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A35207 An essay on the state of England in relation to its trade, its poor, and its taxes, for carrying on the present war against France by John Cary, merchant in Bristoll. Cary, John, d. 1720? 1695 (1695) Wing C730; ESTC R1249 78,898 200

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Employments now the Security of the Freeholders of Ireland is to engage as many as they can in the same Interest with themselves which may be done by dividing the Lands into particular Farmes in bigness suitable to the Stocks of such as undertake them by this means they fix their Roots in the Ground and bind them with a Band of Iron nor would many of their People if Trade were discouraged return to England again but imploy themselves and their Stocks in improving such Farms as they should purchase either for Lives or Years at easie Rents or making themselves Freeholders And as the security of Ireland is lessen'd at Land by Trade so likewise at Sea for which they depend on the Kingdom of England now can it be thought this Nation will be at continual charges only to raise a People which shall vye with them in their Trade Or that we can be able to do it when our Navigation decays which it must do as the others increases who afford us few Saylers towards Manning our Fleet whilst our own are harrast by continual Presses for let them be sure if the French King could have marched an Army thither as easie as he could to Flanders the Lands of Ireland might long since have had other Landlords maugre all the defence they could have made Nor does the Profit of this Trade and Manufacture redound to the Free-holders but only to the Traders who as I hinted before are a separate Interest and remove at their Pleasures But if the People of Ireland think England is bound to defend them against a Foreign Invasion an Account of its own Interest and Security they must be allow'd to be in the right yer let them consider also that we have power to limit their Trade so as it may be least prejudicial to our own which in my Judgment cannot better be done than by reducing that Kingdom to the State of our other Plantations confining the Exportation of their Product only hither and that also unmanufactured and preventing their being supplied with Necessaries from other Nations this will make Ireland profitable to England and in some measure recompence the vast Charges we have been at for its Reduction and Delivery out of the Hands of Foreign Powers and Popish Cut-throats and that not less than twice in forty Years all paid by the People of England a Gvess whereat may be made by this that the last cost above Three Hundred and Forty Thousand Pounds only in Transport Ships for which we now pay Interest and if the Charge of Transporting our Army thither with their Provisions and Ammunition cost so much what did the pay of the first and Purchase of the latter amount unto Now 't is very reasonable the Nation should some way or other receive Satisfaction for its Expences and none seems more just and equal than this which would only limit the Profits of a few Merchants who carry on a Trade to the Prejudice of England As for the Freeholders they would be supply'd with Necessaries on as cheap terms as now and find Chapmen for their Product which would be bought up by Factories setled from England or they might send them hither themselves if they thought fit and by this means all would be manufactured here and Foreign Markets must be supply'd hence as they are now thence This is the way to prevent transporting their Wool for other Places to the Prejudice of our Manufactures and Importing Tobacco with other of our Plantation Commodities directly thence to the prejudice of our Customs and Merchants this also would imploy our Navigation and by its short Voyages make Multitudes of Seamen In short we cannot imagine the Advantages it would bring to this Kingdom till Experience hath shew'd us But then the Act of Prohibition must be repealed there must be free Liberty to bring in Cattle both alive and dead and all things else which that Land produces and here I must again renew the Question What is Truth 'T will be as difficult to perswade the Gentlemen of England that this is their true Interest as it is those of Ireland that theirs does not consist in Trade and Manufactures one being byassed by the breeding part of this Nation as the others are by their Merchants who represent their private Profits as the Nations and it is not to be wondred they have Success therein when it carries so much the face of a present advantage but that the Gentlemen of England should be still fond of that Act after so many Years smarting under it seems to me very strange than which I know no Law in my time hath been more pernicious to the Traffique of this Kingdom 't was this first put those of Ireland on that Trade which hath since almost eat out ours 't was this set them on Manufactures which were so far advanced before the late troubles that the sales of one Market as I have been informed came to a Thousand Pounds per Week for so long as they had Liberty of Importing their Product hither and found a constant Sale when Imported they were contented therewith but being put on a necessity of finding out Foreign Markets for their Provisions this made their Merchants who were before generally Factors to those of England and are to give them their due an ingenious prying People dive deeper and since we refused to take the Flesh they chose to keep the Fleece and either to Ship it to Foreign Countrys where 't would yield a greater Price or by a Manufacture to render it fit for those Markets wherein they vended the other 'T was this that hath produced such great Quantities of Wool in Ireland as have at least equalled if not exceeded England for the greatest part of the Lands of that Kingdom by reason of the thinness of its Inhabitants being turned rather to pasture than Tillage and this Prohibition discouraging the raising black Cattle put the People on stocking them with Sheep which Overplus would again decrease if Ireland becoming better peopled in its Inland Parts by laying aside Trade fell more on Tillage or by repealing this Act the Inhabitants received Encouragement to betake themselves again to breeding black Cattle now if it be true that not the quantity of a Commodity at Market but the Demand when there makes it bear a Price it will appear that the Makers of that Law were out in their Politiques by not considering that the Product of Ireland must be consumed somewhere and if sent to Foreign parts formerly supplied hence 't would abate the Exportation of ours the Consequence whereof would be the lessening their Expence abroad more than it was increased at home nor did they at the same time take care to put us on any footing equal with the others by abatement in the Customs on Exportation and thereby enabling the Merchants of England to sell suitably with those of Ireland but still continued Three Shillings per Barrel on Beef and Four on Pork whilst the
for the latter to some of our Neighbouring Nations but their Flesh is of no use their Skins of little the Leather made thereof is very ordinary only the longest of their Hair is used in Weaving There are many other sorts of Beasts some whereof require no care in raising others little others are more tender such are the Stag the Dear the Rabbit the Hare the Fox the Badger the Goat whose Skins are necessary for our Trade and assist in our Manufactures Agriculture is that whereby we raise our Corn by turning up the Earth the several sorts whereof are Wheat Rye Barly Pease Beans Fetches Oats which not only afford nourishment to our selves and the Beasts we use in labour but serve for Trade as they give Imployment to our People at home and are Transported abroad more or less according to the overplus of onr expence and the want of our Neighbours besides the great Quantities used in our Navigation These Products of both sorts are clear profit to the Nation as they are raised from Earth and Labour whose Advantages arise chiefly from their being Exported either in their own kind or when Manufactered the Remainder spent at Home tending only to supplying the use not advancing the Wealth of the Nation now these Exports being according to the Rates and Prizes they bear in other Countries and those Rates arising from the Proportion their Lands hold with ours in their Yearly Rents are not so great in specie as when workt up Butter is the greatest wherewith we supply many Forreign Markets and did formerly more till by making it bad and using Tricks to increase its weight we have much lost that Trade and are now almost beat out of it by Ireland which every day makes better as we make worse besides they undersell us in the Price as they do also in Beef occasioned by the low Rents of their Lands and more especially by the Act of Prohibition which put that Nation on finding out a Trade in Forreign Markets for what they were denyed to bring hither which being Exported thence direct yeilds them greater profit the sweetness whereof hath encouraged them to take more care and this hath raised them from a Sloathful to be an Industrious People As for Corn Forreign Markets are supplyed therewith both from thence and other places in the Sound also from the Western Islands cheaper then the price of our Lands will admit But our Plantations have still some Dependance on us for our Product and would more if that Act was removed and Ireland made a Colony on the same Terms with them The other Fruits of the Earth as Apples Pears Cherries Plumbs together with the Herbs and Plants also the Fowls and Fish taken in this Land serve rather for our Delight and Food than Trade Some Cider we do Export also Spirits raised by the Distiller both from some of these and also from many other things On the Sea Coasts we catch great Quantities of Herrings and Pilchards which we save and sell in Forreign Markets Nor is this all the Product of our Earth whose Womb being big with Treasure longs to be Delivered and after many Throws brings forth Lead Tin Copper Calamy Coal Culm Iron Allom Copperas and sundry other Minerals which return us great Treasure from Forreign Markets whither they are Exported besides the several Shrubs and Trees that adorn our Fields among which the Oak the Ash and the Elm are the chiefest these not only serve in Building our Sips but do also furnish us with Materials wherewith our Arificers make many things fit for Forregn Commerce and it were much to be wisht better care were taken for preserving Timber lest out Posterities want what we so Prodigally squander away The next thing is our Manufactures whereby we Improve the value of our Products by the Labour of our Inhabitants and make them useful in sundry manners both for our selves and others fitting them for such Services as of their own Natures without the help of Art they would not have been proper and those to suit the Necessities and Humours both of our own and Foreign Countries to which we Export them where they yield a price not only according to the true value of the Materials and Labour but an overplus likewise suitable to the Necessity and Fancy of the Buyer and this adds to the profit of the Nation and increases its Wealth These Manufactures as they Imploy Multitudes of People in their making so also in Transporting them and fetching several Forreign Materials used with our own such as Oyl Dye-stuffe Silk Wool Cotten Barrilia and many others which are either Manufactured here of themselves or wrought up with our Product And first to begin with Sheeps Wool whereof either by it self or mixt with Silk or Linnen we make various sorts of pretty things fit for all Climates and proper for the wearing of both Sexes wherein the Invention and Imitation of our Workmen is so great that they have no Idea represented or Pattern set before them that is not soon out done from a strong heavy Cloath fit to keep out cold in Winter they turn their Hands to a fine thin sort which will scarse keep warm in Summer Ladies may now wear Gowns thereof so light that they can hardly know they have them on from hence they fell on Perpets Serges Crapes Stuffs Says Rattoons Gauzes Anthrines and many other sorts fit both for outward Garments and inward Linings of various Colors Stripes and Flowers some of them so fine and pleasant scarse to be known from Silk besides those multitudes of courser Clothes for the Poor also Rugs Blankets and all Furniture for Houses and such a Progress have they made in this sort of Manufactures that a Man may have his Picture wrought in Tapestry with the same exactness both for Life and Colors as if drawn with a curious Pencil for this I refer the Reader to those Hangings at the Custom-House in London where he may see the several Officers so lively represented in their Stations that want of Motion seems to be the only thing which differs them from their Originals One Workman endeavouring to exceed another they make things to answer all the ends of Silks Calicoes and Linnen of bare Sheeps Wool which if they were by Fashion brought into wearing would then be thought as handsom fine Flannel for Shirts white Crape for Neckclothes Cuffs and Head-Dresses besides the pretty Laces whereof we see various sorts used about the Dead and Caduce of several Colours in imitation of Ribbons also Hats Stockings and many such things are made of Wool and other Mixtures both worn at home and Exported abroad The next Material for our Manufactures is Cotton-Wool which is now become a great Imployment for the Poor and so adds to the Wealth of the Nation this being curiously pickt and spun makes Dimities Tapes Stockings Gloves besides several things wove fit for use as Petticoats wastcoats and Drawers
