upon the Bill was I conceived the proper moment for [risorting?] any | ||||
further Conditions & my Counsel were prepared to accede to such Terms | ||||
as should have been judged equitable. Thus much Sir I think it | ||||
right to say in my own Justification, if I have err’d it was not | ||||
intentionally, but be that as it may, when I found that a | ||||
Misunderstanding had arisen in Consequence of this Bill, I could | ||||
do no more than withdraw it, which was done accordingly, & I | ||||
doubt not I shall have no cause to repent that Measure, whether | ||||
the Bill would or would not have pass’d, the Majority of the | ||||
House must have determin’d, all I can say is, the withdrawing | ||||
it was entirely my own Act. | ||||
There is another part of this Transaction which I | ||||
never thought it would have been necessary for me to have said a | ||||
Syllable I mean the manner in which I executed my Engagements. | ||||
every one I thought was sufficiently concerned & I still think | ||||
there are few Exceptions, that no Attention, no Care, no Expence was | ||||
spar’d to render the Work not only substantial but beautiful, that | ||||
far from falling short of fulfilling my Contract I went greatly | ||||
beyond what I was bound by that Obligation to perform, that for the | ||||
Security of the Foundation I added to my original Design and | ||||
Estimate what occasioned an additional Expence amounting to | ||||
many Hundreds, and that upon the whole a much larger Sum | ||||
was expended than was receiv’d by me from the County; it was | ||||
my Pride Sir to execute this undertaking in the very best manner, | ||||
I disregarded the expence & ever felt myself above the Idea of | ||||
Pocketing the Public Money. After this Sir you will readily | ||||
believe I could not without much Surprize hear that some persons | ||||
had endeavor’d to impress you & the Public with an opinion | ||||
that I had not fulfilled my Contract, but what were the means | ||||
us’d to establish this Belief? Was Mr Smeaton produced to | ||||
declare that he had been stinted in the necessary Supplies of | ||||
cash, that his Designs had been ill executed from the Parsimony | ||||
of the Undertaker, or was Mr Pickernell your County Surveyor who | ||||
Note: Letter from Mr Errington to Mr Aynsley, 22 September 1783, p 3
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