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JB/547/059/001

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Novr 1810
Defence

☞ Before this must be the corruption fund.

2. As to the monopoly Of such a monopoly what are the natural fruits and consequences
– the consequences that probably were, and certainly
ought to have been, expected ? Answer – negligence, insolence,
and treachery vindictive breach of trust, negligence till you
complain, insolence
when you complain,
and if instead of
submission and humiliation,
symptoms of
resentment be the your return
you make for insolence, vengeance
by delay or final loss
of cause.
Sole objects of regard the
official persons emolument and of ease: in so far as the ease afforded any room for latitude in respect of encrease or diminution of emolument emolument and
ease together and in such proportions determined in the
case of each individual by his particular individual frame of mind:
if no opening were left for encrease of emolument,
then ease would govern without a rival.

Under favour of the despotism thus created, haughtiness
and insolence towards clients would be another consequence.
If the obsequiousness and humiliation called
for were submitted to then negligence and insolence would
be the only sources causes from which the client would see his
cause exposed to suffer.

But in some let suppose the negligence provoke produce
complaint, or indolence resentment, then comes vindictive
treachery. With the official It would res The
fate of the cause would be in the hands of offended
dignity. To determine the punishment would be among the
prerogatives of offended dignity, whether delay to any
amount would be sufficient, or whether any thing less would
suffice than final loss of the cause.

If from a course thus natural here was any duration has in fact beendeviated
from, it is to the
ever made, take for the cause of it some extraordinary virtue that in the part bosom of the individual
or individual bosoms: meaning always of the individuals by whom those offices happen to have been fulfilled
that the deviation ought to be ascribed, not to any and at any rate not to any thing like virtue or wisdom
or virtue in the breasts of on the part of those by whom the course was has been prescribed
a course such as
the above was by
a course like this was was
by
being admitted of
then prescribed.


Identifier: | JB/547/059/001
"JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 547.

Date_1

1810-11-10

Marginal Summary Numbering

22-23

Box

547

Main Headings

Folio number

059

Info in main headings field

Defence

Image

001

Titles

Category

Text sheet

Number of Pages

Recto/Verso

Page Numbering

Penner

Jeremy Bentham

Watermarks

Marginals

Jeremy Bentham

Paper Producer

Corrections

Paper Produced in Year

Notes public

ID Number

Box Contents

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