綜合英語.英國文學經典作品

Text B The Rewards of the Professions

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Adam Smith

The probability that any particular person shall ever be qualified for the employment to which he is educated is very different in different occupations.In the greater part of mechanic trades, success is almost certain; but very uncertain in the liberal professions.Put your son apprentice to a shoemaker, there is little doubt of his learning to make a pair of shoes; but send him to study the law, it is at least twenty to one if ever he makes such proficiency as will enable him to live by the business.In a perfectly fair lottery, those who draw the prizes ought to gain all that is lost by those who draw the blanks.In a profession where twenty fail for one that succeeds, that one ought to gain all that should have been gained by the unsuccessful twenty.The counsellor-at-law who, perhaps, at near forty years of age, begins to make something by his profession, ought to receive the retribution, not only of his own so tedious and expensive education, but that of more than twenty others who are never likely to make anything by it.How extravagant soever the fees of counsellors-at-law may sometimes appear, their real retribution is never equal to this.Compute in any particular place what is likely to be annually gained, and what is likely to be annually spent, by all the different workmen in any common trade, such as that of shoemakers or weavers, and you will find that the former sum will generally exceed the latter.But make the same computation with regard to all the counsellors and students of law, in all the different inns of court, and you will find that their annual gains bear but a very small proportion to their annual expense, even though you rate the former as high, and the latter as low, as can well be done.The lottery of the law, therefore, is very far from being a perfectly fair lottery; and that, as well as many other liberal and honourable professions, are, in point of pecuniary gain, evidently under-recompensed.

Those professions keep their level, however, with other occupations, and, notwithstanding these discouragements, all the most generous and liberal spirits are eager to crowd into them.Two different causes contribute to recommend them.First, the desire of the reputation which attends upon superior excellence in any of them; and, secondly, the natural confidence which every man has more or less, not only in his own abilities, but in his own good fortune.