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JB/078/147/001

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1826 Nov. 17
Review of Humphreys

Ch. Agenda
(2) 2 § JB Procedure Code

Could our Masters but bring themselves to do what is done
in France justice would be brought if not literally to every man's
own home yet to within a morning: walk from it and in viewing
return to it. But the money? — aye, there be the rub
it can not be spared. What What at all times will be necessary
is — more Palaces and more Churches: what to
will never be wanting, unless in a law not to be contained
as men call for it is justice

If instead of for them Mr Peel wo could
prevail upon himself, to let would be Judges answer for themselves
he would find it not impossible to content as with see it themselves
at most the utmost say two or 1 and 1. as most the salary that
in France such as are glad to take: In a part
of the Salary which according to his as is down no
one competent man would serve for competent men by hundred
some for in France and the they is universal.
In the eyes estimate of Mr Peel honour and power put together are
worth nothing: in the eyes of every Frenchman Judge in the salute of a
Judge, it is worth much; so much that with it, an English
man that would in Mr Peel's conception hold out vouchsafe a
hand to accept of it. Mr Peel should go to France and there
see that when he is so have a
as he is so sure can not be done says alas is then done
every where Oppose In London I was on the same staircase
lived for fourteen ye fourteen years was living learned man named Long who
all that time had been a Judge at a Salary of £100 a year
had been Judge of the Sheriff Court London: In
I ever knew I saw him going through his business: he went
though it well. no not a of complaint
against him did I ever hear, had there ever been one I
would not have failed to hear it:

Yet does the same man in the same breath [admire and magnify cover with indefatigable eulogy
all those three mutually repugnant and mutually condemnatory
forms. When? ah when! will you open your eyes, ye pillaged, oppressed
and deluded people?

forms. With eulogy, all those
No: with no more than cold
acquiescence the only honest man
for he gets nothing by it: with
eulogy not to say extoling the two
ones: for he gets so
much by them: with most,
the most of them, because for so much more than by the other is got by it.




Identifier: | JB/078/147/001
"JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 78.

Date_1

1826-11-17

Marginal Summary Numbering

Box

078

Main Headings

Review of Humphreys

Folio number

147

Info in main headings field

Review of Humphreys

Image

001

Titles

Category

Text sheet

Number of Pages

1

Recto/Verso

recto

Page Numbering

C2 / E2

Penner

Watermarks

Marginals

Paper Producer

Corrections

Paper Produced in Year

Notes public

ID Number

25238

Box Contents

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