4s Benjamin Franklin [1760 gether, and settle in a foreign land. Some of the idle and drunken may be enticed away; but these only disappoint their employers, and serve to dis- courage the undertaking. If by royal munificence, and an expense that the profits of the trade alone would not bear, a complete set of good and skilful hands are collected and carried over, they find so much of the system imperfect, so many things want- ing to carry on the trade to advantage, so many difficulties to overcome, and the knot of hands so easily broken by death, dissatisfaction, and deser- tion, that they and their employers are discouraged together, and the project vanishes into smoke. Hence it happens that established manufactures are hardly ever lost, but by foreign conquest, or by some eminent interior fault in manners or govern- ment—a bad police oppressing and discouraging the workmen, or religious persecutions driving the sober and industrious out of the country. There is, in short, scarce a single instance in history of the con- trary, where manufactures have once taken firm root. They sometimes start up in a new place; but are generally supported, like exotic plants, at more expense than they are worth for any thing but curiosity, until these new seats become the refuge of the manufacturers driven from the old ones. The conquest of Constantinople, and final reduc- tion of the Greek empire, dispersed many curious manufacturers into different parts of Christendom. The former conquests of its provinces had before done the same. The loss of liberty in Verona, Milan, Florence, Pisa, Pistoia, and other great cities of LG