Those persons who possess large portions of the space of the earth are not altogether in the same position as possessors of mere personalty, for personalty does not impose the same limitations on the action and industry and the well-being to the community in the same ratio as does the possession of land, and therefore I hold that compulsory appropriation, if for an adequate public object, is a thing in itself admirable, and even sound in principle.
— MR. GLADSTONE, Speech at West Calder, November 27, 1879,
The Times, November 28, 1879, p. 10, column 2.
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