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fire at a time; in both which cases the tradesman is often wounded too deep to recover.

The consequences of those adventures are generally such as these: first, That they stock-starve the tradesman, and impoverish him in his ordinary business, which is the main support of his family; they lessen his strength, and while his trade is not lessened, yet his stock is lessened; and as they very rarely add to his credit, so, if they lessen the man's stock, they weaken him in the main, and he must at last faint under it.

Secondly, as they lessen his stock, so they wound him in the tenderest and most nervous part, for they always draw away his ready money. And what follows? The money which was before the sinews of his business, the life of his trade, maintained his shop, and kept up his credit, being drawn off, like the blood let out of the veins, his trade languishes, his credit by degrees flags and goes off, and the tradesman falls under the weight.

Thus have I seen many a flourishing tradesman sensibly decay; his credit has first a little suffered; then, for want of that, trade has declined; that is to say, he has been obliged to trade for less and less, till at last he is wasted and reduced. If he had been wise enough, and wary enough, to draw out betimes, and avoid breaking, he has yet come out of trade, like an old invalid soldier out of the wars, maimed, bruised, and sick; reduced, and fitter for an hospital than a shop. Such miserable havoc has launching out into projects, and remote undertakings, made among tradesmen.

But the safe tradesman is he, that, avoiding all such remote excursions, keeps close within the verge of his own affairs, minds his shop or warehouse, and confining himself to what belongs to him there, goes on in the road of his business, without launching

into unknown oceans; and, content with the gain of his own trade, is neither led by ambition, nor avarice, and neither covets to be greater or richer by such uncertain and hazardous attempts.

CHAP. VII.

Of the tradesman in distress, and becoming bankrupt.

IN former times, it was a dismal and calamitous thing for a tradesman to break; where it befel a family, it put all into confusion and distraction; the man, in the utmost terror, fright, and distress, ran away with what goods he could get off, as if the house was on fire, to get into the Friars or the Mint; the family fled one one way, and one another, like people in desperation; the wife to her father and mother, if she had any; and the children, some to one relation, some to another; a statute of bankrupt came and swept away all, and oftentimes consumed it too, and left little or nothing, either to pay the creditors or relieve the bankrupt. This made the bankrupt desperate, and made him fly to those places of shelter with his goods, where, hardened by the cruelty of the creditors, he chose to spend all the effects which should have paid the creditors, and at last perished in misery.

But now the case is altered; men make so little of breaking, that many times the family scarce removes for it. A commission of bankrupt is so familiar a thing, that the debtor oftentimes causes it to be taken out in his favour, that he may the sooner be effectually delivered from all his creditors

at once, the law obliging him to give a full account of himself upon oath to the commissioners, who, when they see his integrity, may effectually deliver him from all further molestation, give him a part even of the creditors' estate; and so he may push into the world again, and try whether he cannot retrieve his fortunes by a better management, or with better success for the future.

Some have said this law is too favourable to the bankrupt; that it makes tradesmen careless; that they value not breaking at all, but run on at all hazards, venturing without forecast and without consideration, knowing they may come off again so cheap and so easy if they miscarry. But though I cannot enter here into a long debate upon that subject, yet I may have room to say that I differ from those people very much; for though the terror of the commission is in some measure abated, as indeed it ought to be, because it was exorbitant and unreasonable; yet the terror of ruining a man's family, sinking his fortunes, blasting his credit, and throwing him out of business and into the worst of disgrace that a tradesman can fall into, this is not taken away or abated at all; and this, to an honest trading man, is as bad as all the rest ever was or could be.

Nor can a man be supposed, in the rupture of his affairs, to receive any comfort, or to see through his disasters into the little relief which he may, and at the same time cannot be sure he shall, receive at the end of his troubles, from the mercy of the commission.

These are poor things, and very trifling, for a tradesman to entertain thoughts of a breach from, especially with any prospect of satisfaction; nor can any tradesman, with the least shadow of principle, entertain any thought of breaking but with the ut

most aversion, and even abhorrence; for the circumstances of it are attended with so many mortifications, and so many shocking things, contrary to all the views and expectations that a tradesman can begin the world with, that he cannot think of it but as we do of the grave, with a chillness in the blood and a tremour in the spirits. Breaking is the death of a tradesman; he is mortally stabbed, or, as we may say, shot through the head, in his trading capacity; his shop is shut up, as it is when a man is buried; his credit, the life and blood of his trade, is stagnated; and his attendance, which was the pulse of his business, is stopped, and beats no more; in a word, his fame, and even name, as to trade, is buried; and the commissioners that act upon him and all their proceedings, are but like the executors of the defunct, dividing the ruins of his fortune; and, at last, his certificate is a kind of performing the obsequies for the dead, and praying him out of purgatory.

Did ever tradesman set up on purpose to break? Did ever a man build himself a house on purpose to have it burnt down? I can by no means grant that any tradesman, at least in his senses, can entertain the least satisfaction in his trading, or abate anything of his diligence in trade, from the easiness of breaking, or the abated severities of the bankrupt

act.

I could argue it from the nature of the act itself, which indeed was made, and is effectual, chiefly for the relief of creditors, not debtors; to secure the bankrupt's effects for the use of those to whom of right they belong; and to prevent the extravagant expenses of the commission, which before were such as often devoured all, ruining both the bankrupt and his creditors too. This the present law has providently put a stop to, and the creditors now are

secure in this point, that what is to be had, what the poor tradesman has left, they are sure to have preserved for, and divided among them; which indeed before they were not. The case is so well known, and so recent in every tradesman's memory, that I need not take up any more time about it.

As to the encouragements in the act for the bankrupt, they are only these, namely, that upon his honest and faithful surrender of his affairs, he shall be set at liberty; and if they see cause, they, the creditors, may give him back a small gratification for his discovering his effects and assisting to the recovery of them; and all this, which amounts to very little, is upon his being, as I have said, entirely honest, and having run through all possible examinations and purgations; and that it is at the peril of his life if he prevaricates.

Are these encouragements to tradesmen to be negligent and careless of the event of things? Will any man in his wits fail in his trade, break his credit, and shut up his shop for these prospects? Or will he comfort himself, in case he is forced to fail, with these little benefits, and make the matter easy to himself on that account? He must have a very mean spirit that can do this, and must act upon very mean principles in life, who can fall with satisfaction, on purpose to rise no higher than this.

On these accounts and some others, too long to mention here, I think it is out of doubt that the easiness of the proceedings on commissions of bankrupt can be no encouragement to any tradesman to break, or so much as to entertain the thoughts of it, with less horror and aversion than he would have done before this law was made.

But I must come now to speak of the tradesman in his real state of mortification, and under the inevitable necessity of a blow upon his affairs; he has

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