two Manufactures of Sugar and Tobacco more advantageous to the Nation than ever hitherto they have been Tanning of Leather is an Employment which ought to be encouraged as it furnishes us with a Commodity fit to be manufactured at home and also to be transported into Foreign Countrys I know the Exportation of Leather hath been much opposed by the Shooe-makers and others who cut it at home and represented as attended with ill Consequences one whereof is the making it dear here but would it not be of much worse to confine and limit that Employment to an Inland Expence on the other side would it not naturally follow that when Leather rises to a great Price the Exportation must cease because Ireland would under-sell us and would it not seem an unreasonable Discouragement to Trade if Tobacco Sugar and Woollen Manufactures were debarred from Exportation only because they should be sold cheaper here for suppose the occasions of the Nation could not consume all the Leather that is made to what a low price must Hides be reduced for no other reason but that the Shooemakers may get more by their Shooes 'T is true if they could make out that those Countrys must then have their Shooes from us who now have their Leather I should be of their Minds but it must needs have a quite contrary effect especially whilst Ireland is able to supply them This proceeds from a very narrow Spirit and such as ought not to be encouraged in a Trading Nation Ireland hath already made great Progress in this Mistery occasioned by our Imprudence and should we give Encouragement to other Countrys we might too late repent it A good Export for Leather would cause a great Import of Raw Hides which would be more Advantage to the Nation than if they were tann'd in Ireland and sent abroad thence Nor can I omit Iron which is the great foundation of sundry Manufactures not only used at home but wherewith we supply our Plantations and other Places abroad as Howes Bills Axes Cases Locks Nailes and a thousand such Necessaries the Workmanship whereof adds much to their Value There are many other things which may be and are daily improved amongst us as Clockwork wherein we sell nothing but Art and Labour the Materials thereof being of small value I have seen Watches and Clocks of great Prizes made for the Courts of Foreign Princes Paper-Mills are a Benefit to the Nation as they make that Commodity from things of themselves worth little so are are Powder-Mills also Artificers who bring advantage to the Nation by supplying it with things which must otherwise be had from abroad for its own use as also with others proper to be sent thither for Sales and when Exported are more or less profitable as the labour of the Subject adds to their value In like manner things are cheaper to us when we pay only for the first Materials whereof they are made the rest being work done at home is divided amongst our selves so that on the whole it appears to be the great Interest of England to advance its Manufactures and this I humbly conceive may be do●e these several ways 1. By providing Work-houses for the Poor and making good Laws both to force and encourage them to work but designing to speak larger to this before I close this Tract shall referr the Reader to it 2. By discharging all Customs payable on them at their Exportation and also on the Materials used in making them at their Importation for as the one would encourage the Merchant to send more abroad so the other would enable the Manufacturers to afford them cheaper at home and 't is strange that a Nation whose Wealth depends on Manufactures and whose Interest it is to outdo all others especially in the Woollen by underselling them in Foreign Markets should load either with Taxes Here I cannot but mention that of Logwood a Commodity much used in Dying which pays Five Pounds per Tun Custom in and draws back Three Pounds Fifteen Shillings when shipt out by which means the Dyers in Holland use it so much cheaper than ours now if it was Imported Custom Free and paid Twenty five Shillings per Tun at its Export the Dyers there would use it so much dearer than ours here and I think it would be well worth Inquiry whither a Prohibition either total or in part of Shipping out our Manufactures thither and to the Northern Kingdoms undyed or undrest might not be made I am sure it would be of great Advantage to this Kingdom if it might be done without running into greater Inconveniencies which for my part I do not foresee the Dutch discourage their being brought in dyed or drest that they may thereby give Employments to their own People and increase their Navigation by the consumption of great quantities of Dye-stuff and the same reasons should prevail with us to dye and dress them here But this deserves the consideration of a Committee of Parliament to hear what may be said both for and against it 3. By discouraging the Importation of Commodities already manufactured either from our own Plantations or other Places such as clay'd and refined Sugars wrought Silks Calicoes Brandy Glass Earthen Ware Irish Frizes Tann'd Leather Gloves Lace c. and instead thereof we should encourage bringing in the Materials whereof they are made to be wrought up here this may be done by Laws and also by being in love with our Home Manufactures and bringing their Wearing into Fashion 4. By freeing the Manufactures from burthensome Excises which do much discourage small Stocks who are not able to carry on their Trades and make Provision for such great Payments the Distillers have long groaned under them and I fear the Glass-makers now will especially those in and about London who have another load by the Duty of Coals besides the Swarms of Officers to which we lay open the Houses of those Men who deserve all the Encouragement we can give them and ought to have things made as easie to them as may be had the like Methods been used to our Wollen and Leather as was intended we might have repented it at Leisure Taxes when laid on our Manufactures ought to be raised by such easie Methods as shall give least trouble to the Makers Trade ought to be handled gently and he that considers the Expences of this Nation at Five Pounds per Head comes to Forty Millions and the Lands of England but to Twelve will imagine easie Methods may be found out to raise a greater Tax annually then we pay without loading either Land or Trade as now we do a Scheme whereof may be easily drawn up 5. By prohibiting as much as may be the Exportation of things to the Plantations fit to be manufactured there till they are first done here thus ' t vvas better Shooes vvere Transported to the Plantations than Leather so things
Saylors the former are the Sea Waggons whereby we transport and carry Commodities from one Market to another and the latter are the Waggoners which drive or manage them these are a sort of merry unthinking People who make all Men rich save themselves have often more Money than is their own but seldom so much as they know how to spend generally brave in their Undertakings they go through any kind of Labour in their own way with a great deal of chearfulness are undaunted by Storms and Tempests the Sea being as it were their Element and are allowed by all to be the best Navigators in the World they are our Wealth in Peace and our Defence in War and ought to be more encouraged than they are in both but especially in the latter which might be done if better Methods were used to engage them in that Service and better Treatment when there Now I should think if a List were taken of all the Saylers in England and a Law made for every Person who enters himself on that Imploy at the Age of Years to have his Name registred with the place of his Abode and be obliged to appear on Summons left at his House and no Man to be forced into the King's Service till he had been at Sea three Years nor to stay therein above three Years without his free consent and then to be permitted to take a Merchant's Imploy for so much longer and during his being in the King's Service good Provision to be made for his Family at home and a Maintenance for them in case of his death or being disabled This would encourage them to come willingly into the Service which they look on now to be a Slavery whereto they are bound for their Lives whilst their Families starve at home This and the manner of pressing them discourages many and hinders very much the making of Saylors People not caring to put their Hands to an Oar lest the next day they should be halled away to the Fleet though they understand nothing of the Sea I do not think too much Care can be taken for the well manning our Men of War but I would have it also done with able Seamen and not with such who will only stand in the way and are useless when most wanted and this must not be done by pressing but by practicable Methods which shall draw every Man to take his turn at Helm I take Embargoes to be no helps towards it for many Saylors do then lie hid who would appear to serve in Merchant's Ships and might be easily met with at return of their Voyages by this means in a short time there would be a double set of Mariners enough both for the Service of the Fleet and Trade the latter would every year breed more let the Commanders of Merchants Ships on Arrival give in Lists of the Saylors they have brought home for whose appearance their Wages should be Bail and then those whose turn it is to serve in the Fleet should after due time allowed for finishing their Voyages be sent thither and a penalty on every Master of a Ship who carry'd a Saylor to Sea after his three Years Prodict was expired such Laws and Time would bring things into regular Methods This would also prevent great Mischiefs and Inconveniencies which arise from pressing Saylors our of Merchants Ships whilst on their Voyages many of them being thereby lost at Sea and others detained in the West-Indies to the great Discouragement of Trade whereas better ways might be found out of supply the Men of War abroad all Merchants Ships bound to the places where they are might have a proportionable Number of Sailors deliver'd them by the Admiralty to be carried out Gratis for their Use and Service and this would prevent another Mischief too often practised abroad where Captains of Men of War press Saylors from one Merchants Ship only that they may make profit by selling them to another It 's supposed that no Trade raises more Seamen than that of Coals from Newcastle which imploys many Hundreds of Ships to supply the City of London and other Ports of England and being a home Trade doth thereby breed and encourage Saylors more than long Voyages would do To come now to the Trade which England drives with Foreign Countrys here 't is necessary to enquire how each doth encourage our Product and Manufactures how our Navigation what Commodities we receive in Returns and how the Ballance of Trade stands in either among which I esteem none to be so profitable to to us as that we manage to Africa and our own Plantations in America and none so detrimental as that to the East-Indies To begin therefore with the East-India Trade which for many Reasons I take to be mischievous to the Kingdom To clear this we are to consider how a Trade may be advantageous or detrimental to a Nation and then to draw Inferences thence applicable to the above Proposition I shall therefore lay down such general Notions as may without dispute be allowed by all unbyassed Persons which are these 1. That that Trade is advantageous to the Kingdom of England which Exports our Product and Manufactures 2. Which Imports to us such Commodities as may be manufactured here or be used in making our Manufactures 3. Which supplies us with such things without which we cannot carry on our Foreign Trade 4. Which encourages our Navigation and increases our Seamen And consequently that Trade which exports little or none of our Product or Manufactures nor supplies us with things necessary to promote Manufactures at home or carry on our Trade abroad nor encourages Navigation cannot be supposed to be advantageous to this Kingdom especially when it s Imports hinder the consumption of our own Manufactures and more especially when those Imports are chiefly the purchase of our Bullion or Treasure And because I would be rightly understood in my third Proposition I mean those Commodities without which we are not able to fit out our Ships for a Foreign Trade such as are Pitch Tar Hemp Sail-Cloth Masts Timber and such like These are so absolutely necessary that we must have them though purchased for Bullion as being the chief Hinges whereon Trade turns and the Tools by which we Mechannically navigate our Ships those Bulky Mediums of Foreign Trade but for those things which are Imported only in order to be Exported again as Commodities to trade on these cannot be so advantageous to this Kingdom as they may be to the Dutch who having little Land are maintained rather by Buying and Selling than Manufacturing whereas England being a large spot of Ground and having a great Product of its own besides what comes from our Plantations capable to be wrought up or manufactured here gets by the Imployment of its People therefore it would be the great Wisdom of our Government to regulate all Foreign Trades by such Methods as may best make then useful
