The trade and navigation of Great-Britain considered : shewing that the surest way for a nation to increase in riches, is to prevent the importation of such foreign commodities as may be rais'd at home : that this Kingdom is capable of raising within itself, and its colonies, materials for employing all our poor in those manufactures, which we now import from such of our neighbours who refuse the admission of ours : some account of the commodities each country we trade with takes from us, and what we take from them : with observations on the balance
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The trade and navigation of Great-Britain considered : shewing that the surest way for a nation to increase in riches, is to prevent the importation of such foreign commodities as may be rais'd at home : that this Kingdom is capable of raising within itself, and its colonies, materials for employing all our poor in those manufactures, which we now import from such of our neighbours who refuse the admission of ours : some account of the commodities each country we trade with takes from us, and what we take from them : with observations on the balance
Printed by Sam. Buckley, 1730
The second edition
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To the reader signed: Joshua Gee