★ Find a new page to transcribe in our list of Untranscribed Manuscripts
No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
Line 7: | Line 7: | ||
<p>Were Newgate upon this plan, all Newgate might be inspected<lb/> | <p>Were Newgate upon this plan, all Newgate might be inspected<lb/> | ||
by a quarter of an hour's visit to Mr Akerman.<lb/></p> | by a quarter of an hour's visit to Mr Akerman.<lb/></p> | ||
<p>Among the other <del>courses</del> <add>causes</add> of that reluctance, none at present so<lb/>forcible, none so unhappily well grounded, none which affords so natural<lb/>an excuse, nor so strong a reason against accepting of any excuse, <add>as</add> the danger<lb/>of <hi rend="underline">infection</hi>: a circumstance, which carries death, in one of its most tremendous<lb/>forms from of the seat of guilt to the seat of Justice, involving in one common<lb/>catastrophe the violator and the upholder of the laws. But in a spot so constructed<lb/>and under a course of discipline so insured, how <del>shall</del> <add>should</add> infection<lb/>ever arise? or how should it continue? — Against every danger of this kind, what private house of the poor, one might almost say, or even of the most<lb/>opulent, can be equally secure?</p> | <p>Among the other <del>courses</del> <add>causes</add> of that reluctance, none at present so<lb/>forcible, none so unhappily well grounded, none which affords so natural<lb/>an excuse, nor so strong a reason against accepting of any excuse, <add>as</add> the danger<lb/>of <hi rend="underline">infection</hi>: a circumstance, which carries death, in one of its most tremendous<lb/>forms from of the seat of guilt to the seat of Justice, involving in one common<lb/>catastrophe the violator and the upholder of the laws. But in a spot so constructed<lb/>and under a course of discipline so insured, how <del>shall</del> <add>should</add> infection<lb/>ever arise? or how should it continue? — Against every danger of this kind,<lb/> what private house of the poor, one might almost say, or even of the most<lb/>opulent, can be equally secure?</p> | ||
Click Here To Edit Letter VI. Advantages of the Plan 161
removed; and the trouble of going into such a room as the Lodge, is no more than
the trouble of of going into any other.
Were Newgate upon this plan, all Newgate might be inspected
by a quarter of an hour's visit to Mr Akerman.
Among the other courses causes of that reluctance, none at present so
forcible, none so unhappily well grounded, none which affords so natural
an excuse, nor so strong a reason against accepting of any excuse, as the danger
of infection: a circumstance, which carries death, in one of its most tremendous
forms from of the seat of guilt to the seat of Justice, involving in one common
catastrophe the violator and the upholder of the laws. But in a spot so constructed
and under a course of discipline so insured, how shall should infection
ever arise? or how should it continue? — Against every danger of this kind,
what private house of the poor, one might almost say, or even of the most
opulent, can be equally secure?
This Page Has Not Been Transcribed Yet
Identifier: | JB/550/161/001"JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 550. |
|||
---|---|---|---|
550 |
|||
161 |
|||
001 |
|||