121 



to excite the cultivators, in Poland and in Prussia, to 

 inert 5 supplies of Corn, as were experk- 



from ! iaUl, it would be ru-sonable to 



elude that the result might be the same as is exhl 

 in the quantities of Wheat exported from 1801 to. 

 It mi^ht produce, with ten years' increased, 



Ion, and with the ition of the capital 



d in thvse ten years of prosperity, a quantity 

 ! to that which was exported in the years of tae 

 prem . told, when in Poland, th-.t 



durii; . prosperous years, Wheat was brought Ly 

 land car: the Vistula, from distances far too 



great to be xpenses without the enor, 



price.s v\ i. re in the markets of Eng: 



France. It ' '.. not only from the fait hcst parts 



of G'dlicia, b from the vicinity of Lrunn and, 



tz, in ?.L:;ravia. It \vas said, that some r-; 

 . . at of Hungary was con Y| rtheCarpr.: 



-, to Cracow, and there shipped in flats f jr 

 Dantzic and Il --ilst Volhynia a 



were emptied of their stores. 



ether these reports are true, or to what extent 

 they are true, it is natural to suppose that the v<_.y 



price which "Whc-at had reached in the years 

 unde: .ration, must li 



limits of the circle from which it would be collected, 

 and wot.-.' Li ;e the inhabitants to dijpatcri t 

 high . i-ed by the excr- 



. 



By th i)t application of all these pow 



stimuli, which were in operation during ten years, we 

 have seen that at length the surplus. of Wheat, which 

 the Vistula and its borders, extended to unusual 

 dimensions, could yield, amounted to 550,000 quar- 

 ters annually, or about sufficient, supposing the whole 

 to be sent here for the consumption of tliis kr.ig 

 with its present population, during the space of twelve 

 days. 



