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| <head>Extreme Importance of <del>the above</del> Amendments 4<lb/>and 5.</head> | |||
| <p>N.B. The putting <del><gap/></del> the damage upon its true<lb/>grounds instead of the narrow ones which it is feared<lb/> were purposively substituted in the Bill, is of such<lb/> importance that it would surely be worth while<lb/>rather to hazard the circulation producible by a <sic>Depute</sic><lb/>then <sic>submitt</sic> to the existing misrepresentative.<lb/> <del>of the <gap/></del> <add>as above</add> If the true representatives be resistant, it<lb/> can only be from a <add>desire</add> <del>determination</del> to render the consumption<lb/> as far <add><del><gap/></del></add> as possible from being adequate: and<lb/>in that case <add>or a <sic>Depute</sic></add> <sic>shewn</sic> might perhaps bring them to<lb/> do what otherwise it could <gap/> their enterprise to avoid<lb/> doing.</p> | |||
| <p>Supposing the matter to rest upon the present <add>improper & <add><del>false and</del></add> scanty<lb/>ground, the efficient arbitrator (the <del><gap/></del> Treasury nominee)<lb/>would seriously find himself able were he ever so <lb/>willing to <del>put</del> do justice. M<hi rend="superscript">r</hi> and General Bentham<lb/> would be sent upon an endless and <add>to a great degree</add> hopeless search<lb/> after <add>ventures of</add> minute desires of which every one would <del>be</del> (to<lb/>judge from experience at the Audit Office) be contrasted: <lb/> and the whole <add>allowance</add> would be reduced to seem wretched<lb/> because under the name of compensation for <add>loss of</add> time and<lb/> "truth," amounting to small part of the amount<lb/> portion of the pledge at present in hand (between £700<lb/> and £800 <add>a year</add>) of which <del>but for the money of the business<lb/>in Parliament</del> M<hi rend="superscript">r</hi> Bentham after twelve years of<lb/> <gap/> under secretary successive administrations<lb/> had never expected to be directed <del>who probably would<lb/> have been paid for the moving of the business in the House<lb/> of Commons.</del></p> | |||
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Extreme Importance of the above Amendments 4
and 5.
N.B. The putting  the damage upon its true
grounds instead of the narrow ones which it is feared
 were purposively substituted in the Bill, is of such
 importance that it would surely be worth while
rather to hazard the circulation producible by a Depute
then submitt to the existing misrepresentative.
 of the  as above If the true representatives be resistant, it
 can only be from a desire determination to render the consumption
 as far  as possible from being adequate: and
in that case or a Depute shewn might perhaps bring them to
 do what otherwise it could  their enterprise to avoid
 doing.
Supposing the matter to rest upon the present improper & <add>false and scanty
ground, the efficient arbitrator (the  Treasury nominee)
would seriously find himself able were he ever so 
willing to put do justice. Mr and General Bentham
 would be sent upon an endless and to a great degree hopeless search
 after ventures of minute desires of which every one would be (to
judge from experience at the Audit Office) be contrasted: 
 and the whole allowance would be reduced to seem wretched
 because under the name of compensation for loss of time and
 "truth," amounting to small part of the amount
 portion of the pledge at present in hand (between £700
 and £800 a year) of which but for the money of the business
in Parliament Mr Bentham after twelve years of
  under secretary successive administrations
 had never expected to be directed who probably would
 have been paid for the moving of the business in the House
 of Commons.
| Identifier: | JB/118/350/001"JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 118. | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| 118 | panopticon | ||
| 350 | |||
| 001 | extreme importance of amendments 4 and 5 | ||
| text sheet | 1 | ||
| recto | f7 | ||
| jeremy bentham | |||
| 39404 | |||