The miseries of the poor are a national sin, shame, and charge: but by making them happy, we shall pay old debts without new taxes [electronic resource] : In passing one effectual law concerning the poor: by Whom (when reformed and judiciously employ'd) we may justly pay off (within twenty years) all our national debts. And from the then numbers, arts, industry, sabriety, courage, discipline and loyalty of the poor (When under the regular management of one loyal corporation, for ail Great-Britain) we shall farther receie, much greater benefits, than paying off these debts and taxes. A due care of the poor is an act of great piety towards Almighty God, an act of the greatest humanity among men, and of great civil [jurispr]udence and political wisdom relation to the state-as things now are, our po...ulousness (which might ... made the greatest ...lessing a kingdom can ...ave) becomes a burden to the nation; by breeding up whole races, families, and generations, in a mere trade on ... thieving, and begging, and a em...ous kind of life; which must in time prodi... ously increase, and over ... whole face of the Kingdom, and eat out the very heart thereof. Lord Chief Justice Hale, in 1670. Upon employing the poor.
1718
Formats
Format | |
---|---|
BibTeX | |
MARCXML | |
TextMARC | |
MARC | |
DublinCore | |
EndNote | |
NLM | |
RefWorks | |
RIS |
Linked e-resources
Details
Title
The miseries of the poor are a national sin, shame, and charge: but by making them happy, we shall pay old debts without new taxes [electronic resource] : In passing one effectual law concerning the poor: by Whom (when reformed and judiciously employ'd) we may justly pay off (within twenty years) all our national debts. And from the then numbers, arts, industry, sabriety, courage, discipline and loyalty of the poor (When under the regular management of one loyal corporation, for ail Great-Britain) we shall farther receie, much greater benefits, than paying off these debts and taxes. A due care of the poor is an act of great piety towards Almighty God, an act of the greatest humanity among men, and of great civil [jurispr]udence and political wisdom relation to the state-as things now are, our po...ulousness (which might ... made the greatest ...lessing a kingdom can ...ave) becomes a burden to the nation; by breeding up whole races, families, and generations, in a mere trade on ... thieving, and begging, and a em...ous kind of life; which must in time prodi... ously increase, and over ... whole face of the Kingdom, and eat out the very heart thereof. Lord Chief Justice Hale, in 1670. Upon employing the poor.
Created/published
[London] : Printed for T. Warner, In the year M.DCC.XVIII. [1718]
Description
Pp. [4],i-xviii ; 8vo.
Associated name
Note
This record was provided by a vendor. It may contain incorrect or incomplete information.
Dedication signed: Laurence Braddon.
Price on title page: Price stitch'd 2s. bound in sheep 2s. 6d. in calf 3s.
Reproduction of original from Trinity College Library.
Dedication signed: Laurence Braddon.
Price on title page: Price stitch'd 2s. bound in sheep 2s. 6d. in calf 3s.
Reproduction of original from Trinity College Library.
Reproduction
Electronic reproduction. Farmington Hills, Mich. : Cengage Gale, 2009.
ESTC staff note
This edition not in Hanson. Dt copy imperfect; wanting all after p. xviii (1717 ed. = xxiii,[1],iii-xlvii,158p.). Verify 500 note
Cited/described in
English Short Title Catalog (ESTC), T221996
Place of creation/publication
Great Britain -- England -- London.
Item Details
Call number
Available offsite via a Folger OpenAthens account