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8
A View of the Hard-Labour Bill.
judgement on a measure of this sort depended altogether
of those accidents, upon which a seat in Parliament
is known sometimes to depend: as if the whole stock of understanding
(to say nothing of probity) as well as the whole mass of power
in the nation were doomed forever to be confined within that
narrow circle.
paragraph
Such a notion, I must confess, were it even serious —
- by entertained is but too well warranted (as well as usage
can warrant notions so ill-suited to the spirit of the consti-
-tution0 by the privacy in which all parliamentary pro-
ceedings have always been endeavored at least to be
envelopped. For my own part however, I must confess,
that, without any disparagement to its representatives, I can
not bring myself to think quite so unfavorably of the
great body of the nation. Those judges, one would
imagine, did not think so, who in their circuits have recom-
mended the Bill, while thus in embryo, to the general attention
of the country gentlemen. It is some consolation to me to have
the authority and example of those respectable magistrates
on my side. If the few indeed are to decide (as in the truth
it seems best they should) on the interests of the many, it
can scarcely, at least be permitted to debate.
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