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Front Page arrow Titles (by Subject) arrow 480.: mcculloch to ricardo1[Answered by 483] - The Works and Correspondence of David Ricardo, Vol. 9 Letters 1821-1823

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480.: mcculloch to ricardo1[Answered by 483] - David Ricardo, The Works and Correspondence of David Ricardo, Vol. 9 Letters 1821-1823 [1821]

Edition used:

The Works and Correspondence of David Ricardo, ed. Piero Sraffa with the Collaboration of M.H. Dobb (Indianapolis: Liberty Fund, 2005). Vol. 9 Letters 1821-1823.

Part of: The Works and Correspondence of David Ricardo, 11 vols (Sraffa ed.)

About Liberty Fund:

Liberty Fund, Inc. is a private, educational foundation established to encourage the study of the ideal of a society of free and responsible individuals.


480.

mcculloch to ricardo1
[Answered by 483]

My Dear Sir

Since I wrote the accompanying letter I have obtained from my excellent friend Mr. J. A. Murray Advocate2 a copy of a reprint of the exceedingly scarce pamphlet of Sir Dudley North3 which he requests me to forward to you—I also send you the Card which Mr. Murray has sent me with the pamphlet—He had once the pleasure of meeting you, and I am sure that if he should again happen to be in London when you are there you would be much pleased to renew your acquaintance—Mr. Murray has made great sacrifices for the good cause—Had he consented to modify his opinions he might have been at this moment Lord Advocate of Scotland—But although a gentleman of exceedingly mild and pleasant manners, he has too much sturdiness of mind, and too thorough a contempt for every thing that savours of dereliction of principle, to purchase the highest honours that ministry could bestow at such a price—

Yours most truly

J. R. McCulloch

[Enclosure, addressed: ‘J. R. Macculloch Esq / 10 Bucclugh Place’]

Dear Sir

I send you two copies of North. One for yourself and the other for Mr. Richardo. I intended to have written to him but so many years have passed since I saw him at the King of Clubs that I can not hope to retain any place in his recollection. There is no mark of respect and regard which I should not have great pleasure in paying to him. Believe me

very truly yours

John A. Murray

[1 ]Addressed: ‘David Ricardo Esq’—undated and not passed through the post; was no doubt sent by hand with the preceding letter, and Ricardo replies to both together. Sunday, 13 Jan. 1822 is probably the date also of J. A. Murray’s letter.

MS in R.P.

[2 ]John Archibald Murray (1779–1859), a writer in the Edinburgh Review since its commencement, afterwards M.P., Lord Advocate and, as Lord Murray, a judge.

[3 ]Discourses upon Trade; Principally Directed to the Cases of the Interest Coynage Clipping Increase of Money, 1691. McCulloch reprinted it in A select collection of Early English Tracts on Commerce, for the Political Economy Club, London, 1856. In his preface Mulloch says that this pamphlet was supposed to be entirely lost until a copy came to light at the sale of the library of the Rev. Rogers Ruding and was purchased ‘by a gentleman of Edinburgh, who printed a few copies for distribution among his friends’.—Mill, who had been ‘on the look-out for it for years’, was ‘exceedingly’ gratified by the discovery and asked Napier to secure for him ‘a copy of the impression which is to be made by your friend.’ (Letter of 14 Jan. 1822, in Bain’s James Mill, p. 202.)