登陆注册
5256800000034

第34章

Now nutriment and victuals are gotten either out of the territories belonging to the city or out of foreign countries. To have a city great and populous it is necessary that victuals may be brought from far unto it. And that victuals may be brought from remote and foreign parts unto it it behoves that her virtue attractive be of such power and strength as it be able to overcome the hardness and the sharpness of the regions, the height of the mountains, the descent of the valleys, the swiftness of the rivers, the rage of the seas, the dangers of the pirates, the uncertainty of the winds, the greatness of the charge, the evil passage of the ways, the envy of the bordering neighbours, the hatred of enemies, the emulation of competitors, the length of the time that is required for transportation, the dearths and necessities of the places from whence they must be brought, the natural dissension of nations, the contrariety of sects and opinions in religion, and other suchlike things, all which increase as the people increase and the affairs of the city: to conclude, that it grow to be so mighty and so great as it can overcome all the diligence and all the industry that man can use whatsoever. For how shall merchants be persuaded they can bring corn, for example, out of the Indies or Cathay to Rome, or the Romans expect to have it thence? But admit that either of them could so persuade themselves, who can yet assure them the seasons will be always good for corn, that the people stand to peace and quietness, that the passages be open and the ways be safe? Or what form or what course can be taken to bring provision to Rome by so long a way by land, in such sort and manner as the conductors thereof may be able to endure the travel and to wield the charge thereof? Now any one of these impediments or lets, without adding more to overthwart and cross it more, is enough to dissipate and scatter quite asunder the people of a city destitute of help and subject to so many accidents and chances.

Even one dearth, one famine, one violence of war, one interruption or stay of trade and traffic, one common loss to the merchants, or other suchlike accident will make (as winter doth the swallows) the people to seek another country.

The ordinary greatness of a city consisteth in these terms, with which it can hardly be contented. For the greatness that dependeth upon remote causes or hard means cannot long endure.

For every man will seek his commodity and ease where he may find it best. We must also add to these things aforesaid that great cities are more subject unto dearths than the little, for they need more sustenance and victuals. The plague also afflicteth them more surely and more often, with greater loss of people. And to speak in a word, great cities are subject to all the difficulties and hardness we have before declared because they need a great deal more.

So that, although men were as apt to generation in the height and pride of the Romans, greatness as in the first beginning thereof, yet for all that the people increased not proportionably. For the virtue nutritive of that city had no power to go further, so that in success of time the inhabitants, finding much want and less means to supply their lack of victual, either forbare to marry or, if they did marry, their children oppressed with penury, their parents affording them no relief, fled their own country and sought abroad for better fortune. To the which inconvenience the Romans willing to provide a remedy, they made choice of a number of poor citizens and sent them into colonies, where, like trees transplanted, they might have more room to better themselves both in condition and commodity, and by that means increase and multiply the faster.

By the selfsame reason mankind grown to a certain complete number hath grown no further. And it is three thousand years agone and more that the world was replenished as full with people as it is at this present, for the fruits of the earth and the plenty of victual doth not suffice to feed a greater number. In Mesopotamia mankind did first begin to propagate. From thence by success of time it increased and spread apace daily both far and near and having replenished the firm land they transported themselves into the islands of the sea; and so from our counties they have at length arrived by little and little to the counties we call the New World. And what is there under the sun that doth make man, with more horrible effusion of blood, to fight for, and with more cruelty, than the earth, food and commodity of habitation? The Suevians accounted it an honour and a glory to them to bring their confines by many hundred miles into a waste and wilderness. In the New World, in the isle of St. Dominic and the borders thereabout, the people chase and hunt men as we do deer and hares. The like do many of the people of Brazil, especially they whom we call Aymores, who tear in pieces and devour young boys and young girls alive, and open the bellies of the women great with child, and take the creatures out, and in the presence and sight of the fathers themselves eat them roasted upon the coals -- a most horrible thing to hear, much more to see it.

The people of Guinea for the most part live so poor and needy as they daily sell their own children for very vile price to the Moors, who carry them into Barbary, and to the Portugals, who send them to their islands, or sell them to the Castilians for the New World. The people of Peru do the like, who for little more than nothing give their children to them will have them, which proceedeth of misery, and of the impotency they have to bring them up and to maintain them. The Tartars and the Arabians live upon stealth and rapine; the Nasamoni and the Cafri, the most savage and barbarous people of all Ethiopia, live upon the spoils of others' shipwrecks, as the Portugals have many times felt.

It is also a thing known to all men how oft the French, the Dutch, the Goths, the Huns, the Avari, the Tartars and divers other nations, unable through their infinite multitude of people to live in their own countries, have left their confines and possessed themselves with other men's countries, to the utter ruin and destruction of the inhabitants therein. Hence it came to pass that within few ages all the provinces of Europe and of Asia became possessed, in a manner, of strange people, fled and run out of their counties and habitations either for the mighty multitude of people their country could not sustain, or for desire they had to lead a more commodious and easy life elsewhere, in greater plenty of good things.

The multitude again of thieves and murderers, whence doth it, I pray you, for the most part grow, but of necessity and want?

Differences, suits and quarrels, whence do they proceed but out of the straitness and the scantness of confines, boundaries, ditches, hedges and enclosures which men make about their farms and manors? Watchmen of the vineyards and of ripe fruits, gates, locks, bolts and mastiffs kept about the house, what do they argue else but that the world is hard and either ministreth not sufficient to our necessities or satisfieth not our greedy covetous desires? And what shall I remember arms of so many kinds and of so cruel sorts, what shall I speak of continual wars both on sea and land, that bringeth all things unto utter ruin, what of forts on passages, what of garrisons, bulwarks and munition?

