54 THE WEST SHORE. February, 1879, tiik BvoumoH ok worm, Tli follow inn very interesting ami instruc tive article M the " Kvulutiiin of Wonla ami I 'henry of Value, " u read by the Hon. Alei. IM Mr, at a lute nit eling (il the S. K. Academy nf Sciences All words ue subject to mutation. They arc created, grow, gitn huth to cilhrr words, ate lt. 11 4 111 significance, absorbed, or lna their loron, or ilwimllti away ami Immune obsolete. I lua course of change la ilim to their en vimm iiitml, which u tlir liiiinaii iniinl: ami it ia, con aUlitly, into till' evolution o( the intellect Uiat H muat look for the evolution of words, Huilo 111111 are nnli' of siccch, ami tliia con' aiata of a frw names, which chiefly represent lh thing, of which they stand in present need, a food ami drink I In .publics of thcau things licit 1 1. elU-tllmii, ami good, hail, lug, little, hanl, anlt, rU' , come into nan aa wonla. Aa the olawrvation of the.e MM I ttends ami their tniuila develop, an ilo their TtmlrttUrUl Mem- iy canma them into the pant, imagim'tliou into the future The singlo verh, am, limla two new ciiiiijialliulis, tiiu, in lit. Treat'lit ly Uia relations between thing., ami afterwards Ihtass between states .,( ensU'iicc, a, turns ami movement, are penciled, ami wonla an coined to vlpreaa them I'hn coinage li usually of (Id metal, which ia . haaH t, or easier to ,,htain, than now. I'mir people me their Kaimenta lor many ilinVrciit purposes, ml then often remake tin in Ix-fnrc they cut them oil, aid huy new onea. The una hm closk n also lui coverlid; his horae Mink. I lua umlmlla, ami aomrtiniea even hi weUr nuher Ai it lioooiiioa woni, it la cut up for a tavlr ..I tmusrrs; ami when young IVp,. umwa old enough to require a aunilar garb of dignity, it ia razed an. I i ,.n.l, i, . serviceable 4am; ami a., it ...uiiuues in ue until at laat, it W degraded Ui the menial level of a home . I0U1 It ia Uiiii alao with wonla Aiming IwllTll paal ami alao anion,; detsti-l nati , the aame tnml M .....I u Mftf a variety i meanings, aa wiIiimi. many af the Wonli in the Choctaw ami the I roues. V hen aia ial development taking pU., the etr uhiI wonl ia either specialised, .ml uuv u, ,u ,,ngnia) mean n with ..lh. 1 iiuU wonla, or rl.e it ia.ii,r aUI altogether by new terim; in which caee tha tint wonl lu.mei degraded, ami .loomed ia extinction Thus ...nf. which waa once the name only "' Oexi, lining tupem-drd altogether by tha latter trim or ita t.intalenl, sulaetpu m ly Itaa-ame that ..I any nallr.l m (a.werful rr ri then ....l ireoe rally to all landed profri Uara, al now attached to tvery Mtt lnlin. houa. kee,.t. in tha lorm of hml M ttm, which ha.1 a miliar ealtl ongia, Il isaxtont a M irlue with Uieamalleatof a,h.. '"'J ' curUiM km ul ,. ha. laitoa Irum the dignity ul I. dl iaraiuounUhiii Ui tha leel ul heairra. ami duatinen. and lite .f.i. tawAher wonl ol a.ddr origin will (rntaaUy, in Ume, l,, uhaolele. In tin Owe (m that ii when the ..Id wonl u r. twnaxl lot a apav tal lrt. iu meaning ouaawa rltnl with tha ganiral refinement of nlaava. alwayi au.,ng, ,4 ewwrae, that a. ia! lUvaOuMttcal nmUirn Thiia lUrtv, ,. the Uuu for he.nl. and unj,,,!, UrUnan. meant annul) a Iwlel man W.i. m Ulin f.., a oowmanily. and unginally , , ni4ul Mwt naaply a avtUer or .. who dwelt in a onawwwauty Tfca JiIImwbo. Utwmt rwr.irwia i ... wa. tbirvl i. u.. i. It tha dilten i. . b-twea aa ia.digK.u. Italian and a It.wuau oaaMIMl. Tha Ktrwarana. wbo tan a highlv re fiMd taxwOa. wwra owlUd nwrhtrMu y 0, UaavJ ol ouOaara and ntrwtoa w ho f.xnded K.,lu Little by little thcac words camo to have mean Im men, other wonla were creauxl U aiiare thcie ineaninga, M trilil, untamrd, mvayf, on the one aide, and rnlujMrnril, euUurtd, rejiiml, on the other; hut the original