Bengough's Primer: Lessons 13 to
24
Lessons 1-12 |
Lessons 13-24 | Lessons 25-36 | Lessons 37-48 | Lessons 49-60 | Lessons 61-70
LESSON XIII — May Own Sheep ... They Are
Bred ... Not Like Land |
See the Sheep. It is a nice Fat Sheep and has long
Wool.
Does a Man own the Sheep?
Yes, the Man that owns the Hat owns the Sheep as
well.
But how can he own a Sheep? He may own a Hat, for
he can make it. But he may not own Land, which he can
not Make, you say.
Quite right, my Child.
Then how can he own a Sheep? -- for he can no more
make Sheep than Land.
Yes, in a way he can make Sheep. Sheep are Bred by
Man. He can so deal with them as to have more Sheep
than now. He can, if he see fit, Wipe out all Sheep,
so there would be not One left, but he can not make
the Land more or less than God made it. And so the
Sheep is not like Land, but it is a Thing which Man
may own, as is the Ox, the Horse, the Pig, and all
the Beasts we see in the World.
|
Woodcut: A Sheep, standing in a field.
Its coat is fairly long. |
land
different from capital
ownership
|
LESSON XIV
— World Grows Full .... Goods Price
Falls .... Land Gets High
|
Here you see a Sheep and a Hat on one Side, and a
Lot of Land next to them. The Worth of such things as
Sheep or Hats is a Worth of what we call Trade, and
is High or Low as it Costs more or less to make or
breed such things.
As Man finds out new Ways to save Toil, or as the
Crowd grows, such things grow more Cheap, for they
may be made or bred with more ease, and there is more
Sale for them.
But the Worth of Land is a Worth not of Trade but
of "Take" and is high or low as more or less Land may
be thus got and held.
And so it comes that the Worth of Land goes up
just as the Crowd grows big, for there is just so
much Land in the World and no more.
So a tax on Goods, as it must be paid by those who
use the Goods, adds to the Price, but a tax on Land
tends to make Land cheap.
|
Woodcut: the rectangle is divided in two. On the
left is a sheep, with a smaller version of the upturned
hat from Lesson XII. On the right, the sun is rising,
or perhaps setting, behind a small hill. In the
foreground appears to be a pasture. |
trade
population
technological
progress
capitalization
land
price
lowering
the price of land
sales
taxes
|
LESSON XV
— Man May Own ... Earth But Must ...
Pay Land Rent
|
There is but One way by which a Man may be Just to
the Race of Men and yet own a bit of the Earth or the
Whole of it.
What is that?
It is that he shall give a Fair Price to the Whole
Race, for whom God made it.
But what is a Fair Price?
Not a Lump sum paid to any One Man, for that does
the Rest no good. Not a Lump sum paid to the State,
for though that is Fair to all who now Live, it does
no good to the Race soon to be born in the World, and
whose Rights are as good as our own.
What, then, is a fair Price?
The Ground Rent, to be paid each Year in to the
State Till. That is Just, both to those who now Live,
and those yet to be Born; and it is Just, too, to the
Man who wants to own the Land. So, you See, the
One-tax plan would be Just all round.
|
Woodcut:
In the center is a man in tophat and spectacles.
In one hand he carrieds a globe, on which appears the
world "World." On the left is a large open box
labeled "Public Till." The box is close to full, and
the man is taking some of its contents.
|
created
equal
assessment
privatization
justice,
title,
ownership,
rent,
intergenerational
justice,
single
tax
|
LESSON XVI
— Land Rent Springs ... By God's Law
... Out Of Ground
|
Was Man made to live a Lone life?
No; God meant Men to live in the Town and each to
love and help the Rest. But when Men come to live in
a Crowd they need a Purse or Till, out of which to
Pay for the Things they need for the use of All, such
as Lights, Streets, Cops, Schools, and so on.
Did God think of this when He made Man?
Yes, my Child. So He made a great Law. It Works in
this way: When Men come in a Crowd -- such as a Town
-- the Land, which had no worth ere they came, gets
to be worth so much per Foot.
Why?
It is worth so much for the Chance to do biz
there. If the Crowd goes off, this Worth goes with
them. It is what we call Ground Rent. This Fund God
meant for the Town Till.
|
Woodcut: A crowd of men, mostly rather well
dressed. In one corner, a sign saying "Business Sites
for Sale;" in another, a sign "Lots to Rent." In the
foreground, a fat man with a large open bag labeled "$
Ground Rent." Between the crowd and the fat man is a
fountain or spring labeled "land value" whose flow is
arching into the Ground Rent bag. |
rent
as God's provisioning for all
community
public
spending
land
value
urban land
value relative to rural
|
LESSON XVII
— Wage For Work .... Gold For Rent ....
