Enquiry Commission, and adopts from untrustworthy sources many assertions afterwards refuted by the Report of the Commission. This work, although on the whole a valuable one, can therefore only be used with discretion, especially as the author, like Kay, confuses the whole working-class with the mill hands. The history of the development of the proletariat contained in the introduction to the present work, is chiefly taken from this work of Gaskell’s.
  • Thomas Carlyle. Chartism, London, , p. 28.

  • Adam Smith. Wealth of Nations I, McCulloch’s edition in one volume, sect. 8, p. 36: “The wear and tear of a slave, it has been said, is at the expense of his master, but that of a free servant is at his own expense. The wear and tear of the latter, however, is, in reality, as much at the expense of his master as that of the former. The wages paid to journeymen and servants of every kind, must be such as may enable them, one with another, to continue the race of journeymen and servants, according as the increasing, diminishing, or stationary demand of the society may happen to require. But though the wear and tear of a free servant be equally at the expense of his master, it generally costs him much less than that of a slave. The fund for replacing or repairing, if I may say so, the wear and tear of the slave, is commonly managed by a negligent master or careless overseer.”

  • And it came in .

  • Archibald Alison. Principles of Population and Their Connection with Human Happiness, two vols., . This Alison is the historian of the French Revolution, and, like his brother, Dr. W. P. Alison, a religious Tory.

  • Chartism, pp. 28, 31, etc.

  • When as here and elsewhere I speak of society as a responsible whole, having rights and duties, I mean, of course, the ruling power of society, the class which at present holds social and political control, and bears, therefore, the responsibility for the condition of those to whom it grants no share in such control. This ruling class in England, as in all other civilised countries, is the bourgeoisie. But that this society, and especially the bourgeoisie, is charged with the duty of protecting every member of society, at least, in his life, to see to it, for example, that no one starves, I need not now prove to my German readers. If I were writing for the English bourgeoisie, the case would be different. (And so it is now in Germany. Our German capitalists are fully up to the English level, in this respect at least, in the year of grace, .)

  • Dr. Alison. Management of the Poor in Scotland.

  • Alison. Principles of Population, vol. II

  • Dr. Alison in an article read before the British Association for the Advancement of Science. , in York.

  • Manufacturing Population, ch. 8.

  • Report of Commission of Inquiry Into the Employment of Children and Young Persons in Mines and Collieries and in the Trades and Manufactures in Which Numbers of Them Work Together, Not Being Included Under the Terms of the Factories’ Regulation Act. First and Second Reports, Grainger’s Report. Second Report usually cited as “Children’s Employment Commission’s Report.” First Report, ; Second Report, .

  • Fifth Annual Report of the Reg. Gen. of Births, Deaths, and Marriages.

  • Dr. Cowen. Vital Statistics of Glasgow.

  • Report of Commission of Inquiry Into the State of Large Towns and Populous Districts. First Report, . Appendix.

  • Factories’ Inquiry Commission’s Reports, 3rd vol. Report of Dr. Hawkins on Lancashire, in which Dr. Robertson is cited⁠—the “Chief Authority for Statistics in Manchester.”

  • Quoted by Dr. Wade from the Report of the Parliamentary Factories’ Commission of , in his History of the Middle and Working-Classes. London, , 3rd ed.

  • Children’s Employment Commission’s Report. App. Part II Q. 18, No. 216, 217, 226, 233, etc. Horne.

  • Children’s Employment Commission’s Report. App. Part II evidence, p. 9, 39; 133.

  • Children’s Employment Commission’s Report. App. Part II p. 9, 36; 146.

  • Children’s Employment Commission’s Report. App. Part II p. 34; 158.

  • Symonds’ Rep. App. Part I, pp. E, 22, et seq.

  • Arts and Artisans.

  • Principles of Population, vol. II pp. 136, 197.

  • We shall see later how the rebellion of the working-class against the bourgeoisie in England is legalised by the right of coalition.

  • Chartism, p. 34, et seq.

  • Chartism, p. 40.

  • Shall I call bourgeois witnesses to bear testimony from me here, too? I select one only, whom everyone may read, namely, Adam Smith. Wealth of Nations (McCulloch’s four volume edition), vol. III, book 5, chap. 8, p. 297.

  • Principles of Population, vol. II, p. 76, et seq. p. 82, p. 135.

  • Philosophy of Manufactures, London, , p. 406, et seq. We shall have occasion to refer further to this reputable work.

  • On the Present Condition of the Labouring Poor in Manchester, etc. By the Rev. Rd. Parkinson, Canon of Manchester, 3rd Ed., London and Manchester, , Pamphlet.

  • Manufacturing Population of England, chap. 10.

  • The total of population, about fifteen millions, divided by the number of convicted criminals (22,733).

  • The Cotton Manufacture of

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