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defence of usury-第13部分

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this strange competition; there is the most perfect and minute knowledge and information; which interest; the whole interest of a man's reputation and fortune; can ensure: on the side of the legislator; the most perfect ignorance。 All that he knows; all that he can know; is; that the enterprize is a project; which; merely because it is susceptible of that obnoxious name; he looks upon as a sort of cock; for him; in childish wantonness; to shie at。  Shall the blind lead the blind? is a question that has been put of old to indicate the height of folly: but what then shall we say of him who; being necessarily blind; insists on leading; in paths he never trod in; those who can see?     It must be by some distinction too fine for my conception; if you clear yourself from the having taken; on another occasion; but on the very point in question; the side; on which it would be my ambition to see you fix。     〃What is the species of domestic industry which his capital can employ; and of which the produce is likely to be of the greatest value; every individual〃 (you say(30*)); 〃it is evident; can; in his local situation; judge much better than any statesman or lawgiver can do for him。 The statesman; who should attempt to direct private people in what manner they ought to employ their capitals; would not only load himself with a most unnecessary attention; but assume an authority which could safely be trusted; not only to no single person; but to no council or senate whatsoever; and which would no where be so dangerous as in the hands of a man who had folly and presumption enough to fancy himself fit to exercise it。     〃To give the monopoly of the home market to the produce of domestic industry; in any particular art or manufacture; is in some measure to direct private people in what manner they ought to employ their capitals; and must in almost all cases be either a useless or a hurtful regulation。〃  Thus far you: and I add; to limit the legal interest to a rate at which the carriers on of the oldest and best established and least hazardous trades are always glad to borrow; is to give the monopoly of the money…market to those traders; as against the projectors of new…imagined trades; not one of which but; were it only from the circumstance of its novelty; must; as I have already observed; appear more hazardous than the old。     These; in comparison; are but inconclusive topics。 I touched upon them merely as affording; what appeared to me the only shadow of a plea; that could be brought; in defence of the policy I am contending against。 I come back therefore to my first ground; and beg you once more to consider; whether; of all that host of manufactures; which we both exult in as the causes and ingredients of national prosperity; there be a single one; that could have existed at first but in the shape of a project。 But; if a regulation; the tendency and effect of which is merely to check projects; in as far as they are projects; without any sort of tendency; as I have shewn; to weed out the bad ones; is defensible in its present state of imperfect efficacy; it should not only have been defensible; but much more worthy of our approbation; could the efficacy of it have been so far strengthened and compleated as to have opposed; from the beginning; an unsurmountable bar to all sorts of projects whatsoever: that is to say; if; stretching forth its hand over the first rudiments of society; it had confined us; from the beginning。 to mud for our habitations; to skins for our cloathing; and to acorns for our food。     I hope you may by this time be disposed to allow me; that we have not been ill served by the projects of time past。 I have already intimated; that I could not see any reason why we should apprehend our being worse served by the projects of time future。 I will now venture to add; that I think I do see reason; why we should expect to be still better and better served by these projects; than by those。 I mean better upon the whole; in virtue of the reduction which experience; if experience be worth any thing; should make in the proportion of the number of the ill…grounded and unsuccessful; to that of the well…grounded and successful ones。     The career of art; the great road which receives the footsteps of projectors; may be considered as a vast; and perhaps unbounded; plain; bestrewed with gulphs; such as Curtius was swallowed up in。 Each requires an human victim to fall into it ere it can close; but when it once closes; it closes to open no more; and so much of the path is safe to those who follow。 If the want of perfect information of former miscarriages renders the reality of human life less happy than this picture; still the similitude must be acknowledged: and we see at once the only plain and effectual method for bringing that similitude still nearer and nearer to perfection; I mean; the framing the history of the projects of time past; and (what may be executed in much greater perfection were but a finger held up by the hand of government) the making provision for recording; and collecting and publishing as they are brought forth; the race of those with which the womb of futurity is still pregnant。 