Neither doth this lake of mischiefs contain all, for I must add to these the barrenness of soils, the scarcity and dearths of victual, the evil influence of the air, the contagious and dangerous diseases, the plagues, the earthquakes, the inundations both of seas and rivers, and such other accidents which destroy and overthrow now a city, now a kingdom, now a people, now some other thing, and are the let and stay that the number of men cannot increase and grow immoderately.

同类推荐
  • 佛说十一想思念如来经

    佛说十一想思念如来经

    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。
  • Barrack-Room Ballads

    Barrack-Room Ballads

    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。
  • 林我禅师语录

    林我禅师语录

    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。
  • 钤山堂集

    钤山堂集

    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。
  • A House-Boat on the Styx

    A House-Boat on the Styx

    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
  • 艺文

    艺文

    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。
  • 英雄学院鲸吞海塞

    英雄学院鲸吞海塞

    【《我的英雄学》院同人】这是一个弱鸡被一个未知的存在扔到了我英的世界??里面历练成长的故事。最近一段时间特别忙...
  • 一宠成瘾:闪婚老公强制爱

    一宠成瘾:闪婚老公强制爱

    他是她从姐姐身边抢来的男人,一次蓄谋已久的骗局,她如愿以偿,她被赶出家门,舆论压力下,他不得已娶了她。无爱的婚姻她无言承受,她天真的以为,只要她一直爱着,哪怕他不会爱上她,也会接受她的爱。爱已成殇,她选择离开,成全他的幸福,归还他的人生。她走了,他慌了,他的世界全乱了:“女人,入了我的心还想跑,除非我死!”他的眼中满是怨恨,却还带着让她无法忽视的深情。
  • 我的燃

    我的燃

    想我泱泱中华,和其庞大!尔等就跪等唱征服吧!!!
  • 女王逃婚罗曼史

    女王逃婚罗曼史

    唉…难怪人家说一旦人衰起运来就会无药可救,喏!她就是一个前车之鉴!就是因为洗澡的时候摔倒了,所以就无厘头的掉进了另一个世界里,最倒霉的是她刚到达的地方居然是别人的浴桶!!!哇啊啊!!!!这个男人是谁啊?为什么她和他都没有穿衣服,而且泡在水里,难道是…鸳鸯浴?!哇啊啊!!救命啊!!色狼!!———————————————————————————————————————才华横溢的蛮横国师——绰隐:“女王陛下,您已经窥视了臣下的身体,所以您要对臣下负责!您必须娶臣下!”家财万贯的霸道少爷——霖蓦:“不管你是高高在上的女王,还是霖府的平凡管家,你!蓝若涵!我嫁定了!”风流倜傥的翩翩公子——曲凡:“本来我是打算永远做一个自由人,但是自从遇到你之后我的心就被束缚了,所以我决定这辈子都跟着你了!”冷若冰霜的无情宫主——肆幽:“娶我!笨女人!否则!后果自负!”弱不禁风的纯洁少年——清煦:“呜…小涵不要煦儿了吗?呜…煦儿要永远跟你在一起!”柔情似水的神医谷主——梵唯:“纵使我有起死回生的医术,我也救不了已经被你侵蚀的真心,涵儿,只有你能救我了!”番外人物之流失21世纪的青楼男子——云颜:“我额前的梅花,永生只为你而绽放!”———————————————————————————————————————啊!!!这、这都什么跟什么啊!逼婚成奸?!她不要啊!!!不行!!她不能就这样屈服于这些魔爪之下,一个字!逃!就这样,她——蓝若涵的逃婚史拉开了序幕…———————————————————————————————————————此文轻松,简单,希望亲们在看完此文后能感受到和女主一样纯粹的幸福。最后感谢支持我的亲们。么个~~
  • 学习力就是竞争力

    学习力就是竞争力

    为什么蛇能够生存五亿年?为什么钱学森抵得上一个师?为什么犹太人是世界上最富有的民族……《学习力就是竞争力》将为你揭开他们生存、成功、创富的法宝和利器,无论是动物还是人类,无论是名人还是凡客,无论古今中外,学习都是一个民族、一个企业、一个个体蓬勃发展的不竭动力。
  • 黄帝内经素问集注

    黄帝内经素问集注

    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。
  • 王俊凯0j

    王俊凯0j

    顾枳,不由得让人想起一段故事,一段关于你的故事,只属于你的独家记忆;不知道你们在高中有没有很喜欢一个人,我有。那种感觉就像,每天咬着棒棒糖,特别美好,可以和他看同样的天空,呼吸同样的空气。即使最后分散还是怀念那段时间你疯狂喜欢过他的样子。
  • 最强医王

    最强医王

    习得一身道家秘籍的李善缘以医入世,一手出神入化的针术、丹药折服众多国外名医。草根入世的他本以为自己是个孤儿,谁知却有个官权豪门的身世……火爆的激情,勾心斗角的对手,惊心动魄的生死考验,有激情有铁血,时不时挖个坑埋个人。
  • 剑决天下

    剑决天下

    是觉醒,也是苏醒,当一个小人物觉醒了一世记忆后,还会甘于平凡吗。古峰,一座边缘小城中不受重视的少爷。一次寻欢酒醉后,脑海中居然觉醒了一些记忆。也许他本来就不甘平凡,只不过平庸的天资让他不得不随波逐流。