An History of Birmingham (1783) eBook

William Hutton
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 295 pages of information about An History of Birmingham (1783).

An History of Birmingham (1783) eBook

William Hutton
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 295 pages of information about An History of Birmingham (1783).
The town was large, and full of inhabitants, and those inhabitants full of industry.  I had seen faces elsewhere tinctured with an idle gloom void of meaning, but here, with a pleasing alertness:  Their appearance was strongly marked with the modes of civil life:  I mixed a variety of company, chiefly of the lower ranks, and rather as a silent spectator:  I was treated with an easy freedom by all, and with marks of favour by some:  Hospitality seemed to claim this happy people for her own, though I knew not at that time from what cause.

I did not meet with this treatment in 1770, twenty nine years after, at Bosworth, where I accompanied a gentleman, with no other intent, than to view the field celebrated for the fall of Richard the third.  The inhabitants enjoyed the cruel satisfaction of setting their dogs at us in the street, merely because we were strangers.  Human figures, not their own, are seldom seen in those inhospitable regions:  Surrounded with impassable roads, no intercourse with man to humanise the mind, no commerce to smooth their rugged manners, they continue the boors of nature.

Thus it appears, that characters are influenced by profession.  That the great advantage of private fortune, and the greater to society, of softening and forming the mind, are the result of trade.  But these are not the only benefits that flow from this desirable spring.  It opens the hand of charity to the assistance of distress; witness the Hospital and the two Charity Schools, supported by annual donation:  It adds to the national security, by supplying the taxes for internal use, and, for the prosecution of war.  It adds to that security, by furnishing the inhabitants with riches, which they are ever anxious to preserve, even at the risk of their lives; for the preservation of private wealth, tends to the preservation of the state.

It augments the value of landed property, by multiplying the number of purchasers:  It produces money to improve that land into a higher state of cultivation, which ultimately redounds to the general benefit, by affording plenty.

It unites bodies of men in social compact, for their mutual interest:  It adds to the credit and pleasure of individuals, by enabling them to purchase entertainment and improvement, both of the corporeal and intellectual kind.

It finds employment for the hand that would otherwise be found in mischief:  And it elevates the character of a nation in the scale of government.

Birmingham, by her commercial consequence, has, of late, justly assumed the liberty of nominating one of the representatives for the county; and, to her honor, the elective body never regretted her choice.

In that memorable contest of 1774, we were almost to a man of one mind:  if an odd dozen among us, of a different mould, did not assimulate with the rest, they were treated, as men of free judgment should ever be treated, with civility, and the line of harmony was not broken.

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An History of Birmingham (1783) from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.