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Nassau William Senior

Nassau William Senior (/ˈsniər/; 26 September 1790 – 4 June 1864), was an English lawyer known as an economist. He was also a government adviser over several decades on economic and social policy on which he wrote extensively.

Nassau William Senior
Nassau William Senior
Born(1790-09-26)26 September 1790
Died(1864-06-04)4 June 1864 (aged 73)
NationalityEnglish
Academic career
FieldPolitical economy
School or
tradition
Classical economics
InfluencesAdam Smith · Alexis de Tocqueville

Early life edit

He was born at Compton, Berkshire, the eldest son of Rev. J. R. Senior, vicar of Durnford, Wiltshire.[1] He was educated at Eton College and Magdalen College, Oxford; at university he was a private pupil of Richard Whately, afterwards Archbishop of Dublin with whom he remained connected by ties of lifelong friendship. He took the degree of B.A. in 1811 and became a Vinerian Scholar in 1813.

Career edit

Senior went into the field of conveyancing, with a pupilage under Edward Burtenshaw Sugden. When Sugden rather abruptly informed his pupils in 1816 that he was concentrating on chancery work, Senior took steps to qualify as a Certified Conveyancer, which he did in 1817. With one other pupil, Aaron Hurrill, he then took over Sugden's practice.[2][3] Senior was called to the bar in 1819, but problems with public speaking limited his potential career as an advocate. In 1836, during the chancellorship of Lord Cottenham, he was appointed a master in chancery.

On the foundation of the Drummond professorship of political economy at Oxford in 1825, he was elected to fill the chair, which he occupied until 1830 and again from 1847 to 1852. In 1830, he was requested by Lord Melbourne to inquire into the state of combinations and strikes, report on the state of the law and suggest improvements.

Senior was a member of the Poor Law Inquiry Commission of 1832, and of the Royal Commission of 1837 on handloom weavers. The report of the latter, published in 1841, was drawn up by him and had the substance of the report he had prepared some years earlier, on combinations and strikes.

Later life edit

Senior became a good friend of Alexis de Tocqueville (1805–1859) whom he met in 1833 for the first time before the publishing of Democracy in America.[4]

Senior was in the spring of 1849 legal advisor and counsellor to Jenny Lind, who then was performing in London. She intended to marry a soldier named Harris, and Senior was supposed to draw up marriage settlements. Harriet Grote in correspondence calls him Claudius Harris, a lieutenant of the Madras Cavalry; the Grote connection was that he was the brother of the wife of Joseph Grote, the brother of her husband, George.[5][6] Senior accompanied Lind and Harriet Grote to Paris (amid civil strife and a cholera epidemic).[7] The marriage failed to take place.[8]

Senior was "indirectly responsible for the contract which Jenny Lind condescended to sign in 1850 with the American promoter P. T. Barnum".[9][10]

Senior was one of the commissioners appointed in 1864 to inquire into popular education in England. He died at Kensington that year.

Writings edit

Senior was a contributor to the Quarterly Review, Edinburgh Review, London Review and North British Review. In their pages, he dealt with literary as well as with economic and political subjects. The London Review was a project of Senior from 1828, for a quarterly periodical. It was backed by Richard Whately and others of the Oriel Noetics, and with the help of Thomas Mayo, he found an editor in Joseph Blanco White. Early contributions from John Henry Newman, Edwin Chadwick and Senior himself (on the Waverley novels and William Jacob's views) were not enough to establish it, and it ceased publication in mid-1829.[11]

Economics edit

His writings on economic theory consisted of an article in the Encyclopædia Metropolitana, afterwards separately published as An Outline of the Science of Political Economy (1836), and his lectures delivered at Oxford. Of the latter, the following were printed:

  • An Introductory Lecture on Political Economy (London: John Murray, 1827).
  • Two Lectures on Population, with a correspondence between the author and Malthus (1829).[12]
  • Three Lectures on the Transmission of the Precious Metals from Country to Country, and the Mercantile Theory of Wealth (1828).
  • Three Lectures on the Cost of obtaining Money, and on some Effects of Private and Government Paper Money (London: John Murray, 1830).
  • Three Lectures on the Rate of Wages (1830, 2nd ed. 1831).[13]
  • A Lecture on the Production of Wealth (1847).
  • Four Introductory Lectures on Political Economy (1852).

Several of his lectures were translated into French by M. Arrivabne under the title of Principes Fondamentaux d'Economie Politique (1835).

