21.5. 5. Other Differences.
Commerce is sometimes destroyed by conquerors,
sometimes cramped by monarchs; it traverses the earth, flies from the
places where it is oppressed, and stays where it has liberty to breath:
it reigns at present where nothing was formerly to be seen but deserts,
seas, and rocks; and where it once reigned now there are only deserts.
To see Colchis in its present situation, which is no more than a
vast forest, where the people are every day diminishing, and only defend
their liberty to sell themselves by piecemeal to the Turks and Persians,
one could never imagine that this country had ever, in the time of the
Romans, been full of cities, where commerce convened all the nations of
the world. We find no monument of these facts in the country itself;
there are no traces of them, except in Pliny
[3]
and Strabo.
[4]
The history of commerce is that of the communication of people.
Their numerous defeats, and the flux and reflux of populations and
devastations, here form the most extraordinary events.
Footnotes