FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   2951   2952   2953   2954   2955   2956   2957   2958   2959   2960   2961   2962   2963   2964   2965   2966   2967   2968   2969   2970   2971   2972   2973   2974   2975  
2976   2977   2978   2979   2980   2981   2982   2983   2984   2985   2986   2987   2988   2989   2990   2991   2992   2993   2994   2995   2996   2997   2998   2999   3000   >>   >|  
habitants, although the statistics of those days cannot be relied upon with accuracy. The whole revenue of the state was nominally sixteen or seventeen millions of dollars, but the greater portion of that income was pledged for many coming years to the merchants of Genoa. All the little royal devices for increasing the budget by debasing the coin of the realm, by issuing millions of copper tokens, by lowering the promised rate of interest on Government loans, by formally repudiating both interest and principal, had been tried, both in this and the preceding reign, with the usual success. An inconvertible paper currency, stimulating industry and improving morals by converting beneficent commerce into baleful gambling--that fatal invention did not then exist. Meantime, the legitimate trader and innocent citizen were harassed, and the general public endangered, as much as the limited machinery of the epoch permitted. The available, unpledged revenue of the kingdom hardly amounted to five millions of dollars a-year. The regular annual income of the church was at least six millions. The whole personal property of the nation was estimated in a very clumsy and unsatisfactory way, no doubt--at sixty millions of dollars. Thus the income of the priesthood was ten per cent. of the whole funded estate of the country, and at least a million a year more than the income of the Government. Could a more biting epigram be made upon the condition to which the nation had been reduced? Labour was more degraded than ever. The industrious classes, if such could be said to exist, were esteemed every day more and more infamous. Merchants, shopkeepers, mechanics, were reptiles, as vilely, esteemed as Jews, Moors, Protestants, or Pagans. Acquiring wealth by any kind of production was dishonourable. A grandee who should permit himself to sell the wool from his boundless sheep-walks disgraced his caste, and was accounted as low as a merchant. To create was the business of slaves and miscreants: to destroy was the distinguishing attribute of Christians and nobles. To cheat, to pick, and to steal, on the most minute and the most gigantic scale--these were also among the dearest privileges of the exalted classes. No merchandize was polluting save the produce of honest industry. To sell places in church and state, the army, the navy, and the sacred tribunals of law, to take bribes from rich and poor, high and low; in sums infinitesimal or enormous, t
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   2951   2952   2953   2954   2955   2956   2957   2958   2959   2960   2961   2962   2963   2964   2965   2966   2967   2968   2969   2970   2971   2972   2973   2974   2975  
2976   2977   2978   2979   2980   2981   2982   2983   2984   2985   2986   2987   2988   2989   2990   2991   2992   2993   2994   2995   2996   2997   2998   2999   3000   >>   >|  



Top keywords:

millions

 

income

 

dollars

 
industry
 

Government

 

classes

 
nation
 

church

 

interest

 
esteemed

revenue

 

reptiles

 

vilely

 

shopkeepers

 

infamous

 

Merchants

 

mechanics

 

Acquiring

 

dishonourable

 

grandee


production

 

Pagans

 

wealth

 

Protestants

 

condition

 

enormous

 

reduced

 

epigram

 
biting
 

million


Labour
 
degraded
 
industrious
 

infinitesimal

 

minute

 

places

 

honest

 

tribunals

 

sacred

 

gigantic


merchandize

 

polluting

 

exalted

 

privileges

 

dearest

 

nobles

 

disgraced

 

accounted

 

country

 
produce