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the unseen world and other essays-第39章

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eep in their houses; lest they should be buried beneath them during the night。〃 These terrible beasts continued to infest the province as late as 1810。

But society during these dark days had even worse enemies than tigers and elephants。 The barbarous highlanders; of a lower type of mankind; nourishing for forty centuries a hatred of their Hindu supplanters; like that which the Apache bears against the white frontiersman; seized the occasion to renew their inroads upon the lowland country。 Year by year they descended from their mountain fastnesses; plundering and burning。 Many noble Hindu families; ousted by the tax…collectors from their estates; began to seek subsistence from robbery。 Others; consulting their selfish interests amid the general distress; 〃found it more profitable to shelter banditti on their estates; levying blackmail from the surrounding villages as the price of immunity from depredation; and sharing in the plunder of such as would not come to terms。 Their country houses were robber strongholds; and the early English administrators of Bengal have left it on record that a gang…robbery never occurred without a landed proprietor being at the bottom of it。〃 The peasants were not slow to follow suit; and those who were robbed of their winter's store had no alternative left but to become robbers themselves。 The thieveries of the Fakeers; or religious mendicants; and the bold; though stealthy attacks of Thugs and Dacoitsmembers of Masonic brotherhoods; which at all times have lived by robbery and assassinationadded to the general turmoil。 In the cold weather of 1772 the province was ravaged far and wide by bands of armed freebooters; fifty thousand strong; and to such a pass did things arrive that the regular forces sent by Warren Hastings to preserve order were twice disastrously routed; while; in Mr。 Hunter's graphic language; 〃villages high up the Ganges lived by housebreaking in Calcutta。〃 In English mansions 〃it was the invariable practice for the porter to shut the outer door at the commencement of each meal; and not to open it till the butler brought him word that the plate was safely locked up。〃 And for a long time nearly all traffic ceased upon the imperial roads。

This state of things; which amounted to chronic civil war; induced Lord Cornwallis in 1788 to place the province under the direct military control of an English officer。 The administration of Mr。 Keatingthe first hardy gentleman to whom this arduous office was assignedis minutely described by our author。 For our present purpose it is enough to note that two years of severe campaigning; attended and followed by relentless punishment of all transgressors; was required to put an end to the disorders。

Such was the appalling misery; throughout a community of thirty million persons; occasioned by the failure of the winter rice…crop in 1769。 In abridging Mr。 Hunter's account we have adhered as closely to our original as possible; but he who would obtain adequate knowledge of this tale of woe must seek it in the ever memorable description of the historian himself。 The first question which naturally occurs to the readerthough; as Mr。 Hunter observes; it would have been one of the last to occur to the Oriental mindis; Who was to blame? To what culpable negligence was it due that such a dire calamity was not foreseen; and at least partially warded off? We shall find reason to believe that it could not have been adequately foreseen; and that no legislative measures could in that state of society have entirely prevented it。 Yet it will appear that the government; with the best of intentions; did all in its power to make matters worse; and that to its blundering ignorance the distress which followed is largely due。

The first duty incumbent upon the government in a case like that of the failure of the winter rice…crop of 1769; was to do away with all hindrance to the importation of food into the province。 One chief cause of the far…reaching distress wrought by great Asiatic famines has been the almost complete commercial isolation of Asiatic communities。 In the Middle Ages the European communities were also; though to a far less extent; isolated from each other; and in those days periods of famine were comparatively frequent and severe。 And one of the chief causes which now render the occurrence of a famine on a great scale almost impossible in any part of the civilized world is the increased commercial solidarity of civilized nations。 Increased facility of distribution has operated no less effectively than improved methods of production。

Now; in 1770 the province of Lower Bengal was in a state of almost complete commercial isolation from other communities。 Importation of food on an adequate scale was hardly possible。 〃A single fact speaks volumes as to the isolation of each district。 An abundant harvest; we are repeatedly told; was as disastrous to the revenues as a bad one; for; when a large quantity of grain had to be carried to market; the cost of carriage swallowed up the price obtained。 Indeed; even if the means of intercommunication and transport had rendered importation practicable; the province had at that time no money to give in exchange for food。 Not only had its various divisions a separate currency which would pass nowhere else except at a ruinous exchange; but in that unfortunate year Bengal seems to have been utterly drained of its specie。。。。。 The absence of the means of importation was the more to be deplored; as the neighbouring districts could easily have supplied grain。 In the southeast a fair harvest had been reaped; except; in circumscribed spots; and we are assured that; during the famine; this part of Bengal was enabled to export without having to complain of any deficiency in consequence。。。。。 INDEED; NO MATTER HOW LOCAL A FAMINE MIGHT BE IN THE LAST CENTURY; THE EFFECTS WERE EQUALLY DISASTROUS。 Sylhet; a district in the northeast of Bengal; had reaped unusually plentiful harvests in 1780 and 1781; but the next crop was destroyed by a local inundation; and; notwithstanding the facilities for importation afforded by water…carriage; one third of the people died。〃

Here we have a vivid representation of the economic condition of a society which; however highly civilized in many important respects; still retained; at the epoch treated of; its aboriginal type of organization。 Here we see each community brought face to face with the impossible task of supplying; unaided; the deficiencies of nature。 We see one petty district a prey to the most frightful destitution; even while profuse plenty reigns in the districts round about it。 We find an almost complete absence of the commercial machinery which; by enabling the starving region to be fed out of the surplus of more favoured localities; has in the most advanced countries rendered a great famine practically impossible。

Now this state of things the government of 1770 was indeed powerless to remedy。 Legislative power and wisdom could not anticipate the invention of railroads; nor could it introduce throughout the length and breadth of Bengal a system of coaches; canals; and caravans; nor could it all at once do away with the time…honoured brigandage; which increased the cost of transport by decreasing the security of it; nor could it in a trice remove the curse of a heterogeneous coinage。 None; save those uninstructed agitators who believe that governments can make water run up…hill; would be disposed to find fault with the authorities in Bengal for failing to cope with these difficulties。 But what we are to blame them forthough it was an error of the judgment and not of the intentionsis their mischievous interference with the natural course of trade; by which; instead of helping matters; they but added another to the many powerful causes which were conspiring to bring about the economic ruin of Bengal。 We refer to the act which in 1770 prohibited under penalties all speculation in rice。

This disastrous piece of legislation was due to the universal prevalence of a prejudice from which so…called enlightened communities are not yet wholly free。 It is even now customary to heap abuse upon those persons who in a season of scarcity; when prices are rapidly rising; buy up the 〃necessaries of life;〃 thereby still increasing for a time the cost of living。 Such persons are commonly assailed with specious generalities to the effect that they are enemies of society。 People whose only ideas are 〃moral ideas〃 regard them as heartless sharpers who fatten upon the misery of their fellow…creatures。 And it is sometimes hinted that such 〃practices〃 ought to be stopped by legislation。

Now; so far is this prejudice; which is a very old one; from being justified by facts; that; instead of being an evil; speculation in breadstuffs and other necessaries is one of the chief agencies by which in modern times and civilized countries a real famine is rendered almost impossible。 This natural monopoly operates in two ways。 In the first place; by raising prices; it checks consumption; putting every one on shorter allowance until the season of scarcity is over; and thus prevents the scarcity from growing into famine。 In the second place; by raising prices; it stimulates importation from those localities where abund
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