Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
- INTRODUCTION TO THIS VOLUME
- PART I “UNTO THIS LAST” (1860)
- PART II “MUNERA PULVERIS” (1862, 1863)
- PART III “TIME AND TIDE, BY WEARE AND TYNE” (1867)
- APPENDIX: LETTERS AND PAPERS ON ECONOMIC SUBJECTS 1863–1873
- I LETTERS ON “MUNERA PULVERIS” (1863, 1875, 1877)
- II THE DEPRECIATION OF GOLD (1863)
- III LETTERS ON THE LAW OF SUPPLY AND DEMAND (1864, 1873)
- IV LETTERS ON WORK AND WAGES TO THE “PALL MALL GAZETTE” (1865)
- V LETTERS ON SERVANTS AND HOUSES TO THE “DAILY TELEGRAPH” (1865)
- VI LETTERS ON RAILWAYS AND THE STATE (1865, 1868, 1870)
- VII SPEECHES ON TRADES UNIONS AND STRIKES (1868)
- VIII EMPLOYMENT FOR THE DESTITUTE POOR AND CRIMINAL CLASSES (1868)
- IX LETTERS ON ROMAN INUNDATIONS (1871)
- X LETTERS ON “HOW THE RICH SPEND THEIR MONEY”(1873)
- XI HOME, AND ITS ECONOMIES (“CONTEMPORARY REVIEW,” MAY 1873)
- Plate section
VI - LETTERS ON RAILWAYS AND THE STATE (1865, 1868, 1870)
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 November 2011
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
- INTRODUCTION TO THIS VOLUME
- PART I “UNTO THIS LAST” (1860)
- PART II “MUNERA PULVERIS” (1862, 1863)
- PART III “TIME AND TIDE, BY WEARE AND TYNE” (1867)
- APPENDIX: LETTERS AND PAPERS ON ECONOMIC SUBJECTS 1863–1873
- I LETTERS ON “MUNERA PULVERIS” (1863, 1875, 1877)
- II THE DEPRECIATION OF GOLD (1863)
- III LETTERS ON THE LAW OF SUPPLY AND DEMAND (1864, 1873)
- IV LETTERS ON WORK AND WAGES TO THE “PALL MALL GAZETTE” (1865)
- V LETTERS ON SERVANTS AND HOUSES TO THE “DAILY TELEGRAPH” (1865)
- VI LETTERS ON RAILWAYS AND THE STATE (1865, 1868, 1870)
- VII SPEECHES ON TRADES UNIONS AND STRIKES (1868)
- VIII EMPLOYMENT FOR THE DESTITUTE POOR AND CRIMINAL CLASSES (1868)
- IX LETTERS ON ROMAN INUNDATIONS (1871)
- X LETTERS ON “HOW THE RICH SPEND THEIR MONEY”(1873)
- XI HOME, AND ITS ECONOMIES (“CONTEMPORARY REVIEW,” MAY 1873)
- Plate section
Summary
To the Editor of the “Daily Telegraph”
Sir,—Will you allow me a few words with reference to jour excellent article of to-day on railroads. All you say is true. But of what use is it to tell the public this? Of all the economical stupidities of the public— and they are many—the out-and-out stupidest is underpaying their pointsmen; but if the said public choose always to leave their lines in the hands of companies—that is to say, practically, of engineers and lawyers —the money they pay for fares will always go, most of it, into the engineers' and lawyers' pockets. It will be spent in decorating railroad stations with black and blue bricks, and in fighting bills for branch lines. I hear there are more bills for new lines to be brought forward this year than at any previous session. But, Sir, it might do some little good if you were to put it into the engineers' and lawyers' heads that they might for some time to come get as much money for themselves (and a little more safety for the public) by bringing in bills for doubling laterally the present lines as for ramifying them; and if you were also to explain to the shareholders that it would be wiser to spend their capital in preventing accidents attended by costly damages, than in running trains at a loss on opposition branches.
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- The Works of John Ruskin , pp. 528 - 535Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010First published in: 1905