JB/096/210/001: Difference between revisions

Transcribe Bentham: A Collaborative Initiative

From Transcribe Bentham: Transcription Desk

Find a new page on our Untranscribed Manuscripts list.

JB/096/210/001: Difference between revisions

BenthamBot (talk | contribs)
Auto loaded
 
BenthamBot (talk | contribs)
No edit summary
 
(7 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
'''[{{fullurl:JB/096/210/001|action=edit}} Click Here To Edit]'''
'''[{{fullurl:JB/096/210/001|action=edit}} Click Here To Edit]'''
<!-- ENTER TRANSCRIPTION BELOW THIS LINE -->
<!-- ENTER TRANSCRIPTION BELOW THIS LINE -->


''This Page Has Not Been Transcribed Yet''
<head>CHILD-MURDER &#x2014; FORNICATION.</head>
 
<p>It is not to destroy the Children <add>who feel nothing</add> that I contend for. but to save the Mothers <add>Parents who feel every thing</add><lb/>
If your Humanity teaches you to create misery when <add>without necessity</add> you can avoid it, I will have<lb/>
none of it &#x2014; It is a foppish pretence &#x2014; [I hate] the thoughts of it. <add> are odious</add><lb/></p>
 
<p>D<hi rend='superscript'>r</hi> Hunter whose tenderness, if <del>tenderness</del> <add>that quality</add> were rare among the faculty, would be a proverb <add>proverbial</add> <lb/>
&amp; has gone hand in hand with his <add>rare</add> judgment in lifting him to that exalted station in the profession<!-- word cut off paper damage --><lb/>
which he holds <add>professes</add> <del>shows</del> <add>declares</add> in his Lectures that new born Children have no feeling &#x2014; Those<lb/>
<add>agonies</add> of the suffering mother must, if it be not altogether in vain to reason upon the feeling <add>to conjecture what may be the feelings of others be not a vain</add><lb/>
<add>task altogether</add> of others, of all agonies be the most intense.<lb/></p>
 
<head>FOUNDLING HOSP.</head>
 
<p><del>The Legislature which<add> to which care they owe their lives</add>  has preserved them life will have acquired a right which every <lb/>
one will allow to be a good or</del> <add>the best imaginable most perfect</add>  <del>to dispose of them</del><lb/></p>
 
<note>SENTIMENT.
A Woman, rather <add>than</add> the lifeless body<lb/> of her husband, would <del>rather</del> have<lb/> the Undertaker burnt who escorts<lb/> it to the grave &#x2014; But this is<lb/> not the sentiment of the Legislator<lb/> A Poet
</note>
 
<p>The Legislator may say <add>Mortal Cannot</add><lb/>
I cannot extirpate Fornication<lb/>
I cannot stop the current of the Blood that flows to the spermatic <add>along the spermatic Artery</add> &amp; into the <gap/> <lb/>
I cannot intercept the nerves in their ramification till the right words shall have<lb/>
bid the one <add>to</add> flow &amp; the other to possess their Station &#x2014; <lb/></p>
 
<p>But I can do one thing <del>if the Legislation would give me leave</del>, to <del>render it less</del> <add>reduce its growth</add><lb/>
&amp; another to render it not mischievous: at least to render it much less so. <lb/></p>
 
<p><note>who will be content to exasperate rather than seem to abandon the hopes of cure, &amp; save appearances of any <del><gap/></del></note> It is a lesson as difficult to learn as any that can be taught, <del>not</del> to bear with those<lb/>
evils <add>mischief</add> which it is impracticable to prevent. <del>it</del><lb/></p>


<p><note>Those pedantic practitioners in legislation who <del>like</del> would rather kill a patient as Hippocrates directs than relieve <add>cure</add> against his rules.</note>
It was a small thing to compell Mothers by a Law <add> Solon's Law was a cruel one? &#x2014; Why?</add> to part from their Children &#x2014; But <lb/>
upon the supposition the mothers of their children wish for nothing so much as to be<lb/>
rid of them &#x2014;  there is therefore <add>on this score</add> no cruelty in the case<lb/></p>


