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<p><!-- pencil -->5 Feb<hi rend="superscript">y</hi> 1810<lb/>
''This Page Has Not Been Transcribed Yet''
<!-- pencil --><head>Parl<hi rend="superscript">y</hi> Reform</head></p>
 
<p>At <del>the</del> its minimum the quantity of emolument annext<lb/>
 
to any office could not be less than what was necessary<lb/>
 
for the subsistence of a man possessed of the qualifications<lb/>
necessary to enable him to execute <add>exercise</add> the functions of it.<lb/>
In early times even the art of reading was a rare art:  the<lb/>
art of writing consequently still more so – <add>by</add> the bare possession<lb/>
of this rare qualification would therefore suffice to enable a<lb/>
man to exact a more than ordinary rate of payment.</p>
<p>At the institution of an office what would frequently<lb/>
happen – especially in those early times where population,<lb/>
wealth, <del>not</del> communication <del>of</del> in every way <add>mode</add> between man<lb/>
and man were so much less than <add>inferior to what they are</add> at present – that<lb/>
the quantity of business flowing in to an office would not<lb/>
be considerable enough to occupy the whole of his <add>disposable</add> working<lb/>
time.  But, <del><gap/></del> subsistence was <add>as</add> necessary to him <add>a man</add> during<lb/>
the whole of his time:  the fewer <add>smaller</add> therefore the <add>numbers of the</add> occasions<lb/>
on which fees came to be receivable <add>received by him</add>, the greater it was<lb/>
necessary should be the amount of each such fee.  Hence<lb/>
it is <add>was</add> that while it was impossible that fees <add>a fee</add> should ever<lb/>
be too small, it might, <del>and <gap/></del> each fee might and<lb/>
consequently all fees might be in <add>to</add> any degree excessive.<lb/>
Suppose <add>that</add> at the first institution the quantity of business flowing<lb/>
in to the office was such as would not occupy above <add>more than<lb/>
the</add> half of his time:  less however than what was sufficient<lb/>
for the whole of his time <del>he could not</del> the allowance<lb/>
given to him could not be, the consequence was that when<lb/>
the business came to him encreased to such a degree as to<lb/>
fill up the whole of his time, the amount of the emolument<lb/>
received by him would be as much again as was sufficient.</p>
<p><note>Fees at an office<lb/>
attendance is the thing<lb/>
that must be paid for:<lb/>
and this whether anything<lb/>
or nothing be<lb/>
done at the time of<lb/>
the attendance.</note></p>
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Revision as of 02:34, 18 January 2023

Click Here To Edit

5 Feby 1810
Parly Reform

At the its minimum the quantity of emolument annext
to any office could not be less than what was necessary
for the subsistence of a man possessed of the qualifications
necessary to enable him to execute exercise the functions of it.
In early times even the art of reading was a rare art: the
art of writing consequently still more so – by the bare possession
of this rare qualification would therefore suffice to enable a
man to exact a more than ordinary rate of payment.

At the institution of an office what would frequently
happen – especially in those early times where population,
wealth, not communication of in every way mode between man
and man were so much less than inferior to what they are at present – that
the quantity of business flowing in to an office would not
be considerable enough to occupy the whole of his disposable working
time. But, subsistence was as necessary to him a man during
the whole of his time: the fewer smaller therefore the numbers of the occasions
on which fees came to be receivable received by him, the greater it was
necessary should be the amount of each such fee. Hence
it is was that while it was impossible that fees a fee should ever
be too small, it might, and each fee might and
consequently all fees might be in to any degree excessive.
Suppose that at the first institution the quantity of business flowing
in to the office was such as would not occupy above more than
the
half of his time: less however than what was sufficient
for the whole of his time he could not the allowance
given to him could not be, the consequence was that when
the business came to him encreased to such a degree as to
fill up the whole of his time, the amount of the emolument
received by him would be as much again as was sufficient.

Fees at an office
attendance is the thing
that must be paid for:
and this whether anything
or nothing be
done at the time of
the attendance.


Identifier: | JB/147/254/001"JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 147.

Date_1

1810-02-05

Marginal Summary Numbering

4-6

Box

147

Main Headings

Sinecures

Folio number

254

Info in main headings field

Parly Reform

Image

001

Titles

Category

Text sheet

Number of Pages

1

Recto/Verso

recto

Page Numbering

E2

Penner

Watermarks

Marginals

Jeremy Bentham

Paper Producer

Corrections

Paper Produced in Year

Notes public

ID Number

49479

Box Contents

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