Page:Reflections on the Formation and the Distribution of Riches by Anne Turgot.djvu/128

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APPENDIX.

EXCERPTS FROM TURGOT'S CORRESPONDENCE.


1. Turgot to Hume, July 23, 1766.

I am tempted to send you at the same time a trifle of a very different sort,—the programme of an academic prize I think of offering, on a subject we have sometimes discussed. The best means of deciding this, like all other questions, is to get it discussed by the public. I have tried to set forth the state of the question in a clear fashion, as well as the different aspects under which it may be considered. I very much wish you could have the time to give us your ideas. We should take essays on the subject even in English. Our economic philosophers, who belong to Quesnay's sect,[1] will strongly maintain the system of their master. This is a system from which the English writers have been far removed, up to the present; and it is too hard to reconcile its principles with the ambition to monopolize the commerce of the universe for one to expect that they will adopt it from this side for a long time to come. It would, however, be very desirable that Mr. Pitt, and all those who lead the nations, should think as Quesnay does upon all these points. I fear greatly lest your famous demagogue should follow altogether different principles, and think himself interested

  1. Sectateurs de Quesnay.