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III Experience
II Ireland
(2) Prospects spoilt
Whigs the authors
It was in these senses that one of the men when his Majesty
delightible to honour is said to have borrowed acquired the proficiency in the the art of applying
torture acts of torturewith advantage, another, the boldness confidence necessary
to the consequencing establishing of procedure for men to inscrutable imprisonment where
torture might may be applied more at leisure and for
any length of time and for any number of times, and
a third the art of preparing Honourable House for
regarding it as a subject of festivity and exultation
for extracting matter of mirth from employing the art of alliteration in the report of it.
It is in these senses that the Whigs may behold have never
ceased to behold that double advantage the two so interminably connected
though contrasted advantages from which accrue to them
from every thing that is most profligate from in the established the system of
misrule: in the first instance the extent and security
given to the interest share/advantage/profit which even independently
of all chance for official office power they possess in it;
in the next place the advantage of outwardly joining
in the condemnation of that those advan plans from
which as being sources of advantage to them can not
in the nature of the case be inwardly regarded by them
with any other eyes than those of complicity and satisfaction.
Identifier: | JB/137/388/001 "JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 137.
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1820-02-02 |
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137 |
radicalism not dangerous |
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388 |
radicalism not dangerous |
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001 |
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text sheet |
1 |
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recto |
c2 |
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jeremy bentham |
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47105 |
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