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.

245.  Qu.  Whether, notwithstanding the cash supposed to be brought into it, any nation is, in truth, a gainer by such traffic?

246.  Qu.  Whether the industry of our people employed in foreign lands, while our own are left uncultivated, be not a great loss to the country?

247.  Qu.  Whether it would not be much better for us, if, instead of sending our men abroad, we could draw men from the neighbouring countries to cultivate our own?

248.  Qu.  Whether, nevertheless, we are not apt to think the money imported by our labourers to be so much clear gains to this country, but whether a little reflexion and a little political arithmetic may not shew us our mistake?

249.  Qu.  Whether our prejudices about gold and silver are not very apt to infect or misguide our judgments and reasonings about the public weal?

250.  Qu.  Whether it be not a good rule whereby to judge of the trade of any city, and its usefulness, to observe whether there is a circulation through the extremities, and whether the people round about are busy and warm?

251.  Qu.  Whether we had not, some years since, a manufacture of hats at Athlone, and of earthenware at Arklow, and what became of those manufactures?

252.  Qu.  Why we do not make tiles of our own, for flooring and roofing, rather than bring them from Holland?

253.  Qu.  What manufactures are there in France and Venice of gilt-leather, how cheap and how splendid a furniture?

254.  Qu.  Whether we may not, for the same use, manufacture divers things at home of more beauty and variety than wainscot, which is imported at such expense from Norway?

255.  Qu.  Whether the use and the fashion will not soon make a manufacture?

256.  Qu.  Whether, if our gentry used to drink mead and cider, we should not soon have those liquors in the utmost perfection and plenty?

257.  Qu.  Whether it be not wonderful that with such pastures, and so many black cattle, we do not find ourselves in cheese?

258.  Qu.  Whether great profits may not be made by fisheries; but whether those of our Irish who live by that business do not contrive to be drunk and unemployed one half of the year?

259.  Qu.  Whether it be not folly to think an inward commerce cannot enrich a State, because it doth not increase its quantity of gold and silver?  And whether it is possible a country should? not thrive, while wants are supplied, and business goes on?

260.  Qu.  Whether plenty of all the necessaries and comforts of life be not real wealth?

261.  Qu.  Whether Lyons, by the advantage of her midland situation and the rivers Rhone and Saone, be not a great magazine or mart for inward commerce?  And whether she doth not maintain a constant trade with most parts of France; with Provence for oils and dried fruits, for wines and cloth with Languedoc, for stuffs with Champagne, for linen with Picardy, Normandy, and Brittany, for corn with Burgundy?

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Querist from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.