Not one solitary square inch of English soil remains unclaimed on which the landless citizen can legally lay his hand without paying tax and toll to somebody; in other words, without giving a part of his own labor or the product of his labor to one of the squatting and tabooing class in exchange for their permission (which they can withhold if they choose) merely to go on existing upon the ground which was originally common to all alike, and has been unjustly seized upon (through what particular process matters little) by the ancestors or predecessors of the present monopolists.
— GRANT ALLEN, Individualism and Socialism, Contemporary Review, 1889, p. 732.
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