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Book One
Of the Causes of Improvement in the Productive Powers of Labour,
And of the Order according to which its Produce is Naturally
Distributed among the Different Ranks of the People.
CHAPTER XI
PART 1
Of the Produce of Land which always affords Rent
AS men, like all other animals, naturally multiply in
proportion to the means of their subsistence, food is always,
more or less, in demand. It can always purchase or command a
greater or smaller quantity of labour, and somebody can always be
found who is willing to do something in order to obtain it. The
quantity of labour, indeed, which it can purchase is not always
equal to what it could maintain, if managed in the most
economical manner, on account of the high wages which are
sometimes given to labour. But it can always purchase such a
quantity of labour as it can maintain, according to the rate at
which the sort of labour is commonly maintained in the
neighbourhood.
But land, in almost any situation, produces a greater
quantity of food than what is sufficient to maintain all the
labour necessary for bringing it to market in the most liberal
way in which that labour is ever maintained. The surplus, too, is
always more than sufficient to replace the stock which employed
that labour, together with its profits. Something, therefore,
always remains for a rent to the landlord.
The most desert moors in Norway and Scotland produce some
sort of pasture for cattle, of which the milk and the increase
are always more than sufficient, not only to maintain all the
labour necessary for tending them, and to pay the ordinary profit
to the farmer or owner of the herd or flock; but to afford some
small rent to the landlord. The rent increases in proportion to
the goodness of the pasture. The same extent of ground not only
maintains a greater number of cattle, but as they are brought
within a smaller compass, less labour becomes requisite to tend
them, and to collect their produce. The landlord gains both ways,
by the increase of the produce and by the diminution of the
labour which must be maintained out of it.
The rent of land not only varies with its fertility,
whatever be its produce, but with its situation, whatever be its
fertility. Land in the neighbourhood of a town gives a greater
rent than land equally fertile in a distant part of the country.
Though it may cost no more labour to cultivate the one than the
other, it must always cost more to bring the produce of the
distant land to market. A greater quantity of labour, therefore,
must be maintained out of it; and the surplus, from which are
drawn both the profit of the farmer and the rent of the landlord,
must be diminished. But in remote parts of the country the rate
of profits, as has already been shown, is generally higher than
in the neighbourhood of a large town. A smaller proportion of
this diminished surplus, therefore, must belong to the landlord.
Good roads, canals, and navigable rivers, by diminishing the
expense of carriage, put the remote parts of the country more
nearly upon a level with those in the neighbourhood of the town.
They are upon that account the greatest of all improvements. They
encourage the cultivation of the remote, which must always be the
most extensive circle of the country. They are advantageous to
the town, by breaking down the monopoly of the country in its
neighbourhood. They are advantageous even to that part of the
country. Though they introduce some rival commodities into the
old market, they open many new markets to its produce. Monopoly,
besides, is a great enemy to good management, which can never be
universally established but in consequence of that free and
universal competition which forces everybody to have recourse to
it for the sake of self-defence. It is not more than fifty years
ago that some of the counties in the neighbourhood of London
petitioned the Parliament against the extension of the turnpike
roads into the remoter counties. Those remoter counties, they
pretended, from the cheapness of labour, would be able to sell
their grass and corn cheaper in the London market than
themselves, and would thereby reduce their rents, and ruin their
cultivation. Their rents, however, have risen, and their
cultivation has been improved since that time.
A cornfield of moderate fertility produces a much greater
quantity of food for man than the best pasture of equal extent.
Though its cultivation requires much more labour, yet the surplus
which remains after replacing the seed and maintaining all that
labour, is likewise much greater. If a pound of butcher's meat,
therefore, was never supposed to be worth more than a pound of
bread, this greater surplus would everywhere be of greater value,
and constitute a greater fund both for the profit of the farmer
and the rent of the landlord. It seems to have done so
universally in the rude beginnings of agriculture.
But the relative values of those two different species of
food, bread and butcher's meat, are very different in the
different periods of agriculture. In its rude beginnings, the
unimproved wilds, which then occupy the far greater part of the
country, are all abandoned to cattle. There is more butcher's
meat than bread, and bread, therefore, is the food for which
there is the greatest competition, and which consequently brings
the greatest price. At Buenos Ayres, we are told by Ulloa, four
reals, one-and-twenty pence halfpenny sterling, was, forty or
fifty years ago, the ordinary price of an ox, chosen from a herd
of two or three hundred. He says nothing of the price of bread,
probably because he found nothing remarkable about it. An ox
there, he says, cost little more than the labour of catching him.
