登陆注册
5295100000002

第2章 SECT.I(2)

At the dissolution of the monasteries,the lazy and the indigent,who were deprived of their accustomed food,becameclamorous,and,having long since forgot to work,were not only ready to join in every scheme for the disturbance of thestate,but,as vagrants,by their numbers,by their impostures,and by their thefts,they rendered themselves a public andmost intolerable nuisance.To stop their mouths,and to make them employ their hands in honest labour,was the intentionof that day.But at the same time the laws took under their protection some objects of distress,who for near two hundredyears,from a noble kind of pride,refused the proffered aid,or received it with reluctance;and who at the present momentwould be more effectually relieved,if no other laws existed but the first great laws of human nature,filial affection,and thegeneral benevolence of mankind.The world,it must be confessed,is wicked enough:Yet amidst all their wickedness menseldom want compassion,unless the circumstances in which they find themselves are peculiarly distressing.Should we "inthe straitness of a siege behold men eating the flesh of their sons and of their daughters;should we see among them a mantender and delicate,whose eye should be evil towards his brother and towards the wife of his bosom,and towards theremnant of his children,so that he should not give to any of them of the flesh of his children whom he should eat;"(1)wemust not from such instances conclude that all men,or even most men,are destitute of mercy and compassion,or that manin general can be kind and beneficent only by compulsion.No doubt in every district will be found some,who are strangersto the finer feelings of the human heart;but at the same time in every district will be found some,who are endued withgenerosity of soul;and others,who under the influence of piety will rejoice to relieve the wants and distresses of theirfellow creatures.In every place some will be distinguished for benevolence,others for brutality;but in general man is whathis situation makes him.Is he happy himself in the enjoyment of ease and affluence?In such circumstances "he will be eyesto the blind and feet to the lame;he will be a father to the poor;the blessing of those that are ready to perish will comeupon this man:he will cause the widow's heart to leap for joy*."(2)Let the same man be straitened in his circumstances,lethim be burthened with taxes,let him be harassed by the clamours and distracted by the incessant demands of the mostimprovident and lazy of the surrounding poor;and he will have little inclination to seek for objects of distress,or to visitthe sequestered cottage of the silent sufferer.It is generally found,that modest worth stands at a distance,or draws nighwith faltering tongue and broken accents to tell an artless tale;whilst the most worthless are the most unreasonable in theirexpectations,and the most importunate in their solicitation for relief.If the latter,from any imperfection of our laws,getabundantly too much,the former must of necessity obtain too little.If,agreeable to the general practice of the labouringpoor,a man,previous to his marriage,or whilst his family is small,has made no provision for his future wants;if all,towhom he might naturally look for aid,are in the same circumstances with himself;and if the charity of those among hisneighbours,who are distinguished for benevolence,nay of all who have the common feelings of humanity,is exhausted;ifthey who are most willing are least able to relieve him;we must expect to see distress and poverty even among those whoare worthy of compassion.--This at present is the case in England.There never was greater distress among the poor:therenever was more money collected for their relief.But what is most perplexing is,that poverty and wretchedness haveincreased in exact proportion to the efforts which have been made for the comfortable subsistence of the poor;and thatwherever most is expended for their support,there objects of distress are most abundant;whilst in those countries orprovincial districts where the least provision has been made for their supply,we hear the fewest groans.Among the formerwe see drunkenness and idleness cloathed in rags;among the latter we hear the chearful songs of industry and virtue.

