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JB/037/214/001

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1823 July 6
Constitut. Code.III Rationale
Ch. 5. Constitutive
§. [Universal dislocability, why]

In this case, Hope supposing in the mind a place into in which it could
could not find a lodgment would as surely be productive of its
effects in the case of the Right Reverend son as in the case of the
Most Noble Father. But in the case of the Right Reverend
Son it has no such place to lodge in. Hope as it happens has no
such place. For any better that is to say ruler Bishoprick
more advantageous terms might may be secured, more votes
obtained or fixt than by giving it to him. Moreover no matter
by what cases a disagreement has been produced between the
Minister and his Right Reverend Lordship and the Minister.
For On the part of the Most Excellent no disposition is observed
towards putting on this occasion in this instance on behalf of this Right Reverend person a force upon the inclination of
his Minister, no ulterior marks of his Majesty's favour are
therefore accordingly looked for by the Right Reverend eyes.

Meantime another critical question arises and still the
Right Reverend vote is given on the loyal side. Of the effect which
at the outset received the epithet of sinister what can in the
case thus have been the cause: for by the as to Hope, by the
very supposition she is dead and buried. The answer is – that
thought Hope is fled, there remains two powers considerations either of them
capable on this any such occasion capable of operating in the character of an
efficient cause.

2. Gratitude – for notwithstanding its ordinary comparative weakness
the pure purely sympathetic affection thus demonstrated is by no means
inadequate to the production of the sy effect in question sinister as
by the supposition it is: whether by in person or by proxy or vote in the
Lords Does not take long to give. The most extensively mischievous he
Mischievous in the most extensive mischievously on an all-comprehensive
scale does not exclude sympathy and or effective benevolence
on an individual scale. Of all the depraved beings in the Kingdom Monarchy
the King Monarch his Most Excellent Majesty it has been seen already (§. 17 Rationale) is necessarily and
being by his very situation rendered so, the most depraved. But as against the
misdeeds of all Monarchs
so as against the misdeeds
of all persons such functionaries in power committed
by them in such
their capacity the Right
Reverend eyes together
with all other eyes in the
House in which they first
saw the light, been from that
time shut: and
But to the Right Reverend
possessor of the and the Holy Ghost, he is no
otherwise
known in no other manner so impressively as by that one act
of his by which the substantial has been added to the Ghost, and the
Right Reverend are possessor of the so happily associated benefits made comfortable.
The consequence is – that whatsoever profit or pleasure in some
more alluring form does not send him elsewhere, the pleasure of giving exercise
to so pure and generous
a sentiment suffices to
secure the to the royal
and loyal side of the
question the benefit of
the Right Reverend vote.


Identifier: | JB/037/214/001
"JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 37.

Date_1

1823-07-06

Marginal Summary Numbering

Box

037

Main Headings

constitutional code

Folio number

214

Info in main headings field

constitut. code

Image

001

Titles

Category

text sheet

Number of Pages

1

Recto/Verso

recto

Page Numbering

c7

Penner

jeremy bentham

Watermarks

j whatman turkey mill 1822

Marginals

Paper Producer

jonathan blenman

Corrections

Paper Produced in Year

1822

Notes public

ID Number

11429

Box Contents

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