On this page
- Departments (1)
-
Text (5)
-
Untitled Article
-
Untitled Article
-
Untitled Article
-
Untitled Article
-
titttatnxt
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
-
-
Transcript
-
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
Additionally, when viewing full transcripts, extracted text may not be in the same order as the original document.
Untitled Article
attained ; and that the idea of postponing the question is " not only an error , but the moat serious one to be found in the whole field of political economy . " I infer from his contest that , if checks were in abeyance , population would double itself in twenty years , and we should incur a practical retribution for slighting Malthus . Now , the whole practical importance of the question turns Upon this matter of time ; and the question of time involves some ulterior considerations , not included in the common view . We might take it for granted that there is such a ratio between the encrease of population and of food , that some day the fatal limit
would be attained , and yet the theoretical fact would have no more importance for us than the supposititious meeting of two parallel lines . But the proximity or remoteness of the fatal juncture bears upon the still obscure and almost unexplored question—the nature of the two counteractives . " The law of the production of land , " says Mill , " is that , in any given etate of agricultural skill and knowledge , by encreasing the labour , the produce is not encreased in an equal degree ; doubling the labour does not double the produce ; or , to express the dame thing in other words , every encrease of produce is obtained by a more than proportional encrease in the application of labour to the land . "
He admits , however , that laws , usages , and tenures , are such as to check the flow of capital on the land , although " if capital were forthcoming to execute withia the next year , all known and recognized improvements in the land of the United Kingdom which would ' pay' at the existing prices , inferior land would not for a long time" be needed for cultivation . Probably the spread of high tillage might be conteracted . He also admits that probably the worst land now in cultivation produces as much- as the richest soil yielded to our ancestors :
the disuse of fallows virtually added a fourth to the extent of land ; rotation of crops , manures , stock feeding , mechanical inventions , ceconomies of labour , good roads , &c , have done the rest . He admits that farther manufacturing refinements may at once disengage manufacturing labour for better division of employments and reinforcements of agricultural labour ; also that education , might encrease the efficiency of labour ; finally , that importations of food and emigration are counteractives of redundant population .
Now let us enumerate the elements with which we are supplied by Mill towards postponing the practical pressure of the population question . The discontinuance of fallows has virtually added to the extent of the land ; the produce per acre h ^ s . about doubled , even on the worst soils ; importation of food has added to our store , and emigration is an outlet for living surplus : with these auxiliaries we have made a shift thus far , and , upon the whole , ceconomists generally tell us we are better off' than we were with a scantier population . As to the future , Mill promises new access of capital to land ,
on improvement of laws , tenures , and usages ; further improvements , which in a single year would actually have the effect of throwing land out of cultivation , as not needed ; reinforcements of labour , applicable to land ; and encreased efficiency of the labourer . We believe it would J ; e very difficult to calculate the aggregate effect of all these beneficial changes . It is notorious that absurd covenants keep a great deal of land in a state of half cultivation : the abrogation of such covenants , permitting whole cultivation , would vir t ually double the land under them . It is a general charge against tenant-farmers that they have not half
capital enough : admit two capitals where one la , and you have two farina where one is—land doubled . Investigations an to the true ratio of Hiiperh ' cial Hpace , depth of culture , quantity of manure , and produce , are wholly in their infancy ; thus , while it is impossible oven to make a random guess at the total results of the advance in agricultural science , we can , at least , perceive that it must virtually and largely multiply the extent of land . Without going into uny gigantic operations , emigrant colonization hits had so marked an effect in Home counties that the fanners have conspired to check it , and yet , hitherto , it has been imperfectly lined .
It is to he observed that Mill naturally speaks , throughout , on the presumption that trade is the only medium for obtaining concert of labour in the division of employments ; and it incurious to nee the length to which that pretminptiou carries him , when he cun make the remarkable assertion that , " however dear labour may he , when food i « wanted , labour will always be applied to producing it in preference to anything else "—an assertion made in the teeth of the facts , that we see capital idle ,
land idle , and men idle , while capital is wasted on the endless production of nicknacks , and food is wanted for immense numbers . He appears to me , in common with the ceconomists of out day , to be misled by the fact that certain employments do not pay in any trading process—that is , do not subserve with immediate profit the process of exchange—which yet would amply pay the community or the actual workers . I will give two instances . It is well known that the formation of roads in many rural districts would be a powerful auxiliary of agriculture , but that
roads are unmade , or ill made , because there is no sufficient disengageable money-profit for individuals , or because the incidence of the burden is a disputable point . Again , on the moorlands beyond the Union farm near Sheffield * certain persons have been permitted to squat , to build residences , and to cultivate the land for themselves ; as a trading transaction it would not " pay" them to rent the land , neither would it pay the owner to reclaim the land : but while these persons obtain a subsistence out of it they are withdrawn from the surplus population ; withdrawn from being a charge
on their quota of the land under ordinary trading culture ; withdrawn from any of those Waste occupations that delude so many of our townspeople with the mockery of employment . If , besides other improvements that we have indicated , there were to be a real advance towards extending the principle of concert in division of employments , beyond the very imperfect concert , or rather di& ~ concert of competitive trade , we may be sure that the pressure of the population question has no practical bearing upon our day . When oecorJorflists at « tached to old ideas speak of it , you can always convert their proposition into a more practical and matter-of-fact statement : when they speak of
surplus labour they mean labour exiled from landland which is as if it were in chancery , under absurd tenures , or half occupancy ; they mean , labour misdirected by " the higgling of the market / ' to making Paisley shawls when no Paisley shawls are wanted , while it might be tilling the idle land , making roads , or at the worst squatting on some moorland or on the desolated sheep-walks of Scotland . It is , to invert Mill ' s words , " not the niggardliness of nature but the injustice of society , that is the cause of the penalty attached to over population . " An engine for commencing the extension of concert , I have already pointed out in a genuine Poor Law .