reasonable Prises but the higher they yield abroad the more Treasure they bring to the Nation provided we strain not the Staple so as to be undersold from other Markets But there must be a Regard had to our Fisheries that the Liberty of carrying that Commodity direct to Foreign Parts be not restrained Next by their being brought home unmanufactured they would give great Imployments here Cotten Wool by being spun up and made into several sorts of pretty things Tobacco by Cutting and Rowling and Sugar by refining for I would have no Tobacco brought home save in Leaf nor Sugar above Muscovado the last would imploy abundance of Sugar-Houses in England to clay and refine it not only for a home Expence but to be transported to Foreign Markets a Trade we have been lately beat out of by the Industry of the Dutch helpt on by our own Imprudence for no wise Nation would have given such an advantage to a Rival Trader as by Law to put their Refiners on terms of working Sugars Three Shillings per Cent cheaper than our own therefore when the thing comes to be well weighed I believe 't will be found the Interest of this Nation to suffer all those Commodities to be Imported Custom Free and to lay a Duty on what is Exported again unwrought I mean all West-India Commodities and to raise an Excise on what is spent at Home for which easie and practicable Methods may be proposed and this would salve all those Disputes about running Tobacco or drawing back Debentures after relanded which Duty might be collected with few Officers and little Charge and the King might have an Account of every particular Parcel how it was transferred from Man to Man till 't was paid But if the Planter should complain at his being denied to Import wrought Sugars it would be abundantly made up to him by opening the African Trade that so he might be supplied with Negroes both in greater Numbers and at cheaper Rates than now he is a Trade of the most Advantage to this Kingdom of any we drive and as it were all Profit the first Cost being little more than small Matters of our own Manufactures for which we have in Return Gold Teeth Wax and Negroes the last whereof is much better than the first being indeed the best Trassick the Kingdom hath as it doth occasionally give so vast an Imployment to our People both by Sea and Land These are the Hands whereby our Plantations are improved and 't is by their Labours such great Quantities of Sugar Tobacco Cotten Ginger and Indigo are raised which being bulky Commodities imploy great Numbers of our Ships for their transporting hither and the greater number of Ships imploys the greater number of Handecraft Trades at home spends more of our Product and Manufactures and makes more Saylors who are maintained by a separate Imploy for if every One raised the Provisions he eat or made the Manufactures he wore Trade would cease Traffique being a variety of Imployments Men have set themselves on adapted to their particular Genius's whereby one is serviceable to another without invading each others Province thus the Husbandman raises Corn the Millard grinds it the Baker makes it into Bread and the Citizen eats it Thus the Grazier fats Cattle and the Butcher kills them for the Market Thus the Shepherd shears his Wool the Spinster makes it into Yarn the Weavet into Cloth and the Merchant exports it and every one lives by each other Thus the Country supplies the City with Provisions and that the Country with Manufactures Now to advise a Government to monopolize and consequently to lessen this Trade by confining it to a limited Stock is the same as to advise the People of Egypt to raise high Banks to confine the River Nilus from overflowing lest it should thereby fertilize their Lands or the King of Span to shut up his Mines lest he should fill his Kingdom too full of Silver This Trade indeed is our Silver Mines for by the Overplus of Negroes above what will serve our Plantations we draw great Quantities thereof from the Spaniard a Trade we are lately fallen into by a Compact of the two Natious for which a Factory or Assiento is settled by them at Jamaica where what their Agent buys is paid for in Pieces of Eight besides oftentimes Thirty per Cent Cambio for running the risque to the Continent all discharged in the same specie with great Punctuality Nor is this all the advantage the Nation reaps thereby it hath introduced another sort of Commerce and given us Opportunities of selling our Manufactures to that People with whom we now grow into some sort of Familiarity and may be a means in time to make way for a larger Acquaintance whereby we may reap the best part of the Treafure of those Mines Jamaica being now become a Magazine of Trade to New-Spain and the Terra Firma from whence we have yearly vast Quantities of Bullion imported to this Kingdom both for the Negroes and Manufactures we send them which as it was opened for the sake of their having the former so when that supply ceases it will be removed to some other place and our industrious Neighbours are ready to receive it who would perhaps take more care to encourage it than we have done for by the slow steps of the African Company and the Hardships they have ●ut on the Interlopers or private Traders the number of Negroes imported thither hath been so small and so much below our promises and the Spaniards Expectations that this profitable Assiento or Factory hath for some time stood on Tiptoe ready to waft it self to another Island as it certainly had done long since if the Interlopers had not given a better Supply than the Company We will now inquire what Reasons should perswade any Government to monopolize or limit this Trade and what have been the Consequences thereof As for the first the necessity of having Forts Castles and Soldiers to defend the Trade which could not be carried on without great Charge and a joynt Stock these and such like Arguments attended with a Cloud of Guineas had force enough to prevail on an easie Prince who though of a temper not inclined to Mischief and had natural parts capable to understand both his own and the Nation 's Interest yet being perswaded by those Hargyes who like so many Horse Leach●… constantly hung upon him and required more Treasure than his Income could afford he was many times allured to d● things which his own Judgment would not allow so mischievous are evil Cou●cellors especially of the fair Sex to ● good-natur'd Prince But let us consider what these Fo●● Castles and Soldiers now settled by th● Company are their Use and whither 〈◊〉 good Securities for the Trade may not 〈◊〉 made by a regulated Company out o● Stock to be raised on its Members 〈◊〉 those to be admitted for small Fines and 〈◊〉 pay a Duty on the Goods they Export
generally biass our Judgments in such a manner that the very supposing a thing to be so makes us uneasie under any Discourse that perswades only to enquire into it but Truth is the same still and the easiest way to discover it is by walking in the Paths of Plainness Falshood wants Sophistry to lacker and set it off therefore Men usually represent their private Interests under the name of a public Good and thereby endeavour to guild the Pill they would have go down The Heads I shall proceed on are these Two 1. To shew that Ireland as things now stand is very destructive to the Interest of England 2. That the Methods which may be used to render it more serviceable to the Interest of this Nation will also render it more serviceable to its own These are plain Propositions understood by every Man and I hope to make them out with the same plainness 1. As to the first that Ireland is now destructive to the Interest of England I think it will admit of little Dispute for as long as that People enjoy so free and open a Trade to Foreign Parts and thereby are encouraged to advance in their Wollen Manufactures they must consequently lessen ours than which they cannot do us a greater Mischief being the Tools whereon we Trade when they sink our Navigation sinks with them Now the Advantage Ireland hath above England in making the Wollen Manufactures will soon give them opportunities of outdoing us therein first as it produces as good or rather better Wool and next as it furnishes all Provisions cheaper to the Workmen which renders them able to live on easier terms than ours can here and this will in short time give Invitation for many more to remove thither 2. But 't is the second Proposition which will not be so easily allowed how the true Interest of Ireland will be advanced by such means as shall be used to promote that of England Here we must consider what is the true Interest of Ireland and wherein it doth consist Whither in Trade and Manufactures or in Improvement of its Lands by a good Settlement And I doubt not but on a strict Scrutiny it will appear to be the latter for indeed till that is made no Trade can be serviceable to any People farther than it doth help towards it Nor is it the Advantage of an ill-peopled Colony whose Riches are to be the Fruits of the Earth to divert any number of the Inhabitants from its Cultivation whilst they can find Vent for their Product and be supply'd with conveniencies another way had our American Plantations done so they had never been well setled but much more of their Lands at this time unimproved and this I take to be one great Reason why the English in Ireland have always lain open to the Insults of the Natives there the Country being slenderly peopled in the more Inland Parts if so then certainly whatever hinders the Peopling and consequently the cultivating and improving the Lands of Ireland doth so far hinder the advancing its true Interest Now nothing doth this more than Trade Abroad and Manufactures at Home 1. As they divert great Numbers of People which cannot be spared from Husbandry 2. As they so far lessen the Strength and Security of that Island The true Interest then of Ireland being Husbandry Trade and Manufactures stand diametrically opposite thereto for Trade being of it self less laborious and the Poor maintained thereby living more easie than such as are employed in the Field doth invite them rather to settle in that way than the other this is the reason why such Multitudes of People daily flock into Cities from the Country if they have either Encouragement themselves or can foresee any for their Children whereas few withdraw from Trade to the Labour of a Country Life of this we have an eminent Example in New England which tho' it was the first peopled and by its Trade hath drawn thither great Numbers of Inhabitants yet that large Colony hath not cultivated so much Ground as far less Numbers have in other Plantations much later setled for whereas in them the Product was thought to be their Wealth and therefore the Setlers disperst themselves and with all the Assistance they could get endeavoured to clear and fit the Ground for breaking up these took another Course and by keeping together chose rather to live on Buying and Selling by which means their Improvements are very small and their Product of no value suitable to their Numbers so that it seems at present rather a Magazine of Trade their chief Imployment being to supply the other American Plantations with Fish catch'd on the Coasts and some other things raised near the Sea-side and in Returns bring thence the Commodities of their Growth which they again barter with us or Ship to Markets themselves and here it is to be noted that the great Ballance of their Ttade is Ships which having plenty of Timber they build on reasonable Rates either for Sale or to be imployed for transporting their own Commodities which being generally bulky such as Timber Mackrill Bread Horses for the Plantations and Codfish for Europe great part of their value arises from their Freights This was indeed their oversight at first and now scarce to be retrieved for had they then began with Planting and followed that closely for some time they might in all probability long since have made themselves Masters of a greater Product which would have laid the foundations of a much larger Trade both to Europe and other places in America they are indeed a thrifty sort of People but want Commodities of their own Product and the Profits of a Nations Trade being very much limited according to that if the Parliament should think fit by new Laws to hinder the Freedom they now enjoy in our American Plantations which I judge absolutely necessary because so much abused by their carrying those Commodities to Foreign Markets without touching first in England to the lessening our Customs and discouraging our Merchants here their Trade must sink and they see their error too late 2. And as Foreign Trade and Manufactures lessen the Number of Husbandmen in Ireland so secondly it lessens the Strength and Security of that Island which lies in a good Number of hardy People enured to Labour who with it defend their own Interests and cannot depart thence without leaving their All whereas Merchants and Traders being but Temporary Residents may and often do leave a place when it most requires their Stay for its Defence an Instance of this we had lately when the trading Part of the Inhabitants thereof who could remove their Effects left it soonest whilst the Men of Land came more uneasily away because they left their Estates behind them and had no Methods of maintaining themselves in England but by living on what they brought with them whereas the others soon fell into Trade here and tho' they changed the place were still in their
