of several generations to the same end.<a id="noteref_391" name="noteref_391" href="#note_391"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">391</span></span></a> The most striking
+means by which such a coöperation has been advanced in
+modern times is public credit, <span class="tei tei-q">“a draft on posterity;”</span> yet, all
+saving is, in principle, the same. The most powerful element
+in the coöperation in time of labor is the economy in common
+of the family, although it differs in degree, according to the
+different kinds of family inheritance. Where, as among the
+English middle classes, it is customary to secure the business
+property of the family to one child by will, and to entrust the
+conduct of the business, during the life of the father, to the
+devisee, to provide for the other children by insurance, by savings
+etc., made from the surplus of the business, there may be
+old firms which remain always new, however; because they
+combine the experience of age with the energy of youth, and
+are never broken up by a division of the inheritance. But the
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page206">[pg 206]</span><a name="Pg206" id="Pg206" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+compulsory equality of heirs, which actually obtains in France,
+compels almost every new generation to begin with a new
+firm. (See § <a href="#Section_85" class="tei tei-ref">85</a> seq.)<a id="noteref_392" name="noteref_392" href="#note_392"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">392</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc155" id="toc155"></a>
+<a name="pdf156" id="pdf156"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section LXVI.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">Advantage Of Large Enterprises.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+On the results of the division and coöperation of labor rests
+the superior advantage of all great undertakings, and they are,
+therefore, smaller in agriculture than in industry. <span class="tei tei-q">“It is
+harder to acquire the first thousand than the second million.”</span>
+Abstraction made of the conditions of capital and of the market,
+the limit up to which the growing magnitude of an enterprise
+becomes more advantageous, lies in the increasing difficulty
+of superintendence. Numberless commercial improvements,
+such as the post-office, railroads, telegraphs, exchange, banks
+etc., have operated powerfully to extend these limits. It is
+frequently possible, even in small enterprises, to secure the advantages
+of large enterprises, by association among those concerned.
+They must, of course, possess the necessary capital.
+If they have not got it, as property, they must borrow it. It
+is, of course, peculiarly difficult here to preserve the necessary
+unity, without which the coöperation of labor becomes
+the confusion of labor. The more moral and intelligent the
+participants are and the simpler the business, the more extensive
+may it become, and the more probable will be its success.
+(§ <a href="#Section_90" class="tei tei-ref">90</a>.)<a id="noteref_393" name="noteref_393" href="#note_393"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">393</span></span></a><a id="noteref_394" name="noteref_394" href="#note_394"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">394</span></span></a><a id="noteref_395" name="noteref_395" href="#note_395"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">395</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+</div>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page207">[pg 207]</span><a name="Pg207" id="Pg207" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<hr class="page" /><div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 4.00em; margin-top: 4.00em">
+<a name="toc157" id="toc157"></a>
+<a name="pdf158" id="pdf158"></a>
+<h2 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">Chapter IV.</span></h2>
+<h2 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.88em; margin-top: 2.88em"><span style="font-size: 144%">Freedom And Slavery.</span></h2>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc159" id="toc159"></a>
+<a name="pdf160" id="pdf160"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section LXVII.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">The Origin Of Slavery.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+An institution like that of personal bondage, which, it can
+be shown, has existed, among all nations of which history gives
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page208">[pg 208]</span><a name="Pg208" id="Pg208" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+us information, at one time or another, must have very general
+causes. Among these may be mentioned especially subjection
+through war. It is not possible to calculate how much
+the principle, that it was proper to reduce the man to slavery
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page209">[pg 209]</span><a name="Pg209" id="Pg209" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+whom it was considered right to kill, contributed to make war
+less bloody in an uncivilized age.<a id="noteref_396" name="noteref_396" href="#note_396"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">396</span></span></a> A nation of hunters is almost
+compelled to grant no quarter; the conqueror would be
+obliged either to feed his prisoner or to put arms in his hands.
+It is certainly a great humanitarian advance, when this state
+of things is superseded by slavery among nomadic nations.<a id="noteref_397" name="noteref_397" href="#note_397"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">397</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+In times of peace, economic dependence is the result of poverty,
+excessive debt etc.<a id="noteref_398" name="noteref_398" href="#note_398"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">398</span></span></a> Where there is no division
+of labor, the individual has no means of supplying his wants, except by
+cultivating a spot of ground. But, how can the poor wretch
+who has neither capital<a id="noteref_399" name="noteref_399" href="#note_399"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">399</span></span></a> nor land exchange anything of value
+for either? Such an advance, where there is no security in
+law, can be made only on the credit of a very important pledge.
+But the man who is destitute of all property can offer nothing
+but the productive power of himself or of his family.<a id="noteref_400" name="noteref_400" href="#note_400"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">400</span></span></a> And
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page210">[pg 210]</span><a name="Pg210" id="Pg210" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+so it is with the small landed proprietor who has lost all his
+capital;<a id="noteref_401" name="noteref_401" href="#note_401"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">401</span></span></a> for, considering the superabundance of land, the part
+which he possesses has value in exchange only to the extent
+that it is joined with the certainty of being cultivated; and
+here is the origin of the <span lang="la" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="la"><span style="font-style: italic">glebæ
+adscriptio</span></span>. The hereditary
+transmission of the relation to the children seems to be equally
+useful to them; or who, were this not the case, would think
+of providing them with food? It also frequently happens that
+poor parents prefer to sell their children to seeing them starve.<a id="noteref_402" name="noteref_402" href="#note_402"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">402</span></span></a>
+Hence the strange fact that most nations have the most rigid
+system of slavery precisely at the time that the soil produces
+food most readily. We need only cite the instance of the
+South Sea Islands, at the time of their discovery. In many
+negro countries, where the people have not yet learned to use
+animals for transportation, the lowest classes, although they
+enjoy a nominal liberty, are used as beasts of burden.<a id="noteref_403" name="noteref_403" href="#note_403"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">403</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page211">[pg 211]</span><a name="Pg211" id="Pg211" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc161" id="toc161"></a>
+<a name="pdf162" id="pdf162"></a>
+<a name="Section_68" id="Section_68" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section LXVIII.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">The Same Subject Continued.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+In all very low stages of civilization, the greatest absence
+of the feeling of wants, and the greatest indolence, are wont
+to prevail, and in the highest degree. As soon as their merest
+necessities are provided for, men begin to look upon labor as
+a disgraceful occupation, and indolence as the highest kind of
+enjoyment. (§ <a href="#Section_41" class="tei tei-ref">41</a>, 213 ff.) Sustained and voluntary efforts,
+in any number, then become possible only by the creation of
+new wants; but these new wants suppose a higher civilization.
+Escape from this sorry circle is then effected in the most humane
+manner, through the agency of foreign teachers; inasmuch
+as the representatives of a more highly cultivated people
+(missionaries, merchants etc.), by their own example, make
+the nation acquainted with more wants, and at the same time
+help toward their satisfaction.<a id="noteref_404" name="noteref_404" href="#note_404"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">404</span></span></a> But, in the case of nations
+whose civilization is completely isolated, or having intercourse
+only with others equally low, progress is the creature of
+force exclusively. The barbarous isolation of families ceases
+when the strongest and most powerful force the weaker
+into their service. It is now that <em class="tei tei-emph"><span style="font-style: italic">the division of labor really
+begins</span></em>: the victor devotes himself entirely to work of a higher
+order, to statesmanship, war, worship etc.; the very doing of
+which is generally a pleasure in itself. The vanquished perform
+the lower. The one-half of the people are forced to
+labor for something beyond their own brute wants. And it
+is, here as elsewhere, the first step that costs.<a id="noteref_405" name="noteref_405" href="#note_405"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">405</span></span></a> (§ <a href="#Section_45" class="tei tei-ref">45</a>.)
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page212">[pg 212]</span><a name="Pg212" id="Pg212" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc163" id="toc163"></a>
+<a name="pdf164" id="pdf164"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section LXIX.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">Origin Of Slavery.—Want Of Freedom.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+It is not to be supposed that slavery, at this stage, is so
+oppressive even to those who have been deprived of their
+freedom. The feeling of moral degradation which slavery,
+abstraction even made of its abuses, awakens in us, is unknown
+in a very uncivilized age.<a id="noteref_406" name="noteref_406" href="#note_406"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">406</span></span></a> The child willingly obeys the
+orders of strangers, and is hired out to service by his parents
+etc. The want or craving for liberty keeps pace with the intellectual
+growth of a people. The systematic over-working
+of servants or slaves, in the interest of their masters, is scarcely
+thinkable in an uncultured age, when, in the absence of commercial
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page213">[pg 213]</span><a name="Pg213" id="Pg213" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+intercourse, every family consumes what it produces.<a id="noteref_407" name="noteref_407" href="#note_407"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">407</span></span></a>
+The only thing which the slave has to fear is an occasional
+outburst of tyranny on the part of the master, a thing which
+is far from unfrequent in all the relations of low civilizations.
+Fear restrains masters to a certain extent; for, in those early
+days, how few were the institutions of state which could protect
+them against the vengeance of their slaves!<a id="noteref_408" name="noteref_408" href="#note_408"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">408</span></span></a><a id="noteref_409" name="noteref_409" href="#note_409"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">409</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page214">[pg 214]</span><a name="Pg214" id="Pg214" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc165" id="toc165"></a>
+<a name="pdf166" id="pdf166"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section LXX.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">Emancipation.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+As states grow greater and men's manners gentler, the ranks
+of slavery are less and less liable to be recruited through the
+agency of war.<a id="noteref_410" name="noteref_410" href="#note_410"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">410</span></span></a> It then becomes necessary to have recourse
+to the family to keep up their number, which makes their
+condition much more endurable, and which supposes that it
+has been made more endurable in other respects beforehand.
+Modern states, are, as a rule, larger than the ancient were.
+The Germans had, long before the time of Charlemagne,
+treated prisoners of war of German origin more mildly than
+those of Gallic or Slavic origin.<a id="noteref_411" name="noteref_411" href="#note_411"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">411</span></span></a> The condition of the latter
+even improved from the time that nations began to think of
+making permanent conquests. Since the Slavic wars of the
+tenth century, certainly since the Lithuanian contests, it seems
+that prisoners of war were not reduced to slavery.<a id="noteref_412" name="noteref_412" href="#note_412"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">412</span></span></a>
+Chivalry,
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page215">[pg 215]</span><a name="Pg215" id="Pg215" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+and allowing prisoners to go free, on their word of honor,
+contributed largely to this result.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+The more productive agriculture is, the more numerous the
+wants of land owners, the more extensive the division of labor
+and commercial intercourse become, the easier it is for a large
+class of the community to obtain support for themselves and
+families without cultivating land of their own. (Wages.)
+When exchanges through the medium of money become customary,
+the chief argument for slavery disappears; and the
+strong, rich and able man can, without having recourse to
+force, command the labor of other men. Every further advance
+in economic culture must necessarily help forward in this
+direction. Thus, without the plow, for instance, we should all
+be really only so many <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">glebæ adscripti</span></span>. It is due especially to
+the ever increasing perfection of tools, machines and operations,
+that the slave of antiquity was transformed into the serf
+of the middle ages, and afterwards into the day laborer of
+modern times.<a id="noteref_413" name="noteref_413" href="#note_413"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">413</span></span></a> It is more particularly to be remarked, that
+machines, since 1750, <span class="tei tei-q">“first made the constitutional liberty of
+many, instead of the feudal freedom of a few, possible.”</span>
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Schäffle.</span></span>)
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page216">[pg 216]</span><a name="Pg216" id="Pg216" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc167" id="toc167"></a>
+<a name="pdf168" id="pdf168"></a>
+<a name="Section_71" id="Section_71" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section LXXI.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">Disadvantages Of Slavery.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Slavery promotes the division of labor only in the very
+beginning. The more dependent the slave is, the worse he
+works. Whatever he spoils or allows to go to waste injures
+only his master. Hence it is that slave-husbandry is only one
+degree removed from what the Germans call <span lang="de" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="de"><span style="font-style: italic">Raubbau</span></span>, and
+which means, as nearly as we can translate it, the most
+thoughtless and wasteful management possible.<a id="noteref_414" name="noteref_414" href="#note_414"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">414</span></span></a> Whatever
+he consumes is simply so much gain to himself. Industry
+and skill are injurious to him, because, if remarkable for these
+qualities, his master exacts more work from him and is
+more adverse to setting him at liberty. Instead of the numberless
+incentives of the free workman: care for the future,
+for his family, honor and comfort, the slave is generally
+moved by one—the fear of ill-treatment, and to this he gradually
+becomes insensible.<a id="noteref_415" name="noteref_415" href="#note_415"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">415</span></span></a> The division of labor demanded
+by manufactures, and which is to be found for the most part
+only where each person is at liberty to choose his own avocation,
+is scarcely supposable where slavery, in the strict sense
+of the word, prevails. The same is true of the spirit of invention
+and improvement.<a id="noteref_416" name="noteref_416" href="#note_416"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">416</span></span></a>
+And even where the milder <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">glebæ
+</span><span class="tei tei-pb" id="page217">[pg 217]</span><a name="Pg217" id="Pg217" class="tei tei-anchor"></a><span style="font-style: italic">
+adscriptio</span></span> obtains, the division of labor is much hindered.
+Hence, competent judges all agree on the badness of slave
+labor;<a id="noteref_417" name="noteref_417" href="#note_417"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">417</span></span></a> which, as for instance in the United States, was used
+only where the slaves were crowded together in large numbers
+and could therefore be easily superintended. And not
+only are the slaves themselves indolent, but their masters as
+well; more particularly in slave countries where all labor is
+considered disgraceful. What must be the national husbandry
+of a people, one half of whom refuse to do anything that is right
+and proper, through malice, and the other half through pride!
+As soon as, on account of increased population and consequent
+increased consumption, this enormous waste of force
+can be endured no longer, free workmen become more profitable,
+not only to themselves and to the whole community, but
+to the greater number of the individuals who compose it.<a id="noteref_418" name="noteref_418" href="#note_418"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">418</span></span></a>
+On the Bernstoff estates the quantity of rye harvested before
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page218">[pg 218]</span><a name="Pg218" id="Pg218" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+and after emancipation was as 3:8-⅓; of barley-corn as 4:9-⅓;
+of oat-grain as 2-⅔:8.<a id="noteref_419" name="noteref_419" href="#note_419"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">419</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+The owners of serfs, especially, are apt to be very wasteful
+of their labor, because they imagine that they obtain it gratis.
+Tucker has made a curious calculation tending to show that
+when civilization reaches a certain point, the master's self-interest
+leads to emancipation. In Russia, where there are
+seventy-five persons to the English square mile, it seemed to
+him that serfdom was still a good economic speculation. In
+western Europe, where there were one hundred and ten persons
+to the square mile, freedom, in all relations of master and
+servant, he considered more advantageous to all parties. Emancipation
+began in England in the fourteenth century, when that
+country had a population of forty to the square mile, and was
+completed in the seventeenth, when the population was ninety-two
+to the square mile.<a id="noteref_420" name="noteref_420" href="#note_420"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">420</span></span></a> Tucker concludes, that the turning
+point comes, when the population is relatively to the number
+of square miles as 66:1.<a id="noteref_421" name="noteref_421" href="#note_421"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">421</span></span></a> Such a calculation cannot, of course,
+be universally true. The free workman can usually command
+a much larger portion of the sum total of economic profits
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page219">[pg 219]</span><a name="Pg219" id="Pg219" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+than can the slave or serf, who must be satisfied with the minimum
+necessary to support life.<a id="noteref_422" name="noteref_422" href="#note_422"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">422</span></span></a>
+Hence, free labor is more
+profitable to masters only when production in general is so
+much enhanced thereby that a greater quantity of goods falls
+to their share also. But this will always be the case where
+workmen are capable of development.<a id="noteref_423" name="noteref_423" href="#note_423"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">423</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc169" id="toc169"></a>
+<a name="pdf170" id="pdf170"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section LXXII.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">Effect Of An Advance In Civilization On Slavery.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+At the same time, the same degree of servitude becomes
+more and more oppressive to the bondman as civilization advances.
+The greater his intellectual progress, the more does
+he feel the want of liberty, and the more keenly he experiences
+the degradation of his condition. The development of luxury
+digs a gulf between master and servant which grows wider
+every day. (§ 227 ff.) As commerce extends, it becomes
+more profitable for the master to exact excessive work from
+his slave. In the West Indies, it was a problem which every
+slaveholder solved for himself, whether, by immoderately increased
+production, which cost the lives of many slaves, the
+gain in sugar was greater than the loss occasioned by the
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page220">[pg 220]</span><a name="Pg220" id="Pg220" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+consequent death of the negroes.<a id="noteref_424" name="noteref_424" href="#note_424"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">424</span></span></a> When, with the advance of
+civilization, the state guarantees to all more certain protection
+of their rights than they enjoyed in a less advanced stage of
+social improvement, the last check on masters, the fear of the
+vengeance of their slaves, is removed.<a id="noteref_425" name="noteref_425" href="#note_425"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">425</span></span></a> Demoralization naturally
+increases in the same proportion; and that of the master
+as well as that of his servants.<a id="noteref_426" name="noteref_426" href="#note_426"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">426</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc171" id="toc171"></a>
+<a name="pdf172" id="pdf172"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section LXXIII.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">The Same Subject Continued.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+This explains why it is that, in all countries, the power of
+the state, in a period of transition towards a higher civilization,
+has endeavored to render slavery milder. Great credit is
+due the Church in this regard. It soon extinguished slavery
+entirely in Scandinavia,<a id="noteref_427" name="noteref_427" href="#note_427"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">427</span></span></a> and in portions of Europe it abolished
+at least the sale of prisoners to foreign countries.<a id="noteref_428" name="noteref_428" href="#note_428"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">428</span></span></a> The
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page221">[pg 221]</span><a name="Pg221" id="Pg221" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Concilium Agatheuse</span></span>, in the year 506, decreed that serfs should
+not be killed by their masters at pleasure,<a id="noteref_429" name="noteref_429" href="#note_429"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">429</span></span></a> but that they should
+be brought before a tribunal of justice. (The manorial tribunals
+of more recent times.) Moreover, the numberless holidays
+of the church operated greatly in favor of the bondmen.
+Pope Alexander III. recommended their gradual emancipation.<a id="noteref_430" name="noteref_430" href="#note_430"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">430</span></span></a>
+One of the principal steps in the way of progress was
+made when they could no longer be sold singly, but only with
+the village or on the estate to which they belonged.<a id="noteref_431" name="noteref_431" href="#note_431"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">431</span></span></a> The
+feudal aristocracy improved the condition of the bondmen by
+reducing a great number of freemen to their level.<a id="noteref_432" name="noteref_432" href="#note_432"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">432</span></span></a> This
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page222">[pg 222]</span><a name="Pg222" id="Pg222" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+could not be effected without a real amelioration of slavery;
+and, later, when the feudal aristocracy declined, the older serfs
+were, with those who had been formerly free, raised from their
+abject condition. The sense of chivalry would not permit a
+lord to be served by a bondman. The old adage <span class="tei tei-q">“the serf
+lives to serve and serves to live,”</span> by degrees, lost its force.
+Serfs were required to perform certain tasks on the lands of
+their master and to pay him a certain quantity of the produce
+of their own. Heriots (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">mortuarium</span></span>), which became usual
+from the 8th century (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">J. Grimm</span></span>), may be considered evidence
+that even bondmen were permitted to acquire and hold
+property in their own right. Thus was one of the chief disadvantages
+of slavery, in an economic sense, removed.<a id="noteref_433" name="noteref_433" href="#note_433"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">433</span></span></a> It
+may be affirmed, as characteristic of the aristocracy of feudal
+times, that they treated those, who like the serfs were entirely
+at their mercy, with much more consideration than those who
+were free, and, although dependent on them, had certain rights
+guaranteed by contract. The absolute monarchy found in
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page223">[pg 223]</span><a name="Pg223" id="Pg223" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+nearly all nations, at the opening of modern times, was forced
+by its struggle with the mediæval aristocracy to favor the
+emancipation of the serfs and of the lower classes. Even in
+Russia, Iwan III. (1462-1505) seems to have restored to the
+peasantry the right of migration, of which they had been deprived
+by the invasion of the Mongols, nor did they lose it
+again until the great troubles at the beginning of the seventeenth
+century, which gave the ruling power to the nobility.<a id="noteref_434" name="noteref_434" href="#note_434"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">434</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Where civilization has reached its highest development, the
+irresistible power of public opinion, governed by the ideas of
+the universal brotherhood of man and of democratic equality,
+causes the abolition of all irredeemable and of all hereditary
+relations of servitude.<a id="noteref_435" name="noteref_435" href="#note_435"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">435</span></span></a><a id="noteref_436" name="noteref_436" href="#note_436"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">436</span></span></a><a id="noteref_437" name="noteref_437" href="#note_437"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">437</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page224">[pg 224]</span><a name="Pg224" id="Pg224" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc173" id="toc173"></a>
+<a name="pdf174" id="pdf174"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section LXXIV.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">The Same Subject Continued.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+It cannot be doubted, that an entirely direct leap from complete
+servitude to complete freedom may be attended by many
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page225">[pg 225]</span><a name="Pg225" id="Pg225" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+evils. No man is <span class="tei tei-q">“born free,”</span><a id="noteref_438" name="noteref_438" href="#note_438"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">438</span></span></a> but only with a faculty for
+freedom; but this faculty must be developed. The knowledge
+and respect for law, and the self-control, which are the
+conditions and limits of freedom, are never acquired without
+labor, seldom without the making of grave mistakes, and never
+except through the practice of them. As a rule, both parties,
+masters as well as servants, would like to get rid immediately
+of all the inconveniences of the former condition and yet continue
+to enjoy its advantages. The servant, for instance, will
+now yield no more the specific obedience of former times, but
+demands still specific mildness from the land-owner, or loaner
+of capital, his former master. It is inevitable that there should
+be complaints on both sides.<a id="noteref_439" name="noteref_439" href="#note_439"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">439</span></span></a>
+But in the higher stages of economic
+culture, the relation of paternal protection and childlike
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page226">[pg 226]</span><a name="Pg226" id="Pg226" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+obedience between the different classes of the people, which,
+even in medieval times, never obtained in all its purity, is certainly
+unrecallable. Hence it is, that all hope of a better condition
+of things is based only on this, that the lower classes
+may as soon as possible attain to true
+independence.<a id="noteref_440" name="noteref_440" href="#note_440"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">440</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc175" id="toc175"></a>
+<a name="pdf176" id="pdf176"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section LXXV.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">The Same Subject Continued.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Even in antiquity, the principal nations of the world could
+not keep the humanizing influence of civilization from making
+itself felt on their slaves. And if they did not go so far
+as to bring about the total abolition of slavery, it is unhesitatingly
+to be attributed to their religious inferiority.<a id="noteref_441" name="noteref_441" href="#note_441"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">441</span></span></a> In
+Athens, during the Peloponnesian war, it was almost impossible
+to distinguish the slaves from the poorer freemen by their
+looks or dress. Their treatment was mild in proportion as
+desertion was easier by reason of the smallness of the state or
+the frequency of war. It was forbidden to beat them; and only a court of justice could
+punish them with death.<a id="noteref_442" name="noteref_442" href="#note_442"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">442</span></span></a> Emancipation,
+in individual cases, was very frequent, and the names
+of Agoratos and of the law-reviser Nicomachos show how
+great a part an emancipated slave might play in the nation.<a id="noteref_443" name="noteref_443" href="#note_443"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">443</span></span></a>
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page227">[pg 227]</span><a name="Pg227" id="Pg227" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+The helot system of the Lacedemonians preserved much
+longer a great deal more of medieval barbarism; but even
+here, we may infer from the frequent uprisings and emancipations
+of the helots, from their services in war etc., that their
+lot was made less hard than it had been.<a id="noteref_444" name="noteref_444" href="#note_444"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">444</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Among the Romans, with whom war and conquest were
+so long considered<a id="noteref_445" name="noteref_445" href="#note_445"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">445</span></span></a> the principal means of acquisition, slavery
+was relatively very hard.<a id="noteref_446" name="noteref_446" href="#note_446"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">446</span></span></a> But, later, there came to be
+several different grades of slavery (<span lang="la" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="la"><span style="font-style: italic">servi
+ordinarii</span></span> and <span lang="la" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="la"><span style="font-style: italic">mediastini</span></span>
+etc.); and in slavery, every gradation denotes some amelioration
+of condition.<a id="noteref_447" name="noteref_447" href="#note_447"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">447</span></span></a> The slave obtained the right to possess
+resources of his own (<span lang="la" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="la"><span style="font-style: italic">peculium</span></span>).<a id="noteref_448" name="noteref_448" href="#note_448"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">448</span></span></a> In addition to this,
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page228">[pg 228]</span><a name="Pg228" id="Pg228" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+emancipation became much more frequent in the later republic;
+so much so, that Augustus considered it necessary to pass
+laws taxing frivolous emancipation. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">L. Aelia Sentia</span></span> and
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Furia</span></span>.)<a id="noteref_449" name="noteref_449" href="#note_449"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">449</span></span></a> Where men like Terence, Roscius, Tiro, Phædrus
+and the father of Horace rose from the condition of slavery, the treatment
+of slaves cannot have been entirely brutalizing.<a id="noteref_450" name="noteref_450" href="#note_450"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">450</span></span></a>
+Under the emperors who oppressed the free citizens,
+legislation was directed more than ever towards the protection
+of the slaves.<a id="noteref_451" name="noteref_451" href="#note_451"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">451</span></span></a> Instead of permanent slavery, a condition
+of things was introduced and became more general every day,
+one in which the bondman might contract a legal marriage,
+have property of his own, and in which he was protected
+against an arbitrary increase of the quota he had to pay his
+master, whether in money or produce, although he still remained
+bound to the land. This class was formed not only of
+the <span lang="la" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="la"><span style="font-style: italic">originarii</span></span>,
+or those born into it, but also of a large number of impoverished freemen,
+barbarian prisoners of war etc.<a id="noteref_452" name="noteref_452" href="#note_452"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">452</span></span></a><a id="noteref_453" name="noteref_453" href="#note_453"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">453</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page229">[pg 229]</span><a name="Pg229" id="Pg229" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc177" id="toc177"></a>
+<a name="pdf178" id="pdf178"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section LXXVI. (Appendix To Chapter IV.)</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">The Domestic Servant System.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+In most countries the servant system developed itself gradually
+out of serfdom, or of some condition of tutelage analogous
+thereto. This is seen most clearly in the long continuance
+of forced service, by which the subjects of the lord of the fee
+were compelled to allow their children to remain in the court
+of the lord as servants, either without any remuneration whatever,
+or for very low wages fixed by long continued custom.<a id="noteref_454" name="noteref_454" href="#note_454"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">454</span></span></a>
+Here, also, belongs the right of correction, so generally accorded
+to masters in former times. In the higher stages of
+civilization, the whole relation is wont to be resolved more and
+more into freedom of competition; and this process is wont to
+take place earliest and most strikingly in the cities. Where
+vast numbers of men are brought together, demand and supply
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page230">[pg 230]</span><a name="Pg230" id="Pg230" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+of services meet most easily. The nearer in the course of
+this development the servant system approaches to piece-wages
+and day-wages, the shorter does the customary (presumptive)
+duration of the contract last,<a id="noteref_455" name="noteref_455" href="#note_455"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">455</span></span></a> the more voluntary is
+the period of leave-taking by both parties;<a id="noteref_456" name="noteref_456" href="#note_456"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">456</span></span></a> the more does the entire relation
+tend to be limited to single acts of service agreed upon
+in advance (§ <a href="#Section_39" class="tei tei-ref">39</a>), and the more frequently do both
+parties endeavor to supply the place of the domestic servants by workmen
+who receive wages and live outside of the family.<a id="noteref_457" name="noteref_457" href="#note_457"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">457</span></span></a> The
+extreme of this direction at present is the servant-institutes in
+cities, the more movable and more democratic character of
+which finds expression in this, that they have extended the
+use of personal services to a lower circle of consumers than
+could previously have thought of employing them. In English
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page231">[pg 231]</span><a name="Pg231" id="Pg231" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+agriculture this transition was completed mainly in the
+third decade of this century. The change was unquestionably
+favorable to the improvement of the art of agriculture, but it
+was frequently damaging to the social relation existing between the rich
+and the poor in the country.<a id="noteref_458" name="noteref_458" href="#note_458"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">458</span></span></a> In Germany, the
+sale of the public domains, conscription and <span lang="de" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="de"><span style="font-style: italic">Landwehr</span></span> duty have operated in this
+direction.<a id="noteref_459" name="noteref_459" href="#note_459"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">459</span></span></a> Hence
+it is, for instance, that in Prussia, the servants, in 1816, were 15.18 per cent. of the
+entire male population over 14 years of age, and 17.84 per
+cent. of the entire female population over 14 years of age. In
+1861, on the other hand, there were only 11.88 and 12.93 per
+cent., respectively, while the number of day laborers and workmen,
+in the same time, increased from 16.29 per cent. males, and 10.87 per cent.
+females, to 20.95 and 16.65 per cent., respectively.<a id="noteref_460" name="noteref_460" href="#note_460"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">460</span></span></a>
+In most civilized countries, the grade of society
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page232">[pg 232]</span><a name="Pg232" id="Pg232" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+from which servants are recruited grows lower and lower as
+the spirit of independence extends to the deeper strata of humanity.<a id="noteref_461" name="noteref_461" href="#note_461"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">461</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+The servant class may continue a long time yet to be a
+school of development for those of the lower classes, who, ripe
+in body, are not intellectually independent; just as the duty
+of bearing arms has been a school of improvement for all male
+youth. Life-long servants are as seldom to be desired as life-long
+soldiers.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+In most places, the long transition period from complete
+bondage to free competition was governed by a police system
+of wardship, which was very unfavorable to the servant class.
+Such especially was the provision that all young people of the
+lower classes, who could not expressly show that they were
+employed under the paternal roof or at some trade, should be
+compelled to seek some outside or inland work;<a id="noteref_462" name="noteref_462" href="#note_462"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">462</span></span></a> such also
+was the strict prohibition of <span class="tei tei-q">“usurious”</span> wage-claims, and
+the <span class="tei tei-q">“decoying”</span> of servants from their masters.<a id="noteref_463" name="noteref_463" href="#note_463"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">463</span></span></a> Besides, a
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page233">[pg 233]</span><a name="Pg233" id="Pg233" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+great many provisions relating to servants, and based on views
+belonging to an older economic condition, were intended to throw obstacles
+in the way of farm hands and country servants<a id="noteref_464" name="noteref_464" href="#note_464"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">464</span></span></a>
+becoming servants in towns; and, on the other hand, to
+facilitate the speedy abandonment of service in all cases in
+which the servant desired to marry.<a id="noteref_465" name="noteref_465" href="#note_465"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">465</span></span></a> All these preferences
+in favor of one class of contractors, and at the cost of another,
+are radically opposed to the modern political spirit. The laws
+relating to servants are wont, in our day, to have but one object,
+the prevention, by registration with the police, of fraud
+and breach of contract, and of all strife and litigation by the
+legally formulating of the conditions which are very frequently
+tacitly understood.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+The ideal of the relation of master and servant is attained
+when it is considered by both as a part of the life of a Christian
+family.<a id="noteref_466" name="noteref_466" href="#note_466"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">466</span></span></a> Hence, benevolence on the one side and devotedness
+on the other, fidelity on both sides, disinterested care for
+the present and future interests each of the other <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">tanquam
+sua</span></span>; and especially for each other's eternal future. Whether
+this state of mutual feeling is best furthered by the patriarchal
+system, by a police system, or by free competition, it is scarcely
+possible to say. It may, however, be affirmed that it depends
+upon a mutual and continued denial of self not easy to attain.
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page234">[pg 234]</span><a name="Pg234" id="Pg234" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+Where it really prevails, all the advantages of the piece-work
+system are obtained in a worthy and organic manner, and
+without its atomistic drawbacks.<a id="noteref_467" name="noteref_467" href="#note_467"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">467</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+</div>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page235">[pg 235]</span><a name="Pg235" id="Pg235" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<hr class="page" /><div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 4.00em; margin-top: 4.00em">
+<a name="toc179" id="toc179"></a>
+<a name="pdf180" id="pdf180"></a>
+<h2 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">Chapter V.</span></h2>
+<h2 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.88em; margin-top: 2.88em"><span style="font-size: 144%">Community Of Goods And Private Property.
+Capital—Property.</span></h2>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc181" id="toc181"></a>
+<a name="pdf182" id="pdf182"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section LXXVII.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">Capital.—Importance Of Private Property.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+As human labor can attain its full development, only on the
+supposition that personal freedom is allowed to develop to its
+full economic importance and dimensions, so capital can develop
+its full productive power only on the supposition of the
+existence of the freedom of personal property. Who would
+save anything, that is, give up present enjoyment, if he were
+not certain of future enjoyment?<a id="noteref_468" name="noteref_468" href="#note_468"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">468</span></span></a> The legitimacy of private
+property has, since the time of Locke,<a id="noteref_469" name="noteref_469" href="#note_469"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">469</span></span></a>
+been based, by the greater number of political economists, on the right inherent
+in every workman, either to consume or to save the product
+of his labor. But it should not be forgotten here that, at least
+in the higher stages of the economy of a nation, scarcely any
+work or saving is possible without the coöperation of society.
+And society must be conceived not only as the sum-total of
+the now living individuals that compose it, but in its entire
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page236">[pg 236]</span><a name="Pg236" id="Pg236" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+past, present and future, and also as being led and borne onward
+by eternal ideas and wants.<a id="noteref_470" name="noteref_470" href="#note_470"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">470</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page237">[pg 237]</span><a name="Pg237" id="Pg237" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc183" id="toc183"></a>
+<a name="pdf184" id="pdf184"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section LXXVIII.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">Socialism And Communism.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+In opposition to this, the idea of a community of goods has
+found favor, especially in times when the four following conditions
+met:<a id="noteref_471" name="noteref_471" href="#note_471"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">471</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+A. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">A well-defined, confrontation of rich and-poor.</span></span> So long
+as there is a middle class of considerable numbers between
+them, the two extremes are kept, by its moral force, from coming
+into collision. There is no greater preservative against
+envy of the superior classes and contempt for the inferior, than
+the gradual and unbroken fading of one class of society into
+another. <span lang="la" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="la"><span style="font-style: italic">Sperate miseri, cavete
+felices!</span></span> In such a state of
+social organization, we find the utmost and freshest productive
+activity at every round of the great ladder. Those at the
+bottom are straining every nerve to rise, and those higher up,
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page238">[pg 238]</span><a name="Pg238" id="Pg238" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+not to fall below. But where the rich and the poor are separated
+by an abyss which there is no hope of ever crossing,
+how pride on the one side and envy on the other rage! and
+especially in the <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">foci</span></span> of industry, the great cities, where the
+deepest misery is found side by side with the most brazen-faced
+luxury, and where the wretched themselves conscious of
+their numbers, mutually excite their own bad passions. It
+cannot, unfortunately, be denied, that when a nation has attained
+the acme of its development, we find a multitude of
+tendencies prevailing to make the rich richer and the poor, at
+least relatively poorer, and thus to diminish the numbers of
+the middle class from both sides; unless, indeed, remedial influences
+are brought to bear and to operate in a contrary
+direction.<a id="noteref_472" name="noteref_472" href="#note_472"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">472</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+B. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">A high degree of the division of labor</span></span>, by which, on the
+one hand, the mutual dependence of man on man grows ever
+greater, but by which, at the same time, the eye of the uncultured
+man becomes less and less able to perceive the connection
+existing between merit and reward, or service and remuneration.
+Let us betake ourselves in imagination to Crusoe's
+island. There, when one man, after the labor of many
+months, has hollowed out a tree into a canoe, with no tools
+but an animal's tooth, it does not occur to another who, in the
+meantime was, it may be, sleeping on his bear-skin, to contest
+the right of the former to the fruit of his labor. How different
+this from the condition of things where civilization is advanced,
+as it is in our day; where the banker, by a single
+stroke of his pen, seems to earn a thousand times more than
+a day-laborer in a week; where, in the case of those who loan
+money on interest, their debtors too frequently forget how
+laborious was the process of acquiring the loaned capital by
+the possessors, or their predecessors in ownership. More especially,
+we have, in times of <span class="tei tei-q">“over-population,”</span> whole masses
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page239">[pg 239]</span><a name="Pg239" id="Pg239" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+of honest men asking not alms, but only work, an opportunity
+to earn their bread, and yet on the verge of starvation.<a id="noteref_473" name="noteref_473" href="#note_473"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">473</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+C. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">A violent shaking or perplexing of public opinion in its
+relation to the feeling of Right, by revolutions</span></span>, especially when
+they follow rapidly one on the heels of another, and take opposite
+directions. On such occasions, both parties have generally
+prostituted themselves for the sake of the favor of the masses;
+and the latter have become conscious of the changes which the
+force of their arms may effect. In this way, it is impossible
+that until order is again entirely established, the reins of power
+should not be slackened in many ways at the demands of the
+multitude. In this way, too, they are stirred up to the making
+of pretentious claims which it is afterwards very difficult to
+silence. In every long and far-reaching revolution, whether
+undertaken in the interest of the crown, the nobility or the
+middle classes, we find, side by side with the seed it intended
+to sow, the tares of communism sprout up.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+D. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Pretensions of the lower classes in consequence of a democratic
+constitution.</span></span> Communism is the logically not inconsistent
+exaggeration of the principle of equality. Men who always
+hear themselves designated as <span class="tei tei-q">“the sovereign people,”</span>
+and their welfare as the supreme law of the state, are more
+apt than others to feel more keenly the distance which separates
+their own misery from the superabundance of others.
+And, indeed, to what an extent our physical wants are determined
+by our intellectual mould! The Greenlander feels comfortable
+in his mud hut, with his oil-jug. An Englishman in
+the same condition would despair.<a id="noteref_474" name="noteref_474" href="#note_474"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">474</span></span></a><a id="noteref_475" name="noteref_475" href="#note_475"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">475</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page240">[pg 240]</span><a name="Pg240" id="Pg240" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc185" id="toc185"></a>
+<a name="pdf186" id="pdf186"></a>
+<a name="Section_79" id="Section_79" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section LXXIX.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">Socialism And Communism. (Continued.)</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+What has just been said will serve to explain why, in the
+following four periods of the world's history, socialistic and
+communistic ideas have been most widespread: among the
+ancients at the time of the decline of Greece,<a id="noteref_476" name="noteref_476" href="#note_476"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">476</span></span></a> and in that
+of the degeneration of the Roman Republic;<a id="noteref_477" name="noteref_477" href="#note_477"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">477</span></span></a> among the moderns
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page241">[pg 241]</span><a name="Pg241" id="Pg241" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+in the age of the Reformation,<a id="noteref_478" name="noteref_478" href="#note_478"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">478</span></span></a> and again, in our own
+day.<a id="noteref_479" name="noteref_479" href="#note_479"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">479</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc187" id="toc187"></a>
+<a name="pdf188" id="pdf188"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section LXXX.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">Socialism And Communism. (Continued.)</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+We thus see, that the attempts made by socialism and communism
+are, by no means, phenomena unheard of in the past,
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page242">[pg 242]</span><a name="Pg242" id="Pg242" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+and peculiar to modern times, as the blind adherents and opponents
+of them would have us believe. They are rather diseases
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page243">[pg 243]</span><a name="Pg243" id="Pg243" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+of the body social, which have affected every highly
+civilized nation at certain periods of its existence. If the
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page244">[pg 244]</span><a name="Pg244" id="Pg244" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+body be too weak to react healthily and curatively (§
+<a href="#Section_84" class="tei tei-ref">84</a>), the
+evil is very apt to lead to the decline of all true freedom and
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page245">[pg 245]</span><a name="Pg245" id="Pg245" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+order. The communist, viewing all other things, especially
+the organization of the state, only as instruments to supply
+his material and absolute wants, considers the liberal either as
+a fool who is ever pursuing the phantoms of the brain, or as a
+knave who covers his own selfishness under the mask of the
+public welfare.<a id="noteref_480" name="noteref_480" href="#note_480"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">480</span></span></a> Hence the adherents of communism are
+satisfied with any form of government which seems to offer
+them most, and this a ruthless despotism can do, at least, for the
+moment. And, although they are ever ready for any revolution
+in the form of government, and easily to be won over to
+it, they are most readily captivated by a despotic revolution.
+On the other hand, when communism seriously threatens all
+that constitutes the wealth of a people, the owners of that
+wealth are compelled to fly to any refuge which holds out the
+promise to protect them from it, although by seeking that
+same refuge they may destroy their own political freedom.<a id="noteref_481" name="noteref_481" href="#note_481"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">481</span></span></a> The Achean league, which under the leadership of Aratos, the
+<span class="tei tei-q">“enemy of tyrants,”</span> had come into existence, promising so
+much hope, beheld itself later, and mainly through fear of the
+contagious effects of Spartan socialism under Cleomenes, compelled
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page246">[pg 246]</span><a name="Pg246" id="Pg246" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+to unite with the Macedonians, that is, to give themselves
+up entirely. (§ 204).
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc189" id="toc189"></a>
+<a name="pdf190" id="pdf190"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section LXXXI.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">Community Of Goods.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+We now, for the present, turn our gaze from the frightful
+revolution, destructive of all civilization, which would necessarily
+precede the establishment of a community of goods,<a id="noteref_482" name="noteref_482" href="#note_482"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">482</span></span></a>
+and inquire what would be the consequences. Among angels
+(<span class="tei tei-q">“gods and sons of gods”</span> of Plato) and mere animals, a community
+of goods might, perhaps, exist without producing injury.
+And so, too, it might exist among men bound one to
+the other by the bonds of the truest love. The life of every
+model family is accompanied by a species of community of
+goods.<a id="noteref_483" name="noteref_483" href="#note_483"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">483</span></span></a>
+But in more extensive social organizations, this love
+is never found except as an element of the most exalted religious
+enthusiasm, which, as a rule, is of very short duration;
+of which the Acts of the Apostles (II, 44 ff, 32 ff, V, I, II)
+affords us the best known and most beautiful example.<a id="noteref_484" name="noteref_484" href="#note_484"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">484</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page247">[pg 247]</span><a name="Pg247" id="Pg247" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Where this love does not exist, each participant in the community
+of goods will, as a rule, seek to do the least and enjoy
+the most possible.<a id="noteref_485" name="noteref_485" href="#note_485"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">485</span></span></a> In a society of one hundred thousand
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page248">[pg 248]</span><a name="Pg248" id="Pg248" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+members, each individual would be interested in the results of
+its aggregate frugality only indirectly, and only to the extent
+of a one-hundred thousandth part of the whole; that is, practically,
+not at all.<a id="noteref_486" name="noteref_486" href="#note_486"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">486</span></span></a> Individual selfishness would expend itself
+entirely on the division of what the whole community produced.
+It would, consequently, and almost always be detrimental
+to the whole, and to the other individuals of the
+society; whereas, at present, it does so only in exceptional
+cases. When Louis Blanc, as Mably had before him, recommended
+that the <span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">point d' honneur</span></span> should
+take the place of the <span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">interêt
+personnel</span></span>, as a spur to production, and a check on consumption,
+and cited the army as an illustration of its workings,
+he forgot, among other things, the thirty cases in which the
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page249">[pg 249]</span><a name="Pg249" id="Pg249" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+<span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">code militaire</span></span>
+pronounces sentence of death on the violators of
+its provisions. And, as a matter of fact, the Münster Anabaptists
+could not help punishing with death every transgression
+of their communistic precepts.<a id="noteref_487" name="noteref_487" href="#note_487"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">487</span></span></a> If, in a community in which
+the principles of communism were rigorously carried out, all
+the burthens and enjoyments of life were equal, and equally
+divided according to the ideas of the crowd, men like Thaer,
+Arkwright, and others of their class, who now provide bread
+for hundreds of thousands from their studies and laboratories,
+would then be able, at most, with a rake and shovel, to provide
+food for three or four. The division of labor, with its infinite
+amount of productive force, would, for the most part, cease.
+Nor would the consequence be that the humbler classes would
+be freed from work of a coarse, mechanical, unintellectual and
+severe nature; but that the higher classes would be dragged
+down to engage in it likewise. And what an increase there
+would be in the number of consumers at the same time!
+Every man would, with a light heart, follow the most imperious
+of human impulses if the whole community were to
+educate his children. But we have seen that a community of
+goods is desired most urgently in times of over-population.
+Hence, here it would make the evil greater yet, by increasing
+consumption and diminishing production.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Where there are now one thousand wealthy persons, and one
+hundred thousand proletarians, there would be, after one generation,
+no one wealthy and two hundred thousand proletarians.
+Misery and want would be universal.<a id="noteref_488" name="noteref_488" href="#note_488"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">488</span></span></a>
+For the purpose
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page250">[pg 250]</span><a name="Pg250" id="Pg250" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+of giving the crowd a very agreeable,<a id="noteref_489" name="noteref_489" href="#note_489"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">489</span></span></a>
+but rather short-lived
+period of pleasure, a period simply of transition, almost all
+that constitutes the wealth of a nation, all the higher goods of
+life, would have to be cast to the waves, and henceforth all
+men would have to content themselves with the gratifications
+afforded by potatoes, brandy and the pleasures of the most
+sensual of appetites. And then, the equal education of all,
+demanded by the communists, would have no result but this, that no one would
+acquire a higher scientific training.<a id="noteref_490" name="noteref_490" href="#note_490"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">490</span></span></a> But,
+after all, there lurks concealed in communism much more of
+envy than is generally supposed.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page251">[pg 251]</span><a name="Pg251" id="Pg251" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc191" id="toc191"></a>
+<a name="pdf192" id="pdf192"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section LXXXII.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">The Organization Of Labor.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Most theoretical adherents of the doctrine of a community
+of goods, feeling<a id="noteref_491" name="noteref_491" href="#note_491"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">491</span></span></a> more or less the weight of the above objections,
+have supplemented it with the idea of an organization
+of labor<a id="noteref_492" name="noteref_492" href="#note_492"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">492</span></span></a>
+or the centralized superintendence of all production
+and consumption, either by the government already existing,
+or by one to be created anew. Such a government would be,
+of course, a despotism such as the world has scarcely yet seen,
+a Cæsaro-Papacy, usurping both the place and power of Father
+of the universal Family.<a id="noteref_493" name="noteref_493" href="#note_493"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">493</span></span></a>
+But the evils mentioned above
+would be entailed none the less. Every incentive which now
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page252">[pg 252]</span><a name="Pg252" id="Pg252" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+moves man to industry or frugality would disappear, and nothing
+remain but universal philanthrophy; or, if you will, but patriotism,
+virtues which are not wanting even now. Even guardianship
+of the government newly created would be carried on
+in a very loose manner; for it would be exercised without any
+feeling of personal interest, even in the most favorable case
+supposable. It is well known and easily understood, that
+state industries are never engaged in, in the long run, with the
+same zeal, nor crowned with the same success, as competing
+private industries. It is well known, too, how intimate
+the connection is between the political freedom of a people and
+their economic production; that, for instance, England's greater
+wealth, as compared with that of Turkey, depends, most
+largely, on the freedom that obtains in the former country
+and the servitude that prevails in the latter.<a id="noteref_494" name="noteref_494" href="#note_494"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">494</span></span></a> And we may inquire
+just here, what the result would be, if the despotism of
+government should go ten times farther that it has ever gone
+in Turkey, when, moreover, the despot who led the state, was
+not an individual with his few officials, but the whole crowd,
+with its million eyes and million hands. It would, practically,
+be to give every producer an escort of a policeman and a revenue
+agent, as if he were a prisoner.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+And where would be the gain? A division of wealth
+which would seem unjust to many would exist now as well as
+before, because the idle and the unskillful would receive the
+same reward as the most industrious and skillful.<a id="noteref_495" name="noteref_495" href="#note_495"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">495</span></span></a> The opposition
+of one class of society to another, so much complained
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page253">[pg 253]</span><a name="Pg253" id="Pg253" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+of, would continue. The only difference would be, that
+whereas, it now comes from the weak, it would then come
+from the strong.<a id="noteref_496" name="noteref_496" href="#note_496"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">496</span></span></a>
+Compulsory association is certainly more
+prolific in strife and crime than is a state of society in which
+everybody manages his own affairs.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+A journey on foot, in company with others, is allowed, on
+all hands, to be a very good test of friendship. But, a community
+of goods would, in the strictest sense of the word,
+be a journey on foot through the whole of life with numberless
+<span class="tei tei-q">“friends.”</span> Here, every one would believe himself entitled
+to possess whatever pleased him. And, who would decide;
+since so many communists preach the dissolution and
+extinction of all government, and the reign of anarchy? Besides,
+there can be no doubt, that the difference of human
+talents and human wants, would soon, spite of every law, lead
+to a difference in property again. Hence, that first revolution
+would have to be repeated from time to time—a real Sisyphus
+labor! No sooner have the bees produced anything, than the
+drones come, and divide anew!
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc193" id="toc193"></a>
+<a name="pdf194" id="pdf194"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section LXXXIII.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">The Organization Of Labor. (Continued.)</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Experience, however, teaches us, that, in all the lower stages
+of civilization, a community of goods exists to a greater or
+lesser extent.<a id="noteref_497" name="noteref_497" href="#note_497"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">497</span></span></a> The institution of private property has been
+more fully evolved out of this condition of things, only in proportion
+as well-being and culture have been developed as cause
+and effect of such well-being. Thus, among most nations of
+hunters and fishermen, the idea of private property was unknown
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page254">[pg 254]</span><a name="Pg254" id="Pg254" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+when these nations were first discovered. This is,
+indeed, very natural. Their chief spring of production flows
+as if of itself, apparently inexhaustible; and the hunter can
+hardly think of such a thing as saving any of his booty.<a id="noteref_498" name="noteref_498" href="#note_498"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">498</span></span></a> And, among nomadic nations, the land is a great meadow held
+in common; and the industry of plunder is considered, as it is in all
+inferior stages of civilization, especially honorable.<a id="noteref_499" name="noteref_499" href="#note_499"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">499</span></span></a>
+The <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">conquistadores</span></span> of Peru found there something very
+like a community of goods, under the despotic guardianship
+of the state, viz.: a yearly division of all lands among the
+people, in proportion to their rank; the cultivation of these
+lands in common, under the superintendence of the state, and
+to the sound of music. But, at the stage of civilization that
+Peru was then in, land is about the only resource possessed.
+The results were the usual ones. A country like Peru, with
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page255">[pg 255]</span><a name="Pg255" id="Pg255" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+only one city, no beasts of burthen, no plows, no trades and
+no commerce, cannot possibly be rich.<a id="noteref_500" name="noteref_500" href="#note_500"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">500</span></span></a> That the constitution
+of Lycurgus established a sort of community of goods
+among the Spartans, is well known. I need only recall the
+public education, the meals in common, the authorization of
+stealing,<a id="noteref_501" name="noteref_501" href="#note_501"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">501</span></span></a> the prohibition of trade, of the precious metals and
+fine furniture, the equal division of property and the inalienable
+character of the land<a id="noteref_502" name="noteref_502" href="#note_502"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">502</span></span></a> etc. With such laws, Sparta could
+neither be, nor desire to become, wealthy. Of all Greek
+states of any historical importance, it preserved longest the
+economic peculiarities belonging to a low stage of civilization.
+Among most modern nations, the fundamental idea of
+their land laws, which had their origin in the middle ages, is,
+that each family is only the usufructuary, and that the community
+is the sovereign proprietor of the soil. This community
+of landed possession finds expression, among other things, in
+the vast extent of communal woods and pasturages, in the
+varied intersecting of parcels of land one by the other, which,
+indeed, change proprietors from time to time, and in the common
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page256">[pg 256]</span><a name="Pg256" id="Pg256" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+working of the land, carried as far as possible etc.<a id="noteref_503" name="noteref_503" href="#note_503"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">503</span></span></a> In
+all medieval times,<a id="noteref_504" name="noteref_504" href="#note_504"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">504</span></span></a> not only the individual is considered an
+owner of the land, but, over and above him, the family. At
+the same time, we are wont to find existing an amount of
+mortmain property in the hands of corporations, monastery
+lands, crown lands and domains of very great importance.<a id="noteref_505" name="noteref_505" href="#note_505"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">505</span></span></a>
+All these institutions have declined in number and shown a
+disposition to disappear, in proportion as national husbandry
+or economy has grown more productive.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc195" id="toc195"></a>
+<a name="pdf196" id="pdf196"></a>
+<a name="Section_84" id="Section_84" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section LXXXIV.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">The Organization Of Labor. (Continued.)</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+To this tendency we find, indeed, another, and a no less
+powerful one, opposed. Everywhere as civilization advances,
+the sphere of action of the state grows larger, and the ends
+it serves more numerous.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+In its origin, government was established to preserve only
+the external security of its subjects. By degrees, it comes to
+look after their internal legal security, by enforcing internal
+peace, prohibiting revenge for bloodshed etc. It next extends
+its care to the well-being, the culture, and even to the comfort
+of the people. But the claims of the state must grow in the
+same proportion as the service it renders. While Lowe, in
+1822, estimated the yearly net income of the British people at
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page257">[pg 257]</span><a name="Pg257" id="Pg257" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+£251,000,000; the government expenses,<a id="noteref_506" name="noteref_506" href="#note_506"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">506</span></span></a> in 1813 and 1814,
+averaged £106,000,000, and these sums were voluntarily devoted
+to public purposes by parliament. And so, between
+1685 and 1841, the population of England more than trebled
+its numbers, But, in the same period of time, the outlay of
+the state increased forty fold. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Macaulay</span></span>.) Simultaneously
+with this development of things, it becomes more and more
+usual by the exercise of the power of eminent domain and
+others like it, to sacrifice private rights, acquired by the very
+best of titles, to the preponderating common good. We
+may allude, further, to the duty, universally imposed in
+modern times, of performing military service, to the national
+systems of public instruction in so many countries; to the
+large number of societies, joint-stock companies, popular holidays;
+but particularly to the associations for insurance of
+every description. And so it may, indeed, be claimed that we
+have come nearer to a community of goods than could have
+been dreamed of a hundred years ago.<a id="noteref_507" name="noteref_507" href="#note_507"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">507</span></span></a> And yet, these are,
+for the most part, institutions in which we find reflected the
+peculiar strength and solidity of our age. Whoever wishes to
+compare the power of one people with that of another, must
+take into account not only the elements which constitute their
+intellectual and physical force, but especially their inclination
+to permit these elements to coöperate for public purposes.<a id="noteref_508" name="noteref_508" href="#note_508"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">508</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page258">[pg 258]</span><a name="Pg258" id="Pg258" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+We may now inquire: At what point does this increasing
+community cease to be a gain? This is as easily determined
+generally, as it is difficult to say what the limit to it is in particular
+instances. Progress in the direction of a community
+of interests of this nature is beneficial, only so long but certainly
+as long as it corresponds with the feeling entertained by
+the community, that they have interests in common. Hence it
+is, that such a noble kind of communism reigns in art and literature,
+one which causes the stronger to willingly labor for the
+weaker, and with the greatest success.<a id="noteref_509" name="noteref_509" href="#note_509"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">509</span></span></a> And so, too, the christian
+care of the poor, even were it carried to the height of the
+Gospel counsels (Luke, 3:11), would be no direct obstacle in
+the way of the development of a nation's public economy, provided
+it were given, and accepted, only as christian benevolence.
+Every approximation towards a community of goods
+should be effected by the love of the rich for the poor, not by
+the hatred of the poor for the rich. If all men were true
+Christians, a community of goods might exist without danger.
+But then, also, the institution of private property would have
+no dark side to it. Every employer would give his workmen
+the highest wages possible, and demand in return only
+the smallest possible sacrifice.<a id="noteref_510" name="noteref_510" href="#note_510"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">510</span></span></a><a id="noteref_511" name="noteref_511" href="#note_511"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">511</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page259">[pg 259]</span><a name="Pg259" id="Pg259" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc197" id="toc197"></a>
+<a name="pdf198" id="pdf198"></a>
+<a name="Section_85" id="Section_85" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section LXXXV.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">The Right Of Inheritance.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+The right of inheritance to resources has its origin in a combination
+of the idea of the family with the idea of property.
+And, indeed, this combination of ideas is a very natural one.
+The larger portion of mankind consider the pleasures of the
+family as the highest attainable, and endeavor, whenever their
+economic means make it at all possible, to secure them. At
+the same time, the selfishness of most men is not confined to
+their own persons, but extends also to their posterity. Hence
+it is that bed and board, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">eonnubium</span></span> and
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">commercium</span></span>, have,
+from time immemorial, been considered correlative ideas; and,
+to all the more logical socialists, a community of wives (or
+celibacy)<a id="noteref_512" name="noteref_512" href="#note_512"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">512</span></span></a>
+is as dear as a community of goods.<a id="noteref_513" name="noteref_513" href="#note_513"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">513</span></span></a> (§ 245.) And
+in practice, the greater number of nations of hunters, who,
+according to our conceptions, have no knowledge of a real
+family and no knowledge of property, have a custom of burying
+with the dead the things they used, to kill their cattle etc.,
+or to deprive minor children of their inheritance.<a id="noteref_514" name="noteref_514" href="#note_514"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">514</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page260">[pg 260]</span><a name="Pg260" id="Pg260" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc199" id="toc199"></a>
+<a name="pdf200" id="pdf200"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section LXXXVI.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">Economic Utility Of The Right Of Inheritance.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+The certainty, that the material welfare of their children depends,
+in great part, on their industry and frugality, is one of
+the most powerful incentives to good, in the case of most
+men. And this is the basis of the economic utility of the family
+right of inheritance.<a id="noteref_515" name="noteref_515" href="#note_515"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">515</span></span></a> There is scarcely any other institution
+which opposes over-population with such efficiency, for
+the reason, that the obstacle placed in its way here is placed
+very directly, at the point where it can make itself felt most,
+viz.: in the life of the family itself. The weaker the family feeling,
+the less does the abolition of the right of inheritance interfere
+with the economic interests of a nation. Hence, for instance,
+it is, that taxes imposed upon legacies, bequests, testamentary
+gifts etc., are less objectionable in proportion as they
+affect only those in the more remote degrees of relationship
+in which inheritance is something merely accidental. While,
+when a nation is yet in the intermediate stages of civilization,
+the <em class="tei tei-emph"><span style="font-style: italic">family</span></em> right of inheritance seems to be very strong,
+especially as regards landed property, a consequence of the
+fact, that a superior kind of title to such property is recognized
+to exist in the family; at a period, when individualism
+becomes more developed, the liberty of devise by will is wont
+to prevail more and more.<a id="noteref_516" name="noteref_516" href="#note_516"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">516</span></span></a>
+Then the right of inheritance becomes,
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page261">[pg 261]</span><a name="Pg261" id="Pg261" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+so to speak, a more elevated species of personal property,
+a prolongation of the same beyond the grave. Should
+testamentary freedom be too much hampered, selfishness would
+manifest itself in a way much more detrimental to economic
+interests, viz.: in the consumption of wealth, during the lifetime
+of its owner. Every man would be but a life annuitant
+of his own property.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+But, at the same time, in periods of moral decline, complete
+freedom may degenerate so as to produce evils equally great.
+The wealthy Bœotians, in the later days of Hellenic history,
+were wont to form themselves into dissolute drinking companies;
+and not only the childless, but even fathers of families
+made over their property to these companies, limiting their
+offspring to a portion which it was made their duty to let them
+have. It was so in Rome, also, in Cicero's time, when every
+acquaintance of standing took it very ill if not remembered in
+the will of the testator, and where Octavian, for instance, in
+the last twenty years of his reign, received about 70,000,000
+thalers through legacies left him by his <span class="tei tei-q">“friends.”</span><a id="noteref_517" name="noteref_517" href="#note_517"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">517</span></span></a> Here,
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page262">[pg 262]</span><a name="Pg262" id="Pg262" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+the repeal of the law making it obligatory on testators to leave
+a certain proportion of their wealth to their children would
+remove the last safe-guard of their material welfare.<a id="noteref_518" name="noteref_518" href="#note_518"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">518</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc201" id="toc201"></a>
+<a name="pdf202" id="pdf202"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section LXXXVII.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">Landed Property.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+As land, in its uncultivated state, has neither been produced
+by man, nor can be entirely consumed by him, the above demonstration
+of the necessity of private property cannot without
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page263">[pg 263]</span><a name="Pg263" id="Pg263" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+any more ado, be extended to land.<a id="noteref_519" name="noteref_519" href="#note_519"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">519</span></span></a> Hence, individual
+property in land is everywhere much more recent than individual
+property in capital.<a id="noteref_520" name="noteref_520" href="#note_520"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">520</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+But a certain expenditure of capital and labor is necessary
+that land may be used productively, and, in most instances,
+this employment of capital and labor is of long duration, irrevocable
+in the very nature of things, and one the fruits of
+which can be reaped only after some time has elapsed. Now,
+this cooperation of capital and labor is such, that no one would
+undertake to employ them in the cultivation of the land, had
+he not the strongest assurance of possessing it. Hence, agriculture
+in its most rudimentary stage supposes ownership of
+the land, at least from the time that it is <span class="tei tei-q">“tickled with the
+hoe,”</span> until it <span class="tei tei-q">“smiles with the harvest;”</span> or, to express it more
+accurately, all the time intervening between the work of the
+plow and the labor of the sickle. The more, afterwards, population
+and civilization increase, the more products must be
+wrung from the soil. But this can be accomplished only by
+means of its more <em class="tei tei-emph"><span style="font-style: italic">intensive</span></em> cultivation (higher farming), by
+lavishing a greater amount of capital and labor on it, and, as
+a rule, by extending the circle of agricultural operations by
+means of combinations more and more artificial. Hence, the
+progress of civilization demands an ever increasing fixity, and
+a more pronounced shaping of landed property (the <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">specification</span></span>
+of jurists), in the interests of all who share in this progress,
+and even of those who own no landed property themselves.
+Were there no property in land, every one would find it more
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page264">[pg 264]</span><a name="Pg264" id="Pg264" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+difficult and laborious to gratify his want of agricultural
+products;<a id="noteref_521" name="noteref_521" href="#note_521"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">521</span></span></a>
+and the products themselves would be of an inferior
+kind.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Thus, for instance, in Camargo, the lackmus was formerly
+prepared from plants to be had <span class="tei tei-q">“free”</span> in the woods. It was
+then, however, much dearer than it is now that the plants are
+artificially raised on landed property.<a id="noteref_522" name="noteref_522" href="#note_522"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">522</span></span></a>
+It is otherwise with
+the fisheries. The appropriation of rivers or seas would not
+tend to increase the abundance of their products, and hence
+this appropriation is, on the whole, rare.<a id="noteref_523" name="noteref_523" href="#note_523"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">523</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc203" id="toc203"></a>
+<a name="pdf204" id="pdf204"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section LXXXVIII.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">Landed Property. (Continued.)</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Whenever this admixture of capital and labor with land has
+taken place to no great extent, private property in land is not
+found developed in any degree. Thus, there are even now
+many half-civilized countries in which the land is forfeited because
+not tilled for many years, and where it may be occupied
+by the first person who will cultivate it.<a id="noteref_524" name="noteref_524" href="#note_524"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">524</span></span></a>
+In Europe, common
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page265">[pg 265]</span><a name="Pg265" id="Pg265" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+possession of forests and pasture lands asserted itself much
+longer than that of arable land, because, in the case of the
+former, labor and capital play a much less important part in
+the management of them. And yet, even in the case of arable
+land etc., and, in the highest stages of civilization, the property-quality
+is yet less developed than the property-quality of
+capital. How seldom do we find <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">fidei commissa</span></span> of capital,
+or capital juridically tied up. We find that the law of all
+ancient nations drew a marked distinction between moveable
+and immoveable property, and that the power of disposing of
+the former by sale, pledge, in dowry, partition etc., was a much
+freer one. And even now, the police power which may be
+exercised over moveable property is much more restricted
+than that over houses and land.<a id="noteref_525" name="noteref_525" href="#note_525"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">525</span></span></a>
+The justice of the exclusive
+right of possession to what one has earned and saved is obvious
+to every one. On the other hand, the appropriation of
+<span class="tei tei-q">“original and indestructible natural forces”</span> has its basis not
+so much in justice as in the general good; and the state has
+always considered itself entitled to attach to the <span class="tei tei-q">“monopoly
+of land,”</span> which it accorded to the first possessor, all kinds of
+limitations and conditions in the interest of the common good,
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page266">[pg 266]</span><a name="Pg266" id="Pg266" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+and sometimes to consider private property in land in the light
+of a semi-public function.<a id="noteref_526" name="noteref_526" href="#note_526"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">526</span></span></a> I may instance the feudal principles
+of the latter portion of the middle ages, which are so far
+removed from our ideas of private property in land; and yet,
+of which many echoes are heard, even in our day, and are not
+without their influence in practice. Thus, further, for instance,
+even in England, the greater number of the poor-rates, of
+taxes for the support of the established church, the maintenance
+of public highways etc., are heaped upon the rent of
+land. Many socialists have proposed to make the state the
+sole proprietor of the soil,<a id="noteref_527" name="noteref_527" href="#note_527"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">527</span></span></a>
+sometimes adding the condition,
+that the previous private owners should be compensated in
+capital, when it would be at least supposable that private capital
+might be enticed to cultivate it, if long and sure leases of
+it were made. This would be a <span class="tei tei-q">“good”</span> demesne-husbandry,
+extending over the entire country. We need only glance at
+those kingdoms in which something analogous is to be found,
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page267">[pg 267]</span><a name="Pg267" id="Pg267" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+especially the despotisms of the east,<a id="noteref_528" name="noteref_528" href="#note_528"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">528</span></span></a>
+to divine that such a
+system does not suffice to insure the real productiveness of a
+nation's economy.<a id="noteref_529" name="noteref_529" href="#note_529"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">529</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+</div>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page268">[pg 268]</span><a name="Pg268" id="Pg268" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<hr class="page" /><div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 4.00em; margin-top: 4.00em">
+<a name="toc205" id="toc205"></a>
+<a name="pdf206" id="pdf206"></a>
+<h2 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">Chapter VI.</span></h2>
+<h2 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.88em; margin-top: 2.88em"><span style="font-size: 144%">Credit.</span></h2>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc207" id="toc207"></a>
+<a name="pdf208" id="pdf208"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section LXXXIX.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">Credit In General.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Credit<a id="noteref_530" name="noteref_530" href="#note_530"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">530</span></span></a> is the power of disposition over the goods of
+another,<a id="noteref_531" name="noteref_531" href="#note_531"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">531</span></span></a>
+voluntarily granted in consideration of the mere promise
+of the counter-value.<a id="noteref_532" name="noteref_532" href="#note_532"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">532</span></span></a> As Franklin says: A good pay
+is master of another man's purse. Hence, it is evident that
+whoever would obtain credit must be believed to possess the
+ability as well as the intention to fulfill his promise. Where
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page269">[pg 269]</span><a name="Pg269" id="Pg269" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+this belief is based simply on the opinion entertained of the
+person of the debtor, we speak of personal credit,<a id="noteref_533" name="noteref_533" href="#note_533"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">533</span></span></a> in contradistinction
+especially to the credit based on bailment, pledge,
+hypothecation etc. The longer the time between the making
+of the promise and the period fixed for its fulfillment, the less
+certain is the latter, where the security is simply the person
+of the debtor. It is chiefly in very uncivilized nations and
+also in nations in their decrepitude, and during periods of anarchy,
+and in despotisms, that personal security stands higher
+than any other. The same is true, though for other reasons,
+in very energetic civilized nations, where the people put a high
+estimate on the element of labor in their economy, among
+whose members legal security is, indeed, found, but where the
+peculiar sensitiveness of speculation would be too much hampered
+by the more sluggish nature of other credits; as, for
+instance, in North America, and even in ancient Rome. Civilized
+nations that have reached the stationary economic state,
+on this account much prefer the greater security and the absence
+of care which accompany non-personal credit.<a id="noteref_534" name="noteref_534" href="#note_534"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">534</span></span></a>
+In estimating
+the ability of the debtor to meet his promise, we must
+take into account, especially, the disposable character of his
+resources; otherwise it would be impossible to understand
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page270">[pg 270]</span><a name="Pg270" id="Pg270" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+why the merchant may so frequently obtain a loan on his
+stock equal to its whole value, while the owner of land can
+place it as security only to the extent of half its value.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Credit, on the whole, grows in importance with an advance
+in civilization, and this is true especially of credit intended for
+productive purposes. This is a consequence of the greater
+division of labor which causes unfinished products to be put on
+the market more and more frequently,—products which come
+to have a value only after some time, but which, when that time
+has elapsed, have present value. And, indeed, as the world
+advances and civilization grows, it becomes much easier to
+forecast the future with certainty. The future, also, then becomes
+more a source of solicitude, and fixed capital, as a consequence,
+plays a part which grows daily more important.
+The limit to the development of credit is this: it is safe only
+when the debtor invests his borrowed goods in the production
+of, to say the least, their equivalent. This is why the personality
+of the state, clothed with immortality and with a formally
+boundless power of taxation, is so often seduced into engaging
+in transactions of credit which are never self-discharged.<a id="noteref_535" name="noteref_535" href="#note_535"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">535</span></span></a>
+The social diseases of panics and of extravagant enterprises
+stand in the same relation to credit that unbelief and superstition
+do to true religion.<a id="noteref_536" name="noteref_536" href="#note_536"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">536</span></span></a>
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Schäffle</span></span>.)
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc209" id="toc209"></a>
+<a name="pdf210" id="pdf210"></a>
+<a name="Section_90" id="Section_90" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section XC.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">Credit—Effects Of Credit.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+As regards the effects of credit, we may remark, that it is as
+powerless directly to produce new capital as is the division
+of labor to produce new workmen. To every credit of the
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page271">[pg 271]</span><a name="Pg271" id="Pg271" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+creditor corresponds a debit of the debtor. As Turgot said:
+<span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">Tout credit est un
+emprunt</span></span>.<a id="noteref_537" name="noteref_537" href="#note_537"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">537</span></span></a><a id="noteref_538" name="noteref_538" href="#note_538"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">538</span></span></a><a id="noteref_539" name="noteref_539" href="#note_539"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">539</span></span></a> But, on the other hand, credit
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page272">[pg 272]</span><a name="Pg272" id="Pg272" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+facilitates the transmission of the elements of production,
+especially of capital, from one hand to another.<a id="noteref_540" name="noteref_540" href="#note_540"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">540</span></span></a> When,
+therefore, the debtor employs the capital that he has borrowed,
+more productively than the creditor would have done, the whole
+country is a gainer; as it is a loser, on the contrary, when a
+person engaged in industry advances to the idler, the frugal
+man to the spendthrift, the solid man to the wild speculator.
+In declining nations, where every new development hastens
+decay, the latter alternative may be the prevailing one; and,
+especially here, may the usurious giving of credit by the shrewd
+to the simple lead to ruinous debtor-slavery. Among a vigorous
+and energetic people, the former is apt to govern, as it
+is only by the productive employment of the loans made that
+they are permanently enabled to pay interest. Here credit is
+an invaluable means, not only of putting idle capital in motion,
+and of making active capital still more active, but especially of
+concentrating capital, by which it may gain as much in productive
+power as labor does by the coöperation of labor. This is
+effected, very frequently, by means of joint-stock companies,
+the principle of which recommends them especially in enterprises
+where stationary capital is required rather than circulating
+capital, and where capital generally plays a greater
+part than labor; and where this labor can be subjected to provisions
+which may be accurately laid down beforehand; as,
+for instance, in the case of docks, insurance companies, banks,<a id="noteref_541" name="noteref_541" href="#note_541"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">541</span></span></a>
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page273">[pg 273]</span><a name="Pg273" id="Pg273" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+etc. Banks, then, become real reservoirs of capital, provided
+they are properly and judiciously established and managed;
+real reservoirs which receive in one place the capital which is
+superfluous elsewhere, in order to supply some other place
+with that which is necessary to it. The more confidence increases,
+the more are even the smallest driblets of capital
+awakened from their slumbers, and made active and productive.
+It is only by means of credit that the help of foreign
+capital can be obtained for home production. Indeed, credit,
+considered as an exchange of probable future goods against
+actually existing goods, is one of the principal functions of
+the temporal solidarity of the economy of nations. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Schäffle</span></span>.)
+Without credit, there would be very little place for speculation
+proper.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+We may see how the possibility of giving and receiving credit
+promotes wealth, by contemplating the poorer classes, whose
+poverty, both as cause and effect, is very closely related to the
+absence of credit. And here we have a suggestion of the reverse
+to the bright side of the picture of credit, analogous to
+that mentioned in § <a href="#Section_62" class="tei tei-ref">62</a> of the coöperation of labor,
+viz.: that it tends to intensify inequality among men. The man who
+is distinguished by the amount of his wealth, or by his position
+is naturally known to a much wider circle than others
+are. From which it follows, that he may, by the way of credit,
+increase his power, already so much greater in the economic
+world, by a much larger multiplier.<a id="noteref_542" name="noteref_542" href="#note_542"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">542</span></span></a> Hence, it need not
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page274">[pg 274]</span><a name="Pg274" id="Pg274" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+surprise us, that the great obtain credit from those in a lower
+position, at least as frequently as they give them credit in turn.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+On the side of the creditor, the possibility of making loans
+is a powerful incentive to frugality. Were there no credit,
+those who were not in a condition to employ their capital productively
+would make savings only within very narrow
+limits.<a id="noteref_543" name="noteref_543" href="#note_543"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">543</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc211" id="toc211"></a>
+<a name="pdf212" id="pdf212"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section XCI.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">Debtor Laws.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Private credit is always conditioned, and in a great many
+ways, by the situation of the whole nation's business; in other
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page275">[pg 275]</span><a name="Pg275" id="Pg275" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+words, by their politico-economical situation. It is especially
+in the higher stages of civilization, that one bankrupt may
+easily drag numberless others down with him; and where the
+laws are bad or powerless, not even the wealthiest man can
+predicate his own solvency for any length of time in advance.
+One of the most important conditions of credit is the certainty
+that, if the debtor's good will to meet his obligations should
+fail, it shall be supplied by the compulsory process of the
+courts. Hence, the importance of a judicial procedure, at
+once impartial, enlightened, prompt and cheap.<a id="noteref_544" name="noteref_544" href="#note_544"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">544</span></span></a> The more
+vigorous the laws relating to debt are in preventing dishonesty
+on the part of the debtor, the more advantageous are they to
+honorable and honest debtors. Adam Smith has rightly said,
+that in countries in which creditors are not completely protected
+by the courts, the honorable man who borrows money
+is in the same condition as the notoriously dishonest man or the
+spendthrift, in better governed countries. He finds it more difficult
+to borrow and is obliged to pay a higher rate of interest.<a id="noteref_545" name="noteref_545" href="#note_545"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">545</span></span></a>
+Rigorous debtor laws, on the other hand, diminish in
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page276">[pg 276]</span><a name="Pg276" id="Pg276" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+the whole nation the amount of <span class="tei tei-q">“bad debts,”</span> that is, a not insignificant
+portion of the cost of production. They, at the
+same time, promote, as far as it is in the power of laws to do
+it, national honor and the mutual confidence of man in man.
+The excellence of their debtor laws, in their most flourishing
+period, was one of the principal elements which contributed to
+make Athens and Rome of such importance in the history of
+the world.<a id="noteref_546" name="noteref_546" href="#note_546"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">546</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc213" id="toc213"></a>
+<a name="pdf214" id="pdf214"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section XCII.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">History Of Credit Laws.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+In the history of laws relating to credit, we may distinguish,
+in a great many countries, three stages of development.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+A. The laws, in the first stage, are very severe. In the
+Germanic middle age the insolvent was disgraced. He became
+the slave of his creditor (<span lang="de" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="de"><span style="font-style: italic">zu Hand und
+Halfter</span></span>), who might imprison him, fetter him (<span lang="de" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="de"><span style="font-style: italic">stöcken und blöcken</span></span>), and
+probably kill him. A Norwegian law allowed the creditor,
+when his debtor would not work and his friends would not
+ransom him, to take him before the court, and <span class="tei tei-q">“to lop off from his body what
+part he will, above or below.”</span><a id="noteref_547" name="noteref_547" href="#note_547"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">547</span></span></a> To judge of
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page277">[pg 277]</span><a name="Pg277" id="Pg277" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+these provisions correctly, it is necessary to bear in mind the
+many ways in which family resources were at this time bound
+and tied up, and not forget <span class="tei tei-q">“the power of defiance in these
+iron natures.”</span><a id="noteref_548" name="noteref_548" href="#note_548"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">548</span></span></a> (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Niebuhr</span></span>.)
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+B. The canon law introduced milder principles. Gregory
+the Great had already prohibited the holding on to the body
+of the debtor.<a id="noteref_549" name="noteref_549" href="#note_549"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">549</span></span></a> On this account, during the latter portion of
+the middle ages, it was customary to stipulate by contract that
+the provisions of the ancient law should govern in this matter,
+to submit to imprisonment etc.<a id="noteref_550" name="noteref_550" href="#note_550"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">550</span></span></a> The influence of the Roman
+law made it gradually more usual, in the case of insolvent
+debtors, to demand no more from them than the assignment
+of their property for the benefit of their creditors. This, however,
+led to numerous frauds; and these became more frequent
+in proportion as the laws governing the property of parties
+while the marriage relation existed between them, and as executions
+against landed property etc. were defective.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+C. Hence, in more highly civilized times, there has been a
+return to the severity of earlier ages. Persons engaged in
+commerce, especially those whose capital is so volatile, and to
+whom time is a thing so precious, can scarcely dispense willingly
+with personal imprisonment for debt. Hence, legislation
+on bills of exchange, sanctioned especially by imprisonment
+of the person, plays a very important part in the commercial
+cities of the seventeenth century, as it did, naturally, much
+earlier in Italy and the Netherlands.<a id="noteref_551" name="noteref_551" href="#note_551"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">551</span></span></a> Modern laws in
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page278">[pg 278]</span><a name="Pg278" id="Pg278" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+many cases punish the bankrupt whenever an examination of
+his books, kept after approved methods, does not demonstrate
+his innocence.<a id="noteref_552" name="noteref_552" href="#note_552"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">552</span></span></a> The great facility of fraudulent bankruptcy,
+where commerce has attained a high degree of development
+and complication; the absence of honor shown in engaging in
+speculation for one's own gain with a stranger's capital, and
+without the real owner's knowledge; the comparatively small
+number of blameless and irreproachable bankruptcies,<a id="noteref_553" name="noteref_553" href="#note_553"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">553</span></span></a> certainly
+justify these provisions.<a id="noteref_554" name="noteref_554" href="#note_554"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">554</span></span></a><a id="noteref_555" name="noteref_555" href="#note_555"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">555</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page279">[pg 279]</span><a name="Pg279" id="Pg279" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc215" id="toc215"></a>
+<a name="pdf216" id="pdf216"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section XCIII.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">Means Of Promoting Credit.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+One of the most efficient means of promoting credit consists
+in legislation intended to dry up the source of bad debts,
+by placing obstacles in the way of reckless or usurious credits
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page280">[pg 280]</span><a name="Pg280" id="Pg280" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+for objects of luxury or pleasure, to bad customers.<a id="noteref_556" name="noteref_556" href="#note_556"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">556</span></span></a> But the
+application of these laws should be clear and simple as to
+their matter, and require no inquiries, relating to the person,
+impracticable for a business man to make.<a id="noteref_557" name="noteref_557" href="#note_557"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">557</span></span></a> Thus, for instance,
+a short period of limitation established by statute in
+the matter of advances made for ordinary money-claims is
+a beneficial restraint, as well on the creditor as on the debtor,
+since it prevents the accumulation of a multitude of small
+debts which almost imperceptibly but at the same time irresistibly
+overpower the debtor under their weight.<a id="noteref_558" name="noteref_558" href="#note_558"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">558</span></span></a> Another
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page281">[pg 281]</span><a name="Pg281" id="Pg281" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+efficient means is associations of business men to circulate lists
+of bad debtors, and to prosecute their own demands in common.<a id="noteref_559" name="noteref_559" href="#note_559"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">559</span></span></a>
+On the other hand, experience has shown that imprisonment
+for debt, as a means of enforcing a creditor's claim,
+where the amount of the debt is very small and such as only
+very poor debtors are apt to incur, is of little service. It is
+even injurious, because a great many sellers would rely on
+that means of compelling payment in the future instead of demanding
+it immediately, as they should do in the interest both
+of themselves and of their customers. As a rule, it is only
+rich creditors who can resort to it with success, a class who
+compel payment through this means by wringing it from the
+debtor's relations more frequently than from the debtor himself.
+The working out of debts in correctional institutions
+seems, for the same reasons, to fail of its object, since even
+well governed institutions scarcely cover their current expenses from the
+income derived from this source.<a id="noteref_560" name="noteref_560" href="#note_560"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">560</span></span></a> The
+inequitable character of imprisonment for debt lies in this, that
+it punishes the unfortunate debtor as severely as it does the
+malicious one. It must be clearly distinguished from the imprisonment
+recognized by the courts as a punishment for reckless
+or fraudulent bankruptcy.<a id="noteref_561" name="noteref_561" href="#note_561"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">561</span></span></a> We must pass a judgment
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page282">[pg 282]</span><a name="Pg282" id="Pg282" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+similar to that on the imprisonment of the person of the debtor
+on the seizure of his wages not yet due, so far, at least, as an
+amount absolutely necessary to save himself and family from
+want, is not excepted. The prohibition of such seizure, beyond
+this, would amount to a declaration that all workmen
+without capital, even the best, should be considered unworthy
+of credit.<a id="noteref_562" name="noteref_562" href="#note_562"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">562</span></span></a> We may also include in this category
+such laws as except from execution the necessary tools of a
+tradesman, since to deprive him of them would be to prevent
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page283">[pg 283]</span><a name="Pg283" id="Pg283" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+his employing even his labor to satisfy<a id="noteref_563" name="noteref_563" href="#note_563"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">563</span></span></a> his creditors'
+claims.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc217" id="toc217"></a>
+<a name="pdf218" id="pdf218"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section XCIV.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">Letters Of Respite (Specialmoratorien).</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Special letters of respite</span></span> (<span lang="de" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="de"><span style="font-style: italic">Specialmoratorien</span></span>) are a suspension
+of the laws relating to debt, made in favor of an individual.
+(<span lang="de" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="de"><span style="font-style: italic">Quinquennalia.</span></span>)
+They were intended to protect not only the debtor, but also the aggregate of creditors
+against the short-sighted severity of one of their number. They were
+wont to be given especially when the debtor showed that immediate
+execution would not only have the effect of ruining
+himself, but of sending his creditors away empty handed;
+while, if time were given him, he would be able to satisfy
+every one.<a id="noteref_564" name="noteref_564" href="#note_564"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">564</span></span></a>
+But the granting of such letters has, in recent
+times, been prohibited<a id="noteref_565" name="noteref_565" href="#note_565"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">565</span></span></a> in nearly all countries as arbitrary, and
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page284">[pg 284]</span><a name="Pg284" id="Pg284" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+as a species of cabinet-justice. Nor should the granting of
+them be compared with the pardoning power. In the case of
+a pardon, the offended State forgives. In this case it sacrifices
+the unquestionable right of one party to the very doubtful advantage
+of another. Where such letters are granted in great numbers, credit cannot
+fail to suffer. <span class="tei tei-q">“<span lang="de" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="de"><span style="font-style: italic">Quinquinnellen gehören
+in die Hollen!</span></span>”</span>
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Yet in troublous times, when a great many debtors are insolvent
+at the same time, the question of modifying the laws
+relating to debt, temporarily, has been mooted. It has been
+urged on such occasions, that it would be a matter of enormous
+difficulty to treat, <span lang="la" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="la"><span style="font-style: italic">lege artis</span></span>,
+thousands as bankrupts at once; that thousands
+of businesses would have to be closed, their
+stocks cast upon the market at mock prices, and their employees
+thrown out of employment. But, if certain privileges
+were to be accorded to all who should declare themselves unable
+to meet their obligations before a certain day, it would
+be known, at least, that the others were in a solid condition;
+and this would have the effect to strengthen the credit which
+had been before universally shaken. We must, however,
+leaving all cases of abuse out of the question, remember, that
+a really unrightful favor, granted to the debtor, may possibly
+entail the ruin of his creditor. Besides, the uncertainty of
+the law would have a much worse effect on credit than uncertainty
+as to the personal status of individuals.<a id="noteref_566" name="noteref_566" href="#note_566"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">566</span></span></a> Where, as is
+the case generally in inferior stages of civilization, debtors and
+creditors form two distinct classes, the question of right is not,
+indeed, changed, but there is a solid basis afforded for the
+political admeasurement of opposing interests. In another
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page285">[pg 285]</span><a name="Pg285" id="Pg285" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+work I have shown how, after great wars, land owners, who
+became involved in debt, have been protected against capitalists.
+(See <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Roscher</span></span>, Nationalökonomik des Ackerbaues,
+§ 137, ff.)<a id="noteref_567" name="noteref_567" href="#note_567"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">567</span></span></a><a id="noteref_568" name="noteref_568" href="#note_568"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">568</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+</div>
+
+</div>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page287">[pg 287]</span><a name="Pg287" id="Pg287" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<hr class="page" /><div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 5.00em; margin-top: 5.00em">
+<a name="toc219" id="toc219"></a>
+<a name="pdf220" id="pdf220"></a>
+<h1 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.88em; margin-top: 2.88em"><span style="font-size: 144%">Book II.</span></h1>
+<h1 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 3.46em; margin-top: 3.46em"><span style="font-size: 173%">The Circulation Of Goods.</span></h1>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page289">[pg 289]</span><a name="Pg289" id="Pg289" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 4.00em; margin-top: 4.00em">
+<a name="toc221" id="toc221"></a>
+<a name="pdf222" id="pdf222"></a>
+<h2 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">Chapter I.</span></h2>
+<h2 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.88em; margin-top: 2.88em"><span style="font-size: 144%">Circulation In General.</span></h2>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc223" id="toc223"></a>
+<a name="pdf224" id="pdf224"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section XCV.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">Meaning Of The Circulation Of Goods.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+The more highly developed the division of labor is, the
+more frequent and necessary do exchanges become. While
+the hermit engaged in production thinks only of his own wants,
+and the mere housekeeper of the wants of his household, the
+man who is part of a nation and who plays a part in its general
+economy, must bear in mind the <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-variant: small-caps">MARKET</span></span> in which goods
+of one kind are exchanged against goods of other kinds. The
+greater, more various and more changeable the conditions of
+this market are, the greater are the intellectual faculties demanded
+to engage in it successfully, and to the advantage of
+everybody concerned in it.<a id="noteref_569" name="noteref_569" href="#note_569"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">569</span></span></a> Goods intended to be exchanged
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page290">[pg 290]</span><a name="Pg290" id="Pg290" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+are called commodities. By the circulation of commodities is
+meant their going over from one owner to another.<a id="noteref_570" name="noteref_570" href="#note_570"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">570</span></span></a> Among
+the principal causes of circulation, we may mention the difference
+in the nature and civilization of countries and peoples,
+the distinction between city and country, the division of people
+into classes etc.<a id="noteref_571" name="noteref_571" href="#note_571"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">571</span></span></a> The rapidity of circulation depends, on the
+one hand, on the quantity of commodities, and on the other, on
+the degree to which the division of labor has been carried. In
+both respects it is, therefore, an important indication of the
+wealth of the nation, and of the world.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Different commodities have very different degrees of capacity for circulation
+(<span lang="de" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="de"><span style="font-style: italic">Circulationsfähigkeit</span></span>),
+that is, of certainty of finding purchasers, and of facility of seeking purchasers.
+The smaller, compared with its value, the volume and weight
+of a commodity are; the longer and more conveniently it can
+be stored away; the more invariable and well-known are its
+value in use and value in exchange: the more readily does it
+go from one place to another, the more easily is it transmitted
+from one period of time to another and from the possession of
+one person into the possession of another. Thus, for instance,
+the precious metals circulate more rapidly than industrial products;
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page291">[pg 291]</span><a name="Pg291" id="Pg291" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+these in turn more than raw material,<a id="noteref_572" name="noteref_572" href="#note_572"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">572</span></span></a> and
+immovable property circulates least rapidly of all. An improvement in the
+means of transportation naturally increases the capacity of circulation
+of the entire wealth of a people, and especially of those
+commodities which were not before transferable as well as
+of those of which the cost of transportation constituted a peculiarly
+large component part of the price.<a id="noteref_573" name="noteref_573" href="#note_573"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">573</span></span></a> The greater the
+capacity for circulation of any kind of goods, the greater is
+the power of control of its owner in the world of trade. If
+we compare two men, each of whom possesses a million of dollars,
+but one of whom has that million in money and the other
+in land, we shall find that the former is able, for present purposes,
+such as loaning to the state in case of need, aiding a
+conspiracy etc., to command resources much more readily and
+effectively than the latter. Under the ordinary circumstances
+of a nation's economy, we find that the owner of money is
+very seldom in want of bread, fuel or clothing, whereas very
+many owners of other property may be in want of money.<a id="noteref_574" name="noteref_574" href="#note_574"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">574</span></span></a>
+True, resources which may, so to speak, take the offensive
+most energetically, offer less resistance to unforeseen misfortune.
+The possessor of such resources is in a condition to lose
+his all on the turn of a single die. As civilization advances,
+the circulating capacity of a nation's wealth increases.<a id="noteref_575" name="noteref_575" href="#note_575"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">575</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page292">[pg 292]</span><a name="Pg292" id="Pg292" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc225" id="toc225"></a>
+<a name="pdf226" id="pdf226"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section XCVI.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">Rapidity Of Circulation.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+With an advance in a people's public economy, we find an
+increased rapidity of circulation connected, both as cause and
+effect. Every improvement, every thing which shortens the
+process of production, must facilitate and accelerate the circulation
+of commodities. And so, the perfecting of the means
+of transport of commodities, of the media of exchange and of
+credit, an increase in the number of middlemen who make it
+their business to purchase in order to sell again. On the other
+hand, the more rapid the circulation of wealth, the more can
+it promote production. The more rapidly, for instance, the
+manufacturer of cloth exchanges his wares for money, the
+more rapidly may he employ the money in the purchase of
+new tools and the hiring of new labor; and the sooner may he
+appear in the market with new cloth. It is here precisely as
+it is in agriculture, which is more productive where the seed returns
+several times in a year (several crops<a id="noteref_576" name="noteref_576" href="#note_576"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">576</span></span></a>) to the hand of
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page293">[pg 293]</span><a name="Pg293" id="Pg293" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+the peasant than it is where this happens only once. The
+nearer the members of the commercial organism are to one
+another, the more rapid is circulation wont to be. Hence, it
+is more rapid in industry than in agriculture; in retail trade
+than in wholesale; in large cities than in the country; among a
+dense population than among a sparse population.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+The <em class="tei tei-emph"><span style="font-style: italic">regularity</span></em> of circulation increases with economic culture.
+Its concentration at large terminal points, its interruption
+by bad seasons of the year, belong to the lower stages of
+the political economy of a people; although bad harvests,
+floods, wars, revolutions etc. may, at any time, lead to a sluggishness
+or to an arrest of circulation.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc227" id="toc227"></a>
+<a name="pdf228" id="pdf228"></a>
+<a name="Section_97" id="Section_97" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section XCVII.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">Freedom Of Competition.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+But it is especially the freedom of circulation that increases
+with an advance in civilization, and this advance, like the two
+preceding, first affects the home or inland circulation. Freedom
+of competition, the freedom of commerce and industry,
+technical expressions used to designate freedom in general in
+the domain of a nation's economy, is the natural conclusion
+drawn from the principles of individual independence and of
+private property. Hence its development is as slow as the
+development of these, and attains its full growth only in highly
+cultivated nations, their colonies and dependencies. In very
+low stages of economic development, the circulation of goods
+is hampered by the absence of legal security; later, by privileges
+accorded to a great number of families, corporate
+bodies, municipalities, classes, etc., and later yet by the mighty
+guardianship which the state exercises by its power of legislation
+and even of education.<a id="noteref_577" name="noteref_577" href="#note_577"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">577</span></span></a>
+Each one of these epochs constitutes
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page294">[pg 294]</span><a name="Pg294" id="Pg294" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+the end of the preceding one, and is milder than it was.
+Finally comes the period of complete freedom, when every
+man is permitted to manage his own affairs even with injury
+to himself, provided the injury is confined to himself.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+The later times of the Roman Empire are the best illustration
+of how, with the decline of the conditions which must precede
+freedom of competition, that freedom itself decays.<a id="noteref_578" name="noteref_578" href="#note_578"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">578</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Freedom of competition unchains all economic forces, good
+and bad. Hence, when the former preponderate, it hastens
+the time of a people's grandeur, as it does their decline where the
+latter gain the upper hand.<a id="noteref_579" name="noteref_579" href="#note_579"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">579</span></span></a> We may say of economic freedom
+what may be said of all other freedom, that the removal of
+external constraint can be justified and produces the greater
+good of the greater number only where a stern empire over self
+takes its place. Without this it would not prevent or avoid idleness,
+usury or over-population. Freedom must not be simply
+negative. It must be positive. If on account of the immaturity
+or over-maturity of a people, there be no sturdy middle
+class among them, unlimited competition may become what Bazard
+calls a general <span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">sauve-qui-peut</span></span>
+(let the devil take the hindmost); what Fourier designates as a
+<span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">morcellement industriel</span></span>,
+and a <span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">fraude commerciale</span></span>;
+what M. Chevalier denominated <span class="tei tei-q">“a battle-field on which the little are devoured by the
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page295">[pg 295]</span><a name="Pg295" id="Pg295" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+big;”</span> and in such case, as Bodz-Reymond says, the word
+competition, meaning simply that each one is permitted to run
+in whatever direction he may see a door open to him, is but
+another and a new expression for vagabondizing. But here
+the evil does not lie in too great competition, but in this, that
+on one side there is too little competition.<a id="noteref_580" name="noteref_580" href="#note_580"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">580</span></span></a> The opposing principle
+of competition is always monopoly, that is, as John Stuart
+Mill says, the taxation of industry in the interest of indolence
+and even rapacity; and protection against competition is
+synonymous with a dispensation from the necessity to be as
+industrious and clever as other people.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+A protection of this nature, sufficiently effective to attain its
+end, would not fail to arrest the efforts of those who had accomplished
+something, and even to turn them backward.
+That freedom of competition is a species of declaration of war,<a id="noteref_581" name="noteref_581" href="#note_581"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">581</span></span></a>
+among men considered as producers, is certain; but, at the
+same time, it makes all men considered as consumers members
+of one society, in which all the members are equally interested,
+a fact too much overlooked by socialists.<a id="noteref_582" name="noteref_582" href="#note_582"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">582</span></span></a> It is the
+means especially by which the greatest and ever increasing
+portion of the forces of nature are raised to the character of
+the free and common property of the human race.<a id="noteref_583" name="noteref_583" href="#note_583"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">583</span></span></a> <span class="tei tei-q">“Man is
+not the favorite of nature in the sense that nature has done
+everything for him, but in the sense that it has endowed him
+with the ability to do everything for himself. The right of
+freedom of competition may, therefore, be considered both
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page296">[pg 296]</span><a name="Pg296" id="Pg296" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+the protection and the image of this provision of nature.”</span>
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Zachariä.</span></span>)<a id="noteref_584" name="noteref_584" href="#note_584"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">584</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+The person, therefore, who claims or asserts an exception
+from the rule of free competition, has to prove his position in
+every individual case, since the burthen of proof is on him.
+But the duty of interference on the part of the state is positively
+pointed out where any interest common to the whole
+people is not in a condition to assert itself; and negatively,
+when the custom which hitherto had prevented an undoubted
+abuse has grown too weak to continue to perform that service.
+In <em class="tei tei-emph"><span style="font-style: italic">both</span></em> regards I would call attention to the protection of factory
+children against the concurrent selfishness of their parents
+and masters.<a id="noteref_585" name="noteref_585" href="#note_585"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">585</span></span></a><a id="noteref_586" name="noteref_586" href="#note_586"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">586</span></span></a> <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Supra</span></span>, § <a href="#Section_39" class="tei tei-ref">39</a>.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page297">[pg 297]</span><a name="Pg297" id="Pg297" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc229" id="toc229"></a>
+<a name="pdf230" id="pdf230"></a>
+<a name="Section_98" id="Section_98" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section XCVIII.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">How Goods Are Paid For.—The Rent For Goods.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Payment for goods (§ <a href="#Section_1" class="tei tei-ref">1</a> ff.) of any kind can be made only in
+other goods.<a id="noteref_587" name="noteref_587" href="#note_587"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">587</span></span></a><a id="noteref_588" name="noteref_588" href="#note_588"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">588</span></span></a> Hence, the greater, more varied, and the better
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page298">[pg 298]</span><a name="Pg298" id="Pg298" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+adapted to satisfy wants, production is, the more readily
+does any product find a remunerative market; more readily in
+England, for instance, in spite, or rather, because of, the great
+competition there, than in Greenland or Madagascar. From
+this it follows that, as a rule, a person is in a better condition
+to purchase more goods in proportion as he has produced
+more himself. According to official accounts, the average
+value of a harvest of wheat and potatoes in Prussia was formerly
+332,500,000 thalers. In the year 1850, however, it was
+only 262,000,000 thalers. As a matter of course, the country
+people in that year could not purchase from the cities as much
+as in ordinary years, by a difference of 70,000,000 thalers.
+This illustrates how every class of people, who live by finding
+a free market for their products, are interested in the prosperity
+of all other classes. As Bastiat says: <span class="tei tei-q">“All legitimate interests
+are harmonious.”</span> The more flourishing a city, the
+better off are the towns around it, which furnish it with provisions;
+and the richer these towns, the more flourishing is
+the industry of the city which ministers to their wants.<a id="noteref_589" name="noteref_589" href="#note_589"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">589</span></span></a> It is
+important that this fact should be borne steadily in mind,
+especially in times of advanced civilization, when the feeling
+that we all have interests in common, is too apt to grow dormant.
+Nothing can better serve to awaken it again when it
+has become so. A nation, says Louis Blanc, in which one portion
+of the people is oppressed by another, is like a man
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page299">[pg 299]</span><a name="Pg299" id="Pg299" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+wounded in the leg. The healthy limb is prevented by the
+sick one from performing its functions.<a id="noteref_590" name="noteref_590" href="#note_590"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">590</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc231" id="toc231"></a>
+<a name="pdf232" id="pdf232"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section XCIX.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">Freedom Of Competition And International Trade.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Does the same rule apply to the commercial intercourse of
+nations? Where the feeling that all mankind constitute one
+vast family is stronger than that of their political and religious
+diversity; where the sense of right and the love of peace have
+extinguished every dangerous spark of ambition for empire
+and all warlike jealousy; where, especially, their economic
+interests are rightly understood on both sides, a real conflict
+between the interests of two nations must always be a phenomenon
+of rare occurrence, and an exception to the general
+rule, which should not be admitted until it has been clearly
+demonstrated to exist.<a id="noteref_591" name="noteref_591" href="#note_591"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">591</span></span></a> Highly cultivated nations generally
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page300">[pg 300]</span><a name="Pg300" id="Pg300" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+look upon the first steps in the civilization of a foreign people
+with a more favorable eye than they do on the subsequent progress which
+brings such nations nearer to themselves.<a id="noteref_592" name="noteref_592" href="#note_592"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">592</span></span></a>
+Yet the realization of the above mentioned conditions on all
+sides is something so improbable, unpatriotic <span class="tei tei-q">“philanthropy”</span>
+something so suspicious,<a id="noteref_593" name="noteref_593" href="#note_593"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">593</span></span></a>
+the greater number of mankind
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page301">[pg 301]</span><a name="Pg301" id="Pg301" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+so incapable of development except under the limitations of
+nationality, that I should observe the total disappearance of
+national jealousies only with solicitude. Nothing so much
+contributed to the Macedonian and Roman conquests as the
+cosmopolitanism of the later Greek philosophers.<a id="noteref_594" name="noteref_594" href="#note_594"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">594</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+As all commerce is based on the mutual dependence of the
+contracting parties, we need not be surprised to find international
+commerce so dependent. But this dependence need
+not, by any means, be equally great on both sides. Rather
+is the individual or the nation which stands in most urgent
+need of foreign goods or products the most dependent. Hence,
+it seems that, in the commercial intercourse between an agricultural
+and an industrial people, in which the former furnish
+food and the raw material of manufactures, and the latter
+manufactured articles, the latter are the more dependent. In
+case of war, for instance, it is much easier to dispense for a
+long time with manufactured articles than with most articles
+of food.<a id="noteref_595" name="noteref_595" href="#note_595"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">595</span></span></a> However, this condition of things is very much
+modified, for the better, by all those circumstances on which
+the dominant active commerce of a nation depends. It is, for
+instance, much easier for the English, on account of their
+greater familiarity with, and knowledge of the laws and nature
+of commerce, on account of their business connections, their
+capital, credit and means of transportation, but more particularly
+on account of the greater capacity of circulation of their
+national resources, to find a new market in the stead of one
+that has been closed to them, than it is for the Russians with
+their much more immoveable system of public economy.<a id="noteref_596" name="noteref_596" href="#note_596"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">596</span></span></a> It
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page302">[pg 302]</span><a name="Pg302" id="Pg302" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+is true, however, that an effective blockade, which excluded
+both of these nations from all the markets of the world, would
+be much more injurious to England than to Russia.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+</div>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page303">[pg 303]</span><a name="Pg303" id="Pg303" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<hr class="page" /><div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 4.00em; margin-top: 4.00em">
+<a name="toc233" id="toc233"></a>
+<a name="pdf234" id="pdf234"></a>
+<h2 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">Chapter II.</span></h2>
+<h2 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.88em; margin-top: 2.88em"><span style="font-size: 144%">Prices.</span></h2>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc235" id="toc235"></a>
+<a name="pdf236" id="pdf236"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section C.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">Prices In General.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+The price of a commodity is its value in exchange expressed
+in the quantum of some other definite commodity, against which
+it is exchanged or to be exchanged. Hence, it is possible for
+any commodity to have as many different prices as there are
+other kinds of commodities with which it may be compared.<a id="noteref_597" name="noteref_597" href="#note_597"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">597</span></span></a>
+But whenever price is spoken of, we think only of a comparison
+of the commodity whose value is to be estimated, with the
+commodity which, at that time and place, is most current and
+has the greatest capacity for circulation. (Money.)<a id="noteref_598" name="noteref_598" href="#note_598"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">598</span></span></a> When
+two commodities have changed their price-relation to each
+other, it is not possible, from the simple fact of such change
+of relation, to determine on which side the change has taken
+place. If we find that a commodity A stands to all other
+commodities, C, D, E etc., in the same relation as to price as
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page304">[pg 304]</span><a name="Pg304" id="Pg304" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+before, while commodity B, compared with the same, has
+changed its place in the scale of prices, we may infer that
+B, and not A, has left its former position.<a id="noteref_599" name="noteref_599" href="#note_599"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">599</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+The words costly and dear, as contradistinguished from
+common and cheap, both indicate a high price. We, however,
+call a commodity costly whose price, compared with
+that of other similar commodities, is high. On the other
+hand, we call a commodity dear when we compare it with
+itself, and with its own average price in other places and at
+other times.<a id="noteref_600" name="noteref_600" href="#note_600"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">600</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+In individual cases, the price of a commodity is determined
+most usually, and at the same time most superficially, by custom;
+people ask and pay for a commodity what others have
+asked and paid for it. If we go deeper and inquire what
+originated this customary price and may continually change
+it, we come to the struggle of interests between buyers and
+sellers. And if science would analyze the ultimate elements
+of the incentives to this struggle and the forces engaged in it,
+it is necessary that it should keep in view the entire economy
+of the nation, and even all national life.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc237" id="toc237"></a>
+<a name="pdf238" id="pdf238"></a>
+<a name="Section_101" id="Section_101" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section CI.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">Effect Of The Struggle Of Opposing Interests On
+Price.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+No where in the public economy of a people are the workings
+of self-interest so apparent as in the determination of
+prices. When the price of a commodity is once fixed by the
+conflict of opposing interests,<a id="noteref_601" name="noteref_601" href="#note_601"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">601</span></span></a>
+the self-seeking of every individual
+dictates that he should thereby gain as much as possible
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page305">[pg 305]</span><a name="Pg305" id="Pg305" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+of the goods of others, and lose as little as possible of his own.
+In this struggle, the victory is generally to the stronger, and
+the price is higher or lower, according to the superiority of
+the buyer or seller.<a id="noteref_602" name="noteref_602" href="#note_602"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">602</span></span></a>
+But who, in such case, is the stronger?
+Political or physical superiority can turn the balance one way
+or another only in very barbarous times, and especially in
+times when legal security is small.<a id="noteref_603" name="noteref_603" href="#note_603"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">603</span></span></a> As a rule, it is the party
+in whom the desire of holding on to his own commodities is
+strongest, and who is least moved by the want of the wares
+of others. As in every conflict, confidence in self, sometimes
+even unbounded confidence in self, is an important element of
+success. A party to a contract of sale or barter, who considers
+his immediate position decidedly stronger than that of
+the other party, will scarcely depart from his demands. Hence
+it is, that in exchange, one party so frequently holds back
+until the other has expressed his terms.<a id="noteref_604" name="noteref_604" href="#note_604"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">604</span></span></a> How different is the
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page306">[pg 306]</span><a name="Pg306" id="Pg306" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+price of the same pieces of land which a new railroad enterprise
+is compelled to pay and the prices it would get for them,
+from the adjoining owners, in case of the dissolution of the
+company.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+But the struggle to raise prices or to lower them, which is
+always going on, undergoes modifications of every description
+among all really commercial nations, partly through the influence
+of the public conscience, which brands as inhuman
+and blameworthy the spoilation of the opposing party by acts
+which the laws do not reach. And this consideration by the
+public conscience is all the more severe in proportion as real
+competition in the article sold is wanting.<a id="noteref_605" name="noteref_605" href="#note_605"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">605</span></span></a> But the chief modification
+in this struggle is produced by the fact, that where
+civilization has advanced farthest, every commodity is offered
+for sale by a great many and wanted by a great many.<a id="noteref_606" name="noteref_606" href="#note_606"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">606</span></span></a> As
+soon as several seek the same object, there naturally results a
+rivalry among them, which induces each to attain the desired
+end, even by the making of greater sacrifices than others.
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page307">[pg 307]</span><a name="Pg307" id="Pg307" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+The greater the supply of a commodity is, as compared with
+the demand for it, the lower is its price; the greater the demand
+as compared with the supply, the higher it is. And,
+indeed, there is question here, not only of the <em class="tei tei-emph"><span style="font-style: italic">mass</span></em> of things
+supplied or demanded, but also of the <em class="tei tei-emph"><span style="font-style: italic">intensity</span></em> of the supply
+and demand.<a id="noteref_607" name="noteref_607" href="#note_607"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">607</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+If the exchange-force of both contractants be equal, or, in
+other words, if both, with equal knowledge, are interested in
+the completion of the exchange, there results from this attitude
+of the parties toward each other, what is called an equitable,
+or average price, in which both meet with their deserts.
+Here each is a gainer, since each has parted with the commodity
+which was less necessary to him, and received in
+exchange the commodity which was more necessary to him.
+Looked at, however, from the stand-point, not simply of a
+nation's but of the world's economy, the value given and the
+value received are equal.<a id="noteref_608" name="noteref_608" href="#note_608"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">608</span></span></a><a id="noteref_609" name="noteref_609" href="#note_609"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">609</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page308">[pg 308]</span><a name="Pg308" id="Pg308" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+As a rule, the price-relation of two commodities is determined
+by this relation of demand and supply,—by the desire
+to possess and the difficulty of obtaining them. We must,
+therefore, examine on what deeper relations supply and demand
+themselves depend.<a id="noteref_610" name="noteref_610" href="#note_610"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">610</span></span></a> In the case of the purchaser, the
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page309">[pg 309]</span><a name="Pg309" id="Pg309" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+value in use of the commodity and his own ability to pay constitute
+the maximum limit of its price, which price may, however,
+be modified by the cost of producing it<a id="noteref_611" name="noteref_611" href="#note_611"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">611</span></span></a> elsewhere or at
+another time. In the case of the seller, the cost of production
+is the minimum limit, which may, however, be extended
+by the cost of procuring the commodity by the purchaser at
+another time or place.<a id="noteref_612" name="noteref_612" href="#note_612"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">612</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc239" id="toc239"></a>
+<a name="pdf240" id="pdf240"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section CII.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">Demand.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+The purchaser in his demand is wont to consider principally
+the value in use of a commodity, according as it, in a higher
+or lower degree, ministers to a necessary want, to a decency
+or to a luxury. The difference of opinion as to which of
+these categories any given want belongs depends not only on
+the nature of the country and the customs of its people, but,
+for the most part, also, on the prejudices of class and on personal
+individuality.<a id="noteref_613" name="noteref_613" href="#note_613"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">613</span></span></a> A reasonable man will employ only the
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page310">[pg 310]</span><a name="Pg310" id="Pg310" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+surplus of the first class in the satisfaction of wants of the
+second, and again only the surplus of the second in the satisfaction
+of wants of the third.<a id="noteref_614" name="noteref_614" href="#note_614"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">614</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+If the value in use of a commodity rises or falls, and surrounding
+circumstances remain unchanged, its price also rises
+or falls.<a id="noteref_615" name="noteref_615" href="#note_615"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">615</span></span></a><a id="noteref_616" name="noteref_616" href="#note_616"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">616</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page311">[pg 311]</span><a name="Pg311" id="Pg311" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc241" id="toc241"></a>
+<a name="pdf242" id="pdf242"></a>
+<a name="Section_103" id="Section_103" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section CIII.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">Demand.—Indispensable Goods.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+When the supply of articles of luxury diminishes, the price
+of them, it is true, rises. But as now there is a number of
+purchasers no longer able to pay for them, the demand for
+them also decreases, and their price, as a consequence, rises in
+a less degree than might be inferred from the amount and condition
+of the supply merely. And so, on the other hand, an
+increase of the supply which lowers the price is wont, in the
+case of pleasures capable of a wide extension, such as are ministered
+to by fine roots, vegetables, etc., to produce an increase
+of the demand, and this operates to arrest the falling price.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+It is quite otherwise, in the case of indispensable goods, as for
+instance, wheat. When there is a want of such an article, men
+prefer to dispense with all other articles, to some extent, rather
+than to practice frugality in bread; and all the more, as bread
+is not so much used as consumed rapidly, while clothes and
+metallic articles last a long time. And even after an over-abundant
+harvest, leaving voluntary waste out of the question,
+consumption is increased by a finer separating of the flour, an
+increase in the amount of corn fed to cattle, and the distillation
+of spirits. Hence, demand and supply by no means run in
+parallel lines at every moment; and indispensable articles tend
+to greater perturbations in price than those which can be dispensed
+with.<a id="noteref_617" name="noteref_617" href="#note_617"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">617</span></span></a><a id="noteref_618" name="noteref_618" href="#note_618"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">618</span></span></a>
+The price of grain, especially, varies in a ratio
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page312">[pg 312]</span><a name="Pg312" id="Pg312" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+very different from the inverse ratio of the amount of the
+harvest;<a id="noteref_619" name="noteref_619" href="#note_619"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">619</span></span></a> although a formula therefor expressed in figures,
+like that of Gregory King, can never be applicable universally.<a id="noteref_620" name="noteref_620" href="#note_620"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">620</span></span></a>
+Farmers must everywhere and always withhold a certain
+amount of their harvest for seed, for home use etc., from the
+market. Only absolute necessity can induce them to draw on
+the quantity thus laid by. But the ratio of this part to the
+whole is very different in different countries.<a id="noteref_621" name="noteref_621" href="#note_621"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">621</span></span></a> In the higher
+stages of civilization, where payment in money has taken the
+place of payment in produce, and all other kinds of payment,
+and where the cultivator of the ground pays the wages of his
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page313">[pg 313]</span><a name="Pg313" id="Pg313" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+laborers almost exclusively in money, so that they, like all
+others, purchase what bread they require in the market; a
+given deficit in the harvest must be spread over a much larger
+market supply; and prices, therefore, remain much less affected
+than in the lower stages of civilization.<a id="noteref_622" name="noteref_622" href="#note_622"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">622</span></span></a> And so, it is clear
+that a like bad harvest must affect prices very differently, if
+there be a large importation or exportation of the means of
+subsistence, and if several bad harvests, or several harvests
+yielding more than the average have preceded.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+In another respect yet, the price of indispensable commodities
+is very sensitive, because here the mere fear of a future
+want of them has a far deeper and wider influence, than has
+the fear of want of articles of luxury. No matter how good
+the wheat crop may have been, if the weather afterwards
+interferes with its harvesting, the price of wheat, in countries
+in which the spirit of speculation is on the alert, will certainly
+rise, because the prospect of the future crop then becomes
+somewhat doubtful.<a id="noteref_623" name="noteref_623" href="#note_623"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">623</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc243" id="toc243"></a>
+<a name="pdf244" id="pdf244"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section CIV.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">Influence Of Purchaser's Solvability On Prices.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+The purchaser, besides the value in use of the goods he desires
+to buy, considers his own solvability (<span lang="de" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="de"><span style="font-style: italic">Zahlungsfähigkeit</span></span> =
+ability to pay). It is only solvent demand which can influence
+prices.<a id="noteref_624" name="noteref_624" href="#note_624"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">624</span></span></a> For instance, among
+a people made up almost entirely
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page314">[pg 314]</span><a name="Pg314" id="Pg314" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+of proletarians, there will be a great many cases of
+starvation and death after a bad harvest, but the price of corn
+will undergo only a slight increase.<a id="noteref_625" name="noteref_625" href="#note_625"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">625</span></span></a> But where the greater
+number of inhabitants own property, and where the wealthy
+come to the help of the poorer classes by means of poor-rates
+and acts of benevolence, it is scarcely possible to assign limits
+to the increase of the price of corn. By a necessary connection,
+when indispensable articles grow dear, the demand for
+articles that can be dispensed with generally decreases, and
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">vice versa</span></span>.<a id="noteref_626" name="noteref_626" href="#note_626"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">626</span></span></a>
+Every merchant, engaged in an extensive business,
+is interested in knowing in advance the results of the corn
+crop. The higher the price of a commodity rises, the narrower,
+of course, grows the circle of those who can pay
+for it.<a id="noteref_627" name="noteref_627" href="#note_627"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">627</span></span></a><a id="noteref_628" name="noteref_628" href="#note_628"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">628</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page315">[pg 315]</span><a name="Pg315" id="Pg315" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc245" id="toc245"></a>
+<a name="pdf246" id="pdf246"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section CV.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">Supply.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+In the case of isolated chance exchanges, the seller, too, takes
+into consideration, first of all, value in use, and compares the
+satisfaction which the commodity to be parted with and that
+to be received are able to afford. It is true that in making
+this estimate, he is subject in the highest degree to error
+and deception.<a id="noteref_629" name="noteref_629" href="#note_629"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">629</span></span></a>
+In the well ordered trade of a nation whose
+economy is highly developed, the seller, who had this very
+trade in view in his production, is wont to consider almost exclusively
+the value in exchange of his commodity.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc247" id="toc247"></a>
+<a name="pdf248" id="pdf248"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section CVI.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">The Cost Of Production.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+As no one is willing to lose anything, every seller will consider
+what his goods have cost him, and the cost of producing
+or procuring them as the minimum price to be asked for
+them.<a id="noteref_630" name="noteref_630" href="#note_630"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">630</span></span></a>
+At the same time, the idea covered by the expression
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page316">[pg 316]</span><a name="Pg316" id="Pg316" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+cost of production, although it always embraces whatever disappears
+from the resources of the producer to enter into production,
+varies very much according as it is considered from
+the point of view of the individual's, the nation's or the world's
+economy.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+An individual who pays taxes to his government, and who
+has rented land and employed labor and capital to engage in
+production, must indeed, besides the capital he has used in
+such production, call all his outlay in interest, wages, rent,
+and taxes, by the name of cost of production;<a id="noteref_631" name="noteref_631" href="#note_631"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">631</span></span></a> since, unless
+they all come back to him in the price of the commodity, the
+entire enterprise can only injure him.<a id="noteref_632" name="noteref_632" href="#note_632"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">632</span></span></a>
+He will, of course, add
+an equitable profit to remunerate him for his enterprise, since
+without such profit, he would not be able to live or produce;
+or else, he would be compelled to consume his capital. The
+moment the current rates of taxation, interest, wages and rent
+change in a country, the cost of production is also changed
+in the case of the individual engaged in production, however
+unaltered the technic process may remain.<a id="noteref_633" name="noteref_633" href="#note_633"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">633</span></span></a> But taking the
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page317">[pg 317]</span><a name="Pg317" id="Pg317" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+nation, or all mankind into consideration, we must not lose
+sight of the fact that these three great sources of income, as
+well as taxation, are not, rightly speaking, sources from which
+income flows, but rather channels through which the aggregate
+income of the nation or the world is distributed among
+individuals.<a id="noteref_634" name="noteref_634" href="#note_634"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">634</span></span></a> Hence the wages of labor, for instance, which
+afford the means of living to the greater part of the population,
+cannot possibly be looked upon simply as a factor in economic
+production. The people considered in their entirety have
+the soil gratis. All saving made from rent, interest on capital,
+or wages, is nothing but a change of the proportion in
+which the results of production were distributed hitherto
+among coöperators in production. Such a change may be
+either advantageous or the reverse; but it is not a diminution of
+the amount of sacrifice which the people in general must make
+for purposes of production. Hence, in a politico-economical
+sense, to the cost of production, belongs only the capital
+necessarily expended in production, and which has disappeared
+as a part of the nation's resources, abstraction made of the
+personal sacrifices in behalf of production.<a id="noteref_635" name="noteref_635" href="#note_635"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">635</span></span></a> The value of the
+circulating capital which in the process is entirely used up, must,
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page318">[pg 318]</span><a name="Pg318" id="Pg318" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+of course, be entirely restored in the price, that of the fixed
+capital used only to the extent that it has been used.<a id="noteref_636" name="noteref_636" href="#note_636"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">636</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+The risk, which the producer runs until the commodity
+produced is actually consumed must also be borne in mind.<a id="noteref_637" name="noteref_637" href="#note_637"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">637</span></span></a>
+There are things which are a real risk in small enterprises
+that by the intervention of an insurance company, or where
+the enterprises are large and insure themselves, become a
+more or less variable portion of the cost of production. The
+price of the product, in the latter instance, rises, by this means,
+very regularly. In the former case, the rise depends partly
+on the feeling of the people whether their pleasure in gain is greater than their
+grief over a corresponding loss.<a id="noteref_638" name="noteref_638" href="#note_638"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">638</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Those enterprises which necessarily produce different products
+at the same time deserve special consideration.<a id="noteref_639" name="noteref_639" href="#note_639"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">639</span></span></a> Here
+we may speak of <span class="tei tei-q">“<em class="tei tei-emph"><span style="font-style: italic">united</span></em> costs of production,”</span> and all that is
+needed is that the aggregate of these costs should be covered
+by the aggregate price of both products. This complicates
+to a certain extent the calculations which the seller must make
+to determine his minimum demand for each product. To ascertain
+this, he must subtract from the united costs of production
+the amount of value which he expects with certainty
+for the other product.<a id="noteref_640" name="noteref_640" href="#note_640"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">640</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page319">[pg 319]</span><a name="Pg319" id="Pg319" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc249" id="toc249"></a>
+<a name="pdf250" id="pdf250"></a>
+<a name="Section_107" id="Section_107" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section CVII.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">Equilibrium Of Prices.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Goods whose cost of reproduction,<a id="noteref_641" name="noteref_641" href="#note_641"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">641</span></span></a> that is, the highest necessary
+cost of reproduction is the same, have uniformly the same
+value in exchange. Every deviation from this level immediately
+sets forces in motion which endeavor to restore the level,
+just as the water of the sea seeks its level, notwithstanding
+the mountains and abysses which the winds bring forth from
+its bosom.<a id="noteref_642" name="noteref_642" href="#note_642"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">642</span></span></a><a id="noteref_643" name="noteref_643" href="#note_643"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">643</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page320">[pg 320]</span><a name="Pg320" id="Pg320" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc251" id="toc251"></a>
+<a name="pdf252" id="pdf252"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section CVIII.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">Effect Of A Rise Of Price Much Above Cost.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+If the market price rises high above the cost of production,
+producers make a profit greater than the average profit made
+in the country. This induces them, by the appropriation of
+new land and the employment of new labor and capital, to
+increase their business. Other parties also engage in this
+profitable department of trade. This competition not only
+makes the means of production dearer, but must eventually,
+by increasing the demand, reduce the price of the product to
+the ordinary level of profit, that is to an equilibrium with other
+commodities.<a id="noteref_644" name="noteref_644" href="#note_644"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">644</span></span></a>
+Hence, in the beginning, every diminution of
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page321">[pg 321]</span><a name="Pg321" id="Pg321" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+the cost of production<a id="noteref_645" name="noteref_645" href="#note_645"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">645</span></span></a> turns to the advantage of the producer;
+but afterwards and permanently to that of the consumers: an
+economic law exceedingly beneficent in its operations, and not
+unlike the action of positive legislation in the matter of patents.
