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<p><!-- pencil -->15 March 1812.<lb/>
''This Page Has Not Been Transcribed Yet''
<!-- pencil --><head>Penitentiary Act Further proposed Amendments</head></p>
 
<p>Objections to the proposed temporary allowance.</p>
 
<p><del>At this rate</del> Upon this plan M<hi rend="superscript">r</hi> Bentham will be in no<lb/>
 
hurry to get the award made: he will go on receiving<lb/>
his quarterage as long as he lives.</p>
<p>Answer.  What?  A life annuity not <add>worth</add> more that between<lb/>
£6,000 and £7,000 reckoning his life at <del>its worth</del><lb/>
ten years purchase (his age being turned of 64) is this then<lb/>
supposing him willing to receive it, is this thought too much<lb/>
for the "liberal compensation" proposed to be given him?</p>
<p>Too much for the value of the Contract from August 1795<lb/>
when the instrument should have been signed not to speak<lb/>
of March 1793 when his Proposal was accepted and he<lb/>
ordered to take his arrangements? – Too much even for<lb/>
the private manufacturing concern composed of a system of<lb/>
patent inventions of unexampled promise sacrificed with<lb/>
the capital employed in it to the public one? – for the profit<lb/>
expectable upon either concern – in the first place up to the<lb/>
present time, in the next place <add>up</add> to the end of the life of him<lb/>
and his Brother?  Would this be too much, even supposing<lb/>
instead of <unclear>land</unclear> of inheritance to <del>than</del> the amount of<lb/>
£500 a year old rent, not a sixpence <add>in the way of capital</add> had been expended?</p>
<p>N.B.  <del><gap/></del> Had <del>this business come on</del> <add>the date of this statement been</add> one quarter of a year<lb/>
later the <del>annual</del> income from the pledge would have been<lb/>
£100 a year more:  <del>and</del> if 2 1/4 years <add>later,</add> £60<add>2.9<hi rend="superscript">s</hi></add> in addition<lb/>
to the £100:  <del>together £160/2:9:</del> viz.<lb/>
1.  By endorsement dated 26 Aug. 1807 on Lease to Samuel Cooke dated<lb/>
21 Aug. 1805, additional rent from Lady day 1812  £100:0.0<lb/>
2.  By Lease to d<hi rend="superscript">o</hi> dated 27 Aug. 1807 additional fromMidsumm<hi rend="superscript">r</hi> 1814  <hi rend="underline">60:2.9</hi><lb/>
160:2.9</p>
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Latest revision as of 17:18, 12 May 2023

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15 March 1812.
Penitentiary Act Further proposed Amendments

Objections to the proposed temporary allowance.

At this rate Upon this plan Mr Bentham will be in no
hurry to get the award made: he will go on receiving
his quarterage as long as he lives.

Answer. What? A life annuity not worth more that between
£6,000 and £7,000 reckoning his life at its worth
ten years purchase (his age being turned of 64) is this then
supposing him willing to receive it, is this thought too much
for the "liberal compensation" proposed to be given him?

Too much for the value of the Contract from August 1795
when the instrument should have been signed not to speak
of March 1793 when his Proposal was accepted and he
ordered to take his arrangements? – Too much even for
the private manufacturing concern composed of a system of
patent inventions of unexampled promise sacrificed with
the capital employed in it to the public one? – for the profit
expectable upon either concern – in the first place up to the
present time, in the next place up to the end of the life of him
and his Brother? Would this be too much, even supposing
instead of land of inheritance to than the amount of
£500 a year old rent, not a sixpence in the way of capital had been expended?

N.B. Had this business come on the date of this statement been one quarter of a year
later the annual income from the pledge would have been
£100 a year more: and if 2 1/4 years later, £602.9s in addition
to the £100: together £160/2:9: viz.
1. By endorsement dated 26 Aug. 1807 on Lease to Samuel Cooke dated
21 Aug. 1805, additional rent from Lady day 1812 £100:0.0
2. By Lease to do dated 27 Aug. 1807 additional fromMidsummr 1814 60:2.9
160:2.9


Identifier: | JB/118/375/001"JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 118.

Date_1

1812-03-15

Marginal Summary Numbering

Box

118

Main Headings

panopticon

Folio number

375

Info in main headings field

penitentiary bill further proposed amendments

Image

001

Titles

Category

text sheet

Number of Pages

1

Recto/Verso

recto

Page Numbering

f4

Penner

jeremy bentham

Watermarks

th 1806

Marginals

Paper Producer

andre morellet

Corrections

Paper Produced in Year

1806

Notes public

ID Number

39429

Box Contents

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