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dividuals, whether, under such circumstances as will be laid before you, he is to be publicly permitted to hold such doctrines as those which are stated, in a manner that seems to evince that they are not stated for any useful purpose; but that they are stated for the purpose of trying, whether there is any law in this country that will secure the government of the country from attacks, which mean nothing but to display the audacity with which men dare to attack that government? And if And if you shall be convinced, upon the whole of the evidence before you, that the case is such as I have stated it to be, this I am sure of, that you will duly weigh the consequences of the verdict, however you shall be disposed to give it, for the Crown, or for the Defendant; and I am sure, the Crown, upon the temperate consideration of what the Jury does, will not be dissatisfied with that verdict, let it be what it may. The constitution of this country, if it be excellent, if it has really handed down to us those great and invaluable blessings, which, I believe, ninety-nine persons out of a hundred are convinced it has, and if it be a matter of anxiety to transmit them to our posterity, you will remember that the stability of those blessings finally and ultimately depends upon the conduct of Juries. It is with them, by their verdicts, to establish their fellow-subjects in the enjoyment of those rights; it is with them to say in what cases those rights have been invaded; and the same constitution that has left it to them to say in what cases those rights have been invaded,

has also bound every honest man to say, that when they have given their decision upon it, they have acted properly between the country and the individual who is charged with the offence.

Gentlemen, under these circumstances, I shall proceed to lay the case before you, and I have only again to repeat, if you shall find, upon a due consideration of this case, that this is an hasty, an unguarded, and unadvised expression of a gentleman otherwise well disposed, and who meant no real mischief to the country, you will be pleased, with my consent, to deal with the Defendant as a person under those circumstances ought to be dealt with. I never will press a Jury for a verdict, in a case in which, whatever may be the strictness of the law as between man and man, acting upon moral and candid feelings, it ought not to be asked for; and having given you my sentiments, I leave the Defendant in your hands.

EVIDENCE FOR THE CROWN.

JOHN TAITT, of Oxford Street, Upholsterer, sworn. -Examined by Mr. SOLICITOR GENERAL.

Q. Do you know Mr. John Frost ?

A. I never saw him but that evening in
Q. What evening?

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A. The 6th of November last.

Q. Where were you that evening?
A. In the Percy Coffee-house.

Q. Who was with you?

4. Mr. Paul Savignac.

Q. Were there any other persons in the coffeehouse?

A. Yes, several gentlemen.

Q. Can you name any

?

A. Mr. Yatman was there, Mr. Bullock, there were not many that I knew.

Q. Did you see Mr. Frost there?

A. Yes.

Q. At what time?

A. About ten in the evening.

Q. Where did Mr. Frost come from?

A. He came from a room above stairs with several gentlemen into the coffee-room.

Q. What did you first perceive with respect to Mr. Frost?

A. He addressed himself, I think, first to Mr. Yatman, but that I am not certain; he was asked how long he had been returned from France.

Lord Kenyon. Was he asked that by Mr. Yatman?

A. By Mr. Yatman or some of the other gentlemen; he said, he was very lately returned.

Mr. Solicitor General. What did he say more?
A. He asked him what they were doing there, and

he said, things were going on very well there, they were doing very well.

Q. Did you hear him say any thing more?

A. That he should very shortly return there.
Q. What more?

A. There was nothing more, till, a few minutes after, he went into the body of the coffee-room, two or three boxes from where I was; I heard him exalting his voice, and he was for equality-" I am for "equality"-upon which I got off my seat, and I went forward, and inquired, "Who are you, Lord Kenyon. You asked him?

Sir?"

A. Yes, because I did not know him. Mr. Yatman answered, That is Mr. Frost; upon which I asked him, how he dared to utter such words? He still continued, "I am for equality and no King." Mr. Yatman asked him, if he meant no King in this country, and he said, Yes, no King or no Kings; I rather think it was in the plural number. That the constitution of this country was a very bad one.

Q. Did he say any thing more?

A. He said nothing more. I said, he ought to be turned out of the coffee-room; upon which he walked up the room and placed his back to the fire, and wished, I believe, rather to retract, if he could have retracted, what he had said; but he still continued, he was for no King and he was for equality. He quitted the room very shortly after by a general hiss from all the company.

Q. How long did he continue there?
A. I suppose not above five minutes.

JOHN TAITT-cross-examined by Mr. ERSKINE.

Q. You went, I suppose, to the coffee-house just in the ordinary course of your recreation, I take for granted?

A. It is a coffee-house I very seldom go to.

Q. How came you there that night?

A. I went there to sup.

Q. You have been there often?

A. Very often.

Q. Then of course you went to have your supper and read the newspaper?

A. Exactly so.

Q. I take it you remember all the conversation that passed between Mr. Savignac and you that night?

A. I believe Mr. Savignac wrote down to the same effect.

Q. I dare say you wrote down this?

A. I wrote none down.

Q. But do you recollect the conversation between Mr. Savignac and

A. No.

you?

Q. Mr. Frost had been above stairs?

A. Yes.

Q. With whom he was dining you do not know?
A. No.

VOL. II.

X

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