Agricola, Georgius, De re metallica, 1912/1950
page |< < of 679 > >|
1from the owners than necessity demands. Nay, I will admit that a for
man
may plaster over, or hide with a structure, a vein where it is rich i
metals
.
Is the wickedness of one or two to brand the many honest wit
fraud
and trickery?
What body is supposed to be more pious and virtuou
in
the Republic than the Senate?
Yet some Senators have been detecte
in
peculations, and have been punished.
Is this any reason that so honour
able
a house should lose its good name and fame?
The superintenden
cannot
exact contributions from the owners without the knowledge an
permission
of the Bergmeister or the deputies; for this reason decep
tion
of this kind is impossible.
Should the foremen be convicted o
fraud
, they are beaten with rods; or of theft, they are hanged.
I
is
complained that some sellers and buyers of the shares in mines ar
fraudulent
.
I concede it. But can they deceive anyone except a stupid
careless
man, unskilled in mining matters?
Indeed, a wise and pruden
man
, skilled in this art, if he doubts the trustworthiness of a seller o
buyer
, goes at once to the mine that he may for himself examine the vei
which
has been so greatly praised or disparaged, and may consider whethe
he
will buy or sell the shares or not.
But people say, though such an on
can
be on his guard against fraud, yet a simple man and one who is easil
credulous
, is deceived.
But we frequently see a man who is trying to mislea
another
in this way deceive himself, and deservedly become a laughing
stock
for everyone; or very often the defrauder as well as the dupe i
entirely
ignorant of mining.
If, for instance, a vein has been found to b
abundant
in ore, contrary to the idea of the would-be deceiver, then he wh
was
to have been cheated gets a profit, and he who has been the deceive
loses
.
Nevertheless, the miners themselves rarely buy or sell shares, bu
generally
they have jurati venditores28 who buy and sell at such prices as the
have
been instructed to give or accept.
Seeing therefore, that magistrate
decide
disputes on fair and just principles, that honest men deceive nobody
while
a dishonest one cannot deceive easily, or if he does he cannot do s
with
impunity, the criticism of those who wish to disparage the honesty
miners
has therefore no force or weight.

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