wonts were special ized and retained. I'aiiniiig over the Dark Aucs, and nliaervinir the word tmlliattOlt, M it came into me aiaiti in modern days, we find that it, It lint, eiurtaWd merely a phase or condition of a... icty; then, according to 1 1 uiot, a move ment of society, and now it embraces both plume and movement, with the probability that in time, it will be partly displaced Of pngnu, tttkU tvoiuthn, MM other inure stievial terms. The word iHunry is due to the temple of Juno U ' i. where the coins of the empire were fabricated. Ihe use of this word, was, how ever, not common; for long after the Unman nunierary system was hrokeu down, mimnim continue,! to lie used as the generic term for the circulating medium. The word "money" came into more general use during the Dark Ages, until with the scarcity, ileliaseiiient and eventual almost en tire disuse of coins, it waa atiierseded hy I . meaning, literally, paymeut in kind, hut afterward in the form of specie, applied to coins and bullion. This word "siieoies" was the lowest and grossest term employed to ox pn i". the ein ulatiiiK medium of trie times, the word iiummim or "nuiiiliers," of the Roman Common weal til, having been the highest anil moat rolincil. With tho ineiliieval period, which fostered the Dark Ages and tho reuae of coins, which the NopMio of the Itoinan silver miiies in lieruiauy and clsi w here rendered piiB nilile, the word "money" again came into use, and being always aaaociatod with the precious meiaia, convcyeil no meaning apart from thorn, ami previous bi the present century signified only so much gold and silver; this being the iiciiniuon given ui it ny all ol tho earlier, and many of the later, ccouoiuista. ith the general restoration of pence, the ro turn of security, and the conscoueiit use of cor irative and governmental credit! for tho pur pnsea uf a circulating medium, the meauing of money haa Ihhii amplilied, and it ia now gener ally umlcriUvod Ui include any deacription of circulating media, whether coin, promissory bills, or irredeemable notes, otherwise minima noa or uumerariea. Hut p. i h.,)., the ni., it extraordinary am) in Unating term in our vocabulary ia "value." Kvcrybndy uses it, yet iioIhhIv antiuara to ha certain of ita meaning. Kur 100 yean tho ablest w ' me wuriil, Adam .Smith, Chevalier Morch, Daniel ldcardo, .lean Uaptiate Say I roderic lluitiat. .lohn Stuart Mill ....I . k'i ii.t m lit. nv ol leaser lights, have tried to agree umm a defi mtmn of v.lue, but in vain, the entire n-ience ,.f K,liUoal e. ,my is built niton it; the practical alUira f government bingo upon it' H InpOrtMl agency of man, welfare (a Mod monetary sy.teml waita u.H.n it: and y.t no man ha. satufactonly anafysed jt. Although J5 f the Latin wonl inere, the word 'tabic waa not used by the Unmans in it. present .en.e It came into use with the ipecie money ,, the Dark Age., and previous to' the time of Haatiat. scan-,, v :i nawtl .rally 0OMIMd to nieau that attnbuto of . -..-.. .,.. rnve.i tn.iii iu materialitv .mld..r.h,lv rfn,mth,,.t of , pn! , ' tnni llab.rl. urfn.mit. .....1..1 ,.-.r."lul In 1- a." ".7.77- - ' wtuni, r : in nsli itvL Ml are the opiniona, ri (. tin K, ... Ad.,,, f,milhi Ki. ard , IWt.ti.te Say, ami Chevalier Stunh Hut an annlioalion ,,t l,. . . . ahowe.1 all 'J th.m ... L "u ' "? " nur durability, rvertheleaa w, JSmS alua ol, nd are nta.lv Li atan (. iu :n . and ventdauun. itiVr "b er " r Mler .n.0lu the pnluct,;yr HJ I would neter I, Ismght, nor diamonds s hi mimu u ,1,1,1, 2 fi07 J g rl Uwo, 5 l0 Uow w,)rkt tt. "tl.IM.11l I 1 .J 1.. ,.. I luxury, which possess the highest value: and jf we luo. tor vuue 111 ueairuuuity, land, and water, and a myriad of other things, which nccessarilly form the first objects of man's de