Life of Adam Smith
181 pages
English

Life of Adam Smith

-

Le téléchargement nécessite un accès à la bibliothèque YouScribe
Tout savoir sur nos offres
181 pages
English
Le téléchargement nécessite un accès à la bibliothèque YouScribe
Tout savoir sur nos offres

Description

! " #$ % " & ! ! # # ! ' ' ! ( ' ( ) )**+ , -./.012 ' ! 3 ' 4 5&66+0&. 777 58 94 5 3 : ; 55> #% %# # ? ! % ! " ! ! ! @A ! 8 ? 8> !! B %'>> !! # # B !"# $ % !

Informations

Publié par
Publié le 08 décembre 2010
Nombre de lectures 26
Langue English
Poids de l'ouvrage 1 Mo

Extrait

#% %# # ? ! % ! " ! ! ! @A ! 8 ? 8> !! B %'>> !! # # B !"# $ % !" />
The Project Gutenberg EBook of Life of Adam Smith, by John Rae
This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.net
Title: Life of Adam Smith
Author: John Rae
Release Date: December 2, 2005 [EBook #17196]
Language: English
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LIFE OF ADAM SMITH ***
Produced by Robert Connal, Richard J. Shiffer and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net. (This file was produced from images generously made available by the Bibliothèque nationale de France (BnF/Gallica) at http://gallica.bnf.fr)
Life of Adam Smith
By JOHN RAE
London
MACMILLAN & CO.
ANDNEWYORK
1895
PREFACE
THEfullest account we possess of the life of Adam Smith is still the memoir which Dugald Stewart read to the Royal Society of Edinburgh on two evenings of the winter of 1793, and which he subsequently published as a separate work, with many additional illustrative notes, in 1810. Later biographers have made few, if any, fresh contributions to the subject. But in the century that has elapsed since Stewart wrote, many particulars about Smith and a number of his letters have incidentally and by very scattered channels found their way into print. It will be allowed to be generally desirable, in view of the continued if not even increasing importance of Smith, to obtain as complete a view of his career and work as it is still in our power to recover; and it appeared not unlikely that some useful contribution to this end might result if all those particulars and letters to which I have alluded were collected together, and if they were supplemented by such unpublished letters and information as it still remained possible to procure. In this last part of my task I have been greatly assisted by the Senatus of the University of Glasgow, who have most kindly supplied me with an extract of every passage in the College records bearing on Smith; by the Council of the Royal Society of Edinburgh, who have granted me every facility for using theHume Correspondence, which is in their custody; and by the Senatus of the University of Edinburgh for a similar courtesy with regard to theCarlyle Correspondence and the David Laing MSS. in their library. I am also deeply indebted, for the use of unpublished letters or for the supply of special information, to the Duke of Buccleuch, the Marquis of Lansdowne, Professor R.O. Cunningham of Queen's College, Belfast, Mr. Alfred Morrison of Fonthill, Mr. F. Barker of Brook Green, and Mr. W. Skinner, W.S., late Town Clerk of Edinburgh.
[Pg vi]
CONTENTS
CHAPTER I
EARLYDAYSATKIRKCALDY
Birth and parentage,1. Adam Smith senior,1; his death and funeral,3. Smith's mother,4. Burgh School of Kirkcaldy,5. Schoolmaster's drama,6. School-fellows,6. Industries of Kirkcaldy,7.
CHAPTER II
STUDENTATGLASGOWCOLLEGE
Professors and state of learning there,9. Smith's taste for mathematics,10. Professor R. Simson,10. Hutcheson,11; his influence over Smith,13; his economic teaching,14. Smith's early connection with Hume,15. Snell exhibitioner,16. College friends,17.