But corn can nowhere be raised without a great deal of labour,
and in a country which lies upon the river Plate, at that time
the direct road from Europe to the silver mines of Potosi, the
money price of labour could not be very cheap. It is otherwise
when cultivation is extended over the greater part of the
country. There is then more bread than butcher's meat. The
competition changes its direction, and the price of butcher's
meat becomes greater than the price of bread.
By the extension besides of cultivation, the unimproved
wilds become insufficient to supply the demand for butcher's
meat. A great part of the cultivated lands must be employed in
rearing and fattening cattle, of which the price, therefore, must
be sufficient to pay, not only the labour necessary for tending
them, but the rent which the landlord and the profit which the
farmer could have drawn from such land employed in tillage. The
cattle bred upon the most uncultivated moors, when brought to the
same market, are, in proportion to their weight or goodness, sold
at the same price as those which are reared upon the most
improved land. The proprietors of those moors profit by it, and
raise the rent of their land in proportion to the price of their
cattle. It is not more than a century ago that in many parts of
the highlands of Scotland, butcher's meat was as cheap or cheaper
than even bread made of oatmeal. The union opened the market of
England to the highland cattle. Their ordinary price is at
present about three times greater than at the beginning of the
century, and the rents of many highland estates have been tripled
and quadrupled in the same time. In almost every part of Great
Britain a pound of the best butcher's meat is, in the present
times, generally worth more than two pounds of the best white
bread; and in plentiful years it is sometimes worth three or four
pounds.
It is thus that in the progress of improvement the rent and
profit of unimproved pasture come to be regulated in some measure
by the rent and profit of what is improved, and these again by
the rent and profit of corn. Corn is an annual crop. Butcher's
meat, a crop which requires four or five years to grow. As an
acre of land, therefore, will produce a much smaller quantity of
the one species of food than of the other, the inferiority of the
quantity must be compensated by the superiority of the price. If
it was more than compensated, more corn land would be turned into
pasture; and if it was not compensated, part of what was in
pasture would be brought back into corn.
This equality, however, between the rent and profit of grass
and those of corn; of the land of which the immediate produce is
food for cattle, and of that of which the immediate produce is
food for men; must be understood to take place only through the
greater part of the improved lands of a great country. In some
particular local situations it is quite otherwise, and the rent
and profit of grass are much superior to what can be made by
corn.
Thus in the neighbourhood of a great town the demand for
milk and for forage to horses frequently contribute, together
with the high price of butcher's meat, to raise the value of
grass above what may be called its natural proportion to that of
corn. This local advantage, it is evident, cannot be communicated
to the lands at a distance.
Particular circumstances have sometimes rendered some
countries so populous that the whole territory, like the lands in
the neighbourhood of a great town, has not been sufficient to
produce both the grass and the corn necessary for the subsistence
of their inhabitants. Their lands, therefore, have been
principally employed in the production of grass, the more bulky
commodity, and which cannot be so easily brought from a great
distance; and corn, the food of the great body of the people, has
been chiefly imported from foreign countries. Holland is at
present in this situation, and a considerable part of ancient
Italy seems to have been so during the prosperity of the Romans.
To feed well, old Cato said, as we are told by Cicero, was the
first and most profitable thing in the management of a private
estate; to feed tolerably well, the second; and to feed ill, the
third. To plough, he ranked only in the fourth place of profit
and advantage. Tillage, indeed, in that part of ancient Italy
which lay in the neighbourhood of Rome, must have been very much
discouraged by the distributions of corn which were frequently
made to the people, either gratuitously, or at a very low price.
This corn was brought from the conquered provinces, of which
several, instead of taxes, were obliged to furnish a tenth part
of their produce at a stated price, about sixpence a peck, to the
republic. The low price at which this corn was distributed to the
people must necessarily have sunk the price of what could be
brought to the Roman market from Latium, or the ancient territory
of Rome, and must have discouraged its cultivation in that
country.
