★ Find a new page to transcribe in our list of Untranscribed Manuscripts
No edit summary |
m Protected "JB/137/428/001": ready for review ([Edit=Allow only administrators] (indefinite) [Move=Allow only administrators] (indefinite)) |
(No difference)
|
1820 Jany 13
Radicalism not dangerous. <p.++ 5 3o
III. Experience
II. Ireland
3 §.1. Historical sketch
7
19. Purpose f to which
the popular influence thus was
employed. retrospect.
1 Government, a foreign
conquerors. Conquest
being incomplete, oppression
the ruling principle.
6. Mean time the popular influence thus created was
employed for great national purposes. the government</del. A few words of retrospect
are here necessary. The government being from the first that of a foreign conqueror, had had
universal oppression for the and for several centuries the conquest not completed, oppression had of course been the ruling principle. In imitation of
the conquering the country, and for the benefit of the conquerors, the conquered had indeed been indulged with</add> an assembly call the
Parliament. but the right of passing laws had long been
confined to the Monarch, whose constant residence was
in England and to whose Island and its interests were in whose eyes, the ever troublesome possession dependency was
neither the subjects of knowledge nor objects of regard rather a source of disquietude than an object of sympathy. But
as it always was, the condition of the conquered would have have</add. been
still worse, had it not been <add> were it not that , more or less
considerable, of the land, had always had for their prosperity relative men of opulence and power
among the conquerors. It had all along been These however were never so numerous, but that a maxim
and that uniformly acted upon had been — that whenever in so far as any case
public of interest was regarded as having place, concession
was to be only on one side, and the interest of the minor country was to be made
an unrestricted sacrifice,
not only to the
what was regarded as the
aggregate interest of the
greater, but to that of<lb/.any the smallest part
of it. Accordingly,
whether by laws made
either in the English
Parliament of England or, under
the influence of the
English Monarch, in that
Irish Parliament
of Ireland
couple sacrificed country country completely sacrificed to that of the greater
and the bodies of the Island were laws made the trade, and with it the prosperity, of the subject country, was kept in a state of perpetual
under the insistence of England made by the
Irish Parliament Island the trade of
Ireland
continual depression, by a system of regulations having this for their
object purposely and avowedly directed to that end> purpose
Identifier: | JB/137/428/001"JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 137. |
|||
---|---|---|---|
1820-01-13 |
7-11 |
||
137 |
radicalism not dangerous |
||
428 |
radicalism not dangerous |
||
001 |
|||
text sheet |
1 |
||
recto |
d5 / e3 |
||
jeremy bentham |
[[watermarks::[prince of wales feathers] i&m 1818]] |
||
arthur wellesley, duke of wellington |
|||
1818 |
|||
47145 |
|||