| 1846-50 | they were | 107 | per million | ![]() | England, | 66 |
| 1856-61 | „ | 100 | „ | „ | 65 | |
| 1861-70 | „ | 88 | „ | „ | 66 | |
| 1872-76 | „ | 86 | „ | „ | 69 |
These figures show about one-third more suicide in London than the country. The same proportion holds good at the present time.
The Middlesex portion of London has always had a higher percentage than either the Kent or Surrey portions.
In Berlin the suicide rate was stationary in 1860-1872; indeed, decreasing in 1870-1872, but a large rate compared to the country around; in 1860 the relative numbers were 160 for the city to 100 in the country.
Legoyt calculates the suicide rate of the United States as 32 per million; and New York City, for the year 1876, as 142 per million.
Employment.
With regard to the business of one’s life, it has been noticed that professions and trades, which by habits, physical and mental, bring women near to men, often tend to raise in an extraordinary degree the inclination of women to kill themselves.
It is a matter of the greatest difficulty to procure statistics sufficiently reliable of the numbers of each profession and trade, to couple with the numbers of known suicides of each trade and profession, for the purpose of obtaining a “professional suicide rate.”
Italian statistics show that the rates are higher in those trades which are concerned with luxuries, and lower in those whose products command a more regular market, such as are necessaries.
Goldsmiths, jewellers, makers of arms, scientific instruments, toilet necessaries, musical instruments, &c., give a higher rate than that of builders, weavers, spinners, tailors, glovers, &c.