In an open country too, of which the principal produce is
corn, a well-enclosed piece of grass will frequently rent higher
than any corn field in its neighbourhood. It is convenient for
the maintenance of the cattle employed in the cultivation of the
corn, and its high rent is, in this case, not so properly paid
from the value of its own produce as from that of the corn lands
which are cultivated by means of it. It is likely to fall, if
ever the neighbouring lands are completely enclosed. The present
high rent of enclosed land in Scotland seems owing to the
scarcity of enclosure, and will probably last no longer than that
scarcity. The advantage of enclosure is greater for pasture than
for corn. It saves the labour of guarding the cattle, which feed
better, too, when they are not liable to be disturbed by their
keeper or his dog.
But where there is no local advantage of this kind, the rent
and profit of corn, or whatever else is the common vegetable food
or the people, must naturally regulate, upon the land which is
fit for producing it, the rent and profit of pasture.
The use of the artificial grasses, of turnips, carrots,
cabbages, and the other expedients which have been fallen upon to
make an equal quantity of land feed a greater number of cattle
than when in natural grass, should somewhat reduce, it might be
expected, the superiority which, in an improved country, the
price of butcher's meat naturally has over that of bread. It
seems accordingly to have done so; and there is some reason for
believing that, at least in the London market, the price of
butcher's meat in proportion to the price of bread is a good deal
lower in the present times than it was in the beginning of the
last century.
In the appendix to the Life of Prince Henry, Doctor Birch
has given us an account of the prices of butcher's meat as
commonly paid by that prince. It is there said that the four
quarters of an ox weighing six hundred pounds usually cost him
nine pounds ten shillings, or thereabouts; that is, thirty-one
shillings and eightpence per hundred pounds weight. Prince Henry
died on the 6th of November 1612, in the nineteenth year of his
age.
In March 1764, there was a Parliamentary inquiry into the
causes of the high price of provisions at that time. It was then,
among other proof to the same purpose, given in evidence by a
Virginia merchant, that in March 1763, he had victualled his
ships for twenty-four or twenty-five shillings the hundredweight
of beef, which he considered as the ordinary price; whereas, in
that dear year, he had paid twenty-seven shillings for the same
weight and sort. This high price in 1764 is, however, four
shillings and eightpence cheaper than the ordinary price paid by
Prince Henry; and it is the best beef only, it must be observed,
which is fit to be salted for those distant voyages.
The price paid by Prince Henry amounts to 3 3/4d. per pound
weight of the whole carcase, coarse and choice pieces taken
together; and at that rate the choice pieces could not have been
sold by retail for less than 4 1/2d. or 5d. the pound.
In the Parliamentary inquiry in 1764, the witnesses stated
the price of the choice pieces of the best beef to be to the
consumer 4d. and 4 1/4d. the pound; and the coarse pieces in
general to be from seven farthings to 2 1/2d. and this they said
was in general one halfpenny dearer than the same sort of pieces
had usually been sold in the month of March. But even this high
price is still a good deal cheaper than what we can well suppose
the ordinary retail price to have been the time of Prince Henry.
During the twelve first years of the last century, the
average price of the best wheat at the Windsor market was L1 18s.
3 1/6d. the quarter of nine Winchester bushels.
But in the twelve years preceding 1764, including that year,
the average price of the same measure of the best wheat at the
same market was L2 1s. 9 1/2d.
In the twelve first years of the last century, therefore,
wheat appears to have been a good deal cheaper, and butcher's
meat a good deal dearer, than in the twelve years preceding 1764,
including that year.
In all great countries the greater part of the cultivated
lands are employed in producing either food for men or food for
cattle. The rent and profit of these regulate the rent and profit
of all other cultivated land. If any particular produce afforded
less, the land would soon be turned into corn or pasture; and if
any afforded more, some part of the lands in corn or pasture
would soon be turned to that produce.
Those productions, indeed, which require either a greater
original expense of improvement, or a greater annual expense of
cultivation, in order to fit the land for them, appear commonly
to afford, the one a greater rent, the other a greater profit
than corn or pasture. This superiority, however, will seldom be
found to amount to more than a reasonable interest or
compensation for this superior expense.