+There is no greater stimulus to the making of improvements
+than the certainty of reward to the person who first introduces
+one. The moment, however, that the improvement is
+imitated by all producers, the advantage gained by it becomes
+the common good of the whole nation.<a id="noteref_646" name="noteref_646" href="#note_646"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">646</span></span></a> These are, as J. B.
+Say says, conquests made over the gratuitous productive force
+of nature. As a consequence, the value in use of a people's
+resources increases; generally, also, their value in exchange, in
+so far as the production of the now cheaper goods increases
+in a degree greater than their cost of production has diminished.<a id="noteref_647" name="noteref_647" href="#note_647"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">647</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+As to the alternative so frequently discussed, whether it is
+preferable to make a large percentage of profit on the sale of
+a small quantity of goods, or a small percentage on a large
+quantity, we find that, in the lower stages of civilization, the
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page322">[pg 322]</span><a name="Pg322" id="Pg322" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+former is preferred, and the latter in the higher.<a id="noteref_648" name="noteref_648" href="#note_648"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">648</span></span></a> And, indeed,
+the latter is not only more humane, but, in the long run, it is
+more profitable to the person who adopts it as his rule in business.
+In the case of commodities, he now runs but little risk
+from a change of fashion, because the fashions of the masses
+change much less rapidly than those of the upper circles of
+society. In the case of indispensable goods, on the other hand,
+he may now calculate with more certainty on the increase of
+population, and, therefore, on a future market for his wares.
+Competition, which in former times, devoted all its efforts to
+bringing about the exclusion, by law, of all rivals, is now engaged,
+principally, in devising means of surpassing them by
+superiority of workmanship, and in thus increasing the power
+of the real sources of a nation's wealth.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page323">[pg 323]</span><a name="Pg323" id="Pg323" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc253" id="toc253"></a>
+<a name="pdf254" id="pdf254"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section CIX.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">Effect Of A Decline Of Price Below Cost.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+If the market price sinks below the cost of production, the
+producer naturally suffers a loss, and diminishes his stock as
+soon as possible. That whole establishments engaged in industry
+should forsake a branch of it which is suffering from
+depression and enter a flourishing one, must ever remain a
+rare exception.<a id="noteref_649" name="noteref_649" href="#note_649"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">649</span></span></a> But the discouraged manufacturer may
+delay renewing his stock on hand,<a id="noteref_650" name="noteref_650" href="#note_650"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">650</span></span></a> replacing his machinery
+by new machinery; he may dismiss some of his workmen and
+diminish the number of days during which the others shall
+work. Moreover, most industries are operated by means of
+borrowed capital, capital which must therefore, be returned to
+the lender. Under certain circumstances, however, the industry
+may be continued for some time, even at a real loss,<a id="noteref_651" name="noteref_651" href="#note_651"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">651</span></span></a> so
+long as the loss of interest etc., which would follow the entire
+suspension of the work, exceeds the loss produced by the lowering
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page324">[pg 324]</span><a name="Pg324" id="Pg324" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+of price, but hardly any longer. If the supply of the
+commodity the price of which has fallen has been diminished,
+the subsequent result depends on the causes which, in the first
+place, brought about the fall in price. If the diminution in
+price was caused solely by a too great supply, when this superabundant
+supply is gotten rid of, the price will rise again.<a id="noteref_652" name="noteref_652" href="#note_652"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">652</span></span></a> If
+it were produced by a decrease in the value in use of the commodity,
+the diminution of the supply can restore the former
+state of things only in so far as at least a part of the purchasers
+ascribe to the commodity the same value in use as before.<a id="noteref_653" name="noteref_653" href="#note_653"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">653</span></span></a>
+Lastly, if the lowering of the price came from a decrease in the
+number of buyers, or from a decrease in their ability to purchase,
+the former price will be restored when production has
+been adapted to a correspondingly smaller circle of consumers.<a id="noteref_654" name="noteref_654" href="#note_654"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">654</span></span></a>
+This last is true especially when the price, without having
+suffered any absolute change, has become relatively too
+low, on account of an increase in the cost of production.<a id="noteref_655" name="noteref_655" href="#note_655"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">655</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page325">[pg 325]</span><a name="Pg325" id="Pg325" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc255" id="toc255"></a>
+<a name="pdf256" id="pdf256"></a>
+<a name="Section_110" id="Section_110" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Chapter CX.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">Different Cost Of Production Of The Same Goods.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Most goods are produced at the same time, but under different
+circumstances, at a very different cost. In order to
+estimate the influence of this fact upon price, we must distinguish
+between those commodities the cheapest manner of the
+production of which may be extended at pleasure, and those in
+the production of which it is necessary, in order to satisfy the
+aggregate want of them, to call in the dearest mode of production
+to aid the cheapest.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+In the former instance, the price of commodities is naturally
+regulated by the least cost of production. The person who is
+unable to sustain this competition permanently, would do a
+great deal better to abandon the industry altogether; for it is
+not in his power to raise the price by diminishing the supply;
+more powerful rivals would then only need to correspondingly
+increase theirs.<a id="noteref_656" name="noteref_656" href="#note_656"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">656</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+If the same law were applicable, in the latter case, producers
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page326">[pg 326]</span><a name="Pg326" id="Pg326" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+placed in a less favorable situation would be compelled to immediately
+abandon the market. The market, in consequence,
+would no longer be able to provide for the aggregate need;
+and the price of the commodity would continue to rise until
+the producers who had been driven from the market returned
+to it again. Hence, here, price in the long run is determined
+by the cost of the production of the commodity, produced
+under the least advantageous conditions, while such production
+is necessary in order to satisfy the aggregate need. The
+person engaged in production under more advantageous conditions
+receives in the same price of the goods, which are
+cheaper to him, an excess of profit; one which is greater in
+proportion as his situation, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">vis-a-vis</span></span> of production, is superior
+to that of his less favored competitors.<a id="noteref_657" name="noteref_657" href="#note_657"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">657</span></span></a><a id="noteref_658" name="noteref_658" href="#note_658"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">658</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page327">[pg 327]</span><a name="Pg327" id="Pg327" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc257" id="toc257"></a>
+<a name="pdf258" id="pdf258"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section CXI.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">Different Cost Of Production Of The Same Goods. (Continued.)</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Hence the price of a commodity and the ratio between its
+supply and demand mutually condition each other. On the
+height of the price depends, in great part, how many purchasers
+shall resolve to make an effectual demand; but, at the
+same time, to what amount of cost of production, sellers shall
+extend their supply.<a id="noteref_659" name="noteref_659" href="#note_659"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">659</span></span></a> We can speak of an equilibrium between
+supply and demand only when the former corresponds with
+the <em class="tei tei-emph"><span style="font-style: italic">wish</span></em> of those who are ready to make good the full cost
+of production. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Malthus.</span></span>) It has been asked, indeed, whether
+it were more natural and better that demand should precede
+supply or supply demand.<a id="noteref_660" name="noteref_660" href="#note_660"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">660</span></span></a>
+But the inquiry is an illogical one,
+when expressed in so general a manner, since supply and
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page328">[pg 328]</span><a name="Pg328" id="Pg328" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+demand are only two sides of the same transaction. But, we
+may say that in the case of indispensable goods, the want of
+them (demand) is always felt sooner than the excess of them
+(supply), and that in the case of goods which may be dispensed
+with, including, originally, money, the reverse is true.
+Besides, a person engaging in the production of any kind of
+goods, can, as a rule, only seldom directly investigate the relation
+between supply and demand. Generally, he can do no
+more than compare the market price of the commodity with
+the cost at which he can produce it. Many mistakes are inevitable
+here; but the making of them is the necessary sacrifice
+which must be endured to purchase the more than counterbalancing
+advantages of free competition.<a id="noteref_661" name="noteref_661" href="#note_661"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">661</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc259" id="toc259"></a>
+<a name="pdf260" id="pdf260"></a>
+<a name="Section_112" id="Section_112" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section CXII.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">Exceptions.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+The rule that goods which have the same cost of production
+have also equal value in exchange, is applicable only to
+the extent that it is possible to transfer the factors of production
+at will from one branch of production to another. Where
+this really free competition does not exist, the price depends
+entirely on the quantity of the supply, compared with the
+solvability or capacity to pay of the purchaser; and hence, it
+may sometimes rise far above the cost of production (monopoly-price),
+and sometimes sink far below it (forced price, or
+under-price).<a id="noteref_662" name="noteref_662" href="#note_662"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">662</span></span></a> Such hindrances to competition depend, in part,
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page329">[pg 329]</span><a name="Pg329" id="Pg329" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+upon natural causes. Thus, in the case of the works of art
+of a deceased artist, which cannot be increased in number;<a id="noteref_663" name="noteref_663" href="#note_663"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">663</span></span></a>
+or in that of living celebrities who cannot extend their mental
+activity in the same degree that their reputation has grown.
+So, also, in the case of precious stones, which are sometimes
+found free, and therefore cost nothing, but which, at the
+same time, have a high price.<a id="noteref_664" name="noteref_664" href="#note_664"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">664</span></span></a> Many valuable agricultural
+products are, together with their production, limited to a
+definite and sometimes very small district.<a id="noteref_665" name="noteref_665" href="#note_665"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">665</span></span></a> It is to be regarded
+as a modification of such natural monopolies when substitutes
+for a kind of goods which diminish, at least in part,
+the demand for them, are found, at a cheaper price; for instance,
+ordinary table-wines in the stead of fine wines. The
+rule applies much more strictly to those goods which, on
+account of their greater quantity, can replace inferior ones,<a id="noteref_666" name="noteref_666" href="#note_666"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">666</span></span></a>
+than it does to those where this is not possible.
+</p>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page330">[pg 330]</span><a name="Pg330" id="Pg330" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+The principal cause of forced or under-prices (<span lang="de" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="de"><span style="font-style: italic">Schleuderpreise</span></span>)
+is the facility with which the product deteriorates, and
+must, therefore, find a quick sale, especially when its storage
+or transportation is attended by further difficulties.<a id="noteref_667" name="noteref_667" href="#note_667"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">667</span></span></a> But, very
+durable commodities are also subject to under-prices, and especially
+those which last longest, because the supply of them
+can be diminished only very slowly. Thus, for instance,
+houses, in a declining city. Distress-prices are found most
+usually in the case of such commodities as are produced without
+any intention to produce them, as for instance, rags and
+excrementitious substances. The more the mere forces of
+nature preponderate in production, the less can the supply
+be increased or decreased at pleasure, the more frequently, as
+a consequence, do we find monopoly-prices and under-prices.
+(Compare § <a href="#Section_131" class="tei tei-ref">131</a> ff.) Thus the production of wheat is
+invariably connected with the order of the seasons. Between seed-time
+and harvest, there are a number of months which neither
+capital nor skill can shorten to any extent. The cultivation of
+land, to be very much greater and more lasting, supposes so
+many conditions precedent, increase of live stock, buildings etc.,
+that it can be attained only after a series of years. Hence it
+happens that wheat, much more than manufactured products,
+is subject to oppressively high prices and oppressively low ones,
+during a long period of time. No matter what the influence
+of the forces operating in the opposite direction may be, the
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page331">[pg 331]</span><a name="Pg331" id="Pg331" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+price of wheat depends most largely on the result of the last
+crop.<a id="noteref_668" name="noteref_668" href="#note_668"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">668</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc261" id="toc261"></a>
+<a name="pdf262" id="pdf262"></a>
+<a name="Section_113" id="Section_113" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section CXIII.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">Exceptions. (Continued.)</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Other impediments in the way of freedom of competition
+have their origin in social conditions. The rule governing
+prices applies only where the vendor and purchaser are equally
+ready to exchange. But in every case in which the producer
+carries on his business, not for the sake of free gain, but
+simply to obtain a means of livelihood, it may be subject to
+many important exceptions.<a id="noteref_669" name="noteref_669" href="#note_669"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">669</span></span></a>
+The richer a seller is, the longer
+can he wait for a favorable opportunity to sell. Thus, for instance,
+wheat is somewhat lower in price at times when payments
+are universally made than at other seasons of the year,
+because a great many country people are then compelled to
+sell. Where the country population are universally needy, it
+sinks after a harvest to an unusually low figure, and in spring
+rises again very high.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Sometimes price is affected by the agreements of the purchaser
+or seller, but most readily by those of middlemen between
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page332">[pg 332]</span><a name="Pg332" id="Pg332" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+consumer and producer.<a id="noteref_670" name="noteref_670" href="#note_670"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">670</span></span></a> Customs peculiar to whole
+classes may exert the same influence, and such customs are
+especially powerful in the lower stages of business and industrial
+development. They, even at the present time, take
+the place, frequently, of freedom of competition in retail business,
+in the book business, and in the determination of lawyers'
+and doctors' fees, as well as in the distribution of a nation's income among the three
+great branches of its general economy,<a id="noteref_671" name="noteref_671" href="#note_671"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">671</span></span></a>
+deciding, instead of competition, how much shall go to
+each. Wherever there are guilds, communities, castes etc.
+with legal privileges; wherever there are difficulties placed in
+the way of exportation and importation; wherever preëmption
+rights or monopolies,<a id="noteref_672" name="noteref_672" href="#note_672"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">672</span></span></a>
+in the strict sense of the word, exist, the
+leveling ebb and flow of the elements of production may be
+still more seriously interfered with. Legislation<a id="noteref_673" name="noteref_673" href="#note_673"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">673</span></span></a> of this sort
+injures the non-privileged portion of the population more than it helps the privileged
+portion. (See § <a href="#Section_97" class="tei tei-ref">97</a>.)<a id="noteref_674" name="noteref_674" href="#note_674"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">674</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+The word <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">usury</span></span>, so arbitrarily used in every-day language,
+should be admitted in science only to designate a famine-price,
+fraudulently and intentionally caused or intensified.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page333">[pg 333]</span><a name="Pg333" id="Pg333" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc263" id="toc263"></a>
+<a name="pdf264" id="pdf264"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section CXIV.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">Prices Fixed By Government.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+No power can, of course, fix the price of a commodity in
+the long run, which cannot at the same time fix the relation
+of supply and demand. Hence, set prices fixed by governmental
+authority can be made to play a part in practice only
+in so far as they do not establish a price in opposition to the
+real state of things, only to the extent that they give undoubted
+expression to it in a manner in harmony with natural
+conditions. With this restriction, set or fixed prices may, in
+the absence of real competition, which can always best determine
+prices, be useful to both parties; otherwise one party
+would at one time, and the other at another, profit by an unjust
+advantage; but it would not be long before both would
+suffer from the perturbation caused thereby in all commercial
+transactions. How pleasant it is for a traveler in Switzerland,
+or even in Italy, to find set prices established there.<a id="noteref_675" name="noteref_675" href="#note_675"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">675</span></span></a>
+Especially where competition is prevented by state privileges,
+the establishment of set prices by the state for the protection
+of the public may be necessary.<a id="noteref_676" name="noteref_676" href="#note_676"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">676</span></span></a> It is more difficult to fix a
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page334">[pg 334]</span><a name="Pg334" id="Pg334" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+set price for a commodity in proportion to its complexity and
+to its variableness in quality; and where there are different
+grades of quality of the same commodity, and the transition
+from one grade to another is almost imperceptible, such price
+is easily evaded.<a id="noteref_677" name="noteref_677" href="#note_677"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">677</span></span></a>
+In the case of every enterprise carried on
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page335">[pg 335]</span><a name="Pg335" id="Pg335" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+by many in common, where no competition is possible, it is
+necessary to supply the defect by means similar to the establishment
+of fixed prices; as in the case of government, by
+fees for governmental services, and the coöperation of a chamber
+of deputies in the imposition of taxes and the determination
+of official salaries etc.<a id="noteref_678" name="noteref_678" href="#note_678"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">678</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc265" id="toc265"></a>
+<a name="pdf266" id="pdf266"></a>
+<a name="Section_115" id="Section_115" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section CXV.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">Influence Of Growing Civilization On Prices.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+On the whole, prices become more and more regular as
+national-economic civilization advances. Progress in civilization
+tends to bring the parties engaged in the struggle for prices
+that is buyers and sellers, nearer to one another, in so far as it
+uniformly decreases the cost of production, and increases the
+purchaser's ability to pay.<a id="noteref_679" name="noteref_679" href="#note_679"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">679</span></span></a> (See §
+<a href="#Section_101" class="tei tei-ref">101</a>.) The more universal division
+of labor makes commercial intercourse more necessary
+to every one, at the same time that it makes it more of a habit
+to him; and hence exchange ceases more and more to be a
+matter of caprice or chance. The better means of transportation
+and communication render it easier, in every way, for
+supply and demand to meet. With the advance of general enlightenment
+and education, an acquaintance with commodities
+also becomes more general, and every purchaser is on a better
+way to be able to estimate the cost of production which the
+seller has to bear. Hence, fraudulent prices and prices founded
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page336">[pg 336]</span><a name="Pg336" id="Pg336" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+in error become less frequent; and all this is helped forward
+by the greater accuracy of weights and measures. The increase
+of population makes competition more active in all
+branches of trade, while at the same time, with the greater
+freedom of circulation, a number of causes which previously
+operated to produce very high prices in one place and very low
+ones in another are removed.<a id="noteref_680" name="noteref_680" href="#note_680"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">680</span></span></a> But especially, the growth of a
+distinct class of merchants leads to a uniformity in price. This
+class are incited by their own interest to purchase at low prices
+and sell at high prices. Thus, their competition in the former
+case raises prices, and lowers them in the latter.<a id="noteref_681" name="noteref_681" href="#note_681"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">681</span></span></a> In all lower
+stages of civilization, the custom of making offers and beating
+down in price plays a great part, while where culture is
+higher, the system of fixed prices (but not by government)
+gains ground continually. Here Turgot's principle is applicable,
+viz.: that the current price of an article is tacitly understood
+when one asks a merchant the price of his wares.<a id="noteref_682" name="noteref_682" href="#note_682"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">682</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page337">[pg 337]</span><a name="Pg337" id="Pg337" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+This proposition is true in the case of individuals, as well as of
+classes and of whole nations.<a id="noteref_683" name="noteref_683" href="#note_683"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">683</span></span></a> It is plain, that under a system
+of fixed prices we can more certainly discover what the equitable
+price is, than in the heat of higgling which besides consumes
+a great deal of precious time. Lastly, one of the principal
+requisites of a well developed scale of prices is national honor,
+and this, doubtless, increases in the higher stages of civilization,
+not only because of the greater moral culture which
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page338">[pg 338]</span><a name="Pg338" id="Pg338" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+then prevails, but also and especially because that which constitutes a people's real
+and best interests is better understood.<a id="noteref_684" name="noteref_684" href="#note_684"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">684</span></span></a>
+Among declining nations, many of these developments take a
+retrogressive road. The very great distinction between rich
+and poor, between educated and uneducated, again produces
+great fluctuations in price. A proletarian people who have
+sunk so low as to live on potatoes will suffer much more from
+variations in price and of the means of subsistence than a
+people who live on wheat; for the reason that it is so difficult
+to export or to preserve<a id="noteref_685" name="noteref_685" href="#note_685"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">685</span></span></a> potatoes. Nor can it be doubted, that
+the greatest possible constancy of prices is the most beneficial
+condition that the general economy of a people can be in.
+Where prices change while the cost of production remains the
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page339">[pg 339]</span><a name="Pg339" id="Pg339" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+same, one person can only gain what the other has lost. But
+such unmerited gains and undeserved losses have an invariable
+tendency to destroy the deepest roots of a people's economic
+activity; and intentional speculation based upon such change usually assumes
+an immoral character. (Stock-jobbing.)<a id="noteref_686" name="noteref_686" href="#note_686"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">686</span></span></a>
+Even if Macleod be right, that an increase or decrease
+in prices is to be regarded as a warning of excess, the former
+of excess of consumption, the latter of production, no one will
+doubt that it is the interest of every organism to confine pain
+within the smallest possible limits, even if its consequences
+are so beneficial to the preservation of the whole body.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+</div>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page340">[pg 340]</span><a name="Pg340" id="Pg340" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<hr class="page" /><div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 4.00em; margin-top: 4.00em">
+<a name="toc267" id="toc267"></a>
+<a name="pdf268" id="pdf268"></a>
+<h2 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">Chapter III.</span></h2>
+<h2 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.88em; margin-top: 2.88em"><span style="font-size: 144%">Money In General.</span></h2>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc269" id="toc269"></a>
+<a name="pdf270" id="pdf270"></a>
+<a name="Section_116" id="Section_116" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section CXVI.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">Instrument Of Exchange. Measure Of Value. Barter.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Wherever the division of labor is very highly developed,
+the continuance of barter, or the direct exchange of one object
+of consumption for another, presents difficulties well nigh
+insurmountable. How difficult it would be always to find the
+person who could supply us with precisely what we wanted,
+and at the same time have need of what we had a surplus
+of.<a id="noteref_687" name="noteref_687" href="#note_687"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">687</span></span></a> But how much less frequently would it happen that one's
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page341">[pg 341]</span><a name="Pg341" id="Pg341" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+want and another's surplus would correspond exactly the one
+to the other in quantity; that, for instance, the manufacturer
+of nails, desirous of exchanging his nails for a cow, should
+meet a cattle-dealer who should want exactly as many nails
+as a cow is worth! Here there is one chief difficulty in the
+way, viz.: that there are so many commodities which cannot
+be divided without causing a diminution or even a destruction
+of their value; and that others cannot be stored away in any
+quantity without becoming a very heavy burthen to their
+owner. How useful it would therefore be, if there was one
+commodity which should be acceptable to every person, at all
+times, especially if in addition to this, it possessed the qualities
+of durability, capacity for transportation and for being stored
+up and preserved. Any person who possessed a proper supply
+of this one commodity would then be certain of being able to
+obtain all other exchangeable commodities through its instrumentality;
+and every seller would be satisfied to exchange
+what he had to dispose of against this <span class="tei tei-q">“universal commodity.”</span>
+If two values are equal to a third, they are equal to each
+other. It is, therefore, a simple matter to use this most current
+of all commodities, with which all others are most frequently
+compared, as a measure of the relative values of all
+other exchangeable commodities. There is need of such a
+measure, and it is analogous to the want experienced by the
+mathematician who has a column of fractions to sum up, and
+who does it by first reducing them all to a common denominator.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Storch.</span></span>)<a id="noteref_688" name="noteref_688" href="#note_688"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">688</span></span></a>
+A person entrusted with the duty of assessing
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page342">[pg 342]</span><a name="Pg342" id="Pg342" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+the values of two hundred different articles would be
+obliged, if he had no such measure to use, to burthen his
+memory with at least 19,900<a id="noteref_689" name="noteref_689" href="#note_689"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">689</span></span></a> different ratios. With it, he
+need carry only 199 in his head.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Such a commodity, universally in favor, and which, on that
+account, is employed as an intermediary in the effecting of
+exchanges of the most varied nature, in the measuring of all exchange-values and as a
+value-carrier (<span lang="de" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="de"><span style="font-style: italic">Werthträger</span></span>) in
+time<a id="noteref_690" name="noteref_690" href="#note_690"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">690</span></span></a><a id="noteref_691" name="noteref_691" href="#note_691"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">691</span></span></a> and space, we call money. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Merce universale: Berri; produit
+préféré: Ganilh; marchandise intermédiare; Bastiat.</span></span>)<a id="noteref_692" name="noteref_692" href="#note_692"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">692</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page343">[pg 343]</span><a name="Pg343" id="Pg343" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+The more enlightened portions of every business community
+gradually come to require payment in the commodity
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page344">[pg 344]</span><a name="Pg344" id="Pg344" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+which has for the time being the greatest circulating capacity.
+If to this be added the sanction of the government, and if the
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page345">[pg 345]</span><a name="Pg345" id="Pg345" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+government itself recognizes this same <span class="tei tei-q">“universal commodity”</span>
+as the means of payment of all debts, or as <span class="tei tei-q">“legal tender”</span>
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page346">[pg 346]</span><a name="Pg346" id="Pg346" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+(<span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">puissance libératoire</span></span>),
+where no other is expressly agreed upon, the <span class="tei tei-q">“universal commodity”</span>
+in question then becomes money in the fullest sense of the idea conveyed by the
+word.<a id="noteref_693" name="noteref_693" href="#note_693"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">693</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page347">[pg 347]</span><a name="Pg347" id="Pg347" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc271" id="toc271"></a>
+<a name="pdf272" id="pdf272"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section CXVII.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">Effect Of The Introduction Of Money.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+By the introduction of money, most exchanges are divided
+into two halves: purchase and sale.<a id="noteref_694" name="noteref_694" href="#note_694"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">694</span></span></a> We may also say with
+Schlözer, that by its means, exchange, for the first time, becomes
+a sale, and obscure value in exchange, clear and definite
+price. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Permatio vicina emtioni</span></span>). Were there no money,
+the party to an exchange, occupying the most advantageous
+economic position, would possess a much greater superiority
+over the other than he does now. Many a bread-buyer, especially,
+would be half starved before he could agree with the
+seller on the quantity of bread to be received in exchange for
+the commodity he had to dispose of. The producer of the
+means of subsistence would here possess an extreme advantage,
+since the urgent necessity of the exchange for the one
+party, and the power of the other to postpone it, would make the determination
+of the price an entirely arbitrary matter.<a id="noteref_695" name="noteref_695" href="#note_695"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">695</span></span></a>
+Hence, the development of money as the instrument of trade,
+keeps pace with the development of individual liberty. Payment
+of wages in money makes the workman more responsible
+for his husbandry etc., but at the same time, freer, than payment
+in produce. Now, also, a higher division of labor becomes possible;
+for the easier it is to obtain everything else for money,
+the easier it is for each person to devote himself exclusively to
+one branch of business.<a id="noteref_696" name="noteref_696" href="#note_696"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">696</span></span></a>
+Without money, too, only ready
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page348">[pg 348]</span><a name="Pg348" id="Pg348" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+commodities could be exchanged one against another. Only
+when money has become the instrument of trade, is it possible
+to separate the net from the gross returns, and, therefore, to
+manage income properly. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Schäffle</span></span>). Now, also, it becomes
+for the first time really remunerative to produce more than
+one needs for his own use, and to save. Without money, the
+owner of any one kind of capital, who could not employ it
+himself, would be obliged, if he desired to loan it, to find not
+only a person who was in need of capital, but one who needed
+the very kind of capital he had. For instance, the person who
+had one horse too many, would be obliged to look for another
+who was in need of one etc. And how difficult a task it would be
+to determine the amount of interest, if it had to be paid in produce
+or kind, and even to make a return in produce or kind of
+capital which had been presumably used. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Storch</span></span>). Moveable
+property or resources can attain importance only after the introduction
+of good money, since, previous to such introduction,
+it was by reason of its great variety,<a id="noteref_697" name="noteref_697" href="#note_697"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">697</span></span></a>
+and of its perishable nature,
+immensely inferior to landed property. Hence it is, that
+money, in a nation's economy, is what the blood is in the life
+of the animal. It is, so to speak, the common reservoir in
+which all food is first dissolved, and by which, at a later stage,
+the elements of nutrition and preservation are distributed to
+the several organs.<a id="noteref_698" name="noteref_698" href="#note_698"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">698</span></span></a>
+There is, indeed, no machine which has
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page349">[pg 349]</span><a name="Pg349" id="Pg349" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+saved as much labor as money. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Lauderdale</span></span>). It is true that
+the shadows which wealth is wont to cast, extravagance, avarice
+and inequality of every kind, may readily grow longer
+and darker in consequence of the introduction of money.<a id="noteref_699" name="noteref_699" href="#note_699"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">699</span></span></a> But
+may not the knife which, in the hands of the surgeon, does so
+much for life, become an instrument of danger in the hands of
+a child? The invention of money has been rightly compared to the
+invention of writing with letters.<a id="noteref_700" name="noteref_700" href="#note_700"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">700</span></span></a> We may, however,
+call the introduction of money as the universal medium of exchange
+(money-economy),<a id="noteref_701" name="noteref_701" href="#note_701"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">701</span></span></a> in which goods intended for use are
+exchanged against money<a id="noteref_702" name="noteref_702" href="#note_702"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">702</span></span></a>—instead of barter (barter economy),
+which is a system of public economy (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Schäffle</span></span>), in an,
+as yet, very little developed form, man being there less sociable
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page350">[pg 350]</span><a name="Pg350" id="Pg350" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+with his fellow men—one of the greatest and most beneficent
+advances ever made by the race.<a id="noteref_703" name="noteref_703" href="#note_703"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">703</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page351">[pg 351]</span><a name="Pg351" id="Pg351" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc273" id="toc273"></a>
+<a name="pdf274" id="pdf274"></a>
+<a name="Section_118" id="Section_118" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section CXVIII.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">The Different Kinds Of Money.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Very different kinds of commodities have, according to circumstances,
+been used as money; but uniformly only such as
+possess a universally recognized economic value.<a id="noteref_704" name="noteref_704" href="#note_704"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">704</span></span></a> On the
+whole, people in a low stage of civilization are wont to employ,
+mainly, only ordinary commodities, such as are calculated to
+satisfy a vulgar and urgent want, as an instrument of exchange.
+As they advance in civilization, they, at each step,
+choose a more and more costly object, for this purpose,<a id="noteref_705" name="noteref_705" href="#note_705"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">705</span></span></a> and
+one which ministers to the more elevated wants.
+</p>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page352">[pg 352]</span><a name="Pg352" id="Pg352" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+A. Races of hunters, at least in non-tropical countries,
+usually use skins as money; that is the almost exclusive product
+of their labor, one which can be preserved for a long
+period of time, which constitutes their principal article of
+clothing and their principal export in the more highly developed
+regions.<a id="noteref_706" name="noteref_706" href="#note_706"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">706</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+B. Nomadic races and the lower agricultural races,<a id="noteref_707" name="noteref_707" href="#note_707"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">707</span></span></a> pass,
+by a natural gradation, to the use of cattle as money; which
+supposes rich pasturages at the disposal of all. If it were
+otherwise, there would be a great many to whom payments
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page353">[pg 353]</span><a name="Pg353" id="Pg353" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+of this kind had been made, who would not know what to do
+with the cattle given them, on account of the charges for their
+maintenance.<a id="noteref_708" name="noteref_708" href="#note_708"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">708</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page354">[pg 354]</span><a name="Pg354" id="Pg354" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc275" id="toc275"></a>
+<a name="pdf276" id="pdf276"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section CXIX.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">The Metals As Money.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+C. That metals were used for the purpose of money much
+later than the commodities above mentioned, and the precious
+metals in turn later than the non-precious metals, cannot by
+any means be shown to be universally true. Rather is gold
+in some countries to be obtained by the exercise of so little
+skill, and both gold and silver satisfy a want<a id="noteref_709" name="noteref_709" href="#note_709"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">709</span></span></a> so live and general,
+and one so early felt, that they are to be met with as an
+instrument of exchange in very early times.<a id="noteref_710" name="noteref_710" href="#note_710"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">710</span></span></a> In the case of
+isolated races, much depends on the nature of the metals with
+which the geologic constitution of the country has furnished
+them.<a id="noteref_711" name="noteref_711" href="#note_711"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">711</span></span></a> In general, however, the above law is found to prevail
+here. The higher the development of a people becomes,
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page355">[pg 355]</span><a name="Pg355" id="Pg355" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+the more frequent is the occurrence of large payments;
+and to effect these, the more costly a metal is, the better, of
+course, it is adapted to effect such payments. Besides, only
+rich nations are able to possess the costly metals in a quantity
+absolutely great.<a id="noteref_712" name="noteref_712" href="#note_712"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">712</span></span></a> Among the Jews, gold as money, dates only
+from the time of David.<a id="noteref_713" name="noteref_713" href="#note_713"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">713</span></span></a> King Pheidon, of Argos, it is said,
+introduced silver money into Greece, about the middle of the
+eighth century before Christ. Gold came into use at a much
+later period.<a id="noteref_714" name="noteref_714" href="#note_714"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">714</span></span></a> The Romans struck silver money, for the first time, in 209 before Christ,
+and, in 207, the first gold coins.<a id="noteref_715" name="noteref_715" href="#note_715"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">715</span></span></a>
+Among modern nations, Venice (1285) and Florence seem to have been the first
+to have coined gold in any quantity.<a id="noteref_716" name="noteref_716" href="#note_716"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">716</span></span></a>
+Henry III. of England (ob. 1272), was the first to coin gold,
+but with so little success, that for a long time after, Edward
+III. (ob. 1377) was regarded as the first English monarch who
+had coined gold.<a id="noteref_717" name="noteref_717" href="#note_717"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">717</span></span></a>
+How little a barbarous people are in a
+condition to make use of very costly material as money, is
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page356">[pg 356]</span><a name="Pg356" id="Pg356" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+proved by the account which Tacitus gives of the ancient
+Germans, who preferred silver to gold in trade.<a id="noteref_718" name="noteref_718" href="#note_718"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">718</span></span></a> England
+presents us with an instance of the other extreme. Since
+1816, silver, in that country, has been used only as a species
+of change, and the circulation of gold governs in almost all
+commercial transactions.<a id="noteref_719" name="noteref_719" href="#note_719"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">719</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+D. The local usage of some countries has raised many
+other commodities to the dignity of instruments of exchange,
+especially where the population are poor and the metals which
+might be used as money have not existed in sufficient quantities
+or in the requisite proportion. But people have always
+limited themselves in the material of their money to such
+commodities as are universally acceptable, as uniform as may
+be, and current as articles of export or import.<a id="noteref_720" name="noteref_720" href="#note_720"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">720</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page357">[pg 357]</span><a name="Pg357" id="Pg357" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc277" id="toc277"></a>
+<a name="pdf278" id="pdf278"></a>
+<a name="Section_120" id="Section_120" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section CXX.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">Money—The Precious Metals.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+That the precious metals are uniformly preferred in highly
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page358">[pg 358]</span><a name="Pg358" id="Pg358" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+cultivated nations<a id="noteref_721" name="noteref_721" href="#note_721"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">721</span></span></a>
+as the instrument of exchange, depends on
+the greatness and uniformity of their value in exchange, but
+especially on their durability and pliancy as to form.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+This value in exchange is great, because their beauty, which consists
+in their luster and their sonorous ring,<a id="noteref_722" name="noteref_722" href="#note_722"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">722</span></span></a> gives them
+great value in use; and because, at the same time, their rarity
+in nature makes the supply of them relatively small,<a id="noteref_723" name="noteref_723" href="#note_723"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">723</span></span></a> and not
+susceptible of increase at pleasure.<a id="noteref_724" name="noteref_724" href="#note_724"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">724</span></span></a> As they contain so large
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page359">[pg 359]</span><a name="Pg359" id="Pg359" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+a value in so small a volume, they are adapted to transportation from one place to
+another, with but little difficulty—a matter of the greatest importance in an
+instrument of exchange.<a id="noteref_725" name="noteref_725" href="#note_725"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">725</span></span></a>
+Hence, it is much easier to keep the demand for
+them and the supply of them at a level all over the world,
+than it is the demand and supply of most other commodities.
+And this all the more as there are not different kinds of gold
+and silver, but only different qualities of their fineness.<a id="noteref_726" name="noteref_726" href="#note_726"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">726</span></span></a> It
+also contributes to the uniformity of their value in exchange,
+that they minister mainly only to wants of luxury. The most
+indispensable commodities are subject to the greatest variations
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page360">[pg 360]</span><a name="Pg360" id="Pg360" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+in price (see § <a href="#Section_103" class="tei tei-ref">103</a>), whereas, in the case of the
+precious metals, the diversity of uses to which they may be turned
+contributes greatly to render their value, as instruments of exchange,
+more equable. If the supply of them be small, gold
+and silver vessels are less in demand; a part of the old ones
+are melted down, and <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">vice versa</span></span>.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+In durability, the precious metals surpass almost all other
+commodities. They are not at all affected by air or water,
+and they can be corroded only by very few fluids. Fire may,
+indeed, change their form, but scarcely in any degree the
+value of the material of gold, and that of silver very little, and
+then only when it is subjected to a very powerful blast or
+draught of air.<a id="noteref_727" name="noteref_727" href="#note_727"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">727</span></span></a><a id="noteref_728" name="noteref_728" href="#note_728"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">728</span></span></a>
+Hence, while by laying them by, they
+suffer virtually nothing at all (a most valuable article is an
+article to deposit savings in), their wear and tear from use may
+be very much decreased by an admixture with other metals
+in the proper proportion.<a id="noteref_729" name="noteref_729" href="#note_729"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">729</span></span></a>
+This durability contributes largely
+to keep the price of the precious metals more uniform. By
+the time that the wheat crop is rightly harvested, the great
+bulk of the previously stored wheat is, as a rule, consumed;
+and, therefore, the supply of wheat depends almost entirely on
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page361">[pg 361]</span><a name="Pg361" id="Pg361" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+the yield of the last crop. On the other hand, it is probable
+that there is many a piece of money, the raw material of which
+was dug from Thracian gold mines in the time of King Philip
+or from the silver mines of Spain during the reign of Hannibal,
+in circulation to-day. Compared with the immeasurable stores
+of gold and silver which have gone on accumulating for thousands
+of years, the new yield of them, in any one year, is lost
+like a drop in a bucket. Hence, only when the yield of the mines
+has continued for a very long time, or when it is exceedingly
+great or remarkably small, can the price of their products
+change to any great extent.<a id="noteref_730" name="noteref_730" href="#note_730"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">730</span></span></a> Even during the revolution in
+prices, between 1492 and 1560, the yearly decline in their
+prices was only one-half of one per cent. per annum.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Their great pliability of form has, too, very important advantages
+for our purpose: first, that they can be divided very
+accurately into very small parts, and that the volume of every part corresponds exactly
+to the value of the part;<a id="noteref_731" name="noteref_731" href="#note_731"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">731</span></span></a>
+and secondly, that they take an impression at very little cost, an impression
+which is an authoritative and trustworthy expression
+of their weight and quality, thus saving the commercial public
+the perilous trouble of weighing and testing them every time
+they are used.<a id="noteref_732" name="noteref_732" href="#note_732"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">732</span></span></a><a id="noteref_733" name="noteref_733" href="#note_733"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">733</span></span></a><a id="noteref_734" name="noteref_734" href="#note_734"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">734</span></span></a>
+This duty the state, as a rule, assumes.
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page362">[pg 362]</span><a name="Pg362" id="Pg362" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+(Coinage.) When its authority, however, is not recognized,
+as is generally the case in international trade, gold and silver
+bars are even now used, and have, therefore, to be weighed
+and tested.<a id="noteref_735" name="noteref_735" href="#note_735"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">735</span></span></a><a id="noteref_736" name="noteref_736" href="#note_736"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">736</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page363">[pg 363]</span><a name="Pg363" id="Pg363" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc279" id="toc279"></a>
+<a name="pdf280" id="pdf280"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section CXXI.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">Value In Use And Value In Exchange Of Money.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+The original value in use of the precious metals, to satisfy
+certain wants of luxury in the most aesthetic and the most substantial
+manner, continues still; but with the advance of civilization,
+the employment of gold and silver for this purpose
+has fallen farther and farther behind the more recent employment
+of these metals as the best material for money. And
+since now the services rendered by money may be divided into
+two classes: storing up or preservation, and the transmission
+(division, concentration) of values,<a id="noteref_737" name="noteref_737" href="#note_737"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">737</span></span></a> the former always plays a
+greater part in the earlier states of the development of trade
+by money; and the latter plays the larger part in the later
+stages of the same development. We may best compare money to
+the other machines or instruments of commerce.<a id="noteref_738" name="noteref_738" href="#note_738"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">738</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+The person who, in times when there is a dearth of goods,
+and especially of capital, complains of a want of money, commits
+the same error as if he ascribed a scarcity or absence of
+grain, when it exists, to a too small number of wagons to carry
+it, or to the narrowness of country highways. The inference
+may, indeed, be sometimes well-founded, but certainly only by
+way of exception; and yet it is generally the first which politico-economical
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page364">[pg 364]</span><a name="Pg364" id="Pg364" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+quacks think of in practice.<a id="noteref_739" name="noteref_739" href="#note_739"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">739</span></span></a> Like all tools or
+instruments, money constitutes a part of an individual's or a
+nation's, or of the world's capital. Considered from the point
+of view of private business or economy, money is circulating
+capital, but from the point of view of the world's economy, it
+is fixed capital.<a id="noteref_740" name="noteref_740" href="#note_740"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">740</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page365">[pg 365]</span><a name="Pg365" id="Pg365" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc281" id="toc281"></a>
+<a name="pdf282" id="pdf282"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section CXXII.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">Value In Exchange Of Money.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+The value in exchange of money is said to be high when
+all other commodities estimated in money are cheap; and low
+in the opposite case. We have here to do with the application
+of the most general of all laws of price; therefore, with
+the demand and supply of money. The demand for it depends
+on the wants and the means of payment of its purchasers.
+Therefore, if a country has little trade, it will, on this account,
+need only few instruments of trade, that is, of little money
+to effect exchanges. If it be poor in other goods, it will get
+little money in exchange. In the former respect, there is a
+beneficent principle of equalization or compensation which decreases
+the price-variations of money, no matter of what kind,
+in the necessity, when the number of business transactions remains
+the same and money becomes cheaper, to use more of it,
+and less when it becomes dearer.<a id="noteref_741" name="noteref_741" href="#note_741"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">741</span></span></a> The supply of money is, in
+the long run, dependent chiefly on the cost of production.
+But since the cost of production in different mines is very different,
+the value in exchange of the precious metals is determined
+by the cost of producing them from the poorest mines
+which must be worked in order to supply the aggregate
+want of them. (See § <a href="#Section_110" class="tei tei-ref">110</a>.)<a id="noteref_742" name="noteref_742" href="#note_742"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">742</span></span></a> The more unfavorable the conditions
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page366">[pg 366]</span><a name="Pg366" id="Pg366" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+of their production are, the greater is the quantity of
+commodities which must be given for a pound of gold, silver
+etc.; that producers may not be deterred from the prosecution
+of their work. The extremes of the value in exchange
+of money are dependent on the use for which it is intended.
+That value cannot rise higher than to the point at
+which single pieces of money become inconvenient on account
+of their smallness, nor sink lower than the point at which a
+similar inconvenience is produced by their too great size. In
+both instances, it would become necessary to have recourse
+to other instruments of exchange.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc283" id="toc283"></a>
+<a name="pdf284" id="pdf284"></a>
+<a name="Section_123" id="Section_123" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section CXXIII.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">The Quantity Of Money A Nation Needs.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+How great the amount of money needed in the entire
+economy of any state is, cannot be always rightly determined,
+either by the amount of the national resources, or by the
+number of the population.<a id="noteref_743" name="noteref_743" href="#note_743"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">743</span></span></a>
+It is a very easy thing to refute
+the opinion, that the aggregate amount of cash money in a
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page367">[pg 367]</span><a name="Pg367" id="Pg367" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+country constitutes an equivalent of the aggregate amount of
+all other commodities to be found there at any time, in such a
+way that the two pans of this great scales (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Locke</span></span>) hang always
+in a state of equilibrium, and that an increase of the
+amount of money, the amount of all other commodities remaining
+the same, must be productive of an exactly corresponding decrease in the value
+of each piece of money.<a id="noteref_744" name="noteref_744" href="#note_744"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">744</span></span></a> Think
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page368">[pg 368]</span><a name="Pg368" id="Pg368" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+only of the great many commodities which are obtained and
+consumed without any exchange whatever! Rather does the
+amount of money necessary to keep the value in exchange of
+the money employed in a people's public economy unaltered,<a id="noteref_745" name="noteref_745" href="#note_745"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">745</span></span></a>
+depend on the cooperation of the following conditions:
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+A. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">The number and extent of such commercial transactions
+as are effected by means of money</span></span>;<a id="noteref_746" name="noteref_746" href="#note_746"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">746</span></span></a> a relation which,
+evidently, increases (see § <a href="#Section_56" class="tei tei-ref">56</a>, ff.) with every advance
+in the division of labor. Hence the transition from serfdom and socage service
+to free labor, from domestic-servant labor to day-labor and piece-work, from feudal
+military service to that of paid and standing armies, from land-privileges and
+allowances in produce, such as fire-bote etc., to the payment of officials in
+money, from dues in produce to taxes in money, and regular lease-hold interests, from
+requisitions to loans of money; in a word, from the barter-economy
+(<span lang="de" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="de"><span style="font-style: italic">Naturalwirthschaft</span></span>) of the
+middle ages to the trade by means of money in the higher
+stages of civilization, that is, from the <span class="tei tei-q">“feudal”</span> to the <span class="tei tei-q">“commercial”</span>
+system must, of itself, increase the money-need (<span lang="de" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="de"><span style="font-style: italic">Geldbedarf</span></span>) of a people.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+B. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">The rapidity of the circulation of money</span></span>; because, in
+most commercial transactions, one dollar which circulates ten
+times a year really performs the same service as ten dollars
+which go from hand to hand once in a year; just as the
+economic use of a ship employed in the transportation of
+commodities does not depend on its commodiousness alone
+but on its rapidity also.<a id="noteref_747" name="noteref_747" href="#note_747"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">747</span></span></a> The economic use of money does
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page369">[pg 369]</span><a name="Pg369" id="Pg369" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+not depend on its amount simply. Says <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Sismondi</span></span>: <span class="tei tei-q">“The
+amount of the medium of circulation in a state must be equal
+to the sum of the payments made in it in a given time, divided
+by the sum of the times the former has, on an average,
+changed owners within that time.”</span><a id="noteref_748" name="noteref_748" href="#note_748"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">748</span></span></a> Under given economic
+circumstances, the rapidity of the medium of circulation is,
+taken all in all, not by any means an arbitrary matter. It
+will happen very seldom that one man will purchase or consume
+a commodity in order that another may not want
+money.<a id="noteref_749" name="noteref_749" href="#note_749"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">749</span></span></a> Were the greater number of money-earners (and in
+nations with a healthy economic life this number is always
+made up of men noted for the good management of their
+own affairs) inclined to pay out the money which they had
+taken in, rapidly, a very active production would prevail
+everywhere; and this, in turn, supposes general commercial
+freedom and great legal security. The less these conditions
+are developed, the more difficult it becomes, not only to lay
+out the money received to-day productively to-morrow, but
+the more imperatively does a proper foresight demand, that a
+reserve-fund should be maintained for times of necessity.
+(See § <a href="#Section_43" class="tei tei-ref">43</a>.)<a id="noteref_750" name="noteref_750" href="#note_750"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">750</span></span></a> Even in the same age and among the same
+people, money moves most slowly under the influences of
+troublesome and critical epochs; for the dangers of war
+and sedition, of impending burdensome taxation, commercial
+gluts and numerous cases of bankruptcy uniformly operate
+to make the possessors of money hold anxiously to their
+present supply.<a id="noteref_751" name="noteref_751" href="#note_751"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">751</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+In less civilized countries, the same condition of things leads
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page370">[pg 370]</span><a name="Pg370" id="Pg370" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+the people even to bury their money-treasures. In large
+cities, the circulation of money is generally more rapid than
+in the country districts; in a thickly populated than in a thinly populated country;
+and in trade than in agriculture.<a id="noteref_752" name="noteref_752" href="#note_752"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">752</span></span></a> Every
+improvement in the means of intercommunication tends to facilitate
+it. The rich man possesses, as a rule, less money, relatively
+speaking, than the poorer man. Hence, a more equable
+division of a nation's resources among the people would increase
+the amount of money needed.<a id="noteref_753" name="noteref_753" href="#note_753"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">753</span></span></a> While the concentration,
+as to time, of circulation into few great terms of payment
+is calculated of itself to cause a large sum of money to remain
+idle in the interval,<a id="noteref_754" name="noteref_754" href="#note_754"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">754</span></span></a> its concentration in space in large
+commercial cities must dispense with the necessity of a great number
+of instruments of exchange. In England, it is customary
+for every man in comfortable circumstances, as soon as he receives
+any money, to deposit with a banker, and to make all
+his payments by means of checks upon the latter. Cash
+money is now employed by Londoners only in payment of
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page371">[pg 371]</span><a name="Pg371" id="Pg371" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+wages, and in trade between retail dealers and consumers.
+The banker is there the common cashier of a great number of
+private individuals, and is in a condition to make their payments
+for them with a much smaller amount of money, especially
+when they are to be made by one of his depositors to
+another.<a id="noteref_755" name="noteref_755" href="#note_755"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">755</span></span></a> This <span class="tei tei-q">“union of money-chests”</span>
+(<span lang="de" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="de"><span style="font-style: italic">Kassenvereinigung</span></span>)
+has been effected also on a larger scale; inasmuch as bankers,
+in greater or smaller numbers, are wont to have one bank as
+a center; and the country banks, in turn, to be in constant relation
+with the great moneyed institutions of London, subject to
+a species of general superintendence by the Bank of England.
+These great monetary institutions have, so to speak, a common
+rendezvous at the Clearing-House, where the greater part of
+their payments are made by a mere off-setting of debits and
+credits;<a id="noteref_756" name="noteref_756" href="#note_756"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">756</span></span></a>
+and this bank is, as it were, the cashier-in-chief of
+the nation, and in possession of almost the entire cash stores
+of the English people.<a id="noteref_757" name="noteref_757" href="#note_757"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">757</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page372">[pg 372]</span><a name="Pg372" id="Pg372" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+C. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">The quantity and rapidity of circulation of the representatives
+of money.</span></span> These, in so far as they are worthy of the
+name here given them, depend on the credit of those who issue
+them; that is, on the certainty that they shall, at the time fixed,
+be redeemed in money. To this category belong the paper
+money of the state which bears no interest, and the treasury-notes
+of the state which do bear interest, bank notes, bills of
+exchange, promissory notes, book-credits of private persons,
+sometimes even certificates of the storage of goods in public
+stores. It is estimated, that, at the present time, nine-tenths
+of all the payments made in Great Britain are effected without
+the aid of money, or even of bank-notes.<a id="noteref_758" name="noteref_758" href="#note_758"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">758</span></span></a> The capacity
+of a person to make purchases does not depend simply on the
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page373">[pg 373]</span><a name="Pg373" id="Pg373" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+amount of money he possesses, but on his credit likewise.
+The person who buys on credit, contributes as much to raise
+the price of commodities as the person who buys for cash;
+with this exception, however, that when the former eventually
+fails to redeem his promise to pay, the price raised by him
+quickly falls again.<a id="noteref_759" name="noteref_759" href="#note_759"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">759</span></span></a> And, indeed, all the
+various forms of credit, mentioned above, agree essentially in this, however
+they may differ from one another in costliness and rapidity of
+circulation.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc285" id="toc285"></a>
+<a name="pdf286" id="pdf286"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section CXXIV.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">The Quantity Of Money A Nation Needs. (Continued.)</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Of the three conditions above mentioned, it is evident that
+the first operates on the amount of money needed, in a direction
+opposite to that of the other two. The usual course of
+development is this: among an advancing people, the number
+of money transactions increases at first; later, when education
+has become general, and the people have grown habituated
+to the giving and receiving of credit, the circulation of money
+is accelerated, and an increase of the substitutes for money
+effected. Hence, it is perfectly natural that the money-need
+of a people whose public economy is only half developed,
+should, in proportion to the number of inhabitants, be greater,
+not only than that of a people whose economy is wholly undeveloped,
+but also, than that of a people whose public economy
+has been carried to the highest point of perfection.<a id="noteref_760" name="noteref_760" href="#note_760"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">760</span></span></a><a id="noteref_761" name="noteref_761" href="#note_761"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">761</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page374">[pg 374]</span><a name="Pg374" id="Pg374" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc287" id="toc287"></a>
+<a name="pdf288" id="pdf288"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section CXXV.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">Uniformity Of The Value In Exchange Of The
+Precious Metals.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+The peculiar properties of the precious metals described
+above (§ <a href="#Section_120" class="tei tei-ref">120</a>), explains satisfactorily enough, why, at
+the same
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page375">[pg 375]</span><a name="Pg375" id="Pg375" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+time, but in different countries, they have more nearly the
+same value in exchange than any other commodity whatever.
+Like a fluid in tubes which communicate with one another,
+the precious metals seek the one same level of value the whole
+world over.<a id="noteref_762" name="noteref_762" href="#note_762"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">762</span></span></a> Only, it must not be supposed that every absolute
+or relative increase of the amount of money in a country
+must produce immediately a corresponding diminution of the
+value of money; and in addition to this cause an exportation
+of money.<a id="noteref_763" name="noteref_763" href="#note_763"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">763</span></span></a> If the number of trade-transactions increases in
+the same proportion as the amount of money, the value of
+money remains entirely unaffected.<a id="noteref_764" name="noteref_764" href="#note_764"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">764</span></span></a>
+The same thing occurs
+when the increased influx of money, instead of overflowing
+the channels of circulation, only swells the volume in the
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page376">[pg 376]</span><a name="Pg376" id="Pg376" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+ready-money reservoirs. By means of these stores of ready
+money, very large payments may be made by one nation to
+another, without changing the circulation, or, therefore, the
+value of money, in the slightest degree, on either side.<a id="noteref_765" name="noteref_765" href="#note_765"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">765</span></span></a>
+If, indeed, such payments should continue for a long time to flow
+in the same direction, they would certainly influence the circulation,
+and then produce a current in the opposite direction.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+However, it may happen, that the value of money in different
+countries may be permanently different, when there are
+lasting difficulties in the way of the leveling influence of the
+incoming or outgoing current of money. Thus, the precious
+metals maintain a high value in those countries especially which
+can obtain them only by giving commodities difficult of transportation
+for them. If, for instance, an Englishman, anxious
+to take advantage of the high value of money in Poland,
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page377">[pg 377]</span><a name="Pg377" id="Pg377" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+should cause Polish articles, such as wheat, wood, wool etc.,
+to be imported into England, they would reach their destination
+very much increased in price, because of the great cost
+of transportation. Whether Poland or England would have
+to bear this cost depends on the relations of supply and demand.
+Certain it is, however, that the migration of money
+is hereby rendered exceedingly difficult, forbidden even within
+the limits of certain value-differences, especially where the
+means of communication are universally bad. And so, the
+smaller the number of countries which minister to the want of
+commodities of precious-metal districts, the more must other
+nations obtain the money they need only at second and third
+hand; by means of which, naturally, money itself is made
+dearer each time. Now, it is, as a rule, nations in a low stage
+of civilization, that engage in the exportation of raw material,
+and they are the worst adapted to engaging directly in the
+carrying on of trade. When, therefore, they do not possess
+gold or silver mines themselves, money-value is, as a rule,
+highest with them; especially as the absence of legal security
+and protection, which generally obtains there, makes the value
+in use of the precious metals one of great urgency to them.<a id="noteref_766" name="noteref_766" href="#note_766"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">766</span></span></a><a id="noteref_767" name="noteref_767" href="#note_767"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">767</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Direct legislative or governmental provisions may operate
+in the same direction; as, for instance, the Japanese embargo
+laws which, not long since, limited all foreign trade to two
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page378">[pg 378]</span><a name="Pg378" id="Pg378" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+foreign nations.<a id="noteref_768" name="noteref_768" href="#note_768"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">768</span></span></a>
+I intend to treat of the influence of taxation
+on the value of money, in a future work to be written by me,
+on the Political Economy of the State.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc289" id="toc289"></a>
+<a name="pdf290" id="pdf290"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section CXXVI.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">Uniformity Of The Value In Exchange Of The
+Precious Metals. (Continued.)</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Most nations can satisfy their want of the precious metals,
+only through the medium of foreign trade. Hence they very
+naturally look upon the cost of production of the articles of
+export by the exchange of which they obtain the precious
+metals either directly or indirectly, as the cost of production of
+these metals themselves. But, the rule that all commodities of
+equal cost of production have equal value in exchange is applicable
+only within the limits of the same economic territory
+(§ <a href="#Section_107" class="tei tei-ref">107</a>), for it is
+frequently physically impossible, and still more
+frequently rendered difficult, by laws, customs and states of
+mind to transfer factors of production from one country to
+another simply on account of the more advantageous market
+they would there find. Thus, for instance, when England
+exchanges its cotton and woolen goods, and steel instruments
+for Mexican silver, the cost of production of the two equivalents
+may be very different, and the one party in this trade
+may permanently make a larger profit than the other.<a id="noteref_769" name="noteref_769" href="#note_769"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">769</span></span></a> According
+to § <a href="#Section_101" class="tei tei-ref">101</a>, that party will be most favored in whom the
+desire of holding to his own commodities is farthest from being
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page379">[pg 379]</span><a name="Pg379" id="Pg379" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+out-weighed by his desire to obtain the other. But, at
+bottom, silver is no very indispensable article. Especially in
+highly civilized commercial communities, it is easiest to obtain
+substitutes for it, while the principal articles of English
+export are, for the most part, objects with which to satisfy
+wants rather urgent in their nature, very general, and of rapid
+growth; and which, besides, are not, to any extent, difficult
+of transportation. It is not a matter of surprise, therefore,
+that English commodities, in silver countries, are generally
+sold above the mean price between the English cost of production
+and the Mexican, for instance, or the cost of procuring
+them elsewhere; and that silver, on the other hand, is sold
+in England, under the same. But this lowers the price of the
+precious metals of the latter country in general. Hence a
+change in the channels of international trade, which in most
+countries is the only source of gold and silver, may make the
+price of the precious metals dearer in one place and cheaper in
+another, even when the conditions of the production of mines
+remain entirely unaltered.<a id="noteref_770" name="noteref_770" href="#note_770"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">770</span></span></a> In an isolated country, any
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page380">[pg 380]</span><a name="Pg380" id="Pg380" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+amount of gold and silver whatever would, finally, as soon as
+the people had grown accustomed to it, suffice for all the
+wants of circulation. But, in commerce with the rest of the
+world, the greater quantity and greater cheapness of the
+precious metals, that is of those commodities which are most
+current and are possessed of the greatest amount of economic
+energy, must, without fail, be of the greatest advantage to a
+country; and this irrespective of the fact that they are under
+certain circumstances the symptom of an especially highly
+developed public economy. If we suppose two nations, A and
+B, equal in every other point, but that A has twice as much
+money as B, and that prices are twice as high there as in B;
+yet, with the same effort or sacrifice, A could levy twice as
+many taxes as B. In case of a war between them, A might
+pay in ready money for the necessities of an army which had
+invaded B, with one-fourth the sacrifice which B would have
+to make to support its army in A, if we reverse the case, and
+suppose that B had invaded A.<a id="noteref_771" name="noteref_771" href="#note_771"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">771</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+</div>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page381">[pg 381]</span><a name="Pg381" id="Pg381" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<hr class="page" /><div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 4.00em; margin-top: 4.00em">
+<a name="toc291" id="toc291"></a>
+<a name="pdf292" id="pdf292"></a>
+<h2 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">Chapter IV.</span></h2>
+<h2 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.88em; margin-top: 2.88em"><span style="font-size: 144%">History Of Prices.</span></h2>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc293" id="toc293"></a>
+<a name="pdf294" id="pdf294"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section CXXVII.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">Measure Of Prices,—Constant Measure.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+If we had a measure of prices with the same universality of
+application and the same unchangeableness as the measure of
+length, which is determined by astronomical calculation, we
+should be able, not only to clearly understand all the data relating
+to value, that is to say, a not unimportant portion of historical
+science, but we should, moreover, have a practical means to
+condition and fix even perpetual annuities, in such a way, that
+they would always afford the same economic and purchasing
+power to the person receiving them. No wonder, therefore,
+that political economists since Petty's time have zealously labored to find a
+<em class="tei tei-emph"><span style="font-style: italic">constant</span></em> measure of prices.<a id="noteref_772" name="noteref_772" href="#note_772"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">772</span></span></a> If by this we
+understand a species of goods such that it should always maintain
+equal exchange-power, as compared with all other commodities,
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page382">[pg 382]</span><a name="Pg382" id="Pg382" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+the idea of a <span class="tei tei-q">“constant”</span> measure of prices is unthinkable.
+We would have to suppose here, that not a single
+kind of goods varied in its price; since, otherwise, at least as
+compared with those that varied in price, the measure of
+prices would itself be variable.<a id="noteref_773" name="noteref_773" href="#note_773"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">773</span></span></a> But we may, indeed, search
+for a kind of goods such that its inherent elements and the elements
+peculiar to it, so far as it is itself concerned, and which
+go to determine price, should exert the same uniform influence
+at all times. If there be such a kind of goods, and its value
+in exchange as compared with other kinds of goods were to
+vary, we should be certain, at least, that the cause of the
+change was not in it, but in them; that <em class="tei tei-emph"><span style="font-style: italic">it</span></em> had not grown
+dearer or cheaper, but that they had grown cheaper or
+dearer. Such a kind of goods would have these two characteristics:
+A. A given amount of it would, under all circumstances,
+have the same value in use for the same number
+of persons. B. It would require, under all circumstances,
+the same cost to produce it, and therefore the supply might
+always keep pace exactly with the number of those who demanded
+it.<a id="noteref_774" name="noteref_774" href="#note_774"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">774</span></span></a> In this way the supply and demand of this kind
+of goods, abstraction made of the quantity of counter-values,
+would preserve forever the same invariable relation.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc295" id="toc295"></a>
+<a name="pdf296" id="pdf296"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section CXXVIII.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">Value In Exchange Estimated In Labor.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Adam Smith is of opinion that different kinds of goods, no
+matter how far removed from one another they may be in
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page383">[pg 383]</span><a name="Pg383" id="Pg383" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+time or space, have equal value in exchange, when an equal
+quantum of human labor may be purchased by their means.
+He adopts, because of the great differences in work, the average
+work of the common manual laborer. One work-day, and
+the sacrifice of <span class="tei tei-q">“rest, freedom and happiness”</span> therewith connected,
+are, under all circumstances, attended with the same
+inconvenience (value). If at one time this day's labor will exchange
+for more, and at another for less, of any kind of goods, it is only because the price
+of the latter has fallen or risen.<a id="noteref_775" name="noteref_775" href="#note_775"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">775</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+But we may ask whether the same sacrifice of liberty is as
+great a hardship to a Russian as to a Bedouin; or whether
+the sacrifice of an equal amount of rest is as hard for the New
+Englander as it is for a Turk, or as difficult to endure on a
+hot day in July as in the cold of winter. Besides, we have
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page384">[pg 384]</span><a name="Pg384" id="Pg384" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+here to do primarily only with value in exchange; and that
+value in the case of day-laborers' work is subject to very
+great fluctuations.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+The elements on which the demand and supply of labor
+depend are not, in themselves, invariable, nor do their variations
+usually compensate for one another. In progressive nations,
+the value in use of day-laborers' work increases as well
+as the capacity of their employers to pay them; but, at the
+same time, as a rule, and at least relatively speaking, the supply
+of labor diminishes on account of the increase in the cost
+of production of workmen. Precisely the reverse of this happens
+in nations in their decline, and in over-populated nations.
+The workman is subjected to the necessity of accepting distress-prices
+for his work, and especially of accepting them for a
+long space of time.<a id="noteref_776" name="noteref_776" href="#note_776"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">776</span></span></a> How often it happens that, if only
+transitorily, when wages are declining, work improves, and <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">vice
+versa</span></span>.<a id="noteref_777" name="noteref_777" href="#note_777"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">777</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Ricardo's school employs, as the measure of the price of
+various kinds of goods, the quantity of work by which the
+goods themselves are produced.<a id="noteref_778" name="noteref_778" href="#note_778"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">778</span></span></a> It is evident that the same
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page385">[pg 385]</span><a name="Pg385" id="Pg385" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+amount of common labor produces very different results, according
+as it is well or badly conducted. Hence Ricardo
+must have used the word labor in the sense of labor ideally
+adapted to its end. But in this way it would be impossible to
+reduce all the different kinds of labor to a common denominator.<a id="noteref_779" name="noteref_779" href="#note_779"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">779</span></span></a>
+Nor could the peculiar effects of capitalization, or the
+influence of the natural or artificial limitations of competition
+be estimated in terms of such a measure. (See §§ <a href="#Section_47" class="tei tei-ref">47</a>,
+<a href="#Section_107" class="tei tei-ref">107</a>, 189.)<a id="noteref_780" name="noteref_780" href="#note_780"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">780</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc297" id="toc297"></a>
+<a name="pdf298" id="pdf298"></a>
+<a name="Section_129" id="Section_129" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section CXXIX.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">The Precious Metals The Best Measure Of Prices.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+It is no more possible to find a constant measure of prices
+than it is to square the circle. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">J. B. Say.</span></span>) If the two magnitudes
+to be compared are separated from each other in
+space but not in time, the precious metals constitute not only
+the best measure of their prices, but also a very good one.
+But the precious metals are subject to very sensible and accidental
+variations in price in long periods of time. If, therefore,
+we would compare sums of money belonging to different
+times with one another, we must first construct a price-current
+list of all the more important articles of commerce for the
+time in question, and in the quantities they are needed in every
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page386">[pg 386]</span><a name="Pg386" id="Pg386" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+day life. We would next have to calculate the average of
+these mean prices, and thus to determine the relative value of
+the amounts to be estimated.<a id="noteref_781" name="noteref_781" href="#note_781"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">781</span></span></a> The person who should
+limit his comparison to a few species of commodities, says von
+Mangoldt, would lose in exactness what he gained in comprehensibility.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+In every such list, the wages of a day would occupy a very
+important place. The desire of exerting an influence over the
+lives and actions of other men, and the desire of relatively
+greater social distinction as compared with the social distinction
+of others, is very general; and there is scarcely any better
+evidence that it has been attained than the possession of the
+power of controlling a large number of days' work. The man
+who can keep one thousand day laborers is certainly, in a politico-economical
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page387">[pg 387]</span><a name="Pg387" id="Pg387" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+sense, an important personage. Besides, the
+height of day-wages has the most direct influence on the price
+of many other commodities.<a id="noteref_782" name="noteref_782" href="#note_782"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">782</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+No less important is the price of wheat, or rather of the
+principal article of food of the people, for the time being, with
+which the price of inland raw material—in so far as it can be produced from the
+same soil alternately with wheat—and, in the long run, also the wages of labor,
+are so essentially connected.<a id="noteref_783" name="noteref_783" href="#note_783"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">783</span></span></a>
+The same indispensable necessity of wheat which
+causes its price to fluctuate so largely from year to year, and
+from month to month, promotes the uniformity of its average
+price,<a id="noteref_784" name="noteref_784" href="#note_784"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">784</span></span></a> when many years are taken into the
+account.<a id="noteref_785" name="noteref_785" href="#note_785"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">785</span></span></a><a id="noteref_786" name="noteref_786" href="#note_786"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">786</span></span></a>
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page388">[pg 388]</span><a name="Pg388" id="Pg388" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Malthus.</span></span>) If, by reason of great progress made in the art of
+agriculture, the cost of the production of wheat should fall to
+one-half of what it was, a large increase of population would
+certainly not be delayed long. And so, on the other hand,
+there would be a decrease of population if, by the destruction
+of artificial means of irrigation, or other steps in the direction
+of a retrogressive civilization, the cost of the production of
+wheat were to be permanently increased.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+But even the average price of wheat, during a long series
+of years, is not entirely invariable. The increasing consumption
+compels the nation, as a whole, to provide for its requirement
+of wheat from less fertile sources, which increases its
+price generally. It is true that the progress of the science of
+agriculture and of the corn-trade counteract this tendency,
+retard the advance of the price of wheat, and may, for a time,
+produce an opposite tendency. It is true, also, that the people
+are induced by their most general and vital interests to take
+advantage of this possibility. But spite of the frequency of
+exceptions to it, the rule remains.<a id="noteref_787" name="noteref_787" href="#note_787"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">787</span></span></a> If, therefore, we wished
+to so fix a perpetual annuity that it should always be worth
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page389">[pg 389]</span><a name="Pg389" id="Pg389" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+as much money as a certain quantity of wheat had cost, on
+an average, during the three preceding decades, the thing-value
+of this annuity would, on the whole, rise with an advance
+in civilization.<a id="noteref_788" name="noteref_788" href="#note_788"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">788</span></span></a>
+To obtain something that would remain
+the same, it would be necessary to combine wheat with
+at least one chief commodity, the intrinsic basis of the price of
+which had a development independent of the price of grain;
+but the whole to be made payable in money. The precious
+metals are, in many respects, so diametrically opposed in properties
+to wheat, in their dispensableness, transportable character
+and durability, for instance, that these two classes of
+commodities are best adapted to act as counter-balances to
+each other.<a id="noteref_789" name="noteref_789" href="#note_789"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">789</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc299" id="toc299"></a>
+<a name="pdf300" id="pdf300"></a>
+<a name="Section_130" id="Section_130" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section CXXX.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">History Of The Prices Of The Chief Wants Of Life.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+The higher civilization advances, the dearer all those commodities
+in the production of which the factor nature with
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page390">[pg 390]</span><a name="Pg390" id="Pg390" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+value in exchange predominates are apt to become; and the
+cheaper, on the other hand, all those in which labor and capital
+play the principal productive part.<a id="noteref_790" name="noteref_790" href="#note_790"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">790</span></span></a> This is accounted for,
+not only by the almost unlimited capacity of labor and capital
+to be increased, while the natural forces which have value in
+exchange are susceptible of increase to so small an extent;
+but also, and especially, because new additions of labor and capital
+are wont to cause relatively smaller results in the production
+of raw material, and relatively larger ones in industry and commerce. (§
+<a href="#Section_33" class="tei tei-ref">33</a>, ff).<a id="noteref_791" name="noteref_791" href="#note_791"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">791</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Hence, from the relations the prices of the different classes
+of commodities bear to one another, we may draw important
+conclusions as to the degree of civilization which a country has
+attained. The above law also affords an explanation of the
+fact, that a young nation, which has made no great strides in
+the way of development, and in which, of course, the production
+of raw material preponderates, draw their commercial
+and manufactured necessaries, by way of preference, from
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page391">[pg 391]</span><a name="Pg4391" id="Pg4391" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+precisely the most highly civilized foreign nations. The latter
+are in a condition, and accustomed, to give the largest quantity
+and the best quality of manufactured articles for a required
+quantity of raw material; and, of course, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">vice versa</span></span>. Hence,
+in this intercourse of nations, the most urgent want, and the
+completest and easiest possibility of satisfying it, meet.<a id="noteref_792" name="noteref_792" href="#note_792"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">792</span></span></a> Only
+very highly civilized mother-countries can hold fast to colonial
+possessions in our day.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc301" id="toc301"></a>
+<a name="pdf302" id="pdf302"></a>
+<a name="Section_131" id="Section_131" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section CXXXI.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">History Of The Prices Of The Chief Wants Of Life. (Continued.)</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+A. In the case of a great many raw materials, we repeatedly
+find the following to be the course of development. In
+the lower stages of civilization, they grow of themselves, and
+in such quantities that a small amount of labor, and that only
+the labor of occupation, more than suffices to satisfy the small
+demand for them. Here, naturally enough, the price of raw
+materials is very low. After this, it rises with every advance
+made in civilization, for two reasons: first, because the demand
+becomes greater and greater; and then, because the
+naturally free sources of production, called into requisition by
+other wants, now flow less and less abundantly.<a id="noteref_793" name="noteref_793" href="#note_793"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">793</span></span></a> This rise in
+price continues until the point is reached at which it becomes
+customary, instead of the mere occupation of the free gifts of
+nature, to bring forth the commodities in question by the more
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page392">[pg 392]</span><a name="Pg392" id="Pg392" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+laborious process of production proper. From this time forward,
+the usual seeking of prices for a level requires that our
+commodity should, like all others which suppose an equal sacrifice
+of the means of production, claim an equal value in exchange.
+If from any peculiar causes, the production of this
+commodity is not at all possible, or if it is capable of no great
+extension, its price, which would under the circumstances, be
+limited only by the purchasing power of the buyer, might
+attain the utmost extreme reached in prices under the spur of
+vanity or of the mere love of the commodity itself. The
+latter is true especially in the case of venison;<a id="noteref_794" name="noteref_794" href="#note_794"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">794</span></span></a> the former,
+in the case of the tame cattle,<a id="noteref_795" name="noteref_795" href="#note_795"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">795</span></span></a>
+fresh-water fish,<a id="noteref_796" name="noteref_796" href="#note_796"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">796</span></span></a> and wood.<a id="noteref_797" name="noteref_797" href="#note_797"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">797</span></span></a><a id="noteref_798" name="noteref_798" href="#note_798"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">798</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page393">[pg 393]</span><a name="Pg393" id="Pg393" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc303" id="toc303"></a>
+<a name="pdf304" id="pdf304"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section CXXXII.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">History Of The Prices Of The Chief Wants Of Life. (Continued.)</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+B. The rise in prices is observed earliest in that class of
+goods in question which by reason of their small volume and
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page394">[pg 394]</span><a name="Pg394" id="Pg394" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+their comparatively great value, and by reason of the greater
+capacity to be kept in a state of preservation for a longer
+time, are best adapted to seeking a more favorable market.
+This applies particularly to the skins, fleece, hair, feathers,
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page395">[pg 395]</span><a name="Pg395" id="Pg395" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+teeth, horns, etc., of animals, in which, in the breeding of stock,
+etc. people in a low stage of civilization are much more apt
+to speculate than in their meat. Here it is considered, and
+rightly so, to be much more profitable to raise many animals
+which are badly cared for, than a few, that are well cared for;
+for the care bestowed on animals has, as a rule, much more influence
+on the body itself than on their covering.<a id="noteref_799" name="noteref_799" href="#note_799"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">799</span></span></a> In fisheries,
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page396">[pg 396]</span><a name="Pg396" id="Pg396" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+caviar, sturgeon-bladders, oil and whalebone;<a id="noteref_800" name="noteref_800" href="#note_800"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">800</span></span></a> and in forest-culture,
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page397">[pg 397]</span><a name="Pg397" id="Pg397" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+pitch, tar, potash and, to some extent, building material
+etc., play the same part.<a id="noteref_801" name="noteref_801" href="#note_801"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">801</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Conversely, the price of those portions which are most difficult
+of transportation, by reason of their volume or of the
+difficulty of preserving them, rises latest. To this category
+belongs milk, the production of which in a fresh state can be
+made an object of economic speculation, only where civilization
+is at its very highest, and especially in the vicinity of
+large cities.<a id="noteref_802" name="noteref_802" href="#note_802"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">802</span></span></a>
+It is indeed possible by its transformation into
+butter or cheese to preserve milk and make it capable of
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page398">[pg 398]</span><a name="Pg398" id="Pg398" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+transportation. But to carry on such a business for the purposes
+of trade, a care and a cleanliness are needed which are
+national characteristics only of a highly civilized people (§ 229),
+and the preparation of a superior quality of cheese, which is always
+a very long process, is conditioned by the employment
+of capital long in advance of a return, and which no poor
+nation is in a condition to make.<a id="noteref_803" name="noteref_803" href="#note_803"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">803</span></span></a> Cows are primarily milk-producing
+animals.<a id="noteref_804" name="noteref_804" href="#note_804"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">804</span></span></a> Hence their price, as a rule, rises later
+than that of oxen, but, in the higher stages of civilization, it
+rises much more surprisingly. Something analogous is true
+of those products which result from what remains after the
+production of other goods or commodities. As long as this
+alone supplies the demand, the cost of production of the
+former commodity is almost nothing, and hence its price is
+very low. For this reason hogs are relatively cheap in two
+very different periods of a people's national economy, in a very
+low stage of civilization where forests are plentiful and they
+are fattened on acorns and the nuts of the beech, and also
+when they may be considered as a collateral product of some
+great industry, such as distilleries and dairy-farming; and
+when raised by a numerous, especially a rural population of
+small means and laborers, in order to turn to advantage, in
+the former instance, the remains of production, and in the latter
+of consumption.<a id="noteref_805" name="noteref_805" href="#note_805"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">805</span></span></a>
+Where neither of these two reasons obtains,
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page399">[pg 399]</span><a name="Pg399" id="Pg399" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+the price of hogs is wont to increase largely with an advance
+in civilization.<a id="noteref_806" name="noteref_806" href="#note_806"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">806</span></span></a><a id="noteref_807" name="noteref_807" href="#note_807"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">807</span></span></a><a id="noteref_808" name="noteref_808" href="#note_808"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">808</span></span></a> (See Roscher, Nationalökonomik
+des Ackerbaues, §§ 177 ff.)
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page400">[pg 400]</span><a name="Pg400" id="Pg400" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc305" id="toc305"></a>
+<a name="pdf306" id="pdf306"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section CXXXIII.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">History Of The Prices Of The Chief Wants Of Life. (Continued.)</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+C. Those raw materials which, from the very first, have
+been obtained by the means of production properly so called,
+maintain a much greater uniformity in price. In the lower
+stages of civilization, they are never found permanently in
+excess; and as the economy of a people advances, the growing
+dearth of natural forces may be more or less counterbalanced
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page401">[pg 401]</span><a name="Pg401" id="Pg401" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+by the greater cheapness of capital and labor. This
+is true, especially of wheat. (See § <a href="#Section_129" class="tei tei-ref">129</a>,
+and Roscher, Nationalökonomik des Ackerbaues, p. 43.)<a id="noteref_809" name="noteref_809" href="#note_809"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">809</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+D. In the case also of those raw materials which are objects
+of occupation, and never of real production, as, for instance,
+minerals, a progressive public economy, by altering the different
+elements of price in an opposite direction, may leave their
+price on the whole unchanged. Here, indeed, the discovery
+of new and especially of rich natural stores may exert an incalculable
+influence; but such <span class="tei tei-q">“accidents”</span> underlie the laws of
+human development only to the extent that those ages which
+are intellectually most active are those also which are most industrious
+and fortunate in the discovery of their natural resources.<a id="noteref_810" name="noteref_810" href="#note_810"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">810</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page402">[pg 402]</span><a name="Pg402" id="Pg402" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc307" id="toc307"></a>
+<a name="pdf308" id="pdf308"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section CXXXIV.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">History Of The Prices Of The Chief Wants Of Life. (Continued.)</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+E. The products of industry become cheaper and cheaper
+as economic culture advances; whereas, for instance, in England,
+towards the end of the middle ages, a single shirt was
+considered of importance enough to be made not unfrequently
+an object of testamentary bequest.<a id="noteref_811" name="noteref_811" href="#note_811"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">811</span></span></a> And, indeed, the price of
+industrial products sinks lower the more important the part
+played in their production by capital and the division of labor
+is as compared with the part played by the raw material.<a id="noteref_812" name="noteref_812" href="#note_812"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">812</span></span></a>
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page403">[pg 403]</span><a name="Pg403" id="Pg403" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+On this account, in recent times, fine cloths have grown, relatively
+speaking, much cheaper than coarse ones.<a id="noteref_813" name="noteref_813" href="#note_813"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">813</span></span></a> Lead, which during the middle ages in England was much cheaper
+than iron, because of the difficulty of mining the latter, has become
+much dearer in our days.<a id="noteref_814" name="noteref_814" href="#note_814"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">814</span></span></a>
+Conversely, where raw
+material plays the most important part in manufactures, the
+price of the manufactured article may increase with an advance
+in civilization. Hence, articles made of wood are procured
+at the cheapest rates in mountainous countries, where
+the division of labor is not carried very far, but where the
+raw material is cheap.<a id="noteref_815" name="noteref_815" href="#note_815"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">815</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page404">[pg 404]</span><a name="Pg404" id="Pg404" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+F. But the price of commodities decreases, especially in the
+higher stages of civilization, to the extent that it is dependent
+on commerce.<a id="noteref_816" name="noteref_816" href="#note_816"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">816</span></span></a>
+Here capital and human labor almost exclusively
+are effective, and the modern improvements of communication,
+legal security and competition are especially striking.<a id="noteref_817" name="noteref_817" href="#note_817"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">817</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+G. Since personal services are, as a rule, performed and
+received only by individuals, the principle in accordance with
+which labor in general becomes cheaper in the higher stages
+of civilization, does not apply to them to any great extent.<a id="noteref_818" name="noteref_818" href="#note_818"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">818</span></span></a> Yet
+we may claim that advancing civilization has pretty universally
+a twofold influence on the price paid for personal services. In
+the first place, freedom of competition, with the more accurate
+and equitable determination of price which it produces (in contradistinction
+to servitude, privilege and custom) always tends
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page405">[pg 405]</span><a name="Pg405" id="Pg405" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+to obtain the upper hand; and further, by the growing combination
+of labor and of use (§§ <a href="#Section_56" class="tei tei-ref">56</a>, ff. 207), a better and better
+and more clearly defined gradation between ordinary services and
+those of a higher order is effected. When the latter cannot
+be increased at pleasure, the price paid for them may, as the
+wealth of consumers increases, become, from motives of vanity
+or of custom (<span lang="de" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="de"><span style="font-style: italic">Gebrauchsgründen</span></span>),
+almost unlimited. The dancing maid, to whom Herod (Mark, 6, 23) promised even
+the half of his kingdom, is both in a politico-economical and
+in a moral sense a warning example to over-refined nations.<a id="noteref_819" name="noteref_819" href="#note_819"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">819</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc309" id="toc309"></a>
+<a name="pdf310" id="pdf310"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section CXXXV.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">History Of The Values Of The Precious Metals.—In
+Antiquity And In The Middle Ages.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+It is impossible to write a real history of the values of the
+precious metals in ancient and medieval times: the sources of
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page406">[pg 406]</span><a name="Pg406" id="Pg406" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+information are too few. But it does seem possible to suggest
+some fragments and something of the development of that
+history,<a id="noteref_820" name="noteref_820" href="#note_820"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">820</span></span></a> at least in outline.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Thus, for instance, the supply of the precious metals furnished
+by the mines, in the earlier times of ancient history,
+was kept from entering the market by the system which then
+prevailed everywhere, of hoarding treasure by the state, by
+the temples etc., and later by great reserves of treasure kept by
+individuals.<a id="noteref_821" name="noteref_821" href="#note_821"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">821</span></span></a> The revolutions in prices in ancient times were
+produced as frequently by the sudden opening of such reservoirs,
+as by the discovery of richer sources. Thus, for instance,
+such events as the dissipation of Pericles' treasures, the
+subsidies of the Persian kings, the spoliation of many temples
+in consequence of declining religiousness, the distribution of
+Persian treasures by Alexander the Great,<a id="noteref_822" name="noteref_822" href="#note_822"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">822</span></span></a> had a vast influence
+on the undeniable rise in the price of Greek commodities
+in the century succeeding the Peleponnesian war.<a id="noteref_823" name="noteref_823" href="#note_823"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">823</span></span></a> Later,
+it is said that in Rome, the price of pieces of land was doubled
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page407">[pg 407]</span><a name="Pg407" id="Pg407" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+by the influx of Egyptian war-booty.<a id="noteref_824" name="noteref_824" href="#note_824"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">824</span></span></a> It is a remarkable
+proof of the undeveloped condition of trade in the earlier periods
+of ancient history, that the perturbations in prices were,
+apparently, at least, so entirely local. Phœnicia, Palestine
+etc., must have experienced, in the age of Solomon, a formal
+deluge of the precious metals, while Greece, for instance, was
+then, and for centuries after, extremely poor in them.<a id="noteref_825" name="noteref_825" href="#note_825"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">825</span></span></a> It is not, on the whole, to be doubted, that the value in exchange
+of the precious metals was on a continual decline until the
+most flourishing time of the Roman emperors.<a id="noteref_826" name="noteref_826" href="#note_826"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">826</span></span></a> During the
+middle ages, it seems to have stood much higher again; because
+the great loss of treasure caused by the migration of
+nations etc., the almost complete cessation of production at the
+mines, and the slowness of the circulation of money, played
+a much more important part than the decrease of trade.<a id="noteref_827" name="noteref_827" href="#note_827"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">827</span></span></a><a id="noteref_828" name="noteref_828" href="#note_828"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">828</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page408">[pg 408]</span><a name="Pg408" id="Pg408" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc311" id="toc311"></a>
+<a name="pdf312" id="pdf312"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section CXXXVI.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">Effect On The Discovery Of American Mines Etc.
+On The Value Of The Precious Metals.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+The discovery of America influenced the market of the
+precious metals less by the peculiar wealth of the mines in that
+part of the world than by their almost incredible number.<a id="noteref_829" name="noteref_829" href="#note_829"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">829</span></span></a>
+The sources of wealth that the conquistadores first lighted
+upon were, however, much over-estimated.<a id="noteref_830" name="noteref_830" href="#note_830"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">830</span></span></a>
+The production of the American mines first assumed great importance after
+the discovery of Potosi, in 1545, which was soon followed by
+the working of the American mines at Guanaxuato. (1558.)
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page409">[pg 409]</span><a name="Pg409" id="Pg409" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+Coincident with this was the extraordinary <span class="tei tei-q">“chance”</span> of
+Medina's invention, in 1557; by means of which, it became
+possible to separate silver from foreign elements by the cool
+process of amalgamation, instead of melting it as had hitherto
+been done; an invention all the more important in America,
+for the reason that in that country, where there is so much
+rich ore, there is scarcely any fuel, in the neighborhood<a id="noteref_831" name="noteref_831" href="#note_831"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">831</span></span></a> of
+where it is found. During the first hundred years the mines
+of Peru occupied the most prominent place; whereas they
+were afterwards completely overshadowed by the Mexican.<a id="noteref_832" name="noteref_832" href="#note_832"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">832</span></span></a>
+According to Humboldt,<a id="noteref_833" name="noteref_833" href="#note_833"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">833</span></span></a> the annual export of gold and silver
+from America to Europe, between 1492 and 1500, amounted
+to 250,000 piasters; between 1500 and 1545, to 3,000,000;<a id="noteref_834" name="noteref_834" href="#note_834"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">834</span></span></a>
+from that time to 1600, to 11,000,000; in the seventeenth century,
+to about 16,000,000; during the first half the eighteenth
+century to 22,500,000; during the second half, to 35,300,000.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+The production of gold in Brazil began to be important
+after the commencement of the eighteenth century,<a id="noteref_835" name="noteref_835" href="#note_835"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">835</span></span></a> and the
+working of the Mexican silver mines of Valencia, Biscaina etc.
+from the middle of the same century. In the beginning of the
+nineteenth century, Mexico produced, annually, 537,512 kilogrammes
+of silver, and 1,609 kilogrammes of gold; Peru,
+140,078 and 782 of silver and gold respectively; Buenos
+Ayres, 110,764 and 506; Chili, 6,827 and 2,807; New Granada,
+4,714 kilogrammes of gold; Brazil, 3,700 kilogrammes of
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page410">[pg 410]</span><a name="Pg410" id="Pg410" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+gold; the whole of America together, 795,581 kilogrammes of
+silver and 14,018 kilogrammes of gold, worth about 60,750,000
+thalers.<a id="noteref_836" name="noteref_836" href="#note_836"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">836</span></span></a> During the uprisings between 1810 and 1825,
+which separated Spanish America from the mother country, the
+production of the mines diminished as surprisingly as it had
+increased in the previous generation by reason of the greater
+liberality of Spanish colonial policy.<a id="noteref_837" name="noteref_837" href="#note_837"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">837</span></span></a> Since that time,
+a certain increase has, indeed, been noticed, which, however,
+had not immediately before the discovery of the gold mines of
+California by any means attained the height reached in 1808,
+but only an annual production of 701,570 kilogrammes of silver,
+and of 15,215 kilogrammes of gold, with an aggregate
+value of more than 56,000,000 thalers.<a id="noteref_838" name="noteref_838" href="#note_838"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">838</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+In Europe, also, the obtaining of the precious metals during
+the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries took a great stride,
+especially in Germany;<a id="noteref_839" name="noteref_839" href="#note_839"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">839</span></span></a> but, on the other hand, the Spanish
+gold and silver mines were closed in 1535 by a law. In the
+seventeenth century, there was another lull, followed, at the
+end of the eighteenth, by a second period of activity which has
+not yet closed. The great development of the production of
+gold in the Ural mines since 1819, and in the Altai mines since
+1829,<a id="noteref_840" name="noteref_840" href="#note_840"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">840</span></span></a> the revival of the production of silver in the old Spanish
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page411">[pg 411]</span><a name="Pg411" id="Pg411" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+mines since 1835,<a id="noteref_841" name="noteref_841" href="#note_841"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">841</span></span></a> and Pattinson's discovery, by means of
+which the poorest lead ores containing silver may be refined,
+are here of great importance.<a id="noteref_842" name="noteref_842" href="#note_842"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">842</span></span></a> Shortly before 1848, it was
+estimated that all the mines of the old world produced annually
+about 274,000 kilogrammes of silver, and 56,000 kilogrammes
+of gold, with an aggregate value of over 69,000,000
+thalers.<a id="noteref_843" name="noteref_843" href="#note_843"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">843</span></span></a><a id="noteref_844" name="noteref_844" href="#note_844"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">844</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc313" id="toc313"></a>
+<a name="pdf314" id="pdf314"></a>
+<a name="Section_137" id="Section_137" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section CXXXVII.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">Revolution In Prices At The Beginning Of Modern History.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+The mere discovery of new and richer mines need not, of
+itself, lower the price of the precious metals. Their price depends
+on their cost of production; and it may be very much
+increased, even under the most favorable natural conditions,
+by the unskillfulness of labor, the dearness of the means of
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page412">[pg 412]</span><a name="Pg412" id="Pg412" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+subsistence, of machinery and of auxiliary substances, by insecurity
+to property or to the person; by war, oppressive taxes<a id="noteref_845" name="noteref_845" href="#note_845"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">845</span></span></a>
+etc. The new mines can produce a decline in the price of the
+precious metals only to the extent that, for the same amount
+of capital and labor expended, they, spite of all such deductions,
+produce a greater result.<a id="noteref_846" name="noteref_846" href="#note_846"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">846</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+I opine that the price of metallic money, since the discovery
+of America, has diminished until the present time in the ratio
+of from three to four to one.<a id="noteref_847" name="noteref_847" href="#note_847"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">847</span></span></a> The prices of wheat in France,
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page413">[pg 413]</span><a name="Pg413" id="Pg413" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+from 1800 to 1850, were about seven times as great as in the
+second half of the fifteenth century; and in England about six
+times as great. But, it is not to be overlooked here, how
+wheat may have grown dearer in itself (<span lang="de" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="de"><span style="font-style: italic">an
+sich</span></span>) and how gold
+declined considerably less than silver. True, this decline of
+the precious metals was not an entirely steady one. We meet
+at the beginning of the modern era with a real revolution in
+prices. The prices of rye, in lower Saxony, from 1525 to
+1550, were twice as high as from 1475 to 1500. According
+to Garnier, the French prices of wheat, from 1450 to 1500,
+were, on an average, 408 francs of the present time per <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">setier</span></span>;
+from 1501 to 1520, 5 francs; from 1522 to 1540, 11.26 francs;
+from 1541 to 1560, 11.69 francs; from 1561 to 1580, 21.33
+francs; from 1581 to 1600, 32.51 francs; during the first half
+of the seventeenth century, 22.77 francs; in the second half,
+26.83 francs; from 1701 to 1750, 19.64 francs. Similarly in
+England, where wheat cost, from 1560 to 1600, 2.64 times as
+much as from 1450 to 1500.<a id="noteref_848" name="noteref_848" href="#note_848"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">848</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page414">[pg 414]</span><a name="Pg414" id="Pg414" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Now, the increased production of the mines cannot be the
+only cause of this great perturbation in prices. It commenced,
+in most countries, at a time when the supplies from America
+were still too small to account for such an effect. One of the
+chief causes of the phenomenon was, that precisely at this period,
+there was in so many nations a transition from a sluggish
+circulation of money, made still more sluggish by the custom
+which everywhere prevailed of hoarding treasure, to a rapid
+circulation, which was made still more rapid by the use of all kinds of substitutes for
+money. (§ <a href="#Section_123" class="tei tei-ref">123</a>).<a id="noteref_849" name="noteref_849" href="#note_849"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">849</span></span></a> In the earliest ripe
+fruit of European civilization (Italy), this transition had long
+been accomplished; and, on that account, the value in exchange
+of the precious metals was there, for a long time previous,
+comparatively low.<a id="noteref_850" name="noteref_850" href="#note_850"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">850</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+From the second third of the seventeenth century, the value
+of the medium of circulation seems, on the whole, to have remained
+stationary.<a id="noteref_851" name="noteref_851" href="#note_851"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">851</span></span></a> Tooke seeks to demonstrate the steady
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page415">[pg 415]</span><a name="Pg415" id="Pg415" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+decline of the value of money until late in the eighteenth century,
+from the fact that the wages of labor increased during
+that time; but I should rather connect the latter phenomenon
+with the simultaneous elevation of the classes engaged in
+manual labor. And so Adam Smith infers a rise in the price
+of money after the beginning of the eighteenth century, from
+the prices of wheat;<a id="noteref_852" name="noteref_852" href="#note_852"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">852</span></span></a>
+but it would be better to consider the
+cause of this to be the unusually long series of good crops.<a id="noteref_853" name="noteref_853" href="#note_853"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">853</span></span></a>
+An equally unusually long series of bad harvests, during the
+second half of the century, accounts satisfactorily for the simultaneous
+rise of the medium prices of corn. The great war
+which lasted from 1793 to 1815, too, according to a very
+prevalent opinion, must have caused the value of money to
+decline; a fact which is generally accredited to the increase
+of paper money in so many states.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Every great war may very easily have for effect to slacken
+the speed of the circulation of money, to promote the hoarding
+and even the burial of treasure for a rainy day, and to paralyze
+credit and its power to supply the place of money.
+Hence, it seems preferable to seek for the cause of the variations
+in price, during the great war, in the commodities themselves
+whose price was affected; since their production must
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page416">[pg 416]</span><a name="Pg416" id="Pg416" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+have been enormously disturbed. It rendered the brawniest
+men and the most powerful horses unproductive, and even
+employed them as agents of destruction. It interrupted trade
+in a thousand ways, or drove it into unnatural channels, and
+turned the intellectual interests of nations into every direction
+save that of economic industry. To this must be added the
+absence of security everywhere.<a id="noteref_854" name="noteref_854" href="#note_854"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">854</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+The cessation of these restrictions upon production, in consequence
+of the restoration of peace throughout the world and
+the great progress afterwards made in almost all branches of
+industry, explain why, from 1818 to 1848, the precious metals
+have apparently stood higher than during the period immediately
+preceding.<a id="noteref_855" name="noteref_855" href="#note_855"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">855</span></span></a><a id="noteref_856" name="noteref_856" href="#note_856"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">856</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc315" id="toc315"></a>
+<a name="pdf316" id="pdf316"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section CXXXVIII.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">Revolution In Prices.—Influence Of The Non-Monetary
+Use Of Gold And Silver.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+To understand why so great an increase in the production
+of the precious metals produced so small a decline of their
+value in exchange, we must turn our attention to the other
+and further uses of gold and silver. The amount devoted to
+these uses can never be very accurately determined, since
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page417">[pg 417]</span><a name="Pg417" id="Pg417" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+governmental stamping of every new gold or silver article
+would afford no evidence as to the number of such articles
+manufactured out of old articles etc.<a id="noteref_857" name="noteref_857" href="#note_857"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">857</span></span></a> Certain it is, however,
+that the aggregate amount of gold and silver thus employed,
+increases with the increase of luxury and wealth among modern
+nations, and that a quantity of the precious metals thus
+used, especially when used for purposes of gilding for instance,
+is irrestorably lost.<a id="noteref_858" name="noteref_858" href="#note_858"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">858</span></span></a> In addition to this, there is the wear and
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page418">[pg 418]</span><a name="Pg418" id="Pg418" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+tear of coin in circulation, which is naturally greater in the case
+of large pieces than of small, and, therefore, in the case of
+silver than of gold. There is, further, the damage caused by
+the loss of coin in conflagrations and shipwrecks, and that
+occasioned by buried and forgotten treasure.<a id="noteref_859" name="noteref_859" href="#note_859"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">859</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+But, lastly, the principal cause consists in the powerful increase
+of the demand for money, which, during the last two
+centuries, the great impulse given to the rapidity of circulation,
+and the great increase in the substitutes for money, have
+scarcely been able to outweigh. Besides the great growth
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page419">[pg 419]</span><a name="Pg419" id="Pg419" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+of population and of wealth, at least in Europe and the new
+world, I need call attention only to the immense advance made
+in the division of labor, and to the transition from trade by
+barter to trade through the instrumentality of money. The
+entire war and merchant marine of England, about 1602, had,
+according to Anderson, a capacity of only 45,000 tons,—that
+is, not one-fifth of what the small city of Bremen has now; a
+capacity which at the close of the year 1873 amounted to
+237,206 tons—while in 1872 its merchant marine alone had
+a capacity of 7,213,000 tons. The aggregate foreign trade
+of England, France, Russia and the United States, in 1750,
+amounted to about 260,000,000 thalers; in 1864, it was over
+5,400,000,000, and between 1871 and 1872, in one year,
+over 9,000,000,000 thalers. Nor should it be forgotten that
+Europe's trade with the East, since the beginning of the sixteenth
+century, increased immensely. This, at present, produces
+uniformly a very <span class="tei tei-q">“unfavorable balance”</span> for Europe,
+which can be made up for only by very large shipments of
+silver to foreign parts.<a id="noteref_860" name="noteref_860" href="#note_860"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">860</span></span></a> If China and India were suddenly to
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page420">[pg 420]</span><a name="Pg420" id="Pg420" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+draw on us for other commodities instead of gold and silver,
+the result would be a great revolution in prices in Europe.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc317" id="toc317"></a>
+<a name="pdf318" id="pdf318"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section CXXXIX.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">History Of Prices.—Californian And Australian
+Discoveries.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Tengoborski is of opinion, that the flow of gold from Siberia
+alone would have been absorbed by the ever-increasing
+want of civilized nations of money; but that the coincident discoveries
+in California and Australia, in September 1847, and
+February 1851, must sooner or later produce a revolution in
+prices. And, indeed, the fecundity of these countries is unparalleled.
+North America, which in 1846 produced only
+3,600 pounds of gold, according to Sœtbeer, produced in the
+years from 1849 to 1863, respectively, 118,000, 148,000, 178,000,
+195,000, 180,000, 165,000, 165,000, 165,000, 160,000, 145,000,
+125,000, 120,000, 115,000 and 110,000. Austria produced in
+the years from 1851 to 1863 respectively, 27,000, 196,000,
+250,000, 160,000, 170,000, 195,000, 180,000, 175,000, 160,000,
+150,000, 160,000, 160,000, 170,000, pounds of gold.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+From 1864 to 1867, the aggregate production of gold in the
+world was, according to the last mentioned authority, a yearly
+average of 188.4 millions of thalers, and of silver, 94.8 millions.
+In Europe, Russia not included, the production was, in 1863,
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page421">[pg 421]</span><a name="Pg421" id="Pg421" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+3,960 pounds of gold and 405,000 pounds of silver; in the
+Russian Empire, 46,500 pounds of gold and 40,000 of silver; in
+Mexico 12,000 pounds of gold and 1,250,000 pounds of silver; in
+South and Central America, 12,500 pounds of gold and 520,000
+pounds of silver; in Africa, India and Lesser Asia, 30,000 pounds of gold and 40,000
+pounds of silver—a total of 384,000 pounds of gold, and 2,905,000 pounds of
+silver. F.X. Neumann<a id="noteref_861" name="noteref_861" href="#note_861"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">861</span></span></a><a id="noteref_862" name="noteref_862" href="#note_862"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">862</span></span></a>
+estimates that the whole world produced, in the years
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page422">[pg 422]</span><a name="Pg422" id="Pg422" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+1868-1870, annually, 192.8 million thalers of gold, and 94 million
+thalers of silver; and in 1873, of both metals, 291 million
+thalers.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+The question, whether in this second half of the nineteenth
+century, we are to have a revolution in prices similar to that
+which took place in the sixteenth century can be answered
+only hypothetically. The gold diggings now most productive
+will, probably, as we may judge from analogous cases in the
+past, be soon exhausted.<a id="noteref_863" name="noteref_863" href="#note_863"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">863</span></span></a> But it is entirely possible that, for
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page423">[pg 423]</span><a name="Pg423" id="Pg423" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+a long series of years, other diggings will be found equally
+rich. It is almost certain that the restless activity of the English
+and of North Americans will not cease until they have
+exhausted the favors of nature.<a id="noteref_864" name="noteref_864" href="#note_864"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">864</span></span></a> Every improvement in agriculture,
+in the means of communication, and in the public security
+of the gold lands, makes the cost of production smaller.
+There are doubtless in other countries a great many <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">placers</span></span>
+which need only to be touched with the finger of European
+civilization to produce gold in abundance.<a id="noteref_865" name="noteref_865" href="#note_865"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">865</span></span></a>
+It would, indeed,
+be necessary that this same civilization should make these
+same countries better markets for the precious metals by increasing
+their demand.
+</p>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page424">[pg 424]</span><a name="Pg424" id="Pg424" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+So far as silver is concerned, there can be no question that
+America possesses mines unlimited in extent, and, as yet,
+almost untouched. <span class="tei tei-q">“The time will come,”</span> says Duport,<a id="noteref_866" name="noteref_866" href="#note_866"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">866</span></span></a> <span class="tei tei-q">“a
+century sooner or later, when the production of silver will
+have no other limits than those put to it by the continual
+decline in the price of silver.”</span> There seems, also, to be no
+lack of quicksilver, especially in California; and the cost of
+its production hitherto may be lessened very much by the
+labor of better workmen, machines and means of transportation.<a id="noteref_867" name="noteref_867" href="#note_867"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">867</span></span></a>
+All this supposes great progress of the mining countries
+in civilization in general; and yet, thus far, Mexico's republican
+independence etc., as compared with the later years of the
+Spanish colonial system there, is a great retrogression. The
+conquest of Spanish America by the United States would
+give a vast impetus to economic improvement; and here,
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page425">[pg 425]</span><a name="Pg425" id="Pg425" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+again, the increase of production would be attended by an increased
+demand.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+But especially must the demand for the precious metals,
+which naturally increases with the wealth, commerce and luxury
+of nations, constitute a decisive element in answering our
+question. Nothing, for instance, were a reduction in prices
+impending, would promote it so much as a series of devastating
+wars or revolutions in Europe. Moreover, it should not
+be forgotten, that the money market is now almost commensurable
+with the world, and will soon embrace it within its
+limits; and that market embraces not only the precious metals
+but the numberless representatives of money and media of
+credit. The basin, therefore, to which the gold and silver
+streams of the world are tributary is immeasurably greater
+than it was in the sixteenth century; its level cannot be changed
+as readily, and an equal addition made every year to its previous contents can
+increase it only by a small amount.<a id="noteref_868" name="noteref_868" href="#note_868"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">868</span></span></a> Nor
+could a considerable decline of the value of the precious metals
+be readily produced without making the circulation of
+money slower, and the employment of means of credit relatively
+less frequent, in consequence of which, the further decline
+would, to a certain extent, be arrested.<a id="noteref_869" name="noteref_869" href="#note_869"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">869</span></span></a> In the case of
+other commodities a decline of prices leads only probably to
+an absolutely greater demand; in the case of money, it leads
+to a demand necessarily greater. That the money market in
+our days can stand pretty rude shocks is evident from the
+fact, among others, that the price of gold is so high as compared
+with that of silver.<a id="noteref_870" name="noteref_870" href="#note_870"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">870</span></span></a><a id="noteref_871" name="noteref_871" href="#note_871"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">871</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page426">[pg 426]</span><a name="Pg426" id="Pg426" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc319" id="toc319"></a>
+<a name="pdf320" id="pdf320"></a>
+<a name="Section_140" id="Section_140" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section CXL.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">Revolution In Prices.—Its Influence On The National
+Resources.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+The ulterior consequences of such a revolution in prices
+would contribute to the real wealth of a people only in the
+sense that they would place such a people in a way, with less
+sacrifice, to employ the precious metals on a large scale in ministering
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page427">[pg 427]</span><a name="Pg427" id="Pg427" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+to the luxuries of life. This small advantage itself
+would be counterbalanced by the depreciation of the metallic
+stock, and especially by the necessity of henceforth devoting a larger quantity
+of gold and silver to the purposes of circulation.<a id="noteref_872" name="noteref_872" href="#note_872"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">872</span></span></a>
+But such a revolution would produce a sudden reverse
+in the distribution of a nation's wealth among its constituent
+members. All those who, by virtue of contracts antecedently
+made, have payments to effect, are benefited to the extent of the difference between
+the old and the actual price, while those who are to receive such payments
+lose to the same extent.<a id="noteref_873" name="noteref_873" href="#note_873"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">873</span></span></a>
+Therefore, those engaged in industrial enterprises improve
+their condition, because they immediately increase<a id="noteref_874" name="noteref_874" href="#note_874"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">874</span></span></a> the prices
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page428">[pg 428]</span><a name="Pg428" id="Pg428" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+of their own productions; and, for a time at least, continue the
+use of capital borrowed from others, of land leased or rented
+etc. at the old prices.<a id="noteref_875" name="noteref_875" href="#note_875"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">875</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Besides, at the beginning, and before a corresponding depreciation
+of its value has taken place, an increase of money
+produces as a rule a low rate of interest (§ 185), and an itch to
+buy on the part of the public. All this may serve as a powerful
+stimulant to production on a large scale.<a id="noteref_876" name="noteref_876" href="#note_876"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">876</span></span></a> Those most
+certain to suffer loss are officials<a id="noteref_877" name="noteref_877" href="#note_877"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">877</span></span></a> with a fixed salary, and so-called
+annuitants, creditors of the nation and of individuals.
+Even bankers, too, have no means to fix the value of their wares
+which they see disappearing, so to speak under their eyes.<a id="noteref_878" name="noteref_878" href="#note_878"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">878</span></span></a>
+Of land owners, those who are in debt gain, that is especially
+the poorer, and the more speculative among them.<a id="noteref_879" name="noteref_879" href="#note_879"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">879</span></span></a> On the
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page429">[pg 429]</span><a name="Pg429" id="Pg429" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+other hand, owners of large estates who have alienated their
+tithe-rights, or right to vassal-service etc. for capital, or for
+fixed sums to be paid at regular intervals, that is, in a great
+many places the great mass of the nobility, undergo a not
+insignificant social fall.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+The condition of those who earned a living by manual labor
+no doubt deteriorated in the sixteenth century, as may be inferred
+from the extraordinary activity of public charity in
+that period.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Between 1500 and 1550, silver purchased, in Orleans, from
+4.1 to 4.5 times as much common labor as it does now, while
+silver, as compared with the average price of twenty-seven
+commodities, has grown cheaper in the ratio of only from 2.6
+to 2.7:1. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Mantellier.</span></span>) It was impossible for this class to
+raise the price of their wares as rapidly as that of the medium
+of circulation declined, because they could not wait, nor hold
+back their commodity even for a moment. (§ 164.)<a id="noteref_880" name="noteref_880" href="#note_880"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">880</span></span></a> This
+would, indeed, be very different in our day. Wages, because
+of the facilities, both physical and moral, which have everywhere
+been placed in the way of emigration, were necessarily
+one of these articles which rose soonest in price, as compared
+with money.<a id="noteref_881" name="noteref_881" href="#note_881"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">881</span></span></a>
+Lastly, the state itself profits by the diminished
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page430">[pg 430]</span><a name="Pg430" id="Pg430" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+thing-value, that is, real value of its public debt;<a id="noteref_882" name="noteref_882" href="#note_882"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">882</span></span></a> but it loses,
+at the same time, on all taxes, duties etc., which are not estimated
+at a certain percentage of the value of the articles
+taxed.<a id="noteref_883" name="noteref_883" href="#note_883"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">883</span></span></a>
+As a rule, therefore, it would need to impose new
+taxes. Now, the parliamentary right to impose taxes, however
+extensive it may juridically be, is, ordinarily, of great
+importance in practice only when there is question of increasing
+the existing burthen. Hence, this right, wherever it exists,
+is brought into the utmost activity by a revolution in
+prices.<a id="noteref_884" name="noteref_884" href="#note_884"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">884</span></span></a><a id="noteref_885" name="noteref_885" href="#note_885"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">885</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+However, the new additions of gold and silver to the already
+existing supply may not immediately produce a corresponding
+depreciation of the value of the precious metals. If the
+first receivers of the additional supply of money exchange it
+rapidly for other goods, it will probably bring them the former
+value in exchange of the metal. Not until it has passed into
+a third or fourth person's hands is the depreciation apt to be
+perceptible. It is, therefore, in this case, a great advantage to
+be the first hand. The world-threatening power of Spain, in
+the seventeenth century, was very essentially promoted by the
+American gold and silver mines;<a id="noteref_886" name="noteref_886" href="#note_886"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">886</span></span></a> nor is it a matter of less
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page431">[pg 431]</span><a name="Pg431" id="Pg431" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+significance to-day, that the great mineral wealth of the world
+belongs to Siberia, California and Australia; that is, especially
+to Russia and to countries colonized by Great Britain. Further,
+as to the classes into which a nation is divided, it was
+only the crown, the Church and a comparatively small number of officials,
+soldiers and officers who controlled Spanish America;<a id="noteref_887" name="noteref_887" href="#note_887"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">887</span></span></a>
+and who can tell how the absolute monarchy of Spain
+was strengthened by this fact? In the seventeenth century,
+on the other hand, it is principally manufacturers and merchants,
+and more especially yet, workmen, who reap the immediate
+advantages of new discoveries of gold.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc321" id="toc321"></a>
+<a name="pdf322" id="pdf322"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section CXLI.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">Effect Of An Enhancement Of The Price Of The
+Precious Metals.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+A great enhancement of the precious metals would naturally and
+necessarily produce a revolution in prices in a direction<a id="noteref_888" name="noteref_888" href="#note_888"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">888</span></span></a>
+opposite to the one just described, and one which would be
+much more injurious to a nation's economy. Such a revolution
+would weigh most heavily on the most sensitive, and the
+momentarily most productive classes of the people, inasmuch
+as the price of the ready product as compared with advances
+made for the purposes of production would be a declining one;
+and it would benefit those classes who live in leisure on the
+fruits of previous labor. There would, at the same time, be
+a perceptible growth of consumption in certain departments,
+useful, no doubt, in themselves, but apt to degenerate into excess,
+and which are, therefore, most easily cared for. (§ 212, seq.)
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page432">[pg 432]</span><a name="Pg432" id="Pg432" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+To this extent, the gold discoveries of the nineteenth century,
+without which an enhancement of the price of money would
+undoubtedly have taken place, have warded off a great economic
+malady from the nations. Moreover, this inverted revolution
+in prices may be moderated by governmental measures, such as a diminution
+of taxes, emissions of paper money etc.<a id="noteref_889" name="noteref_889" href="#note_889"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">889</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc323" id="toc323"></a>
+<a name="pdf324" id="pdf324"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section CXLII.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">The Price Of Gold As Compared With That Of Silver.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+The price of gold as compared with that of silver does not,
+by any means, depend entirely on the ratio of the quantities of
+the two to each other. Rather is it, in the long run, determined
+by the average cost of production necessary at those
+gold and silver mines which exist under the most disadvantageous
+conditions, but which it is still necessary to work in
+order to satisfy the aggregate requirement of these metals.
+On the whole, with an advance of economic civilization, the
+dearness of gold as compared with that of silver has been enhanced.
+The former, in the middle ages, was worth from ten to
+twelve times as much as the latter,<a id="noteref_890" name="noteref_890" href="#note_890"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">890</span></span></a> while now it is
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page433">[pg 433]</span><a name="Pg433" id="Pg433" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+worth from fifteen to almost sixteen times as much.<a id="noteref_891" name="noteref_891" href="#note_891"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">891</span></span></a> In the
+same period of time, also, gold in highly civilized countries
+is wont to be comparatively dearer.<a id="noteref_892" name="noteref_892" href="#note_892"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">892</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+These facts are explained as well by the demand as by the
+supply. As the production of gold requires so little skill or
+capital, and that of silver so much of both, the former may be
+considered a natural product to a greater extent than the latter,
+and therefore, the rule laid down in § <a href="#Section_130" class="tei tei-ref">130</a> is
+applicable to it. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Senior.</span></span>) Besides, in the higher stages of
+civilization, especially when the precious metals are cheap, larger payments
+are usual, to the making of which, gold is certainly best
+adapted; just as in every day trade merchants are wont to
+accept a gold piece in payment, even at something of a premium,
+while the peasantry hesitate to do so.<a id="noteref_893" name="noteref_893" href="#note_893"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">893</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page434">[pg 434]</span><a name="Pg434" id="Pg434" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+It is very much of a question whether gold or silver is, on
+the whole, subject to greater variations in price. The fact
+that gold is more strictly a natural product would of itself
+constitute a powerful element of variation. (§ <a href="#Section_112" class="tei tei-ref">112</a>).
+But, on the other hand, its greater durability and the greater care bestowed
+on its preservation, have for effect to make the existing
+quantity preponderate in importance over its annual increase.
+The demand for gold varies more suddenly than
+the demand for silver. In case of war or sedition, the former
+is more easily carried away or hidden. It is also more desirable
+for the state for its military fund. On the other hand, on
+account of its greater capacity for transportation, it may follow
+such claims when made on it, more easily, from country
+to country. On the whole, I am inclined to think that, for
+short periods of time, silver maintains its value better, and
+gold for longer ones.<a id="noteref_894" name="noteref_894" href="#note_894"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">894</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page435">[pg 435]</span><a name="Pg435" id="Pg435" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc325" id="toc325"></a>
+<a name="pdf326" id="pdf326"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section CXLIII.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">The Price Of Gold As Compared With That Of
+Silver. (Continued.)</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+If the gold-production of California should be attended<a id="noteref_895" name="noteref_895" href="#note_895"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">895</span></span></a> by
+a notable depression of the value of that metal, it becomes a
+question whether or not silver would be necessarily depreciated
+with it. Senior claims that it would not, for the reason
+that the two precious metals do not, for most purposes, act as
+substitutes each of the other. If a country needed 1,000 pounds of gold and
+15,000 pounds of silver as money,<a id="noteref_896" name="noteref_896" href="#note_896"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">896</span></span></a> and these
+two sums of metal were equal in value, an increase of gold by
+one-half, which would depreciate its price in relation to silver
+to 10:1, would not overflow the channels of circulation. The
+1,500 pounds of gold are now also equal to only 15,000 pounds
+of silver, and <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">vice versa</span></span>.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+I would put very important limitations to this assertion.
+Even a moderate depreciation of gold would drive out the
+silver from all those countries which had a mixed coinage
+made up of the two metals; and hence the supply of silver
+would be increased in the other countries. And so it is quite
+possible, up to a certain point, that the larger silver coin should
+be replaced by small gold ones, ten and five franc pieces etc.
+Rau is certainly right in his surmise that a general rise in the
+price of commodities as compared with coin, the result of a
+great increase of gold, would go farthest in countries in which
+the gold is the medium of circulation, begin later in those
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page436">[pg 436]</span><a name="Pg436" id="Pg436" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+which had a mixed circulation, and continue for the the shortest
+time in those countries which, by force of law, had a
+silver circulation only.<a id="noteref_897" name="noteref_897" href="#note_897"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">897</span></span></a><a id="noteref_898" name="noteref_898" href="#note_898"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">898</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+</div>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page437">[pg 437]</span><a name="Pg437" id="Pg437" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<hr class="page" /><div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 4.00em; margin-top: 4.00em">
+<a name="toc327" id="toc327"></a>
+<a name="pdf328" id="pdf328"></a>
+<h2 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">Appendix I.</span></h2>
+<h2 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.88em; margin-top: 2.88em"><span style="font-size: 144%">Paper Money.</span></h2>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page439">[pg 439]</span><a name="Pg439" id="Pg439" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc329" id="toc329"></a>
+<a name="pdf330" id="pdf330"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section I.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">Paper Money And Money-Paper.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Paper money must be distinguished from other value-paper
+or money-paper,<a id="noteref_899" name="noteref_899" href="#note_899"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">899</span></span></a> which may also run to the possessor or
+holder, and not unfrequently serve as a medium of payment.
+In the case of these bonds or obligations,<a id="noteref_900" name="noteref_900" href="#note_900"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">900</span></span></a> their circulating
+capacity is a secondary matter, and the principal thing the
+authentication of an economic legal relation; whereas paper
+money is intended principally, if not exclusively, to act as
+money.<a id="noteref_901" name="noteref_901" href="#note_901"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">901</span></span></a> Money-paper appears in a great many different
+forms, but it nearly always bears interest. Its value depends
+in great part on the rate and certainty of its interest. On the
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page440">[pg 440]</span><a name="Pg440" id="Pg440" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+other hand, the endeavor to insure a more favorable reception
+for paper money by the promise of interest has been exceedingly
+seldom successful.<a id="noteref_902" name="noteref_902" href="#note_902"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">902</span></span></a> And in reality, good prospects as
+to interest (<span lang="de" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="de"><span style="font-style: italic">Zinsaussichten</span></span>)
+and ease of transfer from one hand to another are two qualities which lie in
+very different directions.<a id="noteref_903" name="noteref_903" href="#note_903"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">903</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+The many recent writers who claim for paper money the
+marks of irredeemableness and forced circulation, confound
+the unfortunately too frequent degeneration of an institution
+with its real nature. They contradict, too, usage of speech,
+which, in countries where silver is the standard, unhesitatingly
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page441">[pg 441]</span><a name="Pg441" id="Pg441" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+calls gold coins money, although they cannot be forced on any
+one.<a id="noteref_904" name="noteref_904" href="#note_904"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">904</span></span></a> The paper money issued by the state
+deserves, indeed, the appellation in the fullest measure; but starting from this
+point we find a number of grades in a downward direction,
+which may still be called money;<a id="noteref_905" name="noteref_905" href="#note_905"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">905</span></span></a> and we shall see especially
+that the differences between state paper money and bank
+notes so widely asserted are, in great measure, differences not
+of kind but of degree.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+The idea of replacing the precious metals as a medium of
+circulation by a less costly material, even the ancients were
+acquainted with; but with the exception of the Carthaginians,
+they scarcely ever made any use of it except in cases of need
+and transitorily.<a id="noteref_906" name="noteref_906" href="#note_906"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">906</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page442">[pg 442]</span><a name="Pg442" id="Pg442" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Similarly, the middle ages in Europe; as in general all
+greater development of the credit-system—and all paper
+money is credit-money—has a natural growth only in the
+higher stages of civilization.<a id="noteref_907" name="noteref_907" href="#note_907"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">907</span></span></a><a id="noteref_908" name="noteref_908" href="#note_908"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">908</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page443">[pg 443]</span><a name="Pg443" id="Pg443" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc331" id="toc331"></a>
+<a name="pdf332" id="pdf332"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section II.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">Advantages And Disadvantages Of Paper Money.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Where it is at all possible to give paper money the same
+purchasing power as metallic money possesses, it is unquestionable
+that the former must have many advantages over the latter.
+True, paper money is very inconvenient for small
+amounts;<a id="noteref_909" name="noteref_909" href="#note_909"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">909</span></span></a>
+but all the more convenient for large amounts, as
+well for purposes of counting as for purposes of the storing
+up of values and for transmission from place to place; a matter
+of greater importance in proportion to the badness of a country's
+means of transportation, and to the cheapness of the metal
+of its currency hitherto.<a id="noteref_910" name="noteref_910" href="#note_910"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">910</span></span></a> It seems a still more important matter
+to most people that paper money dispenses with the use of a
+great quantity of the precious metals for purposes of circulation,
+which can now either be turned into utensils, etc. in the
+country itself or used in foreign countries to make investments
+of capital there, or in the purchase of commodities.<a id="noteref_911" name="noteref_911" href="#note_911"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">911</span></span></a> In national
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page444">[pg 444]</span><a name="Pg444" id="Pg444" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+economies whose commerce is a growing one, the same
+advantage finds a negative expression in this, that they are not
+compelled to satisfy the increasing demand for money by procuring
+costly metals.<a id="noteref_912" name="noteref_912" href="#note_912"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">912</span></span></a> Of the individual members of the nation,
+all these advantages of convenience will be experienced
+by those who employ the paper money. The economical or
+saving advantages of paper money are appropriated by the
+issuers to themselves, in the form of a non-interest bearing
+loan, which they make to those owners of money or to those
+who are entitled to a money-claim and to whom the paper
+money is acceptable instead of cash money.<a id="noteref_913" name="noteref_913" href="#note_913"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">913</span></span></a> A diminution
+for instance of the number of bank notes or of state paper
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page445">[pg 445]</span><a name="Pg445" id="Pg445" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+money does not diminish the available capital of the people.
+Its only effect is that a smaller portion of it is at the disposal
+of the bank or of the government.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+But in contrast with these advantages are the great disadvantages,
+since paper money is wanting in most of those
+properties which originally made the precious metals the best
+instruments of exchange and the best measures of value. In
+addition to this, paper money may be increased at pleasure,
+and at almost no cost; and an occasional surplus of it cannot
+flow either into other branches of employment (as a surplus of
+metallic money may into utensils, ornamentation, etc.) nor into
+other countries. And thus the constancy of value of paper
+money, that is, one of the chief requisites of all good money, is
+imperiled in the highest degree. True, the payment-power,
+or <span class="tei tei-q">“legal tender”</span> character given such money by the state
+may certainly supplement in some way its matter and form-value.