CHAPTER III
ATOXFORD
Scotch and English agriculture,18. Expenses at Oxford,19. Did Smith graduate?20. State of learning,20; Smith's censure of,20. His gratitude to Oxford,22. Life in Balliol College,22. Smith's devotion to classics and belles-lettres,23. Confiscation of his copy of Hume's Treatise,24. Ill-health,25. Snell exhibitioners ill-treated and discontented at Balliol,26. Desire transference to other college,27. Smith's college friends, or his want of them,28. Return to Scotland,28.
CHAPTER IV
LECTURERATEDINBURGH
Lord Kames,31. Smith's class on English literature,32. Blair's alleged obligations to Smith's lectures,33. Smith's views as a critic,34. His addiction to poetry,35. His economic lectures,36. James Oswald, M.P.,37. Oswald's economic correspondence with Hume, 37. Hamilton of Bangour's poems edited by Smith,38. Dedication to second edition,40.
CHAPTER V
PROFESSORATGLASGOW
Admission to Logic chair,42. Letter to Cullen about undertaking Moral Philosophy class,44. Letter to Cullen on Hume's candidature for Logic chair and other business,45. Burke's alleged candidature,46. Hume's defeat,47. Moral Philosophy class income,48. Work, 50. Professor John Millar,53. His account of Smith's lectures,54; of his qualities as lecturer,56. Smith's students,57. H. Erskine, Boswell, T. Fitzmaurice, Tronchin,58,59. Smith's religious views suspected,60. His influence in Glasgow,60. Conversion of merchants to free trade,61. Manifesto of doctrines in 1755,61. Its exposition of economic liberty,62. Smith's alleged habitual fear of the plagiarist,64. This manifesto not directed against Adam Ferguson,65.
CHAPTER VI
THECOLLEGEADMINISTRATOR
Smith's alleged helplessness in business transactions,66; his large participation in business at Glasgow,67. Appointed Quæstor,68; Dean of Faculty,68; Vice-Rector,68. Dissensions in the University,69; their origin in the academic constitution,70. Enlightened educational policy of the University authorities,71. James Watt, University instrument-maker; Robert Foulis, University printer,71. Wilson, type-founder and astronomer. The Academy of Design. Professor Anderson's classes for working men,72. Smith and Watt,73. Smith's connection with Foulis's Academy of Design,74. Smith and
[Pg vii]
[Pg viii]
Wilson's type-foundry,77. Proposed academy of dancing, fencing, and riding in the University,79. Smith's opposition to the new Glasgow theatre,80; his generally favourable views on theatrical representations,81. His protests against Professor Anderson voting for his own translation to Natural Philosophy chair,83. Joins in refusing Professor Rouet leave to travel abroad with a pupil, and in depriving him of office for his absenteeism,84.
CHAPTER VII
AMONGGLASGOWFOLK
Glasgow at period of Smith's residence,87; its beauty,88; its expanding commerce and industry,89; its merchants,90. Andrew Cochrane,91. The economic club,92. Duty on American iron and foreign linen yarns,93. Paper money,94. The Literary Society,95. Smith's paper on Hume's Essays on Commerce,95. "Mr. Robin Simson's Club,"96. Saturday dinners at Anderston,97. Smith at whist,97. Simson's ode to the Divine Geometer,98. James Watt's account of this club,99. Professor Moor,99.
CHAPTER VIII
EDINBURGHACTIVITIES
