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McCabe, James Dabney, 1842-1883

"Great Fortunes, and How They Were Made"

He could make twice that
cutting weeping-willows on American tomb-stones. What could he not
justly demand in wages from a New York sculptor? I employ a dozen
workmen in my studios; the poorest, at work on pedestals and rough
work, earn about half a dollar a day; the moderately skilled, a
little over a dollar. The whole cost me about fifteen dollars per
day, which is wonderfully low. Then, my rent--which could not, for
my extensive accommodations, be less than two thousand five hundred
dollars a year in any eligible position which the public would
visit--reaches only about four hundred and fifty dollars, annually.
But, 4. The general expenses of maintaining a family are so much
less here than at home, that a man without capital, possessing a
profession so slow in reaching its pecuniary returns as an
artist's, finds an immense inducement to live abroad. It is true
that, music and accomplishment in languages apart, the
opportunities of a substantial education for one's children are not
as good here as at home. There are, however, less temptations to
vice, and less exposures to the American habit of hard drinking
among young men; but, no doubt, the general influences here, in
the way of developing a manly, energetic, and self-relying
character, are less favorable than at home.


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