90 | ||||
on the Part of the Magistrates. You must remember Sir | ||||
I often urg’d that the Forms of my Release might at that Time | ||||
be agreed upon; you were regularly assembled at Sessions, I | ||||
was competent to engage for myself but you did not care to name | ||||
any Specific Sum nor did you desire me to make an Offer; in | ||||
this Situation of things according to my Conception we parted. | ||||
I have however been since told, that it was meant at that time | ||||
that my Bill should be sent down to the ensuing Quarter Sessions | ||||
or the one subsequently. So far was I from understanding that to | ||||
be the wish of the Magistrates that Mr Heron can testify that at | ||||
a Meeting at Mr Wallace’s in Lincoln’s Inn Fields not long before | ||||
Xmas-82. concerning the Petition, it was there considered whether | ||||
or no any further Application to Sessions was necessary before | ||||
the Business was proceeded upon, after due Consideration they | ||||
were of opinion there was no necessity for such Application. Tho’ | ||||
this Consultation was held upon the subject of the Petition, yet | ||||
Mr Wallace’s Journey into the North & his Illness prevented it | ||||
being drawn till near the last day appointed for presenting Petitions | ||||
The moment I was in possession of it I enclosed it to you Sir, the | ||||
presenting could not possibly be delayed or the year was lost, it | ||||
was drawn as nearly as I recollect in Conformity to what had | ||||
passed at Sessions, the offer of a Sum of Money to be paid to the | ||||
County was not omitted, You did not favour me with any | ||||
Answer to my Letter. Had I been proceeding contrary to what was | ||||
agreed upon at sessions I doubt not but you would have wrote a | ||||
Line to signify to me my Mistake & put me into the right Road | ||||
but hearing nothing Sir I concluded all was right I was moreover | ||||
informed that Sir Wm Middleton had been desired to take care | ||||
that the Bill was not hurry’d thro’ the House without the | ||||
Magistrates being fully appriz’d of its Nature & Tendency, it is | ||||
true no specific Terms, excepting restoring the Materials were | ||||
mention’d in the Bill, nor do I see how they possibly could, a[s] | ||||
none had ever been agreed upon between the parties, the Comm[ittee?] | ||||
Note: Letter from Mr Errington to Mr Aynsley, 22 September 1783, 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 CTW and KS