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6 July 1807
25
Letter V
II. Litigat. promot.
III. Plff malâ fide
Different causes do indeed concurr in applying some alleviation to that misery - in defrauding you of some portion of your profits: the force of the sympathetic affections in the shape of pity and remorse: the force of the moral sanction: the force of the religious sanction. But in all this there is no fault of yours. You continue to do what depends upon yourselves for the weakening of all three: by the encouragement you never cease to hold out to fraud, to oppression, to mendacity to perjury. See Letter I. Devices.
The choice which a man of himself helpless of standing[?] suit may have of finding support from without, presents a difficult point. The terms on which the support is but given may be gratuitous or commercial: gratuitous support it would not be easy for you to cut from under him, if you wished it: support on commercial terms you may, at least for the most part, {If on this occasion you could deprive the indigent of support in all cases, the bondage would be entire.
to p.26
From p. 26
{All those who could not afford to advance the £25 or whatever greater sum may prove to be necessary to the carrying the suit through on the defendant's side would be a set of villains in gross, having for Lords (tenants in common of the seigniory) all who could afford to advance the £25 or more, necessary to the carrying it through on the Plffs side:- so many Helots on one part, so many Spartans on the other:} the line might be drawn by the returns to the Income -tax might almost serve to draw the line. From the possibility of extraneous support this beautiful simplicity receives considerable disturbance.
+ Spartans quare[?] nactin es hani vrae[?], might then be the advice.
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