Meanwhile , the book of Malthus is not a gospel . We have not yet attained that wisdom which shall justify us in repealing the instinct that God has given us for our guidance in harmony with our other faculties . And meanwhile the acquisition of time is in itself of substantive importance ; for , if checks should ultimately be needed , time gained affords the only hope of discovering that which we certainly have not yet discovered , towards which we have not yet obtained even the smallest clue , a thing as yet to us wholly unimaginable , and mocked only by the ghastly nightmares of political ceconomy in its
dreamsthe true principle of a check according to our nature and our destiny . Hitherto the improvements invented for us by ceconomists have not pointed to any practicable or exalted millennium . Rather than a blue-stocking millennium , or a thousand years of the Kingdom of a hypocritical " Moral Restraint , " let me , for one , having a choice to express , go back to the check of the Middle Ages , adventurous war ; or forward , to the euthanasia of our race—to a repose in divine obedience within this present stratum of alluvial deposit , beneath the footsteps of some newer and higher race , which then shall walk the earth where we have sunned
ourselves . Let high motives uphold our life even unto the portal of thut death which has no terrors for a Htedfast and simple faith . With all the warmth of life upon me , in the full light of hope and love , I aay that I face with less dismay , the idea that our kind muy follow in the flesh to the tomb of extinct races , than the attempt to palter with the general laws of nature and of the God of nature . Let those laws be our guide—let us labour to extinguish the only evils which have a real existence , the contradictions to those Iiuvh which cannot contradict themselves ; and to wet , up the only stable lavv . s for society , laws based upon the laws of God as revealed in his creation . So , my dear ErasinuH , shall we work together for the happiness of our kind ; and in that faith I nay—not "Malthus meanwhile "—not Malthus even for a day . Kver your affectionate , Thornton Hunt .
Untitled Article
Among the changes which every successive generation brings with it into Literature , we may notice a constant encrease of familiarity accompanying a constant decrease of indelicacy—thtls , in our time , we are tolerant of slang , but intolerant of anything resembling indecency . The purists of former days were sensitive enough to all departure * from the true " elevated " style , yet they threw words into their pages which our deCerit generation dare not even hint at \ and many an ancient aurit of our day uses , without misgiving , terms which astound their
nephews . Then , again , what is decorous enough in Paris , Stockholm , or Vienna , would be outrageous in London * We have heard things uttered at dinner-tables by highborn , highbred women abroad , which , if spoken ftt home , would have blanched the faces of the guests with a horror almost aa great afl that which distufbed the feafet of Belshazzar . While , if the reports of travellers are to be trusted , we are as outrageous to American susceptibility as the French and Germans are to ours . Roscommon says : —
" Immodest words admit of no defence t A want of decency ' a a want of sense . " But then comes the question , What is decency ? Is a leg decent , or must one only disclose the ankle ? Cati a bosom be mentioned , or must it be muffled up to the neck ? Are French or Americans to settle our code ? There are critics thrown into a tremor if you write the word " voluptuous , " and as for " sensuality , " one would imagine the thing only existed in the most brtttal natures by the manner in which the word is used .
Such being the state of public punsrri , we scarcely know what significance to give to the report that Lord Holland ' s Memoirs are found " too improper" for publication , and must be suppressed ; or , at any rate , severely castigated . One would like to know who is to be the delicate arbiter ! Taking Swift ' s admirable definition of " a nice man—a man with nasty ideas , ' * we should suggest that some very prurient mind , with a proper reverence for " respectablity , " should be the man chosen . There is nothing like your hog for
discovering filth . A Bishop can quote Scripture for his purposes . None better than Charles Jambs . In a Charge delivered at the Royal Chapel Whitehall , on Sunday week , to the candidates for holy orders , the Church and State Gazette informs the world , that he said " Of the highest office in the Church , the Apostle said , * He that desireth the office of a Bishop , desireth a good thing * " We have not the slightest difference with Ciiaklks JaKiks of London in his belief that it is a good thing—a very
good thing—to be a Bishop , Mix thousand a-yeur is a comfortable independence , and stimulates desires . But the Bishop , in his intense conviction of the excellence of his office , appears to have substituted that conviction for the vdry different notion of St . Paul , whom he misquotes ; the Apostle did not regard it at all in the light of a " good thing "; but said , " He that desireth the office at a Bishop , ho desireth a good work . " Is it the work which our modern Bishops desire , or might one suppose it to be the wages ?
Untitled Article
This is Magazine week . We have not dutifully read all that lies inviting us , ho that we must leavo you to discover for yourselves whatever may be readable . Vrtiser We have read , and it is a charmingly varied number of fiction , criticism , poetry , and politics . In the Freeman wo welcome a GlaH gow adherent to upiricuulisin , though it needs more definite statement of principles to find its audience . In the Westminster liavieu ) ( a more varied and literary number than usual ) there is au elo (| U « paper an the Tinttle of the Churches , wherein tho Writer forcibly states the real conflict now going on .
Untitled Article
14 «•* - »«»*** . •¦ t 8 ** mftA » , I
Untitled Article
Critics are not the legislators . but the jttdgeB ana 6 iiCe of literature . They do not make laws—they interpret and try to enforce them .- ^ £ tiinburgh Bat few .
Titttatnxt
titttatnxt
-
-
Citation
-
Leader (1850-1860), Jan. 4, 1851, page 14, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/l/issues/vm2-ncseproduct1864/page/14/
-