The
author of an article in The Times of 24
July 1795 on ‘The Way to Peace and Plenty’ did not explain why he had felt the
need to write the piece. There were certainly wheat shortages at the time due
to a series of bad harvests, and the country generally was suffering from the
economic effects of the French Revolutionary war, and trouble was brewing in
the pesky American colonies. Or perhaps he had been moved by a particularly
stirring sermon on the evils of spending and waste?
Anyhow,
the Rules for the Rich and Rules for the Poor have some points that make sense
still today – although animal-lovers might take offence at a couple of the ideas.
The Way to Peace and Plenty.
Rules
for the Rich.
1. Abolish gravy soups,
and second courses.
2. Buy no starch when
wheat is dear.
3. Destroy all useless
dogs.
4. Give no dog, or
other animal, the smallest bit of
bread or meat.
5. Save all your
skim-milk carefully, and give it all to the poor, or sell it at a cheap rate.
6. Make broth, rice
pudding, &c, for the poor, and teach them to make such things.
7. Go to church
yourselves, and take care your servants go constantly.
8. Look into the
management of your own families, and visit your poor neighbours.
9. Prefer those poor
who keep steadily to their work, and go constantly to church, and give nothing
to those who are idle, and riotous, or keep useless dogs.
10. Buy no weighing
meat, or gravy beef: if the rich would buy only the prime pieces, the poor could
get the others cheap.
Rules
for the Poor.
1. Keep steady to your
work, and never change masters, if you can help it,
2. Go to no gin-shop,
or alehouse: but lay out all your earnings in food, and cloaths, for yourself,
and your family: and try to lay up a little for rent, and rainy days.
3. Avoid bad company.
4. Keep no dogs: for
they rob your children, and your neighbours.
5. Go constantly to
church, and carry your wives, and children, with you, and God will bless you.
6. Be civil to your
superiors, and they will be kind to you.
7. Learn to make broth,
milk pottage, rice-pudding, &c. One pound of meat, in both, will go further
than two pounds boiled or roasted.
8. Be quiet, and
contented, and never steal, or swear, or you will never thrive.
The
article actually included some recipes for the dishes mentioned. I have chosen two for you.
Rice
Pudding.
Half
a pound of rice, two quarts of skim milk, and three ounces of brown sugar, well
baked, make an excellent pudding. The expense is about sevenpence (if you buy
the milk and pay for the baking) and it will make a good meal for a family of seven
or eight.
Beer
Caudle.
Warm
a gallon of small beer, and put into it three quarters of a pint of oatmeal,
and a little allspice and ginger, both pounded. Boil it half an hour and
sweeten it to your taste.
4 comments:
the writer didn't like dogs, did he?
maybe it was not that he didnt like dogs, but that giving them 'human' food' was wasteful? but probably he didnt like dogs, as you say :)
How apropos for a night upon which we are preparing our income tax returns....
May you receive a plentiful tax return, Shay.
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