OF VALVE. 20 can seldom be read without both pleasure and in- struction, is still more explicit on this subject, and more unmeasured in his language than Mr. Ricardo himself. He asserts, in terms to which nothing can lend additional positive- ness, “that there is no necessary connection at all, or of any kind, between the quantity com- manded, and the value commanding *:” and again, “I presume, that in your use, and in every body's use of the word value, a high value ought to purchase a high value, and that it will be very absurd if it should not. But as to purchasing a great quantity, that condition is surely not included in any man’s idea of value 1.” The plausibility of this passage will disap- Pear on a little reflection. An article of high value, 4, will truly enough purchase another article of equally high value, B, but these two articles will not be high in relation to each other: the term high, in this connection, must * London Magazine for May 1824, page 552. I Ibid. page 557.