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than their former one, certainly widely
different at any rate from that of beggary.
All anxiety for their subsistence
would be at an end, and they would
find themselves relieved from the drudgery
part of their work by men who would
look up to them as a superior race
of beings. The circumstances of the
two Englishmen whom by my Brother
found contented and happy on the Princes estate which is but 20 miles from that in question insomuch
that one of them had sent over for his
wife is such as cannot but afford a strong
assurance to other adventurers: if Englishmen
who have left a flourishing
country as I believe that about Newcastle
is find themselves the better by the
change, how must it be with Scotchmen
coming from a country which is
in the situation you describe? it An Englishman
who wherever he is, is apt to be
a discontented animal is I believe as
remarkable for the difficulty he finds in
accommodating himself to the circumstances
of foreign countries, as a Scotchman
is for the contrary facility.
the notion of not converting a
Millwright after the Mill is built into a
Miller
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Identifier: | JB/540/084/001"JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 540. |
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1784-07-14 |
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540 |
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084 |
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001 |
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Correspondence/copy |
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Jeremy Bentham |
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