A Letter to a Friend Concerning Naturalizations ...Thomas Trye, 1753 - 29 頁 |
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第 1 到 5 筆結果,共 5 筆
第 iii 頁
... employ a Shilling of the public Money for such Purposes. Please to observe, that I say, — Foreign Beggar \j— to ... employed in any Office, or Trust, Civil or Military ., a naturalized Foreigner never can receive any Grants from the ...
... employ a Shilling of the public Money for such Purposes. Please to observe, that I say, — Foreign Beggar \j— to ... employed in any Office, or Trust, Civil or Military ., a naturalized Foreigner never can receive any Grants from the ...
第 7 頁
... employ our own Poor. Now this A- lien Duty is scarce known in any other Trading Country ; it is never imposed in Holland, nor in France, except on English Protestants, and is one Trick, among many, devised by Monopolists here in England ...
... employ our own Poor. Now this A- lien Duty is scarce known in any other Trading Country ; it is never imposed in Holland, nor in France, except on English Protestants, and is one Trick, among many, devised by Monopolists here in England ...
第 8 頁
... employed, be industrious, and able to pay their Rents ; that the Price of Lands should be kept high, and the Interest of Money low; and,',in a Word Word, that no Impediments mould lie jn the Way of 8 A LETTER to a Friend.
... employed, be industrious, and able to pay their Rents ; that the Price of Lands should be kept high, and the Interest of Money low; and,',in a Word Word, that no Impediments mould lie jn the Way of 8 A LETTER to a Friend.
第 10 頁
... employing Foreigners a- broad as Factors and Agents, if they will be contented with. half the Commission Money, which must be paid the English, and if they will dispose of our own Labour and Produce in larger Quantities, or to greater ...
... employing Foreigners a- broad as Factors and Agents, if they will be contented with. half the Commission Money, which must be paid the English, and if they will dispose of our own Labour and Produce in larger Quantities, or to greater ...
第 25 頁
... employ others, if he did not approve of him. In short, when English Factors know, that their Constituents at Home are restrained from employing any but themselves, they naturally run into Combinations, and are tempted to make a bad use ...
... employ others, if he did not approve of him. In short, when English Factors know, that their Constituents at Home are restrained from employing any but themselves, they naturally run into Combinations, and are tempted to make a bad use ...
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常見字詞
according to Law Affair Apostate Bishop Kidder Bishop of Bristol chasing Landed Church of England City of London Commerce corrupt Country Gentle Country Gentleman Deist employ Employment English Factor English-born Subjects exclusive Company exporting farther fetch the Jews Flax fore foreign Jews free and open gion greater Quantity hath Hemp Holborn House of Parliament ihips and Competitions importing Raw Materials Jews home Journeymen and Day-Labourers Judaism Kingdom Landed Interest let his Country Lord Bishop M. A. Rector meerly merce Merchandise Merchants Money Monopo Monopolists Nation Natives Naturalization Bill doth Naturalizing the Jews never Number Orphan Fund Parish Settlement paying Alien Duty Person ported Portugal Power Prelate present Clamours printed Statute Privileges Proposal Protestants purchase Lands reigner restraining Clause rich Foreigners Rivals and Competitors Russia settle in England Shop-keepers and Manufacturers Side the Motives T O A Thing Thomas Trye true turalization Turkey Company
熱門章節
第 iv 頁 - Be it further enacted by the authority aforesaid, that no person shall hereafter be naturalized, unless in the Bill exhibited for that purpose there be a clause or particular words inserted to declare, that such person shall not thereby be enabled to be of the privy council, or a member of either house of parliament, or to take any office or place of trust, either civil or military, or to have any grant of lands, tenements, or hereditaments...
第 16 頁 - And what vicious Principles, or immoral Practices can they introduce from abroad, for which England is not infamous already ? For indeed, there is no Country under the Sun, where Vices of all Kinds reign fo triumphantly, or where the Chriftian Religion is fo outrageoufly attacked.
第 20 頁 - ... such an establishment, till the cunning few could make it useful for their purposes . . . The Rev. Josiah Tucker, an ardent supporter of the Bill, explained the use the City merchants made of religious propaganda : Religion was only the pretence, but monopoly the noli me tangere, and the real cause of the clamours. If the Jews had been content with getting rich as stock-jobbers, as brokers, or in any other capacity but as merchants, all would have been well.
第 8 頁 - ... companies are often artfully made. The following, for example, is a skillful description of the immortal tactics of legislatively privileged classes : " Whenever an attempt hath been made to free the nation from this destructive and impolitic restraint, great is the cry of Demetrius and his craftsmen : ' Sirs, this is the artifice by which we have our wealth; by which we are freed from disagreeable rivals and competitors, and can secure the trade of the kingdom to ourselves, and put what price...
第 8 頁 - Ibid., p. 167. trymen, and harangue upon such popular topics as may keep them still in the dark. For, if they were to know the true state of the case, how soon would all our schemes be rendered abortive? And how quickly would the popular odium fall upon ourselves...
第 23 頁 - ... its powerful influence, to be found throughout his works: " What is the public good ? Is it not for the most part the result of emulation among the members of the same society? And what would become of industry, temperance, frugality, and the desire for excelling, if there were no emulation ?" 2 " The public good can only be promoted by a free and open trade, and by rival ships and competition.
第 15 頁 - Fruits of the Spirit, Love, Joy, Peace, Long-fuffering, Gentlenefs, Goodnefs, Faith, Meeknefs, Temperance...
第 11 頁 - ... to be. He was truly cosmopolitan in his views upon commerce. His religious thought was, in part, responsible for this, or at least, it supported him in this attitude. Witness his words : " But surely the benign Saviour of all mankind hath nowhere enjoined that any person, because he happened to be born on one side of a river, a mountain, or an arm of the sea, should not freely negotiate business or purchase a piece of land on the other. . . . Have we not all one Father?
第 7 頁 - Sort, viz. a Tax upon Raw Materials imported for the Employment of our Poor; a Tax upon the Exportation of our own Produce, Labour, and Manufactures, to be...