Social questions edit

Senior also wrote on administrative and social questions:

  • Report on the Depressed State of the Agriculture of the United Kingdom. In: The Quarterly Review (1821), pp. 466–504
  • A Letter to Lord Howick on a Legal Provision for the Irish Poor, Commutation of Tithes and a Provision for the Irish Roman Catholic Clergy (1831, 3rd ed., 1832, with a preface containing suggestions as to the measures to be adopted in the present emergency)
  • Statement of the Provision for the Poor and of the Condition of the Laboring Classes in a considerable portion of America and Europe, being the Preface to the Foreign Communications in the Appendix to the Poor Law Report (1835)
  • On National Property, and on the Prospects of the Present Administration and of their Successors (anon.; 1835)
  • Letters on the Factory Act, as it affects the Cotton Manufacture (1837)
  • Suggestions on Popular Education (1861)
  • American Slavery (in part a reprint from the Edinburgh Review, 1862)
  • An Address on Education delivered to the Social Science Association (1863)

His contributions to the reviews were collected in volumes entitled Essays on Fiction (1864); Biographical Sketches (1865, chiefly of noted lawyers); and Historical and Philosophical Essays (1865).

In 1859 appeared his Journal kept in Turkey and Greece in the Autumn of 1857 and the Beginning of 1858; and the following were edited after his death by his daughter:

  • Journals, Conversations and Essays relating to Ireland (1868)
  • Journals kept in France and Italy from 1848 to 1852, with a Sketch of the Revolution of 1848 (1871)[14]
  • Conversations with Thiers, Guizot and other Distinguished Persons during the Second Empire (1878)
  • Conversations with Distinguished Persons during the Second Empire, from 1860 to 1863 (1880)
  • Conversations and Journals in Egypt and Malta (1882)
  • also in 1872 Correspondence and Conversations with Alexis de Tocqueville from 1834 to 1859.

Senior's tracts on practical politics, though the theses they supported were sometimes questionable, were ably written and are still worth reading but cannot be said to be of much permanent interest. His name continues to hold an honorable, though secondary, place in the history of political economy. In the later years of his life, during his visits to foreign countries, he noted the political and social phenomena that they exhibited. Several volumes of his journals were published.

Political economy edit

Senior regarded political economy as a deductive science, of inferences from four elementary propositions, which are not assumptions but facts. It concerns itself, however, with wealth only and can therefore give no political advice. He pointed out inconsistencies of terminology in David Ricardo's works: for example, his use of value in the sense of cost of production, high and low wages in the sense of a certain proportion of the product as dilute amount and his employment of the epithets fixed and circulating as applied to capital.[clarification needed] He argued, too, that in some cases the premises assumed by Ricardo are false. He cited the assertions that rent depends on the difference of fertility of the different portions of land in cultivation; that the laborer always receives precisely the necessaries or what custom leads him to consider the necessaries, of life; that as wealth and population advance, agricultural labor becomes less and less proportionately productive and therefore the share of the produce taken by the landlord and the laborer must constantly increase, but that taken by the capitalist must constantly diminish. He denied the truth of all the propositions.

Besides adopting some terms, such as that of natural agents, from Jean-Baptiste Say, Senior introduced the term "abstinence" to express the conduct of the capitalist that is remunerated by interest. He added some considerations to what had been said by Adam Smith on the division of labor and distinguished between the rate of wages and the price of labor but assumed a determinate wage-fund.

Senior's 1837 Letters on the Factory Act have become notorious for the analytical mistake made in them. Nassau opposed the Child Labour Law and the proposed Ten Hours Act, on the grounds that they would make it impossible for factory owners to make profits. In Senior's analysis of factory production, capital advanced means of subsistence (wage) to the workers, who would then return the advance during the first 1012 hours of their labor, producing a profit only in the last hour. What Senior failed to realize is that the turnover of capital stock depends on the length of the working day; he assumed it constant.[15]

In Karl Marx's first volume of Capital, Senior's analyses are subjected to a series of exacting criticisms. "If, giving credence to the out-cries of the manufacturers, he believed that the workmen spend the best part of the day in the production, i.e., the reproduction or replacement of the value of the buildings, machinery, cotton, coal, &c.," Marx writes, "then his analysis was superfluous."[16]

Senior modified his opinions on population in the course of his career and asserted that in the absence of disturbing causes, subsistence may be expected to increase in a greater ratio than population. Charles Périn argued that he set up "egoism" as the guide of practical life. Thomas Edward Cliffe Leslie attacked the abstraction implied in the phrase "desire of wealth".

