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'' | <p>The same thing may still be said of the oath <lb/> of sincerity with which this unanimity is preceded: | ||
<lb/> though this also is frequently dwelt upon as a <lb/> very | |||
spiritual and very happy circumstance; <!-- inkblot above word here --> <del>It <lb/>is from the combination of these happy circumstances | |||
<lb/> with the two preceding ones that an English Jury <lb/> | |||
as at present constituted and for ages used up by | |||
<lb/> English lawyers, may be defined with indefensible <lb/> | |||
truth <add><del>accuracy</del></add> a body of <add>occasional Judges</add> <unclear>from</unclear> whom the</del> law <lb/> | |||
<del>has brought together in order to <unclear>constrain</unclear> them <lb/> by torture</del> to <del>give a false judgment <gap/> over<lb/> <gap/> by Perjury.</del> </p> | |||
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<head>Note to p. 9. continued.</head> | |||
<p>The <del>Law</del> Common Law of England has been | |||
<lb/> much magnified for its <add>supposed humanity</add> <del>magnanimity</del> in rejecting <lb/> | |||
the use of torture: the plain truth is, that, refusing | |||
<lb/> to apply it to <del>the</del> <add> any of the very few <del>and</del> </add> good purposes it has been applied | |||
<lb/> | |||
to by other nations, she has all along <del>applied</del> <add>been applying</add> | |||
<lb/> it to useless purposes and to bad ones.<hi rend='superscript'>+</hi> <note><hi rend='superscript'>+</hi>It was never <del>applied</del> <add><sic>employ'd</sic></add> to obtain of the known guilty <add>a direction to </add> <del>an indication of</del> their known accomplices.</note> | |||
It was till | |||
<lb/> lately <del>applied</del><add>employ'd</add> to force a culprit to comply with | |||
<lb/> an useless <add>formality:</add> <del><unclear>formantory</unclear></del> it is to this <unclear>Law</unclear> applied <lb/>to load <add>an unknown <del>twel</del> proportion of</add> twelve innocent men with unnecessary | |||
<lb/> guilt. </p> | |||
<p><del><unclear>Oh what Fiction was applied in this shows <lb/> how insupportable it is.</unclear> </del></p> | |||
<p><hi rend='underline'>But why</hi>, says somebody, <hi rend='underline'>thus mention torture? as <lb/>if <del>any</del> the memory of man could <del><unclear>favour</unclear></del> <add>furnish</add> an instance of <lb/>any thing that ever <!-- 'ever' doubly underlined -->deserved that name. </hi> I answer: Because <lb/> men must and would fall continually under its gripe, if perjury <lb/> did not afford them a <unclear>secure</unclear> and constant refuge. Would <lb/>the rack be the less a rack, because it had never been <lb/> known to be exhibited in vain?</p> | |||
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{{Metadata:{{PAGENAME}}}} | {{Metadata:{{PAGENAME}}}}{{Completed}} |
The same thing may still be said of the oath
of sincerity with which this unanimity is preceded:
though this also is frequently dwelt upon as a
very
spiritual and very happy circumstance; It
is from the combination of these happy circumstances
with the two preceding ones that an English Jury
as at present constituted and for ages used up by
English lawyers, may be defined with indefensible
truth <add>accuracy</add> a body of occasional Judges from whom the law
has brought together in order to constrain them
by torture to give a false judgment over
by Perjury.
Note to p. 9. continued.
The Law Common Law of England has been
much magnified for its supposed humanity magnanimity in rejecting
the use of torture: the plain truth is, that, refusing
to apply it to the any of the very few and good purposes it has been applied
to by other nations, she has all along applied been applying
it to useless purposes and to bad ones.+ +It was never applied employ'd to obtain of the known guilty a direction to an indication of their known accomplices.
It was till
lately appliedemploy'd to force a culprit to comply with
an useless formality: formantory it is to this Law applied
to load an unknown twel proportion of twelve innocent men with unnecessary
guilt.
Oh what Fiction was applied in this shows
how insupportable it is.
But why, says somebody, thus mention torture? as
if any the memory of man could favour furnish an instance of
any thing that ever deserved that name. I answer: Because
men must and would fall continually under its gripe, if perjury
did not afford them a secure and constant refuge. Would
the rack be the less a rack, because it had never been
known to be exhibited in vain?
Identifier: | JB/035/047/004"JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 35. |
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4-7, 7a |
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035 |
constitutional code; evidence; procedure code |
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047 |
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004 |
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text sheet |
4 |
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recto |
f5 / f6 / f7 / f8 |
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jeremy bentham |
[[watermarks::l munn [britannia with shield emblem]]] |
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benjamin constant |
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10640 |
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