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III. Experience II. Ireland
8 § Reforms indispensable causes
22
Policy in the case
of the erudite class
the comparatively opulent
class. From reading,
not possible to exclude
them: nor by any
direct vote, scarcely
from any department
of art or science: remained
the att
directing the attention
to them must result
from inquiry political
and religious
In respect to in the case of the erudite class, the same policy required
a plan of operation somewhat different. From the lowest level
in the seat of erudition it was not possible to keep them excluded.
From any of the higher up to the very highest
was almost equally impossible. Upon From no one department in
the whole pot field of art and science was it possible by
to keep them included by any direct vote: all that toward
the desired effect was possible was to direct the their attention in
preference to other departments, the wider more widely distant from the
obscurer and dreaded one the better
Identifier: | JB/137/450/001 "JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 137.
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1820-04-08 |
22 |
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137 |
radicalism not dangerous |
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450 |
radicalism not dangerous |
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001 |
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text sheet |
1 |
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recto |
e8 |
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jeremy bentham |
[[watermarks::[prince of wales feathers] i&m 1818]] |
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arthur wellesley, duke of wellington |
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1818 |
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47167 |
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