In a hop garden, a fruit garden, a kitchen garden, both the
rent of the landlord, and the profit of the farmer, are generally
greater than in a corn or grass field. But to bring the ground
into this condition requires more expense. Hence a greater rent
becomes due to the landlord. It requires, too, a more attentive
and skilful management. Hence a greater profit becomes due to the
farmer. The crop too, at least in the hop and fruit garden, is
more precarious. Its price, therefore, besides compensating all
occasional losses, must afford something like the profit of
insurance. The circumstances of gardeners, generally mean, and
always moderate, may satisfy us that their great ingenuity is not
commonly over-recompensed. Their delightful art is practised by
so many rich people for amusement, that little advantage is to be
made by those who practise it for profit; because the persons who
should naturally be their best customers supply themselves with
all their most precious productions.
The advantage which the landlord derives from such
improvements seems at no time to have been greater than what was
sufficient to compensate the original expense of making them. In
the ancient husbandry, after the vineyard, a well-watered kitchen
garden seems to have been the part of the farm which was supposed
to yield the most valuable produce. But Democritus, who wrote
upon husbandry about two thousand years ago, and who was regarded
by the ancients as one of the fathers of the art, thought they
did not act wisely who enclosed a kitchen garden. The profit, he
said, would not compensate the expense of a stone wall; and
bricks (he meant, I suppose, bricks baked in the sun) mouldered
with the rain, and the winter storm, and required continual
repairs. Columella, who reports this judgment of Democritus, does
not controvert it, but proposes a very frugal method of enclosing
with a hedge of brambles and briars, which, he says, he had found
by experience to be both a lasting and an impenetrable fence; but
which, it seems, was not commonly known in the time of
Democritus. Palladius adopts the opinion of Columella, which had
before been recommended by Varro. In the judgment of those
ancient improvers, the produce of a kitchen garden had, it seems,
been little more than sufficient to pay the extraordinary culture
and the expense of watering; for in countries so near the sun, it
was thought proper, in those times as in the present, to have the
command of a stream of water which could be conducted to every
bed in the garden. Through the greater part of Europe a kitchen
garden is not at present supposed to deserve a better enclosure
than that recommended by Columella. In Great Britain, and some
other northern countries, the finer fruits cannot be brought to
perfection but by the assistance of a wall. Their price,
therefore, in such countries must be sufficient to pay the
expense of building and maintaining what they cannot be had
without. The fruit-wall frequently surrounds the kitchen garden,
which thus enjoys the benefit of an enclosure which its own
produce could seldom pay for.
That the vineyard, when properly planted and brought to
perfection, was the most valuable part of the farm, seems to have
been an undoubted maxim in the ancient agriculture, as it is in
the modern through all the wine countries. But whether it was
advantageous to plant a new vineyard was a matter of dispute
among the ancient Italian husbandmen, as we learn from Columella.
He decides, like a true lover of all curious cultivation, in
favour of the vineyard, and endeavours to show, by a comparison
of the profit and expense, that it was a most advantageous
improvement. Such comparisons, however, between the profit and
expense of new projects are commonly very fallacious, and in
nothing more so than in agriculture. Had the gain actually made
by such plantations been commonly as great as he imagined it
might have been, there could have been no dispute about it. The
same point is frequently at this day a matter of controversy in
the wine countries. Their writers on agriculture, indeed, the
lovers and promoters of high cultivation, seem generally disposed
to decide with Columella in favour of the vineyard. In France the
anxiety of the proprietors of the old vineyards to prevent the
planting of any new ones, seems to favour their opinion, and to
indicate a consciousness in those who must have the experience
that this species of cultivation is at present in that country
more profitable than any other. It seems at the same time,
however, to indicate another opinion, that this superior profit
can last no longer than the laws which at present restrain the
free cultivation of the vine. In 1731, they obtained an order of
council prohibiting both the planting of new vineyards and the
renewal of those old ones, of which the cultivation had been
interrupted for two years, without a particular permission from
the king, to be granted only in consequence of an information
from the intendant of the province, certifying that he had
examined the land, and that it was incapable of any other
culture. The pretence of this order was the scarcity of corn and
pasture, and the superabundance of wine. But had this
superabundance been real, it would, without any order of council,
have effectually prevented the plantation of new vineyards, by
reducing the profits of this species of cultivation below their
natural proportion to those of corn and pasture. With regard to
the supposed scarcity of corn, occasioned by the multiplication
of vineyards, corn is nowhere in France more carefully cultivated
than in the wine provinces, where the land is fit for producing
it; as in Burgundy, Guienne, and the Upper Languedoc. The
numerous hands employed in the one species of cultivation
necessarily encourage the other, by affording a ready market for
its produce. To diminish the number of those who are capable of
paying for it is surely a most unpromising expedient for
encouraging the cultivation of corn. It is like the policy which
would promote agriculture by discouraging manufactures.
