<?xml version="1.0"?>
<!DOCTYPE issue SYSTEM "spectator.dtd">
<?xml-stylesheet href="spectator.xsl" type="text/xsl"?>
<?cocoon-process type="xslt"?>
<issue>
<title>The Spectator 232</title>
<header>
  <number>no. 232</number>
  <date>1711-11-26</date>
  <author>John Hughes<footnote name="(1)" url="../november_footnotes/footnote232.xml"></footnote></author>
  <quotation>Nihil largiundo gloriam adeptus est.-----Sallust.</quotation>
  <translation>Sallust. Bell. Cat.</translation>
  <translation>By bestowing nothing he acquired glory.</translation>
  </header>
<text>
<paragraph>MY wise and good Friend, Sir <italic>Andrew Freeport,</italic> divides
himself almost equally between the Town and the Country:
His Time in Town is given up to the Publick, and
the Management of his private Fortune; and after every three or
four Days spent in this Manner, he retires for as many to his Seat
within a few Miles of the Town, to the Enjoyment of himself, his
Family, and his Friend. Thus Business and Pleasure, or rather, in
Sir <italic>Andrew,</italic> Labour and Rest, recommend each other. They take their
Turns with so quick a Vicissitude, that neither becomes a Habit, or
takes Possession of the whole Man; nor is it possible he should be
surfeited with either. I often see him at our Club in good Humour
and yet sometimes too with an Air of Care in his Looks: But in his
Country Retreat he is always unbent, and such a Companion as I
could desire j and therefore I seldom fail to make one with him
when he is pleased to invite me.</paragraph>
<paragraph>The other Day, as soon as we were
got into his Chariot, two or three Beggars on each Side hung upon
the Doors, and solicited our Charity with the usual Rhetorick of a
sick Wife or Husband at home, three or four helpless little
Children all starving with Cold and Hunger. We were forced to part
with some Money to get rid of their Importunity; and then we
proceeded on our Journey with the Blessings and Acclamations of
these People.</paragraph>
<paragraph>Well then, says Sir <italic>Andrew,</italic> we go off with the
Prayers and good Wishes of the Beggars, and perhaps too our Healths
will be drunk at the next Ale-house: So all we shall be able to
value ourselves upon, is, that we have promoted the Trade of the
Victualler and the Excises of the Government. But how few Ounces of
Wooll do we see upon the Backs of those poor Creatures? And when
they shall next fall in our Way, they will hardly be better
dress'd; they must always live in Rags to look like Objects of
Compassion. If their Families too are such as they are represented,
'tis certain, they cannot be better clothed, and must be a great
deal worse fed: One would think Potatoes should be all their Bread,
and their Drink the pure Element; and then what goodly Customers
are the Farmers like to have for their Wooll, Corn and Cattle? Such
Customers, and such a Consumption cannot choose but advance the
landed Interest, and hold up the Rents or the Gentlemen.</paragraph>
<paragraph>But of all Men living, we Merchants, who live by Buying and Selling, ought
never to encourage Beggars. The Goods which we export are indeed
the Product of the Lands, but much the greatest Part of their Value
is the Labour of the People: but how much of these Peoples Labour
shall we export whilst we hire them to sit still? The very Alms
they receive from us, are the Wages of Idleness. I have often
thought that no Man should be permitted to take Relief from the
Parish, or to ask it in the Street, till he has first purchased as
much as possible of his own Livelihood by the Labour of his own
Hands; and then the Publick ought only to be taxed to make good the
Deficiency. If this Rule was strictly observed, we should see every
where such a Multitude of new Labourers, as would in all
probability reduce the Prices of all our Manufactures. It is the
very Life of Merchandise to buy cheap and sell dear. The Merchant
ought to make his Outset as cheap as possible, that he may find the
greater Profit upon his Returns; and nothing will enable him to do
this like the Reduction of the Price of Labour upon all our
Manufactures. This too would be the ready Way to increase the
Number of our Foreign Markets: The Abatement of the Price of the
Manufacture would pay for the Carriage of it to more distant
Countries; and this Consequence would be equally beneficial both to
the Landed and Trading Interests. As so great an Addition of
labouring Hands would produce this happy Consequence both to the
Merchant and the Gentleman; our Liberality to common Beggars, and
every other Obstruction to the Increase of Labourers, must be
equally pernicious to both.</paragraph>
<paragraph>Sir <italic>Andrew</italic> then went on to affirm, That
the Reduction of the Prices of our Manufactures by the Addition of
so many new Hands, would be no Inconvenience to any Man: But
observing I was something startled at the Assertion, he made a
short Pause, and then resumed the Discourse. It may seem, says he,
a Paradox, that the Price of Labour should be reduced without an
Abatement of Wages, or that Wages can be abated without any
Inconvenience to the Labourer, and yet nothing is more certain than
that both those Things may happen. The Wages of the labourers make
the greatest Part of the Price. of every Thing that is useful; and
if in proportion with the Wages the Prices of all other Things
should be abated, every Labourer with less Wages would be still
able to purchase as many Necessaries of Life; where then would be