+But this supplement or addition constitutes, in the case
+of large amounts<a id="noteref_914" name="noteref_914" href="#note_914"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">914</span></span></a>
+a small quota; or else the quantity of money
+as compared with the amount of money needed for commerce
+would have to be fixed very accurately; a thing of peculiar
+difficulty in the case of paper money, which is almost costless.<a id="noteref_915" name="noteref_915" href="#note_915"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">915</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page446">[pg 446]</span><a name="Pg446" id="Pg446" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc333" id="toc333"></a>
+<a name="pdf334" id="pdf334"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section III.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">Kinds Of Redemption.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+While precious metal money carries, so to speak, by far the
+greater portion of its value in itself, and this to such an extent
+that it appears on the inscription found on its face, the inscription
+found on paper money is almost the only reason of its
+value.<a id="noteref_916" name="noteref_916" href="#note_916"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">916</span></span></a> (Credit-value.) The issuer promises in one form or another,
+expressly or tacitly, that he intends to redeem the note,
+almost valueless in itself, in real goods; and the value of this
+promise depends on the probability of its fulfillment.<a id="noteref_917" name="noteref_917" href="#note_917"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">917</span></span></a> The
+only fully satisfactory kind of redemption consists in this, that
+every holder of the paper money may, immediately on demand,
+obtain its nominal value in good current metallic money.
+This only can, in the long run, keep paper money up to its full
+nominal value. But experience teaches that even with less perfect
+modes of redemption, paper money may maintain a part of
+its nominal value, and a part greater in proportion as the following
+conditions are approximated to: freedom from personal
+considerations, the immediateness of the redemption, and currency
+of the goods by means of which redemption is effected.
+Thus, for instance, the acceptance of paper money for all debts
+due the state, in countries where taxation is heavy, where
+there are large state industries etc.; where the lands of the
+state are farmed out etc., has a great influence on its course of
+exchange. Redemption in parcels of land is a very imperfect
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page447">[pg 447]</span><a name="Pg447" id="Pg447" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+one, not only on account of the great differences in the value
+of pieces of land according to quality, situation, the times etc.,
+but also because only a very small number of men, especially
+where money is the usual medium of exchange, are in a condition
+to accept parcels of land.<a id="noteref_918" name="noteref_918" href="#note_918"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">918</span></span></a> It is a question whether the
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page448">[pg 448]</span><a name="Pg448" id="Pg448" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+threat of punishing the refusal to accept paper money, or to
+accept it at its full nominal value, can be called a negative
+mode of redemption. Certain it is, however, that it is the
+most barbarous and in the long run the least efficient mode,
+one in which the issuer calculates only on the fear of those
+who accept it; and, what is most demoralizing, on the hope
+they entertain that they in turn shall be able to dispose of it
+to others as timid.<a id="noteref_919" name="noteref_919" href="#note_919"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">919</span></span></a><a id="noteref_920" name="noteref_920" href="#note_920"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">920</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page449">[pg 449]</span><a name="Pg449" id="Pg449" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc335" id="toc335"></a>
+<a name="pdf336" id="pdf336"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section IV.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">Compulsory Circulation.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+When paper money which is not completely redeemable—and
+it is scarcely possible that in the long run it should be
+thus redeemable—has sunk below its nominal value, the result
+in the case of all private paper money is the bankruptcy (<span lang="de" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="de"><span style="font-style: italic">Vermögensbruch</span></span>) of the individual issuing it; in the
+case of state paper money, the legal provision that it shall have a compulsory
+circulation (<span lang="de" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="de"><span style="font-style: italic">Zwangcourse</span></span>;
+<span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">cours forcé</span></span>).<a id="noteref_921" name="noteref_921" href="#note_921"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">921</span></span></a> To what extent
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page450">[pg 450]</span><a name="Pg450" id="Pg450" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+the real rate of exchange of paper money shall fall in any
+case depends not only on the amount issued as compared with
+the wants of trade, but also and still more on the degree of confidence
+which the state of public affairs inspires.<a id="noteref_922" name="noteref_922" href="#note_922"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">922</span></span></a> The first
+consequence attending a depreciated currency is, that the good
+precious metal money is withdrawn from circulation and even
+from the country; for the reason that it cannot maintain its
+true value side by side with the paper money; the usual effect
+in all untenable mixed standards or currencies.<a id="noteref_923" name="noteref_923" href="#note_923"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">923</span></span></a> A second, and
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page451">[pg 451]</span><a name="Pg451" id="Pg451" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+worse consequence is the unrightful revolution produced in so
+many income and property relations, based on old contracts, to
+the advantage of the debtor, to the disadvantage of the creditor,
+and of those who receive nominally fixed salaries.<a id="noteref_924" name="noteref_924" href="#note_924"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">924</span></span></a> These consequences are in kind similar to those produced by the clipping
+of the coin; but in degree they are much more dangerous.<a id="noteref_925" name="noteref_925" href="#note_925"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">925</span></span></a>
+Besides, the depreciation of paper produces, by no
+means, an equal rise in the prices of all commodities. The
+prices of those commodities, the sellers of which are most
+favorably situated in the struggle for prices, rise earliest and
+highest. This is true especially of foreign commodities, also
+of those inland commodities which can be easily exported,
+and most particularly of those commodities which have the
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page452">[pg 452]</span><a name="Pg452" id="Pg452" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+greatest capacity for circulation, for instance, gold and
+silver.<a id="noteref_926" name="noteref_926" href="#note_926"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">926</span></span></a>
+Hence, it would be a great mistake in countries where there
+is an irredeemable paper currency with compulsory circulation,
+to measure its purchasing power at a special discount as
+compared with the precious metals. Therefore, a depreciated
+paper currency has transitorily an effect on industry similar to
+that of a protective tariff, and even as the payment of export
+premiums; inasmuch as it enables manufacturers to permit a
+part of their cost of production, viz.: that which they have to
+pay their workmen, their older creditors, and in part, also,
+their furnishers of raw material, to rise in a less degree than
+the paper money has declined in value.<a id="noteref_927" name="noteref_927" href="#note_927"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">927</span></span></a> This is indeed a very
+inequitable advantage accorded to private individuals in the
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page453">[pg 453]</span><a name="Pg453" id="Pg453" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+face of the universal distress of the country.<a id="noteref_928" name="noteref_928" href="#note_928"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">928</span></span></a><a id="noteref_929" name="noteref_929" href="#note_929"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">929</span></span></a> And these bad
+consequences are aggravated by the downward-path principle
+which a depreciated paper money always involves. The
+state whose financial distress introduced the evil, sees a great
+portion of its revenues melt away before its eyes;<a id="noteref_930" name="noteref_930" href="#note_930"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">930</span></span></a> while in
+what concerns its outlay, nothing is more calculated to mislead
+it than such an imagined creation out of nothing. And a
+thing which greatly contributes to this its the frightful sensitiveness
+of a depreciated paper currency in the presence of
+complications of foreign politics, a quality which may cause
+the government as many inconveniences from without as the issue of its paper money
+produced conveniences to it at home.<a id="noteref_931" name="noteref_931" href="#note_931"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">931</span></span></a>
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page454">[pg 454]</span><a name="Pg454" id="Pg454" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+Hence recourse is had to additional issues of paper, which are
+easily increased in the same measure as the rate of exchange
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Cours</span></span>) has declined.<a id="noteref_932" name="noteref_932" href="#note_932"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">932</span></span></a> Great private interests operate in the
+same direction. Between the increase of the volume of the
+paper currency in circulation and its consequent depreciation,
+some time always elapses; and in the mean time, either the
+purchasing power of the money-owner or his loaning capital
+is really greater than before. The former increases the demand
+for commodities, the latter facilitates their coming into
+existence. However, the flight of speculation with which the
+increase of paper money is wont to be accompanied<a id="noteref_933" name="noteref_933" href="#note_933"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">933</span></span></a> in the
+beginning depends on an error shared by many men as to its
+true value. Hence it does not last long, and the critical shriveling
+up of the inflated bubbles is greater in proportion to
+what the previous dimensions of these bubbles were. And
+now many believe that the nation's business or economy
+might be kept on its course by new emissions of paper money;
+and the wise ones hope, at least, to be able thereby to postpone
+the catastrophe long enough to enable themselves to get
+their property into a safe condition. And in fact, the restoration
+of a depreciated currency is accompanied by crises entirely
+similar to those which followed its first decline; only
+they are in an opposite direction.<a id="noteref_934" name="noteref_934" href="#note_934"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">934</span></span></a> And hence conscientious
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page455">[pg 455]</span><a name="Pg455" id="Pg455" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+statesmen are frequently deterred from seeking to effect such
+a restoration. Yet the darkest side of a paper currency severed
+of due connection with precious metal-money consists in
+the frequent and violent fluctuations of value to which it is
+subject.<a id="noteref_935" name="noteref_935" href="#note_935"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">935</span></span></a> The consequence of these fluctuations is, that
+every commercial transaction, every credit-transaction, and
+even every act of saving, in which money plays any part, is
+made to bear the impress of a game of chance;<a id="noteref_936" name="noteref_936" href="#note_936"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">936</span></span></a> a consequence
+of far and deep reaching influence, especially in the
+higher stages of civilization, where the importance of commerce,
+of the credit-system, and of money-economy as contradistinguished
+from barter-economy is so great; producing
+there a state of uncertainty which is otherwise peculiar only
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page456">[pg 456]</span><a name="Pg456" id="Pg456" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+to barbarous medieval times.<a id="noteref_937" name="noteref_937" href="#note_937"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">937</span></span></a> All this
+discourages the best business men and the best husbandmen more than it does
+any other class of people, and demoralizes the whole economy
+of a nation; and demoralizes it the more in proportion as it is
+easier for the state to influence the value of paper money as
+compared with specie, and as its influence is more irresistible.<a id="noteref_938" name="noteref_938" href="#note_938"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">938</span></span></a>
+The compulsory circulation of paper money is a much more
+powerful and yet a much more simple screw by means of
+which to practice extortion than is the most burdensome taxation
+or forced loan, and at the same time the most comprehensive
+power which a government can possess to carry out
+both these measures. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ad. Wagner.</span></span>)
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+All the horrors of the later Roman republic, the draining
+of the provinces by robber-governors with their publicans
+and sinners, the building up of monstrous fortunes without
+any production proper, but through usury and rapine alone:
+all this is made to revive again through the instrumentality of
+the national-economic disease called a paper crisis, in a less
+violent form, indeed, but in one which is much more insidious
+and scarcely less pernicious.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page457">[pg 457]</span><a name="Pg457" id="Pg457" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc337" id="toc337"></a>
+<a name="pdf338" id="pdf338"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section V.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">Resumption Of Specie Payments.</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+The healing of such a paper-money disease as we have described,
+it has been endeavored to effect in three ways more
+particularly.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+A. By the reduction or bringing back of the depreciated
+paper money to its full nominal value. And this is best done
+by gradually drawing paper money into the state treasury by
+means of taxation or by loans, and refusing to allow such paper
+money to be again issued. The consequent rise in the
+rate at which the outstanding paper money notes exchange
+against specie is produced not only by the diminution of the
+quantity of paper in circulation, but also by the increasing
+confidence in the future which such a governmental measure
+inspires.<a id="noteref_939" name="noteref_939" href="#note_939"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">939</span></span></a> While this mode of procedure has in the abstract
+most in its favor, yet it is not to be recommended in practice
+except where the depreciation of paper money has either not
+gone very far or where it has existed only a short time.<a id="noteref_940" name="noteref_940" href="#note_940"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">940</span></span></a>
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page458">[pg 458]</span><a name="Pg458" id="Pg458" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+Otherwise the revolution in all property-relations and the disturbance
+of all rightful speculation—always dangerous and
+easily abused—produced by the depreciation would be repeated
+by the restoration of values, with this difference only
+that the disturbance would be produced the second time in an
+opposite direction. And that those who were previously injured
+should now be compensated for the damage sustained in
+the first instance is impossible in proportion as the depreciation
+has been of longer duration. Many of the sufferers from the
+effects of depreciation are now compelled, even as tax-payers,
+to contribute to the enrichment of the speculators who have
+accumulated the depreciated paper into their own hands.
+</p>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+B. The extreme opposite of such a course would consist in
+this, that the depreciated paper should be allowed to go on
+sinking lower and lower until it was practically worthless,
+whereupon a new currency, whether of metal or paper,
+would have to appear like a new world after the waters of a
+deluge had been abated. Hence, therefore, one of two things:
+universal bankruptcy entered into with the clearest purpose,
+or the resignation of despair!<a id="noteref_941" name="noteref_941" href="#note_941"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">941</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page459">[pg 459]</span><a name="Pg459" id="Pg459" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+C. The middle course between these two has, therefore, been
+most frequently pursued, viz.: <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">the legal reduction</span></span> of the value of
+the coin (<span lang="de" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="de"><span style="font-style: italic">gesetzliche Devalvirung</span></span>),
+which consists in reducing
+the nominal value of paper money to its current value at the
+moment the law goes into force, and by redeeming it either in
+specie or in other paper to be issued in smaller quantities.<a id="noteref_942" name="noteref_942" href="#note_942"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">942</span></span></a> Although
+this has been not seldom based on the false principle
+that the value of every separate amount of money is inversely
+as the aggregate amount of all the money in circulation; yet
+it cannot be questioned that it is only the open declaration of
+the state bankruptcy which the whole measure involves, and
+which in most instances has already happened beyond repair.
+Here there is no new and dangerous disturbance of the nation's
+economy whatever; and the fluctuations of value in the
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page460">[pg 460]</span><a name="Pg460" id="Pg460" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+future which are inseparable from the gradual contraction of
+the volume of paper, continued until it has reached its nominal
+value, are avoided: this last, of course, only on the supposition
+that either the pure metallic or the redeemable paper
+currency is rigidly adhered to.<a id="noteref_943" name="noteref_943" href="#note_943"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">943</span></span></a> But the problem, how to protect
+both parties<a id="noteref_944" name="noteref_944" href="#note_944"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">944</span></span></a> to contracts entered into at a rate of
+the currency different from that under which they are to be performed,
+from all damage, is one which will never be perfectly solved.
+Hence, of the different measures to economically preserve a
+state in cases of extraordinary need, the emission of paper
+money with compulsory circulation is much more universally
+disastrous to the people than the effecting of loans at the very
+highest rate of interest, and even than being in arrears in the
+matter of paying the officials and creditors of the state.<a id="noteref_945" name="noteref_945" href="#note_945"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">945</span></span></a>
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page461">[pg 461]</span><a name="Pg461" id="Pg461" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+
+<div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">
+<a name="toc339" id="toc339"></a>
+<a name="pdf340" id="pdf340"></a>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: center; margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 2.00em">Section VI.</h3>
+<h3 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 2.40em; margin-top: 2.40em"><span style="font-size: 120%">Paper Money—A Curse Or A Blessing?</span></h3>
+
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Considering the double-edged-sword character of this
+mighty instrument,<a id="noteref_946" name="noteref_946" href="#note_946"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">946</span></span></a> and the frightful consequences which its
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page462">[pg 462]</span><a name="Pg462" id="Pg462" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+abuse produces, it is easy to conceive why so many political
+economists have expressed such serious doubts as to whether,
+on the whole, the invention of paper money has been more of
+a curse or of a blessing to mankind. The controversy is
+an idle one to a certain extent, since no mature nation (or individual),
+and no nation which considers itself mature will renounce
+the possibility of a brilliant growth simply because it
+fears that it may not be able to withstand the temptations to dangerous
+abuse connected therewith. Politically, the best safeguard
+against such temptation is a so-called moderate constitution,
+which compels the supreme power in the state by
+wise and appropriate counterweights, to allow all rightful interests
+to assert themselves, or at least to find expression;
+and itself to make use not only of the most skillful but also of
+the most highly esteemed instruments and measures. Such
+a constitution, indeed, cannot be made; it must be the ripe
+fruit of a long continued and well conducted national life.<a id="noteref_947" name="noteref_947" href="#note_947"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">947</span></span></a>
+Of the extremes of forms of government, unlimited monarchy
+and democracy are about equally exposed to the paper-money
+disease.<a id="noteref_948" name="noteref_948" href="#note_948"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">948</span></span></a> Aristocracies are less exposed to it,
+for the reason that from their very nature they eschew centralization; and the
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page463">[pg 463]</span><a name="Pg463" id="Pg463" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+paper-money system is intimately connected with the latter.
+Nothing so strengthens the central authority as the paper-prerogative
+with an unlimited power over the prices of all commodities;
+and, on the other hand, whenever paper money is to have a wide
+field for action, there is supposed<a id="noteref_949" name="noteref_949" href="#note_949"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">949</span></span></a> a far-reaching
+and intimate interwearing of the different members of the
+nation's economy with one another. And in what concerns
+the various economic stages, paper money is far removed from
+all medieval times; and for the same reasons that make external
+commerce here preponderant and condense all commerce into
+caravans, staple-towns, fairs, and recommend the collection of
+treasure etc.<a id="noteref_950" name="noteref_950" href="#note_950"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">950</span></span></a>
+Later, on the other hand, we find two stages
+especially adapted to paper money. We have first, as yet undeveloped
+but intellectually active (and therefore desirous of progress) colonial countries,
+possessed in abundance of natural means of production without however
+being able to concentrate them into the hands of an undertaker
+(<span lang="de" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="de"><span style="font-style: italic">Unternehmer</span></span>) for
+<span class="tei tei-pb" id="page464">[pg 464]</span><a name="Pg464" id="Pg464" class="tei tei-anchor"></a>
+want of money.<a id="noteref_951" name="noteref_951" href="#note_951"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">951</span></span></a> Here both the saving of the precious
+metals and the facilitation of transportation effected by means of
+paper money are of greatest utility. And then we have very
+highly developed and rich countries; not only because their
+economic popular education may protect them against the
+dangers of paper money, but because the rich man has relatively
+least need of money and may dispense with stores of
+specie most readily, because of his influence over the supply
+of others.<a id="noteref_952" name="noteref_952" href="#note_952"><span class="tei tei-noteref"><span style="font-size: 60%; vertical-align: super">952</span></span></a>
+</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+</div>
+</div>
+<hr class="doublepage" /><div class="tei tei-back" style="margin-bottom: 2.00em; margin-top: 6.00em">
+ <div id="footnotes" class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 5.00em; margin-top: 5.00em">
+ <a name="toc341" id="toc341"></a>
+ <a name="pdf342" id="pdf342"></a>
+ <h1 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 3.46em; margin-top: 3.46em"><span style="font-size: 173%">Footnotes</span></h1>
+ <dl class="tei tei-list-footnotes"><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_1" name="note_1" href="#noteref_1">1.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">The
+author's preface to the twelfth edition is confined to pointing out the
+improvements etc., made in the eleventh. There is no new preface to the
+thirteenth edition of the original, which appeared in
+1877.—<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-variant: small-caps">Translator</span></span>.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_2" name="note_2" href="#noteref_2">2.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-q">“We shall never
+thoroughly understand the reason of customary law unless
+we also have a knowledge of that which is not customary. The one is
+connected and bound to the other. We have no slaves; why vex ourselves
+with questions about slaves?—Words worthy of a novice.”</span></dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_3" name="note_3" href="#noteref_3">3.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-q">“I
+am a man; I think nothing foreign to me that pertains to man.”</span></dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_4" name="note_4" href="#noteref_4">4.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-q">“That excellent and glorious philosophy.”</span></dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_5" name="note_5" href="#noteref_5">5.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Introduction to
+the Civilistisches Magazin.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_6" name="note_6" href="#noteref_6">6.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Dunoyer</span></span>, De la Liberté du Travail.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_7" name="note_7" href="#noteref_7">7.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Cicero</span></span>, De
+Leg., I.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_8" name="note_8" href="#noteref_8">8.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Discours Préliminaire du
+Code Civil.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_9" name="note_9" href="#noteref_9">9.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Cicero</span></span>,
+De Leg., II, 4. <span class="tei tei-q">“Legem neque hominum ingeniis excogitatam,
+nec scitum aliquod esse populorum, sed æternum quiddam quod universum mundum regeret,
+imperandi, prohibendique sapientia.”</span> <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ibid.</span></span></dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_10" name="note_10" href="#noteref_10">10.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Revue de Législ. et de Jurispr. (1841,
+XIII, p. 39.) <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Montesquieu</span></span> says:
+<span class="tei tei-q">“The relations of justice and equity are anterior to all positive laws.”</span></dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_11" name="note_11" href="#noteref_11">11.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Mr. Wolowski
+translated the second edition of Roscher's Principles into
+French, and prefixed the present essay thereto as a preface. Since Wolowski's
+translation appeared, the original work has gone through eleven editions,
+been largely increased in size, and enriched with new notes, the result
+of nearly twenty additional years of research and thought. The thirteenth
+German edition, from which the present translation is made, is larger
+than the first by one hundred and seventy pages.—<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Translator's
+note.</span></span></dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_12" name="note_12" href="#noteref_12">12.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">And he adds: <span class="tei tei-q">“Animals
+which yield only to an impulse or blind instinct,
+come together only fortuitously or periodically and in a manner destitute
+of all morality. But in the case of men, reason is mixed up more or less
+with every act of their lives. Sentiment is found side by side with desire,
+and right succeeds instinct. I discover a real contract in the union of the
+two sexes.”</span>
+</p>
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+It would be impossible to present a more complete or eloquent refutation
+of the definition of the Roman jurisconsults which debases marriage to the
+level of the promiscuous coming together of animals, and which limits the
+natural law to the law common to man and beast. <span class="tei tei-q">“Jus naturale est quod
+natura omnia animalia docuit; nam jus istud non humani generis proprium,
+sed omnium animalium quæ in terra, quæ in mare nascuntur, avium quoque
+commune est. Hinc descendit maris atque feminæ conjunctio, quam nos
+matrimonium appellamus, hinc liberorum procreatio, hinc educatio; videmus
+etenim cætera quoque animalia, feras etiam, istius juris peritia censeri.”</span> D. L.
+I. De Just. et Jure.</p></dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_13" name="note_13" href="#noteref_13">13.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Comment.
+in tit. Dig., De Just. et Jure, VII, 11th Naples edition. The ingenious
+argument of the great jurisconsult falls to the ground under the beautiful
+words of Cicero: <span class="tei tei-q">“Ut justitia, ita jus sine ratione non consistit; soli ratione
+utentes jure ac lege vivunt.”</span> De Natura Deorum, II, 62. <span class="tei tei-q">“Virtus ratione
+constat, brutæ ratione non utuntur, cujus sunt expertia, ergo jure non vivunt,
+et ut rationis, sic jures sunt expertia.”</span> Besides, Cujas himself recognizes
+how faulty and incomplete was the definition he was defending: <span class="tei tei-q">“At ne jus
+quidem naturale, de quo agimus, est commune omnium animalium quatenus
+rationale, est, sed quatenus sensible est, sensui congruit. Tullius participare
+hominem cum brutis eo quod sentit, sed ratione ab eo differre. Et alio loco:
+jus naturale esse commune omnium Quiritium, veluti ut se velint tueri: sed
+hoc distare hominem a bellua, quod bellua sensu moveatur, homo etiam ratione.”</span></dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_14" name="note_14" href="#noteref_14">14.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Rossi.</span></span></dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_15" name="note_15" href="#noteref_15">15.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Politics, I, ch. I, II.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_16" name="note_16" href="#noteref_16">16.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Ueber die Nothwendigkeit
+eines Allgemeinen burgerlichen Rechts fur Deutschland.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_17" name="note_17" href="#noteref_17">17.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Vom Beruf unserer Zeit
+für Gesetzgebung etc.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_18" name="note_18" href="#noteref_18">18.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">In
+one of his latest productions (Ueber die sogennante historische und
+nicht historische Rechtsschule, Archives du Droit Civil, Heidelberg, XXI
+1838) the veteran of the philosophical school, resuming a debate begun a quarter
+of a century before, energetically defends himself against the erroneous interpretations
+which it was sought to give to his thoughts. <span class="tei tei-q">“Does it follow,”</span>
+he inquires, <span class="tei tei-q">“that because a man is desirous of reform, he must surrender
+the study of the past? And if there be new laws to construe, how could his
+evil genius deter him from the necessary knowledge of ancient laws? Is
+there a single jurisconsult, who, in the hope of a better future, despises the
+meaning and spirit of that which still exists? I do not know even one....
+And when I am accused of passing by the institutions of the past with coldness
+and hatred in my heart, because I was one of the first to express the
+hope of a better future, a charge is laid at my door which is perfectly
+incomprehensible ... I am reproached with despising the history of law. It
+is a slander on me. Although I have only laughed at these reports, one
+man's mistake grieved me; for that man's name was Niebuhr.... When
+he [Niebuhr] returned from Italy to devote himself entirely to science, in
+his retreat at Bonn, he passed through Heidelberg, where he remained five
+or six days. During a great part of that time we came frequently together.
+He was at first a little cold; but Cicero made us friends. After a happy
+word let drop concerning that writer, he asked me what I thought of him.
+I answered laconically: <span class="tei tei-q">‘If they were burning all the Latin authors, and
+I were permitted to grant a pardon to one of them, I should say, without
+hesitation: Spare the works of Cicero.’</span> He joyfully exclaimed: <span class="tei tei-q">‘I have
+at last found a man who judges rightly of Cicero. I share your admiration
+for him, and that is the reason I have given my boy the name of Marcus.’</span>
+The ice was now broken, and he frankly told me that he could not understand
+how I could be an inveterate enemy of Roman law and of the history
+of law. I gave him to understand that I had simply been slandered, and I
+added, that, in order to live entirely with the classics, I had always refused
+to give legal advice, or act as a counsellor, although I might have made a
+fortune in that way. I told him that I owed my gayety and vigor, in great
+part, to my love for the classics of all ages, even those outside the domain
+of jurisprudence; but that I held, above all things, to the good qualities of
+the German nation, and that I did not hesitate to say with Facciolatus:
+<span class="tei tei-q">‘Expedit omnes gentes Romanis legibus operam dare, suis vivere.’</span></span>
+</p>
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+<span class="tei tei-q">“When he heard those words of mine, he exclaimed with his usual energy
+and vivacity: <span class="tei tei-q">‘Habes me consentientem, labes me consentientem.’</span> From
+that moment all coldness between us was at an end, and we approached,
+without any embarrassment, a host of questions in one conversation in
+which I endeavored, as I had before, to learn from him.</span>
+</p>
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+<span class="tei tei-q">“Thus I receive with sincere gratitude, all the works, both useful and profound,
+which have appeared in our day on the history of law. It would be
+folly in me to deny the impetus which the study of positive law has received.
+New sources have been discovered. Their newness and importance
+have excited the zeal of many scholars who have studied them profoundly;
+a fact which made a review of the older sources, still by far the
+most important, necessary. These two circumstances soon rendered it imperative
+to proceed to the making of scrupulous dogmatic researches. Thus
+there now is a new life among jurisconsults, and a great activity, which, it
+is my hope, may continue long.”</span></p></dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_19" name="note_19" href="#noteref_19">19.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Revue
+de Législ. et de Jurisprudence, 1834-35.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_20" name="note_20" href="#noteref_20">20.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Rossi.</span></span></dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_21" name="note_21" href="#noteref_21">21.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">M.
+de Bonald.</span></span></dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_22" name="note_22" href="#noteref_22">22.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">M. Cousin</span></span> has brought this
+out in an admirable manner in his lectures
+on Adam Smith. Cours de Philosophie Moderne.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_23" name="note_23" href="#noteref_23">23.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Channing.</span></span></dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_24" name="note_24" href="#noteref_24">24.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Knies.</span></span>
+Die politische Œkonomie vom Standpunkte der geschichtlichen
+Methode, Braunschweig, 1853.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_25" name="note_25" href="#noteref_25">25.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Cours Complet d' Economie politique, II,
+540, éd. Guillaumin.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_26" name="note_26" href="#noteref_26">26.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Cousin.</span></span></dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_27" name="note_27" href="#noteref_27">27.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">We here append an extract
+from <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Heinrich Contzen's</span></span> Geschichte, Literatur,
+und Bedeutung der Nationalökonomie, Cassel und Leipzig, 1876, p. 7:
+<span class="tei tei-q">“Roscher ... is rightfully considered the real founder and the principal
+representative of the historical school. This school is continually gaining in
+extent, and has found, both in Germany and in France, the most distinguished
+disciples—men who honor Roscher as their teacher and master, the
+leader whose beacon light they follow. Roscher combines the richest positive
+learning with rare clearness and plastic beauty in the presentation of
+his thought. These are conceded to him on every hand; and it does not detract
+from him, or alter the fact that he possesses them, that, here and there, an
+ill-humored or maliciously snappish critic calls them in question.”</span> It should
+be borne in mind here that Wolowski wrote in 1857; Contzen, like Wolowski,
+a politico-economical writer of mark, in 1876.—<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Translator's
+note.</span></span></dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_28" name="note_28" href="#noteref_28">28.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Leben, Werk und Zeitalter des Thukydides.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_29" name="note_29" href="#noteref_29">29.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Rau's</span></span>
+Archiv., Heidelberg. This remarkable essay has since appeared in
+Roscher's Ansichten der Volkswirthschalt vom geschichtlichen Standpunkte,
+1861.—<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Translator's note.</span></span></dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_30" name="note_30" href="#noteref_30">30.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Grundriss zu
+Vorlesungen über die Staatswirthschaft nach geschichtlichen
+Methode.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_31" name="note_31" href="#noteref_31">31.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Berliner
+Zeitschrift für allgem Geschichte.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_32" name="note_32" href="#noteref_32">32.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Ueber Kornhandel und Theuerungspolitik, 3d ed.,
+1852.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_33" name="note_33" href="#noteref_33">33.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Untersuchungen über das Kolonialwesen.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_34" name="note_34" href="#noteref_34">34.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Umrisse zur
+Naturlehre der drei Staatsformen (Berliner Zeitschrift, 1847-1848).</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_35" name="note_35" href="#noteref_35">35.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Ueber das Verhältniss der Nationalökonomie
+zum klassischen Alterthume (K. Sachs Akademie der Wissenschaft, 1849).
+Also to be found in Roscher's Ansichten
+etc.—<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Translator.</span></span></dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_36" name="note_36" href="#noteref_36">36.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Zur Geschichte
+der englischen Volkswirthschaftslehre im 16 und 17 Jahrh.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_37" name="note_37" href="#noteref_37">37.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Ein nationalökonom.
+Princep der Forstwirthschaft.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_38" name="note_38" href="#noteref_38">38.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Roscher's</span></span>
+complete work he calls <span class="tei tei-q">“A System of Political Economy.”</span> It
+embraces the four parts above referred to; but each of these parts constitutes
+an independent work. The first part, or the Principles of Political Economy,
+covers the ground generally covered by English treatises on Political Economy.
+</p>
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Besides the works above mentioned, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Professor Roscher</span></span> has
+written Ansichten der Volkswirthschaft aus dem geschichtlichen Standpunkte, 2d ed.,
+Leipzig, 1861; Die deutche Nationalökonomik an der Grenzscheide des sechszehnten
+und siebenzehnten Jahrhunderts, Leipzig, 1862; Gründungsgeschichte
+des Zollvereins, Berlin, 1870; Betrachtungen über die geographische
+Lage der grossen Städte, Leipzig, 1871; Bertrachtungen über die Währungsfrage
+der deutschen Münzreform, Berlin, 1872; Geschichte der Nationalökonomik
+in Deutschland, Munich, 1874; Nationalökonomik des Ackerbaues,
+8th ed., Stuttgart, 1875.—<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Translator's note.</span></span>
+</p></dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_39" name="note_39" href="#noteref_39">39.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Die
+politische Œkonomie vom Standpunkte der geschichtlichen Methode.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_40" name="note_40" href="#noteref_40">40.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Die National
+Œkonomie der Gegenwart und Zukunft.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_41" name="note_41" href="#noteref_41">41.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Recherches sur les Finances de France.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_42" name="note_42" href="#noteref_42">42.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Frédéric
+Passy</span></span>, de la Contrainte et de la Liberté.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_43" name="note_43" href="#noteref_43">43.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Poor
+peasantry, poor kingdom; poor kingdom, poor sovereign.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_44" name="note_44" href="#noteref_44">44.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Cours
+d' Econ. polit., 2e., Leçon I, p. 33.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_45" name="note_45" href="#noteref_45">45.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">This would
+be: Propter vitiam, vitæ perdere causas.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_46" name="note_46" href="#noteref_46">46.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Cousin</span></span>,
+loc. cit., p. 276.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_47" name="note_47" href="#noteref_47">47.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ibid.</span></span>,
+274.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_48" name="note_48" href="#noteref_48">48.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Frédéric Passy</span></span>: De
+la Contrainte et de la Liberté.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_49" name="note_49" href="#noteref_49">49.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Schäffle</span></span>, Deutsche
+Vierteljahrsschrift (1861), emphasizes this. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Adam
+Smith</span></span>, Wealth of Nations (1776), very characteristically, begins with the
+yearly labor of the nation; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">J. B. Say</span></span> (Traité d'Economie
+Politique, 1802), with <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">richesses</span></span>;
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ricardo</span></span> (Principles of Political Economy and Taxation, 1817),
+with the idea of value.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_50" name="note_50" href="#noteref_50">50.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">The
+sum total of the wants (<span lang="de" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="de"><span style="font-style: italic">Bedarf</span></span>)
+of the Bavarian people, for a whole year, is estimated by
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hermann</span></span>, Staatswirthschaftliche Untersuchungen (2d
+ed., 1870, p. 81), at 177,000,000 florins for food (77 millions for wheat and potatoes,
+69 millions for meat, 15 millions for milk etc., 16 millions for eggs,
+vegetables, salt and spices); 50 millions for clothing, 45 millions for shelter,
+37.5 millions for fuel, 60 millions for beverages.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_51" name="note_51" href="#noteref_51">51.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">The
+original adds: <span lang="de" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="de"><span style="font-style: italic">deren Gesammtheit sein
+Bedarf heisst</span></span>; the aggregate of which is called his [man's] Requisite
+(<span lang="de" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="de"><span style="font-style: italic">Bedarf</span></span>). There being no exact
+equivalent in English for the word
+<span lang="de" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="de"><span style="font-style: italic">Bedarf</span></span> in this connection,
+this note is appended.—<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Translator.</span></span></dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_52" name="note_52" href="#noteref_52">52.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">According to <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Boisguillebert</span></span>
+(ob. 1714) Traité des Grains, I., c. 4, the wants
+<span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">nécessaire</span></span>,
+<span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">commode</span></span>,
+<span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">délicat</span></span>,
+<span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">superflu</span></span>,
+<span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">magnifique</span></span>, arise in
+successive order with increasing welfare or prosperity, and are surrendered in a reverse
+order, with increasing need. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Tucker</span></span> distinguishes necessaries,
+comforts, and conveniences of the respective conditions, elegancies and refinements,
+and lastly, <span class="tei tei-q">“grand and magnificent.”</span> (Two Sermons, 1774, 29 ff.);
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">F. B. W. Hermann</span></span>, loc. cit, 1st, ed., 1832, 68; necessary
+goods (Güter der Nothdurft), goods that contribute to pleasure and recuperation,
+to culture and splendor.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_53" name="note_53" href="#noteref_53">53.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Compare <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Tucker</span></span>,
+On the Naturalization Bill (1751 seq.), IV, note.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_54" name="note_54" href="#noteref_54">54.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">No people without fire (Prometheus!); and it seems that
+broiling was the earliest mode of preparing food; then followed baking in heated
+cavities, and lastly came boiling in vessels. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Klemm</span></span>,
+Allgemeine Kulturgeschichte, I, 180, 343.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_55" name="note_55" href="#noteref_55">55.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">There
+is an interesting attempt by <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Faucher</span></span>, in the Vierteljahrsschrift
+für Volkswirthschaft und Kulturgeschichte, 1868, III, 148 ff., to determine the
+relative place of our various wants according to their capacity for extension or
+contraction.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_56" name="note_56" href="#noteref_56">56.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">The
+qualification <span class="tei tei-q">“true,”</span> excludes from the circle of goods, not only all
+those things which might satisfy only irrational or immoral wants (compare
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Mischler</span></span>, Grundsätze der Nationalökonomie, 1856, I, 187),
+but also vindicates the fundamental idea of the whole system of Political Economy,
+as a subject of moral as well as of psychological investigation.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_57" name="note_57" href="#noteref_57">57.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Even <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Aristotle</span></span>
+(Eth. nicom. V, 8), considers that all things intended to
+enter into commerce, should be susceptible of comparison with one another,
+and that the measure of this comparison is <em class="tei tei-emph"><span style="font-style: italic">want</span></em>, which is the foundation
+of all association among men.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_58" name="note_58" href="#noteref_58">58.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">An
+Arab helped pillage a caravan, and carried away, as his share of the
+booty, a chest of pearls. He thought it a box of rice, and gave them to his wife
+to cook, but finding they did not boil tender, he threw them away.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Niebuhr</span></span>, Beschreibung von Arabien, 383). See a similar
+anecdote in <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ammian. Marcell.</span></span>, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">XXII</span></span>.
+Compare <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Strabo</span></span>, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">VIII</span></span>, 381.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_59" name="note_59" href="#noteref_59">59.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">As
+soon as the Persians renounce the superstition that the daily contemplation
+of a turquoise is a talisman against the "evil eye" (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">K. Ritter</span></span>,
+Erdkunde, VIII, 327), that precious stone will lose much of its value. On the
+other hand, the amulets of antiquity, although they have long lost the quality
+of goods as objects of superstition, have now a real value for the archæologist.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_60" name="note_60" href="#noteref_60">60.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Since
+observation shows, that, as time runs on, matter tends more and
+more to become <em class="tei tei-emph"><span style="font-style: italic">goods</span></em>, the blind forms of motion in nature to become useful
+labor and useful sustenance, impersonal and objectless existence to be transformed
+into personal property and personal culture, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Schäffle</span></span> inclines to
+the belief that the whole mechanism of unconsciously governing nature is destined
+ultimately to aid in the realization of moral good, which alone is really
+valuable. Das gesellschaftliche System der menschlichen Wirthschaft, III,
+Auff., 1873, I, 3.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_61" name="note_61" href="#noteref_61">61.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hermann</span></span>, loc. cit, 1st ed., I,
+calls internal goods whatever each of us finds in himself, the free gift of nature; also
+that which we develop in ourselves by our own free action; and external, whatever we
+create or obtain, through the external world, as a means of satisfying our wants. The
+internal goods of one man may be external goods to another, as, for instance, when
+the former conveys them directly to the latter to be enjoyed, by words, demeanor,
+etc., or indirectly, in combination with other external goods.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_62" name="note_62" href="#noteref_62">62.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">The exclusion of all else, has, indeed, been called
+one-sidedness and materialism. But, as <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Senior</span></span> says, no one blames
+the writer on tactics, because he confines his attention to military subjects; nor is the
+objection raised, that by so doing, he is encouraging eternal war. On the other hand,
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">J. B. Storch</span></span> (1815) devoted a special division of his work to
+the consideration of <span class="tei tei-q">“internal goods”</span> (health, knowledge, morality, security,
+leisure,.etc.). See <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Rau's</span></span> translation of his Manual, II,
+337 ff. Compare <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Gioja</span></span>, Nuovo Prospetto delle
+Scienze economiche, 1815 ff. VIII.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_63" name="note_63" href="#noteref_63">63.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">The
+inclination to exchange is, according to <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Adam Smith</span></span>, one of the
+most important marks which distinguish man from the brute. (Wealth of Nations,
+I, ch. 2). But see <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Büsch</span></span>, Geldumlanf (1780), I, § 29, on
+exchange among the lower animals.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_64" name="note_64" href="#noteref_64">64.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Observed
+by <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Aristot.</span></span> Polit. I, ch. 6.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_65" name="note_65" href="#noteref_65">65.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">The efforts
+of political economists to select from among the infinite number
+of goods, those which should constitute the subject of their investigations,
+have taken two directions in recent times. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Bastiat</span></span> here confines
+himself too exclusively to commerce. The political economist should concern himself
+only with wants and satisfactions, where the labor, which is the connecting
+link between them, is undertaken by some other person for a consideration.
+Thus the ordinary act of respiration lies outside the circle, that of the diver,
+which is paid for, does not. (Harmonies économiques, 1850, 68 ff.) But
+even Robinson Crusoe had his own system of economy. Are the products
+which the farmer consumes in his own home, the work he does himself, any
+the less matters of economic moment than the products he sells, or the labors
+of his servants? <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Schäffle</span></span> is right when he says that ordinary
+respiration is no economic function, because it is an unconscious necessity of nature.
+But his definition is too broad, inasmuch as he places the essence of the economic
+character of goods or of an act, in the conscious adaptation of means to
+human ends. (Tübinger Progr. z. 27 Sept. 1862, 9, 24 seq.) To take a
+walk is no economic operation, although it may be the best means to a very
+important end,—health. The same goods or the same act may have, frequently,
+according to the end proposed, an economic or non-economic character.
+The beauty of the human body, for instance, however systematically
+made use of for purposes of vanity, is not economic <em class="tei tei-emph"><span style="font-style: italic">goods</span></em>. But it is an
+economic speculation, base though it be, when a man relies on his handsome
+figure to secure a wealthy wife, or, for purposes of gain, allows her to pose as
+a model to artists or to take part in
+<span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">tableaux vivants</span></span>. According to
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">C. Menger</span></span>,
+Grundsätze der Volkswirthschaftslehre (1871) I, 51 ff., there are no economic
+goods, but those the disposable supply of which is, at most, equal to
+the quantity that is required. But is not the largest navigable stream, even
+in the most thinly populated country, an economic good?</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_66" name="note_66" href="#noteref_66">66.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hegel</span></span>, Rechtsphilosophie, § 67. Even
+the use of a corpse as manure, or for any mercantile purpose, is repugnant to our
+feelings, <span class="tei tei-q">“because of the dignity of personality.”</span> (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Schäffle</span></span>,
+National Œkonomie, 1860, 28.) In this respect, prostitution is a remnant of slavery.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Schäffle</span></span> is right, when he says
+that to repay personal services with material commodities which do not afford
+as much food etc., as the former have cost in expenditure of vital energy, is a
+slow and frequently a very cruel kind of cannibalism. (Kapitalismus und
+Socialismus, 1870, 18).</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_67" name="note_67" href="#noteref_67">67.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Bornitz</span></span>, De rerum Sufficientia in
+Republica procuranda, 1625, gives in this
+encyclopædia of political science, together with a dissertation on agriculture,
+commerce and manufactures, a complete survey of the <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">ministeria</span></span>.
+Several modern writers refuse to look upon personal services, or the ability
+to render such services, as elements of wealth: compare <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Kaufmann</span></span>,
+Untersuchungen im Gebiete der politischen Œkonomie, 1830, II, Heft I. They
+demonstrate, however, no more than this, that that class of goods has something
+very peculiar. Thus <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Malthus</span></span>, Principles of Political Economy
+(1820), chap. I, sect. I, objects that they cannot be inventoried or taxed; but can
+material goods be so completely? Can all the parts of the wealth of a nation
+be so inventoried and taxed? <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Rau</span></span>, Lehrbuch der pol. Œkonomie
+(1826) I, § 46, remarks that the personal aptitude to perform services dies with the
+person, and that personal services cannot be stored up (?), etc. I appeal
+simply to the definition I have given above of economic goods, and which
+applies equally to services of every kind which can be performed for other
+people. Besides, those who oppose this view are unable to give a satisfactory
+explanation of all the phenomena of commerce. Of course, the qualification
+<span class="tei tei-q">“recognized as useful”</span> is of the utmost importance as a mark to determine
+what is goods. But a prima donna, or a world-renowned physician, cast naked
+by shipwreck on the shores of North America, is certainly, better off
+than a blind beggar, his fellow sufferer. Compare <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Storch</span></span>,
+Handbuch II, 335 ff. and his Considérations sur la Nature du Revenu National.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_68" name="note_68" href="#noteref_68">68.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ad. Müller</span></span> compares persons,
+so far as they render any kind of service, to
+things, and, so far as they are required to be preserved in their individuality, to
+persons. The children in the <span class="tei tei-q">“status”</span> of a country gentleman, for instance,
+are treated more as persons, and domestics, more like things; the land partakes
+of a species of personality, but not the implements of labor. (Nothwendigkeit
+einer theolog. Grundlage der Staatswissenschaft, 1819, 48.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_69" name="note_69" href="#noteref_69">69.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">The privilege of selling refreshments in the garden of
+the Palais Royal was formerly let for 38,000 francs a year.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_70" name="note_70" href="#noteref_70">70.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">See the cases cited by <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hermann</span></span>,
+Staatswirtsch. Untersuchungen, 6 ff. and by <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Bernoulli</span></span>, Schweiz.
+Archiv. für Statistik und N. Œkon. II, 55. Think of the firm of J. M. Farina!
+In Athens, good stands were leased at a very high rent, even where there was no
+investment of the lessee's capital. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Demosthenes</span></span>,
+pro. Phorm., 948; adv. Steph. I, iiii.) There is, again, the sale of inventions,
+while they are still <span class="tei tei-q">“mere ideas.”</span> According to <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Schäffle</span></span>,
+Theorie der ausschliessendnen Verhältnisse, 1857, II ff., the value in exchange of these
+relations depends on the extra income which is assured in fact, or in law,
+against diminution, by the exclusion of competition. He, therefore, recommends,
+instead of the word <span class="tei tei-q">“relations,”</span> <span class="tei tei-q">“custom,”</span> or <span class="tei tei-q">“publicum.”</span> But these
+words, by no means, exhaust the meaning expressed by <span class="tei tei-q">“relation.”</span> Thus,
+the good administration of public affairs, although it has no value in exchange,
+is one of the most valuable economic goods which a people can
+possess.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_71" name="note_71" href="#noteref_71">71.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">The relation mentioned above
+of a general to an army may even have great value in exchange. Instance,
+the Italian condottieri in the fifteenth century!</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_72" name="note_72" href="#noteref_72">72.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Relations
+which take from one man, as much as they afford to their
+possessor, are of value as components of a man's private fortune, but not of
+the wealth of the nation. To this class belong debts due from persons or
+from things, compulsory custom or good-will of every description; as for instance,
+the seventy-two places of the <span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">agents de
+change</span></span> in Paris, each of which was worth more than a million of francs; or
+the right of navigating the Elbe as far as Magdeburg, which, about the beginning of
+this century, was worth in every instance about 10,000 thalers.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Krug</span></span>, Abriss. der St. Œkonomie, 62.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_73" name="note_73" href="#noteref_73">73.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Schäffle</span></span>,
+N. Œkonomie, 10. In the German language, this same word
+is used to designate utility, and sometimes useful objects (so called values).
+A clear distinction, however, should be made between utility and value in
+use. Utility is a quality of things themselves, in relation, it is true, to human
+wants. Value in use is a quality imputed to them, the result of man's
+thought, or of his view of them. Thus, for instance, in a beleagured city, the
+stores of food do not increase in utility, but their value in use does. Compare
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Schäffle</span></span>, System, III, I, 170.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_74" name="note_74" href="#noteref_74">74.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Genovesi</span></span>, Economia civile
+(1869), II, I, 7. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">L. Say</span></span>, De la Richesse individuelle
+et de la Richesse publique (1827), 29, estimates the value of goods
+according to the degree of discomfort attendant on the privation of them.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_75" name="note_75" href="#noteref_75">75.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Friedländer</span></span> has,
+however, made a general attempt in this direction.
+Theorie des Werthes (Dorpat, 1852). But says <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Th. Fix</span></span>
+(Journal des Economistes, 1844, IX, 12): <span class="tei tei-q">“It is as impossible to establish
+a scale of values, as it is to find an exact mathematical and permanent measure
+of our wants, passions, desires, tastes and fancies.”</span></dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_76" name="note_76" href="#noteref_76">76.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Compare
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Knies</span></span>, Geld und Credit, 1873, I, 126 ff. The very respectable
+attempt made by <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">A. Samter</span></span>, Sociallehre (1875), with the idea
+society-value (<span lang="de" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="de"><span style="font-style: italic">Gesellschaftswerth</span></span>)
+covers too nearly the idea of value in exchange. Further
+research will here have to be made, with the idea of <span class="tei tei-q">“impotent need,”</span>
+inasmuch as, from a high ethical, national-dietetical point of view, the question
+is asked whether, to what extent, and how, <span class="tei tei-q">“impotent need”</span> may be
+made a potent one.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_77" name="note_77" href="#noteref_77">77.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Friedländer</span></span>, loc. cit, 50. If
+too many copies of the very best book be published, there is a certainty
+that a number of them will remain little better than waste paper.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_78" name="note_78" href="#noteref_78">78.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Schäffle</span></span>,
+System, II, aufl., 55. See also his Kapitalismus und Socialismus,
+1870, 31, 35, 43.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_79" name="note_79" href="#noteref_79">79.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Thus
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Kleinwächter</span></span> (Hildebrand's Jahrbücher für N. Oek. und Statistik,
+1867, II, 318), defines value in exchange=value in use + costliness. According
+to Schäffle, it is <span class="tei tei-q">“a covert comparison between the cost-value and
+the value in use of the two kinds of goods to be exchanged.”</span> (Kapitalismus
+und Socialismus, 35.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_80" name="note_80" href="#noteref_80">80.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">An intermediate dealer can, so
+far as he is himself concerned, attribute value in exchange to goods only to the
+extent that they have use for the last person who has acquired them. Hence,
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Storch</span></span> calls <em class="tei tei-emph"><span style="font-style: italic">value in use</span></em> immediate,
+and <em class="tei tei-emph"><span style="font-style: italic">value in exchange</span></em>, mediate value. As the English are always wont to
+express the immediate in words of Germanic origin, and the mediate in words
+borrowed from the Latin, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Locke</span></span> calls value in use <span class="tei tei-q">“worth,”</span>
+and value in exchange, simply <span class="tei tei-q">“value.”</span> (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">K. Marx</span></span>,
+Das Kapital. Kritik der politischen Œkonomie, 1867, I, 2.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_81" name="note_81" href="#noteref_81">81.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">It is,
+of course, otherwise when, for instance, a beautiful sea view, or a
+desirable position as regards air and sunshine, is connected with a piece of
+land.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_82" name="note_82" href="#noteref_82">82.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">In Ravenna a cistern had greater
+value in exchange than a vineyard: <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Martial</span></span>, III, 56. In
+Paris, too, drinking water, which is transported only with
+considerable trouble, costs 1-1/3 thalers per cubic meter. We may also mention
+snow and ice in summer, which last sells in the capitals of southern
+Europe at 0.34, silber groschens per pound. According to <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Carey</span></span>,
+<span class="tei tei-q">“utility”</span> is the measure of man's power over nature, <span class="tei tei-q">“value,”</span> the
+measure of nature's power over man. He very inaccurately adds, that both are always
+in an opposite direction. (Principles of Social Science, 1861, VI, ch. 9.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_83" name="note_83" href="#noteref_83">83.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Hence
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ad. Müller</span></span> calls value in use, individual value, and value in
+exchange, social value. The Germans call the value of goods whose value in
+use is recognized by only one person,
+<span lang="de" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="de"><span style="font-style: italic">Affectionswerth</span></span>,
+(affection-value) a value which influences its value in exchange only when the
+individual who holds it in high esteem is not himself the possessor of the goods. An
+instance of this latter is a piece of paper covered with notes, intelligible only to the
+maker of them.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_84" name="note_84" href="#noteref_84">84.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">The very important difference
+between value in use and value in exchange was recognized oven by Aristotle.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Aristot.</span></span> Pol. I, 9. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hutchinson</span></span>,
+System of Moral Philosophy (1755), II, 53 ff. The Physiocrates speak very
+frequently of <span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">valeur usuelle</span></span>
+and <span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">vénale</span></span>, on which, according
+to <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Dupont</span></span>, Physiocratie, CXVIII, the difference between
+<span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">biens</span></span> and
+<span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">richesses</span></span> is based.
+<span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">La valeur d'un septicr de blé,
+considéré comme richesse ne consiste que dans son prix.</span></span>
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Quesnay</span></span>, éd. Daire, 300.) <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Turgot</span></span>
+distinguishes between <span class="tei tei-q">“<span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">valeur
+estimative</span></span>”</span> and
+<span class="tei tei-q">“<span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">échangeable</span></span> or
+<span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">appréciative</span></span>;”</span>
+the former designating the relation between the amount of energy, physical and mental,
+which one is willing to spend in order to obtain the goods, to the sum total of his
+energies, physical and mental; the latter the relation between the aggregate like
+energy of two persons which they are willing to spend in order to procure
+each of the goods to be exchanged, and the sum total of their energies in
+general. (Valeurs et Monnaies, p. 87, seq., éd. Daire.) <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ad.
+Smith</span></span>, in his Wealth of Nations, I, ch. 4, shows that he knew the difference
+between value in use and value in exchange; but he afterwards drops the consideration of
+the former, altogether. In this respect he has had only too faithful and one-sided
+followers among his countrymen, so that <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ricardo</span></span>, Principles, ch.
+28, asks what value in exchange can have in common with the capacity of commodities
+to serve as food or clothing. (See, however, ch. XIX seq.) Many <span class="tei tei-q">“free
+traders”</span> would have no objection to interpose, if a people should abandon
+the cultivation of wheat, etc., to devote themselves exclusively to the manufacture
+of point lace, provided the latter had a greater value in exchange.
+The two degrees of the idea of value have been examined with much thoroughness
+by <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hufeland</span></span> in his Neue Grundlegung der Staatswirthschaftskunst
+(1807), I, 118 ff.; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Lotz</span></span>, Revision der Grundbegriffe (1811 ff.),
+I, 31, ff.; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Storch</span></span>, Handbuch, I; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Rau</span></span>,
+Lehrbuch, I, 56, ff.; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Thomas</span></span>, Theorie des Verkehrs, I, p.
+11; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Knies</span></span>, Tübing. Zeitschr. 1855;
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Bastiat's</span></span> declaration (Harmonies, p. 171 ff.): that
+<span class="tei tei-q">“<span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">valeur</span></span>”</span> (by which
+Bastiat means only value in exchange), =
+<span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">le raport de deux services
+échangés</span></span>, contains a two-fold error: the ambiguity of the word
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">services</span></span>, which applies equally to a yielding or affording of
+utility, as to useful labor, and the error that the labor necessary to produce a
+commodity, and of which the purchaser is relieved, alone determines its value in
+exchange. Compare <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">infra</span></span> §§ <a href="#Section_47" class="tei tei-ref">47</a>,
+<a href="#Section_107" class="tei tei-ref">107</a>, <a href="#Section_110" class="tei tei-ref">110</a>,
+<a href="#Section_115" class="tei tei-ref">115</a> ff., and <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Knies</span></span>, loc. cit., p.
+644 ff.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_85" name="note_85" href="#noteref_85">85.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Proudhon</span></span>,
+Système des Contradictions économiques, 1846, ch. 2.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_86" name="note_86" href="#noteref_86">86.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">In France, according to
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Cordier</span></span> (Mémoire sur l'Agriculture de la Flandre
+Française), the wheat harvest yielded, in
+</p>
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+1817, forty-eight million hectolitres, with a value in exchange of two thousand
+and forty-six million francs; in
+</p>
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+1818, fifty-three million hectolitres, with a value in exchange of one thousand
+and four hundred and forty-two million francs; in
+</p>
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+1819, sixty-four million hectolitres, with a value in exchange of one thousand
+and one hundred and seventy million francs.
+</p>
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+A rise in the value in exchange of wheat, such as was witnessed in 1817,
+is synonymous with a decline in the value in exchange of money, and of all
+those goods whose money price has not risen. It is no objection to the views
+here advocated, that when the necessaries of life are very scarce, the want
+of clothing, furniture, articles of luxury etc., is not felt so keenly as at other
+times, and that the value in use of these commodities really falls; and
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">vice versa</span></span>.</p></dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_87" name="note_87" href="#noteref_87">87.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Compare
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">B. Hildebrand</span></span>, N. Œkonomie der Gegenwart und Zukunft,
+1848, I, p. 316 ff. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Knies</span></span>, loc. cit.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_88" name="note_88" href="#noteref_88">88.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">The greater
+importance attached, in our days, to value in exchange, than
+to value in use, is seen especially in the attitude which the buyer, who is possessed
+of the more current commodity (money), assumes toward the seller,—an
+attitude not unlike that of a patron towards his client. In the interior of
+Africa, the possessor of money, as such, would scarcely look down on the
+possessor of the means of subsistence. The South American Indians are
+ready to render an amount of service for a little brandy, which it would be
+in vain to ask them to perform for ten times its value in gold. (Ausland,
+Jan. 15, 1870.) The miser estimates the possibility of being able to procure
+for himself, for one dollar, a hundred different articles worth a dollar each, to
+be worth one hundred dollars.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_89" name="note_89" href="#noteref_89">89.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">When the wants of a
+person or of a people change, it is possible for the
+value in use of one kind of goods, which had the greater prominence before,
+to take the place occupied previously by its value in exchange; and
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">vice versa</span></span>. Thus, the youth sells the plaything he used in
+childhood; the man, the educational apparatus of his earlier years; the old man, the
+implements that enabled him to acquire wealth, and which he can no longer use except
+with great effort. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Menger</span></span>, Grundsätze, I, 220
+ff.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_90" name="note_90" href="#noteref_90">90.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Rau</span></span> (Lehrbuch, I, § 61 ff.)
+distinguishes between the concrete or quantitative
+value which a certain kind of goods may have for a certain person,
+under certain circumstances, and the abstract or species-value which a whole
+class of commodities may have for men in general.
+</p>
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+But <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">F. J. Neumann</span></span>, (Tübinger Zeitschrift, 1872, p. 288 ff.)
+objects, that even the abstract value of a commodity always suggests the relation of a
+definite number of concrete men to a definite quantity of goods; else, by the
+expression, value of goods, is to be understood not what it is generally meant
+to signify, but only the capacity to satisfy a single want.</p></dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_91" name="note_91" href="#noteref_91">91.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Storch</span></span>, Ueber die Natur des
+Nationaleinkommens (1824, 1825), 5, defines
+(<span lang="de" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="de"><span style="font-style: italic">Vermögen</span></span>) thus: a source of
+income, permanent in its nature, and
+capable of being transmitted, the possessor of which does not need to work,
+on its account. Hence he does not approve of the expression <span class="tei tei-q">“the people's
+resources”</span>
+(<span lang="de" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="de"><span style="font-style: italic">Volksvermögen</span></span>).</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_92" name="note_92" href="#noteref_92">92.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">See especially
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Lord Lauderdale</span></span>, Inquiry into the Nature and Origin of
+Public Wealth, 1804, ch. 2. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Storch</span></span>, loc. cit.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_93" name="note_93" href="#noteref_93">93.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Moreau
+de Jonnès</span></span>, Le Commerce au 19. Siècle (1825) I, 114 ff., says that
+the United States imported from abroad 9.6, France 6, and Great Britain
+5.8 per cent. of their annual consumption; and exported respectively 10.4,
+6.2, 9.8 per cent. of their annual production. The recent free trade tendencies,
+and the improvement in the international means of transportation, have certainly
+increased the relative importance of foreign commerce. In the kingdom
+of Saxony (1853), <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Engel</span></span> estimates that 10/47 of the whole
+production of the country was destined for foreign countries, and that 10/47 of
+the consumption was imported.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_94" name="note_94" href="#noteref_94">94.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">When the land of a country
+becomes dearer, simply on account of the increase
+of population, or goods, the quantity of which is susceptible of increase,
+because the cost of production has been increased, this cannot be considered
+an increase in the wealth of the people, (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">v. Mangoldt.</span></span>)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_95" name="note_95" href="#noteref_95">95.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Neither is value in exchange a
+quality inherent in goods, but only a relation
+between them and other goods. Hence it is absurd to speak of a rise or
+fall of all values in exchange. If the goods A lose in capacity to be exchanged
+against goods B, goods B of course increase in exchange power as
+compared with A, and <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">vice versa</span></span>. It is necessary to guard
+against being misled here by the intervention of money, that is, by the custom universal
+among men of employing a definite kind of goods as a medium of exchange
+for all others. Yet there are many writers who have been thus misled. Thus
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Galiani</span></span>, Delia Moneta (1750), II, p. 2, who regards the lasting
+increase of the prices of all commodities as an infallible sign of national prosperity.
+To the same effect is the motto of the Physiocrates: <span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">Abondance et cherté c'est opulence</span></span>. In its coarsest
+form, in <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Saint Chamans</span></span>, Nouv. Essai sur la Richesse
+des Nations (1824), 456, who would have that which is now the free gift of
+nature, to come to us or be produced only as the reward of toil.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Verri</span></span>, on the other hand, Meditazioni sull. econ. pol. (1771),
+ch. V, thinks that the number of buyers in a country should be as small as possible, and
+that of sellers as great as possible, in order that thus prices might be low; (as if
+every buyer was not, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">eo ipso</span></span>, also a seller.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_96" name="note_96" href="#noteref_96">96.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Kaufmann</span></span>, Untersuchungen, I,
+p. 165 seq. Also, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Verri</span></span>, Meditazioni,
+XVII, 2.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_97" name="note_97" href="#noteref_97">97.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">The
+differences characteristic of poverty, indigence, managing to live, fortune and
+wealth, cleverly treated by <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">von Justi</span></span>, Staatswirthschaft, I, p.
+449, seq. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Rau</span></span>, Lehrbuch I, § 76, seq., establishes the
+following gradation: privation and wretchedness, poverty, indigence, <span class="tei tei-q">“getting on,”</span>
+comfort, wealth, superfluity. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">L. Say</span></span> calls those who can
+satisfy the wants of luxury rich; well-to-do, those who can command the
+comforts of life; and wretched, those who cannot obtain a sufficiency of
+the objects of prime necessity. In France, the limits of these situations are
+marked by an income of respectively 60,000, 6,000 and 900 francs per family,
+so that a family with an income of only 300 francs per year is in a
+condition of wretchedness. (Traité de la Richesse, 1827, I ff., 71 ff.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_98" name="note_98" href="#noteref_98">98.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Palmieri</span></span>, Ricchezza nazionale, Introd.
+The greater number of the definitions of wealth are rather onesided than false.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Socrates</span></span>, for instance, looks only at the relation existing
+between means and their owner's wants. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Xenoph.</span></span> Memor., IV, 2,
+37, seq. Œconom. II, 2 ff.). <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Plato</span></span>, on the other hand, as the
+socialists are wont to do, looks to the excess over that possessed by others.
+(Legg. V, 742, seq.). <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Xenophon's</span></span> observations, Hiero, 4, on the
+nature of wealth, are many-sided and beautiful. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Aristotle</span></span>
+distinguishes between natural and artificial wealth: πλῆθος ὀργάνων οἰκονομακῶν καὶ
+πολιτικῶν—πλῆθος νομίσματος. (Polit, I, 3, 9, 16.) Compare
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Cicero</span></span>, Parad. VI. The dominant idea of the so-called Mercantile
+System is thus expressed in a Saxon pamphlet of 1530 (Müntzbelangende Antwort, etc.):
+<span class="tei tei-q">“Money is the real watchword; where there is much money, there is wealth, it is
+clear.”</span> Compare <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Luther</span></span>, Werke, Irmisch edition, XXII, p. 200
+seq. See some excellent remarks in opposition hereto, in the Saxon pamphlet, Gemeyne
+Stimmen von der Müntz, 1530. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Schröder</span></span>, Fürstliche
+Schatz-und Rentkammer, 1686, ch XXIX. <span class="tei tei-q">“A country grows rich in proportion as it draws
+gold or money, either from the earth or from other countries; poor, in proportion as
+money leaves it. The wealth of a country must be estimated by the quantity
+of gold and silver in it.”</span> See a very passionate argument against this view in
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Boisguillebert</span></span>, Dissertation sur la Nature des Richesses, written
+sometime between 1697 and 1714. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Berkeley</span></span>, Querist (1735), Nos.
+562, 542. Among Englishmen, the correct view was prevalent much earlier, especially
+among the founders of the American colonial empire. See <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hachluyt</span></span>,
+Voyages (1600) III, 22 ff. 45 ff. 152 ff. 165 ff. 182 ff. 266 ff; but especially the work
+<span class="tei tei-q">“Virginia's Verger”</span> in <span class="tei tei-q">“Purchas Pilgrims”</span> (1625), IV, p. 809 ff. However,
+several Spaniards were led by hard experience to adopt a view opposed to the Midas-view
+(compare <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Aristotle</span></span>, Polit. I, ch. 3, 16), by which the first
+American explorers were carried away: <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Garcilasso de la Vega</span></span>
+(1609), Comment. reales II, ch. 6; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Saavedra Faxardo</span></span>, Idea
+Principis christiani (1640) Symb. 69: <span lang="la" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="la"><span style="font-style: italic">potissimæ divitiæ ac opes terræ fructus sunt, nec ditiores in
+regnis fodinæ, quam agricultura; plus emolumenti, acclivia montis Vesuvii latera
+adverunt, quam Potosus mons</span></span>. Contemporary with those Englishmen, was the
+Italian, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Giov. Botero</span></span>, who called attention to the fact, that
+France and Italy were the countries of Europe richest in gold, although they possessed no
+mines of the precious metal themselves: Della Ragion di Stato (1591) p. 88 ff. Also
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Sully</span></span>, who called agriculture and cattle-breeding the breasts of
+the state, the real mines and pearls of Peru. (Economies royales I, ch. 81. See however,
+II, p. 381). <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Montchrêtien</span></span>, Traité d'Économie politique (1615) 81,
+172 seq. According to <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Sir D. North's</span></span> Discourses upon Trade, 1691,
+wealth is synonymous with freedom from want, and the ability to procure many comforts,
+while <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Temple</span></span> (ob. 1700, Works I, 140 seq.) looks entirely at the
+subjective side of wealth. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Pollexfen</span></span>, <span class="tei tei-q">“England and East India
+inconsistent in their Manufactures”</span> (1697), considers gold and silver as the only
+real wealth. To this definition Davenant (ob. 1714), opposes another. Wealth, according
+to him, is whatever places prince or people in a condition of superabundance, peace and
+security. See his Works, I, p. 381 seq. He even reckons intellectual powers, alliances
+etc., among the national wealth. Compare <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">W. Roscher</span></span>, Zur
+Geschichte der englischen Volkswirthschaftslehre 1851, in the acts of the royal Saxon
+Academy of Sciences, vol. III. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Vauban</span></span> (Dime royale 1707), Daire's
+edition, says: <span class="tei tei-q">“The real wealth of a people consists in an abundance of those things,
+the use of which is so necessary to sustain the life of man, that they cannot at all be
+dispensed with.”</span> By the wealth of a people <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Galiani</span></span>, Della
+Moneta II, c. 2, understands the aggregate of all lands, houses, movable property,
+money, etc. which belong to them, but, that the chief element of wealth, and the
+condition precedent of all others, is men themselves. Hence, the process of the
+impoverishment of a people in their decline, takes the following course: money first
+emigrates, next, population diminishes, afterwards, the houses fall in ruin, finally,
+the land itself becomes a waste. According to <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Broggia</span></span>, wealth is
+<span lang="it" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="it"><span style="font-style: italic">un avanzo osia valore di tutto cio che
+avanza al proprio consumo e bisogno</span></span>, Delle Monete, 1743, IV, 307, 314; Cust.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Palmieri</span></span> (ob. 1794), also says: <span lang="it" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="it"><span style="font-style: italic">il superfluo constituisce la richezza</span></span>. (Publica
+Felicità.) According to <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Turgot</span></span>, Sur la Formation et Distribution
+des Richesses 1771, § 90, the wealth of a nation consists in the net proceeds of landed
+property capitalized at the ordinary price of land, and then of the aggregate of all
+the movable property of the country. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Büsch</span></span>, Geluumlauf III, § 27,
+considers a certain duration of the produce or revenue as an essential element in
+the idea of wealth. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Lauderdale</span></span>, Inquiry, ch. II, distinguishes
+national wealth and private wealth; the former embracing all that man covets as
+agreeable or desirable; while it is one of the marks of the latter, that there
+should be no general superfluity of it on hand. Several modern English
+economists call wealth only that, the production of which cost human
+labor. Thus, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Malthus</span></span>, Definitions (1827) p. 234.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Torrens</span></span>, Production of Wealth, 1821, ch. I. When
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Rossi</span></span>, Cours d'Economie politique, 1835, L. 2, says:
+<span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">tout chose propre à satisfaire aux besoins
+de l'homme est richesse</span></span>, he demonstrates how the frequent inaccuracy of the
+French language stands in the way of a close analysis. The greater number of more recent
+definitions are true of resources rather than of wealth. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Bastiat</span></span>
+distinguishes between <span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">richesse
+effective</span></span> and <span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">relative</span></span>,
+the former being based on <span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">utilité</span></span>,
+the latter on <span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">valeur</span></span>.
+(Harmonies, ch. 6.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_99" name="note_99" href="#noteref_99">99.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">The national wealth of Athens, at the time of the hundredth
+Olympiad, is estimated by <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Böckh</span></span> (Staatshaushalt der Athen, I, p.
+636, 2d ed.) to have been from thirty to forty thousand talents, besides the non-taxable
+property of the state. That of Great Britain is estimated at about 8,000 million pounds
+sterling. (Athenæum 5 March, 1853.) <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Wolowski</span></span> estimated that of
+France at, at least, 116 milliards of francs, with an annual increase of 1-½ milliards,
+(L'or et l'Argent, 1870. Enquête, 59.) <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">David A. Wells</span></span> estimated
+that of the United States, in 1860, slaves not included, at 14,183 million dollars, or
+$451.20 per capita, whereas in England, the per capita wealth was about $1,000.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hildebrand's</span></span> Jahib., 1870, I, 431.) The national wealth of the
+kingdom of Saxony is equal to 600 million thalers immovable, and 600 million movable,
+property. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Engel</span></span>, Statist. Zeitschr. August, 1856). That of
+Würtemberg=2,710 million florins, of which 700 millions represent movable goods, and 100
+million, claims on foreign countries. (Statistisches Handbuch, 1863.) Of
+course all these estimates are very inexact.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_100" name="note_100" href="#noteref_100">100.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ch.
+Dupin</span></span>, Forces productives, p. 82. See <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">infra</span></span>, § 230.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_101" name="note_101" href="#noteref_101">101.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Compare
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Meidinger</span></span>, Das britische Reich in Europa, pp. 79, 238, 261.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_102" name="note_102" href="#noteref_102">102.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Davenant</span></span> considers an increase in the
+number of houses, ships and stocks of goods, as the surest sign of an increase in the
+national wealth; and on the other hand, a high rate of interest, a low price of land,
+small wages, a decrease of population, and an increase of uncultivated land, as the signs
+of national impoverishment. (Works, I, pp. 354, seq. II, p. 283.) <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Sir
+M. Decker</span></span>, Essay on the Causes of Decline of Foreign Trade (1744), 3, gives as the
+signs of impoverishment, the following: a wretched condition of the poor
+and of manufactures, a low price of wool, long credit to retail dealers, frequent
+cases of bankruptcy, exportation of the metals, unfavorable exchange,
+few new coins, many cases of unpaid rent of leased land, and high poor rates.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_103" name="note_103" href="#noteref_103">103.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Storch</span></span>, Handbuch,
+I, 45. Compare <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">infra</span></span>, § 187.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_104" name="note_104" href="#noteref_104">104.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">On the difference between human and animal economy,
+see <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Schön</span></span>, Neue Untersuchungen der N. Œkonomie, (1835), 4.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_105" name="note_105" href="#noteref_105">105.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Compare <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Schäffle</span></span>, System, III, Aufl.
+I, 2, 28.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_106" name="note_106" href="#noteref_106">106.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Knies</span></span>, in his Polit. Œkonomie vom
+geschichtl. Standpunkte, 1853, p. 160 ff., shows, very happily, how the love of one's
+self,—which must, indeed, be distinguished from self-seeking—is not in
+conflict with the love of one's neighbor; but that, in healthy natures, it is found
+allied with a feeling of equity, and of the common good. See, also, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">F.
+Fuoco</span></span>, Saggi economici, Pisa, 1825, Nr. 7. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Schutz</span></span>, Das
+sittliche Element in der Volswirthschaft: Tübinger Zeitschrift für Staatswissensch.
+1844, p. 132, ff.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_107" name="note_107" href="#noteref_107">107.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-q">“That they should seek the Lord if haply they might
+feel after him.”</span> (Acts, 17, 27. Compare Matthew, 6:33, also I. Timothy, 5:8.)
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Adam Müller</span></span> in his Nothwendigkeit einer theolog. Grundlage, 49
+seq., is a strong advocate of all this, but a rather narrow one. The farmer, he says,
+should first work for the love of God, then for the fruit, that is, for the gross
+product, and lastly for the net product. His work is a trust.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Müller</span></span> considers the business relations of men, as they exist at
+present, as <span class="tei tei-q">“the comfortless mutual slavery of all.”</span> (Nothwendigkeit einer
+theolog. Grundlage, 49 ff.) The economist, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ch. Perin</span></span>, who writes
+from the Catholic politico-economical standpoint, substitutes for conscience,
+<span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">renoncement</span></span>, as the force
+antagonistic to <span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">intérêt</span></span>, an
+expression inappropriate, because merely negative, although in perfect harmony with the
+ascetic religiousness of the middle ages. (De la Richesse dans les Sociétiés
+chrêtiennes, 1861, II vol., passim) Compare <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Roscher</span></span> in
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Gelzer's</span></span> Protestant. Monatsblättern, Jan. 1863.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Puchta</span></span>, Institutionen, I, f. 8, opposes to individualism—or
+the impulse to distinguish ourselves from others, and which, when uncontrolled, leads to
+egotism, pride and hate—love and right, which are controlling powers over the
+former.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_108" name="note_108" href="#noteref_108">108.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Even the ancients conceived Eros as a world-building principle.
+According to <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Schön's</span></span> expression, loc. cit., which it is not
+difficult to misconstrue, the feeling of the common interest manifests itself, both as
+law and force. And, in reality, it is necessary that, in order not to permit the drowsy
+conscience to fall too far behind self-interest, which is always awake, it should
+create lasting institutions and regulations above and beyond the caprice of
+the individual or of the moment; for instance, in the family, marriage, education
+etc.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_109" name="note_109" href="#noteref_109">109.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">The more private interest ceases to be
+momentary, and becomes life-long and even hereditary, the better does it harmonize with
+the feeling of the common interest.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_110" name="note_110" href="#noteref_110">110.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Perin</span></span> says (1,
+93), that the conflict of interest is reconciled in the seeking
+for the attainment of the supreme good, that is God, <span class="tei tei-q">“who gives himself to
+all in equal measure, and yet always remains the same, and out of whose fulness
+all may draw, and yet no one's share grows less.”</span> But the same is true
+of all ideal goods, and of every form of the feeling for the common interest,
+the highest of which is, indeed, religiousness.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_111" name="note_111" href="#noteref_111">111.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">According
+to <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Kant</span></span>, Anthropologie, p. 239, the desire of comfort and
+well-being, and the inclination to virtue, when the former is properly restrained
+by the latter, produce the highest degree of moral, united to the
+highest degree of physical, good. It is well known, that during the middle
+ages, in all countries except Italy and, even up to the seventeenth century,
+the moral sciences were under a one-sided theological influence, whose ascetic
+condemnation of self-interest may have been well enough during a
+period of violence. By virtue of a very natural reaction, and as a protest of
+individualism against the constraint of absolute monarchy, the materialists
+of the eighteenth century endeavored to discover, even in the most exalted
+phenomena of human society, only the expression of an enlightened self-interest.
+See <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Mandeville's</span></span> Fable of the Bees, or private Vices
+public Virtues (1723), but especially, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Helvétius</span></span>, De
+l'Esprit (1758). <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Voltaire</span></span> says, that, in all the
+celebrated maxims of <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">De Rochefoucauld</span></span> (1665) there is but one
+truth contained, <span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">que l'amour propre est
+le mobile de toutes nos actions</span></span>. (But see, per contra,
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Pufendorf</span></span>, Jus Naturæ et Gentium, 1672, II, 3, 15.) This tendency
+was opposed, especially by the English, who could not be blind to the
+influence exerted in public life by the feeling for the common good.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">David Hume</span></span>, Treatise on Human Nature (1739), III, 54,
+is of opinion that the interests of others are, on the whole, in the case of
+nearly every man stronger than even his own self interest.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hutcheson</span></span>, System of Moral Philosophy (1755), speaks of
+the innate principle of benevolence. Man is not a perfect whole; a part belongs
+to his own person, part to his family, part to the nation, part even to all
+humanity. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Burke</span></span>, Inquiry into the Origin of our Ideas
+of the Sublime and Beautiful (1756), distinguishes two fundamental principles
+of action, that of self-preservation and that of society. On the former is
+based the sense of the sublime; on the latter, of the beautiful. According
+to <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ferguson</span></span>, History of Civil Society, (1767), I, 3, 4,
+the <span class="tei tei-q">“sense of union”</span> is frequently strongest where the advantage drawn from
+the connection is smallest; for instance, it is weakest in highly cultured commercial
+countries. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Adam Smith</span></span>, Theory of Moral Sentiments (1768),
+has been as one-sided in reducing everything to <span class="tei tei-q">“sympathy,”</span> as he has been in his
+Wealth of Nations in reducing everything to <span class="tei tei-q">“self-interest;”</span> but not without
+the consciousness, that to explain the reality, it is necessary to take both
+into consideration (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Buckle</span></span>). It would, indeed, be just as
+preposterous to base economy on self-interest alone, as to base marriage merely on
+the sexual appetite. Recently, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hermann</span></span>, Staatswirthschaftliche
+Untersuchungen, 1st ed., part 1st, discovers in self-interest, and in the feeling for
+the common good, the two springs of all economy. He would even base the so-called
+theoretic Political Economy, on the study of self-interest, its practice in that
+of the common good. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">M. Chevalier</span></span>, Cours d'Economie politique,
+1844, II, 412 ff., understands something very like this by the contrast between liberty
+and centralization. The <span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">antagonisme</span></span> and <span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">association</span></span> of <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Bazard</span></span>,
+Exposition de la Doctrine de Saint Simon (1829), p. 144 ff. Closer investigation will
+show, however, that self-interest, which must not be confounded with egotism,
+and the common interest, are neither coördinate nor exhaustive opposites.
+Compare the beautiful contrast drawn by <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Goethe</span></span> (Pocket
+edition of 1833, vol. 46, 97), between <span class="tei tei-q">“Pietät”</span> and <span class="tei tei-q">“Egoisterei.”</span></dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_112" name="note_112" href="#noteref_112">112.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Paul</span></span>, I. Corinth. 12, gives the
+most beautiful model description of a social organism. Compare, however, the fable of
+Menenius Agrippa in <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Livy</span></span>, II, 32.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_113" name="note_113" href="#noteref_113">113.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Excellent beginnings
+of a general theory of economies in common in <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Schäffle</span></span>,
+N. Œkonomie, II, Aufl., 62 ff., 331 ff.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_114" name="note_114" href="#noteref_114">114.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">The French and English, with
+their strong political bias, use the expressions respectively
+<span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">economie politique</span></span> and
+Political Economy. In Germany, where the terms the people
+(<span lang="de" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="de"><span style="font-style: italic">Volk</span></span>) and the state
+(<span lang="de" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="de"><span style="font-style: italic">Staat</span></span>) are much less nearly
+coextensive, the words <span lang="de" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="de"><span style="font-style: italic">Volkswirthschaft</span></span> and <span lang="de" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="de"><span style="font-style: italic">Nationalökonomie</span></span> are preferred. But even
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hufeland</span></span>, who first gave currency to the term
+<span lang="de" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="de"><span style="font-style: italic">Volkswirthschaft</span></span>
+(Grundlegung, I, 14), called attention to the peculiarity <span class="tei tei-q">“that the term economy
+suggests that there is one who economizes and guides, an economist in
+chief, and that such a one is, even according to the most correct opinion,
+wanting in the public economy of a people.”</span></dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_115" name="note_115" href="#noteref_115">115.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">According to
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Th. Cooper</span></span>, Lectures on the Elements of Political Economy,
+(1726), 1, 15 ff. 117, the wealth of society is nothing but the aggregate wealth
+of all the individuals that compose it. Each individual looks out best for his
+own interests, and, hence, that nation must be the richest, in which each individual
+is most completely left to himself. (If this were so, savage nations
+would be the richest!) <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Cooper</span></span> goes so far as to disapprove of
+the protection afforded to commerce on the high seas by a national navy; no naval war is
+worth what it costs, and merchants should protect themselves. He says, too,
+that the word <span class="tei tei-q">“nation”</span> is an invention of the grammarians, made to save
+the trouble of circumlocution, a nonentity! <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Adam Smith</span></span> is, as
+might be expected, far removed from such absurdities. (Compare Wealth of Nations, IV,
+ch. 2, and the end of the fourth book.) But, even he is of opinion that men,
+in the study of their own advantage are led <span class="tei tei-q">“naturally, or rather necessarily”</span>
+(IV, ch. 2), to the employment which is most useful to society. But here
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Adam Smith</span></span> overlooks the fact, that every individual nation
+strives after earthly immortality, and is, in consequence, frequently compelled to make
+immediate sacrifices for the sake of a distant future, a thing which can never be
+to the private interest of the mortal individuals who compose it. And thus,
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">D. North</span></span>, Discourses upon Trade (1691), 13 seq., says, that in
+commercial matters, different nations stand in precisely the same relation to the whole
+world, that individual cities do to the kingdom, and individual families to
+the city. Similarly, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Boisguillebert</span></span>, Factum de la France, ch. 10,
+327, Daire's edition. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Benjamin Franklin</span></span> (ob. 1790), Political
+Papers, § 4. And <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">J. B. Say</span></span>, Traité d'Economie politique (1802)
+I, 15: every nation is, in relation to neighboring nations, in the situation of a
+province in relation to neighboring provinces. Unfortunately, such doctrine is only too
+palpably refuted by every war! <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">J. Bentham's</span></span> saying:
+<span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">Les intérêts individuels sont les seuls
+intérêts réels</span></span> (Traité de Législation, I, 229). <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Infra</span></span>
+§ <a href="#Section_98" class="tei tei-ref">98</a>.
+</p>
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Among those who, in antiquity, most energetically maintained that the
+idea of national economy is not a merely nominal one, is <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Plato</span></span>
+(De Republ., IV, 420, I, 462); more recently, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Fichte</span></span> (Der
+geschlossene Handelstaat, 1800), although, in general, the socialists attach as little
+importance to nationality as their most decided opponents. Adam Müller is a writer
+who deserves recognition for his advocacy of national economy, and of the state as a
+whole, paramount to individuals, and even generations. He gives war the credit of
+causing the scientific knowledge of the state to cast deeper roots, and of enlightening
+individuals in the most forcible way, that they are parts of one
+great whole. (Elemente der Staatskunst, 1809, I, 7, 113). He calls public economy,
+as a whole, the product of all products. What, he inquires, is the use of
+all wealth, if it does not guarantee itself? And this, it can do, only through
+the organization of the whole people, that is, through the nation (I, 202).
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Adam Smith's</span></span> theory of labor would be correct if it considered
+the entire national life of a people itself as one huge piece of labor. (II, 265). And
+so, Müller directs his polemics against Adam Smith's premise of a merely mercantile
+world-market. (II, 290). Similarly, the protective tariff theoreticians,
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ganieh</span></span>, Théorie de l'Economie politique (1822), II, 198 ff.
+and <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Fr. List</span></span>, Nationales System der politischen Oek. (1842), I,
+240 ff. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Colton</span></span>, Political Economy of the United States, 1853.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Sismondi</span></span>, Nouveaux Principes (1819), I, 197, ridicules the
+opinion which resolves the public interest into merely private interests: It is A's
+interest to rob B; B, the weaker, is equally interested to let himself be robbed,
+that he may fare no worse. But the state—?!</p></dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_116" name="note_116" href="#noteref_116">116.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">National wars are really no mere operations of the will of the
+state! Since 1800, Ireland, and, since 1858, even British India, constitute one state
+with England, and yet how different are the economic tendencies of these different
+countries of which the individual husbandman or business man must take
+cognizance!</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_117" name="note_117" href="#noteref_117">117.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">One might also deny the reality of a stream,
+considered as a whole, since its bed, no one calls a stream, and its watery contents
+change every moment. And yet, it is well known to scientific geography that every
+stream has its own individual character.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_118" name="note_118" href="#noteref_118">118.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">This would be to be guilty of explaining
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">ignotum</span></span> per <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">ignotius</span></span>. And yet,
+there are a great many modern writers who imagine that they have said
+something all-sufficient, when they have told us that the state is an organism.
+As early a writer as <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hufeland</span></span> (N. Grundlegung, I, 113),
+enters his protest against such abuses. The person who would operate with this notion,
+should, at least, have read the acute observations, so well calculated to dissipate
+preconceived opinions, made by <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Lotze</span></span>, in his Allgemeine Physiologie
+des körperlichen Lebens, 1-165. The organic conception of national life,
+the life of a whole people, where the individual organs are free and rational
+beings, is evidently a much more difficult one to form than that of the
+animal or human body.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_119" name="note_119" href="#noteref_119">119.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">I first called
+attention, in my work on the life-work and age of <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Thucydides</span></span>,
+to the fact that that great historian always accounts for causes in the following
+manner: A. is produced by B., and B. by A. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Roscher</span></span>, Leben Work
+und Zeitalter des Thukydides, 199 ff.; compare especially <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Thucyd.</span></span>,
+I, 2, 7, seq.) Such a circle is not a vicious one. All first class historians have thus
+explained historical phenomena. The one-sided deduction of A. from B., and
+B. from C., etc., which the so-called pragmatic writers like
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Polybius</span></span>, for instance, is the result of overlooking all
+reciprocal action. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Scialoja</span></span>, Principii (1840), p. 60, makes
+a somewhat similar observation for Political Economy.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_120" name="note_120" href="#noteref_120">120.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Whether
+we call the unknown and inexplicable ground back of all analysis,
+and which our analysis cannot reach, vital force, generic form, spirit of
+the nation, or God's thought, is for the present a matter of scientific indifference.
+All the more necessary are the self-knowledge and honesty, in general,
+which admit the existence of this background, and which do not, by
+denying it, deny the connection of the whole, which is, for the most part,
+much more important than the analyzed parts. But I must at the same time,
+enter my energetic protest against the imputations of heresy made by those
+who do not comprehend the sacred duty of science, by never ceasing investigation,
+to push farther back the bounds of this inexplicable background.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_121" name="note_121" href="#noteref_121">121.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">When
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hildebrand</span></span>, for instance, objects to the application of the
+expression <span class="tei tei-q">“natural law”</span> to the economic actions of man, for the reason that it
+conflicts with human freedom and man's capacity for progress (Jahrbücher
+der N. Œek. und Statistik., 1863, Heft., I), I cannot agree with him. I use the
+expression <span class="tei tei-q">“natural law”</span> wherever I observe uniformity, explicable in its
+broader connections, and not dependent on human design. That there are
+such uniformities there can be no question. I need only mention the philological
+law of the so-called <span class="tei tei-q">“permutation of consonants,”</span> which individuals
+follow when speaking—certainly not through compulsion,—and, by means
+of which, the progress of the speaking aggregate is made manifest. Or, I
+might call attention to the well known fact, that, in populous countries marriages
+and crimes, which are for the most part free, are divided among the
+different age-classes in a proportion much more uniform, from year to year,
+than are deaths, which are not free. I adhere all the more firmly to the expression
+<span class="tei tei-q">“natural law,”</span> because no one takes offense at or objects to the expression,
+<span class="tei tei-q">“nature of the human soul.”</span> But to this very nature of the human
+soul belong the freedom and responsibility of the individual, as well as the
+capacity of the species for progress. Compare <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">A. Wagner</span></span>, on Law
+in the Apparently capricious Actions of Man (<span lang="de" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="de"><span style="font-style: italic">Die Gesetzmässigkeit in den scheinbar
+willkürlichen menschlichen Handlungen</span></span>, 1864, p. 63 seq.), in which, however,
+he only goes so far as to show that law and freedom coexist side by
+side as indubitable facts, while the seeming contradiction between the two
+remains. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Drobisch's</span></span> Moralische Statistik und die menschliche
+Willensfreiheit, 1867, is an important contribution to the literature of this
+question.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_122" name="note_122" href="#noteref_122">122.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Whately</span></span>, in
+his fourth lecture (Lectures, 1831), shows in a very clear way,
+how London is supplied and provisioned by men with no object in view but
+their own personal interest, each of whom is possessed of but a very limited
+knowledge of the aggregate wants of its inhabitants, and yet they work into
+one another's hands, in the interests of the whole, purely instinctively, and
+infinitely better, perhaps, than the operations of the most skillful governmental
+commission, organized for the same purpose.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_123" name="note_123" href="#noteref_123">123.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Alphonsus of
+Castile, the king astrologer of the thirteenth century, is
+reported to have said, that the universe would have been much better constituted,
+if the Creator had asked his advice beforehand. Astronomers like
+Newton and Gauss have, certainly, judged otherwise.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_124" name="note_124" href="#noteref_124">124.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">MacCulloch</span></span> remarks, that there is an
+essential difference between the physical
+and the moral and political sciences in this, that the principles of the former
+apply in all cases, those of the latter, only in the greater number of cases—a
+thought very ably developed by <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Knies</span></span>, loc. cit.,
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">passim</span></span>. If, with <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Newmarch</span></span>,
+(London Statistical Journal, 1861, p. 460 seq.), we could grant, that there is no
+<span class="tei tei-q">“law,”</span> except where it is possible to predict each individual occurrence under
+it, there would be no such thing even as the <span class="tei tei-q">“laws”</span> of the probability of life.
+The word <span class="tei tei-q">“element,”</span> also, means something very different in Political Economy
+from what it does in chemistry: a combination which might be broken
+up, but which that science leaves it to other sciences to do. The <span class="tei tei-q">“element”</span>
+of Political Economy is Man. Compare <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Pickford</span></span>, Einleitung
+in die politische Œk., 1860, 17.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_125" name="note_125" href="#noteref_125">125.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">It is in this sense that
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Aristotle</span></span> (Polit., I, p. 1, 9 Schn.) says: φανερὸν,
+ὅτι τῶν φύσει ἡ πόλις ἐστὶ, καὶ ὅτι ἄνθρωπος φύσει πολιτικὸν ζῶον.
+According to <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">L. Stein, Lehrbuch der Volkswirthschaft</span></span>,
+1858, 33, the political economy of a people begins at the point where the
+overplus of individuals begins.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_126" name="note_126" href="#noteref_126">126.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Compare
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">K. L. von Haller</span></span>, Restauration der Staatswissenchaft, I, p.
+446 ff.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_127" name="note_127" href="#noteref_127">127.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">As <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Sallust</span></span>
+characterizes the political apogee of the Romans: <span lang="la" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="la"><span style="font-style: italic">Optimis moribus et maxima concordia egit populus Romanus
+inter secundum atque postremum bellum Carthaginiense.</span></span> See
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Augustin</span></span> (Civ. Dei II, 18). <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Puchta</span></span>
+(Institutionen, I, f. 83), with a great deal of good sense, distinguishes in every
+people their individual character from that which they share in common with
+all mankind. The latter exists among savage nations, only as a germ buried
+under the overpowering weight of that which is special to them. The period
+of the perfect equilibrium of both elements is coincident with that of a
+people's real culture. In the further course of development, the latter, more
+general element becomes gradually over-powerful, destroys the individual,
+and thus dissolves nationality.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_128" name="note_128" href="#noteref_128">128.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Thus formulated, the principles
+of the two great parties, evidently, no more contradict
+one another than their ordinary watchwords, <span class="tei tei-q">“freedom”</span>
+and <span class="tei tei-q">“order,”</span> are in contrast with one another. Hence all the great statesmen
+of the best periods of history have adopted the middle course recommended
+by Aristotle.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_129" name="note_129" href="#noteref_129">129.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">See
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Lotze</span></span>, Allgemeine Pathologie, 1842.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ruete</span></span>, Lehrbuch der allgemeinen
+Therapie, 1852. These analogies, obviously, should not be pushed too far.
+One of the most essential differences between the two consists in this, that
+in the diseases of the body politic, physicians and nurses are themselves part
+of the diseased organism.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_130" name="note_130" href="#noteref_130">130.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">See <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ahren's</span></span>
+very beautiful exposition, Organische Staatslehre, 1850, I, 77. National economy
+(<span lang="de" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="de"><span style="font-style: italic">Nationalökonomie</span></span>=public
+economy); national economics (<span lang="de" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="de"><span style="font-style: italic">Nationalökonomik</span></span>=the science of public economy).
+The latter term was first proposed, in Germany, in 1849, by
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Uhde</span></span>; the former was naturalized therein 1805:
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">v. Soden</span></span>, Nationalökonomie, 1805; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Jacob</span></span>,
+Grundsätze der N. Œk., 1806. In Italy, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">G. Ortes</span></span> used it as
+early as 1774, in his Dell Economia nazionale, and in England it was employed, even in
+1867, by <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ferguson</span></span>, History of Civil Society, III, p. 4.
+Holland. Volkshuyshoudkunde. As a rule, outside of Germany, the term political
+economy, <span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">économie politique</span></span>,
+one which is somewhat calculated to mislead the student, is used. (Thus
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Montchrêtien sieur de Vatteville</span></span>, Traité de l'Economie
+<span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">politique</span></span>, 165; later
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">J. J. Rousseau</span></span>, Discours sur l'Economie politique, later yet
+the Traités d'E. p., <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Maillardère</span></span>, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Page</span></span>
+and <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">J. B. Say</span></span>, 1801-1803). Political Economy
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Sir J. Stewart</span></span>, Inquiry into the principles of P. E., 1767);
+also Public Economy (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Petty</span></span>, several Essays, 1682, 35);
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Economia politica</span></span> or <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">pubblica</span></span> (the
+latter by <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Verri</span></span> and <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Beccaria</span></span>). The title
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Economia civile</span></span> (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Genovesi</span></span>, Lezioni,
+d'Ec. civ. 1769), has found few adherents. It has, however, been used recently by
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Cernuschi</span></span>: Illusions des Sociétés coöperatrices (1866). The
+term, <span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">Economie sociale</span></span> has
+been used all the more in France (Dunoyer, Nouveau Traité d'Ec. soc., 1830), since
+recommended by <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">J. B. Say</span></span>, and employed by
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Buat</span></span> (Des vrais Principes de l'Origine et de la Filiation
+du Mot Economie politique, in the Journal des Economistes, 1852.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_131" name="note_131" href="#noteref_131">131.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Stein</span></span>, Lehrbuck der V. W., prefaces his <span class="tei tei-q">“Science of Public
+Economy”</span> (pp. 329-358), by a <span class="tei tei-q">“Science of Economy”</span> (pp. 96-328), which, however,
+treats individual economies only as the elements of the national economy. A science
+of household or isolated individual economy could, of course, treat only
+of the economic relations of anchorites. Those who object that Political
+Economy is not a real whole will be satisfied with the definition of it given
+by <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">F. I. Neumann</span></span>: <span class="tei tei-q">“The Science of the bearing of household
+or separate economies to one another, and to the state as a whole.”</span> (Tüb.
+Zeitschr., 1872, 267.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_132" name="note_132" href="#noteref_132">132.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">In so far
+as these various institutions are concerned, with objects beyond
+the human, or supernatural, only the manner in which they are accepted, or
+in which they are made use of, is an expression of national life.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_133" name="note_133" href="#noteref_133">133.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Thus, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">J. Tucker</span></span> thinks
+that religion, the state and commerce, are only
+the parts of one same general plan: no institution, therefore, can be called
+appropriate, within the limits of the province of any one of these, if it be
+clearly in opposition to the other two, because the harmony of God's work
+can not be broken up. (Four Tracts and two Sermons on political and commercial
+Subjects, 1774, Serm. I.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_134" name="note_134" href="#noteref_134">134.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Riedel</span></span> (National Œkonomie,
+1838, I, p. 178 seq.), gives a good illustration of the difference
+between the manner in which law and Political Economy look
+at the same question. The law (to avoid strife, or to settle controversies)
+looks upon the debtor as the owner of the capital, and lets him run all the
+risk; Political Economy, on the other hand, looking deeper into the nature
+of the contract, reaches an entirely opposite result. The mere jurist has a
+dangerous tendency to undervalue the reign of the laws of nature; the mere
+political economist, just as readily, undervalues the element of free will.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Arnold</span></span>, Cultur und Recht I, 97.) In this respect,
+the two sciences complement each other very well. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Roesler</span></span>
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hildebrand's</span></span> Jahrb., 1868, II, and 1869,
+I.) shows, and he does not exaggerate the fact, that political economists have
+made altogether too little use of the results of the science of
+law.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_135" name="note_135" href="#noteref_135">135.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Jurists will always experience
+the want of divesting their isolated ideas of
+their purely accidental character, by grouping them together in such a manner
+as to make them constitute a complete and independent whole. One
+must be possessed of profound knowledge to perceive their necessary connection
+from an historico-juridical point of view. Political Economy, with
+its characteristic accuracy and practical utility, can best take its place, at the
+present time. It is in the greater number of legal questions, the systematically
+elaborated science of <span class="tei tei-q">“the nature of the thing.”</span> See the able beginnings
+of a policy of legislation and higher history of law, based on Political Economy,
+by <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">H. Dankwardt</span></span>: N. Œk. und Jurisprudenz, 3 Hefte, 1857, and my
+preface to <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Dankwardt's</span></span> Nationalökonomisch-civilistischen
+Studien, 1862.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_136" name="note_136" href="#noteref_136">136.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">The intellectual power of a people
+depends upon the vigorous and harmonious development of all seven
+spheres of life.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_137" name="note_137" href="#noteref_137">137.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Montecuccoli</span></span>,
+Besondere und geheime Kriegsnachrichten (Leipzig, 1736).
+A very similar judgment by Cæsar in <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Dio Cass.</span></span>, XLII, 49.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_138" name="note_138" href="#noteref_138">138.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Bülan</span></span>,
+Handbuch der Staatswirthschaftslehre, 1835.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_139" name="note_139" href="#noteref_139">139.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Thus <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">v. Justi</span></span>,
+Staatswirthschaft 1755. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Kraus</span></span>, Staatswirthschaft, published
+by Auerswald, 1808; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Schmalz</span></span>, Handbuch der Staatswirthschaft, 1808.
+More recently, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hermann</span></span>, Staatswirthschaftliche Untersuchungen,
+1832. In France, the expression <span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">économie
+de l'état</span></span>, is very seldom used. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Gavard</span></span>,
+Principes del'E. d'Etat, 1796.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_140" name="note_140" href="#noteref_140">140.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Pölitz</span></span>, Staatswissenschaften im Lichte unserer Zeit, II, 3.
+Compare <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Lotz</span></span>, Handbuch der Staatswirthschaft (2d ed., 1837),
+I, 10 ff.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_141" name="note_141" href="#noteref_141">141.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Our view of Political Economy holds a
+middle place between opposed extremes. The view expressed by <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Whately</span></span>, Lectures on Political Economy (1831), No. 1, and
+covered by the proposed term <span class="tei tei-q">“catalactics,”</span> is by far too narrow. Similarly,
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Macleod</span></span>, Elements of Political Economy, 1858, I, 11.
+A like objection may be raised to the earlier title of <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Pritzwitz's</span></span> book: Die Kunst reich zu werden,—the art of
+growing rich. On the other hand, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Dunoyer</span></span>, Liberté du Travail
+(1845), L. IX, ch. I, goes too far altogether: <span class="tei tei-q">“not only in what manner a nation
+grows rich, but according to what laws it best succeeds, in the execution of all its
+functions.”</span> And so <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Storch</span></span>, Handbuch, translated into German
+by <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Rau</span></span>, I, 9. Many modern writers define Political Economy
+simply as the theory of society; for instance, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Scialoja</span></span>, Principj.
+dell'Economia sociale, 1840. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Cibrario</span></span>, E. polit. del medio
+Evo, III, 1842.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_142" name="note_142" href="#noteref_142">142.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">For the many and various definitions of the
+police power, see <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">von Berg</span></span>, Handbuch des Polezeirechts, I,
+1-12; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Butte</span></span>, Versuch der Begründung eines System der Polezei
+(1807), 6 ff.; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Rosshirt</span></span>, Ueber den Begriff der Staatspolizoi
+(1817), 34 ff. One of the principal difficulties is, that the practical domain of
+the police power is, in consequence of the successive grades of civilization
+through which a people passes, subject to greater modifications than any
+other state power. We call attention especially to the expressions <span class="tei tei-q">“without
+mediation, to prevent,”</span> and <span class="tei tei-q">“external order,”</span> in our definition. The church,
+the school, the administration of justice etc., act mediately towards the prevention
+of such disturbances; and there are many other institutions which
+offer immediate protection to order of a higher and more intellectual nature.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_143" name="note_143" href="#noteref_143">143.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">See the great
+number of earlier definitions collected in <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">R. von Mohl</span></span>, Gesch.
+und Literatur der Staatswissenschaften III, pp. 637 ff. There are two principal
+groups of them, the one of which considers it as the science of things
+of political note, the other as the science of actual or past conditions.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_144" name="note_144" href="#noteref_144">144.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">See
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Dufau</span></span>, Traité de Statistique, 1840; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Moreau
+de Jonnès</span></span>, Elements de Statistique, 1847; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Knies</span></span>, Die
+Statistik als selbstständige Wissenschaft, 1850. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">B. Hildebrand</span></span>,
+in his Jahrbüchern, 1866, I etc., but especially <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Quetelet's</span></span> works.
+For the contrary view, see <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Fallati</span></span>, Einleitung in die
+Wissenschaft der Statistik der St., 1843; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Jonak</span></span>, Theorie der
+Statistik, 1856, and <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Heeren</span></span>, in the Gött.
+Gelehrten Anzeigen, 1806, No. 84, 1807, 1302.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_145" name="note_145" href="#noteref_145">145.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">So thinks <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">v.
+Rümelin</span></span> (Tübinger Zeitschr., 1863, 653 ff.); and he recommends
+in place of statistics an independent branch of learning bordering on history
+and geography, to be called demography. His statistics is a science auxiliary
+to all the experimental sciences of man, just as criticism and hermeneutics
+are a methodological science auxiliary to many sciences, otherwise different.
+It would be difficult to justify the use of the name statistics for such a science,
+as such a science corresponds to neither of the two meanings of the word
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">status</span></span> (state—condition).</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_146" name="note_146" href="#noteref_146">146.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">The ancients understood by the term καμάρα
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">camera</span></span>, covered places such especially as were vaulted, also
+vaults of the most varied kind. Compare <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Herod</span></span>, I, 199;
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Diod.</span></span>, II, 9; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Strabo</span></span>, XI, 495;
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Arrian</span></span>, Exp. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Alex.</span></span>, VII, 5, 55;
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Dio Cass</span></span>. XXXVI, 32; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Sallust</span></span>, B. C., 55;
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Cicero</span></span>, ad Q. fratrem III, 1; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Plin.</span></span>, H.
+N. XXX, 27; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Seneca</span></span>, Epist., 86; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Tacit.</span></span>
+Hist. III, 47; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Sueton</span></span>, Nero, 34. During the middle ages, the
+meaning treasure-chamber (<span lang="de" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="de"><span style="font-style: italic">Schatzkammer</span></span>) became predominant: <span lang="la" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="la"><span style="font-style: italic">camera est locus, in quem thesaurus recoilligitur, vel
+conclave, in quo pecunia reservatur</span></span> (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ocham</span></span>, Cap. Quid
+sit Scaccarium). It gradually became synonymous with finance,—from the time of
+Charlemagne, or at least since Louis II. (Charter of 874). See
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ducange</span></span>, Glossarium, v. Camera, and
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Muratori</span></span> Antiquitt. Ital., I, 932 ff.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_147" name="note_147" href="#noteref_147">147.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-q">“A husbandman must plow and manure his land
+if he would reap a harvest from it. He must fatten his cattle if he would slaughter
+them; and furnish his cows with good fodder if he would have them give good milk.
+In like manner, a prince should begin by assuring his subjects healthy and abundant
+food, if he would take anything from them.”</span> <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">von Schröder</span></span>,
+Fürstl. Schatz-und Rentkammer (1686), preface, § 11. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Von Horneck</span></span>
+before him, Oesterreich über alles wann es nur will, p. 220, ed. of 1707, had expressed
+the idea that the watchful solicitude for the public economy of the country was
+no <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">parergon</span></span>, no <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">appendix</span></span>, to the council
+(<span lang="de" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="de"><span style="font-style: italic">Kammer</span></span>), but its real basis, and
+that it embraced many subjects which had nothing in common with the
+cameralia (<span class="tei tei-q">“<span lang="de" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="de"><span style="font-style: italic">Cameralien</span></span>”</span>).</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_148" name="note_148" href="#noteref_148">148.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Morhof</span></span>, Polyhistor (1688), III. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Thomasius</span></span>,
+1728, Cautelæ circa præcognita Jurisprudentiæ (1710), ch. 17. (Cautelæ circa studium
+œconomicum.) Also, in his lectures on <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Seckendorff's</span></span>
+<span class="tei tei-q">“Teutschen Fürstenstaat.”</span> Compare <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Roscher</span></span>, Gesch. der N.
+Œk. in Deutschland, 328 ff.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_149" name="note_149" href="#noteref_149">149.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">While
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Dithmar</span></span> (1731) distinguishes economy-police and cameralistic
+sciences and restricts the latter to finance and taxation;
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Darjes</span></span> (1756) comprises under the name of cameralistic science,
+economy (municipal and rural), and police, as well as cameralistic subjects in the
+strict sense of the term, that is, the public, domain and regal rights. While
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Nau</span></span> (1791), in his <span class="tei tei-q">“Ersten Linien der C.,”</span> treats only of
+the branches of private economy, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Schmalz</span></span>, (1797) treats also of
+national or public economy, and <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Rössig</span></span> (1792) divides
+cameralistic science into the doctrine of the public demesne and regal rights
+(cameralistic science in the narrower sense), and the doctrine of taxation and
+police.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_150" name="note_150" href="#noteref_150">150.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Thus,
+for instance, all that concerns domestic economy, book-keeping and
+private financial administration.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_151" name="note_151" href="#noteref_151">151.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">John Stuart
+Mill</span></span>, Principles of Political Economy (1848), I, p. 25, draws
+a distinction between the physical conditions which influence the economic
+situation of a people, and the moral and psychological conditions; which last
+have their origin in social institutions or in the fundamental principles of human
+nature. Only the latter belong to the domain of Political Economy.
+According to <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">J. B. Say</span></span>, Traité, Introd., this science embraces
+at once agriculture, manufactures and commerce, but only in their relation to the
+increase or diminution of wealth, and does not concern itself with the means employed
+to reach the desired end. As a rule, says <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Arndt</span></span> (Naturgemässe
+Volkswirthschaft, 1851, p. 16), it takes into consideration not so much things themselves
+as their exchange value. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Lotz</span></span> (Handbuch, I, p. 6 seq.), in like
+manner, defines Political Economy—the science of the one activity which constitutes
+the basis of all industries etc. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">F. G. Schulze</span></span> (Ueber
+volkswirthschaftliche Begründung der Gewerbswissenschaften, 1826), characterizes
+Political Economy as the science of the fundamental conditions of the well-being of a
+people, in so far as they lie in human nature.
+</p>
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+When <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Adam Smith</span></span> (book IV, c. II) says that the government in
+respect to matters of economy is inferior to the first best person engaged in industrial
+pursuits, he is right only from a technic point of view. And when
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Stewart</span></span>, on the other hand, vindicates for the state the office
+of a pater-familias (book II, ch. 13), he evidently means only in national economical
+matters.</p></dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_152" name="note_152" href="#noteref_152">152.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">See also
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Rau</span></span> (Ueber die Cameralwissenschaft, Entwickelung ihres Wesens
+und ihrer Theile, 1825); <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Baumstark</span></span> (Cameralistische
+Enclycopädie, 1835).</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_153" name="note_153" href="#noteref_153">153.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Xenoph.</span></span> Œconom.
+I, 8 ff. Cyrop. VIII; 2, 23. He saw with equal clearness
+the moral light and shade of wealth. (Œcon. XI. 9. Conviv. 4. Memor.
+I, 6. Cyrop. VIII, 3, 35 ff. Hiero 4.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_154" name="note_154" href="#noteref_154">154.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Thomas Aquinas</span></span>
+values earthly goods according to the end they are made to serve; when
+used for a good purpose, they have a mediately true value. Hence it was
+an error of the stoics to despise them under all circumstances.
+(Summa Theol. II, 2. Qu., 50, 3. 58, 2. 59, 3. 125, 4.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_155" name="note_155" href="#noteref_155">155.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Whateley</span></span>
+considers the savage much beneath the materialist, instead of
+superior to him. The latter possesses, although he frequently abuses it, the
+faculty of self-control and forethought, which is entirely wanting in the
+former. (Lectures, No. 6.) <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Dunoyer</span></span>, De la Liberté du Traväil,
+liv. IV, ch. I, 8, an apology for the moral wholesomeness of civilization, since promotive
+of military prowess, favorable to the development of the sciences, and even
+poetical. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Baudrillart</span></span>, Manual d'Œkonomie politique, 1857, 24.
+See <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Fallati</span></span>, Ueber die sogennannte materiellen Tendenz der
+Gegenwart, 1842.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_156" name="note_156" href="#noteref_156">156.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">See the inscription on the tomb of Sardanapalus:
+ταῦτ᾽ ἔχω, ὄσσ᾽ ἔφαγον καὶ ἐφύβρισα καί μετ᾽ ἔδωτος τέδπν ἔπαθον. (Strabo, XIV,
+672.) <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Isaiah</span></span>, 122, 13, 56, 12, and the book of wisdom (2)
+characterizes the view of the fallen Jewish people. In Greece, the Cynic and Epicurean
+schools were only different phases of the same degeneration. <span class="tei tei-q">“Thirst, for
+money, and nothing else, will be the ruin of Sparta!”</span> (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Cicero</span></span>,
+De Offic, II, 22, 77.) See the magnificent description by Demosthenes, in which he shows
+the over-estimation of material things to be the principal cause of the decline
+of Athens, and in which he lays great stress on the fact, that Athens, on its
+decay, had a larger population, more wealth, ships, and evidences of external
+power, than in its golden age. (Phil., III, 120 seq.) Also Phil., IV, 144,
+cautions us against the Manchester criterion of national prosperity. See
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Plato</span></span>, De Rep., VIII. In Rome, the principle <span lang="la" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="la"><span style="font-style: italic">ommia venalia esse</span></span> was a chief element in the total
+decline and fall of the republic. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Sallust</span></span>, Cat., 10 ff., Jug.,
+8 ff.) In an age when people think they can do everything with money, the
+ruin of all things is the last end of mercantile, financial and political speculation.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Condillac</span></span>, Le Commerce et le Gouverment, 1776, II, 18.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_157" name="note_157" href="#noteref_157">157.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Under Pericles, the Athenian treasury of the state
+contained at most 9,700 talents. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Thucyd.</span></span> II, 13.) On the
+other hand, Alexander the Great had a treasure of 180,000 talents accumulated in the
+citadel of Ecbatana. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Strabo</span></span>, XV, 731); Ptolomy II. left after
+him 740,000 talents. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Appian.</span></span> præf. 10,
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Droysen</span></span>, Geschichte des Hellenismus II, 44 ff.) In Nero's time
+there was many a freedman's daughter who owned a looking glass worth a greater sum
+than the senate had appropriated as a dowry to the daughter of the great Scipio.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Seneca</span></span>, Quæst. Natur. I, 17. Compare Cons, ad Helviam, 12.)
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">McCulloch</span></span> says that an intelligent despotism can enrich a
+nation as well as freedom. (In his Discourse on the Rise, etc. of Polit. Econ., 1825,
+77 seq.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_158" name="note_158" href="#noteref_158">158.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Bacon</span></span> (Sermones,
+56) says that youthful states distinguish themselves specially by
+their warlike instincts; mature states in literature; old and decaying
+ones in industry and commerce. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Davenant</span></span> very happily remarks,
+that the development of commerce among a people has an ambiguous value.
+It, indeed, increases wealth, but, at the same time, it may introduce luxury,
+covetousness and fraud, destroy virtue, do away with simplicity of manners
+and customs, and then it inevitably ends in internal or external slavery.
+(Works II, 275.) The simplicity of the patriarchal state, however, cannot
+last always, if for no other reason, because of the emulation of foreign nations.
+(1, 348, ff.) The impoverishment of even the wealthiest nation is
+certainly inevitable when its morality declines. It is especially true, that the
+public economy of a people can be prosperous only where political liberty
+obtains, and this, independent of the fact that wealth without freedom has no
+value. (II, 336 ff., 380, ff., 285.) According to <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ferguson</span></span>,
+private wealth, honestly acquired, used rightly and with moderation, managed with a
+sense of independence, may be to those who possess it, an element of self-confidence
+and of liberty, provided they loosen their purse strings not through vanity
+or for their personal gratification, but for commendable party purposes. But
+in periods of decay, even a greater amount of wealth is very far from producing
+these results. (History of Civil Society, VI, 5.) <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Whately</span></span>, on the
+contrary, maintains that only personal wealth—never national wealth—has
+a disastrous influence on morals. Lectures, No. 2.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_159" name="note_159" href="#noteref_159">159.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-q">“The method of a science is of
+much greater importance than any individual discovery,
+however wonderful.”</span> (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Cuvier.</span></span>)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_160" name="note_160" href="#noteref_160">160.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Thus, for instance, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">G.
+Biel</span></span> (ob. 1495), the <span class="tei tei-q">“last of the schoolmen,”</span> gives
+us his doctrine of Political Economy, in a work on Dogmatic Theology, in
+the chapter on Penance, his starting point being the inquiry, how the economic
+damage caused by the sinner may be repaired. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Roscher</span></span>, Geschichte
+der Nationalökonomik in Deutchland, 1074, I, 23. The Melittotheologia,
+Arachnotheologia of later times! A recent attempt in this direction
+has been made by <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ad. Müller</span></span>, Nothwendigkeit einer theologischen
+Grundage der gesammten Staatswissenschaften und der Staatswirthschaft
+insbesondere (1819), i.e., <span class="tei tei-q">“necessity of a theological basis for all political science,
+and especially for Political Economy.”</span> He divides political science
+into two parts: the science of law, and the science of wisdom, embracing
+under the latter denomination, politics, Political Economy, etc. Law emanates
+from God, as supreme judge; the science of wisdom from God, as our
+Supreme Father.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_161" name="note_161" href="#noteref_161">161.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Abstraction
+is indulged in on a large scale, when a number of elements
+which are always found combined in life, are here separated and examined
+apart. It is precisely thus that anatomy proceeds, dissecting each member of
+the human frame, separating the bones, ligaments and muscles from one another,
+thus becoming the necessary preparatory school to physiology.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_162" name="note_162" href="#noteref_162">162.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Thus, for instance,
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Canard</span></span>, Principes d'Economie politique (1801). Also
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Kröncke</span></span>, in several of his works, and
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Count Buquoy</span></span>, in his Theorie der Nationalwirthschaft
+(1816), p. 333 ff.; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Lang</span></span>, Grundlinien einer politischen
+Arithmetik, Charkow, 1811, and more especially <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">v. Thünen</span></span>,
+Der isolirte Staat, vol. I (1842), vol. II, 1850. See my criticism of his method in
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Birnbaum's</span></span> Georgika, 1869, 77 ff. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Voa
+Thünen's</span></span> first volume is an essay towards a geometrical exposition of the
+science. See also <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Rau</span></span>, Lehrbuch I, § 154, appendix;
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">von Mangoldt</span></span>, Grundriss der Volkswirthschaftslehre (1862);
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Cazaux</span></span>, Elements d'Economie privée et Principes mathématiques
+de la Théorie des Richesses (1838); <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">F. Fuoco</span></span>, Saggi economici
+(1827) II, 61 ff. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Walras</span></span>, Eléments d'Econ. politique pure
+(1874). <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Jevons</span></span> has recently endeavored to give Political
+Economy a mathematical basis by reducing the objects of which it treats to the
+calculable feelings of pleasure (+) and pain (-). The duration of a feeling is
+treated as an abscissa, its intensity as the ordinate of a curve, and its quantity
+as the area. Future feelings are reduced to present ones, by allowing for their
+distance, and the uncertainty of their occurrence. All this, however, is rather
+curious than scientifically useful.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_163" name="note_163" href="#noteref_163">163.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Herbart</span></span>, Ueber die Möglichkeit und Nothwendigkeit, Mathematik auf
+Psychologie anzuwenden; Kleinere Schriften, II, 417.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_164" name="note_164" href="#noteref_164">164.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">How detrimental it is
+to ignore the psychological nature of Political Economy is evident from the
+errors of <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Karl Marx</span></span>, who personifies things in a
+manner almost mythological. Thus, according to him, modesty should be
+ascribed to a coat which exchanges for a piece of linen, and purpose to the
+linen, etc. (Das Kapital, 1867, I, 19, 22, seq.) The greatest fault of this intelligent
+but not very acute man, his inability to reduce complicated phenomena
+to their constituent elements, is greatly increased by his way of thus
+looking at things.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_165" name="note_165" href="#noteref_165">165.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Compare
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">J. B. Say</span></span>, Traité I, introd. Thus, it would be certainly possible
+to describe every individual's physiognomy by means of a very complicated
+mathematical formula, and yet there is no one who would not prefer
+the usual mode of taking pictures. The simple motions of the heavenly
+bodies, on the contrary, are always treated mathematically.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Lotze</span></span>, Allgemeine Physiologie, 322 ff.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_166" name="note_166" href="#noteref_166">166.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">When
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Fawcett</span></span> says that all <span class="tei tei-q">“principles of Political Economy
+are describing tendencies instead of actual results”</span> (Manual of Political Economy,
+1863, p. 90), our method, the historical, would give also the theory of the
+latter.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_167" name="note_167" href="#noteref_167">167.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">This
+was lost sight of by most writers during the second half of the
+eighteenth century, because they looked upon that equality as the really
+oldest condition, and its restoration the ideal to be striven for. How much
+of this still clings to the present free-trade school; see in
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Roscher</span></span>, Gesch. der N. Œk. in Deutschland, 10, 17 ff.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_168" name="note_168" href="#noteref_168">168.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Thus,
+for instance, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ricardo</span></span> examines, almost exclusively, the actual
+condition of things, while the socialists confine themselves, still more exclusively,
+to the investigation of how things should be. It has been very usual in Germany
+since <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Rau</span></span> wrote, to draw a distinction between theoretical and
+practical Political Economy. There are many who think that a good manual
+of practical Political Economy, dropping the introduction, demonstrations
+etc., would be also a good code of law, of universal application.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Mercier de la Rivière</span></span> has said that he wished to propose an
+organization which should be necessarily productive of all the happiness which can be
+enjoyed on earth. (Ordre essentiel et naturel (1767), Disc. prélim.) Compare, also,
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Sismondi</span></span>, N. Principes, I, ch. 2.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_169" name="note_169" href="#noteref_169">169.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">The word method is used
+in an essentially different sense, when the inquiry
+is, whether the inductive or deductive method is followed in Political
+Economy. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">J. S. Mill</span></span> calls Political Economy, and,
+indeed, all <span class="tei tei-q">“sociology,”</span> a concrete deductive science, whose
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">a priori</span></span> conclusions, based on the laws of
+human nature, must be tested by experience, either by comparing them with
+the concrete phenomena themselves, or with their emperical laws. It, in
+this, resembles astronomy and physics. (System of Logic VI, ch. 9. Essays
+on some unsettled questions of Political E., No. 5.) According to this,
+an economic fact can be said to have received a scientific explanation only
+when its deductive and inductive explanations have met and agreed. <span class="tei tei-q">“Only
+those principles which, after they have been obtained by the one, are confirmed
+by the other method, can be said to have a scientific basis.”</span> (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">von
+Mangoldt</span></span>, Grundriss, 8.) While I agree to this view, it seems necessary to
+me to mention points wherein caution is necessary: A. Even the deductive
+explanation of economic facts is based on observation, namely, on the
+self-observation of the person accounting for them, who, consciously or unconsciously,
+must always inquire: If I had experienced or accomplished the
+same fact, what should I have thought, willed and felt? The man who cannot
+translate himself into the souls of others, will give a wrong explanation
+of most economic facts. In the question, for instance, of the determination
+of the price of an article, the person who can look into the mind of one of
+the contracting parties only, will give a one-sided explanation of the facts.
+B. Moreover, every explanation, that is, satisfactory connection of the fact
+seeking explanation with other facts which are already clear, can be only
+provisional. The wider our horizon grows, the deeper should our solution
+of all questions become. A hundred years hence, should science increase in
+the mean time, the solutions which are satisfactory to us will be looked
+down upon by our posterity, as the speculations of our fathers antecedent to
+Adam Smith's time are looked down upon by us.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_170" name="note_170" href="#noteref_170">170.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span lang="la" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="la"><span style="font-style: italic">Tanquam e vinculis sermocinantur</span></span>, says
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Bacon</span></span> (De Dignit. et Augm. Scient., III, 3), of those who have
+written in a not non-practical way on the laws. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hugo</span></span>, also
+(Naturrecht, 1819, p. 9), calls attention to the resemblance of the so-called laws
+of nature, to the positive law in force at the time. As to political idealism, see
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Roscher</span></span>: De historicæ doctrinæ apud sophistas majores
+vestigiis (Gött. 1838, 26 ff.). The only exceptions to this rule are the eclectics,
+who form their own system from the blossoms of all foreign ones, a system,
+indeed, without root, and which therefore must soon wither.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_171" name="note_171" href="#noteref_171">171.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">In this place, naturally, such an assertion can
+be made only as a programme to be carried out, the proof whereof is to be
+sought in the rest of the work. By <span class="tei tei-q">“the people,”</span> we do not mean the
+governed, to the exclusion of the governing classes, but both classes
+together. We attach to the expression the most extensive meaning possible.
