Querist eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 96 pages of information about Querist.

Querist eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 96 pages of information about Querist.

164.  Qu.  Whether, if the ill state of our coin be not redressed, that scheme would not be still more necessary, inasmuch as a national bank, by putting new life and vigour into our commerce, may prevent our feeling the ill effects of the want of such redress?

165.  Qu.  Whether men united by interest are not often divided by opinion; and whether such difference in opinion be not an effect of misapprehension?

166.  Qu.  Whether two things are not manifest, first, that some alteration in the value of our coin is highly expedient, secondly, that whatever alteration is made, the tenderest care should be had of the properties of the people, and even a regard paid to their prejudices?

167.  Qu.  Whether our taking the coin of another nation for more than it is worth be not, in reality and in event, a cheat upon ourselves?

168.  Qu.  Whether a particular coin over-rated will not be sure to flow in upon us from other countries beside that where it is coined?

169.  Qu.  Whether, in case the wisdom of the nation shall think fit to alter our coin, without erecting a national bank, the rule for lessening or avoiding present inconvenience should not be so to order matters, by raising the silver and depressing the gold, as that the total sum of coined cash within the kingdom shall, in denomination, remain the same, or amount to the same nominal value, after the change that it did before?

170.  Qu.  Whether all inconvenience ought not to be lessened as much as may be; but after, whether it would be prudent, for the sake of a small inconvenience, to obstruct a much greater good?  And whether it may not sometimes happen that an inconvenience which in fancy and general discourse seems great shall, when accurately inspected and cast up, appear inconsiderable?

171.  Qu.  Whether in public councils the sum of things, here and there, present and future, ought not to be regarded?

172.  Qu.  Whether silver and small money be not that which circulates the quickest, and passeth through all hands, on the road, in the market, at the shop?

173.  Qu.  Whether, all things considered, it would not be better for a kingdom that its cash consisted of half a million in small silver, than of five times that sum in gold?

174.  Qu.  Whether there be not every day five hundred lesser payments made for one that requires gold?

175.  Qu.  Whether Spain, where gold bears the highest value, be not the laziest, and China, where it bears the lowest, be not the most industrious country in the known world?

176.  Qu.  Money being a ticket which entitles to power and records the title, whether such power avails otherwise than as it is exerted into act?

177.  Qu.  Whether it be not evidently the interest of every State, that its money should rather circulate than stagnate?

178.  Qu.  Whether the principal use of cash be not its ready passing from hand to hand, to answer common occasions of the common people, and whether common occasions of all sorts of people are not small ones?

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Querist from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.