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30 Apr. 1816 1 *21
Cat.
Append. III
Dean Andrews
2. Vansittart
K
Motives
48( ) continue
Malice in prosecution
a good ground for
exemption, Monster
suffered unjustly
If malice on the part of the pros for giving exemption
to the a delinquent malice on the part in the breast of the prosecutor
was is a good just ground, the Monster suffered unjustly.
Produced by prosecution, malice is bad enough: how much
worse how much more hellish horrible, when utterly destitute of
any such excuse! From the monster man whom he then
pursued to destruction, had Augustine ever so much as
fancied himself to have received any the slightest injury?
Yet for the bringing this man to destruction from
five to six hundred pound did he keep in expending of his
own money, such was the perseveringness, the implacableness
of his malice! The prosecutors own Solicitor
had the question been put to him when the Defendant
came up for sentence could not have denied it.
Irritated at the spectacle of so much virtue, and the
more convinced of its reality the more urgently sharply
stimulated and anxiously determined to disprove its existence
what a field, supposing the fact the matter of fact suspected known as
for the what a field to an for the exercise
of his eloquence!
Identifier: | JB/007/091/001 "JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 7.
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1816-04-30 |
48 ( ) continued sic] |
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007 |
church of englandism |
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091 |
cat |
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001 |
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text sheet |
1 |
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recto |
d21* |
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jeremy bentham |
john dickinson & c<…> 1813 |
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a. levy |
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1813 |
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3035 |
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