JB/096/230/002: Difference between revisions

Transcribe Bentham: A Collaborative Initiative

From Transcribe Bentham: Transcription Desk

Find a new page on our Untranscribed Manuscripts list.

JB/096/230/002: Difference between revisions

JFoxe (talk | contribs)
No edit summary
BenthamBot (talk | contribs)
No edit summary
 
(4 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown)
Line 18: Line 18:
<p>However strange it may seem, that after the number of <del>Auditors</del> <add>the Audience</add> is extended to 500, the most formidable,<lb/>
<p>However strange it may seem, that after the number of <del>Auditors</del> <add>the Audience</add> is extended to 500, the most formidable,<lb/>
some of them for their dispositions more by their talents, any addition can <add>should</add> make a<lb/>
some of them for their dispositions more by their talents, any addition can <add>should</add> make a<lb/>
difference, it may be found perhaps that the <gap/> <gap/> that imperfection so remarkable<lb/>
difference, it may be found perhaps that the <foreign>mauvaise honte</foreign> that imperfection so remarkable<lb/>
&amp; so general in Englishmen,<del> may be</del> <add>is at this time of day +</add> <note>It could hardly be very prevalent, at the first origin of this restriction, <add>exclusion</add> when criticism in style was little known: <del>if it had been, in</del> <add>a part of this is the <del><gap/> of</del> reputation that</add> Oliver Cromwell could maintain notwithstanding his speeches, which at this time of day would have <gap/> their author with ridicule.</note> <add>one</add> of the most powerful causes of all this affectation<lb/>
&amp; so general in Englishmen,<del> may be</del> <add>is at this time of day +</add> <note>It could hardly be very prevalent, at the first origin of this restriction, <add>exclusion</add> when criticism in style was little known: <del>if it had been, in</del> <add>a part of this is the <del><gap/> of</del> reputation that</add> Oliver Cromwell could maintain notwithstanding his speeches, which at this time of day would have <gap/> their author with ridicule.</note> <add>one</add> of the most powerful causes of all this affectation<lb/>
of heresy.</p>
of <sic>secresy</sic>.</p>


<p>A <gap/> <gap/>, as it may indeed be truly stated, pernicious to those who feel it, which is<lb/>
<p>A <foreign>mauvaise honte</foreign>, as it may indeed be truly stated, pernicious to those who feel it, which is<lb/>
comparatively but as small matters pernicious to the public, in this <sic>it's</sic> effect, if it be<lb/>
comparatively but as small matters pernicious to the public, in this <sic>it's</sic> effect, if it be<lb/>
<sic>it's</sic> effect, which is a great one <note>Turned the arms of the people against themselves.</note></p>
<sic>it's</sic> effect, which is a great one <note>Turned the arms of the people against themselves.</note></p>
Line 29: Line 29:


<!-- DO NOT EDIT BELOW THIS LINE -->
<!-- DO NOT EDIT BELOW THIS LINE -->
{{Metadata:{{PAGENAME}}}}
{{Metadata:{{PAGENAME}}}}{{Completed}}

Latest revision as of 10:12, 4 February 2020

Click Here To Edit

NOTORIETY EXCLUSION from DEBATES v. Tit. Punishment A

The external foreign operations of the Executive Power must be secret, because often their very execution
depends upon their being so; so in a very few instances so perhaps in some scatter'd instances [which might be enumerated, + + As the steps taken for the apprehension of Offenders Qu.
(but which tho' few are frequently occurring)] must the domestic —

But howsoever it may have happened, that, in on a very few extraordinary conjunctions instances,
occasions the public may have been surprized by the Legislature into their good,
yet as a general principle and rule of conduct, nothing can be more pernicious
nor indefensible: it is a Rule for the making Laws not for, but against the People.

Founding themselves on maxims & sentiments, which conclude if they are admitted, in favor of the Aristocratical
or Monarchical Government in preference to our own.

However strange it may seem, that after the number of Auditors the Audience is extended to 500, the most formidable,
some of them for their dispositions more by their talents, any addition can should make a
difference, it may be found perhaps that the mauvaise honte that imperfection so remarkable
& so general in Englishmen, may be is at this time of day + It could hardly be very prevalent, at the first origin of this restriction, exclusion when criticism in style was little known: if it had been, in a part of this is the of reputation that Oliver Cromwell could maintain notwithstanding his speeches, which at this time of day would have their author with ridicule. one of the most powerful causes of all this affectation
of secresy.

A mauvaise honte, as it may indeed be truly stated, pernicious to those who feel it, which is
comparatively but as small matters pernicious to the public, in this it's effect, if it be
it's effect, which is a great one Turned the arms of the people against themselves.




Identifier: | JB/096/230/002"JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 96.

Date_1

Marginal Summary Numbering

Box

096

Main Headings

legislation

Folio number

230

Info in main headings field

composition builder's act

Image

002

Titles

measures of unity

Category

text sheet

Number of Pages

2

Recto/Verso

recto

Page Numbering

Penner

jeremy bentham

Watermarks

[[watermarks::l v g propatria [britannia motif]]]

Marginals

Paper Producer

caroline vernon

Corrections

Paper Produced in Year

Notes public

ID Number

31234

Box Contents

UCL Home » Transcribe Bentham » Transcription Desk
  • Create account
  • Log in