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When an Act of Parliament is to be drawn, the first case<lb/> of the Penner is to look out for a Preamble; and though<lb/> the Provisions speak their own design in never so plain<lb/> terms, yet without something beginning with a "Whereas<lb/> it is plain, the composition would be imperfect: [for it is<lb/> absolutely necessary that where the Legislature continues<lb/> an Act, they should declare they thought it beneficial, least<lb/> it should be supposed they meant to have it understood <add>it should be otherwise</add> as<lb/> their reason <add>motive</add> for so doing that it was useless or pernicious.] The next is, to heap together as many words [ <add>Terms for the same idea</add> as a <foreign>Gradus<lb/> ad Parnassum</foreign> were there such a thing for the English<lb/> Language would furnish] and to force those Terms into <add>out of these Terms to form</add><lb/> as many propositions as can be devised <add>brought together</add><note>accumulation has no other Limits</note> so as not to be<lb/> absolutely foreign to the subject, nor too apparently contradictory<lb/> to one another. <add> each other</add>  
When an Act of Parliament is to be drawn, the first case<lb/> of the Penner is to look out for a Preamble; and though<lb/> the Provisions speak their own design in never so plain<lb/> terms, yet without something beginning with a "Whereas<lb/> it is plain, the composition would be imperfect: [for it is<lb/> absolutely necessary that where the Legislature continues<lb/> an Act, they should declare they thought it beneficial, least<lb/> it should be supposed they meant to have it understood <add>it should be otherwise</add> as<lb/> their reason <add>motive</add> for so doing that it was useless or pernicious.] The next is, to heap together as many words [ <add>Terms for the same idea</add> as a <foreign>Gradus<lb/> ad Parnassum</foreign> were there such a thing for the English<lb/> Language would furnish] and to force those Terms into <add>out of these Terms to form</add><lb/> as many propositions as can be devised <add>brought together</add><note>accumulation has<lb/> no other Limits</note> so as not to be<lb/> absolutely foreign to the subject, nor too apparently contradictory<lb/> to one another. <add> each other</add>  


The next case is, to make the turn of the Phrase in every<lb/> instance, as remote from that which are accustomed to as possible;<lb/> and if the poverty of the language or infelicity of<lb/> his imagination should in any case unhappily drive <add>force into his hands to take up</add><lb/>  him to such an one as can be apprehended without effort<lb/>  he omits not by the ....<gap/> interposition of such an epithet<lb/>  as "commonly called" or "known ordinarily" or the like, to<lb/> let it be perceived, that it is his intention to depart <add>not from choice that he</add> from<lb/> the dignity of being unintelligible.<lb/>  
The next case is, to make the turn of the Phrase in every<lb/> instance, as remote from that which are accustomed to as possible;<lb/> and if the poverty of the language or infelicity of<lb/> his imagination should in any case unhappily drive <add>force into his hands to take up</add><lb/>  him to such an one as can be apprehended without effort<lb/>  he omits not by the ....<gap/> interposition of such an epithet<lb/>  as "commonly called" or "known ordinarily" or the like, to<lb/> let it be perceived, that it is his intention to depart <add>not from choice that he</add> from<lb/> the dignity of being unintelligible.<lb/>  

Revision as of 06:02, 28 December 2010

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When an Act of Parliament is to be drawn, the first case
of the Penner is to look out for a Preamble; and though
the Provisions speak their own design in never so plain
terms, yet without something beginning with a "Whereas
it is plain, the composition would be imperfect: [for it is
absolutely necessary that where the Legislature continues
an Act, they should declare they thought it beneficial, least
it should be supposed they meant to have it understood it should be otherwise as
their reason motive for so doing that it was useless or pernicious.] The next is, to heap together as many words [ Terms for the same idea as a Gradus
ad Parnassum
were there such a thing for the English
Language would furnish] and to force those Terms into out of these Terms to form
as many propositions as can be devised brought togetheraccumulation has
no other Limits
so as not to be
absolutely foreign to the subject, nor too apparently contradictory
to one another. each other

