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<head>18 June 1802<lb/>N. S. Wales 2</head> | <head>18 June 1802<lb/>N. S. Wales 2</head> | ||
<p>My hypothesis is, my Lord, that it had not escaped <add>their</add> <lb/>notice. <del>In every thing</del> <add>On every ground</add> that lay in the least degree beyond<lb/> the routine of <add>the most</add> beaten practice, every possible degree of <del>ig</del><lb/> helplessness and blindness I am ready to give them<lb/> credit for: from the whole tenor of this address Your<lb/> Lordship will judge whether in my view <add>estimate of their | <p>My hypothesis is, my Lord, that it had not escaped <add>their</add> <lb/>notice. <del>In every thing</del> <add>On every ground</add> that lay in the least degree beyond<lb/> the routine of <add>the most</add> beaten practice, every possible degree of <del>ig</del><lb/> helplessness and blindness I am ready to give them<lb/> credit for: from the whole tenor of this address Your<lb/> Lordship will judge whether in my view <add>estimate of their faculties</add> of the matter<lb/> there can be any difficulty on that score. I say for every<lb/> possible degree: but such a degree as this, is what I look<lb/> upon as not possible.</p> | ||
<p><add>Such is my explanation: <del>dete</del></add> Still I give it but as an hypothesis: <del>but as<lb/> such it requires some train of reasoning for the support<lb/> of it — and that which I have to submit to Your Lordship<lb/> is as <add>this</add> follows — — my grounds for it are as follows —</del> </p> | <p><add>Such is my explanation: <del>dete</del></add> Still I give it but as an hypothesis: <del>but as<lb/> such it requires some train of reasoning for the support<lb/> of it — and that which I have to submit to Your Lordship<lb/> is as <add>this</add> follows — — my grounds for it are as follows —</del> </p> | ||
<p>In the whole measure there was not a feature that<lb/> men were not ashamed and afraid to hold <add>present</add> up to <del>other<lb/> view</ | <p>In the whole measure there was not a feature that<lb/> men were not ashamed and afraid to hold <add>present</add> up to <del>other<lb/> view</del> <add>el> in its true colours to the view of Parliament.<lb/> <del>The</del> For its ostensible application <add>In the way of estimable utility </add> and use, the Colony <lb/>had nothing to produce but the use proposed</add> <add>intended</add> to be made<lb/> of it as a place of confinement <add>in relation to Convicts<add>in the character of a receptacle for Convicts</add></add> and employment for Convicts.<lb/> In this character it implied in substance<add> what Your Lordship has seen:</add> <lb/>the subversion of the whole system of the criminal law —<lb/> a system of oppressive enhancement of punishment repugnant <lb/>to the <unclear>pleasant</unclear> and most undisputed principles of national <lb/>justice: the <del>effect</del> whole system of transportation laws being <lb/>changed <add>subverted in effect</add> the better on being suffered to remain<lb/> <add>for a blind</add> in order <del>to mask the operation <add><del>nature</del></add></del> that the change <add><gap/></add> that had<lb/> been effected by a power stolen from Parliament; might<lb/> the more effectually remain concealed from the eye of <lb/>Parliament.</p> | ||
<p>a subversion of the laws of Parliament — a measure never submitted<lb/> to Parliament — a measure studiously concealed <add>the real nature and operation of whereby <gap/></add> from Parliament<lb/> because of the laws of Parliament <lb/> because subversion of the laws of Parliament as well as repugnant <lb/>to the <unclear>usual</unclear> principles of national justice, and on both accounts not fit to be spread out<lb/> and given in its true <lb/>colours before the eye of<lb/> Parliament. </p> | |||
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{{Metadata:{{PAGENAME}}}} | {{Metadata:{{PAGENAME}}}}{{Completed}} |
18 June 1802
N. S. Wales 2
My hypothesis is, my Lord, that it had not escaped their
notice. In every thing On every ground that lay in the least degree beyond
the routine of the most beaten practice, every possible degree of ig
helplessness and blindness I am ready to give them
credit for: from the whole tenor of this address Your
Lordship will judge whether in my view estimate of their faculties of the matter
there can be any difficulty on that score. I say for every
possible degree: but such a degree as this, is what I look
upon as not possible.
Such is my explanation: dete Still I give it but as an hypothesis: but as
such it requires some train of reasoning for the support
of it — and that which I have to submit to Your Lordship
is as this follows — — my grounds for it are as follows —
In the whole measure there was not a feature that
men were not ashamed and afraid to hold present up to other
view el> in its true colours to the view of Parliament.
The For its ostensible application <add>In the way of estimable utility and use, the Colony
had nothing to produce but the use proposed</add> intended to be made
of it as a place of confinement in relation to Convicts<add>in the character of a receptacle for Convicts</add> and employment for Convicts.
In this character it implied in substance what Your Lordship has seen:
the subversion of the whole system of the criminal law —
a system of oppressive enhancement of punishment repugnant
to the pleasant and most undisputed principles of national
justice: the effect whole system of transportation laws being
changed subverted in effect the better on being suffered to remain
for a blind in order to mask the operation <add>nature</add> that the change that had
been effected by a power stolen from Parliament; might
the more effectually remain concealed from the eye of
Parliament.
a subversion of the laws of Parliament — a measure never submitted
to Parliament — a measure studiously concealed the real nature and operation of whereby from Parliament
because of the laws of Parliament
because subversion of the laws of Parliament as well as repugnant
to the usual principles of national justice, and on both accounts not fit to be spread out
and given in its true
colours before the eye of
Parliament.
Identifier: | JB/116/160/001"JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 116. |
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1802-06-18 |
2 |
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116 |
panopticon versus new south wales |
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160 |
n. s. wales |
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001 |
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text sheet |
1 |
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recto |
e2 |
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jeremy bentham |
[[watermarks::[monogram] 1800]] |
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1800 |
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37693 |
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