The rent and profit of those productions, therefore, which
require either a greater original expense of improvement in order
to fit the land for them, or a greater annual expense of
cultivation, though often much superior to those of corn and
pasture, yet when they do no more than compensate such
extraordinary expense, are in reality regulated by the rent and
profit of those common crops.
It sometimes happens, indeed, that the quantity of land,
which can be fitted for some particular produce, is too small to
supply the effectual demand. The whole produce can be disposed of
to those who are willing to give somewhat more than what is
sufficient to pay the whole rent, wages, and profit necessary for
raising and bringing it to market, according to their natural
rates, or according to the rates at which they are paid in the
greater part of other cultivated land. The surplus part of the
price which remains after defraying the whole expense of
improvement and cultivation may commonly, in this case, and in
this case only, bear no regular proportion to the like surplus in
corn or pasture, but may exceed it in almost any degree; and the
greater part of this excess naturally goes to the rent of the
landlord.
The usual and natural proportion, for example, between the
rent and profit of wine and those of corn and pasture must be
understood to take place only with regard to those vineyards
which produce nothing but good common wine, such as can be raised
almost anywhere, upon any light, gravelly, or sandy soil, and
which has nothing to recommend it but its strength and
wholesomeness. It is with such vineyards only that the common
land of the country can be brought into competition; for with
those of a peculiar quality it is evident that it cannot.
The vine is more affected by the difference of soils than
any other fruit tree. From some it derives a flavour which no
culture or management can equal, it is supposed, upon any other.
This flavour, real or imaginary, is sometimes peculiar to the
produce of a few vineyards; sometimes it extends through the
greater part of a small district, and sometimes through a
considerable part of a large province. The whole quantity of such
wines that is brought to market falls short of the effectual
demand, or the demand of those who would be willing to pay the
whole rent, profit, and wages, necessary for preparing and
bringing them thither, according to the ordinary rate, or
according to the rate at which they are paid in common vineyards.
The whole quantity, therefore, can be disposed of to those who
are willing to pay more, which necessarily raises the price above
that of common wine. The difference is greater or less according
as the fashionableness and scarcity of the wine render the
competition of the buyers more or less eager. Whatever it be, the
greater part of it goes to the rent of the landlord. For though
such vineyards are in general more carefully cultivated than most
others, the high price of the wine seems to be not so much the
effect as the cause of this careful cultivation. In so valuable a
produce the loss occasioned by negligence is so great as to force
even the most careless to attention. A small part of this high
price, therefore, is sufficient to pay the wages of the
extraordinary labour bestowed upon their cultivation, and the
profits of the extraordinary stock which puts that labour into
motion.
The sugar colonies possessed by the European nations in the
West Indies may be compared to those precious vineyards. Their
whole produce falls short of the effectual demand of Europe, and
can be disposed of to those who are willing to give more than
what is sufficient to pay the whole rent, profit, and wages
necessary for preparing and bringing it to market, according to
the rate at which they are commonly paid by any other produce. In
Cochin China the finest white sugar commonly sells for three
piasters the quintal, about thirteen shillings and sixpence of
our money, as we are told by Mr. Poivre, a very careful observer
of the agriculture of that country. What is there called the
quintal weighs from a hundred and fifty to two hundred Paris
pounds, or a hundred and seventy-five Paris pounds at a medium,
which reduces the price of the hundred-weight English to about
eight shillings sterling, not a fourth part of what is commonly
paid for the brown or muskavada sugars imported from our
colonies, and not a sixth part of what is paid for the finest
white sugar. The greater part of the cultivated lands in Cochin
China are employed in producing corn and rice, the food of the
great body of the people. The respective prices of corn, rice,
and sugar, are there probably in the natural proportion, or in
that which naturally takes place in the different crops of the
greater part of cultivated land, and which recompenses the
landlord and farmer, as nearly as can be computed according to
what is usually the original expense of improvement and the
annual expense of cultivation. But in our sugar colonies the
price of sugar bears no such proportion to that of the produce of
a rice or corn field either in Europe or in America. It is
commonly said that a sugar planter expects that the rum and
molasses should defray the whole expense of his cultivation, and
that his sugar should be all clear profit. If this be true, for I
pretend not to affirm it, it is as if a corn farmer expected to
defray the expense of his cultivation with the chaff and the
straw, and that the grain should be all clear profit. We see
frequently societies of merchants in London and other trading
town's purchase waste lands in our sugar colonies, which they
expect to improve and cultivate with profit by means of factors
and agents, notwithstanding the great distance and the uncertain
returns from the defective administration of justice in those
countries. Nobody will attempt to improve and cultivate in the
same manner the most fertile lands of Scotland, Ireland, or the
corn provinces of North America, though from the more exact
administration of justice in these countries more regular returns
might be expected.
