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<head>1829 May 1. 6<lb/>Petitions</head> <p><note>24<lb/><del>Supplement</del><lb/>Suits in pendency.<lb/>&sect;. Objections answered</note></p> <p>(2)<lb/>In the lips, and even in the eyes of many a man, to this<lb/>proposal, as well as to any other whatsoever how beneficial so ever<lb/>it will be a sufficient and peremptory objection &#x2014; that it is new.<lb/>In these <add>each</add> same eyes, better an old established disease than a new<lb/>health, old established misery than new happiness: and of the degree<lb/>of this unendurable quality, the measure will be taken from, the distance<lb/>of the new <gap/. to that which is nearest to it of those <del>who</del> of which the stock of the man's own old ideas is<lb/>composed.</p> <p><note>14<lb/>Objection time not<lb/>ripe for it</note></p> <p>(1)<lb/>Let it not be said by way of<lb/>objection to this proposal the time is not yet<lb/>ripe for it.</p> <p><note>15<lb/>Not ripe for proposition<lb/>or for acceptance</note></p> <p>Time not ripe for it &#x2014; ambiguous this:<lb/>not ripe for proposition? not ripe for acceptance?<lb/>Which of those is it that is meant?</p> <p>Proper question here &#x2014; is it a proper time<lb/>for the proposition? if yes, reason against acceptance<lb/>has no application here.</p> <p><note>16<lb/>If ripe for proposition<lb/>no reason against acceptance</note></p> <p><note>16<lb/>If ripe for proposition<lb/>no reason against acceptance</note></p> <p>If it be admitted that it is not too soon<lb/>for proposition every moment during which the<lb/>proposition is deferred will be a delay unjustifiable.<lb/><sic>Till</sic> proposition has been made<lb/>acceptance is impossible: and the sooner the<lb/>proposition is made the sooner will acceptance<lb/>become possible.</p> <p><note>17<lb/>If no good can yet be<lb/>done at any rate no<lb/>harm</note></p> <p>By the earliest possible bringing-forward<lb?>of the proposition if no good be done at any rate<lb/>no harm can be done.</p> <p><note>18<lb/>If not now brought<lb/>forward by the only<lb/>man capable when<lb>will it be brought<lb/>forward?</note></p> <p>Will it be said Yea for it will be thrown<lb/>into discredit: and by that means if accepted<lb/>at all, not so soon as if kept back <sic>till</sic> a<lb/>later period.</p> <p>Answer, the assertion is at any rate ungrounded<lb?>if not groundless: and of its not<lb/>being brought forward by a man perhaps the<lb/>only man who at this present is ready and<lb/>willing, and competent to bring it forward<lb/>may not the consequence be that it will<lb/>not be brought forward by any other man<lb/>or if not at all not <sic>till</sic> later than it will be if not <hi rend="superscript">[x]</hi><lb/><!-- continues in the margin --><hi rend="superscript">[x]</hi> suppressed now.</p>
<head>1829 May 1. 6<lb/>Petitions</head> <p><note>24<lb/><del>Supplement</del><lb/>Suits in pendency.<lb/>&sect;. Objections answered</note></p> <p>(2)<lb/>In the lips, and even in the eyes of many a man, to this<lb/>proposal, as well as to every other whatsoever how beneficial so ever<lb/>it will be a sufficient and peremptory objection &#x2014; that it is new.<lb/>In these <add>each</add> same eyes, better an old established disease than a new<lb/>health, old established misery than new happiness: and of the degree<lb/>of this unendurable quality, the measure will be taken from, the distance<lb/>of the new idea to that which is nearest to it of those <del>who</del> of which the stock of the man's own old ideas is<lb/>composed.</p> <p><note>14<lb/>Objection time not<lb/>ripe for it</note></p> <p>(1)<lb/>Let it not be said by way of<lb/>objection to this proposal the time is not yet<lb/>ripe for it.</p> <p><note>15<lb/>Not ripe for proposition<lb/>or for acceptance</note></p> <p>Time not ripe for it &#x2014; ambiguous this:<lb/>not ripe for proposition? not ripe for acceptance?<lb/>Which of those is it that is meant?</p> <p>Proper question here &#x2014; is it a proper time<lb/>for the proposition? if yes, reason against acceptance<lb/>has no application here.</p> <p><note>16<lb/>If ripe for proposition<lb/>no reason against acceptance</note></p> <p>If it be admitted that it is not too soon<lb/>for proposition every moment during which the<lb/>proposition is deferred will be a delay unjustifiable.<lb/><sic>Till</sic> proposition has been made<lb/>acceptance is impossible: and the sooner the<lb/>proposition is made the sooner will acceptance<lb/>become possible.</p> <p><note>17<lb/>If no good can yet be<lb/>done at any rate no<lb/>harm</note></p> <p>By the earliest possible bringing-forward<lb/>of the proposition if no good be done at any rate<lb/>no harm can be done.</p> <p><note>18<lb/>If not now brought<lb/>forward by the only<lb/>man capable when<lb/>will it be brought<lb/>forward?</note></p> <p>Will it be said <unclear>Yea</unclear> for it will be thrown<lb/>into discredit: and by that means if accepted<lb/>at all, not so soon as if kept back <sic>till</sic> a<lb/>later period.</p> <p>Answer, the assertion is at any rate ungrounded<lb/>if not groundless: and of its not<lb/>being brought forward by a man perhaps the<lb/>only man who at this present is ready and<lb/>willing, and competent to bring it forward<lb/>may not the consequence be that it will<lb/>not be brought forward by any other man<lb/>or if at all not <sic>till</sic> later than it will be if not <hi rend="superscript">[x]</hi><lb/><!-- continues in the margin --><hi rend="superscript">[x]</hi> suppressed now.</p>






