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Indirect
It would be in vain for a foreigner spy to
think of passing for a native.
It would be in vain for a prisoner to think
of escaping from confinement, or for a banished
man to return before the expiration of his sentence.
or
It would be in vain for a husband to think
of deserting his wife, or father parent his children;
a wife her husband. What is more a soldier
would found it a matter of It would be in it would
be in vain for a deserter from the army to
think of finding shelter in any other case than
where an enemies army or inaccessible fortresses
were at hand(a): the penalties for harbouring deserters,
as they could no longer be incurred through ignorance,
might be inflicted, with unrelenting rigour.
The affair was concluded a year or two ago.
(c) An imposter who passed in Saxony itself passed for
some time for the Electoral Prince of Saxony. See Letters
sur la vie du Comte Brühl.
Between The ... 17.. and 17..
40,000 men had been were lost by desertion alone to
the British navy: deducting only such as had
entered a a in order to receive another bounty.
Even in those cases the bounty money was lost, though not the men.
Identifier: | JB/062/181/003 "JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 62.
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062 |
indirect legislation |
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181 |
indirect legislation |
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003 |
frauds, forgery, personation |
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text sheet |
4 |
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recto |
f9 / f10 / f11 / f12 |
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jeremy bentham |
[[watermarks::gr [crown motif] [britannia with shield emblem]]] |
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20171 |
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