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3 Note continued
In the infancy  At an early  of the Exchequer currency, Bills
 were issued for sums as low as £10 or even £5. 
Now it should have happened that they should have been
 the practice of issuing such small notes should have 
ceased, and the minimum note raised to and 
continued at   fixed at its present pitch of £100, is not
 difficult to conceive. The form of the security could 
 naturally be adapted adapt itself to the convenience of the lenders 
more especially as the lenders were individuals acting 
on their own account, and the Governors statesmen 
acting, without any such personal interest for the public at large. The lenders on 
this security have been on as the one part and that 
the principal part the immensely opulent Company
 the Bank of England — partly the work of small but prodigiously opulentopulent 
moneyd men about Change known to each other 
and meeting one another continually at or in the
 nag neighborhood of the Exchange. £100 was 
a magnitude quite small enough for persons of that
 class. The faculty of employing in the same way
 a smaller sum, suppose £50, would have 
been of no use to him: since that and more even
 the £100 is not so much as he would be under
 the necessity of keeping by him or at his Bankers
 for the purpose of current expences or small and payments 
on a small scale. Notes Bills of less magnitude 
 would thus be attended with no advantage, and they
 would be attended with the disadvantage of making a 
proportionable addition to the trouble of computation. 
Another relative disadvantage and a much more considerable 
one, is — the effect of small Bills that £10 and £5 Bills for example, would 
be to open the market to a greater number of customers, thence 
 to increase the competition for it. — and to raise the price — in
 other words to lower the rate of interest upon the paper, and  thence diminish the profit to be made by purchasing it.