item: #1 of 33 id: A06731 author: Maddison, Ralph, Sir. title: Englands looking in and out Presented to the High Court of Parliament now assembled. By the author R.M. Knight. date: 1640.0 words: 9503 flesch: 37 summary: A low Exchange exporteth our money in specie , for gaine ; wherefore neither high , nor low Exchange is advantageous , but prejudiciall to us , only now a medium is the best ; giving leave to plenty or scarcitie , as necessity or plenty inviteth , and most agreeable to right and equity to all men ; which otherwise carryed , they have three wayes of exportation ; namely , by commodities , monyes , and exchange ; But there are but two wayes of importation ; namely , commodities , and Exchange , whereby commeth a notable over-ballancing of forraine commodities ; and bee assured , the gaines to bee sought upon moneys , doth impeach the gaines to bee had upon our commodities , and beateth downe our prices at home , and our commodities being beat downe , it is a great cause of carrying out our moneys to fulfill , or equall the ballance . And first to prove the Marchant Exchange un-equally carried , is the efficient cause of exporting our money , give me leave to know whether plenty of moneys make our prices to rise , and scarcitie of money make small prices , Wch no man ( I think ) keywords: aforesaid; ancient; ballance; bankers; bee; betweene; books; cause; causeth; coine; commerce; commodities; common; copper; countries; coynes; denomination; doe; doth; effect; english; equall; exchange; fall; finenesse; forraigne; foure; france; gaine; generall; gold; great; hath; high; home; kingdome; land; like; losse; low; making; man; marchants; meanes; men; moneys; monyes; mynt; open; ounce; place; plenty; pound; price; princes; raising; realme; reason; remedy; seas; secret; selfe; silver; text; thing; time; trade; troy; true; unequall; value; want; wayes; wee; weight; words cache: A06731.xml plain text: A06731.txt item: #2 of 33 id: A06788 author: Malynes, Gerard, fl. 1586-1641. title: Englands vievv, in the vnmasking of two paradoxes with a replication vnto the answer of Maister Iohn Bodine. By Gerrard de Malynes Merchant. date: 1603.0 words: 30909 flesch: 53 summary: Your Honors iudgement shall easily perceiue , that the Paradoxes are opposite , and do contradict one another , besides the slender and weake ground of their foundation : as also that Maister Bodine hath mistaken the true ground of the matter , by comparing the prices of things within themselues in a Common-wealth : whereas the comparison must be betweene the home Commodities of one Common-wealth , and the forraine Commodities of other nations : and that , either by way of permutation of Commodities for Commodities , or by Commodities for money in specie , or by exchange . The consideration then must be , not to compare things within themselues in the Commonwealth where we do liue ; but betweene vs and other nations with whom we deale , either by way of permutation of Commodities for Commodities , or Commodities for money in specie , or by exchange . keywords: aboue; abundance; aforesaid; alteration; altered; answer; apparell; auncient; beginning; bene; best; better; betweene; bodine; buying; care; cause; certaine; cheape; cloth; commeth; commodities; common; commonwealth; consideration; containeth; copper; corne; countries; course; crowne; custome; dayes; dearer; dearth; deliuered; difference; diuerse; dominions; doth; east; effect; end; england; english; equalitie; estimation; euery; example; exchange; farre; fine; finenesse; fish; fiue; flesh; forraine; forraine commodities; foure; fraunce; french; gaine; generall; giue; god; gold; good; goodnesse; great; greater; ground; halfe; hath; haue; hauing; hee; henry; home; home commodities; hundreth; iland; increase; indies; interest; iohn; iudgement; king; kingdome; lands; late; lawes; lesse; like; liuers; long; maintenance; maister; making; malestroit; man; manner; marke; matter; meanes; measures; men; merchants; mettals; millions; money; money doth; monies; nations; nature; neuer; new; number; onely; opinion; ouer; ounce; paradoxes; particular; parts; passe; pay; peeces; pence; people; permutation; places; pleasure; plentie; poore; pound; precious; price; princes; proportion; proue; purpose; quantitie; raigne; rate; realme; reason; receiue; regard; riches; rule; said; saith; salt; scarcitie; seas; second; set; seuerall; shillings; siluer; small; sols; sort; starling; statute; stones; store; subiects; substance; tcp; text; themselues; therof; things; time; touching; trade; trafficke; transportation; treasure; true; valuation; value; veluet; vnder; vnto; vpon; vse; vsed; waight; wares; water; way; wealth; west; wherby; whereof; wine; world; worth; yeare cache: A06788.xml plain text: A06788.txt item: #3 of 33 id: A11663 author: Scotland. title: Act anent the inbringing of money date: 1640.0 words: 1419 flesch: 64 summary: And the said silver or gold worke to be all given in , either to the Committee of Estate , or to the Committee of warre within each ●hyrefdome , or Presbyterie , or to the Magistrates of each Burgh , within eight dayes after intimation shall bee made thereof , ●●●her at the severall Market crosses , or by towke of Drum , or by advertisement from the Ministers out of the Pulpits : With certi●●cation , That these who shall not give in or redeemed the said silver 〈◊〉 gilt worke , within the said space , the same shall bee con 〈…〉 i 〈…〉 nt for the publicke use . Secondly , They shall have full annuelrent from the lenning thereof , as the same shal● bee received within the said spaces respective forsaid to the Terme of VVhitsonday nexto-come as for a whole yeare , notwithst●●ding a good part of the Terme is past . keywords: a11663; act; anent; bee; books; committee; dayes; early; edinburgh; english; gold; intimation; len; money; prices; said; scotland; securitie; silver; text; worke