when it will be necessary for you to come | will never be to you a reflection attended | |||
up. when we know what passes at the County | with any disagreable sensation. & will ever | |||
meeting it will enable us to judge whether or | be remember’d with gratitude by your | |||
no it will be adviseable to get Messrs Ward | Oblig’d & Obedient | |||
& Tweddell to come up. I laid the bill before | Humble Servt | |||
Mr Kenyon he refus’d any fee, but said he | St James’s Henry Errington | |||
thought it perfectly right & would support | March 27 | |||
it in Parliament. I will pay due regard to | 1783 | |||
what you say about Mr Milne if he is not | ||||
already gone. I shd be extremely sorry you | ||||
lost the friendship of any Gentleman on | ||||
my account, & I flatter myself that cannot | ||||
be the case with the respectable part of | ||||
the Magistracy, but I will venture to say you | ||||
will lose the esteem of none by acting con | ||||
sistenly with honor & Justice, & your endeavoring | ||||
to defend a well intention’d Client against the | ||||
hardship of the Summum Jus* which I am | ||||
sure in this instance would be Summa injuria* |
Note: Letter from Henry Errington to Ralph Heron, p 2
Abbreviations are underlined like this Wm. and the expansion may be seen by moving the cursor over it.
An entry outlined like this has a note which may be seen by hovering over it. |
Transcribed by AF and GB