Edinburgh friends,101. Wilkie, the poet,102. William Johnstone (afterwards Sir William Pulteney),103. Letter of Smith introducing Johnstone to Oswald,103. David Hume,105. The Select Society,107; Smith's speech at its first meeting,108; its debates,109; its great attention to economic subjects,110; its practical work for improvement of arts, manufactures, and agriculture,112; its dissolution,118. Thomas Sheridan's classes on elocution,119. TheEdinburgh Review,120; Smith's contributions,121; on Wit and Humour,122; on French and English classics,123; on Rousseau's discourse on inequality,124. Smith's republicanism,124. Premature end of theReview,124; Hume's exclusion from it,126. Attempt to subject him to ecclesiastical censure,127. Smith's views and Douglas'sCriterion of Miracles Examined,129. Home'sDouglas,130. Chair of Jurisprudence in Edinburgh,131. Miss Hepburn,133. The Poker Club,134; founded to agitate for a Scots militia,135. Smith's change of opinion on that subject,137. The tax on French wines,139.
CHAPTER IX
THE"THEORYOFMORALSENTIMENTS"
Letter from Hume,141. Burke's criticism,145. Charles Townshend,146. Letter from Smith to Townshend,148. Second edition of Theory,148. Letter from Smith to Strahan,149. The union of Scotland with England,150. Benjamin Franklin,150.
CHAPTER X
FIRSTVISITTOLONDON
Conversion of Lord Shelburne to free trade,153. Altercation with Dr. Johnson,154. Boswell's account,155; Sir Walter Scott's,156; Bishop Wilberforce's,157.
CHAPTER XI
LASTYEARINGLASGOW
Letter on Rev. W. Ward's Rational Grammar,159. Letter to Hume introducing Mr. Henry Herbert,161. Smith's indignation at Shelburne's intrigues with Lord Bute,162. On Wilkes, 163. Letter from Hume at Paris,163. Letter from Charles Townshend about Buccleugh tutorship,164. Smith's acceptance,165. Salary of such posts,165. Smith's poor opinion of the educational value of the system,166. Smith's arrangements for return of class fees and conduct of class,167. Letter to Hume announcing his speedy departure for Paris, 168. Parting with his students,169. Letter resigning chair,172.
CHAPTER XII
TOULOUSE
[Pg ix]
[Pg x]
Sir James Macdonald,174. Toulouse,175. Abbé Colbert,175. The Cuthberts of Castlehill, 176. Archbishop Loménie de Brienne,177. Letter to Hume,178. Trip to Bordeaux,179. Colonel Barré,179. Toulouse and Bordeaux,180. Sobriety of Southern France,180. Duke of Richelieu,181. Letter to Hume,181; letter to Hume,183. Visit to Montpellier,183. Horne Tooke,183. The States of Languedoc,183. The provincial assembly question, 184. Parliament of Toulouse,185. The Calas case,186.
CHAPTER XIII
GENEVA
Its constitution,188. Voltaire,189; Smith's veneration for,190; remarks to Rogers and Saint Fond on,190. Charles Bonnet, G.L. Le Sage,191. Duchesse d'Enville and Duc de la Rochefoucauld,192. Lord Stanhope, Lady Conyers,193.
CHAPTER XIV
PARIS
Arrival,194. Departure of Hume,196. Smith's reception in society,197. Comtesse de Boufflers,198. Baron d'Holbach,199. Helvetius,200. Morellet,200. Mademoiselle de l'Espinasse,201. Turgot and D'Alembert,202. Question of literary obligations,203. Alleged correspondence,204. Smith's opinion of Turgot,205. Necker,206. Dispute between Rousseau and Hume,206. Letter to Hume,208. Madame Riccoboni,210; letter from her to Garrick introducing Smith,211. Visit to Abbeville,212. A marquise,213. The French theatre,214. Smith's love of music,214. The French economists,215. Dupont de Nemours's allusion,215. Quesnay,216. Views of the political situation,217. Mercier de la Rivière and Mirabeau,218. Activity of the sect in 1766,219. Smith's views of effect of moderate taxation on wages,220. Illness of Duke of Buccleugh at Compiègne,222. Letter of Smith to Townshend,222. Hume's perplexity where to stay,225. Death of Hon. Hew Campbell Scott,226. Duke of Buccleugh on the tutorship,226. Smith's merits as tutor,227. His improvement from his travels,227; their value to him as thinker,228. Did he foresee the Revolution?229. His views on condition of French people,230. His suggestion for reform of French taxation,231.
