[320]. 7th ed., pp. 177, 181 n.
[321]. Ibid., p. 178 and n.
[322]. Not above suspicion. See 7th ed., p. 176 n.
[323]. The military advantage of an increasing population is pointed out also in the article on Newenham’s ‘Ireland,’ Edin. Rev., July 1808, p. 350.
[324]. Cf. Josiah Tucker, On Trade, p. 17 (3rd ed., 1753).
[325]. Essay, 2nd ed., p. 297 n; 7th ed., p. 185, which omits one clause. Cf. 2nd ed., pp. 290–1; 7th ed., pp. 179, 180.
[326]. 2nd ed., p. 291; 7th ed., pp. 179, 180. Cf. the often-quoted passages about the bleak rock and the garden, written (be it remarked) before and not after the Revolution, in Arthur Young’s Travels in France (Bury St. Edmunds, 1792), pp. 36, 37, 42; cf. p. 341.
[327]. E. g. 5th, 1817; 7th ed., ch. vii.
[328]. 7th ed., p. 188.
[329]. Arthur Young, Travels in France, pp. 410, 437.