登陆注册
15424600000069

第69章 Chapter III(10)

One of Mill's most characteristic doctrines shows conspicuously this relation.Malthus had found in Norway and Switzerland communities which flourished because they spontaneously practised his principles.'It is worthy of remark,'says Mill,(46)'that the two countries thus honourably distinguished are countries of small landed proprietors.'This coincidence was not accidental;and Mill's Malthusianism falls in with his admiration for peasant-proprietorship.He diverged in this respect from the orthodox economical tradition.The economists generally left it to sentimentalists to regret the British yeoman,and to weep musically with Goldsmith over the time 'when every rood of ground maintained its man.'Wordsworth had dwelt pathetically upon the homely virtues of the North-country statesman.(47)Cobbett had in his happiest passages dwelt fondly upon the old rural life,and denounced in his bitterest invectives the greedy landowners and farmers who had plundered and degraded the English peasant.The economists looked at the matter from the point of view represented by Arthur Young.Enclose commons;consolidate small holdings;introduce machinery;give a free hand to enterprising landlords and substantial farmers,and agriculture will improve like commerce and manufactures.Small holders are as obsolete as handloom weavers;competition,supply and demand,and perfect freedom of trade will sweep them away,new methods will be adopted,capital introduced,and the wages of the labourer be raised.M'Culloch,for example,took this view;(48)denounced small holdings,and prophesied (49)that France would in fifty years become the greatest 'pauper-warren in Europe.'A remarkable advocate of a similar view was Richard Jones (1790-1855),who in 1835succeeded Malthus at Haileybury.(50)Jones admired Malthus and accepted with qualifications the account of rent given by Malthus and West.But he denounced Malthus's successors,Ricardo,James Mill,and M'Culloch for preferring 'anticipation'to 'induction',and venturing to start with general maxims and deduce details from them.Jones deserves the credit of perceiving the importance of keeping historical facts well in view.He shows sufficiently that Ricardo's theory,if taken to be a historical statement of the actual progress of events,is not correct.He refuses to define rent,but treats historically of the various payments made in respect of land.After classifying these,he decides that rent of the Ricardian kind prevails over less than a hundredth part of the earth's surface.He considers it,however ,as representing a necessary stage of progress.It is far superior to the early stages,because it supposes the growth of a class of capitalists,able to direct labour and introduce the best methods of cultivation.Hence Jones comes by a different route to an agreement with M'Culloch.He prophesies that peasant-proprietors will rapidly fall into want and their numbers be limited only by the physical impossibility of procuring food.They were precisely in the position least favourable to the action of prudential checks.(51)Mill upon this matter dissented most emphatically both from the 'classical'and the historical champion.The point is with him of vital importance.His French sympathies had prepared him to see the other side of the question.The most unequivocal triumph claimed,with whatever truth,for the French revolution was the elevation of the cultivators of the land.Mill,at any rate,held emphatically that the French revolution had 'extinguished extreme poverty for one whole generation,'(52)and had thereby enabled the French population to rise permanently to a higher level.Contemporary English history gave the other side.

Poor-law controversies had brought into striking relief the degradation of the English agricultural labourer.The Morning Chronicle articles,to which he had devoted six months,combined with an advocacy of peasant-proprietorship an exposition of the inadequacy of poor-laws.The excellent W.T.Thornton (1813-1880)had been from 1836Mill's colleague in the India House,and was one of the few friends who communicated freely with him during his seclusion.(53)In 1846Thornton published a book upon Over Population and its Remedy,in which he declares himself to be a thoroughgoing Malthusian,and rebukes M'Culloch for saying that Malthus's work exemplified the 'abuse'of general principles.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 暗之尘封的记忆

    暗之尘封的记忆

    凋零的生命,贪婪愚蠢的人,腐败的国家,你究竟能改变什么。只能让自己强大起来,排除一切不利,守护心爱的人。
  • 美男傍身:皇帝要我嫁

    美男傍身:皇帝要我嫁

    别逗了,21世纪IT精英,东方科技公司董事长的老爸竟然是古代人?那也就算了,如今老妈要她东方歆然替老爸穿越回去?简直就是重男轻女,重色轻女……曾为太子的老爸告诉她,这是宿命的安排?谁能告诉她,这是在做梦?她的美男啊,穿回去还会有的吗?时光穿梭,日月轮回,一路轻歌,只为博得美人一笑……
  • 踏动诸天

    踏动诸天

    天道无常,往生之后,不入轮回,那么,我便踏动诸天!
  • 献给父母的爱:子女必读

    献给父母的爱:子女必读

    本书从生理、心理、保健、亲情、经济、生活、临终、综合等八个方面,系统地回答、探讨了有关孝敬父母的话题。
  • 荒兽录

    荒兽录

    一位走头无路的中年人异外间打开,青铜棺。古有预言,青铜棺椁一但被打开,将会发生不可预知的后果。相传,青铜棺椁打开时天下必将大乱。
  • 写在指尖的字

    写在指尖的字

    写在指尖的字,刻在心里的名,十指连心,是否把你的名字写在指间就再也无法忘记了呢?
  • 六爷拐娇柒,说好的禁欲受呢

    六爷拐娇柒,说好的禁欲受呢

    “顾柒!以后不许沾花惹草!不许看其他男人和女人!你是爷的!”陆洺咬牙道,才三天没见他就去找别人了,照这样下去以后还不翻天?“六爷~宝宝没有~”顾柒郁闷,他不过去见个朋友,仅此而已,这都会吃醋……“不过我喜欢。没有?嗯?再说一遍试试!”陆洺怒火冲天,看来几天没调教她,不乖了。想到这里,陆洺一把抱起顾柒,扔在床上。“六……唔~”顾柒在床上凌乱了……谁来把这Y的拖走啊啊啊!!小肉怡情,大肉伤身~
  • 复仇:地狱公主禁忌恋

    复仇:地狱公主禁忌恋

    『未闻花名』『初瑶°』【已完结不入V,保证坑品,放心入坑!!】【新文:《复仇:王牌杀手倾世恋》已发√火热连载中……】他们,是地狱而来的魔鬼,他们集万千光华于一身,只是谁又能懂得这光芒背后的残忍?谁又能懂得这骄傲背后的凄惨?十年前的背叛,造就了今日的他们,他们是死神的代表,是死亡的象征,从地狱而来的公主,本不配拥有爱情,却在这嗜血般残暴的复仇之路上,沦陷在禁忌的生死爱恋中……
  • 逝水无情,爱有天意

    逝水无情,爱有天意

    在这个被金钱和欲望填满的世界,我们还有多少真爱存在?当我们飞扬的青春被掩埋,还有多少人记得那远去的人?在这满是慌言的现实中,我不停的反思着自己的人生。把这本书献给被我掩埋的一个女孩和我现在深爱着的一个女人。
  • 觅仙寻道

    觅仙寻道

    御风化龙破云天,看一对难兄难弟的修真成长史。