cache: A11663.xml plain text: A11663.txt item: #4 of 33 id: A26182 author: Atwood, William, d. 1705? title: A safe and easy method for supplying the want of coin and raising as many millions as the occasions of the publick may require. Humbly offered to the consideration of the present Parliament. With some remarks upon the Bank of England, Dr. Chamberlain's Bank, the Land-Bank, so called, and the National Land-Bank. date: 1695.0 words: 7564 flesch: 64 summary: for 150 Years , to secure the payment of 100 l. yearly into his Office , in money or his Bank Bills , for 100 Years ; and also pays 1000 l. in Money at 4 payments , 400 l. at setling the Estate , 300 l. at the end of the first year , 200 l. at the end of the second 100 l. at the end of the third ; he shall have Bills for 6000 l. including his own 1000 l. of which 1000 l. when he seals , 1100 l. at the end of the first year , 1200 l. at the end of the second , 1300 l. at the end of the third , 1400 l. at the end of the forth , besides 2000 l. in Bills , which with his 400 l. advanced shall immediately be paid to the Treasurer of the joint Stock in Trade , to which 600 l. must be added as it comes in , and the party must pay 5 ● . Though these payments may seem too slow to set the Bank in credit , especially after the Coin is regulated , and men will be less fond of Bills than they have been ; yet such a Fund can never fail of commanding money where it is needfull ; nor will men unnecessarily call for money , while they can have so good Bills ; especially if this Bank were established by Ast of Parliament : in consequence of which it would soon become a Registry for most of the Lands in the Kingdom , and if it were made so for such as would voluntarily enter their Lands and Incumbrances , or the Claims which they have ; and were 100000 l. per An ▪ settled for 40 Years for 1600000 l. to the publick ( whereas the Bank of England has in effect a perpetuity for 1200000 l. it would make this Bank no mean Rival to that of Amsterdam ; besides the raising Land to 40 Years purchase generally , and that in Bank to much more . Nor can it be thought that the Landed-men , who must needs have the prevailing Interest in Parliament , can long neglect those Advantages , which would set them upon an equal bottom with the Traders and Usurers . keywords: annum; answ; bank; benefit; bills; cent; charge; clear; coin; credit; directors; eebo; end; england; english; estate; fund; good; interest; land; loss; man; men; millions; money; months; obj; objection; office; parliament; pass; payment; present; profit; publick; settlement; specie; stock; subscribers; subscription; tcp; text; time; trade; trustees; value; year cache: A26182.xml plain text: A26182.txt item: #5 of 33 id: A27255 author: Beeckman, Daniel. title: To the honourable the Commons of England assembled in Parliament proposals humbly offered to lay down a method which will totally prevent all robberies upon the highway, raise five hundred thousand pounds per annum to the government, and increase dealings of all kinds ... date: 1695.0 words: 3059 flesch: 46 summary: 4. AS to the Furnishing the said Chambers with Cash sufficient to answer such Ends , I presume the moneys Collected for the KING's Taxes ; The Excise , and other moneys already Charged , and to be Charged , by Act of Parliament , with Moneys payable for all manner of Goods or Commodities through the Kingdom in parts remote ; being paid into the said Chambers , in each Town or County , as aforesaid , in order to be Remitted to other parts of the Kingdom ; may ( as I humbly conceive ) answer the ENDS Proposed , with all Objections that shall be made against it ; only allowing Petty Chapmen , who shall Travel the Country for some Miles , to lay out moneys in order to buy up Goods ; as Wooll , &c. buying two or three Tod in one place , and three or four in another , where they can meet with them : For it is not to be imagined , such Chapmen as these : shall have their moneys remitted , by reason of the great uncertainty in what place they shall buy their Goods : And they may keep an exact Ballance on all occasions , in all places , and at all times throughout the Kingdom ; by which means each Town may have a Bank of money by them , which , ( as I conceive ) will be no small Increase of Riches throughout the Kingdom , causing all manufacturies to flourish much more than hither to they have done , the failure of which is thought to befor want of Moneys among them , which has occasioned many Country people to try their Fortunes in London , where money is more plenty , which hath much depopulated the Country , thereby damnifying very much both Gentlemens Estates , and done great injury to all Manufacturies . keywords: aforesaid; annum; books; chamber; characters; conceive; country; early; eebo; england; english; goods; government; great; increase; kingdom; london; moneys; parliament; paying; person; place; post; pounds; returns; robberies; said; sums; tcp; tei; text; town; trade cache: A27255.xml plain text: A27255.txt item: #6 of 33 id: A27258 author: R. B. title: Proposals humbly offered to the honourable house of commons first, for a way, or method, to procure bullion. Secondly, that His Majesty, and subject, will be gainers thereby. Thirdly, that it will highly tend to the good of trade, and commerce in general, during the time the moneys shall be re-coining. Which are as follows, (viz) date: 1696.0 words: 1740 flesch: 61 summary: Copies of the texts have been issued variously as SGML (TCP schema; ASCII text with mnemonic sdata character entities); displayable XML (TCP schema; characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or text strings within braces); or lossless XML (TEI P5, characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or TEI g elements). THE