登陆注册
37826300000019

第19章 Chapter 3(6)

In free counties, capitation is looked upon as a degrading tax, because it recalls the idea of servitude. It was, indeed, originally always accompanied with servitude of the soil. The peasant always depended on the good pleasure of his master; in executing their mutual contact, no law afforded him protection; he was always liable to be ejected, carried off, sold, stript of all the property amassed by his industry; and thus the kind of authority to which he was subject incessantly reminded him, that, whatever he saved, he took from himself to give it to his master; that every effort on his part was useless, every invention dangerous, every improvement contrary to his interest, and finally, that every sort of study but aggravated his wretchedness by more clearly informing him of his condition.

Even in Russia, however, the disinterestedness of some noble families, who for several generations have not changed the capitation, has inspired the peasantry with confidence sufficient to reanimate their industry, to infuse a taste for labour and economy, and sometimes even to permit their realizing very large fortunes which, however, always depend on the master's good pleasure. But in countries where servitude of the soil has been gradually abolished, the capitation has become a fixed rent; united most frequently to personal services, and sometimes reduced to mere feudal rights, as the system, by degrees, varied from its primitive uniformity. Such was the tenure by villanage in France, by copy-hold in England, the origin of nearly all the property possessed by peasants cultivating their own heritages.

On the other hand, such contracts helped to produce the notion of farm-leases, which, in the wealthiest countries of Europe, have succeeded every other kind of convention between proprietor and cultivator.

By a farm-lease, the proprietor yields his land, and nothing more, to the cultivator; and demands an invariable rent for it; whilst the farmer undertakes to direct and to execute all the labour by himself; to furnish the cattle, the implements, and the funds of agriculture; to sell his produce, and to pay his taxes.

The farmer takes upon him all the cares and all the gains of his agriculture; he teats it as a commercial speculation, from which he expects a profit proportionate to the capital employed in it.

At the time when slavery was abolished, the system of farms could not be immediately established: freedmen could not yet undertake such important engagements, nor were they able to advance the labour of a year, much less that of several years, for putting the farm in a proper condition. The master, on giving them their liberty, would have been obliged to give them also an establishment; to furnish them with cattle, instruments of tillage, seed and food for a year; and after all these advances, the farm would still have been a burdensome concern for the owner, because by his contract he had renounced the profit of good years on condition that his farmer should warrant him against bad years; but the farmer who had nothing could warrant nothing, and the master would have given up his good crops without any return.

The first farmers were mere labourers; they executed most of the agricultural operations with their own hands; they adjusted their enterprises to the strength of their families; and as the proprietor reposed little confidence in their management, he used to regulate their procedure by numerous obligatory clauses; he limited their leases to a few years, and kept them in a continual state of dependence. During the last century, farmers, particularly in England, have risen to rank and importance.

Political writers and legislators have uniformly viewed them with a favourable eye; their leases have ceased to be limited in time to a small number of years, and hence farmers have issued from a more elevated class of society. With large capitals, they have taken farms of a larger size; more extensive knowledge, and a better education have enabled them to teat agriculture as a science: They have applied to it several important discoveries in chemistry and natural history; they have also in some degree united the habits of the merchant with those of the cultivator.

The hope of a larger profit has induced them to make larger advances; they have renounced that parsimony which originates in want, and stands in direct opposition to enlightened economy; they have calculated and recorded the result of their operations with greater regularity, and this practice has furnished better opportunities of profiting by their own experience.

On the other hand, farmers from this time have ceased to be labourers; and below them has of course been formed a class of men of toil, who, being entrusted with supporting the whole nation by their labour, are the real peasants, the truly essential part of the population. The peasantry, strengthened by the kind of labour most natural to man, are perpetually required for recruiting all the other classes; it is they who must defend the country in a case of need; whom it most concerns us to attach to the soil where they were born; and policy itself would invite every government to render their lot happy, even though humanity did not command it.

