A Plea for the Rights of Industry in Ireland: Being the Substance of Letters which Recently Appeared in the Morning Chronicle, with AdditionsJ. Ridgway, 1848 - 94페이지 |
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14 페이지
... practice the measure may present . Even were the " interference with private property " ten times as extensive or unusual , the critical , or rather the despe- rate , state of Ireland would vindicate the employment of any resource ...
... practice the measure may present . Even were the " interference with private property " ten times as extensive or unusual , the critical , or rather the despe- rate , state of Ireland would vindicate the employment of any resource ...
21 페이지
... practice the system recommended in the " Digest , " of locating upon the waste lands a po- pulation inconveniently crowded on the adjoining arable lots . By this he afforded permanent employment to six times as many persons as the same ...
... practice the system recommended in the " Digest , " of locating upon the waste lands a po- pulation inconveniently crowded on the adjoining arable lots . By this he afforded permanent employment to six times as many persons as the same ...
26 페이지
... practice in Lancashire is to divide the open moss into inclosures of three to ten acres each , by open ditches , not too deep at first , but deepened further as the moss settles . Covered turf - drains are then made into the open ...
... practice in Lancashire is to divide the open moss into inclosures of three to ten acres each , by open ditches , not too deep at first , but deepened further as the moss settles . Covered turf - drains are then made into the open ...
28 페이지
... waste lands , " says the Di- gest of Evidence to Lord Devon's Commission , ‡ " will * Devon Commission Evidence . [ 27. ] Thornton on Over - population . + P. 570 . be best understood from a practice not uncommon in Ireland 28.
... waste lands , " says the Di- gest of Evidence to Lord Devon's Commission , ‡ " will * Devon Commission Evidence . [ 27. ] Thornton on Over - population . + P. 570 . be best understood from a practice not uncommon in Ireland 28.
29 페이지
... practice not uncommon in Ireland , to which farmers sometimes resort . This con- sists in giving the use of a small portion of it to a poor cottier or herdsman for the first three crops , after which this improved portion is given up to ...
... practice not uncommon in Ireland , to which farmers sometimes resort . This con- sists in giving the use of a small portion of it to a poor cottier or herdsman for the first three crops , after which this improved portion is given up to ...
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afford amount April 20 argument better Bill bog-land capable capital and labour Celt Channel Islands claim colonization compensation cost cottier crops culture of Ireland demand desirable Devon Commission discontent disposal doubt drainage draining effect employed England equal equitable estates evicted existing expense extent farm farmers Galway give Government home soils idleness improved cultivation increased value INDUSTRY IN IRELAND investment Irish islands J. S. Mill justice Kilcullen Lancashire land in Ireland land-laws Landlord and Tenant lative leases Legis legislation Legislature less likewise Lord maintaining means measure ment millions of acres misery mode obedient servant object occupiers owners perhaps permanent improvements poor-law population practice principle produce proposal proprietor purchase purpose question quit-rent reclaimed remedy rent result RIGHTS OF INDUSTRY shew subsoiling surplus surplus labour tenant-right tenantry tenure tion Tipperary Tuscany Ulster vast waste lands wealth workhouse Wurtemburg
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78 페이지 - sacredness of property " is talked of, it should always be remembered, that any such sacredness does not belong in the same degree to landed property. No man made the land. It is the original inheritance of the whole species. Its appropriation is wholly a question of general expediency. When private property in land is not expedient, it is unjust.
78 페이지 - ... exclusion should be absolute, except where positive evil to others would result from it; but in the case of land, no exclusive right should be permitted in any individual, which cannot be shown to be productive of positive good.
29 페이지 - The profit of reclaiming waste land,' says the Digest of Evidence to Lord Devon's Commission, ' will be best understood from a practice not uncommon in Ireland, to which farmers sometimes resort. This consists in giving the use of a small portion of it to a poor cottier or herdsman for the first three crops, after which this improved portion is given up to the farmer, and a fresh piece of the waste land is taken on the same terms by the cottier.
78 페이지 - ... usually consists in not leaving even this pittance, but turning out the people to beggary if not to starvation. When landed property has placed itself upon this footing it ceases to be defensible, and the time has come for making some new arrangement of the matter.
28 페이지 - ... rival. A capitalist must have a certain return for the money he lays out, but the poor man expends nothing but his own superabundant labour, which would be valueless if not so employed, so that his returns, however small, are all clear profit.
78 페이지 - The community has too much at stake in the proper cultivation of the land and in the conditions annexed to the occupancy of it, to leave these things to the discretion of a class of persons called landlords, when they have shown themselves unfit for the trust.
29 페이지 - ... This consists in giving the use of a small portion of it to a poor cottier or herdsman for the first three crops, after which this improved portion is given up to the farmer, and a fresh piece of the waste land is taken on the same terms by the cottier." Well may the compiler say, " Here we have the example of the very poorest class in Ireland obtaining a livelihood by the cultivation of waste land under the most discouraging and the least remunerative circumstances that can well be imagined.
28 페이지 - ... but the poor man expends nothing but his own superabundant labour, which would be valueless if not so employed; so that his returns, however small, are all clear profit. No man in his senses would ever have thought of wasting money upon the original sand of the Pays de Waes; but the hard-working boors who settled there two hundred years ago, without any other stock than their industry, contrived to enrich both themselves and the land, and indeed to make the latter the richest in Europe.
28 페이지 - may perhaps be thought to require a good deal of capital; but capital is principally useful for its command of labour, and the Irish peasantry have quite labour enough at their own disposal. Their misfortune is that they have so much. Their labour would not be worse applied because they worked for themselves instead of for a paymaster. So far is large capital from being indispensable for the cultivation of barren tracts, that schemes of this kind, which could only bring loss to a real speculator,...
77 페이지 - ... would have been driven from the Alps to make room for flocks of sheep. But whatever might have been in its origin the right of the counts, the legislation of the whole of continental Europe has not ceased guaranteeing and ameliorating the condition of the feudatories, of the vassals, of the serfs, strengthening the independence of the peasant, covering him with the buckler of prescription, changing his customs into rights, sheltering him from the exactions of his lord, and by degrees raising...