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V - LETTERS ON SERVANTS AND HOUSES TO THE “DAILY TELEGRAPH” (1865)

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 November 2011

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Summary

DOMESTIC SERVANTS—MASTERSHIP

To the Editor of the “Daily Telegraph”

Sir,—You so seldom write nonsense, that you will, I am sure, pardon your friends for telling you when you do. Your article on servants to-day is nonsense. It is just as easy and as difficult now to get good servants as it ever was. You may have them, as you may have pines and peaches, for the growing, or you may even buy them good, if you can persuade the good growers to spare you them off their walls; but you cannot get them by political economy and the law of supply and demand.

There are broadly two ways of making good servants; the first, a sound, wholesome, thorough-going slavery—which was the heathen way, and no bad one neither, provided you understand that to make real “slaves” you must make yourself a real “master” (which is not easy). The second is the Christian's way: “whoso delicately bringeth up his servant from a child, shall have him become his son at the last.” And as few people want their servants to become their sons, this is not a way to their liking.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2010
First published in: 1905

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