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<head>Before A</head> <note>5 Connect<hi rend="superscript">g</hi> Observ<hi rend="superscript">n</hi></note><lb/> | |||
<head>SS.3 The Establishsment betrayed to L<hi rend="superscript">d</hi> Belgrave</head> | |||
without the Salisbury Estate would have enabled me to give it-)<lb/> | |||
M<hi rend="superscript">r</hi> Boodle notwithstanding so important and favourable a change<lb/> | |||
of circumstances, found Lord Belgrave still inflexible. What,<lb/> | |||
under this fresh disappointment, could M<hi rend="superscript">r</hi> Boodle say to me?<lb/> | |||
By what explanation could he make the refusal credible? Was<lb/> | |||
it to be represented to me as the choice and determination of<lb/> | |||
his Noble principal to have my Prisoners to shake hands<lb/> | |||
with him and his Lady from their Windows? In a word<lb/> | |||
for saving the occupier of that house from the otherwise inevitable<lb/> | |||
reputation of insanity - (and I took care so to put it<lb/> | |||
to him) there was but one possible expedient, which was, to<lb/> | |||
confess how it happened:- Lord Belgrave had applied for a<lb/> | |||
promise that the land (though now perhaps already purchase<lb/> | |||
should never be put to that its only lawful use: he had<lb/> | |||
applied - and he had succeeded. - The 20<hi rend="superscript">th</hi> of February 1800<lb/> | |||
was the day on which I received from M<hi rend="superscript">r</hi> Boodle a letter<lb/> | |||
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Before A 5 Connectg Observn
SS.3 The Establishsment betrayed to Ld Belgrave
without the Salisbury Estate would have enabled me to give it-)
Mr Boodle notwithstanding so important and favourable a change
of circumstances, found Lord Belgrave still inflexible. What,
under this fresh disappointment, could Mr Boodle say to me?
By what explanation could he make the refusal credible? Was
it to be represented to me as the choice and determination of
his Noble principal to have my Prisoners to shake hands
with him and his Lady from their Windows? In a word
for saving the occupier of that house from the otherwise inevitable
reputation of insanity - (and I took care so to put it
to him) there was but one possible expedient, which was, to
confess how it happened:- Lord Belgrave had applied for a
promise that the land (though now perhaps already purchase
should never be put to that its only lawful use: he had
applied - and he had succeeded. - The 20th of February 1800
was the day on which I received from Mr Boodle a letter
Identifier: | JB/120/024/001"JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 120. |
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7-9 |
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120 |
panopticon versus new south wales |
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024 |
the establishment betrayed to ld belgrave |
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001 |
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copy/fair copy sheet |
1 |
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recto |
d5 |
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39850 |
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