If laws alone could make a nation happy,ours would be the happiest nation upon earth:idleness and vice could not exist;poverty would be unknown;we should be like a prosperous hive of bees;all would have enough and none too much.Thereverse of this we find to be the case:poverty and vice prevail,and the most vicious have access to the common stock.If aman has squandered the inheritance of his fathers;if by his improvidence,by his prodigality,by his drunkenness and vices,he has dissipated all his substance;if by his debaucheries he has ruined his constitution,and reduced himself to such adeplorable condition that he hath neither inclination nor ability to work;yet must he be maintained by the sweat and labourof the sober and of the industrious farmer,and eat the bread which should be given only to virtue in distress.--If in allcases,this bread,so ill bestowed,were superabundant;if the industrious firmer were himself in ease and affluence;thegrievance would yet be tolerable.But in this day it often happens that the industrious firmer is oprest with poverty.He risesearly,and it is late before he can retire to his rest;he works hard and fares hard;yet with all his labour and his care he canscarce provide subsistence for his numerous family.He would feed them better,but the prodigal must first be fed.Hewould purchase warmer cloathing for them,but the children of the prostitute must first be cloathed.The little whichremains after the profligate have been cloathed and fed,is all that he can give to those,who in nature have the first claimsupon a father.If this evil could be stemmed,whilst the present laws subsist,he might yet have hope:but when he considers,that all the efforts,which have been made in his own parish or in others,have been vain,and that the evil is constantlyincreasing,he is driven to despair of help,and fears that he shall be himself reduced to work for daily hire.It will be evidentthat his fears are not altogether groundless,if we consider,that even in parishes,where no manufactures have beenestablished,the poor rates have been doubling,some every fourteen years,and others heady every seven years;whilst insome districts,where the manufactures are carried on to a considerable extent,the poor rates are more than ten shillings inthe pound upon the improved rents.That the distress does not arise from the high price of com,will be clear,if weconsider,what may perhaps hereafter be more fully stated,that although for these two hundred years the price of wheathas fluctuated between wide extremes,yet upon comparing the average prices within that period,the ancients did not find acheaper market than the moderns.If we take the average of the sixty years which terminated at the commencement of thepresent century,we shall find the price of wheat to have been six shillings and four pence halfpenny per bushel,whereas inthe subsequent sixty years it was only five shillings;and for the last twenty years,ending with the year 1782,not more thansix shillings and six pence:yet during that long period in which provisions were the cheapest,the poor rates werecontinually advancing.That the distress does not arise from the high price of soap,leather,candles,salt,and other smallarticles needful in a family,will appear not only from the superior advance in the price of labour (in the proportion of six tofour within a century),(3)but from hence,that where the price of labour is the highest and provisions are the cheapest,therethe poor rates have been most exorbitant.In Scotland they have no legal provision for the poor,yet labour is cheaper andcorn is dearer than they are in England.

同类推荐
  • 子平真诠评注

    子平真诠评注

    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。
  • 陈氏香谱

    陈氏香谱

    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。
  • 杨忠愍集

    杨忠愍集

    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。
  • 叠山集

    叠山集

    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。
  • 尔雅

    尔雅

    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
  • 后宫陌妃传

    后宫陌妃传

    那日繁花似锦,翠锦稚女,提罗裙笑颜沐春风。那月影绰半掩,陌上佳人,舞长袖轻歌照月华。时已迁,景已变,人犹在,情难堪。国恨情仇,后宫争宠步步惊心。苏紫陌,恬然淡漠入宫来,殊不知后宫如镜,镜面平静无波,镜后是袖里藏刀血染红。为护得身边人周全,不得不步步为营,如履刀锋。圣宠面前从无情义,紫陌心头却存一寄光明,仇恨背后,是天下再无战乱,举世安宁的希望。
  • 白衣卿相

    白衣卿相

    “哎,你听说了吗,这次的文武状元是同一个人啊!”“听说那个文武状元长得比女子还要美三分呐!”“而且他才15岁,又是全国首富佟云的亲侄子!皇上当场就封了他做兵部侍郎呢,圣恩深隆啊!”听到这些传言,青衣男子白皙有力的手握着茶杯,细长的丹凤眼微眯着,望着茶杯,眼神深邃而遥远:莫君语,这个一夜之间名满帝都的男子,究竟是个什么样的人呢?说是佟云的侄子,可是他之前的经历竟然是无迹可查!想到这,他的眉心微蹙了下。今晚,父皇会设宴款待今科状元及众举子,届时再做试探吧。他和她最终留下谜一样的结局……
  • 这就是台湾,这才是台湾