sire, bat which nature has supplied to him so liberally that they possess little or no value, arise to confutu the definition. Unable to digest the word as a whole, the economists attempted to manage it in parts. They split it into pieces, calling one value intue, another value in exchange, and so on, until each piece was .small enough for their purpose ; but, still in vain, there always remained a doubtful mass which they could not dispose of, and which constituted the enigma of the science they had attempted to construct Said Hast i,it : "The primary element of ex change, is the notion of value ; so that every truth, and every error which this word intro duces into men's minds, is a social truth or error ; " and " value is to political economy, what numeration is to arithemetic," and "economical science is condensed, and summed up in the word value, of whioh it is only a lengthened explanation." In one masterly survey of the whole subject, this gifted philosopher swept away all the vague and many of the erroneous notions of value that had preceded him. He held that value was not an attribute, but a relation of things ; that it implied " comparison, apprecia tion, estimation, measure :" or. as he otherwise explained it, "value is the relation of two services exchanged." This view was a great step in the right direc tion. It was somethiuE to know that value waa a relation, arid not a thing, nor a mysterious issue of the attributes of thing ; it would have Wen more satisfactory had Bastiat informed us precisely what that relation was, bat he died liefore his treatise on value was comnleted: and. judging from its appearance, probably, without revising the portion he had written. If an effort lie now made to complete this work, it is nnpeit it will lie viewed with the indulgent duo to the earnest enuuirer into anv difficult subject In the first place it must be said that Bastiat's leflnition is hardlv brood enoutrh. Whv should value be hold to exist only between two services xcnangM ; why not between all services, and ommodities exchangeable ! The edifice which now shelters us, is not exchanged, nor beiiul exchanged, yet it has a value ; and that value is dotermincd not by comparing it merely with tho thing that may lie offered in exchange for it, but, through tho medium of monev. bv comnari- son with all other things which are exchange- aiue. Value therefore exists not merely between two coiiimiHlities. or service, but between all of such; and it exist not merely between things which are exchanged, but between all things which are exchangeable. The notion, common to othor economist beside Bastiat, that money measures the value only of those things which are in market, np for sale, or being exchanged, is doubtless derived from th Jispanty between tho magnitude of all commo lities and available itrvinM .nil the littleness of the measure the ma of money which tonus their nominal equivalent. It would b equally abaurd to hold, that gallon measure only wines which are being exchanged. Th '""ney is 01 it present magnituat simply because it wa o chosen to be, or so left to become: it can be made lanrer or smaller at man's pleasure, whenever he chooses to tx erase the same dominion over it, that be has chosen to exercise over weight and measures; ..... i, wnencver he choose to define, ana limit by law, the unit of measure, whioh, in th caee of money, is the whole maaa. ShooJd this limitation increaae nr Mii.u tu. .mitmla of the existing mass of money, this will not alter value, but only the expreaaion 0 it in vo wii, price. So, too, the gaiwa mcasun' is of it. i,r.......t la m chosen to be; it would answer the same purpose, and prove equally efficient no matter what it - . tioou taweaay ' P low. u waa; unK. m f .e.-. th. avrm.