Government , by way of Encouragement , allowing Ten Pounds Interest , for Eighteen Months , for One Hundred Pounds value of Plate , to be brought in to be Coined ; and so in proportion for a greater , or lesser Sum ; and His Majesty to have the use of the Money , as the same shall be Coined ; which may ( in a great measure ) be compleated in Six Months , and will bring a speedy Supply , by making daily Payments , so soon as the said Money shall be Coined ; which Money will Circulate amongst the Subject , and , at the same time , answer His Majesty's present Occasions . keywords: books; bullion; characters; coin; early; eebo; english; general; honourable; house; interest; majesty; money; plate; subject; supply; tcp; text; time; way; works cache: A27258.xml plain text: A27258.txt item: #7 of 33 id: A31618 author: Chamberlen, Hugh. title: A collection of some papers writ upon several occasions concerning clipt and counterfeit money, and trade, so far as it relates to the exportation of bullion / by Dr. Hugh Chamberlain. date: 1696.0 words: 4784 flesch: 58 summary: A collection of some papers writ upon several occasions concerning clipt and counterfeit money, and trade, so far as it relates to the exportation of bullion / by Dr. Hugh Chamberlain. Chamberlen, Hugh. 1696 Approx. A collection of some papers writ upon several occasions concerning clipt and counterfeit money, and trade, so far as it relates to the exportation of bullion / by Dr. Hugh Chamberlain. Chamberlen, Hugh. keywords: books; bullion; cent; chamberlain; charge; clipt; commodities; counterfeit; credit; doth; early; eebo; england; english; exportation; foreign; gold; great; home; honourable; house; hugh; land; loss; market; money; nation; natural; occasions; plate; price; proportion; quantity; said; silver; standard; tcp; text; tho; time; trade; value; weight; years cache: A31618.xml plain text: A31618.txt item: #8 of 33 id: A33407 author: Clement, Simon. title: A Dialogue between a countrey gentleman and a merchant concerning the falling of guinea's wherein the whole agrument relating to our money is discuss'd. date: 1696.0 words: 7060 flesch: 54 summary: You 'll please to note , Sir , that I had the Caution to say , that it could not rise ( in that sence ) with respect to Forreigners ; and yet I 'll make it as plain to you , that ( excepting a small matter ) silver is not really capable of rising and falling amongst our selves ; for this seeming and nominal Advance upon it was indeed no advance at all , for you must note , that he that bought silver at 7 s. per Ounce , was to pay for 't either in Guinea's at 30 s. ( and in that sort of Payment his Ounce of silver was indeed worth about 7 s. 3 d. ) or in the clipt and counterfeit Money , of which perhaps the true value of what was call'd 7 s. might not be 4 s. but you may assure your self , that none of these Buyers of silver would give a new mill'd Crown and a 6 d. for an ounce of silver , because they know how to throw them into the melting Pot , and bring out above the weight of an ounce ; and this Rule is so certain , that it can never vary more than such a Value , as People will be content to give for silver when they have occasion to transport it , rather than incur the danger of the Law by melting down , or transporting the currant Coin ; and that difference ( when our currant Money was good ) hath rarely been known to be more than 3 d. or 4 d. per Ounce : If you should yet have the least scruple , pray try whether you can by any sort of reasoning perswade your self , that an Ounce of ●nncoyn'd Silver can have more real Value in it than an Ounce of Silver of the same fineness coyn'd into Money , as a late Ingenious Author hath well observed . Gent. But now you 'll readily agree with me , that if the French King should raise the Denomination of his Crown , and cause it to pass among his own People for 4 Livers , we should still esteem it worth no more than 4 s. 6 d. as we did before , because it had nothing added to its former weight of Silver ; so that in reality the true value of Money is only to be reckoned by the weight of the Silver and Gold that it bears , and t is altogether needless for us to trouble our Heads with the nice distinction of extrinsic , intrinsic , and real Value , for it must all be resolv'd into this one Proposition of Weight , every Man's or Nation 's Riches being truly to be measured , according to the more or less weight of Silver which they possess : And that I may give you an infallible Demonstration that silver is only a standard to its self , and as such , is not capable of being rais'd or lower'd with respect to Forreigners : keywords: advance; army; bills; books; countrey; crown; denomination; eebo; english; forreigners; gent; gold; good; great; guinea; hath; home; king; little; loss; man; matter; merch; merchant; money; nation; new; occasion; ounce; parliament; pay; people; produce; raising; reason; self; selves; send; silver; sir; tcp; text; trade; true; value; weight cache: A33407.xml plain text: A33407.txt item: #9 of 33 id: A33408 author: Clement, Simon. title: A discourse of the general notions of money, trade & exchanges, as they stand in relation to each other attempted by way of aphorism : with a letter to a minister of state, further explaining the aphorisms, and applying them to the present circumstances of this nation : wherein also some thoughts are suggested for the remedying the abuses of our money / by a merchant. date: 1695.0 words: 12783 flesch: 55 summary: 2006-07 TCP Assigned for keying and markup 2006-08 Aptara Keyed and coded from ProQuest page images 2006-11 Celeste Ng Sampled and proofread 2006-11 Celeste Ng Text and markup reviewed and edited 2007-02 pfs Batch review (QC) and XML conversion A DISCOURSE OF THE General Notions OF Money , Trade , & Exchanges , AS They stand in Relation each