[338] _Works_, p. 34 (chap. ii.). Rent is there defined as the sum paid for the original and indestructible powers of the soil.
[339] _Works_, p. 132 (chap. xvii.). He admits (_Ibid._ p. 210 _n._) that the labourer may have a little more than what is absolutely necessary, and that his inference is therefore "expressed too strongly."
[340] See _Letters to M"Culloch_, p. xxi.
[341] "The a.s.saults upon Malthus"s "great work,"" he says (_Works_, p.
243, ch. x.x.xii.), "have only served to prove its strength."
[342] _Letters to Malthus_, p. 226.
[343] _Works_, p. 58 (ch. v.).
[344] _Ibid._ p. 211 _n._ (ch. xxvi.).
[345] _Ibid._ p. 258 (ch. x.x.xii.).
[346] _Works_, p. 248 (ch. xxii.).
[347] Bain"s _James Mill_, p. 211.
[348] Editions in 1821, 1824, and 1826.
[349] _Autobiography_, p. 204.
[350] The first edition, an expanded version of an article in the _Encyclopaedia Britannica_, appeared in 1825.
[351] _Latter-day Pamphlets_ (New Downing Street). M"Crowdy is obviously a type, not an individual.
[352] See Mr. Hewin"s life of him in _Dictionary of National Biography_.
[353] Fourth edition in 1827.
[354] Ricardo"s _Works_, p. 164 _n._
[355] _External Corn-trade_, preface to fourth edition. J. S. Mill observes in his chapter upon "International Trade" that Torrens was the earliest expounder of the doctrine afterwards worked out by Ricardo and Mill himself. For Ricardo"s opinion of Torrens, see _Letters to Trower_, p. 39.
[356] _Production of Wealth_ (Preface).
[357] _Production of Wealth_ (Preface).
[358] _Political Economy_ (1825), p. 21.
[359] _External Corn-trade_, pp. xviii, 109, 139; _Production of Wealth_, p. 375.
[360] Originally in the _Encyclopaedia Metropolitana_, 1836.
[361] Senior"s _Political Economy_ (1850), p. 26.
[362] _Ibid._ (1825), pp. 55, 129-131.
[363] Senior"s _Political Economy_ (150), p. 125.
[364] _Ibid._ p. 135. M"Culloch admits the possibility that a man may judge his own interests wrongly, but thinks that this will not happen in one case out of twenty (_Ibid._ p. 15).
[365] See Torrens"s _Production of Wealth_, p. 208; and M"Culloch"s _Political Economy_ (1843), p. 294, where he admits some exceptions.
[366] _External Corn-trade_, p. 87, etc.
[367] _Political Economy_ (second edition), pp. 21, 22.
[368] _Ibid._ p. 67.
[369] _Political Economy_ (1825), p. 329.
[370] _Production of Wealth_, p. 34, etc.
[371] _Political Economy_ (1825), p. 318.
[372] Mill"s _Political Economy_ (second edition), p. 102; M"Culloch"s _Political Economy_ (1825), pp. 289-291.
[373] M"Culloch"s _Political Economy_, p. 290.
[374] Preface to _External Corn-trade_.
[375] _Ibid._ p. 95.
[376] _Political Economy_ (1825), pp. 313-18. This argument disappears in later editions.
[377] _Ibid._ p. 217.
[378] _Political Economy_, p. 221. De Quincey makes a great point of this doctrine, of which it is not worth while to examine the meaning.
[379] _Political Economy_, p. 221 _n._
[380] _Ibid._ p. 336.
[381] _Ibid._ p. 337.
[382] "Essay upon the Circ.u.mstances which determine the Rate of Wages"
(1826), p. 113. This was written for Constable"s _Miscellany_, and is mainly repet.i.tion from the _Political Economy_. It was republished, with alterations, in 1851.
[383] _Political Economy_, pp. 359-61.
[384] _Ibid._ (1843), p. 178. And see his remarks on the unfavourable side of the Factory System, p. 186 _seq._
[385] "Wherever two persons have the means of subsisting," as he quaintly observes, "a marriage invariably takes place" (_Political Economy_, p. 154).
[386] _Political Economy_, p. 206.