SOCIALISM IN ENGLAND.
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of rent, and it offered to any landowner, w^ho might prefer to
relinquish his land, its full selling value. This would still be
advantageous to the nation, “ since an individual never gives,
in present money, for a remote profit, anything like what that
profit is worth to the State, which is immortal.” * Whatever
may be thought of the practicability of this proposal, it is not
nearly so open to the charge of injustice as most of the schemes
of land nationalization which are propounded to-day. All that
can be said against it is, that unearned increment is not a
peculiarity of property in land ; it occurs, for instance, in rail-
' way shares, which often increase in value solely “ through the
growth of population and wealth.” We hear little, however,
about this particular proposal to-day, partly because far more
drastic measures are being pressed upon our attention, and
partly, perhaps, because agricultural land in England has
recently been falling in value—receiving, in fact, an unearned
decrement—and its early recovery is a matter of doubt.
The publication of “ Progress and Poverty,” early in 1881,
gave a great impetus to the land nationalization movement.
Its author, Henry George,f was born at Philadelphia, on the
2nd of September, 1839, of American parents. His father
was desirous of giving him a thorough education, but the lad
was self-willed and preferred to study in his own way. “ They
teach nothing at the Academy that I don’t know or think I
know already,” he said, and accordingly he was not sent to
school after his twelfth year. When he was sixteen he went as
cabin boy in a sailing-ship to India, because “ he had read so
much about that unhappy country ” and wished to investigate for
himself the state of affairs there. For some years he led a roving
life without any settled employment In 1858 he worked his
way on a merchant-vessel to San Francisco, and spent the next
three years in unsuccessful mining enterprises. Finally, in 1861,
he settled down in San Francisco, where he was successively
* See J. S. Mill’s papers on Land Tenure in the fourth volume of his
“Dissertations and Discussions.”
t I have gleaned most of these biographical facts from a recently
published sketch of Mr. George’s life by Mr. Henry Rose, editor of the
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