drunkenness,
nor to
poverty,
nor to
overcrowding
in towns,
nor to
temptation
from
surrounding
wealth--nor,
indeed, to
any one of
the many
indirect
causes to
which it
is
sometimes
referred--but
mainly TO
A
DISPOSITION
TO
ACQUIREPROPERTY
WITH A
LESS
DEGREE OF
LABOUR
THAN
ORDINARY
INDUSTRY."The
italics
are the
author's.
(15) S. C.
Hall's
'Memories.'
(16)
Moore's
'Life of
Byron,'
8vo. Ed.,
p. 182.
(17)
Captain
Basil Hall
records
the
following