The Man Who Laughs


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IV.  
The commerce in children in the 17th century, as we have explained, was  
connected with a trade. The Comprachicos engaged in the commerce, and  
carried on the trade. They bought children, worked a little on the raw  
material, and resold them afterwards.  
The venders were of all kinds: from the wretched father, getting rid of  
his family, to the master, utilizing his stud of slaves. The sale of men  
was a simple matter. In our own time we have had fighting to maintain  
this right. Remember that it is less than a century ago since the  
Elector of Hesse sold his subjects to the King of England, who required  
men to be killed in America. Kings went to the Elector of Hesse as we go  
to the butcher to buy meat. The Elector had food for powder in stock,  
and hung up his subjects in his shop. Come buy; it is for sale. In  
England, under Jeffreys, after the tragical episode of Monmouth, there  
were many lords and gentlemen beheaded and quartered. Those who were  
executed left wives and daughters, widows and orphans, whom James II.  
gave to the queen, his wife. The queen sold these ladies to William  
Penn. Very likely the king had so much per cent. on the transaction. The  
extraordinary thing is, not that James II. should have sold the women,  
but that William Penn should have bought them. Penn's purchase is  
excused, or explained, by the fact that having a desert to sow with men,  
he needed women as farming implements.  
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Quick Jump
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