to other . A DISCOURSE of the General Notions of Money , Trade and Exchanges , as they Stand in Relation each to other , &c. CHAP. keywords: able; abuses; advance; ballance; better; bullion; cause; cent; certain; chapter; charge; clipt; coin; commodities; countrey; countries; currant; different; discourse; eebo; english; exchanges; expence; foreign; general; gold; good; government; great; greater; guineas; hath; hazard; home; little; loss; man; means; men; merchant; money; nation; necessary; necessity; need; new; notions; occasion; parts; pay; people; places; plenty; pounds; present; price; product; profit; publick; reason; riches; rise; selves; sending; silver; small; subject; tcp; text; things; thought; time; trade; trouble; value; want; war; way; weight cache: A33408.xml plain text: A33408.txt item: #10 of 33 id: A37603 author: England and Wales. Parliament. title: An act touching the moneys and coyns of England date: 1649.0 words: 979 flesch: 73 summary: VVHereas the ordering of Moneys and Coyns , and setting the same at such valuations and prizes as shall be thought convenient and necessary , is appropriate and of right belonging to the Soveraign and Supreme Authority of this Commonwealth ; And the Parliament having Resolved to change and alter the former Stamps , Arms , Pictures , with the Motto's , VVords , Stiles and Inscriptions in and about the same , and to cause new Coyns of Gold and Silver to be made of several Stamps , VVeights and Values , but of one uniform Standard and Allay , to be current within this State and Commonwealth of England ; ( that is to say ) One piece of Gold of the value of Twenty shillings Sterlin , to be called , The Twenty shillings piece , stamped on the one side with the Cross , and a Palm and Lawrel , with these words , The Commonwealth of England ; and on the other side with the Cross and Harp , with these words , God with us : One other piece of Gold money of Ten shillings , to be called , The Ten shillings piece ; and one other piece of Gold money of Five shillings , to be called , The Five shillings piece , with the same VVords , Inscriptions , Pictures and Arms on each side , as the former : And for Silver moneys , pieces of Five shillings , and pieces of Two shillings and six pence , and pieces of Twelve pence , and pieces of Six pence , having the same VVords , Inscriptions , Pictures and Arms on each side as the former ; Also pieces of Two pence , and One peny , having the same pictures and Arms as the former , without any VVords or Inscriptions ; and the Half peny having on the one side a Cross , and on the other side a Harp : All which several Coyns of Gold and Silver , The Parliament doth hereby Enact , Declare , publish and authorize to be amongst others heretofore used , the Moneys current for this State and Commonwealth of England , to be used and received by all the people of this Nation , in all Receipts and payments , and in all maner of Traffiquing , Bargaining and Dealing between man and man , at the several rates and values contained in the Schedule or Table hereunto annexed , expressing their true Values and VVeights , according to the Accompt of the Mint within the Tower of London . This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A37603 of text R39470 in the English Short Title Catalog (Wing E1159). keywords: a37603; act; books; coyns; early; england; english; gold; moneys; parliament; peny; pieces; shillings; text cache: A37603.xml plain text: A37603.txt item: #11 of 33 id: A39901 author: Ford, R., fl. 1696. title: A further attempt towards the reformation of the coin with expedients for preventing the stop of commerce during the re-coinage, and supplying the mint with a sufficient quantity of bullion ... / by R. Ford. date: 1696.0 words: 7835 flesch: 50 summary: Now if I can but prove , that such an Excessive Want and Scarcity of Money will be the certain and fatal Consequence of fixing so low a Rate on Silver . Now that the low Valuation of Silver would cause so great a Scarcity of Money , as would in a great measure produce such fatal Effects , may I conceive be evinced from the ensuing Considerations . keywords: advancement; cause; cent; coin; coin'd; commerce; commodities; counterfeit; eebo; english; fixing; fourth; general; gold; good; great; interest; intrinsick; kingdom; land; loss; low; lower; means; millions; mint; money; nation; ounce; persons; present; price; proportion; publick; purchase; quantity; rate; reason; said; scarcity; silver; sterling; sufficient; tale; tcp; text; time; valuation; value; viz; want; weight; years cache: A39901.xml plain text: A39901.txt item: #12 of 33 id: A42642 author: Gerbier, Balthazar, Sir, 1592?-1667. title: To the honnorable the Commons of the realme of England, assembled in Parliament Explanation. Concerning certaine expedients by vvhich the state of England may reape notable advantage. Baltazar Gerbier knight. date: 1646.0 words: 4108 flesch: 57 summary: The rele●● of Husba●●●men . THE erecting of BENCHES OF LOANE begun some tvvo hundred yeares and above in the Kingdom of Naples , and throughout all Itally ; and at their example vvere established in other parts of most trafic , to serve for releefe of all Negosiants , Tradsmen and all needy persons , of vvhat quality and condition soever : And to free them ( and all vvell gouverned States ) of the most pernicious practice of Ievvish Benches of Loane , aftervvards disguised by the name of Lombards , vvhich prouved to be as Cancors in any Common-vveal●h for that they did extort of the needy ( by a redoublement of Interest upon interest ) first , three score & above in the hundred , for the bare Loane ; and over and above intollerable fees , for enroulment , and releasement of goods ; vvhich in conclusion raised to such a hight , as that Proprietaries did find themselves at last deprived of their