CHAPTER XV
LONDON
Arrival in November 1766,232. On Hume's continuing hisHistory,233. Third edition of Theory,233. Letter to Strahan,234. Letter to Lord Shelburne,233. Alexander Dalrymple, hydrographer,235. Colonies of ancient Rome,236. Anecdote of Smith's absence of mind,237. F.R.S.,238.
CHAPTER XVI
KIRKCALDY
Count de Sarsfield,240. Letter from Smith to Hume,241. His daily life in Kirkcaldy,242. Letter to Hume from Dalkeith,243. Bishop Oswald,243. Captain Skene,243. The Duchess of Buccleugh,243. Home-coming at Dalkeith,244. The Duke,245. Stories of Smith's absence of mind,246. Letter to Lord Hailes on old Scots Acts about hostellaries,247. On the Douglas case,248. Reported completion ofWealth of Nationsin 1770,251. Smith receives freedom of Edinburgh,251. Letter to Sir W. Pulteney on his book and an Indian appointment,253. Crisis of 1772,254. The Indian appointment,255; Thorold Rogers on, 256. Work onWealth of Nationafter this date,257. Tutorship to Duke of Hamilton,258. Anecdote of absence of mind,259. Habits in composingWealth of Nations,260.
CHAPTER XVII
LONDON
Letter to Hume appointing him literary executor,262. Long residence in London,263. Assistance from Franklin,264. Recommendation of Adam Ferguson for Chesterfield tutorship,266. Hume's proposal as to Smith taking Ferguson's place in the Moral Philosophychair,266. The British Coffee-House,267. Election to the LiteraryClub,267.
[Pg xi]
Smith's conversation,268. His alleged aversion to speak of what he knew,269. Attends William Hunter's lectures,271. Letter to Cullen on freedom of medical instruction,273. Hume's health,280. Smith's zeal on the American question,281. Advocacy of colonial incorporation,282.
CHAPTER XVIII
"THEWEALTHOFNATIONS"
Terms of publication and sales,285. Letter from Hume,286. Gibbon's opinion,287; Sir John Pringle's,288; Buckle's,288. General reception,288. Fox's quotation,289. Fox and Lauderdale's conversation on Smith,289. Quotations in Parliament,290. Popular association of economics with "French principles,"291. Prejudice against free trade as a revolutionary doctrine,291. Editions of the book,293. Immediate influence of the book on English taxation,294.
CHAPTER XIX
THEDEATHOFHUME
Smith and John Home meet Hume at Morpeth,295. TheDialogues on Natural Religion,296. Letter from Hume,297. Hume's farewell dinner,299. Correspondence between Hume and Smith about theDialogues,300. Hume's death and monument in Calton cemetery, 302. Correspondence of Smith with Home or Ninewells,302. Correspondence with Strahan on theDialogues,305. Copy money forWealth of Nations. Strahan's proposal to publish selection of Hume's letters,309. Smith's reply,310. Clamour raised by the letter to Strahan on Hume's death,311. Bishop Horne's pamphlet,312. Was Hume a Theist? 313. Mackenzie's "La Roche,"314.
CHAPTER XX
LONDONAGAINAPPOINTEDCOMMISSIONEROFCUSTOMS
Mickle's translation of theLusiad,316. His causeless resentment against Smith,317. Governor Pownall,318. Letter of Smith to Pownall,319. Appointed Commissioner of Customs,320. Lord North's indebtedness to theWealth of Nations,320. Salary of post, 321. Correspondence with Strahan,321.
CHAPTER XXI
INEDINBURGH
Panmure House, Canongate,325; Windham on,326. Sunday suppers,327. Smith's library, 327. His personal appearance,329. Work in the Custom House,330. Anecdotes of absence of mind,330. Devotion to Greek and Latin classics,333. The Oyster Club,334. Dr. Black and Dr. Hutton,336.
