can occupy the attention of the statesman and the moralist, to earnest ideas clothed in simple and well-measured words; and that these will receive with welcome any worthy contribution to the expanding opinions of our day and nation, and look in these "Ideas," perhaps not unsuccessfully, for some true and abiding materials towards the structure of some fairer polity of the future.
Brampton,
August 4th, 1854.
∵ In the MS. of the Third Chapter, on "Positive Welfare," there occurs an hiatus of a few pages. This has not been supplied in the German edition, published by the Author's brother; but the thread of the argument is sufficiently clear, from the Author's summary, to occasion little difficulty to the reader in continuing it in his own mind.