| Charles James Napier - Aboriginal Australians - 1835 - 312 pages
...can be expected in any definite period, it " must, I think, be evident to every reflecting per" son, that all fears as to a surplus population are " perfectly ideal, and that it is its unequal distribu" tion, and not its aggregate amount, which is to be " deplored ; it may be said that the quantity... | |
| Robert Kane - Industries - 1844 - 438 pages
...unexplored, resources remain for the maintenance of any increase of inhabitants that can be expeeted in any definite period, it must, I think, be evident...not its aggregate amount, which is to be deplored." The primary object of agriculture, as hitherto discussed, is the production of food, which process... | |
| Glass - 1844 - 416 pages
...increase of inhabitants that can be expected in any definite period, it must, I think, be evident to everj reflecting person, that all fears as to a surplus...not its aggregate amount, which is to be deplored." No. III. Mr. Wakefield, on this subject, says : " The water in which flax has been immersed is, in... | |
| University magazine - 1845 - 772 pages
...expected in any definite period, it must, I think, he evident to every reflecting person, that all tears as to a surplus population are perfectly ideal, and that it is its unequal distrilmtiun, and not its aggregate amount, which is to be deplored. It may be said that the quantity... | |
| Cardinal Adolphe Louis Albert Perraud, Adolphe Perraud - Ireland - 1862 - 568 pages
...1 « It must, I think, be evident to every reflecting person, that ail fears as to a « surplus de population » are perfectly ideal, and that it is...not its aggregate amount, which is to be deplored. » (fndustrial rcsources, p. 300.) * Telle était en 1835 l'opinion d'une commission de membres du... | |
| 1845 - 960 pages
...every reflecting person, that all fears as to a surplus porlalion are perfectly ideal, and that it its unequal distribution, and not its aggregate amount,...but the proportion in Armagh would give an amount of 3,000,000 of acres of unprofitable land in the whole of Ireland, which cannot be so far from the truth,... | |
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