No More Sweat
|
Here is a Man at work on the Land. See the beads
of Sweat on his Brow. He earns his Bread, and it is
Sweet to him. It is a fair Wage for his Work. This is
the Law as God has made it: No Toil, no Bread; much
Toil, much Bread. But see the Man next to him. He has
a big Bag and it is full of Gold, but he does not
Work at all. And, bless my Heart, Child, look! it is
the Same Man! He has quit Work.
What does this Mean? How does he get more Gold
now, though he does no Work, than he got when he did
hard Toil?
Why, you see, he got a Deed of the Land he used to
work on, and a Town is now built on that Land, so now
he lives on the Gold which the Folks of that Town
have to put in his Bag each Year in the form of Land
Rent.
For what?
For the Right to Live, which he is so Kind as to
give them.
|
Woodcut: This is divided into two panels. In the
left one, a man digs with a shovel in rural land. In
the right panel, which bears a sign saying "Town Site"
another man sits under a tree, with a large bag next to
him labeled "$ Land Rent." In the background are a
number of buildings suggesting a town. |
labor
wages
landlord
ownership
all
benefits...
in
one's sleep
speculation
inequality
privatization
|
LESSON XVIII — One Tax Plan ... Now In Use
... For House Rent |
See the big House.
Does the Man own It?
Yes.
Does he want to make the Most out of it he can
with the least Loss?
That is just it, my Child.
Then what is his Plan?
It is a Plan of Good Sense and marks a Wise Man.
It is what I may call the One-tax Plan.
What do you Mean?
He makes those who Use the House pay for it just
by the Size and Kind of Room they rent, so much per
Year. Now, he might get his Gain out of it in more
Ways. He might make Folks pay who go in or out; he
might Lease the Hoist to a Man, and let him charge
Fare up and down; he might put a Tax on the Gas used
in each room, and he might Charge for all Goods
brought in or sent out, and so much per cent. on the
Trade done by each Man in the place. But you see, his
One-tax Plan is the best.
|
Woodcut: A large industrial/retail building, which
runs the full width of the panel. It seems to have a
retail space on the first floor, and three floors of
windows above it, at least 30 windows on each floor.
Several small figures are on the sidewalk in front of
it, and two people seem to be crossing or walking in
the street. |
single
tax
rent
canons of
taxation
user
fees
congestion
Cross reference to The Apartment Analogy
|
LESSON XIX
— Why Not State ... Have This Plan ...
For The Land
|
What are these Men? They wear Bands on their
Hats.
Yes. I will tell you Why. Their work is to rake in
the Fund which the State takes in the form of
Tax.
Does the Plan of the State show the Good Sense of
that of the Man who owns the big House?
No, the State does not just put a Tax on each
Man's Land for what it may be Worth, as he does with
each Man's space in the House. It does what that wise
Man might try to do, as I have said, if he were not
Wise. It lets slick Chaps own and run its Hoists
(rail roads) for their own Gain; it tries to Tax the
Trade each Man does in his own Store, or what he
earns by Toil; it puts a Tax on what comes in at the
Ports, and on some Things that go out. It is a Plan
that Costs Much and is not Just or Fair.
|
Woodcut: In the left half of the panel, a uniformed
man is looking through a bag carried by one of two
well-dressed hatted women. On the right, two similarly
uniformed men are chatting. On the wall is a sign
saying "Customs." |
canons of
taxation
tariffs
|
LESSON XX — Milk
Keeps Just ... Rent For State ... Same Calf
Law
|
Oh, see the Cow, and the nice wee Calf.
Does the Calf call the Cow ma?
Yes, and the Cow loves the Calf. The Calf lives on
Milk, which it draws from the Cow. In this we see the
great Law of God once more. When a Calf is born it
needs Milk for Food that it may Live and Thrive, and
so in each case the Cow has Milk for it. If the Milk
were kept from the Calf, and it were fed on Hay and
Roots, it would be like to Starve, for Milk is its
right Food. Now, just as the Cow brings forth Milk
for the use of the Calf, so does the Land bring forth
a Fund for the use of the State. The Milk for the
State we call Ground Rent. It is a Fund from which
the State could draw all it Needs to serve all its
Just Ends, just as the Calf will thrive on the Milk
of the Cow.
|
Woodcut: A bucolic scene, with three animals. The
first and largest is a Cow, labeled "Land Value." The
second is a calf, labeled "The State." In the
background is a grazing figure, which might be another
calf. There is also a post with a line attached to
it. |
rent
as God's provisioning for all
intelligent
design
rent
|
LESSON XXI — Goat
Owns Cow ... Takes The Milk ... Like Land
Lords
|
But see! What is this?
It is a Goat!
Is it a Calf?
