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<p> experience at a pretty dear rate.  <hi rend="underline">You remember</hi> the old story of <lb/> <hi rend="underline">the minerals</hi> <hi rend="underline">which came directed to <sic>L<hi rend="superscript">d</hi></sic> Shelburne</hi>: and among <lb/> which the box of Petersburgh, by passing as it <sic>shoud</sic> seem for a box <lb/> of minerals, <add> as it was <sic>inclosed</sic> in a larger box which contained nothing else but minerals</add> happened to escape duty.  <hi rend="underline">I told you</hi> at the time or <lb/> soon afterwards of what passed on that subject between <sic>L<hi rend="superscript">d</hi></sic> Shelburne<lb/> and myself; and <hi rend="underline">of his taking the matter upon himself in<lb/> the most explicit manner.</hi>  As he told me at the same time of <lb/> having <del> paid a <gap/></del> <add>franked</add> <hi rend="underline">Linquist's</hi> goods among which was a very <lb/> large cargo of French wines with <add>the</add> public money, <hi rend="underline">I concluded of <lb/> course that whatever charge, if any, there might be upon the very <lb/>trifling articles that were consigned to me,</hi> <hi rend="underline">would be paid for</hi> in <lb/> the same manner.  It would have been a very improper application<lb/>of the public money, doubtless: but that was his concern,<lb/> I certainly should not have asked him to do any thing for me <lb/> in any such way; but <hi rend="underline">when he <sic>offer'd</sic> it it would have been<lb/> ridiculous <add>and very offensive to him</add> to have stopped his hand.</hi>  <hi rend="underline">After a number of delays, <lb/> at last</hi>, <add>as</add> you know <hi rend="underline">I got the minerals</hi>: <hi rend="underline">but of the silks and <gap/> <lb/> as I told you, nothing positive could as yet be said.  In the <lb/> mean time came one day to my chambers <foreign>Mons.<hi rend="superscript">r</hi> </foreign> <hi rend="underline">Frombel</hi>, my <lb/>Lord's Valet de Chambre, with a bill for the charges attending<lb/>these things and a receipt to it given by a man of the name <lb/> of <hi rend="underline">Marshall</hi>, to the amount of £19 within a few shillings;<lb/> which bill upon my asking him, he said he had just been<lb/> paying.</hi></p>
<p> experience at a pretty dear rate.  <hi rend="underline">You remember</hi> the old story of <lb/> <hi rend="underline">the minerals</hi> <hi rend="underline">which came directed to L<hi rend="superscript">d</hi> Shelburne</hi>: and among <lb/> which the box of Petersburgh, by passing as it <sic>shoud</sic> seem for a box <lb/> of minerals, <add> as it was <sic>inclosed</sic> in a larger box which contained nothing else but minerals</add> happened to escape duty.  <hi rend="underline">I told you</hi> at the time or <lb/> soon afterwards of what passed on that subject between <sic>L<hi rend="superscript">d</hi></sic> Shelburne<lb/> and myself; and <hi rend="underline">of his taking the matter upon himself in<lb/> the most explicit manner.</hi>  As he told me at the same time of <lb/> having <del> paid a <gap/></del> <add>franked</add> <hi rend="underline">Linquist's</hi> goods among which was a very <lb/> large cargo of French wines with <add>the</add> public money, <hi rend="underline">I concluded of <lb/> course that whatever charge, if any, there might be upon the very <lb/>trifling articles that were consigned to me,</hi> <hi rend="underline">would be paid for</hi> in <lb/> the same manner.  It would have been a very improper application<lb/>of the public money, doubtless: but that was his concern,<lb/> I certainly should not have asked him to do any thing for me <lb/> in any such way; but <hi rend="underline">when he <sic>offer'd</sic> it it would have been<lb/> ridiculous <add>and very offensive to him</add> to have stopped his hand.</hi>  <hi rend="underline">After a number of delays, <lb/> at last</hi>, <add>as</add> you know <hi rend="underline">I got the minerals</hi>: <hi rend="underline">but of the silks and <gap/> <lb/> as I told you, nothing positive could as yet be said.  In the <lb/> mean time came one day to my chambers <foreign>Mons.<hi rend="superscript">r</hi> </foreign> <hi rend="underline">Frombel</hi>, my <lb/>Lord's Valet de Chambre, with a bill for the charges attending<lb/>these things and a receipt to it given by a man of the name <lb/> of <hi rend="underline">Marshall</hi>, to the amount of £19 within a few shillings;<lb/> which bill upon my asking him, he said he had just been<lb/> paying.</hi></p>
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Revision as of 14:28, 4 December 2014

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experience at a pretty dear rate. You remember the old story of
the minerals which came directed to L<hi rend="superscript">d Shelburne</hi>: and among
which the box of Petersburgh, by passing as it shoud seem for a box
of minerals, as it was inclosed in a larger box which contained nothing else but minerals happened to escape duty. I told you at the time or
soon afterwards of what passed on that subject between Ld Shelburne
and myself; and of his taking the matter upon himself in
the most explicit manner.
As he told me at the same time of
having paid a franked Linquist's goods among which was a very
large cargo of French wines with the public money, I concluded of
course that whatever charge, if any, there might be upon the very
trifling articles that were consigned to me,
would be paid for in
the same manner. It would have been a very improper application
of the public money, doubtless: but that was his concern,
I certainly should not have asked him to do any thing for me
in any such way; but when he offer'd it it would have been
ridiculous and very offensive to him to have stopped his hand.
After a number of delays,
at last
, as you know I got the minerals: but of the silks and
as I told you, nothing positive could as yet be said. In the
mean time came one day to my chambers <foreign>Mons.<hi rend="superscript">r
</foreign> Frombel, my
Lord's Valet de Chambre, with a bill for the charges attending
these things and a receipt to it given by a man of the name
of Marshall, to the amount of £19 within a few shillings;
which bill upon my asking him, he said he had just been
paying.</hi>


Identifier: | JB/539/431/001"JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 539.

Date_1

1783-10-??

Marginal Summary Numbering

Box

539

Main Headings

Folio number

431

Info in main headings field

Image

001

Titles

Category

Correspondence

Number of Pages

Recto/Verso

Page Numbering

Penner

Jeremy Bentham

Watermarks

Marginals

Paper Producer

Corrections

Paper Produced in Year

Notes public

ID Number

Box Contents

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