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<p>11</p>
''This Page Has Not Been Transcribed Yet''
<p>that if he should peremptorily refuse to let him off,<lb/>
 
<del>so it <gap/></del> <add>there was no remedy.</add>  For he was so <del><gap/></del> <add>circumstanced</add>, that it was<lb/>
 
necessary for him not to <del><gap/></del> <add>quarrel with his brother</add> "<hi rend="underline">rompre en visière</hi>"<lb/>
 
was the expression:  <del><gap/> as it is <gap/></del> <add>for being</add> so remarkable<lb/>
an one, I put it again and again to<lb/>
my friend to tell me whether it was really <del>that<lb/>
<gap/></del> the one he used.  He concluded with<lb/>
saying that he would go and talk with his<lb/>
brother that instant, and would immediately acquaint <add>give</add><lb/>
my friend with <add>notice</add> the result.  This was<lb/>
on the Friday:  the Commissioners set off for Portsmouth<lb/>
the Tuesday after.  Would not you have<lb/>
imagined that some sort of apology or at least <add>some</add> answer<lb/>
would have been made to me?  Not a syllable<lb/>
have my friend or I heard from <del>his</del> <add>Johnstone</add> to this<lb/>
hour.  My friend was highly exasperated, while as<lb/>
yet there was nothing to complain of but delay:<lb/>
<del>and</del> <add>He</add> wrote him a note in pretty peremptory language<lb/>
which was set, but, as it proved, to late to reach<lb/>
him.  To love mankind, says Helvetius, one should expect<lb/>
<add>but little</add> of them.  I do expect but little of them, and am therefore<lb/>
<del>not</del> seldom disappointed, &amp; never vehemently.</p>
<p>M<hi rend="superscript">r</hi> Howard’s book on Prisons that I have<lb/>
<add>so often</add> mentioned in my View of the Hard-labour Bill,<lb/>
have you got it at Petersburgh?  I hope you have,<lb/>
and that by this time <del>he</del> <add>that intelligent &amp; indefatigable friend to the distressed</add> may number the Empress<lb/>
among his admirers.  You certainly must have<lb/>
heard of him before you went, on the occasion of the<lb/>
extraordinary tours he took all over England, and a<lb/>
considerable part of the continent, merely for the purpose<lb/>
of inspecting the state of the prisons <del>wherever<lb/>
<add>he</add></del></p>
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Latest revision as of 17:46, 20 October 2023

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11

that if he should peremptorily refuse to let him off,
so it there was no remedy. For he was so circumstanced, that it was
necessary for him not to quarrel with his brother "rompre en visière"
was the expression: as it is for being so remarkable
an one, I put it again and again to
my friend to tell me whether it was really that
the one he used. He concluded with
saying that he would go and talk with his
brother that instant, and would immediately acquaint give
my friend with notice the result. This was
on the Friday: the Commissioners set off for Portsmouth
the Tuesday after. Would not you have
imagined that some sort of apology or at least some answer
would have been made to me? Not a syllable
have my friend or I heard from his Johnstone to this
hour. My friend was highly exasperated, while as
yet there was nothing to complain of but delay:
and He wrote him a note in pretty peremptory language
which was set, but, as it proved, to late to reach
him. To love mankind, says Helvetius, one should expect
but little of them. I do expect but little of them, and am therefore
not seldom disappointed, & never vehemently.

Mr Howard’s book on Prisons that I have
so often mentioned in my View of the Hard-labour Bill,
have you got it at Petersburgh? I hope you have,
and that by this time he that intelligent & indefatigable friend to the distressed may number the Empress
among his admirers. You certainly must have
heard of him before you went, on the occasion of the
extraordinary tours he took all over England, and a
considerable part of the continent, merely for the purpose
of inspecting the state of the prisons wherever
he


Identifier: | JB/169/106/003"JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 169.

Date_1

Marginal Summary Numbering

Box

169

Main Headings

Folio number

106

Info in main headings field

letter to foster petersburgh

Image

003

Titles

Category

correspondence

Number of Pages

4

Recto/Verso

recto

Page Numbering

f9 / f10 / f11 / f12

Penner

jeremy bentham

Watermarks

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

Marginals

Paper Producer

caroline vernon

Corrections

Paper Produced in Year

Notes public

letter 248, vol. 2

ID Number

56926

Box Contents

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