An estimate of the comparative strength of Britain during the present and four preceding reigns; and of the losses of her trade ... since the Revolution. To which is added an essay on population, by the lord chief justice HaleJohn Stockdale, 1804 - 440 頁 |
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acceffion againſt amount annual annuity augmented average balance balance of trade becauſe Britain Britiſh calculation caufe cauſes cent circulation circumftance claffes coin commerce conclufion confequently confiderable confumed cuſtoms Davenant debts decreaſed demonftrate Ditto domeftic Edward III England epoch eſtabliſhed exclufive exifted expence exported faid falutary fame fecurity feems fent feven fhall fhew fhips fhould filver fince finking fund finking-fund firft fome foreign fpirit ftate ftatutes ftill fubfequent fubject fuch fufficient fupply fuppofed furniſhed greater number greateſt Gregory King Henry VII hoftilities houfes houſes increaſe induftrious intereft labour laft laſt laws lefs manufactures meaſures ment millions moft moſt muft muſt nation navigation neceffary Obfervations paffed Parliament peace perfons population prefent profperity progrefs purpoſe raiſed reafon Regifter reign revenue Revolution rife royal navy Scotland ſhall ſhipping Ships cleared ſtate ſtill taxes thefe theſe thofe thoſe thouſand tion tonnage trade traffic uſeful vaft Value of Cargoes yearly
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第 113 頁 - Before her dance; behind her crawl the Old! See thronging Millions to the Pagod run, And offer Country, Parent, Wife, or Son! Hear her black Trumpet thro' the Land proclaim, That "Not to be corrupted is the Shame.
第 44 頁 - London produceth fewer people than in the country, yet London in general having a greater proportion of breeders is more prolific than the other great towns, and the great towns are more prolific than the country. 2. That if the people of London of all ages were as long lived as those in the country, London would increase in people much faster pro rato than the country.
第 216 頁 - A COMPARATIVE VIEW of the Number of HOUSES, in each County of England and Wales, as they appeared in the Hearth-books of Lady-day 1690; as they were made up at die Tax-office, in 1 708-1 750-1 78 1 ; and, as they appear from the enumeration Counties No.
第 46 頁 - The activity and ardour which the civil commotions of the country had excited, began now to be turned to the arts of peace. The several manufactures and new productions of husbandry that were introduced from abroad, before the Revolution, not only formed a new epoch, but evince a vigorous application to the useful arts, in the intermediate period. The common highways were repaired and enlarged, and rivers were deepened for the purposes of water conveyance, while foreign trade was increased by opening...
第 39 頁 - Head. 600 Millions. 3. The several Distinctions of the People, as to Males, & Females, Married, and unmarried, Children, Servants, & Sojourners That the 5 Millions and a half of Souls in England Including the Transitory People, & vagrants, appear by the assessm." on Marriages Births and Burials, to bear the following proportions in Relation to Males & Females viz.
第 125 頁 - England remained almost in their ancient condition, even as late as 1752, and 1754, when the traveller seldom saw a turnpike, for two hundred miles, after leaving the vicinity of London.
第 31 頁 - But since the attaining thereof (how necessary and desirable soever) is next to impossible, we must content ourselves with such near approaches to it as the grounds we have to go upon will enable us to make.
第 41 頁 - Christi 1066 The Kingdome had somewhere above Two Mill.' of People; That a.° 1260 or about 200 Years after the Norman conquest the Kingdome had 2,750,000 People, or half the present Number so that the People of England have doubled in about 435 Years last past; That in Probability the next doubling of the People of England will be in about 600 years to come, or by the year of our Lord 2300. At which time it will have 1 1 Mill.
第 30 頁 - ... the intercourse of things being so established throughout the world, that there is a perpetual derivation of all that can be necessary for mankind.
第 297 頁 - The whole number of country banks in England was unknown ; their capitals, and characters, were unknown : Their imprudence only was known, which had already fhaken their own credit.