Article contents
American Traditions Concerning Property and Liberty*
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 02 September 2013
Extract
When, over a century and a half ago, a poet saw a group of his countrymen about to set sail on their way to a new home in Georgia, he took a gloomy view of their prospects. He believed that they were leaving a land of scattered hamlets, sheltered cots, and cultivated farms, where ease, health, and plenty had prevailed, for a “dreary scene” around the “wild Altama”—a region of blazing suns, wild tornadoes, poisonous fields, and matted woods where lurked the “dark scorpion … vengeful snake … crouching tigers … and savage men more murderous still than they.” Posterity has liked best the poet's fond memories of his native village. Goldsmith, however, considered the practical politico-economic aspect of his poem to be its best feature. He had indeed paid some attention to actual economic changes that were causing a depopulation of the English countryside. His compatriots, he believed, were crossing “half the convex world,” not because they were dissatisfied with a land where simple pleasures and “light labour … gave what life required but gave no more,” but because such a manner of living was no longer possible in Britain: “trade's unfeeling train” had “usurped the land” and made it a place where the “man of wealth” extorted pleasures “from his fellow-creature's woe” and took up “a space that many poor supplied.”
- Type
- Research Article
- Information
- Copyright
- Copyright © American Political Science Association 1936
References
1 Crèvecoeur, J. Hector St. John, Letters from an American Farmer (1904), pp. 75–76Google Scholar.
2 Works (Boston, 1809), pp. 425–426Google Scholar.
3 Works (Boston, 1851), Vol. II, p. 174Google Scholar.
4 Works (New York, 1851), Vol. II, pp. 51, 298Google Scholar.
5 Challenge to Liberty (1934), p. 30Google Scholar.
6 Works (1851), Vol. IV and Vol. VI, p. 516Google Scholar.
7 Kent, William, Memoirs and Letters of James Kent (Boston, 1898), p. 218Google Scholar.
8 Works, Vol. VI, p. 9Google Scholar.
9 Pollock v. Farmer' Loan and Trust Co., 157 U. S. 429 (1895), at p. 534.
10 Works, Vol. IX, p. 376Google Scholar.
11 Works, Vol. III, pp. 14–15Google Scholar.
12 Challenge to Liberty, pp. 1–2.
13 Works (Memorial edition, New York, 1926), Vol. XXIV, p. 82Google Scholar.
14 Journals (Boston, 1911), Vol. V, p. 285Google Scholar.
15 Autobiography (Cambridge, 1916), p. 190Google Scholar.
16 See especially the poems “Corn” and “The Symphony.”
17 Selections from the Correspondence of Theodore Roosevelt and Henry Cabot Lodge (2 vols., New York, 1925), Vol. I, p. 542Google Scholar.
18 Writings (Ford, ed., New York, 1894), Vol. III, pp. 268–269Google Scholar.
19 Works (Charleston, S. C., 1851), Vol. III, p. 399Google Scholar.
20 Complete Works (Riverside ed., Cambridge, 1883), Vol. I, pp. 224–225Google Scholar.
21 I'll Take My Stand: The South and the Agrarian Tradition. By Twelve Southerners (New York, 1930)Google Scholar.
22 Challenge to Liberty, Ch. 9.
23 Warburg, James P., It's Up to Us (New York, 1934)Google Scholar; Mills, Ogden L., What of Tomorrow? (New York, 1935)Google Scholar.
24 Writings (New York, 1906), Vol. II, p. 299Google Scholar.
25 Works (New York, 1895), Vol. III, pp. 338, 340Google Scholar.
26 Quoted in an article by McKenzie, W. L., in New York Tribune, April 24, 1849Google Scholar.
27 For figures, see United States Department of Commerce, Statistical Abstract of the United States, 1933Google Scholar; United States Department of Agriculture, Yearbook of Agriculture. See also Doane, Robert R., The Measurement of Wealth (1933)Google Scholar; Corey, Lewis, The Crisis of the Middle Class (1935)Google Scholar.
28 G. K.'s: A Miscellany of the First 500 Issues of G. K.'s Weekly (1935), pp. 15–16Google Scholar.
29 Congressional Record, June 11, 1935, pp. 9386–9387Google Scholar.
30 New York Herald-Tribune, May 9, 1935.
31 See Cauley, Troy J., Agrarianism; A Program for Farmers (1935)Google Scholar; Owsley, Frank L., “The Pillars of Agrarianism,” The American Review, March, 1935Google Scholar; John Crowe Ransome, “Happy Farmer,” ibid., Vol. I (1933); John C. Rawe, “Agrarianism: the Basis for a Better Life,” ibid., December, 1935; Agar, Herbert, The Land of the Free (1935)Google Scholar.
32 Leven, Maurice, Moulton, Harold G., and Warburton, Clark, America's Capacity to Consume (1934)Google Scholar, Ch. 5.
33 Lyon, Leverett S. and Others, , The National Recovery Administration; an Analysis and an Appraisal (Washington, 1935)Google Scholar.
34 Writings, Vol. VII, p. 35Google Scholar.
- 1
- Cited by
Comments
No Comments have been published for this article.