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1826. Octr. 8.
Review of Humphreys.
Conclusion
Dismiss Eldon
A circumstance almost too manifest to bear mentioning is
thus so so long as Lord Eldon is where he is, there is no more
room in the Statute Book for any such Code as Mr Humphrey's,
than in the Chancery Court for the monument in St Paul's
But there surely can not be a now in the mind of
Lord Eldon any much longer been will not be suffered to shape that ever being the groans complaints and prayers of an
oppressed and plundered paper will produce from the prayer [+] of whom such
sum are so reputedly
exorted in pretence
notoriously and proclaimedly
false
qu an intimation expressible in the words of the Horace
Lucute sales ediste alque bebesta
Tanpens aberi abi est.
If playing with the lives and fortunes as so many
of lives and fortunes has been for there six and twenty by long
years been played with, is not playing, instead of to
substitute furnish flurish or furash, that may either of them for though it be hurrci
or rather types play
of
may so far set the matter right: rhythm would or not elastic enough to admitt of
but one. Re <add>indignant</add> would open his arms to both.
—
Addendum by Editor?
Provision for him and Lord Sidmouth. Profession Chair at Oxford and
Cambridge. Say Art and Text Book Castighams Counties. Retreat or be made
from Cabinet as Dionysius from Corinth. Lord Sidmouth
after the Manchester M; the Pyrrhi Chancellor after
the str slaughter the mcable the starvation of unascribed innocents.
—
In the despair produced by this prospect you havesee
the cause of the war which his papers can never cease to
wage against the self stiled Giant refreshed so long as they
both how much the Giant continues sealed on his cloud encompassed
throne.
—
Addendum by Editor?
Has the Reason to add We have it from good authority<add>undoubted</add> that when on an occasion [+] eyes turned upon
him, and by him something
necessary to be said -
in which is the happens to be happen to be the of
Lord Eldons point -[+] Lordship his observation was - he is mad: insanity therein are with
which the use of reason is
not incompatible: and
of in complement to his
Lordships admission was
made that this is the case with Mr Bentham. The admission might be made that his Lordship
would not be much the better for it, and a defence for him would be as much a seek after it as before. |
while defence of the noble and learned Lord was repeated in
the Courts, by way of apology for new prosecution. But if a according the
the opinion if of more believe of a classical opinion conveyed in the
phrase be admitted subscribed among the same species of insanity
Identifier: | JB/078/076/001 "JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 78.
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1826-10-08 |
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078 |
Review of Humphreys |
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076 |
Review of Humphreys |
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recto |
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25167 |
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