the Inconvenience? But the Price of Labour may be reduced by the
Addition of more Hands to a Manufacture, and yet the Wages of
Persons remain as high as ever. The admirable Sir <italic>William Petty</italic><footnote name="(2)" url="../november_footnotes/footnote232.xml"></footnote>
has given Examples of this m some of his Writings: One of them, as
I remember, is that of a Watch, which I shall endeavour to explain
so as shall suit my present Purpose. It is certain that a single
Watch could not be made so cheap in Proportion by one only Man, as
a hundred Watches by a hundred; for as there is vast Variety in the
Work, no one Person could equally suit himself to all the Parts of
it; the Manufacture would be tedious, and at last but clumsily
performed: But if an hundred Watches were to be made by a hundred
Men, the Cases may be assigned to one, the Dials to another, the
Wheels to another, the Springs to another, and every other Part to
a proper Artist; as there would be no need of perplexing anyone
Person with too much Variety, everyone would be able to perform his
single Part with greater Skill and Expedition; and the hundred
Watches would be finished in one fourth Part of the Time of the
first one, and everyone of them at one fourth Part of the Cost,
tho' the Wages of every Man were equal The Reduction of the Price
of the Manufacture would increase the Demand of it, all the same
Hands would be still employed and as well paid. The same Rule will
hold in the Clothing, the Shipping, and all the other Trades
whatsoever. And thus an Addition of Hands to our Manufactures will
only reduce the Price of them; the Labourer will still have as much
Wages, and will consequently be enabled to purchase more
Conveniencies of Life; so that every Interest in the Nation would
receive a Benefit from the Increase of our Working People.</paragraph>
<paragraph>Besides, I see no Occasion for this Charity to common Beggars, since every
Beggar is an Inhabitant of a Parish, and every Parish is taxed to
the Maintenance of their own Poor.<footnote name="(3)" url="../november_footnotes/footnote232.xml"></footnote> For my own part, I cannot be
mightily pleased with the Laws which have done this, which have
provided better to feed than employ the Poor. We have a Tradition
from our Forefathers, that after the first of those Laws was made,
they were insulted with that famous Song;</paragraph>
<quotation><italic>Hang Sorrow, and cast away Care,</italic></quotation>
<quotation><italic>The Parish is bound to find us, &#38;c.</italic></quotation>
<paragraph>And if we will
be so good-natured as to maintain them without Work, they can do no
less in Return than sing us <italic>The Merry Beggars.</italic></paragraph>
<paragraph>What then? Am I against all Acts of Charity? God forbid! I know of no Virtue in the
Gospel that is in more pathetical Expressions recommended to our
Practice. <italic>I was hungry and [ye<footnote name="(4)" url="../november_footnotes/footnote232.xml"></footnote>] gave me no Meat, thirsty and ye
gave me no Drink, naked and ye clothed me not, a Stranger and ye
took me not in, sick and in prison and ye visited me not.</italic> Our
Blessed Saviour treats the Exercise or Neglect of Charity towards a
poor Man, as the Performance or Breach of this Duty towards
himself. I shall endeavour to obey the Will of my Lord and Master:
And therefore if an industrious Man shall submit to the hardest
Labour and coarsest Fare, rather than endure the Shame of taking
Relief from the Parish, or asking it in the Street, this is the
Hungry, the Thirsty, the Naked; and I ought to believe, if any Man
is come hither for Shelter against Persecution or Oppression, this
is the Stranger, and I ought to take him in. If any Countryman of
our own is fallen into the Hands of Infidels, and lives in a State
of miserable Captivity, this is the Man in Prison, and I should
contribute to his Ransom. I ought to give to an Hospital of
Invalids, to recover as many useful Subjects as I can; but I shall
bestow none of my Bounties upon an Alms-house of idle People; and
for the same Reason I should not think it a Reproach to me if I had
withheld my Charity from those common Beggars. But we prescribe
better Rules than we are able to practise; we are ashamed not to
give into the mistaken Customs of our Country: But at the same
time, I cannot but think it a Reproach worse than that of common
Swearing, that the Idle and the Abandoned are suffered in the Name
of Heaven and all that is sacred, to extort from Christian and
tender Minds a Supply to a profligate Way of Life, that is always
to be supported, but never relieved.</paragraph>
<paragraph>[Z.<footnote name="(5)" url="../november_footnotes/footnote232.xml"></footnote>]</paragraph>

<paragraph>1. Or Henry Martyn?</paragraph>
<paragraph>2. Surveyor-general of Ireland to Charles II. See his Discourse of Taxes (1689).</paragraph>
<paragraph>3. Our idle poor till the time of Henry VIII. lived
upon alms. After the dissolution of the monasteries experiments
were made for their care, and by a statute 43 Eliz. overseers were
appointed and Parishes charged to maintain their helpless poor and
find work for the sturdy. In Queen Anne's time the Poor Law had
been made more intricate and troublesome by the legislation on the
subject that had been attempted after the Restoration.</paragraph>
<paragraph>4. [you] throughout, and in first reprint.</paragraph>
<paragraph>5. [X.]</paragraph>
</text>
</issue>