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1829 May 1. 6
Petitions

24
Supplement
Suits in pendency.
§. Objections answered

(2)
In the lips, and even in the eyes of many a man, to this
proposal, as well as to every other whatsoever how beneficial so ever
it will be a sufficient and peremptory objection — that it is new.
In these each same eyes, better an old established disease than a new
health, old established misery than new happiness: and of the degree
of this unendurable quality, the measure will be taken from, the distance
of the new idea to that which is nearest to it of those who of which the stock of the man's own old ideas is
composed.

14
Objection time not
ripe for it

(1)
Let it not be said by way of
objection to this proposal the time is not yet
ripe for it.

15
Not ripe for proposition
or for acceptance

Time not ripe for it — ambiguous this:
not ripe for proposition? not ripe for acceptance?
Which of those is it that is meant?

Proper question here — is it a proper time
for the proposition? if yes, reason against acceptance
has no application here.

16
If ripe for proposition
no reason against acceptance

If it be admitted that it is not too soon
for proposition every moment during which the
proposition is deferred will be a delay unjustifiable.
Till proposition has been made
acceptance is impossible: and the sooner the
proposition is made the sooner will acceptance
become possible.

17
If no good can yet be
done at any rate no
harm

By the earliest possible bringing-forward
of the proposition if no good be done at any rate
no harm can be done.

18
If not now brought
forward by the only
man capable when
will it be brought
forward?

Will it be said Yea for it will be thrown
into discredit: and by that means if accepted
at all, not so soon as if kept back till a
later period.

Answer, the assertion is at any rate ungrounded
if not groundless: and of its not
being brought forward by a man perhaps the
only man who at this present is ready and
willing, and competent to bring it forward
may not the consequence be that it will
not be brought forward by any other man
or if at all not till later than it will be if not [x]
[x] suppressed now.




Identifier: | JB/081/147/001"JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 81.

Date_1

1829-05-01

Marginal Summary Numbering

14-18

Box

081

Main Headings

petition for justice

Folio number

147

Info in main headings field

petitions

Image

001

Titles

Category

copy/fair copy sheet

Number of Pages

1

Recto/Verso

recto

Page Numbering

f24

Penner

john flowerdew colls

Watermarks

b&m 1828

Marginals

george bentham

Paper Producer

arthur moore; richard doane

Corrections

Paper Produced in Year

1828

Notes public

ID Number

25934

Box Contents

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