must be eased and what is laid on the latter must be done with great Caution and Consideration things must be well weighed and the Principles whereon we proceed must be sure and solid and then a thinking Man may improve them by well-digested Notions Trade like the Camel will stoop to take up its Burthen but the weight thereof must not be greater than it can chearfully rise under otherwise we destroy it and shall by our inconsiderate Covetousness lose those Golden Eggs it every day would bring us Another thing to be consider'd in the laying a Tax is that the Poor bear little or none of the Burthen their Province being more properly to labour and fight than pay He that gets his Money by the Sweat of his Bt ows parts not from it without much Remorse and Discontent and when all is done 't is but a little they pay therefore Taxes that light heavy on them such as Chimney-Money and oftentimes a Poll tend rather to unhinge than assist the Government by disgusting such a number of robust and hardy Men as carry a great personal Ballance in the Kingdom and may be apt when they think themselves opprest to joyn with any for a present Relief not being well able to foresee the Consequences of things at a distance Great Care should also be taken of our Manufactures and Manufacturers that they be not opprest A general Excise cannot do well for besides the great Charge and Oppression of Officers it shews no Respect to the Poor but they pay more than the Wealthiest of their Neighbours suitable to what they have for though a rich Man spends more in excisable things than a poor Man doth yet it is not his All whereas the other's Poverty gives him leave to lay up nothing but 't is as much as he can do to provide Necessaries for his Family out of all which he pays his Proportion Much like this is a general Poll where 't is very difficult to tax People equally But out of all these something may be taken which may be both easie and practicable and a Project may be fram'd which may raise annually enough to carry on the Charge of the War on equal and easie Terms with little or no Anticipation In the well laying whereof these following Rules seem fit to be considered 1. That what is laid on Trade be so weighed that where the Trader pays he may see an apparent Advantage 2. That the charge of Collecting be on such easie Terms as not to eat up a great part of what is raised 3. That the Poor bear little or none of the Burthen 4. That the Manufacturers be not discouraged 5. That that Summ be not raised by many Acts which may be raised by One. 6. That the Consequence of a Tax be either to remove a Publique Grieviance or to make it pay towards the Charge of the War 7. That it be chiefly laid on those who have hitherto least felt former Taxes have least suffer'd by the War and whose Imployments tend more to their own Private Advantages than the Support of the Government 8. That ways be found out to make all People pay their Shares for carrying on the Expence of the War who are protected by it whither they live in England or elsewhere 9. That the Lands of England be eased 10. That the Revenue suffer not by Anticipations But after all is done when Money is raised with Ease and Equality to the Subject yet if great Care be not taken to see it well laid out 't will fall short of answering the end designed good Methods are as necessary in this as the former and the Nation will be more willing to give chearfully when it shall see the Publick Treasure managed to Advantage 't will be no difficult Task to make its Credit equal with private Merchants and its Penny pass as far this will be done when its Payments are as punctual but then things must not be begun in the middle but at the right end we quarrel in vain with a Collonel for not paying an Hundred Pounds to his Regiment when perhaps he receives but Seventy to do it with nor can the Captains pay their Soldiers to the full when the Money grows less in every Hand through which it passes Labour is spent to no purpose about the Conduit Pipes when the Water stops in the Spring Errors in the Foundation are most fatal when things are set right at the Fountain Head then 't will be time to enquire into the defects of the several Currents Payments punctually made according to agreement would encourage all Men to sell their Commodities cheap and put an end to the Abuses of Agents Cloathiers of the Army and Ticket-Buyers who do now prey on the Publick the King would then have his Money well laid out and those who serve him be paid without dilatory and chargeable Attendances and when the Nation comes to be satisfied that what Money is raised for carrying on the War is justly applyed to its use and managed with good Husbandry the Parliament will give more readily and the People pay more chearfully this will render his Majesty the Terror of his Enemies and the delight of his Friends who will then strive to outdo each other in their forwardness to serve him with their Lives and Fortunes especially when they shall see that due Care is also taken to secure their Trade which must enable them to pay their Taxes And thus I have given my thoughts of these three Subjects I shall only add that what I have done hath not proceeded from an Itch of Writing but purely from the Love I bear to my Native Country whose Good and Welfare I delight in and should be glad to see it flourish and though perhaps I may be thought mistaken in some particulars of this Discourse yet I believe few will disagree with me in the Foundation that the Interest of England doth consist in Improving its Trade Product and Manufactures What I have imperfectly treated on I should be well pleased to see a better Pen undertake great things have often risen from small Beginnings perhaps this may stir up some abler Head without Reflections to handle the Subject ●uller which as it may be useful to the 〈◊〉 so I should read it with great De●●●●● for if the Trade of England thrives it answers my end and I care not who proposes the Methods FINIS Trade in general It s Original The Trade of England Inland Trade Buying Selling. Husbandry Feeding Tillage Fish Minerals Manufactures Sheeps Wool Cotton Wool Hemp and Flax. Glass Earthen Wares Silk Distilling Sugar-baking Tobacco Tanning Iron Clock-work Paper-Mills Powder-Mills Artificers Methods to improve our Manufactures By imploying the Poor By freeing the Manufactures from Customs Logwood dying and dressing 〈◊〉 Woollen Manufactures at home By not importing things manufactur'd By freeing the Manufactures from Excises By not exporting Materials till Manufactured By securing 〈◊〉 Foreign Trade Courts of Merchants By lowering the Interest of Money Banks Lombards By Rectifying the Currant Coin By discouraging Stockjobbing By taking away Priviledged Places By preventing Exportation of Wool 〈…〉 By making Bonds and Bills assignable By confining to a method in Trade By managing Treaties of Peace to the Advantage of Trade Liberty of Conscience The Quakers in respect to Oaths The Importation of Materials to be manufactured will encourage Trade Navigation Manning our Ships of War Pressing Saylors Embargoes Inconvenience of pressing Saylors from Ships on their Voyages Short Voyages breed Saylors Outland Trade East-Indies How England may be said to be enricht by Trade West-Indies Methods to render the Plantations more profitable to England Africa Made as Ireland Act of Prohibition Scotland Canarys Spain Portug●● Turky Italy Holland Hamburgh Poland Russia Sweden Denmark and Norway France What Foreign Trades are profitable and what are not to our Manufactures The Ballances of Foreign Trades What Nations do chiefly cope with us in our Manufactures Difference between imploying our own Ships and those of other Nations Whither the Ballance of Foreign Trade may be truly judged A Committee of Trade would be of great advantage to the Kingdom Insurance Whither the Price of Labour discourages our Manufactures or hinders Improvements in our Product Cheapness of our Product no Advantage to our Inland Trade The Poor Mr Edw. Col●on near Bristoll Taxes to carry on the War Conclusion
AN ESSAY ON TRADE c. AN ESSAY ON THE STATE OF ENGLAND In Relation to its TRADE It s Poor and its Taxes For carrying on the present War against FRANCE By JOHN CARY Merchant in Bristoll BRISTOLL Printed by W. Bonny for the Author and are to be sold in London by Sam. Crouch at the Corner of Popes Head-Alley in Cornhill and Tim. Goodwin at the Queen's Head near the Temple also by Tho. Wall and Rich. Gravett near the Tolzey in Bristoll Novem. 1695. TO THE KING's Most Excellent MAJESTY May it please Your Majesty IT is not a Desire to appear in Print hath made me to write or a fond Opinion of what I have written to affix Your Great Name to these Papers but a true Affection to my Native Country and the Cause Your Majesty is now ng ag'd in A War on whose good Success depends the Security of Religion Liberty and Property both to Your own Subjects and likewise to all the Protestant Interest in Europe A War as it is absolutely necessary and must be carried on with Vigour so it is like to be long and chargeable and so much longer as we abate in Our Vigorous Prosecution A War which may strain the Nerves and Sinews of our Treasure before it be ended and therefore as in Martial Discipline great Wisdom must be used to secure those Posts where the Enemy bends most of his Forces so here 't is Prudence to strengthen our Treasure by advancing and securing our Trade which must bring it in If this was done Taxes would be easily paid and little felt and without it this Nation will at last become Bankrupt when its Expences exceed its Profits The Foundations of the Wealth of this Kingdom are Land Manufactures and Foreign Trade these are its Pillars which ought not to be overshaken they have hitherto borne the Burthen and felt the Smart of the War and 't is time now they should slide their Necks out of the Collar other ways may be found out to raise a greater Summ annually than Your Majesty's Occasions will require without Four Shillings per Pound on the first Excises on the second or a Tunnage Bill on Ships on the last an Act which lighted heavy on the Merchant and left no room to consider whither he gained or lost by the Voyage or whither the Ship returned home full or empty The Methods for Raising Money must be easie when the annual necessary Summs are to be so great therefore it would be Policy in our Law-makers to make use of those which may least hurt any part of our Vitals such as Land and Trade are I mean that part of Trade which is useful to the Publick God not that which is managed only for private Men's Advantage it may be possible to rate the Trader and yet to spare the Trade There are two things which seem to be of great Importance to this Nation and very necessary to be look'd into First The better securing our Plantation Trade so as it may more absolutely depend on this Kingdom than it hath hitherto done this will not only encourage our Navigation when all their Product shall be imported hither but also much advance Your Majesty's Revenues when such quantities of Tobacco shall not be carried thence directly to foreign Markets to prevent which and secure Your Majesty's Duties when Imported plain and practicable Methods may be proposed and the Consequence thereof would be that this Kingdom being the Mistress of that Commodity Your Majesty's Coffers would be filled not only from its Home Expence but also by a Tribute raised from Foreign Nations where it would very much lie in Your Majesty's Power to set its Price I do not think new Imposts upon the Importer will so much advance Your Majesty's Revenue as they will discourage the Merchant 't would be better to take away those already laid and instead thereof to raise a far greater Summ on the Consumer which may be done without the Clog or Oppression of Officers in such a manner that it shall scarce be felt either by the Retailer or Spender The next thing is the securing our Wool at Home and making this a Market for all the Wool of Christendom whereby England would soon become the Queen of Europe and flourishing in its Manufactures grow Rich by the Labour of its People and consequently might better afford to import Commodities to be spent on Luxury I take it to be one great Reason why the Kingdom of Spain still continues poor notwithstanding its Indies because all that the Inhabitants buy is purchased for its full Value in Treasure or Product their Labour adding nothing to its Wealth for want of Manufactures I am apt to think greater Steps may be made in this than have hitherto been done and our Wool may be kept at home not by punishing the Exporter with Death but by apt Methods to prevent his doing it and when a Lock is put on Ireland and Rumny-Marsh Foreign Countrys will more easily be prevailed on to send us theirs These things seem worth the Consideration of the ensuing Parliament a great many Members of the last to my certain Knowledge began to be much in Love with Trade and have often lamented the dark Notions That House had of it for want of being put into a better Light by those who ought to have represented it truly to them Which hath been a great Inducement to me in the writing this Tract that I might set forth the Interest of England in Relation to its Domestick and Foreign Traffick and how both may be better improved to the Advantage of the Nation King Solomon who was pleased to encourage Trade in his Dominions by his Royal Example soon found it to be the weightiest Jewel in his Dyadem bringing him in more Treasure from abroad than all the Tribute he received from Judea The Trade of this Kingdom hath always been a profitable Ornament to the Crowns of Your Royal Predecessors Kings and Queens of this Realm and it may be still so to Your Majesty's if the Causes of its languishing were inquired into and apt Methods applyed for its Recovery That it may please God to make this Nation happy by giving Your Majesty a long Life crown'd with Victories over the Enemies of its Peace and Tranquility is the Prayer of Your Majesty's most Faithful And most Obedient Subject John Cary. TO THE HONOURABLE THE Commons of England IN Parliament Assembled May it please Your Honours IT is the greatest Happiness of the People of England that the Laws by which they are govern'd cannot be made without the Consent of their Representatives who as they obtain good Ones from the Favour of their Prince so 't is their own fault if they pass such as are bad Amongst all our Laws none tend more to the promoting the Wealth of this Nation than those which advance its Trade and Manufactures by the latter we not only imploy our Poor and so take off that Burthen which must otherwise
