Wesley Collected Works Vol 11
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-wesley-collected-works-vol-11-174 |
| Words | 373 |
Were there even half as many? As to the fisheries on our
own coasts, and on the coasts of Scotland and Ireland, can
any man deny that they have hugely increased during these
eighteen years? Indeed all our fisheries are now in a more
flourishing condition than ever they were before.” Allowing
then, that we have sustained some loss in Newfoundland,
what is this to the total gain? On this account, therefore, we
have no reason to talk of the “ruinous state of the nation.”
146 A SEIt IOUS ADDRESS TO
7. “As to the tendency of our taxes, having previously
observed, that the hands of the diligent and frugal are the only
hands which make a nation rich; I have then to ask, Do our
taxes in general, especially those which took place the last
year, tend to make the people diligent and frugal, or idle and
extravagant? Do they tend to promote industry, or obstruct
it? to turn bees into drones, or drones into bees? Of late
years we have made several excellent alterations in our taxes:
We have repealed that very injudicious tax which in a manner
prohibited the importing of butter, tallow, lard, and other
articles from Ireland. Hence the mutual intercourse between
the two kingdoms has prodigiously increased. Our shipping
and mavigation likewise have increased in the same proportion. And so has the quantity of English goods and manufactures
exported thither. Does this show a decay of trade; or give
a just ground for our daily complaints and lamentations? 8. “The clear amount of the annual revenue is a matter
of fact, and capable of ocular demonstration. Now, let an
appeal be made to the proper accounts, which state the
amount of all the taxes of the year 1759; let these accounts
be compared with those of the year 1777, and you cannot
but see with your own eyes where the advantage lies; yea,
notwithstanding the loss of our tobacco-trade from Maryland
and Virginia, and notwithstanding the great failure of the
crops of sugar, as well as of cyder and perry. 9. “The last article is the national debt. And great it
undoubtedly is. Yet, comparatively speaking, it is not so
great now, as it was in 1759.