[849]. No. 1, Oct 1802, esp. p. 26.
[850]. Population, I. i.
[851]. Appendix to 3rd ed., p. 520 n.; 7th ed., p. 491 n.
[852]. See his Letter to Godwin, dated October 1818, and quoted in Godwin’s Population, Bk. II. ch. i pp. 116–123, with comments.
[853]. See above, p. 66.
[854]. Population, II. x. 244–7.
[855]. E. g. II. xi. 274, 282, but especially I. iv. 25, and for the third argument, pp. 29, 30, cf. pp. 43–50, &c. Cf. also Godwin to Sinclair in Sinclair’s Correspondence, i. 393.
[856]. Population tends to double in a bundled years, and there is no risk of over-population except in occasional times of dull trade (Letter of Godwin to Sinclair, Sinclair’s Correspondence, l. c.). A notable exception.
[857]. Population, II. xi. 251–2.
[858]. IV. i.