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1<lb/><lb/><head>OBSTACLES Indolence Insensibility to evils remote</head><lb/>A great obstacle to the perfection of <add>Legislation</add> the Legislative<lb/>System is that <sic>it's</sic> operations have scarce ever<lb/>hitherto been <hi rend="superscript">+</hi> performed but upon the <gap/> of the<lb/><note><hi rend="superscript">+</hi>nor from the nature<lb/>of things can well<lb/>be expected to be, at<lb/>least for a long time<lb/>performed</note><lb/>occasion upon <del>the press</del> <add>under the actual</add> sufferance or at least<lb/>the Imminent danger of the mischief of which it is<lb/>meant to guard against in future: that is, things<lb/>are <add><gap/></add> done but at the very time, of all others,<lb/>in which they are least likely to be done well.<lb/><lb/>The reason of all this, is, that there is no en-<lb/>-couragement & <add>there are</add> many discouragements to Legislation<lb/>from acting but at any other Season — The<lb/>gratitude to the Physician is in proportion to the<lb/><add><gap/></add> grievousness of the disease: but here, there being<lb/>by the supposition no disease, in consequence,<lb/>there is no gratitude. Suppose for example<lb/>a <del>Minister,</del> <add>Legislator</add> having no matter <add>by what miracle</add> how, attained the<lb/>gift of <del>seeing</del> <add>reading into</add> not only actual but possible futurity<lb/>should know for certain that in the year 1872 — <add>unless something were done</add> a<pb/>2<lb/><lb/><add>to prevent it</add> certain Page, having insinuated himself into a crimi-<lb/>-nal familiarity with the Queen regnant then<lb/>unmarried, by his influence & the discontents consequent<lb/>upon its capricious exertion, should plunge the nation<lb/>into the miseries of cruel war — Suppose that<lb/>in consequence, he were to propose a Law, to ex-<lb/>-tend the provisions in the Stat. <gap/> <gap/> against<lb/><note>& to make <add>void <gap/></add> the mar-<lb/>-riage of a Queen<lb/>regnant without con-<lb/>-sent of Parliament.</note><lb/>the defiling of Females related to the Crown to this case:<lb/>It is a great chance <add>that he would <del>be looked upon</del> meet with the com-</add> whether that Legislator would<lb/><add>-ment of | 1<lb/><lb/><head>OBSTACLES Indolence Insensibility to evils remote</head><lb/>A great obstacle to the perfection of <add>Legislation</add> the Legislative<lb/>System is that <sic>it's</sic> operations have scarce ever<lb/>hitherto been <hi rend="superscript">+</hi> performed but upon the <gap/> of the<lb/><note><hi rend="superscript">+</hi>nor from the nature<lb/>of things can well<lb/>be expected to be, at<lb/>least for a long time<lb/>performed</note><lb/>occasion upon <del>the press</del> <add>under the actual</add> sufferance or at least<lb/>the Imminent danger of the mischief of which it is<lb/>meant to guard against in future: that is, things<lb/>are <add><gap/></add> done but at the very time, of all others,<lb/>in which they are least likely to be done well.<lb/><lb/>The reason of all this, is, that there is no en-<lb/>-couragement & <add>there are</add> many discouragements to Legislation<lb/>from acting but at any other Season — The<lb/>gratitude to the Physician is in proportion to the<lb/><add><gap/></add> grievousness of the disease: but here, there being<lb/>by the supposition no disease, in consequence,<lb/>there is no gratitude. Suppose for example<lb/>a <del>Minister,</del> <add>Legislator</add> having no matter <add>by what miracle</add> how, attained the<lb/>gift of <del>seeing</del> <add>reading into</add> not only actual but possible futurity<lb/>should know for certain that in the year 1872 — <add>unless something were done</add> a<pb/>2<lb/><lb/><add>to prevent it</add> certain Page, having insinuated himself into a crimi-<lb/>-nal familiarity with the Queen regnant then<lb/>unmarried, by his influence & the discontents consequent<lb/>upon its capricious exertion, should plunge the nation<lb/>into the miseries of cruel war — Suppose that<lb/>in consequence, he were to propose a Law, to ex-<lb/>-tend the provisions in the Stat. <gap/> <gap/> against<lb/><note>& to make <add>void <gap/></add> the mar-<lb/>-riage of a Queen<lb/>regnant without con-<lb/>-sent of Parliament.</note><lb/>the defiling of Females related to the Crown to this case:<lb/>It is a great chance <add>that he would <del>be looked upon</del> meet with the com-</add> whether that Legislator would<lb/><add>-ment of <del>as a</del> Cassandra & that no body would hear him</add><lb/>be heard — Men in Office would think it<lb/>good Logic to ply him with, the improbability of<lb/>any princess of his Majesty's royal line so far<lb/>forgetting her dignity as to <gap/> <gap/>, to observe that<lb/>if any <gap/> thereof which God forbid should call<lb/>in another <gap/>, it would then be time enough<lb/><gap/> <gap/> & other <gap/> if this cost which from<lb/><note>with which some<lb/>men will never tire<lb/>though</note><lb/>with equal force against every <gap/> of the<lb/>power of the Crown that has been made, <del><gap/></del> that<lb/>shall be made hereafter. The people seeing what<lb/>they now see with so much pleasure, the Royal | ||
1
OBSTACLES Indolence Insensibility to evils remote
A great obstacle to the perfection of Legislation the Legislative
System is that it's operations have scarce ever
hitherto been + performed but upon the of the
+nor from the nature
of things can well
be expected to be, at
least for a long time
performed
occasion upon the press under the actual sufferance or at least
the Imminent danger of the mischief of which it is
meant to guard against in future: that is, things
are done but at the very time, of all others,
in which they are least likely to be done well.
The reason of all this, is, that there is no en-
-couragement & there are many discouragements to Legislation
from acting but at any other Season — The
gratitude to the Physician is in proportion to the
grievousness of the disease: but here, there being
by the supposition no disease, in consequence,
there is no gratitude. Suppose for example
a Minister, Legislator having no matter by what miracle how, attained the
gift of seeing reading into not only actual but possible futurity
should know for certain that in the year 1872 — unless something were done a
---page break---
2
to prevent it certain Page, having insinuated himself into a crimi-
-nal familiarity with the Queen regnant then
unmarried, by his influence & the discontents consequent
upon its capricious exertion, should plunge the nation
into the miseries of cruel war — Suppose that
in consequence, he were to propose a Law, to ex-
-tend the provisions in the Stat. against
& to make void the mar-
-riage of a Queen
regnant without con-
-sent of Parliament.
the defiling of Females related to the Crown to this case:
It is a great chance that he would be looked upon meet with the com- whether that Legislator would
-ment of as a Cassandra & that no body would hear him
be heard — Men in Office would think it
good Logic to ply him with, the improbability of
any princess of his Majesty's royal line so far
forgetting her dignity as to , to observe that
if any thereof which God forbid should call
in another , it would then be time enough
& other if this cost which from
with which some
men will never tire
though
with equal force against every of the
power of the Crown that has been made, that
shall be made hereafter. The people seeing what
they now see with so much pleasure, the Royal
Identifier: | JB/097/027/001"JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 97. |
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jeremy bentham |
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