| Thomas Lloyd, Great Britain. Board of Agriculture - Agricultural productivity - 1794 - 548 pages
...the improvement of land, reckon alone on the advantages which the landlord reaps from an increafeJ income ; whereas, in a national point of view, it...the produce of the country, that is to be taken into confideration. It is for want of attending to this important diftinction, that people are fo infenfu.le... | |
| Great Britain - 1868 - 812 pages
...Sinclair's Committee in 1795, as will be seen by the following extracts from their report : — ' In general, those who make any observations on the improvement...the country, that is to be taken into consideration. * » * * * * * Before concluding this address, it is necessary to tako notice of one important circumstance.... | |
| William Cunningham - Free enterprise - 1908 - 516 pages
...the importance of that measure has not as yet perhaps been so distinctly stated as it deserves. In general, those who make any observations on the improvement...prosperity that must be the certain result of domestic improvement. They look at the rental merely, which, like the 1 Arthur Young's protost against the changes... | |
| William Cunningham - Free enterprise - 1908 - 520 pages
...the importance of that measure has not as yet perhaps been so distinctly stated as it deserves. In general, those who make any observations on the improvement...prosperity that must be the certain result of domestic improvement. They look at the rental merely, which, like the 1 Arthur Young's protest against the changes... | |
| William Cunningham - Free enterprise - 1938 - 456 pages
...the importance of that measure has not as yet perhaps been so distinctly stated as it deserves. In general, those who make any observations on the improvement...prosperity that must be the certain result of domestic improvement. They look at the rental merely, which, like the 1 Arthur Youug's protest against the changes... | |
| James L. Outman - Industrial revolution - 2003 - 516 pages
...the importance of that measure has not as yet perhaps been so distinctly stated as it deserves. In general, those who make any observations on the improvement...prosperity that must be the certain result of domestic improvement. They look at the rental merely, which, like the 1 Arthur Young's protest against the changes... | |
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