登陆注册
5234000000048

第48章 Chapter 7(4)

Abstractly, the multiplication of food follows a geometrical progression, no less than the multiplication of men. It follows it only in a much more rapid manner. In a given space and time, this progression is not followed any more by the one species than the other. Population is arrested first, and arrests subsistence in its turn; when the obstacle is removed, both begin again to increase, till they reach a new limit, equally common to both; and the history of the universe has never yet presented the example of a country in which the multiplication of food could not be more rapid than that of the co-existent population.

In a state absolutely savage, men live on the produce of hunting and fishing. The fish and the game are multiplied like man, in a geometrical progression, but much more rapid than the one he follows. Man, it is true, hinders their reproduction by destroying them; but, on the other hand, they arrest his; for it is not certainly among nations of hunters that the population is doubled every twenty-five years; and whenever this destruction is suspended, the reproduction of game will be much more rapid than that of men.

The progress of civilization substitutes the pastoral life for a life of hunting; and the natural produce of the ground, better managed, is sufficient for a much more numerous population of men and of animals. The deserts, which scarcely support five hundred Cherokee hunters, would be sufficient for ten thousand Tartar shepherds, with all their flocks; the multiplication of the latter is always much more rapid than that of men; whilst the production of a man requires twenty-five years, that of an ox requires but five, of a sheep but two, of a hog but one. The number of oxen may be doubled in six years, that of sheep in three, that of hogs may be rendered ten times as great in two years. Whenever a shepherd gains possession of a country formerly abandoned to hunting, the multiplication of his flocks will greatly precede that of his family; when, afterwards, one of the two is arrested, the other will be so too.

But when civilization makes a new step, pastoral nations abandon their flocks for agriculture; and, instead of trusting to the natural productions of the vegetable kingdom, they produce and multiply them by their labours. It is calculated that thirty families may live on the corn produced by a piece of ground, which would have supported only a single family by its produce in cattle. At the time, therefore, when a nation passes from the pastoral to the agricultural state, it in some sense acquires a country thirty times as large as the one it formerly occupied. If the whole of this country is not cultivated, if even in the most civilized kingdoms, there remains a vast extent nf fertile land still employed in unprofitable pasturage, it is an evident proof that other causes than want of subsistence prevent the development of population.

The multiplication of vegetables follows a geometrical progression much more rapid still than the multiplication of cattle. In common tillage, corn increases five-fold in the course of a year; potatoes ten-fold in the same space of time. The latter vegetable, to produce a given quantity of food, scarcely requires the tenth part of the ground which corn would occupy.

Yet even in the most populous countries, men are very far from having planted all their corn fields with potatoes; from having sown all their pasturages with corn; from having converted into pasturage all their woods, all their deserts abandoned to hunting. Those things are a fund of reserve remaining to every nation; and, by means of them, if a new demand for labour should suddenly cause the population to increase as rapidly as the nature of man can permit, the multiplication of food would still precede it.

The demand for labour which the capital of a country can pay, and not the quantity of food which that country can produce, regulates the population. In political economy, nothing is reckoned a demand but what is accompanied with a sufficient compensation for the thing demanded. If no fault has been committed on the part of government, if no dangerous prejudice has been diffused among the people, very few men will think of marrying, and burdening their hands with the subsistence of individuals unable to procure it themselves, till they have first acquired an establishment. But whenever a new demand for labour raises their wages, and thus increases their revenue, they hasten to satisfy one of the first laws of nature, and seek in marriage a new source of happiness. If the rise of wages was but momentary; if, for example, the favours granted by government suddenly give a great development to a species of manufacture, which, after its commencement, cannot be maintained, the workmen, whose remuneration was double during some time, will all have married to profit by their opulence; and then, at the moment when their trade declines, families disproportionate to the actual demand of labour will be plunged into the most dreadful wretchedness.