lie heavy on our Lands but also grow Rich in our Commerce with Foreign Nations to whom we thereby sell our Product at greater Prices than it would otherwise yield and return them their own Materials when wrought up here and encreased in their Value by the Labour of our People This little Tract I humbly offer to this Honourable House not to direct but with all Humility to lay before Your Honours an Anatomy of the Trade of England dissected and laid open so as to discover its Vitals which have seemed to be struck through by some late Acts. Whatever doth Prejudice to our Manufactures or burthens our Foreign Trade above what it is well able to bear stabs them to the Heart and where Taxes are thus laid they disable the Subject and consequently are so much more burthensome as they make him less able to pay them But when our Manufactures are encouraged and our Foreign Trade made easie and well secured the Lands of England will be advanced and Taxes paid without Discontent because they will scarce be felt especially when equally laid and in such a Manner that every Man shall pay his Proportion in a Regular way If what I have written may be serviceable to this Honourable House I shall think my Time and Labour well imployed That God will direct your Councels to the Advancement of his Glory and the Welfare of this Nation shall ever be the Prayer of Your Honours most truly Devoted Servant John Cary. THE PREFACE TO THE READER THE following Treatise was the Imployment of some leisure Hours which I thought could not be better spent than in digesting so copious a Subject as Trade is I am sure could be no way more advantageously imployed to the Nation 's Interest than by proposing Methods for its Improvement I have herein considered the State of England in respect to its Trade its Poor and its Taxes for carrying on the present War The first I have divided into the Inland and Outland Trade the Inland into three parts viz. Buying and Selling Husbandry and Manufactures Under the former Head I have comprehended all those Imployments whereby Men get by one another without making any Addition to the Wealth of the Nation in general Husbandry I have divided into Pasture and Tillage and have been the longer thereon to shew from how small Foundations the Primums or Principles of all our Trade are derived which indeed is wonderful when we consider that the Lands of England according to the Act of Four Shillings in the Pound cannot come to above Eight Millions Five Hundred Thousand Pounds sterling per annum that whole Tax with Personal Estates amounting to Nineteen Hundred and Seventy Thousand Pounds whereof I compute about Two Hundred and Seventy Thousand Pounds to be raised on Personal Estates so the Remainer is Seventeen Hundred thousand Pounds which being the fifth part of the whole if that Tax were equally and justly laid the Computation is rightly made but suppose they are worth Thirteen Millions per annum 't is a very small Summ if compared with the vast Expences of this Nation which with the Charges of carrying on the War maintaining the Civil List and the Profits laid up by particular Men cannot be less than One Hundred Millions per annum the rest is raised by Manufactures Trade and Labour the first of which though the third in my Division is the most profitable part of our Inland Trade being That whereby our Product is advanced in its value and made fit both for our own use and also for Foreign Markets from whence are again Imported hither sundry other Materials the Foundations of Manufactures different in their Natures from our own these I have handled under several Heads and likewise shew'd by what Methods they may be improved and so have closed the Inland Trade Before I enter'd on the Outland I have consider'd Navigation as the Medium between both and given my Thoughts how some Evils that attend and discourage it may be removed I have then proceeded to our Foreign Traffick or the Trade we drive with other Nations which I have spoken to under several Heads viz. East-Indies West-Indies and Africa Maderas Ireland Scotland Canaries Spain Portugal Turky Italy Holland Hamburgh Poland Russia Sweden Denmark Norway and France and have endeavour'd to shew how we get or lose by each and by what Methods they may be improved and made more advantageous to this Kingdom As to the second part of this Discourse the Poor I have shewed how this Habit of Laziness and Begging first crept in amongst us how it may be prevented from spreading farther how Imployments may be provided for those who are willing to work and a force put on those that are able and how the Impotent Poor may be maintained and those whose Labour will not support their Charge assisted In the last place I have proposed general Rules for raising of Taxes to carry on the present War and better Husbanding the Money when raised wherein I have rather aimed to shew that these things may be done than published Methods for doing them which because they would swell this Discourse above it designed Brevity are omitted here as being more proper to be laid before a Committee of Parliament AN ESSAY ON TRADE c. THE general Notions of a National Trade whereby it may be Discovered whither a Kingdom Gets or Looses by its Managment are things well worth our Consideration It being possible for a Nation to grow Poor in the Main whilst private Persons encrease their Fortunes For as in the Body Natural if you draw out Blood faster then the Sangufying parts can suply it must necessarily wast and decay So where the Exports of a Nation in Product and Manufactures are outballanced by Imports fit only to be consumed at home though one Man may get by the Luxury of another the Wealth of that Nation must decay all one as a private Person whose Expences exceeds his Incomes though he may for some time live on the Main yet in the end he must fall to ruin The Profits of England arise Originally from its Product and Manufactures at home and from the grouths of those several Plantations it hath setled Abroad and from the Fish taken on the Coasts all which being Raised by the Industry of its Inhabitants are both its true Riches and likewise the Tools whereon it Trades to other Nations the Products coming from the Earth and the Manufacturing them being an Addition to their value by the Labour of the People Now where we Barter these Abroad only for things to be Eat and Drank or wasted among our selves this doth not Increase our Wealth but it is otherwise where we change them for Bulloin or Commodities fit to be Mannufactured again The first Original of Trade both Domestick and Forreign was Barter when one private Person having an Overplus of what his Neighbour wanted furnished him for its Value in such Commodities the other had and he
of different Fancies and Stripes and I doubt not our Workmen would exceed the East Indies for Calicoes had they Incouragment with all which we supply Forreign Markets besides the Consumption at home Hemp and Flax are the Grounds for another Manufacture for though Weaving of Linnen is not so much used here as of Woollen yet several Counties are maintained thereby who not only supply themselves but furnish those Bordering on them with such Cloth as answers the ends of French Linnens besides which great Quantities of Ticking of all finenesses Incle Tapes Sacking Girtwhip are daily made thereof also Cordage Twine Nets with multitudes of other Manufactures which Imploy the Poor and bring by their Exports Profit to the Nation Glass is a Manufacture lately fallen on here and in a short time brought to a great Perfection which keeps many at work the Materials whereof its made being generally our own and in themselves of small value costs the Nation little in Comparison of what it formerly did when fetcht from Venice those noble Plate Glases of all sizes both for Coaches and Houses are things of great Ornament and much used which also shew forth the Genius of the English People and for common uses what various sorts of Utensils are made of Flint fit for all the occasions of a Family which look as well as Silver and 't would be better for the Nation they were more used in its stead besides the ordinary Glass for Windows and also Glass Bottles all which find a greater expence both at home and abroad by their cheapness And as for Earthen Ware though the Progress we have made therein is not suitable to the other yet it hath been such as may give us cause to hope that time and Industry will bring it to a perfection equal if not to exceed the Dutch Silk is another Material for a great Manufacture which being brought from abroad Raw we here twist dye and weave into different goodness both plain stript and flowered either by it self or mix'd with Gold and Silver so richly brocadoed that we exceed those from whom at first we had the Art besides great Quantities of Ribbons Silk Stockings and other things daily made not only to serve our selves but also to Export Distilling is an Art so exceedingly Improved in a few Years that had it not met with Discouraging Laws 't would by this time have attained to a great height this brings great profit to the Nation for next to that of making something out of nothing is the making somthing of what is worth nothing therefore this Art ought to have been Handled very chearily to have been trained up with a great deal of gentleness and not loaden with Taxes in its Infancy like the Hen in the Fable we had not Patience to expect its Treasure as Time and Nature could produce it but by our Avarice were like to discourage it in the beginning however it hath still bore up under all the weight laid upon it 'T was a great mistake to appoint Measures by Act of Parliament to the Distillers in their workings Mens knowledge increases by Observation and this is the reason why one Age exceeds another in any sort of Mistery because they improve the Notions of their Predecessors therefore confining Distilling only to Corn was an Error 't is true other things were allowed to be used but on such Terms and Restrictions as were next to a Prohibition had the makers of that Law then Prohibited Coffee and Tea to be drank in Publick Houses it might more probably have answered their ends in advancing the price of Barly by a greater consumption of Ale and by degrees the Distillers would have fallen on that Commodity themselves using it with other mixtures and thereby drawing from it a cleaner Spirit then it doth afford of it self which they might in time have Rectified to such a fineness as to have increased very much its use No Nation can give more incouragement to the Mistery of Distilling then England whose Plantations being many and well Peopled where those Spirits are so necessary and useful for the Inhabitants and these depending wholly on us for all things might have been supplied with them hence only besides the great Quantities used in our Navigation therefore a total Prohibition of their Importation from other Nations who make them generally of such things which are else of little value would be very convenient We have many Materials of our own Product to work on such as are Melasses Cyder Perry Barly c. all which in time they would have used for as the Distillers found their sales increased they would have made new Essays It was a great discouragement both to them and also to the Sugar Bakers and Brewers to hinder Distilling on Mellasses Scum Tilts and Wash a fault the Dutch nor no Trading Nation besides our selves would have been guilty of and proceeded from ill Advice given that Parliament by those who under pretence of advancing Corn designed to discourage Distilling only took it by that handle they thought would be best received in the House which being generally made up of Gentlemen unskilful in Trade lookt no deeper into it than as it answered that plausible pretence whereas were Trading Cities and Towns more careful in chusing Men well Verst in Trade 〈◊〉 't would be much better for the Nation I cannot omit what a worthy Member of the House once told me in private Discourse says he I have always observed that when we have meddled with Trade we have left it worse than we found it which proceeds from want of more Traders in the House the places we depend on for them sending such Members as are able to give us but little Information 〈◊〉 so partial that we can take no true measures of them The truth is great Cities are to blame in this who ought to think none so fit to represent them in Parliament as those who have their Heads fill'd with good Notions of Trade such who can speak well to it and be heard when they speak Trade and Land go Hand in Hand as to their Interest if one flourish so will the other encourage Distilling and it will spend Hundreds of things now thrown away Refining of Sugars hath given Employment to our People and added to their value in Foreign Parts where we found great Sales till the Dutch and French beat us out and this was much to be attributed to the Duty of Two Shillings and Four Pence per Cent lately laid on Muscovado Sugars whereby they were wrought up abroad above Twelve per Cent cheaper than at home and though that Law is now expired yet 't is harder to regain a Trade when lost than keep it when we have it Tobacco also hath employed our Poor by Cutting and Rowling it both for a home Consumption and also for Exportation the latter we decay in every Year but Methods may be offered in Parliament to render those
