登陆注册
19621600000020

第20章 Chapter 3(7)

But the hind has no participation in property, nothing to hope from the fertility of the toil or the propitiousness of the season; he plants not for his children; he entrusts not to the ground the labour of his young years, to reap the fruit of it, with interest, in his old age. He lives each week on the wages of the last. Ever exposed to the want of work by derangements in his master's fortune; ever ready to feel the extremes of want, from sickness, accident, or even the approaches of old age, he runs all the risks of ruin without enjoying any of the chances of fortune. Economy in his situation is scarcely probable; but though he should succeed in collecting a little capital, the suppression of all intermediate ranks hinders him from putting it to use. The distance between his lot and that of an extensive farmer, is too great for being passed over; whereas, in the system of cultivation on the small scale, a labourer may succeed, by his little economy, in acquiring a small farm or a small metairie; from this he may pass to a greater, and from that to every thing. The same causes have suppressed all the intermediate stages in other departments of industry. A gulf lies between the day-labourer and every enterprise of manufacture or trade, as well as farming; and the lower classes have now lost that help which sustained them in a former period of civilization. Parish aids, which are secured to the day-labourer, increase his dependence. In such a state of suffering and disquietude, it is not easy to preserve the feeling of human dignity, or the love of freedom; and thus at the highest point of modern civilization, the system of agriculture approximates to that of those corrupt periods of ancient civilization, when the whole labour of the field was performed by slaves.

The state of Ireland, and the convulsions to which that unhappy country is continually exposed, show clearly enough how important it is for the repose and security of the rich themselves, that the agricultural class, which forms the great majority of a nation, should enjoy conveniences, hope, and happiness. The Irish peasants are ready to revolt, and plunge their country into the horrors of civil war; they live each in a miserable hut, on the produce of a few beds of potatoes, and the milk of a cow; more unhappy, at the present day, than the cottagers of England, though possessing a small property, of which the latter are destitute. In return for their allotted portion of ground, they merely engage to work by the day, at a fixed wage, on the farm where they live; but their competition with each other has forced them to be satisfied with a wage of the lowest possible kind. A similar competition will act likewise against the English cottagers. There is no equality of strength between the day-labourer, who is starving, and the farmer, who does not even lose the revenue of his ground, by suppressing some of his habitual operations; and hence the result of such a struggle between the two classes, is constantly a sacrifice of the class which is poorer, more numerous, and better entitled to the protection of law.

Rich proprietors generally find that for themselves large farms are more advantageous than small ones. The small farmer rarely employs a capital sufficient even for his little cultivation; himself is always so near to ruin, that he must begin by ruining the ground. And certainly, in counties where the different systems of cultivation are practically set in opposition to each other, it is granted that land is ruined by letting it on lease, and reimproved by cultivating it with servants or metayers. It is not, therefore, small farms, but metairies, which ought to be compared with large farms.

Cultivation on the great scale, spares much time which is lost in the other way; it causes a greater mass of work to be performed in the same time, by a given number of men; it tends, above all, to procure from the employment of great capitals the profit formerly procured from the employment of numerous workmen; it introduces the use of expensive instruments, which abridge and facilitate the labour of man. It invents machines, in which the wind, the fall of water, the expansion of steam, are substituted for the power of limbs; it makes animals execute the work formerly executed by men. It hunts the latter from trade to trade, and concludes by rendering their existence useless. Any saving of human strength is a prodigious advantage, in a colony, where the supernumerary population may always be advantageously employed. Humanity justly solicits the employment of machines to aid the labour of the negroes, who cannot perform what is required of them, and who used to be incessantly recruited by an infamous commerce. But in a country where population is already too abundant, the dismissal of more than half the field-labourers is a serious misfortune, particularly at a time when a similar improvement in machinery causes the dismissal of more than half the manufacturing population of towns. The nation is nothing else but the union of all the individuals who compose it, and the progress of its wealth is illusory, when obtained at the price of general wretchedness and morality.

Whilst, in England, the peasantry are hastening to destruction, their condition is improving in France; they are gathering strength, and without abandoning manual labour, they enjoy a kind of affluence; they unfold their minds, and adopt, though slowly, the discoveries of science. But in France, the peasants are mostly proprietors: the number of those who cultivate their own lands prodigiously increased in the revolution; and to this cause must be attributed the rapid progress which agriculture is making in that country, in spite of a long war and heavy contributions. Perhaps England might partly obtain a similar advantage, if these vast commons were shared among her cottagers, to whom the charm of property would thus be restored.

