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<!-- heading and marginal notes in pencil --> <head>1820 <sic>Feb.</sic> 13<lb/>Radicalism not dangerous</head> <p><note>III Experience<lb/>II Ireland<lb/>Corruption general<lb/><unclear>Per</unclear> Grattan<lb/>Cavendish corruption</note></p> <p><sic>Plowd.</sic> II 349 1792 <sic>Jan<hi rend="superscript">y</hi></sic> 19. <sic>Parl.</sic> opens.   Grattans Speech<lb/>12. <sic>Parl. Deb.</sic> p.23. proceedings imputed <del><gap/></del> by him to Sir Henry<lb/>Cavendish. He "voted in one Session for a <unclear>previous</unclear> Bill and<lb/>"against it in the next . . <del><gap/></del> for a place Bill in one Session<lb/>"and against it in the next . . . for a Committee to proceed<lb/>"towards impeachment against the present Ministry for,<lb/>selling peerages, and the very next Sessions <add>votes</add> for thanks to that<lb/>"very Ministry." For selling peerage <add>Note</add> as of the influence<lb/>exercised by selling peerages were more corruptive than that he<lb/>received by giving them <foreign>gratis</foreign>!</p> <p> N.B. On the same day <add><sic>Plowd.</sic> <del>II</del> 348</add> <del>Speak</del> <add>Speech</add> by M<hi rend="superscript">r</hi> Grattan <gap/><lb/><del>displaying the utter corruption of</del> <add>ascribing to the Irish Constitution</add> as <sic>compleat</sic> a state of corruption<lb/>as can be imagined: at the same time "he allowed<lb/><del>t</del> the British Constitution to be the best."   Let him who can<lb/>say in what <unclear>case</unclear> if the particulars of the corruption so held<lb/>up by him to view the one constitution differs <add>or did then differ</add> from the other<lb/>"It was not (p.348) " mixed monarchy with parts happily tempered<lb/>"and so forth; the cant of grave and superannuated addresses; but<lb/>"the reach and will, and simple, and absolute government;<lb/>"rendered so by means that made every part of it vicious<lb/>"and abominable; the executors who devoured the whole, and<lb/>"the other two parts which were thus extinguished; of such a<lb/>"<unclear>confluence</unclear> the component parts were debauched by one another"<lb/>&amp;c &amp;c.</p>           
<!-- heading and marginal notes in pencil --> <head>1820 <sic>Feb.</sic> 13<lb/>Radicalism not dangerous</head> <p><note>III Experience<lb/>II Ireland<lb/>Corruption general<lb/><unclear>Per</unclear> Grattan<lb/>Cavendish corruption</note></p> <p><sic>Plowd.</sic> II 349 1792 <sic>Jan<hi rend="superscript">y</hi></sic> 19. <sic>Parl.</sic> opens. Grattans Speech<lb/>12. <sic>Parl. Deb.</sic> p.23. proceedings imputed <del><gap/></del> by him to Sir Henry<lb/>Cavendish. He "voted in one Session for a <unclear>previous</unclear> Bill and<lb/>"against it in the next . . <del><gap/></del> for a place Bill in one Session<lb/>"and against it in the next . . . for a Committee to proceed<lb/>"towards impeachment against the present Ministry for selling<lb/>"peerages, and the very next Sessions <add>votes</add> for thanks to that<lb/>"very Ministry." For selling peerage <add>Note</add> as of the influence<lb/>exercised by selling peerages were more corruptive than that he<lb/>received by giving them <foreign>gratis</foreign>!</p> <p> N.B. On the same day <add><sic>Plowd.</sic> <del>II</del> 348</add> <del>Speak</del> <add>Speech</add> by M<hi rend="superscript">r</hi> Grattan <gap/><lb/><del>displaying the utter corruption of</del> <add>ascribing to the Irish Constitution</add> as <sic>compleat</sic> a state of corruption<lb/>as can be imagined: at the same time "he allowed<lb/><del>t</del> the British Constitution to be the best." Let him who can<lb/>say in what <unclear>case</unclear> if the particulars of the corruption so held<lb/>up by him to view the one constitution differs <add>or did then differ</add> from the other<lb/>"It was not (p.348) " mixed monarchy with parts happily tempered<lb/>"and so forth; the cant of grave and superannuated addresses; but<lb/>"the reach and will, and simple, and absolute government;<lb/>"rendered so by means that made every part of it vicious<lb/>"and abominable; the executors who devoured the whole, and<lb/>"the other two parts which were thus extinguished; of such a<lb/>"<unclear>confluence</unclear> the component parts were debauched by one another"<lb/>&amp;c &amp;c.</p>           






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1820 Feb. 13
Radicalism not dangerous

III Experience
II Ireland
Corruption general
Per Grattan
Cavendish corruption

Plowd. II 349 1792 Jany 19. Parl. opens. Grattans Speech
12. Parl. Deb. p.23. proceedings imputed by him to Sir Henry
Cavendish. He "voted in one Session for a previous Bill and
"against it in the next . . for a place Bill in one Session
"and against it in the next . . . for a Committee to proceed
"towards impeachment against the present Ministry for selling
"peerages, and the very next Sessions votes for thanks to that
"very Ministry." For selling peerage Note as of the influence
exercised by selling peerages were more corruptive than that he
received by giving them gratis!

N.B. On the same day Plowd. II 348 Speak Speech by Mr Grattan
displaying the utter corruption of ascribing to the Irish Constitution as compleat a state of corruption
as can be imagined: at the same time "he allowed
t the British Constitution to be the best." Let him who can
say in what case if the particulars of the corruption so held
up by him to view the one constitution differs or did then differ from the other
"It was not (p.348) " mixed monarchy with parts happily tempered
"and so forth; the cant of grave and superannuated addresses; but
"the reach and will, and simple, and absolute government;
"rendered so by means that made every part of it vicious
"and abominable; the executors who devoured the whole, and
"the other two parts which were thus extinguished; of such a
"confluence the component parts were debauched by one another"
&c &c.




Identifier: | JB/137/300/001"JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 137.

Date_1

1820-02-13

Marginal Summary Numbering

Box

137

Main Headings

radicalism not dangerous

Folio number

300

Info in main headings field

radicalism not dangerous

Image

001

Titles

Category

collectanea

Number of Pages

1

Recto/Verso

recto

Page Numbering

Penner

jeremy bentham

Watermarks

[[watermarks::[prince of wales feathers] i&m 1816]]

Marginals

Paper Producer

arthur wellesley, duke of wellington

Corrections

Paper Produced in Year

1816

Notes public

ID Number

47017

Box Contents

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