others paid much less there the same on Butter Bread Flower and other Provisions so that a Stander by would have thought this Law had been contrived for the Advantage of Ireland all which proceeded from the mistaken Interest of one part of the Kingdom which were it true ought not to prevail to the Detriment of a National Trade and the true Interest of the Remainer Nor will it be reasonable unless this Liberty be given to bind up Ireland from a Foreign Trade and consequently to confine the consumption of its Product to a Home Expence except what we shall occasionally fetch from them to carry Abroad This as it will discourage the Free-holders there so will it Industry here and the Trade must be managed by great Funds small Stocks not being able to engage in transporting the Commodities they receive in Barter to Foreign Markets which they might in bringing them to England being a shorter Voyage and so consequently the Product of Ireland would have more Buyers and the Inhabitants be supplyed with Necessaries on cheaper Terms by this free Trade than when their whole Dependance should be on those Monopolizers The next Question will be what effect the taking off this Prohibition will have on our native Product Whither it will lessen its Consumption I am of opinion it will not because our Exports must be increased as theirs from Ireland are lessened unless we do imagine Foreign Markets will not consume the same quantities they did before or will find out new ways to be supplied with them from other places besides by how much more charges are added to the Products of Ireland as those of Freight and other petty Expences on such bulky Commodities will be if brought hither so much will ours be put on the same Footing with them and bear a better price It 's well known that the Exporting our Wool to Foreign Markets hath by the ill Consequences thereof abated its Price at Home This hath been observed by Calculations made by considering Men and the reason was because those Countrys were thereby enabled to work up much larger Quantities of their own into various sorts of Manufactures which both fitted their occasions at Home and supplied Markets abroad where we generally vended ours by this means our Sales growing slack and finding new Competitors in our Trade we were forced to sell our Manufactures cheap and this was done by making them slighter and by lessening the Prices both of Wool and Labour whereas had we kept our Wool at Home these Mischiefs had been prevented and the French and other Nations could not have made such a Progress in Manufactures as they have done their Wool being unfit to be wrought up by its self unless mixt with English or Irish must have sought a Market here and been returned again to them in Manufactures which is the true way to enrich this Kingdom This would have drawn over great Numbers of People to be employed in the Cloathing Trade who would likewise have consumed our Product and as these had increased so also had their Imployment which would have kept up the Price of Wool things being of value in Markets according as they are supply'd by Nation 's standing in competition for Trade and it must be allowed that it was not the Interest of England to fall its Manufactures abroad had we been the only Sellers for according as they yielded there so much is the Wealth of this Nation advanced This our Fore-fathers knew when they made Laws not only to prohibit the Exportation of Wool hence but also from Ireland which Laws cannot be too strong on whose due observation depends our Wealth or Ruin now if the Trade of Ireland was reduced to that of our other Colonies and the same Care taken about the Commodities of its growth our danger from that Kingdom in Relation to this would be at an end when Methods may also be used to prevent its being Exported hence Nor is there any reason to be offered why Ireland should have greater Liberty than our other Plantations the Inhabitants whereof have an equal Desire to a free Trade forgetting that the first design of their Settlement was to advance the Interest of England against whom no Arguments can be used which will not equally hold good against Ireland 1. As it was settled by Colonies spared from England 2. As it hath been still supported and defended at the Charge of England 3. As it hath received equal Advantages with the other Plantations from the Expence England hath been at in carrying on Wars Abroad and Revolutions at Home And on this last there is greater Reason against Ireland than any of the rest we having lately paid more Money for the Purchase of that Trade than the Profits thereof may bring to us and our Posterities for many Generations so that 't would be a piece of great Ingratitude for the Free-holders of Ireland unwillingly to submit to any thing whereby the Interest of England may be advanced to the Inhabitants whereof they are indebted for their Lands who have laid down their Lives and spent their Treasures to reinstate them in their Possessions As for Corn Fish and Horses whither a Liberty may not be allowed to transport them thence direct for other Markets on Ships first entring here in England is a point worth serious Consideration But the main objection as to England is yet behind a great part of the Gentlemen of this Kingdom thinking it will sink the Rents of their Lands if Irish Cattle are admitted to be brought over alive others that the Importation of Provisions thence will fall the Price of our own and though in the former they do not so generally agree differing according as their Lands are Scituated and proper for Breeding or Feeding yet in the latter they more unanimously consent and cry out This is the great Diana of the Ephesians the less Provisions are brought in the more our own will be expended whereas if they did impartially consider they would find it an empty Idol Nothing will advance their Lands like Trade and Manufactures therefore what-ever turns the Stream of these elswhere lessens the Number of Inhabitants who should consume their Provisions and when those increase so do the others which besides a home consumption by People engaged in Imployments distinct from Husbandry doth always invite many Foreigners hither who being Temporary Residents spend our Product it being a sure Maxim that where the Carcass is there will the Eagles be gathered together Besides when the Irish Provisions are broughr hither those Markets which were supply'd with them thence before will then have them hence tho' perhaps at dearer Rates and with them great Quantities of our own No Man can imagine what Expence there would be of English Cattle were we once fallen into the Trade of making Provisions here England as well in its Beef as Manufactures exceeding all other Countrys with this farther Advantage that the former for Goodness and Price cannot be
several Commodities to be thence Transported to France whence among other things it hath been supply'd with Lead which occasioned once an Order of Council here for stopping all Ships bound thither with that Commodity esteem'd so useful to them in carrying on the War but on second Thoughts it was recall'd for which Order there seem'd to be no good Ground at first as if the French King who doubtless would not refrain taking the Plate out of his Churches to support the Charge of his War should out of Reverence spare the Lead that covered them if he wanted it and could not elsewhere be supplyed with it which was not probable since 't was so plenty in every part of his Kingdom one Tun whereof according to a moderate Computation making above Thirty Thousand Bullets I wish he were better furnish'd with our Product and Manufactures and we had his Money for them which would much more weaken him than the other would enable him to carry on the War Ireland supplies Portugal with tann'd Leather and Woollen Manufactures which would be sent hence if the Trade of that Kingdom was well regulated The Trade driven to Turkey is very profitable which affords us Markets for great Quantit●●s of our Woollen Manufactures and Lead shipt hence to Constantinople Scandaroon and Smyrna and from thence disperst over all the Turkish Dominions also to Persia The Commodities we have thence in Returns are Raw Silk Cotten Wool and Yarn Goats-Wool Grogram-Yarn Cordivants Gaules Potashes and some other things which are the foundations of several Manufactures different from our own by the variety whereof we better suit Cargoes to Export again and though it must be allowed that the Turky Merchants carry thither Bullion and 't was to be wish'd the Trade could be driven without it being better for this Nation if we bought all things in Barter for our Product and Manufactures which above the Foreign Materials they are made off are all Profit yet if we rightly consider we shall find great difference between Buying for Mony Commodities already manufactured which hinder the use of our own such as those brought from the East-Indies or things to be spent on our Luxury such as Wines and Fruit and buying therewith Commodities to keep our Poor at work these must be had though purchased with all Bullion and therefore we ought highly to esteem that Trade wherein we receive so great a part of them in Barter for the other To the several Ports of Italy we ship great Quantities of Lead and other our Product and many sorts of Woollen Manufactures but chiefly those made of Worsted also Fish and Sugars both White and Brown the last principally to Venice but more thereof in times of Peace than we do in this time of War Freights being high and the Commoditie dear at home we bring thence Raw and Thrown Silk and Red Wool which are wrought up here also Oyl and Soap used in working our Wool some Paper and Currants Both Venice and Genoua have made some Progress in a Woollen Manufacture being furnished with Wool from Alicant and those Eastern parts of Spain wrought Silks and Glass are not so much Imported thence as they were since we have fallen on making them at home The Dutch do likewise buy many of our Manufactures and some of our Product as Coals Butter Lead Tin besides things of smaller value such as Clay Redding c. which are all Exported to Holland not only for their own use but being a Mart of Trade for Germany they disperse them for the Expence of those Countrys among whom also they vent our West-India Commodities as Sugars Tobacco Indigo Logwood Fustick Ginger Cotten Wool besides what they use themselves These are an industrious People but having little Land do want Product of their own to trade on except what they raise by their Fisheries and bring from the East-Indies whereof Spices and Salt-Peter are many times admitted to be brought hither though contrary to the Act of Navigation Indeed the Trade of the Dutch consists rather in Buying and Selling than Manufactures most of their Profits arising from that and the Freights they make of their Ships which being built for Burthen are imployed generally in a Home Trade for Bulky Commodities such as Salt from St. Ubes to the Sound Timber Hemp Corn Pitch and such things thence to their own Country which Ships are Sailed with few Hands and this together with the lowness of Interest enables them to afford those Commodities at such Rates that many times they are fetch'd thence by other Nations cheaper than they could do it from the Places of their Growth all Charges considered 't is strange to observe how those People buz up and down among themselves the vastness of whose Numbers causes a vast Expence and that Expence must be supply'd from abroad so one Man gets by another and they find by Experience that as a Multitude of People brings Profit to the Government so it creates Imployment to each other besides they invent new ways of Trade by selling not only things they have but those they have not great quantities of Brandy being disposed of every Year which are never intended to be delivered only the Buyer and Seller get or lose according to the Rates it bears at the time agreed on to make good the Bargains such a Commerce to England would be of little Advantage no more than jobbing for Guineas this Nation would no way advance its Wealth thereby whose Profits depend on our Product and Manufactures But that Government raising its Incomes by the Inhabitants who pay on all they eat drink or wear cares not so much by what means each Person gets as that they have People to pay which are never wanting from all Nations for as one goes away another comes and every Temporary Resident advances their Revenue therefore to increase their Numbers they make the Terms of Trade easie contrary to the Customs of Cities and private Corporations with us the narrowness of whose Charters discourages Industry and Improvements both in Handecrafts and Manufactures because they exclude better Artists from their Societies unless they purchase their Freedoms at unreasonable Rates Another great Market for our Manufactures in Hamburgh This City vents great Quantities of our Cloth Sugar Tobacco and other Plantation Commodities which are thence sent into Germany from whence we have Linnens Linnen Yarn and other Commodities very necessary both for the use of our selves and our Plantations and no way thwarting with our own Manufactures Poland also takes off many of our Manufactures wherewith it is supply'd chiefly from Dantzick within the Sound whither they are first carry'd and thence disperst into all parts of that Kingdom which hath but little Wool of its own and that chiefly in Ukrania but the Expence of our Cloth hath been lessened there since Silesia and the adjoyning parts of Germany have turned their Looms to that Commodity occasioned by our disusing their Linnens
