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' | <head>+Before B1</head> | ||
<head>Symptoms</head> | |||
<p>3 March 1802</p> | |||
<p>land to its <add>only proper and</add> professedly-intended use, the <del>demonstration</del> <add>appearance</add><lb/> | |||
of <del>giving up</del> <add>sacrificing</add> the establishment to Lord Belgrave,<lb/> | |||
in consequence of his Lordship's application for that<lb/> | |||
purpose, must have been a sort of deceit though<lb/> | |||
<add>(it must be confessed)</add> <del>of a very civil kind</del> <add>of a deceit of a very unusual as well as civil kind,</add> that noble Lord<lb/> | |||
<del>a very civil one, put upon his Lordship</del><lb/> | |||
<add>put by these Right Honourable and Honourable persons, or some of</add><lb/> | |||
them, upon that noble Lord.</p> | |||
<p>An introduction that, upon this hypothesis had never<lb/> | |||
been entertained, could not be given up. But,<lb/> | |||
<add>few things seem less likely</add> as it was not likely <add>natural</add> that his Lordship should be <add>have been</add><lb/> | |||
let into a secret which <add>while</add> at the same time that<lb/> | |||
it would have been a confession of legal guilt as<lb/> | |||
well as moral perfidy would have <sic>destroyd</sic> the<lb/> | |||
compliment. The natural course of things is<lb/> | |||
then that {supposing the compliment to Lord<lb/> | |||
Salisbury to have been the only real object of<lb/> | |||
the purchase} although without any such interposition<lb/> | |||
on the part of Lord Belgrave the establishment<lb/> | |||
would equally have been laid aside, <add>suitable</add> abd<lb/> | |||
<del>pretences</del> <add>pretences and other</add> measures adequate to the object <sic>employd</sic><lb/> | |||
for the purpose yet when the interposition<lb/> | |||
of his <add>the noble Viscount</add> Lordship did manifest itself, whatever<lb/> | |||
shape so ensued were referred in the intercourse <add>all conversations</add><lb/> | |||
<add>in the subject</add> with his Lordship or any friends or assistants of<lb/> | |||
his in the business, to that interposition, as the<lb/> | |||
only cause. Here ten would be an examplification<lb/> | |||
of that sort <add>branch</add> of economy, in which the two under members of the Triumvirate <add>not unjustly</add> may be<lb/> | |||
supposed to be at least as well conversant as<lb/> | |||
<add>with</add> in any other; that of making the most of <del>the</del> a<lb/> | |||
<del>matter of</del> very valuable <add>modification of the matter of the wealth of the nations</add> species of matter—the matter<lb/> | |||
<add>of</add></p> | |||
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{{Metadata:{{PAGENAME}}}} | {{Metadata:{{PAGENAME}}}} |
+Before B1 Symptoms
3 March 1802
land to its only proper and professedly-intended use, the demonstration appearance
of giving up sacrificing the establishment to Lord Belgrave,
in consequence of his Lordship's application for that
purpose, must have been a sort of deceit though
(it must be confessed) of a very civil kind of a deceit of a very unusual as well as civil kind, that noble Lord
a very civil one, put upon his Lordship
put by these Right Honourable and Honourable persons, or some of
them, upon that noble Lord.
An introduction that, upon this hypothesis had never
been entertained, could not be given up. But,
few things seem less likely as it was not likely natural that his Lordship should be have been
let into a secret which while at the same time that
it would have been a confession of legal guilt as
well as moral perfidy would have destroyd the
compliment. The natural course of things is
then that {supposing the compliment to Lord
Salisbury to have been the only real object of
the purchase} although without any such interposition
on the part of Lord Belgrave the establishment
would equally have been laid aside, suitable abd
pretences pretences and other measures adequate to the object employd
for the purpose yet when the interposition
of his the noble Viscount Lordship did manifest itself, whatever
shape so ensued were referred in the intercourse all conversations
in the subject with his Lordship or any friends or assistants of
his in the business, to that interposition, as the
only cause. Here ten would be an examplification
of that sort branch of economy, in which the two under members of the Triumvirate not unjustly may be
supposed to be at least as well conversant as
with in any other; that of making the most of the a
matter of very valuable modification of the matter of the wealth of the nations species of matter—the matter
of
Identifier: | JB/120/106/001"JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 120. |
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1802-03-03 |
3-6 |
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120 |
panopticon versus new south wales |
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106 |
symptoms |
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001 |
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text sheet |
1 |
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recto |
d2 / f2 |
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jeremy bentham |
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39932 |
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