+We do not limit it to the present generation, but intend it to cover all
+the generations from the beginning of a people's history to its end.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_172" name="note_172" href="#noteref_172">172.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">The
+custom, which has become general, of calling all democratic movements,
+and them only, revolutions (thus <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Stahl</span></span>: Was ist Revolution? 1852,
+and many other writers of an entirely opposite tendency, especially in France),
+is not warranted. It is true that democratic (and imperial) revolutions are
+more frequent than others in our times, just as aristocratic revolutions were
+in the middle ages, and monarchical at the beginning of modern history.
+The essence of revolution, however, is in the operation of change contrary to
+positive law, acknowledged as such by the consciousness of the people.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_173" name="note_173" href="#noteref_173">173.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Compare, especially, the first pages of
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Sir J. Stewart</span></span>, Principles of Polit. Economy.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_174" name="note_174" href="#noteref_174">174.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">See <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Colton</span></span>,
+Public Economy of the United States, p. 28, who, indeed, unwarrantedly, refers to
+the whole of Political Economy, what properly belongs to its precepts.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_175" name="note_175" href="#noteref_175">175.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">Je n'impose rien, je ne propose même rien: j'expose.</span></span>
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ch. Dunoyer</span></span>). <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Cherbuliez</span></span>,
+Précis de la Science économique, 1862, p. 7 ff., has exaggerated this
+idea in a strangely non-practical manner. That the historical method does not
+differ essentially from the statistical as recently recommended, see
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Roscher</span></span>, Gesch. der Nat. Œk., 1035 seq.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_176" name="note_176" href="#noteref_176">176.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Storch</span></span>, Handbuch, II, 222.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_177" name="note_177" href="#noteref_177">177.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ad.
+Müller</span></span>, an essentially mediæval mind, is guilty of this same braggadocio
+in an opposite direction, when he calls the <span class="tei tei-q">“present with its political
+disorders simply an intermediate state,—the transmission of the natural or
+unconscious wisdom of the fathers, through the inquisitiveness of their children
+to the rational acknowledgment of that wisdom by their grandsons.”</span>
+(Theorie des Geldes, 1816, pref.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_178" name="note_178" href="#noteref_178">178.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Thus, for instance, it
+can not be said that a model university is better than a model public
+school; and yet the former is higher, because the age to which it is adapted
+is doubtless intellectually higher.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_179" name="note_179" href="#noteref_179">179.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Knies</span></span> (Polit. Œk., 256 seq.) remarks, that it would be a great
+mistake, and it is the mistake of the majority, to consider what has been achieved or
+striven for in the present, as the absolute <span lang="la" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="la"><span style="font-style: italic">non plus ultra</span></span>, and thus to look upon all
+future generations as called upon to play the parts of apes and ruminators; a
+remark worthy to be taken to heart.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_180" name="note_180" href="#noteref_180">180.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">I have, myself, no doubt, that up to the
+present time, mankind, as a whole, has, from the beginning of historical knowledge,
+always advanced. In individual cases, their movement has been interrupted by so many
+pauses, and even by so many occasional retrogressions, that great care must be taken
+not to infer superior excellence from mere subsequency.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_181" name="note_181" href="#noteref_181">181.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Buckle</span></span>
+writes of people whose knowledge is about limited to that which
+they see going on under their eyes, and who are called practical, only because
+of their ignorance; and he adds that, although they assume to despise theory,
+they are in fact slaves of theory, of others' theories.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_182" name="note_182" href="#noteref_182">182.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Compare this whole
+chapter with <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Roscher</span></span>, Leben Werk und Zeitalter des
+Thukydides, 1842, pp. 25, 239-275; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Roscher</span></span>, Grundries
+zu Vorlesungen über die Staatswirthschaft nach geschichtlicher Methode, 1843,
+preface; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Roscher</span></span> Geschichte der Nat. Œk. in Deutchland
+(1874), 882 f., 1017 seq., and D. Vierteljahrsschrift, ff. See also
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">J. Kautz's</span></span> learned and accurate Theorie und Geschichte
+der N. Œkonomik, vol. I, 1858, II, 1860. I find no real contradiction between
+the views here expressed and those of <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Kautz</span></span>, when he (I, pp.
+313 ff.) introduces history and ethico-practical reason with their ideals as
+sources of Political Economy, to the end that the science may be something
+more than simply a picture, namely, a model of economic life. Apart from
+the fact that it is only the ethico-practical reason that can understand history
+at all, the ideals of a period constitute one of the most important elements of
+its history. The aspirations of an age find in them their best expression.
+The historical political, economist as such, is certainly not disinclined to
+form plans of reform, nor can it be said that he is not adapted to the performance
+of such a task. Only, he will scarcely recommend his reforms as
+absolutely better than what they are intended to supplant. He will confine
+himself to showing that there is a want which may, probably, be best satisfied
+by what he proposes. See <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Sartorius</span></span>, Einladungsblätter zu
+Vorlesungen über die Politik, 1793.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_183" name="note_183" href="#noteref_183">183.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-q">“There is a book
+which youth may use to grow old, and the old to remain young—History.”</span>
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">K. S. Zaccharia</span></span>).</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_184" name="note_184" href="#noteref_184">184.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Especially when natural
+science begins to be <span class="tei tei-q">“a practical science.”</span> (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">L.
+Stein</span></span>).</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_185" name="note_185" href="#noteref_185">185.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">The
+difference between the broader and narrower sense of production,
+corresponds essentially with that of gross and net income (§ 145). Compare
+also §§ 206, 211 ff.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_186" name="note_186" href="#noteref_186">186.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Von Mangoldt</span></span>
+distinguishes the coming into existence of free values of
+the production undertaken for an economic purpose. (Grundriss, 9.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_187" name="note_187" href="#noteref_187">187.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Gioja</span></span>, Nuovo Prospetto delle Scienze
+economiche (1815), I, 49 ff. Besides positive production, there is
+a latent production, which prevents the decay of goods. It is
+not possible to make as exact an estimate of the latter as of the
+former; and much more depends in the latter case than in the former
+on continuity and proper extension. Hence, latent production is especially a
+state concern. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Knies</span></span>, Telegraph als Verkehrsmittel, 1857,
+232.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_188" name="note_188" href="#noteref_188">188.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">See <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Schäffle</span></span>, in the Tübinger Univ. Programm, September 27, 1862, on
+the disastrous effect on the community of idleness. The leading of a happy
+life the Greeks called very appropriately, εὐπράττειν (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Garve</span></span>).</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_189" name="note_189" href="#noteref_189">189.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">We
+use the expression <span class="tei tei-q">“external nature”</span> through the whole of this work
+in contradistinction not only to the soul, but also to man's body, designating
+his entire physico-intellectual activity by the term <span class="tei tei-q">“labor-force”</span>
+(<span lang="de" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="de"><span style="font-style: italic">Arbeits kraft</span></span>).</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_190" name="note_190" href="#noteref_190">190.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">By the expression <span class="tei tei-q">“natural forces,”</span>
+we designate the economically useful changes of matter,
+changes of place as well as of composition, which are
+made without man's cooperation; for instance, the gigantic machinery which
+supplies the greater part of mankind with water to drink, for domestic and
+other purposes—the evaporation of the sea, the formation of clouds, rain,
+springs, rivers etc. See <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Bastiat</span></span>, Harmonies, 277.
+Thus the sun's rays are indirectly the cause, not only of vegetation, but
+also of all wind and steam forces.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_191" name="note_191" href="#noteref_191">191.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Spite of this <span class="tei tei-q">“freedom,”</span>
+it may well happen that these gifts of nature can
+be utilized, in many cases, only on condition of some expenditure. The photographer
+can compel the sunlight to work for him only by means of a camera
+obscura, and the smithy the atmosphere, only by means of a bellows. But
+neither will ever successfully make an item, in their accounts with their customers,
+of the services of the sun or air.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_192" name="note_192" href="#noteref_192">192.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">The most important ocean currents may be explained by
+two causes: the flowing of the water from the polar seas to the equator (polar current),
+and the revolution of the earth about its axis (equinoctial current); besides
+which, there are the reflex currents produced by the horizontal form of the
+coast-lands. Thanks to these natural ocean highways, England is nearer to
+almost all the important mercantile coasts of the world by 300 geographical
+miles than the Eastern States of the American Union. The only exception
+is the Atlantic coast of America north of the Equator. North Americans
+to pass the line, or to double one of the two great capes, are obliged first to
+traverse the ocean as far as the Azores. On the other hand, the western
+coast of South America is very widely separated from Mexico, for instance,
+by its ocean currents. The colonization of America by Europe, instead of
+by China, is a consequence of the direction of ocean currents, as is also the
+fact that America has now the fairest prospect of influencing the civilization
+of China and Japan. What an influence the warm gulf stream has on the
+mild climate of north-western Europe!</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_193" name="note_193" href="#noteref_193">193.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">While the Mississippi has no ebb or
+flow whatever, the influence of the ocean is felt in the Hudson, which is
+60 geographical miles long, a distance of 29 miles from its mouth.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_194" name="note_194" href="#noteref_194">194.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Thus, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">A. Young</span></span>, Travels
+in France I, 293 ff., has defined, with approximate accuracy, the limits
+within which the vine, maize and the olive grow. And so
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">von Cancrin</span></span>, Dorpater Jahrbuch IV, 1, distinguishes the ice
+zone, the reindeer-moss (a lichen on which the reindeer live in winter) zone, the forest
+zone, the zone within the limits of which cattle are raised; that in which the
+culture of rye begins, that in which it becomes permanent; the wheat, fruit-tree,
+vine, maize, olive, sugar cane and silk-worm zones. The United States
+are divided into cattle-raising, wheat-raising, cotton-raising, rice-raising and
+sugar-raising zones. Even in Europe, beyond the 60th parallel of north latitude,
+wheat can scarcely be cultivated; the polar limits of rye raising extend,
+at most, six or seven degrees farther. Towards the north, barley extends
+sometimes as far as the 70th degree. Here agriculture almost ceases, and
+the inhabitants are compelled to confine themselves to animal substances for
+food. On the other hand, these three cereals are not adapted to a tropical
+climate, while the bread-fruit tree, for instance, does not thrive at more than
+22 degrees from the Equator, nor the banana at more than 35. Compare
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Grisebach</span></span>, Die Vegetation der Erde nach ihrer klimatischen
+Anordnung. II, 1871.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_195" name="note_195" href="#noteref_195">195.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Thus rye and wheat thrive in
+many parts of Siberia (Iakutzk) at an annual temperature of - 7.50, while
+in Iceland no cereals ripen at an annual temperature of + 4°. But
+in the former place the summer heat is + 16.2°; the winter cold,
+- 39.2°; in Iceland, + 12° and - 1.6°. In England, the myrtle,
+laurel, camelia and fuchsia stand the winter well; while the vine no where
+ripens. On the other hand, Astrakan and Hungary are vine growing countries,
+although the former is as cold in winter as North Cape, and although the
+cold is more intense in Hungary than in the Faroe Islands, where neither
+the oak nor the beech grow any longer. No good wine is produced on the
+western coast of France, north of 47° 20' north latitude; in Champagne,
+north of 49°, or in the Rheingau, north of 51°. In Norway, the average
+heat is greater on the coast than in the heart of the country where, however,
+grain ripens, while it does not on the coast; for the mildness of the winter,
+no matter how great, can make no compensation for the want of heat. On
+the other hand, the cattle on the coast can remain much longer out of doors,
+and the sea seldom freezes in such a way as to interfere with the fisheries.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Blom</span></span>, Norwegen I, 39. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Boussingnault</span></span>
+(Economie rurale considérée dans ses Rapports avec la Chimie, II)
+has made some interesting attempts to calculate by a mathematical
+process the amount of heat necessary to vegetable, during the period
+of vegetation. Thus, for instance, wheat requires about 12°
+(Réaumur) of heat during 140 days; that is, nearly 140 x 12° = 1680° Réaumur.
+In Venezuela, the sugar cane requires a longer time to grow in a higher and
+therefore cooler position than in a lower and warmer, and the length of time
+required is in proportion to the height.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_196" name="note_196" href="#noteref_196">196.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Hence it is that the isothermal lines
+are not parallel with the equator or with one another. The greater number
+of these have two northern and two southern summits; the former on
+the western coasts of Europe and America, and the latter in eastern
+North America, and in the interior of Asia.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_197" name="note_197" href="#noteref_197">197.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">The quantity of rain which
+falls every year is, at St. Petersburg and Pesth, from 16 to 17 inches; at Berlin
+19, Mannheim 21, Tübingen 26: in the interior of France 16-24; on the French coast
+25, on the eastern coast of England 24, on the western coast 35, in Milan 36,
+Genoa 44, on the coast of most tropical lands 70-120. On the political-economical
+influences of most climates, see <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Gobbi</span></span>, Ueber die Abhängikeit
+der Populationskräfte von den einfachen Grundfstoffen, 1842.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_198" name="note_198" href="#noteref_198">198.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">The snow limit
+at Mageröe in Norway is 2,200, in Iceland 2,900, in the
+northern Ural 4,500, in the Alps 8,200, in the Caucasus 10,400, and Quito
+14,850 feet high. Hence it is that mountainous countries which produce
+nothing in the north, make magnificent vineyards in warmer countries.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_199" name="note_199" href="#noteref_199">199.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">In central Germany, even a second crop can
+be produced after the corn harvest. In Arabia, the same seed produces three harvests,
+because the grain which falls at the time of harvesting to the ground, germinates
+immediately and suffices for new seed. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Niebuhr</span></span>, Beschreibung,
+154.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_200" name="note_200" href="#noteref_200">200.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Thus in the northern states
+of the American union, wheat yields a return of only from four to five times the
+amount sown; in France, 5-6 times (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Lavoisier</span></span>): in Chili,
+12 times; in northern Mexico, 17 times; in Peru, 18 and 20 times; in southern
+Mexico, 25 and even 35 times; in Germany, maize seed yields at best one hundred
+fold, while in the torrid zone there is a return of from three hundred to four
+hundred fold, generally.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_201" name="note_201" href="#noteref_201">201.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"> Andalusian corn produces in the mill only one-half as much
+bran-waste as Baltic wheat produces. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Bourgoing</span></span>, Tableau de
+l'Espagne, II, 155. Baltic wheat contains 6-7 per cent, of azote, and Algerian, 20-25
+Per cent. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Kabsch</span></span>, Pflanzenleben der Erde, 1865.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_202" name="note_202" href="#noteref_202">202.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">In Europe the blossoming season is retarded
+four days for each degree of northern latitude. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Schübler</span></span>.)
+As we advance towards the north, the difference becomes less noticeable, but more so
+as we go towards the south. In mountainous countries a similar difference is
+observable, produced by a like climatic influence. It is from about 10 to 12 days,
+for a height of from 500 to 600 feet. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Wolff</span></span>, Naturgesetzliche
+Grundlagen des Ackerbaues I, p. 332 ff.) In the cantons, in which the Swiss
+confederation had its origin, the pasturage of the Alps lasts generally thirteen
+weeks, but in the higher Alps it lasts only from six to seven weeks.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Businger</span></span>, C. Unterwalden., p. 52.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_203" name="note_203" href="#noteref_203">203.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">In central Italy, winter wheat may be sown in
+October, November or December; summer wheat, in February or March.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Sismondi</span></span>, Tableau de l'Agriculture Toscane, p. 35.)
+In Judæa, it was possible to harvest figs ten months in the year.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Joseph</span></span>, Bell. Jud., Ill, p. 10.) On the other hand,
+there is Jemtland, where the peasant in many places surrounds the northern
+portion of his cornfield with fagots, and lights them in August when the
+north wind blows, to protect his land from the frost; and where the expression
+<span class="tei tei-q">“green years”</span> is used to designate those in which the harvest has to be
+reaped before it is ripe. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Forsell</span></span>, Statistik von Schweden,
+24.) In the valuation made of the lands of the kingdom of Saxony, for assessment purposes,
+the cost of supporting a yoke of oxen in the lowest country is estimated at
+only three-fourths of what it is in the highest localities, because in the former,
+200 work days can be calculated upon in the year, in the latter only 159.
+In central Russia, the greater part of the labor of agriculture, sowing and
+harvesting, has to be finished within the space of four months. In central
+Germany, they are spread over seven months. Other things being equal,
+seven horses and ploughmen are needed in Russia where only four are called
+for in central Germany, (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">von Haxthausen</span></span>, Studien I, 174.)
+On the impediments put in the way of agriculture by the climate of eastern
+Prussia, see <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Meitzen</span></span>, Boden und landwirthsch. Verhältnisse
+des preussichen Staats, 1868, I, Abschn., 6.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_204" name="note_204" href="#noteref_204">204.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-q">“In both hemispheres, the zone in
+which the temperature decreases most rapidly lies between the 40th and
+50th degrees of north latitude. This circumstance must have a happy
+influence on the culture and industry of the nation inhabiting the neighborhood
+of that zone. Here is the point where the regions of the
+vine touch upon those of the olive. Nowhere in the world, do
+the products of the vegetable kingdom, and the most varied wonders
+of agriculture, follow with such rapidity on one another. The great variety
+of products enlivens the commerce and increases the industrial activity
+of agricultural nations.”</span> (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Humboldt</span></span>.) It is
+true, however, that tropical countries possess, also, in their mountainous
+parts, the <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">tierra fria</span></span>, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">templada</span></span>
+and <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">caliente</span></span>, superimposed the one on the other.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_205" name="note_205" href="#noteref_205">205.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">The
+aggregate coal supply of Great Britain (1869) was 2,180 millions cwt.;
+of Belgium (1862), 207 millions; of France (1868) 256 millions; of Prussia
+(1870), 600 millions, of Austria (1870), including brown lignite coal, 158 millions;
+of Russia (1868), only a little over 9 millions. The great English coal
+field, in the counties of Durham and Northumberland, embraces 732 English
+square miles; that of South Wales, 1,200, with a depth of 95 feet, so that the
+geographical square mile contains here 679 millions of tons, each of twenty
+cwt. To obtain the same quantity of combustible material as was furnished
+to Prussia, in 1865, by its coal, it would be necessary to use up 6,331 square
+miles of forest, (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">von Dèchen</span></span>, in <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Engel's</span></span>
+Zeitschrift, 1867, 258.) The supply of coal is, of course, exhaustible while,
+for instance, turf-fields replace themselves by slow degrees. Compare
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Griesbach</span></span>, über die Bildung des Torfs, in
+the Göttinger Studien, 1845, vol. I. The importance of the coal-fields of the
+United States, which are twenty-two times as large as those of Great Britain,
+in the distant future, cannot be over-estimated.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_206" name="note_206" href="#noteref_206">206.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">I need only call
+attention to the earth-fire (<span lang="de" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="de"><span style="font-style: italic">Erdbrand</span></span>) for the purpose of
+forcing the growth of garden plants in the neighborhood of Zwickau, which
+is said to have existed since 1505.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_207" name="note_207" href="#noteref_207">207.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Thus, in
+Watt's steam engines of the larger kind, an hourly consumption
+of ten pounds of coal is needed to produce a force equivalent to that of one
+horse, while in the smallest machines of only one horse power, twenty-two
+pounds are needed. See <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Prechtl</span></span>, Technolo. Encyklopädie, III,
+669.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_208" name="note_208" href="#noteref_208">208.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">It is easy to see that it is the most important
+substances needed in industry which are mentioned in this
+section. Many political economists have considered the principal
+difference between agriculture and the industries and economies
+of towns to lie in the contrast here referred to. Thus, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">A.
+Sena</span></span>, Sulle Cause che possono far abbondare li Regni d'oro e d'argento,
+dove non sono miniere, 1613, I, 3. See the description of the difference between
+land and machines in <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Malthus</span></span>, Principles, III, 5;
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Senior</span></span>, Outlines, 86. But it is
+nothing more than a difference of gradation. Even in the most active
+of businesses there is a limit which the accumulation of means of
+production cannot pass without a relative diminution of the income. This
+boundary is imposed by the limited nature of those organic beings which
+must contribute to production either actively or passively. Thus, for instance,
+a manufacturing establishment or commercial business can be enlarged
+with advantage only so long as it is still possible for one superintendent
+to conduct it. And so, when cattle are furnished with very abundant
+and substantial food, a pound of meat costs the producer a much higher
+price than when they are more moderately supplied: sometimes in the ratio
+of 1.95:0.98. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Boussingault</span></span>, Economie rurale, II.
+Where there is absolute over-feeding, the producer must suffer loss.
+But, even inorganic nature imposes its own limits here; as, for
+instance, when ships, machines etc., on account of the insufficient
+strength of the materials of which they are made, cannot be
+constructed beyond a certain size. But all these limits are much
+narrower than those imposed by the quality of immovability.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_209" name="note_209" href="#noteref_209">209.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Senior</span></span>,
+Outlines, 26, 81 ff. See <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Stewart</span></span>, Principles, II, ch.
+11; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ortes</span></span>, E. N., I, 18, II, 18 ff. This most important
+principle in Political Economy is thus illustrated by <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">John
+Stuart Mill</span></span>, Principles, book I, ch. 12. <span class="tei tei-q">“The limitation
+to production from the properties of the soil is not like the obstacle
+opposed by a wall, which stands immovable in one particular spot, and offers
+no hindrance to motion short of stopping it entirely. We may rather compare
+it to a highly elastic and extendible band, which is hardly ever so violently
+stretched, that it could not possibly be stretched any more, yet the
+pressure of which is felt long before the final limit is reached, and felt more
+severely the nearer that limit is approached.”</span> This is, if possible, more obvious
+in building than in agriculture, both as to the construction of new
+stories and the excavation of deeper cellars.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_210" name="note_210" href="#noteref_210">210.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ad. Mayer</span></span>,
+Das Düngerkapital und der Raubbau (Heidelberg, 1869), sees
+the only conditions of production which man cannot increase at will exclusively
+in the sun's rays, the employment of which also depends on the quantity
+of land. Thus would he explain <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Senior's</span></span> law.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_211" name="note_211" href="#noteref_211">211.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">See the tables of increase in <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Cotta</span></span>,
+Anweisung zum Waldbau, p. 228. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Count Buquoy</span></span>, Theorie der N.
+Wirthschaft, p. 54, ridicules the absurd procedure of a great many farmers,
+as if by forcing the ploughshare deeper into the soil, they could compel
+it to produce a double return, and asks: if one should dig a square foot
+of land to the center of the earth and manure it, who would take it
+off his hands? As to the effect of manure, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Kuhlmann's</span></span>
+investigations have shown that 300 kilogrammes of guano produced in three years
+an increase per <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">hectare</span></span> in the yield, of 2,469 kilogrammes
+of hay; while 600 kilogrammes produced an increase of only 2,870 kilogrammes.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Schübler</span></span>, found that where salt had been used for
+manuring purposes, 40 kilogrammes produced a maximum of fertility from which
+point forward every increase in the amount of salt was attended by
+diminished returns, and finally led to complete barrenness. See
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Wolff</span></span>, Naturgesetzliche Grundlagen, I, 408, 412,
+502. Constantly increased irrigation would convert the land into a swamp
+instead of indefinitely adding to its fertility. Nor can abundant sowing be
+of any use when it reaches such a point that the plants stand so closely together
+as to interfere with their proper development.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_212" name="note_212" href="#noteref_212">212.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">These differences correspond with
+the differences in the kinds of deterioration to which land is liable from
+rivers, floods, lava, etc., soil-exhaustion, and the growing wild of
+the land.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_213" name="note_213" href="#noteref_213">213.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">From
+a technic point of view, it would, perhaps, be practicable, in most
+instances, to obtain the phosphoric acid immediately from the land and
+transfer it to other land; but the relation of the cost to the result makes it
+impossible from an economical point of view.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_214" name="note_214" href="#noteref_214">214.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">It most certainly is always
+an uncommon advantage that certain kinds of soil, rich in
+kali and decayed vegetable matter, yield a long series of harvests
+without the addition of manure, provided, always, that a short interval
+is allowed to the process of decay to replace the exhausted plant-food. Thus
+in many volcanic regions. Compare on similar districts in the Deccan:
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Rilter</span></span>, Erdkunde, V, 714.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_215" name="note_215" href="#noteref_215">215.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">According to <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Schübler</span></span>,
+the absorption of water by 100 parts of earth is, in the case of
+quartz-sand, 25 per cent. of its weight; for clay, 70 per cent.; for
+calcareous earth, 85 per cent.; humus, 190 per cent.; and for 100 parts of
+their value, respectively, 37.9, 66.2, and 69.2 per cent. The consistency of
+the four kinds of earth, in a dry state, is in the proportion of 0.100, 5, 8.7;
+their adhesion in a moist state, to iron agricultural implements, is in that of
+0.17, 1.12, 0.65, 0.40. Of 100 parts of water mixed with these kinds of earth,
+the evaporation in four hours, at a temperature of 18° 75' (centigrade) is
+88.4, 31.3, 28 and 20.5 per cent, respectively. The diminution of volume
+when the moist earth dries, under the same degree of temperature, is, 0,
+18.3, 5 and 20. Their relative absorption of atmospheric moisture for 48
+hours is as 0, 24, 17.5 and 55; their absorption of oxygen in 30 days is
+respectively 1.6, 15.3, 10.8 and 2.03 per cent.; and, lastly, their heat-holding
+power is in the ratio of 95.6, 66.7, 61.8, 49.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_216" name="note_216" href="#noteref_216">216.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">In Austria, below the Enns, only 3.8 per
+cent. of the soil is barren; in the Tyrol, 29 per cent.; in Dalmatia,
+48.1 per cent. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Springer</span></span>). In the French
+Pyrenees, 43 per cent. is considered incapable of cultivation; in the Alps, in
+Landes and Morbihan, 42 per cent.; in the departments of Nord and Somme,
+1.3 per cent. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Schnitzler</span></span>).
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Franscini</span></span> considers 36 per cent. of Switzerland
+unfit for tillage. The idea <span class="tei tei-q">“barren”</span> is a very vague one, and hence a comparison
+of different countries on this point should not be made without great
+caution.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_217" name="note_217" href="#noteref_217">217.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Wolff</span></span>, loc. cit., 353 ff. As to the manner in which soil and
+climate mutually improve or injure one another, see <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Schwerz</span></span>,
+Prackt. Ackerbau I, 12.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_218" name="note_218" href="#noteref_218">218.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">In this respect, also, the fundamental
+difference between agriculture and industry is very important, inasmuch
+as the products of the former, equal in value to those of the latter,
+require a very large supporting or bearing surface; those of industry,
+a very small one. If <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Nobbe's</span></span> <span class="tei tei-q">“water-cultivation”</span>
+should ever come to assume any great practical importance, agriculture
+would approach to industry in this respect.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_219" name="note_219" href="#noteref_219">219.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Wolkoff</span></span> has called special attention to mere <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">emplacement</span></span>: Lectures d'Economie polítique rationelle (1861),
+pp. 90 seq., 157 seq. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Bastiat's</span></span> rather broad and
+enthusiastic assertion, that no mere product of nature possesses
+value (in contradistinction to utility), an exaggeration of his very honorable
+contest with the socialists (1848!), is refuted by daily experience, as when,
+for instance, discoveries are made accidentally of metallic veins, coal-fields
+etc., which immediately acquire great exchange value.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_220" name="note_220" href="#noteref_220">220.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Aristotle</span></span>
+distinguishes between ἀπολαυστικὰ and κάρπιμα. (Rhet., I, 5.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_221" name="note_221" href="#noteref_221">221.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Humboldt</span></span>, Essai
+politique, súr la N. Espagne, IV, 9, in which he estimates
+the relation of the culture of the banana to that of wheat, in respect of mere
+quantity, to be as 4,000 to 30,—<span class="tei tei-q">“probably the best gift of nature to awakening
+man, and the object of the most ancient cultivation.”</span></dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_222" name="note_222" href="#noteref_222">222.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">It was said that in Easter
+Island, three days' labor sufficed for a man's maintenance through
+the whole year. A similar gift of nature to tropical lands is the
+date tree. It is turned to so many different uses that the Arabs
+of the coast of the Persian Gulf say that it is possible to construct a ship,
+rig it, supply and freight it, from date trees. Houses are built of palm wood,
+covered with palm leaves, furnished with palm mats, lighted with palm chips,
+and heated with palm coals. The whole architecture of these countries is fashioned
+by the date tree. Date wine is the favorite intoxicating beverage. There
+is a proverb current there that a good housewife can vary the preparation of
+the date for her guests every day in the month. Even the pulp is eaten.
+Each tree yields an average of 50-250 lbs. of dates; and a tree may last over
+200 years. An acre may contain more than 200 trees. The labor of cultivation
+is very slight, although it demands more care than the banana. Compare
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ritter</span></span>, Erdkunde, XII, 763. An acre planted with the
+sago-palm yields as much nourishment as 163 acres of wheat land. (Reise der
+Frigatte Novara, II, 113.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_223" name="note_223" href="#noteref_223">223.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">See <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">D. Hume</span></span>,
+Discourses No. I (On Commerce). While in hot countries
+<span class="tei tei-q">“the sun does more work for man, it diminishes human strength itself.”</span>
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">M. Wirth</span></span>.) That, however, such people, to their
+surplus of the natural means of enjoyment and the consequent laziness
+and absence of care, add the bright side of a joyous disposition, is well
+shown by <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Goethe</span></span>, Werke (16 mo., 1840), XXIII, 246.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_224" name="note_224" href="#noteref_224">224.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Noticed even by <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Thucyd.</span></span>,
+I, 2. See also <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Euripides'</span></span> comparison of Sparta
+and Messina, in <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Strabo</span></span>, VIII, 366.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_225" name="note_225" href="#noteref_225">225.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">We find, in a great
+many countries, that their northern portions are endowed more
+sparingly by nature with means of enjoyment (<span lang="de" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="de"><span style="font-style: italic">Genussmitteln</span></span>) than southern portions,
+but more abundantly with means of acquisition.
+(<span lang="de" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="de"><span style="font-style: italic">Erwerbsmitteln</span></span>.)
+Hence, the former are latest to develop; but once developed,
+they assume a much higher place in civilization than the latter. This is true
+of Italy, Spain, Portugal, France, the Netherlands, and the United States,
+and of North America in general, as compared with South America. Something
+similar may be seen in the contrast between Austria and Prussia.
+The latter is colder and less fertile, but far superior to the former in extent
+of coast, in rivers, and fossilized combustible matter.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_226" name="note_226" href="#noteref_226">226.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">The
+rule is not without its exceptions. Thus, for instance, Borneo and
+New Guinea are physically very like each other, but zoölogically two different
+worlds; the former belonging to India and the latter to Australia.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_227" name="note_227" href="#noteref_227">227.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Even language, which is the
+most general and most accurate expression of the
+intellectual genius of a people, presents a strikingly analogous contrast
+in mountainous and coast countries. Thus, compare the Ionic, Latin,
+Low German, Danish and Portuguese, with the Doric, Oscan, High German,
+Swedish and Spanish.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_228" name="note_228" href="#noteref_228">228.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">See
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Strabo</span></span>, II, 126. seq.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_229" name="note_229" href="#noteref_229">229.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">The
+most striking instance, illustrative of the manner in which the nature
+of a country influences the character of a people is afforded by the difference
+in the development of the Aryans in India and Persia, especially
+when their sojourn in the territory of the Indus before that near the Ganges
+is looked upon as an intermediate stage.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_230" name="note_230" href="#noteref_230">230.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">French writers,
+especially, have exaggerated the influence of nature over man. Thus,
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Bodin</span></span>. de Repub. (1584), V, I;
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Montesquieu</span></span>, Esprit des Lois, XVII, 6. XVIII, 1, 18.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Cabanis</span></span>, Rapport du Physique et du Moral de
+l'Homme (1805), IX, Mémoire, Influence des Climats. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Comte</span></span>,
+also, Traité de Législation (1827), is of opinion that <span class="tei tei-q">“the degree of
+civilization which a people may attain does not depend on the degree of
+development of which they are capable by nature, but on that which
+their geographical situation permits them to attain.”</span> See, also,
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Herodot</span></span>., III, 106; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hippocr</span></span>.,
+De Ære etc., 71; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Euripid</span></span>., Medea, 820 ff.;
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Plutarch</span></span>, De Exilio, 13. The proper mean has been
+found by <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">E.M. Arndt</span></span>, in his Anleitung zu historischen
+Characterschilderungen (1810), and by <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ritter</span></span>, and his
+school. See, also, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">K.S. Zachariæ</span></span>, Idee einer
+volkswirthschaftlichen Geographic als Grundlage der praktischen N.
+Œkonomie fur jedes einzelne Volk: Vierzig Bücher v. Staate, II, 79. See,
+also, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Turgot</span></span>, Géographie politique, 1750, Œuvres (ed.
+Daire, II, 611 ff.); <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Lueder</span></span>, Nationalindustrie und
+Staatswirthschaft, III, 1800 ff.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_231" name="note_231" href="#noteref_231">231.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Malte Brun</span></span>, Précis. de la Geographie universelle, VI.
+pr.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_232" name="note_232" href="#noteref_232">232.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Strabo</span></span>, IV, 178. On the
+climate of ancient Germany, see <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Tacit</span></span>, Germ, 2.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_233" name="note_233" href="#noteref_233">233.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Fraser</span></span>, Travels in
+Koordistan and Mesopotamia, II, 5. See, also, the description of
+ancient Susiana in <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Strabo</span></span> XV, 731, with that of the new one
+by <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">M'Kinneir</span></span>, Geogr. Memoir of Persia, 92.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_234" name="note_234" href="#noteref_234">234.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Thus, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Galenus</span></span>, De
+Usu Partium Corporis humani, L. I. The animal nearest to man mentally, the elephant,
+is also possessed of a member more like the human hand than any other animal. Its
+trunk was called <span lang="la" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="la"><span style="font-style: italic">manus</span></span> by
+the Romans. Hence the Indians call the elephant, the animal gifted with a
+hand. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Buffon's</span></span> view is exaggerated by Helvetius in the
+interests of materialism. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Aristotle</span></span>, (De partt. anim. IV,
+10), opposes the saying of Anaxagoras: διὰ τὸ χεῖρας ἔχειν φρονιμώτατον εἶναι τῶν
+ζώων ἄνθρωπον. Compare <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Bell</span></span>, On the human Hand, 1836.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_235" name="note_235" href="#noteref_235">235.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">As to
+the imperfection of the ordinary division into agricultural, industrial
+and commercial labor, see <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">John Stuart Mill</span></span>, I, ch. 2,
+9. The division of all labor into mental and physical, is not more satisfactory;
+for even the basest labor is not wholly physical. See <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Buckle</span></span>,
+History of Civilization, vol. II.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_236" name="note_236" href="#noteref_236">236.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Dioscorides</span></span>
+and <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Galen</span></span> were acquainted with, at most, 600 plants;
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Linnæus</span></span>, with 8,000. About 1812, about 30,000 had been
+described; in 1837, about 60,000; in 1849, about 100,000.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Buckle</span></span>, History of Civilization etc., II, p. 359.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_237" name="note_237" href="#noteref_237">237.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Industrie extractives</span></span>, according to <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Dunoyer</span></span>.
+When nature's spontaneous gifts are exhausted, this <em class="tei tei-emph"><span style="font-style: italic">occupation</span></em> readily
+becomes <em class="tei tei-emph"><span style="font-style: italic">production</span></em>.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_238" name="note_238" href="#noteref_238">238.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">Industrie voituriére</span></span>, according to
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Dunoyer</span></span>; <span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">industria
+traslocatrice</span></span> in opposition to <span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">trasformatrice</span></span>, according to
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Scialoja</span></span>. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ortes</span></span> distinguishes only four
+classes: <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">agricoltori</span></span>, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">artefici</span></span>,
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">dispensatori</span></span> and <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">administratori</span></span>, or
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">raccoglitori</span></span>, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">manifattori</span></span>, and
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">difensori di bene</span></span> (E. N. I, 2; III, 14).
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">A. Walker</span></span>, Science of Wealth (1867), p. 34, knows only three
+classes: transmutation, transformation, transportation.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_239" name="note_239" href="#noteref_239">239.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">This is not to be understood
+in the sense, that there ever was a period in which these sciences were unknown.
+We need only mention the position occupied by the priest and knight in the middle
+ages. But, looked upon as economic labor, intended only for purposes of free commerce,
+they have become very important only within a relatively recent period of time.
+Thus, for instance, there was in Lower Austria, in 1866, one lawyer or notary to every
+6,569 inhabitants; in Bohemia, to every 14,860; in Galicia, to every 22,361;
+in the whole of Cis-Leithanian Austria, 12,259. In 1865, there was in Prussia,
+one to every 11,149; in Bavaria, to every 7,350; in Hanover, to every 4,946;
+in 1862, in Baden, one to every 4,992; in 1867, in Saxony, one to every 3,048.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hildebrand's</span></span> Tagebuch, 1868, I, 234. There was in Prussia,
+in 1871, one doctor to every 3,230 inhabitants; in Berlin, to every 1,100; in
+Heldesheim, to 1,803; in Cologne, to 2,120, in Marienwerder, to 7,240; in Gumbinnen, to
+10,047. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Engel</span></span>, Preuss. Statis. Zeitschrift, 1872, 376. The
+verb <span class="tei tei-q">“to plow”</span> is, according to comparative philologists, of more recent origin
+than <span class="tei tei-q">“to weave.”</span> (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Lassen</span></span>, Indische Alterth. I, 814 ff.)
+And yet agriculture, in the sense above indicated, undoubtedly precedes industry.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_240" name="note_240" href="#noteref_240">240.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Observed
+by <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Geiler v. Kaisersberg</span></span>. Compare
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Schmoller</span></span> in the Tübinger Zeitschr., 1860, 483. Hour
+wages occupy a middle place between day wages and piece wages.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_241" name="note_241" href="#noteref_241">241.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Thus the introduction of piece wages into
+lower Silesia has increased the daily earnings of workmen by one-third,
+one-half, and even more. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Engel's</span></span> Stastist. Zeitschr.
+(1868), p. 327. The investigations of the German agricultural
+congress on the condition of agricultural laborers in the German empire
+(report of <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">v. d. Goltz</span></span>, 1875) show that in all Germany
+on an average, the daily earnings of a contract workman (<span lang="de" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="de"><span style="font-style: italic">Accordlöhner</span></span>) is to the daily summer
+wages of a day laborer as 15:10 (1420). On the other hand,
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Brassey</span></span>, in the construction of a railway, found that the
+same workmen engaged in grading, digging, etc., cost 18 pence per yard when paid by
+the day, and 7 pence when paid by the piece. (Work and Wages, 266.) Swiss experience
+is, that production became 20 per cent. cheaper under the piece wages system.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Böhmert</span></span>, Beitr., 109.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_242" name="note_242" href="#noteref_242">242.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">According to
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">v. d. Goltz's</span></span> Enquête, the earnings of workmen by the piece,
+compared with the wages paid workmen by the day in summer, is especially
+high in middle Franconia (16.5:10); in the Leipzig circle of the German
+empire (16.6), in the Braunschweig plain (16.8), within the jurisdiction of
+Hildesheim (18.1), of the Bavarian Palatinate (18.6), in Rhenish Hesse (23.2),
+especially low in Stettin (13.2:10), in Stralsund (12.4), in Schleswig Holstein
+(12), in Osnabrück, (11.7.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_243" name="note_243" href="#noteref_243">243.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">According to <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">v. Flotow</span></span>,
+Anleitung zur Fertigung der Ertragsanschlage, I, 80, four days of serf labor are
+equivalent to only three of a free day laborer. According to <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">v.
+Jacob</span></span>, Ueber die Arbeit Leibeigener und freier Bauern (1815), 21, two day
+laborers are equal to three serfs, and one farm horse is equal to two employed by
+serfs. It is as impossible to obtain accurate general estimates
+here, as in the case of slave labor. As a rule, hope is not only a more
+humane but a sharper spur to action. But if force is employed at all, there is
+no doubt that the greater it is, the more effectual it is. Wherever the right of
+corporal punishment has been taken from the masters, the technic value of
+serfdom has uniformly decreased. In the English West Indies, formerly,
+philanthropic masters who treated their negroes with unwonted gentleness,
+obtained from them, as a rule, very poor economic results. While each of
+the slaves expressed the greatest indignation at the idleness of the others
+when they had <span class="tei tei-q">“so good a master,”</span> they were all equally and excessively
+lazy. The weekly production of a plantation sank rapidly under this system
+from thirty-three hogsheads to twenty-three, and finally to thirteen.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Math. Levis</span></span>, Journal of a West India Proprietor, 1834;
+Edinburg Review, XLV, 410. For the same reason, the negroes in the Spanish colonies,
+who were treated much more gently than those owned by other European nationalities
+produced much worse work. See, however, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Columella</span></span>, De Re
+rust., I, 8.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_244" name="note_244" href="#noteref_244">244.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">According to <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Howlett</span></span>,
+The Insufficiency of the Causes to which the Increase of our Poor Rate have been
+ascribed (1788), piece wages had become usual <span class="tei tei-q">“a few years ago.”</span> Very
+recently the trades unions have again restricted the system of piece wages (§
+176).</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_245" name="note_245" href="#noteref_245">245.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">This
+system is inapplicable in the case of domestic servants (<span lang="de" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="de"><span style="font-style: italic">Gesinde</span></span>) who are a
+part of the household, and who afford to their masters, besides their services,
+the advantage of having a person at their disposal always about them,
+and whose wages are therefore in great part their board and lodging. Still
+less can it apply to the case of the family physician, whose services consist
+not simply in writing prescriptions, but who is also the professional family
+friend. The same may be said of the state official, clergyman etc., from
+whom it is demanded that he should sacrifice his entire life to the service of
+the public. Against adopting piece wages in the case of state officials, it may
+be further urged that no case at law, no act of public life is precisely similar
+to any other. It cannot be applied to that of soldiers, because they are called
+upon for action only after a long term of peace, during all of which they must
+keep themselves in readiness for war. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Schäffle</span></span>, N. Œk.,
+II, 388.) It has also been the practice of courts, until recently, on
+account of their dignity, to pay their mechanics not by the piece,
+wherever that was practicable, but by a fixed salary. An able
+professor in a university is of use to it not only by
+his lectures, but by his reputation and example etc.; hence, here, a combination
+of piece wages and of a regular salary is preferred. As to services, the
+permanency of which constitutes their essential character, remuneration is
+also wont to be permanent or hereditary, as in the case of very many public
+officers, while civilization is as yet unadvanced. Later, in proportion as the
+progress of civilization makes itself felt, this hereditariness is wont to be
+confined to the sovereign. For an opposite view, see <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Boxhorn</span></span>,
+Institutt. politt. (1663), 41.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_246" name="note_246" href="#noteref_246">246.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Thus,
+the Chinese, who, by a ridiculous exaggeration bordering on caricature
+of many of our recent tendencies, may afford us a warning reflection of
+ourselves in our present state of civilization, rarely labor efficiently when not
+watched. Only by means of piece wages or the share-system can they be
+induced to do good work. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">R. M. Micking</span></span>; Recollections
+of Manilla and the Phillippine Islands, 1851.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_247" name="note_247" href="#noteref_247">247.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Day laborers, for
+instance, must be watched over during the harvest, to prevent
+their idling away their time, and piece-workers to prevent their continuing
+to work in spite of wet weather, binding sheaves, for instance, which
+causes the sheaves to rot. In England, it is considered almost an impossibility
+to induce laborers to cut wheat close enough to the soil.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Sinclair</span></span>, Code of Agriculture, 102.) The
+haste of piece-workers, in the harvest of the rape, occasions
+great loss, by the fall of the seed. In Russia the removing
+of the hide from animals is paid for by the piece, and the laborers injure a
+very large number of skins in their haste. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Steinhaus</span></span>,
+Russlands industrielle und commercielle Verhältnisse, 425.
+Piece-wages are to be entirely discountenanced in the reeling
+of silk. See <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Bernouilli</span></span>, Technologie, II, 215. A
+yearly salary is to be recommended in the tending of cattle, because here a
+certain connection (<span lang="de" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="de"><span style="font-style: italic">Anschluss</span></span>)
+with individuals is desirable. In building trades,
+contractors in England prefer a regular salary; but they employ model
+workmen, the so-called <span class="tei tei-q">“bell horses,”</span> to whom they pay a large salary, and
+who keep the others on the strain by their example, and who on that account
+are very much hated by their colleagues.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_248" name="note_248" href="#noteref_248">248.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Adam
+Smith</span></span>, W. of Nations, I, ch. 8. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Howlett</span></span>, also, l. c.,
+thinks that piece-wages increase the earnings of workmen, but at the expense of their
+capacity for constant labor. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Count Görtz</span></span>, in his Reise, 328,
+relates with what fatal effect piece-work in Demarara tells on white laborers and their
+horses. After the February Revolution, Parisian workmen demanded the abolition
+of piece-wages, and obtained it in several manufactories. Revue des deux
+Mondes, March 15, 1848.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_249" name="note_249" href="#noteref_249">249.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">In
+several Swiss factories, understrappers receive a salary, while
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">monteurs</span></span> work by groupe-contract.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Böhmert</span></span>, Arbeiterverältnisse und Fabrikeinrichtungen
+der Schw., II, 70.) Sub-contracting, where the contract is generally
+made with only one person, for the most part of more than average capacity,
+and this latter contracts with other workmen on his own account entirely, is
+considered by philanthropic employers of labor as one of the worst kinds of
+remuneration. The more democratic system of gang-contract is much
+better, although even here, it is very easy for the weaker members of a
+good gang to overwork themselves. (Edinburg Review, October, 1873,
+365.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_250" name="note_250" href="#noteref_250">250.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Especially important in chemical factories. The expense
+of greasing on the Rhenish railways fell, through premiums offered as rewards for saving,
+from 27,000 thalers to 5,000, in spite of an increase in the amount of traffic.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">v. Mangoldt</span></span>, Volkswirthschaftslehre, 349.) This was, besides,
+the most effectual way of controlling the theft of material.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_251" name="note_251" href="#noteref_251">251.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">In the cachelot
+fishery, the captain receives one-sixteenth, the master, one twenty-fifth,
+the second master, one thirty-fifth, the boatswain, one-sixtieth, each sailor,
+one eighty-fifth of the profit. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Humboldt</span></span>, N. Espagne,
+IV, 10.) This system is very common in North America. See <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Carey</span></span>
+in <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">J. S. Mill's</span></span> Principles, V, ch. 9, 7. In heathen Iceland,
+mariners were always paid a certain quota of the profits. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Leo</span></span>,
+in <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Raumer's</span></span> historischem Taschenbuch, 1835, 524. The same
+was often the case in China. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">McCulloch</span></span>, Comm. Diction. v.
+Canton. In England, its employment was rendered very difficult by the laws
+of partnership, which made each individual, except in great chartered societies,
+responsible for all kinds of debts contracted by the rest of the firm.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">J. S. Mill</span></span>, B. IV, ch. 7, 5.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_252" name="note_252" href="#noteref_252">252.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">The
+house painter Leclaire, in Paris, obtained very high results in this
+respect. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Leclaire</span></span>, Répartition des Bénéfices du Travail,
+1842. He retained for his own services as contractor the sum of 6,000 francs, and
+paid each workman the salary he had hitherto received. What remained was, at the
+end of the year, equally divided among all. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Leclaire</span></span> assures us
+that he was always satisfied with the system. The paying of a proportion of the
+general profits to laborers is advisable only in case their ability of surveying
+the whole is not much inferior to that of their employers. Where
+a special proportion is paid, in special branches of business, it is sufficient
+if their supervision extends over that particular branch. But a sharing in
+the profits of business always supposes a corresponding supervision of the
+business itself, and also the keeping of accounts.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_253" name="note_253" href="#noteref_253">253.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">A very good remedy
+against indigence among the lower classes. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Umpfenbach</span></span>,
+National Œkonomie, 1867, 214.) But whether it will ever be possible
+to make the remuneration of the navvy or that of a type-setter depend
+on the final success of his work, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">qnœre</span></span>.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_254" name="note_254" href="#noteref_254">254.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Tournefort</span></span>, speaking of
+the fatalism of the Turks, says that they always
+and everywhere leave the world as they found it. According to their own
+proverb, no grass grows again where the Osman has set foot.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_255" name="note_255" href="#noteref_255">255.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">The experiments made with the dynamometer
+in 1800 ff. show that the average <span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">force
+manuelle</span></span> of an inhabitant of Van Dieman's Land is to that of an
+inhabitant of New Holland, of Timor, of a French marine, and of an English
+colonist in Australia, in the ratio of 50, 51, 58, 69, 71 kilogrammes.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Péron</span></span>, Voyage de Découverte aux Terres australes, 2d ed.,
+II, 417. It was found more recently in the American army, that the average
+lifting-power of white soldiers was 314 to 343 -lbs.; of white marines, 307;
+students, 308; negroes, 323; mulattos, 348; and Indians, 419.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Gould</span></span>, Investigations in the Military and Anthropolog.
+Statistics of American Soldiers, 1869, 458, seq. According to English manufacturers,
+an English laborer accomplishes almost as much again as a French one(?), and the
+latter in turn more than an Irishman. An English contractor, who had worked in
+French manufactories, expressed his opinion concerning the French to this effect:
+<span class="tei tei-q">“It cannot be called work they do; it is only looking at it and wishing it done.”</span>
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Senior</span></span>, Outlines, 149. Thus, for instance, a good English
+spinner with a machine of 800 spindles could produce 66 lbs. of yarn, No. 40, while
+a Frenchman could produce only 48 lbs. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">M. Mohl</span></span>, Reise durch
+Frankreich, 535; compare <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Dingler</span></span>, Polyt. Journal, I, 63 seq.)
+That the Americans also are inferior to the English in strength and dexterity is
+attested by the American <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hewitt</span></span>. See
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Brentano</span></span>, Arbeitergilden, II, 231. A Berlin wood-sawyer
+accomplished as much in ten days as a West Prussian from Labiau in twenty-seven days.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">J. G. Hoffmann.</span></span> English farmers on the Hellespont prefer to
+pay Greek laborers £10 per year <span class="tei tei-q">“besides their keep,”</span> rather than £3 to Turkish
+laborers. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Lord Carlisle</span></span>, Diary in Turkish and Greek Waters,
+1854, p. 77 seq.) In Paulo-pinang, the Malayan agricultural laborer receives $2-½
+per month, the Malabar, $4, the Chinese, $6; for which compensation they work
+respectively 26, 28 and 30 days. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ritter</span></span>, Erdkunde, v, 54.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_256" name="note_256" href="#noteref_256">256.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Little light can
+be thrown on this subject by a comparison of different countries. Thus, in
+France, there are 614 persons in every 1,000 examined fit for military
+service; in Bavaria, 705; in Denmark, 523; in Austria, 498; in Prussia, 284;
+in Saxony, 259; in England, where the conscription is from among the lowest
+classes, 665; and in Württemberg, 490. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Wappäus</span></span>, Allg.
+Bevölkerungsstatistik, II, 71, 140.) <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Massy</span></span>, Remarks on
+the Examination of Recruits, 1854. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Memminger</span></span>, Würt.
+Jahrb., 1843, 103.) The comparison of different parts of the same state is
+much more instructive. Thus, in Saxony, cities afford only 197, and
+the flat country only 265 per 1,000 (Sächs. statist. Ztschr., 1856,
+No. 4 ff.); and in France there are among those of illegitimate
+birth a very large number unfit for military service. (Journ. des Econ., 1850,
+XXV, 69.) According to the Austrian Annual of military statistics, there
+were in 1870, on an average, throughout the entire monarchy, 211 per 1,000
+of those liable to enter the ranks of the military, fit for service; in the Innsbruck
+command, 325; in Lemberg, 179.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_257" name="note_257" href="#noteref_257">257.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">M.
+Chevalier</span></span>, Cours, I, 115. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Adam Smith</span></span>, B. I, ch. 8,
+noticed the great industry of well paid workmen. Among the uneducated, labor must almost
+necessarily be repulsive in proportion as it is illy remunerated.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_258" name="note_258" href="#noteref_258">258.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Thus
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">A. Young</span></span> remarked that wages in Ireland are wretchedly low, while
+labor is far from being cheap. In his <span class="tei tei-q">“Evidence in Respect to the Occupation
+of Land in Ireland,”</span> II, 135, he says that a Scotch day laborer at 1s. per
+day is cheaper than an Irish day laborer at ½s. According to
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">McCulloch</span></span>, <span class="tei tei-q">“Statis. Account of the British Empire,”</span>
+I, 666, industrial labor in Germany and France is dearer than in England, because
+in the former countries there are, <span lang="la" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="la"><span style="font-style: italic">ceteris
+paribus</span></span>, twice as many laborers employed in most manufactures.
+See <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Senior</span></span>, Lectures on Wages, 1830, 11, and the reports of the
+committees of parliament, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">passim</span></span> on French manufactures (1825).
+The same has been experienced in the agricultural history of Schleswig-Holstein.
+See <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hanssen</span></span>, Archiv. der Politisch. Œk. IV, 421.
+<span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">La main d'œuvre est chère en Russie dès
+qu'il s'agit d'une certaine capacité et d'un certain degré d'instruction professionelle,
+tandis que celle de l'ouvrier ordinaire n'est nulle part aussi bas.</span></span>
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Tégoborsky.</span></span>)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_259" name="note_259" href="#noteref_259">259.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Thus even
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Columella</span></span>, R. R. I, 9. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">J. S. Mill</span></span>,
+Principles, I, ch. 7, 5.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_260" name="note_260" href="#noteref_260">260.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Thus, for instance, the Lex Visigoth., VIII,
+4, 16, graduates the fine to be paid by the murderer according to the age of
+his victim. It increases up to the 20th year in the case of males, and
+diminishes after the 50th. In the case of females, the maximum is attained
+between the ages of 15 and 40. Similarly even <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Moses</span></span>,
+Book III, 27.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_261" name="note_261" href="#noteref_261">261.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">As to what concerns the two sexes,
+the <span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">force rénale</span></span> of adult
+males is twice that of females in the human species. The difference between them in
+youth is not so great. The force <span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">manuelle</span></span> of the two sexes at the age of 30 is as
+9:5. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Quételet</span></span>, Sur l'Homme II, p. 73 ff.) The numerical
+ratio of one sex to the other varies but little among those nations which have attained
+a certain degree of civilization. See <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">infra</span></span>, § 245.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_262" name="note_262" href="#noteref_262">262.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">It is
+of great importance to calculate here the number of days in the year
+in which the laborer is compelled to be idle on account of sickness.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Fenger</span></span>, (Quid faciant ætas annique tempus ad frequentiam et
+diuturnitatem morborum, Hafniæ 1840), finds the following result:
+</p>
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Between 15 and 19 years, 7.2 days. Between 35 and 39 years, 7.8 days.<br />
+Between 20 and 24 years, 10.3 days. Between 40 and 44 years, 8.3 days.<br />
+Between 25 and 29 years, 9.5 days. Between 45 and 49 years, 11.6 days.<br />
+Between 30 and 34 years, 7.6 days. Between 50 and 59 years, 14.1 days.
+</p>
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+According to <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Villermé</span></span>, in the Annales d'Hygiène, II,
+</p>
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+At 60 years, 16 days. At 67 years, 42 days.<br />
+At 65 years, 31 days. At 70 years, 75 days.
+</p>
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+The latter table is the result of a comparison made of the tables of seventy
+Scotch mutual aid societies. Compare <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Digler</span></span>, Polyt. Journal,
+XXIV, 168.</p></dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_263" name="note_263" href="#noteref_263">263.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Tacit.</span></span>, Germ., 14.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Leo</span></span>, in <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Raumer's</span></span> Taschenbuch, 1835,
+418. <span lang="la" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="la"><span style="font-style: italic">Maxime sua esse credebant, quæ:
+ex hostibus cepissent.</span></span> (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Gajus</span></span> IV, 16.) Roman auction
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">sub hasta</span></span>! Similar views obtained among the Thracians. See
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Herodot.</span></span>, V, 6. In Sparta, even in the time of Agesilaus,
+economic labor was considered unworthy of a free man, (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Plutarch</span></span>,
+Ages, 26); while the Athenians, from the time of Solon, punished idleness, and
+from that of Pericles <span class="tei tei-q">“knew no other festival but attending to their business.”</span>
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Thucyd.</span></span>, I. 70. For some happy observations on this subject,
+see <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Riehl</span></span>, Die deutsche Arbeit, 1861.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_264" name="note_264" href="#noteref_264">264.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Compare <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Erasmus</span></span>
+Colloq. (ed. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Stallb.</span></span>), 21 ff., 213 ff., 392 ff.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_265" name="note_265" href="#noteref_265">265.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Temple</span></span> learned from the Dutch of his own age that the time of
+industrious men is the greatest home commodity of a country. (Works I, 129.) <span class="tei tei-q">“A
+trader's time is his bread.”</span> (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Sir M. Decker</span></span>, Essay on the
+Decline etc., 1744, 24.) <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Walpole</span></span>, in his Testament politique
+II, 385, speaks of the inferiority of the Roman Church in this respect. I would
+allude to the medieaval prohibition <span class="tei tei-q">“to sell time”</span> as one of the chief grounds
+of the prohibition of usury. (See <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Roscher</span></span>, Gesch. der N. Œk.
+in Deutschland, 7.) <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Economia di tempo equivale a prolungamento di
+esistenza.</span></span> (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Soialeja.</span></span>)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_266" name="note_266" href="#noteref_266">266.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Douville</span></span>, Voyage au Congo I,
+239. See <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">v. Haxthausen</span></span>, Studien, II, 439;
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">W. Jacob</span></span>, Production and Consumption of the precious
+Metals, II, 209. The division of the day into hours dates from the time of
+the sun dials of Alexandria. It was not known in Rome until after the year of
+the city 491. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Mommsen</span></span>, Römische Geschichte, I. 301.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_267" name="note_267" href="#noteref_267">267.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Pinckard</span></span>, Notes
+on the West Indies, 1806, II, 107. In Spain it looks as if no one in the streets
+was in a hurry. What a contrast between the <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">sans souci</span></span> gait
+of persons at bathing places and the resorts of pilgrims and the precipitate haste
+in commercial centres!</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_268" name="note_268" href="#noteref_268">268.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Meyendorff</span></span>, Voyage
+à Boukhara, 246.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_269" name="note_269" href="#noteref_269">269.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">The history of this idea affords a remarkable example of the
+confusion produced by the employment of scientific terminology in daily life. Until
+within a short time every possible meaning of the word <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">capital</span></span>
+was to be found in the dictionary of the French Academy, its scientific
+politico-economical meaning alone excepted. During the middle ages, the Latin
+<span lang="la" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="la"><span style="font-style: italic">capitale</span></span> was used to signify both
+loaned money and cattle. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ducange</span></span>, s.v.) When culture was at its
+highest in Greece, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Demosthenes</span></span> entertained very good
+ideas of the nature of capital which he sometimes calls ἀφορμὴ, sometimes ἔρανος, the
+meaning of which he extends also to the incorporeal capital of a good reputation.
+(Adv. Mid., 574; pro Phorm, 947.) The same may be said of the Roman in conception of
+<span lang="la" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="la"><span style="font-style: italic">peculium</span></span>. See
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hildebrand's</span></span> Jahrbb., 1866, I. 338. On the beginnings of the
+present idea of capital among the later schoolmen, see <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Funck</span></span>,
+Tübinger Ztschr., 1869, 149. The diary of <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Lucas Rems</span></span>, 1491-1541
+(ed. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Greiff</span></span>, 1861), calls commercial capital, in most instances,
+the chief good (<span lang="de" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="de"><span style="font-style: italic">Hauptgut</span></span>) p. 37;
+also <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Cavedal</span></span>. The words money and capital, interest and the price
+of money are now confounded in daily life, as they were formerly by most writers. In
+the 17th century, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Child</span></span> and <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Locke</span></span> may be
+mentioned as instances. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hobbes</span></span> had some faint notion of the
+productive power of capital. See <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Roscher</span></span>, Zur Geschichte der
+englischen Volkswirthschaftslehre, 49, 60, 102. Thus, also, in the 18th century,
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Law</span></span>, Sur l'Usage des Monnaies, 697; Trade and money (1705) 117;
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Mélon</span></span>, Essai politique sur le Commerce, 1734, ch. 22;
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Galiani</span></span>, Della Moneta, IV, 1, 3; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Blackstone</span></span>, Commentaries, 1764, II, 456; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Genovesi</span></span>, Economia civile, II, 2, 18, 13; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Stewart</span></span>, Principles, IV, 1, ch. IV; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Verri</span></span>,
+Meditazioni, XIV; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Büsch</span></span>, Geldumlauf, V. 14; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">A.
+Young</span></span>, Political Arithmetics (1774), 1, ch. 7. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hume</span></span>, on the
+other hand, Discourses (1752), No. 4 (on interest), shows, that the rate of interest is
+dependent, not as <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Locke</span></span> supposed, on the abundance or scarcity
+of money, but on the state of profit and on the relation between the demand and supply
+of capital. Similarly, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">J. Massie</span></span>, An Essay on the governing
+Causes of the Rate of Interest (1750). <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Quesnay</span></span>, Dialogue sur
+le Commerce, 173 (ed. Daire), shows that he had a very clear conception of the operation,
+and of the principal component parts of capital. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Turgot</span></span>, Sur la
+Formation et la Distribution des Richesses, § 14, 54-79, came very near the truth, and yet
+missed it. He recognized the necessity of advances which, as a rule, are the
+result of saving, in every case of production. He also distinguishes in the
+product of the soil, besides the <span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">produit
+net</span></span> and the <span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">subsistance du
+laboureur</span></span>, the <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">profit</span></span> of the latter. He likewise
+points out a great number of differences between the <span class="tei tei-q">“price of money”</span> considered
+in its relation to trade, and in its relation to loans. He explains the interest on
+capital, as <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Schröder</span></span>, in his Schatz-und Rentkammer, 231, and
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Benjamin Franklin</span></span>, in his Inquiry into the Nature of a Paper
+Currency (1729) had done before, by the fact that the owner of capital can purchase a
+piece of land with his capital, and thus draw an income without working. Money, he
+said, was indeed not productive, but neither was any other thing that could be loaned
+or leased, with the exception of land and cattle. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Adam Smith</span></span>
+deserves the greatest credit for his analysis of the idea of capital, although he
+opposes <span class="tei tei-q">“capital”</span> to what the Germans call capital-in-use, the <span class="tei tei-q">“stock for
+immediate consumption.”</span> When <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Canard</span></span>, Principes d'Economie
+politique (1801) and <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">J. B. Say</span></span>, Cours pratique, 1828, I, 285,
+included man's power of labor in capital, they took a retrograde step. <span class="tei tei-q">“Labour is
+Capital, primary and fundamental.”</span> <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Colton</span></span>, 275. Every
+grown-up individual, says <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">McCulloch</span></span>, Principles, 1825, II, ch.
+2, may be looked upon as a machine which has cost several years of continued
+care and a considerable sum for its construction. It is only another
+side of this same perversity, when <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">McCulloch</span></span> seeks to force
+the results produced by animals and machines into the definition of labor.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Schlozer</span></span>, Anfangsgründe (1805), I, 21, goes so far as to
+call the soul, raw material, which receives productive power from the
+labor of the teacher! For a calculation of the money value of man in
+the different ages of life, see Statis. Journ. XVI, 43 ff. See, on
+the other hand, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Malthus</span></span>, Definitions, ch. 7;
+and <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Rossi</span></span>, in the Journal des Economistes, VI, 113.
+Nor does the view of <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ganilh</span></span>, Systèmes d'Economie politique
+(1809), I, 243; of <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ad. Müller</span></span>, Concordia, 93 ff., 211; of
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hermann</span></span>, <span class="tei tei-q">“Staatswirth”</span> Untersuchungen, No. 3; of
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Dunoyer</span></span>, Liberté du Travail, L. VI; of
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Bastiat</span></span>, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Carey</span></span> and others, who
+include pieces of land in themselves under the head of capital, seem to be
+better founded. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hermann</span></span> defines capital the durable basis
+of every utility possessed of value in exchange. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Schäffle</span></span>
+reckons land as nature offers it to us, among <em class="tei tei-emph"><span style="font-style: italic">free</span></em> goods. From the
+moment that labor and capital are spent upon it, it becomes immovable capital,
+but he concedes that it still preserves many essential points which distinguish
+it from other capital. (N. Œk. Theorie der ausschliessenden Absatzverhältnisse, 1867,
+65 ff., 89 ff.) These differences appear to me to be still more important than that
+which land and capital have in common; especially as the historic development of
+their relations proceeds for the most part in opposite directions. Thus, for
+instance, as civilization advances, land is wont to become dearer and capital
+cheaper. How difficult would it be to introduce clearness into the ideas of
+<em class="tei tei-emph"><span style="font-style: italic">intensive</span></em> and <em class="tei tei-emph"><span style="font-style: italic">extensive</span></em> agriculture, if land were accounted
+capital! And it is not only always theoretically, but also very often, in practice,
+possible to separate the value of a given piece of land from the most durable
+capital-improvements (<span lang="de" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="de"><span style="font-style: italic">Kapitalmeliorationen</span></span>) made on it. It is only
+necessary to call to mind the area of buildings.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_270" name="note_270" href="#noteref_270">270.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Marx</span></span> makes a very arbitrary assertion when he says that only the
+capital operating in trade, and even only that operating in trade where money is
+used as the instrument of exchange, can properly be called capital; and that,
+therefore, the modern biography of capital dates only from the 16th century,
+(Das Kapital I, 106 ff.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_271" name="note_271" href="#noteref_271">271.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">See, on the other hand, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Wolkoff</span></span>,
+Lectures d'Economie politique rationelle, 167.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_272" name="note_272" href="#noteref_272">272.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hermann</span></span> (II ed., 238 ff.)
+distinguishes especially <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">preparatory contrivances</span></span> auxiliary to
+labor, such as stationary structures etc., vessels, tools, machines and instruments for
+measuring etc.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_273" name="note_273" href="#noteref_273">273.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Thus, for
+instance, the plow and the gun are machines, the spade and the
+blow-pipe are tools. A hammer may be considered as a hard, insensible fist;
+the bellows as a pair of very strong and durable lungs. Tongs take the
+place of fingers, just as a spoon does of the empty hand, and the knife the
+place of the teeth. A great number of machines, on the other hand, may
+be compared to a complete workman. Thus, the action of the mill which
+grinds grain has very little resemblance to the blowing of the wind or the
+running of the water, whereas the rising and falling of the pestle in the
+small mortar for throwing grenades corresponds to the motion of the arm.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Rau</span></span>, Lehrbuch I, § 125.) The infinite number of
+functions of which our members are capable is related to their inability
+to attain alone the greater number of their ends. Hence animals which
+require no tools can undertake to achieve very few things. <span class="tei tei-q">“Man is a
+tool-making animal.”</span> (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">B. Franklin.</span></span>)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_274" name="note_274" href="#noteref_274">274.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">This is seen most clearly in the history of
+the grinding of corn. In the time of Moses, and even of Homer,
+there were only hand-mills, and originally only mortars.
+Later, mills set in motion by horse-power were employed.
+Shortly after Cicero's time, mills driven by water-power came into use.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Brunck</span></span>, Analecta, II, 119, Ep. 39. Mills built
+on pontoons do not date farther back than the time of Belisarius.
+Wind-mills have been known since the ninth century; Dutch wind-mills,
+only since the middle of the 16th century. See <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Beckman</span></span>,
+Beiträge zur Geschichte der Erfindungen II, I ff.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_275" name="note_275" href="#noteref_275">275.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Compare
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Plato</span></span>, Polit., 280.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_276" name="note_276" href="#noteref_276">276.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Thus,
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ganilh</span></span>, Théorie de l'Economie politique I, 133, calls the
+knowledge, talents and probity of merchants, as well as their reputation, valuable
+parts of their capital in trade. See, also, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Möser</span></span>, Patriot. Ph.
+II, 26. See some happy observations on the intellectual capital of nations, as consisting
+of <span class="tei tei-q">“known and unknown preparatory labor through their history,”</span> in
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Lotze</span></span>, Mikrokosomos II, 353 seq.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_277" name="note_277" href="#noteref_277">277.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Compare <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Dietzel</span></span>,
+System der Staatsanleihen (1856), 71 ff. And, earlier yet, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ad.
+Müller</span></span> had looked upon taxes not in the light of an insurance premium,
+but as <span class="tei tei-q">“the interest of the invisible and yet absolutely necessary intellectual
+capital of the nation.”</span> (Elemente, III, 75.) Of course, the State is much more
+than a species of capital; just as a Gothic cathedral is something more than a
+piece of masonry, but does not on that account cease to be a piece of masonry.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_278" name="note_278" href="#noteref_278">278.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">J. B. Say</span></span>,
+Traité d'Economie Politique I, ch. 10. Only think of what
+is known in physiology as the change or transformation of matter
+(<span lang="de" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="de"><span style="font-style: italic">Stoffwechsel!</span></span>).</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_279" name="note_279" href="#noteref_279">279.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Productive capital has been rendered into German by the word
+<span lang="de" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="de"><span style="font-style: italic">Erwerbstamm</span></span>, by the author of
+<span class="tei tei-q">“Staatswirthschaft nach Naturgesetzen,”</span> 1819. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Malthus</span></span>,
+Definitions, ch. 10, and <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Rau</span></span>, Lehrbuch, I, § 51, call productive
+capital alone, capital. According to <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">M. Chevalier</span></span>, goods lose
+their quality of capital as soon as they come into the hands of a consumer.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Schäffle</span></span>, N. Œk., II, aufl., 59, calls capital in use
+<span lang="de" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="de"><span style="font-style: italic">Genussvermögen</span></span> (resources intended
+for enjoyment) and productive capital, <span lang="de" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="de"><span style="font-style: italic">Kapitalvermögen</span></span> (capital-resources). On the other
+hand, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">J. B. Say</span></span>, Traité, I, 13; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">McCulloch</span></span>,
+Principles, II, 2, 3, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hermann</span></span>, Staatswirthschaft. Untersuchungen,
+p. 60 ff., and <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">v. Mangoldt</span></span>, Volkswirthschaftslehre, 122, divide
+capital into capital in use and productive capital, according as it provides the
+possessor with that which he may turn to account directly or indirectly by becoming the
+owner of goods through its means. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Aristotle</span></span> distinguishes between
+ὄργανα and κτήματα, the former relating to ποίησις; for instance, a shuttle; the latter
+to πράξις, as, for instance, bedding and articles of dress. (Polit., I, 2, 5.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_280" name="note_280" href="#noteref_280">280.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Thus, for instance, class A
+embraces parks and forests; B, theaters, churches, manufactories, arsenals, granaries,
+public walks and roads. Walks can, besides, be used for the cultivation of fruit, and
+roads for pleasure trips.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_281" name="note_281" href="#noteref_281">281.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Translated <span class="tei tei-q">“capital de
+consommation”</span> by Wolowski, p. 96 of his Roscher's
+Principles.—<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Translator's note.</span></span></dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_282" name="note_282" href="#noteref_282">282.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Dead, or better, dormant
+capital is such productive capital as, for the time being,
+remains unused, and which, therefore, does not yield even personal enjoyment.
+The sum total of this kind of capital is very much diminished by
+the agency of savings banks. Loaned capital which has been employed unproductively
+evidently constitutes no longer a part of the wealth of a people.
+See <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">infra</span></span>, § 189.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_283" name="note_283" href="#noteref_283">283.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Wolkoff</span></span> is so far right, when in his Lectures, p. 142,
+he calls the return of capital in use not <span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">revenu</span></span>, but <span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">déstruction graduelle</span></span>. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Schäffle</span></span> is right, too, and entirely so, when he says
+that only such an increase of the property, intended for
+enjoyment simply, is anti-economic, as does not make the personal
+capacities of labor (<span lang="de" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="de"><span style="font-style: italic">Arbeitsvermögen</span></span>) as much more productive than
+they would otherwise be. N. Œk., II, aufl., 224.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_284" name="note_284" href="#noteref_284">284.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Humboldt</span></span>, N. Espange, II, ch. 17; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">v.
+Schlözer</span></span>, Anfangsgründe, II, 109. Ausland, 140, No. 313. On the
+extraordinary wealth of even Russian peasant women in pearls, see
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">v. Haxthausen</span></span>, Studien, 87, 309.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_285" name="note_285" href="#noteref_285">285.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Townsend</span></span>, Journey in Spain, I, 115, 310. In the patriarchal age of the
+Jews, there was a relatively very large quantity of ornamental objects in
+gold and silver: <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Michælis</span></span>, De Pretiis Rerum apud Hebræos, in
+the Comm. Soc. Götting., III, 151 ff., 160. Conservative Sparta, in the middle age of its
+history, was certainly not rich, and yet it had more gold and silver than any
+other Grecian state: <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Plato</span></span>, Alcib., I, 123. According to
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">St. John</span></span>, The Hellenes, III, 142, the ancients
+had relatively much more of the precious metals in the form of
+objects for ornament than the moderns. The Romans, with their usual
+good sense, did not make use of silver as an article of luxury
+until they had attained great wealth. See <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Cato</span></span>, R.
+R., ch. 23, and <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Seneca</span></span>, De Vita beata,
+ch. 21. Then the Carthaginian ambassadors railed at
+their hosts because they found the same pieces of table silver in all the houses
+to which they were invited. The younger Scipio, even, did not possess more
+relatively than 32 pounds of silver ware. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Mommsen</span></span>,
+Römische Geschichte, II, 383. The relatively great importance of the
+stores for domestic use, nevertheless, runs through the whole of
+Roman history. The title <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">de penu legato</span></span>,
+in the Pandects (Digest, XXIII, 9), points to this, during the reign of the
+emperors, and in earlier times, the derivation of <span lang="la" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="la"><span style="font-style: italic">penates</span></span> from <span lang="la" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="la"><span style="font-style: italic">penu</span></span>. See <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Rodbertus</span></span>,
+in <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hildebrand's</span></span> Jahrbuch, 1870, I, 365. Immense importance of the
+ring in the old north countries: <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Weinhold</span></span>, Altnord. Leben,
+184 ff. The age of chivalry was very rich in silver plate, cups, basins, etc.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Büsching</span></span>, Ritterzeit und Ritterwesen, II, 137.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Anderson</span></span>, Origin of Commerce, a. 1386. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Lord
+Burleigh</span></span>, in the age of queen Elizabeth, left after him between fourteen and
+fifteen thousand pounds sterling in silver ware; that is almost as much as
+the rest of his whole estate; and, it would seem, that for a man of his rank,
+even this was not considered a great deal. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Collins'</span></span>
+Life of B., 44. According to <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Giustiniani</span></span>, cardinal Wolsey
+owned articles of silver to the value of 1,500,000 ducats, and the greater number
+of the lords of the time were equally well provided with them.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_286" name="note_286" href="#noteref_286">286.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">The Bedouins
+are fond of decorating their wives and children with all
+the jewels that they possess, both on holidays and other days, so that they
+sometimes have four or six bracelets on each arm and fifteen ear-rings in
+each ear. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Burckhardt</span></span>, Bemerkungen, 188.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Wellsted</span></span> (Roederer's translation),
+I, 224. In Asia Minor, girls wear their whole dowry in the shape of personal
+ornaments. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Belgiojoso</span></span>, Revue des deux Mondes, Feb. 1, 1855. In
+East India even the most wretched towns have their silver workers. The
+emirs of Scinde, with an annual income of £300,000, had a treasure worth
+£20,000,000, nearly £7,000,000 of which were in jewels.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ritter</span></span>, Erdkunde VII, p. 185.
+On the upper Ganges more jewels and other ornaments are
+worn than on the lower, where the wealthy prefer to spend their capital on
+landed estates. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ritter</span></span>, VI, 1143.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_287" name="note_287" href="#noteref_287">287.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">The first beginnings of this
+division are to be found in <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Quesnay</span></span> (Analyse du Tableau
+économique, 1758), in which he develops the difference between <span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">avances primitives</span></span> and <span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">avances annuelles</span></span>. See also <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Adam
+Smith</span></span>, W. of N., II, ch. 1, who, however, reduces the difference between them
+mainly to the relations of possession, and hence includes grain and seed in fixed
+capital. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hermann</span></span>, Staatsw. Untersuch., 269 ff.;
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ricardo</span></span>, Principles, ch. 1, sec. 2;
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Schmitt-henner</span></span>, Staatswissenschaften, I, 387, divides capital
+into I, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">infungible</span></span>, that is, 1, fixed in the strict sense of
+the word; 2, transportation-capital; II, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">fungible</span></span>,
+1, transformable capital; a, material (raw material, auxiliary material etc.),
+b, formed products; 2, circulating capital; a, wares; b, money.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">A. Walker</span></span>, S. of W., 57, calls circulating capital that which
+may be easily transferred from one branch of production to another; fixed, that which
+can be used with advantage only for the purpose for which it was originally
+intended.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_288" name="note_288" href="#noteref_288">288.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Old wood-work
+is burned; old iron utensils sold; also houses when pulled
+down. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Emminghaus</span></span>, Allg. Gewerbelehre, 1868, 175.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_289" name="note_289" href="#noteref_289">289.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">If the Mongols, for instance, should
+despoil China of all its moveable property with the exception of its buried money,
+its immovable property would become productive only from the time that that money would
+be used to secure other moveable articles. In any case, the production would be
+proportioned only to the borrowed seed, cattle, etc. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Sismondi</span></span>,
+Richesses commerciale, 1803, I, p. 61.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_290" name="note_290" href="#noteref_290">290.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">That the
+Athenians left everything in the lurch to oppose Xerxes, much
+more readily than under Pericles, even, the flat country of Attica.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Büchsenschütz</span></span> (Besitz und Erwerb im griech. Alterthum, 589)
+explains by the fact that in the interval between the two periods,
+fixed capital increased largely. In rude ages under the appellation of
+a community or nation was understood a number of men; and the state,
+while its members remained, was accounted entire. With polished and mercantile
+states, the case is sometimes reverted. The nation is a territory cultivated and
+improved by its owners; destroy the possession even while the master remains, the
+state is undone. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ferguson</span></span>, Hist. of civil Society, V, 4;
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">v. Mangoldt</span></span>, Volkswirthschaftslehre, 159. Fixed capital is
+not so sure of being completely used up as circulating. On this point see
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Schäffle</span></span>, N. Œk., 53.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_291" name="note_291" href="#noteref_291">291.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">If the aggregate productive
+activity of man be designated by the word labor (just as everything
+produced on a piece of land is inaccurately called its product),
+then all capital may be considered as the unconsumed result of
+labor. The recent socialistic theory that considers capital as the wages
+which have been earned but not paid, is a gross misconception of this truth.
+This is the origin only of the capital of oppressors and deceivers, and of theirs
+only in part. See <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">infra</span></span>, § 189.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_292" name="note_292" href="#noteref_292">292.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-q">“While we are clothed in our winter garments, the
+spring stuffs are already in the shops of retail dealers; the light material of next
+summer's wear is already manufacturing, and the wool for our next winter's clothing
+spun.”</span> Think of the study in advance which the physician must have gone through,
+whom we summon to us at a moment's notice! <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Menger</span></span>, Grundsätze,
+I, § 33. seq.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_293" name="note_293" href="#noteref_293">293.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Thus in dangerous callings, as for instance, among soldiers
+and sailors, there is very little saving. The same may be said of times of plague. See
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">J. Rae</span></span>, New Principles on the Subject of Political Economy,
+1834.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_294" name="note_294" href="#noteref_294">294.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">That we keep our
+property under lock and key, while it was customary in Plato's time to seal it up, is
+in itself a great advance. See <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Becker</span></span>, Charicles, I, 202 seq.
+Earlier yet, artificial knots were used. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Homer</span></span>, Odyss.
+VII, 443.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_295" name="note_295" href="#noteref_295">295.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Compare
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hearne</span></span>, Reise, nach Prinzwalesfort, 43, 58, 119.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Barrow von Sprengel</span></span>, 282. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Humboldt</span></span>,
+Relation historique, II, 245. Ausland, 1844, No. 359; 1845, No. 84.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Stein-Wappüus</span></span>, Handbuch der Geographie, I, 310. For proof that
+the clergy by preaching self denial contributed largely to the creation
+of capital in the earlier part of medieval history, see <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Guórard</span></span>,
+Polyptiques d'Irminon Préf., 13.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_296" name="note_296" href="#noteref_296">296.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">On the inevitableness of slavery, where capital
+is needed, and no one cares to save, see <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">de Metz Noblet</span></span>,
+Phénomènes économiques, I, 306.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_297" name="note_297" href="#noteref_297">297.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">The origination of capital by
+<span class="tei tei-q">“social connexions”</span> (<span lang="de" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="de"><span style="font-style: italic">gesellschaftliche
+Zusammenhänge</span></span>) <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Lassalle</span></span> (Bastiat-Schultze, 92, 98)
+exaggerates into the absurdity that no capital was ever saved. This is in part related
+to his confounding land with capital (103 seq.). On the other hand,
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">P. L.</span></span> (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">v. Lilienfeld</span></span>), Gedanken
+über die Staatswissenschaft der Zukunft (1873), distinguishes between
+the external and internal creation of capital in human society; the latter based
+on the condition of every organic being, by virtue of which the present is
+generated by the past, and generates the future. The intercellular substance
+of plants, the honey-comb of bees, and the blood in the animal body, correspond
+to the capital of a nation.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_298" name="note_298" href="#noteref_298">298.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hermann</span></span>, St. Untersuchungen, 289 ff.; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">List</span></span>,
+System der politischen Œkonomie, I, 325 ff. Thus, for instance, capitalization among a
+race of hunters may be continued longest by the creation of herds; that of a race of
+shepherds by the building of houses, and by land-improvements; that of an
+agricultural people by the establishment of trades, artificial roads, etc. As
+to how, in general the accumulation of goods to any great extent, supposes
+exchange, and as to how, first of all, with exchange through the existence of
+a superabundance wealth may originate, see <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hermann</span></span>, loc. cit.,
+II, Aufl., 25 ff.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_299" name="note_299" href="#noteref_299">299.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">The annual increase
+of the capital of France during the later years of
+Louis Philippe's reign, was estimated at from 200 to 300 million of francs;
+during the best years of Napoleon III's reign, at 600 million. Journal des
+Econ., Nov., 1861, 170. The capital of the British empire, judging from the
+statistics of the income tax, increased from 1843 to 1853, in Great Britain
+alone, at least £42,000,000 yearly; from 1854 to 1860, in the whole empire, at
+least £114,000,000; and in 1863 alone by £130,000,000. London Statis. Journal,
+1864, 118 ff. A war carried on on English soil would doubtless be more
+destructive of capital than one waged in Russia; but Russia would recover
+from one like that of 1854-55 with much greater difficulty because of the
+small tendency of its people to amass capital. In countries in which the
+middle classes preponderate, the influence of the amassing of capital on foreign
+politics is one that favors peace. In despotic or democratic countries, it
+may as readily favor war.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_300" name="note_300" href="#noteref_300">300.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">The <span class="tei tei-q">“absolute formation”</span> of
+capital above described is, of course, the only
+one in the general economy of mankind. In the economy of individuals, we
+frequently meet with another which is only <span class="tei tei-q">“relative,”</span> as when the increase
+of one's resources is attended by as great or even greater decrease of another's.
+This is the case, for instance, where privileges or monopolies are granted.
+The same phenomenon is found also in the intercourse of economies of different
+nations. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Supra</span></span>, § <a href="#Section_64" class="tei tei-ref">64</a>.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_301" name="note_301" href="#noteref_301">301.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Thus
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Cicero</span></span>, De Off., II, 3, 4. Nature may indeed produce mere value
+in use without the coöperation of labor, in the narrow sense of the word; as, for
+instance, a forest which protects a district from avalanches etc. But <span class="tei tei-q">“everything
+which has been transformed into goods tends constantly to return to its
+natural state, and to withdraw itself from the life of goods.”</span>
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Stein</span></span>, Lehrbuch.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_302" name="note_302" href="#noteref_302">302.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Compare <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">List</span></span>, System
+der Polit. Œkon. But see also the very fine discussion
+of <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">J. S. Mill</span></span>, Principles, IV, ch. VI, 2, on the dreariness of
+nature, when taken exclusive possession of by man; <span class="tei tei-q">“with every rood of land
+brought into cultivation which is capable of growing food for human beings;
+every flowery waste or natural pasture plowed up; all quadrupeds or birds
+which are not domesticated for man's use, exterminated as his rivals for food;
+every hedgerow or superfluous tree rooted out, and scarcely a place left where
+a wild shrub or flower could grow, without being eradicated as a weed, in the
+name of improved agriculture.”</span></dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_303" name="note_303" href="#noteref_303">303.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">In Paris, in 1820, the necessary
+tools of a rag-gatherer cost 6-¼ francs.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Garnier</span></span>, Elements d'Econ.-polit., 43.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_304" name="note_304" href="#noteref_304">304.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">It is not to be overlooked that all labor expended for a
+distant end also falls under the head of capital. See <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Droz</span></span>,
+Economie politique, 1829, I, 6.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_305" name="note_305" href="#noteref_305">305.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">For a good exposition as
+to how England has need of more agricultural products,
+the East Indies of more capital, and the West Indies of more labor,
+see <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Fawcett</span></span>, Manual of P. E., 110.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_306" name="note_306" href="#noteref_306">306.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">It is a very significant fact, that, at present, in certain
+European countries, in Germany for instance, the laborer is called a
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">taker</span></span>, and the capitalist a <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">giver</span></span> of work.
+The expressions employed by <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Canard</span></span>, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Say</span></span>
+and <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hermann</span></span>, teach a similar lesson.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_307" name="note_307" href="#noteref_307">307.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Schäffle</span></span>, Kapitalismus und Socialismus, 124 seq.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_308" name="note_308" href="#noteref_308">308.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">It is evident, that, absolutely considered,
+the predominating factor of an
+earlier period may continue to increase during the following: and, as a rule,
+it does continue to increase.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_309" name="note_309" href="#noteref_309">309.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">I need cite only the instance of the
+slaves, who called out the hours, thus performing the functions of a clock:
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Martial</span></span>, VIII. 67; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Juvenal</span></span>, X. 216;
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Petron.</span></span> 26; of the turning of water wheels, in Egypt and
+Babylon, by human hands. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Strabo</span></span>, XVI. 738, XVII., 807.
+Among the ancients, it required one shepherd, and shepherd boys besides, to take
+care of twenty sheep. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Geopon.</span></span> XVIII, 1.) In highly cultivated
+regions, the number ran up to fifty. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Demosth.</span></span>, adv. Euerg.
+et Mnes., 1155.) It seldom passed eighty (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Varro</span></span>, De re rust.,
+II. 10, 10. 2, 20), or one hundred (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Cato</span></span>, R.R. c. 10);
+while, recently, five men are sufficient to take care of eighteen hundred sheep.
+See <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Roscher's</span></span> discourse on the relation of Political Economy
+to classical antiquity, in the reports of the Royal Saxon Science Association, May, 1849.
+Also <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">D. Hume</span></span>, Discourses, No. 10.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_310" name="note_310" href="#noteref_310">310.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">The
+productive power of each of the factors of production has been over-estimated
+by some schools. After <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Gratian</span></span> (c. i, C. XIII. qu. i), had clearly
+recognized the necessary coöperation of the three elements, there was in the
+one-sidedness with which the Reformers emphasized God's blessing as the
+only source of wealth, a great over-estimation of the factor nature. The
+Mercantile System over-estimated the factor capital, in one of its most obvious
+component parts, money. In later times again: <span class="tei tei-q">“<span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">La terre est la source ou la matière d'où l'on tire la
+ichesse; le travail de l'homme est la forme qui la produit. Tous les hommes d'un
+état subsistent et s'enrichissent aux dépens des propriétaires des terres.</span></span>”</span>
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Cantillon</span></span>, Sur la Nature du Commerce, 1755, I. 33,
+55.) <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">La terre est l'unique source des richesses.</span></span>
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Quesnay</span></span>, Maximes générales de Gouvernement, 1758, ch. 3.)
+In another place, indeed, the same writer says: <span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">les revenus sont le produit des terres et des hommes
+(Grains</span></span>, p. 276, Daire), and <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Mirabeau</span></span> frequently laid
+stress on the necessary coöperation of labor and capital. (Landwirthschaftsphilosophie,
+translation by <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Wichmann,</span></span> I, 5.) <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Turgot</span></span>,
+Sur la Formation et Distribution des Richesses, § 7. For an excellent refutation of
+this <span class="tei tei-q">“Physiocratic”</span> one-sidedness, which, if all men are endowed by nature with
+equal rights, leads to socialism, see <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Canard</span></span>, Principes, 6.
+According to <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Gioja</span></span>, N. Prospetto, I. 35, the part played by labor,
+in the production of <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Parmesan</span></span> cheese, is a thousand times as
+great as that played by the soil; and in the production of a Dutch tulip, a hundred
+thousand times as great. The English are wont, similarly, to over-estimate
+the relative power of labor. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ponocratie</span></span>, after
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ancillon</span></span>, Essais philosophiques, 1817, II. 327.) <span class="tei tei-q">“Commerce
+and trade first spring from the labour of men.”</span> (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">North</span></span>,
+Discourses upon Trade, 112.) Thus, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Locke</span></span> (1690), Of Civil
+Government, II, 5, 40 ff., is of opinion, that, at least 9/10 of the value of the
+products of the soil, useful to man, are to be ascribed to labor, and, in the
+case of most, even 99/100. And so, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Berkeley</span></span> (1735), Querist,
+No. 38 seq. This view is advocated in its boldest form,—a thing unusual in the
+case of the independent disciples of a great master—by
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">McCulloch</span></span>, Principles, II, ch. i, that it is to labor, and to
+labor alone, that man owes everything that possesses any value in exchange. Similarly,
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">J. Mill</span></span>, Elements (1824), III, 2. The
+consequences which socialism might draw from these premises are self-evident.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Karl Marx's</span></span> whole system, for instance, rests, without any
+attempt at demonstration, on the assumption that the Ricardo school is right. Much
+more moderate views are met with earlier. Thus, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hobbes</span></span>, De Cive,
+XIII, 14, and <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Leviath</span></span>., 24 (1642 and 1651), calls
+<span lang="la" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="la"><span style="font-style: italic">labor et parsimonia</span></span> necessary
+sources of wealth; <span lang="la" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="la"><span style="font-style: italic">proventus terræ et
+aquæ</span></span> useful ones; and <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Petty</span></span>, On Taxes (1679), 47,
+says: <span class="tei tei-q">“Labour is the father and active principle of wealth, as lands are the mother.
+Land and labour together are the sources of all wealth; without a competency of lands
+there would be no subsistence, and but a very poor one without labour.”</span>
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Harris</span></span>, Upon Money and Coins, 1757, P.I. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Adam
+Smith</span></span>, also, in spite of the well known passage at the beginning
+of his work, very frequently lays stress on <span class="tei tei-q">“the annual produce of
+land and labour.”</span> (See the passages collected in <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Leser</span></span>,
+Begriff des Reichthums bei A.S., 97.) According to <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Leibniz, regionis
+potentia consistit in terra, rebus, hominibus</span></span>. (ed. Dutens, IV. 2, 531.)
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ricardo's</span></span> school is wont to bring capital under the head of
+labor, as saved-up labor. This is about as correct as to say, that all that a grown man
+does, his parents had done. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Umpfenbach</span></span>, Nat. Œk., 64.) There
+is only one way in which labor, and even then the expression is not exactly correct, can
+be looked upon as the only factor in production; and that is to presuppose the forces of
+nature as matters of course (<span lang="de" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="de"><span style="font-style: italic">als sich von
+selbst verstehend</span></span>), and to call the aggregate use made of them by the human
+mind, labor. Or we might say with old <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Epicharmos</span></span>, that the gods
+sell all goods for labor. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Xenoph</span></span>., Memor. II. 1.)
+Moreover, even in purely intellectual productions, in poetical productions for
+instance, nature, labor and experience, the culture inherited from former
+ages (a kind of intellectual capital) uniformly coöperate. But how almost
+completely valueless in literature are all entirely pure (empty!) productions
+of the fancy!</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_311" name="note_311" href="#noteref_311">311.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Before
+the predominance of the Mercantile System, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Montchrétien</span></span> very
+cleverly called all trades: <span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">parcelles et
+fragments de cette sagesse divine que Dieu nous communique par le moyen de la
+raisen</span></span>. By means of the three estates; <span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">labourers, artisans, merchands, tout état est nourri; par eux
+tout profit se fait. L'utilité règle les rangs des arts</span></span>. (Traité, 12, 45,
+66.) The teaching of <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">P. Gregorius Tolosanos</span></span> (ob. 1597) on the
+different classes of society and the different callings of men, is still more in keeping
+with the present doctrine of production; only, in the moralizing tone of the time, he
+speaks rather of their dignity than of their influence in creating wealth: De Rep. I,
+195. See, also, the earlier views of <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Franc. Patricius</span></span> (ob.
+1494), De Rep. I, 4, 7, 8.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_312" name="note_312" href="#noteref_312">312.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Compare <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">A. Serra</span></span>, Breve Trattato
+delle Cause che possono far abbondare i Regni d'Oro d'Argento, 1613.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Th. Mun</span></span>, England's Treasure by foreign Trade, 1664.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ch. King</span></span>, British Merchant or Commerce Preserved, 1721.
+But, particularly, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">A.C. Leib</span></span>, Von Verbesserung Land und Leuten
+etc. (1708), who, from the point of view of the Mercantile System, draws a very clear
+distinction between the productive and unproductive classes. See, also,
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">infra</span></span>, § <a href="#Section_116" class="tei tei-ref">116</a>. First thoroughly
+refuted by <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">W. Petty</span></span>, Political Anatomy of Ireland, 67, 82.
+Quantulumcunque concerning Money (1682). <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">D. North</span></span>,
+Discourses upon trade (1691). See <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Roscher's</span></span> Geschichte der
+englischen Volkswirthschaftslehre, 77, 88, 138. And later, especially,
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ad. Smith</span></span>, W. of N. IV., ch. 1 ff. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Adam
+Smith's</span></span> doctrine of productive and unproductive labor is to be found already, in
+this period, in <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Petty</span></span>, Several Essays, 127 ff. Political Anatomy,
+185 ff; also, in the anonymous work, A Discourse of Trade, Coyn and Paper Credit,
+London (1697), 44, 159.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_313" name="note_313" href="#noteref_313">313.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Quesnay</span></span>, Dialogue sur les Travaux des Artisans, 210 ff.; 289 éd. Daire;
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Turgot</span></span>, Sur la Formation etc., § 8; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Dupont</span></span>,
+Correspondence avec J.B. Say, 400, éd. Daire. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">B. Franklin</span></span>, Letter
+to Dr. Evans (1768), and Positions Concerning National Wealth (1769), Works ed. Sparks,
+VII and II. Similarly even <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Aristotle</span></span>, Oec., I, 2, says, that
+commerce, wage-labor and war win from men, with or without their will; but that only
+agriculture obtains booty from nature. And so <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Cicero</span></span> says of
+merchants: <span lang="la" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="la"><span style="font-style: italic">nihil proficiunt, nisi admodum
+mentiantur</span></span>. De Off., I, 42. The same view seems to have prevailed during
+the middle ages. See <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Thom. Aquin.</span></span>, De Rebus publicis, II, 3, 5
+seq. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Luther</span></span> entertained a like notion (Vom Kaufhandel und Wucher,
+1524). He prefers agriculture to the trades. See the Irmischer edition of his works,
+XXII, 284; XXXVI, 172; LXI, 352. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Calvin</span></span> considered commerce both
+useful and honorable; so that <span lang="la" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="la"><span style="font-style: italic">ex ipsius
+mercatoris diligentia atque industria</span></span>, its profit may be greater than that of
+agriculture. (Opp. ed. Amstelod, 1664, IX, 223.) <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Asgill</span></span>, Several
+Assertions proved in order to create another Species of Money than Gold (1691): <span class="tei tei-q">“what
+we call commodities is nothing but land severed from the soil; man deals in nothing but
+earth.”</span> Concerning <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Cantillon</span></span>, compare § 47, note 4. How
+violent an innovation the Physiocratic theory was in its time may be inferred from what
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Zincke</span></span> writes in the Leipzig Sammlungen, X, 551 ff. (1753), p.
+20, XIII, 861.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_314" name="note_314" href="#noteref_314">314.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Quesnay</span></span>, l. c., 189, does not ignore that many workmen earn more than
+the cost of their necessary subsistence; but he claimed that this was a result
+of a natural or legal monopoly of the same. The dearer labor was, the more
+productive it seemed. Per contra, see <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Dohm</span></span> on the
+Physiocratic system, in the Deutsch. Museum, 1778, II, 313 ff.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_315" name="note_315" href="#noteref_315">315.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Gournay</span></span> (compare <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Turgot</span></span>, Eloge de G., in
+Guillaumin's edition, I, 266, 271 ff.), as well as <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Raynal</span></span>,
+Histoire des Indes, vol. X, Livre 19, spite of the
+similarity of their and Quesnay's views, acknowledged on this account, the
+productiveness of industry. For some remarkable examples illustrative of
+how it may increase the value in exchange of raw material, see the anonymous
+work, Paying Old Debts without New Taxes, London, 1723. See also
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Algarotti</span></span> (ob. 1794), 318, in <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Custodi</span></span>,
+Economisti classici italiani, Parte moderna,
+I. Thus a cwt. of coarse cast iron is converted, in a Berlin manufactory,
+into 88,440 shirt buttons worth 6-⅔ silver groschens each. Hence the value is
+raised from 1-2 thalers to 19,653 thalers. The increase of the value in use
+by industrial labor is self-evident.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_316" name="note_316" href="#noteref_316">316.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Quesnay</span></span>,
+Dialogue sur le Commerce.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_317" name="note_317" href="#noteref_317">317.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Recognized
+very early by <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ad. Contzen</span></span>, Politicorum, Lib. VIII, C. 10
+(1629).</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_318" name="note_318" href="#noteref_318">318.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">This did not escape the notice of Frederick II. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Von
+Raumer</span></span>, Hohenstaufen, III, 535.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_319" name="note_319" href="#noteref_319">319.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Condillac</span></span> acknowledges the productive power both of industry and of
+commerce; and that the service rendered by the state is at least economically
+indispensable. (Le Commerce et le Gouvernment, 1776, I, 6, 7, 10.) <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Beccaria</span></span>, Economia pubblica (1769 ff.), IV, 4, 24.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Boisguillebert</span></span> (ob. 1714), Sur la Nature
+des Richesses, illustrated the utility of commerce by the picture of a number
+of men bound to pillars, one hundred steps apart, one with a superabundance
+of food but naked, a second with a superabundance of fuel, a third with a
+superabundance of clothing etc.; all of whom perish, because unable to exchange
+their respective surpluses with one another. According to <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Lotz</span></span>,
+Revision, I, 217, <span class="tei tei-q">“buying dear,”</span> apart from real fraud, means only a decrease of
+possible gain.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_320" name="note_320" href="#noteref_320">320.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Verri</span></span>, Meditazioni, XXIV, instead of calling the merchant productive,
+calls him a mediator between producers and consumers. It would be just
+as reasonable to call the shoemaker a mediator between the production and
+consumption of leather; or the cloth merchant, who cuts the material from
+the piece, an assistant preparatory to the tailor. The labor of commerce is
+especially like that of the fisherman or the turf digger, because they produce
+only in so far as they transfer goods from inaccessible to accessible places.
+See, however, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Rau</span></span>, Lehrbuch, I, § 103. See the demonstration of
+the productive power of commerce in general, as well as of what is, by way of preference,
+called industry, in <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ad. Smith</span></span>, W. of N., IV, ch. 9. A much more
+fundamental refutation of the Physiocratic Principle is to be found in
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Jacob</span></span>, N. Œk., 204 ff.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_321" name="note_321" href="#noteref_321">321.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">In
+1843, about 55,000 tons of ice were shipped from Boston. Less than
+25 cents per ton was paid for the ice in the first instance. When packed on
+board ship, it was worth $2.55 per ton. The ultimate sale brought $3,575,000.
+Ausland, 1844, No. 278. The ancients were acquainted with a similar
+production of ice, the value in exchange of which might be almost entirely
+reduced to the labor of commerce. See <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Xenoph.</span></span>, Memor., II,
+I, 30; Athen. III 97: Proverbs of Solomon, 25, 13.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_322" name="note_322" href="#noteref_322">322.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">W. of N., ch. 3. See, however,
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Garnier's</span></span> French translation of Ad. Smith, Préf. p. IX and
+V, note 20. Similarly, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Malthus</span></span>, Principles, ch. 1,
+Lect. 21. Definitions, ch. 7, 10.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_323" name="note_323" href="#noteref_323">323.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Bacon</span></span>
+had already said of the nobility, clergy and literateurs: <span lang="la" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="la"><span style="font-style: italic">sorti reipublicæ nihil addunt</span></span> (Serm., 15, 29); in
+opposition to which, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hobbes</span></span> justly remarks, that even human labor
+may, like other things, be exchanged against goods of all sorts. (Leviathan, 24.) In
+the work, Discourse of Trade, Coyn and Credit, p. 44 ff., and p. 156, the absolute
+necessity of <span class="tei tei-q">“head-work”</span> as well as bodily labor, is conceded; but it is insisted
+that physicians, clergymen and jurists can never enrich a country, and that a
+relatively large number of them would even conduce to national poverty. (See
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Roscher</span></span>, Geschichte der englischen Volkswirthschaftslehre, 138.)
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">David Hume</span></span> considers merchants as productive, but says that a
+doctor or lawyer can grow rich only at the expense of some one else. (Discourses, No.
+4, On Interest.) <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ferguson</span></span> very cleverly compares such a valuation
+of national wealth to that of a miser. Hist. of Civil Society, VI, I.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_324" name="note_324" href="#noteref_324">324.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Similarly
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Lauderdale</span></span>, Inquiry, 355; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Lotz</span></span>, Handbuch
+der Staätswirthschaft, I, § 39, and <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Rau</span></span>, Lehrbuch I, § 195,
+concede only indirect productiveness to commerce. It may be shown, in a great many
+instances, that such productiveness exists side by side with direct productiveness, on
+account of the thousand ways in which all economic threads are interwoven with one
+another. Thus <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Paley</span></span> remarks in his work on the Principles of
+Morals and Politics, that a tobacco manufacturer even may contribute indirectly to the
+cultivation of grain; an actor, to industry etc.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_325" name="note_325" href="#noteref_325">325.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Thus <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Sismondi</span></span>, Nouveaux Principes,
+II, ch. 1, and, earlier, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Mengotti</span></span> Colbertismo,
+317. (Cust.) See, on the other hand, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hermann</span></span>, Staatsw.
+Untersuchungen, 34 ff. Even <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">J.B. Say</span></span> does no manner of justice,
+in this respect, to personal services. He speaks <span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">of produits qui ne s'attachent à rien qui s'évanouissent
+à mésure qu'ils naissent, qu'il est impossible d'accumuler, qui n'ajoutent
+rein à la richesse nationale</span></span>. Compare Catéchisme (3d ed.) 52 ff., 174 ff.
+On the other hand <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Dunoyer</span></span>, Libertê du Travail, L.V., remarks that
+here labor and its result are made to change places; the former like all labor
+is very perishable, the latter as lasting as in the case of other kinds of labor.
+In the one case the utility is fixed in things, in the other in persons.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ad. Müller</span></span>, Elemente der Staatskunst passim, calls special
+attention to how the kinds of labor, called unproductive by <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Adam
+Smith</span></span>, preserve the state, and in that way, all individual exchangeable goods.
+Similarly, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Storch</span></span>, Handbuch, I, 347;
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Steinlein</span></span>, Handbuch, I, 460. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Lauderdale</span></span>
+(443), however, is correct when he says, that the continued duration of the product of
+labor depends, usually, more on the caprice of consumers than on the nature of the
+labor.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_326" name="note_326" href="#noteref_326">326.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Garnier</span></span>
+calls attention to the fact, that there is a great quantity of material
+products, such as laces, perfumes etc., that can scarcely be ever used in
+further production, and, generally speaking, one's resources for the most part
+are not kept in lasting goods, but are preserved by the change of technic forms
+in production. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hermann</span></span>, I, Aufl., 115.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_327" name="note_327" href="#noteref_327">327.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">When <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Schön</span></span>, Nat. Œkonomie, 33,
+ridicules the idea of the productiveness of personal
+services, by citing the instance of prostitution carried on as
+a trade, he forgets that many material goods also may conduce to the moral
+damage of the purchaser of them. It is said that there are in France 3,500
+retailers and colporteurs of immoral writings and pictures, who sell yearly
+nine million numbers or pieces, at a cost of six million francs! (Moniteur, 9
+Avril, 1853.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_328" name="note_328" href="#noteref_328">328.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Compare
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Schäffle</span></span>, Theorie der ausschliessenden Absatzverhältnise, 1867,
+135. seq.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_329" name="note_329" href="#noteref_329">329.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Many of the socialists take a
+retrograde step in this respect, in as much as they consider only manual labor
+productive. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Fourier's</span></span> school particularly,
+declaim passionately against the unproductiveness of commerce and
+of most personal services. Compare <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">V. Considérant</span></span>,
+Destinée sociale, 1851, I, 44.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_330" name="note_330" href="#noteref_330">330.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Besides the above, see
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Gioja</span></span>, N. Prospetto, I, 246 ff.; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Scialoja</span></span>,
+42; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">J. B. Say</span></span>, Traité, I, ch. 2; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hufeland</span></span>,
+N. Grundlegung, I, 42, 54; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Gr. Soden</span></span>, Nat. Œkonomie, I, 142 ff.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hermann</span></span>, St. Untersuchungen, 20 ff., distinguishes
+three politico-economical points of view; that of the producer, that of the
+consumer, and that of the whole nation's economy. The producer calls his
+labor productive, in case he receives back his outlay of capital with the rate
+of profit usual in the trade of the country. To this point of view, therefore,
+every service which is paid for, according to wish, seems productive.
+On the other hand, the consumer ascribes productiveness to all those kinds
+of labor the achievements of which he may use, and which he can obtain at
+a convenient price. Whenever, therefore, he pays for a service voluntarily,
+he acknowledges its productiveness. Lastly, from a national-economical
+point of view, all labor is considered productive which increases the quantity
+of goods exposed for sale in the market; and this, personal services do.
+The technic productiveness, which depends on the execution of the technic
+ideas floating before the mind of the workman, must be distinguished from this
+economic productiveness. It is possible that, technically labor may be very
+productive, and yet cause economic loss; for instance, the fine arts and the
+so-called master pieces of the trades! See <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Seneca</span></span>, De Benef.,
+II, 33. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">H.</span></span> (33) furnishes a very good refutation of the
+doctrine that a great deal depends on whether the labor has been paid from capital
+or from income. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Eiselen</span></span>, Volkswirthschaft (1843), 27 ff.,
+remarks, that the laborer, for instance, who grows corn, must besides look
+after his health and the preservation of his house; this is a
+part of his necessary aggregate labor. Why, then, should
+it be called unproductive when such secondary labor is performed by particular
+persons? Otherwise the farmer would have no time whatever for his
+principal business! Edinburgh Review, 1804, IV, 343 ff.;
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Wakefield</span></span>, An Essay upon Political Economy, 1804,
+who is concerned mainly with the theory of the productiveness
+of labor. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">L. Lauderdale</span></span> says, that when the
+nation's wealth is estimated according to its value in use, all useful labor is
+productive; and that when estimated according to its value in exchange, all
+labor that is paid is productive. (Inquiry, ch. 3.) <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Stein</span></span>
+(Lehrbuch, 68; Tüb. Zeitschr., 1868, 230) conditions the notion of productiveness by the
+presence of a superfluity of values. But, it may be asked, does a family,
+which does no more than support itself, labor unproductively? (Compare, however,
+§ <a href="#Section_30" class="tei tei-ref">30</a>.) <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">J. S. Mill</span></span> took a
+surprisingly retrograde step in the doctrine on this point, in his Principles,
+I, ch. 3. Compare his Essays on some unsettled Questions of Political Economy,
+No. 3. A still more surprising exaggeration in <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">de Augustinis</span></span>
+Instituzzioni di Economia sociale (Napoli 1837), who goes so far as to call a
+person guilty of arson a productive person because he has produced for himself
+<span class="tei tei-q">“the pleasure of destruction”</span>! More recently, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">von Mangoldt</span></span>
+distinguishes between economic labor and the labor
+of culture: the latter is incorporated into the man himself, the former one
+employed on the external world, in order to transform it in a way corresponding
+to human wants. Viewed from the stand-point of Political Economy,
+the latter only is productive. (Volkswirthschaftslehre, 1865, 26 ff.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_331" name="note_331" href="#noteref_331">331.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">We
+might, indeed, compare original production, that which preceded all
+other, to eating; the trades, to digestion; commerce, to the movements of the
+several members of the body; personal services to inspiration, and yet
+all are equally necessary to the life of the body! Thus,
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Gamilh</span></span> compares agriculture to the root of a tree of which the
+service rendered by the state is the top. The growth of the latter contributes, as well as
+that of the former, to the nutrition of the whole, and is far removed
+from exhausting the tree. Théorie de l' E.P., II, 46 ff. <span class="tei tei-q">“Natural production”</span>
+would, indeed, accomplish very little without the legal protection
+guaranteed by the state, or without the tools furnished by industry
+etc. But it is, besides, in most instances, a distortion of the truth to
+speak of productive and unproductive men or classes of men. These
+expressions are proper only when applied to individual kinds of
+labor. See <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Murhard</span></span>, Ideen über Nat. Œk., 88 ff.
+Persons seriously ill are temporarily unproductive, and children who die early,
+are unproductive for their whole life.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_332" name="note_332" href="#noteref_332">332.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Not,
+however, in the case in which the loser estimates the pleasure of the
+play higher than the loss.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_333" name="note_333" href="#noteref_333">333.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">J. B. Say</span></span>,
+Traité, I. ch. 1.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_334" name="note_334" href="#noteref_334">334.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">v. Cancrin</span></span>, Œkonomie der
+menschlichen Gesellschaften, 1845, 10, speaks, in this case, of privative
+production. Among the Socialists, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Bazard's</span></span> expression
+<span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">l'exploitation de l'homme par
+l'homme</span></span>, has found loud echo; instead of which only <span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">l'exploitation du globe par l'homme</span></span> should
+be allowed to obtain. (Exposition de la Doctrine de St. Simon, 24.) But
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">von Schröder</span></span> had already warned the world of <span class="tei tei-q">“imagined
+food”</span> which led only to idleness. (F. Schatz- und Rentkammer, 191, 363.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_335" name="note_335" href="#noteref_335">335.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Therefore, there should not be too
+many nor too highly salaried offices. See <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Storch</span></span>,
+Nationaleinkommen, 33 ff.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_336" name="note_336" href="#noteref_336">336.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">See <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">v. Mangoldt</span></span>,
+Volkswirthschaftslehre, 29 ff.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_337" name="note_337" href="#noteref_337">337.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><em class="tei tei-emph"><span style="font-style: italic">Remained</span></em>, and not
+<em class="tei tei-emph"><span style="font-style: italic">become</span></em>, poor, as is generally supposed; for the enormous
+wealth of Spain, under Ferdinand and Isabella, as well as during the
+early period of Charles V. is only a <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">fable convenue</span></span>.
+Charles V. said: France has a superabundance of everything, and Spain is
+in want of everything. See also the embassy report of
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Navagero</span></span> (1526), Viaggio fatto in Spagna e
+in Francia (Venet., 1563), and <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ranke</span></span>, Fürsten und
+Volker, I, 393 ff.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_338" name="note_338" href="#noteref_338">338.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">The prize
+was won by <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Arreta de Monteseguro</span></span>. The author of the history
+of Portuguese Asia, translated by <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Stevens</span></span>, is
+of opinion (III, ch. 6), that commerce is not a proper subject for
+serious history to treat.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_339" name="note_339" href="#noteref_339">339.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">There is a very fine description of this
+spirit in <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Clenard</span></span>, Epist. I. ad Latomum
+(1535 ff.) Compare <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Juvellanos</span></span>, in
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Laborde</span></span>, Itinéraire déscriptif, IV, 176.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Townsend</span></span>, Journey through Spain, II, 207, 117.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Buckle</span></span>, History of Civilization, II, ch. I. The
+census of 1788 gave the number of priests and monks, soldiers, mariners,
+nobles, lawyers, tax-gatherers, authors, students and domestics, at 1,221,000,
+in a total of 3,800,000 men; from which number there was a multitude of
+beggars, vagrants etc. to be deducted. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Laborde</span></span>,
+Itinéraire, II, 32 ff. The seventeen universities and the numberless small
+Latin schools, with their gratuitous instruction, and their many scholarships,
+misled a disproportionately large number to engage in study. At the beginning
+of this century, there were at least 200,000 priests, nuns
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Geistliche</span></span>), etc., in a population of from three to
+three and a half millions only. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ebeling</span></span>, Erdbeschreibung
+von Portugal, 66.) <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Senior</span></span> shows that the poverty of
+the Osman is caused by too many state employees, tax-farmers and retail
+merchants. (Journal kept in Turkey and Greece, 1857-58.) Thus, also,
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">J. Tucker</span></span>, Four Tracts, 1774, 18, contrasts men engaged
+in industry with rich idlers, whose increase, possibly by immigration, would make
+the people a nation of <span class="tei tei-q">“gentlemen and ladies, footmen, grooms, laundresses etc.”</span>
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Schmitthener</span></span>, N. Œk., 656, calls a condition such as that
+of Spain, <span class="tei tei-q">“national-economical phthisis.”</span></dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_340" name="note_340" href="#noteref_340">340.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Tucker</span></span>, Progress of the U.S., 137. The following data also will
+serve for a comparison: In Belgium, in 1856, it was estimated that, leaving persons
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">sans profession</span></span> out of consideration, 45.6 per cent. were
+agriculturists, 37.2 industrials, 6.7 in commerce, 2.8 in the liberal professions,
+1.5 <span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">force publique</span></span>, 2.1
+<span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">propriétaires, rentiers,
+pensionnés</span></span>, 3.7 <span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">domesticité</span></span>. In Prussia, in 1871, of the
+entire male population, 28.6 per cent. were engaged in agriculture, forest-culture,
+hunting and fishing: 32.3 per cent. in mining, industry, building, and in
+founderies: 8.56 in trade and commerce; 20.3 in personal services and handiwork
+not belonging to any of the groups above mentioned; 2.3 in the army
+and navy; 3.7 in other callings; 2.7 were renters, pensioners, and persons who
+lived by selling or renting houses, reserving lodgings for themselves therein,
+and persons who gave no account of their calling. (Preuss. statisc. Zeitschr., 1875,
+32. ff.) It is, however, surprising that <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Engel's</span></span> Amtl. Jahrbuch,
+III, 1867, gives only 48 per cent. as belonging to the first category, and 25 to
+the second. In the kingdom of Saxony in 1861, 25.1 per cent. of the population
+were agriculturists and foresters; 56.1 were engaged in industry; 7.7 in trade
+and commerce; 6.8 in art, science, the service of the state and of private persons;
+while 4.1 per cent were without any particular calling, or returned none.
+Bavaria, in 1852, had 67.9 per cent. of its population engaged in agriculture;
+22.7 in the trades and in manufactures; 5.5 per cent., persons living on the
+interest of their money, and by performing the higher class of personal services;
+1.9 in the army; and 2 per cent. of listed poor. In <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hermann</span></span>,
+Beiträge zur Statistik des Königreichs Bayern. In France, according to the official
+reports, there were:
+</p>
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+<span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">Agriculteurs</span></span> 61.46 per cent. in
+1851, 51.49 per cent. in 1866;<br />
+<span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">Industriels et commerçants</span></span> 25.95
+per cent. in 1851, 32.78 per cent. in 1866;<br />
+<span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">Professions libérales</span></span> 9.73 per
+cent. in 1851, 9.48 per cent. in 1866.
+</p>
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+To which it must be added, that, in 1851, there were 2.86 <span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">sans profession ou dont les professions n'ont pu être
+constatées</span></span>; and that, in 1866, on the other hand, there were 2.87 per
+cent. in <span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">professions se rattachant à
+l'agriculture, industrie et commerce. (Legoyt.)</span></span> In England and Wales,
+leaving the domestic class out of consideration (women without an independent means of
+employment, school children, servant girls etc.), and also the <span class="tei tei-q">“indefinite class,”</span>
+there were, in 1861, 25.3 per cent. of the population engaged in agricultural
+pursuits; 60.7 in industrial; 7.8 in commercial; and 6.06 in professional pursuits.
+In Italy, omitting housewives, children and infirm persons, there
+were, in 1862, 57.4 per cent. of the population engaged in agriculture; 22.9
+in industrial pursuits; 4 in commerce; and 3.9 per cent. in the army and in
+the liberal professions. (Annali univ. di Statistica, Febbr., 1866.) On Holland,
+in the middle of the 17th century, see <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">J. de Wit</span></span>, Mémoires,
+34 seq.</p></dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_341" name="note_341" href="#noteref_341">341.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Csaplovics</span></span>, Gemälde von
+Ungarn II, 1. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Torrens</span></span>, The Budget: On commercial
+and colonial Policy, 106 ff.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_342" name="note_342" href="#noteref_342">342.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Precisely
+as there are more people ruined by spirituous liquors than by
+bread. Time thieving is also more frequent among servants. There is
+scarcely anything in agriculture analogous to the lazzaroni who wait all day
+to help a gondola to land, to unload a coach, etc. There is more in the
+chase, in the fisheries, or in the cattle raising.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_343" name="note_343" href="#noteref_343">343.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Compare
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Bastiat</span></span>, Harmonies économiques, ch. 17. Hence
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Sismondi</span></span> accounts it one of the chief merits of the
+constitutional state, that in it, the <span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">population gardienne</span></span> does not regulate its
+own remuneration. (N.P., I, 144.) <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Saint Simon</span></span>, indeed,
+says that the French members of the <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Chambre</span></span>, in his
+time, drew a revenue from the state, three times as large as from their own
+resources, and were, therefore, deeply interested in increasing the budget.
+(Vues sur la Propriété et la Législation, 1818.) I would call attention also to
+the national over-estimation and over-crowding of learned callings from
+which Germany suffered, even as far back as the time of Louis XIV. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">v.
+Schröder</span></span>, Fürstl. Schatz-und Rentkammer, 302 ff.); to the disproportionate
+number of keepers of public houses, which is related to the system of popular
+assemblies, and is a regular attendant upon Democracy (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Bronner</span></span>,
+Der C. Aargau, I, 451.) Taxation-legislation may here become a good means of
+popular education.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_344" name="note_344" href="#noteref_344">344.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">This was recognized very early by <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Gregor.
+Tolsan</span></span>, l.c. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ad. Müller</span></span>, Elemente, II, 255.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Storch</span></span>, Handbuch, II, 229 ff.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Schleiermacher</span></span>, Christ. Sitte, 668.) <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">A.
+Smith,</span></span> W. of N., II, ch. 5, ascribed greater productiveness to agricultural
+than to industrial labor; in the former case, not only human labor
+was put in operation, but the forces of nature were compelled to coöperate
+with them. Similarly, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Malthus</span></span>, Additions (1817) to the
+Essay on the Principle of Population, B. III, ch. 8-12. Principles of P. E., 217 ff.
+Both thus explain the rent of land, and so far as products, which have only value in
+exchange are concerned, they are right. Hence it is all the more surprising
+that <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Carey</span></span>, the zealous advocate of a protective tariff and
+opponent of rent, comes back in this to Adam Smith. Principles of Social Science, 1858,
+II, 35, and passim. Compare also <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">J. B. Say</span></span>, Traité, II, ch. 8;
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Sismondi</span></span>, N. P., II, ch. 5. For the best refutation of this
+view, see <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ricardo</span></span>, Principles, ch. 2, 3. Does not all labor put
+the force of nature in operation? <span lang="la" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="la"><span style="font-style: italic">Ad opera
+nihil aliud potest homo, quam ut corpora naturalia admoveat, reliqua natura intus
+transigit.</span></span> (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Bacon.</span></span>) Similarly,
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Verri</span></span>, Meditazioni, III, 1. An expression escapes even
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ricardo</span></span> himself (ch. 7), to the effect, that capitalists are the
+producing class.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_345" name="note_345" href="#noteref_345">345.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Relying on very superficial statistics of
+England and France, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ganilh</span></span> advocates a theory of the productive
+forces of the several branches of economy the very reverse of <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Adam
+Smith's</span></span>. He places foreign trade first; then follow wholesale trade, industry and
+agriculture. (Théorie, I, 240 seq.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_346" name="note_346" href="#noteref_346">346.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Ausland, 1846, No. 54. Expressions still used in
+Europe, such as <span lang="de" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="de"><span style="font-style: italic">Spindelmagen</span></span>
+(spindle-relation), <span lang="de" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="de"><span style="font-style: italic">Kunkellehen</span></span>
+(apron-string-hold) etc., for instance, suggest this
+most ancient and purely family division of labor. The lower
+classes of the population, even in the most civilized countries, are wont to
+preserve some of the peculiar customs of very primitive times. Hence it is
+that among proletarians, the division of labor between males and females is
+still very small. The employments usual at different stages of life among
+men, and the costumes worn by them are much more uniform than among
+the higher classes. See <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Riehl</span></span>, Die Familie, 1855,
+passim.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_347" name="note_347" href="#noteref_347">347.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">As <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Dankwardt</span></span>
+shows, the <span lang="la" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="la"><span style="font-style: italic">jus civile</span></span> of the
+earliest Roman time is based on the condition of isolated labor, the later
+<span lang="la" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="la"><span style="font-style: italic">jus gentium</span></span>, on the division of
+labor. N. Œk. und Jurisprudenz, 1857, Heft. I.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_348" name="note_348" href="#noteref_348">348.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Saxo Gramm.</span></span>, Hist. Dan.
