Sophisms of the Protectionists
SOPHISMS OF THE PROTECTIONISTS. BY THE LATE M. FREDERIC BASTIAT, _Member of the Institute of France_. * * * * * Part I. Sophisms of Protection--First Series. Part II. Sophisms of Protection--Second Series. Part III. Spoliation and Law. Part IV. Capital and Interest.
a cow brought from Switzerland, breathing as seldom as he could, and
never speaking a word. Since he come to Tours he has lived quite
alone; he is as proud as a peacock; but you have certainly made a
conquest of him, for probably it is not on my account that he has
ridden under the window twice every day since you have been here.--He
has certainly fallen in love with you."
That last phrase roused the Countess like magic. Her involuntary start
and smile took the Marquise by surprise. So far from showing a sign of
the instinctive satisfaction felt by the most strait-laced of women
when she learns that she has destroyed the peace of mind of some male
victim, there was a hard, haggard expression in Julie's face--a look
of repulsion amounting almost to loathing.
A woman who loves will put the whole world under the ban of Love's
empire for the sake of the one whom she loves; but such a woman can
laugh and jest; and Julie at that moment looked as if the memory of
some recently escaped peril was too sharp and fresh not to bring with
it a quick sensation of pain. Her aunt, by this time convinced that
Julie did not love her nephew, was stupefied by the discovery that she
loved nobody else. She shuddered lest a further discovery should show
her Julie's heart disenchanted, lest the experience of a day, or
perhaps of a night, should have revealed to a young wife the full
extent of Victor's emptiness.
"If she has found him out, there is an end of it," thought the
SOPHISMS OF THE PROTECTIONISTS. BY THE LATE M. FREDERIC BASTIAT, _Member of the Institute of France_. * * * * * Part I. Sophisms of Protection--First Series. Part II. Sophisms of Protection--Second Series. Part III. Spoliation and Law. Part IV. Capital and Interest.