Robert Owen: and 2Hutchinson & Company, 1906 |
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Seite 24
... land were fixed by custom , and the changes enforced from century to century by changing economic conditions were regulated and as far as possible retarded by legal enactments , and by the restrictions imposed by guilds and immemorial ...
... land were fixed by custom , and the changes enforced from century to century by changing economic conditions were regulated and as far as possible retarded by legal enactments , and by the restrictions imposed by guilds and immemorial ...
Seite 25
... land tenure had been disappearing step by step ; one industry after another had developed to a point at which it ... land - a large pro- portion of the land of England was still cultivated by villages on the communal system ; there were ...
... land tenure had been disappearing step by step ; one industry after another had developed to a point at which it ... land - a large pro- portion of the land of England was still cultivated by villages on the communal system ; there were ...
Seite 26
... land , partly to maintain their position in face of the growing wealth of the merchant princes of London and the west of England . As a means to this end the small freeholders were gradually expropriated , until towards the close of the ...
... land , partly to maintain their position in face of the growing wealth of the merchant princes of London and the west of England . As a means to this end the small freeholders were gradually expropriated , until towards the close of the ...
Seite 27
... Land being divided into small Enclosures , that is to say , from two Acres to six or seven Acres each , seldom more ; every three or four Pieces of Land had a House 1 Baines's History of the Cotton Manufacture , p . 105 . belonging to ...
... Land being divided into small Enclosures , that is to say , from two Acres to six or seven Acres each , seldom more ; every three or four Pieces of Land had a House 1 Baines's History of the Cotton Manufacture , p . 105 . belonging to ...
Seite 28
... Land about his House , for they scarce sow Corn enough for their Cocks and Hens . Among the Manufacturers ' Houses are likewise scattered an infinite number of Cottages or small Dwellings , in which dwell the Workmen which are employed ...
... Land about his House , for they scarce sow Corn enough for their Cocks and Hens . Among the Manufacturers ' Houses are likewise scattered an infinite number of Cottages or small Dwellings , in which dwell the Workmen which are employed ...
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
afterwards already amongst appears attention Autobiography Bill boys Braxfield building child Church classes Committee of 1816 cotton cotton-mills Dale's David Dale doubt Duke effect employed employment Essays establishment evidence experiment factory father favour Formation of Character formed Francis Place friends Glasgow Government Greenheys habits Harmony Gazette House of Commons human hundred industry instruction interest kind labour Lanark land later letter London Lord machinery Manchester manufacture master McGuffog meeting mills moral nature Newtown Owen tells Owen's Owen's plan parents partners Peel period persons poor principles probably produced proposed purchased quoted reform religious Report Robert Dale Owen Robert Owen Scotland Sir Robert Peel social Society taught Threading tion town twelve UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA views village villages of co-operation wages whole William William Maclure workpeople writing yarn young
Beliebte Passagen
Seite 112 - That any character — from the best to the worst, from the most ignorant to the most enlightened — may be given to any community, even to the world at large, by applying certain means, which are to a great extent at the command and under the control, or easily made so, of those who possess the government of nations.
Seite 108 - The difference of natural talents in different men is, in reality, much less than we are aware of; and the very different genius which appears to distinguish men of different professions, when grown up to maturity, is not upon many occasions BO much the cause as the effect of the division of labor.
Seite 338 - I have the honour to be, my dear sir, Your most obedient humble servant, DERBY.
Seite 28 - Among the Manufacturers Houses are likewise scattered an infinite Number of Cottages or small Dwellings, in which dwell the Workmen which are employed, the Women and Children of whom, are always busy Carding, Spinning, &c.
Seite 27 - ... the chapmen used to keep gangs of pack-horses and accompany them to the principal towns with goods in packs, which they opened and sold to shopkeepers, lodging what was unsold in small stores at the inns. The pack-horses brought back sheep's wool, which was bought on the journey and sold to the makers of worsted yarn at Manchester, or to the clothiers of Rochdale, Saddleworth, and the West Riding of Yorkshire.
Seite 114 - If then due care as to the state of your inanimate machines can produce such beneficial results, what may not be expected if you devote equal attention to your vital machines, which are far more wonderfully constructed? When you shall acquire a right knowledge of these, of their curious mechanism, of their self-adjusting powers; when the proper...
Seite 342 - ... that they have been and are the real source of vice, disunion and misery of every description; that they are now the only real bar to the formation of a society of virtue, of intelligence, of charity in its most extended sense, and of sincerity and kindness among the whole human family ; and that they can be no longer maintained except through the ignorance of the mass of the people, and the tyranny of the few over that mass.
Seite 122 - I found him a man of kind manners and good intentions, of an imperturbable temper, and an enthusiastic desire to promote the happiness of mankind.
Seite 45 - Three hundred a year,' was my reply. 'What?', Mr Drinkwater said, with some surprise, repeating the words, 'three hundred a year! I have had this morning I know not how many seeking the situation, and I do not think that all their askings together would amount to what you require.' 'I cannot be governed by what others ask,' said I, 'and I cannot take less. I am now making that sum by my own business.
Seite 28 - ... and his provisions from the market, to carry his yarn to the spinners, his manufacture to the fulling mill, and, when finished, to the market to be sold, and the like; so every manufacturer generally keeps a cow or two, or more, for his family, and this employs the two, or three, or four pieces of enclosed land about his house, for they scarce sow corn enough for their cocks and hens; and this feeding their grounds still adds by the dung of the cattle, to enrich the soil.