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The Trial of Charles Random de Berenger, Sir Thomas Cochrane Part 104

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_Mr. Gurney._ I am quite content with that answer?

_Lord Ellenborough._ Mr. Park, would you like to look the Dover letter?

_Mr. Park._ I am no judge of hand-writing, my Lord.

_Lord Ellenborough._ That may be a concealed hand-writing, and I should think it extremely likely.

_Mr. Park._ I mean to call other witnesses to this; I have nothing to conceal in this case?



_Lord Ellenborough._ No; you announced to us that you flatly contradict the whole of the story as to Mr. De Berenger.

_Mr. Park._ Yes, I do my Lord; I observe this is all pencilling which has been shewn to you?

_A._ Yes, it is.

_Mr. Park._ Is this pencil writing in the same kind of character that a man writes when he writes with pen and ink; are you enabled to say from your knowledge of the hand-writing, whether it is or is not?

_A._ That it is which puzzles me more than any thing, its being in pencil.

_A Juryman._ We should like to see that road book.

_Mr. Park._ Does your Lords.h.i.+p think the jury have a right to see that; they cannot take it for the purpose of comparing with any thing else?

_Lord Ellenborough._ It is in evidence, being found in the desk of the defendant, they may look at each, if they please.

_General Campbell, sworn._

_Examined by Mr. Brougham._

_Q._ Do you know Mr. Cochrane Johnstone?

_A._ I do.

_Q._ Did you meet him in the month of September or October last, at a meeting or hunt in Scotland?

_A._ I met him the second week, I think in last October, at the Perth meeting.

_Q._ Did he at that time shew you some plans and prospectus of the new place of amus.e.m.e.nt, in the nature of a Ranelagh?

_A._ I saw in Mr. Cochrane Johnstone's hands, the prospectus of a new public place, he called it, to be erected in the Regent's Park, or the neighbourhood of the Regent's Park.

_Q._ Do you recollect the name he gave to it?

_A._ I think he called it Vittoria.

_Q._ Will you look at the prospectus, and see whether that is the same?

[_The prospectus was shewn to the witness._]

_A._ I believe this is a copy of the same that I saw.

_Q._ Look at the plan?

_A._ He did not shew me the plan.

_Q._ Did he shew this prospectus, and communicate to other persons at that meeting upon the subject of it, as well as you?

_A._ I cannot speak to that; he communicated to me in my own apartment or his own, I cannot recollect which.

[_Mr. Hopper was called, but did not answer._]

_Mr. Serjeant Best._ This gentleman was taken very ill, being kept here last night; if he comes by and by, I trust your Lords.h.i.+p will permit him to be examined out of his turn.

_Lord Ellenborough._ Certainly, at any period.

_Mr. Serjeant Best._ That is the case of the three defendants for whom I appear.

_The Right Honourable the Earl of Yarmouth sworn._

_Examined by Mr. Park._

_Q._ You are I believe, or were, the Colonel of the Duke of c.u.mberland's sharp-shooters?

_A._ Lieutenant-colonel commandant.

_Q._ It is called the corps of sharp-shooters?

_A._ Yes.

_Q._ Captain De Berenger was adjutant of that regiment, was he not?

_A._ He was a non-commissioned officer, acting adjutant.

_Q._ How long have you known Mr. De Berenger?

_A._ Ever since a few days after I was elected to command that corps; that was in the beginning of the year 1811; I cannot fix the day, very early in that year I know it was.

_Q._ Has your Lords.h.i.+p had opportunities of seeing Mr. De Berenger write, or of receiving letters from him, and of acting upon those letters from him.

_A._ I have received a great many letters from him, and have seen him write occasionally.

_Q._ And you have seen him, probably, on the subject of the contents of those letters?

_A._ Very frequently; two or three times I have seen him alter the regimental orders, and have received very many letters from him.

_Q._ Are you, from that opportunity that you have described, in a capacity to state to his Lords.h.i.+p and the jury, whether you are acquainted with his character of hand-writing?

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The Trial of Charles Random de Berenger, Sir Thomas Cochrane Part 104 summary

You're reading The Trial of Charles Random de Berenger, Sir Thomas Cochrane. This manga has been translated by Updating. Author(s): William Brodie Gurney. Already has 547 views.

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