In Virginia and Maryland the cultivation of tobacco is
preferred, as more profitable, to that of corn. Tobacco might be
cultivated with advantage through the greater part of Europe; but
in almost every part of Europe it has become a principal subject
of taxation, and to collect a tax from every different farm in
the country where this plant might happen to be cultivated would
be more difficult, it has been supposed, than to levy one upon
its importation at the custom-house. The cultivation of tobacco
has upon this account been most absurdly prohibited through the
greater part of Europe, which necessarily gives a sort of
monopoly to the countries where it is allowed; and as Virginia
and Maryland produce the greatest quantity of it, they share
largely, though with some competitors, in the advantage of this
monopoly. The cultivation of tobacco, however, seems not to be so
advantageous as that of sugar. I have never even heard of any
tobacco plantation that was improved and cultivated by the
capital of merchants who resided in Great Britain, and our
tobacco colonies send us home no such wealthy planters as we see
frequently arrive from our sugar islands. Though from the
preference given in those colonies to the cultivation of tobacco
above that of corn, it would appear that the effectual demand of
Europe for tobacco is not completely supplied, it probably is
more nearly so than that for sugar; and though the present price
of tobacco is probably more than sufficient to pay the whole
rent, wages, and profit necessary for preparing and bring it to
market, according to the rate at which they are commonly paid in
corn land, it must not be so much more as the present price of
sugar. Our tobacco planters, accordingly, have shown the same
fear of the superabundance of tobacco which the proprietors of
the old vineyards in France have of the superabundance of wine.
By act of assembly they have restrained its cultivation to six
thousand plants, supposed to yield a thousand weight of tobacco,
for every negro between sixteen and sixty years of age. Such a
negro, over and above this quantity of tobacco, can manage, they
reckon, four acres of Indian corn. To prevent the market from
being overstocked, too, they have sometimes, in plentiful years,
we are told by Dr. Douglas (I suspect he has been ill informed),
burnt a certain quantity of tobacco for every negro, in the same
manner as the Dutch are said to do of spices. If such violent
methods are necessary to keep up the present price of tobacco,
the superior advantage of its culture over that of corn, if it
still has any, will not probably be of long continuance.
It is in this manner that the rent of the cultivated land,
of which the produce is human food, regulates the rent of the
greater part of other cultivated land. No particular produce can
long afford less; because the land would immediately be turned to
another use. And if any particular produce commonly affords more,
it is because the quantity of land which can be fitted for it is
too small to supply the effectual demand.
In Europe, corn is the principal produce of land which
serves immediately for human food. Except in particular
situations, therefore, the rent of corn land regulates in Europe
that of all other cultivated land. Britain need envy neither the
vineyards of France nor the olive plantations of Italy. Except in
particular situations, the value of these is regulated by that of
corn, in which the fertility of Britain is not much inferior to
that of either of those two countries.
If in any country the common and favourite vegetable food of
the people should be drawn from a plant of which the most common
land, with the same or nearly the same culture, produced a much
greater quantity than the most fertile does of corn, the rent of
the landlord, or the surplus quantity of food which would remain
to him, after paying the labour and replacing the stock of the
farmer, together with its ordinary profits, would necessarily be
much greater. Whatever was the rate at which labour was commonly
maintained in that country, this greater surplus could always
maintain a greater quantity of it, and consequently enable the
landlord to purchase or command a greater quantity of it. The
real value of his rent, his real power and authority, his command
of the necessaries and conveniencies of life with which the
labour of other people could supply him, would necessarily be
much greater.