+V, 101. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Turner</span></span>, Hist. of the A. Saxons B.
+VII, ch. 11. Nibel., 351 ff. There is a French proverb: <span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">du temps que la reine Berthe filait</span></span>. Queen Bertha
+was a mythic daughter of Charlemagne. It may be that the character meant is the
+old German spinning goddess Berchta. Concerning the daughter of Otto the Great, see
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Dithmar</span></span>, Merseb. II. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Homer</span></span>, Od. V,
+31 ff.; X, 106; XXIII, 189 ff. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Herodot.</span></span>, VIII, 137.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Livy</span></span>, I. 57.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_349" name="note_349" href="#noteref_349">349.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Eden</span></span>,
+State of the Poor I, 558 ff. In the interior of Peru, the priest is also usually a
+shop-keeper (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Pöppig</span></span>, Reise, II, 365); in Canada, as in many of
+the villages of the Alps which are not often visited, a hotel keeper. In countries
+with an unadvanced civilization, the little division of labor that exists
+is also very awkwardly regulated. Thus in Russia, weak children are very
+frequently put to work on farms, while powerful men are found in the city
+offering all kinds of eatables and the pictures of saints for sale.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Storch</span></span>, Gemälde des russischen Reichs II, 364.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">v. Haxthausen</span></span>, Studien I, 335.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_350" name="note_350" href="#noteref_350">350.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Babbage</span></span>, Economy of Machinery,
+1833, 201. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">L. Faucher</span></span>, Angleterre II, Ch.
+<span class="tei tei-q">“<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">la Ville des Serruriers</span></span>.”</span> The industrial statistics
+of Paris, furnished by <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">H. Say</span></span> in 1847 and 1848, show that
+in that city alone there are 325 different branches of
+industry, 17 of which are concerned with the production of food;
+21 with building; 32 with the manufacture of furniture; 21 with that of
+clothing; 36 with that of thread and tissues; 7 with skins and leathers; 14
+with vehicles, saddlery, and military equipment; 33 with chemicals and
+pottery; 33 with working in metal, glass etc.; 35 in that of the precious
+metals and jewels; 27 with printing, engraving and paper; 15 with that
+of wooden-ware and wicker-ware; 34 with <span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">articles de Paris</span></span>. Journal des
+Economistes, Janv., 1853, 107. According to the industrial almanac of
+Birmingham, there are in that city manufacturers of buttons in gold, silver,
+metal, mother-of-pearl etc.; manufacturers of hammers, ink-stands, coffin-nails,
+dog-collars, tooth-picks, stirrups, fish-hooks, spurs, pack-needles etc.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_351" name="note_351" href="#noteref_351">351.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">And so with
+the subdivisions. Flannel is manufactured almost exclusively
+in Halifax, woolen blankets between Leeds and Huddersfield etc.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_352" name="note_352" href="#noteref_352">352.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">The same division of labor was
+developed among the Dutch in the 17th century, and excited
+then the wonder of the English. See <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Sir W. Temple,</span></span>
+Observations upon the U. Provinces, 1672, ch. 3. Works, I, 128, 143. In
+1615, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Montchrêtien</span></span> held up the Flemish as a model
+to the French, in this respect.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_353" name="note_353" href="#noteref_353">353.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">On the bees,
+see <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Virgil, Georg.</span></span> IV, 158.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_354" name="note_354" href="#noteref_354">354.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">The
+principle of the division of labor was known to the ancients:
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Xenophon</span></span>, Cyri Discipl., VIII, 2, 5.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Plato</span></span>, de Rep., II, 369, III, 394, IV, 443;
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Isocrat</span></span>., Busir., 8. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Aristot</span></span>.,
+Polit., II, 8, 8. Among the more modern writers, compare <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Thomas
+Aquin</span></span>., De Reg. pr., I, 1, II, 3. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Luther</span></span> (Works by Walch,
+I, 388), in his Commentary on Genesis, 3, 19. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Petty</span></span>,
+Several Essays, 1682, p. 113. Considerations upon the East India Trade, London,
+1701. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Roscher</span></span>, Geschichte der englischen
+Volkswirthschaftslehre, 118. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Mandeville</span></span>, The Fable of the
+Bees, enlarged edition of 1723, p. 411. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Berkeley</span></span>, Querist, 1735,
+No. 415, 430, 520 ff., 586: <span class="tei tei-q">“What is everybody's business is nobody's.”</span>
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Harris</span></span>, on Money and Coins (1757), I, 16.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">J. J. Rousseau</span></span>, Emile (1762), L. III.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Turgot</span></span>, Sur la Formation et la Distribution des Richesses, §
+3, p. 50, 62, 66. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Diderot</span></span>, Encyclopédie de l'Art, s. v. Art.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">J. Tucker</span></span>, Four Tracts (1774), p. 25 ff.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Boccaria</span></span>, Economia pubblica, I, 1, 9. But the author to
+whom we owe most on this score is undoubtedly <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Adam Smith</span></span>. To him we
+are indebted almost entirely for our knowledge of the natural laws developed
+in § <a href="#Section_59" class="tei tei-ref">59</a> seq.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_355" name="note_355" href="#noteref_355">355.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">According to <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Adam Smith</span></span>, a nailer
+can make 2,300 nails (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Rau</span></span> says 3,000 shoemaker's tacks in
+the Odenwalde) per day; a smith who is only occasionally employed in the manufacture,
+from 800 to 1,000; and smiths who never made nails before, from 200 to 300. A
+clever filer makes 200 strokes in a minute; a skilled comb-maker can make in a
+day from 60 to 70 combs of such fineness that there are from 40 to 48 teeth to the
+inch in them; eight Liege brick-makers, working together, produce 4,800 bricks per
+day; children employed in a needle manufactory, in making the eyes of needles, grow so
+skillful at it that they can make a small hole in the finest hair and draw another
+hair through it. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Rau</span></span>, Lehrbuch I, § 115. The old proverb,
+<span class="tei tei-q">“practice makes perfect,”</span> is followed even by thieves in their great division of
+labor. See <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Thiele</span></span>, Die jüdischen Gauner I, 87.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Fregier</span></span>, Des Classes Dangéreuses.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_356" name="note_356" href="#noteref_356">356.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Children,
+with their thinner fingers, can point twice as many needles in
+the same time as a grown person.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_357" name="note_357" href="#noteref_357">357.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">The manufacture of English needles demands, on the part
+of workmen, degrees of skill so different that their pay varies from 6 pence to 20
+shillings per day. If the most skillful workman were to manufacture whole needles
+alone, he would partly be obliged to be satisfied with one-fortieth of what he
+might otherwise receive. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Babbage</span></span>, loc. cit.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_358" name="note_358" href="#noteref_358">358.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">In
+the case of machines and in the chemical branches of industry, the labor
+increases in a much smaller ratio than the material used in production.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_359" name="note_359" href="#noteref_359">359.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">In opposition to monopolies, and to practical constraint
+which has its source in ignorance etc.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_360" name="note_360" href="#noteref_360">360.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Hence
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Torrens</span></span> calls foreign trade the <span class="tei tei-q">“territorial division of
+labour.”</span> (Essay on the Production of Wealth (1821), 155 ff.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_361" name="note_361" href="#noteref_361">361.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">See
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Bastiat</span></span>, Harmonies, ch. 1, for a very beautiful exposition of the
+doctrine that each man receives much more from society than he accomplishes
+on his part, for it.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_362" name="note_362" href="#noteref_362">362.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">The
+working together of a great number of persons is often carried on
+to the detriment of agriculture, for each then waits for all the others to
+work, throws all the blame on them etc. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Columella</span></span>, I, 9.) As
+many a housekeeper must have observed, two seamstresses or ironers accomplish,
+in a day, less than one, in two days. Of course, this rule does not apply in
+the case of work which cannot be performed by one man, under any circumstances,
+or the magnitude of which would easily discourage him, and in
+which mutual aid is easily obtained; as in the raising of heavy loads, the
+construction of roads, dikes etc.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_363" name="note_363" href="#noteref_363">363.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ad. Smith</span></span>,
+B., II, Introd. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hufeland</span></span>, Neue Grundlegung, I, 215. In many
+instances, a division of labor, of course, favors the saving of capital. If every
+workman needed all the tools necessary to the work in which he participates,
+three-fourths of them would have to lie idle at present. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">J. Rae</span></span>,
+New Principles on the Subject of Political Economy, 164.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_364" name="note_364" href="#noteref_364">364.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">This
+necessity is observable, although in a peculiar form, even where
+what has been called the <span class="tei tei-q">“despotic organization of labor”</span> prevails, instead
+of freedom.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_365" name="note_365" href="#noteref_365">365.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">In the highlands of Scotland, in Adam Smith's
+time, there were no smiths who manufactured nails only; for the reason that no smith
+had a market for more than 1,000 nails a year, that is not for so many as might be
+manufactured in a single day.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_366" name="note_366" href="#noteref_366">366.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">It is of course very different when
+there is question of a foreign market, even if it be only indirectly. Thus, for
+instance, there are in the Hartz mountains, persons who are simply post-makers,
+trough-makers, chess-wood-makers, block-hewers, shingle-makers etc.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_367" name="note_367" href="#noteref_367">367.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Too much should
+not be inferred from the existence among the Egyptians of physicians, specialists
+for the several members of the body. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Herodot.</span></span>, II,
+84. Something analogous is to be found even among barbarous nations; but
+it is accounted for entirely by the superstition of the people. See
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Klemm</span></span>, Kulturgeschichte, I, 266.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_368" name="note_368" href="#noteref_368">368.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">In the whole of Hesse, there were under
+Philip the Magnanimous, only two apothecaries, one at Cassel and one at Marburg.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Rommel</span></span>, Gesch. v. Hessen, IV, p. 419, note. And there were no
+bakers among the Romans before the time of the war with Perseus. All the bread needed
+by the family was baked by the wife or by female domestics.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Plin.</span></span>, H. N. XVIII, 28. The
+common oven in new towns marks the period of transition. Even yet, in
+the central part of France, there are localities where each family bakes its
+own bread for a whole month in advance; and, in the Alpine departments for
+even a year in advance. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">M. Chevalier</span></span>, Cours II, 366.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_369" name="note_369" href="#noteref_369">369.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">It is obvious from the foregoing that, in decaying
+nations, in which the market contracts and capital decreases, the division of labor
+also must grow less.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_370" name="note_370" href="#noteref_370">370.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">According to <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Arago</span></span>,
+a horse uses the same amount of force to draw 20
+cwt. along an ordinary road that he does to draw 200 over a railroad track,
+or 1,200 on a canal. He could carry scarcely 2 or 3 on his back! Moniteur,
+1838, No. 116. It is, however, certain that the introduction of our railroads
+has somewhat detracted from the advantages of coasts.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_371" name="note_371" href="#noteref_371">371.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Compare
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Humboldt</span></span>, Essai politique sur l'Ile de Cuba, II, 205.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_372" name="note_372" href="#noteref_372">372.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Strabo</span></span>, II, 121 ff.
+In Europe, there is one mile of coast to every 31 square
+miles in the interior; in North America, to 56; in South America, 91; in
+Asia, 100; in Africa, 142. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Humboldt.</span></span>)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_373" name="note_373" href="#noteref_373">373.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">If the
+original connection of the Caspian sea and the sea of Aral with
+the Frozen Ocean were still in existence, it is probable that an Asiatic Scandinavia
+would have been formed in consequence.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_374" name="note_374" href="#noteref_374">374.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">What is true of the sea in this respect
+may be claimed, also, though in a less degree, for the streams that carry the
+civilizing fruits of the coasts far into the interior. Nearly all large cities not
+situated on the harbors of coasts derive their importance from rivers; especially when
+they have been built on spots adapted by nature to the transhipment of merchandise. That
+Venice finally eclipsed Genoa is to be ascribed, in greatest part, to its control
+of an important stream, the Po. The economic importance of Holland, of
+Hamburg and Bremen will, in the long run, bear the same relation to one
+another as the geographical importance of the valleys of the Rhine, Elbe
+and Weser. As nothing is more disastrous to a nation than the loss of its
+coast (we need only cite the efforts of the Lybian kings and, later, of Philip
+of Macedon to conquer the Greek colonies on their coasts; and in more recent
+times, of Russia before Peter the Great, or of the Zollverein without
+the shores of the German sea), so, also, the economic and political influence
+of a stream increases as one approaches its mouth. Hence the justification
+of the great interest taken by Germany and Austria in the question
+of the Danubian principalities. The United States recognized this fact when
+they purchased Louisiana for 80,000,000 francs. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Bignon</span></span>, Hist. de
+France III, 111 seq. Readers of history are familiar with the important part played
+by the three Asiatic Mesopotamias: that between the Euphrates and the
+Tigris; that between the Ganges and the Brahmapootra; that between the
+Hoang-Ho and the Yang-tse-Kiang, to which finally the Punjab might be
+added. This relation is recognized by popular consciousness, in the case of
+the Ganges, by the belief in the sacredness of the stream. No river has had
+so much influence on civilization as the Nile: its periodical risings have
+made the labor of agriculture extraordinarily easy; their extent and regularity
+favored the progress of astronomy; the flooding over of the land led to
+geodesy; the hydraulic labors necessitated by the rising of the waters produced
+a school of architecture to which the river furnished an excellent means of
+transportation for the enormous masses to be moved. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">K. Ritter</span></span>,
+Erdkunde, I, p. 880 seq; VI, p. 1,168 seq. In this matter, also, America and
+Europe have the advantage over Asia and Africa. While the Danube is,
+in places, scarcely three German miles from the Rhine—which, however,
+flows in an almost opposite direction—in Asia, the eastern streams are separated
+from the western, and the northern from the southern, by a strip of
+land difficult to be traveled, and about 300 German miles in extent. Besides,
+the principal streams of northern Asia have their exit into the Frozen Ocean,
+a fact which diminishes their importance greatly. The source of the Missouri
+is only about one mile distant from the Columbia river, although the
+two flow towards opposite seas.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_375" name="note_375" href="#noteref_375">375.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">The
+law governing the march of civilization from the mountain to the plain and to
+coast lands was observed even by <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Strabo</span></span>, XIII, 592, and partly
+by <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Plato</span></span>, De Leg., 677 ff.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_376" name="note_376" href="#noteref_376">376.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Thus, for instance,
+that all the customers of a shoemaker together form a shoe-association etc.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Dunoyer</span></span>, Liberté du Travail, L. IV, ch. 10.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_377" name="note_377" href="#noteref_377">377.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Storch</span></span>, Handbuch, III, 188 ff.
+The Dutch traveler, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Usselinx</span></span>, speaks in a similar way of the
+imitativeness and many-sidedness of the Swedes (Argonautica Gustavica, 20). Chilian
+servants (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">peones</span></span>) are a good combination of the cook, the
+muleteer, builder, courier etc. Once they have passed over a road, they never forget
+it. A knife stands them in stead of most tools, and pieces of leather in stead of
+nails. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Pöppig</span></span>, Reise, I, 171 ff.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_378" name="note_378" href="#noteref_378">378.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">von Haxthausen</span></span>, Studien, I, 63, 113.
+In 1827, a Russian hatter got 12 rubles for a hat, a German one 35
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Schön</span></span>, N. Œkonomie, 78).</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_379" name="note_379" href="#noteref_379">379.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">See the report of a large manufacturer in
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Kohl</span></span>, England und Wales, p. 332 seq.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_380" name="note_380" href="#noteref_380">380.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Raynal</span></span>,
+Histoire des Indes (1780), L. XV. And so <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Rousseau</span></span>, Discours
+sur l'Inegalité (1754), who also declaims against all kinds of capital; were
+there no ladders, men would climb better; and throw a stone better if they
+had no slings. There is certainly a misunderstood truth in this saying. It
+is assuredly very salutary, in the actual state of society, in which every one's
+business is transacted for him by some one else, that a time should occasionally
+come when no one can take our place, and a man can only call upon
+himself. And herein lies the immense value which just war, when not much
+prolonged, but which is brought to a happy termination, sometimes has upon
+the life of a people.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_381" name="note_381" href="#noteref_381">381.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">The American savages
+are, on an average, weaker than the whites. In a fist-fight the Kentuckians and
+Virginians showed themselves far superior to the Indians. See
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Lawrence</span></span>, Lectures, 403, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">supra</span></span>, §
+<a href="#Section_40" class="tei tei-ref">40</a>.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_382" name="note_382" href="#noteref_382">382.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">For a very
+unprejudiced estimate of the dark and bright sides of the division <em class="tei tei-emph"><span style="font-style: italic">of
+labor</span></em>, even before Adam Smith's time, see <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ferguson</span></span>,
+History of of Civil Society (1767), IV, I, V, 3 ff. Also <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Garve</span></span>,
+Versuche, III, 41. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Adam Smith</span></span> was not blind to the dark side of
+the division <em class="tei tei-emph"><span style="font-style: italic">of</span></em> labor, which, in part, he would remove by popular
+instruction at the expense of the state, and by a species of compulsory education. W.
+of N., V, ch. 1, 3, art. 2. One of the chief peculiarities of <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">J.
+Möser's</span></span> Political Economy is his great opposition to all highly developed
+division of labor. Patr. Ph., I, 2, 21, III, 32, 34.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_383" name="note_383" href="#noteref_383">383.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">von
+Ledebur</span></span>, Reise in Altai, I, 384. The working together of wife and
+child, introduced recently by manufacturers, cannot be considered as a higher
+grade of the division of labor, but only as a very unfavorable change in the
+kind of it; inasmuch as it were better to employ the women in their domestic
+avocations and to leave children to their studies and their sports. Among
+the higher classes, it should be made the part of female education, to counterbalance,
+in the family, the effects of the ever increasing division of labor
+among the male portion, by the development of that which is universally
+human—art, sociability, house-keeping etc.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_384" name="note_384" href="#noteref_384">384.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Schleiermacher</span></span>,
+Christliche Sitte, 465 ff., 676 ff., 154 ff. From a similar
+feeling, although much exaggerated, the Greeks of the classic age proper
+considered all callings followed for gain dishonorable, not excepting even
+those of the physician and of the teacher. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Plato</span></span>, de Rep.,
+I, 347 ff. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Aristot.</span></span>,
+Rhet., I, 9, 27: μηδεμίαν ἐργάζεσθαι βὰναυσον τέχνην, ἐλευθέρον
+γάρ τὸ μὴ πρὸς ἄλλον ζην.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_385" name="note_385" href="#noteref_385">385.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">As, for instance, the superintendent of a
+manufactory must have a better general training, but can get along with less of a
+special, than his workmen.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_386" name="note_386" href="#noteref_386">386.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Thucydides</span></span>
+says of the contemporaries of Pericles: <span class="tei tei-q">“The same men
+devote themselves, among us, in part to domestic and political business;
+in part, others who busy themselves with agriculture and industry have
+no mean knowledge of the affairs of state. We call those who take no part
+in the former not people loving their ease, but useless men.”</span> (II, 40.)
+During the succeeding period, Athens was destroyed mainly by the ever
+increasing division of labor between citizens and soldiers. For, <span class="tei tei-q">“to separate
+the arts which form the citizen and the statesman, the arts of policy and
+war, is an attempt to dismember the human character, and to destroy those
+very arts we mean to improve.”</span> (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ferguson.</span></span>) We know from
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Valerius Maximus</span></span>, that the Roman soldiers from the time of Marius
+had, doubtless, a better technic training than their ancestors who who defeated Hannibal;
+but was it in a military or political sense that they were thus better trained?
+The beautiful definition of Cato intimates something of the same nature;
+the good orator was <span lang="la" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="la"><span style="font-style: italic">vir bonus dicendi
+peritus</span></span>. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Quintilian</span></span>, XII, I.) And so
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Garve</span></span>, Versuche, IV, 51 ff., expects from the political elevation
+of citizenship, of those possessed of the right of citizens, not only usefulness in a
+particular direction but the development of the whole man, a thing hitherto expected
+only of the nobility.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_387" name="note_387" href="#noteref_387">387.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">As one's
+peculiar calling does not take up all his life, we must draw a
+clear distinction between the one-sidedness of labor and the one-sidedness of life,
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">von Mangoldt</span></span>, Volkswirthschaftslehre, 227.) Only the last is to
+be avoided at all hazards; and we find it in the middle ages, with its limited divisions
+of labor, perhaps more frequently than where civilization has attained
+a higher stage. During the middle ages, it was not unusual to make
+feelings which every one should cultivate at times, if only temporarily, the
+lasting calling of some. Thus one prayed his whole life long, or was engaged
+in contemplation, and relieved others of the necessity of performing
+these duties. The consequence was, that the latter sank as deeply in worldliness
+and want of the interior spirit as the former were plunged in idleness
+and hypocrisy. But, on the other hand, when, in our day, the printer relieves
+the writer of a portion of the labor which might be his, the personal
+development of neither suffers.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_388" name="note_388" href="#noteref_388">388.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span lang="it" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="it"><span style="font-style: italic">L'uomo è un' tal potenza, che unita all' altra non fa un
+eguale alla somma, ma al quadrato della somma.</span></span>
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Genovesi.</span></span>) As to how the action of every individual
+man is a species of division and union of different kinds of labor, see
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Stein</span></span>, Lehrbuch, 24.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_389" name="note_389" href="#noteref_389">389.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Compare <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ad. Müller</span></span>, Elemente
+der Staatskunst, III, 1809. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Fr. List</span></span>, System der polit.
+Œkonomie, 222 ff., 409 ff. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Wakefield</span></span>, in his edition of Adam
+Smith, distinguishes two degrees of coöperation, simple and complex. In
+the case of simple labor, the same sort of work is performed at the same
+time and place by several individuals, as, for instance, by a lot of hod-carriers
+in building. In the other case, there are different kinds of work performed
+at different times and places, but all intended for the one greater end. Agriculture
+affords room for the first especially, and it is known also to a great
+number of animal species.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_390" name="note_390" href="#noteref_390">390.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Flemish weavers
+in England, French refugees in Protestant countries;
+German miners in Spain, Scandinavia, Hungary and America.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_391" name="note_391" href="#noteref_391">391.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">This,
+so very largely developed in Egypt and India, where the principle
+of caste obtains, is very little developed in the despotisms of Asia. The great
+princes, in the latter countries, build largely from vanity only. Hence their
+successors seldom complete their works, and scarcely repair them. Nowhere
+else are there so many half completed and yet decaying buildings.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Klemm</span></span>, Kulturgeschichte, VIII, 86. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Riedel</span></span>,
+N. Œkonomie I, 259, very correctly remarks
+that such kinds of coöperation as contribute most to the propagation
+of skill, both in commerce and manual labor, have less real division of labor,
+and vice versa.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_392" name="note_392" href="#noteref_392">392.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Compare
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Leplay</span></span>, La Réforme sociale en France (1864).</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_393" name="note_393" href="#noteref_393">393.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Concerning association in
+general, see <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">M. Chevalier</span></span>, Cours, III, Leçon,
+24, 25. On this subject so much talked of in our day, see, more in detail, concerning
+its application to agriculture, my work, Nationalökonomik des
+Ackerbaues, 4, § 39, 47 ff.; 68, 133 ff.; on its application to industry, especially
+where there is question of the relation of handiwork and manufactures to large
+factories; see <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Roscher</span></span>, Ansichten der Volkswirthschaft, II,
+Aufl., 1861, Abhandlung, IV, V.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_394" name="note_394" href="#noteref_394">394.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Adam
+Smith</span></span> remarked that the laws of the division of labor obtain also in
+intellectual works; and indeed, among all nations in a very low grade of
+civilization, the germs of all art and science are found connected with theology;
+and later, the germs of all poetry and history with the epic. The expression:
+<span lang="la" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="la"><span style="font-style: italic">non defuit homini, sed scientiæ, quod
+nescivit Salmasius</span></span>, is a clear
+proof of the insignificance of the science of the time. Think of the increase
+during the last hundred years of the branches of study in our German universities.
+There are now thirty-four regular professors in the Leipzig
+philosophical faculty, where then there were only nine. But here also the
+principle proves true, that an excessive division of labor, where the broader
+connection and the deeper foundation of all sciences disappear from the consciousness,
+undermines intellectual health and freedom. And the injury here is
+greater and more irreparable than in the domain of mere physical labor. See
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hufeland</span></span>, N. Grundlegung, I, 207 ff. If we have just become
+Alexandrians, we have, however, no Aristotle to hope for. <span lang="la" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="la"><span style="font-style: italic">Jurisprudentia est divinarum atque humanarum rerum notitia,
+justi atque injusti scientia</span></span> (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ulpian</span></span>). It is remarkable
+that nations who possess no real national literature of their own,
+when they once get beyond the bounds of utter barbarism, learn foreign languages
+etc., most easily.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_395" name="note_395" href="#noteref_395">395.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">The socialistic utopia of
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ch. Fourier</span></span> (Théorie des quatre Mouvements,
+1808. Théorie de l'Unité universelle, 1822. Le nouveau Monde industriel
+et sociétaire, 1829) are based upon the following fundamental ideas. A. The
+present civilization is that of a topsy-turvy world, especially in so far as it
+ascribes a <span class="tei tei-q">“moral”</span> (a word always used by him in an ironical sense) self-government
+to man. In Fourier's world, on the other hand, every man is supposed, at all times, to
+give free rein to every <span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">passion</span></span>;
+and the play of these gratifications constitutes the <span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">harmonie</span></span>, in which the poorest find more
+enjoyment than do kings at the present time. (See § 207 of this work.) B.
+The main thing to further this is a radical reform in the division and cooperation
+of labor as they exist at present. Instead of the present villages
+and cities, we should have only phalansteries, each with 2,000 inhabitants, and
+situated in the center of the land cultivated by them. Instead of the present
+nations and states, we should have a universal confederate republic, hierarchically
+graded, with French as the universal language. According to the demands
+of the <span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">passion papillonne</span></span>,
+each one should carry on the most different kinds of business side by side, and
+each one of them at most two hours per day; i.e., every one should be a dilettante, no
+one a master, and everything should be done as badly as possible.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Proudhon</span></span>, Contradictions économiques,
+ch. 3, objects to this, that a workman must, in some way, be held responsible
+for his work. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Fourier</span></span> himself calculates that, in his
+<span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">harmonie</span></span> all pleasures
+are productive labor; and that by this constant change, one might be
+satisfied with from 4-½ to 5-½ hours of sleep, and that even children 2-½ years
+old might take part in the work. Thus, there would be a great rivalry between
+apple-growers and pear-growers, so great <span class="tei tei-q">“that more intrigues in attack
+and defense [<span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">passion cabaliste</span></span>]
+would arise there than in all the cabinets of Europe,”</span> in the settling of which the
+growers of quinces would act as intermediaries.
+There are, in addition to all this, wonderful aids; a fructifying
+crown of light rises over the north pole; oranges bloom in Siberia; the sea
+becomes as delicious as lemonade; dangerous animals die, and in their stead
+anti-lions and anti-whales come into being, animals useful to man, which
+draw his ships for him during calms. These ideas are by no means retracted
+in <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Fourier's</span></span> later works, See Nouveau Monde (Oeuvres) IV, 447.
+The propositions of <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Robert Owen</span></span>, A new View of Society (1812),
+have much similarity with those of Fourier. They differ only in the absence of the
+French barrack-like character of the phalanxes, and the fantastic character of the
+presentation of the doctrine. He would have all the land divided into districts
+of 1,000 acres each; each district to have a four-cornered town with 1,000
+inhabitants, following a system of production and consumption in common,
+but not with full equality; carrying on both agriculture and other business.
+A principal feature here is an entirely new system of education. The author
+says that man has hitherto been the slave of an execrable trinity: positive religion,
+personal property and indissoluble wedlock. (Declaration of mental
+independence.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_396" name="note_396" href="#noteref_396">396.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Compare
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Tacitus</span></span>, Histor., II, 44.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_397" name="note_397" href="#noteref_397">397.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">See
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Iselin</span></span>, Geschichte der Menschheit (1764), III, 7.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Bazard</span></span>, Exposition de la Doctrine de Saint Simon, 1831, 153.
+Among negro nations deprivation of freedom is one of the most usual punishments for
+crime; but the criminal has the option of substituting his wife or child for himself.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">L.A. de Oliveira Mendez</span></span>, in the Memor. econom. of the Royal
+Academy of Lisbon, vol. IV, I, 1812. As to slavery on account of crime among the
+Germans, see <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Grimm,</span></span> D. Rechtsalterth., 328 seq.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_398" name="note_398" href="#noteref_398">398.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Loss at play was a frequent cause of slavery among
+the ancient Germans. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Tacit.</span></span>, Germ., 24. For the principal causes
+of slavery among the Israelites, see the books of Moses, II, 22, 3; III, 25, 39; IV, 21,
+26 seq.; among the Indians, Laws of Menu, VIII, 415. The first serfs of Russia were
+prisoners of war and their children. The laws of Jaroslaws recognize, besides, the
+following causes: insolvency, contracting marriage with a slave, the illegal
+breach of a contract for service, flight, unconditional contract for service.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Karamsin</span></span>, Russ. Gesch., II, 37.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_399" name="note_399" href="#noteref_399">399.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">At least seed and the means of subsistence
+until harvest time.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_400" name="note_400" href="#noteref_400">400.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Cases of
+voluntary slavery to escape famine. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Papencordt</span></span>, Geschichte
+der Vandalen, 186; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Victor</span></span>, Chron., V, 17; Tur., VII, 45; Lex
+Bajuv, VI, 3; L. Fris, XI, I. According to the Edictum Pistense (a., 864), c., 34, one
+could free himself again by paying back the purchase money and 20 per
+cent. in addition. It frequently happened that people spontaneously accepted
+the condition of a vassal in order to enjoy the protection of a powerful
+personage. See <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Stüve</span></span>, Lasten des Grundeigenthums, p. 74. In
+1812, a young Himalayan offered himself to the traveler Moorcroft as a slave in order
+to obtain food during the famine. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">K. Ritter</span></span>, Erdkunde, III, p.
+999. The same fact occurred, but in greater proportions under Joseph in Egypt.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Moses</span></span>, I, 47, 18 seq.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_401" name="note_401" href="#noteref_401">401.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Cæsar</span></span>, B.G., VI,
+13.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_402" name="note_402" href="#noteref_402">402.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Solon</span></span> was the first to prohibit this commerce in Athens.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Kindlinger</span></span>, in his Geschichte der deutschen Hörigkeit, p. 621,
+speaks of a child promised as a slave before its birth, by its parents, as a species of
+farm-rent. (See the Edictum Pistense, in <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Baluz</span></span>, II, 192.) In
+Chili, the poorest country people who were not entirely white, sold their children in
+the towns, where they grew up with the families of their masters, and were then kept as
+servants in a state of semi-serfdom. There is, it is true, no law governing this
+condition of things. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Pöppig</span></span>, Reise, I, 201 ff.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_403" name="note_403" href="#noteref_403">403.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ritter</span></span>, XIII, 727. For instance, men in South America used for the
+purpose of riding. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">M. Chevalier</span></span>, Cours, I, 251;
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Lœwenstern</span></span>, Le Mexique, Souvenirs d'un Voyageur (1843); and
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Stephens</span></span>, Travels in Yucatan (1841),
+show how, even yet, in Central America, although the Indians are legally
+free, yet, by their senseless way of running into debt, a number of legal relations,
+amounting virtually to <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">glebæ adscriptio</span></span>, arise. But compare,
+however, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Humboldt</span></span>, Neuspanien, IV, 263. This condition of things
+has been produced in Peru, also, by the payment of one or two years' wages in advance.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Pöppig</span></span>, Reise, II, 225.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_404" name="note_404" href="#noteref_404">404.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Thus <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Forbonnais</span></span>,
+Eléments du Commerce (1854) I, 364, says of trade with savages:
+<span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">il fait naître dans ces nations le goût
+du superflu et des commodités, qui multiplie le, échanges et leur donne le goût
+du travail.</span></span></dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_405" name="note_405" href="#noteref_405">405.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">In very uncivilized
+nations, among whom serfdom is not known, we generally
+find the slavery of woman and the temporary bondage of the son-in-law
+in order to secure the daughter in marriage. This is still the case among
+the Laplanders. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Klemm</span></span>, Kulturgeschichte III, p. 54.
+Slavery was unknown among the Greeks in the very earliest times.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Herod.</span></span>, VI, 263. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">F. A. Wolf</span></span>,
+Darstell. der Afterthumswissenschaft, III, doubts whether any great advance
+in the higher development of the mind would have been possible without
+slavery.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_406" name="note_406" href="#noteref_406">406.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">In Russia, where free
+peasants and serfs lived side by side, it has been
+remarked that the latter were never so rich and never so poor as the former.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Kohl</span></span>, Reise durch Russland II, 8, 300.) The
+Livonian peasants have become poorer since their
+emancipation. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Cancrin</span></span>, Œkonomie der menschlichen
+Gesellschaften, 41). Many of the serfs refused to accept emancipation.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Büsch</span></span>, Geldumlauf, Einleitung, § 6.)
+And so <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Martius</span></span>, Reise in Brasilien
+II, 552 ff., assures us that the negro slaves in Brazil are as a rule a very
+merry set. He is also of the opinion that they are better clothed, lodged,
+fed and employed than in their own country. For the remarkable official
+defense of North American slavery directed by
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Calhoun</span></span>, to Lord Aberdeen,
+see the Allg. Zeitung, 1844, No. 145. In this document, we find a comparison
+instituted between the free negroes of the north and the slaves of the
+south. In the north, there was one deaf-mute, a case of blindness and of insanity
+in every 96; in the south, in every 672; a pauper, invalid and prisoner
+in every 6 at the north, in every 54 at the south. In Maine, 1/12th of the
+negroes were afflicted by disease; in Florida, 1/1105th(?). The fact that the
+slave population of the United States increased, between 1840 and 1860, from
+2,873,698 to 4,441,830, while the free negro population of Jamaica, between
+1833 and 1843, underwent a frightful decrease, is to the same purport. However,
+too much must not be inferred from all this, as the negroes in America
+are very far from being the children of the soil.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_407" name="note_407" href="#noteref_407">407.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">The
+servants in the Odyssey who cared for hogs and cattle etc. were certainly
+in a better condition in many respects than the peasants of Attica,
+who were free, but buried in debt until the time of Solon. Concerning the
+mildness of the treatment of slaves in very early Roman times, see
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Plutarch</span></span>, Coriol., 24, and <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Cato</span></span>,
+I, 3, 20 ff.; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Cato</span></span>, de Re rust, 5, 56 ff.;
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Macrob.</span></span>, Stat. I, 10 ff. On the state of the serfs
+among the Germans, see <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Grimm</span></span>, Deutsche
+Rechtsalterthümer, p. 339 ff.; among the ancient Scandinavians etc.,
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Dahlman</span></span>, Geschichte von Dänemark, I, 163. See
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Tacit.</span></span>, Germ., 25.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_408" name="note_408" href="#noteref_408">408.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Compare
+Landnamabok, I, 6.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_409" name="note_409" href="#noteref_409">409.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">The opinions of the ancients
+for and against slavery are found in <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Arist.</span></span>
+Polit. I, 2. See especially the beautiful passages in
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Philemon</span></span>: <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Meineke</span></span>, Comicorum
+jr., 364, 410. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Aristotle</span></span> even thinks that there are cases in which
+master and slave might be brought together by a mutual want, each of the
+other. The former wants hands to execute the work of his brain; the latter
+a guiding brain for his hands. Where the degree of dependence corresponds
+exactly to the difference of ability, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Aristotle</span></span>,
+leaving its abuses out of the question, declares slavery to be
+just. See, also, Eth. Nicom., VIII, 11. Similarly
+the Pythagorean <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Bryson</span></span> in <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Stobœus</span></span>,
+Florid. LXXXV, 15. But <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Aristotle</span></span>
+would hold up emancipation to all slaves as a reward they might have in
+prospect. Polit VII, 9, 9; Œcon. I, 5. It is characteristic of the many testaments
+of philosophers, found in <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Diogenes Laertius</span></span>,
+that they contain declarations giving slaves their freedom.
+The Essenes and Therapeutics condemned slavery under all
+circumstances. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Philo.</span></span>, Opp. II, pp. 458, 482,
+Opp. I. See <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Seneca</span></span>, De Benef. III,
+20. The <span lang="la" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="la"><span style="font-style: italic">jus naturale</span></span> of
+the age of the Cæsars recognized the freedom and equality of man. Digest, XII, 664., L.
+17, 32. The New Testament does not reject it absolutely, but would sanctify
+it as well as all other relations in life. Compare Luke, 17, 7; Eph. 6 5 ff.;
+Coloss. 3, 22; Tit. 2, 9. More especially, I Timothy, VI, 1 ff. It was not
+until the ninth century that the opinion that slavery was anti-Christian because
+men were all made in the image of God, arose. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Planck</span></span>, Geschichte
+der kirchlichen Gesellschaftsverfassung, II, 350. Sachsenspiegel, III, 42.
+A writer as recent as <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Pufendorf</span></span> explains slavery
+as arising from a free contract; <span lang="la" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="la"><span style="font-style: italic">faciam,
+ut des.</span></span> Jus naturæ (1672) VI, 3. More recently
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Linguet</span></span>, Théorie des Lois civiles (1767), V,
+ch. 30, and <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hugo</span></span>, Naturrecht, § 186 ff. have endeavored
+to prove that slaves are in a condition preferable to that of poor free
+men. And so <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Möser</span></span> Patriot Phantasien, II,. p.
+154, seq. Those who with <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Thaer</span></span> separate the
+element of production, <span class="tei tei-q">“labor”</span> from that of <span class="tei tei-q">“intelligence,”</span>
+justify slavery on the same principle that Aristotle did, without knowing it.
+Per contra, see <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">F. G. Schultze</span></span>, N. Œkonomie (1856), 418.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_410" name="note_410" href="#noteref_410">410.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Turgot</span></span>, Sur
+la Formation etc., § 21. The universal empire of the Romans
+demonstrated this. Then it was, for instance, that during the wars of
+Lucullus, a slave cost only four drachmas. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Appian.</span></span>,
+Bell. Mithr., 78.) <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Sardi venales</span></span>: on account
+of the glutting of the market with Sardinian slaves, made through
+the victory of Tib. Gracchus, 177, before Christ. Many of the
+lesser wars of the Romans can be looked upon only as slave-hunts. But the
+great wars also were followed by uprisings of slaves on account of the many
+new slaves which they made. Thus 198 in Latium, 196 in Etruria.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Bücher</span></span>, Aufstände der unfreien Arbeiter von, 143-129,
+v. Chr., 1874.) During the relatively peaceful periods which
+preceded many of the Roman revolutions, pirates delivered
+over great masses of slaves. It frequently happened that several thousand
+slaves were led to Delos and sold in a single day. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Strabo</span></span>,
+XIV, 668.) As emancipation was a measure which people could not make
+up their minds to adopt, these pirates satisfied a <span class="tei tei-q">“want”</span> for a time, and this
+partly explains the otherwise incomprehensible forbearance of the state towards
+them.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_411" name="note_411" href="#noteref_411">411.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Gregor.
+Turon.</span></span>, III, 15.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_412" name="note_412" href="#noteref_412">412.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Grimm</span></span>, D. Rechtsalterthümer, 323. It is a strange fact
+that prisoners of war were in several remarkable instances sold as slaves
+in Italy during the fifteenth century. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Sismondi</span></span>, Hist.
+des Républiques italiennes, IX, p. 312 seq.; XI, p. 138 seq.) And even in
+the sixteenth century, the pope allowed those of states opposed to him to
+be treated in this way. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Sismondi, supra</span></span>,
+XI, 251; XIII, 485. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Raynold</span></span>, Ann. eccl. 1506, § 25 ff.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_413" name="note_413" href="#noteref_413">413.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">This graduation of
+slave, serf and workman, has been carried out especially
+by <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Saint Simon</span></span>, Oeuvres, 328 ff.
+Even <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Proudhon</span></span> admits that the condition
+of the lower classes is better now than formerly. (Contradictions
+économiques, ch. X, 2.) Compare <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">M. Chevalier</span></span>,
+Cours, I. Leçons 1 and 2,
+where he shows that our productive power has increased during the last four
+or five centuries in the production of iron in the proportion of 1 to from
+25 to 30; in the preparation of flour since the time of Homer in the
+proportion of 1:144; in the production of cotton during the last 70 years in
+the proportion of 1:320. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Aristotle</span></span> predicted,
+long ago, that <span class="tei tei-q">“when the shuttle would move of itself, and plectra of
+themselves strike the lyre, we should need no more slaves.”</span> Polit.,
+2, 5. Every step of true progress brings us nearer the fulfillment of
+the prophecy.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_414" name="note_414" href="#noteref_414">414.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">The
+North American planters employed coarse tools rather than fine
+ones, mules rather than horses, because their slaves took so little care of
+them.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_415" name="note_415" href="#noteref_415">415.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">It can never obtain as much
+labor from the slave, as the fear of losing his situation and
+of not being able to obtain another, will from the free workman.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hume.</span></span>) <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Marlo</span></span>,
+Weltœkonomie, 1848, I, 2, 38, grants this to be true only where
+all the forces of nature are appropriated by occupation, and the number
+of workmen is greater than the want of workmen.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_416" name="note_416" href="#noteref_416">416.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Even in Brazil, only free men are,
+as a rule, employed as sugar refiners, distillers, teamsters etc.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Koster</span></span>, Travels in Brazil, 1816, 362.)
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Storch</span></span>, Russland unter Alexander I, Heft, 23, p.
+255, cites the opinion of an eminent Russian manufacturer, that it would
+first be necessary to liberate the serf factory-hands. Masters have
+generally given up employing their own serfs in manufactures, allowed
+them to seek work for themselves, and only required them to pay them
+a species of tax. When this plan was adopted, it was found that they worked
+much better, (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">v. Haxthausen</span></span>, Studien I, 61,
+116.) It was a consequence of slavery that, in antiquity, the very wealthy
+purchased so little: <span lang="la" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="la"><span style="font-style: italic">omnia domi
+nascuntur</span></span>! (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Petron.</span></span>, 38.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_417" name="note_417" href="#noteref_417">417.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Thus <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Homer</span></span>, Od.
+XVII, 322, in whose time even there were day laborers, θῆτες or
+ἔριθοι. (Od. IV, 644; X, 85; XI, 490; XIV, 102. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hesiod</span></span>, Opera,
+602.) And <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Varro</span></span>, De Re rust. I, 17, advises
+that difficult labor should be performed rather by day laborers.
+<span lang="la" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="la"><span style="font-style: italic">Coli rura ab ergastulis pessimum est et
+quidquid agitur a desperantibus.</span></span> <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Plin.</span></span>,
+H. N. XVIII, 7. <span lang="la" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="la"><span style="font-style: italic">Omne genus agri
+tolerabilius sub liberis colonis, quam sub villicis.</span></span>
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Columetta</span></span>, De Re rust I, 7.)
+It has been estimated, that, in the West Indies, a negro slave performed only
+one-third of the work performed by an Englishman in his own country.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">B. Edwards</span></span>, History of the British West Indies,
+II, 131.) During the one afternoon, in every week, in which the negroes
+were allowed to work on their own account, they accomplished as much as on other
+entire days. Edinburgh R. IV, 842. Compare <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Bentham</span></span>, Traité de
+Législation I, 319. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ch. Comte</span></span>, Traité de Législation, 1827,
+Livre V.; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Cairnes</span></span>, The Slave-Power, its Character, Career and
+probable Designs, 1862; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Olmsted</span></span>, Journeys and Explorations in
+the Cotton Kingdom, 1861.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_418" name="note_418" href="#noteref_418">418.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">While
+the older tyrants had prohibited idleness, Draco and Solon even
+under pain of degradation (see places in <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Büchsenschütz</span></span>,
+Besitz und Erwerb, 260). <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Socrates</span></span> called the ἅργια the
+sister of Freedom (Aelian, V.H.X, 14), and the σκολή the most beautiful of
+all professions.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_419" name="note_419" href="#noteref_419">419.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">B. Franklin</span></span>,
+Observations concerning the Peopling of New Countries etc., 1751.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_420" name="note_420" href="#noteref_420">420.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Monument erected to
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Bernstorff</span></span> by his peasants, 8, 15. The
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Zàmoiski</span></span> estates yielded, 17 years after emancipation, three
+times as much as they did when serfdom prevailed. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Coxe</span></span>,
+Travels in Poland, I, 22. The transformation of the serfs into hereditary farmers
+cost <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Count Bernstorff</span></span> 100,000 thalers;
+but the revenue derived from his lands increased in consequence, in twenty-four
+years, from 3,000 to 27,000 thalers. An English mower can mow a
+field two and three times as great as a Russian mower in a given time. If
+the former receives daily wages equivalent to seventy pounds of wheat, and
+the latter to only twelve, the Englishman's labor is still the cheaper; for he
+turns out 100 pounds of hay while the latter turns out only eight.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Jacob</span></span>, 43 seq. But the hiring out of serfs in the large cities of
+Russia yielded less to their masters than in the interior. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Storch</span></span>,
+Handbuch, II, 286.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_421" name="note_421" href="#noteref_421">421.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Tucker</span></span>, Progress
+of the United States, 1843, pp. 111 ff. We need not call
+attention to the inaccuracy of these figures, nor remark how little serviceable
+for our present purpose an average obtained from the density of population
+in different parts of Russia, where such densities are themselves so very
+different, would be.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_422" name="note_422" href="#noteref_422">422.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">The Spartans seemed to
+have counted on an adult free man for twice as much coarse food
+as a bondsman. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Thucyd.</span></span>, VI, 16.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_423" name="note_423" href="#noteref_423">423.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Stewart</span></span>,
+Principles, I, 7, in accordance with historical data, says, that
+the peasantry in our days work for other people, because they have wants
+which can be satisfied only in this way; because <span class="tei tei-q">“they are slaves of their
+own wants.”</span> The unquestionable superiority of free to slave labor, in point
+of economy, has been dwelt upon especially by <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Turgot</span></span>, Sur
+la Formation et la Distribution, § 28, and by <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Adam Smith</span></span>,
+Wealth of Nations, I, 8, III, 2. But see <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">J. B. Say</span></span>, Traité,
+I, ch. 19, and <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Storch</span></span>, Handbuch, II, 184. When
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hume</span></span>, Discourses, No. 11, Populousness of ancient Nations,
+demonstrates the greater cost of slavery from the fact that the master of slaves
+must either breed or buy them, he forgets that in the case of free workmen he is obliged
+to provide also for the support of the workman's children. Only, the slaveholder
+has, indeed, to advance the whole at once.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_424" name="note_424" href="#noteref_424">424.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Humboldt</span></span>,
+Cuba, I, 177. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ashworth</span></span>, Tour in the U.S. Cuba and Canada,
+1861. The slaves in Louisiana were so overworked that they lived, on an
+average, scarcely seven years. Edinburg Rev., LXXXIII, 73. Even the
+Stoics were not agreed, whether it was right, in case of shipwreck, to sacrifice
+a cheap slave in order to save a valuable horse. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Cicero</span></span>,
+de Off. III, 23.) Whether the self-interest of masters is an inducement to the mild
+treatment of their slaves depends on the price for which fresh slaves may be obtained.
+This is a strong reason why a high degree of civilization, where there are
+not counteracting influences, must make slavery less endurable. The more
+valuable slaves are, the worse is their condition. In the unfertile Bahamas,
+the price was £21; in Demarara, £86. In the former place they were required
+to do little work and were well fed and well clothed. Hence their
+numbers have increased there, while in Demarara they have decreased.
+(Edinburgh Rev., XLVI, 496, 180.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_425" name="note_425" href="#noteref_425">425.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Proverb:
+<span lang="la" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="la"><span style="font-style: italic">quot servi totidem hostes.</span></span>
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Macrob.</span></span>, Sat. I, 11, 13.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_426" name="note_426" href="#noteref_426">426.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Jefferson</span></span>,
+Notes on Virginia, 212. The chastity of both parties especially
+suffers. The <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">leno</span></span> of ancient comedy was a slave trader!
+Compare L. 27, Digest, V, 3. In the English negro colonies, it was not unusual for the
+guests of the planters, even in the best families, on retiring, to ask the
+accompanying servant for a girl, with as little concern as they would in England
+for a light. (Negro Slavery, or a Creed of ... that state of Society as
+it exists in the United States and in the Colonies of the West Indies, London,
+1823, 53.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_427" name="note_427" href="#noteref_427">427.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Even the law of Upland forbade the
+sale of Christians. The children of a slave and of a free person were born free.
+Emancipation was considered a Christian act, to be performed for <span class="tei tei-q">“the
+salvation of one's soul.”</span> Voluntary slavery was prohibited in 1266, and Magnus
+Erichson forbade slavery generally from the year 1335. See
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Geijer</span></span>, Geschichte von Schweden, pp. 157, 185, 273.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Estrup</span></span>, in <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Falcks</span></span> N. Staatsburg Magazin,
+1837, 179, ff.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_428" name="note_428" href="#noteref_428">428.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">L. Alam, 137,
+1. L. Fris., 17, 5. Decree of 960 concerning the abolition
+of the trade in Christian slaves between Germany, Italy and the Byzantine
+Empire. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Tafel und Thomas</span></span>, Urkunden der Staats-und Handelsgeschichte
+von Venedig, I, 18 ff.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_429" name="note_429" href="#noteref_429">429.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Tacit</span></span>. Germ. 25. In the Legg. Walliæ 206 (Wolton) we read:
+<span class="tei tei-q">“<span lang="la" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="la"><span style="font-style: italic">Hero eadem potestas in servum suum ac
+in jumentum.</span></span>”</span></dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_430" name="note_430" href="#noteref_430">430.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">The
+council of London in 1102 forbade men to be sold like beasts. (Concil.,
+ed. Venet. 1730, XII, 1100, No. 27.) <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Guérard</span></span>, Polyptiques
+d'Irminon, Prolegg., 220, describes a pedagogical model emancipation by the Church of
+its own serfs. On the whole, the church contributed more towards the emancipation
+of the serfs of others than of its own. See ch. 39, C. XII, qu. 2; c.
+3,4; De Rebus eccl.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_431" name="note_431" href="#noteref_431">431.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">In Flanders
+since the end of the twelfth century. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Warnkönig</span></span>, Flandrische
+Staats und Rechtsgeschichte (I, 244).</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_432" name="note_432" href="#noteref_432">432.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">In what
+relates to Germany, compare <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Sugenheim</span></span>, Geschichte der Aufhebung
+der Leibeigenschaft in Europa, 1861, p. 350 ff. The destruction of the old
+manorial system (<span lang="de" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="de"><span style="font-style: italic">Hofwesen</span></span>)
+in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, was often unfavorable to bondmen and
+favorable to serfs. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Maurer</span></span>, Gesch. der
+Frohnhöfe, II, 92. In Poland, where all were originally equal land-owners,
+many sank gradually through poverty to the condition of the so-called
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">kinetes</span></span>, who, although personally free, were not
+very far removed from slaves. Beginning with the thirteenth century, a
+great number of immunities, after the model of those accorded in Germany, were
+granted, by means of which they lost, for the most part, their direct subjection
+to the emperor and the empire alone. This was soon followed as a consequence by
+their personal oppression. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Röpell</span></span>, Geschichte von Polen, I,
+p. 308 seq., and p. 570 seq.) In Bohemia, the old form of serfdom had so far
+disappeared in the fourteenth century, that it might be said it was known only to
+history. But during the reign of the weak king, Ladislaus II, a new species of
+serfdom came into vogue, the result of the preponderance of the aristocratic element.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Palacky</span></span>, Gesch. von Böhmen, II, p. 33 seq.; III, 31 seq.
+Aristocratic Denmark, before the peasant war of 1255-1258, subjected the free
+peasantry who had been leaseholders for a term of years to unlimited socage duty.
+Waldemar III, reduced to the same kind of service the land-owning peasantry, which
+especially from the date of Margaret's reign, developed into a species of
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">glebæ adscriptio</span></span>. From the sixteenth century, when the royal
+power almost disappeared, these public privileges were abandoned to the nobility to
+such an extent that, in 1650, there were scarcely 5,000 free peasants.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Dahlmann</span></span>, III, p. 73 seq. However the severity of
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">traeldom</span></span> made way in the fourteenth century for the
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">vornedskap</span></span> (modified bondage), a milder species of vassalage.
+See <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Kolderup Rosenvinge</span></span>, Grundriss der dänischen
+Rechtsgeschichte, § 94.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_433" name="note_433" href="#noteref_433">433.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">The French expression
+<span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">mainmorte</span></span> comes originally
+from the deprivation of the right of inheritance. In Beaumanoir's time, 1283, it was
+customary, after a number of serfs had lived together for a year and a day, for their
+chattels movable to become the common property of the community.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Warnkönig</span></span>, Französische Rechtsgeschichte, II, 157.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_434" name="note_434" href="#noteref_434">434.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">In France,
+Louis X. made it a fiscal speculation to sell serfs their liberty
+in whole districts, even against their will. His edict, Ordonnances, I, 583,
+recognizes that all men are by nature free, and that France is not without
+reason called the land of the Franks etc. Even in 1298, Philip IV. had exchanged
+the serfdom to the crown of several provinces for a land duty. The
+last ruler of Dauphiny gave all the serfs of the crown their liberty gratis, in
+1394. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Sugenheim</span></span>, p. 130.) When the so-called
+<span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">coutumes</span></span> were written, there
+were only nine provincees in which by local law serfdom was permitted.
+The defeat of the <span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">jacquerie</span></span>
+injured the cause of emancipation in France in the same way that the suppression of
+the war of the peasants did in Germany. About 1779, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">mainmorte</span></span>
+was abolished in all lands of the crown, and its proof made almost impossible in
+all others. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Warnkönig</span></span>, II, 151 seq.) Yet it is said that there
+were 150,000 <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">serfs de corps</span></span> in France in 1789.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Cassagnac</span></span>, Causes de la Revolution, III, 11.) Koloman, who died
+in 1114, forbade the slave trade in Hungary, and labored to raise all Christian slaves
+to <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">conditionarii</span></span> (renters). But the right of migration was
+abolished in 1351. King Sigismund, and still more, Matthias Corvinus, restored it, after
+the suppression of the war of the peasants, but in 1514 it was again lost until
+1586. Further progress was arrested until the Urbarium of Maria Theresa.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_435" name="note_435" href="#noteref_435">435.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">In Italy, Frederick II. liberated all the
+serfs of the crown. (Constitutt. Regni Sicil., 164.) A model instance of emancipation at
+Bologna in 1256. The serfs of the state were simply set at liberty; the freedom of those
+of private persons was purchased with the money of the state, and a small
+corn-tithe laid on the emancipated as a compensation for the expense incurred
+in their behalf. In the future, there was not to be a bondman on
+Bologna territory. The motives which led to this measure are a strange
+admixture of Christianity and Democracy. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Muzzi</span></span>, Annali di Bologna,
+1840, I, 479.) Italy, at the end of the fourteenth century, was entirely free
+from Christian serfdom. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Muratori</span></span>, Antt. Ital., I, 798.) In the
+canton of Berne, Switzerland, slavery was gradually abolished, the process commencing
+about the beginning of the fifteenth century. It continued, however,
+in the case of ordinary masters until 1798. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Sugenheim</span></span>, p. 530
+seq. In England, Alfred the Great's efforts towards the gradual abolition of slavery
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Wilkins</span></span>, Leges, 29) remained without result. The steps taken by
+William I, towards a much narrower end, however, seem to have been more successful.
+(Leges Will. Conq., 225, 229; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Turner</span></span>, Hist. of England, I, 135.)
+From the time of the Norman conquest, prisoners of war ceased to recruit the
+ranks of slavery. Under Henry III and Edward I, socage tenants became
+more and more frequent; but, before long, their duties became less onerous,
+and might be discharged by others hired for the purpose, instead of by themselves.
+The first remarkable vestige of a class working for wages is met
+with in the law of 1351, which may be considered an effort made by the
+nobility to oppose the tendencies in favor of emancipation, which were a
+consequence of the development of cities. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Eden</span></span>, State of the
+Poor, I, 7, 12, 30, 41,) <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Infra</span></span>, § 175. Although the peasant war
+under Wat Tyler and Straw, who wished to abolish servitude at a blow, failed of its
+object, we find that there were a great many instances of emancipation by individuals in
+the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries when death or sickness overtook them, in
+which they declared the moral unfitness of slavery. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Wycliffe</span></span>:
+<span class="tei tei-q">“When Adam dalve and Eve span, who was then the gentleman?”</span>) Elizabeth liberated
+the last serfs of the crown. Compare 12 Charles II, ch. 24, 1660.
+Emancipation in the lowlands of Scotland was completed in 1574.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Tytler</span></span>, Hist. of Scotland, II, 260.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_436" name="note_436" href="#noteref_436">436.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Modern Emancipation Laws: in Prussia, 1719, 1807, 1819; Lausitz; 1820,
+Westphalia; in Austria, 1781 (Bohemia and Moravia), 1782 (other German
+countries and Galicia); 1785 (Hungaria); Schleswig-Holstein, 1804, after
+many of the landed gentry had voluntarily emancipated their own serfs; in
+Bavaria, in 1808; in the kingdom of Westphalia, in 1808; in Hessen-Darmstadt,
+in 1811; in Württemberg, in 1817; in Baden, in 1783, 1820 in newly
+acquired countries; in Mecklenburg, in 1820; in the kingdom of Saxony, in
+1832; in Hanover, in 1833. The law of 1702, abolishing serfdom in Denmark,
+was evaded until 1788, and in part, even until 1800 by the
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Schollband</span></span> (clod-bond) introduced in its stead. The only
+Christian people in Europe, who, until recently, kept serfs, was the Russian. The serfs
+of Russia, in 1834, numbered 22,000,000, i.e., about 40 per cent. of the entire
+population. In the meantime, the law of February 19, 1861, passed after four years of
+preparation, fixed the date of emancipation at the beginning of the year 1863.
+Slavery has been abolished in the United States since January 1, 1863; first of all in
+all portions of the country engaged in rebellion.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_437" name="note_437" href="#noteref_437">437.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">There is a
+very interesting discussion in the Journ. des Economistes for
+June 1863, of the question whether the owners of serfs are entitled to compensation
+on their emancipation, by <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Laboulaye</span></span>,
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Wolowski</span></span>, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Lavergne</span></span>,
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Garnier</span></span>, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Simon</span></span> and others. In the United
+States it would have required $2,000,000,000
+to fully compensate the slave-holders for depriving them of their slaves.
+(Quart. R., Jan., 1874, 142.) Compare my view, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Roscher</span></span>,
+Nationalökonomi des Ackerbaues, § 124.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_438" name="note_438" href="#noteref_438">438.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Leave a new-born child to its
+<span class="tei tei-q">“natural freedom”</span> for twenty-four hours, and it will in all probability be
+dead at the end of the time!</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_439" name="note_439" href="#noteref_439">439.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Compare Edinburgh Review, LXXXIII,
+64 ff., April, 1851, 333. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Klein's</span></span>
+Annalen XXV, 70, ff. Even in the fifth book of Moses, 15, 13, ff., we see
+that experience had taken into consideration that a freed serf without capital
+or landed property might very readily be in a worse condition than he was
+before. In the United States, the anticipation that the emancipated negroes
+might diminish in numbers has not been realized. The census of 1870
+showed a negro population of 4,880,000, nearly ten per cent. more than in
+1860. The increase of the number of churches, schools and savings banks
+also bears testimony to the prosperity of the negro.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">R. Somers</span></span>, The Southern States since the War, 1871.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_440" name="note_440" href="#noteref_440">440.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">J. S. Mill</span></span>, Principles, 10, ch.
+7.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_441" name="note_441" href="#noteref_441">441.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">As to the
+Jews, see <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ewald</span></span>, Geschichte von Israel, I 2, p. 198. In general,
+see <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">H. Wallon</span></span>, Hist, de l'Esclavage dans l'Antiquité, II,
+1847.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_442" name="note_442" href="#noteref_442">442.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Thucyd.</span></span>
+IV, 27; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Xenoph.</span></span> De Re. rep. Art. I, 10 ff.,
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Aristoph.</span></span> Nubes, 6; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Antiph.</span></span>
+De Caede Herod, 727. In the <span class="tei tei-q">“Frogs”</span> of Aristophanes, the relation
+between the slave Xanthias and his master is eloquent testimony to the
+good treatment he received. Slaves enjoyed great freedom of speech.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Demosth.</span></span> Phil. III, iii.) Concerning masters accused
+of cruelty, see <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Demosth.</span></span> Mid. 529, 7. Athen. VI, 266.
+The slave who had been ill-treated might seek refuge in a temple, after which
+his master was compelled to sell him. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Schol. Aristoph.</span></span>
+Equitt. 1309. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Plutarch</span></span>, Thes. 36.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_443" name="note_443" href="#noteref_443">443.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Slaves
+might purchase their own freedom with their <span lang="la" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="la"><span style="font-style: italic">peculium</span></span>. See Petit. Legg., Art. II, 179.
+There were many who lived entirely on their own account,
+paying a certain duty or tax to their masters, and who were well able
+to make savings. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">R. F. Hermann</span></span>, Privatalterthümer, § 13,
+9, 58, 11 ff. See the instance in <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Plato</span></span>, De Rep. VI, 495,
+where a slave who had grown wealthy asks the daughter of his former master in
+marriage. Moreover, there was a general indisposition to hold Greeks as slaves.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Philostr.</span></span> Apoll. VIII, 7, 12.) The case cited in
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Demosth</span></span>. adv. Nicostr. 1249 ff., is all the stronger on this
+account.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_444" name="note_444" href="#noteref_444">444.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Under Cleomenes,
+many purchased their freedom with their own means.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Plutarch</span></span>, Cleom. 23. At an earlier period, men
+like Lysandros, Gylippos, Kallikratidos had belonged to a class composed of
+the children of slaves brought up as citizens.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_445" name="note_445" href="#noteref_445">445.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Cicero</span></span>, pro
+Muræna, IX, 22.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_446" name="note_446" href="#noteref_446">446.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Think of the subterranean
+<span lang="la" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="la"><span style="font-style: italic">ergastula</span></span>, the fettered
+door-keepers and the gladiatorial exhibitions.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_447" name="note_447" href="#noteref_447">447.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Even from the time of <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Plautus</span></span>,
+the <span lang="la" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="la"><span style="font-style: italic">servi honestiores</span></span> were
+wont to keep <span lang="la" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="la"><span style="font-style: italic">vicarios</span></span>,
+or subordinate slaves. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Plaut.</span></span> Asin. I, 4,
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Seneca</span></span> De Tranq. Anim. 8. Compare <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Cicero</span></span>,
+Parad. V, 2. Of the slaves of the state, the public scribes were sometimes found in
+excellent circumstances.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_448" name="note_448" href="#noteref_448">448.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">The peculium
+was fully developed in the time of Plautus and Terence. Compare
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Terent.</span></span>, Phorm. I, 1. It was customary to promise slaves their
+freedom as soon as they had acquired a certain <span lang="la" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="la"><span style="font-style: italic">peculium</span></span>. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Dionys. Hal.</span></span>,
+Antt. Rom., IV, 24. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Tac.</span></span>, Ann., XIV, 42.) Humane masters permitted
+their slaves to dispose freely of their <span lang="la" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="la"><span style="font-style: italic">peculium</span></span> by will. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Plin.</span></span>,
+Ep., VIII, 16.) There were many of the Romans who gave their slaves a fixed salary, from
+which they could make savings. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Senec.</span></span>, Epist., 80, 7.)
+Shepherds raised some sheep for themselves alone. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Plaut.</span></span>,
+Asin., III, 1, 36; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Varro</span></span>, R. R., I, 17, 7.) Premiums were
+offered for certain products (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Athen.</span></span>, VI, 274 d),
+and there were cases even in which businesses were farmed out to slaves.
+(Corp. Inscr. Gr., No. 4,713 f.) The <span lang="la" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="la"><span style="font-style: italic">servi
+publici</span></span> had the right to dispose of the half of what they owned, by will.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ulpian</span></span>, XX, 16.) Contracts of loan were sometimes made between
+master and slave. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Plut.</span></span>, Cato, I, 21, L., 49,
+§ 2, Digest, XV, 1.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_449" name="note_449" href="#noteref_449">449.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Compare <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Tacit.</span></span>,
+Ann., XIII, 26 seq. During the time from 356 to 211
+A.C., it seems that there were, on an average, 1,380 slaves emancipated
+yearly. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Dureau de la Malle</span></span>, Economie polit. des Romains,
+I, 290 ff.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_450" name="note_450" href="#noteref_450">450.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Concerning
+the highly educated slaves of Atticus, of the like of whom
+the Greeks had formerly few examples, see <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Drumann</span></span>,
+Geschichte Roms., V, 66. The high prices, 100,000, and even 200,000 sesterces, paid
+for slaves, suppose a very high degree of education. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Martial</span></span>,
+I, 59; III, 62; XI, 70; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Seneca</span></span>, Ep., 27.) But even
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Cicero</span></span> was ashamed of his affliction over the
+death of an exceptionally clever slave. (Ad. Att., I, 12.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_451" name="note_451" href="#noteref_451">451.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">At an earlier period, even the censor
+had punished cruel masters. But most of what was done to prevent the arbitrary
+condemnation to death of slaves, their castration etc., and to give them rights
+against their masters for libidinous acts towards them, for cruelty and insufficient
+support, or the furnishing them with bad food, was done after the time of Hadrian.
+(Compare <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Seneca</span></span>, de Benef., III, 22; de Ira, III, 40,
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Sueton.</span></span>, Claud, 25, Dom., 7; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Spartian.</span></span>,
+Hadr., 18; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Gaius</span></span>, I, 53; L., 1, § 2, Digest, I, 6; L., 1,
+§ 8, D., I, 12; L., 1, § 2, D., XLVII, 8; L., 1; Cod., IX, 14; Contra, see
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Dio Cass</span></span>, I, V, 17.) However, the <span lang="la" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="la"><span style="font-style: italic">vitæ necisque potestas</span></span> existed in the time of
+Justinian. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Zimmern</span></span>, Geschichte des röm., Privatrechts, I,
+2, 661 ff.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_452" name="note_452" href="#noteref_452">452.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Salvian</span></span>,
+De Gubern. Dei, V, 8. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Theod.</span></span>, Cad. V, 4.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Eumenis</span></span>, Paneg Coast. 8, 9. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Trebell</span></span>,
+Poll. Claud., 9. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Justin.</span></span> Cad., XI, 26, 47. Compare
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">v. Savigny</span></span>, Ueber den romischen Colonat. Berliner Akad.,
+1822-23.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_453" name="note_453" href="#noteref_453">453.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">The figures given in <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Athen.</span></span>,
+VI, 103, concerning the number of bondmen in Greece are almost incredible. For
+Attica alone, the estimates vary between 110,000 (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Letronne</span></span>,
+in the Mem. de I'Académie des Inscr., 1822, 192, ff.) and 400,000
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Athen.</span></span> 1. c.), while the free men are estimated at from 130,000
+to 150,000. In Rome, during the time from the expulsion of the kings until
+the destruction of Carthage, the number of the slaves remained about the
+same. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Blair</span></span>, State of Slavery among the Romans, 1833, 10,
+15.) On the other hand, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Dureau de la Malle</span></span> is of opinion,
+that in 576 B.C., the number of slaves was to the number of free men as 1 to 25,
+and in 225 B.C. (including the metics), as 22 to 27. (Economie polit. des Romains I
+270 ff., 296.) Compare <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Cato</span></span>, de Re. rust. I, 3, IV, X, 1 XI;
+1, XVII, XVIII, 1. In Germany, the number of bondmen, from the eighth to the tenth
+century, was estimated to be at least as great as that of free men.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Grimm</span></span>, D. Rechtsaltherthümer, 334.) Among the Anglo Saxons,
+before the Norman conquest, it was much higher, even three-fourths of the entire
+population. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Turner</span></span>, Hist. of the A. S., VIII, 9.) Compare
+on the subject of this whole chapter my paper in the Archiv. der polit Œkonomie, N.
+F., IV, 30 ff.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_454" name="note_454" href="#noteref_454">454.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Klöntrupp</span></span>, Abhandlung der Lehre vom Zwangsdienste, 1801. Frequently,
+the lord had only a right of preference in case the children of the tenant desired
+to abandon the parental roof and take service elsewhere.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_455" name="note_455" href="#noteref_455">455.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">In <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Adam Smith's</span></span>
+time, in England, the presumption was that a servant
+had been hired for a year. (I, 2, 15 ed., Bas.) Frederick the Great's ordinance
+of 1769, on this subject, forbade any one to enter into service for a
+shorter time than this (II, § 1 ff.), while the Saxon ordinance of 1835, on the
+same matter, allowed engagements by the month, in cities. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Darjes</span></span>,
+Erste Gründe der Cameralwissenschaften, 2d ed. (1768), p. 432, demands that servants
+should always hire themselves for at least four or five years, and that
+their masters should have, during the whole of this time, the right to enforce
+the contract. In North America, however, service by the month has become
+customary and general, and no notice of the dissolution of the contract is, as
+a rule, required. (Deutsche Vierteljahrsschrift, 1853, II, 191.) In Switzerland,
+contracts for service by the week are frequently made even by country servants.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Böhmert</span></span>, Arbeiterverhh., II, 157.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_456" name="note_456" href="#noteref_456">456.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">In the
+south of England, farm hands were used to change service only at
+Michaelmas. The choice of such a date made farmers very dependent on
+them, as it fell in harvest time. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Marshall</span></span>, Rural
+Economy of the Southern Countries, II, 233.) A similar complaint in Cleves.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Schwerz</span></span>, Rheinischwestphälische Landw., 21 ff.) In
+Jülich, a half year's notice was required, during which time the servant who
+had received it, performed his work with disgust, and stirred up his fellow
+servants against their master. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Schwerz</span></span>,
+II, 87.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_457" name="note_457" href="#noteref_457">457.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">The
+families of day laborers, to whom the owner of the land gives the
+use of a house, small garden, a cow etc., constitute such a transition; and
+also, workmen who are fed. In Brandenburg, in 1644, only married persons
+or widowers with children were permitted to work as day laborers.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Mylius, C. C. March.</span></span>, V, 1, 3, 11.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_458" name="note_458" href="#noteref_458">458.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Wakefield</span></span>,
+Swing Unmasked, or the Causes of rural Incendiarism, 1831.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_459" name="note_459" href="#noteref_459">459.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">By means of the former, the number of
+independent small householders was much increased in
+the country. Masters feel indisposed to hire young
+men liable to be subjected to military duty, because they may be called away
+at the moment their services are most needed. The returning soldier, as a
+rule, feels above doing menial service. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Schwerz</span></span>,
+passim, I, 191 ff., 236.) On this account, servants' wages in Cleves rose much
+higher than those of day laborers. (194.) In Belgium, a farm hand cost, on an average,
+400 francs a year; a day laborer, counting 300 working days to the year, only
+339 francs. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Horn</span></span>, Statist. Gemälde, 175.) In the
+Palatinate, day laborers who receive nothing but their wages cost their masters less
+than those who receive only their food; and servants are the dearest of all.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hanssen,</span></span> Archiv der Politischen Œkonomie, N. F. X, 243.)
+If servants were relatively more poorly paid in 1813 than day laborers
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Lotz</span></span>, Revision, III, 147), it was because of the at least
+temporary retrogression of civilization which every great war causes.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_460" name="note_460" href="#noteref_460">460.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Engel</span></span>, Preuss. Statist. Jahrb., II, 261. Services which contribute
+to personal convenience are naturally committed much less frequently to independent
+day laborers than those which aid in production proper. Hence it
+is, that, as civilization advances, house-servants, especially of the female sex,
+constitute an ever-increasing portion of the total number of servants. In
+Prussia, in 1816, the number of servants who ministered to personal comfort
+was only 4.19 per cent. of the total number of servants engaged in industry;
+of female servants, it was 13.4 per cent. In 1861, on the other hand, the
+percentages were 8.4 and 37.2. In Great Britain, of the total number of
+servants over 20 years of age, only 2 per cent. were engaged in personal
+services. In 1841, they were 3-½ per cent. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Meidinger</span></span>.) In
+France, in 1851, 2.5 per cent. of the whole population were in <span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">domesticité</span></span>. (Stat. off.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_461" name="note_461" href="#noteref_461">461.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">In
+England, now more especially, out of farm-hand day laborers: Edinburgh
+Rev., April, 1862.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_462" name="note_462" href="#noteref_462">462.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">A chief
+element in the earlier <span class="tei tei-q">“organization of labor.”</span> So, also, in the
+Magdeburg Gesindeordnung (service-regulation) of 1789.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_463" name="note_463" href="#noteref_463">463.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Saxon
+<span lang="de" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="de"><span style="font-style: italic">Landesordnungen</span></span> of 1482 and
+1543. Cod. August. I, 3, 23. The <span lang="de" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="de"><span style="font-style: italic">Gesindeordnung</span></span> (service regulation) of Frederick
+the Great, threatened with the house of correction the receivers, and under certain
+circumstances also the givers of wages higher than the fixed rate of wages; but as a
+<span class="tei tei-q">“matter of course,”</span> the payment of wages less than this was permitted. (V, § 7)
+Great care was taken that wages greater than the law allowed should not be
+evaded by the payment of <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">arrha</span></span> or payment in produce. The same law
+forbade the deprivation of the servant of his right to determine the service
+by making of loans to him on long time (II, § 7.) Even <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">v. Berg</span></span>,
+Handbuch des deutschen Polizeirechts, calls it a duty of the public authorities charged
+with the protection of property and of the public security, to see to it that
+there be no lack of good servants, and that the public (as if those who sell
+their services were not a part of it) should not be made the victims of exorbitant
+demands in the matter of servants' wages. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Jung</span></span>, more humane,
+demands that the authorities shall protect, especially, the weaker party. (Grundlehre
+der Staatswirthschaft, 1792, 700.) In Prussian legislation, the Silesian
+rescript of March 13, 1809, is the beginning of the new order of things.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Rabe</span></span>, Samml. preuss. Gesetze, X, 59 ff.) The
+<span lang="de" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="de"><span style="font-style: italic">Obertribunal</span></span>, or high court,
+decided, in 1874, that the bringing back of absconding servants by the police,
+which the law concerning servants of 1810 provided for, should not be allowed
+to occur any more.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_464" name="note_464" href="#noteref_464">464.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Ordinance of
+the elector of Saxony of 1766, prohibiting the inhabitants
+of cities to take an apprentice from among the peasantry, unless he had served
+at least four years as a farm hand, beginning with his fourteenth year. Similarly,
+in Prussia in 1781.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_465" name="note_465" href="#noteref_465">465.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">In Berlin, even
+before the <span class="tei tei-q">“populationistischen”</span> period: <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Fidicin</span></span>, Histor.
+diplom. Beiträge zur Gesch. der Stadt Berlin, I, 101. (From the year
+1397.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_466" name="note_466" href="#noteref_466">466.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">I Peter, 2, 18 ff.; I Timoth., 6, 12; Ephes.,
+6, 5; Philem., 15 ff.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_467" name="note_467" href="#noteref_467">467.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">In the German colonies
+of Mennonites in Russia, every youth serves a
+few years in the family of some other peasant. This is considered a sort of
+school. Wages are of course very large, and the treatment very mild.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">v. Haxthausen</span></span>, Studien, II, 185. Southwestern Germany
+where small landed proprietors are many, something very analogous to this
+continues. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">v. d. Goltz</span></span>, loc. cit., 452.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_468" name="note_468" href="#noteref_468">468.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">For a masterly exposition of
+the doctrine that the right of prescription or limitation is related to the
+politico-economical necessity of property, see <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">John Stuart
+Mill</span></span>, Principles, 3, II, ch. 2, sec. 2.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_469" name="note_469" href="#noteref_469">469.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Locke</span></span>,
+On Civil Government, II, §25-51; and so <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">L. Mendelssohn</span></span>, Jerusalem
+(1783), 32; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Thiers</span></span>, Du Droit de la Propriété (1849).</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_470" name="note_470" href="#noteref_470">470.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Modern writers, in their attempt
+to find a philosophical basis for the right of property, have taken two principal
+directions, the first a juridical, the second a political one. The axiom,
+<span lang="la" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="la"><span style="font-style: italic">res nullius cedit primo
+occupanti</span></span> (compare L. 3, Digest, XLI, 1), explains only the smallest part
+of the relations of property, and that only because of a very fortuitous
+circumstance. According to <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hobbes</span></span> (Leviathan, 24), property has
+its origin in the recognition of it by the power of the state, by the
+<span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">autorité publique</span></span>, the
+<span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">gouvernement</span></span>
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Bossuet</span></span>, Politique tirée de l'Ecriture, Sainte, L. 3, 4),
+or as <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Montesquieu</span></span> (Esprit des Lois
+XXVI., 15) more mildly expresses it, in the laws. The application of this
+principle would, on account of the extreme changeableness of the laws of
+every state, lead to most extreme insecurity, and to a steady oscillation from
+one Utopia to another, from one revolution to another, if it were not, at the
+same time, recognized that each one had a just title to the acquisitions he
+had made, not because the law, for the time being existing, acknowledged
+the right, but because they were the product of his labor and saving. The
+theory which bases the right of property on contract cannot be objected to
+with as much reason. Thus, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hugo Grotius</span></span>, Jus Belli et
+Pacis, II, 2, who even justifies the occupation of things without an owner, on
+the supposition of the existence of an implied contract. It is very characteristic of
+the English, that in their political language, the words <span class="tei tei-q">“liberty”</span> and
+<span class="tei tei-q">“property”</span> are so frequently found in each other's company. In one of his classic
+speeches made by Fox in 1784, he gives a definition of liberty which begins
+with the words, <span class="tei tei-q">“It consists in the safe and sacred possession of a man's
+property”</span> etc. The recent doctrine, not unfrequently to be met with, that
+every man has a right to an amount of property corresponding to his wants,
+may be used to sanction all kinds of socialistic inferences. An entirely bewildered
+and bewildering description is to be found in <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Proudhon's</span></span> Qu'est ce
+que la Propriété, 1848, as the precursor of which <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Brissot's</span></span>
+Recherches philosophiques sur le Droit de Propriété et le Vol, may be considered. In
+medieval times, there are always a multitude of other titles to property besides
+production and saving. The title which is held in highest esteem for the
+time being is always because of this very extreme vis-a-vis of all other
+titles, strengthened and made general.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_471" name="note_471" href="#noteref_471">471.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">The word socialism brought into use by
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">L. Reybaud</span></span> is as ambiguous as
+the word communism is simple and intelligible. But most socialists agree
+that actual <span class="tei tei-q">“society”</span> (which is indeed to be distinguished from the state) is,
+together with its foundations, the existing relations of property and the
+family, entirely wrong. A radical reconstruction, they say, is needed to
+remove forever the chief evil of this system, viz.: the glaring difference between
+the rich and the poor, the educated and the uneducated. The difference
+between the doctrines of the socialists and of Political Economy does
+not, by any means, consist in this, that the former concerns itself more with
+the welfare of the lower classes, or even that it gives wider scope to economy
+in common. But socialism is, indeed, a living or housekeeping in
+common (<span lang="de" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="de"><span style="font-style: italic">Gemeinwirthschaft</span></span>),
+which goes far beyond the feeling for the common interest
+(<span lang="de" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="de"><span style="font-style: italic">Gemeinsinn</span></span>). Such economy
+in common is always opposed to freedom, and, at its first introduction, contrary to
+law. It can guarantee no compensation to those who have suffered from violence or force,
+because it leads to a thoughtless and wasteful exhaustion of the nation's resources,
+inasmuch as it weakens the incentive to industry and frugality. Political Economy,
+on the other hand, recommends an <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">expropriation</span></span> when the incentives
+to industry and frugality are thereby strengthened; and the increased resources
+thus obtained serve it, as full compensation to those whose property
+has been <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">expropriated</span></span>.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_472" name="note_472" href="#noteref_472">472.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">See <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Roscher</span></span>, Betrachtungen
+über Socialismus und Communismus, Berliner Zeitschrift für Geschichtwissenschaft,
+1845, III, 422 ff.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_473" name="note_473" href="#noteref_473">473.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">Vivre en travaillant ou mourir en
+combattant</span></span>—the device on the flags of the mutinous
+silk-weavers at Lyons, in 1832.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_474" name="note_474" href="#noteref_474">474.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">We are so assured by
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Vauban</span></span> (Dime Royale, 34 seq), of the later years
+of the reign of Louis XIV, that nearly 1/10 of the French people begged,
+that 5/10 could give no alms, because they were themselves on the very brink
+of indigence; 3/10 were <span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">fort malaisés,
+embarassés de dettes et de procès</span></span>; scarcely one per cent. could be said
+to be <span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">fort à leur aise</span></span>. How
+much better off is the present Parisian workman! And yet, at that time, there was not
+the least spread of communistic doctrines. It is indeed seldom that completely
+down-trodden men react against their wretchedness with great
+energy.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_475" name="note_475" href="#noteref_475">475.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-q">“If my <em class="tei tei-emph"><span style="font-style: italic">caprice</span></em> be the source of law,
+then my <em class="tei tei-emph"><span style="font-style: italic">enjoyment</span></em> may be the source of the division of the nation's
+resources.”</span> <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Stahl</span></span>, Rechtsphilosophie, II, 2, 72.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_476" name="note_476" href="#noteref_476">476.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">That the socialism
+of <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Plato</span></span>, De Repub., V, was no mere fancy, is proved
+by the polemic which <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Aristophanes</span></span> directs against it in
+his Ecclesiazuses. See also <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Aristot.</span></span>, Polit., II, 2, Schn.
+In the contemporary practice of the Greeks, with the increasing democratization of
+the state, it became more and more usual for it to bear the expense of the outlay
+for the means of subsistence of the great crowd. (See <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Plutarch</span></span>,
+Cimo, 10.) Every act of public life was paid for. Citizens were paid for attending
+popular meetings three oboli per day, while the pay of the soldiers was six, and
+that of the sailors three. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Thucyd.</span></span>, III, 17; VII, 27; VIII,
+45.) The pay of the commonest day laborer was from three to four oboli per day.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Aristophan.</span></span>, Eccl., 310, and <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Pollux</span></span>,
+VII, 29. The number of magistrates was very large, in order that as many
+as possible might participate in this species of remuneration. Thus, in
+Athens, when it had only about 20,000 inhabitants, there were 6,000 judges.
+In addition to all this, there were numberless feasts, plays, banquets etc., which
+were offered to the people gratis. The wealthy who were compelled to meet
+all the expense thus incurred, lived in such a state of terror of the populace,
+that they considered their own impoverishment as a species of deliverance.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Xenoph.</span></span>, Conviv., 4, and <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Lysias</span></span>,
+pro Bonis.) <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Isocrates</span></span> called it much more dangerous to be
+rich than to commit a crime, since in the latter case one might obtain a pardon
+or a mild punishment. (De Permut., p. 160.) (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Lysias</span></span>,
+De Invalido, de sacra Olea, seq.) There is little difference between this
+state of things and a semi-community of goods. Only that, indeed, the great
+mass of the slaves were excluded from enjoying them. The contrast which
+somewhat later distinguished the Cynics from the Cyreno-Epicureans affords
+a striking analogy to that which, in our own times, exists between the
+pure socialists and the worshipers of mammon after the fashion of Doctor
+Ure. Concerning the Utopia of <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Iambulos</span></span>, see
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Diodor.</span></span>, II, 55 ff.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_477" name="note_477" href="#noteref_477">477.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Our sources of
+information concerning the division of the Roman republic into a moneyed
+oligarchy, and the proletariat are very numerous. Compare
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">infra</span></span>, § 205. The speeches of the Gracchi (e.g.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Plut.</span></span>, T. Gracchus, 9), and still more the violent discourses
+of Catiline's conspiracy (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Sallust</span></span>, Cat., 20, 23, 37-39),
+remind us very forcibly of the shibboleths of modern socialism.
+We very frequently meet with the expression of a longing desire to
+return to the most uncivilized and hoary past, when there was no money and
+no wealth—an aspiration which lies at the very foundation of communism.
+Thus <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Virgil</span></span>, Geo., I, 125, ff., <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Tibull.</span></span>
+I, 3, 35, ff. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Propert.</span></span> II, 13, III, 5, 11;
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Seneca</span></span>, Epist., 90; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Senec.</span></span>,
+Oct. II, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hippol.</span></span>, II, 2; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Plin.</span></span>,
+H. N. XXXII, 3. On the other hand, the practice of supporting the populace at the
+expense of great candidates or of the state, was developed to a very great extent. The
+masses lived very largely by the sale of their right of suffrage to the highest
+bidder. At the election of consuls in the year 54, 500,000 thalers were offered
+to the century called on to vote first. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Cicero</span></span>, ad Quintum
+II, 15; ad. A.H. IV, 15.) Even <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Cato</span></span> had a part in such
+bribery. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Sueton.</span></span>, Caes., 19.) In the social reform of the
+younger Gracchus, besides the limitation of large land-ownership, the principal
+points were the following: the sale of wheat under the market price, but only to
+the inhabitants of Rome itself; the construction of great highways in Italy;
+colonization at the expense of the state, and the increase of soldiers' pay.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ritsch</span></span>, Gracchen, 392 ff.) The socialistic plans
+of Rullus went much further. Were his agrarian laws put in execution, he
+would have confiscated very nearly the entire country in the interest of the
+poor, and of their demagogues! (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Cicero</span></span>, De Lege agrar.)
+Rome twice experienced a social revolution of the most frightful character, one by which
+a great portion of all private goods fell into the hands of the propertyless (soldiers),
+who knew nothing of how to turn it to account or to invest it—under
+Sulla, and then under the later Triumviri. (Compare <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Appian</span></span>,
+Bell, civil., V, 5, 22.) Complaints concerning the latter, in
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Horat.</span></span>, Epist., I, 2, 49; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Virgil</span></span>,
+Buc., IX, 28; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Tibull.</span></span> I, 1, 19, IV, 1, 182;
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Propert.</span></span>, IV, 1, 129. The elder Gracchus had promised
+compensation to the last possessors. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Tabulæ novæ</span></span> of Cinna,
+Catiline, Cælius, Dolebella. Clodius introduced the distribution of wheat, which
+according to Cicero pro Sext., 25, ate up almost one-fifth of the public revenues.
+About 320,000 persons were, in this way, supported for a long period of time
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Sueton.</span></span>, Caes, 41, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Dio C.</span></span>, XLIII,
+21; L. LV, 10), but only in such a manner as to keep them from starvation.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Sallust</span></span>, 268 ed. Bip.) To all this was soon added
+distributions of salt, meal and oil, also free baths, numberless public plays,
+colossal banqueting, payment of one year's rent etc. <span lang="la" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="la"><span style="font-style: italic">Panem et circenses!</span></span> (Juvenal, X, 80 seq.) The
+mere distribution of money under Augustus, in which from 200,000 to 320,000 men
+participated, cost each time from 2,500,000 to 6,000,000 thalers. (Monum Ancyr., 372
+Wolf.) Extraordinary assistance was, by way of preference, accorded to colonies
+of the poor. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Sueton.</span></span>, Caes, 42.) Concerning this entire
+policy, see <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Plin.</span></span>, Paneg., 26 ff. Even in Constantinople, at
+the time of its foundation, large distributions of bread were made at the expense of
+Egypt, although there could scarcely be any real pauperism in that new and
+flourishing city. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Theod.</span></span>, Cod., XIII, 4, XIV 16;
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Socrat.</span></span>, II, 13.) I can only allude to the plan
+proposed by the emperor Gallien by the neo-platonist Plotin, to found a city
+in which the ideas of Plato's republic should be carried out. (Porphyr., V,
+Plotin., 8.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_478" name="note_478" href="#noteref_478">478.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">During the two centuries of which the
+Reformation constituted the middle point, the transition from the peasant system
+of agriculture to the large farming system of modern times bore very heavily on the
+inferior classes. Such, too, was the operation of the fall in price of the precious
+metals. (§ <a href="#Section_140" class="tei tei-ref">140</a>.) The suppression of the many
+monasteries caused an increase in the wretchedness of the poor; and the numerous
+poor-laws enacted in England, Spain etc., were not sufficient to supply a remedy. The
+feeling of the people during this period of tribulation found expression in the War of the
+Peasants, in the sect of Anabaptists, in the many reformations and counter-reformations,
+in the revolt of the Netherlands, in the conflicts for the crown
+in France and England etc. In Italy, the contrast existing between the
+moneyed oligarchy and the proletariat had been developed several centuries,
+but from the middle of the sixteenth century, it had become much more oppressive
+by reason of the universal impoverishment of the country. For an
+account of the pantheistic <span class="tei tei-q">“Brethren and Sisters of the Free Spirit,”</span> with
+their community of goods and of women, see <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ullmann</span></span>, Reformatoren
+vor der Reformation, II, 18 ff. They were very numerous from the thirteenth
+to the fifteenth century in Italy and France, as well as in Germany, and lead
+us to the Adamites in the Hussite war. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Aschbach</span></span>, Geschichte K.
+Sigismunds, III, 109.) Earlier yet, we have the sect of the Giovannali, who had
+their property and women in common, and who, in 1355, had won the third
+of Corsica, but who were afterwards suppressed by Genoa and the Church.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Lebret</span></span>, Geschichte von Italien, VI, 208 ff.) The coarse
+socialist, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">John Balle</span></span>, bears about the same relation to Wycliffe,
+that Münzer and Bockholt did to Luther. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Walsingham</span></span>, Hist. Angliæ
+in <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Camden, Scriptt.</span></span>, 275.) Hans
+Böheim of Würzburg, 1476, seems to be the direct precursor of Münzer.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ullmann</span></span>, I, 421 ff.) It was almost as usual in Luther's time,
+as in 1848, or in our day, to hear of the deep demoralization of trade—the
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Fuggerei</span></span> of the Germany of the time—and of the universal
+system of fraud that prevailed. See the citations in <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hagen</span></span>,
+Deutschland's Verhältnisse im Reform-Zeitalter, II, 313 ff. Münzer's fundamental
+principle: <span lang="la" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="la"><span style="font-style: italic">Omnia simul communia!</span></span>
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Sebastian Frank</span></span>, Chronica, Zeytbuch und Geschychtbibel etc.,
+1551, fol. VI, 16, 27, 116, 194, 414, 433. John Bockholt's life presents us with a
+striking contrast. While they were bringing his perfumed women, sparkling with jewels,
+to his rose-covered bed, hung with curtains of gold cloth, on which he was
+reclining, his subjects were a prey to the horrors of famine, to such an extent
+that they were compelled to salt the bodies of children who had died
+of starvation. How frightful the end of this communistic benefactor of mankind!
+Libertine community of goods and women. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Calvin</span></span>, Instructio adv.
+Libertinos, cap. 21.) English communists in the age of the reformation.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">J. Story</span></span>, Comment. on the Constitution of the U.S., I, 36.) Even
+under Cromwell, there were many Englishmen who believed that farmers were no
+longer obliged to pay rent to land-owners. On the sect of Levellers, see
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Walker</span></span>, History of the Independency, II, 152. Even in
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Erasmus</span></span>, we find some sympathy with communism. (Enchirid. milit.
+Christ, 80.) <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Contra</span></span>, see <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Melanchthon</span></span>,
+Prolegg. in Cic. de Off., Corp. Reform, XVI, 549 ff. The most remarkable systematic
+works of this period are <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Thomas More's</span></span>, Utopia, 1516,
+and <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Campanella's</span></span> Civitas, solis, 1620. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Thomas
+More</span></span> bluntly says that all existing governments are in fact only permanent
+conspiracies of the rich to further their own interests under the mask of the common
+good, and to despoil labor. The abolition of money, which should be continued in use only
+to carry on foreign war, would, he contends, remove all misery. There was
+no really private property in his Utopia. There should be a rigid superintendence
+of all work by the public authorities, whose duty it should be to see
+to it, that no one should abandon agricultural pursuits. All should eat at a
+common table and dress after the same fashion. Internal commerce should
+give way to a mutual exchange of gifts under the supervision of the state.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Campanella</span></span>, besides a community of goods, recommends continually
+varying occupation, to last not more than four hours daily; education in common,
+especially by means of pictures, popular encyclopedias etc., all under the supreme
+guidance of a despotism to be composed of the wise, some secular
+and some spiritual, operating through the confessional. Socialists nearly
+always succeed better in the critical part of their works than in the positive.
+Compare <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">R. Mohl</span></span>, Geschichte und Literatur der
+Staatswissenschaften, § 1, 165 ff.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_479" name="note_479" href="#noteref_479">479.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">Considering the aversion exhibited against private property
+by <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">J. J. Rousseau</span></span>, and the unlimited power which he accords to
+the majority for the time being in the state (Contrat Social, 1761, II, ch. 4), it cannot
+be denied that his freedom and equality contain, to say the least, germs of
+communism by no means insignificant. But, he would, in the present state
+of civil society, have a feeling of respect for the rights of property implanted
+in the mind of the child very early, and even before the feeling of liberty is
+developed. (Emile, 1762, Livre II.) About the same time <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Morelly</span></span>
+published his Basiliade ou Naufrage des Iles flottantes, 1753, a political romance in the
+interest of communism. See the same author's Code de la Nature, 1755.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Mably</span></span>, in his two works, Doutes proposés aux Economistes, 1768,
+and La Législation ou Principes des Lois, 1776, recommended the abolition of all
+inequality and a real community of goods. The introduction of property seems
+to him, <span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">une faute qu'il était presque
+impossible de faire</span></span>. Even <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Beccaria</span></span> calls
+property a dreadful but perhaps a necessary right which has left to the unfortunate
+nothing but a naked existence. (Dei Delitti e delle Pene, 1765, cap.
+22.) The French Reign of Terror came pretty near carrying these ideas into
+effect. We need only refer to the abolition of the census, the payments made
+to the workingmen who attended the section meetings, two francs per diem,
+the enormous extension of confiscation, requisitions and forced loans, the
+revolution effected in the fortunes of individuals by the system of issuing assignats,
+the maximum affixed to the price of all the necessaries of life, the
+abolition of indirect taxes, and of what remained of the economic institutions
+handed down from the middle ages. According to <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">St. Just</span></span>:
+<span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">l'opulence est une infamie; il ne faut ni
+riches ni pauvres</span></span>. The Cahier des Pauvres demands,
+first of all, that salaries <span class="tei tei-q">“should no longer be estimated in accordance
+with the murderous principles of unbridled luxury.”</span> See Forster's letter
+dated November 15, 1793. (Sämmtl. Schriften, IX, 125.) On the conspiracy
+of Baboeuf, who was executed in 1796, and who wanted to see the completest
+equality and community of labor, of enjoyment and education, the abolition
+of large cities etc., see <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Buonarotti</span></span>, La Conjuration de B., 1821.
+This book contributed powerfully towards the revival of communistic ideas after the
+July revolution. Among modern communists who are to be distinguished
+from the more ancient, especially by the industrial coloring given to their
+theories, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Cabet</span></span>, Voyage en Icarie, 1840, II, holds a very
+prominent place. He declares the abolition of religion, of the family and of the state, to
+be open questions, and desires to bring the practice of a community of
+goods to a successful issue only through the peaceful channel of conviction.
+</p>
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Compare <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Reybaud</span></span>, Etudes sur les Réformateurs contemporains ou
+Socialistes modernes, 1840. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">L. Stein</span></span>, Der Socialismus und
+Communismus des heutigen Frankreich. See, also, the learned history of socialistic
+systems in <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Marlo's</span></span> Weltökonomie, I, 2, 435 ff.; and in what
+concerns the most recent time, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">R. Meyer</span></span>, Der Emancipationskampf
+des vierten Standes, II, 1874, seq.; a book which, in spite of its many defects, both
+doctrinal and journalistic, is as rich in thought, and in the knowledge of the subject
+it treats of, as it is permeated by a love of truth regardless of consequences. Among the
+opponents of socialism and communism, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Malthus</span></span>, On Population, B.
+III, ch. 3, and <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">B. Hildebrand</span></span>, Die Nationalökonomie der Gegenwart
+und Zukunft, vol. I, 1848, hold a very distinguished place. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">J. S.
+Mill</span></span>, Principles, II, ch. 1, 3, calls attention to the fact that hitherto the
+principle of free property has never been consistently carried out. The first social
+arrangement of modern society was almost everywhere the result of conquest and violence,
+large traces of which yet remain. Things have always been made property which
+ought not to be property. Governments have endeavored to intensify the
+darkness of the dark side of property, and favored the concentration instead
+of the diffusion of wealth etc. Hence, no one can claim that the social
+wrongs, so-called, had their origin in property as such.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Schäffle</span></span>, Kapitalismus und Socialismus, 1870, has made a very
+note-worthy effort to recognize whatever of truth there is in socialism, and to combat
+its errors.</p></dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_480" name="note_480" href="#noteref_480">480.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Saint Simon's</span></span>
+reproach to the liberals, that their fundamental principle
+was: <span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">ôte-toi de là, que je
+m'y mette</span></span>, is well known.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_481" name="note_481" href="#noteref_481">481.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Compare
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Malthus</span></span>, Additions to the Essay on Population, 1817, IV, ch.
+7.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_482" name="note_482" href="#noteref_482">482.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">The
+<span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">travailleurs égalitaires</span></span>
+wished to murder not only the king, the court,
+and the ministry, but also the Liberals and all owners of property.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_483" name="note_483" href="#noteref_483">483.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">As soon, indeed, as this true love disappears
+in the married state, the community of goods even there degenerates only too
+easily into a spoliation of the better party by the worse.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_484" name="note_484" href="#noteref_484">484.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">The
+community of goods of the first Christians at Jerusalem, so frequently
+cited and extolled (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">James</span></span>, I, 1), was only a community
+of use, not of ownership (Acts IV, 32), and, throughout, a voluntary act of love,
+not a duty (V. 4), least of all, a <em class="tei tei-emph"><span style="font-style: italic">right</span></em> which the poorer might assert.
+Spite of all this, that community of goods produced a chronic state of poverty in the
+church of Jerusalem. Hence, Paul had collections taken up for them on all sides, without,
+however, anywhere establishing a similar institution. (Romans, 15, 26; I.
+Corinth., 16, 1.) Compare <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Mosheim</span></span>, De vera Natura Communionis
+Bonorum in Ecclesia Hierosol., in his Dissertatt. ad Histor. Eccles. pertinentes, II, 1
+ff. As to whether <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Barnabas</span></span> (Epist., 19) desired to say anything
+more, compare Epist. ad Diognetum, 5. For a real recommendation of a community of goods,
+on economic grounds, see <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Joh. Chrysostom.</span></span>, in Acta Apost., Hom.
+XI. Also <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Clemens Rom.</span></span> c. 2 C. 12, qu. 1. Community of goods
+among the Essenes: <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Philo.</span></span> Opp. II. 457 ff.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Joseph. Bell</span></span>, Jud., II. 8. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Bellermann</span></span>,
+Geschichtliche Nachrichten über die Essener. (1821.) In many monasteries, there has been
+and is a species of community of goods. There was once a singular contest on
+this subject, carried on between the Minorites and the Pope, in the time of
+Louis of Bavaria. The Minorites claimed that property was a thing, so
+much to be condemned, that even food, at the moment of eating it, did not
+belong to the person using it. The Pope taught on the other hand, that even
+Christ and the Apostles possessed property, part personal and part in common.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Raynaldi</span></span>, Ann. eccl., XV, 241, 285 ff.) Community of goods of the
+Homiliates, later of the Brothers of Common Life, after the manner of the
+monks, but of a much higher kind. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ullmann</span></span>, Reformatoren v.d.
+Reform, II, 62 ff.) The first settlers of New Haven, Connecticut, held their property
+in common. Land was divided among families in proportion to the number
+of persons in them, and of the number of cattle they had brought with them;
+and all sales and purchases were made on account of the whole community.
+And so in Massachusetts during the first seven years of the colony's existence.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ebeling</span></span>, Geschichte und Erdbeschreib. der Vereinigten Staaten,
+II, 391, I, 557.) <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Herrnhut</span></span> community of goods in Pennsylvania,
+from 1742 to 1762, but which was done away with when the number of colonists became
+too great. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ebeling</span></span>, IV, 717.) Community of goods of the Shakers
+and Lutheran Rappers. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Buckingham</span></span>, Eastern States, II, 214, 427.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Prinz Neuwied</span></span>, Reise in Nord Amerika, I, 136, ff.) Russian sects
+with community of goods. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">v. Haxthausen</span></span>, I, 366, 407.)
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Harless</span></span>, christliche Ethik § 501, distinguishes very
+well between the <span class="tei tei-q">“anti-christian”</span> and <span class="tei tei-q">“pseudo christian”</span> stand point, from
+which it is sought to establish the doctrine of a community of goods. The
+Christian view of this subject (compare Ephes., 4, 28, I; Thess., 4, 11, II, 3, 12;
+Matth., 6, 24; Pet. 4, 10; Matth., 26, 7-11) is accused of hypocrisy by many socialists.
+It is very easy, they say, when one is himself in comfortable circumstances,
+to represent to the poor that their poverty is a school for heaven,
+and to preach a contempt for riches etc. They entirely forget, that the first
+promulgation of the Gospel was made at a time when the worst kind of pauperism
+prevailed; and that even the Master Himself, and the greater number
+of His Apostles belonged to the lowest stratum of society. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Luke</span></span>,
+9, 58. Many of the Fathers of the Church, however, in their exhortations to benevolence,
+used language in which modern Socialists have found a rich mine which
+they have sedulously worked. (Compare <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Villegardelle</span></span>, Histoire des
+Idées sociales, 1846, 61 ff.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_485" name="note_485" href="#noteref_485">485.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Even <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Aristotle</span></span> says that
+what is common to many is a matter of little concern to any one. (Polit., II, 1.)
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Bastiat</span></span> remarks: <span class="tei tei-q">“We compete to-day
+to see who works most and best. Under another regime, we should emulate
+one another to see who should work least and worst.”</span> (Harmonies Econ.,
+ch. VIII.) When the first settlers of Virginia, in 1611, gave up the system
+of common labor and of joint-stock companies, as much work was performed
+in a day as formerly in a week, or as much by three workmen as formerly
+by thirty. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Purchas</span></span>, Pilgrims, iv, 1866.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Bancroft</span></span>, History of the United States, I, 161.) Even in New
+England, therefore among men both steady and accustomed to labor, who for conscience
+sake had sacrificed so much, a community of goods was accompanied uninterruptedly by
+famine. A change for the better took place, for the first time in 1623 with the
+introduction of the institution of private property which was followed in 1624 by the
+right of inheritance. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Bancroft</span></span>, I, 340.) The military colonies
+of Algeria, also, in which husbandry in common was carried on, begged, at the end of a
+year, that the system should be abandoned, for the reason that it was good for
+nothing but to generate idlers; and yet, these colonists were all powerful
+men of about the same age, and accustomed to order and service in common.
+They were, moreover, assisted by the nation with pay and food. Compare
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Bugeaud's</span></span> account: Revue des deux Mondes, June 1, 1848. <span class="tei tei-q">“The
+French associations (after 1848), whose object was labor in common, have nearly all
+died out.”</span> <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">M. Chevalier</span></span> in the Journal des Débats, Feb. 3,
+1851. In the United States, sixteen phalansteries of Fourierites, founded between 1840 and
+1846, had all collapsed in 1855. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">D. Vierteljahrsschrift</span></span>,
+October, 1855, 205 ff.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_486" name="note_486" href="#noteref_486">486.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Even in New Harmony, the members considered the task which
+they had to perform to obtain food, clothing and shelter, as villeinage in the worst
+sense of the term. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">H. Bernhard v. Weimar</span></span>, Nordamerikan. Reise,
+V, 134 ff.; 151, 310, ff.) It is very inconsistent in socialists to continue the
+proprietorship and heirship of the state. To be consistent they should give both
+these rights only to mankind as a whole. Compare <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Kiraly</span></span>, Ueber
+Socialismus und Comm., 1868, 35.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_487" name="note_487" href="#noteref_487">487.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">It would not be
+entirely fair to take a partisan view of the <span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">ateliers nationaux</span></span>
+of 1848, and claim them as a practical refutation of socialistic utopias,
+since no serious experiment was made with them. Compare <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">E. Thomas</span></span>,
+Histoire des Ateliers nationaux considérés sous le double Point de Vue politique
+et social, 1848.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_488" name="note_488" href="#noteref_488">488.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Socialists generally overlook the
+fact, that the greater number of enjoyments from which the poorer classes are excluded,
+by the right of property, would not exist at all were it not for that very right.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Spittler</span></span>, Politik, 356 ff.) This remark may also be made of
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hugo's</span></span> ingenious objections. (Naturrecht,
+§ 208 ff.) One of the most effective pieces of socialistic declamation is
+that the lower classes have a much shorter average of life than the upper.
+Hence the institution of private property is charged with being a species of
+spoliation of the poor of so many years of life, and the entire <span class="tei tei-q">“present society”</span>
+condemned on that account. Here again it is not borne in mind, that
+a few centuries ago the general average of life was probably still smaller;
+and that it was precisely the growth and development of <span class="tei tei-q">“present society”</span>
+that lengthened the days of the poorer classes even, although it may have
+lengthened those of the rich in a still greater proportion. See § 246.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_489" name="note_489" href="#noteref_489">489.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">But a community of goods would
+not, by a great deal, accomplish as much as is generally supposed. In Prussia, for
+instance, in 1867, only about three per cent. of the entire number of families in the
+community had a yearly income of 1,000 thalers; only nine per cent. had 500 thalers or
+more, and only 6,465 returned an income of more than 4,000 thalers, while only
+590 returned one of 16,000 thalers. (Preuss. statist. Ztschr, 1868, 83.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Held</span></span>, Die Einkommensteuer, 197 ff) How little, therefore, could
+the poor here gain by the spoliation of the rich! Besides, the purely personal consumption
+of the rich is, after all, not so great; and if all luxury were abandoned,
+an innumerable number of men would lose their gains. (Compare <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ad.
+Smith</span></span>, Wealth of Nations, I, ch. 11, 2.) It would be to kill the hen that had
+hitherto laid the golden egg in order to divide its flesh a little more equally.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_490" name="note_490" href="#noteref_490">490.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Babeuf</span></span>
+declared all arts and sciences to be evils. He would have no one
+learn anything but Reading, Writing, Arithmetic, and a little of the Geography
+of France; and have the strictest censorship enforced to keep every
+one within these limits. Compare the able criticism of <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Proudhon</span></span>,
+Contradictions, ch. 12.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_491" name="note_491" href="#noteref_491">491.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">According to <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Umpfenbach</span></span>,
+Nationalökonomie, 201, where a community of
+goods obtains, there can be but the alternative, viz.: whether each person or
+each family shall receive just the same amount. (The former would be more
+in harmony with principle, but what an over-population would be the consequence!)
+Precisely so, too, if each person were to come and take his own
+portion (anarchy!), or if it were parcelled out to each by a board of distributors
+(despotism!).</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_492" name="note_492" href="#noteref_492">492.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">This expression came into vogue, principally, through
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">L. Blanc</span></span>, Organization
+du Travail (1841), the leading ideas in which work are the following:
+The suppression of competition by the establishment of state industries;
+equality of remuneration for labor; equality and legislative determination of
+the rate of interest; the choice of superintendents by the workmen. With
+many modern socialists, the shibboleth is not so much <span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">liberté</span></span> as <span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">solidarité</span></span>. Besides, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Fichte's</span></span>
+Naturrecht (1796), and his geschlossener Handelsstaat, are,
+without doubt, among the most remarkable works favoring an <span class="tei tei-q">“organization
+of labor.”</span> They aim at the destruction of the present social system, which, at
+most, needs only to be reformed and rejuvenated; and to galvanize the dead
+body into a new and different life (Medea's magic cauldron!). Compare
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Corvaja</span></span>, Bancocrazia o il gran Libro sociale, 1840.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_493" name="note_493" href="#noteref_493">493.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Cabet's Icarian colony in America numbered
+298 adults and only 107 children. Yet spite of this condition, so favorable to
+production, it did but a very sorry business. Its government was very similar to that of
+a house of correction or a penitentiary. Even in religious matters, spite of all pretended
+toleration, those members who did not agree with Cabet were described in
+the official weekly paper as <span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">des infames
+ou des aveugles</span></span>. (D. Vierteljahrsschrift, 1855, October, 205 ff.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_494" name="note_494" href="#noteref_494">494.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">An
+eastern sage says, that land possesses the ideal of legal security
+through which a beautiful woman, decked with pearls, might travel without
+danger. What would such a sage say of a European country, in which even
+orphan children have their property not only preserved to them, but find it
+increased from having been placed at interest, as soon as they reach their
+majority? (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Barrow</span></span>.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_495" name="note_495" href="#noteref_495">495.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-q">“The
+equality of communism is the worst species of inequality, because
+it guarantees to one for two hours of poor labor as much as it does to an
+other for four hours of good work.”</span> (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Bastiat</span></span>,
+Harmonies économiques, ch. 8.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_496" name="note_496" href="#noteref_496">496.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Proudhon</span></span>,
+Qu'est-ce que la Propriété, 283, says, very justly, that <span class="tei tei-q">“a community
+of goods is the spoliation of the strong by the weak.”</span></dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_497" name="note_497" href="#noteref_497">497.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Called a negative community of goods, by
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Zacchariä</span></span>, Vierzig Bücher vom Staate, IV,
+146, in contradistinction to the positive and universal community of gain,
+as desired by the communists.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_498" name="note_498" href="#noteref_498">498.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Community
+of goods and of women among the Ichthyophages on the Red
+Sea, who lived in caves, went naked for the most part, plundered all shipwrecked
+people, and never reached an advanced age. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Diodor.</span></span>, III, 15 ff.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Peripl.</span></span>, Maris Erythr., 12. Concerning the Scythians, see
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Strabo</span></span>, VII, 300; the Spaniards, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Plutarch</span></span>,
+Marius, 6; the Rhetians, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Dio Cass.</span></span> LIV, 22; the
+Triballi, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Isocr.</span></span>, Panath., § 237; the Kilici,
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Sext.</span></span>, Empir. Pyrrh. Hypot. III, 24. Community of goods among the
+Caribs who performed all their work in common, and had, at least in the case of males, a
+common table and common stores with supplies. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Petr. Martyr</span></span>, Dec.
+VII, 1. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Rochefort</span></span>, II, c. 16. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">B. Edwards</span></span>,
+History of the West Indies, I, 43 ff.) Among the Kuskowimers of Russian America, all the
+able-bodied men of the tribe live together. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">v. Wrangell</span></span>,
+Nachrichten, 129.) Among the inhabitants of the Aleutian islands, at least in times of
+scarcity of food, the produce of the fisheries is divided according to their need.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">V. Wrangell</span></span>, 185.) The organization
+of labor is rigidly enforced among the Otomacs, on the banks of
+the Orinoco, and they are, nevertheless, more civilized than their neighbors.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Depons</span></span>, Voyage, I, 295.) A community of goods must, however, be
+considered an advance, in the case of an isolated people; and it is an error to
+look upon it as the most primitive condition, as does, for instance,
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ambrosius</span></span>, De off. Minist. I, 28, and <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Frederick
+II</span></span>, in the preface to his general code. (Allgemein. Gesetzbuche, 1231.) The
+hospitality of the inhabitants of the Friendly Islands borders on a community of goods.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Mariner</span></span>, Freundschaftsinseln, 75, 81.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Klemm</span></span>, Kulturgeschichte, IV, 398.) Concerning the
+beginnings of property among the Esquimaux, See <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Klemm</span></span>, II,
+294.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_499" name="note_499" href="#noteref_499">499.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Οὐκ
+ἄδοξον ἧν παρὰ τοῖς παλαιοῖς ληστεύειν, ἀλλ᾽ ἔνδξον.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Didym.</span></span>, ad Odyss. II, 73, IX, 252.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_500" name="note_500" href="#noteref_500">500.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">In Mexico,
+the Spaniards found land ownership among the most distinguished
+of the natives, but only a species of possession in common and
+common store houses among the peasantry. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Robertson</span></span>,
+History of America, § VII.) Hence, the agriculture of the country was so unimportant that
+the little army of the <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">conquistadores</span></span> frequently
+produced a famine by their marches.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_501" name="note_501" href="#noteref_501">501.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">The Tcherkesses considered robbery
+honorable provided the robber was not caught <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">in
+flagrante</span></span>. Compare <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Koch</span></span>, Reise in den kaukasischen Isthmus,
+I, 370 ff. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Bell</span></span>, Journal of a Residence in Circassia,
+I, 181, II, 201. The organized robber bands of ancient Egypt, when it was so
+highly civilized (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Diodor.</span></span>, I, 80) may, on the other hand,
+be accounted for by similar conditions actually existing in the large cities of
+our own day.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_502" name="note_502" href="#noteref_502">502.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">What a frightful organization of
+labor we find in Sparta, combined with a community of goods! Let us recall the exposing
+of children authorized by law, the mode of education which must have cost the life of
+all whose constitution was weak, the <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">cryptia</span></span>, the stern
+hierarchy of age etc. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Plut.</span></span>, Inst. Lac. 2, appreciates the
+bad taste of the black broth at its true value. The Cretan community of goods was
+based chiefly on the unnatural relation created by the authorities known as
+paiderastia; and which was a very efficient means to prevent over-population.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Plat.</span></span>, De Legg, I, 636. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Arist.</span></span>,
+Polit. II, 8.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_503" name="note_503" href="#noteref_503">503.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Remarkable
+reasons therefor in <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Cæsar</span></span>, Bell. Gall., VI, 22.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_504" name="note_504" href="#noteref_504">504.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">There are, especially in Russia, a multitude
+of such institutions among the inhabitants of the country still. See
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Roscher</span></span>, Nationalökonomik des Ackerbaues, § 71
+ff.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_505" name="note_505" href="#noteref_505">505.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">In
+the Corpus Juris Canonici, that crown of medieval theology, politics
+and jurisprudence, the ideal of a community of goods occupies a place
+almost as prominent as in the works of modern socialists. The only difference
+is, that in the former the opposition to private property arises from a
+one-sided religiousness and contempt of the world, while, in the latter, it
+arises generally from irreligiousness and over-estimation of worldly goods.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_506" name="note_506" href="#noteref_506">506.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">This does not include the
+cost of the schools, churches and benevolent institutions.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_507" name="note_507" href="#noteref_507">507.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">According to
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Lassalle</span></span>, System der erworbenen Rechte, 1861, § 259, history
+shows that law, as civilization advances, curtails more and more the
+proprietary sphere of private individuals, inasmuch as it tends more and
+more to place a greater number of objects outside the circle of individual
+ownership.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_508" name="note_508" href="#noteref_508">508.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Saint
+Simonism is a warning example of this tendency. Saint Simon
+never lost an opportunity to give vent to his utter contempt for the liberals,
+and for constitutional government—<span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">ce
+bátard du régime féodal et du régime industriel</span></span>; and to counsel the crown,
+after the example of Louis XI. to place itself at the head of the working class, and
+in opposition to the middle class. (Oeuvres de <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Saint Simon</span></span>,
+éd. 1841, 44, 148, 209.) <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Bazard</span></span>, Exposition, 76, demanded
+that all antagonism between the temporal and spiritual powers, all opposition
+for the sake of freedom, <span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">méfiance
+organisée</span></span> of parliaments, and all competition, should cease. Even education
+he would have bestowed according to <span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">capacité</span></span>, which he would have determined by the
+<span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">chefs légitimes de la société</span></span>
+(280). To the criminal court should be referred all cases of <span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">delicts</span></span>, that is, all inopportune acts, even in
+the scientific and artistic departments. They should be tried after the manner of the
+<span class="tei tei-q">“courts of trade;”</span> that is, in a summary way, without appeal, and by experts
+(317 ff). All the relations of property should be determined by the <span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">décision arbitrale des chefs d'industrie</span></span> (326).
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Bazard</span></span> everywhere insists that the reign of genius and of
+self-sacrifice on the one hand, and on the other of confidence and obedience, is the
+only true policy (330). Saint Simonism was nearly related to Bonapartism.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_509" name="note_509" href="#noteref_509">509.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Schäffle</span></span>,
+Nat. Œk., III, Aufl., I, 61.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_510" name="note_510" href="#noteref_510">510.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">If we remove
+in thought, all injurious elements from a community of
+goods, and add to it all the incentives and restraints necessary to be added,
+we shall have a state of things entirely similar to that in a nation whose public
+and private affairs are carried on in accordance with the principles of a
+healthy system of Political Economy as understood to-day. (Edinburgh
+Review, January, 1851.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_511" name="note_511" href="#noteref_511">511.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">How true freedom is
+accompanied by what <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Bastiat</span></span> calls <span class="tei tei-q">“true Saint
+Simonism and true communism,”</span> see <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">infra</span></span>, § 210.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_512" name="note_512" href="#noteref_512">512.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">The experiments of a community of goods,
+which have proved successful in practice, were all based on the more
+or less complete celibacy of the members of the societies. Compare
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hermann</span></span>, Staatsw. Unters., II, Aufl., 45.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_513" name="note_513" href="#noteref_513">513.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Thus
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Proudhon</span></span> (Contradictions, ch. 5) says that the many socialists,
+who would construct their societies after the type of the family, as the
+<span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">molscule organique</span></span>, are all
+wrong. The family has a <span class="tei tei-q">“monarchical, patriarchal”</span> character.
+In it, the principle of authority is formed and preserved. On it, ancient
+and feudal society was based; and <span class="tei tei-q">“precisely against this old patriarchal
+constitution, modern democracy protests and revolts.”</span>
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Fourier</span></span> calls marriage, <span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">un groupe essentiellement faux: faux par le nombre borné
+à deux, par l'absence de liberté et par les dissidences du goṅt, qui éclatent dès le
+premier jour</span></span>. (Nouveau Monde, 57.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_514" name="note_514" href="#noteref_514">514.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">On the
+Indians of North America, see <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Schoolraft</span></span>, Information respecting
+the Indian Tribes of the United States, II, 194; on the South American
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">d'Orbigny</span></span>, Voyage, IV, 220, and passim, on the South
+Sea Islanders, the Novara-Reise, II, 418; on the ancient Albanians,
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Strabo</span></span>, XI, 503.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_515" name="note_515" href="#noteref_515">515.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">The hereditary transmission
+of property to posterity has an obvious tendency
+to make a man a good citizen. It ranges his passions on the side of
+duty, and induces him to make himself profit the common good, and it assures
+him that his reward shall not die with himself, but that it shall be
+handed down to those to whom he is joined by the dearest and most tender
+feelings. (See <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Blackstone's</span></span> Commentaries, II, 11.)