maine stock : besides that for the most part for vvant of timly releassement , they lost their goods on pretence of forfaiture ; and no such thing in practise ( as in the BENCHES OF LOANE ) to restore to the Ovvners of the goods any surplus made of the goods vvhen sold . keywords: acts; benches; books; certaine; commons; england; english; erecting; expedients; explanation; fit; generall; gerbier; goods; great; hath; honnorable; houses; kingdome; loane; money; needy; negotiants; notable; office; parliament; payment; persons; proprietaries; protocoll; provinces; realme; records; revenevv; rights; said; saile; state; stock; subject; text; time; use; viz; vvas; vvhat; vvhen; vvhich; vvill; vvith; vvould; ● ● cache: A42642.xml plain text: A42642.txt item: #13 of 33 id: A43319 author: T. H. title: A proposal to make good the coyn of this kingdom without diminishing the species thereof. date: 1695.0 words: 1485 flesch: 59 summary: Copies of the texts have been issued variously as SGML (TCP schema; ASCII text with mnemonic sdata character entities); displayable XML (TCP schema; characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or text strings within braces); or lossless XML (TEI P5, characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or TEI g elements). Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 32656) keywords: bank; books; characters; early; eebo; encoding; english; good; image; kingdom; mint; money; online; oxford; partnership; phase; plate; tcp; tei; text; works cache: A43319.xml plain text: A43319.txt item: #14 of 33 id: A44301 author: Hale, Matthew, Sir, 1609-1676. title: A short treatise touching sheriffs accompts written by the Honourable Sir Matthew Hale ... ; to which is added, A tryal of witches, at the assizes held at Bury St. Edmonds, for the county of Suffolk, on the 10th of March 1664, before the said Sir Matthew Hale, Kt. date: 1683.0 words: 18006 flesch: 70 summary: Concerning the manner how the Annual Revenue of the Co●nty was usually answered in the ancient times until 10 E. 1. p. 48. CHAP. ordinarily , on every pound weight of Gold , the King had for his Coin 5 s. out of which he paid to the Master of the Mint , for his work , sometimes 1● . sometimes 1 s. 6 d. keywords: accompts; act; allay; allowance; ancient; anciently; annual; answer; answering; bayly; bedf; blanc; bucks; business; cap; certain; cest; chap; charge; claus; coin; collecting; comitatus; common; compotum; considerable; continued; copper; corpore; corpus; counties; county; court; crown; cum; custos; datas; day; debts; del; denomination; discharged; ease; eebo; english; est; exchequer; fees; fine; firma de; firme; fuit; gold; good; grains; great; great roll; gross; hale; hath; illeviable; kinds; king; lands; levy; libra; long; lord; making; manner; marc; mint; money; nature; nomine; non; numero; oath; onely; order; ounce; particular; payment; pence; peny; period; persons; pipe; post; pound; pound weight; process; proficuis; proficuo; profits; provisions; quibus; quod; reason; reddit; relation; remanente; rents; reservation; reserved; revenue; reward; roll; roy; said; second; set; sheriffs; sheriffs accompts; sheriffs firmes; shillings; silver; sir; small; standard; statute; sterling; sterling silver; sub; summons; summs; tallies; tcp; terras; text; things; time; title; trouble; true; truth; tryal; use; vicecomitis; vicontiel; viz; weight; year; yearly; ● ● cache: A44301.xml plain text: A44301.txt item: #15 of 33 id: A45304 author: Hall, Joseph, 1574-1656. title: A modest offer of some meet considerations, tendred to the English about their coyne and trade, and particularly to East India date: 1695.0 words: 3451 flesch: 66 summary: 2005-11 TCP Assigned for keying and markup 2005-12 Apex CoVantage Keyed and coded from ProQuest page images 2006-10 Taryn Hakala Sampled and proofread 2006-10 Taryn Hakala Text and markup reviewed and edited 2007-02 pfs Batch review (QC) and XML conversion A Modest Offer of some Meet Considerations , tendred to the ENGLISH about Their Coyne and Trade , and particularly to East India . The Kings Customs and our Wealth will encrease , and the French being without Trade and Captures at Sea , will the sooner be reduced to Extremity . keywords: armies; books; company; dutch; early; east; eebo; england; english; exclusive; fleet; foreign; good; guineas; india; joynt; money; nation; parliament; payment; shillings; silver; stock; subjects; tcp; text; thing; time; trade; value; war; works cache: A45304.xml plain text: A45304.txt item: #16 of 33 id: A46155 author: Boyle, Michael, 1609?-1702. title: Whereas information is given unto us the Lords Justices and Council, that divers great summes of money have been of late secretly conveyed, and transported out of this kingdom, contrary to the laws and statutes now in force prohibiting the same, to the great impoverishing of the realm, and final consumption to the treasure thereof, if not speedily prevented ... by the Lords Justices and Council, Mich. Dublin, c., Art. Forbese. date: 1675.0 words: 1481 flesch: 64 summary: (EEBO-TCP ; phase 1, no. A46155) Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 104882) Text selection was based on the New Cambridge Bibliography of English Literature (NCBEL). keywords: books; characters; contrary; council; dublin; early; eebo; english; force; great; ireland; justices; kingdom; laws; lords; money; online; phase; realm; statutes; tcp; tei; text cache: A46155.xml plain text: A46155.txt item: #17 of 33 id: A46608 author: T. J. title: The Nature, nobility, character, and complement of money date: 1684.0 words: 1524 flesch: 72 summary: eng Money -- Poetry. 