Controversy on Irish Famine edit

Senior reportedly said of the Great Irish Famine of 1845

"would not kill more than one million people, and that would scarcely be enough to do any good".[17]

That is a point quoted by theorists who propose that the actions of the British government before and during the famine were tantamount to deliberate genocide, but his opinion was not government policy. Costigan[18] argues, however, that the quote is taken out of context and reflects Senior's opinion purely from the viewpoint of the theory of political economy; in other words, even such a large reduction in the population would not solve the underlying economic, social and political problems, which would be proved correct. He argues that Senior made attempts over many years to improve the lot of the Irish people, even at considerable personal cost (in 1832, he was removed, after one year in office, from his position as Professor of Political Economy at King's College, London, for supporting the Catholic Church in Ireland). In his letter[19] of 8 January 1836 to Lord Howick, Senior wrote,

With respect to the ejected tenantry, the stories that are told make one's blood boil. I must own that I differ from most persons as to the meaning of the words 'legitimate influence of property'. I think that the only legitimate influence is example and advice, and that a landlord who requires a tenant to vote in opposition to the tenant's feeling of duty is the suborner of a criminal act.'

Senior's notes of his visits to Birr, County Offaly in the 1850s mention his surprise and concern that the everyday lifestyle of the Irish poor had changed so little, despite the famine disaster.

Though the aspect of Ireland is somewhat changed since 1852, and much since 1844, I doubt whether any great real alteration in the habits to feelings of the people has taken place. They still depend mainly on the potato. They still depend rather on the occupation of land, than on the wages of labour. They still erect for themselves the hovels in which they dwell. They are still eager to subdivide and to sublet. They are still the tools of their priests, and the priests are still ignorant of the economical laws on which the welfare of the labouring classes depends.[20]

Family edit

Senior married Mary Charlotte Mair of Iron Acton, Gloucestershire, in 1821. Their daughter, the memoirist Mary Charlotte Mair Simpson (1825–1907) acted as his literary executor. Their son Nassau John Senior (1822–1891), was a lawyer and married Jane Elizabeth Senior (1828–1877), an inspector of workhouses and schools.[21]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^   This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Senior, Nassau William". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 24 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 644–645.
  2. ^ Leon Levy 1970, p. 41.
  3. ^ S. Leon Levy, "Nassau W. Senior, British Economist, in the Light of Recent Researches: I", Journal of Political Economy, Vol. 26, No. 4 (Apr., 1918), pp. 350–351. Published by The University of Chicago Press. Article Stable URL: https://www.jstor.org/stable/1822589
  4. ^ Preface of Correspondence and Conversations of Alexis de Tocqueville with Nassau William Senior 1834–1859, edited by M. C. M. Simpson (Senior's daughter), New York 1872.
  5. ^ Jenny Lind – The Artist. Memoir of Madame Jenny Lind-Goldschmidt: Her Early Art-Life and Dramatic Career, 1820–1850 by H. S. Holland, W.S. Rockstro and Otto Goldschmidt, London 1891 (vol. I, p. xi and vol. II, pp. 344–347); and S. Leon Levy, Nassau W. Senior 1790–1864, Devon 1970 (pp. 171–173).
  6. ^ Thomas Herbert Lewin, The Lewin Letters; a selection from the correspondence & diaries of an English family, 1756–1884 (1909), pp. 63–65; archive.org.
  7. ^ Senior's handwritten letter dated 1849 Paris – Monday [21 May] tells his daughter in London: "We are here on the brink of another fight.... Mrs Grote is puzzled. She does not wish to stay over the émeute – does not like to leave Jenny" (copy from The National Archives, Wales).
  8. ^ Senior's handwritten letter of 28 May 1849 tells Mrs Grote who is still in Paris with Jenny Lind: "Lord Liverpool says that Jenny ought to write not direct to the Queen, but to G. Anson [the Queen's Privy Purse] – to say that as Her Majesty had done her the honor to express a wish to be informed when this marriage was to take place, he thought it wise to tell to him for her Majesty's information that it will never take place" (copy from The National Archives, Wales). Icons of Europe says that Jenny Lind had planned to marry Chopin and not "Captain" Harris, who, according to British Army records, was a cadet / lieutenant stationed in India at the time (source: Cecilia and Jens Jorgensen, Chopin and The Swedish Nightingale, Brussels 2003, ISBN 2-9600385-0-9, and their subsequent research in consultation with the Fryderyk Chopin Institute and other institutions).
  9. ^ Leon Levy 1970, p. 171
  10. ^ Did Senior also assist Jenny Lind in obtaining permission for Chopin's lavish funeral at Église de la Madeleine on 30 October 1849, which she – as said by Icons of Europe – appears to have secretly organized? He met with French foreign minister Alexis de Tocqueville in Paris on 21–23 October 1849 for apparently no good reason (Correspondence and Conversations of Alexis de Tocqueville with Nassau William Senior 1834–1859, M.C.M. Simpson, New York 1872, p. 68).
  11. ^ Leon Levy 1970, pp. 60–64.
  12. ^ online available (2011-06-24)
  13. ^ online available (2011-06-24)
  14. ^ "Review of Journals kept in France and Italy from 1848 to 1852 by the late Nassau William Senior, edited by his daughter M. C. M. Simpson, 2 vols". The Athenaeum (2281): 77–78. 15 July 1871.
  15. ^ DeLong, J. Bradford (1986). "Senior's 'last hour': suggested explanation of a famous blunder" (PDF). History of Political Economy. 18 (2): 325–333. doi:10.1215/00182702-18-2-325.
  16. ^ "Economic Manuscripts: Capital Vol. I – Chapter Nine".
  17. ^ Gallagher, Michael & Thomas, Paddy's Lament. Harcourt Brace & Company, New York / London, 1982.
  18. ^ Costigan, Giovanni 'A History of Modern Ireland', Pegasus, New York, p. 185.
  19. ^ Leon Levy 1970, p. 268.
  20. ^ Offaly history pages on Senior's visits 16 May 2008 at the Wayback Machine
  21. ^ Deane, Phyllis. "Senior, Nassau William". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/25090. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)

