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'' | cases be intolerable to the public; if not, to the individual.<lb/>Four of them then are to be for a large <del><gap/></del> City: not fewer<lb/>for the smallest Parish.<lb/><lb/>If they are paid any thing, they <add>in the City at least</add> must be paid a suffici-<lb/>-ency for their maintenance: <del>for they will be</del> continually<lb/><add>upon duty</add> or liable to be called upon duty at a minute's warning,<lb/>it will be impossible for them to carry on any business<lb/>of their own. That they may make the better checks<lb/>to a professional man <del>it <gap/> to be</del> the design seems<lb/>to be that they shall not be professional men. [They are<lb/>to be of the materials that <add>our</add> common Jury men are made<lb/>of, Shop-keepers and Farmers.] Men of <del>talents</del> <add>intellectual requirements</add> suffi-<lb/>-cient to sit by the Judge's side but not <add>sufficient ever</add> <del><gap/></del> to take<lb/>his place. What is the consequence? That <gap/> you<lb/>get the burthen of an <gap/> establishment without<lb/>the benefit.<lb/><lb/>I see infinite embarassment and <gap/> in the 6<hi rend='superscript'>th</hi><lb/>article. They <del><gap/></del> can have no certain <del>hours</del> days not<lb/>hours of sitting. The Judge has <add>a pair of them</add> them to hunt for,<lb/>as occasion draws him into their neighbourhood. Thus<lb/><del>notice of his apparent</del> footsteps raise an alarm among<lb/>the Good-men-and true of every Parish he comes near<lb/>The moment he <del><gap/></del> is known to bind his <gap/> toward any<lb/>Parish the Good-men-and-true take the alarm. <del>They</del> <add>Our</add> man | ||
cases be intolerable to the public; if not, to the individual.
Four of them then are to be for a large City: not fewer
for the smallest Parish.
If they are paid any thing, they in the City at least must be paid a suffici-
-ency for their maintenance: for they will be continually
upon duty or liable to be called upon duty at a minute's warning,
it will be impossible for them to carry on any business
of their own. That they may make the better checks
to a professional man it to be the design seems
to be that they shall not be professional men. [They are
to be of the materials that our common Jury men are made
of, Shop-keepers and Farmers.] Men of talents intellectual requirements suffi-
-cient to sit by the Judge's side but not sufficient ever to take
his place. What is the consequence? That you
get the burthen of an establishment without
the benefit.
I see infinite embarassment and in the 6th
article. They can have no certain hours days not
hours of sitting. The Judge has a pair of them them to hunt for,
as occasion draws him into their neighbourhood. Thus
notice of his apparent footsteps raise an alarm among
the Good-men-and true of every Parish he comes near
The moment he is known to bind his toward any
Parish the Good-men-and-true take the alarm. They Our man
Identifier: | JB/051/237/002"JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 51. |
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4-5 |
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051 |
evidence; procedure code |
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237 |
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002 |
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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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16402 |
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