2007-11 TCP Assigned for keying and markup 2008-05 SPi Global Keyed and coded from ProQuest page images 2008-06 Mona Logarbo Sampled and proofread 2008-06 Mona Logarbo Text and markup reviewed and edited 2008-09 pfs Batch review (QC) and XML conversion THE NATURE , NOBILITY , Character , and Complement OF MONEY . keywords: books; characters; complement; creation; doth; early; eebo; encoding; english; image; men; meum; money; nature; nobility; online; oxford; partnership; phase; sea; tcp; tei; text; tuum; xml cache: A46608.xml plain text: A46608.txt item: #18 of 33 id: A46637 author: James, William, fl. 1689-1695. title: An explanation of the proposal lately given in to the Honourable House of Commons, signed William James. It is humbly proposed that guineas, and all other gold coins now currant, be brought into the Exchequer ... date: 1696.0 words: 1729 flesch: 67 summary: Text selection was based on the New Cambridge Bibliography of English Literature (NCBEL). (EEBO-TCP ; phase 1, no. A46637) Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 32636) keywords: bill; books; characters; commons; early; eebo; english; exchequer; gold; good; guineas; house; james; money; pound; silver; tally; tcp; text; time; william; works cache: A46637.xml plain text: A46637.txt item: #19 of 33 id: A48129 author: England and Wales. Parliament. title: Sir, this day was published an act for continuing several duties granted by former acts upon wine, vinegar, tobacoo, East-Indian goods, and other merchandise (imported) untill the 29th day of September 1701 wherein is a clause for preventing the further encrease of the rate of coyned gold, which enacts. date: 1696.0 words: 1087 flesch: 61 summary: Copies of the texts have been issued variously as SGML (TCP schema; ASCII text with mnemonic sdata character entities); displayable XML (TCP schema; characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or text strings within braces); or lossless XML (TEI P5, characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or TEI g elements). Text selection was based on the New Cambridge Bibliography of English Literature (NCBEL). keywords: books; characters; day; early; eebo; encoding; english; gold; image; online; oxford; partnership; phase; rate; tcp; tei; text; xml cache: A48129.xml plain text: A48129.txt item: #20 of 33 id: A48895 author: Locke, John, 1632-1704. title: Some considerations of the consequences of the lowering of interest, and raising the value of money in a letter to a member of Parliament. date: 1692.0 words: 45711 flesch: 59 summary: So that whatever this Author , or any one else may say , Money is brought into England by nothing but spending here less of Foreign Commodities , than what we carry to Market can pay for ; Nor can Debts we owe to Foreigners be paid by Bills of Exchange , till our Commodities Exported , and Sold beyond Sea , have produced Money or Debts due there , to some of our Merchants ; for nothing will pay Debts but Money or Moneys worth , which three or four Lines writ in Paper cannot be ; for if they have an intrinsick value , and can serve instead of Money , why do we not send them to Market instead of our Cloth , Lead and Tin ? and at an easier rate purchase the Commodities we want . Si●v●r th●t is worth but 5 s. 2 d. per Ounce at the 〈◊〉 is w●●th 5 s. 4 d. elsewhere . keywords: advantage; alteration; annum; answer; apt; author; ballance; better; bills; body; borrowing; bullion; bushel; care; cent; certain; charge; cheaper; clear; coin; coin'd; coinage; commerce; commodities; commodity; consumption; corn; countries; country; credit; crown; current; day; debts; denomination; effect; england; english; equal; evident; exchange; exportation; fall; falling; farm; foreign; foreigners; gain; general; gold; good; grains; great; greater; half; hands; high; holland; home; income; increase; interest; intrinsick; kingdom; known; labour; labourer; land; landholder; law; lead; legal; lessening; life; lighter; like; little; loss; low; making; man; market; means; measure; men; merchant; mill'd; mint; money; native; natural; necessary; necessity; need; neighbours; new; number; ounce; owner; parts; pass; pay; paying; people; pieces; place; plenty; poor; present; price; product; profit; proportion; publick; purchase; quantity; raising; rate; ready money; reason; rent; respect; riches; scarcity; sea; security; self; sellers; set; shew; shillings; silver; silver money; sort; species; stamp; standard; standard silver; standing; suppose; supposing; taxes; tenant; text; things; time; trade; true; use; value; vent; want; way; ways; wealth; weight; weighty money; wheat; world; worth; yearly; years; yield; ● t; ● ● cache: A48895.xml plain text: A48895.txt item: #21 of 33 id: A49332 author: Lowndes, William, 1652-1724. title: A further essay for the amendment of the gold and silver coins. With the opinion of Mr. Gerrard de Malynes, who was an eminent merchant in the reign of Queen Elizabeth, concerning the standard of England. date: 1695.0 words: 3861 flesch: 58 summary: Money -- Early works to 1800. Some Gentlemen who has made it their business for some Years last past , to melt down all the mill'd and broad Moneys , will tell you , That altering the Standard will lessen the Reputation of our Trade abroad , as tho' all the Foreign Trade depended upon the exchange of Money . keywords: better; books; characters; coin; commodities; computation; defect; early; eebo; england; english; essay; expedient; gold; government; lowndes; mint; moneys; new; opinion; oxford; people; plate; present; price; project; publick; reason; shillings; silver; standard; tcp; tei; text; time; trade; useful; value; works cache: A49332.xml plain text: A49332.txt item: #22 of 33 id: A49333 author: Lowndes, William, 1652-1724. title: A report containing an essay for the amendment of the silver coins date: 1695.0 words: 27149 flesch: 46 summary: First , It is believed by some Authors , ( and not without Reason ) that in the most Ancient times , when Money was first Coined within this Island , it was made of * Pure