References edit

  • Levy, S. Leon (1943). Nassau W. Senior, The Prophet of Modern Capitalism, Boston, Massachusetts: Bruce Humphries. OCLC 730126628
  • Levy, S. Leon (1970). Nassau W. Senior 1790–1864, Newton Abbot : David & Charles. OCLC 463277765
  • Smith, George H. (2008). "Senior, Nassau William (1790–1864)". In Hamowy, Ronald (ed.). The Encyclopedia of Libertarianism. Thousand Oaks, California: SAGE; Cato Institute. pp. 457–58. doi:10.4135/9781412965811.n279. ISBN 978-1-4129-6580-4. LCCN 2008009151. OCLC 750831024.

External links edit

nassau, william, senior, september, 1790, june, 1864, english, lawyer, known, economist, also, government, adviser, over, several, decades, economic, social, policy, which, wrote, extensively, born, 1790, september, 1790compton, berkshire, englanddied, 1864, j. Nassau William Senior ˈ s iː n i er 26 September 1790 4 June 1864 was an English lawyer known as an economist He was also a government adviser over several decades on economic and social policy on which he wrote extensively Nassau William SeniorNassau William SeniorBorn 1790 09 26 26 September 1790Compton Berkshire EnglandDied 1864 06 04 4 June 1864 aged 73 KensingtonNationalityEnglishAcademic careerFieldPolitical economySchool ortraditionClassical economicsInfluencesAdam Smith Alexis de Tocqueville Contents 1 Early life 2 Career 3 Later life 4 Writings 4 1 Economics 4 2 Social questions 5 Political economy 6 Controversy on Irish Famine 7 Family 8 See also 9 Notes 10 References 11 External linksEarly life editHe was born at Compton Berkshire the eldest son of Rev J R Senior vicar of Durnford Wiltshire 1 He was educated at Eton College and Magdalen College Oxford at university he was a private pupil of Richard Whately afterwards Archbishop of Dublin with whom he remained connected by ties of lifelong friendship He took the degree of B A in 1811 and became a Vinerian Scholar in 1813 Career editSenior went into the field of conveyancing with a pupilage under Edward Burtenshaw Sugden When Sugden rather abruptly informed his pupils in 1816 that he was concentrating on chancery work Senior took steps to qualify as a Certified Conveyancer which he did in 1817 With one other pupil Aaron Hurrill he then took over Sugden s practice 2 3 Senior was called to the bar in 1819 but problems with public speaking limited his potential career as an advocate In 1836 during the chancellorship of Lord Cottenham he was appointed a master in chancery On the foundation of the Drummond professorship of political economy at Oxford in 1825 he was elected to fill the chair which he occupied until 1830 and again from 1847 to 1852 In 1830 he was requested by Lord Melbourne to inquire into the state of combinations and strikes report on the state of the law and suggest improvements Senior was a member of the Poor Law Inquiry Commission of 1832 and of the Royal Commission of 1837 on handloom weavers The report of the latter published in 1841 was drawn up by him and had the substance of the report he had prepared some years earlier on combinations and strikes Later life editSenior became a good friend of Alexis de Tocqueville 1805 1859 whom he met in 1833 for the first time before the publishing of Democracy in America 4 Senior was in the spring of 1849 legal advisor and counsellor to Jenny Lind who then was performing in London She intended to marry a soldier named Harris and Senior was supposed to draw up marriage settlements Harriet Grote in correspondence calls him Claudius Harris a lieutenant of the Madras Cavalry the Grote connection was that he was the brother of the wife of Joseph Grote the brother of her husband George 5 6 Senior accompanied Lind and Harriet Grote to Paris amid civil strife and a cholera epidemic 7 The marriage failed to take place 8 Senior was indirectly responsible for the contract which Jenny Lind condescended to sign in 1850 with the American promoter P T Barnum 9 10 Senior was one of the commissioners appointed in 1864 to inquire into popular education in England He died at Kensington that year Writings editSenior was a contributor to the Quarterly Review Edinburgh Review London Review and North British Review In their pages he dealt with literary as well as with economic and political subjects The London Review was a project of Senior from 1828 for a quarterly periodical It was backed by Richard Whately and others of the Oriel Noetics and with the help of Thomas Mayo he found an editor in Joseph Blanco White Early contributions