OF VALUE. 1923 measure. Let us try to discover how far it would assist us here. Suppose cloth in the year 1600 was worth 125. a yard, and in 1800 only 6s. Here we have a fluctuation in the value of cloth, in re- lation to the standard commodity ; in 1800 it was worth only half as much silver as it was in 1600. This, however, is not, let it be ob- served, a fluctuation ascertained by the cir- cumstance of silver being produced by an in- variable quantity of labour. Had silver varied in the circumstances of its production, our in- formation as to the relation between cloth and silver would have been equally attainable, and equally complete. What then could be ascer- tained, in this case, from the metal being in- variable in the quantity of its producing la- bour? What inference would this circum- stance enable us to draw? No inference, ob- viously, as to the value of cloth and silver; for, on this point, the prices of the former tell us all that it is possible to know. The in- ference we should draw would be, that the