Gold and Silver , like the Moneys now Currant in some other Nations , particularly in Hungary and Barbary , where they have Pieces of Gold called Ducats and Sultanesses ; and in the Kingdom of Industan , where they have Pieces of Silver called Rupees , which I have seen , and wherein ( as I am inform'd ) there is little or no Allay : And that afterwards it being found convenient in the Fabrication of the Moneys , to have a certain Quantity or Proportion of Baser Metal to be mixt with the Pure Gold and Silver , the Word Sterling was introduced , and hath ever since been used , to denote the certain Proportion or Degree of Fineness , which ought to be retained in the respective Coins composed of such mixture , as aforesaid . And it is freely submitted to Impartial Judgments , whether the propos'd Advance of Silver in the Coins can infer a Real Loss upon any Persons , other than such as can propose to themselves particularly the Receipt of Moneys in Weighty or Unclipt Pieces only , and the Conversion thereof to an Advantage , which Law or Reason would not allow them . keywords: accounts; aforesaid; allay; angels; authority; ballance; base; bills; book; bullion; carats; carats fine; case; certain; changer; charge; charles; clipt; clipt moneys; coin'd; coining; coins; commerce; common; consideration; course; crowns; currant; day; denomination; difference; diminished; edward; effect; england; english; equal; exchange; exchequer; extrinsick; fabrication; farthings; fine; fine gold; fine silver; fineness; foot; foreign; fourth; general; gold; gold coins; good; grains; great; greater; groats; guineas; half; half fine; hammer'd; hath; indenture; interest; king; kingdom; light; like; little; london; lordships; loss; majesty; master; means; melting; mint; molten; nation; necessary; new; new moneys; nobles; number; officers; old standard; old sterling; opinion; ounces; ounces fine; parliament; parts; payment; pence; pence half; pence sterling; peny weight; people; persons; pieces; pound sterling; pound weight; pounds; present; present standard; price; profit; proportionable; propos'd; publick; quantities; quarter; queen; rate; reason; reasonable; regard; respective; rialls; said; said old; second; self; set; shillings; silver; silver coins; silver moneys; silver pieces; sir; small; sovereigns; standard; standard silver; sterling; sterling silver; subject; sum; tale; tcp; testoons; text; time; trade; treasurer; troy; unclipt; unites; value; weight; weight fine; weight troy; whereof; william; wit; worker; years cache: A49333.xml plain text: A49333.txt item: #23 of 33 id: A51042 author: G. M., fl. 1663. title: The citizens complaint for want of trade, or The trades-mans outcry for lack of money By G. M. date: 1663.0 words: 2579 flesch: 70 summary: Others rejoyce ; and some it makes quite mad : Money makes some rich ; some it maketh poor : Money makes Rogues ; 'T is Money makes a Whore : Money makes Knaves ; the reason 's very plain ; They'd ne're turn Knaves , wer 't not for knavish gain : Money makes men Fools , ( as daily you may see ) But this thing Money has it at command ? 'T is Money that I want ; for Trading it is bad ; 'T is for the want thereof that makes my heart so sad ; I think , therefore , my wisest course will be , To seek Redress for this my povertie ; Which how I know uot ; but , would Strife once end , And men turn good ; the TIMES , no doubt , would mend . keywords: bad; books; characters; citizens; complaint; doth; early; eebo; encoding; english; fear; images; man; mans; men; money; online; oxford; partnership; phase; poor; tcp; tei; text; times; trade; want; xml cache: A51042.xml plain text: A51042.txt item: #24 of 33 id: A54623 author: Petty, William, Sir, 1623-1687. title: Sir William Petty his Quantulumcunque concerning money to the Lord Marquess of Halyfax, anno 1682. date: 1695.0 words: 4457 flesch: 72 summary: Ans. You would indeed have ⅓ part more of the new christned Shillings ; but not an Ounce more of Silver , nor Money ; nor could you get an Ounce more of Forreign Commodities for all your new multiplied Money than before : Nor even of any Domestick Commodities ; but perhaps a little at first from the few Fools above mentioned . It looks like a Demonstration that it is : Yet if Gold be not Money , but a Commodity next like to Money , and that Silver be only Money ; then we must see whether 1000 Jacobusses would then purchase no more Silver than 1000 Guineas will do now : keywords: 20s; answ; coinage; coins; commodities; copper; doth; eebo; england; english; farthings; gold; hath; interest; laws; like; little; men; merchant; money; nation; new; old; ounces; petty; proclamation; purchase; quantulumcunque; shillings; silver; sir; states; tcp; text; time; use; value; weight; william; worth; years cache: A54623.xml plain text: A54623.txt item: #25 of 33 id: A64755 author: Vaughan, Henry, 1622-1695. title: A discourse of coin and coinage the first invention, use, matter, forms, proportions, and differences, ancient and modern. With the advantages and disadvantages of the rise and fall thereof, in their own or neighbouring nations: and the reasons. Together with a short account of our common-law therein. As also tables of the value of all sorts of pearls, diamonds, gold, silver, and other metals. By Rice Vaughan, late of Grays-Inn, Esq; date: 1696.0 words: 1102 flesch: 68 summary: Text selection was based on the New Cambridge Bibliography of English Literature (NCBEL). A64755) Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 33699) keywords: books; characters; coinage; early; edition; eebo; english; online; oxford; partnership; phase; rice; tables; tcp; tei; text; vaughan; works cache: A64755.xml plain text: A64755.txt item: #26 of 33 id: A67512 author: Ward, Edward, 1667-1731. title: The miracles perform'd by money a poem / by the author of the humours