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<p>You bid me take for granted that <add>M<hi rend="superscript">r</hi></add> Wise's pieces of land <lb/>were meant, both of them, to be given me. M<hi rend="superscript">r</hi> Long did not <lb/>contradict this: but neither did he assent to it: the observations he had made were of a direct contrary tendency. — </p> | <p>You bid me take for granted that <add>M<hi rend="superscript">r</hi></add> Wise's pieces of land <lb/>were meant, both of them, to be given me. M<hi rend="superscript">r</hi> Long did not <lb/>contradict this: but neither did he assent to it: the observations he had made were of a direct contrary tendency. — </p> | ||
<p>M<hi rend="superscript">r</hi> Long expressed plainly a disposition to get rid of <note>Quere</note><lb/>the whole business altogether, upon the stale objection of the <lb/>unfitness of Lord Salisbury's in respect of dampness & <add> —</add> an <lb/>objection started by <add>M<hi rend="superscript">r</hi></add> Fordyce. <add><hi rend="superscript">(a)</hi></add> The objection was made & answered <lb/>by me, <hi rend="underline">before</hi> the purchase: the purchase of the ground is <lb/>made, and <hi rend="underline">now</hi>, the same objection is started again, as a reason <lb/>why the Ground, now it <hi rend="underline">is</hi> purchased, should not be <hi rend="underline">used</hi>.<hi rend="superscript"><del>(b)</del></hi> <lb/><note>(b1) See Notes</note> </p> | |||
+ I 7 H 5 2 Doc 10 Deferred Memorial & its consequences
Apr 21 1800 June 10 1800
10 June 1800 The condemned Memorial appeared to you clear and
unexceptionable in every point: — you told me so, or it
would not have gone in. Mr Long would not so much as
acknowledge it to be a Memorial. If the prayer of it
was not intelligible, I am incapable of drawing up any
thing that shall be so: if he had turned to it, and told
me what he was disposed to accede to, and what not, I
should have some ground whereon to build a fresh Memorial:
now I have none.
You bid me take for granted that Mr Wise's pieces of land
were meant, both of them, to be given me. Mr Long did not
contradict this: but neither did he assent to it: the observations he had made were of a direct contrary tendency. —
Mr Long expressed plainly a disposition to get rid of Quere
the whole business altogether, upon the stale objection of the
unfitness of Lord Salisbury's in respect of dampness & — an
objection started by Mr Fordyce. (a) The objection was made & answered
by me, before the purchase: the purchase of the ground is
made, and now, the same objection is started again, as a reason
why the Ground, now it is purchased, should not be used.(b)
(b1) See Notes
Identifier: | JB/121/145/001"JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 121. |
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1800-06-10 |
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121 |
Panopticon |
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145 |
Disarmed Memorial & its consequences |
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001 |
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Correspondence |
2 |
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Recto"Recto" is not in the list (recto, verso) of allowed values for the "Rectoverso" property. |
D2 |
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Not sent; see note to letter 1555, vol. 6 |
001 |
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