A rice field produces a much greater quantity of food than
the most fertile corn field. Two crops in the year from thirty to
sixty bushels each, are said to be the ordinary produce of an
acre. Though its cultivation, therefore, requires more labour, a
much greater surplus remains after maintaining all that labour.
In those rice countries, therefore, where rice is the common and
favourite vegetable food of the people, and where the cultivators
are chiefly maintained with it, a greater share of this greater
surplus should belong to the landlord than in corn countries. In
Carolina, where the planters, as in other British colonies, are
generally both farmers and landlords, and where rent consequently
is confounded with profit, the cultivation of rice is found to be
more profitable than that of corn, though their fields produce
only one crop in the year, and though, from the prevalence of the
customs of Europe, rice is not there the common and favourite
vegetable food of the people.
A good rice field is a bog at all seasons, and at one season
a bog covered with water. It is unfit either for corn, or
pasture, or vineyard, or, indeed, for any other vegetable produce
that is very useful to men; and the lands which are fit for those
purposes are not fit for rice. Even in the rice countries,
therefore, the rent of rice lands cannot regulate the rent of the
other cultivated land, which can never be turned to that produce.
The food produced by a field of potatoes is not inferior in
quantity to that produced by a field of rice, and much superior
to what is produced by a field of wheat. Twelve thousand weight
of potatoes from an acre of land is not a greater produce than
two thousand weight of wheat. The food or solid nourishment,
indeed, which can be drawn from each of those two plants, is not
altogether in proportion to their weight, on account of the
watery nature of potatoes. Allowing, however, half the weight of
this root to go to water, a very large allowance, such an acre of
potatoes will still produce six thousand weight of solid
nourishment, three times the quantity produced by the acre of
wheat. An acre of potatoes is cultivated with less expense than
an acre of wheat; the fallow, which generally precedes the sowing
of wheat, more than compensating the hoeing and other
extraordinary culture which is always given to potatoes. Should
this root ever become in any part of Europe, like rice in some
rice countries, the common and favourite vegetable food of the
people, so as to occupy the same proportion of the lands in
tillage which wheat and other sorts of grain for human food do at
present, the same quantity of cultivated land would maintain a
much greater number of people, and the labourers being generally
fed with potatoes, a greater surplus would remain after replacing
all the stock and maintaining all the labour employed in
cultivation. A greater share of this surplus, too, would belong
to the landlord. Population would increase, and rents would rise
much beyond what they are at present.
The land which is fit for potatoes is fit for almost every
other useful vegetable. If they occupied the same proportion of
cultivated land which corn does at present, they would regulate,
in the same manner, the rent of the greater part of other
cultivated land.
In some parts of Lancashire it is pretended, I have been
told, that bread of oatmeal is a heartier food for labouring
people than wheaten bread, and I have frequently heard the same
doctrine held in Scotland. I am, however, somewhat doubtful of
the truth of it. The common people in Scotland, who are fed with
oatmeal, are in general neither so strong, nor so handsome as the
same rank of people in England who are fed with wheaten bread.
They neither work so well, nor look so well; and as there is not
the same difference between the people of fashion in the two
countries, experience would seem to show that the food of the
common people in Scotland is not so suitable to the human
constitution as that of their neighbours of the same rank in
England. But it seems to be otherwise with potatoes. The
chairmen, porters, and coalheavers in London, and those
unfortunate women who live by prostitution, the strongest men and
the most beautiful women perhaps in the British dominions, are
said to be the greater part of them from the lowest rank of
people in Ireland, who are generally fed with this root. No food
can afford a more decisive proof of its nourishing quality, or of
its being peculiarly suitable to the health of the human
constitution.
It is difficult to preserve potatoes through the year, and
impossible to store them like corn, for two or three years
together. The fear of not being able to sell them before they rot
discourages their cultivation, and is, perhaps, the chief
obstacle to their ever becoming in any great country, like bread,
the principal vegetable food of all the different ranks of the
people.
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