But to pursue this idea; the execution of which is not within my competence; would lead me too far from the purpose。     Comfortable it is to reflect; that this state of continually…improving security; is the natural state not only of the road to opulence; but of every other track of human life。 In the war which industry and ingenuity maintain with fortune; past ages of ignorance and barbarism form the forlorn hope; which has been detached in advance; and made a sacrifice of for the sake of future。 The golden age; it is but too true; is not the lot of the generation in which we live: but; if it is to be found in any part of the track marked out for human existence; it will be found; I trust; not in any part which is past; but in some part which is to come。     But to return to the laws against usury; and their restraining influence on projectors。 I have made it; I hope; pretty apparent; that these restraints have no power or tendency to pick out bad projects from the good。 Is it worth while to add; which I think I may do with some truth; that the tendency of them is rather to pick the good out from the bad? Thus much at least may be said; and it comes to the same thing; that there is one case in which; be the project what it may; they may have the effect of checking it; and another in which they can have no such effect; and that the first has for its accompaniment; and that a necessary one; a circumstance which has a strong tendency to separate and discard every project of the injudicious stamp; but which is wanting in the other case。 I mean; in a word; the benefit of discussion。     It is evident enough; that upon all such projects; whatever be their nature; as find funds sufficient to carry them on; in the hands of him whose invention gave them birth; these laws are perfectly; and if by this time you will allow me to say so; very happily; without power。 But for these there has not necessarily been any other judge; prior to experience; than the inventor's own partial affection。 It is not only not necessary that they should have had; but it is natural enough that they should not have had; any such judge: since in most cases the advantage to be expected from the project depends upon the exclusive property in it; and consequently upon the concealment of the principle。 Think; on the other hand; how different is the lot of that enterprize which depends upon the good opinion of another man; that other; a man possessed of the wealth which the projector wants; and before whom necessity forces him to appear in the character of a suppliant at least: happy if; in the imagination of his judge; he adds not to that degrading character; that of a visionary enthusiast or an impostor! At any rate; there are; in this case; two wits; set to sift into the merits of the project; for one; which was employed upon that same task in the other case: and of these two there is one; whose prejudices are certainly not most likely to be on the favourable side。 True it is; that in the jumble of occurrences; an over…sanguine projector may stumble upon a patron as over…sanguine as himself; and the wishes may bribe the judgment of the one; as they did of the other。 The opposite case; however; you will allow; I think; to be by much the more natural。 Whatever a man's wishes may be for the success of an enterprize not yet his own; his fears are likely to be still stronger。 That same pretty generally implanted principle of vanity and self…conceit; which disposes most of us to over…value each of us his own conceptions; disposes us; in a proportionable degree; to undervalue those of other men。     Is it worth adding; though it be undeniably true; that could it even be proved; by ever so uncontrovertible evidence; that; from the beginning of time to the present day; there never was a project that did not terminate in the ruin of its author; not even from such a fact as this could the legislator derive any sufficient warrant; so much as for wishing to see the spirit of projects in any degree repressed? The discouraging motto; Sic vos non vobis; may be matter of serious consideration to the individual; but what is it to the legislator? What general; let him attack with ever so superior an army; but knows that hundreds; or perhaps thousands; must perish at the first onset? Shall he; for that consideration alone; lie inactive in his lines? 〃Every man for himself  but God;〃 adds the proverb (and it might have added the general; and the legislator; and all other public servants); 〃for us all。〃 Those sacrifices of individual to general welfare; which; on so many occasions; are made by third persons against men's wills; shall the parties themselves be restrained from making; when they do it of their own choice? To tie men neck and heels; and throw them into the gulphs I have been speaking of; is altogether out of the question: but if at every gulph a Curtius stands mounted and caparisoned; ready to take the leap; is it for the legislator; in a fit of old…womanish tenderness; to pull him away? laying even public interest out of the question; and considering nothing but the feelings of the individ
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