+Without the right of inheritance, credit is scarcely possible, since
+with the death of the debtor the only stay of the creditor would
+cease.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_516" name="note_516" href="#noteref_516">516.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Testamentary freedom
+(which obtained in places there about the beginning
+of the eighteenth century) prevails completely in England at present,
+contrary to the principle of the Roman law requiring an obligatory portion
+(<span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">la légitime</span></span>) to be
+left to the heirs, which is still binding in France, but in a
+very much developed form. The consequence is that last testaments are as
+frequent in England as they are rare in France. There were, in Paris, in
+1825, 7,649 judicial, and only 1,081 testamentary partitions of property.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Monnier</span></span>.) In Great Britain, in 1838, the number
+of testamentary alienations of property taxed stood to those in which there
+was no will, in the proportion of 8:3; and the values of the alienated property
+as 10:1. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Porter</span></span>.) Among a people noted for their high moral
+tone, testamentary freedom is a powerful means of strengthening paternal authority
+on the one hand, and of keeping alive, in the minds of parents, on the other, a
+sense of responsibility for the future of their children. Compare
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Helferich</span></span>, Tübinger Zeitschr., 1854, 143, ff.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_517" name="note_517" href="#noteref_517">517.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Polyb.</span></span>, XX, 6. Hence it was, that all (?) the wealth of Thebes,
+when it was destroyed by Alexander the Great, was only 440 talents. (Athen., IV,
+148.) <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Drumann</span></span>, Gesch. Roms. etc., VI, 333 ff.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Cicero</span></span>, Phil., II, 16. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hoeck</span></span>,
+Röm. Gesch., I, 2, 118. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Sueton.</span></span>, Octav., 66. An especially
+scandalous instance in <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Petron.</span></span>, 140. For a masterly theory
+of legacy-hunting, see <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Horat.</span></span>, Sat., II,
+5. Compare <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Lucian</span></span>, Dialogues of the Dead, 5-9.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Petronius</span></span> speaks of a <span lang="la" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="la"><span style="font-style: italic">turba hæredipetarum</span></span>. (124.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_518" name="note_518" href="#noteref_518">518.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Even the
+revolutionary shibboleth, <span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">paternité</span></span>, really means nothing more
+than the equal right of inheritance of all, i.e., the abolition of the right of
+inheritance! (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">R. Meyer</span></span>.) The strongest attack, from a scientific
+point of view, made on the right of inheritance in more recent times, comes from Saint
+Simonism. The founder himself, after a life rich in experience but poor in action,
+spent in the search of much but in the finding of little, succeeded only
+in arraying the industrial and proprietary classes against each other, in declaring
+the poorest class to be the most important of all, and in basing the
+new <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">religion of love</span></span> on the emancipation of labor. His disciples
+went further. In order to abolish all the privileges of birth,
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Bazard</span></span>, Exposition de la Doctrine de Saint Simon, 1831, p. 172,
+ff., taught that it was not enough to distribute public employments according to merit,
+and in the interest of the people generally, but that the distribution of property
+should be made in accordance with the same principle. The inequality of ownership should
+correspond with the inequality of merit. Every one may, during his life,
+keep what he had acquired himself, but give it to the state at death. Thus
+would a reconciliation be effected between the general interest and private
+interest; and the public revenue, supplied in this way, might easily be employed
+in place of the revenue raised by such taxation as weighs most
+heavily on the inferior classes. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">F. Huet</span></span>, also, Le Regne social
+du Christianisme, 1853, III, 5, would have all private property, after the death of the
+owner, fall <span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">également à tous les jeunes
+travailleurs</span></span>. The practical consequences of this system may now be seen in
+Turkey. There, the principal military fiefs are held in this way. Hence it is, that the
+Turkish owner of such a fief builds as little as possible. When one of his walls
+threatens to fall, it is kept standing by means of props. If it falls in fact, the only
+consequence is that there are fewer rooms in the house, and the owner settles beside the
+ruins. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Denon</span></span>, I, p. 193.) In the Butan, there exists a species
+of practical Saint Simonism. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Robinson</span></span>, Descriptive Account of
+Assan, 1841.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_519" name="note_519" href="#noteref_519">519.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">It was chiefly fear of the
+consequences of the declamations of the socialists and their declamation against
+<span class="tei tei-q">“monopoly”</span> that induced <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Bastiat</span></span> to reduce all
+the value of landed property to that of the capital employed in its manuring,
+improvement etc. (Harmonies, ch. 9.) We may, however, unreservedly
+grant him that, as a rule, until the time of its original possession by man, land
+had no <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">valeur</span></span> whatever (278).</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_520" name="note_520" href="#noteref_520">520.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Kant</span></span> thinks the very
+contrary: Metaph. Anfangsgründe der Rechtslehre, (Werke, IX, 72 ff).
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Contra</span></span>, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Grotius</span></span>, J. B. et P., II, 2.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Graswinkel</span></span>, in his Schriften für die Freiheit des Meeres, 1652
+ff., in <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Laspeyres</span></span>, Geschichte der niederländischen N. Œk., 12.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hufeland</span></span>, Neue Grundlegung, I, 307.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_521" name="note_521" href="#noteref_521">521.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-q">“A district of Tartary of ten square miles, in
+which several hordes pasture their flocks, may contain between 400 and 500
+shepherds, who find employment in this mode of production.”</span> In Brie, in
+France, on the same area, 50,000 peasants who own no land, live and draw
+their sole income from their labors in the fields (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">J. B.
+Say</span></span>).</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_522" name="note_522" href="#noteref_522">522.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Schubert</span></span>, Reise durch Frankreich und Italien, I, 188.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_523" name="note_523" href="#noteref_523">523.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-q">“Without labor,
+the earth bestows nothing on man but a stopping place.
+Hence, the reasons for private property do not extend so far as to prove that
+the great land and water highways should not be reserved as common property,
+and as a home to every man.”</span> (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Zachariä</span></span>, vom Staate, VII,
+43.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_524" name="note_524" href="#noteref_524">524.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">This is the practice in
+Taway. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ritter</span></span>, Erdkunde, V, 130. And so in
+ancient Germany. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">J. Grimm</span></span>, Rechtsalterthümer, 92. Right of the
+<span class="tei tei-q">“dead fire”</span> in Spain and Portugal during the middle ages. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">S.
+Rosa de Viterbo</span></span>: Elucidario das Palavras etc., I, 470. In many parts of Persia, the
+land belongs to anyone who has provided it with water by canals or wells.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Fraser</span></span>, Journey in Chorasan, ch. 7.) Especially after the
+Mongolian devastation about the beginning of the fourteenth century, it was decreed
+that land which had remained uncultivated for a long time should belong to the person
+who made it productive. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">d'Ohsson</span></span>, Hist. des Mongols, IV, 418.)
+Similarly, in the time of the ancient Persians (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Polyb.</span></span>, X, 28,
+3), the harvest for the first five years belonged to the person who first irrigated the
+land. On the upper Euphrates, likewise, the land is very often neither sold nor leased.
+Anyone who will till it and pay one-tenth of the produce to the bey may
+have it for nothing. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ritter</span></span>, X, 669; compare VIII, 468; IX,
+900.) So, too, among the Fulah and Mandingo negroes, and even among the Tscherkessans.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Klemm</span></span>, Kulturgeschichte, III, 337 ff.) As the latest stages of
+development so often present instances of a reversion to the earliest, we find that
+Theodosius and Valentinian decreed that the <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">agri deserti</span></span> should,
+after two years' cultivation, belong to the possessor. L. 8, Cod. Just., XI, 58.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_525" name="note_525" href="#noteref_525">525.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Thus anyone
+may burn his own coat or throw it in the water; but no
+one may set fire to his own house or drown his land by the destruction of a
+dam. Even the non-user of a large area, in a thickly populated region,
+would scarcely be permitted. The taking of property by the state, at the
+present day in times of peace, is confined almost exclusively to land.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_526" name="note_526" href="#noteref_526">526.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Thus <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">P.
+v. Arnim</span></span>, in a work entitled <span class="tei tei-q">“Ideen zu einer vollständigen
+landwirthschaftlichen,”</span> Buchführung, 1805, a treatise on <span class="tei tei-q">“agricultural
+book-keeping,”</span> considers the farmer as a state official who should cultivate whatever
+he believed in conscience, or what the state declared to be, most necessary.
+He suggests that the state should subject all new purchasers of land to an
+examination to ascertain whether they are rich and noble enough to act in
+this way.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_527" name="note_527" href="#noteref_527">527.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Thus, for instance,
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Herbert Spencer</span></span>, Social Statics, 1851, 114 ff., and to
+some extent <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Spinoza</span></span>, Tract. polit., VI, 2. There are now
+in England several Land-Tenure-Reform-Associations, some of which would
+<span class="tei tei-q">“expropriate”</span> all land and vest the title in the state. The programme of the
+others embraces not only opposition to the right of primogeniture, to family
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">fidei commissa</span></span> and the assertion of the right of freedom of trade
+in land, and of a more democratic use of common lands, but also the appropriation by the
+state of the increase in the rent of land which is caused by no labor of the landlord,
+but solely by the increase of population and of the wealth of the community
+or of the nation. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Newmarch</span></span>, on the other hand, very correctly
+remarks, that since it is impossible to draw a line of demarkation showing the increase of
+the value of land growing out of the increase of population etc., the owner
+of land in making improvements would never know whether he made them
+for himself or for the state. (Statist. Journal, 1871, 488 ff.) Compare
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Wolkoff</span></span>, Sur la Rente foncière, 1854, and <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">H.
+H. Gossen</span></span>, Entwickelung der Gesetze des menschlichen Verkehrs (1854).</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_528" name="note_528" href="#noteref_528">528.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">In Congo and
+on the gold coast of Guinea the land, in whole villages,
+is tilled in common and the harvest distributed among the families per capita.
+Wherever absolutism reigns, the prince is also the owner of all the land.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Klemm</span></span>, III, 337.) In China, where the original tenure
+in common of the land by all was broken through in the third century before Christ, all
+the land of the country now belongs, strictly speaking, to the state; and the possessor
+of land who permits it to go untilled is punished. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Plath.</span></span> in the
+phil.-hist. Sitzungsberichten der Münchener Akad., 1873, 793 ff.) In Corea,
+private property in land is unknown; arable land is divided by the state according
+to the number in a family. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ritter</span></span>, IV, 633.) The example, on the
+largest scale, of a country without private property in land is the British
+East Indies. Compare the paper by <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ch. Campbell</span></span>, in the Essays
+published by the Cobden Club; System of Land Tenure in various Countries, 1870.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_529" name="note_529" href="#noteref_529">529.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">The legal and economic difference between
+property in land and property in capital is well defined by <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">J.
+S. Mill</span></span>, Principles, II, ch. 2, 6. <span class="tei tei-q">“The reasons
+which form the justification, in an economical point of view, of property in
+land, are only valid in so far as the proprietor of the land is its improver.
+In no sound theory of private property was it ever contemplated that the
+proprietor of land should be merely a sinecurist quartered on it.”</span> He here
+alludes specially to Ireland. The Fourierist, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Considérant</span></span>,
+distinguishes accurately between the capital produced by labor and saving, and the
+increase of the value of land caused by capital and labor, and its original value.
+Only the first two elements can justly be made property. But as, for prudential
+reasons, it is necessary to grant individuals the right of private property
+in land, those who are not such proprietors must, as a compensation for
+the common property which they have lost, be guaranteed the right to labor.
+(Théorie du Droit de Propriété et du Droit au Travail.) In England, the
+opinion that the compulsory support of the poor was introduced in compensation
+to them for the establishment of private property in land has met
+with considerable favor. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Bishop Woodward</span></span>, On the Expediency of
+a Regular Plan for the Maintenance of the Poor in Ireland, 1775. Compare
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Eden</span></span>, State of the Poor, I, 413. However, the poor rates, in a
+country like England, are much more than an equivalent of what its soil could produce
+without the assistance of capital.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_530" name="note_530" href="#noteref_530">530.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">The principal classical work on this subject is
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Nebenius</span></span>, Der öffentliche Credit, 1820, 2d ed., 1829. Previously,
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Salmasius</span></span>, De Modo Usurarum, 1639; and even
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Demosthenes</span></span>, adv. Dionysiod, 1283. Compare further
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Schäffle</span></span>, in the Deutsch. Vierteljahrsschrift, No. 106, II,
+289 ff.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_531" name="note_531" href="#noteref_531">531.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Compulsory loans by the state, for instance,
+occupy an intermediate position between taxes and credit-operations,
+properly so called.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_532" name="note_532" href="#noteref_532">532.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Besides loans proper, all payments
+in advance, or delays made in the payments of earnest-money, all leases and
+lettings, which <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Courcelle-Seneuil</span></span> calls
+<span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">un médiocre degré de crédit</span></span>,
+insurances and even all contracts for wages where the payment is delayed for a long
+period of time, are species of credit. For a nice distinction between leasing
+(<span lang="de" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="de"><span style="font-style: italic">Pacht</span></span>) and letting (<span lang="de" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="de"><span style="font-style: italic">Miethe</span></span>), see <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Knies</span></span>,
+Tübinger Ztschr., 1860, 180 ff., and the Freiburger Univ. Programm.,
+9. September, 1862. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">D. Wakefield</span></span>, Essay upon Political Economy,
+1804, 35, distinguishes between <span class="tei tei-q">“loan-credit”</span> which is given to a poor man in the
+hope of his paying it by means of his labor, and <span class="tei tei-q">“exchange-credit,”</span> or credit
+between property owners. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Cieszkowski's</span></span> definition:
+<span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">le crédit c'est la métamorphose
+des capitaux stables et engagés en capitaux circulants et dégagés</span></span>. (Du
+Crédit et de la Circulation, 2d ed., 1847.) According to <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Knies</span></span>,
+Tübinger Ztschr., 1859, 568, every credit-operation is an exchange or sale of services,
+one of which is to be performed in the present, and the counter-service of
+the other party in the future. According to <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Macleod</span></span>, it is
+<span class="tei tei-q">“a sale of debts.”</span></dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_533" name="note_533" href="#noteref_533">533.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Personal
+credit, of course, preponderates in commerce. Hence it is, that
+in mercantile life, information concerning the personal status, reputation etc.
+of his colleagues, plays so important a part with the merchant. This information
+was made more accessible in England by the Lloyd institution. On
+similar North American institutions, see <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Tellkampf</span></span>, Beiträge, I,
+51. Credit given on security is a modification, sometimes of personal and sometimes of
+real credit. Compare, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">infra</span></span>, the theory on bankers, brokers
+etc.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_534" name="note_534" href="#noteref_534">534.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">In despotisms,
+credit is almost entirely personal. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Montesquieu</span></span> Esprit des
+Lois, L.V., 15. In New York, says <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">M. Chevalier</span></span>, a merchant
+with resources worth 200,000 francs, can do a business of from 1,000,000 to 1,500,000
+francs. In Paris, under similar circumstances, the same man would find it difficult to
+be credited to the extent of 500,000 francs. In Holland, two hundred years
+ago, a person who hypothecated his property was obliged to pay a higher
+rate of interest than in business (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Becher</span></span>, Polit. Discurs,
+1763, 699), while the stationary period, one hundred years ago, made personal credit
+extremely difficult. In Zurich, it was encouraged by the prohibition of loaning money
+out of the country. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Büsch</span></span>, Geldumlauf, III, 40.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_535" name="note_535" href="#noteref_535">535.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Schäffle</span></span>, Nat. Œk., II, Aufl., 112.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_536" name="note_536" href="#noteref_536">536.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Schäffle</span></span>,
+according to the purpose which it is intended to subserve, divides
+credit into production-credit (investment of loans in immoveable property
+and in moveable property engaged in industrial operations), consumption-credit
+and clearing-credit, or loans made to pay respited purchase and earnest
+money, inheritances etc. (Kapitalismus und Socialismus, 552.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_537" name="note_537" href="#noteref_537">537.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Pinto</span></span>, Traité de la
+Circulation et du Crédit, 1771, considers loans bearing interest as new portions of the
+resources of a country (p. 161), and that government loans not made in excess of its
+powers are <span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">une alchymie réalisée dont
+souvent eux mêmes qui l' opèrent n' entendent pas tout le mystère</span></span>, (p. 338.)
+Similarly and earlier, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">v. Schröder</span></span>, F. Schatz-und Rentkammer,
+238 ff; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Mélon</span></span>, Essai politique sur le Commerce, 1734, ch. 6;
+next, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hamilton</span></span>, Report to the House of Representatives on the
+subject of Manufactures, Dec. 5, 1791; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Von Struensee</span></span>,
+Abhandlungen, 1800, I, 259. See infra, § 210. More recently, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">St.
+Chamans</span></span>, Nouvel Essai sur la Richesses des Nations, 1824, 83 ff.
+To some extent, even <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Dietzel</span></span>, System der Staatsanleihen,
+1855, 200. This is a dangerous error, since to every credit there is a set-off in
+the nature of a debit of an equal amount; and the evidences of debt are nothing but claims
+on the future revenue of the state. This was fully recognized by
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Cantillon</span></span>, 291 ff. One of the principal advocates of that view
+among writers on Political Economy is the vivacious, acute and practically not
+unskillful, but sophistically superficial <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Macleod</span></span>. (Elements
+of Political Economy, 1858, ch. 3, Dictionary, 1862, v. Credit.) The creditor's
+assignable right of demand, he considers immaterial capital. While bills of lading,
+warehouse receipts, dock yard receipts etc., only represent goods, the bank note is
+new goods. Even metallic money has only a credit-value, inasmuch as it can be used only to
+effect exchanges. To the - of the creditor may correspond a + of the
+debtor; but the latter is negative only in the sense that we speak of negative
+electricity, a negative thermometrical degree. When an estate is leased, the
+owner has, in his demand for rent, a vendible <em class="tei tei-emph"><span style="font-style: italic">plus</span></em>; but the lessee no
+corresponding <em class="tei tei-emph"><span style="font-style: italic">minus</span></em>. (Not so. To the same extent that the proprietor has his
+future payments on the lease discounted, the present sale-value of his estate
+is diminished; or if it is not sold, the last party obtaining the discount has
+made his available capital as much less by the advance as that of the lessor
+has been increased.) The <span class="tei tei-q">“discounting of the future,”</span> that is, the apparent
+capitalization of hopes, so much in vogue at the present time, may be a great spur to
+production as it may also be to baseless extravagance.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_538" name="note_538" href="#noteref_538">538.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Many
+theoreticians ascribe a direct creation of new capital to credit, in so
+far as the capacity of the evidences of debt to circulate as a medium of exchange
+effects a real saving, and permits the former very costly and intrinsically
+valuable instruments of exchange to be used in some other way.
+(§ <a href="#Section_123" class="tei tei-ref">123</a>.) Compare <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ricardo</span></span>,
+Proposals for a secure and economical Currency (1817). <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">J. S.
+Mill</span></span>, Principles, II, 174 and 36. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">McCulloch</span></span>, Commercial
+Dictionary, art. Credit. And so it was in the first four editions of this book
+of mine. But here, too, there is, immediately, only a transfer of already existing
+capital. The person, for instance, who accepts a bank note for payment,
+loans a part of his capital to the bank; and the advantage to the whole
+community of such credit-operations consists chiefly in this: that so large
+a quantity of cash-capital which lay idle in banks etc., may be used more
+productively.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_539" name="note_539" href="#noteref_539">539.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">When <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Roesler</span></span> says that
+credit is capital, the product of saving, and very serviceable in further production
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Grands.</span></span>, 300), he confounds credit itself
+with the foundations of credit, which are, indeed, in large part material or
+moral capital.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_540" name="note_540" href="#noteref_540">540.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Compare Discourse
+on Trade, Coyn and Paper-Credit, London, 1697, 72 ff.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_541" name="note_541" href="#noteref_541">541.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Compare
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Buron</span></span>, Guerre au Crédit, 1868. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Schäffle</span></span>,
+Tüb. Ztsch., 1869, 296 ff. With a thorough understanding of its politico-economical
+bearing, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">O. Michaelis</span></span>, (Berliner V. Jahrsschr. 1863, IV, 121,)
+says: The capital-value of my credit is not equal to the nominal value of my evidences
+of indebtedness [notes etc.], but to the capitalized amount of the extra surplus which I
+have obtained in my business by means of credit, after deduction is made of the
+costs and of the risk-premium.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_542" name="note_542" href="#noteref_542">542.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">We shall, in the books to follow
+this, inquire with great care, what are the means best calculated to remedy this
+dangerous tendency. We need only remark here, that it is to be found in a judicious
+association of small capitalists, and also in the capitalization, so to speak, of
+personal qualities. A well organized society of work-men, without capital, may indeed
+obtain credit, as for instance, the Schultze-Delitsch societies, the Russian
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">artel-schnicks</span></span> (market-aid societies) etc. prove.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Frühauf</span></span>, Die russ. Artels in <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Faucher's</span></span>
+Vierteljahrsschrift, 1868, I, 106 ff.) We may also mention the
+greater credit accorded to a land-owner the moment he becomes a member
+of a land-loan association as compared with what he could obtain before he
+had joined it. The popular belief of the ancient Egyptians afforded them a
+very great instrument of credit in the pledging of the remains of their ancestors.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Herodot.</span></span>, II, 136.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_543" name="note_543" href="#noteref_543">543.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">B. Hildebrand</span></span> is of opinion that the
+Political Economy of the future may be characterized as credit-economy, in the same way
+as the Economy of the present may be called money-economy, and that of the past as
+barter-economy of barter. (National Œkonomie der Gegenwart und Zukunft, I,
+276 ff.) <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hildebrand's</span></span> view is correct in so far as that, with
+every advance in civilization, credit comes to have absolutely and relatively an ever
+increasing importance, although in the middle ages, especially under feudal forms
+(<span lang="de" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="de"><span style="font-style: italic">Lehensformen</span></span>), there were
+numberless operations in credit. Otherwise, however, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hildebrand's</span></span>
+three kinds of economy are, by no means, coördinated.
+While barter and purchase through the instrumentality of money, in every
+instance, entirely exclude each other, it is impossible to imagine a credit-transaction
+of which the promise of a barter-performance or of a money-performance
+does not constitute the base. During a <span class="tei tei-q">“money-economical
+(<span lang="de" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="de"><span style="font-style: italic">geldwirthschaftlichen</span></span>) period”</span>
+[i.e., one during which money is the medium of exchange, and not notes; and when barter
+does not obtain.—<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Translator</span></span>.]
+the service rendered by money as a medium of exchange may, for the most
+part, be supplanted by credit. Money, as a measure of value, still remains
+the substratum of credit itself. (See <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Knies</span></span> in the Tübinger
+Ztschr., 1860, 154 ff.; and in the Freiburger Programm, 9 Sept., 1862, 19.) Earlier yet,
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">A. Wagner</span></span>, Beitr. zur Lehre von den Banken, 1857 ff. Among the
+most practical propositions of Saint Simonism is that of a <span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">système genéral des banques</span></span>,
+intended to administer all the goods of the nation, and to loan them to individuals
+engaged, in production. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Bazard</span></span>, 205 ff.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_544" name="note_544" href="#noteref_544">544.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">It is destructive
+of credit to allow the debtor to await several decrees or
+judgments before his liability is established; to allow him, on easy terms,
+delays, reversals of judgment, the costs of the case etc. The term within
+which a creditor might bring in his claim before the meeting of creditors in
+the Amsterdam Boedel-chamber was formerly thirty-three and a third years.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Büsch</span></span>, Darst. der Handlung, Zusatz, 82.) In the
+presidency of Bengal there were, in 1819, 81,000 cases in arrears, and in 1829,
+140,000. Westminister Review, XIX, 142.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_545" name="note_545" href="#noteref_545">545.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">And yet
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Melon</span></span> is of opinion that the state should favor the debtor as
+much as possible. (Essai politique sur le Commerce, ch. 12, 18.) This was
+the view entertained on this subject by the older practitioners. In Bengal,
+the <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">dhura</span></span>, a species of <span class="tei tei-q">“judgment of God,”</span> in which
+the party who could hold out longest against hunger was declared the victor, was the
+only means to compel a debtor to pay his debt. As a consequence, the Bengal peasant
+could not borrow money at less than 60 per cent. per annum. Edinburgh
+Review, XXII, 67. On the damages attending the credit-laws and credit-courts
+of Russia, by which all foreign goods are rendered exceedingly dear,
+see <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">v. Sternberg</span></span>, Bemerkungen über R., 100 ff. In a country
+in which a great many powerful personages are above the laws, an incorporated loaning
+bank may be an indispensable necessity. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Storch</span></span>, Handbuch, II,
+p. 23 ff.) In Naples, even as recently as 1804, no debtor could be arrested during the
+last six months of the queen's pregnancy. At a previous period, one might
+fail in business there and escape all punishment by exposing the hindermost
+part of himself in a nude state publicly before a column of the
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Vicaria</span></span>. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Rehfues</span></span>, Gemälde von Neapel,
+I, p. 203 seq., 222.) In Schwytz, the rate of interest is so high, because the law
+allows the debtor to pay his creditor, whether the latter will or not, in articles of
+household furniture, clothes etc., estimated at a very high value.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hermann</span></span>, Staatsw. Untersuchungen, 202.) It has now become quite
+usual in the United States, on account of the many delays granted to the debtor by
+<span class="tei tei-q">“democratic”</span> laws introduced there, instead of mere mortgage, to give full warranty
+deeds when capital is loaned. By this means, the creditor is in danger, when misfortune
+overtakes him, to see himself compelled to let his property go at one-fourth of its
+value.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_546" name="note_546" href="#noteref_546">546.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">See the Heliast oath in <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Demosth.</span></span>,
+adv. Timocr., 746. The Roman system of credits in the time of Polybius was much better
+than the Carthaginian. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Polyb.</span></span>, VI, 56, XXXII, 13.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_547" name="note_547" href="#noteref_547">547.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Sachsenspiegel, III, 39.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">J. Grimm</span></span>, Deutsche Rechtsalterthümer, 612 ff.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Dahlmann</span></span>, Dänische Gesch., II, 245, 339.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hermann</span></span>, Russ. Gesch., III, 357. On slavery for debt among
+the Malays, see Ausland, 1845, No. 157.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_548" name="note_548" href="#noteref_548">548.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Beaujour</span></span>, Tableau
+du Commere en Grèce, II, 176.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_549" name="note_549" href="#noteref_549">549.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">C. 2 X. De Pignor. An appropriate
+provision in a priestly government. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Diodor.</span></span>, I,
+79.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_550" name="note_550" href="#noteref_550">550.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Staying in a place
+by the debtor until the creditor is satisfied, and other
+degrading stipulations, which, however, were prohibited by the police regulations
+of the Empire in 1548, art. 17.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_551" name="note_551" href="#noteref_551">551.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Marten's</span></span>
+Ursprung des Wechselrechts, 1797. Statuta Mediol., 1480, fol.
+238 ff. The municipal law of Florence unconditionally imprisoned the
+father or grandfather for the debt of the son, when the latter engaged in industrial
+pursuits with their consent. (Stat. Flor., I, 201.) In Bologna, the
+brothers of a bankrupt who had constituted one household with him were
+held responsible for his debts. (Statuti dell' Università de Mercantati della
+Città di B., 1550, fol. 110.) The law of Geneva excluded from all positions of
+honor the son who had left his father's debts unpaid. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Montesquieu</span></span>,
+E. des Lois, XX, 16. The consequence was, that among the higher classes not a
+creditor lost anything for centuries. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">K. L. v. Haller</span></span>,
+Restauration der Staatswissenschaften, VI, 519.) Compare the <span class="tei tei-q">“Nurenberger
+Reformation”</span> of 1479, fol. 61 and 68 of the edition of 1564.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_552" name="note_552" href="#noteref_552">552.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Compare the R. P. O. of 1548,
+art. 22. And so, by the Code de Commerce, III, 4, I, even the simple bankrupt in
+contradistinction to the fraudulent bankrupt is punished, and every person unable to pay
+his debts is declared a <em class="tei tei-emph"><span style="font-style: italic">simple</span></em> bankrupt, who, among other things, has made
+excessive household expenses, or lost considerable sums by play etc. Compare
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Sully</span></span>, Mémoires, Livre XXVI, who declares it to be his most
+wholesome law, that fraudulent bankrupts should, like thieves, be punished with death,
+and that all their fraudulent assignments, gifts, etc., should be declared void. Further,
+Ordonn. de Louis XIV., sur les Failletes, art. 11; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">J. de Wit</span></span>,
+Mémoires, 77 ff; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">v. den Heuvel</span></span>, Sur le Commerce de la Hollande,
+110 ff. Frederick William I., in 1715, threatened with the galleys all light-headed
+bankrupts, and, in 1723, all those who, knowing their insolvent condition, should effect
+further loans. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Mylius</span></span>, Corp. Const. March. II, 2, 31, 40. For
+China, see <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Davis</span></span>, The Chinese, I, 247 ff. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Gr.
+Soden</span></span>, Nat. Oek., III, 231, demands that, in case of doubt, the guilt of the
+bankrupt should always be presumed.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_553" name="note_553" href="#noteref_553">553.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">In England only
+one-tenth of the number of bankrupts are considered innocent.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Elliot</span></span>, Credit the Life of Commerce, 1845, 50 ff.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_554" name="note_554" href="#noteref_554">554.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">The <span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">contrainte par corps</span></span> of debtors was abolished in
+France in 1792, but restored in 1797. Even <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Turgot</span></span> remarked that
+since slavery had ceased there was no further fear (?) that the poor would be oppressed
+by imprisonment for debt. (Sur le Prêt d' argent, § 31.) According to
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Droz</span></span>, the question is not one of weighing <span class="tei tei-q">“freedom”</span> against
+<span class="tei tei-q">“miserable money,”</span> but the deprivation of a few of that freedom and the
+non-fulfillment of obligations entered into, that is against the destruction of public
+confidence.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_555" name="note_555" href="#noteref_555">555.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">A similar development among the Greeks:
+</p>
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+A. Rigorous slavery for debt, which Kypselos moderated at Corinth.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Pausan.</span></span>, V. 17, 2), and Solon abolished in Athens.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Plutarch</span></span>, Sol., 15. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Demosth.</span></span>,
+de fals. Legat., 412.)
+</p>
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+B. The reckless creation of debts as seen in Aristophanes; while outside
+of Athens slavery for debt lasted yet a long time. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hermann</span></span>,
+Griech. Privatalterth., § 57, 20.) In the time of Demosthenes, the merchant in arrears
+in the payment of his debts was cast into prison, and the bottomry-debtor
+who deprived his creditor of his security might be punished with death,
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Demosth.</span></span> adv. Pharm., 922, 958), and this although the
+<span lang="la" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="la"><span style="font-style: italic">cessio honorum</span></span> was introduced.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hermann</span></span>, § 70, 3. Compare <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Xenoph.</span></span>,
+Vectigg., 3, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Demosth.</span></span> adv. Apat., 892; adv. Lacrit., and adv.
+Dionys. In Corinth, the state superintended expenses made by parties. This was part of
+its credit-policy. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Athænæus</span></span>, VI, 227.) For a remarkable
+Rhodian law relating to debts, see <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Sext.</span></span> Emp., Hypot. I, 149.
+</p>
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+In Rome:
+</p>
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+A. The chief characteristic of the ancient law in this matter was the
+eventual sale of the person of the debtor on the getting of the loan (<span lang="la" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="la"><span style="font-style: italic">nexum</span></span>); the power of the creditor to put
+the <span lang="la" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="la"><span style="font-style: italic">addictus</span></span> to death or to sell
+him in foreign parts; finally, the <span lang="la" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="la"><span style="font-style: italic">in
+partes secanto</span></span>, in the concourse of creditors. Without these rigorous
+provisions, the borrower might easily have evaded his debts, by the emancipation of his
+son and turning over his property to him. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Niebuhr</span></span>, Rom. Gesch.,
+II, 770 ff; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Savigny</span></span> in the Abb. der Berliner Acad., 1833.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Zimmern</span></span>, Gesch. des röm. Privatrechts, III, 131 ff.)
+</p>
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+B. Later, we find nothing of the execution of the debtor, or of the sale of
+his person; but he might be compelled to do slave labor for his creditor
+without any protection against ill-treatment. Slavery for debt was restricted
+by the Lex Poetelia. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Niebuhr</span></span>, III, p. 178;
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Mommsen</span></span>, III, 494.) The Prætorian
+law introduced the custom of putting the creditor in possession of the goods
+of the debtor, with power of sale, which proceeding rendered the debtor infamous.
+See several passages in <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Walter.</span></span>, Röm Rechtsgesch, 763 ff;
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Tertull.</span></span>, Apol., 4; Tab. Herac. I, 115 ff. Later, Cæsar's Lex
+Julia permitted the honest debtor to escape imprisonment by the assignment of his goods.
+</p>
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+C. The moneyed oligarchy which prevailed in Rome caused the adoption
+of exceedingly severe measures against delinquent debtors.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Plut.</span></span>, Lucull., 20. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Cic.</span></span>,
+ad. Att. V. 21, VI.), although its members themselves incurred
+debts in the most reckless manner. Cæsar, in the year A.C. 62, excluding
+his active (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">activen</span></span>), owed debts to the amount of 25,000,000
+sesterces; M. Antonius, in the year 24, 6,000,000; in the year 38, 40,000,000;
+Curio, 60,000,000; Milon, 70,000,000. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Mommsen</span></span>, Römische
+Geschichte, III, 486.) Compare <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Gellius</span></span>, XX, 1, XV, 14.</p></dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_556" name="note_556" href="#noteref_556">556.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Whenever
+a new shop-keeper, who sells goods on monthly credits, settles
+in a district, the number of poor persons invariably increases.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">McCulloch</span></span>, Commercial Dictionary.) The
+ruinous credit given by the Jews to the Westphalian peasants
+begins with an account for the goods which they have
+succeeded in pressing upon them, after five or six years have elapsed. The
+Jew seldom sues accounts at law; but he besieges the debtor and discovers
+where his last head of cattle and his last little supply of provisions are to be
+found. As he is willing to accept everything that has any value, sometimes
+in payment of arrears, and sometimes in payment for some new piece of trash, he is
+sure to obtain his dues in the end, but not until his victim, who is sunk deeper
+and deeper in the abyss of debt by every <span class="tei tei-q">“accommodation,”</span> is entirely ruined.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Schmerz</span></span>, Rheinish-Westphäl. L.W., 396 ff.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_557" name="note_557" href="#noteref_557">557.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">In the
+lower and middle stages of civilization, we find a multitude of
+laws by which minors, students etc., but especially land-owners are limited
+to a minimum of credit, which, however, varies very much with the person,
+and is subjected to a number of embarrassing forms, the consent of a third
+person, for instance etc. (Compare Bayerische L.O. von 1553, fol. 83.)
+Such laws, however, give as much room to the play of dishonesty as they
+take away from that of want of reflection.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_558" name="note_558" href="#noteref_558">558.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">On the municipal regulations
+(<span lang="de" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="de"><span style="font-style: italic">Städteordnungen</span></span>) of the 14th
+and 15th centuries, which compelled Jewish creditors especially to have their evidences
+of indebtedness redeemed within from every two to five years, see
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Stobbe</span></span>, Juden im Mittelalter, 129. Compare further the Würtemberg
+L. O. of 1515, Statut. Ferrar, ed. 1650, lib. II, rub. 37, 289. According to the other
+provisions of the laws in North America, some book accounts were required
+to be sued on within six and others within seventeen years.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ebeling</span></span>, Gerchichte und Erdberschreibung der v. Staaten, II,
+247, 298.) The Prussian law of March 31, 1838, provides a period of limitation of three
+years for all ordinary commercial debts. A similar law was passed in the Kingdom of
+Saxony, in 1846. In London, there has been found a great number of hatters,
+tailors, boot and shoe dealers etc., whose books showed credits of more
+than £4,000, most of them not to exceed over £10. How much of all this
+must be lost entirely, and how that loss must increase the sums paid for
+boots, shoes and hats by the prompt payer! (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">McCulloch</span></span>, v.
+Credit.) We find, even in Athens, that the period of limitation was shortened in the
+interest of credit, and that in the case of minors, it did not exceed five years.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Demosth.</span></span> adv. Nausim., 989.) Security for a debtor not over one
+year. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Demosth.</span></span>, adv. Apatur., 901.) The prohibition of Zaleukos
+to issue any evidences of debt whatever goes much farther.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Zenob.</span></span>, Proverb. V, 4.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_559" name="note_559" href="#noteref_559">559.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Compare
+the report of the Dresden Handelskammer, 1864, 11.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_560" name="note_560" href="#noteref_560">560.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">A. Mayer</span></span>,
+in <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Faucher's</span></span> Vierteljahrsschrift, 1865, IV, 65.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_561" name="note_561" href="#noteref_561">561.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">We learn from
+the debates in the English parliament of February 9, 1827, that,
+in two years and a half, there were, in London and its environs,
+70,000 cases of imprisonment for debt, the costs of which were from £150,000
+to £200,000. In 1831, there were in one debtors' prison 1,120 prisoners, who
+owed on an average £2 3s. 2d. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">McCulloch</span></span>, l. c.) There
+was, in 1792, a case of a woman who, for a debt of £19, remained in prison 45
+years, and others like it. (See <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Archenholtz</span></span>, Annalen, IX,
+87 ff; X, 169 ff, XIII, 125.) In England in 1844, arrest for sums less than £19 was
+prohibited. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Johnson</span></span> had already proposed a similar provision.
+(Idler, 1758, Nos. 22 and 38.) Imprisonment for debt was abolished in France, England and
+Austria in 1867; in the North German Confederation, on the 29th of May, 1868, but arrest
+for security's sake was retained. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Sismondi</span></span> finds fault with nearly
+all laws in the premises, because they attack the person of the debtor rather than his
+personal property, and his personal, rather than his immovable, property. He
+would have all this just the contrary of what it is. The first interferes with
+the very source of wealth, the productive power of labor; the second causes
+goods to be sold much below their value. Neither of these evils attends the
+last. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">N. Principes</span></span>, I, 250.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_562" name="note_562" href="#noteref_562">562.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">A law of the North
+German Confederation allows the pledging of future
+wages, only in the case of public officers, and those holding permanent places
+in the service of private parties, whose salaries are over 400 thalers per annum.
+The original draft had excepted only the things necessary to workmen
+and those directly depending on them; while the law as passed makes the
+prohibition general. This was undoubtedly done for the convenience of employers
+as well as of courts; as for instance in the circuit of Dortmund,
+there were, in one year, 10,000 cases in which wages were garnisheed. (Annalen
+des N.D. Bundes und Zollvereins, 1869, 1071 ff.) But the recklessness
+of those workmen whose wages are below the average, might have been
+just as well guarded against without dragging those whose wages are above
+the average down to their level, if a distinction had been made between production-credit
+and consumption-credit, and the latter had been limited by providing
+that no suit should be instituted for supplies made to public houses,
+taverns etc.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_563" name="note_563" href="#noteref_563">563.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">In the second book
+of <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Moses</span></span>, 22, 25 ff., and the fifth, 24, 6. A very old
+Norman law provides that in actions for debt, execution should not issue
+against effects of the debtor which are indispensably necessary to him to
+maintain his position, such as the horses of a count or the armor of a knight.
+(Dialog. de Scaccario.) Magna Charta extended this provision so as to include
+the agricultural implements and cattle of the peasantry. The moment
+these laws, in consequence of a false principle of humanity, except anything
+but what is absolutely necessary, they injure credit. Thus, for instance, in
+Brazil, a law of 1758, providing that nothing immediately employed in
+or directly necessary to the production of sugar should be seized on execution,
+caused great injury to the production of sugar. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Koster</span></span>,
+Travels in B., 1816, 356 ff.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_564" name="note_564" href="#noteref_564">564.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">§ 2, Cod. De Prec. Imper. Off., I, 19.
+The diets of the Empire had granted such letters in the fourteenth
+century. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Wachsmuth</span></span>, Europ. Sittengesch.,
+IV, 690.) They were granted, as a rule, only with the previous knowledge
+of the Emperor, by the police ordinances of the Empire of 1548, art. 22.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_565" name="note_565" href="#noteref_565">565.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">So in Austria,
+Saxony, Brunswick, the electorates of Hesse and Baden.
+In Prussia, they could be granted only after a juridical decree to that effect;
+and an appeal to a superior court was allowed to reverse or affirm it. Compare
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Mittermaier</span></span> in the Archiv. für civilist. Praxis, XVI,
+and also <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">P. de la Court</span></span>, Aanwysing der politike Gronden
+en Maximen van Holland etc., 1669, I, ch. 25. Nürnberg obtained as a privilege,
+in 1495, that no <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">moratorium</span></span> should be valid as against
+its citizens. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Roth</span></span>, Geschichte des Nürnb. Handels,
+I, 86.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_566" name="note_566" href="#noteref_566">566.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Compare
+the discussions in the French National Assembly, in the month
+of August, 1848. It is much less disadvantageous in times of great commotion,
+when all business is brought to a stand still, to extend the time in which
+bills of exchange etc. are payable. Such a measure prevents a number of
+bankruptcies which the real balance of debts due to one and owing by him
+does not render necessary.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_567" name="note_567" href="#noteref_567">567.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">In the persecution of the Jews in the middle ages,
+the so-called <span lang="de" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="de"><span style="font-style: italic">Brief-todten</span></span>
+(letter-killing), or the destruction of titles, was very common. In
+1188, the French government released all crusaders from the payment of interest
+on their debts, and granted them an extension of three years' time to
+pay off the principal. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Sismondi</span></span>, Hist. des Français, VI, 82.)
+Similar compulsory measures were provided against the Jews and usurers in 1223 (Ibid,
+VI, 539 ff.); and in 1299 (Ordonnances, I, 1331), on the formal request of the
+nobility. (Ordonnances, II, 59.) Again, in 1594, there was a release of one-third
+of the interest on all national and private debts. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Sismondi</span></span>,
+XXI, 318.) The general <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">moratorium</span></span> of the Milanese for a term of
+eight years, introduced in 1251, after their war with France, was of an essentially
+different character. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Sismondi</span></span>, Geschichte der italienischen
+Republiken, III, 155.) The same is true of the general <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">indult</span></span>
+granted by Philip II. in Belgium. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Boxhorn</span></span>, Disquisitt.
+politicæ, 241 ff.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_568" name="note_568" href="#noteref_568">568.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">The abolition or release of debts,
+so frequent in ancient revolutionary times, reminds us, in
+many ways, of the crises precipitated in modern times
+by paper money and produced by the state. The ancestors of Alcibiades
+and Hipponikos laid the foundation of an immense fortune, in Solon's time,
+by purchasing land in large quantities with money borrowed from several
+citizens, a short time before the abolition of debts.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Plutarch</span></span>, Sol., 15.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_569" name="note_569" href="#noteref_569">569.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Enormous
+consumption of wax in the churches of the middle ages. In
+the cathedral of Wittenberg alone, a short time before the Reformation,
+more than 35,000 pounds of wax candles etc. were burned yearly. At the
+same time, honey was generally used instead of sugar. How much more
+important, therefore, at that time must bee-culture have been, considered
+from the point of view of circulation as compared with what it is to-day.
+And so in Catholic countries, a difference in the external manifestation of religion
+causes the relative importance of the consumption of fish to increase
+and decrease. In 1803 there was little demand in France for ivory crucifixes,
+rosaries etc. In 1844, the demand for them and for <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">prie-Dieu</span></span>
+for the bed-room etc. was increased. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Mohl</span></span>,
+Gewerbwissenschafliche Reise, 101.) To engage successfully in the sale of sugar in
+Persia, it is necessary to know that in that country it is liked only in little
+hat-shaped lumps, which are used only as semi-voluntary gifts; and that, in such case,
+custom fixes the number of lumps. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Steinhaus</span></span>, Russlands
+commercielle etc. Verhh., 151.) In the Levant, workmen prefer bars of iron which are
+small and of varied form because they find it difficult to manipulate the large ones.
+The English bear this in mind much better than the Russians.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Steinhaus.</span></span>) A merchant sending wood to Southern France must be
+acquainted with the form of the staves used in the manufacture of barrels there. Compare
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Büsch</span></span>, Geldumlauf, VI, 2, 2.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_570" name="note_570" href="#noteref_570">570.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">The
+circulation of goods compared to the circulation of the blood: by
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Mirabeau</span></span>, Philosophie Rurale, ch. 3.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Turgot</span></span>, Sur la Formation etc. § 69.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Canard.</span></span>, Principes, ch. 6.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_571" name="note_571" href="#noteref_571">571.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Eiselen</span></span>,
+Volkswirthschaftslehre, 98 ff. If in ancient times commerce
+played a much less important part than it does among the moderns, it was, as
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Montesquieu</span></span> says, because the whole commercial world
+was then more uniform in climate and the character of its products than it
+is now. (Esprit des Lois, XXI, 4.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_572" name="note_572" href="#noteref_572">572.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Of the
+successive steps, sheaves, corn, flour, bread,—flour has the greatest
+capacity for circulation. And, indeed, the last operation of labor on a
+great many goods, because of their consequent more narrowly specialized
+utility, is accompanied by a decrease in their capacity for circulation. As an
+illustration, we may mention ready-made clothing as compared with cloth.
+The capacity for circulation of a commodity is very much advanced when
+the demand is wont to increase with the supply, as is the case with gold and
+silver, but not with learned books, optical instruments etc. Many commodities
+have but little circulating capacity, because no one desires to purchase them but at
+first hand. See <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Menger</span></span>, Grundsätze, I, 245 ff.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_573" name="note_573" href="#noteref_573">573.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Knies.</span></span>,
+Die Eisenbahnen und ihre Wirkungen, 1853, 79.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_574" name="note_574" href="#noteref_574">574.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Compare
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Schmitthenner</span></span>, I, who calls attention and with reason to the
+importance of loans on chattel mortgages. But <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Berkeley</span></span>, Querist,
+No. 265, remarks that a squire with a yearly income of £1000 can, <span class="tei tei-q">“upon an
+emergency,”</span> do less good or evil than a merchant with £20,000 ready money.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_575" name="note_575" href="#noteref_575">575.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">A
+very important difference between Russia and England.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_576" name="note_576" href="#noteref_576">576.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Storch</span></span>,
+Handbuch, I, 273 ff. There is also a useless circulation which is
+not calculated to promote the division of labor, but to employ idle time or
+idle capital, as in the case of games of hazard, speculation in stocks, wheat
+etc. Even impoverishing consumption may produce rapidity of circulation,
+as in Germany during the war years 1812 and 1813. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">F. G. Schulze</span></span>,
+N. Œkonomie, 1856, 667.) Relying on this fact, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hume</span></span> (1752) on
+Public Credit, Discourses, No. 8, argues in favor of the old opinion, that all
+circulation is wholesome and to be encouraged. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Boisguillebert</span></span>,
+Traité des Grains, I, 6, went so far as to laud war because it accelerated the
+circulation of wealth. On the necessity of a <span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">circulation sans repos</span></span>, see ibid., II, 10. In a
+similar way <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Law</span></span>, Trade and Money, 1705, and
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Dutos</span></span>, Réflexions Politiques sur le Commerce,
+over-valued the circulation of wealth as such. Concerning the Mercantile
+System, see § 116. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Darjes</span></span>, Erste Gründe der Cameralwissenschaft,
+1768, 531. And even <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Büsch</span></span>, Geldumlauf, I, 29, 32 ff., III, 96,
+who in other places nearly always overlooks real production and sees only the circulation
+of money caused thereby. Thus he calls the poor when they are helped in money, and spend
+it, useful members of society! (IV, 32, 39. Similarly, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">v.
+Struensee</span></span>, Abhandlungen, 1800, I, 282 ff., 400 ff.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_577" name="note_577" href="#noteref_577">577.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">As, for instance, happened in
+France in 1577, when all commerce, and in 1585 all industry, were declared
+to be <span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">de droit domanial</span></span>.
+Louis XIV. was of opinion that the king was absolute master of all private
+property of priests and people. (Mémoires histor. de Louis XIV., II, 121.)
+Compare <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Duclos</span></span>, Mémoires, I, 14 ff.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_578" name="note_578" href="#noteref_578">578.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Compare
+Theod. Cod., V, 9, 1; Just. Cod., X, 19, 8; XI, 47, 21, 23; XI, 50,
+51, 52, 55, 58. How full the really classic period of the Roman jurists was
+of the idea of freedom of competition, we see in <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Paullus</span></span>:
+L. 22, § 3, Dig. XIX, 2. The provisions concerning <span lang="la" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="la"><span style="font-style: italic">lœsio enormis</span></span> appear first in the time
+of Diocletian. (Just. Cod., IV, 44, 2.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_579" name="note_579" href="#noteref_579">579.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Benjamin Franklin</span></span>
+says that the freer the form of government is, the
+more the people show themselves in their true aspect. Ancient Rome, with
+the early development of its rational disposition, soon learned to favor freedom
+of commercial intercourse. Compare <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Mommsen</span></span>, Römische Geschichte,
+I, passim. This was, certainly, an element of its greatness, but also of the
+proletarian evils developed in it an early date, and which were weighed down
+only by the absolute growth of the state and the development of its economic
+interests during centuries.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_580" name="note_580" href="#noteref_580">580.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Nor
+must it be forgotten that competition raises prices as well as lowers
+them. The expressions higher price and lower price denote only different
+sides of the same relation. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">M. Chevalier</span></span> is of opinion that
+our present breathless competition is characteristic only of a period of transition
+prolific in new inventions, a competition soon to be followed by peace. (Cours, II,
+450 ff.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_581" name="note_581" href="#noteref_581">581.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Ἀγαθὴ
+ἔρις: Hesiod., Opp., 10 ff.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_582" name="note_582" href="#noteref_582">582.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-q">“Whoever
+speaks of competition suppresses the existence of a common
+aim,”</span> says <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Proudhon</span></span>, although he adds, after
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Bileam's</span></span> way, that to cure the
+evils of competition by competition, is as absurd as to lead men to liberty
+by liberty, or to cultivate the mind by cultivation of the mind.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_583" name="note_583" href="#noteref_583">583.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Compare
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Bastiat</span></span>, Harmonies économiques, ch. 10.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_584" name="note_584" href="#noteref_584">584.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">If
+all classes were protected against competition, no class would derive
+any advantage from it, since a <span class="tei tei-q">“universal privilege”</span> is an absurdity. If only
+certain classes or individuals are protected, it is done at the cost of all others.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_585" name="note_585" href="#noteref_585">585.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">The question should not be
+formulated thus: <span class="tei tei-q">“Caprice or rule?”</span> but <span class="tei tei-q">“Rule of morals,
+or rule of law?”</span> <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Schmoller</span></span> against
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">v. Treitschke</span></span> in <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hildebrand's</span></span>
+Jahrbb.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_586" name="note_586" href="#noteref_586">586.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">Concerning the arguments by which
+the commercial restrictions of the middle ages were defended, see below. They were,
+for the most part, well founded for the age in which they were advanced. A judicious
+education will often be compelled to provide limitations, but always with the intention,
+by this means, of making possible a really greater independence. Thus the
+current of commerce may be too weak in a poor and thinly settled country
+in order that supply and demand should always and everywhere meet and be
+satisfied. Under such circumstances, their artificial concentration at certain
+points is among the most efficient means of promoting the economy of the
+whole people. The policy of freedom of commerce was recommended even
+in the seventeenth century by <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">J. Child</span></span>, by
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">North</span></span> and <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Davenant. W. Roscher</span></span>,
+Zur Geschichte der englisch. Volkswirthschaftslehre, 65 ff., 85 ff., 113 ff., 142
+ff. And earlier yet, in Holland, by <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Salmasius</span></span>, De Usurus,
+1638, 583 and <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">de la Court</span></span>. Compare Tübinger Ztschr., 330 ff.
+Thus <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Boisguillebert</span></span> says: <span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">Il n'y avait qu'à laisser faire la nature et la libertê,
+qui est le commissionaire de cette même nature</span></span>. (Factum de la France, 1707,
+ch. 5.) See, also, Dissertation sur la Nature des Richesses, ch. VI; Détail de
+la France, 1697, II, ch. 13; Tr. des Grains, II, 8. For the most part dictated by a
+reaction against Colbertism.
+</p>
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+See further, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Mélon</span></span>, Essai Politique sur le Commerce, 1734, ch.
+2. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">M. Decker</span></span>, Essay on the Causes of the Decline of Foreign
+Trade, 1744, 31 ff, 106 ff. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">J. Tucker</span></span>, Essay on the advantages
+and disadvantages which respectively attend France and Great Britain with regard to
+Trade, 1750. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Forbonnais</span></span>, Elémens du Commerce, 1754, I, 63.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Genovesi</span></span>, c. I, 17, 3, is of opinion that at least in case of
+doubt, commerce stood more in need of freedom than of protection.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Verri</span></span>, in his Meditazioni, goes still farther. The Physiocrates,
+with their <span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">laissez aller</span></span> and
+<span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">laissez faire</span></span> recommend competition
+as the best means to increase the net income of a people. According to
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Dupont</span></span>, 147 ff, éd. Daire, the province of legislation is
+confined to declaring the laws of nature. His motto is: <span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">liberté and propriété</span></span>. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Adam
+Smith</span></span> asks that the state should do only three things: insure protection against
+foreign states, the administration of justice at home, the establishment and maintenance
+of certain institutions of advantage to the whole community, but
+which private interest could not establish for want of means to cover the expenses
+attending them. (Wealth of Nations, V, ch. I, 2.) Hence he demands (III, ch. 2) the
+abolition of all kinds of <span lang="la" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="la"><span style="font-style: italic">fidei
+commissa</span></span>, of royalty in mines (I, ch. 11, 2), of all corporate and exclusive
+privileges, of all protective duties etc. (IV, ch. I ff), but especially of the colonial
+policy hitherto in vogue. (IV, ch. 8.)
+</p>
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+The attacks of the Socialists on freedom of competition were begun by
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Fichte</span></span>, Geschlossener Handelsstaat, 126, in which it is called a
+robber-system or system of spoliation. He would have the state have more solicitude for
+human industry than if men were so many swallows. See further,
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Sismondi</span></span>, N. Principes, passim, who everywhere demands the
+protection of the government for the weaker. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Fourier</span></span>, N. Monde
+industriel, 396, who thinks that <span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">le
+monopole général</span></span> is always a <span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">preservatif contre le commerce</span></span>.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Bastiat</span></span>, Harmonies économiques, ch. 10, has a very valuable
+refutation of these follies. Recently, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Rodbertus</span></span>, Hildebrand's
+Jahrbücher, 1865, II, 272, is of opinion that <span class="tei tei-q">“social individualism”</span> has ever had
+in history the task of dissolving decaying societies, as, for instance, under the
+Cæsars.</p></dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_587" name="note_587" href="#noteref_587">587.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Whoever would sell to others must purchase of them.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Child.</span></span>, Discourse of Trade, 358.) Similarly
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Temple</span></span>, Works III, 19, and <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Becher</span></span>, Polit.
+Discurs, 1547. This view seems to have become the national one first in Holland.
+Compare also <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Quesnay</span></span>, 71 and <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Mirabeau</span></span>,
+Philosophie rurale, 1763, ch. 2.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_588" name="note_588" href="#noteref_588">588.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">We often hear it said:
+<span class="tei tei-q">“nothing sells because there is no money.”</span> But
+the real cause here is, in most instances, not a want of money, but a want of
+other goods which might serve as a counter-value. In bad times, for instance,
+there is many a weaver who would consider himself fortunate, even
+if he could get no money for his cloth, to obtain instead, meat, bread, wood,
+raw material etc. If money only were wanting, that might easily be as favorable
+a symptom in commerce, as when there are not enough shops,
+steamers etc., to carry on the business of the country. Compare
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">North.</span></span>, Discourses upon Trade, 1691, 11 seq., but
+especially <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">J. B. Say's</span></span> celebrated theory
+of Markets, traité I, ch. XV.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_589" name="note_589" href="#noteref_589">589.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">See
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Humboldt's</span></span> observations as to how, in Spanish America, agriculture
+in the vicinity of the mines increases and decreases with the wealth of the
+latter. (N. Espagne, III, 11 ff.) See also <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Harrington</span></span> (ob. 1677),
+On the Prerogative of a Popular Government, I, ch. 11; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Cantillon</span></span>,
+Nature du Commerce, 16. And so <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Stein.</span></span>, Lehrbuch, 122 seq., points
+out how great enterprises produce especially for the consumption of the small
+householder without capital, and how, therefore, the flourishing condition of the one
+determines that of the other.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_590" name="note_590" href="#noteref_590">590.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Those
+indeed who live by the spoliation of others, as robbers, deceivers
+etc. are interested in the economic prosperity of the latter only so long as
+their spoliation of them is not endangered. Only to this extent can it be
+claimed with <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Fr. List</span></span> that the nobility of the Middle Ages, in
+obeying the selfish calculation which led to the oppression of the peasantry, engaged in
+as bad a speculation as a manufacturer of our day would who should feed
+his steam-engine with nothing but saw-dust or scraps of old paper. The
+cities of the middle ages had a much more undoubted economic interest in
+the emancipation of the peasantry as a class than the nobles or the clergy.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_591" name="note_591" href="#noteref_591">591.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">Such
+exceptions there certainly are, even if it were not true <span class="tei tei-q">“that the
+most godly cannot rest in peace unless he is acceptable to his ungodly neighbor.”</span>
+Nations that furnish the same products as we do may, indeed, <span class="tei tei-q">“spoil
+our market,”</span> just as at home the selfish shoemaker may desire the prosperity
+of all wearers of shoes, that is of all other industries, but not that of all
+other producers of shoes. The view that long prevailed, that one man's gain
+was always some other man's loss (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Th. Morus</span></span>, Utopia 79, ed.
+Colon. 1555; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Baco.</span></span>, Sermones fideles, cap. 15;
+<span lang="la" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="la"><span style="font-style: italic">quid-quid alicubi adiicitur, alibi
+detrahitur</span></span>; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">M. Montaigne, Essais</span></span> I, 21: <span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">les prouficit de l'un est le dommage de
+l'autre</span></span>) prevailed much longer in international affairs where observation is
+much more difficult than in national affairs; although even here, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">P.
+de la Court</span></span>, Maximes politiques, 1658, contrasts the economic interest of Holland
+with that of the rest of the Netherlands and prefers it to theirs. Even
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Voltaire</span></span> says: <span class="tei tei-q">“The desire of the greatness of the Fatherland
+includes the desire of evil to our neighbor. Evidently no country can gain except what
+another loses.”</span> (Dict. philosophique, v. Patrie.) Compare, however, the
+<span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">peut-être</span></span> in his Histoire
+de la Russie, I, 1, on the occasion of the English-Russian treaty of commerce.
+Similarly, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Galiani</span></span>, Della Moneta, I, 1, IV, 1;
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Verri</span></span>, Opuscoli, 335, and recently <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">v.
+Cancrin</span></span> who says that <span class="tei tei-q">“in every-day life, property is acquired only
+at some other person's expense.”</span> (Weltreichthum, 1821, 119. Oekonomie der
+menschl. Gesellschaft, 1845, 23.) The cosmopolitan view
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Xenoph.</span></span>, Cyrop., III, 2, 17. Hier., 10) which prevails in Adam
+Smith's school was introduced by <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hume</span></span>, Essays, 1752, On the
+Jealousy of Trade. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Quesnay</span></span>, Encyclopédie, v. Grains, 294, ed.
+Daire; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">A. Smith</span></span>, Theory of moral Sentiments, 1759, p. 6, sec.
+2, ch. 2. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Pinto</span></span>, Lettre sur la Jalousie de Commerce, 1771, and
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">J. Tucker</span></span>, Four Tracts on commercial and political Subjects,
+1776, 34 ff and 42 ff. <span class="tei tei-q">“The system of states exercises no influence whatever on the
+world's commerce.”</span> (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Lotz</span></span>, Handbuch I, 11.) More recently,
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">R. Cobden</span></span>, in his Russia,
+Edinb., 1836, among others argued, that the conquest of Turkey by the Russians
+would be useful to England, because then more (?) English products
+would probably be sold there. Russia would become no stronger thereby, as
+conquests always injure the conqueror more than they benefit him. The
+idea of European equilibrium is therefore a chimera, because no state can
+be prevented from having an internal growth, as great as may be. Thus, in
+the summer of 1853, we heard the London Times sometimes preach that
+every cannon-shot fired by the English at the Russians might kill an English
+debtor or an English customer. The Venetians entertained a similar view
+at the beginning of the fifteenth century. Compare <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">M. Sanudo</span></span>
+in <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Muratori</span></span>,
+Scriptores, XXII, 950 ff. See above, § <a href="#Section_12" class="tei tei-ref">12</a>.
+</p>
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Moreover, Malthus had recognized that there were natural rivalries between
+nations which produced exceptions to Tucker's laws. (Principles,
+Preface.) Similarly <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Garve</span></span>, in Cicero's Pflichten (1783),
+III, 146 ff.</p></dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_592" name="note_592" href="#noteref_592">592.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">B.
+Franklin</span></span>, Works, vol. III, 49. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Sismondi</span></span> claims for
+all civilized nations the right of interfering with the governments of other nations
+with whom they have or might have commercial relations, and of insisting that they
+shall have a good government under which commerce may freely develop.
+(N. P. VII, ch. 4.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_593" name="note_593" href="#noteref_593">593.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">As for instance when the <span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">ami des hommes</span></span> says that he felt towards an Englishman
+or a German as he did towards a Frenchman with whom he was
+not acquainted. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Mirabeau</span></span>, Philosophie rurale, ch. 6.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_594" name="note_594" href="#noteref_594">594.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Thus, for instance,
+the Stoic, Zeno: <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Plutarch.</span></span> De Alex, fort, 1, 6.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_595" name="note_595" href="#noteref_595">595.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Compare even <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Lauderdale</span></span>,
+Inquiry, 274 ff.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_596" name="note_596" href="#noteref_596">596.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">How
+well, for instance, the English sustained Napoleon's continental
+blockade, the evils produced by which were intensified by several bad harvests.
+Its worst time did not, indeed, coincide with that of the struggle with
+the United States. The ancient Athenians, during their contest with Philip
+of Macedon, considered the question of the supplies from the Bosphorus
+etc. as one of life and death. But this can be looked upon only as a cogent
+proof of the small development which their commercial talents had received
+at the time. How easily might they not, according to our ideas, have obtained
+corn from Sicily or Egypt.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_597" name="note_597" href="#noteref_597">597.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">According
+to the acute analysis of language made by <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">F. J. Neumann</span></span>,
+Tübinger Ztschr., 1872, 317 ff., the word <span class="tei tei-q">“price”</span> has reference to an actual
+purchase or sale, while the expression <span class="tei tei-q">“value in exchange,”</span> generally called
+simply value, is based upon a valuation, or intimates in a general way that an
+object possesses value; value in exchange is, so to speak, the average of several
+price-determinations. Price, according to <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Schäffle</span></span>, is the
+external consequence of value in exchange, a means of representing the latter. (N. Œk.,
+III, Aufl., I, 218.) Only through the difference between value in exchange
+(universal possibility) and price (special reality) is the <span lang="la" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="la"><span style="font-style: italic">laesio enormis</span></span> of the jurists possible.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Schmitthenner</span></span>, Staatswissenschen, I, 416.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_598" name="note_598" href="#noteref_598">598.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">By
+market price, <span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">prix courant</span></span>,
+is meant the money-price of commodities, determined by competition.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_599" name="note_599" href="#noteref_599">599.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">A
+problem very similar to that of the motion of bodies in space.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_600" name="note_600" href="#noteref_600">600.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Lotz</span></span>, Handbuch, 50
+ff., calls those commodities costly which are obtained
+only at a high cost of production, and dear, those whose price is above the
+cost of production.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_601" name="note_601" href="#noteref_601">601.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Compare <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Canard</span></span>,
+Principes d'Economie politique, ch. 3. Almost simultaneously,
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">H. Thornton</span></span>, 1802, Paper-Credit of Great Britain.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_602" name="note_602" href="#noteref_602">602.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">See <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Jackson's</span></span>
+Account of Morocco, 284, for cases in which, in the Sahara,
+when the burning winds of the desert had dried up the water in the leathern
+bottles of the caravan, a drink of water cost from $10 to $500.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_603" name="note_603" href="#noteref_603">603.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">The North
+American aborigines very frequently consent, in their exchanges,
+to take any offer made to them by their equals, however insufficient
+it may be, because they fear revenge. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Schoolcraft</span></span>,
+Information etc., II, 178. As to the effects of cunning, the Tungusi, when
+they get a glass of brandy from the Russians, grow almost idiotic, and give away
+their goods at mock-prices in drink. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">v. Wrangell</span></span>, Nachrichten,
+I, 233.) In the higher stages of civilization, on the other hand, very distinguished
+people are, by no means, privileged because of their position, in the struggle for
+prices. In modern times, claims (<span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">reclamen</span></span>) have taken the place of greater physical or
+political power. Compare <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">E. Hermann</span></span>, Leitfaden der
+Wirthschaftslehre 1870, 91 ff.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_604" name="note_604" href="#noteref_604">604.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Thus
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Galiani</span></span> says, that before one of the two parties has expressed his
+want to buy or to sell, the pans of the scales are in equilibrium. The first
+that speaks breathes on one of them, and it drops. (Dialogue sur le Commerce
+des Bleds, 1770, No. 6.) This has been verified in a striking manner
+in California, where the most valuable commodities were often purchased at
+auction at the lowest prices, while when purchased from merchants and
+even the most wretched shopkeepers, they were sold enormously dear.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Gerstäcker</span></span>, in the Allg. Zeitg., May, 1850.) Thus there were
+harvested in France, in 1817, 48,000,000 hectolitres of wheat, valued at 2,046,000,000
+francs, in 1820, 44,500,000 hectolitres valued at 895,000,000 francs.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Cordier.</span></span>) This vast difference in price existed, because in
+1817, the whole world was still trembling under the impression made by the failure of the
+crops in 1816, while in 1820, the feeling of comfort and security caused by the rich year
+1819, still prevailed. Low prices at forced sales under decree etc. See below,
+§ 5. That travelers are so frequently taken advantage of in effecting
+changes of money is explainable partly by their urgent wants, which are well
+known to the opposite party, and partly by their supposed ignorance in the
+matter. And so, at auction sales, out-bidding one another has something
+very seductive in it for ignorant or hot-headed purchasers.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_605" name="note_605" href="#noteref_605">605.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">It
+was considered immoral by his contemporaries, when William the Conqueror
+introduced the custom of farm-letting to the highest bidder. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">A.
+Thierry</span></span>, Conquête de l'Angleterre, II, 116, éd. Bruxelles.) It is repugnant
+to poetic and delicate minds to think that everything has a price exactly
+fixed. (§ 2.) I need only refer to the picture of Helen which Zeuxis
+exhibited for money, which act of his was characterized, by his cotemporaries,
+as a species of prostitution. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Val. Mac</span></span>, III, 7.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ælian</span></span>, V, 4, IV, 12. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Socrates</span></span>
+judgment on the payment of the sophists. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Xenoph.</span></span>, Memor., I,
+6, 13.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_606" name="note_606" href="#noteref_606">606.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Competition
+has only a negative influence on prices, inasmuch as it modifies
+the extreme operation of the other grounds of their determination.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Thornton</span></span>, Paper Credit. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Lotz</span></span>,
+Revision, 1811, I, 74 ff, 241 ff.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_607" name="note_607" href="#noteref_607">607.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">The expression, <span class="tei tei-q">“intensity of demand,”</span> in
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Malthus</span></span>, Principles, ch. 2, sec. 2. As early a writer as
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Sir J. Stewart</span></span> calls attention to the difference between
+large and high and small and low demand. A high demand will always
+raise the price, as when, for instance, two wealthy virtuosi compete at an auction.
+<span lang="la" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="la"><span style="font-style: italic">Paucorum furore pretiosa</span></span>,
+as Seneca says. An English penny of the time of Henry VII, once sold, on such an
+occasion, for £600. In 1868, at the Lafitte auction, seven bottles of wine sold to
+Rothschild at 235 francs a piece after the
+<span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">Maison dorée</span></span> had offered 233.
+(N. freie Presse, Dec. 17, 1868.) A
+great demand has frequently no result but to increase the supply, and the
+price rises only in so far as the demand is too sudden to permit a parallel
+growth of the supply. (Principles, Book II, ch. 2, 10.) The present price
+of tea could not remain unaffected, if ten different private merchants, competing
+one with another, or the agent of a privileged commercial society,
+should send orders to China for an equal quantity of tea.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Verri</span></span>, Meditazioni, IV, 8 ff.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_608" name="note_608" href="#noteref_608">608.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Immense weight laid on the <span lang="la" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="la"><span style="font-style: italic">æqualitas permutationis</span></span> (after
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Aristot.</span></span>, Eth. Nicom., V. 7,) in the ethics and economics of
+the scholastic middle ages, and in the time of the Reformation.
+Compare <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Melancthon</span></span>, in Corp. Ref.,
+XVI, 495 ff, XXII, 230.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_609" name="note_609" href="#noteref_609">609.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">A very barbarous theory
+of price in <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Xenoph.</span></span>, De Vectigg., 4. The ancients
+made little progress in this respect, although there are not wanting ingenious
+observations on certain phenomena of prices. (See <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Aristot.</span></span>, (?)
+Oecon. II; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Cicero</span></span>, De Off. III, 12 ff.)
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Mariana</span></span>, De Rege et Regis Institutione,
+1598, III, explains price as the relation of value to quantity. According
+to <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Locke</span></span>, the price of a thing is determined by the relation
+between <span class="tei tei-q">“quantity”</span> and <span class="tei tei-q">“vent”</span>: the increase or diminution of its useful
+qualities influences it only so far as it alters that relation. (Considerations on the
+Consequences of the Lowering of Interest etc, 1691, Works II, 20 ff.)
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Law</span></span>, on the contrary, says that the <span class="tei tei-q">“vent”</span> can never be
+greater than the <span class="tei tei-q">“quantity,”</span> but that the <span class="tei tei-q">“demand”</span> may be. Wherefore, he
+proposes the formula: quantity in proportion to the demand. (Trade and Commerce
+considered, 1705, ch. 1.) In chap. 6, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Law</span></span> distinguishes
+three elements in price: quality, quantity and demand. The expression <span class="tei tei-q">“quantity”</span>
+is, certainly, very unsatisfactory. How many examples does not
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Tooke</span></span> (Thoughts and Details, on the
+high and low Prices of the last thirty Years, 1823, part IV) give to illustrate
+how, when the supply was smallest, prices were lowest and
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">vice versa</span></span>!
+It was so almost always after the market was over-filled, when a great many
+speculators had lost and no one dared to purchase anew.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Montanari</span></span> (ob. 1687) furnishes us with an excellent theory of
+prices. (Della Moneta, 64 ff., Custodi.) And a still better one, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Sam.
+Pufendorf</span></span>, Jus Naturæ et Gentium, 1672, V. 1, who must be considered the best
+authority on the laws of prices before <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Stewart</span></span>.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Boisguillebert</span></span>, Traité des Grains, II, 1, 10.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Galiani</span></span>, Della Moneta, I, 2, knows only the factors
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">utilità</span></span>, and <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">rarità</span></span>, although in his
+exposition of the latter, he discusses many points which would be called the cost
+of production in our time. The wisdom of Providence has granted us the
+most useful things in the greatest abundance to make them cheap.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Stewart</span></span>, Principles II, 2, 4, rendered a great service to the
+theory of prices, tracing back supply to the cost of production, demand to want and
+ability to pay; and his deserves to be called the immediate predecessor of
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hermann's</span></span> remarkable theory. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hermann</span></span>,
+Staatsw. Untersuchungen, 66 ff.) For a peculiar theory of prices, see
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Paganini</span></span>, Saggio sopra il giusto Pregio delle Cose, 189 ff.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Neri</span></span>, Osservazioni, 1751, 127. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Gust.
+Menger</span></span>, Grundsätze, I, 179 ff., has made an interesting attempt to explain the
+formation of prices in its simplest shape, in the supposition of a monopoly in the
+seller, and by then going over to the subsequent modifications introduced by the
+competition of many sellers.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_610" name="note_610" href="#noteref_610">610.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-q">“Instead of separating, in the same matter,
+the points of view of the buyer and seller, we may distinguish the consideration of
+the thing to be acquired and the thing to be given by one and the same person.”</span>
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Rau.</span></span>) The possessor of the more current commodity appears
+especially as demanding, that of the less current as offering or supplying,
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">v. Mangoldt.</span></span>)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_611" name="note_611" href="#noteref_611">611.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">This is for
+free goods=0, for monopolized goods=1/0.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_612" name="note_612" href="#noteref_612">612.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">The obvious fact that every price supposes a
+comparison of two commodities, and that every buyer is, at the same time, a seller, has
+been overlooked by only too many writers. And hence <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Dutot's</span></span>
+opinion, that, as all men buy and few only sell, the state, in case of doubt, should
+favor the buyer. (Réflexions sur le Commerce et les Finances, 1738, 962, éd. Daire.) And
+so the often-mooted question whether universal dearness or cheapness is more useful: the
+latter advocated, for instance, by <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Herbert</span></span>, Police générale des
+Grains, 1755; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Verri</span></span>, Meditazioni, V; the former by
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Boisguillebert</span></span>, Traité des Grains, I, 7, II, 9; and by the
+Physiocrates. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Quesnay</span></span>, Maximes générales, Nr. 18 ff., I,
+Problème Économique; also by <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">A. Young</span></span>, Polit. Arithmetics,
+ch. 8.) The laity in Political Economy understand by dearness only the general
+cheapness of the medium of circulation or exchange, and <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">vice
+versa</span></span>.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_613" name="note_613" href="#noteref_613">613.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Thus, even a poor man in Naples
+sometimes requires a glass of ice-water. The introduction of the
+extensive use of snow into Sicily improved the condition of the public health.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Rehfues</span></span>, Gemälde von Neapel, I, 37 ff.) On the
+other hand, furs, in the far north, are articles of prime necessity. Newspapers
+in a free country satisfy a want much more urgent than in countries which
+are not free. And so, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Senior</span></span> says that shoes are
+<span class="tei tei-q">“necessaries”</span> to all Englishmen, since without them, their health would suffer.
+To the lower classes of Scotland they are <span class="tei tei-q">“luxuries.”</span> Custom permits them to
+go barefoot without hardship or degradation. For the middle classes of the same country,
+they are <span class="tei tei-q">“decencies.”</span> Shoes are worn there, not to protect the feet but one's
+civil position. In Turkey, tobacco is a decency and wine a luxury. The reverse
+is the case in England. (Outlines, 36 ff.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_614" name="note_614" href="#noteref_614">614.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">As to the relativity of the
+opposites of <span class="tei tei-q">“temperance”</span> and <span class="tei tei-q">“excess,”</span> every
+person should attend to the following points: a, not to exceed one's income;
+b, to provide for one's self and one's family; c, to lay by something for a
+rainy day; d, to place one's self in a position to care for the poor; e, to indulge
+in no pleasure injurious to body or mind; f, to give no bad example.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Tucker</span></span>, Two Sermons, 29 ff.) <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Menger</span></span>,
+Grundsätze, I, 92 ff., endeavors to compare the value in use
+of different commodities from the point of view, that
+the means of gratification of a less urgent want, when the more urgent wants
+of the present are satisfied completely, should be preferred to the means of
+over-gratifying the latter.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_615" name="note_615" href="#noteref_615">615.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Thus the price of many dark articles of apparel rises
+in a moment of unexpected universal mourning. A very remarkable case in Paris, at the
+death of Henry II. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Montanari</span></span>, Delia Moneta, 85, Custodi.) On
+the other hand, a change of fashion may greatly depress the price of many commodities.
+Such a change may take place even in the case of precious stones; as, for
+instance, now in London, a perfect emerald is most highly prized.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">King</span></span>, Precious Stones and Metals, 1871.) The rise of many drugs
+in times of cholera, and of leeches, for example, in Paris, 600 per cent. Rise of the
+price of powder, horses etc. at the outbreak of a war, and of the price of iron
+caused by extensive railroad building. In Circassia, a good shirt of mail was
+formerly worth from 10 to 200 oxen: but since it was discovered not to be a
+protection against cannon balls, its price fell 50 per cent.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Bell</span></span>, Journal of a Residence in Circassia, I,
+403.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_616" name="note_616" href="#noteref_616">616.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">On <span class="tei tei-q">“connected”</span> (<span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">connexen</span></span>) goods, the use of one of which supposes the
+use of the other, as, for instance, sugar and coffee, wood and stone used in
+the construction of buildings, see <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Schäffle</span></span>, Nat.-Oek, II.
+Aufl., 179.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_617" name="note_617" href="#noteref_617">617.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Observed by <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Necker</span></span>, Sur la
+Législation et le Commerce des Grains, 1776. Compare <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Roscher</span></span>,
+Ueber Kornhandel und Theuerungspolitik, 1853, 1 ff. In Athens, for instance, the
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">medimnos</span></span> of wheat cost ordinarily five drachmas,
+but during the siege by Sulla it rose to 1000 drachmas.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Demosth.</span></span> adv. Phorm., 918. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Plutarch</span></span>,
+Sulla, 13.) Compare II. Kings, 6, 25, 7, 1. In Paris during the siege by Henry
+IV. it rose to 5000 per cent. of the ordinary price.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Lauderdale</span></span>, Inquiry, 60 ff.) During the siege of Breisach,
+in 1638, a mouse was finally worth 1 florin, the quarter of a dog, 7 florins, a
+quarter of wheat, 80 thalers. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Röse</span></span>, Leben H. Bernhards, M.,
+11, 269.) Compare <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Strabo</span></span>, V, 248
+seq.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_618" name="note_618" href="#noteref_618">618.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Wheat is still more indispensable than meat. Hence, in
+the ten principal markets of Prussia, the price of rye rose much more from 1811 to 1860
+than the price of beef; the former between 0.32 and 1.03 silver groschens and the
+latter between 2.32 and 4.94 silver groschens. (Annalen der preussischen
+Landwirthschaft, 1869, No. 9.) And so in the Rhine district, the wine harvests
+have undergone much greater changes in price than the prices of must, although
+the years differed very largely in the quality of the yield. Thus the
+crop of 1830 was only 225, that of 1868, 10,845 pieces, and yet the minimum
+price between 1831 and 1865 was only from 3 to 58 flr. per ome.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Engel</span></span>, Preuss. Statist., Ztschr., 1871, 168 ff.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_619" name="note_619" href="#noteref_619">619.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">In England, the price of wheat has not unfrequently
+risen from 100 to 200 per cent. when the harvest was from one-sixth to one-third under
+the average, and when a supply from abroad had modified even this condition
+of things. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Tooke</span></span>, History of Prices, I, 10 ff.)
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Tooke</span></span> is of opinion that in a country with
+poor-laws like those of England, a deficit of one-third in the
+wheat crop, if there were no stores remaining and no importation from
+abroad, would cause the price of wheat to rise, 500, 600, and even 1000 per
+cent (p. 15.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_620" name="note_620" href="#noteref_620">620.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">See
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Davenant</span></span>, Political and Commercial Works, London, 1771, II, 224.
+Tooke was somewhat acquainted with Davenant. According to this law, a
+deficit in the harvest of 10 per cent. would raise the price of corn 30 per
+cent.; one of 20 per cent. would raise the price of corn 80 per cent.; one of
+30 per cent. would raise the price of corn 160 per cent.; one of 40 per cent.
+would raise the price of corn 280 per cent.; one of 50 per cent. would raise
+the price of corn 450 per cent.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_621" name="note_621" href="#noteref_621">621.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">In England,
+it is 38.8 per cent. of the supply that comes to the market.
+(Quart. Review, XXXVI, 425.) In Belgium 40, and in Saxony at least 50
+per cent. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Engel</span></span>, Jahrb. der Statistik etc. von Sachsen,
+I, 276.) In Germany, the farmers consume on an average two-thirds themselves.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">v. Viebahn</span></span>, Zoll.-v-Statist., II, 958.) With this
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Plato</span></span>, De Legg., VIII, agrees remarkably
+well.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_622" name="note_622" href="#noteref_622">622.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">On
+the difference in this respect between England, Germany and northwestern
+Norway, see <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hermann</span></span>, p. 71.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_623" name="note_623" href="#noteref_623">623.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Hence it not unfrequently
+happens that grain grows dear not from any real want of it,
+but because it is generally supposed that such want exists. For
+an explanation of why it is that wheat and similar commodities have an almost
+invariable price, when the average is taken of a long series of years,
+see <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">infra</span></span> § <a href="#Section_129" class="tei tei-ref">129</a>.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_624" name="note_624" href="#noteref_624">624.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Case in Naples in which after
+a poor harvest the price of corn remained very low, because
+the oil-harvest had also failed, and the poor could earn
+nothing in that industry in which they were largely employed, and <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">vice
+versa</span></span>. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Galliani</span></span>, Della Moneta, II, 2.) Thus
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Adam Smith</span></span>, Wealth of Nations, I, ch. 7, distinguishes
+between <span class="tei tei-q">“effectual”</span> and <span class="tei tei-q">“absolute”</span> demand. Similarly <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">J.
+Steuart</span></span>, Principles I, ch. 18. Care should be taken to distinguish
+in this respect between desire and demand.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_625" name="note_625" href="#noteref_625">625.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Thus, in the famine
+in Ireland in 1821, during which potatoes rose to fabulous prices, but
+wheat scarcely at all, and had therefore to be exported.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_626" name="note_626" href="#noteref_626">626.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">In <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Tooke</span></span>,
+History of Prices (2d edition of the Thoughts and Details etc.),
+we meet repeatedly with the assertion that when the price of wheat rises, the
+price of colonial products and manufactured articles sinks, and <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">vice
+versa</span></span>. Thus, in England, the price of the evidences of national debt increases from
+two to three per cent. in fruitful years above what it is after a bad harvest.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Lauderdale</span></span>, Inquiry, 93.) The British nation paid for the
+cotton it needed for their own consumption in 1845 over £19,500,000; in 1847 only
+£9,500,000. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Banfield</span></span>, Organization of Industry, 162.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_627" name="note_627" href="#noteref_627">627.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Hence <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">J. B. Say</span></span> has said that
+the disposable wealth of a people is like a pyramid, with the scale of prices
+of the various commodities inscribed on its side. The higher a commodity is in
+this scale of prices, the smaller is the corresponding section of the pyramid.
+Compare <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Sir W. Temple</span></span>, Essay on the Origin and Nature
+of Government, Works I, 23 ff.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_628" name="note_628" href="#noteref_628">628.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">This fact, in connection
+with the preceding, explains the well known puzzle,
+why the remnant of a piece of goods is comparatively cheaper than the
+whole piece, while a small share in the public debt is dearer than a large one.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Lauderdale</span></span>, ch. 1.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_629" name="note_629" href="#noteref_629">629.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Rhode Island was, it is said, bought from the
+Indians in 1638 for a pair of spectacles. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">B. Franklin</span></span>,
+Political ... Pieces, 1707.) According to <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Chalmers</span></span>, it
+was bought for 50 threads of coral, 12 hatchets and 12 overcoats.
+(Political Annals of the U. States.) Compare <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ebeling</span></span>, II,
+108. Holland cloths and opium were exchanged for a long time at Sumatra for gold dust
+worth ten times their value. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Saalfeld</span></span>, Geschichte des holl.
+Kolonialwesens, I, 260.) The Hudson Bay Company realized, it is said, at the beginning of
+this century, in trading with the Indians, a profit of 2000 per cent.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Anderson</span></span>, Origin of Commerce, a. 1751.) When Altai was
+discovered, the natives gave as many sable-skins for a Russian kettle or boiler as
+could be crammed into it. With 10 rubles in iron it was an easy easy matter to gain
+500-660 rubles. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Storch</span></span>, Gemälde des russ., R., II, 16;
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">K. Ritter</span></span>, Erdkunde, II, 557. Similar
+cases among the Germans: <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Tacit.</span></span>, Germ., 5.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_630" name="note_630" href="#noteref_630">630.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">A seller not actually engaged in the business of selling for a
+livelihood, and who has not purchased or produced with the intention of selling, is apt
+to consider instead of this the market price, towards the determination of
+which those actually engaged in trade have coöperated. Somewhat inaccurately,
+the amount of the cost of production is called by <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Adam Smith</span></span> and
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ricardo</span></span>, <span class="tei tei-q">“natural price,”</span> by <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">J. B. Say</span></span>,
+<span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">prix naturel</span></span>, also
+<span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">prix originaire</span></span>, because
+the commodity at its first entrance into the world cost so much.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Sismondi</span></span> and <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Storch</span></span> call it
+<span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">prix nécessaire</span></span>, and
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Lotz, Kostenpreis. P. Cantillon</span></span>,
+Nature de Commerce, 33 ff., understands by the <span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">prix intrinsique</span></span> of a commodity,
+the amount of land and labor, taking the quality of both also into
+consideration, necessary to its production.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_631" name="note_631" href="#noteref_631">631.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">The
+cheapest cotton thread is numbered from 60 to 80. The coarser is
+dearer on account of the quantity of raw material in it, and the finer because
+of the greater amount of labor in it. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Babbage.</span></span>) For
+similar reasons, the Venetian chains cost per <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">braccio</span></span>,
+No. 0, the finest, 60 francs; No. 1, 40 francs; Nos. 2 and 3, 20
+francs; No. 24, coarsest, 60 francs. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Rau.</span></span>)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_632" name="note_632" href="#noteref_632">632.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">If
+a person engaged in production has himself furnished certain of the
+elements of production; if, for instance, he has worked with his own hands,
+employed his own capital etc., he is wont to charge as much for these as they
+would be worth, if he hired himself out or loaned his capital.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_633" name="note_633" href="#noteref_633">633.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">The
+greater number of political economists consider the cost of production
+only from the standpoint of the individual engaged in production. Thus
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Darjes</span></span>, Erste Gründe, 218 seq.; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ad.
+Smith</span></span>, Wealth of Nations, I, ch. 6. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">J.
+B. Say</span></span> calls even production an exchange in which the productive services
+of natural forces, of labor and of capital are parted with in order to obtain
+products. The estimate put upon the value of these services is the cost of
+production. For some interesting examples as to how the cost of production,
+in this sense, is calculated, see <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hermann</span></span>, I ed., 136
+ff.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_634" name="note_634" href="#noteref_634">634.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Jacob</span></span> translated by
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Say</span></span>, 1807, II, 450. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hufeland</span></span>,
+N. Grundelgung, I, 309.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_635" name="note_635" href="#noteref_635">635.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Compare
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">L. Lauderdale</span></span>, Inquiry, 124, against the Physiocrates.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Riedel</span></span>, Nat.-Oekonomie, 1838, I, 68.) A country which possesses
+advantages over other countries, in respect to the cost of production of a commodity,
+can offer it in the market cheapest. Where, for instance, with the employment of the
+same amount of capital, a specially large quantity of wheat can be produced,
+whether it be because of the unusual fertility of the soil, or because of the
+<em class="tei tei-emph"><span style="font-style: italic">extensiveness</span></em> of agriculture (farming over a large area), wheat will,
+the demand being the same, be specially cheap, whatever the proportion of the three
+branches of income may have been. If relatively a great number of workmen
+have been employed in its cultivation, each will receive smaller wages,
+and <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">vice versa</span></span>.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_636" name="note_636" href="#noteref_636">636.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Copper
+and steel engraving affords an example of the different kinds of
+wear of fixed capital, and the influence it may have on prices.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Canard</span></span>, Principes, ch. IV, considers that one of the most
+important elements in the cost of production is the length of time that capital must
+<span class="tei tei-q">“stagnate”</span> for the sake of production.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_637" name="note_637" href="#noteref_637">637.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">On
+this risk depends, for instance, the high price of vanilla
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Humboldt</span></span>, N. Espagne, IV, 10,), sparkling wines and articles
+of fashion.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_638" name="note_638" href="#noteref_638">638.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Mangoldt</span></span>,
+Lehre vom Unternehmergewinn, 1855, 81 ff. Compare <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">v.
+Thünen</span></span>, Der isolirte Staat, II, 1, 80 ff.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_639" name="note_639" href="#noteref_639">639.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Wool
+and mutton, brandy and fattened cattle, calves and milk, honey and
+wax, gas and coke, hens and eggs etc.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_640" name="note_640" href="#noteref_640">640.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Adam Smith</span></span>
+himself remarked that all artificial lowering of the price of
+skins or wool must necessarily raise the price of the meat, and
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">vice versa</span></span>. (Wealth of Nations, I, ch. 11, 3.) For a
+very elaborate theory on this subject, see <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">J. S. Mill</span></span>,
+Principles, III, ch. 16, § 1. Thus Australian wool did
+not rise as much in price as the production of gold there might have led us
+to suppose, for the reason that mutton rose to an exceedingly high price.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_641" name="note_641" href="#noteref_641">641.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">It is an
+important and correct remark of <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Carey's</span></span>,
+that the price of a commodity depends much more on the cost of producing its like
+than on its own cost of production, which already belongs to the
+past.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_642" name="note_642" href="#noteref_642">642.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Compare <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">J. S. Mill</span></span>,
+III, ch. 3, § 1. A much too high price, caused by speculation, or a much too
+low one, by depreciation, is regularly followed by an ebb or flow just as much
+too great. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Tooke</span></span>, History of Prices, III, 55.)
+And <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Law</span></span>, Trade and Money, 41, remarks that the price
+of a commodity always tends to coincide with the <span class="tei tei-q">“first cost.”</span> This fact
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Adam Smith</span></span> expresses by saying that the cost of production is the
+center about which the market price always gravitates. (I, ch. 7.) But here there is
+still the error lurking, that the producer's profit is a part of the cost of production.
+Compare <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Malthus</span></span>, Definitions, ch. 6.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_643" name="note_643" href="#noteref_643">643.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">The
+English view, one very characteristic of the people, is that the equilibrium
+of prices depends on this, that all commodities should have a value
+equal to that of the labor they have cost. (Compare <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Aristot.</span></span>,
+Eth. Nicom., V, 5.) The same doctrine is to be found in its germinal state in
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hobbes</span></span>, Leviathan, 24, 1651, and <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Rice
+Vaughan</span></span>, Discourse of Coin and Coinage, 1675. More exhaustively in
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Petty</span></span>, Treatise of Taxes and Contributions, 1679,
+24, 31, 67. (Compare <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Locke</span></span>, Civil government, II, § 40 ff.;
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">B. Franklin</span></span>, Inquiry into the Nature and Necessity of a
+paper Currency, 1729; Works, ed. Sparks, vol. II.) <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Adam Smith</span></span>
+admits this to be true only of the first beginnings of society, before the origin of
+property in land and in capital. (Wealth of Nations, I, ch. 5.) Most largely developed
+in <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ricardo</span></span>, Principles, ch. I, 4, 30. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Marx</span></span>,
+Zur Kritik der polit. Œkonomie, 1859, 6, endeavors to improve on this by calling all
+values in exchange <span class="tei tei-q">“a determinate quantity of thickly curdled working-time,”</span>
+meaning by work an averaged <span lang="de" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="de"><span style="font-style: italic">qualitätslose</span></span>, social work of production.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Per contra</span></span>, compare <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hufeland</span></span>, N.
+Grundlegung, I, 134, 156 ff.; and <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Malthus</span></span>, Principles, ch. 2,
+secs. 2, 3, who claims very earnestly that price is not determined by the cost of
+production, but by the relation existing between demand and supply, the cost of
+production influencing it only to the extent that it influences this relation. He
+calls attention to the poor-rates by which the cost of production of labor is raised, but
+its wages decreased; also to the case of bank notes etc. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Tooke</span></span>,
+History of Prices, V, 49 ff; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">J. S. Mill</span></span>, Principles, III, ch.
+16, 2.) For a very marked case of reaction against Adam Smith and Ricardo, see
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Macleod</span></span>, Elements, ch. 2, who, however, is much too one-sided
+in considering only the amount necessary to the purchaser, and his means. Even
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Condillac</span></span> had said: <span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">une chose n'a pas une valeur, parcequ'elle coûte, mais elle
+coûte (du travail ou de l'argent), parcequ'elle a une valeur</span></span>. (Commerce et
+Gouvernement, 16.) <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ricardo's</span></span>
+doctrine is more tenable than appears at first blush. We need only
+to interline his theory of rent, admit that capital is accumulated labor, subtract
+all objects constituting a natural monopoly, and not forget that the
+intrinsic value of labor is one of the causes of the difference of price of
+different sorts of labor. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ricardo</span></span> does justice to value in
+use even <span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">en passant</span></span>.
+A strange effort by <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">McCulloch</span></span> to make labor the cause of the
+non-use of capital. (Principles, III, ch. 6, 2.) <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">McCulloch</span></span>
+has not unfrequently exaggerated the half-truths of his doctrines to such an extent
+as to produce unwittingly a <span lang="la" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="la"><span style="font-style: italic">reductio ad
+absurdum</span></span>. According to <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Torrens</span></span>, before any separation
+of capitalists from workmen, price depends entirely on the work done, and
+afterwards on the capital expended, inasmuch as wages, rent etc. are covered
+by the capital of the person who engages in the enterprise. (Production of
+Wealth, ch. 1.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_644" name="note_644" href="#noteref_644">644.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">Ce que l'
+on appelle chereté, c'est l' unique remède à la chereté.</span></span>
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Dupont de Nemours.</span></span>) Tenders of division in common, in England,
+increase and decrease according to the higher or lower price of corn during the preceding
+year. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Tooke</span></span>, Thoughts and Details, III, 105 ff.) The cotton
+famine after 1861 increased the price of flax-yarn in a short time fifty per cent.,
+although the raw material of flax did not rise in price, but only because care was not
+taken to increase the number of flax-spinners. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ausland</span></span>, I,
+1865.) However, there were in 1864, 490,000 flax-machine spindles in course of erection.
+(Report of the Chemnitz Chamber of Commerce, 1864, 101.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_645" name="note_645" href="#noteref_645">645.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">By the discovery, for instance,
+of new natural forces, the invention of machines, improved division of labor,
+improved roads etc. In France, in consequence of technic improvement, a quintal
+of saltpeter fell from 100 to 9 francs. See a similar instance in
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Chaptal</span></span>, De l' Industrie française, II, 64,
+70, 434.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_646" name="note_646" href="#noteref_646">646.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hermann</span></span>,
+Staatsw. Untersuchungen, 212.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_647" name="note_647" href="#noteref_647">647.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">The
+highest but unattainable ideal of such progress would consist in this,
+that all products should be obtained without cost. If this ideal were attainable,
+every one would be infinitely rich and all wealth would be free, like the
+air and the sunshine. (Compare <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">J. B. Say</span></span>, Traité, II, 2.)
+The complete victory of mankind over nature would consist in that all men should be free
+and all the forces of nature the slaves of man. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Smitthenner.</span></span>)
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Carey</span></span> intimates something similar when he says that, with the
+advance of civilization the tendency is for men to become more and more valuable and
+commodities to have less of <span class="tei tei-q">“value.”</span></dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_648" name="note_648" href="#noteref_648">648.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">We
+might here speak of an aristocratic and democratic principle of the
+determination of prices. The greater utility of the latter is advocated in the
+Discourse of Trade, Coyn and Credit, London, 1697. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Bacon</span></span> has a good
+word to say for the maxim: <span class="tei tei-q">“Light gains make heavy purses; for light
+gains come thick, whereas great come now and then.”</span> Similarly,
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Gurnay</span></span> in <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Cliquot de Blervache</span></span>,
+Considérations sur le Commerce etc., 1758, 48, 54. As to how Morrison, the celebrated
+merchant, became rich by adhering to the principles: <span class="tei tei-q">“to sell cheap as well as to
+buy cheap,”</span> and <span class="tei tei-q">“always tell the truth,”</span> see <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Chadwick</span></span>,
+in the Statistical Journal, 1862, 503. Compare the related opinion of
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Adam Smith's</span></span> continuator in an ethical direction,
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Garve</span></span>, zu Cicero's Pflichten, III, 100. The contrary principle,
+the cunning of the Judæans, according to <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Strabo</span></span>, XVII, 800,
+was followed by the Dutch East India Company, when it, in 1652, caused the greater
+number of the vegetable roots on the Moluccas to be destroyed.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Saalfeld</span></span>, Geschichte des holländischen Kolonialwesens, I, 272.
+Also, when great quantities of roots were destroyed by burning in the East Indies.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Huysers</span></span> Beschryving der Oostindischen Etablissmenten, 1789, 22.)
+For a clever argument against such practice, see <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">de la Court</span></span>,
+Anwysing der heilsame Gronden, 1663. The principle
+similar to that of the patent, mentioned in the text, works at the same
+time democratically and aristocratically, both words understood in their best
+sense.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_649" name="note_649" href="#noteref_649">649.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">This is true, first of all, in
+those industries which are intimately connected with one another, or
+of those which are carried on with scarcely any fixed
+capital; also in lower stages of civilization, where the lights and shades caused
+by a highly developed division of labor are not very intense. On the numerous
+difficulties overlooked by Ricardo in every other case, see
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Sismondi</span></span>, N. P., II, ch. 2. The workman thereby loses his
+former skill, that is his principal capital, and can certainly not wait until he
+has acquired other and different skill.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_650" name="note_650" href="#noteref_650">650.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">When a lowering of prices is
+expected, demand is less than consumption: <span class="tei tei-q">“postponed demand;”</span> whereas, an
+expectation that the price will rise, produces <span class="tei tei-q">“anticipated demand.”</span>
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Tooke</span></span>, History of Prices, II, 155.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_651" name="note_651" href="#noteref_651">651.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Thus,
+for instance, if the workmen were exposed to starvation, or were
+likely to take their departure; if great stores of raw material were in danger
+of spoiling; if fixed capital of great value were engaged in one industry and
+could not be easily transferred to another. The first and third causes are frequently
+met with in mining, and give rise to the mode of carrying on the
+operation known as <span lang="de" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="de"><span style="font-style: italic">Zubusgruben</span></span>,
+that is, a species of working mines upon shares. In England, after the spring of 1862,
+cotton yarn was not so much dearer than raw cotton, that the loss caused by the decline
+could be made up. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ausland</span></span>, 24 Sept., 1862.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_652" name="note_652" href="#noteref_652">652.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Besides,
+in the time immediately following, the price lowered by too great
+a supply, may produce a species of desperation among producers, which
+would lead them, in the hope of covering their losses, to increase the supply
+still more, until many of them were ruined. Generally, when a time of high
+prices is followed by a time of low prices, we find an interval during which
+sellers endeavor to defend themselves against the decline, and during which,
+as a consequence, scarcely any business is transacted, while high prices are
+nominally continued. And so <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">vice versa</span></span>.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Tooke</span></span>, History of Prices, II, 62.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_653" name="note_653" href="#noteref_653">653.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Thus,
+for instance, when the change of fashion brought about the disuse
+of long periwigs in every-day life, their price did not cease to fall until they
+had entirely disappeared. But, if a person wishes to have one made to-day
+for a masquerade, for the stage, etc., he would pay as much for it as its former
+price. On the other hand, the price of whalebone has never been again as
+high as it was in the time when hooped petticoats were worn.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_654" name="note_654" href="#noteref_654">654.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">The
+great plague in the time of Edward III. caused during the first year,
+on account of the decreased consumption, an extraordinary cheapness of
+provisions. In the following year, however, they became alarmingly dear,
+because there were few producers, especially among the humble classes. A
+quarter of wheat cost in 1348, 4s. 2d.; in 1349, 5s. 5d.; in 1350, 8s. 3d.; in
+1351, 10s. 2d.; while in 1346 and 1347, its average price was 6s. 8-7/8d.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Rogers</span></span>, History of Agriculture and Prices, I, 232.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_655" name="note_655" href="#noteref_655">655.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">As
+for instance when new taxes or excises are imposed. Generally when
+the cost of production has largely increased, purchasers do not wait until a
+decrease of competition among sellers compels them to exact higher prices,
+but meet them half way, especially when many greatly desire the commodity,
+and the increase of the cost is only small. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Rau</span></span>, Handbuch,
+I, § 163.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_656" name="note_656" href="#noteref_656">656.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Under this rule fall, according
+to § <a href="#Section_33" class="tei tei-ref">33</a>, most products of industry properly
+so called. <span class="tei tei-q">“If we lose a market for a year, we generally lose it for all
+time,”</span> said an experienced manufacturer before the parliamentary hand-loom
+weavers' committee, 1840-42. Of course the cost of transportation as far as
+the market must be estimated as part of the cost of production. In consequence
+of this, as well as of the difference of taxation duties etc., the superiority
+of one producer to another may be more than overcome. In the case
+of colonial commodities, which go into the interior of a country from different
+sea-ports, the territory supplied from each port is determined for the
+most part by these data. Thus, in Switzerland, for instance, we find the districts
+supplied by Havre, Genoa and Rotterdam; in Austria, the districts
+supplied by Hamburg and Triest contiguous, but the boundary line subject
+to many changes. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Rau</span></span>, Lehrbuch, I, § 164.) It must be
+understood that we do not here speak of abnormal expenses made by producers individually,
+whether in consequence of want of skill or because of accident.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_657" name="note_657" href="#noteref_657">657.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">This
+is true especially of agricultural production, in which, as a rule, beside
+the most fertile and most advantageously situated land, the worse must
+be used. What <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Whately</span></span> calls <span class="tei tei-q">“surplus-profit”</span> appears
+here in the form of rent, whereas, in other cases, it takes the shape of unusually high
+wages, or profit on capital. This is very beautifully and systematically developed by
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Schäffle</span></span>, N. Œk., II; Aufl., 192 ff. According to
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Senior</span></span>, Outlines, 15, the price-relation of two commodities to
+each other depends not on the quantities of them which come to market, but on the
+relative power of the difficulties which stand in the way of an increase in these
+quantities. If the same producers can pursue the cheaper mode of production which does not
+suffice to supply the market, as well as the dearer, we have, generally, a price
+which is the mean between the two costs of production. The same is true in the case of
+<span class="tei tei-q">“smuggled”</span> goods which ought to have paid duty. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hermann</span></span>,
+loc. cit., 83, seq.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_658" name="note_658" href="#noteref_658">658.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">To this section belong the secrets of
+production which may be taken advantage of either <span lang="la" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="la"><span style="font-style: italic">ad libitum</span></span> or within certain limits. In agriculture,
+advantages of production can seldom remain secret. Compare, however, the case
+mentioned in <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Garnier's</span></span> translation of <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Adam
+Smith</span></span>, V, 119, and that of the orchards which yielded £1,000 yearly for every 32
+acres, and which were a result of the recent introduction of the culture of the cherry
+in Kent, in the reign of Henry VIII. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Anderson</span></span>, Origin of
+Commerce, a, 1540.) There is therefore, a certain odium attached by agricultural
+producers to keeping secret a means of agricultural improvement.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_659" name="note_659" href="#noteref_659">659.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Compare <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Boisguillebert</span></span>,
+Traité des Grains, II, ch. 2. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">John Stuart Mill</span></span>
+speaks of an equation: the price of a commodity in a given market is always
+high enough to produce a demand corresponding to the present supply, or
+to an expected supply. The price of such commodities only which may
+not be increased to any desirable extent depends on supply and demand. In
+the case of all others, on the other hand, demand and supply depend on the
+price, and this on the cost of production. Supply and demand always tend
+to an equilibrium which is never really attained where the price is high
+enough to cover the cost of production (?). (Principles, III, ch. 2, § 4; ch.
+3, § 2.) <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Schäffle's</span></span> theory of prices is topped by the
+proposition that all competing sellers and all competing buyers, after an economic
+fashion, do not wish to sell below individual cost-value, nor to rise above individual
+value in use, in purchasing. Hence, in a throng of competition of supply the costliest
+productions step out of the field of competition in a descending cost-value
+series; and in a throng of competition of demand, the most wearied
+cravings in an ascending value-in-use series; until the quantities offered in
+supply and asked for cover each other without loss, and have placed each
+other in quantitative equilibrium. (N. Œk. Aufl., I, 188 ff.; compare 173,
+185.) It is, however, to say the least, an instance of baseless solicitude, when
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Wade</span></span>, History of the middle and working Classes, 214, says that
+one unemployed workman might depress the aggregate wages of labor, almost
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">ad infinitum</span></span>.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_660" name="note_660" href="#noteref_660">660.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hufeland</span></span>, N.
+Grundlegung, I, 78; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ricardo</span></span>, Principles, ch. 31.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_661" name="note_661" href="#noteref_661">661.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Dunoyer</span></span>,
+Liberté du Travail, VIII, ch. 4; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Rau</span></span>, Lehrbuch, I, § 158.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_662" name="note_662" href="#noteref_662">662.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">For a good classification of monopolies, see
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Senior</span></span>, Outlines, 103 ff. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Menger</span></span>,
+Grundsätze, I, 195, shows that no monopolist can arbitrarily determine
+the extent of the market for his monopoly-product when the price
+is fixed, nor when the extent of the market is known, the height of
+the price. Moreover, the price may remain longer above than under the cost
+of production, for the reason that it is easier to abandon a business than to
+begin one, and that the fear of loss is more frequently an incentive to action
+than the hope of gain. Hence the price of corn, when everything else is
+very dear, is more apt to vary from the average price, than in times when
+everything is very cheap. For instance, the Munich prices from 1750 to 1800
+show that its highest price was 147 per cent. above, and its lowest 47 per cent.
+below the average of twenty years. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Rau</span></span>, Lehrbuch, § 162,
+182.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_663" name="note_663" href="#noteref_663">663.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Chance
+plays a great part here. Thus, Murillo's Conception which Marshal
+Soult had offered several times for 150,000 francs, but in vain, was sold
+in May, 1852, for 586,000 francs. Paul Potter's young bull at the Hague,
+which cost 625 florins in 1748, was valued before the middle of the nineteenth
+century at 200,000 florins. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Dethmar.</span></span>)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_664" name="note_664" href="#noteref_664">664.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">The purchaser resolves
+to do so because it would, in all probability, cost
+him more to go to India or Brazil in search of precious stones. Besides after
+the working of the Brazilian mines in 1728, and again after the French Revolution,
+the price of diamonds fell greatly; in the one case, from an increase
+of the supply, in the other from a decrease of the demand. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ritter</span></span>,
+VI, 355, 365.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_665" name="note_665" href="#noteref_665">665.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Thus, the
+Champagne and Johannisberg grapes, when transplanted to the
+Crimea, lost most of their native taste. On China's practical monopoly of
+tea culture, and Ceylon's, especially in its southwestern part, of cinnamon, at least
+so far as the peculiar aroma is concerned, compare <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ritter</span></span>,
+Erdkunde, VI, 123 ff. The small deer of Angora no sooner leave the little district of
+Asia Minor to which they belong, than they are in danger of degenerating.
+(Revue des deux Mondes, May 15, 1850.) Indian birds-nests cost no more
+than 11 per cent. to gather, dry etc., of the market price.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Crawfurd</span></span>, East India Archipelago, III, 432 ff.;
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hogendorp</span></span>, Sur l'Ile de Java, 201.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_666" name="note_666" href="#noteref_666">666.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Poor
+material for fuel, poor day-laborer work—dwellings, medical attendance.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Menger</span></span>, Grundsätze, I, 116.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_667" name="note_667" href="#noteref_667">667.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Thus
+sea fish, oysters etc. were formerly much cheaper during the summer
+than during the winter, at Ostend and Scheveningen, because during
+winter they could be sent to a distance. At Billingsgate market, in the
+mackerel season, fish cost per hundred 48 to 50 shillings at 5 o'clock in the
+morning, 36 shillings at 10 o'clock, and 24 shillings in the afternoon.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">H. Schulze</span></span>, Nat-Œkonomische Bilder aus England, 1853, 241.) In
+the Rhine country, the price of fruit does not vary so much as in Saxony, because it is
+customary there to employ the surplus in the manufacture of cider, of preserves
+etc., thus making it transportable and durable. Frequently, after a
+very abundant crop of grapes or olives, under-prices prevail, sometimes on
+account of a want of vessels, cellar-room etc.; they must, therefore, be sold
+rapidly.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_668" name="note_668" href="#noteref_668">668.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Compare <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Adam Smith</span></span>, Wealth of Nations, I,
+ch. 7.; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Tooke</span></span>, History of
+Prices, I, 97. Furs vary very much in price, sometimes 300 per cent. in a
+year, because, in the case of this entirely natural product, every thing depends
+on the stores of them, on the temperature etc. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">McCulloch</span></span>,
+Commerc. Dict., s.v.) On the other hand, the price of coffee usually varies only after
+periods of a number of years, because new plantations produce only after a lapse of
+years. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ibid.</span></span>) Pigs vary much more than cattle in price, because
+the former may be made ready for the slaughter house in one-third of the time
+required for the latter. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Thaer</span></span>, Rationelle Landwirthschaft, IV,
+374.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_669" name="note_669" href="#noteref_669">669.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Thus the rent of farms,
+where a numerous proletarian population will live
+exclusively from agriculture, depends on scarcely anything but the number
+of people and the extent of the land. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">J. S. Mill</span></span>, Principles,
+III, ch. 2.) In retail trade, where personal want comes in question, prices are much more
+subject to be modified by small circumstances, than in wholesale trade, where
+both parties are only intent on <span class="tei tei-q">“doing business.”</span> (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">J. S.
+Mill</span></span>, III, ch. 1, § 5. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Tooke</span></span>, II, 72 f.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_670" name="note_670" href="#noteref_670">670.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Hucksters, butchers, dealers in corn,
+inn-keepers etc. A remarkable case where Parisian dealers in
+hare-skins attempted to ruin the new fashion in silk hats by
+distributing a great number of them among the rabble, at mock-prices.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hermann</span></span>, 1st ed., 91.) The author witnessed a similar but
+unsuccessful attempt in Berlin in 1838-39, by the tailors against the so-called Macintosh
+coat. On the conspiracy of the English dealers in second-hand goods
+against auctions, see Athæneum, Dec. 5, 1863. It is one of
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">McCulloch's</span></span> characteristic exaggerations, that he says that
+conspiracies to raise the price of a commodity by artificial means, are broken just as
+soon as they begin to obtain their object by the interest of the individual members to
+profit by the advanced prices. (Edition of <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Adam Smith</span></span>, Edinb.,
+1863, p. 59.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_671" name="note_671" href="#noteref_671">671.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">J. S.
+Mill</span></span>, Principles, II, ch. 4.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_672" name="note_672" href="#noteref_672">672.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Monopolies universally prohibited: L. un. C.
+De Monopol. (IV, 59.) Police-order of the Empire, 1548, tit. 18.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_673" name="note_673" href="#noteref_673">673.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Privileges
+which the purchaser voluntarily accords to the seller are wont
+to be useful to both parties. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hermann</span></span>, loc. cit. 155,
+158.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_674" name="note_674" href="#noteref_674">674.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Besides,
+guilds, castes, corporations etc. may, when the vent diminishes,
+produce under-prices as readily as they may monopoly-prices when the vent
+is very good. (See <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Adam Smith</span></span>, Wealth of Nations, I, ch. 7.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_675" name="note_675" href="#noteref_675">675.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Thus,
+for instance, the traveler who wanted to cross a stream, would find
+himself delivered over to the tender mercies of the ferry-man, without protection
+of any kind against his demands. But repeated impositions in the
+matter of prices would have for effect to bring a point into disrepute as a
+place of crossing, and would induce the public to seek another. Similarly
+in the case of hackney-coachmen and carriers in large cities, and in that of
+innkeepers, at hotels and postal termini etc.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_676" name="note_676" href="#noteref_676">676.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Fixed prices
+by governmental authority were soonest attempted after bad
+harvests, but, indeed, with a strange ignorance of the natural grounds of the
+increase in price of bread-stuffs. Thus in the time of Charlemagne. (Capitul.
+a, 805; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Baluz</span></span>, I, 423.) Similarly in the case of other articles
+of universal necessity, when oppressively but necessarily dear. (See § 175.)
+During the last centuries of the middle ages, with their multitude of actual
+monopolies, and at the beginning of the modern era, fixed prices became
+more and more general. The earliest instance in the history of England of
+a fixed price for bread was in 1202 (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">v. Raumer</span></span>, Hohenstaufen, V,
+372), and in 1266, 51 Henry III. The earliest in Prussia was in 1393.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Voigt</span></span>, Geschichte von Preussen, II, 659.) Many instances of fixed
+prices in the Rhine provinces of Austria in 1530. In <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Mylius</span></span>,
+Corp. Const. March, V, 2, 587 ff., we find an ordinance of 1653 fixing prices in Berlin,
+and including 72 industries. There is a very complicated system of fixed prices in the
+police ordinance of the electorate of Saxony of 1612, and in the decree concerning
+the coin of 1822. As to how, in Saxony in 1578, an attempt was made to
+ascertain the cost of the production of shoes by shoemakers, see <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Joh.
+Falke</span></span>, Gesch. des Kurf. August in volkswirthschaft. Beziehung, 1868, 252. There
+was an enormous extension of governmental fixing of prices under Philip
+II.; one of the principal causes why Castile was so far behind Aragon economically.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Townsend</span></span>, Journey through Spain, II, 221.) Sometimes these
+measures were adopted to prevent distress-prices; as in Hochheim, in favor
+of the vintners. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Becher</span></span>, Polit. Discurs, II, 1652.) The
+predilection especially of German authorities for the fixing of prices by governmental
+power, in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries is very remarkable. Thus
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Luther</span></span>, vom Kaufhandel und Wucher, 1524;
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Calvin</span></span>, Leben Calvins, by <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Henry</span></span>, II,
+Beilage, 3, 23; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Bornitz</span></span>, De Rerum Sufficientia, 1625, 246;
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Seckendorff</span></span>, Teutscher Fürstenstaat, 5th ed., 1776, 210;
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Becher</span></span>, II, 1823 ff.; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Horneck</span></span>, Oesterrich
+über Alles, wenn es will, 1684, 123; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Leibniz ed. Dutens</span></span>, VI, I,
+250; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Thomasius</span></span>, Göttl. Rechtsgelahrtheit, 1709, 209; even
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Frederick</span></span> the Great, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Mylius</span></span>, N. Corp.
+Const. March, I, 190. Similarly, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Mariana</span></span>, De Rege et
+Regis Institutione, III, c. 9. Compare, however, III, c. 8, and
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Bacon</span></span>, Serm., 15; Historia Henrici, 1037, 1040. On the other
+hand, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Child</span></span>, 1690, and <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">North</span></span>,
+1691, reprove all such measures. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Roscher</span></span>, Zur Geschichte der
+englischen Volkswirthschaftslehre, 65, 90 f. Earlier yet,
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Salmasius</span></span>, who would allow the free <span lang="la" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="la"><span style="font-style: italic">fori ratio</span></span> to govern. (De Usuris, 1638, 583.) For
+a very rigorous price-tariff in the old Indian laws, by which, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">inter
+alia</span></span>, the price of provisions was to be fixed anew every fourteen days, see
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Menu</span></span>, Laws, VIII, ch. 401 ff.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_677" name="note_677" href="#noteref_677">677.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Where trade is free, the
+<span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">filet de boeuf</span></span>,
+for instance, is worth four times as much as the
+flesh of the ox's neck or throat; but prices fixed by a government
+can scarcely take cognizance of the difference. How easily might not
+a fixed price for beer, for instance, be evaded by diluting that beverage with
+water, or fixed prices for inn-keepers by dealing out portions smaller in
+quantity or of an inferior quality. Moreover, as early a writer as <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">De la
+Court</span></span>, Polit. Discoursen, 1662, c. 4, remarks that the establishment of fixed
+prices by governmental authority raises the average price of all commodities
+rather than lowers it, for the reason that the few who are sellers by trade
+can do more to influence the authorities than the many buyers, whose interests
+are divided among numberless different commodities.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_678" name="note_678" href="#noteref_678">678.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Schäffle</span></span>,
+Nat.-Œkonomie, II, 384 f.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_679" name="note_679" href="#noteref_679">679.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Banfield</span></span>,
+Organization of Industry, 120. <span class="tei tei-q">“Where the economic life of a
+people is still undeveloped, and the production of one enterprise is not from
+the first based on the estimated consumption of another, the circulation of
+goods brings with it great profits and great losses; whereas, profits and losses
+grow smaller, but at the same time more uniform and regular, in proportion
+as the circulation of goods increases in rapidity and regularity.”</span>
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Stein</span></span>, Lehrbuch, 212.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_680" name="note_680" href="#noteref_680">680.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">In Belgium, during
+the last forty years, the price of wheat has become
+more constant every year, while the price of rye has become more variable;
+for the reason that rye has gradually ceased to be an article of popular consumption,
+and therefore to be an important article in trade, and is consumed
+almost entirely and directly by its producers. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Horn</span></span>, Statist.
+Gemälde von B., 1853, 185.) <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Rodbertus</span></span> rightly conjectures that the
+price of wheat was much more variable in ancient times than it is with us.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hildebrand's</span></span> Jahrb., 1870, I, 36.) That it was so may be
+inferred from the surprisingly large family supplies which were laid in, as appears from
+Digest, XXXIII, De Penu legato.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_681" name="note_681" href="#noteref_681">681.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">In
+Würtemberg even officials etc. buy their own wine almost always directly
+from the vintner. This causes prices there to be exceedingly variable, frequently
+from hour to hour. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">v. Reden</span></span>, Statist. Zeitschrift, Nov. 1847,
+1008.) How greatly the mere presence of a regular market has contributed to make
+prices more constant, may be seen in the suburbs of Hamburg, where fish
+offered for sale on the street are sold in the evening for one-third of the price
+asked for them in the morning. Besides, purchases made with a view to speculation
+may increase the variations of price, if the speculation is unskillfully
+conducted, especially when a low rate of interest, and of the profit of the
+person engaged in it, has produced a blind race among the speculators.
+Here the price of a commodity rises, not from any natural cause, but because
+it once rose before, and <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">vice versa</span></span>.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Senior</span></span>, Outlines, 17 ff.; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hermann</span></span>, 90
+ff.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_682" name="note_682" href="#noteref_682">682.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">That fixed
+prices suppose that men are engaged in the production of the
+commodity in question, as their calling in life, see <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Garve</span></span>,
+Zu Cicero's Pflichten, III, 64 ff. Chess-like commerce of colporteurs, and in caravans
+etc. Concerning the dreadful higgling of the Bedouins, see
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Wellsted</span></span>, Reise in Arabien, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Rödiger's</span></span>
+translation, I, 147; and the still worse bantering in Cashmere,
+where the merchant, in the first place, always denies that he possesses
+the desired commodity, then begins to search for it, in order to discover what
+value the purchaser puts upon it etc. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">K. Ritter</span></span>, Erdkunde, III,
+475.) On the practices in Indian fairs, see <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Th. Skinner</span></span>,
+Excursion in India, 1832, I, ch. 6; on the bazaars in Asia,
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Andree</span></span>, Globus XII, 7, 211. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Herberstein</span></span>
+says of the Russians in the sixteenth century: <span lang="la" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="la"><span style="font-style: italic">mercantur fallacissime et dolosissime
+nec paucis verbis ... mercatores nonnunquam non uno tantum aut altera
+mense suspensos detinent, verum ad extremam desperationem perducere solent</span></span>.
+Hence the great variations in prices and commodities. (Rerum Moscov.
+Commentt., ed. Starczewski, 39 f.) Similarly also, in 1674, according to
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Kilburger</span></span>: Büsching's Magazin, III, 249. But, on the contrary,
+it is said of the Plescovers, educated by intercourse with the Hanse;
+<span lang="la" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="la"><span style="font-style: italic">tanta integritas ... in
+contractibus, ut uno tantum verbo res ipsas indicarent omni verbositate
+in fraudem emptoris omissa</span></span>. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Herberstein</span></span>, 52.) In the
+England of the present day, the custom of marking each piece of goods with its price is
+very general. Concerning the rapidity and the paucity of words with which
+prices are settled in that country, where business men do not even salute their
+customers, nor customers the business man, see <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">C. G. Simon</span></span>,
+Observations recueillies en Angleterre, 1835, I, 129 f. The Athenian laws (?), that fixed
+prices should be asked, and that sellers should not sit down that that they
+might sell more rapidly, points to something similar. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Athen.</span></span>,
+VI, 226 f. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Plato</span></span>, De Legg., XI, 916 f.) Athenian law prohibiting
+mendacity in the markets. (See <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Demosth.</span></span>, Lept., 459.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_683" name="note_683" href="#noteref_683">683.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Thus the German
+book-trade has fixed prices. Many merchants never
+make an offer to their educated customers who are wont to do so with peasants
+etc.; because they are aware that the latter purchase only after they
+have compelled the seller to come down greatly from his first proposed price.
+Among the Quakers it has been a rule from the beginning, never to ask more
+for their wares than they were determined to accept. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hume</span></span>,
+History of England, ch. 62.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_684" name="note_684" href="#noteref_684">684.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Sir
+William Temple</span></span>, Observations upon the Netherlands, Works I, 134,
+compares honor in trade to discipline in an army. Similarly, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Law</span></span>,
+Trade and Money, 209 f. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ferguson</span></span>, History of Civil Society, III,
+4. Where the seller is not obliged to make known the existence of certain defects in his
+wares to the purchaser before sale, there is always scope for fraud. Compare
+Digest De Edict. aedilit., XXI, I. On the meaning of the German legal maxims:
+<span lang="de" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="de"><span style="font-style: italic">Hand muss Hand wahren</span></span>, and
+<span lang="de" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="de"><span style="font-style: italic">Ein Wort, ein Mann</span></span>, see
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Eisenhart</span></span>, Deutsches Recht in Sprüchwörtern, 311 f., 319 f. It
+is a principle in matters of business, that the person who through malice or carelessness
+recommends a man of whose probity there is already some doubt, should
+bear the damage caused by his recommendation. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Martens</span></span>,
+Grundriss des Handelsrechtes, 24 ff.) Many attempts at dishonesty are prevented by laws
+which in important contracts, especially in sales of land etc., require the
+presence of witnesses, and this particularly in the lower stages of civilization.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Meier</span></span> and <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Schömann</span></span>, Attischer Process,
+522; Roman, Emancipatio; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Grimm</span></span>, Deutsche Rechtsalterthümer, 608
+f.), or even a public proclamation before the assembled community, at least written
+documents invested with all legal formalities as practiced among civilized peoples. On
+Greek laws of this nature, see especially, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Theophrast.</span></span>, in
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Stobaeus</span></span>, Sermon., XLIV, 22. Very remarkable in Sparta.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Schol. Aristophan.</span></span>, Aves, 1284.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_685" name="note_685" href="#noteref_685">685.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Compare <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Lotz</span></span>,
+Revision, I, 255 ff. In England the price of wheat scarcely
+ever varied more than from 1 to 2. In Ireland the price of potatoes varied
+from 1 to 6. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">McCulloch</span></span>, Comm. Dict., v. Potatoes.) Compare
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Engel</span></span>, Jahrbuch für Sachsen, I, 491 ff. The custom of asking
+enormous prices with the expectation of being beaten down, is usual in Italy and carried
+to a frightful extent, and related to the bad custom prevalent there of begging a
+little after-payment to every little gratuity or drink-money which has been
+received.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_686" name="note_686" href="#noteref_686">686.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Storch</span></span>,
+Handbuch, I, 311. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">J. B. Say</span></span>, Traité I, ch. 16. As to how commerce,
+when fully developed, is wont to be more moral than when only
+half developed, see <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Garve</span></span>, loc. cit., and Versuche IV, 149 ff.
