17200 Essays 3 clothed and better lodged. And if, instead of em- ploying a man I feed in making bricks, I employ him in fiddling for me, the corn he eats is gone, and no part of his manufacture remains to augment the wealth and convenience of the family; I shall there- fore be the poorer for this fiddling man, unless the rest of my family work more, or eat less, to make up the deficiency he occasions. Look around the world and see the millions em- ployed in doing nothing, or in something that amounts to nothing, when the necessaries and con- veniences of life are in question. What is the bulk of commerce, for which we fight and destroy each other, but the toil of millions for superfluities, to the great hazard and loss of many lives by the constant dangers of the sea? How much labor is spent in building and fitting great ships, to go to China and Arabia for tea and coffee, to the West Indies for sugar, to America for tobacco? These things can- not be called the necessaries of life, for our ancestors lived very comfortably without them. A question may be asked: Could all these people now employed in raising, making, or carrying super- fluities be subsisted by raising necessaries? I think they might. The world is large, and a great part of it still uncultivated. Many hundred millions of acres in Asia, Africa, and America are still in a forest, and a great deal even in Europe. On a hundred acres of this forest a man might become a substantial farmer, and a hundred thousand men, employed in clearing each his hundred acres, would hardly brighten a spot big enough to be visible from the moon, unless with -C4} 232