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'' | <head>66</head> | ||
<head>10</head> | |||
<note>VII Escapes</note> | |||
<p>no business with them: and this misdelivery not performed by one<lb/> | |||
person only, but by an unspecified number of persons, perhaps at<lb/> | |||
the same time, perhaps at different successive times. Be this as<lb/> | |||
it may, the affidavits of the claimants were taken, and by the candour<lb/> | |||
and discernment of the Judge Advocate, the <sic>alligations</sic> were<lb/> | |||
with the highest appearance of reason regarded (it seems) as true:<lb/> | |||
and indeed they could scarcely have been otherwise, unless the<lb/> | |||
intelligence of an omission, such as no human ingenuity could<lb/> | |||
have imagined, had found its way to persons in the situations<lb/> | |||
of the Convicts: a fact, neither probable in itself, nor stated as<lb/> | |||
such by Captain Collins.-<lb/></p> | |||
<p>In <del>the</del> England the presumption is always, if the so<lb/> | |||
much vaunted, and too often even superstitiously pursued, law maxim<lb/> | |||
is to be believed, <foreign><hi rend='underline'>in favorem libertatis</hi></foreign>. Here, at the antipodes, where<lb/> | |||
justice is turned topsy-turvy, the the presumption was <foreign>-<hi rend='underline'>in favorem</hi></foreign><lb/> | |||
<foreign><hi rend='underline'>servitutis</hi></foreign>. In this preposterous state of things were so many<lb/> | |||
things that were illegal had been rendered necessary, judgment,<lb/> | |||
if accompanied with a due share of candour, is perpetually at a<lb/> | |||
stand. But a proposition about which there can be no difficulty, is<lb/> | |||
that this abomination, if the result of pure negligence, and not contrived<lb/> | |||
on purpose by the same <foreign><hi rend='underline'>astuti</hi></foreign>, whose <foreign><hi rend='underline'>astutia</hi></foreign> had devised<lb/> | |||
this quiet mode of making and amending the laws of Parliament,<lb/> | |||
belongs at any rate to the credit of those founders and Confounders<lb/> | |||
<add>of Colonies</add></p> | |||
<head>Note continued.</head> | |||
<p>"It must <add>be</add> acknowledged" (continues this humane Magistrate and<lb/> | |||
candid Historian) "it must be acknowledged, that these people were<lb/> | |||
"most peculiarly and unpleasantly situated. Conscious in their own<lb/> | |||
"minds that the sentence of the law had been fulfilled upon them,<lb/> | |||
"it must have been truly distressing to their feelings to find that<lb/> | |||
"they could not be considered in any other light, or received into any<lb/> | |||
"other situation, than that in which alone they had been hitherto<lb/> | |||
"known in the settlement."<lb/></p> | |||
<pb/> | |||
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{{Metadata:{{PAGENAME}}}} | {{Metadata:{{PAGENAME}}}}{{Completed}} |
66 10 VII Escapes
no business with them: and this misdelivery not performed by one
person only, but by an unspecified number of persons, perhaps at
the same time, perhaps at different successive times. Be this as
it may, the affidavits of the claimants were taken, and by the candour
and discernment of the Judge Advocate, the alligations were
with the highest appearance of reason regarded (it seems) as true:
and indeed they could scarcely have been otherwise, unless the
intelligence of an omission, such as no human ingenuity could
have imagined, had found its way to persons in the situations
of the Convicts: a fact, neither probable in itself, nor stated as
such by Captain Collins.-
In the England the presumption is always, if the so
much vaunted, and too often even superstitiously pursued, law maxim
is to be believed, in favorem libertatis. Here, at the antipodes, where
justice is turned topsy-turvy, the the presumption was -in favorem
servitutis. In this preposterous state of things were so many
things that were illegal had been rendered necessary, judgment,
if accompanied with a due share of candour, is perpetually at a
stand. But a proposition about which there can be no difficulty, is
that this abomination, if the result of pure negligence, and not contrived
on purpose by the same astuti, whose astutia had devised
this quiet mode of making and amending the laws of Parliament,
belongs at any rate to the credit of those founders and Confounders
of Colonies
Note continued.
"It must be acknowledged" (continues this humane Magistrate and
candid Historian) "it must be acknowledged, that these people were
"most peculiarly and unpleasantly situated. Conscious in their own
"minds that the sentence of the law had been fulfilled upon them,
"it must have been truly distressing to their feelings to find that
"they could not be considered in any other light, or received into any
"other situation, than that in which alone they had been hitherto
"known in the settlement."
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Identifier: | JB/116/290/002"JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 116. |
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116 |
panopticon versus new south wales |
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290 |
n. s. wales |
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002 |
note |
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copy/fair copy sheet |
2 |
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recto |
d9 f65 / d10 f66 |
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john herbert koe |
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37823 |
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