Page:History of the Indian Archipelago Vol 3.djvu/382

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page needs to be proofread.

36G COMMERCIAL DESCRIPTION OF to have been laid in in India at the rate of six Spa- nish dollars the picul, and freight to have ac- tually cost the Portuguese, in the early and im- perfect state of their navigation, as high as L. 50 Sterling per ton, or above si:v times the present prices, they ought still, had there been a free trade, to have sold at 7d. per pound. To the difference between land and sea carriage must be added, the superior risk of three sea voyages, — the expences of frequent shipment and trans-shipment, the many arbitrary imposts, in the form of import, transit, and export duties, levied by barbarous states, * with the risk of plunder and depredation in passing through the territories of barbarous hordes, t Another important remark occurs, that, during the short period in which the Dutch had a mono- poly of the pepper trade, the price rose 100 per cent, above what it was in the time even of the Portu- guese, and 114S per cent, beyond what it had been before the discovery of the route by the Cape of Good Hope. This shews at once the condition to • The duties levied by the Soldans of Egypt alone are said to have amounted to one-third of the price of the goods at Alexandria.

"What goods," says the author of the Wealth of Na- 

tions, " could bear the expence of land carriage between London and Calcutta ? Or, if there were any so precious as to be able to support the expence, with what safety could they be transported through the territories of so naany bar- barous nations ?" — Book I- Chap- III-