16
POLITICAL ECONOMY
somewhat anticipated. Before the assault on
political economy came to a head, Senior
and the younger Mill had succeeded Ricardo.
The elder Mill and Malthus—in part discoverer,
in part inventor of the “ revolting ratios ”
between food and population, the fundamental
notion of which, nevertheless, contained “ a
very valuable discovery, or ‘ like the toad,
ugly and venomous, had yet a precious jewel
in its head,’ ” as Hazlitt unflatteringly put
it—these two had worked contemporaneously,
partly in collaboration and partly in rivalry
with Ricardo, on the general principles of
economic science ; and to them, as well as to
him, an important step in its development
must be attributed. John Stuart Mill improved
wonderfully on Ricardo and wrote a treatise
to which little exception could be taken on
humanitarian grounds, but the public notion of
what political economy taught had already been
created and its dissemination was continuing.
Nevertheless we can hardly ascribe anything
path-breaking in the progress of economics
to Mill. His most important contribution,
perhaps, was to put together, develop, extend
and combine in a coherent system the ideas
of the school in which he had been brought
up, and at the same time somewhat to soften
their outlines. But to do this a master mind