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  • The Freemasons' Magazine
  • Feb. 1, 1794
  • Page 63
  • PARLIAMENTARY PROCEEDINGS.
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The Freemasons' Magazine, Feb. 1, 1794: Page 63

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    Article PARLIAMENTARY PROCEEDINGS. ← Page 4 of 10 →
Page 63

Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Parliamentary Proceedings.

' And again on the 4 th day of May , AA'hen the Lords decided , That it is not competent to the Managers for the Commons , to put the fofldwitif * question to the witness upon the seventh article of charge , viz . —Whether more oppressions did actually exist under the new institution , than under the old ? And again on the iSth day of May , when , tlie House of Lords resolved , That it is not competent to the Managers for the Commons to give evidence of the enormities actually committed by Deby Syng ; the same not being charged in the

impeachment-. And again on the 2 d day of June , when the Lords resolved , ' ¦ That it is not competent ( or the Managers on the part of the Commons , to give any evidence Upon the seventh article of the impeachment , to prove ' shat the letter of the 5 th of May , 17 S 1 , is false , in any other particular than that wherein it is expressly charged to be false ; The said divisions of the House of Lords are founded upon princiles not peculiar

p to trials by impeachment . They are founded upon common sense , and on the immutable principles Of justice . ! ' —In Scotland those principles are peculiarly necessary to be adhered to , inasmuch as by the laws of that part of the united kingdom , a defendant is obliged to produce a complete lis ; of all his witnesses in exculpation , the day before the- trial . That alone appears to me a considerable hardship . But if , after such list ' is actually delivered in by the defendant , any facts ( or supposed facts ) not particularly set forth as crimes in the indictment , may , on the following day , for the first tirny , and without noticehe suddenly brought out in evidence the trial against the

de-, upon fendant ; such defendant , from such an entrapping mode of trial , may be convicted , although innocent . Such proceedings ( whether supported or unsupported by any ojt ? Scotch statute passed in arbitrary times ) ought I conceive , to be revised . For , in a free country , there ought rot to be one mode of administrating justice to one man , namely , to Mr . Hastings , and an opposite mode of administrating , justice to another man , namely , to Mr . Muir ,

STANHOPE . HOUSE or COMMONS . Jan . is . The proceedings in the House of Commons teak a similar turn to those in the Upper House . The Address to his Majesty being moved bLord CllfTdenwho took & short but

y , ge neral review of the atrocities committed by the ruling powers in France , add seemed of opinion , that no peace could be made Avith safety or AA'ith honour , while the present system existed in that country . ' Ke Avas seconded by Sir Peter Burrel . The amendment was moved by the Earl of Wycombe , who delivered his sentiments decidedly against the conduct of Administrafon ; . "lightly glancing over what he termed their wicked and absurd policy in commencing the war : He took a comprehensive

view of the operations of the late campaign , on some of which lie was diffuse , even to minuteness , and the whole had his unqualified disapprobation . The mis-carriages at M . artinico and Dunkirk , he was particuiaily severe on . —The fo'Bier , he s :-, ; d , was so inadequately planned , and disgiacen-lly conducted , as to merit a parliamentary enquiry . With respect to Dunkirk , he was justified , he said , by great military authorities , in asserting , that neither the design , nor the means taken to carry it into offeet , were adequate to such , an important purpose . Fie painted the present situation of this country as critical and alarming ; he

deprecated the fastidious and ridiculous policy , which refused to treat with the present government of France ; he said , that in the end , they v . ould compel us to treat ; and he hoped that . all true friends of their country would unite in endeavouring to effect 3 speedy pacification .

