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<head>Reward</head>  | |||
<note>Cases unmest § 3</note>  | |||
<note>Wagers</note>  | |||
<p><add>which</add> by possibility it may have a pernicious<lb/>tendency in the capacity of a reward, would<lb/>be to go to far.  It lies upon the prudence<lb/>of the legislator to make an estimate <add>draw a <sic>ballance</sic> in such case</add> <note>strike a ballance<lb/> between<lb/></note> of the<lb/>danger accruing <add>impending to be apprehended</add> from this cause, and the<lb/>advantage to be expected from the measure when<lb/><sic>considerd</sic> in other points of view.  It is evident<lb/>enough that the proportion between this danger<lb/>and this advantage will in different cases be<lb/>very different: and the drawing the line between<lb/>the cases in which the one and those in <lb/>which the other seems to preponderate, is a<lb/>business of too much detail to be transacted <add>performed</add><lb/>here.  It will find its place with propriety<lb/>under the head of <hi rend="underline">Contracts</hi> in the Civil<lb/>Code: and to that subdivision of it in which<lb/>the question <hi rend="underline">what contracts</hi> <del>shall be</del> <add><hi rend="underline">are</hi></add> [<hi rend="underline">adopted</hi>,<lb/> <del>that</del> or in <del>others</del> other words are declared <lb/>to be good and ] valid, is discussed.<lb/><note>To the same place<lb/> belongs the consideration <lb/>of the expedients that <lb/>may be adopted for <lb/>guarding <add>as well as may be</add> against the <lb/>danger, <del>without </del> sacrificing <lb/>as little as <lb/>may be of the advantage.  <lb/>A hasty and <lb/>narrow-minded legislator <lb/>starts with horror from a <lb/>measure at the first <del>glance</del> <add>glympse</add><lb/> of evil: a well-informed <lb/>and circumspect legislator <lb/>understand, and <lb/>having understood remembers, <lb/>that legislation <lb/>is never any thing but a<lb/> choice of evils.<lb/></note> At present all that we have to do is to lay<lb/>down a general cautionary rule, which is as follows:<lb/><hi rend="underline">Wherever an emolument is held up or<lb/><sic>allow'd</sic> to be held up to view, let the legislator<lb/>beware of any evil tendency it may have in<lb/>the capacity of a reward.<lb/></hi></p>  | |||
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41
Reward
Cases unmest § 3
Wagers
which by possibility it may have a pernicious
tendency in the capacity of a reward, would
be to go to far.  It lies upon the prudence
of the legislator to make an estimate draw a ballance in such case strike a ballance
 between
 of the
danger accruing impending to be apprehended from this cause, and the
advantage to be expected from the measure when
considerd in other points of view.  It is evident
enough that the proportion between this danger
and this advantage will in different cases be
very different: and the drawing the line between
the cases in which the one and those in 
which the other seems to preponderate, is a
business of too much detail to be transacted performed
here.  It will find its place with propriety
under the head of Contracts in the Civil
Code: and to that subdivision of it in which
the question what contracts shall be are [adopted,
 that or in others other words are declared 
to be good and ] valid, is discussed.
To the same place
 belongs the consideration 
of the expedients that 
may be adopted for 
guarding as well as may be against the 
danger, without  sacrificing 
as little as 
may be of the advantage.  
A hasty and 
narrow-minded legislator 
starts with horror from a 
measure at the first glance glympse
 of evil: a well-informed 
and circumspect legislator 
understand, and 
having understood remembers, 
that legislation 
is never any thing but a
 choice of evils.
 At present all that we have to do is to lay
down a general cautionary rule, which is as follows:
Wherever an emolument is held up or
allow'd to be held up to view, let the legislator
beware of any evil tendency it may have in
the capacity of a reward.
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 jeremy bentham  | 
 [[watermarks::gr [crown motif] [britannia with shield motif]]]  | 
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