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I - “TAXATION, AND PRINCIPALLY BREAD TAX”

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 November 2011

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Summary

Venice, March 9th, 1852.

§ 1. Those who have neither influence to press nor opportunity to diffuse their opinions, had better in general leave them unexpressed. Neither my circumstances nor my health admit of my entering into public life—and having little sympathy with the present course of English policy, and less power to resist it, I am forced, while my own country is multiplying errors and provoking dangers, to pass my days in deciphering the confessions of one which destroyed itself long ago. But the crisis we have reached in England no longer permits the silence of any one who perceives its peril. By our system of taxation, we have fevered the populace, and palsied the commerce of the country for the last twenty years; by our system of election we have achieved a Parliament which is unoffended at a proposal formally to deny the Christian faith, and which can produce from its ranks no one fitter to manage our exchequer than a witty novelist; and by our system of education we have made half the youth of our upper classes, Roman Catholics, and of our lower classes, infidels. Yet the first principles of taxation, election, and education, are, I believe, so clear and simple that he who runs may read them. Give me room for a few words on all three.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2010
First published in: 1903

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