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5 - The general scandal upon business: unanswerable doubts, and the text as a field supporting very nice distinctions

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  14 September 2009

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Summary

There is some difference between an honest man, and an honest Tradesman; and tho' the distinction is very nice, yet I must say it is to be supported.

The Complete English Tradesman, 1: 226

If no man can be called honest but he who is never overcome … none but he who is sufficiently fortified against all possibility of being tempted by prospects, or driven by distress, to make any trespass upon his integrity—woe be unto me that write, and to most that read!

Serious Reflections of Robinson Crusoe, p. 46

[Trade] is like a hand-mill, it must always be turned about by the diligent hand of the master, or if you will, like the pump-house at Amsterdam, where they put offenders in for petty matters … if they will work and keep pumping, they sit well, dry and safe, and if they work very hard one hour or two, they may rest, perhaps a quarter of an hour afterwards; but if they over sleep themselves, or grow lazy, the water comes in upon them, and wets them, and they have no dry place to stand in, much less to sit down in … so that it is nothing but pump or drown, and they may chuse which they like best.

A Tradesman has Hazards … and Fears and Anxieties … all the Way he goes.

The Complete English Tradesman, 1: 48, 2 (pt . 1): 237
Type
Chapter
Information
Crime and Defoe
A New Kind of Writing
, pp. 137 - 166
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1993

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