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7
B III Ch.1
Punishment analysed
Ordinary Conditions or modes of Relationship may be
distinguished into natural and acquired. By natural conditions
I mean those which necessarily belong to a man by birth: to wit
in virtue of either his own birth or that of some other person to
whom he stands related. Such as that of Son, daughter, father
mother, brother, sister, and so on through the several modes of
relationship constituted by the several degrees of consanguinity.
To stand in any of these relations to such or such a person
may be the source of various advantages. These conditions it
is plain cannot themselves be forfeited; a man however may
and in some instances has been said to have forfeited them,
and may actually be made to forfeit many of the advantages
attending them.
Acquired conditions may be distinguished in the
first place into political and religious; and political again
into domestic and public. Domestic conditions may be distinguished
into family conditions and professional. Family conditions are
1st. The matrimonial; or that of being husband or wife to such a person: 3d. and 4th. that of being Guardian or Ward: 5th. and 6th. that of being
Master or Servant to such a person.
By
Identifier: | JB/141/094/005 "JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 141.
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141 |
rationale of punishment |
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094 |
punishment analysed |
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005 |
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copy/fair copy sheet |
4 |
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recto |
f7 / f8 / f9 / f10 |
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[[watermarks::myears [lion with crown motif]]] |
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caroline fox |
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folio now in two pieces |
48311 |
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