CHAPTER XXII
VARIOUSCORRESPONDENCEIN1778
Letter from Duc de la Rochefoucauld,339. Letter to Lord Kames,341. Sir John Sinclair's manuscript work on the Sabbath,342. The surrender at Saratoga,343. Letter to Sir John Sinclair on theMémoires concernant les Impositions,343. Smith's view of taxes on the necessaries and on the luxuries of the poor,345.
CHAPTER XXIII
FREETRADEFORIRELAND
Commercial restrictions on Ireland,346. Popular discontent,347. Demand for free trade,347. Grattan's motion,348. Smith consulted by Government,349. Letter to Lord Carlisle,350. Letter from Dundas to Smith,352. Smith's reply,353. Smith's advocacy of union,356.
CHAPTER XXIV
THE"WEALTHOFNATIONS"ABROADANDATHOME
[Pg xii]
[Pg xiii]
Danish translation,357. Letter of Smith to Strahan,357. French translations,358; German, 359; Italian and Spanish,360. Suppressed by the Inquisition,360. Letter to Cadell,361. Letter to Cadell on new edition,362. Dr. Swediaur,362. The additional matter,363.
CHAPTER XXV
SMITHINTERVIEWED
Reminiscences in theBee,365. Opinion of Dr. Johnson,366; Dr. Campbell of thePolitical Survey,366; Swift,367; Livy,367; Shakespeare,368; Dryden,368; Beattie,368; Pope's Iliad, Milton's shorter poems, Gray, Allan Ramsay, Percy'sReliques,369; Burke,369; the Reviews,370. Gibbon'sHistory,371. Professor Faujas Saint Fond's reminiscences, 372. Voltaire and Rousseau,372. The bagpipe competition,372. Smith made Captain of the Trained Bands,374. Foundation of Royal Society of Edinburgh,375. Count de Windischgraetz's proposed reform of legal terminology,376.
CHAPTER XXVI
THEAMERICANQUESTIONANDOTHERPOLITICS
Smith's Whiggism,378. Mackinnon of Mackinnon's manuscript treatise on fortification,379. Letter from Smith,380. Letter to Sir John Sinclair on the Armed Neutrality,382. Letter to W. Eden (Lord Auckland) on the American Intercourse Bill,385. Fox's East India Bill,386.
CHAPTER XXVII
BURKEINSCOTLAND
Friendship of Burke and Smith,387. Burke in Edinburgh,388. Smith's prophecy of restoration of the Whigs to power,389. With Burke in Glasgow,390. Andrew Stuart,391. Letter of Smith to J. Davidson,392. Death of Smith's mother,393. Burke and Windham in Edinburgh,394. Dinner at Smith's,394. Windham love-struck,395. John Logan, the poet, 396. Letter of Smith to Andrew Strahan,396.
CHAPTER XXVIII
THEPOPULATIONQUESTION
Dr. R. Price on the decline of population,398. Dr. A. Webster's lists of examinable persons in Scotland,399. Letter of Smith to Eden,400. Smith's opinion of Price,400. Further letter to Eden,400. Henry Hope of Amsterdam,401. Letter to Bishop Douglas, introducing Beatson of thePolitical Index,403.
CHAPTER XXIX
VISITTOLONDON
Meeting with Pitt at Dundas's,405. Smith's remark about Pitt,405. Consulted by Pitt,406. Opinion on Sunday schools,407. Wilberforce and Smith,407. The British Fisheries Society,408. Smith's prognostication confirmed,409. Chosen Lord Rector of Glasgow University,410. Letter to Principal Davidson,411. Installation,412. Sir John Leslie,412. Letter of Smith to Sir Joseph Banks,413. Death of Miss Douglas,414. Letter to Gibbon, 414.
CHAPTER XXX
VISITOFSAMUELROGERS
Smith at breakfast,416. Strawberries,417. Old town of Edinburgh,417. Loch Lomond,417. The refusal of corn to France,417. "ThatBogle,"418. Junius,429. Dinner at Smith's, 420. At the Royal Society meeting,421. Smith on Bentham'sDefence of Usury,422.
CHAPTER XXXI
REVISIONOFTHE"THEORY"
[Pg xiv]
[Pg xv]
  • Univers Univers
  • Ebooks Ebooks
  • Livres audio Livres audio
  • Presse Presse
  • Podcasts Podcasts
  • BD BD
  • Documents Documents