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7) Personal Injuries. Aggravating circumstances.
— Why of the unpleasant, rather than of the acute. -cious in defendin towards that purpose. It is by this
use then that a man may make of his strength, partly by the actual use, and partly by the fear of his making it that
a man may do more towards ensuring himself
against such attacks than by the other: it is by in this
way that he is enabled to drive his adversary at such a
distance and guard in a great measure against as will prevent him from coming to
make any sudden attack: and this the better the
greater is is strength. The being subjected then to a
train of injuries of this sort though inflicted suddenly and
at intervals is as palpable a proof of weakness nearly
as the remaining exposed to them the uninterrupted infliction of them
for a length of time. All this however abstruse and obscure it
may seem in this view of it, is in substance perfectly
well understood and [perfectly] familiar at School;
where the young affections have not yet learnt to
put that subject themselves to those restraints which the breach at a
of which is regarded as so serious a matter, at a more advanced time of life. [are not to be broken through
without the most serious consequences] it is so serious
a matter to break through.
Identifier: | JB/072/173/003"JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 72. |
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not numbered |
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072 |
penal code |
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173 |
personal injuries - aggravating circumstances |
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003 |
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text sheet |
4 |
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recto |
e5 / e6 / e7 / e8 |
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jeremy bentham |
[[watermarks::[gr with crown motif] pro patria [with motif]]] |
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23790 |
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