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<p>8</p>
''This Page Has Not Been Transcribed Yet''
<p><head>Deformation, Disablement and Mutilation examined.</head></p>
 
<p>to beg <add>trust to <del>pair</del> occasional private charity</add>to live by plunder, or to starve.</p>
 
<p>To <add>a</add> man who have been accustomed to live in a<lb/>
 
state of liberty and <add>comparative</add> independency, especially if his way<lb/>
of business <add>employment</add> has been such as afforded him a more<lb/>
comfortable subsistence than is to be derived from rough<lb/>
labour, the first of these courses is <del>fit</del> <add>intensely</add> irksome:<lb/>
the second besides being irksome is precarious:  to<lb/>
avoid the fourth <del>nothing therefore</del> <add>he can not therefore</add> but find himself<lb/>
under a very strong temptation to plunge<lb/>
at all hazards into the third.</p>
<p>It is not indeed every kind of employment that<lb/>
[requires a] <add>demands</add> confidence [to be placed in the workman]<lb/>
nor indeed is every man <add>will every employer</add> so rigorous as to withdraw<lb/>
his confidence upon occasion of a single instance<lb/>
of delinquency.  Nor therefore is the mischief by any<lb/>
means sure to happen.  Experience however it is<lb/>
said has testified that the <del>be</del> danger of it's happening<lb/>
is considerable<hi rend="superscript">†</hi> <note><hi rend="superscript">†</hi> Howard Sect. 3. p.39.</note>, and such <unclear>as</unclear> <del>told it</del> <add>unless it can</add> be provided<lb/>
against must form a considerable objection to any<lb/>
punishment the nature of which is to induce<lb/>
a lasting Infamy.</p>
<p>This danger is <del>greater</del> <add><del>most</del> at it's highest</add> when the <del>mark stigma</del> <add>mark</add> that<lb/>
serves as an evidence of the infamy is indelible.  Were<lb/>
it not for such a mark the <del>memory</del> <add>idea</add> of <del>the</del> his guilt<lb/>
would by degrees, die away in the memory of <del>those who</del> <add>men:  or</add><lb/>
<del>by</del> what could come to the same thing the impression it<lb/>
made of <add>on</add> them could gradually be effaced.<hi rend="superscript">⊞</hi> <note><hi rend="superscript">⊞</hi> His continuing in society a certain time without being guilty of any such offence of the nature of that which brought on him the disgrace in question, would serve as a proof that his character no longer <del>what</del> <add>such as</add> that disgrace indicated it to have been once.</note>  An indelible<lb/>
stigma <del>prop</del> continually renews and keeps up the force of this<lb/>
<add>impression.</add></p>
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Revision as of 06:20, 1 September 2021

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8

Deformation, Disablement and Mutilation examined.

to beg trust to pair occasional private charityto live by plunder, or to starve.

To a man who have been accustomed to live in a
state of liberty and comparative independency, especially if his way
of business employment has been such as afforded him a more
comfortable subsistence than is to be derived from rough
labour, the first of these courses is fit intensely irksome:
the second besides being irksome is precarious: to
avoid the fourth nothing therefore he can not therefore but find himself
under a very strong temptation to plunge
at all hazards into the third.

It is not indeed every kind of employment that
[requires a] demands confidence [to be placed in the workman]
nor indeed is every man will every employer so rigorous as to withdraw
his confidence upon occasion of a single instance
of delinquency. Nor therefore is the mischief by any
means sure to happen. Experience however it is
said has testified that the be danger of it's happening
is considerable Howard Sect. 3. p.39., and such as told it unless it can be provided
against must form a considerable objection to any
punishment the nature of which is to induce
a lasting Infamy.

This danger is greater most at it's highest when the mark stigma mark that
serves as an evidence of the infamy is indelible. Were
it not for such a mark the memory idea of the his guilt
would by degrees, die away in the memory of those who men: or
by what could come to the same thing the impression it
made of on them could gradually be effaced. His continuing in society a certain time without being guilty of any such offence of the nature of that which brought on him the disgrace in question, would serve as a proof that his character no longer what such as that disgrace indicated it to have been once. An indelible
stigma prop continually renews and keeps up the force of this
impression.


Identifier: | JB/159/177/004"JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 159.

Date_1

Marginal Summary Numbering

Box

159

Main Headings

punishment

Folio number

177

Info in main headings field

deformation, disablement and mutilation examined

Image

004

Titles

variability / exemplarity / subserviency to reformation

Category

text sheet

Number of Pages

4

Recto/Verso

recto

Page Numbering

f5 / f6 / f7 / f8

Penner

jeremy bentham

Watermarks

[[watermarks::l v g propatria [britannia motif]]]

Marginals

Paper Producer

caroline vernon

Corrections

Paper Produced in Year

Notes public

ID Number

54000

Box Contents

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