    这就是台湾,这才是台湾

    经常有大陆的朋友跟我分享他们去台湾的旅行,我突然发现他们并没有看到真实的台湾。我去书店买了大量的台湾旅行书,结果也是如此。于是,我决定从一个土生土长的台湾人的角度写一本与台湾有关的书。26万字,19个地方,从台北到澎湖,从城市到小镇,从热门景点到夜市、码头、老街、环岛公路、庙宇、高山族区、铁道,从台湾小吃到太平洋的风,从台湾的人到台湾的民俗,从台湾人的真实生活到台湾的小故事,从街上随处可见的现象到台湾的历史,我花了三年时间写出了我从小认识以及热爱的台湾。
  • 你是我的忧伤

    你是我的忧伤

    从小,苏安禾就把古溪当做自己的偶像,崇拜着他,爱慕着他。那个时候,她总是简单的以为她与古溪能一直幸福下去。上了大学后,遇见了严格,一个阳光帅气的男孩,带给她莫名的幸福,突如其来的感动,终于打动了她,两个人手牵手的幸福。毕业前夕,苏安禾知道了古溪身患重病,内心的挣扎,她不知道该何去何从?从此以后,苏安禾只身一人承受着所有的痛苦和忧伤,古溪的病情,严格的误解,让她悲伤到快要窒息。对古溪,到底是亲情还是爱情?严格,我们是否还能继续走下去?她的幸福,又在哪里呢?
  • 快穿女神帅炸天

    快穿女神帅炸天

    在总裁文里,女配要和女主抢男人,在女强文里,女配要和女主抢男人,在修仙文里,女配还是要和女主抢男人。女配纯情也好,美艳也好,温婉也好,但内里都是个妖艳贱货,而白酒总是会成为这个“妖艳贱货”。白酒穿进去后,世界的画风是这样的……女一号:“小姐姐,求抱大腿!” 女二号:“小姐姐,求抱大腿!” …… 女N号:“小姐姐,求抱大腿!”男主抓狂,“说好的女主和女配要为我疯,为我狂呢!?”呵呵。白酒给了男主一个王之蔑视,转眼就被一双如野兽性危险的视线给盯住了。男(已崩坏)配:“你是爱我,还是他们?”白酒看了眼他手里拿着的锁链,微笑:“亲爱的,当然是爱你。”(女主苏苏苏!)
  • 大宋江山(第二卷):陈桥双辉

    大宋江山(第二卷):陈桥双辉

    本卷从宋太祖赵匡胤陈桥兵变开始,书写大宋立国的艰难历程。全书描写了赵匡胤和赵普等策划发动兵变,赵匡胤黄袍加身,被拥立为皇帝,登基后又杯酒释兵权,定下重文抑武的国策。故事以赵匡胤登基开始,以赵匡胤在赵光义的明剑暗伤中谢幕为结束,帝王的命运似乎是一个解不开的死循环,呈现出历史大势与生命悲剧的纠缠一幕。
  • 觉醒者

    觉醒者

    神秘杀手冒名进军统,打鬼子,除间谍,美女相伴,破坏特高科惊天阴谋,揭露不世之密。
  • 陌上公子陌相安

    陌上公子陌相安

    当红明星穿越至民国成了少帅,一同穿越的还有个母胎单身25年的粉丝小姐姐?动荡的年代,面对回到现代与爱人相守,该何去何从?怕是唯有两相安好才算圆满“从前以为相知,相爱,相守如同一颗种子的发芽,开花,结果,顺其自然,理应如此”“如今,我只愿你安好,一世周全”
  • 彊村老人评词

    彊村老人评词

    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。
  • 赢在起点:孩子从优秀到卓越的36种能力

    赢在起点:孩子从优秀到卓越的36种能力

    这本书不会告诉父母如何让孩子取得高分,但它是孩子取得高分并成为顶尖人才的永不枯竭的能量源泉。父母在阅读本书汲取家教智慧的同时,还能发现提升自身能力的良方。