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TIME AND TIDE.
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LETTER XXII.

Of the Normal Position and Duties of the Upper Classes. General Statement of the Land Question.

April 17, 1867.

136.IN passing now to the statement of A conditions affecting the interests of the upper classes, I would rather have addressed these closing letters to one of themselves than to you, for it is with their own faults and needs that each class is primarily concerned. As, however, unless I kept the letters- private, this change of their address would be but a matter of courtesy and form, not of any true prudential use ; and as besides I am now no more inclined to reticence—prudent or otherwise; but desire only to state the facts of our national economy as clearly and completely as may be, I pursue the subject without respect of persons.

137. Before examining what the occupation