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1826. Novr. 16
Review of Humphreys
ultt
Ch 4. H's eight Projects
§3. Formula improved
Art.2. Now for the applications. To the formulæ the Substitution of aptitud
subject matter of the to the present unapt form belongs
the improvement which I place in the first rank?
Why? because most likely to be adopted, and most speedily
capable of being effected.
In so far as capable for its adoption the fo
Take any one of them for example. In so far as,
for its being employed and carried into effect, it requires not any
alteration in the existing of the Statute Law as in the course of
Judicial practice, the membersit is capable of being may be carried into practice by the member
himself by Mr Humphrey himself: by the to by him to whose
by whose ingenuity and public has its been devised: and
the greater the number of them then happily circumstanced, the more
extensive will be the improvement effected by that most simple of all means
Unhappily But by this office alone Without the assistance from Statute law, not very extensive great
I fear am perhaps may to the for effect produced. But Still. For each distinguishable improvement the less the assistance needed
from this source, requisite the bettergreater the chance.
Of the level of evil in all shapes with which the instruments in
question an oppressed — case of lengthiness
with giving
use made
take
thence unintelligibility, expressiveness and delatness, to the
main efficient causes are shown to be composed of the worth given of needless and useless trustees in whom no confidence is
reposed, and the mis substitution misupplicative of the labour of judiciary
functionaries to that of professional draughtsmen by in the fict of instruments reparations
denominated of fines and . This mass of abuse could not be
cleared away without his hand by any other hand than that of Parliament. But by the handthat
of any professional draughtsman the endless sentence might be
broken down, to the length and reduced to the scantling of those employed in familiar observer
of other nations and the language of which different ably in this respect from un
-employed in other subjects:
and, to and wha that which as is done in others
branches of art and science
and by which the languagealone, together
with the definitive of the appropriate
was appropriate language
necessary attention to method used to thr that
language is distinguished
from ordinary
conversation, —
the several chancery distinguishable component arrangements from each other
and appropriate denomination given to them: means by which the eye of the reader
might be is directed at once to the prospect of each, and to the place
way in which it contributedcontributes to the design of the whole.
Identifier: | JB/078/029/001 "JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 78.
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Review of Humphreys |
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J WHATMAN TURKEY MILL 1826 |
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Jonathan Blenman |
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1826 |
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25120 |
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