[339] Works, p. 132 (chap. xvii.). He admits (Ibid. p. 210 n.) that the labourer may have a little more than what is absolutely necessary, and that his inference is therefore 'expressed too strongly.'
[340] See Letters to M'Culloch, p. xxi.
[341] 'The assaults upon Malthus's "great work,"' he says (Works, p. 243, ch. xxxii.), 'have only served to prove its strength.'
[342] Letters to Malthus, p. 226.
[343] Works, p. 58 (ch. v.).
[344] Ibid. p. 211 n. (ch. xxvi.).
[345] Ibid. p. 258 (ch. xxxii.).
[346] Works, p. 248 (ch. xxii.).
[347] Bain's James Mill, p. 211.
[348] Editions in 1821, 1824, and 1826.