The next case is, to make the turn of the Phrase in every
instance, as remote from that which are accustomed to as possible;
and if the poverty of the language or infelicity of
his imagination should in any case unhappily drive force into his hands to take up
him to such an one as can be apprehended without effort
he omits not by the .... interposition of such an epithet
as "commonly called" or "known ordinarily" or the like, to
let it be perceived, that it is his intention to depart not from choice that he from
the dignity of being unintelligible.

entail upon ourselves

Under the necessary burthen of increasing Laws, we suffer
a stile of composition to be in use remain perpetuated, by which out of pure
wantonness without the least Utility, at the expence often
as much of precision as of conciseness, that burthen is
twice or three times doubled, to the great discomfiture of
plain sense and reason, to the attracting of contempt of
ridicule on what ought to be the subject of veneration reverence,
and to the signal frustration of those purposes for which
Laws are made.

If it be absolutely necessary that Legislation should have
a Stile [and language peculiar to itself] of its own, let it be a stile which
without maching their understanding shallmay command
their reverence.

There is nothing in this so difficult.


---page break---

A number of Schemesmodes of expression consecrated to a certain
degree by the stamp of antiquity or of religion, offer
themselves in sufficient plenty for every occasion.
in which neither is dignity purchased at the expense of intelligible , nor simplicity at that of precision.

Many phrases remote from vulgar use tho' not above vulgar
distinguished apprehension rather by the turn of the expression, then by
by the words of which it consists is composed.

The result of this is that the Legislative language ought
to be either that in the most common familiar use or distinguished
from it if in any thing rather by the disposition of the
words, than by the words themselves: or if by the words
by such as are elevated above familiar use, but not
above ordinary apprehension.

Perspicuity tho' not perceived is perceivable at once: the good existence of utility
effects of a Precision are hardly perceived by the direct survey
of the sentence phraseology in question, but by the consideration of all others that one can conceive substituted in it's room. because as it is nothing more than an Aptitude to be readily understood. If a man upon being asked whether he understand a thing, answers immediately in the affirmative, he thereby acknowledged it to be perspicuous. but then

perspecuity in of words, is In the inversarativeof the efforts necessary to apprehend their meaning. Accordingly this is a merit which can scarce be recognized by any but connoifseurs; that is by those who have a great number of such alternativeswith their respective consequence to at once present in their memory;at once [of the consequences of those alternatives apparent to their understanding.]

Thus unhappily it falls out that the greatest merits which a composition of this kind can have, are those which make the least 'eclatpreg the least revered: A Stile which shall unite them can have [has] but few Judges, and of those few the greater part prejudiced by long habit in it's disfavour, without entring into the causes of their attachment. The multitude are more taken with the merit o the numbers, than with either of the other two, looking for something extraordinary in the eaprefsion; and thinking slightly of it if it be anything which they can suppose they might themselves have thought of, they will be disappointed if they mifs of that kindlong winded of rumbling harmony in use, [which has given a short of terrible satisfaction to their ears] infromwhich their ears have been accustomed to seek a sort of Parmytremendoushorrible satisfaction, [The Idea of the Legislative power of this- ...... voice are in a manner amalgated in their minds.] is a question that a man never thinks to ask himself, unless it is put to him. The legs are a man's efforts to understand,the legs he thinks about them: now it is these efforts that are the measure of this quality, fo Perspicuity is the invirsarative of their magnitude earsvitiatide The first point to be considered is perspicuity the next Brevity: the last Harmony, Dignity will result withoutas of course reserarch from Brevity invested with the form of Imperation.Essential x Omamesstial

Perspicuity may be conceived as depending upon two circumstances (tho it is not easy to draw the line between them) upon the choice of words, of theirupon arrangement, I say it is not easy for a different arrangement where the instruction of this is varied (If there is little variety of arrangement without it) requires a different choice of words.


Identifier: | JB/070/064/001"JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 70.

Date_1

Marginal Summary Numbering

Box

070

Main Headings

of laws in general

Folio number

064

Info in main headings field

composit. stat. singly - as a discourse - general idea

Image

001

Titles

Category

copy/fair copy sheet

Number of Pages

1

Recto/Verso

recto

Page Numbering

a1

Penner

Watermarks

[[watermarks::gr [crown motif] [britannia with shield motif]]]

Marginals

Paper Producer

Corrections

jeremy bentham

Paper Produced in Year

Notes public

ID Number

23179

Box Contents

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