When the system of small farms has been compared, as is often done, with that of great farms, it has not been sufficiently considered that the latter, by taking the direction of his labour out of the peasant's hands, reduces him to a condition greatly more unhappy than almost any other system of cultivation. In truth, hinds performing all the labours of agriculture, under the command of a rich farmer, are not only more dependent than metayers, but even than serfs, who pay their capitation or their service. The latter, whatever vexations they experience, have at least a hope, a property, and a heritage to leave their children.

同类推荐
  • 无文道灿禅师语录

    无文道灿禅师语录

    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。
  • 答叶溥求论古文书

    答叶溥求论古文书

    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。
  • 罗氏字辈

    罗氏字辈

    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。
  • 说文解字

    说文解字

    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。
  • 性恶

    性恶

    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。
热门推荐
  • 莫青的穿越之旅

    莫青的穿越之旅

    这是一个回不了头的穿越之路,是自己选择道路还是被安排。。。
  • 娇妻来袭

    娇妻来袭

    她死不瞑目。重生后,一心报复负心人,却意外的遇到了冷酷无情的豪门总裁。他高不可攀,身边女人环绕。她只不过是柔弱的小女子,只能臣服在他的掌控下。他和她从冤家对头到情侣,会经历什么样的故事。
  • 绝恋蜀山仙

    绝恋蜀山仙

    天地万物,都有着各自的发展规律。他们收集人世间最丑恶的力量,来增长自己的实力,所以即使炼成了功力。
  • 骗婚我的公孙大少

    骗婚我的公孙大少

    点背弄坏博物馆文物,人家要求赔偿5亿!还是美元……把我卖了也不值那些钱啊……呜……怎么办……幸好有老师帮忙!什么?假结婚?!……好吧,迫不得已,我只好为了钱”卖身“了……进入豪门后,却发现,靠!这世界上真的有鬼!!
  • 第九英雄志前传

    第九英雄志前传

    在这里,每一位英雄被当做奇迹。在那里,所有的英雄紧紧相依。神说,我可以给你一切,只要你愿意皈依——
  • 四殇

    四殇

    当无尽的黑暗从轮回中再现,王者的桂冠在废墟中崩裂,神灵喋血,诸天哀嚎,谁来拯救万族?当道德的底线从人性中沦丧,邪恶的力量从深渊中挣脱,正义不存,光明隐现,众生何去何从?踏万界,征仙途,直面厄运!且看那无畏少年,用激昂热血,谱一曲乱世悲歌,战一个百死不悔!
  • 推半就半

    推半就半

    人生在世,安身立命,有两点需谨记:第一,不要惹上司;第二,不要惹黑道。呃,如果这两类易燃易爆危险品她都不小心惹上了呢?——愿上帝与你同在,阿门!某生物:不要让我再看到你!鲁半半:(傻眼)……难道物种之间就不能有和平的对话吗?
  • 凰尊临世:帝君,撩宠不休!

    凰尊临世:帝君,撩宠不休!

    『1v1,无虐超宠!』“死女人,不准碰我!松手!停、停下!”漂亮的红色似鸡的翎鸟在女人揉弄羽毛的掌心下,如凤般娇娇地啼鸣几声。一朝错算,他成了它……他是自域外而来的神秘帝君,天之骄子,她是A国最年轻的医学博士,因命格契合而交集。圣地相邀?妖王求契?神兵为之出世?宁意尽皆淡然处之。只是……宁意一度觉得她的转世是机缘,可是谁能告诉她,这个天天黏上来,如何都扒拉不开的妖孽傲娇男人又是谁?难不成,机缘也是赠一送一?
  • 海贼世界的千珏

    海贼世界的千珏

    执子之魂,与子共生。我,千珏,狩猎开始!
  • 闪婚

    闪婚

    当婚姻成了一种生活体验,那么整个传统的爱情模式似乎瞬间被这些80后快节奏青年彻底颠覆。当你看过《金婚》的时候肯定会被那种真挚,朴素的爱情所感动;而当你阅读《闪婚》的刹那,或许带给你的只有震撼,思考——比《奋斗》更奋进!比《早熟》更震撼!