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THE TRIAL OF BELLINGHAM

... was sworn and the indictment was read. Mr. Abbot opened the pleadings by stating. that..Jolde Bellingham had committed the crime ormikdering the Right. Ibinourable iucic L. The Attorney-General thentsddres:ed a Jury. lie began by saying, that the painful ...

PARTICULARS OF THE ASSASSINATION OF. PC/WI:VAL. About a'anterter past . five on Monday ie'ennight Mr. Perceval ..

... awful consequences that would ensue to himself. He observed to a Polite officer, after his commitment, that he knew what his crime was, and what its result would be. He had lodgings in New Millman-street, near the Foundling Hospital. His landlady, who is ...

that the a-year should he continued to the eldest son for his life, and Mr. Huskisson suggested, by way of

... Abbey, as a mark of respect to his private and public virtues, and to record the horror and in. dignation of the house at the crime el his assassination. The late Right Honourable Spencer Perceval was the second son of the of Egmont, and was thus a member ...

MARQUIS WELLESLEY. STATEMENT OF TIIE CAUSES OF LORD WEI LEA• LEY'S RESIGN ATIoN. [Published from authority] ..

... is, that no beneficial result is likely to arise from giving publicity to snch atrocious producCons. The very nature of the crime is an insuperable obstzs:le to the discovery of the author—secret and silent investigation affords a mach stronger probability ...

THE EX ECUTIO::

... Sir, I feel as a man ought to do. Sheriff Heygate.— You know, that to take away the life of a man unlawfully is a heinous crime. Bellingham.— The Scriptures,you know, Sir, say that. Sheriff Heygate.— I hope you have made your peace with and that by ...

464111' • 9, Now Mama Street, March 23. ISO

... attendance on divine worship, and had marked out the lessons for Whitsunday in his prayer-book, before the commission of the crime.—Within these two years he received a legacy of 4001. from an aged relative at Brompton. He has lately had few visitors; one ...

FROM TIIE LONDON GAZETTE. Carlton-Howe, May 29

... for his talents. We mourn the lofs which his family and his country fuilain by his untimely death; and deeply regret that a crime fo atrocious could have been perpetrated by any indi. vidual in this favoured wild enlightened country. Aggravated, however ...

PASTORAL ADMONITION

... God, for your establishment in whatsoever thinas are of such good report; but the glory of our Land is turnsd into sh one. Crimes, of which outcasts alone were believed to be capable, have been brought home to those who lived among us AS members of the ...

dm the one bad, by the fear of God, while they are are prompted, on the;other, by those wants and

... dering wickedness. Though the dissipated and regerdless, in an elevated station, be fortified against the commission of such crimes, by the superior education which they have received, and the natural influence of their condition in life, even they are not ...

44th ditto—Captaio H. Martin, from the Woecefier Militia, to be Enfign, without purehafe. SOth ditto—Lieut. A. ..

... deserve: but his Royal Highness has reason to apprehend, that in many instances, sufficient attention has not been paid to the of crimes. The timely interference of the officer o his personal intercourse and acquaintance with his men (which are sure to be repaid ...

The Earl of Liverpool replied in the negative, and

... thrown into indescribable terror, by 'the. t The sum of 15,5931. having been voted for the commission of one of those dreadful crimes Mint, and some routine business having been gone which have so lately brutalised the species, and ! through, the house adjourned ...

lity. nolutely 'd; a, M.i.j ment

... said, the present laws were sufficient; but it had been proved by experience that they were insuflicient. The progress of crimes had become too quick for the cornmou pace of the law, and lie now called on the Cou. stitut inn, in the names of those persons ...