同类推荐
  • 沙弥尼律仪要略

    沙弥尼律仪要略

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 玄宗直指万法同归

    玄宗直指万法同归

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 释迦谱

    释迦谱

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 注肇论疏

    注肇论疏

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 摩登伽经

    摩登伽经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 晋春秋

    晋春秋

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 雪之奇幻汉字之旅

    雪之奇幻汉字之旅

    浩瀚星云间,智慧星体不知前世今生,却面临着生死抉择......
  • 北冥邪蛟传

    北冥邪蛟传

    孙悟空:“我这一生最烦的是如来,最怕的是二哥。”牛魔王:“孩儿,知道我为什么第一个找上蛟老二做兄弟吗?因为我不想与他为敌。”如来:“我不否定任何妖怪成佛的可能,只是你这个魔王是另一回事。”蛟魔王:“非吾纵三界,道高而已;非吾覆江海,时济而已;非吾洗霄阙,天行而已;三非焉罪?魔道入圣。”
  • 风轻轻来过

    风轻轻来过

    太美的东西我们总是抓不住,就像烟火,它的美丽不在人间,而在天上。就像你,如清风轻轻地来了,又悄悄地走了……
  • 文明之光 周口店北京人遗址(文化之美)

    文明之光 周口店北京人遗址(文化之美)

    周口店遗址是现今世界上发现人类化石最丰富、最生动的古人类遗址,那具著名的“北京人”头盖骨便是周口店的发现,其重要地位不言而喻。本书编者融合国内外考古发现,剖析遗骨遗迹的同时,挖掘考古背后的文化及历史背景,为读者全面展现周口店遗址挖掘的历史过程。
  • 保密的行动

    保密的行动

    地下党优秀党员李汉魂奉命潜入军统保密局打入西南联络站,与此同时与敌特展开了你死我活的较量
  • 狂妃难驯:陛下,求别撩

    狂妃难驯:陛下,求别撩

    在终南山修仙的小侯爷被皇上亲手抱回来了,羡煞无数女子。据说,皇上还当众许诺,一辈子只抱小侯爷一人,天下女子皆心碎!他说:“朕对你,势在必得。朕可攻可守,可上可下,都行。”她怕极!“我不行!”于是,她逃他追,她躲他逮。直到某天,她挺着圆滚滚的肚子哭:“吃坏肚子了,一天比一天大,就这模样,还怎么泡女人啊!”他笑:“乖,不怕!做了皇后,朕‘治’好你。”
  • 罗马史(诺贝尔文学奖文集)

    罗马史(诺贝尔文学奖文集)

    诺贝尔文学奖,以其人类理想主义的伟大精神,为世界文学提供了永恒的标准。其中所包含的诗、小说、散文、戏剧、哲学、史学等不同体裁。不同风格的杰作,流光溢彩,各具特色,全面展现了20世纪世界文学的总体各局。吉卜林、梅特林克、泰戈尔、法朗士、消伯纳、叶芝、纪德……一个个激动人心的名字;《尼尔斯骑鹅旅行记》、《青鸟》、《吉檀迦利》、《福尔赛世家》、《六个寻找作者的剧中人》、《伪币制造者》、《巴比特》……一部部辉煌灿烂的名著,洋洋大观,百川归海,全部汇聚于这套诺贝尔文学奖获奖者文集之中。
  • 凤逆天下:嚣张狂妃

    凤逆天下:嚣张狂妃

    她是二十一世纪的王牌特工,冷傲、淡漠、绝对不是个好惹的主!她因不满嫁与风流成性的战王而在大婚当日自尽身亡!当她再次睁开眼,已经不在是那个胆小如鼠,懦弱不能,任人欺凌的相府三小姐!一朝穿越,将他府中的姬妾全部赶走,让他与朝臣决裂,与她做丞相的爹爹脱离父女关系,千方百计只为要他那一纸休书,却没有想到这个战王深藏不露根本不是世人所传的那般,相反却是神秘无比!【此文为宠文,结局一对一,欢迎大家入坑~~】
  • 快乐历史一本通:趣味中国史

    快乐历史一本通:趣味中国史

    打开尘封的历史,可以阅读文明的厚重,可以追寻时光的脚步,可以增加人生的领悟。人们常说:以史为鉴可以知兴替。人们读历史,不只是为了寻求知识,追寻事情的究竟,怀念伟大的古人,更重要的是寻找进步的力量,激励自己不断前进。