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    On the Punishment of Death - Page 2

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    are conjectured to ensue from the discipline
    and order of his internal thoughts, as affecting his condition in
    a future state. They omit, indeed, to calculate upon the accidents
    of disease, and temperament, and organization, and circumstance,
    together with the multitude of independent agencies which affect
    the opinions, the conduct, and the happiness of individuals, and
    produce determinations of the will, and modify the judgement, so
    as to produce effects the most opposite in natures considerably
    similar. These are those operations in the order of the whole of
    nature, tending, we are prone to believe, to some definite mighty
    end, to which the agencies of our peculiar nature are subordinate;
    nor is there any reason to suppose, that in a future state they should
    become suddenly exempt from that subordination. The philosopher is
    unable to determine whether our existence in a previous state has
    affected our present condition, and abstains from deciding whether
    our present condition will affect us in that which may be future.
    That, if we continue to exist, the manner of our existence will be
    such as no inferences nor conjectures, afforded by a consideration
    of our earthly experience, can elucidate, is sufficiently obvious.
    The opinion that the vital principle within us, in whatever mode
    it may continue to exist, must lose that consciousness of definite
    and individual being which now characterizes it, and become a unit
    in the vast sum of action and of thought which disposes and animates
    the universe, and is called God, seems to belong to that class of
    opinion which has been designated as indifferent.

    To compel a person to know all that can be known by the dead
    concerning that which the living fear, hope, or forget; to plunge
    him into the pleasure or pain which there awaits him; to punish or
    reward him in a manner and in a degree incalculable and incomprehensible
    by us; to disrobe him at once from all that intertexture of good
    and evil with which Nature seems to have clothed every form of
    individual existence, is to inflict on him the doom of death.

    A certain degree of pain and terror usually accompany the infliction
    of death. This degree is infinitely varied by the infinite variety
    in the temperament and opinions of the sufferers. As a measure of
    punishment, strictly so considered, and as an exhibition, which, by

    its known effects on the sensibility of the sufferer, is intended
    to intimidate the spectators from incurring a similar liability,
    it is singularly inadequate.

    Firstly, Persons of energetic character, in whom, as in men who
    suffer for political crimes, there is a large mixture of enterprise,
    and fortitude, and disinterestedness, and the elements, though
    misguided and disarranged,
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