No, it is a Goat.
But why is it Here, and what does it Mean to
do?
Just what you See it do now. The Calf is Tied, you
see, and the Goat sucks the Cow's Milk. Goats are
fond of Milk, and this Goat has quite a Snap.
Is this Right?
Well -- yes, I Guess it is, for the Goat "Owns"
the Cow, and it is a Queer Thing if it can not take
the Milk.
But what of the Calf?
Oh, the Goat "Bought" the Cow, you know, by Leave
of the Calf -- which is a Beast of Small Sense -- and
now, while the Goat takes the Milk for its own Use,
the Calf has to be Fed on Things that do not Suit it
as well as the Milk would do. Just in this way the
State (which is a Calf) lets Land Lords own the Land
and Feed on the Rent, while it has to do the Best it
can to keep Life in it by a Tax on Goods, and Toil,
and so forth.
|
Woodcut: Same figures. But now the calf is tethered
to the post, which is now labeled "Tax System." And the
other figure, previously grazing in the background, is
now in the foreground, nursing from the Cow. It is a
goat, labeled "Landlordism." |
theft
privatization
ownership
privilege
sales
taxes
|
LESSON XXII
— Toil Digs Pick ... Must Have Land ...
Thus Makes Wealth
|
What is this?
It is a Man at Work with a Pick.
Does he Dig?
Yes, he Digs in the Land.
What is his Name?
We call him Toil.
Will he Dig all Day?
No, he will Dig but part of the Day, and then he
will Rest. He can make as Much in that time as he
Needs for his Keep, and then he will Read so as to
Feed his Mind, and Play that he may have Health.
You say he can "Make as Much as he Needs." What is
it he Makes?
We call it Wealth. This Word just Means all that
is got by Toil.
But could Toil get any Wealth if he were with his
Pick out on the Sea or up in the Air?
No, he must be on the Land. Toil and Land are the
two Things by which all Wealth is Got, and there is
no other Way to get Wealth in all the World. There is
not a Thing that Man has, or that he can have, but
what comes from Land and Toil.
|
Woodcut: A workman with a pick, about to strike
some rocks. |
labor
land
wealth
|
LESSON XXIII
— Man Brings Oxen ... Thus Helps Toil
... His Good Friend
|
But what do you Call this?
It is a Plow and Oxen.
Does the Man own the Plow and Oxen?
Yes.
What does he Mean to do with them?
He is on his Way to where Toil is at Work. He
means to give Toil the Use of the Plow and Oxen in
his work on the Land.
Is he not a good, kind Man?
He is, and he is a firm Friend of Toil.
What is the good Man's name?
You may read it on his Ox. By the use of the Plow
in place of the Pick, you see, he will aid Toil to do
much more, and so get much more of a Crop, and this
he will, of course, Share with his good Friend, as is
but Just, since by the Help he gave so much more Work
was done in the same Time.
Is it Right that he should have this Share?
I think it is, my Child. I know some try to make
Out that he is the Foe of Toil, but it is not like a
Foe to Help one, is it? He and Toil are Friends.
|
Woodcut: The same man is leaning on his pick.
Nearby is another man, with a whip and a team of two
oxen pulling a plow. On the flank of the nearer ox is
written the word "Capital." |
labor
capital
technological
progress
savings
interest
factors of
production
|
LESSON XXIV
— Toil And Friend ... Now Quite Mad ...
Worm Eats Fruit
|
Who are these two Men, and why do they Dance and
Tear as if they were Mad?
They are Toil and his Friend.
They have done the Work, and now they are mad at
the Worm which eats the Fruit. You see the Fruit is
Wealth -- that is, what was got by the Joint Work of
the Two on the Land. The Fruit is to be cut in two
Parts, one for Toil, which we call his Wage, and one
for his Friend, which we call In-ter-est.
Is it Strange that they are Mad at the Worm, which
means to Eat up most of the Fruit? Did the Worm help
them to get this Fruit of Work?
No; but the Worm owns the Land out of which they
have to get all the Wealth that can be got, and so it
Claims its share in the form of Rent. But the Worm
does no Work. It's Plan is to let them Work, and then
take Toll.
|
Woodcut: The same two men. The first has put down
his pick and appears to be stomping his feet. The
second too might be stomping; he is also waving his
whip. The oxen are in the background. Between the men
is a large round fruit, labeled "Product" and on top of
it is a large caterpillar or worm labeled
"Landlordism." |
labor
capital
wages
interest
fruits of one's
labor
he who
produces
land
land
monopoly
ownership
in
one's sleep
all
benefits...
|
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Lessons 1-12
| Lessons 13-24 | Lessons 25-36 | Lessons 37-48 | Lessons 49-60 | Lessons 61-70
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