+How fortunate for the public economy of nations that the prices of corn especially have
+been growing more steady all the time since the middle ages. See
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Roscher</span></span>, Ueber Kornhandel, 56, 61.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_687" name="note_687" href="#noteref_687">687.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Trade by barter was very general in several states of the American
+Union about the close of the eighteenth century. In Vermont, for instance, it was
+usual for a doctor to exchange his medicines against a horse, and for the
+printer to buy corn, butter etc. with a newspaper. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ebeling</span></span>,
+Geschichte und Erdbeschreibung, II, 537.) In Maryland, the Assembly fixed by law the
+relative proportions at which tobacco, pork, corn and wheat should be exchanged
+the one against the other. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ebeling</span></span>, V, 435 ff.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Douglas</span></span>, Summary of the British Settlements in N. America, 1670,
+V, 2, 359.) Even as late as 1815, children were wont to run the streets of Corrientes,
+crying: <span class="tei tei-q">“Salt for candles, tobacco for bread etc.”</span> It was commerce with England that
+first led to trade by money in the United States. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Robertson</span></span>,
+Letters on South America, 1843, I, 52.) Similarly in Rhokand until the end of the
+eighteenth century, where the cities, as a consequence, presented the appearance of a
+fair the whole year round. In the beginning of this century, the khan introduced
+the use of copper money made from Persian cannons; and much
+later yet, there were scarcely a million rubles in money to a million men.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ritter</span></span>, Erdkunde, VII, 753.) <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Basil Hall</span></span>
+found the uncivilized inhabitants of the Loo-Choo Islands ignorant of the use of money.
+(Voyage of Discovery, 1818.) Concerning trade by barter in the Homeric age, see the Iliad,
+VII, 472 ff. A supposed law of Lycurgus prohibited the use of money in
+purchases, and allowed barter only. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Justin.</span></span>, III, 2.) According
+to <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Pausan.</span></span>, III, 12, only barter existed in India (?) in his
+time.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_688" name="note_688" href="#noteref_688">688.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">The person who has been used to
+paying for four pounds of meat with twenty pounds of bread, and is asked to give twenty
+pounds of bread in exchange for some other article, must of course have some unit of
+measure in his mind to serve as a means of comparison between the value of that article
+and that of four pounds of meat. In Denmark, during the rule of the aristocracy,
+there were fixed prices sanctioned by the tradition of long usage, in
+accordance with which the prices of all commodities were estimated in relation
+to a ton of barley or rye—a natural consequence, apparently, of the
+want of a common measure to govern in the greater number of transactions.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Bergsoe</span></span>, Archiv der Polit. Œk., IV, 314;
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Graugan's</span></span> Icelandic Code contains a remarkable fixed price of this
+nature in the supplement to the <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Kaupa-Balkr</span></span>
+or Commercial Code, I, p. 500. Similarly among the ancient Persians.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Reynier</span></span>, Economie publique des Perses, 308.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_689" name="note_689" href="#noteref_689">689.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">That is, (200x(200-1))/2. Compare
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Rau</span></span> in <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Storch</span></span>, Handbuch, III, 253. The
+<span class="tei tei-q">“at least”</span> has reference to the fact, that in barter, the many different kinds
+of most commodities has to be borne in mind. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Knies</span></span>, Geld und
+Credit, I, 218.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_690" name="note_690" href="#noteref_690">690.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">This transportation of values supposes an equality of values of
+the money in two places, while the transportation of goods supposes different values of
+the same kind of goods in both places. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Knies</span></span>, Geld und Credit,
+I, 218.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_691" name="note_691" href="#noteref_691">691.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">While the words <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">pecunia</span></span>,
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">danaro</span></span>, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">dinero</span></span>, and
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">argent</span></span>, are all derived from unessential qualities, the German
+word for money, <span lang="de" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="de"><span style="font-style: italic">Geld</span></span>, corresponds
+with the essential quality of money, since it denotes that which is of value everywhere
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">gilt</span></span>). On the other hand, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">nummus</span></span> and
+νόμισμα from νόμος, (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Bœckh.</span></span> Metrolog. Unters., 310.),
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">moneta</span></span> (the English, money), are from the temple of Juno Moneta,
+in which the Roman coins were for a long time stamped. In old German, the word for money,
+<span lang="de" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="de"><span style="font-style: italic">Geld</span></span>, means everything that
+is paid by any one. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Grimm</span></span>, D. Rechtsalterth., 382.) The present
+meaning of the word is to be met with in a very old document of 1327.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Arnold</span></span>, z. Geschichte des Eigenthums in den deutschen Städten,
+89.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_692" name="note_692" href="#noteref_692">692.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">The
+wrong definitions of money may be divided into two classes: those
+which convey the idea that it is more than a commodity, and those which
+imply that it is less.
+</p>
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+This was a point which was contested even among the Greeks. There
+were many who claimed that wealth consisted exclusively in the possession
+of much money; as we find, for instance, in the pseudo-Platonic dialogue
+Eryxias; while others insisted that money was something purely imaginary
+(λῆρος), and the creation, exclusively, of human laws. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Aristot.</span></span>,
+Polit., I, 3, 16, Schn.) Νόμισμα σύμβολον τῆς ἀλλαγῆς ἔνεκα.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Plato</span></span>, De Rep., II, 371.) <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Anacharsis</span></span>
+compares money to counters. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Plutarch</span></span>, De Profectt
+in Virtute.) <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Aristotle</span></span>, himself, subscribed to the second
+opinion, although he saw clearly, that only useful and current things (χρείαν
+εὐμεταχείριστον πρὸς τὸ ζῆν) could be used as money. (Polit., I, 3, 14 ff. Eth. Nicom.,
+V, 5, 6, Rhet., II, 16.) <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Xenophon</span></span> ascribed properties to money
+which no other commodity possessed; especially when he said that it could never be
+too plentiful, and that its price could never fall. (De Vectt. Ath., 4.) The
+finest ancient explanation of the nature of money is that of the jurisconsult
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Paullus</span></span>, L. I.; Digest, XVIII, 1; and it well deserves the long
+commentary devoted to it by <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">P. Neri</span></span>, Osservazioni etc., in
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Custodi</span></span>, P.A., VI, 324, ff.
+</p>
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Among the moderns, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Melancthon.</span></span>, Corp. Ref., XVI, 498, and
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Seb. Frank</span></span>, Chronik., 760, consider money as a mere symbol. On
+the other hand, the over-estimation in which the precious metals were held by the
+adherents of the Mercantile System was owing, without doubt, to their very superior
+utility as money; for we very frequently find that the adherents of that school
+insist that the precious metals must circulate. (See § <a href="#Section_9" class="tei tei-ref">9</a>
+and § 210.) <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">v. Schröder</span></span>, Fürstl. Schatz- und Rentkammer, III f.,
+considers new copper coins as an increase of the national wealth, but not other copper
+which is merely a commercial commodity. He frequently calls money, the
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">pendulum commercii</span></span>, and expresses ideas concerning it as
+enthusiastic as they are obscure (p. 86.) <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Horneck</span></span>, in his
+Oesterreich über Alles wenn es will, 1864, calls gold and silver <span class="tei tei-q">“our best blood, the
+very marrow of our strength,”</span> and <span class="tei tei-q">“the two most indispensable universal instruments
+of human activity and existence.”</span> (p. 188.) <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Th. Mun</span></span>, England's
+Treasure by forraign Trade, 1664, (ch. 2) considers cash-money and resources as
+synonymous in every way. Only, he says (ch. 4) that it is sometimes advisable to allow
+one's money to remain in foreign countries, and to use bills of exchange, banks etc., at
+home, as a substitute. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">F. Gee</span></span>, Trade and Commerce of Gr. Britain,
+edition of 1738, laments the <span class="tei tei-q">“stiff-necked folly of those who think money a commodity
+like any other.”</span> It is one of the most common demands of the adherents of the
+Mercantile System that the home mines of gold and silver should be worked
+at no matter what sacrifice, since the money employed in working them continues
+to remain in the country and the newly coined precious metal is clear
+gain. Compare <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Schröder</span></span>, loc. cit. 109 ff., 181.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Horneck</span></span>, loc. cit. 173. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Broggia</span></span>,
+Della Monete, 1743, cap. 33; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">v. Fusti</span></span>, Staatswirthschaft, 1755,
+I, 246: <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Forbonnais</span></span>, Finances de France, 1758, I, 148.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ulloa</span></span>, Noticias Americanas, 1772, ch. 12. We seldom meet with the
+correct view on this subject in the seventeenth century. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Sully</span></span>,
+of whom Henry IV. said that he never found anything to be possessed of beauty which cost
+double its real value, had it at times. (Economies royales, LXXIII.) So had
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">v. Seckendorff</span></span>, Teutscher Fürstenstaat, 1655, 5th edition.
+</p>
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+It is in accordance with the usual course of human development that the
+exaggerations of the Mercantile System led to a reaction characterized by an
+exaggeration in the opposite direction. Even <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Davanzati</span></span>, Sulle
+Monete, 1588, traces the value of money back to human convention and refuses to find it
+in nature. A natural calf, he thinks, is <span lang="it" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="it"><span style="font-style: italic">più
+nobile</span></span> than a golden one; although he elsewhere expresses his admiration of
+the precious metals, calls them <span lang="it" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="it"><span style="font-style: italic">cagioni
+seconde della vita beata</span></span>, and lauds them because they procure us
+<span lang="it" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="it"><span style="font-style: italic">tutt'essi beni</span></span> (20, 21, Cust.)
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Montanari</span></span> (ob., 1687) demonstrates from the
+use of leather money etc., that the authority of the state is the only power
+which gives money its character as money. (Della Moneta, 35.)
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Davenant</span></span> (ob., 1714) carries his inclination to call money <span class="tei tei-q">“the
+servant of trade, measure of trade,”</span> so far as to compare it to a ticket or counter.
+(Works, I, 355, 444.) Strongly as <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Law</span></span>, himself, opposes the
+convention theory (Trade and Money, ch. I; Sur l' Usage des Monnaies, 1720, p. 1.), his
+disciple <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Dutot</span></span>, in his Réflexions polit. sur le Commerce et les
+Finances, 1738, 905, éd. Daire, contrasts not only paper money but also gold and silver
+as representative wealth, with real wealth. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Berkeley</span></span>, Querist,
+1735, teaches that the real notion of money is not that of a <span class="tei tei-q">“commodity, standard,
+measure, pledge, but [No. 23] ticket or counter, entitling to power and fitted to record
+and transfer such power.”</span> (441, 475.) Even if the names, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">livre</span></span>,
+shilling etc., remain, and the metal is dropped, every article may still as well as
+before be counted and sold, industry promoted and the course of commerce preserved.
+(p. 440.) According to <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Montesquieu</span></span>, Esprit des Lois, XXI, 22,
+gold and silver are a <span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">richesse de fiction
+ou de signe</span></span>. Compare Lettres persanes, II, 18. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Benjamin
+Franklin</span></span> also maintains that the value of gold, for instance, is
+principally a credit-value. Remarks relative to the American Paper-Money,
+1765, Works, II, Sparks' edition. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Forbonnais</span></span>, Finances de France,
+I, 86 f., calls money, simply a means to put commodities, which alone have value
+originally, in circulation. Hence it is, in itself, a matter of indifference
+whether, for a given quantity of coin, a person gives one thaler, or ten. In
+the Elements de Commerce, I, 11, II, 67 ff., he draws a distinction between
+<span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">richesses naturelles</span></span> (raw
+material), <span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">artificielles</span></span>
+(manufactured products), and <span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">richesses</span></span> de convention (money.)
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">von Schlözer</span></span>, Aufangsgründe, 1805, 100,
+138, calls money something imagined; and <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Th. Smith</span></span>, Essay on the
+Theory of Money and Exchange, 1807, asserts, that true money is only an ideal
+measure of value, of which coins in turn are only the representatives.
+Compare, however, Edinb. Review, Oct., 1808. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Oppenheim</span></span>, Die Natur
+des Geldes, 1855, grants that in the beginnings of trade, money possessed the
+character of a commodity; but says that as soon as the services of circulation of the
+money-commodity prevailed over its services in consumption, it
+lost all its importance for the latter purpose, and that all relations dependent
+thereon ceased. At present, he claims money is only the representative of
+commodities, but no commodity itself. See, on the other hand,
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Roscher's</span></span> critical analysis in the Literarisches Centralblatt,
+1855, December.
+</p>
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+The true doctrine was advocated in a classic form by <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Nicolaus
+Oresmius</span></span> (ob. 1382). See his Tractatus de Origine et Jure nec non et Mutationibus
+Monetarum, newly edited by <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Wolowski</span></span>: Paris, 1864. See
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Roscher's</span></span> essay in the Comptes rendus of the Académie des
+Sciences morales et politiques, vol. 62, 435 ff. Based on the latter we have
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Gabr. Biel</span></span> (ob. 1495), De Monetarum Potestate simul et Utilitate,
+1542, and <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">G. Agricola</span></span>, De Re metallica, 1556, I,
+4 ff. This true doctrine was acclimated earliest in England and Holland, and
+before the mercantile system invaded them. Compare <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hobbes</span></span>,
+Leviathan, 24, in which the <span lang="la" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="la"><span style="font-style: italic">concoctio
+bonorum</span></span> is described by means of money, and the full and clear chapter 12 of
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Salmasius</span></span>, De Usuris (1638), who, among other
+things, shows how Midas, who turned everything into bread, died of thirst.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Petty</span></span> shows very clearly that national wealth does not consist
+exclusively nor mainly in money. Every country, he says, needs a certain quantity of
+money to carry on trade. It would be a waste to increase the former, the
+latter remaining the same. But the precious metals, by reason of their durability
+and universally recognized value, possess the character of wealth in
+a higher degree than other commodities.
+</p>
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+On the whole, the use of money in a nation is like the use of fat in the
+individual. (Quantulumcunque concerning Money, 1682.) Compare
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Roscher</span></span>, z. Geschichte der eng. Volkswirthschaftslehre, 80 f.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Davanzati</span></span> and <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hobbes</span></span> had compared it to
+the blood, as has recently <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Schmitthenner</span></span>, Staatswissenschaften,
+1839, I, 459. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">North</span></span> calls money a commodity of which there may
+be an excess as well as a want. (Discourse on Trade, preface and postscript.)
+Compare <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Locke</span></span>, Considerations on the Lowering of Interest, 1691,
+Works II, 13 ff., 19. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Galiani</span></span>, 1750, Della Moneta, IV, holds a
+very happy middle place between the alchymists and the philosophic contemners of gold.
+See, further, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Quesnay, éd. Daire</span></span>, 64, 75 ff.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Turgot</span></span>, Sur la Formation des Richesses, § 30 ff, had many clear
+views on this subject. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Verri</span></span>, Meditazioni, 1771, II,
+1, calls money the universally current commodity. The expressions, measure
+of value, pledge, representative of all commodities might be true also
+of all other wares. It cannot, however, be denied that most modern political
+economists have not borne sufficiently in mind the peculiarities which distinguish
+money from all other commodities, as is apparent from the doctrine
+of the balance of trade prevalent in Hume's and Adam Smith's time. To
+this extent, therefore, the semi-mercantilistic reaction instituted by
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ganilh</span></span>, Théorie de l'Economie politique, 2822, II, 380 ff., 426;
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">St. Chamans</span></span>, N. Essai sur la Richesse des Nations, 1824, ch. 3;
+and <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Colton</span></span>, Public Economy for the United States, 1849, 203 ff.,
+who bring into relief the difference between <span class="tei tei-q">“money as the subject”</span> and <span class="tei tei-q">“money
+as the instrument of trade,”</span> was not wholly unfounded. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ad.
+Müller</span></span> exaggerates a correct thought, and causes it to degenerate into a species
+of mystic pleasantry, when he calls every individual in the state and every commodity
+that possesses value, in exchange or a social character, money.
+</p>
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+The highest object of the state is to develop this money-character more
+and more. (Elemente der Staatskunst, II, 194, 199.) The statesman, he
+says, should be money. (III, 206.) A very valuable monograph on this
+subject is <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">M. Chevalier's</span></span> De la Monnaie, 1850, constituting the
+third volume of his Cours d'Economie polititique. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Knies</span></span>, Geld
+und Credit, I, 1873, is here most thorough and acute, especially in keeping separate, by
+well defined lines of demarcation, the five different functions of money: measure of
+value (by proper division into parts: price-measure), instrument of exchange, means of
+transportation of values, and means of storing up and preserving values.
+</p>
+</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_693" name="note_693" href="#noteref_693">693.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Knies</span></span> shows how the making of money
+legal tender by the state, although of only secondary importance, is by no means an
+irrelevant matter, since persons must then have it, even if they do not want it for
+purposes of use or exchange, to discharge their liabilities thereby etc., etc. (Tübinger,
+Zetschrift, 1858, 272.)
+</p>
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+In all these cases, barter-economy (<span lang="de" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="de"><span style="font-style: italic">Naturalwirthschaft</span></span>) meets with greater
+and greater difficulties as civilization advances. How, for instance, could 50
+days annually of socage-service or labor be redeemed by the achievement at
+one time of 1,000 days of socage-service or labor? The rich man requires
+money principally as a means of payment, the poor man as a medium of exchange.
+The requirement or need of a people of media of payment is much
+more susceptible of extension or contraction, than that of media of exchange,
+made especially so by the intervention of claim-rights instead of money.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">(Knies</span></span>, loc. cit, 200 ff.) <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ravit</span></span>, Beitr.
+z. Lehre vom Gelde, emphasizes this feature of money altogether too much after the
+manner of a jurist. But he is entirely right in adopting the exclusion of the
+<span lang="la" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="la"><span style="font-style: italic">rei vindicatio</span></span> against the
+honest possessor as necessary to the completion of the idea of money.
+</p>
+</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_694" name="note_694" href="#noteref_694">694.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Sismondi</span></span>,
+N.P., I, 131, very rightly remarks that this has made practice
+as much easier as it has theory more difficult.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_695" name="note_695" href="#noteref_695">695.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Law</span></span>,
+Trade and Money, 19. Hence, before the invention of money,
+scarcely anything but the things most indispensable to existence were produced.
+Were there no money, there would be very few scholars, artists etc.;
+for the classes who produce most of the things indispensable to existence
+make but few demands for them. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Büsch</span></span>, Geldumlauf, I, 11 ff., 36,
+II, 54.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_696" name="note_696" href="#noteref_696">696.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Turgot</span></span>, Formation et
+Distribution, § 48 ff. Commodities which perish rapidly could be produced by persons
+devoting themselves to their production as a business only after the invention of small
+coin. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Lueder</span></span>, N. Œk., 1820, 283.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_697" name="note_697" href="#noteref_697">697.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Compare
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Knies</span></span>, Geld und Credit, I, 219.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_698" name="note_698" href="#noteref_698">698.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Compare <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Schmitthenner</span></span>,
+loc. cit., I, 457. One of the principal advantages
+of money consists in this, that every producer can discover what there is an
+over-supply or under-supply of in the nation, by means of the relation of
+the price in money of his products to the cost of producing them, estimated
+in money, (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">v. Thünen</span></span>, Isolirte Staat, II, 2, 235.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_699" name="note_699" href="#noteref_699">699.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Hence
+it is that so many socialists attack money. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Th. More</span></span> assures us
+that with the simple abolition of money, vice and misery would, for the most
+part, disappear of themselves. Hence in his Utopia, criminals are bound in
+golden chains and the chamber-pots are made of gold and silver in order to
+make these metals contemptible. (Ed. 1555, ff., 197 ff.) Similar views among
+the over-cultured Romans. (Compare §§ <a href="#Section_79" class="tei tei-ref">79</a>, 204.)
+<span lang="la" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="la"><span style="font-style: italic">Auri sacra fames</span></span>.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Virgil</span></span>, Æneid, III, 56. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Pliny</span></span>, too, would
+recall the days of trade by barter. (H. N., XXXIII, 3.) Even in
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Boisguillebert</span></span>, Factum de la France, ch. 4, we find,
+together with many correct views on the nature of money, passionate declamation against
+it because of its darker side. <span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">Argent
+criminel</span></span>. (Détail de la France, 7. Dissertation sur la Nature des Richesses
+etc.) More recently this darker side has been dwelt upon by <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">F.
+Möser</span></span>, Patriot. Phant., I, 28; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ortes</span></span>,
+Economia nazionale, II, 17, and the would-be restorer of the middle ages,
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ad. Müller</span></span>. While the latter writer lauds the feudal system as a
+<span class="tei tei-q">“sublime fusion of person and thing”</span> (Elemente I, 221), the present system of wages,
+because it is a system of compensation, he blames, and prefers the feudal for
+the opposite reason (?). <span class="tei tei-q">“The only <em class="tei tei-emph"><span style="font-style: italic">merit</span></em> which the state recognizes in our
+day is one <em class="tei tei-emph"><span style="font-style: italic">of service</span></em>.”</span> (III, 259.) <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Kosegarten</span></span>,
+Geschichtliche systematische, Uebersicht der N. Oek., 1856, 146 ff., is no friend to
+the economic system to which money gives a distinctive character. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Per
+contra</span></span>, compare <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Bastiat</span></span>, Maudit Argent, 1849.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_700" name="note_700" href="#noteref_700">700.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Mirabeau</span></span>,
+Philosophie rurale, 1763, ch. 2, adds as the third great invention
+the <span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">tableau économique</span></span> of the
+Physiocrates. For a comparison of money and language, see <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hamann</span></span>,
+Werke, II, 135 ff., 509. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hehn</span></span>, Kulturpflanzen
+und Hausthiere, finds it characteristic of the race, that wine, writing with
+letters, and money, all owe their origin to the monotheistic stem of the Semitic
+people.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_701" name="note_701" href="#noteref_701">701.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Where every man becomes a merchant, and the society
+itself a commercial society. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ad. Smith</span></span>, Wealth of Nations, I,
+ch. 4.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_702" name="note_702" href="#noteref_702">702.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Just as descriptive is the German word
+<span lang="de" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="de"><span style="font-style: italic">billig</span></span>
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">equitable</span></span>) for cheap. Here it is plain that language takes
+sides with the possessor of money!</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_703" name="note_703" href="#noteref_703">703.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">The contrast between
+barter-economy and money-economy is of great and fundamental importance. It repeats
+itself with so much regularity in the history of every highly developed nation, that
+political economists gifted with perception for the historical, could not possibly
+overlook it. Thus, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Aristotle</span></span>, for instance, establishes with the
+utmost care and accuracy the difference between οἰκονομικὴ and χρηματιστικὴ, that is,
+between natural economy and artificial economy, corresponding to the difference between
+value in use and value in exchange. (Polit., I, 3, Schn.) Similarly <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">D.
+Hume</span></span>, who allows a period of luxury, culture, industry, of trade and manufactures,
+of freedom and circulation of money, to be preceded by one in which the feeling of wants
+is not awakened, in which coarseness and idleness prevail, one in which
+agriculture is alone pursued, and monetary economy and freedom decline,
+and trade by barter obtains. (Discourses, passim, especially On Interest
+and on Money.) A similar contrast we find frequently, and as one of his
+fundamental thoughts, in <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">J. Steuart</span></span>.
+</p>
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+As to how the transition from barter-economy to monetary-economy is
+generally effected, see <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">F. G. Hoffmann</span></span>, Lehre vom Gelde, 1838,
+176 ff. In the Tyrol, as late as 1820, the greater portion of purely mechanical work,
+such as that of the smith, the carpenter, and the washerwoman, were purely
+feudal duties. On the other hand, payment in money was the rule, in the
+beginning of the fourteenth century. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">F. Beidermann</span></span>, Technische
+Bildung in Oesterreich, 3.) Yet, for a long time after, the functions of a measure of
+value were performed by pieces of land, and those of an instrument of exchange
+by cattle and natural products. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Arnold, Gesch. des Eigenth</span></span>., 207.)
+In France, money-economy, i.e., trade by money, had grown to importance
+earlier. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Nitsch</span></span>., Ministerialität und Bürgerthum, im 11. und 12.
+Jahr., 143.) Even in the time of Mary Stuart, the Scotch estimated the rent of land in
+<span class="tei tei-q">“cauldrons of victuals.”</span> (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Moryson</span></span>, Itinerary, 1617, III,
+155.) In ancient Italy, during the first three centuries of Rome, there was, with the
+exception of the Greek colonies, only trade by barter. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Mommsen</span></span>,
+Römische Gesch., I, 293, shows that the oldest ases were not money in the higher sense
+of the word, but belonged rather to the stage of barter-economy. On the other
+hand, we find in the time of the classic jurists, much as slavery had limited
+the sphere of action of money, the principle: <span lang="la" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="la"><span style="font-style: italic">pecuniæ nomine non solum numerata
+pecunia, sed omnes res, tam soli quam mobiles, et tam corpora quam jura
+continentur</span></span>. (L. 222, Digest L. 16; compare 4, 5, 178.) Similarly in
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Cicero</span></span>, Top. 6. De Invent, II, 21. De Legg, II, 19, 21; III, 3.
+Compare <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Dionys. Hal.</span></span>, N.R. IV, 15.
+</p>
+</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_704" name="note_704" href="#noteref_704">704.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Were
+money nothing but a measure of values in exchange, it should
+on that account, if on no other, have value in exchange itself, as a measure
+of length must necessarily have length itself. (We measure time on a
+clock by means of the revolution of the hands on the dial.) Again, value
+in exchange supposes value in use. The so-called <span class="tei tei-q">“money of account,”</span>
+such as the East Indian <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">lac de roupies</span></span>, the Portuguese reis,
+and the earlier English <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">pound</span></span> sterling are no imaginary
+magnitudes, which would disappear with the figures of our system of counting
+(see <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hufeland</span></span>, N. Grundlegung, II, 33, in reply to
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Struensee</span></span>, Abh., III, 501); but real coin-values which
+can not be represented by only single pieces of coin, units of value for the
+most part no longer recognized by the state, but which the people still retain.
+See <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">M. Park's</span></span> (Travels, 27) refutation of the fable circulated
+by <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Montesquieu</span></span>, Esprit des Lois, XXII, 8, that the regular
+standard money of the Mandingo negroes was a mere imaginary standard.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hobbes</span></span>, Leviathan, 24, exhibits a very good knowledge of this
+subject.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_705" name="note_705" href="#noteref_705">705.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Compare
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">P. Neri</span></span>, Osservazioni, 1751, VI, 1. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Lord
+Liverpool</span></span>, Treatise on the Coins of the Realm, 1805. The person who takes money as
+such must always harbor the hope of being able to dispose of it again as money.
+Hence, such an acceptance always supposes the existence of a certain amount
+of commercial confidence. The savage Goahiros, between Rio de la Hacha
+and Maracaibo, are too <span class="tei tei-q">“distrustful”</span> to take anything in trade but commodities
+fit for the most immediate use. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Depons</span></span>, Voyage dans la Terrefirme,
+I, 314.) Similarly in the twelfth century, the heathen Laplanders.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Arndt</span></span>, Liefl. Chronik, II, 3.) Commodities which barbarians can
+consume immediately are objects of the first necessity, whereas more civilized people, who
+are in a condition to undergo greater expense, look more to the technic qualities
+of money, such as divisibility, capacity for transportation and durability.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">v. Scheel</span></span> shows in a very happy manner how, as commerce increases,
+money comes to be, as it were, subjected to a process resembling that of distillation:
+first mere increase of stores for use, next preponderating values in
+exchange, lastly mere orders for the same possessing no independent value.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hildebrand's</span></span> Jahrbb., 1866, I, 16.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_706" name="note_706" href="#noteref_706">706.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">The last circumstance continues to be one of great importance
+for a long period of time in the frigid zones. Thus, the beaver-skin continues still to
+be the unit of measure of trade in much of the territory of the Hudson Bay
+Company. Three martens are estimated to be equal in value to one beaver,
+one white fox to two beavers, one black fox or a bear to four beavers, a rifle
+to fifteen beavers. (Ausland, 1846, No. 21.) The Esthonian word,
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">raha</span></span>, money, means in the related language of the Laplanders,
+fur. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Krug</span></span>, Zur Münzkunde Russlands, 1805.) Concerning
+skin-money in the middle age of Russia, see <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Nestor</span></span>,
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Schlözer's</span></span> translation, III, 90. The old word
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">kung</span></span>, money, means marten. By degrees it came to pass that
+instead of whole skins, only two <span class="tei tei-q">“snouts”</span> were given or other pieces of leather
+about a square inch in size, which were probably stamped by the government and redeemed
+in whole skins at the government magazines. Hence, there is here supposed
+a species of assignats, and of disturbances of credit. The Mongolian conquerors
+would not recognize them, and they therefore became suddenly valueless.
+In Novgorod and Pskow, the system continued some time longer,
+for the reason that these places had little trade with the Mongols. In the
+rest of the kingdom it now became necessary to introduce silver money, and
+in the north to return to real squirrel and beaver skins.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Karamsin</span></span>, Russ. Gesch., I, 203, 385; I, 96, 191 f. Voyage de
+Rubruquis, in <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Bergeron</span></span>, Voyages I, 91.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Herberstein</span></span>, Rer. moscov. Commentt, 58 ff. Even in 1610, a
+Russian military chest was captured by the enemy, and in it were found 5450
+silver rubles, and 7000 fur rubles. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Karamsin</span></span>, XI, 183.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_707" name="note_707" href="#noteref_707">707.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">When
+the Danes progressed so far as to practice agriculture, they used
+grain instead of cattle, in quantities corresponding to the value of one cow or
+one sheep, for money, to the end that their idea of a unit of measure might
+not become obscured. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ravit</span></span>, Beiträge, 3.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_708" name="note_708" href="#noteref_708">708.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Homeric determination of prices in oxen. Iliad, II,
+449; VI, 236; XXI, 79; XXIII, 703 ff; Odyss., I, 431. Compare, however, II, VII, 473
+ff. In Draco's time, money-fines were imposed in cattle (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Pollux</span></span>,
+IX, 60 ff.), and in Athens, before Solon's time, even the metal coins were, for the
+most part, stamped with the figure of an ox. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Plutarch</span></span>, Theseus,
+25. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Böckh</span></span>., Metr. Uuntersuch., 121 ff. Among the most ancient
+Romans (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Cicero</span></span>, de Rep., II, 35) the imposition of fines in
+property, the coins first stamped by Servius, <span lang="la" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="la"><span style="font-style: italic">boum oviumque effigie</span></span> (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Plin.</span></span>,
+H. N., XVIII, 3, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Cassiodor.</span></span>, Var., VII, 32), and
+the words <span lang="la" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="la"><span style="font-style: italic">pecunia</span></span>,
+<span lang="la" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="la"><span style="font-style: italic">peculium</span></span>,
+<span lang="la" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="la"><span style="font-style: italic">peculatus</span></span>, derived from
+<span lang="la" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="la"><span style="font-style: italic">pecus</span></span>, point to something
+analogous. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Varro</span></span>, De L. L., V, 19; De Re rust., II, 1;
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Cicero</span></span>, De Rep., II, 9; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ovid</span></span>, Fast., V,
+281; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Plutarch</span></span>, Publicola, 11.) Old German fines
+in cattle, in <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Tacitus</span></span>, Germ., 12, 21; Lex Ripuar, 36, 11; Lex
+Saxonum, 19. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ulfilas</span></span> translates αργύριον δοῦναι
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Mark</span></span>, 14, 11), <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">faihu giban</span></span>. Very old
+German documents, of the seventh and eighth centuries, name horses as
+purchase-price. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Grimm</span></span>, Deutsche Rechtsalterth., 586 f.) Otho
+the Great imposed cattle-fines. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Widuk</span></span> Corb., II, 6.)
+Similarly, in King Stephen's laws of Hungary (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Wachsmuth</span></span>,
+Europäische Sitturgesch., II), in the old Irish Brehon laws
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Leland</span></span>; History of Ireland, 36 ff.), as well as in the
+Scotch collection of laws, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Regiam Majestatem</span></span>, of 1330.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Honard</span></span>, II, 263 f, 537.) <span lang="la" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="la"><span style="font-style: italic">Viva pecunia</span></span> of the Anglo-Saxons in the laws of
+William I. In ancient Sweden, all property was estimated in
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">fä</span></span>=cattle (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Geijer</span></span>, Schw. Gesch.,
+I, 100), just as now, in Icelandic, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">fe</span></span>=property. In Berne, the
+German <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">vieh</span></span>, cattle, is used to express commodities. Among
+really nomadic races this is, of course, still more the case. Thus the Kirghises use
+horses and sheep as money, and wolf-skins and lamb-skins for small change.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Pallas</span></span>, Reise durch Russland, 1771, I, 390.) Among some of the
+Tartar tribes, everything is stipulated for in cows. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">v.
+Haxthausen</span></span>, Studien, II, 371.) Among the Persian nomads, sheep are used as money;
+or when they are held in subjection in the cities, corn, straw and wool.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ritter</span></span>, Erdkunde, VIII, 386.) Oxen in use as money among the
+Tscherkessens. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Klemm</span></span>, Kulturgeschichte, IX, 16.)
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">W. B. Hermann</span></span> doubts, however, whether cattle were ever used as a
+medium of exchange. He thinks rather they were employed only as a measure
+of price. (Münchener Gel. Anz., 580.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_709" name="note_709" href="#noteref_709">709.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">That
+of vanity which presents itself among some people sooner than that
+of clothing.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_710" name="note_710" href="#noteref_710">710.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">In Genesis,
+1, 24, gold appears only as a valuable ornament. Abraham
+paid for his purchases in silver.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_711" name="note_711" href="#noteref_711">711.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">For this reason, zinc-money is just as natural with the Malays
+and Chinese as iron-money with the Senegambians. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Mungo Park</span></span>,
+Travels, 27.) And so <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Plutarch</span></span>, Lysand., 17, may be right when
+he calls iron the earliest universal means of payment. In Sparta, too, where industrious
+efforts were made to maintain the lower stage of culture, this medium of payment was
+longest maintained. Compare, however, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">St. John</span></span>, The Hellenes,
+III, 260 ff. The first copper coins were stamped a short time before Philip, father of
+Alexander the Great. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Eckhel</span></span>, Doctr. Numm, I, XXX ff.) On the
+other hand, Italy, partly because it had mines of its own, and partly because of its
+intercourse with Carthage (Cyprus), had become, at a very distant period,
+so rich in copper that the circulation of copper, or to speak more accurately,
+of bronze, was naturally introduced. Compare <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Niebuhr</span></span>, Röm.
+Gesch., I, 475 ff. (<span lang="la" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="la"><span style="font-style: italic">Aes alienum, obæratus,
+ærarium, æstimare.</span></span>) Copper was all the more adapted to this end the more
+frequently it was found unmixed. It was generally used in preference to iron because
+of the greater facility of working it. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hesiod.</span></span>, Opp., 150 f.;
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Lucret.</span></span>, V, 1285 f.) In modern nations copper money
+seems to have been employed only after silver money. Thus, it was not
+stamped in England before the time of James I. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Adam Smith</span></span>, I,
+ch. 5), nor in Sweden before 1625. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Geijer</span></span>, Schwed., Gesch.,
+III, 56.) Money was struck from the metal of molten bells during the French
+Revolution!</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_712" name="note_712" href="#noteref_712">712.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">In Russia, between 1763 and 1788, there were 76
+million rubles of gold and silver coins struck, against 54 million of copper rubles.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hermann</span></span>). On the other hand, in France, between 1727 and
+1796, there were struck only 40 million francs of copper, 10 million of
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">billon</span></span> or base coin, and 3967 million of gold and
+silver.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_713" name="note_713" href="#noteref_713">713.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Michaelis</span></span>, De
+Pretiis Rerum apud veteres Hebræos, 183.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_714" name="note_714" href="#noteref_714">714.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Strabo</span></span>, VIII, 358. Hiero, tyrant
+of Syracuse, found it exceedingly difficult to obtain gold. When the Spartans wished
+to make an offering of gold at Delphi they were obliged to have recourse to Crœsus.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Herodot.</span></span>, I, 69; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Theopomp.</span></span>, in
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Athen</span></span>, VI, 231 ff.) <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Aristoph.</span></span>, Ranae,
+720, calls gold <span class="tei tei-q">“new”</span> in contradistinction to the <span class="tei tei-q">“old money,”</span> that is,
+silver.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_715" name="note_715" href="#noteref_715">715.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Plin.</span></span>,
+H. N., XXXIII, 13. Compare, however, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Dureau de la Malle</span></span>,
+Economie polit. des Romans, I, 69, after <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Varro</span></span>, apud Charisium,
+I, 81. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Putsch.</span></span>) It is certain, however, that when Italy was
+conquered, the Romans had introduced a circulating medium of silver, and that it was the
+prevailing medium; but in the time of Cæsar and Augustus, a gold circulation
+was the prevalent one. Yet the state treasure was deposited in gold
+during the period of silver circulation, because gold was, without question,
+better adapted to storing up and transportation.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_716" name="note_716" href="#noteref_716">716.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Muratori</span></span>,
+Antiquitt., IV, Diss., 28.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_717" name="note_717" href="#noteref_717">717.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Henry was obliged to
+issue an order to the mayor and sheriffs of London,
+to get his gold into circulation; but he soon saw himself compelled to desist
+from executing his design. Edward III. was able only after a voluntary circulation
+of them had continued for a long time, to prohibit any one's refusing
+the rose-nobles. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">L. Liverpool</span></span>, loc. cit.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_718" name="note_718" href="#noteref_718">718.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">German., 5. Still
+more striking is the example cited by <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Herbelot</span></span>, Bibliothéque
+Orientale (1697), 485. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Rubruquis</span></span>, Voyage, ch. 13. In the time of
+Nadir-shah, the Kurds gave, without the slightest hesitation, a pound of gold for a pound
+of silver or copper. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ritter</span></span>, Erdkunde, VIII, 395.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_719" name="note_719" href="#noteref_719">719.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Recommended even by
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Adam Smith</span></span>, ch. 5, and for Germany by <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">F. G.
+Hoffmann</span></span>, Drei Aufsätze über das Münzwesen, 1832. In Egypt, also, for a
+long time the wealthiest country of the middle ages, the circulation of gold
+prevailed until the twelfth century. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Macrisi</span></span>, Historia Monetae
+Arab., cap. 3 ed., <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Tychsen</span></span>.) Harun Alraschid's income was
+estimated at about 7,500 cwt. of gold. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ritter</span></span>, Erdkunde, X,
+235.) Something similar related of the Carnatic, <span class="tei tei-q">“the land of ancient emporiums.”</span>
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ritter</span></span>, Erdkunde, V, 564, after
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ferishta</span></span>.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_720" name="note_720" href="#noteref_720">720.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">The use of the
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">cauris</span></span> (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Cypræa moneta</span></span>) in India this
+side and beyond the Ganges, in upper Asia, and in southern Africa depends on their
+employment for purposes of ornament, on their greater uniformity, and on the rarity of
+copper which would otherwise be better suited to purposes of change. In
+Calcutta, 1280 <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">cauris</span></span> are equivalent to about half a shilling.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">McCulloch.</span></span>) Compare <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">K. Ritter</span></span>, Africa,
+149, 324, 422, 1038; Asien, I,964; II, 120; III, 233, 739; IV, 53, 420;
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Salin</span></span>, III, 62; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Botz</span></span>, in the Tübinger
+Ztschr. Similarly among the fishing population of Northwestern America.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Stein-Wappäus</span></span>, Handbuch I, 352.) Salt as money on the
+Chinese-Birman boundary (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Marco Polo</span></span>, 38), but especially in the
+interior of Africa, where nature does not at all produce it, but into which it is
+brought by caravans from the deserts, where salt is found in great quantities.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">M. Polo</span></span>, Travels, 305, found the
+current price of a salt-tablet, two and a half feet long, one foot, two inches
+broad, and two inches thick, to be equal to the value of two pounds sterling
+among the Mandingos. In Abyssinia, the salt-bars are generally six inches
+long, three inches broad, one and a half inches thick, and they are bound
+with an iron ring to protect them against fracture. Sixty of them are worth
+one thaler. (Ausland, 1846, No. 35.) Slaves used as money: <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Barth</span></span>,
+Reise, III, 338, 344. Tea-blocks in upper Asia and Siberia; and they are given by
+the Chinese to the Mongols as pay for troops. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ritter</span></span>, Asien,
+III, 252,) In Keachta, a tea-block is equal in price to one paper ruble. (Ausland, 1846,
+No. 20. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Timkowski</span></span>, Reise nach China, 143.) Date-money in the
+Sivah oasis. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hornemann</span></span>, Reise, 21.) Also in the Persian
+date-country, where, formerly, the lowest silver piece of money was coined in the form
+of a date (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ritter</span></span>, Asien, VIII, 752, 819.)
+</p>
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+The ancient Mexicans used as money cocoa-nuts, in bags of 24,000 pieces,
+cotton-stuffs, small pieces of copper, and gold dust in quills.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Humboldt</span></span>, N. Espagne, IV, 11.) Cocoa-beans are still used as
+small change there. (Ibidem, IV, 10.) On the Amazon, wax-cakes weighing one pound are
+used. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Smyth</span></span>, Journey from Lima to Para, 1836.) Among the ancient
+inhabitants of Rügen, linen (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Helmold</span></span>, I, 39); and still among the
+Icelanders, the so-called <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Vadhmâl</span></span>. During the middle ages, 120
+ells of <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Vadhmâl</span></span> were equal in value to one milch cow or six milch
+sheep, or two and a half ounces of silver. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Leo</span></span> in
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Raumer's</span></span> histor. Taschenbuch, 1835, 515.) That the ancient
+northern mode of valuation, by the <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Vadhmâl</span></span> and in cows is older
+than by the <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">mark</span></span> is shown by <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Wilda</span></span>, Gesch.
+des deutschen Strafrechts, I, 331. The cod-fish money used by the Icelanders was, on
+account of its great commercial importance as an article of export, an advance upon the
+use of the <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Vadhmâl</span></span>. Among the Caffirs, besides
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">cauris</span></span>, mats, javelins, glass corals, but
+particularly brass rings, are used as money. From three to four hundred of
+these rings are strung together, and two such strings are equal in value to
+one cow. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Klemm</span></span>, Kulturgeschichte, III, 308, 320 f.) Ivory used
+as money in the neighborhood of the Portuguese colonies in Africa.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Martius</span></span>, Reise, II, 670.) In Logone,
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Denham</span></span> (1822) ff., had met with pieces of iron as a
+medium of circulation; but on the other hand, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Barth</span></span> (1849), with
+small strips of cotton from 2 to 3 inches in breadth, and shirts for larger sums.
+(A. R., III, 274, 297, 538.) In colonies, money of this nature is continued
+for a long time. Thus cod-fish used in Newfoundland, sugar in the English
+West Indies (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Adam Smith</span></span>, I, ch. 4), tobacco in Maryland and
+Virginia. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Douglas</span></span>, V, 2, 389; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ebeling</span></span>,
+V, 435 ff.) The last was related to the inspection
+and storage of the tobacco intended for exportation. Payment was
+made in orders on the stored and inspected tobacco, even as late as the end
+of the eighteenth century. In 1618, the forced circulation of tobacco was
+decreed in Virginia, and under severe penalties. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Gouge</span></span>, History
+of Paper-Money and Banking in the United States, ch. 1.)
+</p>
+</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_721" name="note_721" href="#noteref_721">721.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">When the caravans no longer
+touched at the oasis Agades, gold and silver money fell into disuse,
+and grain, stuffs etc. did service as instruments of circulation.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Barth</span></span>, Reisen und Endeckungen, I, 144.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_722" name="note_722" href="#noteref_722">722.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ad.
+Müller</span></span> says very pertinently, but in a very mystical vein, that the
+precious metals combine in a very high degree and yet in a very simple manner,
+the principal qualities in which man's greatness finds expression: rarity,
+flexibility, uniformity, mobility, durability and beauty. (Elemente, II, 266.)
+In another place, he says, the highest ideal good is God, the highest material
+good, gold! (III, 65.) The mysticism of gold was most highly developed
+among the alchymists of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_723" name="note_723" href="#noteref_723">723.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Iron
+beds are worked only when they contain at least 18 per cent. of metal.
+Generally it is estimated that the furnace should yield 30 per cent. In the
+copper mines of Mansfield, Norway, Agordo and Venice, it goes as low as
+from one to three per cent. On the other hand, silver mines which yield 0.17
+per cent. of metal are considered worth working. Lastly, gold is so rare that
+generally it can be extracted only from time to time by the ordinary mining
+processes. As a rule, men are content to gather it where nature has charged
+itself with its refining. The extreme limit of the working of gold appears,
+according to <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Plattner</span></span> and <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Haussmann</span></span>,
+at Goslar, to be reached when in 5,200,000 parts of mineral earth
+there is one of gold. Spite of this, however, by reason
+of their great ductility, the precious metals have been able to penetrate
+even into the meanest huts in one form or another. It has been estimated
+that a silver leaf may be attenuated by beating to a thickness of only
+0.00001 of an inch, and a gold leaf to 0.0000035 of an inch. An ounce of gold
+spread on a silver thread may attain a length of 13,000 English miles.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">McCulloch.</span></span>)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_724" name="note_724" href="#noteref_724">724.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">How easily, for instance,
+could leather-money, such as was used by the ancient Galls
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Cassiodor.</span></span>, Varia, II, 32,) be increased to any desired quantity,
+and thus its price brought down.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_725" name="note_725" href="#noteref_725">725.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Engel</span></span>, at the usual
+tariff for land and railroad freight (10 and 5 <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">pfennigs</span></span>
+per mile and hundredths of a mile) estimates the enhancement of the price
+of the following commodities, for one mile of transportation of a custom-hundred-weight
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Zollcentner</span></span>) at the following percentage of their average
+value:
+</p>
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Gold, value 47610 German <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Reichsthaler</span></span> per cwt., 0.000007 by
+land, 0.0000035 by railroad.<br />
+Silver, value 3000, 0.00111 by land, 0.00055 by railroad.<br />
+Cotton, value 45, 0.074 by land, 0.037 by railroad.<br />
+Tin, value 24, 0.1389 by land, 0.0694 by railroad.<br />
+Lead, value 8, 0.416 by land, 0.208 by railroad.<br />
+Iron, value 2.5, 1.333 by land, 0.666 by railroad.<br />
+Rye, value 2, 1.666 by land, 0.833 by railroad.<br />
+Potatoes, value 0.6, 5.555 by land, 2.777 by railroad.<br />
+Coal, value 0.12, 27.777 by land, 13.888 by railroad.
+</p>
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Their great specific gravity, also, makes the precious metals easy of transportation.
+Thus <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Cazeau</span></span> calculates that a given value of gold is 17,222 times
+as easy to transport as the same value in wheat. But as, where the weight
+is the same, the labor of transportation is inversely as the volume, this number
+must be multiplied by 26, and we therefore have 447,772 times. In the
+case of silver, the relation to wheat is as 1:15,554. Concerning copper, see
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Storch</span></span>, Handbuch 1, 488. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Chevalier</span></span>,
+Cours, III, 17 ff.</p></dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_726" name="note_726" href="#noteref_726">726.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">This,
+at bottom, is also true, of the various kinds of copper; only, here,
+complete refining is impracticable on account of the relation between the cost
+of production and the product-price.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_727" name="note_727" href="#noteref_727">727.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">On the other hand, copper,
+and still more zinc, tin and lead lose much of their value in
+the fire. Pearls may lose their entire value by fire, and diamonds
+more than half of it.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_728" name="note_728" href="#noteref_728">728.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Aqua-regia</span></span>,
+a mixture of nitric and muriatic acid, dissolves gold. Chlorine
+and bromine attack it. It has been noticed to vaporize at a very high
+temperature. A gold thread vaporizes when a strong electric current is
+passed through it. A small ball of gold gives off a great deal of vapor if
+placed between two carbon points and subjected to the action of a powerful
+galvanic pile. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">K. F. Naumann.</span></span>)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_729" name="note_729" href="#noteref_729">729.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Compare <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hatchett</span></span>,
+Experiments and Observations of the various Alloys,
+On the specific Gravity and comparative Weight of Gold, 1863. The French
+five-franc pieces wear away, on an average, in a year, 0.00016; the English
+crown, 0.00018; the half crown, about 0.00173; and the shilling, about 0.00456.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">L. Liverpool</span></span>, Treatise on the Coins. 204;
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">M. Chevalier</span></span>, Cours, III, 128 ff.) The wear from use of
+the south German gulden is 0.292 per 1,000. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Rau</span></span>,
+in the Archiv. N.F.X, 256.) According to <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Jacob</span></span>, the
+average wear of coin is 2.38 per 1,000. (Historical Inquiry into the Production
+and Consumption of the Precious Metals, ch. 23.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_730" name="note_730" href="#noteref_730">730.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Adam Smith</span></span>,
+Wealth of Nations, I, ch. II, Digr.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_731" name="note_731" href="#noteref_731">731.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Solera</span></span>, Sur
+les Valueurs, 1785, 271 ff.; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Custodi</span></span>. Half an ox, for instance,
+is worth half the value of a whole one only for a few well defined purposes.
+As to how much the value of the diamond varies with the size etc., see
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Dufrênoy</span></span>, Traité de Minéralogie, II, 77 f. On the other hand,
+the separated parts of a piece of metal are very readily reduced to a whole.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_732" name="note_732" href="#noteref_732">732.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">In the case of the ox, it is impossible
+to imagine a mark which might not be eluded by its losing
+flesh.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_733" name="note_733" href="#noteref_733">733.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">The cost of coinage since 1849 has
+been ¾ of 1 per cent. in the case of silver, and in that of gold not quite
+2 per 1,000. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">M. Chevalier</span></span>, Cours, III,
+110.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_734" name="note_734" href="#noteref_734">734.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Platinum possesses many of the properties necessary to an
+instrument of exchange in as high a degree as gold and silver,—great value in
+exchange, great specific gravity and great durability. On the other hand, its pliability
+as to form is very small, and therefore the cost of coining it would be high.
+The conversion of platinum coins into utensils, and of utensils into coin,
+which would contribute to the supply of money when needed, and to a
+diminution of that supply when the demand decreased, would be much more
+difficult on this account; and also because of the small degree of beauty
+possessed by that metal, which renders it little adapted to purposes of luxury.
+Under these circumstances, the rarity in nature of the metal is a great drawback;
+for the discovery of a new mine would create a great perturbation in
+prices. For this reason, the Russian platinum coins have been generally
+very much undervalued since 1828 in the commercial world, and the whole
+experiment was given up in 1845-46. Compare <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">J. Schòn</span></span>, National
+Œkonomie, 128 ff. Aluminum, discovered by Wöhler, and which can be prepared
+from argillaceous earth, is capable of manipulation in a very high degree
+(<span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">malléable et ductile à peu près sans
+limite, excessivement fusible</span></span>), almost as indestructible
+as the precious metals, but easily distinguished from silver by a
+fine bluish color, which has been compared to that of tin; by its small specific
+gravity, from 2.5 to 2.67, and its ring like that of iron. Hence it is very
+doubtful whether aluminum can be made to play the part of a substitute
+for silver, and still more so whether it can be used for coining.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_735" name="note_735" href="#noteref_735">735.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Lingot, bullion</span></span>. In India,
+beyond the Ganges, and in China, bars are very much used.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Sycee.</span></span>) In the latter country, besides these bars, there
+is no coinage except that of a mixture of copper and lead, for small change.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Th. Smith</span></span>, An attempt to define some of the first
+Principles of Political Economy, 31. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Timkowski</span></span>, Reise
+nach China, III, 366.) Concerning Brazilian trade by bars, see
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Spix und Martius</span></span>, Reise, I, 346 f. They are stamped
+with the national coat of arms, the sign of the mint, the number by which
+registered, that of the year and of the degree of fineness. Concerning the
+Persian bars, the <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">laries</span></span>, see <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Noback</span></span>,
+Handbuch der Munzverrh., III, Taf. 29.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_736" name="note_736" href="#noteref_736">736.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Concerning
+the utility of the precious metals for purposes of money, see
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Pliny</span></span>, A.N. XXXIII, 3; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Oresmius</span></span>,
+De Mutatione Monetarum, ch. 2; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Law</span></span>,
+Sur l' Usage des Monnaies, 683 f. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Daire</span></span>, where we read
+that before the invention of money, silver had served all kinds of useful purposes,
+but that now it served its most important purpose, namely the making of the best
+material for money on many accounts. Yet <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Law's</span></span> book, Money and
+Trade considered (1705) is based mainly on the idea that pieces of land are
+much better adapted for purposes of money than the precious metals (185)!
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Galliani</span></span>, Della Moneta, 1750, I, 3, 4, and
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">P. Neri</span></span>, Osservazioni, 1751 ff,
+Cust., have very correct ideas on this subject.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_737" name="note_737" href="#noteref_737">737.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">North</span></span>,
+Discourses upon Trade, 16. The capacity of money to act as a
+storer of wealth has been as much over-estimated by the so called Mercantile
+System, as its capacity to transfer wealth has been by the so called
+currency-school.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_738" name="note_738" href="#noteref_738">738.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Adam
+Smith</span></span> compares money to a large wheel, by means of which a due
+share of the means of subsistence and of enjoyment is distributed to each
+member of society. Elsewhere he compares its utility to streets and roads.
+(Wealth of Nations, II, ch. 2.) <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hume</span></span>, On Money, Pr.,
+prefers to compare it to the oil with which the wheels of circulation are greased.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Sismondi</span></span> compares money to porters. (N. Principes, II,
+ch. 2.) <span class="tei tei-q">“Money is to commerce what railways are to locomotion, a contrivance to
+diminish friction.”</span> (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">J. S. Mill.</span></span>) According to
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Schmitthenner</span></span>, 455, it bears the same relation to other
+commodities that the written language of a people's literature does to their
+dialects.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_739" name="note_739" href="#noteref_739">739.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Law's</span></span>
+views on money are, in part, excellent. Thus, for instance, he
+says that the debasement of the coin from financial necessity is as great a
+folly as it would be to try to enlarge a piece of goods too small for the purpose
+for which it was intended, by diminishing the length of the yard-stick.
+(Sur l'Usage des Monnaies, 697.) A country entirely isolated from all others
+could get along as well with one hundred pounds sterling as with a million.
+(Money and Trade, p. 88.) Elsewhere, he confounds money and capital to
+such a degree that he considers every increase of the amount of money in a
+country as an enrichment of the people, a means to give employment to the
+poor, to carry on manufactures etc. (Money and Trade, 23, 26 ff., 168.) A
+given quantity of money is capable of giving employment at most only to
+a certain number of men. (21.) A nation's power and wealth depend on
+the population and its stores of goods, these on commerce, and commerce in
+turn on the amount of money. (Pp. 110, 220.) The advice given, in 1848,
+to the National Assembly of France, but which it had the good sense to
+reject, to overflow all France with the so-called <span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">bons hypothécaires</span></span>, is akin to
+Law's practical propositions. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">M. Chevalier</span></span>, Cours,
+III, 8, rightly ridicules the literal construction of the words:
+<span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">l'argent est abondant</span></span>,
+when merchants find it easy to obtain credit, and considers it as well grounded as it
+would be to infer from the maxim: <span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">l'argent
+est le nerf de la guerre</span></span>, that rifles and
+bullets were made of silver.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_740" name="note_740" href="#noteref_740">740.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Adam Smith</span></span>
+was not entirely clear, in his own mind, on this point. Thus
+inconsistently enough, he calls money unproductive—<span class="tei tei-q">“dead stock,”</span> for the
+reason that it leaves no material traces behind it of the goods which it has
+transferred from one hand to another. (II, ch. 2.) Is not the same true of
+trade itself? And yet Adam Smith calls trade productive. His error is
+doubtless a remnant of the Physiocratic doctrine, to which Smith still held.
+Compare <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Quesnay</span></span>, 94, éd. Daire. Even
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Twiss</span></span> says that money employed as
+money is unproductive, but that, when employed as a commodity, it is productive.
+(View of the Progress of Political Economy, since the sixteenth
+Century, 1847.) Besides it is not a peculiarity of money alone, that, after it
+has served the purposes of production, it comes out of the product unaltered.
+The same is true of quicksilver employed in amalgamation.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hermann</span></span>, 2nd edition, 302.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_741" name="note_741" href="#noteref_741">741.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Senior</span></span>,
+Three Lectures on the Value of Money, 1840, is, in so far, not
+wrong when he says that the value in exchange of the precious metals is
+still ultimately determined by the want of such commodities as are luxuries.
+This last determines to what extent the production shall be extended by the
+working of the poorest mines, whereas the wants of circulation can be met
+as well by small as large quantities of the metals.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_742" name="note_742" href="#noteref_742">742.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">The
+good or bad result of this production depends on many different elements
+which may compensate on another. In California and Australia gold
+is to be found in large quantities, and is easily mined; but the workmen
+make large demands which the nature of the country renders it difficult to
+meet. In the Harz mines, where the cost is scarcely covered,
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Lehzen</span></span>, Hannover's
+Staatshaushalt, 1853, I, 139), the shafts are sometimes 175-½ fathoms
+deep, but this is made up for in a measure by the moderate demands of the
+workmen and their skill in mining. Among the Mandingos, the auriferous
+material is so rich that ⅓ per 1,000 of the weight of the sand is washed out into
+pure gold in ten minutes (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">M. Park</span></span>, Journal, 53 ff.,
+addenda, XIX), while in Europe, where the proportion is only 1/100 per 1,000, mines are
+still considered worth working. But then, what workmen there are there! In Peru, the
+burdensome height of the mines above the level of the sea and the want of
+combustible material more than counterbalance many favorable advantages,
+while in Norway the cheapness of wood compensates for a great many disadvantages.
+Another thing which contributes towards the uniformity of
+the price of the precious metals is the circumstance that the great amount
+of fixed capital required in the greater number of mining enterprises, postpones
+for a long time the working of good mines as well as the abandonment
+of poor ones.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_743" name="note_743" href="#noteref_743">743.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Older writers have
+estimated the amount of money necessary in a country
+at 1/5, 1/10 (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Petty</span></span>), 1/15, and even 1/30 of
+the yearly income of a people (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Adam Smith</span></span>, II,
+ch. 2.) According to <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Cantillon</span></span>, Sur la Nature du Commerce,
+p. 73, it is from 1/6 to 1/10 of the annual gross production of a nation.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_744" name="note_744" href="#noteref_744">744.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Davanzati</span></span>,
+Lezione sulle Moneta, 1588, 32 ff., Cust., thinks that all terrestrial
+things which serve to satisfy the wants of men are, by virtue of agreement,
+equal in value to all the gold, silver and copper; and that the parts
+comport themselves as the whole. The price of a commodity is based on
+this, that men find in it as much of their <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">beatitudine</span></span> as
+is afforded them by a given quantum of gold etc. Similarly,
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Montanari</span></span>, who adds as a limitation the quantity of money
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">spendibile in commercio</span></span>. (Della Moneta, 45, 64, Cust.)
+The same opinion leads <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Locke</span></span> to the singular conclusion,
+that, as there is now in the world, ten times as much silver as there was previous
+to the discovery of America, each single piece of silver, separately considered, and
+taken in relation to such commodities as have not varied, is worth only one-tenth
+of what it was then. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Locke</span></span>, here, starts out with the gross
+assumption, shared even by <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ganilh</span></span>, Théorie, II, 386 ff., that
+in the case of money the demand is always, relatively speaking, equally strong and
+just as great as the supply, or as the amount in the market. (Works, II, 23 ff.)
+Further, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Montesquieu</span></span>, Esprit des Lois, XXII, 7, 8. Per contra,
+however, see <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Montesquieu</span></span>, ibid. XXII, 5, 6, and
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hume</span></span>, On Money and on the Balance of Commerce,
+Essays II, 1752.
+</p>
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Hume knew perfectly well, that only circulating money and circulating
+commodities operated on price, but failed to take the rapidity of circulation
+into account. Similarly, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Forbonnais</span></span>, Eléments du Commerce, II, 212;
+even <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Canard</span></span>, Principes, ch. 6; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Fichte</span></span>,
+Geschloss. Handelstaat, 93 ff., and <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Stein</span></span>, Lehrbuch, 58.
+Contested by <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Law</span></span>, Trade and Money considered, 140, a
+work directed especially against the Mercantilistic essay, Britannia languens;
+1680, by <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Mélon</span></span>, Essai politique sur le Commerce, ch. 22;
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Genovesi</span></span>, Economia civile, 1764, II, 1, 15;
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Steuart</span></span>, Principles, II, ch. 28; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Verri</span></span>,
+Meditazioni, XVII, 3 ff.; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Büsch</span></span>, Gedlumlauf, II, 40. The
+simple taking of an inventory of most private resources which possess so much greater
+value in other commodities than in money is enough to demonstrate the error of
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Davanzati's</span></span> doctrine. Thus, in France, in Necker's time, the cash
+money in the kingdom was estimated at 2,200,000,000 livres, and the average value of the
+wheat crop alone at 1,000,000,000. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Necker</span></span>, Législation et
+Commerce des Grains, 1776, I, 215. Recently, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Michel Chevalier</span></span>,
+estimated the amount of money in France at from 3-½ to 4 milliards, while the official
+estimate of its immovable property alone was over 83 milliards.</p></dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_745" name="note_745" href="#noteref_745">745.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">When
+money becomes dearer, less of it is of course needed; and when
+cheaper, more, for the same purpose.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_746" name="note_746" href="#noteref_746">746.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">In contradistinction to
+presents, acts of spoliation, but especially to barter.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_747" name="note_747" href="#noteref_747">747.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">The discoverer of this truth
+is supposed by many to be <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Bandini</span></span>, Discorso
+economico, 1737, 141 f., Cust. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Berkely</span></span>, however, in the Querist,
+1735, 477 f, writes: <span class="tei tei-q">“A sixpence twice paid is as good as a shilling once paid.”</span>
+Much earlier yet, in 1797, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Boisguillebert</span></span>, Détail de la France,
+II, 19, had the germ of this doctrine, but he confounds circulation with consumption.
+And <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Locke</span></span>, Considerations, II, 13 ff., presented it in 1691 with
+great clearness, although he did not always remain true to his theory. Compare
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Quesnay</span></span>, éd. Daire, 64; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Cantillon</span></span>, 159
+ff., 382.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_748" name="note_748" href="#noteref_748">748.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">If the number
+of annual exchanges effected by 1 dollar = u; the total
+number of dollars in the store of money = m; the rapidity of circulation,
+that is the number of exchanges effected on an average by each dollar in a
+year, = s: then is u = m s, s = u/m, m = u/s.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_749" name="note_749" href="#noteref_749">749.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Since good money is so easily stored away and preserved, no one
+is in haste to get rid of it. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">St. Chamans</span></span>, N. Essai sur la
+Richesse des Nations, 122 ff.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_750" name="note_750" href="#noteref_750">750.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Among the Kurds, all the
+money in their camps is used for head-ornaments for their women. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">K.
+Ritter</span></span>, Erdkunde, X, 887.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_751" name="note_751" href="#noteref_751">751.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Thus, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Sir
+David North</span></span>, Discourse on Trade, 1691, Postscr.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_752" name="note_752" href="#noteref_752">752.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Lotz</span></span>,
+Handbuch, 377, is of opinion that even in England £100,000 employed
+in trade in land can scarcely effect exchanges to the amount of £1,000,000
+in a year. The same sum employed for the same purpose in London,
+in stocks and in the trade in commodities, will effect exchanges to the amount
+of £160,000,000.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_753" name="note_753" href="#noteref_753">753.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Cernuschi</span></span>,
+Mécanique de l'Échange, 1865, 132 ff.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_754" name="note_754" href="#noteref_754">754.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Thus <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Petty</span></span>
+(ob. 1687) is of opinion that England needed as much
+money as ½ of all its ground-rents amounted to, as the ¼ of all house-rents,
+and 1/52 of all the wages of labor for a year; for the reason that ground-rents
+are paid semi-annually, house-rents quarterly, and wages weekly. (Several
+Essays, 179; Political Anatomy of Ireland, 116.) <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Locke</span></span>, on the
+other hand, assumes 1/50 of the wages of labor, ¼ of all the revenue of land owners, and
+1/20 of the amount cash money taken in in a year by merchants. Of these
+amounts, there should be always, at least, one-half in ready money on hand,
+if commerce would not be brought to a stand-still. If leases were to be paid
+for on short terms, a great saving of money would be possible. (Works, II,
+13 ff.) <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Pinto</span></span>, Traité du Crédit et de la Circulation, 34,
+calls special attention to the case of Tournay, in which the commandant, during the
+siege of 1745, made 7,000 florins serve him for seven weeks to pay the garrison; by
+borrowing that sum anew every week from the inn-keepers etc.; which they,
+again, had received from the soldiers.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_755" name="note_755" href="#noteref_755">755.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">If all were to commit their payments to the care of the same
+banker, it would be possible to do with almost no money. But even now, if 100 separate
+merchants were obliged to keep each 3,000 dollars in their money-chests
+for unforseen contingencies, a banker might accomplish the same for them
+with 50,000 dollars, because it is not probable that the unforseen contingencies
+in question would occur to all at the same time.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_756" name="note_756" href="#noteref_756">756.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">In the London Clearing-House, in 1839, £954,401,600 were paid
+by means of the use of £66,275,600 as a circulating medium, for the most part notes
+of the Bank of England. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Tooke</span></span>, Inquiry into the Currency
+Principle, 27.) From May, 1868, until May, 1869, £7,068,078,000. (Statist. Journal, 1869,
+229.) The New York Clearing House, in 1867, effected payments to the
+amount of £5,735,031,900 (Ibid., 1867, 577), and in 1868, $30,880,000,000.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hildebrand's</span></span> Jahrb., 1869, II, 168.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_757" name="note_757" href="#noteref_757">757.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">This system began in the middle of the
+seventeenth century. (A Discourse of Trade Coyn and Paper Credit,
+64.) As early a writer as <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Sir J. Child</span></span>, N. Discourse on Trade,
+46, says, that for some time, every man who had from £50 to £100 in money, sent it to
+his banker, and that since that time, all the money flowed towards London and the
+country was deprived of it. (127 ff.) As a rule, the goldsmiths were also bankers. One
+such smith had at the time of the Great Fire of 1666, emitted £1,200,000 in
+notes. (A Discourse etc., 67.) The Bank of England, as a money center,
+dates from 1694. The London banks developed into intermediaries principally before the
+time of the French Revolution. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Thornton</span></span>, Paper-Credit of
+Great Britain, 1802.) This remarkable institution had grown to vast dimensions
+even in Thornton's time, although it has been much enlarged since
+1825. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Tooke</span></span>, History of Prices, 152 f.) Similar conditions among
+almost all highly civilized peoples. Thus in Greece, compare
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Becker</span></span>, Charicles, I, 294. Concerning a person who had 14
+talents' worth of resources, 26 minæ, and therefore three per cent. in cash, see Lysias,
+adv. Diog., 6. In Rome, compare <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Polyb.</span></span>, XXXII, 13.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Cicero</span></span>, pro Font., I, 1. For Italian analogous
+cases, part of which may be traced back as far as the twelfth century, see
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Lobero</span></span>, Memorie storiche della Banca de S. Georgio, 1832; or the
+Dutch <span class="tei tei-q">“cassiere”</span> Richesse de Hollande, I, 376, ff. In France an ever increasing
+centralization of the money-trade is to be noticed in Paris (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">M.
+Chevalier</span></span>, Cours., III, 418); and now of the money-trade of Germany in Berlin.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_758" name="note_758" href="#noteref_758">758.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Compare
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Fullarton</span></span>, On the Regulation of Currencies, 1845. Among
+the Dutch, the custom of using all commercial commodities as much as possible,
+as a basis of the circulating medium, was much earlier developed.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Child</span></span>, Discourse on Trade, 65, 264 f.) In Great Britain,
+the aggregate amount of bills of exchange put in circulation was, in 1839, £528,000,000,
+which sum has been increased annually at the rate of about £24,000,000.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Tooke</span></span>, Inquiry into the Currency Principle, 26.) Between 1828
+and 1847, there circulated at the same moment, on an average, £79,127,000 in bills of
+exchange in England, and in Scotland, £17,380,000 (Athenæum, 1850, No. 175),
+and in Great Britain and Ireland, from £180,000,000 to £200,000,000.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Tooke</span></span>, History of Prices, VI, 588,) According to
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Macleod</span></span>, the bills of exchange
+and promissory notes together amounted to £500,000,000; bills of exchange,
+bank-notes and bank-credits, to over £600,000,000. (Elements, 12, 325.)
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Macleod</span></span> calls the currency the sum total of all debts due by
+every individual in the country. (Elements, 43.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_759" name="note_759" href="#noteref_759">759.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">A case in England, in
+1857, in which a house with £10,000 capital failed
+with liabilities amounting to £900,000. (Report of the select Committee on
+the Bank Act, 1858, XV.) Or where a speculator with £1,200 made purchases
+on credit to the amount of £80,000, and then failed with a deficit of
+£16,000. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Fawcett</span></span>, Manual, 442 f.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_760" name="note_760" href="#noteref_760">760.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Remarked
+by as early a writer as <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Davenant</span></span>, Works, IV, 106 ff. Compare,
+however, II, 238. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Quesnay</span></span>, éd. Daire, 75 ff.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Lord King</span></span>, Thoughts on
+the Effects of the Bank Restriction, 1804, 17 ff. Exhaustively treated by
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Chevalier</span></span>, Cours., III, 397 ff. He very much laments the fact
+that the customs of France cause it to need from 3½ to 4 milliards of cash money, while
+England does a much larger trade with 1,200 millions. (I, 207 ff.) In
+France, it is said that the amount of money, in 1812, was 1,500,000,000
+francs(?). (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Peuchet</span></span>, Statistique élémentaire, 473.) In Prussia,
+in 1805, it was 90,000,000 thalers. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Krug</span></span>,
+Betracht. über den Nationalwohlstand des
+preuss. St., I, 244.) The annual amount of production in the former country
+was, 7,036,000,000 francs; in the latter it was estimated at 261,000,000
+thalers, so that in Prussia the relation of money to national income was, as
+1:2.9; in France, as 1:4.69.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_761" name="note_761" href="#noteref_761">761.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">It
+is scarcely possible to determine exactly the amount of money in a
+country; for the reason that, outside of the suppositions of bankers etc.,
+there is no authority which can be safely relied on, unless it be the reports
+concerning the coinage, and of the emission of paper money. The information,
+no less necessary, to be derived from the statistics of the importation
+and exportation of money, the melting down of coin by gold smelters etc.,
+can never be exactly obtained. In England, at the end of the sixteenth century,
+the circulating medium was estimated at £4,000,000 (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hume</span></span>,
+History of England, ch. 44, App.); under Charles II., at £6,000,000, when the population
+was 6,000,000. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Petty</span></span>, Several Essays, 179.) About 1711,
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Davenant</span></span>, New Dialogues, 11 ff., mentions £12,000,000 as the
+amount; and <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Anderson</span></span>, Origin of Commerce, a., 1659, £16,000,000
+in 1762. The circulation of gold, shortly before 1797, was estimated by
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Rose</span></span> at, at least, £40,000,000; by Lord
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Liverpool</span></span>, at £30,000,000; by <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Tooke</span></span>, at
+only £22,500,000. (History of Prices, V, 130 ff.) <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Moreau de
+Jonnés</span></span>, 1837, assumed £43,500,000 (Statistique, I, 329), and
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Helferich</span></span> (Schwankungen der edlen Met., 1843, 147), £45,000,000.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Sir Robert Peel</span></span>, estimated the amount in 1845 at £59,000,000, to
+which was to be added an average of £28,000,000 in bank notes, after deduction made of
+the metallic reserve. According to <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Jevons</span></span>, the amount of British
+money is now £80,000,000 in gold, £14,000,000 in silver, £1,000,000 in copper; the sum
+total, including bullion and bank notes, after the deduction of their metallic
+representatives, £134,000,000. (Economist, December, 1868, July, 1869.) In
+France, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Vauban</span></span>, Dîme royale, 104 (Daire), estimated the cash
+money at about 500,000,000 livres, over 750,000,000 francs, with which
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Voltaire</span></span>, Siècle de Louis, XIV, ch. 30, agrees so far as the
+year 1683 is concerned. In 1730, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Voltaire</span></span>, assumes the amount to
+be 1,200,000,000 of the coins of that time. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Necker</span></span>,
+Administration des Finances, III, 66, estimated it, in 1784, at 2,200,000,000 livres;
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Mollien</span></span>, about 1806, at 2,300,000,000. The valuations in
+Louis Philippe's time varied from 2,400,000,000 to 2,500,000,000 (Chamber
+of Deputies, April, 13, 1847), and 4,000,000,000. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Blanqui.</span></span>)
+The valuations of 1870 were, according to <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Wolowski</span></span>, 4 milliards;
+and to <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Bonnet</span></span>, from 5 to 6 milliards. Compare
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Wolowski</span></span>, L'Or et l'Argent, 383 ff., Euquête, 42. The
+German Zollverein is said to have had, at the beginning of 1870
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Soetbeer</span></span>) 480,000,000 or 520,000,000 thalers
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Weibezahn</span></span>) cash money.
+</p>
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+In Wirtemberg, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Memminger</span></span>, 1840, estimated the resources of the
+country at 1,600,000,000 guldens, of which 36,000,000 were cash; and the yearly gross
+income at 179,000,000 guldens; so that the money was 20 per cent. of the
+latter and 2¼ per cent. of the former. The annual sales = 226,000,000.
+Therefore the coin currency must have circulated on an average between six
+and seven times in a year. In the electorate of Hesse, there were <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">per
+capita</span></span> 4 thalers, 18 sgrs., 9 hellers, metallic money, and 3 thalers, 9 sgrs., 4
+hellers, paper-money. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">B. Hildebrand</span></span>, Statist. Mitth., 1853,
+185.) The amount of money in Naples, in 1840, was estimated at 42,000,000 ducats.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Scialoja.</span></span>) It has been estimated that, in 1830, Spain
+possessed 1,725,000,000 francs. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Barrego
+von Rottenkamp</span></span>, 330.)</p></dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_762" name="note_762" href="#noteref_762">762.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Montanari</span></span>, Della
+Moneta, 52 ff.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_763" name="note_763" href="#noteref_763">763.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">David Hume's</span></span>
+very influential essay on the balance of trade does not give
+expression to this error, but he certainly was the occasion of making a great
+many of his disciples advocate it. It is related to the error mentioned in
+§ <a href="#Section_123" class="tei tei-ref">123</a>. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Quesnay</span></span>, 101
+(Daire) saw this point in a much clearer light. So did
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Graumann</span></span>, Gesammelte Briefe vom Gelde (1762), 12 ff.; 73
+ff.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_764" name="note_764" href="#noteref_764">764.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">This is
+seen, for instance, when paper money is issued, in times when
+trade is thriving, and is withdrawn when this conjuncture ceases.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_765" name="note_765" href="#noteref_765">765.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Very
+well elaborated by <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Fullarton</span></span>, On the Regulation of Currencies, 71
+ff., 139 ff. Compare, however, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Becaria</span></span>, Economica publica, IV, 4,
+27. When England on the occasion of the removal of the bank restriction in 1821 and
+1822, caused £9,520,759 and £5,356,788 to be stamped, this powerful demand
+scarcely affected the gold-agio in Paris. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">M. Chevalier</span></span>, Cours,
+III, 157.) And, on the other hand, the system of assignats, developed during the first
+French Revolution, on so large a scale, had no influence on the price of silver
+in the rest of Europe. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Lord King</span></span>, Thoughts on the Bank
+Restriction, 1804.) And so, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Tooke</span></span>, History of Prices, I, 205,
+describes a very large increase of the medium of circulation, after which the prices of
+commodities remained unchanged, corn fell, colonial products rose in price, both as they
+had done before, and from causes inherent in the commodities themselves.
+During the first years of the bank restriction, 1799-1801, grain rose very rapidly
+in price, while all trans-Atlantic products sank. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Tooke</span></span>, I,
+232 ff.) The unusually large importation of wheat from January 1, 1846, to January 14,
+1847, was paid in France by a decrease of the bank metallic reserve
+(<span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">encaisse</span></span>)
+to the extent of 172,000,000 francs. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">M. Chevalier</span></span>, Cours, III,
+470.) An experienced practitioner in England is of opinion that an increase of bank notes
+to the amount of about £5,000,000 would not raise prices nor increase the
+tendency to speculation, but only enlarge the deposits of the bankers. But,
+if on the other hand, £5,000,000, by any sudden contingency, were to be put
+into the hands of the working classes, this money would, for the most part,
+enter immediately into circulation; the price of commodities would, therefore,
+rise and continue to rise until that amount had come into closer fists, as
+it would after some time. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Tooke</span></span>, III, 156 ff., II, 323.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_766" name="note_766" href="#noteref_766">766.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">This
+explains the high price of gold in Farther Asia, which was formerly
+separated from America, the principal source of supply of the precious
+metals, by a journey around the earth, the then usual course of the world's
+trade.
+</p>
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+The precious metals are generally higher in country places than in large
+cities, and in the interior than on the sea-coast. Since the public highways
+etc. in Germany have been so much improved, the difference in the value of
+money in upper and lower Germany has almost disappeared. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Rau</span></span>,
+in the Archiv der polit. Oek., III, 338.)</p></dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_767" name="note_767" href="#noteref_767">767.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Happy
+beginning of this doctrine in <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hume</span></span>, On the Balance of Trade.
+Further, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Thornton</span></span>, The Paper Credit of Great Britain, ch. 11.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Adam Smith</span></span>, on the other hand, claims that gold and silver,
+because they are costly superfluities are uniformly paid most dearly for, in the
+richest countries. (Wealth of Nations, I, ch. 11, 3: Digr.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_768" name="note_768" href="#noteref_768">768.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Similarly in China, and even
+in Upper Egypt, the China, so to speak, of antiquity! Compare
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Herodot.</span></span>, II, 112 ff; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Homer</span></span>, Od., IV,
+354 ff. The religion of the Egyptians prescribed to them a mode of life which was scarcely
+practicable in foreign parts. They were systematically inspired with a horror
+for everything foreign. They had a strong antipathy for salt, fish and pilots.
+In Egyptian mythology, Osiris represents the Nile, Typhon the desert and
+the sea! (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Plutarch</span></span>, De Iside, 32.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_769" name="note_769" href="#noteref_769">769.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">The
+other party, of course, makes a profit also. He is in a better condition
+than if he wished to produce the desired commodity in his own country.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_770" name="note_770" href="#noteref_770">770.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">The
+first clear germ of this doctrine, which is one of the most important
+theoretical principles of international-trade politics, is to be found in
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">David Hume</span></span>, On Interest; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Cantillon</span></span>,
+Nature du Commerce, 226, 369 ff. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ricardo</span></span>, Principles,
+ch. 7. <span class="tei tei-q">“Gold and silver having been chosen for the general medium
+of circulation, they are, by the competition of commerce, distributed in such
+proportions amongst the different countries of the world, as to accommodate
+themselves to the natural traffic which would take place if no such metals
+existed, and the trade between countries were purely a trade of barter.”</span>
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Rebenius</span></span>, Oeff. Credit, I, 29 ff. Still further developed,
+especially by <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">John Stuart Mill</span></span>, Elements, 1821, III, 4, 13 f.;
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Torrens</span></span>, The Budget, 1844. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">John
+Stuart Mill</span></span>, Essays on some unsettled Principles of Political Economy, 1844,
+No. 1, and Principles, III, ch. 19, § 3, 5th ed.: <span class="tei tei-q">“The opening of a new branch
+of export trade from England; an increase in the foreign demand for English
+products, either by the natural course of events or by the abrogation of duties;
+a check to the demand in England for foreign commodities, by the laying
+on of import duties in England, or of export duties elsewhere; these and
+all other events of similar tendency, should make the imports of England,
+bullion and other things taken together, no longer an equivalent for the exports;
+and the countries which take her exports would be obliged to offer
+their commodities, and bullion among the rest, on cheaper terms, in order to
+re-establish the equation of demand; and thus England would obtain money
+cheaper, and would acquire a generally higher range of prices.”</span>
+</p>
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Obscurely surmised by <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Beccaria</span></span>, E.P., 3, 18, and even by
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Galiani</span></span>, Della Moneta, II, 2. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Senior's</span></span>
+admirable work, Three Lectures on the Cost of Obtaining
+Money, 1830, follows up the thought that every country obtains indigenous
+and foreign products at a cost which grows smaller in the same
+proportion as the productiveness of its people's labor is large. This would,
+certainly, explain why it is that perhaps one hundred English days' work in
+cotton manufactures will exchange against as much silver as is produced by
+two hundred days' work in Mexican mines and foundries. This would not,
+by any means, produce a lowering of the price of the precious metals relatively
+to other English commodities, but the influence would be felt equally
+by all the products of English national industry.</p></dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_771" name="note_771" href="#noteref_771">771.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">To be found in germ in
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Cantillon</span></span>, Nature du Commerce, 1755, 249 ff.
+307. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Büsch</span></span>, Geldumlauf, 14. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Kaufmann</span></span>,
+Untersuchungen, I, 75 ff. Many of the doctrines of the so-called Mercantile System, of
+which I shall treat in my projected work on the Political Economy of Commerce, have
+given expression to this truth in an inexact and exaggerated way; but they were not
+entirely erroneous, as is supposed by the adherents of Hume and Smith.
+However, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">J. S. Mill</span></span>, Principles II, ch. 19, § 2, does not fully
+admit the degree of the cheapness of money in England usually assumed. According
+to him it is wants of luxury (luxury-wants) become such through habit,
+that produce <span class="tei tei-q">“the dearness of living in England.”</span></dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_772" name="note_772" href="#noteref_772">772.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Petty</span></span>
+considers the search for a measure which could be applied both to
+land and labor as one of the principal problems of Political Economy. (Political
+Anatomy of Ireland, 62 ff.) <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Sir J. Steuart</span></span>, Principles, III, ch.
+I, took the matter very easy by considering the so-called <span class="tei tei-q">“coin of account,”</span> for
+instance, <span class="tei tei-q">“bank-money,”</span> as an invariable value-magnitude. Compare
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Jacob</span></span>, Grundsätze der National Œkonomie, II, 441 ff.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Cazaux</span></span>, Economie politique et privée, 1825, 16 ff., has a not
+uninteresting study on this subject; but he goes, throughout his argument, on the
+assumption that the rate of interest is the price of money! If the rate of interest in
+two countries = I and i, the prices of the same commodity = P and p, the true
+thing-values, V and v; then we have v: V:: i p: I P!</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_773" name="note_773" href="#noteref_773">773.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Law</span></span>,
+Trade and Money, 181. Before him, and quite correctly, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Montanari</span></span>,
+Della Moneta, I, p. 84 ff., compares the means employed of measuring
+one commodity by another, to the means used to estimate time in terms of
+space, as when it is measured by the revolutions of the hands of a clock, and
+again, space in terms of time.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_774" name="note_774" href="#noteref_774">774.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">The solvability or capacity to pay of buyers cannot be taken into
+consideration here, because it is synonymous with the amount of counter-values which
+are to be measured.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_775" name="note_775" href="#noteref_775">775.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Adam Smith</span></span>,
+Wealth of Nations, I, ch. 5. Similarly <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Luther</span></span>, vom Kaufhandel:
+Werke, ed. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Walch</span></span>, X, 1098 f. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">B. Franklin</span></span>
+considered the labor employed in the production of wheat as the best measure of prices.
+(Letter to Ld. Kames: Works, ed. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Sparks</span></span>, VII.) As Adam Smith, so
+also <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Sismondi</span></span>, Richesse commerciale, I, 371 f.;
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Kraus</span></span>, Staatswirthschaft, I, 84,; v.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Schlözer</span></span>, Anfangsgründe, I, 41. Also
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Malthus</span></span>, in the second and succeeding editions
+of his Principles, ch. I, 6, and Definitions, ch. 8, 9. The Measure of
+Value, 1823. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Zachariä</span></span>, Vierzig Bücher, VII, 53 f., maintains
+that, at least within the limits of every separate nation, the average labor-power of one
+man is invariable. Assuming this principle, therefore, to be true, the means
+of subsistence necessary to support a laborer for one work-day constitutes, indirectly,
+a measure of prices. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Tooke</span></span>, History of Prices, I, 56, says that
+the amount of a day's wages is always a better measure of the price of the precious
+metals than the price of wheat. Even in 1750, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Galiani</span></span>, Della
+Moneta, II, 2, had denied the impossibility of an entirely invariable measure of price
+in this world of change, but he considered man himself the least variable of
+measures, and in a country where slavery prevailed, slaves. He thought
+that the <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">macuta</span></span> of the negroes were a part of the average price
+of slaves. Practically, Adam Smith's proposed measure was used in the French constitution
+of 1791, in as much as it provided that participation in primary assemblies should depend
+on the participant's paying an annual tax equal to the wages of three days' work, and
+eligibility as an <span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">èlecteur</span></span>, on
+the possession of an income equal in value to the wages paid for two hundred days'
+day-labor. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Owen</span></span> endeavored to base the value of the paper money
+in circulation in his Utopian commonwealth, not on any metal of a certain weight or
+stamp, but on hours of labor as the unit. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Reybaud</span></span>,
+Réformateurs Contemporains, I, 255.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_776" name="note_776" href="#noteref_776">776.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">The wretched condition,
+until within a short time since, of the Irish working
+class, is well known; how they dwelt in mud cabins without windows,
+board-floors or chimneys etc., in the same apartment with their pigs; how they lived
+almost exclusively on potatoes, and went about in rags. These same Irish,
+<span lang="la" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="la"><span style="font-style: italic">coelum, non animum mutantes</span></span>,
+received in North America for the coarsest kind of labor, 50 to 75 cents wages, besides
+wheat bread and meat three times a day, coffee and sugar twice a day, butter once, and
+seven or eight glasses of whisky or brandy. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">M. Chevalier</span></span>,
+Lettres sur l'Amérique du Nord, I, 159.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_777" name="note_777" href="#noteref_777">777.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Thus in Mauritius, the immigration of the coolies has
+produced a decrease of negro wages, but an increase of negro industry. In the Barbadoes,
+the negroes are more industrious and their wages lower than in Jamaica. The
+wages of good workmen, as for instance during the commercial crisis in Manchester,
+often sink, while the wages of bad workmen rise; as, for example,
+in a village through which a railroad is made to pass. Compare
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Lauderdale</span></span> Inquiry, ch. 1; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Sartorius</span></span>,
+Abhandlungen, 1806, I, 16 ff.; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Lotz</span></span>, Revision, I,
+99 ff.; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">M. Chevalier</span></span>, Cours, III, 88 f.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_778" name="note_778" href="#noteref_778">778.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Besides the passages cited in §
+<a href="#Section_107" class="tei tei-ref">107</a>, compare also <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Harris</span></span>, On
+Money and Coins, II, 1757 f.; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Jacob</span></span> also preceded
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ricardo</span></span>. See the German translation
+of <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Say</span></span>, II, 435, 507.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_779" name="note_779" href="#noteref_779">779.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">The
+introduction of the words <span class="tei tei-q">“the socially necessary time of labor”</span>
+into the formulæ does not make the measure any more practical for political
+economists or for socialists.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_780" name="note_780" href="#noteref_780">780.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Cantillon</span></span>, who reduces all the cost of production to land and labor,
+considers the <span class="tei tei-q">“at par”</span> between these two to be this: that the labor of the meanest
+slave corresponds to the quantity of land which the owner is obliged to
+employ for his support, and the support of the slave and of the children
+who are to take his place. (Nature du Commerce, 42.) The Physiocrates
+thought that the internal (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">innere</span></span>) value of two commodities stood
+in the same relation to each other as the area of land directly or indirectly necessary
+to their production. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Schlettwein</span></span>, Grundfeste der Staaten, 1792,
+230.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_781" name="note_781" href="#noteref_781">781.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">The so-called <span lang="de" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="de"><span style="font-style: italic">Sachwerth</span></span> (thing-value, real-value) of
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hermann</span></span>, St. Untersuchungen,
+101 ff. Thus <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Poulett Scrope</span></span> recommended a <span class="tei tei-q">“tabular standard,”</span>
+to be officially established and renewed from time to time, to serve as an
+anchor to those persons who wished permanently to fix their money in such a
+manner as to make it exchangeable for an equal value in <em class="tei tei-emph"><span style="font-style: italic">things</span></em>. (Principles
+of Political Economy, 1833, 406.) Something of this kind was tried for 50
+commodities, between 1833 and 1837, by <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Porter</span></span>, Progress of the
+Nation, 1st ed., II, 236 ff., then for 40 commodities by <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Jevons</span></span>
+in the Statistical Journal, 1865. Of course, all commodities of a given price are not
+equally important in this respect. Thus, for instance, a fluctuation in the price of
+diamonds would have no effect on the thing-value or real-value of a day's wages, but
+it certainly would on the thing-value of a princely income. There are some
+excellent remarks on this very important subject in <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Lowe's</span></span> work,
+On the Actual Condition of England, chs. 8 and 9. The controversy carried on
+between <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Jevons</span></span>, A serious Fall in the Value of Gold, and its
+social Effects, 1863; Statist. Journal, 1865; and <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Laspeyres</span></span>,
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hildebrand's</span></span> Jahrb., 1864, 81 ff.;
+1871, I, 296 ff; in which the former recommends the geometric mean of the
+relative prices of separate commodities at different points of time, in order
+to calculate the average relative price: and the latter, as usual, the arithmetical
+mean, is very thoroughly reviewed and criticised by <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Drobisch</span></span>, who
+shows that neither of these methods is sufficient, but that the quantity of every
+separate commodity must also be taken into account, for which he furnishes
+practical formulæ. (Math. phys. Berichte der <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">K.</span></span> Sächs.
+Gesellsch., 1871, I, 143 ff, 416 ff.) It is certain that a fixed income in money could
+maintain its real value or thing-value (<span lang="de" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="de"><span style="font-style: italic">Sachwerth</span></span>) just as little if the cwt. of bread
+rose by as many dollars as the cwt. of pepper had fallen; as if the increasing
+price of bread depended on a decreasing price of pepper.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_782" name="note_782" href="#noteref_782">782.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Senior</span></span>,
+Outlines, 187. In addition to this, we may draw from the thing-value
+of a day's wages a right conclusion as to the economic condition of the
+majority of the people; and assuming the customary division of the national
+wealth, also as to the degree, to which the people have subjected the forces
+of nature to their service.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_783" name="note_783" href="#noteref_783">783.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ricardo</span></span>, ch.
+22, refuted, indeed, only the view that an increase in the
+wages of labor produced by the higher prices of corn, would necessarily
+make all goods or products of labor, correspondingly dearer.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_784" name="note_784" href="#noteref_784">784.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Compare § <a href="#Section_103" class="tei tei-ref">103</a>. In Paris, in
+1817, the <span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">setier</span></span> of wheat cost
+March 5, 55½ francs; April 2, 57 fr.; April 23, 60 fr.; May 14, 63 fr.; May 21, 66 fr.;
+May 28, 75 fr.; June 4, 82 fr.; June 11, 92 fr. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Tooke</span></span>, History
+of Prices, II, 17.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_785" name="note_785" href="#noteref_785">785.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Locke</span></span>, 98. When
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Condillac</span></span> asserts that wheat is the best measure of
+prices, he adds, when free trade in wheat obtains. (Commerce et Gouvernement,
+1, 23.) <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Fichte</span></span>, on the other hand, while advocating the despotic
+guidance of all trade by the state, would employ wheat as the fundamental measure
+of prices. (Geschl. Handelstaat, 47 ff.) That grain does not afford a
+good measure of prices in very highly cultivated nations nor in barbaric
+ones, see <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hermann</span></span>, II, Aufl., 451.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_786" name="note_786" href="#noteref_786">786.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">The
+average price must be based on the prices of a great many years,
+since crops vary not only from year to year in price, but from decade to
+decade. See <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Roscher</span></span>, Nationalökonomik des Ackerbaues, § 152, and
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Roscher</span></span>, Kornhandel und Theuerungspolitik, 47 ff. Great wars are
+wont to disturb agriculture in such a manner that the price of corn is very much increased
+by them. Hence, it is not unfrequently possible to use the prices of
+grain as a species of barometer to determine the real pressure of a war upon
+the economic life of a people. Judging by this standard, England suffered
+much less from the War of the Roses in the fifteenth century, than from the
+civil wars in the seventeenth; and less than France from the religious wars
+of the sixteenth. The war year 1631-2, in which Gustavus Adolphus and the
+emperors had to spare the country, must have been far less oppressive for
+Saxony than the later Swedish campaigns. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Roscher</span></span>, in the Tübinger
+Zeitschrift, 1857, 471.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_787" name="note_787" href="#noteref_787">787.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">Most countries go through these
+successive periods in their corn trade: in the first, exportation preponderates; in the
+second, there is an equilibrium; in the third, importation preponderates.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">M. Chevalier</span></span>, III, 74 ff.) Compare <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Tacit.</span></span>,
+Ann., XII, 43. Omitting the two dearest and the two cheapest years,
+the Prussian provinces were circumstanced as follows:
+</p>
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+In The Whole Kingdom, the price of Rye, 1816 to 1837, was 40. silver groschens.
+The population per square mile, 2,776<br />
+In Prussia, 32.2 silver groschens, and 1,827<br />
+In Posen, 34.3 silver groschens, and 2,180<br />
+In Brandeburg, Pomerania, 38.4 silver groschens, and 2,093<br />
+In Saxony, 40.3 silver groschens, and 2,366<br />
+In Silesia, 38.0 silver groschens, and 3,612<br />
+In Westphalia, 47.7 silver groschens, and 3,600<br />
+In Rhine Province, 49.4 silver groschens, and 5,078
+</p>
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Rau</span></span>, Lehrbuch, I, § 183. As to when it may be assumed that the
+price of corn has remained unchanged, see <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hermann</span></span>, loc. cit.,
+125 ff.
+</p></dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_788" name="note_788" href="#noteref_788">788.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Petty</span></span> recommended the average
+daily food necessarily required by one
+man as the measure of price, estimated on the basis of the cheapest means
+of subsistence. (Polit. Anatomy of Ireland, 62 ff.) <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Thaer</span></span> used as
+such a measure the smallest day's wages; as he supposed, expressed in rye, that is,
+1/9 of the Prussian <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">scheffel</span></span>. Similarly,
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Malthus</span></span>, in his first edition, and <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Buquoy</span></span>,
+Theorie der Nationalwirthschaft, 240. But this is simply to substitute
+for wheat an arbitrarily determined quantity and quality of the same as
+a measure of prices. For practical experiments of this kind, made by the
+depreciation of paper money during the French Revolution, see <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">M.
+Chevalier</span></span>, Cours, III, 98; and Constitution de 1795, V, 68, VI, 173.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Count Soden</span></span>, Nat. Œk., II, 338 f., demands that all taxes,
+salaries of state officials etc., should be regulated in accordance with the price of
+corn. This same view has been suggested recently in many German States.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_789" name="note_789" href="#noteref_789">789.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Recognized generally by <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Locke</span></span>,
+Considerations 24. Further, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Galliani</span></span>, Della Moneta, II, 2;
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Adam Smith</span></span>, I, ch. 5. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Schäffle</span></span>, N. Œk.,
+II, Aufl., 127, maintains that a constant measure of price, such as would enable a person
+to stipulate for a salary for instance that would be always of the same value,
+is impossible. Similarly, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hildebrand's</span></span> Jahrb., 1871, 315 ff.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_790" name="note_790" href="#noteref_790">790.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Compare <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">J.
+Tucker</span></span>, Four Tracts on political and commercial Subjects,
+28 ff., who maintains that it is a rule, almost without exception, that <span class="tei tei-q">“operose
+or complicated manufactures”</span> are cheapest in rich countries; <span class="tei tei-q">“raw materials,”</span>
+in poor ones. Thus, for instance, corn (?), garden products in the
+former; cattle, wool, milk, skins, flesh-meat, in the latter. Ships and movable
+property are cheaper in the former, whereas wood may be said to be almost the
+free product of nature here. See especially <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Adam Smith</span></span>, Wealth
+of Nations, ch. 11, Digr.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_791" name="note_791" href="#noteref_791">791.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Senior</span></span>,
+Outlines 119 f., makes the following calculation: Of the 15d.
+which a loaf of bread costs in England, 10d. goes to buy the wheat, the other
+5d. to the miller, baker etc. If now, we suppose, that in consequence of an
+increased demand, and therefore of increased production under more unfavorable
+circumstances, the price of wheat should rise to 20d., the cost of production
+would possibly, because of an improved division of labor, come down
+to 3-¾d., and hence the price of the loaf of bread would be increased to 23-¾d.
+It is quite the reverse in the case of lace, because here a piece of raw material
+worth only 2 shillings may, by reason of the labor expended on it, become
+worth as much as £105. If the consumption of lace should increase
+so that the value of the raw material rose to 4 shillings, the simultaneous
+decrease of the cost of manufacture to the extent of one-quarter of the aggregate
+price, would leave the price of the manufactured article £78, 19s.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_792" name="note_792" href="#noteref_792">792.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">When,
+for instance, the inhabitants of the Baltic coasts, by way of preference,
+kept up their relations with the Hanseatic cities, the Dutch and English,
+that is with the most important industrial and commercial nations in
+their own sphere, they in all this pursued only their own interest. As to
+how this intercourse between <span class="tei tei-q">“old”</span> and <span class="tei tei-q">“new”</span> countries is susceptible of
+the very highest development, see <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Torrens</span></span>, The Budget: On
+Commercial and Colonial Policy, 1844, and earlier, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Wakefield</span></span>,
+England and America, II, 1823.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_793" name="note_793" href="#noteref_793">793.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">The clearing up
+of primeval forests, the cultivation of natural meadows, etc.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_794" name="note_794" href="#noteref_794">794.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">In
+Hungary, during the sixteenth century, the choicest venison was consumed
+by plebeians and nobles alike. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Herberstein</span></span>, Rer. Moscov. Comm., 97.
+In Russia, even the lowest classes not unfrequently partake of roast hare and
+duck etc. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Kohl</span></span>, Reise in Russland, II, 386. Still, in St.
+Petersburg, wild-fowl game rose between the time of Peter the Great and Alexander I. 600
+per cent. in price. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Storch</span></span>, Handbuch, I, 368.) In Pittsburg, in
+1807, mutton, beef and veal cost from 4 to 6 cents a pound, and game only from 3 to 4-½
+cents a pound. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Melish</span></span>, Travels through the United States, II, 57.)
+The more the game laws are enforced, the longer does the low price of game continue,
+especially when it is not easy for the poor to procure them. The moderns
+have seldom thought of raising game artificially; among the Romans, artificial
+raising was confined to the hare and fieldfare. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Varro</span></span>, R.R., III,
+12 ff.; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Columella</span></span>, R.R., VIII, 10.) Hence, the enormous prices paid
+for game, of which <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Pliny</span></span>, H. N. X., 43, relates an example from the
+time of the emperors. On the other hand, Polybius assures us that, in his time, game
+was to be had as good as gratis in Lusitania. XXXIV, 8, 7.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_795" name="note_795" href="#noteref_795">795.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">In Buenos Ayres, in the nineteenth
+century, beggars on horseback were to be seen. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Robertson</span></span>,
+Letters on South America, II, 294.) In Krasnojarsk, in 1770, 1-½ rubles was the price
+of an ox, 1 ruble of a cow, from 2 to 3 of a horse, from O.3 to O.5 of a sheep; O.15
+of a deer. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Pallas</span></span>, Sibirische Reise, III, 5, II 12.) According
+to the Tables of Prices in <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Sir F. M. Eden</span></span>, State of the Poor,
+Append. I, and <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Rogers</span></span>, History of Agriculture and Prices
+(1866), I, 245, 361, the following prices obtained in England;
+</p>
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+(On an average.)
+</p>
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+in 1125-26, one ox, 1 shilling; one quarter of wheat, 20 shillings;<br />
+in 1260-1400, one ox, 13 shillings 1-¼d; one quarter of wheat, 5 shillings 10-¾d;<br />
+in 1406, one ox, 9-½ shillings; one quarter of wheat, 4-½ shillings;<br />
+in 1463, one ox, 10-20 shillings; one quarter of wheat, 1-⅔-4-⅔ shillings.
+</p>
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Compare <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hume</span></span>, History of England, a. 1327. Under Henry VIII. veal,
+beef, mutton and pork were food for the poor in England, and cost on an average
+1-½d per pound; while wheat cost from 7 to 8 shillings a quarter. (24 Henry VII,
+c. 3. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Price</span></span>, Observations, II, 148 f.) The same appears from
+the <span class="tei tei-q">“reasonable prices”</span> which Charles I, in 1663, had established by sworn
+juries viz.: that the different kinds of meat were much cheaper comparatively
+than corn in our days. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">(Rymer</span></span>, Foedera, XIX, 511.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Anderson</span></span>, Origin of Commerce, a. 1633.) In many places in the
+highlands of Scotland, in the middle of the seventeenth century, one pound of oat-bread
+cost as much or more than one pound of the best meat. The union of Scotland with
+more highly civilized England soon changed the relation, so that in <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Adam
+Smith's</span></span> time, good meat, in nearly all parts of Great Britain was worth from
+2 to 4 times as much as the same weight of wheat bread. (Wealth of Nations,
+I, ch. 11, 1.) The Thomas Hospital in London paid, on an average,
+for good beef per stone weight:
+</p>
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+1701-1710: 1s. 7.9d.<br />
+1764-1773: 1s. 3.7d.<br />
+1794-1803: 1s. 5.d.<br />
+1804-1821: 1s. 10.9d.<br />
+1822-1842: 1s. 1.5d.
+</p>
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Porter</span></span>, Progress of the Nation, III, 112.) Among the most certain
+proofs of the high degree of economic civilization attained in upper Italy about
+the close of the medieval times is the fact, that the price of cattle, compared
+with that of wheat in the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries, varies very
+little from what it is to-day. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Cibrario</span></span>, Economia politica del
+medio Evo, III, 335-383.) Compare <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Rau</span></span>, Lehrbuch I, § 185. In
+Athens, the cost of a <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">medimnos</span></span>
+of wheat was as great as that of a sheep in Solon's time. In the age of Demosthenes,
+it cost only half as much. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Böckh</span></span>, Staatshaushalt der
+Athener, I, 107, 132.) It is obvious, however, that the price of meat compared
+with that of corn, was lowered by the great extension of the artificial
+cultivation of meadows; for, when the former has reached its maximum, it
+becomes a great spur to the promotion of the latter. Thus, in England, the
+price of meat, at the beginning of the sixteenth century, was on an average,
+higher than in <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Adam Smith's</span></span> time. (loc. cit.) To the same cause is
+to be ascribed the state of things in Prussia mentioned by <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">v.
+Podewils</span></span>, Wirth schaftserfahrungen, II, 15.
+</p>
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+As a common basis for such calculations, the following may be accepted.
+It is plain that meadows, pasturages and forage-fields must yield as much in
+meat, as corn-fields of the same dimensions of equal goodness, and situated
+as favorably, in corn. According to <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Block</span></span>, a Prussian acre
+(<span lang="de" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="de"><span style="font-style: italic">Morgen</span></span>) of the
+best quality, used as a meadow, produces a hay-value equal to 1,000 pounds,
+a clover-value equal to 2,420; as a vegetable field, a beet or potato-value equal
+to 6,050-6,930 pounds, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">v. Lengerke's</span></span> estimate is that 110 pounds
+of cattle-fodder expressed in terms of hay, produces on an average 40 pounds of milk,
+and from 3-½ to 4 pounds of meat. This would, at most, give 36, 88 and 220-252 pounds of
+meat. The yield of wheat, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">v. Lengerke</span></span> estimates, on the best soil,
+and on an average, at 14 Prussian <span lang="de" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="de"><span style="font-style: italic">scheffels</span></span> (at 80 pounds, i.e. 1,120
+pounds) yearly per acre (<span lang="de" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="de"><span style="font-style: italic">Morgen</span></span>).
+The three periods in the history of the prices of cattle were clearly recognized by
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Thaer</span></span>, Landw. Gewerblehre, 1815, 100.</p></dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_796" name="note_796" href="#noteref_796">796.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">It is a very characteristic fact,
+in relation to the river fisheries, that the fable that servants formerly
+stipulated not to eat salmon except twice a week
+is to be found in so many places. Thus on the Elbe and the Rhine. Compare
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Thaarup</span></span>, Dänische Statistik, I, 112. In Scotland, about the end of
+the seventeenth century, the story in places ran, that it was five times a week.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Walter Scott</span></span>, Old Mortality, ch. 8.) In England, fish seems to
+have been a tid-bit among the poorer classes in the fourteenth century.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Rogers</span></span>, I, 606.) It was dearer especially during Lent. (Statist.
+Journ., 1861, 544 ff.) The artificial production of sea-fish seems to have been tried only
+by the ancient Romans. On the whole, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Adam Smith's</span></span> law that a
+ten-fold demand can, as a rule, be met only by a greater than ten-fold labor, applies
+here. (I, 370, ed. Basil.) But this relation is obscured to a certain extent, from the fact
+that the source of the production of sea-fish, the ocean, which may be claimed at any
+time by occupation, is, practically, boundless. Here, therefore, the improvements
+made in nautical science, and the progress of geographical knowledge,
+may yet for a long time compensate for the exhaustion of the nearer seas,
+and even more than counterbalance it.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_797" name="note_797" href="#noteref_797">797.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Among
+a great many nations in a low stage of civilization, agriculture
+consists in the burning down of the forest. In 1594, the Lauenförder forest
+produced 1,110 thalers' worth of food for hogs, and wood to the amount of
+44 thalers. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">v. Berg</span></span>, Staatsforstwirthsch., 213.) The Harzgerode
+woods, at the ducal line of Anhalt-Bernburg, were estimated at 6,000 thalers. A hundred
+years later, they brought in yearly 70,000 thalers, although, in the meantime,
+very little progress was made in the science of cultivating them, (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">v.
+Justi</span></span>, Staatswirthschaft, II, 211.) We may form a notion of the relativity of
+the idea of the dearness of wood from the fact that in Bavaria, for instance,
+in 1840, there was a great deal of complaint, that in the district of Isark the
+price rose from 6 to 9 florins; in the districts of Regen and the lower Maine,
+from 11 to 14 florins to from 15 to 18; in the Rhine district, from 20 to 26
+florins per cord (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Klafter</span></span>). (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Rau</span></span>, Lehrbuch,
+III, § 150, a.) Besides, the price of wood in the forest rises, with an advance in
+civilization, much more rapidly than it does in the market; in which last, labor and
+capital play a greater part. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Rau</span></span>, I, §
+385.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_798" name="note_798" href="#noteref_798">798.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Plan for the artificial production of pearl oysters.
+(Novara-Reise, I, 303.) Ostriches seem now to be ceasing to be objects of mere occupation,
+and to be becoming objects of breeding. (Ausland, 1869, § 13.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_799" name="note_799" href="#noteref_799">799.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">Thus
+Wolff's experiments made at Möckern have shown that in the case
+of sheep fed with hay, the wool becomes much heavier and the flesh
+leaner than those of sheep fed with a more concentrated food. While it is
+estimated in England, at the present time, that the wool of South-Down
+sheep is worth scarcely one-tenth what their flesh is (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Jacob</span></span>, On
+Corn Trade, 166), mutton, from the year 1260 to 1400, was, on an average, worth
+17 pence; and this even at a time when prices were gradually rising; but the
+wool of one animal (1 lb., 7-¾ ounces), 5-¼ pence. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Rogers</span></span>, I,
+362, 395.) Even under Anglo-Saxon kings the fleece was worth 40 per cent. of the value
+of the whole sheep, (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">David Hume</span></span>.) And so <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">W.
+Macann</span></span>, Two Thousand Miles Ride through the Argentine Provinces, 1853, I, 151, says
+that in the interior of Buenos Ayres, he purchased 8,000 sheep at 18 pence a dozen,
+and after a march of 200 English miles, sold the skins for sixty pence a dozen.
+In Goya, formerly, a live horse cost 3 pence, its skin on the coast 12
+pence; and the slaughtering of the beast cost 3 pence, the removal and cleaning
+of the skin 3 pence; and 3 pence were paid for transportation.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Robertson</span></span>.)
+</p>
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+In Ireland, in 1763, it not unfrequently happened that the skin and tallow
+of an ox cost as much in a commercial city as the whole ox had cost in the
+nearest market town. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Temple</span></span>, Works III, 13.) In England, from 1260
+to 1400, the average price of a whole cow was 9s. 9d.; of the hide 1s. 8d., and
+cows were cheapest in the first decade, i.e., 6s. 2d., and the hides dearer than
+they were generally afterwards, i.e., by from 1-9-¼d. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Rogers</span></span>, I,
+361, 451.) In Saxony, according to <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Engel</span></span> (1853), the average price
+of horned cattle was about 46 thalers; of their hide, 4 thalers and 21 silver groschens.
+Russia exported, 1842-1847, 72,636,166 silver rubles worth of tallow, 1,832,137 silver
+rubles worth of horse hair, 10,811,735 worth of bristles (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Borsten</span></span>),
+7,387,140 of uncured skins, 36,159,452 of sheep's wool, but flesh-meat only to the
+amount of 370,362 rubles, and entire animals to the value of 6,853,241 rubles.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">P. Storch</span></span>, Der Bauernstand Russlands, 289 ff.) Tallow is there ten
+times dearer than the same volume of wheat. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Steinhaus</span></span>, Russlands
+industrielle und commercielle Verhältnisse, 294 ff.); while in Saxony, according to
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Engel</span></span> (1821), a pound of wheat cost on an average 7.8
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">pfennigs</span></span>, and a pound of tallow 30 <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">p.</span></span>
+However, Russia's recent progress in civilization has had for effect: that the exportation
+of tallow (1833 = 4-½ million <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">puds</span></span>; 1869 = 2-¼ mill.) has greatly
+fallen off; while that of butter and live stock has increased. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">v.
+Lengefeld</span></span>, R. im 19. Jahrh., 220 ff.)
+</p>
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+In England, during the fourteenth century, a pound of meat cost, on an
+average, ¼d.; of lard, from 1-½ to 2. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Rogers</span></span>, I, 411.) On the
+other hand, from 1848 to 1856, the average January price of beef from America was
+110 shillings; of tallow from St. Petersburg, 48s. 11d. per cwt.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Newmarch</span></span>.) And so, in the time of <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Pallas</span></span>,
+the Cossacks chased the deer of their steppes only for the sake of its skin and horns.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Pallas</span></span>, Reise, III, 524.) While the Greeks got horn from Macedonia
+and Thrace (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Herodot.</span></span>, VII, 156), it is a striking proof of high
+civilization that at Athens (?), about the time of the hundredth Olympiad, an ox-hide was
+worth only 3 drachmas, and the whole ox 77 drachmas. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Böckh</span></span>,
+Staatshaushalt, I, 105 ff.)
+</p>
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+As the ox is primarily serviceable as an object of food and an instrument
+of labor, and the sheep on the other hand, only an instrument to produce
+wool, it is easy to understand why, with the further advance of civilization,
+the price of oxen rises comparatively much more than the price of sheep. In
+Athens, during the time of Solon, an ox was equal in value to five sheep.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Plutarch</span></span>, Solon, 23.) So also in countries with a low
+civilization in the time of Polybius. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Polyb.</span></span>, XXXIV, 8;
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Gell.</span></span>, XI, 1.) Why the same was the case in Rome at the
+beginning of the Republic? (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Plut.</span></span>, Popl., 11). In
+England the proportion between the price of an ox and that of a sheep was,
+</p>
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+in 927 as 6:1 (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Henry</span></span>.)<br />
+in 1125 as 3:1<br />
+in 1182 as 6.3:1<br />
+in 1197 as 9:1<br />
+in 1229 as 8:1 (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Eden</span></span>.)<br />
+in 1260-1492 (av.) as 9.2:1 (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Rog.</span></span>)<br />
+in 1497 as 10:1<br />
+in 1500 as 11.6:1<br />
+in 1511 as 8:1<br />
+in 1528 as 10:1<br />
+in 1529 as 12.8:1<br />
+in 1531 as 9.4:1<br />
+in 1551 as 10.6:1<br />
+in 1597 as 8.2:1 (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Eden</span></span>.)
+</p>
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+At present the proportion may be from 10 to 20:1. In Saxony, it is as
+48 thalers to 5.27. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Engel</span></span>.)</p></dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_800" name="note_800" href="#noteref_800">800.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">About 1793, Russia
+exported 10,000 rubles worth of fish, 452,000 of sturgeon bladders, 188,000 of
+caviar. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Storch</span></span>, Russland, II, 184.) But this had
+undergone a great change even in 1850. At present, there are 64 per
+cent. of sturgeon bladders, 27 of caviar, and 7 of whole fish.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Steinhaus</span></span>, Russland's industrielle und commercielle Verhältnisse,
+102, 368.) Yet the Astrakan fishermen still throw the greater number of the sturgeon they
+catch back into the water. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Pallas</span></span>, Reise im süd. Russland, I,
+189; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Steinhaus</span></span>, 99.) Salt fish are adapted for transportation to a
+distance not only because they can be preserved, but also because they may be caught and
+prepared on the great highway of the water. Athens got from the Black Sea besides wood,
+tar, wool, hides, cordage, honey, wax and slaves, also salt fish.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Wolf</span></span>, z. Demosth. Leptin., 252; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Bockh</span></span>,
+Staatshaush. I, 51.) The latter from Sardinia, Egypt and Spain.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Pollux</span></span>, VI, 48.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_801" name="note_801" href="#noteref_801">801.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">The principal
+countries that produce potash are Russia and North America.
+It is estimated that a cwt. of potash requires, on an average, 480 cwt.
+of wood. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Pfeil</span></span>, Grundsätze der Forstwirthsch. in Bezug.
+auf National-Oekon. etc., I, 128.) From 1800 to 1840, wood for fuel in Würtemberg trebled
+its price; for building material the price increased 1.6 times. (Deutsche
+Vierteljahrsschrift, 1847, No. 4, 104.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_802" name="note_802" href="#noteref_802">802.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Whereas barbarous nations
+take little trouble to turn the milk from their cows to account
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Roscher</span></span>, Ideen z. Politik und Statistik der Ackerbausysteme,
+Archiv. der politische Œkonomie, neue Folge, III, 202), <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Reuning</span></span>, in
+1844, calculated that the milk from all the cows in Saxony amounts to a value
+of 10,000,000 thalers, their meat to over 2,000,000, and the labor performed
+by them in various ways to 3,000,000. In Silesia, in the last decade of the
+eighteenth century, a quart of milk was estimated to be worth 2
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">pfennigs</span></span> (Festschrift der deutschen Landwirthschaftsversammlung,
+1869, 343), whereas as now it is sold almost everywhere for 12
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">pfennigs</span></span>. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Schmoller</span></span>.) In the
+rather high state of civilization which Saxony had reached at the end of the
+sixteenth century, when game was already dear, and the prices of other meat
+were almost as high as in 1800, a <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">sheffel</span></span> of rye was
+worth 44 measures (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Mass.</span></span>) of milk, and recently 82-⅔ measures.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Schmoller</span></span>, Tübinger Ztschr., 1871. 336 ff.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_803" name="note_803" href="#noteref_803">803.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">The principal
+cheese-producing countries and cities are Holland, Limburg,
+Switzerland, Gloucester, Chester, Ayrshire etc. Compare <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Roscher</span></span>,
+loc. cit., 195 ff.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_804" name="note_804" href="#noteref_804">804.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">In England, in the year 1000, a cow was worth only as much as
+two sheep. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Anderson</span></span>, Origin of Commerce, a., 979.) The best
+butter was worth only 1d. per pound in 1550, while pork was worth 1-1/8, veal and mutton,
+1-½, and beef, 2-¼d. The price of butter was exceedingly variable in the sixteenth
+century. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Eden</span></span>.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_805" name="note_805" href="#noteref_805">805.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">During the middle ages, pork
+constituted the most usual animal food even of the best classes.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Büsching</span></span>, Ritterzeit und Ritterwesen, I, 164.) Immense
+importance attached to pork by the <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Lex Salica</span></span>. (Tit., II, XIV;
+Emendatt. Caroli Magni, II, 1 ff.) The archbishop of Cologne used every day 24 large
+and 8 medium-sized hogs, and four more on the three great festivals. The
+abbot of Corvey used daily five fat and one lean hog, besides two young ones.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Kindlingen</span></span>, Münsterische Beitr., Urkunden, 147, 126.) In 1345, at
+the court of Dauphiny, there were used annually for 30 persons, 30 salt and 52 fresh
+hogs; whereas, in modern Paris, with 800,000 inhabitants, only 32,000 hogs
+are consumed yearly. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Roquefort</span></span>, De la Vie privée des Fr., I, 310
+f.) Compare herewith the place occupied by the swine-herds in the Odyssey in
+Greece's age of chivalry. In England, in the time of William I., woods were
+taxed according to the number of hogs they might feed. At present, there
+is an enormous production of hogs in Servia, which, in many places, constitutes
+the only source of ready money to the agricultural population.
+</p>
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+And about the end of the eighteenth century, it is said that Servia received
+from Austria alone 1,300,000 florins yearly for hogs. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ranke</span></span>, Serb.
+Revolution, 95.) In 1864, Servia's total exports amounted to 62,500,000 piasters,
+of which 28,162,260 were for hogs, 7,043,000 for wool, 7,662,000 for the
+skins of sheep and deer, 5,732,000 for cattle, 1,222,400 for tallow.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Kanitz</span></span>, Serbien, 598 ff.) Great production of hogs also in the
+Moldau and in Wallachia, in the United States and Mexico, where, instead of butter, only
+lard and suet are used; also in Lombardy, the Prussian Rhine province, Belgium,
+the English milk-producing districts, Gloucester, Wilt, Dumfries, Galloway
+and the districts where agricultural proletarians abound—Ireland and Yorkshire.
+It is a consequence of the same law that, among the South Sea Islanders,
+the hog was the principal domestic animal, as it still is among the
+Chinese. Similarly in the whole of Asia, beyond the Ganges (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ritter</span></span>,
+Erdkunde, IV, 938, 1101); in semi-barbarous upper Italy in the time of
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Polybios</span></span> (II, 15); in Gall itself, in the time of Augustus.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Strabo</span></span>, IV, 192, 197.) The America of the ancient Greeks, Sicily,
+exported hogs, mainly, in the time of Hermippos. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Athen.</span></span>, I, 27.)
+And even among the Romans, the consumption of pork was much greater than the consumption
+of beef. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Marquard-Becker</span></span>, Handbuch, V, 2, 39.)</p></dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_806" name="note_806" href="#noteref_806">806.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">In the cities of Prussia
+subject to a tax for the privilege of maintaining slaughter
+houses, a pound of beef cost on an average, in 1846, from 2 silver
+groschens, 5 <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">pfennigs</span></span>, to 3 s. gr. 4 pf.; pork, from 3 s. gr. 2 pf.
+to 4 s. gr. 4 pf. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Dieterici.</span></span>) In Moscow, also, the latter is
+dearer at present. Before the time of Peter the Great, it was cheaper.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Storch</span></span>, Handbuch I, 364.) It was a sign of high civilization, too,
+that in Florence, in the fifteenth century, veal cost, on an average, 2-½ soldi; mutton,
+2-⅓ soldi; but pork, 4 soldi. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Pagnini</span></span>,
+Saggio sopra il giusto Pregio delle Cose, 325 f., Cust.) It is especially the
+lower middle class who ask for fat meats. The very fat English sheep are
+taken not to London, but into the manufacturing districts.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Lauderdale</span></span>, Inquiry, 322 f.) As to whether the relatively high
+price of pork, and the fact that in the later times of Rome, the wild boar was the most
+fashionable dish, compare <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Becker</span></span>, Gallus, II,
+186.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_807" name="note_807" href="#noteref_807">807.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">The production of fowl is similar in this, that they are
+frequently fed from remains of consumption; only their production is not adapted to
+uncivilized countries, because it is difficult to protect them there. In Texas, it
+is said, it costs more to raise ten chickens than to bring up ten children.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Kennedy</span></span>, Czarnkowski's translation, 1846, 115.) The independent
+breeding of fowl is advisable only where there are a great many rich consumers; for
+the reason that they are naturally a delicacy. Enormous production of pigeons
+in Cambridge, Huntington etc. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">McCulloch</span></span>, Statistical Account, I,
+189.) In Paris the consumption of pork and fowl has gained somewhat since the Revolution.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">M'Chevalier</span></span>, Cours. I, 113.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_808" name="note_808" href="#noteref_808">808.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">According
+to <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Schuckburg</span></span>, Philosophical Transactions of 1798, and
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Kraus</span></span>, Vermischte Schriften, I, tab. I, the prices of the following
+species of animals rose in England between 1550 and 1795: horses, 904 per cent.; oxen,
+896 per cent.; sheep, 876 per cent.; cows, 2050 per cent.; hogs, 1964 per cent.;
+geese, 300 per cent.; butter rose from 5d. per pound to 11-½d.; beer from 1d.
