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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
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Untitled Article
HJHfr ^ mim Compmvf rtfumd gfantauch compensation , and declined tepipjUiMa'P any piopoaHion wh « gtew « f on the subject . limt your PetitipQe ^ s h * vnt > l y , jieg tp a asure , ^ ur H onourajble House , that they regard such a denial of Justice as this to be h \ gh derogatory to the British name and reputation : as it appears to your PirtiUmjfefH that a British subject has been banished wfehattt
trial—punished without conviction—and ruined in ail his fortunte and pursi&itR , WJ&o > i * t even the allegation of his having been guilty of any crirne . Ttatt when the great charter of English liberty guaranteed to the sutgects of this realm , that no man should be punished but by the judgment of his peers—that all punishments should be proportioned to the offence—( hat there should be no wrong without a remedy—and that justice shoujd neither be delayed nor denied to any man—your'
Petmoners humbly conceive , that these protecting privileges were meant to be extended to all Englishmen , in whatever part -off HiiS Majesty ' s dominions they might happen to be . That , in the case of the said James Silk Buckingham , your Petitioners regret to perceive that all these principles of English liberty have been violated , without necessity , and without adequate cause ; for he bas been punished without judgment of his peers—his punishment has
be > fe whollydisproportioned to his alleged offence- —he has feuffer ^ tl ti ffHtvdus wrong , without having any remedy at law for the sante- —atitt Iw wott than twelve years past , during which the facts of hi * case bUve bfefcti so often before the public , as to be familiar to almost every one who rcWb , justice has been delayed and denied—without his having yet been yravfcd to be guilty of any other offence than that < rf adyqgqftiiig t i * { tftHa , that freedom of trade , freedom of > settlement , and freedom of , publication , which were formerly denied to Englishmen in th ^ i
00 uyBtary ^ but which are now happily made , by the last charter for India , t&e established law of the land . Yo * ir Petitioners cannot bring themselves to believe that the aclvocmiiog and practising in India what both Houses of the Legislature , and His jtyEp ^ taty on the thron e , have since sanctioned and approved , and whn | tfct most distinguished Goveniors-General of India , past and
presfi ^ hfure publicly declared to be as great a blessing and advantage to KMMt M . it is in England , and to every other well-governed country , ( Mptety , i the fVeedom ; of the press—subject only to the control of the hMli as aiftmitiisteretf by a judge and jury , ) ought to be considered in aiif ^^ Wffer light than that of a public virtue and a public good : and , tfctf » ilbre , they humbly conceive that the summary banishment and ar- > llfihirt ^ ViJhl Of atl honourable individual , without trial or convicfiotihe of ad
sW-I ^ Mfti ^ y ^ 1 togw d ground than that was guilty vocating and practising the freedom of the press—cannot be defended by any prin-2 sjjkt >* f the Biiiiih Constitution , to the very spirit and essence of which i | % M ^ T ** & JtntU ^ lf repugnant . . T ^^^ your honourable Hoiwe , 4 ^ . 20 U ^ w 4 U fcp cieased to give your sanction to such a 8 ) 1 1 ., a » gjjypi $ * < ftWr James Silk ; Buckingham to recover , from ihe gaet mfWSmwML mtiwik&aaittto * , whieh the Select ComitiiUee offtte * eir oWnioii
mm"WWimm : ^^^ * to ** itrtanimous that'tftk iiar ^^ ftffl ^ R ^^ m % * to ti . m , for the ^ slctictibft t ^ Wp * o 4 < H < H ' mti , ff * m * i * d by the iMaaures herein before mentioned AA ^ % Ut tmtK ** n ; as in duty bound , will ever pray . " '
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Citation
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Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), Dec. 2, 1835, page 804, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2652/page/48/
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