viz. That both our Product and Manufactures may be carried on to advantage without running down the labour of the Poor As for the first our Product I am of opinion that the running down the Labour of the Poor is no advantage to it nor is it the Interest of England to do it nor can the People of England live on such low Wages as they do in other Countrys for we must consider that Wages must bear a Rate in all Nations according to the prices of Provisions where Wheat is sold for One Shilling per Bushel and all things suitably a labouring Man may work for Three Pence per diem as well as he can for Twelve Pence where it is sold for Four Shillings and this price of Wheat must arise from the Rates of Land it cannot be imagined that the Farmer whose annual Rent is Twenty Shillings per Acre can afford it as low as he who pays but Half a Crown and hath the same Cropp nor can he then expect labour so cheap as the other This is the case of England whose Lands yielding great Rents require good Prices for their Product and this is the Freeholders advantage for suppose Necessaries were the currant Payment for Labour in such case whither we call a Bushel of Wheat One Shilling or Four Shillings it is all one to him for so much as he pays but not for the Overplus of his Cropp which makes a great difference into his Pocket you cannot fall Wages unless you fall Product and if you fall Product you must necessarily fall Land And as for the second our Manufactures I am opinion that they may be carried on to advantage without running down the labour of the Poor for which I offer 1. Observation or Experience of what hath been done we have and daily do see that it is so the Refiners of Sugars lately sold for Six Pence per Pound what yieled twenty Years since Twelve Pence The Distillers sell their Spirits for one third part of what they formerly did Glass-Bottles Silk-Stockings and other Manufactures too many to be enumerated are sold for half the Prices they were a few Years since without falling the labour of the Poor or so little as not to stand in Competion with the other But then the question will be how this is done I answer It proceeds from the Ingenuity of the Manufacturer and the Improvements he makes in his ways of working thus the Refiner of Sugars goes thro' that operation in a Month which our Forefathers required four Months to effect thus the Distillers draw more Spirits and in less time from the Simples they work on than those formerly did who taught them the Art the Glass-maker hath fonnd a quicker way of making it out of things which cost him littie or nothing Silk-Stockings are wove instead of knit Tobacco is cut by Engines instead of Knives Books are printed instead of written Deal-Boards are sawn with a Mill instead of Men's Labour Lead is smelted by Wind-Furnaces instead of blowing with Bellows all which save the labour of many Hands so the Wages of those imployed need not be lessened Besides this there is a Cunning crept into Trades the Clockmaker hath improved his Art so high that Labour and Materials are the least part the Buyer pays for The variety of our Woollen Manufactures is so pretty that Fashion makes a thing worth both at Home and Abroad twice the Price it is sold for after the humour of the Buyer carrying a great sway in the value of a Commodity Artificers by Tools and Laves fitted for different Uses make such things as would puzzle a Stander by to set a price on according to the worth of Mens Labour The Plummer by new Inventions casts a Tun of Shott for Ten Shillings which an indifferent Person could not guess worth less than Fifty The same Art is crept into Navigation A Tun of Sugars which cost a few Years since from Six to Eight Pounds Freight from the Plantations was commonly brought home before the War for Four Pounds Ten Shillings and whereas it then weighed but Twenty-five Hundred ' taws increased to Forty-five and yet Saylors Wages were still the same Ships are built more for Stowage and made strong enough to carry between Decks Wool is steeved into them by Skrews so that three or four Baggs are put where formerly one would scarce lie Cranes and Blocks draw up more for One Shilling than Men's Labour could do for Five New Projections are every day set on foot to render the making our Manufactures easie which are made cheap by the Heads of the Manufacturers not by falling the Price of poor Peoples Labour cheapness creates Expence and Expence gives fresh Imployments so the Poor need not stand idle if they could be perswaded to work The same for our Product Pits are drained and Land made Healthy by Engines and Aquaeducts instead of Hands the Husband-man turns up his Soil with the Sullow not digs it with his Spade fowes his Grain not plants it covers it with the Harrow not with the Rake brings home his Harvest with Carts not on Horse-backs and many other easie Methods are used both for improving of Land and raising its Product which are obvious to the Eyes of Men verst therein though do not come within the Compass of my present Thoughts all which lessen the number of Labourers and make room for better Wages to be given those who are imploy'd Nor am I of opinion with those People who think the running down the Prises of our Growth and Product that so they may buy Provisions cheap is an advantage to the Inland Trade of this Kingdom but on the contrary I think 't would be beter for it if they were sold higher than they are which may seem a Paradox at first till the thing be rightly stated suppose then the common and usual price of Beef to be Two Pence half-penny per Pound and Wheat Three Shillings and Six Pence per Bushel and all Flesh and Grain suitable 't would be better for our Inland Trade if the former yielded Four Pence and the latter Five Shillings and other things in Proportion To prove this let us begin with the Shop-keeper or Buyer and Seller who is the Wheel whereon the Inland Trade turns as he buys of the Importer and Manufacturer and sells again to the Country suppose such a Man spends Two Hundred Pounds per Annum in all things necessary for his Family both Provisions Cloaths House-Rent and other Expences the Question will be what proportion of this is laid out in Flesh Corn Butter Cheese c. barely considered according to their first cost in the Market I presume we shall find Fifty or Sixty Pounds per Annum to be the most and suitably the advance thereon will be about Twenty-five to Thirty Pounds per annum but the Consequence thereof in the Profits of his Trade will be much more for by this Means the Farmer may give a better Rent
former failed the last is thought to have gotten little considering the long time they have been a Monopoly and what Advantage the new Fund will make Time must shew the Tricks used to engage Men therein causes me to doubt whither 't will answer the Expectations of the Subscribers On the whole let us consider what Arguments can be offered to the Wisdom of the Nation to limit this Trade to an exclusive Company as was desired or as in truth it is to turn it into a Monopoly by Law a thing very contrary to the Genius of the People of England and seems to barr the Freedom and Liberty of the Subject Were Monopolies to be allowed it must certainly be in One of these three Respects 1. That we might put off our own Commodities to other Nations in Barter for those we received from them 2. That we might keep down the Prices of their Commodities whilst we advanced our own 3. That as the Consequence of these two we might encourage our Manufacturers at home and furnish Foreign Commodities cheap But when a Monopoly shall cause quite different Effects it 's not to be allow'd on any Terms As for the first the East-India Company takes off little of our Manufactures nor do I think the Trade will admit it for I cannot see how that Nation can be supplied with Manufactures hence fit for their Wearing answerable in Price to their own except they were a Luxurious People who cared not what they gave to please their Fancies which I do not take them to be but generally very Provident for if we consider that when the East-India Company hath brought their Calicoes and Silks hither with great Charges and sold them at an extraordinary advance they find vent by their cheapness how can we believe that any of our Manufactures can afford them a profit in India where they must be sold suitable in price to the others first cost and therefore 't would not be amiss if the Government were put on making a narrow Inquiry whither the Company do boná fide export so much of the Product and Manufactures of rhis Kingdom and land them in India as they are obliged to do by their Charter elfe many ways may be found out to evade it and the Nation be deprived of the only Advantage expected from that Monopoly The Dutch and we deal not thither on the same Terms their Manufactures are small and so no Matter what they Trade on besides their Settlements in the East-Indies are so great that what they bring thence may almost be called their own Product whereof by monopolizing that Trade they make greater Prices in Europe which being chiefly spent either in Foreign Markets or by Temporary Residents brings them more Profit They have also great Advantages above us in their East-India Trade being possest of the whole Traffick to Japan whither they carry Cloth Lead and other Commodities from Holland Calicoes Spices c. from India which they sell for Gold and Silver increasing thereby their Bullion as we diminish ours Besides their East-India Company is not settled on such a narrow Foundation as ours which being limited to one City exclusive of all others sells their Commodities for greater Advance than any other Traders whither we consider their Risque or the time they are out of their Money which should be the standing Rules in Trade Nor can it be otherwise whilst they remain a Company the Charges both abroad and at home being much more than when manag'd by private Stocks besides the affected Grandeur in all which must be paid by the Nation whereon I take that Monopoly to be a Tax so far as it might be supply'd with them on cheaper Terms if the Trade were laid more open by a Regulation I know there is much talk'd by the Company about Forts Castles and Soldiers to defend their Interests in India but I cannot see the use of them for either they are thereby defended against the Natives or the Dutch their Competitors the former have no reason to quarrel with them for bringing them a Trade so highly their Advantage as the purchasing their Product and Manufactures with Money especially if they pay for what they buy And as for their Competitors the Dutch if they were not better defended against them by our Fleets at home and the Protection of the Princes they trade with than by all the Force they have there the Trade had been but ill-secured and must have sunk long ago Only those great Words serve to hold us amused whilst their Guineas in the two last Reigns were the Support of their Charter One thing which I aim at in this Discourse is to perswade the Gentry of England to be more in Love with our own Manufactures and to encourage the wearing them by their Examples and not of Choice to give Imployment to the Poor of another Nation whilst ours starve at home We will next proceed to the West-India and African Trades which I esteem the most profitable of any we drive and do joyn them together because of their dependance on each other But before we enter farther I will consider of one Objection it having been a great question among many thoughtful Men whither our Foreign Plantations have been an advantage to this Nation the reasons they give against them are that they have drained us of Multitudes of our People who might have been serviceable at home and advanced Improvements in Husbandry and Manufactures That the Kingdom of England is worse Peopled by so much as they are increased and that Inhabitants being the Wealth of a Nation by how much they are lessened by so much we are poorer than when we first began to settle our Foreign Colonies Though I allow the last Proposition to be true that People are or may be made the Wealth of a Nation yet it must be where you find Imployment for them else they are a Burthen to it as the Idle Drone is maintained by the Industry of the labourious Bee so are all those who live by their Dependance on others as Players Ale-Houses-keepers Common-Fidlers and such like but more particularly Beggars who never set themselves to work It s my Opinion that our Plantations are an Advantage to this Kingdom and I doubt not but 't will appear to be so by the consequence of this Discourse though not all alike but every one more or less as they take off our Product and Manufactures supply us with Commodities which may be either wrought up here or Exported again or prevent fetching things of the same Nature from other Princes for our home Consumption imploy our Poor and encourage our Navigation for I take England and all its Plantations to be one great Body those being so many Limbs or Counties belonging to it therefore when we consume their Growth we do as it were spend the Fruits of our own Land and what thereof we sell to our Neighbours for Bullion or such Commodities as we must pay for
