Wesley Collected Works Vol 11
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-wesley-collected-works-vol-11-171 |
| Words | 383 |
I allow too, that some of the villages near the Land’s End
are less populous than formerly; but what is all this loss,
taken together, in comparison of the increase? I cannot but
think there has been, within twenty years, an increase of more
than an hundred thousand, in six cities and towns only; I
mean, in London, Bristol, Birmingham, Sheffield, Manchester,
and Liverpool. Do not you see with your eyes in all these
places, not only houses, but whole streets added continually? And can any one persuade you, in the mean time, that there
is no increase of inhabitants? And yet some have wonder
fully affirmed that there is a decrease of inhabitants even in
London | Why do they not affirm, there is a decrease of
houses too? When I see one, I will believe the other. And it is not only in cities and large towns, as some have
intimated, but even on commons, heaths, and mountains, yea,
all over the Peak of Derbyshire, that you may see little
houses (and many not very little) shooting up on every side. And does not this denote an increase of people? Or are
they inhabited only by rats and mice? Considering these
things which I have seen with my own eyes, I cannot doubt
one moment but England has a million more inhabitants
than it had twenty years ago. 2. “As to agriculture, what was the state of it last year,
compared with the state of it in 1759? Has it advanced or
declined since that time? You may judge by considering a
very few particulars. Are your old farm-houses, barns, out
houses, tumbling down? And are no new ones erected? Are
your old enclosures, fences, drains, running to decay, and no
new ones making? Is there less land tilled and improved now,
than there was in 1759? Nay more, as is notoriously known,
by many hundred thousand acres. Are our farmers in general
grown poorer than heretofore? Are their stocks of hay and
144 A SERIOUS ADDRESS To
corn, of sheep, horses, and cattle diminished? Are they not
exceedingly increased ? I will add no more. Let those who
affirm we are on the brink of ruin show how greatly our
agriculture is decreased since the happy days of 17591’’
3.