★ Find a new page to transcribe in our list of Untranscribed Manuscripts
No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
Line 4: | Line 4: | ||
Indirect Legislation § 6 | <p>Indirect Legislation § 6</p> | ||
Political | <note>Political</note> | ||
<add>a</add> man who is heir to an estate and is <del>the</del> <add>of</add><lb/><del><gap/></del> such a station of life as to possess a considerable <lb/><del>de</del> share of pecuniary credit, may have<lb/>to choose between <del>Forgery</del> Murder, <add>that is of the present life-holder of the estate and</add> Forgery and<lb/>Theft or Robbery. But an indigent vagabond can <lb/>have no <add>such</add> option: of the above four crimes, he <lb/>can scarcely have more than Theft and Robbery <lb/>to choose out of.<lb/><p><add>Of the several groups of offences which are liable</add><lb/>The motive which furnishes the largest group <lb/><add>to come in competition with one another the most</add><lb/>of offences that are <del>liable</del> <add>apt</add> to come into competition<lb/><add>numerous is that which is furnished by</add><lb/>with one<lb/> is that of pecuniary interest; <del>especially when</del> <lb/> which when the circumstances of the party <del>being</del><lb/><del>it</del> add to it a tincture of physical want, may<lb/>be termed <hi rend="underline">indigence</hi>. <add>Accordingly the</add> Offences that are <del>most<lb/>apt to occur</del> <add>susceptible</add> open to the greatest variety of<lb/>competition are <del>accordingly</del> <add>the</add> crimes of indigence. <hi rend="superscript">+</hi><lb/> <note><hi rend="superscript">+</hi></note> <!-- There is no text attached to this note --> This subject will be more particularly discussed<lb/>in the body of the work under the <del>head</del> <add>title</add> of<lb/>offences against property in general.<lb/></p><p>Indulgence shown to Duelling in comparison of assassination.<lb/></p> | |||
<add>a</add> man who is heir to an estate and is <del>the</del> <add>of</add><lb/><del><gap/></del> such a station of life as to possess a considerable <lb/><del>de</del> share of pecuniary credit, may have<lb/>to choose between <del>Forgery</del> Murder, <add>that is of the present life-holder of the estate and</add> Forgery and<lb/>Theft or Robbery. But an indigent vagabond can <lb/>have no <add>such</add> option: of the above four crimes, he <lb/>can scarcely have more than Theft and Robbery <lb/>to choose out of.<lb/><p><add>Of the several groups of offences which are liable</add><lb/>The motive which furnishes the largest group <lb/><add>to come in competition with one another the most</add><lb/>of offences that are <del>liable</del> <add>apt</add> to come into competition<lb/><add>numerous is that which is furnished by</add><lb/>with one<lb/> is that of pecuniary interest; <del>especially when</del> <lb/> which when the circumstances of the party <del>being</del><lb/><del>it</del> add to it a tincture of physical want, may<lb/>be termed <hi rend="underline">indigence</hi>. <add>Accordingly the</add> Offences that are <del>most<lb/>apt to occur</del> <add>susceptible</add> open to the greatest variety of<lb/>competition are <del>accordingly</del> <add>the</add> crimes of indigence. <hi rend="superscript">+</hi><lb/> <note><hi rend="superscript">+</hi></note> <!-- There is no text attached to this note --> This subject will be more particularly discussed<lb/>in the body of the work under the <del>head</del> <add>title</add> of<lb/>offences against property in general.<lb/></p><p>Indulgence shown to Duelling in comparison of assassination.<lb/></p | |||
Line 48: | Line 47: | ||
<!-- DO NOT EDIT BELOW THIS LINE --> | <!-- DO NOT EDIT BELOW THIS LINE --> | ||
{{Metadata:{{PAGENAME}}}}{{ | {{Metadata:{{PAGENAME}}}}{{Completed}} |
Indirect Legislation § 6
Political
a man who is heir to an estate and is the of
such a station of life as to possess a considerable
de share of pecuniary credit, may have
to choose between Forgery Murder, that is of the present life-holder of the estate and Forgery and
Theft or Robbery. But an indigent vagabond can
have no such option: of the above four crimes, he
can scarcely have more than Theft and Robbery
to choose out of.
Of the several groups of offences which are liable
The motive which furnishes the largest group
to come in competition with one another the most
of offences that are liable apt to come into competition
numerous is that which is furnished by
with one
is that of pecuniary interest; especially when
which when the circumstances of the party being
it add to it a tincture of physical want, may
be termed indigence. Accordingly the Offences that are most
apt to occur susceptible open to the greatest variety of
competition are accordingly the crimes of indigence. +
+ This subject will be more particularly discussed
in the body of the work under the head title of
offences against property in general.
Indulgence shown to Duelling in comparison of assassination.
Identifier: | JB/087/030/002"JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 87. |
|||
---|---|---|---|
5 |
|||
087 |
indirect legislation |
||
030 |
indirect legislation |
||
002 |
note |
||
text sheet |
4 |
||
recto |
f5 / f6 / f7 / f8 |
||
jeremy bentham |
[[watermarks::r williams [britannia with shield motif]]] |
||
c. hamilton |
|||
27555 |
|||