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1821. April 16
Codification Offer
'7 Foreigner why
Remains, the only case, in which, consistently with moral probability, a work of
this sort could have for its author a foreigner, acting under the direction and
impulse of a particular and sinister interest. This is the case where, in the
expectation and for the sake of a remuneration in one or more of the above
mentioned three shapes, viz. money, power, and factitious dignity, he has
offered himself for the work, to this or that leading native. But, in this case,
there must exist, on the one part, in the breast of an individual, in relation
to whom in countries foreign to his own, a sufficiently strong and extensive
persuasion of his appropriate aptitude in the shape of intellectual aptitude and
active talent, has place; on the other part, a desire to earn the remuneration
whatever it may be at the price of a labour of so vast a magnitude, /unexampled
a complexion,/ at the disposition of the ruler or rulers in question, a mass of
reward, sufficient to afford an adequate remuneration, not only for the labour
employed in such a work, howsoever executed, fut moreover for the disrepute and
self-reproach attached to the execution of it in a manner thus adverse to the
workmans own presumable principles. Under these circumstances, it will be seen
what probability there is that, by the hands of a foreigner, any intentional
sacrifice of the greatest happiness of the greatest number of the community in
question would come to be effectual, or so much as to have been proposed: and
therefore, that to any such person any such invitation, or to any offer, if made
by him, an acceptance, should be given. Oh yes, if being a foreigner he were not
known to be so. But by the supposition, as above, this case is excluded.
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