FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   2   3   4   5   6   7   8   9   10   11   12   13   14   15   16   17   18   19   20   21   22   23   24   >>  
naturally render the case of _Thomas Daniels_ a subject of eager curiosity and warm debate. That persons in the superior stations of life should sometimes find means to evade the punishments incurred by infringing the laws of their country, and by disturbing the order of society, does not greatly excite our wonder; an experience of the manners and customs of the world, occasions our hearing such instances as things of course; we make a natural reflection or two on the occasions, and think no more of them. But when a person in one of the lowest classes of mankind, by a fatal accident, appears before a court of justice with apparent evidences of guilt, sufficient to influence a jury of his impartial countrymen to sentence him to the most severe penalty the law can inflict; when this man, meerly from the advantage of a good character in the narrow circle of his acquaintance, and from a re-examination into the probability of the fact, for which he was condemned, shall have the inferences drawn from the depositions on his trial, totally invalidated, so that the sentence passed on him is freely remitted! it is _such a sanction_ of his innocence, that it would be cruel and unjust, in particulars, afterward to retain any suspicions injurious to him. It ought to be principally attended to in this affair, that his Majesty, whose regal virtues are so generally known and acknowledged, cannot appear in a more amiable view, than in the attention with which he is said to have endeavoured to discover the merits of the intercession made for this poor convict. An instance which, as it may be deemed too trivial to engage any particular share of princely consideration, yet is certainly one of the truly parental duties of a Monarch, and will endear him in the hearts of many of his useful subjects, who are beneath caring for the retention of _Guadalupe_ or _Canada_. And it is doing justice to the poor fellow, to own, that he seems to retain a grateful, if not a politely expressed, sensibility of the great obligation he owes to the royal parent of this his second period of existence. But as an imputation of so base a nature, confirmed by a court of justice, would naturally prejudice female minds universally against him, too strongly for any after testimony in his favour easily to efface; and as Mr. _Daniels_ is not yet old enough to relinquish all thoughts of matrimony, and seems to possess too happy a share of vivacity to be totally depre
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   2   3   4   5   6   7   8   9   10   11   12   13   14   15   16   17   18   19   20   21   22   23   24   >>  



Top keywords:

justice

 

occasions

 
sentence
 

retain

 

Daniels

 

naturally

 

totally

 

trivial

 

virtues

 

Majesty


engage
 
attended
 
consideration
 

principally

 

affair

 

princely

 
discover
 

amiable

 

merits

 

intercession


endeavoured
 

attention

 

generally

 

instance

 

acknowledged

 

convict

 

deemed

 

beneath

 

female

 

universally


strongly
 

prejudice

 

confirmed

 

existence

 

period

 

imputation

 

nature

 

testimony

 

favour

 

matrimony


thoughts
 

possess

 

vivacity

 

relinquish

 

efface

 
easily
 

parent

 

subjects

 

injurious

 

caring