登陆注册
19569400000023

第23章

"The proprietary rights of the sovereign, and his large and practically indefinite interest in the produce, prevent the formationof any really independent body on time land.By the distribution of the rents, which his territory produces, the monarchmaintains the most influential portion of the remaining population in the character of civil or military officers.There remainonly the inhabitants of the towns to interpose a check to his power; but the majority of these are fed by the expenditure ofthe sovereign or his servants.We shall have a fitter opportunity to point out how completely the prosperity or rather theexistence of the towns of Asia, proceeds from the local expenditure of the government.`As the citizens are thus destitutefrom their position of real strength, so the Asiatic sovereigns, having no body of powerful privileged landed proprietors tocontend with, have not had the motives which the European monarchs had: to nurse and foster.the towns into engines ofpolitical, influence, and the citizens are proverbially the most helpless and prostrate of the slaves of Asia.There exists,therefore, nothing in the society beneath him which can modify the power of a sovereign who is the supreme proprietor of aterritory cultivated by a population of ryot peasants.All that there is of real strength in such a population, looks to him asthe sole source, not merely of protection, but of subsistence; he is by his position and necessarily a despot.But the results ofAsiatic despotism have ever been the same: while it is strong it is delegated, and its power abused by its agents; when feebleand declining, that power is violently shared by its inferiors, and its stolen authority yet more abused.In its strength and inits weakness it is alike destructive of the industry and wealth of its subjects, and all the arts of peace; and it is this whichmakes that peculiar system of rents particularly objectionable and calamitous to the countries in which, it prevails."The land-tax in this system is in practice arbitrary, and thence oppressive.Mr Mill relates (.379) how the English rulerswhen they succeeded to the powers of the previous sovereigns attempted to remedy this oppression.They wished to found aclass of great landlords, that India might prosper as England has prospered under her landlords.For this purpose theypitched upon a set of tax-gatherers called Zemindars.But this plan seems to have failed.It seems now, says Mr Jones (p.118), to be generally admitted that the claims of the Zemindars were overrated, and that if something less had been done forthem and something more for the security and independence of the Ryots, the settlement, without being less just orgenerous, would have been more expedient.

But the system of cultivation in India seems on the point of undergoing a great change from causes extraneous to the ryotsystem.The Governor-General has instituted, it is recently stated, system of grants of the unoccupied land, on terms whichmake the grantees independent cultivators.The unoccupied land is wide and fertile, and thus a race of cultivators may arisewhose condition will be free from the evils of the ryot tenure.This however belongs to the Political Economy of the Future.

Transition from Cottier Rents.

I now take another case.

Ireland is cultivated in a great measure by Cottiers.Mr Mill has put these in the same chapter as the ryots of India.At this Imarvel much; for he has himself pointed out the broad differences which exist between the two systems.He truly states thatin India the payments have been regulated by custom; in Ireland by competition; a vast difference, of which he himself hasforcibly pointed out the importance.Add to this that in India the owner of the land is the sovereign; in Ireland a privateperson.And we may add furtherwhat is also a very important feature that the rent is contracted to be paid in money, not inproduce; and therefore does not vary with the amount of the crops.And this last circumstance especially has greatimportance in the progress of the country in which these systems are found.

Ryot rents have no tendency to change; they have existed in India from the time of the Greeks: probably much longer.TheCottiers' rents of Ireland offer remarkable facilities for change; Mr Jones says (p.152):

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 道极天

    道极天

    小门派少主硬遭寒山城第一势力逼迫,无奈远走他乡,却不料自家门派已然解散消失,心中带恨的他能否如愿登顶,重回铸造门派荣耀!一路披荆斩棘,锤炼己身,让我们一起见证他的成长!
  • 暗夜蔷薇,宠妻豪门复仇

    暗夜蔷薇,宠妻豪门复仇

    那天,她亲眼见到自己的母亲含恨而死,那天,她没有哭,只是因为她母亲临死的一句话“承熙,以后遇到再大的困难都不可以哭,因为眼泪不能代表什么,没有人会因为你的眼泪而放弃一切。”她因为那个让她妈妈爱了一生地男人走上了复仇的道路,“顾夜,我要用你全家来祭奠我的母亲。”她不在善良,无情冷漠变成了她唯一的伪装。十七岁那年,她遇到了那个男人的儿子,她发誓要让他的儿子来体会当年他带给母亲的痛。是不是一切的恩怨都会有结果,是谁编织了这场阴谋,是谁改变了那场青春的结果,或许,不是所有的感情都会有结果。
  • EXO:因为一起走过

    EXO:因为一起走过

    尹儿第一次写文,如果有写不好的地方可以告诉我。尹儿会改,谢谢大家看我的文。
  • 血煞天魔

    血煞天魔

    十年筑基,百年炼丹,千年飞升为何?是为了打破命运的桎梏,还是只为长生不死!这是一个现代穿越者,在修真界被视为邪派的天魔门中一路成长的故事,修真到底为何或许只有在他飞升进入九玄天界后才能得到答案。
  • 剑极战神

    剑极战神

    一剑西来,天外飞仙万道寂灭,剑道长存君临六合八荒,傲视九天十地我有一剑,当为战神!
  • 小嫩妻逆袭擒夫

    小嫩妻逆袭擒夫

    如果真的有一种爱,是由恨演变的,那么她是否有理由相信有一天他会爱上她。他被迫和她结婚,却一直没有任何反抗,就像沉睡的狮子。她为了他改变了自己的一切,爱得卑微。她可以为了爱他,把脸踩在地上。但是她有一天累了,不想再爱,要做自己的女王。看小嫩妻如何逆袭擒夫。
  • 红绫骨豆两生愿

    红绫骨豆两生愿

    三千年前,他为救她遭受重创,魂飞魄散,飞灰湮灭…她为他甘愿忍受天谴消耗万年修为沉睡了三千年只为帮他改变命运,聚集七魂六魄,使他可以转世投胎…三千年后,她从沉睡中醒来,得到的却是转世投胎的他机关算尽只为心爱的女人谋夺天下,可是那个女人不是她…曾经的海誓山盟被他遗忘在三千年的岁月长河中,只有她还迟迟不愿醒过来…]
  • 故都的秋(中小学生必读丛书)

    故都的秋(中小学生必读丛书)

    二十世纪三十年代初,美国《密勒士评选》曾评出当时中国文坛最具知名度的五位作家,郁达夫位列其中。他是一位优秀的作家,也是一位优秀的出版家,并且与鲁迅、郭沫若、茅盾等一同在“五四”新文学运动中发挥了积极作用,为中国现代文学和出版事业的发展都做出了巨大贡献。
  • 末世喰种t病毒

    末世喰种t病毒

    末世让人害怕的世界,让人恐慌的世界,让人难以生存的世界。而在这里三个喰种不断进化,杀丧尸,吃人……而在末世中最恐怕的不是丧尸而是人性!而最后的结果是什么,病毒的源头又是什么???
  • 你de影子

    你de影子

    如果你离开了,是否连光也照不出你的样子....