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Title: Robinson Crusoe's Money;

Author: David Ames Wells

Illustrator: Thomas Nast

Release date: August 6, 2012 [eBook #40429]
Most recently updated: October 23, 2024

Language: English

Credits: Produced by Jeroen Hellingman and the Online Distributed
Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net/ for Project
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*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ROBINSON CRUSOE'S MONEY; ***

Robinson Crusoe’s Money.

By David A. Wells.

New York:

Harper & Brothers, Publishers,

Franklin Square.

1876.

“I smiled at myself at the sight of all this money. ‘Oh, drug,’ said I, aloud, ‘what art thou good for? Thou art not worth to me, no, not the taking off the ground. One of these knives is worth all this heap.’”—Page 9.

“I smiled at myself at the sight of all this money. ‘Oh, drug,’ said I, aloud, ‘what art thou good for? Thou art not worth to me, no, not the taking off the ground. One of these knives is worth all this heap.’”—Page 9.

Cobden Club Edition.
Robinson Crusoe’s Money;
Or, the
Remarkable Financial Fortunes and Misfortunes
of a Remote Island Community.

“It requires a great deal of philosophy to observe once what may be seen every day.”—Rousseau.

New York:
Harper & Brothers, Publishers,
Franklin Square.
1876.

Preface.

Preface.

The origin of this little book is as follows: Some months ago, the expediency was suggested to the author, by certain prominent friends of hard money in this country, of preparing for popular reading—and possibly for political campaign purposes—a little tract, or essay, in which the elementary principles underlying the important subjects of money and currency should be presented and illustrated from the simplest A B C stand-point. That such a work was desirable, and that none of the very great number of speeches and essays already published on these topics in all respects answered the existing requirement, was admitted; but how to invest subjects, so often discussed, and so commonly regarded as dry and abstract, with sufficient new interest to render them at once attractive and intelligible to those whose tastes disincline them to close reasoning and investigation, was a matter not easy to determine.

At last the old idea—recognized in fables, allegories, and parables—of making a story the medium for communicating instruction, suggested itself; and, in accordance with the suggestion, a remote island community has been imagined, in which, starting from conditions but one remove from barbarism, but gradually rising to a high degree of civilization, the progress, the use, and the abuse of the instrumentalities and mechanism of exchange—through barter, money, and currency—have been traced consecutively; and the effect of the application of not a few of the most popular fiscal recommendations and theories of the day practically worked out and recorded. And, in carrying out this scheme, the reader will not fail to perceive, by reference to the marginal notes accompanying the text, that hardly an absurdity in reference to exchange, money, or currency can be imagined, which somewhere and at some time has not had its exact counterpart in actual history or experience.

If any apology for the objects designed or the course pursued is needed, the author thinks he finds it in the precedent established by the illustrious Geoffrey Crayon, Gent., who, in the introduction to his “Tales of a Traveler,” thus happily sets forth the special advantage which accrues from the proper employment of a story as a means of communicating information. “I am not,” he says, “for those barefaced tales which carry their moral on their surface, staring one in the face; on the contrary, I have often hid my moral from sight, and disguised it as much as possible by sweets and spices; so that while the simple reader is listening with open mouth to a ghost or love story, he may have a bolus of sound morality popped down his throat, and be never the wiser for the fraud.”

Whether in “Robinson Crusoe’s Money” the author shall succeed in inducing his fellow-countrymen—to whom the ordinary currency medicine is becoming distasteful—to swallow without wry faces the same dose sugar-coated, remains to be determined.

Norwich, Conn., January, 1876.

Contents.

Chapter I.      Page

The Three Great Bags of Money      11

Chapter II.

A New Social Order of Things      13

Chapter III.

The Period of Barter      15

Chapter IV.

How They Invented Money      20

Chapter V.

How the People on the Island and Elsewhere Learned Wisdom      26

Chapter VI.

Gold, and How they Came to Use It      33

Chapter VII.

How the Islanders Determined to be an Honest and Free People      50

Chapter VIII.

How the People on the Island Came to Use Currency in the Place of Money      55

Chapter IX.

War with the Cannibals, and What Came of It      60

Chapter X.

After the War      72

Chapter XI.

The New Millennium      83

Chapter XII.

Getting Sober      108