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desertion of his duty to have sat silent
because what he said might possibly give
offence to a particular person whom for
reasons public and private he should be
most sorry to offence. – He deplored the absence
of a learned judge (the Master of the Rolls) and
of those barristers who from their practice
in the Court of Chancery might have been
able to give the house much information
on this subject. It might perhaps be inconvenient
for them to attend. But he
considered his public to duty so imperative
as to supersede all private
convenience. He did not think it would
be becoming in him to be absent while
he believed that conceived that to his
presence could in any degree contribute
to prevent what he regarded as a most
serious evil.
Now it Now it did appear to him highly
desirable that the house should have
much more information on this subject
than they could derive from this Report –
and he saw no way to to secure that
object except by the appointment of
a committee of their own to ascertain
how the delay arose. If the the
evil should be found to be temporary
Identifier: | JB/149/220/003 "JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 149.
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bernardino rivadavia |
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1810 |
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