from John Henry Newman Edwin Chadwick and Senior himself on the Waverley novels and William Jacob s views were not enough to establish it and it ceased publication in mid 1829 11 Economics edit His writings on economic theory consisted of an article in the Encyclopaedia Metropolitana afterwards separately published as An Outline of the Science of Political Economy 1836 and his lectures delivered at Oxford Of the latter the following were printed An Introductory Lecture on Political Economy London John Murray 1827 Two Lectures on Population with a correspondence between the author and Malthus 1829 12 Three Lectures on the Transmission of the Precious Metals from Country to Country and the Mercantile Theory of Wealth 1828 Three Lectures on the Cost of obtaining Money and on some Effects of Private and Government Paper Money London John Murray 1830 Three Lectures on the Rate of Wages 1830 2nd ed 1831 13 A Lecture on the Production of Wealth 1847 Four Introductory Lectures on Political Economy 1852 Several of his lectures were translated into French by M Arrivabne under the title of Principes Fondamentaux d Economie Politique 1835 Social questions edit Senior also wrote on administrative and social questions Report on the Depressed State of the Agriculture of the United Kingdom In The Quarterly Review 1821 pp 466 504 A Letter to Lord Howick on a Legal Provision for the Irish Poor Commutation of Tithes and a Provision for the Irish Roman Catholic Clergy 1831 3rd ed 1832 with a preface containing suggestions as to the measures to be adopted in the present emergency Statement of the Provision for the Poor and of the Condition of the Laboring Classes in a considerable portion of America and Europe being the Preface to the Foreign Communications in the Appendix to the Poor Law Report 1835 On National Property and on the Prospects of the Present Administration and of their Successors anon 1835 Letters on the Factory Act as it affects the Cotton Manufacture 1837 Suggestions on Popular Education 1861 American Slavery in part a reprint from the Edinburgh Review 1862 An Address on Education delivered to the Social Science Association 1863 His contributions to the reviews were collected in volumes entitled Essays on Fiction 1864 Biographical Sketches 1865 chiefly of noted lawyers and Historical and Philosophical Essays 1865 In 1859 appeared his Journal kept in Turkey and Greece in the Autumn of 1857 and the Beginning of 1858 and the following were edited after his death by his daughter Journals Conversations and Essays relating to Ireland 1868 Journals kept in France and Italy from 1848 to 1852 with a Sketch of the Revolution of 1848 1871 14 Conversations with Thiers Guizot and other Distinguished Persons during the Second Empire 1878 Conversations with Distinguished Persons during the Second Empire from 1860 to 1863 1880 Conversations and Journals in Egypt and Malta 1882 also in 1872 Correspondence and Conversations with Alexis de Tocqueville from 1834 to 1859 Senior s tracts on practical politics though the theses they supported were sometimes questionable were ably written and are still worth reading but cannot be said to be of much permanent interest His name continues to hold an honorable though secondary place in the history of political economy In the later years of his life during his visits to foreign countries he noted the political and social phenomena that they exhibited Several volumes of his journals were published Political economy editSenior regarded political economy as a deductive science of inferences from four elementary propositions which are not assumptions but facts It concerns itself however with wealth only and can therefore give no political advice He pointed out inconsistencies of terminology in David Ricardo s works for example his use of value in the sense of cost of production high and low wages in the sense of a certain proportion of the product as dilute amount and his employment of the epithets fixed and circulating as applied to capital clarification needed He argued too that in some cases the premises assumed by Ricardo are false He cited the assertions that rent depends on the difference of fertility of the different portions of land in cultivation that the laborer always receives precisely the necessaries or what custom leads him to consider the necessaries of life that as wealth and population advance agricultural labor becomes less and less proportionately productive and therefore the share