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<head>C 5</head> | |||
<head>Offences against Condition — Adultery</head> | |||
<head>20</head> | |||
<p><note>Facility of the Romans</note> Among the Romans <add>in the earlier ages of the Commonwealth</add> a man's wife was considered<lb/> | |||
<add>upon the <gap/> of</add> as his property, [just] <add>in most respects</add> as his children were considered<lb/> | |||
as his property. He might sell his children<lb/> | |||
He might repudiate his wife — He might lend her<lb/> | |||
to another man. Cato, the virtuous Cato lent his<lb/> | |||
wife to his friend .... Such sort of<lb/> | |||
[friendship] complaisance <add>generosity</add> is not now in fashion<lb/> | |||
Were such a <del>kindness</del> favour done a man <gap/><lb/> | |||
out of generosity, it would not be imputed<lb/> | |||
<del>a gener</del> that principle but to some meaner<lb/> | |||
motive.</p> | |||
<head>21</head> | |||
<p><note>Facility <gap/><gap/></note>It may seem inconsistent that while with<lb/> | |||
respect to every other kind of possession, a facility<lb/> | |||
in communicating it to a friend should be<lb/> | |||
deemed <add>an act of generosity</add> a merit, a facility of the same cost <sic>shewn</sic><lb/> | |||
with regard to a wife should <add>ordinarily</add> be deemed an act<lb/> | |||
of meanness, a vice.</p> | |||
<head>22</head> | |||
The case is that [<gap/><gap/>] | |||
<head>23</head> | |||
<p><note>— why suspected</note> The selfishness of mankind which can give<lb/> | |||
way for a while with regard to every other kind<lb/> | |||
of possession can not <add>near so often</add> give way with regard to a<lb/> | |||
possession which if it be dear at all is apt to<lb/> | |||
be so much dearer than any other.</p> | |||
---page break---
C 5
Offences against Condition — Adultery
20
Facility of the Romans Among the Romans in the earlier ages of the Commonwealth a man's wife was considered
upon the of as his property, [just] in most respects as his children were considered
as his property. He might sell his children
He might repudiate his wife — He might lend her
to another man. Cato, the virtuous Cato lent his
wife to his friend .... Such sort of
[friendship] complaisance generosity is not now in fashion
Were such a kindness favour done a man
out of generosity, it would not be imputed
a gener that principle but to some meaner
motive.
21
Facility It may seem inconsistent that while with
respect to every other kind of possession, a facility
in communicating it to a friend should be
deemed an act of generosity a merit, a facility of the same cost shewn
with regard to a wife should ordinarily be deemed an act
of meanness, a vice.
22
The case is that []
23
— why suspected The selfishness of mankind which can give
way for a while with regard to every other kind
of possession can not near so often give way with regard to a
possession which if it be dear at all is apt to
be so much dearer than any other.
Identifier: | JB/071/094/001"JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 71. |
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21-32 |
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071 |
penal code |
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094 |
offences against condition - adultery |
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001 |
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text sheet |
4 |
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recto |
f5 / f6 / f7 / f8 |
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jeremy bentham |
[[watermarks::gr [crown motif] [britannia with shield motif]]] |
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23497 |
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