xml:lang="en" lang="en" dir="ltr">

Transcribe Bentham: A Collaborative Initiative

From Transcribe Bentham: Transcription Desk

Keep up to date with the latest news - subscribe to the Transcribe Bentham newsletter; Find a new page to transcribe in our list of Untranscribed Manuscripts

JB/116/632/001

Jump to: navigation, search
Completed

Click Here To Edit


41

To the gentleman himself it would have seemed,
that in making any such offer he knew what he
was about: — but the "great person" would have known
better things. The more beneficial to the public he
had, in his own view of the matter, made his terms,
the more appalling the scorn with which he might
have been looked down upon, by the intuitive and
supercalculative wisdom of such high personages: —
after learning from one great person that his terms
were too high, he might learn from another that
they were too low; or from each of them that they
were too high and tyd too low at the same time: —
and if on any other occasion he had evenr been guilty
of thinking for the public this too might have been
numbered among his "flights". —

What will become of the worthy Magistrate
whose existence, to judge by the terror he seems to
be in of being prosecuted for flattery, seems to depend
upon the breath of the great person's nostrils? If a
wish to submitt to a limited deduction from a sum
of £12000 a year for maintaining a 1000 prisoners
creates doubts of sanity what mercy can there be for
an offer to maintain 200 prisoners or thereabouts
for a sum of £400 a year — not plus but minus.
How much longer will great persons suffer him
to go about without a keeper? I see him tremblingly
alive all o'er: — I see Your Lordship trembling
for him in mere sympathy: I hasten to present Your


tell him so upon the very best authority. Your Lordship can shew him a much more "beneficial
"way" of "expending from the public purse" the interest of double the money: desire him only
to look at the next article where instead of £4000 once paid for correcting an abuse — he
may see a still greater abuse and of exactly the same kind - and £350 a year paid for
looking at it and screening it.



Identifier: | JB/116/632/001
"JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 116.

Date_1

Marginal Summary Numbering

Box

116

Main Headings

panopticon versus new south wales

Folio number

632

Info in main headings field

Image

001

Titles

Category

copy/fair copy sheet

Number of Pages

2

Recto/Verso

recto

Page Numbering

d41 / d42

Penner

john herbert koe

Watermarks

1800

Marginals

Paper Producer

Corrections

Paper Produced in Year

1800

Notes public

letter was never sent; see note 8 to letter 1747, vol. 7

ID Number

38165

Box Contents

UCL Home » Transcribe Bentham » Transcription Desk