+per gallon to 2-¾d.; agricultural day wages from ½s. to 1s. 5-¼d.; wheat 326
+per cent. Compare, however, Edinburg Review, III, 246 ff. In Germany
+also, cows and hogs have increased much more in price than horses and
+sheep. (Tübinger Ztschr., 1871, 342.) <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Dutot</span></span>, Réflexions, 946 ff.,
+éd. Daire, says that the value of the precious metals in France decreased in value between
+the times of Louis XII. and Louis XV. in the ratio of 3-79/91:1. On
+the other hand, the prices of different commodities rise in very different degrees:
+</p>
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Fat sheep, from 7 sous to 10 livres.<br />
+Lean sheep, from 5 sous to 5 livres 10 sous.<br />
+Hogs, from 10 sous to 25-35 livres.<br />
+Capons, from 1 sou to 12 sous.<br />
+Hens, from 1-½ sous to 6 sous.<br />
+Pigeons, from 1-½ sous to 3 sous.<br />
+Deer, from 1-½ sous to 15 sous.
+</p></dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_809" name="note_809" href="#noteref_809">809.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">Thus,
+in Thuringia, the average price in silver of corn from the sixteenth
+century until the period 1848-61 increased in the ratio of from 1 to 3-4; the
+price of the different kinds of animals, on the other hand, from 1 to 5-10.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Knies</span></span>, in <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hildebrand's</span></span> Jahrbb., 1863,
+78.) The price of the different kinds of corn as compared
+with one another may, however, be modified by many
+different circumstances. Thus the Capitulare Saxoniæ of 797, c., II, estimated
+the prices of rye, barley and oats to be to one another as 30:30:15;
+while the Magdeburg Chamber of 1804 estimated them to be as 17:14:8.
+In the kingdom of Saxony, in 1841-9, the average prices of wheat, rye,
+barley and oats stood to one another in the ratio of 144:100:75:47
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Engel</span></span>); while, in the middle ages, wheat, rye and
+oats were as 9:6:3 (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Gersdorf</span></span>,
+Cod. Depl. Sax., II, p. XXXIV); under Prince August, corn, barley and oats
+were as 24:22:12. Assuming the price of rye to be equal to 100, the cost
+was:
+</p>
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+At Brussels, in the 16th century, wheat 126.7, barley 80, oats 50<br />
+At Brussels, in the 17th century, wheat 138.8, barley 82.9, oats 51.9<br />
+At Brussels, in the 18th century, wheat 147, barley 86.7, oats 55.2<br />
+At Brussels, 1815-1844, wheat 156<br />
+At Brussels, 1841-1850, wheat 153, barley 82.7, oats 51<br />
+At Berlin, 1789-1818, wheat 135, barley 74.8, oats 54<br />
+At Berlin, 1819-1832, wheat 143.5, barley 74.9, oats 52
+</p>
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Rau</span></span>, Lehrbuch, I, § 183.) To understand this, it is necessary to
+bear in mind the relatively great increase of wheat bread, beer made of barley, and
+horses, as objects of luxury. The unusually low price of oats in North
+America, as compared with the price of wheat, is dependent on the facility
+of exporting the latter. In Florence, in the fifteenth century, the price of
+wheat was 22-⅔, of rye, 12, of barley, 8 <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">soldi</span></span>.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Pagnini</span></span>, Sopra il giusto
+Pregio delle Cose, 325.)</p></dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_810" name="note_810" href="#noteref_810">810.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">The
+English so called custom-house prices (<span lang="de" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="de"><span style="font-style: italic">Zollhauspreise</span></span>) correspond to
+the market prices of 1696. If these are assumed = 100, the price
+</p>
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Of steel and iron was, in 1826, 83, in 1831, 56<br />
+Of coal was, in 1826, 47, in 1831, 45
+</p>
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Between 1835 and 1850, Scotch iron had already become cheaper by one-half
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Meidinger</span></span>, 387), and coal in London by one-third
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Porter</span></span>).</p></dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_811" name="note_811" href="#noteref_811">811.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Rogers</span></span>,
+History of Agriculture, I, 67.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_812" name="note_812" href="#noteref_812">812.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">In
+England, in 1172, an ox cost 2 shillings; in 1175, green cloth cost per
+ell, 2-10/12 shillings; red cloth, 5-½ shillings. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Eden.</span></span>) In the
+western states of North America, the farmer gives two pounds of coarse wool for one pound
+of woolen yarn; he sends 4 bushels of wheat to the miller for the flour of
+three bushels (Ausland, 1843, No. 68), while in Ravenna, in the thirteenth
+century, the miller's fee was 1/10 (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">von Raumer</span></span>, Hohenstaufen II,
+437); according to the fixed prices in <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Fantazzi</span></span>, (Monumen.
+Ravennet.); in Germany, during the last centuries of the middle ages, 1/8
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">J. Grimm</span></span>, Weisthümer, III, 8); at the end of the sixteenth
+century from 1/8 to 1/5 (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Coler</span></span>, Oeconomia, II, 3); in
+modern Germany, generally 1/16 of the raw material, and in the steppes of
+southern Russia, when the wind is still, in summer, even the half. (Mitth.
+der freien ökonom. Gesellsch. zu Petersburg, 1853, 85.) In Guiana, in 1806,
+a very ordinary saddle and bridle could not be had under 10-½ guineas.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Pinckard</span></span>, Notes on the West Indies, III, 1806.)
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Count Görtz</span></span> was obliged to pay 2 dollars, in Demarara, for the
+cleansing of a rifle, and another person for the oiling of a carriage, 5 dollars.
+(Reise um die Welt, 1864, 327.) A lady's dress in Mobile costs four times
+as much as in London or Paris. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ch. Lyell</span></span>, Second Visit
+to the United States, II, 70.) In Athens, articles of clothing,
+even for the poorer classes, were never as cheap as they are in civilized
+countries to-day. (Compare <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Plutarch</span></span>, De Tranquill. Anim.,
+10.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_813" name="note_813" href="#noteref_813">813.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">In Upper
+Italy, between 1261 and 1400, a lady's chemise and the making
+of it cost 14.77 lire; Rheims linen, 7.04; ordinary mourning cloth, O.45; black
+cloth from Moriana, 2.83; cloth from Mecheln, 43.83; from Ypres, 47.04;
+scarlet cloth, 80.44 per ell. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Cibrario</span></span>, 1. 1.) On the
+other hand, to-day, in the Leipzig market, the difference in price of the dearest and of
+the cheapest cloth will scarcely surpass the ratio 18:1. Even
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Scaruffi</span></span>, Sulle Moneta, 1679, 163, Cust, remarks that hemp-linen
+and similar coarse articles had increased much more in price than brocades; but he
+ascribes this circumstance to the disordered state of the coinage. It is much better
+accounted for by <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Adam Smith</span></span>, Wealth of Nations, I, 386, ed.
+Basil.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_814" name="note_814" href="#noteref_814">814.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Before the plague in the fourteenth century,
+the cwt. of lead was worth 10-½d.; of iron, 4s. 1d. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Rogers</span></span>, I.
+599.) On the other hand, between 1848 and 1856, the average January price of
+bar-iron was £7, 11s.; of lead, over £20. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Newmarch.</span></span>)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_815" name="note_815" href="#noteref_815">815.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">Thus, in England, the price:
+</p>
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+Of glass was, in 1826, 387; in 1831, 369 per cent.<br />
+Of leather was, in 1826, 285; in 1831, 123 per cent.<br />
+Of silk goods was, in 1826, 158; in 1831, 249 per cent.<br />
+</p>
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+of the price of the same articles in 1796. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Rau.</span></span>) Of 29 chemical
+products of the Parisian manufacture, the wages of labor is on an average only 7.4
+per cent. of the selling price; and, in some cases, only from 1 to 2 per cent.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Chabrol</span></span>, Richerches Statistiques sur la Ville de Paris, 1821;
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hermann</span></span>, Staatsw. Untersuch., 137.) In Buschtiehrad, between 1670
+and 1870, barley rose from 1 to 4.8; hops to 6.52; fire wood to 6.14; the excise to 6.54;
+but beer only to 2.81; although wages increased ten fold. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Inama
+Sternegg</span></span>, Gesch. der Preise im österreich. Ausstellungsbericht von 1873,
+43.)</p></dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_816" name="note_816" href="#noteref_816">816.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">A silk cloak lined with fur cost in
+the time of Charlemagne, 400 scheffels of rye, one not so lined 200.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hullmann</span></span>, Finanzgeschichte, 212 ff.) In
+Florence in the fifteenth century, one pound of sugar was equal in value to
+15 pounds of mutton. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Pagnini</span></span>, 326.) In Turin, in
+the fourteenth century, 1 pound of pepper was equal in value to 28 pounds of
+salt. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Cibrario</span></span>, III, 359, 362.) As late as the middle
+of the fifteenth century, the court of Duke William of Saxony paid for one
+pound of sugar 1 thaler and 8 groschens, while ducal fees paid to servants and
+workmen seldom exceeded 2 gr. Hence, even at a princely meal, often scarcely
+½ a pound was consumed. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Büsching</span></span>, Ritterzeit, I, 137 f.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_817" name="note_817" href="#noteref_817">817.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Charlemagne's
+capitularies suppose a merchant's profits to be from 100 to
+200 per cent. (a. 809, c. 34.) And even in our own day, merchants in the
+markets of Cabul are frequently not satisfied with a profit of from 300 to 400
+per cent. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">K. Ritter</span></span>, Erdkunde, VII, 244), and the caravans
+which leave Maroc for the Soudan are wont, in exchange for commodities amounting in
+price to 1,000,000 piasters, to return with a supply of other commodities worth
+10,000,000. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Stein-Wappäus</span></span>, Handbuch, Africa, 33.) According
+to <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Büsch</span></span>, Geldumlauf, II, 10, the price of East Indian
+products in Hamburg was some 70 per cent. higher than at home, while
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Pliny</span></span>, H. N. IV, 26, speaks of a price one hundred times
+(?) as high; and its spices, at the time of Portuguese dominion, were sold at
+a profit of at least 600 per cent., in Europe. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Crawfurd</span></span>,
+History, VII, 360; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ritter</span></span>, Erdkunde, V, 872.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_818" name="note_818" href="#noteref_818">818.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">When
+Humboldt found a missionary near Cumana who paid 7 piasters
+for a cow, and was obliged to pay 17 piasters for blood-letting, rather unskilfully
+performed, he found an illustration of one of the peculiarities of colonial
+life—to have all the wants of higher stages of civilization but not the
+means of satisfying them. (Relation historique, I, 374.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_819" name="note_819" href="#noteref_819">819.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Enormous
+payments made to distinguished virtuosi, actors, sophists and
+hetares at the time in question, also to Appelles, Aristides etc., for works of
+art. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Plin.</span></span>, XXXIV, 19, 2, XXXV, 36, 19.) The actor Aesopus
+(see § 233, note 6) had a fortune worth 20,000,000 sesterces, while Pompey, for instance,
+had 70,000,000. Roscius received from the state for every day he played,
+286 thalers, and earned 43,000 a year. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Mommsen</span></span>, Römische
+Geschichte, III, 483, 547.) Compare <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Cicero</span></span>, pro Roscio Comœdo,
+10, and <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Plin.</span></span>, H. N. IX, 59, X, 72. The zither-player,
+Amoebaeos, received one talent for each appearance. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Athen.</span></span>
+XIV, 623.) According to <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Pliny</span></span>, H. N. XXIX, 5, the Roman
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">principes</span></span> gave the most distinguished doctors yearly 250,000
+sesterces, and even more as an honorarium. At the end of the eighteenth century, the
+greatest Parisian actors received from 4,000 to 5,000 francs per annum. Now
+100,000 is considered a moderate income for one. (Journ. des Economistes,
+May, 1854, 279.) It is said that Frederick Hase earned $30,000 in America
+in ten weeks. (Leipz. Tagebb., 15 Jan., 1871.) <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Steuart</span></span>,
+Principles, II, ch. 30. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Adam Smith</span></span> frequently represents
+it as a rule, that superfluous goods like gold and silver, are dearest among
+the richest nations, necessary goods among the poorer, and
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">vice versa</span></span>. But the supply has much more to do with
+the permanent price of a commodity than the demand for it has. And the
+principle above mentioned applies only in so far as the supply is here an unlimited
+and there a limited one. Hence, the comparison of silver with painters'
+and sculptors' works is not an apposite one—in the case of these there is a
+natural monopoly, while the former, on account of its durability and capacity
+for transportation, may, on the contrary, be increased almost at pleasure.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_820" name="note_820" href="#noteref_820">820.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Besides <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Böckh.</span></span>, Staatshaushalt
+der Athener, 1817, Book I, compare <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Arbuthnot</span></span>,
+Tables of ancient Coins, Weights and Measures, 2d ed., 1754,
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Reitmeyer</span></span>, Ueber den Bergbau der Alten, 1785, and
+Michaelis, De Pretiis Rerum apud veteros Hebræos, in the Comment. Societ.
+Gottingensis, vol. III. The principal sources of information among the
+ancients are <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Diodor.</span></span>, V; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Strabo</span></span>,
+III, V; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Plin.</span></span>, H. N., XXXIII.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_821" name="note_821" href="#noteref_821">821.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">The money revenue of the Persian king, to
+the amount of 14,560 talents yearly, was transformed into bars and thus
+deposited in the treasury. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Herodot.</span></span>,
+III, 95 f. Even the little vassal prince Pythios of Celænæ had a treasure
+of 2,000 talents of silver and 4,000,000 pieces of gold. (Ibid, VII, 26 f.)
+On the money stores of private persons, see <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Plin.</span></span>, H.
+N., XXXIII, 47.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_822" name="note_822" href="#noteref_822">822.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">An
+ox was worth, in Solon's time, 5 drachmas; in 410 B.C., 51 dr.; 374
+B.C., 77¼ dr.; a medimnos of wheat in Solon's time, 1 dr., about 390, 3 dr.,
+under Alexander the Great, on an average, 5 dr. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Böckh.</span></span>,
+I, 102, f.) The usual amount of ransom paid for a prisoner of war, in Kleomenes' time,
+was 2 minæ (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Herodot.</span></span>, V, 77, VI, 79); under Dionys., I,
+300 m. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Aristot.</span></span>, Oeconom, II, 21); under Philip of Macedon,
+from 300 to 400 m. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Demosth.</span></span>, De fals. Legat., 394); under
+Demetrios Poliorketes, 1,000 for a free man, 5 for a slave.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Diod.</span></span>, XX, 84.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_823" name="note_823" href="#noteref_823">823.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">This
+booty for Susa alone amounted to from 40,000 to 50,000 talents; for
+Persepolis, to 120,000; for Pasargadæ, to 600. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Curtius</span></span>,
+V, 2, 6; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Strabo</span></span>, XV, 731; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Justin</span></span>,
+XI, 14; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Arrian</span></span>, III, 16; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Diod.</span></span>,
+XVII, 66, 71; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Plutarch</span></span>, Alex., 36.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_824" name="note_824" href="#noteref_824">824.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Oros.</span></span>,
+VI, 19; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Dio, C.</span></span>, LI, 21; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Suet.</span></span>,
+Aug., 41. Decline of the value of
+money under Constantine the Great, when the precious objects of the heathen
+temples were coined. (Monitio ad Theod., Aug. de inbidenda Largitate,
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Thes.</span></span>, Antt. Renn., XI, 1415; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Taylor</span></span>,
+ad Warm. Sandvic, 38.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_825" name="note_825" href="#noteref_825">825.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Compare
+I Kings, 10, 14, 27 ff.; I Chron., 22, 2 ff.; II Chron., 9, 15 f.,
+12, 10 ff. On Ophir: <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">K. Ritter</span></span>, Erdkunde, XIV,
+407 f.; on the wonders of the discovery of Spain: <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Herodot.</span></span>,
+IV, 152. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Aristot.</span></span>, De Mirab., 146; Diodor,
+V, 35 ff. On the other hand, of Greece, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Athen.</span></span> VI, 19
+ff.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_826" name="note_826" href="#noteref_826">826.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Compare
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Plin.</span></span>, H. N., XIV, 1. Yet the value of money in the time of
+the Cæsars seems to have stood much higher than it is now, as is proved, for
+instance, by the endowments by Trajan (16 sesterces per month for boys,
+and 12 sesterces per month for girls), as the <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">alimenta</span></span>
+furnished them according to Digest XXXIV, 1, embraced their entire support.
+Compare the excellent essay on this subject by <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Rodbertus</span></span>,
+in <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hildebrand's</span></span> Jahrbb., 1870, I.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_827" name="note_827" href="#noteref_827">827.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">The
+conquest of the Avares seems to have temporarily produced a considerable
+cheapness of the precious metals. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Guérard</span></span>, Polyptiques,
+I, 141.) Increase of the value of money in Scandinavia, during the later part of the
+middle ages. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Wilda</span></span>, Gesch. des deutschen Strafrechts, I, 323
+ff.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_828" name="note_828" href="#noteref_828">828.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">In England, from 1279 to 1509, there were coined on an
+average only 6,868½ pounds sterling; from 1603 to 1830, on the other hand, 819,415 pounds
+sterling. The average in the time of George IV., per annum, was 4,262,652
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Jacob</span></span>, ch. IV.) An evidence of the uncertainty of the history
+of prices in the middle ages is, that <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Jacob</span></span>, ch. 12,
+infers, from the price of corn, that the price of silver remained rather stationary
+from 1120 to 1550, while <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Adam Smith</span></span>, I, ch. 11, 3, infers from
+the same fact, a remarkable rise in the price of silver from 1350 to 1570.
+Concerning the latter, see <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Leber</span></span>, Fortune
+privée au moyen Age, 16 f. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Tooke-Newmarch</span></span>, History of Prices,
+VI, 391; whereas <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Rogers</span></span>, Statist. Journ., 1861, 544 ff., finds
+that in England, between 1300 and 1532, there was no change whatever in the price
+of silver. According to <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Soetbeer</span></span>, Forschungen zur deutschen
+Geschichte, VI, 94, wheat and rye were, as compared with silver, worth during the
+Carolingian period, about one-fourth of its value, between 1750 and 1850.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hegel</span></span>, Shassburger Chroniken, II, 1012, ascribes to gold over
+2½ times as great a purchasing power in the 13th and 14th centuries as in the 19th
+century; and to silver, a purchasing power about three times as great.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_829" name="note_829" href="#noteref_829">829.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">The
+silver ores of Peru and Mexico yield, on an average, only from 2 to
+3 per 1,000 of metal; those of Potosi, at present, scarcely 1 per 1,000; those
+of Mexico, according to <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Humboldt</span></span>, on an average, from 3 to 4
+ounces per cwt.; so that many of the European ores are decidedly richer. While the
+veins of the Saxon mine, Himmelsfürst, have a breadth of only from 0.2 to
+0.3 meters; the Veta-Madre of Guanaxuato, is in few parts less than 8, and
+it is sometimes even 50 meters broad; and the Veta-Grade of Zacatecas is
+from 5 to 10 meters in breadth. In Pasco there are veins of silver ore which
+have 114 and even 123 meters. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Tschudi</span></span>, Reise in Peru, K., 12;
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Chevalier</span></span>, Cours, III, 184 ff., 241 ff. According to
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Humboldt</span></span>, Essai sur la Nouvelle Espagne, III, p. 413, eleven
+times as many miners are needed at Himmelsfürst
+as at Valenciana to obtain the same quantity of silver.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_830" name="note_830" href="#noteref_830">830.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Thus, for instance, the
+celebrated ransom-money of Athahualpa (even according to <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Garcilaso
+de la Vega</span></span>) amounted to only 5,000,000 thalers, while the French King John, after
+the battle of Poitiers, in 1356, had to pay 41,000,000 francs for his ransom.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Leber</span></span>, Fortune privée au moyen Age, 121 ff.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_831" name="note_831" href="#noteref_831">831.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Compare
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">M. Chevalier</span></span>, III, 190 ff. Discovery of the quicksilver mines
+of Guancavelica, 1567.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_832" name="note_832" href="#noteref_832">832.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">The yield
+of Potosi amounted from 1545 to 1638, to 395,619,000 pesos.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ulloa</span></span>, Viage, II, I, 13.) Up to the present time,
+the aggregate yield there has been estimated at from 6,000 to 7,000
+million francs.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_833" name="note_833" href="#noteref_833">833.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">On the worse grounded assumptions of
+former writers, see <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Humboldt</span></span>,
+N. Espagne, IV, 237.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_834" name="note_834" href="#noteref_834">834.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">There
+was really introduced into Spain, about 1525, not much over 2,000,000
+francs annually; and after 1550, six times as much. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">L.
+Ranke</span></span>, Fürsten und Völker, I, 347 ff.) Compare <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Humboldt</span></span>,
+Ueber die Schwankungen der Goldproduction, in the Vierteljahrsschrift, 1838, IV,
+18.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_835" name="note_835" href="#noteref_835">835.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">On the Brazilian
+exports of gold in the 18th century, see <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Schäfer</span></span>, Gesch.
+von portugal, V, 192 ff.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_836" name="note_836" href="#noteref_836">836.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">According to <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Humboldt</span></span>, N.E., IV,
+218, the amount up to the beginning of this century was 17,000 kilogrammes of gold
+and 800,000 kilogrammes of silver.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_837" name="note_837" href="#noteref_837">837.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Thus, for instance, Mexico,
+during this period yielded, on an average, 65,000,000 francs, instead of the former
+amount of from 130,000,000 to 140,000,000. In Carro de Potosi, there were, in 1826,
+of the former 132 pool-works only 12 in operation. Compare
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Adams</span></span>, The Actual State of the Mexican Mines, 1822.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Jacob</span></span> assumes that about 1830, the quantity of money
+in Europe and America was 1/6th less than in 1809. (Ch. 28.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_838" name="note_838" href="#noteref_838">838.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Of this, 1,800 kilogrammes of
+gold from the United States.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_839" name="note_839" href="#noteref_839">839.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Fischer</span></span>, Geschichte
+des deutschen Handels, 2d ed., II, 616 ff., 673 ff. But
+the Schwaz mines, in the Tyrol, are said to have produced, until 1523,
+55,000 marks annually; the Freiberg silver mine, from 1542 to 1616, 16,000
+marks annually. Compare <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">von Langen</span></span>, Kurfürst Moritz, II,
+56.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_840" name="note_840" href="#noteref_840">840.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">The Russian gold ores, quite insignificant before the year
+1814, have made very great progress since 1840. Their aggregate yield, between 1814
+and 1861, not taking into account the amount embezzled, amounted to 37,000
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">puds</span></span>, the <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">pud</span></span> being equal to 16.3
+kilogrammes. The best year, 1847, gave a yield of 1,757 <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">puds</span></span>;
+1852-1861, an average of 1,556 <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">puds</span></span>; 1861 alone, 1,442
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">puds</span></span>, of which 1,041 came from the private Siberian gold-sand
+washings. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Walcker</span></span>, in Faucher's Vierleljahrsschrift, 1869,
+II, 115.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_841" name="note_841" href="#noteref_841">841.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Spanish silver production yielded, in 1845, over
+184,000 marks; in 1850, over 291,000. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Willkomm</span></span>, Halbinsel
+der Pyranäen, 1855, 537.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_842" name="note_842" href="#noteref_842">842.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Annales des Mines, X, 831
+ff.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_843" name="note_843" href="#noteref_843">843.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Of this amount, there came to Europe, not including Russia,
+150,000 kilogrammes of silver, 2,650 kilogrammes of gold; to Russia, 24,000 kilogrammes
+of silver and 30,000 kilogrammes of gold (embracing the quantities
+probably withdrawn without the knowledge of the custom's authorities); to
+the rest of Asia, 100,000 kil. of gold; to Africa, 4,000. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">M.
+Chevalier.</span></span>)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_844" name="note_844" href="#noteref_844">844.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">According to
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Humboldt's</span></span> assumption before the time of Columbus, Europe
+had a circulation of 170,000,000 piasters; about 1600, of 600,000,000;
+about 1700, of 1,400,000,000; in 1809, of about 1,824,000,000. Up to 1803,
+there was produced in America, 9,915,000 marks (Spanish) of gold, and
+512,700,000 of silver. (N.E., 245.) <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Gallatin</span></span> estimates that,
+before Columbus, there were 1,600,000,000 francs; in 1830, in Europe and America,
+from 22,000,000,000 to 27,000,000,000 francs. (Considerations on the Currency and
+Banking System of the United States, 1831.) According to <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">M.
+Chevalier</span></span>, 1850, all the silver which America produced had a volume of only 11,657
+cubic meters; and all the gold of only 151 cubic meters. The latter, therefore,
+would not even fill the half of a French gentleman's <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">salon</span></span>.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_845" name="note_845" href="#noteref_845">845.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">All the more
+in favor with governments because they affect principally
+foreign consumers. Thus, the Spanish government at first imposed a tax of
+50 per cent. of the gross yield of the raw material, on the purchaser of silver;
+since 1503, under Orando, of 33-⅓ per cent.; and later yet, of 20 per
+cent. This last tax was therefore in full force under Cortes. This tax was
+reduced in Mexico, in 1725, and in Peru in 1736, to 10 per cent., and later, in
+the case of gold, to 3 per cent. Heavy taxation of Russian gold ore (35 per
+cent. of the raw material), by virtue of the ukase of April 14, 1849. Compare
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">M. Chevalier</span></span>, III, 274.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_846" name="note_846" href="#noteref_846">846.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Cantillon</span></span>, Nature
+du Commerce, 215, 236, shows very clearly how the increase
+of the price of commodities was produced, in the first instance, by the
+increased consumption of the possessors of gold, and how it, therefore, first
+affected those commodities which they especially desired.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_847" name="note_847" href="#noteref_847">847.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">This is the opinion of
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Adam Smith</span></span>. Similarly of <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">David Hume</span></span>, On
+Money. According to <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Letronne</span></span>, Considérations sur l'Evaluation
+des Monnaies Grecques et romaines, 119, and <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Böckh</span></span>,
+Staatshaushalt, I, 88, the average value of wheat in relation to silver was, in
+Athens, 400 B.C., as 1:3146; in Rome, 50 B.C., as 1:2681; in France, shortly before
+1520 after Christ, as 1:4320; in the nineteenth century it is as 1:1050.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Th. Smith</span></span>, De Republ. Anglorum, I, assumes that the price of
+silver, from the age of chivalry to 1625, decreased in the ratio of 120:40. The
+Spaniard, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Moncado</span></span> (1619), says as 6:1.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Jacob</span></span>, ch. 19.) <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Jacob</span></span>, himself, in
+comparison with his own time, as 7:1 (ch. 15.) Much more moderate is
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Newmarch</span></span> in <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Tooke's</span></span> History of Prices, VI,
+345 ff., who assumes an increase in the prices of commodities of about 200 per cent.
+The estimated value of tithe-wine (<span lang="de" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="de"><span style="font-style: italic">Zehntwein</span></span>) about doubled in lower Austria,
+during the sixteenth century. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Oberleitner</span></span>, Finanzlage N.
+Oesterreichs im 16 Jahrhundert, 36.) According to the important researches of
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Mantellier</span></span>, Mémoires de la Société Archéologique de l'Orleanais,
+vol. 1, 103 ff.; extract of <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Lespeyres</span></span> in
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hildebrand's</span></span> Jahrb., 1865, I, 1, the purchasing power of silver
+as compared with the average value of twenty-seven commodities, assuming it
+to have been 1 from 1750 to 1850, was, from 1350 to 1450, 2.9; from 1450 to
+1550, 2.8; from 1550 to 1650, 1.5; from 1650 to 1750, 2.1. According to
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Rogers</span></span>, the prices of corn in relation to silver were from 1596
+to 1636, at most 2.3 times as high as from 1260 to 1400; from 1637 to 1700, 2.6 times;
+from 1701 to 1764, 2.1 times; from 1726 to 1820, 3.2 times.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Rogers</span></span>, I, 180.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_848" name="note_848" href="#noteref_848">848.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">In Germany, the rise in prices was first
+observed in the price of foreign groceries, which partly rose 400 per cent. Popular
+opinion looked for the cause in the evil disposition of the large commercial houses.
+In order to facilitate the competition of the smaller houses with the larger, the
+Reichstag, in 1522, prohibited all companies with a capital of more than 50,000 florins;
+and, in 1524, the royal treasury wished to bring suit against the violators of
+this law. But the cities contrived to avert the blow. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">L. Ranke</span></span>,
+Geschichte der Reformation, II, 42 ff., 134 ff.) In Spain, the government, especially
+between 1550 and 1560, endeavored to oppose the growing dearness of goods
+of all kinds, by prohibiting the exportation of the most important commodities,
+and by putting obstacles in the way of retail trade. The lower classes in England
+ascribed the rise to the suppression of the monasteries (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Percy</span></span>,
+Reliques of ancient Poetry, II, 296), while Henry VIII. endeavored to improve
+the condition of things by laws against luxury, the governmental
+establishment of fixed prices, the expulsion of foreign merchants etc. (21
+Henry VIII.) The first writer who seems to have clearly seen the true cause of the
+changes in price was <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Bodinus</span></span>, Response aux Paradoxes de Mr.
+de Malestroit touchant l'Enchérissement de toutes Choses et des Monnaies
+(1568). This work was translated into Latin by <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">H. Conring</span></span>, 1671;
+and done over in the work: Discours sur les Causes de l'extrême Cherté, qui est
+aujourd'hui en France (1574). Next, we have the English author <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">W.
+S.</span></span>, A Compendious or briefe Examination of certayne ordinary Complaints of divers
+of our Countrymen of these our Days, London, 1581. In <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Befold's</span></span>
+Vitæ et Mortis Consideratio politica, 1623, 13 f., we have a right explanation
+of the <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">caritas sine inopia</span></span> which is to be considered as the
+common property of his time.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_849" name="note_849" href="#noteref_849">849.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Similarly
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Quesnay</span></span>, 77, Daire. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Sir J. Stewart</span></span>,
+Principes, ch. 3. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Kraus</span></span>, Vermischte Schriften, II, 131 ff.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hermann</span></span>, Staatsw. Unters., 127.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Helferich</span></span>, Von den periodischen Schwankungen im Werth der
+edlen Metalle, 1843, 70 f.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_850" name="note_850" href="#noteref_850">850.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">According to <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Cibrario</span></span>, a
+hectolitre of wheat was worth, in Turin, from 1289 to 1379, on an average, 905 gr. of
+fine silver; that is, about three times as much as in Paris before the discovery of
+America, and as much as in Paris from 1546 to 1556. In Turin, from 1825 to 1835, it was
+worth about 1702 gr. In the fifteenth century even, the foreign embassadors complain of
+the enormous cost of living there. So, for instance, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Raumer's</span></span>
+histor. Taschenbuch, 1833, 162. Compare also, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Carli</span></span>, Del Valore
+della Proporzione dei Metalli monetati con i Generi in Italia prima delle Scoperte dell'
+Indie, 1760, in which he, indeed, exaggerates the matter, and seeks to prove his
+views by the coarsest sophistry.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_851" name="note_851" href="#noteref_851">851.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">The chief result of <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Helferich's</span></span>
+excellent researches. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Helferich</span></span>, loc. cit.) The general
+opinion, indeed, is that this <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">statu quo</span></span> of the value of the
+precious metals was interrupted about the middle of the eighteenth century by
+another decline, and that the latter yielded to a subsequent rise in 1815 and
+afterwards. Thus <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">David Hume</span></span>, History of England, ch. 44, App. 31,
+ch. 49, App. A. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Young</span></span>, Political Arithmetics, ch. 6. More
+recently, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Rau</span></span>, Lehrbuch, I, § 176. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">M.
+Chevalier</span></span>, Cours, III, 320 ff. One of the principal advocates of the opinion that
+every increase made in the medium of circulation produces a corresponding depreciation
+is <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Nebenius</span></span>, Deutsche Vierteljahrsschrift (1841). In England a
+quarter of wheat was worth, on an average, 38s. 8/9d., from 1595 to 1685. On a similar
+stability of corn prices in Belgium, see <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Schwerz</span></span>, Belgische
+Landwirthschaft, III, 37. According to Suckburg (l.c.), the value in exchange of money
+from 1640 to 1700 declined 32-2/9 per cent.; from 1700 to 1760, 43 per cent.; from 1760
+to 1806, 84 per cent.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_852" name="note_852" href="#noteref_852">852.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">From 1637 to 1700 the price of corn in England
+averaged 51 shillings; from 1701 to 1764 only 40½ shillings.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_853" name="note_853" href="#noteref_853">853.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Thus,
+the dearness of wheat in Germany, during the first thirty years
+after the Thirty Years' War was caused, in large part, by the depopulation
+produced by the War.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_854" name="note_854" href="#noteref_854">854.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">In Germany, also, the cause of the
+enhanced dearness of so many goods during the Thirty Years' War is to be sought for
+in the goods themselves.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_855" name="note_855" href="#noteref_855">855.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Since 1815, most Birmingham and Sheffield wares have
+fallen from 50 to 70 or 80 per cent. in price—at least from 20 to 30.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">McCulloch</span></span>, Statist. Account, I, 705.) The Quarterly Review,
+May, 1830, speaks even of an average decline of prices of English commodities in
+general, of 50 per cent.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_856" name="note_856" href="#noteref_856">856.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Excellently carried out in
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Tooke</span></span>, History of Prices, III, 1838. That the world's market is
+not so very readily affected by an increase of the medium of circulation, is
+established by this fact, among others, that the immense exportation of French
+metallic money in consequence of the issue of paper money between 1716 and 1720, and
+again in 1790 and the following years, is coincident with very low prices of wheat in
+the neighboring countries. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Helferich</span></span>, loc. cit., 139, 190 ff.)
+And yet, in the former case, the amount was 400,000,000 francs, and in the latter, at
+least 1,000,000.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_857" name="note_857" href="#noteref_857">857.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Jacob</span></span>
+estimates this part at only 2-½ per cent., <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">McCulloch</span></span>, at 20,
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Lowe</span></span> at 25, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Necker</span></span> and
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Helferich</span></span> at 50, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Humboldt</span></span> at 66-⅔ of the
+whole quantity worked. It certainly is, in our day, on account of the ever growing
+aggregate supply, greater than hitherto; but it is very different in different countries.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Nebenius</span></span>, Deutsche Vierteljahrsschrift, 1851, 56 seq., estimates
+the aggregate consumption of new gold and silver for industrial purposes at 14-½
+piasters yearly, and in addition to this seven millions of old gold and silver
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Bruchgold und Bruchsilber</span></span>). The annual wear and tear of
+previously existing articles of gold and silver, it is estimated, amounts to 4,420,000
+piasters (1/420); the annual increase of their aggregate amounts in Europe to 6,000,000
+piasters (1-½ per cent., corresponding to the increase of population), and 4,200,000
+(one-fifth of the entire consumption), is employed, as he claims, in
+gilding, plating etc. The last item is probably much increased by galvanic
+silver-plating, the invention of photography etc.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_858" name="note_858" href="#noteref_858">858.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Jacob</span></span> embraces in the
+amount of metal employed in industrial purposes, in the sixteenth and seventeenth
+centuries, 1/5 of the amount which, after deducting the loss in Asiastic trade, was
+added to the gold and silver stores of Europe; i.e., in the seventeenth century, about
+2,500,000 piasters yearly; in the eighteenth century, ⅔ (!); that is, annually,
+15,000,000 piasters; in 1830, in England, £2,457,221; in France, 120,000; Switzerland,
+350,000; in the rest of Europe, 1,605,490; in North America, about 300,000; altogether,
+£5,900,000. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Humboldt's</span></span> estimate is 21,000,000 piasters;
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">McCulloch's</span></span>, £6,050,000. According to the records of the Paris
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Monnaie</span></span>, the amount of silver ware in France increased seven fold
+between 1709 and 1759. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Humboldt</span></span>.) In England, between
+1807 and 1814, 8,290,000 ounces of silver were stamped for manufacturing
+purposes, from 1830 to 1837, only 7,387,000; in 1851, 924,000.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">McCulloch</span></span> estimates the annual consumption of silver, in
+Birmingham alone, for plating purposes, at 150,000 ounces; in Sheffield, at 500,000; and
+the gold consumption in the pottery districts at £650 per week. Birmingham consumed
+(1831) for gilding purposes, £1,000 gold yearly. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Whately.</span></span>) It now
+employs weekly 3,000 ounces of gold and 6,000 ounces of silver in the manufacture
+of gold and silver ware, besides the quantity intended for gilding
+and silver-washing purposes. (Quart. Rev., April, 1866, 381.) The jewelers
+of New York manufacture yearly 3,000,000 of dollars worth of gold and
+silver ware, mostly new material. (Economist, April 16, 1853.) There were
+in Vienna, in 1781, only 167 workers in gold and silver; in 1840, 229; in 1847,
+539. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Baumgartner</span></span>, in the Wiener Akademie, May 3, 1857.)
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Jacob</span></span> estimates the aggregate mass of gold and silver ware, in
+plate, instruments etc., in Europe and America, to be 1-¼ as great as that of the ready
+money; and in England alone to be twice as great (ch. 28); while
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Tengoborski</span></span> thinks that at the beginning of the nineteenth
+century, the coin constituted ⅔ of the entire amount of the precious metals. Sometimes a
+movement in the opposite direction takes place, as, for instance, in those revolutions
+in which the silver of the church was confiscated; in the unfortunate wars of Louis
+XIV., etc. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Nebenius</span></span>, loc. cit., 17, mentions a South German
+silversmith who melted down in the years succeeding 1802, monastery silver to the
+amount of 11,000,000 guldens.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_859" name="note_859" href="#noteref_859">859.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">On the wear and tear of
+coin, see § <a href="#Section_120" class="tei tei-ref">120</a>, and <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hermann</span></span>, in
+the Archiv. der politischen Oek., I, 1841. Compare also, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Faust</span></span>,
+Concilia pro Aerario, 1641, 263 ff. This wear and tear is so great that
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">M. Chevalier</span></span> supposes that it alone would suffice to reduce an
+amount of money under Constantine the Great of 5,000 millions to 300 millions, in the
+time of Philip IV. (ob. 1314.) Cours, II, 322. How great a number of coins, especially
+of the smaller denominations, are entirely lost is evident from the fact, that at the
+time of the demonetization of the 15-sous and 30-sous pieces of 1791-92, amounting to
+25,000,000, only 16,000,000 were presented for redemption. Of the 10-centime
+pieces stamped with an N, amounting to 3,286,932 francs, there were only
+2,000,000 left when they were withdrawn from circulation, and this although
+individuals had added to the coinage. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">M. Chevalier</span></span>, III, 321.)
+The total loss caused on this score, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">McCulloch</span></span> estimates at 1 per
+cent. per annum, and <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Helferich</span></span>, at ¾ per cent. The greater the
+aggregate stock of gold and silver, the greater the absolute amount of wear and tear.
+If, therefore, there were annually an equal influx of mineral products to the markets,
+the pressure of this increase of supply from that cause alone would take the shape of a
+converging series of prices. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Tooke</span></span>, History of Prices, II, 151
+ff.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_860" name="note_860" href="#noteref_860">860.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">The British East India Company
+exported gold and silver on an average per annum from:
+</p>
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+1711-1720, £434,000<br />
+1721-1730, 532,000<br />
+1731-1740, 487,000<br />
+1741-1750, 631,000<br />
+1751-1760, 571,000<br />
+1761-1770, 152,000<br />
+1771-1780, 43,000<br />
+1781-1790, 393,000<br />
+1791-1800, 352,000<br />
+1801-1807, 852,000
+</p>
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Milburn</span></span>, Oriental Commerce, 1813, 419. According to
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">M. Chevalier</span></span>, Introduction
+aux Rapports de l'Exposition de 1867, the trade of Europe and
+North America, with India, China, Japan and the Australian islands,
+amounted in 1800, to only 410 million francs, in 1866, to 4,024 million. Yet,
+for a time, the largely increased exportation of English manufactures to East
+India and of East Indian opium to China, had changed the relation so that
+the exportation of the precious metals from South Asia, by a great deal, more
+than counterbalanced the imports. On the other hand, between 1853 and 1856
+240,000,000 thalers were shipped to India and China from England and the
+Mediterranean harbors; in 1863 and 1864, even as much as 300 millions, to
+be, for the most part, buried there. Moreover, the immense quantity of cash
+money—often as much as from 12 to 15 million in pounds sterling—in the
+state treasury, and silver ornaments (§§ 44, 123) customary in India, demand
+a considerable yearly supply to make up for wear. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Newmarch</span></span> speaks
+of 400 million pounds sterling which can be maintained in its condition hitherto by
+a yearly increase of 1 per cent. (History of Prices, VI, 723.) From 1865 to
+1869, English steamships carried gold and silver to the East in the following
+quantities, yearly: 93.9, 66.3, 24.6, 70.2 and 60.4 million thalers, in addition
+to which almost as much came directly from California. Statist. Journ.,
+1871, 122 seq.</p></dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_861" name="note_861" href="#noteref_861">861.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Tooke-Newmarch</span></span>, History of
+Prices, VI, 147 ff., estimates the aggregate stock of gold at
+the end of 1848 at £5,600,000; in 1856, at £172,000,000 more.
+According to <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Lavasseur</span></span>, the amount of silver in the East
+increased, between 1848 and 1857, from 22 to 24 milliards of francs; and the amount of
+gold from 9-½ to 15-½ milliards. (Annuarie d'Economie politique, 1858, 632.) The
+total amount of gold and silver in the civilized world, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Wolowski</span></span>
+estimated at from 55 to 60 milliards of francs, in 1870. (L'Or et l'Argent, Enquête, 19.)
+Compare <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Mason</span></span>, The Gold Regions of California from the Official
+Reports, 1848. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Tengoborski</span></span>, Sur les Gîtes aurifères de la
+Californie et de l'Australie, 1853. Goldfield's Statistics issued from the Mining
+Department in Victoria, 1862. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">W. R. Blake</span></span>, The Production of the
+precious Metals, or statist. Notice of the principal Gold and Silver producing Regions
+of the World (New York, 1869).</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_862" name="note_862" href="#noteref_862">862.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Soetbeer's</span></span>
+Denkschrift betr. die deutsche Münzeinigung Mai, 1869, and earlier yet, in
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Faucher's</span></span> Vierteljahrsschrift, 1865, II. According to
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">M. Chevalier</span></span>, all the mines of the world, a short time previous
+to 1865, produced 284,000 kilogrammes of gold, and 190,000 kilogrammes of silver in a
+year: a total of 373,000 thalers (Journal des Economistes, June, 1866), while, in
+1848, the total amount of gold coinage in the world was estimated at 560,000,000;
+Great Britain, France, North America and Sidney had, since that
+time and up to 1871, added to this £597,780,000. The additions have been
+made in decreasing quantities: thus, 1857-59, 37.2 millions annually; 1869-71,
+16.99 millions annually. (Statist. Journ., 1872, 376 ff.) The estimates as to
+how much a gold-digger might make in a day have been variously estimated.
+Thus, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Larkin</span></span> estimates it from $25 to $50;
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Mason</span></span>, at $10; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Folson</span></span>, at $25 to
+$40; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Butler King</span></span>, at $16, reckoning one ounce at $16. All these
+estimates seem to give an altogether too high average. In Australia, according to
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Khull</span></span>, Colonial Review, June, 1853, a digger can produce only one
+ounce daily, or less than 4 thalers. According to <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">W. Stamer</span></span>,
+Recollections of a Life of Adventure, II, 1866, a gold-washer in Victoria earned in
+1858, on an average, £250 per year; in 1865, only £70; while day labor was worth 15
+shillings. Hence, great hopes have to be built on the lottery-nature of gold-washing.
+On the Rhine, a gold-washer is satisfied with ⅔ of a gramme of
+gold, that is worth from 13 to 18 silver groschens. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Daubrée</span></span>,
+Comptes rendus de l' Académie des Sciences, XXII, 639.) It should be borne in mind,
+however, that the Rhine-lander devotes to gold-washing only the leisure time
+which his avocation as a fisherman leaves him, while the gold-washer in the
+new world, as a rule, devotes his whole time to it; and that his labors are interrupted
+by the long rainy season, attacks of fever etc. To this must be
+added the great difference of the average prices of the means of subsistence
+and the difference of all social conditions.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_863" name="note_863" href="#noteref_863">863.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">Compare, for instance, on the early
+productiveness of the Brazilian gold districts which soon ceased:
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Spix und Martius</span></span>, Reise nach Brasilien, I, 262 f.,
+350. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Gardner</span></span>, Travels in the Interior of Brazil, 1846. On
+Hispaniola, see <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Benzoni</span></span>, N. Mundo, I, 61, and
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Peschel</span></span>, Gesch. der Entdeckungen, 304, 556.
+Hitherto, gold had been obtained by the usual mining process, only in very
+few places. As a rule, it has been found in alluvial land not far from the
+surface. Compare <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ansted</span></span>, The Gold-Seekers' Manual, 1849. These
+circumstances have made the production of gold important from the first; and
+they still make it comparatively easy, while it causes little demand for capital
+but for great skill. As soon, therefore, as the greater part of the country
+washed for gold has been worked, which does not require a long time, the
+whole is abandoned, while in the production of silver the great amount of
+capital fixed in pits, shafts, kilns etc. ties the parties engaged in the enterprise
+to the spot, and necessitates the continuation of the enterprise. In recent
+times, however, Australia and California have developed the mining and
+machine production of gold to a surprising extent. According to
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Laur</span></span>, La Production des Métaux précieux en Californie, 1862, 33,
+and the Journal des Economistes, Nov. 1862, Californian gold-quartz produced, in 1851,
+on an average, 635 francs per ton; in 1860, only from 80 to 85 francs; but the
+gold-washing methods have become cheaper in the ratio of 2,500:1. However,
+the production of the precious metals seems even now to be decreasing.
+According to the Statist. Journal, 1866, 99, it amounted on an average to:
+</p>
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+in 1849-51, gold £23.9 million, silver £15.5 million.<br />
+in 1852-56, gold 38.7 million, silver 16.1 million.<br />
+in 1857-59, gold 36.5 million, silver 17.1 million.<br />
+in 1860-63, gold 33.5 million, silver 18.2 million.<br />
+in 1864-68, gold 30.0 million, silver 19.5 million.
+</p>
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+The number of gold-diggers in Victoria steadily decreased from 125,764 in
+1857, to 63,053 in 1867.</p></dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_864" name="note_864" href="#noteref_864">864.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">One of the
+chief difficulties in the way of the production of gold is the
+loss by embezzlement, which is estimated at an average of 20 per cent.
+Small companies of men working on their own account would be less exposed
+to temptation, and the Anglo-Saxon races and the North Americans
+are very well adapted thereto. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">M. Chevalier</span></span>, III,
+261.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_865" name="note_865" href="#noteref_865">865.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Gold
+is in a certain sense one of the most widespread of metals, although
+it is found anywhere only in small quantities; so that on the Rhine, for instance,
+it takes from 17 to 22 millions of gold grains to make a kilogramme.
+An extraordinary large number of places owe their civilization to gold-seekers.
+Compare <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Tacitus</span></span>, Agr., 12. I select the following <span class="tei tei-q">“finds”</span>
+from <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ritter's</span></span> Erdkunde. The Shangallas (I, 249); still more the
+terrace of Fazoglu itself (I, 253, compare <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Bruce</span></span>, Travels, V, 316,
+VI, 255, 342), in Monomotapa (I, 140); in Manica, west from Sofala (I, 145), especially
+since the suppression of the slave trade (I, 305, 471); in Mandigo land (I, 360, 372);
+on the road from Gambia to Timbuctoo (I, 457); on Lake Mangara (I, 493); between
+Timbuctoo and Finnin (I, 445); in Nubia (I, 667, seq.); unused silver and
+quicksilver mines on the lower Bagradas (I, 493); gold wealth at Malacca,
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">aurea chersonesus</span></span> (V, 6 f., 27); Tonkin, Lao and Ava (III, 926, 1,
+216, IV, I, 213); Assam (IV, 294); smaller Thibet (III, 657); Kashmere (III, 1,155); on
+upper Setledsch (III, 654 ff., 668); in the mountainous sources of the Indus
+(III, 508, 529, 593, 608); on the Cabool (VII, 23); in Peshaver (VII, 223);
+Badakschan (VII, 795); rich silver mines abandoned for want of wood near
+Herat (VIII, 243); in Armenia (X, 273). It is said that in southern China
+there are great treasures of the precious metals, the removal of which has
+been opposed thus far. (IV, 756.) Arabia's richness in gold mines, spoken of
+by <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Diodor.</span></span>, II, 50, III, 45, and
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Agatharch</span></span>, De Mare rubro, 60, is of doubtful
+existence, as no traces of them are to be found in the country to-day.
+On the other hand, on both shores of the Pacific Ocean, the portions of the
+earth richest in volcanoes seem to possess almost everywhere quantities of gold
+equal to those of California and Victoria. (Edinburgh Review, Jan., 1863,
+82 ff.) What an amount of treasure can be obtained at times from old and
+long since forgotten <span class="tei tei-q">“finds”</span> is proved by the Altai (that is gold mountain),
+which even the old Tschudi had rummaged (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">K. Ritter</span></span>, II); and where
+Herodotus' (III, 16) love of truth, so frequently called in question, has recently
+been so brilliantly vindicated. Compare <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">v. Ungern-Sternberg</span></span>, Gesch.
+des Goldes, 1835. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">A. Erman</span></span>, Ueber die geographische Verbreitung des
+Goldes, 1835. According to <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Murchison</span></span>, Siberia, ch. 17, gold is to
+be found only <span class="tei tei-q">“in crystalline and paleozoic rocks, or in the drift from these rocks,
+which is a tertiary accumulation of the pliocene age;”</span> and that it is found most
+abundantly <span class="tei tei-q">“in quartz-ore, vein-stones and traverse altered Silurian slates,
+chiefly lower Silurian, frequently near their junction with eruptive rocks.”</span></dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_866" name="note_866" href="#noteref_866">866.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Compare
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Humboldt</span></span>, N. Espagne, IV, 147 ff.; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">St. Clair
+Duport</span></span>, Essai sur la Production des Metaux précieux en Mexique, 1843;
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">M. Chevalier</span></span>, Cours., III, 483 ff.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_867" name="note_867" href="#noteref_867">867.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">The
+cost of a kilogramme of silver, expressed in terms of silver itself,
+up to the moment that it is shipped, is estimated by <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Duport</span></span> as
+follows: salt and <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">magistral</span></span>, 61 grammes; quicksilver, 112
+grammes; stamping it, 171 grammes; transformation of the ore, 72 grammes; rent and
+superintendence, 38; duties etc., 145; smelting, transportation and shipping, 35. There
+remains as profit for mining it, 336 grammes. As to how the production of American
+silver increases and runs parallel with the cheapness of quicksilver, see
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Humboldt</span></span>, N. Espagne, IV, 91 ff.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_868" name="note_868" href="#noteref_868">868.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Wolowski</span></span>
+calculates that the absolutely much smaller yearly increment
+to the amount of the precious metals in the sixteenth century, frequently 1/12,
+now constitutes only 1/50 of the greater existing amount. (L'Or et l'Argent
+Enquête, 50.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_869" name="note_869" href="#noteref_869">869.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">In the
+United States the stock of cash money in 1820 was estimated at
+5.1 thalers per capita; in 1849, at 8.6 thalers; in 1854, on the other hand, at
+13 thalers.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_870" name="note_870" href="#noteref_870">870.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">The weight of the mass of
+gold introduced into Europe annually stood to that of silver in
+the ratio of 1:60-65 in the seventeenth century; in the
+first half of the eighteenth century, in that of 1:30; in the second half, in
+that of 1:40; and yet the variations in price were not in the least parallel.
+According to <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Sœtbeer</span></span> (Beiträge und Materialien zur
+Beurtheilung von Geld und Bankfragen, 1855, 102 seq.), the average silver-course
+(<span lang="de" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="de"><span style="font-style: italic">silbercurs</span></span>) of gold
+had, 1852-54, sunk only 2.05 per cent., as compared with that of 1800-40.
+And yet the value of the annual production of gold stood to the annual production
+of silver, in the beginning of the nineteenth century, as 29 to 71; in
+1846, as 47 to 53; in 1848-56, as 3 to 1.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_871" name="note_871" href="#noteref_871">871.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">While
+the public, even since 1850, think they have noticed a depreciation
+in the value of money, there are a great many learned political economists
+who are by no means prepared to grant it. The principal advocates of this
+opinion are <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Tooke</span></span>, and <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Newmarch</span></span>, in vol.
+VI. of the History of Prices (1857). Also <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Lavergne</span></span>, in the
+Journal des Economistes. And really the enhanced dearness of
+many kinds of goods up to 1857, might have been accounted for
+by causes affecting the goods themselves: diminished supply by reason of
+bad harvests, commercial gluts etc.; increased demand by capitalization on a
+gigantic scale, speculation, but especially by the elevation of the lower
+classes etc.
+</p>
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+The London wholesale prices were on the 1st day of January, 1869, nearly
+all lower by 10 per cent. than on the 1st day of July, 1857. Only indigo,
+cotton and meat had risen. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hildebrand's</span></span> Jahrb., 1870, I, 328.) In
+many instances the enhanced dearness is entirely local, by reason of the
+greater facilities for transportation in places where prices were already higher.
+But as new truths are very easily exaggerated by their discoverers,
+much of Tooke's view concerning these events depends upon a polemic carried
+too far against the theory of the balance of trade which was customary
+in the so-called currency school. Compare, in opposition to Tooke,
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Lavasseur</span></span>, in the Journal des Economistes, March, 1838, and
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">M. Chevalier</span></span>, La Baisse probable de l'Or, 1858.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Lavasseur</span></span>, from the difference between the
+official and real custom-house prices in France, calculates that raw materials
+in 1856 were on the average 63 per cent., and in 1858, 20 per cent. higher than
+in 1826; and that manufactured articles were in 1856, just as high, and in
+1858, 6 per cent. lower than in 1856. An average made of all commodities
+showed, in 1856, an enhancement of 30 per cent, and in 1858 of 9 per cent.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hildebrand's</span></span> Jahrb., 1864, II, 118.)
+</p>
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+In the Hamburg market in 1847-65, 87 articles declined in price, 183 rose
+in price, and 24 remained about stationary. (Amtl. Statistik von 1887, 18 ff.)
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Jevons</span></span> assumes a general rise in the price of commodities between
+1849 and 1869 of about 18 per cent. (Economist, May 8, 1869.) He makes this estimate
+from the average March prices of 50 of the principal articles. Assuming
+the average March price of 1849=100, we have, according to him, for
+the following years, respectively: 101, 103, 101, 116, 130, 125, 129, 132, 118,
+120, 124, 123, 124, 123, 122, 121, 128, 118, 120, 119. Previous years showed:
+1789=133; 1799=202; 1809=245; 1819=175; 1829=124; 1839=144.
+(Compare supra, § <a href="#Section_129" class="tei tei-ref">129</a>, note 1.) The budget of a Swiss
+teacher's family consisting of five persons has become dearer since 1840 ff., their
+consumption remaining the same and of only the simplest articles, by 72.5 per cent.
+(Böhmert, Arbeiterervhältnisse etc., I, 302 ff., 355.) That, however, the depreciation
+is under-estimated most precisely in England and over-estimated in Germany,
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Knies</span></span> very well accounts for by the price-leveling effects of the
+more modern means of communication. (Tübinger Zeitschr., 1858, 280 ff.)</p></dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_872" name="note_872" href="#noteref_872">872.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Compare
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Leibnitz</span></span>, on the consequences which would follow the realization
+of the dreams of the alchemists. It would be a great misfortune, since then a
+pocket would no longer suffice for the transportation of money, and people
+would have to use wheel-barrows as they do now in Sweden. (Opera ed.
+Dutens, V, 199, 401.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_873" name="note_873" href="#noteref_873">873.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Beccaria</span></span> considers
+it equitable that the debtor should always pay the original
+value of the metal. (E.P., IV, 2, 17.) <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Galiani</span></span>, on the other
+hand, would not permit individuals, even when the state arbitrarily causes a diminution
+in the real value of money, to maintain the real value of the coinage in their
+contracts. (Della Moneta, V. 3.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_874" name="note_874" href="#noteref_874">874.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">It is
+precisely this class which first comes to an understanding of the essential
+nature of the change effected.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_875" name="note_875" href="#noteref_875">875.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Thus the English lessees,
+who in the sixteenth century had leases for a long term
+of years, saw themselves rise in the social scale in consequence
+of the revolutions in price—a fact of importance in the political struggles
+of the seventeenth century. Compare <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Sir F. M. Eden</span></span>, State of the
+Poor, I, 119 ff.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_876" name="note_876" href="#noteref_876">876.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Too much stress
+is laid upon this by <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Tooke-Newmarch</span></span>, who, on that account,
+considers almost every increase of the precious metals as a blessing.
+As a matter of fact, the population of Australia, of the United Kingdom,
+and of the United States, increased, between 1848 and 1871, 44.5 per cent.;
+the production of coal and of railroads in England, between 1856 and 1869,
+by about 60.6 per cent.; the English production of woolen goods, linen and
+cotton and yarn, between 1848 and 1870, by from 110 to 335 per cent.
+(Statist. Journal, 1872, 376 ff.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_877" name="note_877" href="#noteref_877">877.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Luther's</span></span>
+complaint concerning the poor condition of the clergy. See
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Schmoller</span></span>, in the Tübinger Ztschr., 1860. This very clearly
+shows how much surer for the crown domains are than a civil list, and donations of land
+to a church than payments in money. Law of Elizabeth, 18 Eliz., that, in the
+case of university property, ⅔ of the lease rent should be paid in metal and
+⅓ in corn. In <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Adam Smith's</span></span> time, this latter third was worth as
+much again as the other two. (I, ch. 5.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_878" name="note_878" href="#noteref_878">878.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">In
+the sixteenth century, this class was of small importance in most countries;
+in our times, their ruin would cause general disturbance. The wiser
+class of capitalists would, indeed, find means to exchange their credits for
+more certain values, or make it a condition that they should receive in the
+end a large sum.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_879" name="note_879" href="#noteref_879">879.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Thus, for instance,
+the son of a deceased land owner who retains the
+lands as his own acquits himself towards his brothers who have entered the
+military or civil service of their country by paying them a certain sum periodically.
+If a revolution were really impending, the owners of land would
+soon emulate one another to improve their estates by borrowing capital, if
+for no other reason, to turn the depreciation of the medium of circulation to
+their own advantage. In the sixteenth century, the indebtedness of land
+owners was relatively unimportant.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_880" name="note_880" href="#noteref_880">880.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">It appears
+from <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Roger's</span></span> Tables, Statist. Journal, 1861, 551 ff., that,
+between 1583 and 1620, a time during which the population of England increased
+neither in wealth nor in numbers, there was a considerable increase in the
+price of nearly all English commodities. Thus, for instance, wheat was,
+from 1591 to 1600, 468 per cent., and from 1611 to 1620, even 495 per cent.
+higher than from 1530 to 1533. The Saxon laborer earned, in 1599, in corn,
+only half as much as in 1455. (Tübinger Ztschr., 1871, 354.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_881" name="note_881" href="#noteref_881">881.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">When labor is indispensable to employers,
+it may happen that a small decline in the supply may largely raise
+the price. Wages, in almost all branches of labor, rose between
+1851 and 1856, by about from 15 to 20 per cent.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_882" name="note_882" href="#noteref_882">882.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">This,
+also, was of little significance in the sixteenth century, but how
+important now!</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_883" name="note_883" href="#noteref_883">883.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Income taxes, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">ad valorem</span></span>
+duties and tithes rise and fall in their nominal
+amount as the price of the medium of circulation falls and rises.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_884" name="note_884" href="#noteref_884">884.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Thus, for instance, the victory of the English Parliament
+over the unlimited power of the crown, in the first half of the seventeenth century, was
+very much promoted by the fact that the crown, in spite of all its economy,
+was always in financial straits in consequence of the depreciation of money.
+(Power of the purse, power of the sword!) However, any force kept steadily
+in action is a two-edged sword. While under favorable circumstances, it
+may be thereby developed, under unfavorable circumstances it may be
+thereby exhausted. How great a number of representative assemblies, during
+the revolutions in prices in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, allowed
+their energies to grow dormant!</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_885" name="note_885" href="#noteref_885">885.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Most of the above
+points are very well discussed in the work <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">W. S.</span></span>, cited
+above, § <a href="#Section_137" class="tei tei-ref">137</a>.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_886" name="note_886" href="#noteref_886">886.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">As no one then
+doubted: Compare <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">W. Raleigh</span></span>, The Discovery of
+Guiana, Pref. I refer to Philip of Macedon.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_887" name="note_887" href="#noteref_887">887.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Compare
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Roscher</span></span>, Kolonien, Kolonialpolitik und Auswanderung, 1856,
+145 ff.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_888" name="note_888" href="#noteref_888">888.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Something
+similar might have been observed in England in 1819 etc., at
+the restoration of a depreciated paper currency. Among nations in a comparatively
+low stage of civilization, a variation in the medium of circulation
+is of less importance than among more highly civilized nations, because
+trade in money, and still more, credit, are relatively speaking undeveloped.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_889" name="note_889" href="#noteref_889">889.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Fawcett</span></span>
+greatly exaggerates when he says that with an increase of population
+and wealth, an increase of money is as much a want as hunger. (Manual,
+370.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_890" name="note_890" href="#noteref_890">890.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Galiani</span></span>,
+Dellab Moneta, III, 1. At the time of the Lex Salica, 10:1.
+After the Edictum Pistense of Charles II., ch. 24 (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Pertz</span></span>, Mon.
+Germ., III, 488), 12:1. At the time of the Sachsenspiegel (III, 45), again, 10:1. Under
+Saint Louis, King of France, 12.5:1. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Leblanc</span></span>, Traité historique
+des Monnaies de la France, ch. 1, 2.) In Poland, 1356, 12:1.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Muratori</span></span>, Dissertt. Medii Aevi, II, 28.) In England, 1262, 9.6;
+1272 = 12.5; 1345 = 13.7:1. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Rogers</span></span>, 1, 593 ff.) Under Henry VI.,
+and in 1494 = 12:1. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Anderson</span></span>, Origin of Commerce, a. 1422,
+1494.) In Denmark, under the former Kings of the Union = 8:1.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Dahlmann</span></span>, Dänische Geschichte, III, 52.) And so
+throughout almost the whole of Scandinavia's medieval period, as for instance
+in the Graugans. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Wilda</span></span>, Gesch. des deutschen Strafrechts, I,
+329.) In Italy, 1579 = 12:1. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Scaruffi</span></span>, Sopra le Moneta,
+1582.) In Holland, 1589 = 11.6:1. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Bodinus</span></span>,
+De Republ., 1584, II, 3, maintains 12:1 as the general
+ratio; but the Apostolic Chamber adopted the ratio of 12.8:1. In Germany,
+according to the instances cited by <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">A. Riese</span></span>, 1522 = 10:1.
+The monetary laws of Germany give it in 1524 = 11-⅓:1, in 1551 = 11:1, 1559 = 11-3/7:1;
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Budelius</span></span>, De Monetis, 1591 = 11-¼:1. At the beginning of the
+seventeenth century the relation in Spain was = 13.3; in Germany = 12.16; in Flanders =
+13.22; in England = 13.5:1. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Forbonnais</span></span>, Finances de la France,
+I, 52.) About 1641, in Flanders, it was 12.5; in France, 13.5; in Spain, 14.1. Immediately
+after Colbert's death it was, in Genoa, 15.03; in Milan = 14.75:1.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Montanari</span></span>, Della Moneta, 80.) While in the seventeenth century
+gold rose, it sank in the eighteenth, on account of the Brazilian gold washings and the
+many bank notes in circulation, which were for the most part of a large denomination.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Steuart</span></span>, Principles, III, ch. 13.) Still it was in Amsterdam
+in 1751 = 14.5:1.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_891" name="note_891" href="#noteref_891">891.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">In Hamburg,
+the relation of the price of gold to that of silver bars, varied,
+between 1816 and 1852, from between 15.11-16.2 to 1 (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Soetbeer</span></span>); in
+London, from 1816 to 1837, between 15.80 and 14.97 to 1.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_892" name="note_892" href="#noteref_892">892.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">In Asia, it is generally lower
+than in Europe—for centuries mostly = 10:1. But in Birmah it is = 17:1,
+mostly on account of the extent to which indulgence in luxury is carried there.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Crawfurd</span></span>, Embassy, 433. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ritter</span></span>,
+Erdkunde, V, 244, 266.) Concerning China, see <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">M. Chevalier</span></span>, Cours,
+III, 359. In Africa, gold is low as compared with silver, in proportion to
+the distance from the civilized world. Thus, an ounce of gold in Shenaar
+cost 12 piastres; in Suakim, 20; in Djidda, 22. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ritter</span></span>,
+Erdkunde, I, 538.) In Timbuctoo, Mungo Park found the relation of gold to silver to be
+as 1-½:1. Compare Marco Polo, II, 39 seq.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_893" name="note_893" href="#noteref_893">893.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">In antiquity, a similar
+course is to be observed. According to Manu's Indian laws, VIII,
+134 seq., = 2-½:1; in the East, for a long time, = 10:1; under Darius Hystaspis,
+= 13:1. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Herodot.</span></span>, 111, 95.) In Greece, in the time
+of Lysias, = 10:1 (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Lysias</span></span>, pro bonis Arist., Conon);
+according to <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Plato,</span></span> = 12:1 (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hipparch.</span></span>,
+231); according to <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Demosthenes</span></span>, adv. Phorm., 214, = 14:1
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Böckh</span></span>, Staatst., I, 43); Menander's estimate, = 10:1,
+probably because Alexander's victory had made gold cheaper.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Pollux</span></span>, IX, 76.) Among the Romans, about 189 B.C., = 10:1
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Livy</span></span>, XXXVIII, 11); somewhat later, = 11.9:1
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Mommsen</span></span>, in the histor. phil. Berichten der K. Sächs.
+Gesellschaft, 1851, 184 ff.); in the fourth century after Christ, = 14:1.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Theod.</span></span>, Cod. VIII, 4, 27.) We sometimes find sudden variations.
+Thus, according to <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Polyb.</span></span>, XXXIV, 10, gold, in Italy, sank
+about ⅓ in consequence of the opening of the mines at Aquilea. It sank to the
+proportion of 9:1 when Cæsar spent the contents of the Roman treasure, which consisted
+of gold. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Surton.</span></span>, Cæs., 54.) The ratio of 17:1, during
+Hannibal's wars, was a species of National bankruptcy. See
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Plin.</span></span>, H. N., XXXIII, B.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_894" name="note_894" href="#noteref_894">894.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">After the February revolution,
+the gold-agio, as compared with silver, rose from 10-17 to 70 per 1,000.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">M. Chevalier</span></span> Cours, III, 346.) On the
+other hand, since the discovery of America, gold, as compared with commodities,
+has declined much less than silver. Compare <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hermann</span></span>, Ueber den
+gegenwärtigen Zustand des Münzwesens, in <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Rau's</span></span> Archiv., I, 151
+ff. According to <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Lord Liverpool</span></span>, Treatise on the Coins of the
+Realm, the value of gold coin in the London market, as compared with bank notes, varied
+in 40 years, almost 5½ per cent.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_895" name="note_895" href="#noteref_895">895.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">In
+recent times, it has become possible to extract from ancient silver
+coins a small quantity of gold, and with some advantage. European industry
+produced in this way about 1,600 kilogrammes of gold per annum. One
+half of this amount is obtained in France and the rest in Hamburg, Amsterdam,
+Brussels and St. Petersburg. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Michel Chevalier</span></span>, Cours, III,
+302.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_896" name="note_896" href="#noteref_896">896.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Senior</span></span>,
+On the Value of Money, 77 ff. It is certain that a simple variation
+in prices would not induce people to have gold table services, or architectural
+ornaments of silver.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_897" name="note_897" href="#noteref_897">897.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Rau</span></span>, Lehrbuch,
+6th ed., I, § 277 c. In Rau's opinion (loc. cit.) we may,
+in the course of the next decades, expect a decline of the price of gold of
+about 76 per cent., and of only 10 percent. of the price of silver (because of
+the low prices of quicksilver.) But here he seems to overlook entirely what
+influence a change of standard in important commercial districts would
+have.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_898" name="note_898" href="#noteref_898">898.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Compare the works already mentioned.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Fleetwood</span></span>, Chronicon preciosum,
+or an Account of English Gold and Silver Money, the Price of Corn
+and other Commodities etc., for Six Hundred Years last past, 1707; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Dupré
+de Saint Maur</span></span>, Essai sur les Monnaies ou Réflexions sur les Rapports entre
+les Denrées et l'Argent, 1746; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Unger</span></span>, Ordnung der Fruchtpreise,
+1752; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Paucton</span></span>, Métrologie ou Traité des Mesures etc., des anciens
+Peuples et les modernes, 1780; the appendix to <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Macpherson's</span></span>
+Annals of Commerce, 1805; the tables in <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Garnier's</span></span> translation of
+Adam Smith, vol. II, 1822; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">A. Young</span></span>, Inquiry into the
+progressive Value of Money in England, as marked by the Price of Agricultural Products,
+1812; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">W. F. Lloyd</span></span>, Prices of Corn in Oxford, in the Beginning
+of the fourteenth Century, and also from 1583 to the present Time, 1830;
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Helferich</span></span>, in the Tüb. Zeitschrift, 1858, 471 ff. There are
+some very interesting notes on the history of prices during the Merovingian
+and Carolingian periods in <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Guérard</span></span>, Polyptiques, I, 141 ff.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_899" name="note_899" href="#noteref_899">899.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Thus, for instance, the bonds (and their
+coupons) of states, cities, great corporations, certificates of stock,
+mortgages, bills of exchange, checks.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_900" name="note_900" href="#noteref_900">900.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">A Prussian regulation
+of 1765 (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Goldschmidt</span></span>, Handbuch des Handelsrechts, I, 550), calls
+money-paper (<span lang="de" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="de"><span style="font-style: italic">Effecten</span></span>),
+instruments of trade in which a value or a <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">valuta</span></span> is
+designated.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_901" name="note_901" href="#noteref_901">901.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Garnier</span></span>, French translation of
+Adam Smith, II, 143 ff., distinguishes between coin-paper
+and promise-paper: the latter is never found in circulation at the same time
+with the capital which it represents. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Say</span></span> says that, for instance,
+evidences of state indebtedness, state bonds, call for money if they
+would circulate, but they seldom act as money in circulation. (Traité, III,
+ch. 2.) <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Sismondi</span></span> very well determines the difference in his
+Richesse Commerciale, I, 160. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Rau</span></span>, Lehrbuch, I, § 293, requires
+of all good paper money: a., that its mere transfer, even without any proof of its
+rightful acquisition, should suffice to vest the property in it in the receiver; b.,
+that the power emitting it should enjoy universal confidence or be able to compel
+universal recognition; c., that its redemption should not be fixed for any definite point
+of time.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_902" name="note_902" href="#noteref_902">902.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">That it is not possible to keep paper money
+from declining in value, by the payment of interest, the people of North America
+learned from more than one experiment during the eighteenth century.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Benjamin Franklin</span></span>, Remarks and Facts relative to the Paper
+Money of America, 1765.) The same phenomenon was observed in the case of the Spanish
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">vales</span></span>, which were created during the North American war in
+consequence of the absence of the silver fleet. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Bour-going</span></span>,
+Tableau de l' Espagne, II, 38 ff. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Humboldt</span></span>, N. Espagne, II,
+808.) When the Portuguese <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">apolices</span></span> (since 1797) still
+bore six per cent. they depreciated in value; and when the payment of the
+interest was suddenly stopped, the rate of exchange did not become any
+lower. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Balbi</span></span>, Esai statist. sur le Portugal, I, 323.) In
+Austria, in September, 1820, the bank notes which bore no interest were at a premium as
+compared with the imperial treasury notes, which did bear interest of 1 per cent.,
+although the credit of both kinds of paper had ultimately the same foundation,
+namely, Austrian state-credit.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_903" name="note_903" href="#noteref_903">903.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">The attempt to make paper
+money pay interest suggests (as the Saint Simonists recommend it
+should, with much ado; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Enfantin</span></span>, Ser les Banques,
+d' Escompte in the Producteur, 1826), that awkward sword, invented by
+Count Wilhelm von Bückeburg, to the blade of which a pistol is affixed!
+Shortly before each term for the payment of interest, the circulation of such
+paper money would be arrested. If the rate of discount should sink below
+the rate of interest such notes bore, they would be sought after eagerly and
+disappear in quantities, and, not be ever seen again until the rate of discount
+had risen to a high figure, when they would be suddenly presented for redemption.
+Such interest-bearing paper money, therefore, would be a serious
+element to aggravate the fluctuations of the money-market between good
+and bad times. When interest-bearing paper money pays interest at the rate
+usual in the country, it is hoarded by misers, (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">v. Struensee</span></span>.
+Abhandlungen, III, 387.) Compare <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Forbonnais</span></span>, Principes
+économiques, p. 234, ed. Guill., whereas <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">v. Prittwitz</span></span>, Kunst
+reich zu werden (1840, 359), takes delight in elaborating
+the idea of an interest-bearing paper money.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_904" name="note_904" href="#noteref_904">904.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Of jurists, see <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Thöl</span></span>, Handelsrecht, I,
+§ 51, and the authorities for and against in <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Goldschmidt</span></span>,
+Handelsrecht, II, Kap. 4, 1, 2. The compulsory circulation of paper
+money is an essential element only in reference to the
+person that issues it. Of political economists, especially <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">A.
+Wagner</span></span> in <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Bluntschli's</span></span> Staatswörterbuch, Art. Papiergeld,
+Band, VII, who, however, is very soon compelled to oppose to paper money <span class="tei tei-q">“proper,”</span>
+another kind not <span class="tei tei-q">“proper.”</span> <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Adam Smith</span></span> unhesitatingly
+accounts bank notes also paper-money. (W. of N., II, ch. 2, p. 28, Bas.)
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Huskisson</span></span> understands by <span class="tei tei-q">“paper-money”</span>
+only the irredeemable paper-money of the state, while bank notes
+should be considered as <span class="tei tei-q">“paper currency.”</span> (The Question concerning the
+Depreciation of our Currency, 1810.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_905" name="note_905" href="#noteref_905">905.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Seyd</span></span>,
+Münz, Währungs- und Bankfragen in Deutschland, 50 ff., distinguishes
+four classes of paper-money: 1st class, paper-money covered by
+cash; 2d class, bank notes covered after the manner of banks; 3d class, state
+paper-money; 4th class, such paper money as the notes of the Southern
+Confederacy after its defeat.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_906" name="note_906" href="#noteref_906">906.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">Even <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Plato</span></span>, De Legg., V,
+742, was acquainted with money after the Spartan
+type, intended only for internal trade: νόμισμα ἐπιχώριον, αὐτοῖς
+μὲν ἔντιμον τοῖς δὲ ἄλλοις ἀνθρώποις ἀδόκιμον. Besides the state
+kept for foreign trade a supply of the universal Hellenic money, of which
+in case of need, private individuals could acquire what portion they needed
+by exchange. When Dionysius I. issued tin instead of silver money, all the
+Syracusans, although they noticed the forgery, acted in their intercourse
+with one another as if they considered the coins genuine.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Aristot.</span></span>, Œcon., II, 21, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Pollux</span></span>,
+IX, 79.) Timotheos behaved more honorably when, pressed
+by the dearth of money, he gave his troops copper coin tokens, which passed
+for the time being for their full value in the camp; but which were later to
+be redeemed at their full value in silver. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Aristot.</span></span>, Œc.
+II, 22.) Compare <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Polyæn</span></span>, Strateg., IV, 10, 2. The iron
+money which the Klazomenians exchanged with the rich for silver, which bore interest,
+but which the rich were forced to take, had a longer duration; the silver was used to
+pay foreign state creditors, the iron money circulated for the time being in the city,
+and was gradually redeemed. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Aristot.</span></span>, loc. cit, II, 17.)
+</p>
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+We are still more forcibly reminded of paper money by the Carthaginian
+leather money, where any object whatever of the size of a coin was shut up
+in a leather envelope with the state seal, and then circulated as if it were the
+coin it purported to be. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Mieris</span></span>, Beschryving der Munstn, 1726,
+explains the saga of Dido's ox-skin by means of this leather money. Certain it is,
+however, that the surprise with which the sophistical dialogue, Eryxias, mentions
+the matter, is a proof how foreign it was to the Greeks. Concerning the
+Roman plated denarii which were stamped with the silver coins, but which
+were also accepted by the state treasury, see <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Mommsen</span></span>, R.
+G., I, 405.</p></dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_907" name="note_907" href="#noteref_907">907.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">In the middle ages,
+leather money was issued as a promise of future payment: by the
+doge of Venice in the wars of 1122 and 1126 (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Montanari</span></span>, Della
+Moneta, 34); by King John, of England, during the struggle of the barons
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Camden</span></span>); Emp. Frederick II. at the siege of Faventia
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Malespini</span></span>, Hist. Fior., 130,
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Villani</span></span>, Hist. Fior., VI, 21); by Louis IX. during his
+captivity (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">v. Raumer</span></span> Hohenstaufen, V, 461), John of
+France, 1360 (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Anderson</span></span>, Origin of Commerce).
+On the Frankfurt lead marks which were afterwards redeemed by
+the <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Rechnerei</span></span>: <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Kirchner</span></span>, I, 541.
+Lavallette's copper tokens during the siege of Malta had the inscription:
+<span lang="la" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="la"><span style="font-style: italic">non æs sed fides</span></span>. The paper
+money which was issued during the siege of Leyden, the inhabitants afterwards would rather
+preserve than have redeemed, <span lang="la" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="la"><span style="font-style: italic">ad perpetuam
+liberationis divinæ memoriam</span></span>. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Bornitii</span></span>, De Nummis,
+1605, I, 15. Distress coins, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">melacs</span></span>, during the siege
+of Landau and of the Hungarian <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ragoczy</span></span>,
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Marpurger</span></span>, Beschreibung der Banquen, 213.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Krones</span></span>, Zur Geschichte Ungarns im Zeitalter R's,
+1870.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_908" name="note_908" href="#noteref_908">908.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">The Chinese have had various kinds of paper-money in
+their country since the 7th century after Christ. Sometimes they called them <span class="tei tei-q">“flying
+coins, convenient coins,”</span> and sometimes <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">coupons</span></span>,
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">bons</span></span>, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">conventions</span></span>
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Klaproth</span></span>, Mémoires relatives à l'Asie, I, 375 ff.), against
+which the caravans, as soon as they had passed the limits were obliged to exchange their
+silver (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Pegolotti</span></span>, Pratica della Mercatura in Della decima etc.,
+III, 3). These had compulsory circulation in China. The great Mongolian khans here
+became acquainted with paper-money. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">M. Polo</span></span>, II, 21.) Thus,
+especially in Persia, where refusal to accept such money and the imitation of it was
+punished with death (1340). Compare <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ferishta</span></span>, ed.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Briggs</span></span>, I, 414 ff. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">d'Ohsson</span></span>, Hist. des
+Mongols, IV, 101 ff.; II, 487. Even here there occurred cases of state bankruptcy
+and finally withdrawals of the depreciated paper. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Klaproth</span></span>,
+loc. cit.) In Japan, according to <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Oliphant</span></span>, Narrative of L.
+Elgin's Mission to China and Sapan (1859), all foreign coins were required to
+be exchanged against paper-money at the offices of the state bankers.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_909" name="note_909" href="#noteref_909">909.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Adam Smith mentions North American paper money of the amount of
+1 shilling, and Yorkshire bank notes of the amount of 1-½ shillings. Sweden
+had, until 1828, notes of 28 <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">pfennigs</span></span>.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_910" name="note_910" href="#noteref_910">910.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Hence in Sweden, with its copper standard
+of long duration, the system of banks of issue was developed very early. The
+transport-notes (<span lang="de" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="de"><span style="font-style: italic">Transportzettel</span></span>)
+(to be found in that country as far back as 1661) of the Stockholm bank are considered
+the oldest bank notes. Compare, however, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Palgrave</span></span>,
+in the Statist. Journal, 1873. When, in 1768, Catherine II. introduced paper
+money into Russia, the people gladly paid ¼ per cent. exchange to the state
+treasury for it. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Brückner</span></span>, in
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hildebrand's</span></span> Jahrbücher, 1863, 49.) According to
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Cancrin</span></span>, Oconomie der menschl. Gesellschaft, 116, private
+individuals in from four to five months exchanged 40 millions of silver roubles for paper.
+And thus, in 1780, Berlin bank notes stood a few per cent. above par, and the notes
+of the S. Carlos-Bank, in 1788, from 1 to 1-½ per cent. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Rau</span></span>,
+Archiv., II, 161.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_911" name="note_911" href="#noteref_911">911.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">When
+at times in which paper money is looked upon with diffidence,
+peasants and others bury their metallic money, this advantage of course is
+lost. On the other hand, the exportation of precious metal money, caused
+by the emission of paper money, must not be considered a necessary evil,
+but rather as the condition precedent which in most cases makes the above
+advantages of the paper money possible for the first time. Compare <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ad.
+Wagner</span></span>, Die russische Papierwährung (1868), 22, 24, 33.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ricardo</span></span>, Proposals for an economical and sure Currency, 1816,
+estimated that England, after the abolition of the bank restriction, needed twenty
+million pounds sterling. The interest on this amount of capital inclusive of wear and
+tear etc., should be estimated at at least ten percent.; that is for the whole kingdom
+at at least from two and one-half to three millions a year. On this
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ricardo</span></span> founded his proposal to base the bank notes on gold bars.
+In its time, the essay: Guineas an unnecessary and expensive Incumbrance on Commerce, or
+the Impolity of repealing the Bank-Restriction Bill considered (London, 1802), met with
+great approval.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_912" name="note_912" href="#noteref_912">912.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Adam Smith</span></span> calls attention to
+the analogous case in which a manufacturer
+replaces a costly machine by a cheap one, sells the former and employs
+the difference between the old one and the new in enlarging his
+business. (W. of N., II, ch. 2.) When, indeed, all nations have introduced
+the use of paper money, the greater portion of the advantages which the one
+nation was able to obtain by its means cease, and the only ultimate result is
+a depreciation of the value of money and of the precious metals. Formerly
+the advantage reaped by the single nation that emitted paper money was
+greater than its share in the depreciation. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Wolowski</span></span>, Enquête
+de 1865, 108.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_913" name="note_913" href="#noteref_913">913.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">When
+E. Seyd calls bank notes more costly than metallic money, because
+the former in England require an outlay for administration of 1-½ per cent.
+per annum, while the wear and tear of metallic money amounts to 1 per
+cent. only in 20 years (Statist. Journal, 1872, 511), he overlooks the loss in
+interest and the costs of coinage in the latter case.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_914" name="note_914" href="#noteref_914">914.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Related to this
+is the fact that in France, during the assignat-crisis, the
+large bills of 10,000 francs were harder to get rid of than the small ones.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">A. Schmidt's</span></span> Pariser Zustände, III, 22.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_915" name="note_915" href="#noteref_915">915.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">The
+numbering of paper money. A state which should neglect this
+would not only reserve to itself the possibility of an unlimited increase, but
+would surrender all control of its officials charged with the emission of the
+paper money. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Law</span></span>, Trade and Money, 162, advises that a large
+money reward should be paid to any one who should show the existence of a higher
+number than allowed by law, or of a duplicate number. And indeed, as
+comptroller-in-chief, he caused the <span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">prévôt
+des marchands</span></span> to be removed, because charged with the duty of burning
+the paper withdrawn from circulation, he (the <span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">prévôt</span></span>) noticed that the same number reappeared
+several times.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_916" name="note_916" href="#noteref_916">916.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">If a traveler wished to pay his inn-keeper in the note of a
+bank entirely unknown in the place, the latter would certainly refuse it. If, on the other
+hand, the traveler were to offer him a silver coin, the stamp and inscription
+of which were not familiar, still it would be taken at the value of the metal
+it contained, after deduction made of the costs of testing it, re-coining it, and
+compensation for the trouble caused. Ignored by <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Berkeley</span></span>, who,
+indeed, considered metallic money nothing but <span class="tei tei-q">“counters”</span> or tickets (Querist, No.
+23, 26, 441, 475), and who ascribes important advantages to paper money,—which
+by <span class="tei tei-q">“stamp”</span> and <span class="tei tei-q">“signature”</span> is made as costly as gold (440)—over metallic
+money (226).</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_917" name="note_917" href="#noteref_917">917.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Any
+person who has witnessed a tax-execution, or sale of property for the non-payment of
+taxes (<span lang="de" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="de"><span style="font-style: italic">Stuerexecution</span></span>) will admit
+that a tax receipt is at least as real goods as an umbrella or a glass window that
+protects one from the storm. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Michælis</span></span> considers the amount of
+running payments to the state for duties, taxes etc., as the only right basis for
+full-value paper money. (Berliner Vierteljahrsschrift, 1863, III.) Better yet when
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Höfken</span></span> advises that only as much paper money should be issued as
+amounted to the average balance (<span lang="de" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="de"><span style="font-style: italic">Bestand</span></span>) in the national treasury. The tax-basis is
+defended with great warmth by <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">L. Stein</span></span>. Louis XIV., in 1704
+issued paper money bearing 7 per cent. interest, the acceptance of which by all the
+royal officers of the treasury was prohibited! (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Dutot</span></span>,
+Réflexions, 863, Daire.) <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Law</span></span>, Trade and Money (1705) ascribes to
+parcels of land the greatest constancy of value, because they cannot be replaced,
+because they can be neither increased nor decreased, and because they help to produce all
+other goods (p. 170). While silver cannot but depreciate, they have a prospect but to
+rise (188). Hence <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Law</span></span> recommended notes based on parcels of land
+as the best money. (163, 191, 195.) Similarly, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Benjamin Franklin</span></span>,
+Modest Inquiry into the Nature and Necessity of a Paper Currency: and the Paper Money of
+Pennsylvania, New York and New Jersey was actually based on parcels of land, and was to
+be extinguished by the enfeoffed owners, and the interest paid by them.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ebeling</span></span>, Gesch. und Erdbeschreib, von N. Amerika, III, 621, IV,
+649.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_918" name="note_918" href="#noteref_918">918.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">F. Renonard de Ste
+Croix</span></span>, Voyage aux Indes orientales (1810), I, 32, describes
+a species of paper money based on parcels of land which had lost 40
+per cent. of its nominal value, although the holders of them were invested
+with the fief at only one-half their value. The French <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">mandats
+territoriaux</span></span> of 1796, declined in five months to 5 per cent. of their nominal
+value, although they contained the provision that the holders might, without public sale
+(<span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">Auction</span></span>), have a certain amount
+of the national estates allotted to them in exchange for the <span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">mandats</span></span>. The assignats were still more defective after
+their redemption (at the <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Caisse de l'extraordinaire</span></span>), which was
+at first intended, and their drawing of interest were not fulfilled. Leaving the tax-basis
+out of consideration, the notes might, at the sale of the national estates,
+be brought in as means of payment: a thing which would not have been inoperative,
+provided the amount of the paper money had been strictly limited to
+the price of the pieces of land estimated in money. On the 1st of April, 1790,
+400,000,000 francs in assignats were issued, and in September, 800,000,000
+more, both together about equal to the secularized property of the church.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ad. Schmidt</span></span>, Pariser Zustände, II, 97.) But as afterwards all
+proportion between these two magnitudes ceased, or rather as up to January 1, 1793,
+3,626,000,000 assignats were issued; up to September, 1794, over 8,800,000,000;
+up to September, 1795, 19,700,000,000; and finally up to September, 1796,
+45,578,000,000 francs, of which perhaps 6,500,000 were either burned or demonetized,
+the price of the national estates on lands must naturally have
+risen as vastly as the assignats declined.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_919" name="note_919" href="#noteref_919">919.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">The paper money issued by Colbert's successor,
+Chamillard, soon lost on account of its too great amount, 25 per cent. of its value,
+spite of the fact that it bore interest, and that ¼ of all payments to private persons
+had to be made in it. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Forbonnais</span></span>, Recherches et Considérations,
+II, 182.) When the people of the United States, in 1775, issued paper money, it did not
+decline in value up to the end of 1776, so long as the amount did not exceed
+$20,000,000, as it was considered a matter of honor to take it at par. Afterwards,
+when the amount issued continued to increase, not even the law that
+a refusal to accept it, or insisting on taking it below par, should be punished
+with the loss of the commodity, and that the guilty party should be declared
+a national enemy, could keep it from declining in value; so that in May, 1871,
+a dollar in specie was worth $200.5 in paper. Compare <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Franklin</span></span>,
+Works, ed. Sparks, II, 421, VIII, 328, 505.
+</p>
+<p class="tei tei-p" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em">
+France, during the Reign of Terror, on the 2d day of April 1793, threatened
+the claiming of a discount in the taking of assignats with six years'
+confinement in chains, and on the 1st day of August, on Couthon's motion,
+with twenty years' confinement. In addition to this, maximum prices for
+the principal necessities of life were fixed and the exceeding of them was punished
+by severe penalties; and in France, and still more in the neighboring
+conquered countries, there were many persons who preferred to take assignats
+instead of payment rather than permit themselves to be robbed by requisitions.
+And yet on the 4th of June, 1796, one franc in specie exchanged for
+800 francs assignats. Compare <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Büsch</span></span>, Geldumlauf, III (§ 58 ff.,
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">d'Ivernois</span></span>, Etat. des Finances Française,
+1796).</p></dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_920" name="note_920" href="#noteref_920">920.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">The Prussian treasury notes of 1806, by virtue of a
+decree published in 1807, were to be taken by all at a rate of exchange to be
+officially published from time to time. Between December 1, 1807, and February 28, 1809,
+the highest <span class="tei tei-q">“normal course of exchange”</span> was 71, and the lowest 27 per cent. In
+January, 1815, a refusal to take them at par, except in certain cases, was
+threatened with from 500 to 1,000 thalers of a money-fine or from 6 to 12
+months' imprisonment. But indeed, in December, 1812, of 8,000,000 thalers,
+there were only 731,625 still circulating. Compare § 7 of the decree of the
+19th of January, 1813. In April, 1815, it was ordered that the half of all
+taxes should be paid in such notes, or that if not, 8-½ per cent, should be
+added as a penalty. This penalty, reduced in 1827 to 1 silver groschen,
+was not formally abolished even in 1870, although it had long fallen into disuetude.
+There was a run of the owners of the notes in 1830, for redemption,
+and again in 1841 and 1848; in 1848 to the extent of at most 40,000
+thalers in one day, and altogether not over 100,000 thalers.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Bergius</span></span>, in the Tübinger Zeitschr., 1870, 226 ff.) About 1846,
+it was estimated that scarcely 1/250 a year of Prussian paper money was presented for
+redemption, while ⅓ of the state receipts came in in the shape of paper money.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Rau</span></span>, Archiv., V, 125, 207.) The Saxon treasury notes never lost
+over 2 per cent., although the state treasury redeemed them up to 1804 only at an
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">agio</span></span> of 9 <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">pfennigs</span></span> per thaler, and
+afterwards of 1 <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">pfennig</span></span>.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_921" name="note_921" href="#noteref_921">921.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Those entitled to
+make money claims are either compelled to accept the
+paper money at its nominal value or only at its current value for the time
+being. In the latter instance, the unjust compulsion is much smaller, but at
+the same time the whole expedient is much less productive to the state; and
+hence the former is the more usual. It was provided in Austria on the 22d
+of May and the 2d of June, 1848, that the former should be the rule, and that
+the latter should govern in cases in which gold or foreign silver had been
+stipulated for. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Höfken</span></span>, Oesterreichs Finanzprobleme, p. 53.) On
+the 7th of February, 1856, it was permitted to contract by express promise for loans
+in the metallic currency of the country, both for the interest and the repayment
+of the principal. Hence a species of parallel-currency. If it be made
+entirely impossible for private individuals to protect themselves against the
+compulsory circulation of paper money, the more prudent are forced to send
+their capital into foreign countries, which operates very disadvantageously to
+poor countries especially. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Wagner</span></span>, Tübing. Zeitschr., 1863,
+441.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_922" name="note_922" href="#noteref_922">922.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Thus, for
+instance, the Frederick coins, and for a time the French assignats
+were helped by the popular enthusiasm, while Gustavus III., of Sweden,
+could give little value to his paper. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">v. Struensee</span></span>, Abh., III,
+577.) In France, in 1796, 2,400,000,000 <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">mandats</span></span> were issued
+instead of all the outstanding assignats; that is, as many as there were assignats at the
+close of the year 1792. And yet the latter were then only 25 per cent. below par;
+the former, before one month had elapsed, 80, and in nine months, almost 98
+per cent. below par. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">St Chamans</span></span>, Nouvelle Essai sur la Richesse
+des Nations, p. 150. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">A. Schmidt</span></span>, Parisier Zustände, III, 121 ff.)
+In Austria, in 1811, the volume of paper money was contracted, but in a manner so violent
+and destructive of credit that its rate of exchange did not rise in consequence.
+(Tub. Zeitschr., 1763, 1874.) After 1848, also, the rate of exchange
+of Austrian paper money was much more perceptibly influenced by the
+variations in the political state of affairs than by the changes in its volume.
+(Tub. Zeitschr., 1856, 129.) In the summer and winter of 1866, about
+650,000,000 paper rubles circulated, with scarcely any increase or decrease;
+and yet the ratio of exchange was, during a part of the summer, 66, and in
+winter, 84 per cent. of the silver value of the ruble. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Wagner</span></span>,
+Russ. Papierwährung, 74.) Instances in which the increase in the price of commodities
+began to be more general only after the volume of paper money had
+decreased; in Austria, in 1851 and 1866; in Russia, in 1857 (loc. cit).</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_923" name="note_923" href="#noteref_923">923.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Then
+precious metal money becomes a commodity of which great stores
+may be collected in the country itself, at the banks, but chiefly for foreign
+trade. It is said that Austrian business men in 1860 and the following years
+invested <span class="tei tei-q">“hoards”</span> to the amount of several hundred million florins in exchange
+on metallic-currency countries. (Tüb. Zeitschr., 422.) Good paper
+money will never drive out the whole supply of cash money out of a country,
+because a good portion must always be kept for purposes of redemption;
+depreciated paper money operates much farther in this direction. Even the
+exportation of small change may become a profitable speculation as soon as
+the amount of depreciation of paper money exceeds the seigniorage. Then
+usually small change of a worse kind is stamped, as, for instance, in Austria,
+copper instead of silver; and in 1860, 12 millions florins of paper small
+change. Here the exportation of the better money is not a consequence, but
+the motive to the manufacturing of the worse.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_924" name="note_924" href="#noteref_924">924.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">During
+the assignat-period it could happen that a land owner, after the
+term for which he had farmed out his land, might be compelled to surrender
+it to the farmers, for the reason that the taxes, requisitions, etc., paid by the
+farmers, amounted to more than the farm rent. In the case of the former,
+the calculation was based on the recent depreciated value of the assignats;
+in the case of the latter, on the higher value the assignats had at the moment
+that the contract was concluded. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Büsch</span></span>, Geldumlauf, III, 62.) A
+writer in the Revue des deux Mondes, April 15, 1865, thinks that one reason why
+the American civil war was so popular in the northwest was because the
+paper money issued during the rebellion made it easy for that part of the
+country to pay off the mortgage-debts which had burthened it since 1848.
+Even of the two law catastrophes, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Duclos</span></span>, in his memoirs, remarks
+that they produced a great admixture of those who had been formerly separated
+by differences of class and wiped out the previous ideas of decorum, fitness,
+etc.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_925" name="note_925" href="#noteref_925">925.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">During
+the time that the clipping of the coin was practiced, it is scarcely
+possible to show that money was debased below 11 per cent. of what its value
+should have been. See, on the other hand, § <a href="#Section_3" class="tei tei-ref">3</a>. In Austria,
+in 1810, a person had to give 1,200 florins in paper money for 100 florins in silver.
+(Tüb. Zeitschr., 1861, 593.) In North America, in 1781, it took $280 in paper to
+purchase $1 in silver. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ebeling</span></span>, Gesch. und Erdbeschreib., von
+N.A., 1856, III, 580; IV, 440; V, 437.) During the American civil war, the paper money
+of the Southern States declined to ½ (December, 1863) and even to 1/35 (October,
+1864) of its nominal value. Compare <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hock</span></span>, Finanzen der V. Staaten,
+514 ff. Observed even by <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Storch</span></span>, Handbuch,
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Rau's</span></span> translation, III, 141 ff. (See, on the other hand,
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">C. King</span></span>, Thoughts, p. 113.) In Paris in July, 1795,
+the greater number of commodities estimated in assignats were worth as
+much as if the rate of exchange of the latter was 6-14 per cent. of their
+nominal value, while it actually amounted to only 3-½ per cent.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_926" name="note_926" href="#noteref_926">926.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Where an <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">agio</span></span> of exchange of metallic
+money as compared with paper is prohibited, the decline of the latter will manifest
+itself not only in foreign rates of exchange, but also in the price of bars of the
+precious metals.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_927" name="note_927" href="#noteref_927">927.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">The changes
+of the agio or premium depend mainly on the supply and
+demand of the precious metals, that is, on the extent and intensity of the business
+transactions which have to be made in these metals themselves.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Wagner,</span></span> Russ. Papierw., 87.) Hence, for short periods of time,
+it may be said in a paper currency country, that business transactions based on cash money
+have a great element of variation in them. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Wagner</span></span> in
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Bluntschli's</span></span> Staats-wörterbuch, III, 971.) The purchase and
+lease-hold prices of fixed capital, of houses, for instance, rise much less because most
+people look upon the distress as transitory, and of short duration. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">A.
+Walker</span></span>, Sc. of W., 133.) In Austria in 1859, the rise of the agio of exchange of
+silver from par to 40 per cent., and its subsequent fall within 7 months to 20 per
+cent., left the price of coin almost entirely unaffected. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">A.
+Wagner</span></span>, Gött. Anz., 1860, 114.) That country people in general suffer more from a
+bad paper currency than the towns people and inhabitants of cities, see
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Bonamy Price</span></span>, Currency and Banking, 175, seq. In the northern
+states of the American union, in 1864, 12 home kinds of commodities had risen 148 per
+cent., 7 foreign kinds of commodities, 164 per cent., and 7 which could be obtained only
+from the southern states, 353 per cent. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">v. Hock</span></span>, 186 seq.) As
+too great issues of paper money are so frequently made on account of war, it is
+comparatively easy to understand why it is that articles for which war creates a demand
+should rise in price very soon and very high; while the very opposite happens
+in times of taxation-distress, in the case of a great many articles of luxury,
+which can readily be dispensed with. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Büsch</span></span> remarks (Werke, VII,
+91), that retail dealers frequently raise their prices in order not to be obliged to
+pay out so many small coins as change for the paper dollar.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_928" name="note_928" href="#noteref_928">928.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Compare
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hufeland</span></span>, N. Grundlegung, II, 241. Self-seeking undertakers
+(<span lang="de" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="de"><span style="font-style: italic">Unternehmer</span></span> = men of enterprise)
+have, on this account, both in Austria and Russia (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Wagner</span></span>, Russ.
+P.W., 105), but more so in North America (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">v. Hock</span></span>, 556 ff.),
+opposed measures intended to restore values (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Valuta</span></span>), on the
+ground that they were anti-national. Even <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Sperausky</span></span> experienced
+this in 1809, when he published very correct ideas on paper money, while in the
+<span class="tei tei-q">“fairy”</span> times of Catherine II., no one even thought that state paper money
+is a state debt. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Bernhardi</span></span>, Russ. Geschichte, II, 2, 636.) One
+of the principal representatives of this course is <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">H. C. Carey</span></span>,
+Our Resources (1866), and in the New York Herald, 1865. On the other hand,
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Faucher</span></span> rightly calls the more active exportation of countries,
+with a bad paper currency, an exportation of barbarous nations, the commerce of misery,
+to which any price paid in metal or in any higher-standing product of civilization is
+acceptable. (Vierteljahrsschrift, 1868, IV, 167.) The nation in the aggregate loses in
+international trade for the simple reason that its foreign creditors will accept
+its paper money at most at its current rate of exchange against specie, while foreign
+debtors force it upon the nation at its nominal value.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_929" name="note_929" href="#noteref_929">929.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">The
+different provinces also of a large empire may have very different
+degrees of depreciation of the same paper money. Thus, in the interior of
+Russia its rate of exchange against specie had for a long time not declined
+beyond 50 per cent. of its nominal value; while the foreign rate of exchange
+supposed a decline to 33-⅓ per cent. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Cancrin</span></span>, Weltreichthum,
+68.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_930" name="note_930" href="#noteref_930">930.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">An enhancement of
+duties, taxes (<span lang="de" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="de"><span style="font-style: italic">Abgaben</span></span>) etc.,
+will seldom be able to
+progress in the same measure as the paper money sinks; in any case, a law
+would be necessary to effect this, which, however, comes always later than
+the decline. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Sismondi</span></span>, Du Papier Monnaie, 27.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_931" name="note_931" href="#noteref_931">931.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Wagner</span></span>,
+Russische Papierwährung, 142, estimates that the Crimean war
+depreciated the average current rate of exchange of Russian paper money
+by 11.1 per cent., the Italian war of 1859 by 14.5 per cent., the German war
+of 1866 by 19.4 per cent., spite of the fact that Russia did not participate directly
+in the last two wars.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_932" name="note_932" href="#noteref_932">932.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">The
+more than forty-five milliards French assignats, estimated at their
+rates current, really produced to the state only about six milliards.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Gentz</span></span>, Histor. Journ., 1800, II, 317, after
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Lecoulteux</span></span>.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_933" name="note_933" href="#noteref_933">933.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Very well
+explained by <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">H. Thornton</span></span>, Paper Credit of Great Britain, ch.
+10. As to how, in Austria, the paper-money crisis contributed to bring the
+rigid national resources into a molten state, and to shake off the national inertia
+by the feeling of insecurity, see <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Buquoy</span></span>, Theorie d. Wirthschaft,
+1816, 347 ff. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Schäffle</span></span>, System, 3 aufl., 254 seq., thinks that
+if Austria should first adjust its values, and then, in case of another war, have
+recourse to a second depreciation, the disastrous disturbances of its national economy
+consequent herein would be produced twice instead of once, and not without
+reason.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_934" name="note_934" href="#noteref_934">934.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">The Prussian
+treasury-bills stood, in June, 1809, at 36 per cent. of their
+nominal value; June, 1810, 84-½ per cent.; January, 1812, 13-½; December,
+1812, 44-½; June, 1813, 26-½; July, 1813, 24-½; December 31, 1813, 49-½;
+January, 1815, 88; January 5, 1816, 99 per cent. Austrian paper money expressed
+in terms of metallic money, amounted, on an average, between 1849
+and 1855, to 292,000,000 florins: but at certain moments, it fluctuated from
+231,000,000 to 337,000,000. (Tübing. Zeitschr., 1856, 124.) The agio of
+silver fluctuated during the <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Bancozettel</span></span> (bank-billets, a species
+of Austrian paper money) period from one day to another on Change 40 and even 100 per
+cent.: thus, on the news of Napoleon's entry into Paris, between the 25th of
+March and the 4th of April, from 330 to 440; on the receipt of the news of
+the result of the battle of Waterloo, in three days, from 458 to 412; after
+Napoleon's abdication, from 412 to 320. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Gentz</span></span>, Werke, V, 62.)
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Huskisson</span></span>
+rightly calls a depreciated paper currency a much worse thing than clipped
+coin: the clipping of the coin is, so to speak, one great blow after which
+people can again calculate with certainty; but bad paper money is one continual
+fluctuation.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_935" name="note_935" href="#noteref_935">935.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-q">“The only difference here is that it is not
+left to individuals to say whether they will join in the game or not.”</span>
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Helferich.</span></span>)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_936" name="note_936" href="#noteref_936">936.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">During
+the later assignat-period every house was full of commodities,
+every pocket of samples; every <span class="tei tei-q">“exquisite”</span> and every lady was a merchant,
+because no one had any further confidence in the money. People had retrograded
+to the barbarous condition of trade by barter. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Goncourt</span></span>,
+Histoire de la Société française pendant le Directoire, 1854.) The French constitution
+of 1795 fixed the salaries of members of the Directory at the value of 50,000
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">myriogrammes</span></span> of wheat (art. 173, 68). In Delaware, while the
+depreciation of paper money lasted, farm rent was usually required to be paid in produce.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ebeling</span></span>, V, 37.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_937" name="note_937" href="#noteref_937">937.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-q">“Of all contrivances
+for cheating mankind, none has been more effectual than that which deludes
+them with paper money.”</span> (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">D. Webster.</span></span>) The
+American Secretary of the Treasury, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">McCulloch</span></span>, says, in the
+report of December 7, 1868, of the legal tender notes: <span class="tei tei-q">“there can be no doubt that
+these acts have tended to blunt and deaden the public conscience, and they are
+chargeable in no small degree with the demoralization which so generally
+prevails.”</span> <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Niebuhr</span></span> attributes the decline of old Spanish
+honesty which was formerly so much relied on in all great money centers, principally to
+the <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">vales</span></span>. (Nichtphilol. Nachlass, 489.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_938" name="note_938" href="#noteref_938">938.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">This
+calls to our mind the impersonal mass-crimes to which our own
+times so frightfully incline, when many a man who would recoil in horror
+from an ordinary act of pocket-picking or from manslaughter with intent to
+commit larceny, robs thousands in cold blood by means of a swindling enterprise,
+or, for the sake of a fraudulent insurance, destroys the lives of a
+whole ship's crew.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_939" name="note_939" href="#noteref_939">939.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Saxon loans of two million thalers treasury notes
+(<span lang="de" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="de"><span style="font-style: italic">Kassenbillets</span></span>), August,
+1813, which were then to bear interest in silver and to be paid in silver. The
+purchase of the precious metals, or loans made by the state in foreign countries,
+with the intention of redeeming paper money, effect the same end at a
+much greater cost. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Peschel</span></span>, D. Vierteljahrsschrift, 1858,
+III, 254.) If the currency consists of bank notes endowed by the state with compulsory
+circulation and an irredeemable character, such a metallic loan made in order
+to reimburse the bank for a loan to the state in depreciated notes is a gift
+made to the bank without reason; and the metallic money brought into the
+country flows back into foreign parts when the bank restriction is removed,
+because it, together with the appreciated notes, creates a too abundant
+circulation.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_940" name="note_940" href="#noteref_940">940.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Although
+in England the suspension of the redemption of notes had
+lasted from 1797 to 1819, depreciation of notes during the greater part of this
+time either did not occur at all (Summer of 1797 to 1799, 1802 ff.) or was very
+small; and even during the last five war years, it did not amount to much
+over 30 per cent. About 1817, the notes of themselves again rose to par,
+and had lost but little during the following years, in consequence of the great
+loans of the continental powers in the English market. Under such circumstances, the
+repeated promise of the state to make the notes redeemable at
+their full nominal value was certainly a cogent reason for the Peel's Act of
+1819. In favor hereof are especially <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Tooke</span></span>, Hist. of Prices, II,
+p. 60 ff., and <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">J. S. Mill</span></span>, Principles, III, ch. 13. Opposed to
+it, the so-called Birmingham-Atwood school and also <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Lord
+Ashburton</span></span>, in his statement before the Agricultural Committee, 1836. But according
+to <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Rob. Muschet</span></span>, Tables, exhibiting
+the Gain and Loss to the Bondholders arising from the Fluctuations in
+the Value of the Currency (1826), the state creditors, on the whole, lost more
+by the depreciation of the notes than they gained by their subsequent rise.
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ad. Wagner</span></span> also is decidedly in favor of the course A.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_941" name="note_941" href="#noteref_941">941.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">This has
+occurred not unfrequently in the case of the paper money of
+subdued revolt: thus, for instance, the Hungarian of 1849; in the case of the
+Southern Confederacy. But the assignats, too, came to this end, although,
+according to <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Büsch</span></span> (Werke IX, 526), the intentions of the country
+at first were good; and in Austria, in 1810, many prophecies looking in this direction
+were made. (Per contra <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Rehberg</span></span>, Sämmtl. Schriften. IV, 334.) Not
+very differently did it fare with the Swedish coin-tokens (<span lang="de" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="de"><span style="font-style: italic">Münzzeichen</span></span>) of Charles XII, which were altered 7
+times between 1715 and 1718; and where besides, the tokens called in in a much too short
+space of time were transformed into small change coins 1/32 their value hitherto.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Brückner</span></span> in <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hildebrand's</span></span>
+Jahrb. 1864, I, 161, ff.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_942" name="note_942" href="#noteref_942">942.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Thus
+it was, for instance, in Austria, in 1811 and 1820, at 1/5 and 2/5 of the
+nominal value, in 1799 in the United States, in 1813 in Denmark with the
+currency notes (<span lang="de" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="de"><span style="font-style: italic">Courantzettel</span></span>),
+in 1816 in Norway with the royal bank dollar notes, in Sweden in 1814 with the bank
+notes (<span lang="de" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="de"><span style="font-style: italic">Bancozetteln</span></span>) at 37-½ per
+cent., in 1839 in Russia with the <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">bankassignationen</span></span>, at 2/7 of
+their nominal value. Of theoretical writers this course is recommended among others by
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Jacob</span></span>, Staatsfinanzwissenschaft, § 980 ff.;
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Nebenius</span></span>, Œff. Credit, 2 Aufl., ff.; Deutsche
+Vierteljahrsschrift, 1841, I, 65; <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Rau</span></span>, Lehrbuch, III, § 528;
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Helferich</span></span>, Tüb. Ztschr., 1856, 435 ff. According to
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">v. Rotteck</span></span>, Lehrbuch, IV
+402, it may be assumed that paper money is spread among the people of a
+country in proportion to their resources: which is also the hypothesis on
+which all direct taxation is based. Hence the gradual depreciation of paper
+money operates like the imposition of a tax and the <em class="tei tei-emph"><span style="font-style: italic">reduction of value</span></em>
+(<span lang="de" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="de"><span style="font-style: italic">Deralvirung</span></span>)
+is, so to speak, only the release of the same. Besides <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Gentz</span></span>
+(Werke by Schlezier, IV, 58) shows from the example of Austria in 1811,
+that in the case of the taking up of a depreciated paper currency it makes a
+better impression to give 100 florins in specie for 1,000 florins in paper, than
+200 florins in a new kind of paper. The holders of the old paper money have
+now lost confidence in all paper currency. Of similar import is the immediate
+abolition of the compulsory circulation of paper money at its nominal
+value (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Prince Smith</span></span> in <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Faucher's</span></span>
+Vierteljahrsschrift, VII, 126 ff.), and the introduction
+of compulsory circulation in accordance with the day's quotations
+of the actual value of the paper as compared with specie.
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Strache</span></span>, Die Valuta in Œsterreich, 1861;
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">per contra</span></span>, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ad. Wagner</span></span>, Tüb. Zeitschr.,
+1861, 606 ff.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_943" name="note_943" href="#noteref_943">943.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Such measures
+as were adopted in Austria, in 1811, where a <span class="tei tei-q">“redemption
+and extinction deputation,”</span> independent of the government was established
+and sworn to prevent a further increase of paper money, are not sufficient
+of themselves alone.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_944" name="note_944" href="#noteref_944">944.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">The Code Civil
+(art. 1895) makes the nominal value entirely conclusive;
+so, also, the Prussian Landrecht (I, § 790): which is to proclaim the omnipotence
+and infallibility of the state power in the most ingenuous or else in
+the most brutal manner. The power given by <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Puchta</span></span> to metallic
+value (Pandecten, VII, aufl., § 38) is applicable neither to paper money nor to small
+coin; and it ignores entirely that stamped coins and currency money are
+something different from mere metallic commodities and even from metallic
+bars. The Austrian civil law (<span lang="de" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="de"><span style="font-style: italic">bürgerliche
+Gesetzbuch</span></span>) decides in favor of the current value (986 seq.):
+a view which most modern jurists since <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Savigny</span></span>
+(Obligationenrecht, I, 404; earlier yet, <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Hufeland</span></span>, Ueber die
+rechtliche Natur des Geldschulden, 180) entertain. But they even fail to recognize that
+the depreciation, for instance, of paper money as compared with specie and general
+decrease of purchasing power are identical only in the case of such
+paper money or reduced coins which have no compulsory circulation. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">A.
+Wagner</span></span>, Tüb. Ztschr., 1863, 478 ff.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_945" name="note_945" href="#noteref_945">945.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Let
+us suppose that at the moment the state could perform its duty to
+its servants only to the extent of one half. If it should frankly admit this,
+pay one-half in good money and remain in debt for the other half, it might
+subsequently, in better times, make good to them or to their heirs what it
+had now refused; and thus private credit, from the disturbance of which the
+state can only suffer, suffer no diminution. Both are quite different when
+the state disguises its insolvency under the mask of apparent full payment
+in paper money which has lost 50 per cent. of its nominal value. In opposition
+to the myth that the assignats saved France, see <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Levasseur</span></span>, in the
+Acad. des Sc. m. et. p.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_946" name="note_946" href="#noteref_946">946.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">It not
+unfrequently happens that a nation's paper money has been directly
+or indirectly affected by an unfriendly state. Thus for instance, England, in
+1794, tolerated an assignat manufactory at Lambeth, while Frenchmen imitated
+English bank notes. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Archenholz</span></span>, Aenalen XI, 429.) Napoleon in
+1812 issued forged Russian bank notes. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Cancrin</span></span>, Œconomie der
+menschl. Gesellschaft, 136. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Niebuhr</span></span>, Gesch. der Revolution, II,
+314.) When Maria Theresa first wished to introduce paper money, Bolza, her minister of
+finance, in his urgent appeal to her to desist from adopting such a measure,
+foretold the subsequent bankruptcy etc. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Mailath</span></span>, Oesterr.
+Gesch., V., 83.) <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Adam Smith</span></span> compares gold and silver circulation
+to a highway which, indeed, produces nothing directly. Paper money is an advance similar
+to that which would be produced by the construction of a machine adapted to the
+carriage of persons and goods through the air, and which permit the highways
+hitherto used to be turned into meadows, arable land etc. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ad. Smith</span></span>
+very strongly emphasizes the insecurity of these <span class="tei tei-q">“Dædalian wings”</span> as compared
+with the <span class="tei tei-q">“solid ground of gold and silver,”</span> especially in the transitory
+misfortune produced by war. (W. of N., II, p. 78, Bas.) <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">David Hume</span></span>
+says of all paper media of exchange, that they share all the harmfulness of an increase
+of specie money, enhancement of the price of commodities, aggravation
+of the obstacles to exportation; but that they do not share in the useful
+properties of specie money. (Discourses, On Money and on the Balance of
+Trade.) The younger <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Mirabeau</span></span> kept Necker from pursuing his plan
+to issue paper money with the words: <span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">du
+papier monnaie c'est la peste circulante!</span></span> Inconsistent
+as Napoleon was in his bank policy (compare <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Horn</span></span>, Bankfreiheit,
+304), he always rejected paper money. As in 1805 he wrote to the minister
+of justice: <span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">je ne veut pas de papier
+monnaie</span></span>: so, in opposition to the minister of the interior, he in 1810
+compared it to the plague: <span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">le plus
+grandfléau des nations</span></span>. (Acad. des Sciences m. et p., 1864, II, 212.)
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Sismondi</span></span>, too, compares paper money to the paper cannons of the
+Chinese, which render a cheap service until the hour of danger comes. (N. Principles,
+II, 107.) Of the banks he says: <span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">les
+avantages aussi-legers les dangers aussi graves</span></span>. (Eludes,
+II. 421). <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Cancrin</span></span>, Œkonomie der menschl. Gesellschaft, 1845, 152
+ff., says he thinks that possibly it might have been well never to have established
+banks, but that yet the craving for the new is preponderately good, it brings
+inventions and improvements with it. Even <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Tooke</span></span> considers the
+insecurity of paper money a disadvantage which more than counterbalances its cheapness.
+(Considerations on the State of the Currency, 1829, 85.) On the
+doubts of <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Jefferson</span></span> and <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Gallatin</span></span>, see
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Wolowski</span></span>, Enquête, 170, seq. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Webster</span></span>
+called paper money <span class="tei tei-q">“the most effectual of inventions to fertilize the rich
+man's field by the sweat of the poor man's brow.”</span> <span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">Tout papier monnaie par lui même est un mensonage.</span></span>
+(<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">M. Chevalier</span></span>, Cours, III, 428.) <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">M.
+Niebuhr</span></span> calls banks a poison which should be used with moderation. (Bankrevolution
+und Bankreform, 1846, 37.) Compare the writers named in §
+<a href="#Section_2" class="tei tei-ref">2</a>.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_947" name="note_947" href="#noteref_947">947.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">Avec la liberté un peuple n'a jamais de mauvaises
+monnaies</span></span> (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">F. Lenormant</span></span>): entirely so, provided
+<span lang="fr" class="tei tei-foreign" xml:lang="fr"><span style="font-style: italic">liberté</span></span> be translated <span class="tei tei-q">“true
+and insured freedom.”</span></dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_948" name="note_948" href="#noteref_948">948.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Law's giddy projects under
+the regents of Orleans and the assignats of the first republic; Austria, Russia and the
+United States; the Danish absolute monarchy, and Sweden, both under Charles XII., and
+its oligarchical times. The history of Rhode Island paper money is peculiarly scandalous.
+All debts had to be paid within two years, or to be held invalid, and juries
+were dispensed with in such cases. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ebeling</span></span>, Gesch. und
+Erdbeschreib. von N. America, II, 173 ff.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_949" name="note_949" href="#noteref_949">949.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Ad. Müller</span></span>
+compares <span class="tei tei-q">“cosmopolitan”</span> metallic money to a universal language:
+paper money ties one to the country, as people do not like to travel
+in foreign parts when they understand only their native language. As paper
+money compels subjects to take an interest in the state, a state like Austria
+would act very foolishly if it should begin its reorganization by enhancing
+its depreciated values (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Valuta</span></span>). (Elemente der Staatskunst, 180,
+III, 171; II, 339 ff.) Even in 1830, he found fault with the Austrian loan for the payment
+of the paper money. (Briefwechsel mit Gentz, 321 seq.) He lauded
+paper money because he claimed it led a country back to the barter And
+service-economy of the middle ages. (Verm. Schriften, I, 59 ff.) Similarly,
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Gentz</span></span>, in his later writings. Compare
+<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Roscher</span></span>, Gesch., der N. Œk., in
+Deutschland, II, 762.</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_950" name="note_950" href="#noteref_950">950.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Who, for instance, would lay by a paper dollar in the
+savings bank for his godchild? In this respect, too, oriental countries have preserved
+much of the medieval. Concerning the aversion of the Egyptians of our day for
+all paper money, see <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">Stephan</span></span>, Ægypten, 250 seq. This is all the
+more surprising since during several months after the harvest, there are from 4,000,000
+to 8,000,000 piasters in specie sent every day from Alexandria by post to
+private individuals in the provinces. In addition to this there is the immense
+difference in the French, English and Austrian coins circulating in the country,
+and which have very different rates in the different provinces. It is still
+worse in Arabia. (<span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">v. Maltzan</span></span>, Reise, I, 27.)</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_951" name="note_951" href="#noteref_951">951.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext">Compare <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">v. Schlozer</span></span>,
+Anfangsgründe, I, 140 ff. <span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">M. Niebuhr</span></span> (Rau's Archiv.
+N.F. II, 125) finds paper money best adapted to countries without
+any exchange-trade, but which at the same time require a species of money
+easily computed and easy of transportation (Russia); countries whose national
+economy has an extraordinarily rapid growth (the United States); and
+in unusually solid countries (Scotland).</dd><dt class="tei tei-notelabel"><a id="note_952" name="note_952" href="#noteref_952">952.</a></dt><dd class="tei tei-notetext"><span class="tei tei-hi"><span style="font-style: italic">List</span></span>, Nat. System der politischen
+Œk., I, 394. A private individual of
+small means who should go on his travels without money would be subject
+to all sorts of annoyances; a king or a Rothschild, just as soon as he was
+recognized as such, would find credit everywhere. Thus, English businessmen
+have outstanding claims in all parts of the world, which might without
+any great difficulty be called in in the precious metals. The more the
+division of labor is developed, the better may the condition of a nation's
+whole economy be seen reflected in the course of its banking system and its
+exportation and importation.</dd></dl>
+ </div>
+ <hr class="doublepage" /><div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 5.00em; margin-top: 5.00em">
+ <div id="pgfooter" class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 4.00em; margin-top: 4.00em"><pre class="pre tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em">***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PRINCIPLES OF POLITICAL ECONOMY***
+</pre><hr class="doublepage" /><div class="tei tei-div" style="margin-bottom: 3.00em; margin-top: 3.00em"><a name="rightpageheader343" id="rightpageheader343"></a><a name="pgtoc344" id="pgtoc344"></a><a name="pdf345" id="pdf345"></a><h1 class="tei tei-head" style="text-align: left; margin-bottom: 3.46em; margin-top: 3.46em"><span style="font-size: 173%">Credits</span></h1><table summary="This is a list." class="tei tei-list" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em; margin-top: 1.00em"><tbody><tr><th class="tei tei-label tei-label-gloss">January 4, 2009  </th></tr><tr><td class="tei tei-item"><table summary="This is a list." class="tei tei-list" style="margin-bottom: 1.00em; margin-top: 1.00em"><tbody><tr class="tei tei-labelitem"><th class="tei tei-label"></th><td class="tei tei-item">Project Gutenberg TEI edition 1</td></tr><tr class="tei tei-labelitem"><th class="tei tei-label"></th><td class="tei tei-item"><span class="tei tei-respStmt">
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