同类推荐
  • 幼官图

    幼官图

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 雪关和尚语录

    雪关和尚语录

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 琴堂谕俗编

    琴堂谕俗编

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • Madame Bovary

    Madame Bovary

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 伤寒标本心法类萃

    伤寒标本心法类萃

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 倾世狂妃:废材三小姐

    倾世狂妃:废材三小姐

    她是叱咤黑道的暗夜女王,一经穿越,新婚之日,自己男人抱着她的妹妹在她面前上演大战?可笑,男人,算什么!倾城一笑,素手一撇,你,不过是浮尘一颗!当丑女褪去伪装,一支艳舞倾天下!异世大陆,烽烟四起,刀光剑影,血色挥洒,且看她翻手为云覆手为雨,成就一段惊世传奇!情节虚构,切勿模仿
  • 九尾狐尊

    九尾狐尊

    洛辰!一个缺失了八年记忆的少年!一个不知道自己身世的少年!一个命魂无踪的少年!一个拥有至尊容魂的少年!一个身具无上体质火灵体的少年!……他纵横沧溟,笑傲大陆,与众尊争锋,千族比拼!他逐红颜,相救母,报父仇……他究竟有着何等的壮阔人生?他的未来又在何处?一切尽在九尾狐尊!签约作品,请放心收藏!
  • 校花的贴身暗卫

    校花的贴身暗卫

    神秘组织现身国内,国家重点扶持的能源企业有遭人渗透的可能性,企业领导人的独生女洛晓洛多次被绑架。黑暗特种兵派出了有八年特种兵龄的张浪来到一座叫做海都的临海城市,以体育老师的身份卧底在洛晓洛身边,并且为其提供保护。张浪在来到海都市之后,却意外介入了海都四大家族的明争暗斗之中。青春活泼的学生让他疲于应付、灵动美人让他难以割舍、冰山董事长让他意乱情迷、突然出现的青梅竹马也让他措手不及……
  • 汉末超级书院

    汉末超级书院

    我唱着山歌,教着学生,喝着开水,忙着修仙。俗世里没有我的身影,却有着我的传说。教书育人,是我的本职,桃李满天下,是我的追求。世界将由我的弟子改变!
  • 祸乱天下:修仙刷怪谈恋爱

    祸乱天下:修仙刷怪谈恋爱

    一夕之间,物不是人也非。本来曾是警校一枝花的她,却被自己的男友和闺密一同背叛,成了一条游荡的冤魂,或许是上天怜悯,她意外的重生成了玄幻世界的一个小兵——欧阳汐。但“欧阳汐”的身份,却没有想象之中的那么简单。这一世的朋友,会不会让她重蹈覆辙?幽远的记忆,是否是早已注定的纠缠?一个神秘引人,一个勾人心魄,两个牵动她灵魂的身影,孰真孰假?意外走上修仙之路的她,能否斩断上一世的爱恨?她是叶汐,树叶的叶,潮汐的汐。“不管他是谁,我此生,都只爱他……”
  • 为君解罗裳:妖女倾天下

    为君解罗裳:妖女倾天下

    这东南国,谁人不知,谁人不晓,这要嫁的王爷,是传说中的暴君,杀人不眨眼,嗜血成狂的一个魔君的?圣旨一下,要千家的女儿嫁给东南国国的这个平南王爷,千家一听,仿佛是立马炸开了锅一样的,你不愿意去,我不愿意去,自然,就是由这个痴儿傻儿嫁过去了?
  • 英雄联盟之称霸异界

    英雄联盟之称霸异界

    【最强英雄联盟传承者降临】你横扫同级强者真巧我也是,你有强大武技我只需用一个沉默技能就能把你瞬间变成废人。我是德玛的化身我有剑圣的传承,斗气魔法飞刀长枪无一不精。
  • 灵欲主蜉

    灵欲主蜉

    我欲主灵蜉,谁有不服!我欲称灵主,谁有不服!我欲天地沉浮,谁有不服!一少年,天生傲骨,修灵道,灭灵门,主灵蜉,踏足巅峰看茫茫灵界,我主沉浮!
  • 海归抢滩中关村

    海归抢滩中关村

    本书介绍在中关村创业的代表性海归企业的决策人,记述其留学过程、海外经历、回国感悟及创业的历程与事业发展。
  • 缘分遇上冤家

    缘分遇上冤家

    虽然,我们差不了几岁,但是,我是你的太爷爷,你是我的重孙女。虽然,我们亲密无间,但是,我是你的缘分,你是我的冤家。虽然??????呵??????太多的假设,我也许真的只有把一切的一切都放在心底吧。虽然,我现在出家为僧,我只想对你说:“你对我的好,我永远记得。”??????