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1794 Sept. 26< | <note>1794 Sept. 26</note> | ||
<head>To Dundas</head> | <head>To Dundas</head> | ||
<note>To Dundas</note> | <note>To Dundas</note> | ||
<p>As to the imputation of want of temper (and<lb/>dispositions in that respect I presume) how well<lb/>soever merited by the author I hope it will not<lb/>be the means of the plan's being deprived of the<lb/>benefit of your patronage. It is <add>for</add> the place of<lb/>Jailor <del>for</del> Sir that I am a candidate, and not<lb/>the place of a professor of urbanity or even of<lb/>good manners. <add>Good</add> Temper is most certainly an essential<lb/>quality of a jailor — but towards whom?<lb/>Towards those that are under him not towards those<lb/>that are above him. Was I ever deficient in this<lb/>respect towards persons of that description bearing<lb/>any such relation to me? — that with submission<lb/><del>would be the proper</del> <add>is the</add> object for your inquiry — No <lb/>servant no dependent of any kind ever heard a harsh <lb/>word from me. <lb/><del>Do not</del> You will do an injustice<lb/>if you believe that I would <add>ever</add> make so free with a<lb/>person standing in such a <del>rela</del> situation with respect<lb/>to me as <del>you see I have</del> I would do, as I have<lb/>done, Sir, with you — Why? — for this simple<lb/>reason that addressed to such a person asperity <add>any thing of</add> <lb/><add>harshness</add> would fall heavy on him: addressed to you, it<lb/>could fall heavy only on myself.</p> | |||
<note>Send your servants <lb/>Sir, to <del>ask my servants</del> <lb/>inquire of <lb/>mine.</note> | |||
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1794 Sept. 26
To Dundas
To Dundas
As to the imputation of want of temper (and
dispositions in that respect I presume) how well
soever merited by the author I hope it will not
be the means of the plan's being deprived of the
benefit of your patronage. It is for the place of
Jailor for Sir that I am a candidate, and not
the place of a professor of urbanity or even of
good manners. Good Temper is most certainly an essential
quality of a jailor — but towards whom?
Towards those that are under him not towards those
that are above him. Was I ever deficient in this
respect towards persons of that description bearing
any such relation to me? — that with submission
would be the proper is the object for your inquiry — No
servant no dependent of any kind ever heard a harsh
word from me.
Do not You will do an injustice
if you believe that I would ever make so free with a
person standing in such a rela situation with respect
to me as you see I have I would do, as I have
done, Sir, with you — Why? — for this simple
reason that addressed to such a person asperity any thing of
harshness would fall heavy on him: addressed to you, it
could fall heavy only on myself.
Send your servants
Sir, to ask my servants
inquire of
mine.
Identifier: | JB/541/594/002"JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 541. |
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1794-09-25 |
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541 |
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594 |
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002 |
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Correspondence |
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Jeremy Bentham |
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