<p><add>It is difficult</add> One has an unpleasant task to combat with those <add>seen when they fly</add> who seize <add>at once</add> on the strong hold <add><gap/></add><lb/>
of <add>popular</add> prejudice, &amp; turn the weaknesses of mankind to the profit of their opinion.</p>
<head>China</head>
<p>It is to me as convincing an experiment as it is possible for me to be in a <unclear>Science</unclear> where it is so difficult <lb/>for all the influencing circumstances to be taken in <lb/></p>
<head>
HOMICIDE <del><unclear>Casual</unclear></del> of Infants _ Sentiment  _ Fornication [BR][10]</head>


<!-- DO NOT EDIT BELOW THIS LINE -->
<!-- DO NOT EDIT BELOW THIS LINE -->
{{Metadata:{{PAGENAME}}}}
{{Metadata:{{PAGENAME}}}}{{Completed}}

Latest revision as of 10:12, 4 February 2020

Click Here To Edit

CHILD-MURDER — FORNICATION.

It is not to destroy the Children who feel nothing that I contend for. but to save the Mothers Parents who feel every thing
If your Humanity teaches you to create misery when without necessity you can avoid it, I will have
none of it — It is a foppish pretence — [I hate] the thoughts of it. are odious

Dr Hunter whose tenderness, if tenderness that quality were rare among the faculty, would be a proverb proverbial
& has gone hand in hand with his rare judgment in lifting him to that exalted station in the profession
which he holds professes shows declares in his Lectures that new born Children have no feeling — Those
agonies of the suffering mother must, if it be not altogether in vain to reason upon the feeling to conjecture what may be the feelings of others be not a vain
task altogether of others, of all agonies be the most intense.

FOUNDLING HOSP.

The Legislature which to which care they owe their lives has preserved them life will have acquired a right which every
one will allow to be a good or
the best imaginable most perfect to dispose of them

SENTIMENT. A Woman, rather than the lifeless body
of her husband, would rather have
the Undertaker burnt who escorts
it to the grave — But this is
not the sentiment of the Legislator
A Poet

The Legislator may say Mortal Cannot
I cannot extirpate Fornication
I cannot stop the current of the Blood that flows to the spermatic along the spermatic Artery & into the
I cannot intercept the nerves in their ramification till the right words shall have
bid the one to flow & the other to possess their Station —

But I can do one thing if the Legislation would give me leave, to render it less reduce its growth
& another to render it not mischievous: at least to render it much less so.

who will be content to exasperate rather than seem to abandon the hopes of cure, & save appearances of any It is a lesson as difficult to learn as any that can be taught, not to bear with those
evils mischief which it is impracticable to prevent. it

Those pedantic practitioners in legislation who like would rather kill a patient as Hippocrates directs than relieve cure against his rules. It was a small thing to compell Mothers by a Law Solon's Law was a cruel one? — Why? to part from their Children — But
upon the supposition the mothers of their children wish for nothing so much as to be
rid of them — there is therefore on this score no cruelty in the case

It is difficult One has an unpleasant task to combat with those seen when they fly who seize at once on the strong hold
of popular prejudice, & turn the weaknesses of mankind to the profit of their opinion.

China

It is to me as convincing an experiment as it is possible for me to be in a Science where it is so difficult
for all the influencing circumstances to be taken in

HOMICIDE Casual of Infants _ Sentiment _ Fornication [BR][10]



Identifier: | JB/096/210/001"JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 96.

Date_1

Marginal Summary Numbering

Box

096

Main Headings

legislation

Folio number

210

Info in main headings field

homicide of infants - sentiment - fornication

Image

001

Titles

Category

text sheet

Number of Pages

1

Recto/Verso

recto

Page Numbering

c10

Penner

jeremy bentham

Watermarks

[[watermarks::j honig & zoonen [lion with vryheyt motif]]]

Marginals

Paper Producer

cc1

Corrections

Paper Produced in Year

Notes public

ID Number

31214

Box Contents

UCL Home » Transcribe Bentham » Transcription Desk
  • Create account
  • Log in