of the produce taken by the landlord and the laborer must constantly increase but that taken by the capitalist must constantly diminish He denied the truth of all the propositions Besides adopting some terms such as that of natural agents from Jean Baptiste Say Senior introduced the term abstinence to express the conduct of the capitalist that is remunerated by interest He added some considerations to what had been said by Adam Smith on the division of labor and distinguished between the rate of wages and the price of labor but assumed a determinate wage fund Senior s 1837 Letters on the Factory Act have become notorious for the analytical mistake made in them Nassau opposed the Child Labour Law and the proposed Ten Hours Act on the grounds that they would make it impossible for factory owners to make profits In Senior s analysis of factory production capital advanced means of subsistence wage to the workers who would then return the advance during the first 101 2 hours of their labor producing a profit only in the last hour What Senior failed to realize is that the turnover of capital stock depends on the length of the working day he assumed it constant 15 In Karl Marx s first volume of Capital Senior s analyses are subjected to a series of exacting criticisms If giving credence to the out cries of the manufacturers he believed that the workmen spend the best part of the day in the production i e the reproduction or replacement of the value of the buildings machinery cotton coal amp c Marx writes then his analysis was superfluous 16 Senior modified his opinions on population in the course of his career and asserted that in the absence of disturbing causes subsistence may be expected to increase in a greater ratio than population Charles Perin argued that he set up egoism as the guide of practical life Thomas Edward Cliffe Leslie attacked the abstraction implied in the phrase desire of wealth Controversy on Irish Famine editSenior reportedly said of the Great Irish Famine of 1845 would not kill more than one million people and that would scarcely be enough to do any good 17 That is a point quoted by theorists who propose that the actions of the British government before and during the famine were tantamount to deliberate genocide but his opinion was not government policy Costigan 18 argues however that the quote is taken out of context and reflects Senior s opinion purely from the viewpoint of the theory of political economy in other words even such a large reduction in the population would not solve the underlying economic social and political problems which would be proved correct He argues that Senior made attempts over many years to improve the lot of the Irish people even at considerable personal cost in 1832 he was removed after one year in office from his position as Professor of Political Economy at King s College London for supporting the Catholic Church in Ireland In his letter 19 of 8 January 1836 to Lord Howick Senior wrote With respect to the ejected tenantry the stories that are told make one s blood boil I must own that I differ from most persons as to the meaning of the words legitimate influence of property I think that the only legitimate influence is example and advice and that a landlord who requires a tenant to vote in opposition to the tenant s feeling of duty is the suborner of a criminal act Senior s notes of his visits to Birr County Offaly in the 1850s mention his surprise and concern that the everyday lifestyle of the Irish poor had changed so little despite the famine disaster Though the aspect of Ireland is somewhat changed since 1852 and much since 1844 I doubt whether any great real alteration in the habits to feelings of the people has taken place They still depend mainly on the potato They still depend rather on the occupation of land than on the wages of labour They still erect for themselves the hovels in which they dwell They are still eager to subdivide and to sublet They are still the tools of their priests and the priests are still ignorant of the economical laws on which the welfare of the labouring classes depends 20 Family editSenior married Mary Charlotte Mair of Iron Acton Gloucestershire in 1821 Their daughter the memoirist Mary Charlotte Mair Simpson 1825 1907 acted as his literary executor Their son Nassau John Senior 1822 1891 was a lawyer and married Jane Elizabeth Senior 1828 1877 an inspector of workhouses and schools 21 See also editAbstinence theory of interestNotes