of a coffee-house. date: 1692.0 words: 4863 flesch: 69 summary: Mong Wonders to which Mony makes pretence , 'T is strange it shou'd supply the want of Sense ! T were Endless , should I but attempt to Run , O're all the Miracles by Mony done . keywords: author; beauty; blessing; books; characters; charms; days; dear; early; edward; eebo; encoding; english; ere; estate; fortune; friend; gold; good; images; john; london; lord; love; low; lye; man; mankind; men; mighty; miracles; monied; mony; nay; new; old; online; oxford; partnership; pen; person; phase; pleasure; poor; power; praise; quality; rich; sad; self; sense; store; strange; subject; tcp; tei; text; thing; tho; thou; thought; time; true; want; wit; wonders; works; world; worth; xml; young; youthful cache: A67512.xml plain text: A67512.txt item: #27 of 33 id: A82486 author: England and Wales. Parliament. title: An Act touching the moneys and coyns of England. date: 1649.0 words: 991 flesch: 75 summary: This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A82486 of text R211240 in the English Short Title Catalog (Thomason 669.f.14[58]). (EEBO-TCP ; phase 1, no. A82486) Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 163046) keywords: a82486; act; arms; coyns; england; gold; moneys; parliament; peny; pieces; shillings; text; thomason cache: A82486.xml plain text: A82486.txt item: #28 of 33 id: A83303 author: England and Wales. title: Die Lunæ 6 Septemb. 1647. An ordinance or the Lords and Commons assembled in Parliament, that from henceforth no moneys clipt, filed, or deminished, shall be payable, or received in payment within this kingdom. date: 1647.0 words: 856 flesch: 72 summary: This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A83303 of text R221657 in the English Short Title Catalog (Thomason 669.f.11[75]). An ordinance or the Lords and Commons assembled in Parliament, that from henceforth no moneys clipt, filed, or deminished, shall be payable, or received in payment within this kingdom. England and Wales. keywords: clipt; commons; die; england; foure; lords; moneys; ordinance; parliament; payable; payment; septemb; text; wales cache: A83303.xml plain text: A83303.txt item: #29 of 33 id: A95703 author: Newton, John, 1622-1678. title: A table to know what a hundred waight commeth to from a farthing the pound, to 2'-6d the pound. date: 1645.0 words: 1177 flesch: 66 summary: This text is an enriched version of the TCP digital transcription A95703 of text R210358 in the English Short Title Catalog (Thomason 669.f.10[24]). 11 C The rate of 11 defects per 10,000 words puts this text in the C category of texts with between 10 and 35 defects per 10,000 words. keywords: farthing; half; hapeny; pence; pound; table; text; thomason; waight cache: A95703.xml plain text: A95703.txt item: #30 of 33 id: A96558 author: England and Wales. Sovereign (1689-1694 : William and Mary) title: His Majesties order for taking off the chimney-money, in His gracious message to the Parliament, for the ease of His loving subjects. With some observations thereupon date: 1689.0 words: 1915 flesch: 64 summary: Text selection was based on the New Cambridge Bibliography of English Literature (NCBEL). For that Egypt-Plague , those House Locusts ( GOD and Great William be prais●● ) are now departing your Dwelling● ; and you and your Race for the future may live in hopes of making your Fires burn clear , without melting down your Porridge-Pots into the bargain . keywords: books; characters; chimney; early; ease; eebo; encoding; england; english; gracious; great; image; king; majesty; mary; message; money; online; original; oxford; parliament; partnership; phase; poor; subjects; tcp; tei; text; william; works cache: A96558.xml plain text: A96558.txt item: #31 of 33 id: B05541 author: Scotland. Privy Council. title: A proclamation appointing some forraigne species of gold and silver to be current date: 1677.0 words: 1739 flesch: 61 summary: Text selection was based on the New Cambridge Bibliography of English Literature (NCBEL). Royal arms at head of text; initial letter. keywords: books; characters; council; coyn; currant; early; edinburgh; eebo; english; forraign; gold; image; kingdom; money; online; partnership; phase; pounds; privy; proclamation; said; scotland; silver; spanish; species; tcp; tei; text; works cache: B05541.xml plain text: B05541.txt item: #32 of 33 id: B05674 author: Scotland. Privy Council. title: A proclamation for raising the rate of money. date: 1695.0 words: 1396 flesch: 65 summary: (EEBO-TCP ; phase 1, no. B05674) Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 179086) Text selection was based on the New Cambridge Bibliography of English Literature (NCBEL). keywords: books; characters; council; early; edinburgh; eebo; english; kingdom; money; online; oxford; partnership; phase; piece; privy; raising; rate; scotland; scots; shilling; silver; tcp; tei; text; works cache: B05674.xml plain text: B05674.txt item: #33 of 33 id: B06565 author: Wade, John, fl. 1660-1680. title: 'Tis money makes a man: or, The good-fellows folly. Here in this song good fellow that mayst find, how money makes a man, if thou'rt not blind? Therefore return e're that it be too late, and don't on strumpets spend thy whole estate, for when all is gone, no better thou wilt be: but laught to scorn in all thy poverty. To a pleasant new tune: Bonny black Bess: or, Digby. / By J. Wade. date: None words: 2034 flesch: 76 summary: Here in this song good fellow that mayst find, how money makes a man, if thou'rt not blind? Here in this song good fellow that mayst find, how money makes a man, if thou'rt not blind? keywords: ale; better; books; characters; doth; early; eebo; english; estate; fellows; good; house; man; money; new; online; penny; phase; poverty; tcp; tei; text; thou; wade; wife; works cache: B06565.xml plain text: B06565.txt