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3 Sept. 1802
Panopticon W. N. S. Wales
B. 7 or 8 Note to
private to L Pelham
Mr Benthams work on L Pelham Letter No written
28 Aug. 1802.
Pretended anger
of J. B.
anger
a justification
of precedent in-
-juries.
This is exactly the same , about the risk of my
mind, ( — a point perfectly immaterial to the business in hand — ) is
the only sort of notice that intent his Lordship or Mr Addington
or Mr Riley Addington could have ever been able to bear
to take of it. On any form Mr Riley Addington
When on Tuesday 9th of July 1801, after leaving after quitting Mr Riley Addington and Mr Long together,
I had was sitting in Mr Vansittart's room, according to the ap-
-pointment he had made with me, Mr Riley Addington, in
through the room the though
I was angry: although at that very time moment, with the most proper composure,
I was cool enough to be discussing discussing with MrVansittart with the most proper composure a business that bore not
of intricacy great intricacy, that bore not
the smallest reference to it. This is the recourse of men who+
+knowing that the part
they have are taking is
indefensible, are bent
upon persevering in it.
are running against them in
So long as the destined victim keeps to the tour of
, they take no notice of him at all? When, for the pur-
-pose of trying the of fear upon to . making that impression by fear which is
in this regard to justice, he the time of ,
this makes they of time is that he is angry: and
thus the hope is that his anger may & will to each apetite
as to afford (as in Mr Palmer's case) a subsequent for their the
predetermined injustice. terrifying the confederacy,+ I did to be angry
+and if possible,
frightening them into
the path of probity,
enough, and ever angry enough, and am angry enough and always will be angry enough and they were and are frightened
accordingly: forgiving them any advantage over me. I do not
choose to be angry enough, nor will they ever find me so.
If on an action if upon an upon a Contract
th a Judge were to take obvious from the of the
Council to make the discovery that the the Council was angry, or
from the fact of the bringing of the action that the was angry, and
so give judgtment for the defendent, his regard for justice
could be an exact copy of that which has been
now for this year and a half by the Misses Addington and Lord
Pelham. Whether their corruption is to be wasted than by
my anger in the eyes of the public and Parliament, is
an experiment to be tried.+
+Though my anger,
real or supposed, is
working working to the purpose
that is very far from being
the case with the certain
they are pleased to
of it. It before per-
-fectly itself — corrupted.
Here are
by questions — now unable
to find so at the
of
in the and to which distress they and for and
Identifier: | JB/121/332/001"JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 121. |
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1802-09-03 |
Not numbered |
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121 |
Panopticon versus New South Wales |
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332 |
Panopticon v N. S. Wales |
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001 |
[[titles::Note to Introductory note / private[?] to Ld Pelham]] |
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Text sheet |
1 |
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Recto"Recto" is not in the list (recto, verso) of allowed values for the "Rectoverso" property. |
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[[watermarks::[monogram] 1800]] |
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1800 |
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001 |
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