edit nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Senior Nassau William Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 24 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 644 645 Leon Levy 1970 p 41 S Leon Levy Nassau W Senior British Economist in the Light of Recent Researches I Journal of Political Economy Vol 26 No 4 Apr 1918 pp 350 351 Published by The University of Chicago Press Article Stable URL https www jstor org stable 1822589 Preface of Correspondence and Conversations of Alexis de Tocqueville with Nassau William Senior 1834 1859 edited by M C M Simpson Senior s daughter New York 1872 Jenny Lind The Artist Memoir of Madame Jenny Lind Goldschmidt Her Early Art Life and Dramatic Career 1820 1850 by H S Holland W S Rockstro and Otto Goldschmidt London 1891 vol I p xi and vol II pp 344 347 and S Leon Levy Nassau W Senior 1790 1864 Devon 1970 pp 171 173 Thomas Herbert Lewin The Lewin Letters a selection from the correspondence amp diaries of an English family 1756 1884 1909 pp 63 65 archive org Senior s handwritten letter dated 1849 Paris Monday 21 May tells his daughter in London We are here on the brink of another fight Mrs Grote is puzzled She does not wish to stay over the emeute does not like to leave Jenny copy from The National Archives Wales Senior s handwritten letter of 28 May 1849 tells Mrs Grote who is still in Paris with Jenny Lind Lord Liverpool says that Jenny ought to write not direct to the Queen but to G Anson the Queen s Privy Purse to say that as Her Majesty had done her the honor to express a wish to be informed when this marriage was to take place he thought it wise to tell to him for her Majesty s information that it will never take place copy from The National Archives Wales Icons of Europe says that Jenny Lind had planned to marry Chopin and not Captain Harris who according to British Army records was a cadet lieutenant stationed in India at the time source Cecilia and Jens Jorgensen Chopin and The Swedish Nightingale Brussels 2003 ISBN 2 9600385 0 9 and their subsequent research in consultation with the Fryderyk Chopin Institute and other institutions Leon Levy 1970 p 171 Did Senior also assist Jenny Lind in obtaining permission for Chopin s lavish funeral at Eglise de la Madeleine on 30 October 1849 which she as said by Icons of Europe appears to have secretly organized He met with French foreign minister Alexis de Tocqueville in Paris on 21 23 October 1849 for apparently no good reason Correspondence and Conversations of Alexis de Tocqueville with Nassau William Senior 1834 1859 M C M Simpson New York 1872 p 68 Leon Levy 1970 pp 60 64 online available 2011 06 24 online available 2011 06 24 Review of Journals kept in France and Italy from 1848 to 1852 by the late Nassau William Senior edited by his daughter M C M Simpson 2 vols The Athenaeum 2281 77 78 15 July 1871 DeLong J Bradford 1986 Senior s last hour suggested explanation of a famous blunder PDF History of Political Economy 18 2 325 333 doi 10 1215 00182702 18 2 325 Economic Manuscripts Capital Vol I Chapter Nine Gallagher Michael amp Thomas Paddy s Lament Harcourt Brace amp Company New York London 1982 Costigan Giovanni A History of Modern Ireland Pegasus New York p 185 Leon Levy 1970 p 268 Offaly history pages on Senior s visits Archived 16 May 2008 at the Wayback Machine Deane Phyllis Senior Nassau William Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 25090 Subscription or UK public library membership required References editLevy S Leon 1943 Nassau W Senior The Prophet of Modern Capitalism Boston Massachusetts Bruce Humphries OCLC 730126628 Levy S Leon 1970 Nassau W Senior 1790 1864 Newton Abbot David amp Charles OCLC 463277765 Smith George H 2008 Senior Nassau William 1790 1864 In Hamowy Ronald ed The Encyclopedia of Libertarianism Thousand Oaks California SAGE Cato Institute pp 457 58 doi 10 4135 9781412965811 n279 ISBN 978 1 4129 6580 4 LCCN 2008009151 OCLC 750831024 External links edit nbsp Wikisource has original works by or about Nassau William Senior Works by Nassau William Senior at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Nassau William Senior at Internet Archive Nassau William Senior Online Library of LibertyPortals nbsp Economics nbsp Liberalism nbsp Libertarianism nbsp Politics Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Nassau William Senior amp oldid 1176593158, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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