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1794-02-01, Page 63” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 12 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01021794/page/63/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
LONDON: Article 1
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 2
THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE. OR GENERAL AND COMPLETE LIBRARY. Article 3
THE PRINCIPLES OF FREE MASONRY EXPLAINED. Article 11
JOHN COUSTOS, FOR FREEMASONRY, Article 19
A VIEW OF THE PROGRESS OF NAVIGATION. Article 22
ON THE PROPRIETY OF MAKING A WILL. Article 24
ANECDOTES OF THE LATE HUGH KELLY. Article 29
EXTRACT FROM AN ESSAY ON INSTINCT. Article 33
THE ORIGIN OF LITERARY JOURNALS. Article 35
LETTER Article 37
LETTER Article 38
ON MAN. Article 38
ON JEALOUSY. Article 40
ON YOUTHFUL COURAGE AND RESOLUTION. Article 41
INVASION. Article 42
ANECDOTES OF JAMES NORTHCOTE, ESQ. Article 48
SURPRIZING INGENUITY. Article 51
CURIOUS ACCOUNT OF THE PHYSICIANS OF ANCIENT EGYPT. Article 52
INSTANCE OF THE POWER OF MUSIC OVER ANIMALS. Article 53
PLAN OF EDUCATION. Article 53
TO THE EDITOR OF THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE. Article 56
REMARKS ON THE MUTABILITY OF FORTUNE. Article 57
LONDON CHARACTERIZED. Article 59
LITERARY INTELLIGENCE. Article 59
PARLIAMENTARY PROCEEDINGS. Article 60
STRICTURES ON PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 69
A CURIOUS FACT. Article 72
POETRY. Article 73
FREEMASON PROLOGUE. Article 74
PROLOGUE WRITTEN FOR THE YOUNG GENTLEMEN, Article 75
RURAL FELICITY: A POEM. Article 76
TO FRIENDSHIP. Article 77
IMPROMPTU Article 77
ON CONTENT. Article 78
ON AN INFANT Article 79
EPITAPH. Article 79
EPITAPH ON A NOBLE LADY. Article 79
FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 80
Untitled Article 83
Untitled Article 83
Untitled Article 83
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Parliamentary Proceedings.

' And again on the 4 th day of May , AA'hen the Lords decided , That it is not competent to the Managers for the Commons , to put the fofldwitif * question to the witness upon the seventh article of charge , viz . —Whether more oppressions did actually exist under the new institution , than under the old ? And again on the iSth day of May , when , tlie House of Lords resolved , That it is not competent to the Managers for the Commons to give evidence of the enormities actually committed by Deby Syng ; the same not being charged in the

impeachment-. And again on the 2 d day of June , when the Lords resolved , ' ¦ That it is not competent ( or the Managers on the part of the Commons , to give any evidence Upon the seventh article of the impeachment , to prove ' shat the letter of the 5 th of May , 17 S 1 , is false , in any other particular than that wherein it is expressly charged to be false ; The said divisions of the House of Lords are founded upon princiles not peculiar

p to trials by impeachment . They are founded upon common sense , and on the immutable principles Of justice . ! ' —In Scotland those principles are peculiarly necessary to be adhered to , inasmuch as by the laws of that part of the united kingdom , a defendant is obliged to produce a complete lis ; of all his witnesses in exculpation , the day before the- trial . That alone appears to me a considerable hardship . But if , after such list ' is actually delivered in by the defendant , any facts ( or supposed facts ) not particularly set forth as crimes in the indictment , may , on the following day , for the first tirny , and without noticehe suddenly brought out in evidence the trial against the

de-, upon fendant ; such defendant , from such an entrapping mode of trial , may be convicted , although innocent . Such proceedings ( whether supported or unsupported by any ojt ? Scotch statute passed in arbitrary times ) ought I conceive , to be revised . For , in a free country , there ought rot to be one mode of administrating justice to one man , namely , to Mr . Hastings , and an opposite mode of administrating , justice to another man , namely , to Mr . Muir ,

STANHOPE . HOUSE or COMMONS . Jan . is . The proceedings in the House of Commons teak a similar turn to those in the Upper House . The Address to his Majesty being moved bLord CllfTdenwho took & short but

y , ge neral review of the atrocities committed by the ruling powers in France , add seemed of opinion , that no peace could be made Avith safety or AA'ith honour , while the present system existed in that country . ' Ke Avas seconded by Sir Peter Burrel . The amendment was moved by the Earl of Wycombe , who delivered his sentiments decidedly against the conduct of Administrafon ; . "lightly glancing over what he termed their wicked and absurd policy in commencing the war : He took a comprehensive

view of the operations of the late campaign , on some of which lie was diffuse , even to minuteness , and the whole had his unqualified disapprobation . The mis-carriages at M . artinico and Dunkirk , he was particuiaily severe on . —The fo'Bier , he s :-, ; d , was so inadequately planned , and disgiacen-lly conducted , as to merit a parliamentary enquiry . With respect to Dunkirk , he was justified , he said , by great military authorities , in asserting , that neither the design , nor the means taken to carry it into offeet , were adequate to such , an important purpose . Fie painted the present situation of this country as critical and alarming ; he

deprecated the fastidious and ridiculous policy , which refused to treat with the present government of France ; he said , that in the end , they v . ould compel us to treat ; and he hoped that . all true friends of their country would unite in endeavouring to effect 3 speedy pacification .

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