therein brings a second Profit to the Nation These Plantations are either the great Continent from Hudson's Bay Northward to Florida Southward containing New-found-land New-Eugland Virginia Mary-land New-York Pensilvania Carolina c. and also our several Islands the chief whereof are Barbadoes Antigua Nevis St. Christophers Montserat and Jamaica the Commodities they afford us are more especially Sugars Indigo Ginger Cotten Tobacco Piamento and Fustick of their own growth also Logwood which we bring from Jamaica though first brought thither from the Bay of Campeacha on the Continent of Mexico belonging to the Spaniard but cut by a loose sort of People Subjects to this Kingdom Men of desperate Fortunes but of wonderful Courage who by force have made small Settlements there and defend themselves by the same Means besides great quantities of Fish taken the Coasts of Newfound-land and New-England These being the Product of Earth Sea and Labour are clear Profit to the Kingdom and give a double Imployment to the People of England first to those who raise them there next to those who prepare Manufactures here wherewith they are supplied besides the Advantage to Navigation for the Commodities Exported and Imported being generally bulky do thereby imploy more Ships and consequently more Saylors which leaves more room for other labouring People to be kept at work in Husbandry and Manufactures whilst they consume the Product of the one and the Effects of the other in an Imployment of a distinct Nature from either This was the first Design of settling Plantations abroad that the People of England might better maintain a Commerce and Trade among themselves the chief Profit whereof was to redound to the Center and therefore Laws were made to prevent the carrying their Product to other places or their being supply'd with Necessaries save from hence and both to be done in our own Ships navigated by English Saylors except in some cases permitted by the Acts of Navigation and so much as the Reins of those Laws are let lose so much less profitable are the Plantations to us The Interest therefore of this Kingdom being to prevent any practices contrary to the first Design it would be the great Wisdom of the Parliament to frame such Laws as may more effectually do it than any yet made I do not mean Laws whose chief Strength shall be their Penalties but such whose plain Methods being capable to be reduced to Practice may do it without Oppression of Officers for I esteem them so far weak as they need the Support of either the one or the other and it were to be wisht that both our Customs and all other Taxes might be raised with less Charge and Burthen than now they are for which ways might be sound out if it were well considered of and then Multitudes of useless People might be sent into the Vineyards of Husbandry and Manufactures Among these Plantations I look on that of New-England to bring least Advantage to this Kingdom for being setled by an industrious People and affording few Commodities proper to be transported hither the Inhabitants imploy themselves by trading to the rest of the Plantations whom they supply with Provisions and other their Products and from thence fetch their respective Growths which they after send to Foreign Markets and thereby iniure the Trade of England Now as to the first part it 's neither convenient for them nor the Plantations that they should be debarr'd it what they carry thither being for the most part Fish Deal-Boards Pipe-staves Horfes and such like which the others cannot be well supplyed with hence also Bread Flower and Pease but then they should be obliged to make their Imports hither I mean to bring all the Good they load at those Plantations to this Market and from hence let them be supply'd again with what thereof shall be necessary for their Home Expence as they are with all European Commodites by which means England would become the Centre of Trade and standing like the Sun in the midst of its Plantations would not only refresh them but also draw Profits from them and indeed it 's a matter of exact Justice it should be so for from hence it is Fleets of Ships and Regiments of Soldiers are frequently sent for their Defence at the Charge of the Inhabitants of this Kingdom besides the equal Benefit the Inhabitants there receive with us from the Advantages expected by the Issue of this War the Security of Religion Liberty and Property towards the Charge whereof they contribute little though a way may and ought to be found out to make them pay more by such insensible Methods as are both rational and practicable Now the means to render these Plantations more profitable to this Kingdom are by making Laws 1. To prevent as much as conveniently may be the Product of either to be transported from the place of its Growth to any other place save England 2. To prevent its being Imported hither after manufactured there 3. To prevent as much as may be with Conveniency the Exporting hence any simple thing in order to be manufactured there such as Iron Leather c. which 'twere better for this Kingdom were first wrought up here 4. In Lieu of all to lay open the African Trade that the Inhabitants may be supply'd with Negroes on easie Terms These are general Rules but not without some Exceptions for when I say the Commodities of one Plantation should not be carried to another I mean those only which are fit for Trade and may be brought hither and be hence disperst again as Sugars Cotton Indigoe Tobacco Ginger and such like but for Provisions Timber Horses and things of like natures they may and ought to be permitted because this Nation cannot so conveniently supply them hence and therefore the Act of Trade gave leave to transport the former from Ireland which hath laid open a Gapp to that Peoyle who carry the first Beef to those Markets wherein they anticipate us and get the best Prises besides the Charges we are at in sending our Ships thither to load which they save Nor is this all for going to the Plantations without giving Bonds to discharge in England what they take in there as the Law doth require they frequently unload either all or part of their Loadings elsewhere in opposition to the the Act of Navigation therefore if a new Law was made that all Ships Trading to the Plantations from Europe should first give Bonds in England and for default thereof be seized on their Arrival there it would be a great Step towards preventing this abuse and then plain and easie ways may be offered to hinder Landing any part of their Cargoes elsewhere And when things are brought to this State that the Product of our Plantations shall necessarily be center'd here we may put almost what Rates we will on them to our Neighbours it 's true 't is the Interest of England that what is consumed among our selves should be sold at
Objects of Charity is by taking care that the Poor's Rates be made with more equality in Cities and Trading Towns than now they are especially in the former where the greatest number of Poor usually residing together in the Suburbs or Out-Parishes are very serviceable by their Labours to the Rich in carrying on their Trades yet when Age Sickness or a numerous Family makes them desire Relief their chief Dependance must be on People but one step above their own Conditions by which means those Out-Parishes are more burthened in their Payments than the In-Parishes are tho' much Richer and is one reason why they are so ill inhabited no one careing to come to a certain Charge And this is attended with another ill Consequence the want of better Inhabitants makes way for those Disorders which easily grow among the Poor whereas if Cities and Towns were made but one Poor's Rate or equally divided into more these Inconveniencies might be removed and the Poor maintained by a more impartial Contribution And that a better Provision may be made for the Relief of Saylors who having spent their Labours in the Service of the Nation and through Age or Disasters no longer fit for the fatique of the Sea ought to be taken care for at home let a small Deduction be made from Seamen's Wages and Freights of Ships to be collected by a Society of honest Men in every Sea Port This with what addition might be made by the Gifts of worthy Benefactors would be sufficient to raise a Fund capable to maintain them in their old Age who in their Youth were our Walls and Bulwarks but it must be setled by Law and no Man left at his Liberty whither he will pay or no These are generally the most Laborious People we have I do not mean those Scoundrel Rascals who often creep in amongst them but the true old Saylor who can turn his Hand to any thing rather than Begging and I am troubled to see the miserable Conditions they and their Families are many times reduced to when their Labours are done Alms-Houses raised for them are as great Acts of Piety as building of Churches Age requires Relief especially where Youth hath been spent in Labour so profitable to the Publique as that of a Saylor and not only themselves but their Widows and young Children ought to be provided for In this the Worshipful Society of the Merchants Adventurers within the City of Bristoll are a Worthy Pattern And as for those who lose their Lives or Limbsfighting against the Enemy themselves or Families ought to be rewarded with a bountiful Stipend which if raised by a Tax would be chearfully paid 't is attended with sad Thoughts when a Woman sees her Husband prest into the Service and knows if he miscarrys her Family is undone and she and they must come on the Parish whereas if this Provition were made the Fleet would be more easily mann'd our Merchant-Ships better defended Saylors more ready to serve in both and their Wives to let them go but great care must be taken that this Charity of the Nation be not abused nor put into the Pockets of those appointed to dispose of it Confiscation of their Estates should be made a Penalty to detert them from such ill Practices We will next consider the State of the Nation with regard to its Taxes When I consider the necessity of the War we are now engaged in and the Consequences of its Event the Liberties of Christendom and the Security of the Protestant Religion depending on the Success thereof I think it the Duty of every good Subject to offer his advice in a matter of this Importance Money we know to be the Sinews of War it is that which doth strengthen the carrying it on and I believe there are few Men who do not by this time see that not the longest Sword but the strongest Purse is most likely to come off Victor we are too far engaged to look back and if we do not go on with Vigour it will encourage our Enemy and make him think better of his own Strength we cannot preserve at too high a Rate those inestimable Jewels of Liberty and Property which if we miscarry in this War we are very likely to lose therefore how unpleasant soever Taxes may seem Money must be raised till the French King can be brought to such Terms whereon a safe and lasting Peace may be concluded but great Prudence ought to be used in the Methods of raising it lest the People be thereby disgusted against that happy part of our Constitution Parliaments when they see their only work is to find out new Methods for raising Taxes to whom every such Act seems a new Arrow levied at them by these it is they are discontented and think themselves shot thro' and thro' because that under different names they hit the same Persons again and again besides the great charge● the Crown is at in those small Collections as any Man will see who considers particularly that of the Hackny-Coaches whereof near one quarter part goes away for its management and indeed few of the Projects I have yet seen seem to be the effects of a considering Head or to be so weighed as to support themselves against common Objections their greatest Foundation was Necessity besides many of them cannot be renewed their Income being anticipated for many Years so that for the future new Projects must be thought on and what this will at last tend to no Man can foresee I am apt to think most Men would agree with me in this that if a Method could be found out whereby Four or Five Millions might be raised Yearly with little Charge and great Ease and Equality it must be much better than now it is and this to be a Fund out of which the Parliament to appropriate what Summs they see necessary for every use so that then they would have Leisure to spend much of their time on other Affairs which is now wholly taken up about Ways and Means besides when the People knew there was no new Tax to be raised they would more chearfully look upon the opening of a Sessions and the French King must be exceedingly discouraged when he shall see that after so great Expences we come on with new Vigour and have provided a Fund for carrying on the War till he can be brought to such Terms as will establish a safe and lasting Peace which by the Means hitherto used we cannot expect every Tax we have given being like the Gasps of a Man labouring for Life whereby he concluded we could not subsist a Year longer and doubtless his Emissaries in England have not failed to represent things to him in their worst Colours but I hope both He and They will find that the People of England to defend their Religion Liberties and Properties neither want Money nor a Will to give it The Taxes of this Kingdom are chiefly to be raised on Land or Trade the first