★ Find a new page on our Untranscribed Manuscripts list.
Auto loaded |
No edit summary |
||
(4 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown) | |||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
'''[{{fullurl:JB/096/038/001|action=edit}} Click Here To Edit]''' | '''[{{fullurl:JB/096/038/001|action=edit}} Click Here To Edit]''' | ||
<!-- ENTER TRANSCRIPTION BELOW THIS LINE --> | <!-- ENTER TRANSCRIPTION BELOW THIS LINE --> | ||
'' | |||
<p><note>To be copied</note> the resolutions of the British Legislature | |||
<lb/> | |||
are not notified to the people who are to obey | |||
<lb/> | |||
<del>them. Yet when he afterwards treats of the</del> <add>them. How lucky it is that a man in our Author's high station has | |||
<lb/> | |||
<del>taken notice</del> <add>marked in such</add> strong<del>ly</del> <del>the</del> terms the necessity of <sic><del>remdying</del></sic> a proper</add> | |||
<lb/> | |||
<del>British Parliament, he very gravely tells</del> <add>promulgation of the Legislator's Will. That he has even made it an | |||
<lb/> | |||
essential part, <foreign>a sine <sic>quâ</sic> non</foreign> of <hi rend='underline'>law</hi>. I turned to the article <del>of</del></add> | |||
<lb/> | |||
<del>us</del> "that there needs <hi rend='underline'>no</hi> formal promulgation <note>Vol 1. P.185</note> <add>Parliament: & these I read</add> | |||
<lb/> | |||
"of a Statute to give it the force of a law, as — | |||
<lb/> | |||
"was necessary <del>with</del> <add>by</add> the civil law with regard | |||
<lb/> | |||
"to the Emperor's edicts: because | |||
<lb/> | |||
"every man in England is, in judgment | |||
<lb/> | |||
"of law, party to the making of an act of | |||
<lb/> | |||
"Parliament, being present there at by | |||
<lb/> | |||
"his Representatives." [<del>It is hard to say</del> <add>It would be <del>difficult</del></add> | |||
<lb/> | |||
<del>whether this kind of reasoning excites most</del> <add>hard to say, whether I felt more indignation, or contempt | |||
<lb/> | |||
at this passage: <del>& w</del> I threw the Book from me: <del><gap/></del></add> | |||
<lb/> | |||
contempt | |||
<add>& exclaimed with <unclear>Fontenelle</unclear> "<foreign>Il n'est <hi rend='underline'>mon</hi> homme <add>que</add></foreign></add> | |||
<lb/></p> | |||
<head>104</head> | |||
<!-- DO NOT EDIT BELOW THIS LINE --> | <!-- DO NOT EDIT BELOW THIS LINE --> | ||
{{Metadata:{{PAGENAME}}}} | {{Metadata:{{PAGENAME}}}}{{Completed}} |
To be copied the resolutions of the British Legislature
are not notified to the people who are to obey
them. Yet when he afterwards treats of the them. How lucky it is that a man in our Author's high station has
taken notice <add>marked in such strongly the terms the necessity of remdying a proper</add>
British Parliament, he very gravely tells promulgation of the Legislator's Will. That he has even made it an
essential part, a sine quâ non of law. I turned to the article of
us "that there needs no formal promulgation Vol 1. P.185 Parliament: & these I read
"of a Statute to give it the force of a law, as —
"was necessary with by the civil law with regard
"to the Emperor's edicts: because
"every man in England is, in judgment
"of law, party to the making of an act of
"Parliament, being present there at by
"his Representatives." [It is hard to say It would be difficult
whether this kind of reasoning excites most hard to say, whether I felt more indignation, or contempt
at this passage: & w I threw the Book from me:
contempt
& exclaimed with Fontenelle "<foreign>Il n'est mon homme <add>que</foreign></add>
104
Identifier: | JB/096/038/001"JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 96. |
|||
---|---|---|---|
096 |
comment on the commentaries |
||
038 |
|||
001 |
|||
collectanea |
4 |
||
recto |
c104 / c105 / c106 / c107 |
||
168 |
[[watermarks::gr [quartered royal arms motif]]] |
||
[[notes_public::"to be copied" [note not in bentham's hand]]] |
31042 |
||