| The first excerpt represents the past or something you must release, and is drawn from Lay Morals by Robert Louis Stevenson: a party of soused herrings I never did see - not a man among
them bar poor Tom. But us that are the servants on the road
have all the risk and none of the profit.'
'And this brave fellow,' asked Mr. Archer, very quietly,
'this Oglethorpe - how is he now?'
'Well, sir, with my respects, I take it he has a hole bang
through him,' said Sam. 'The doctor hasn't been yet. He'd
'a' been bright and early if it had been a passenger. But,
doctor or no, I'll make a good guess that Tom won't see to-
morrow. He'll die on a Sunday, will poor Tom; and they do
say that's fortunate.'
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The second excerpt represents the present or the deciding factor of the moment, and is drawn from Criminal Sociology by Enrico Ferri: and parliaments.
I have already spoken of penal jurisprudence in its relations with
criminal sociology, and may now cite a few examples of the more or
less direct and avowed influence of the new data on penal
legislation.
The legislators of to-day, vaguely impressed by statistical and
biological, ethnographical and anthropological data, and still
imbued with the old prejudice of social and political
artificiality, were at first hurried into a regular mania for
legislation, under which every newly observed social phenomenon
seemed to demand a special law, regulation, or article in the
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The third excerpt represents the future or something you must embrace, and is drawn from Charmides by Plato: occurrence of expletives, would, if reproduced in a translation, give
offence to the reader. Greek has a freer and more frequent use of the
Interrogative, and is of a more passionate and emotional character, and
therefore lends itself with greater readiness to the dialogue form. Most
of the so-called English Dialogues are but poor imitations of Plato, which
fall very far short of the original. The breath of conversation, the
subtle adjustment of question and answer, the lively play of fancy, the
power of drawing characters, are wanting in them. But the Platonic
dialogue is a drama as well as a dialogue, of which Socrates is the central
figure, and there are lesser performers as well:--the insolence of
Thrasymachus, the anger of Callicles and Anytus, the patronizing style of
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