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que je vous ai. Je suis faché cependant que les devoirs d'une place que j'occupe aujourd'hui ne me permettent pas de me faire connaître dans cette affaire du Lord de Stirling. Vous qui en savez beaucoup ne serez point surprise qu'un homme en place n'ose pas y intervenir ouvertement.

J'ai déjà dit que je vous ai des obligations. Oui, Mademoiselle, j'en ai et j'ai eu l'avantage plus d'une fois de vous consulter; même à une epoque lorsque j'êtais menacé d'une grande disgrace ce fut vous qui me sauvâtes par un éclaircissement utile donné à propos. Vous n'avez pas obligé un ingrat. Je rends en toute occasion justice à vos talens, et je vous serai toute ma vie devoué et reconnaissant.

Vous pensez bien que je n'ai acheté cette vieille carte du Canada que pour les autographes qui sont fort curieux. L'apostille en marge de la Note de Mallet (dans le coin à droit) est dit-on de Louis XV. Les autographes de Fenelon et de Flechier ne sont pas moins précieux, et le marchand qui me vendit la carte in 1819 m'assura qu'elle avait appartenue à Louis XVI. ce que paraît assez probable d'après ce que je viens de dire de l'apostille de son ayeul. Le marchand démeurait en 1819 sur le quai Voltaire, mais depuis tant d'années il s'est fait bien des changemens et son nom m'a échappé.

Agreez, Mademoiselle, l'hommage des sentimens distingués que je vous ai voués et que vous méritez si bien.

Versailles, le 10 Juillet 1837.

M.

Je charge des personnes de confiance de ce paquet. Elles iront vous consulter: Ne soyez donc pas étonnée de le trouver sur quelque table ou chaise dans votre cabinet.

No. VII.

SECOND DIVISION.

JAN. 3, 1839.

REPORT AND ADDITIONAL PRODUCTIONS

IN CAUSA

THE OFFICERS OF STATE

AGAINST

ALEXANDER.

“Edinburgh, December 22, 1838. — The preceding Excerpts having been produced in process, the Lords, on the motion of the Lord Advocate, Appoint the original letters to be exhibited to the Clerk of Court, and direct him to compare the same with these Excerpts, and to report on such points thereanent as he shall find proper for the information of the Court: And Appoint the Excerpts, with the report thereon, to be printed and boxed quam primum.

(Signed)

"D. BOYLE, I.P.D."

REPORT AND ADDITIONAL PRODUCTIONS

IN CAUSA

THE OFFICERS OF STATE

AGAINST

ALEXANDER, calling himself EARL OF STIRLING.

IN pursuance of the above order of the Court, the original letters from Mr Eugene John Alexander to his father, of which excerpts had been produced in process, have been exhibited to me, and compared with the excerpts, and I have to report as follows:

The first of the two letters dated "London, April 22d," is written on a half sheet of common post paper; the address on

the back is partly obliterated, and entirely covered over with slips of paper, with the exception of the words, "A Paris."

On the contents of this letter I have only to observe, that between the words "that I have received," and the words, "new evidence yesterday," one word, of three or four letters, has been lost, in consequence of a perforation made by tearing or rubbing out the substance of the paper at that spot.

The second letter, dated "London, April 23d, 1837," consists of two sheets of post paper. On the three first pages of the first sheet is contained the letter from which excerpts have been produced. The second sheet contains copies, in a different hand, of the five documents therein referred to. These occupy three pages; and on the fourth page the address has been written, but is now obliterated and covered over, except the words, "A Paris."

The first and second of these sheets are of different kinds of paper, and that the first was enclosed in the second there is no evidence, but their general correspondence in size. It is only from the first sheet that excerpts have been produced, the contents of the second being the five documents produced in process, and already printed.

Of the letter itself, a great many lines and passages have been either obliterated or covered by slips of paper. The places and extent of these omissions will be best understood by the annexed transcript of the excerpts, in which corresponding spaces have been left. A few words, not given in the excerpts, but which are not obliterated on the original, have been given in this transcript.

In examining the post marks on these letters, I have availed myself of the skill of Mr Bokenham, superintending president of the inland department of the London Post Office, and of Mr Joseph Moule, president of the general sorting office in Edinburgh, both of whom have been intimately conversant in the business of their departments. On their authority I am warranted in reporting, that the Post Office stamps impressed on these letters are genuine, and correspond with the dates of the letters. But on examining the postages marked on the second of these letters, they have expressed a confident opinion that it must have passed through the London Post Offices as a single letter; and that the second sheet, above described, could not have contained within it the other sheet on which the letter of April 23, 1837, is written.

(Signed)

THO. THOMSON.

EXCERPTS from Letters from Mr EUGENE JOHN ALEXANDER, Son of the EARL OF STIRLING, to his Father.

26.

My Dear Father,

London, April 22d.
I have your 24.

At to seven to-night, I write a few hasty lines to say, that I received ...... new evidence yesterday, and ever since have so occupied as not to be able to do any thing -not write a letter. It contained 4 documents, and a beautiful portrait of John of Antrim ....

I will write on Monday full particulars.

haste.

Your affectionate Son,
E.

I opened this letter again
from the misdirection.
(R. 24th.)

No. 27.

My Dear Father,

London, April 23d, 1837.

You will receive my 26 of yesterday with the great news of the new evidence. I now proceed to give you full particulars. I received your last (24,) on Friday morning, and went to Golden Square to see W. Pearson and Angela. It was on my return home that I called at De Porquet and Co. about 2 o'clock, when the young man at the counter said, that they had received a packet by the 2d post about an hour before I called, which he put into my hands. It was directed to Messrs De Porquet and Co. 11, Tavistock St. Covent Garden, London. They had opened it, and found the following note with another packet, addressed "The Right Honble. the Earl of Stirling." The note was as follows, in a lady's hand, without disguise," Mrs Innes Smyth's compliments," &c. (here the note is copied.) I took the packet with the cover and note to De Porquet just as they

received it.

in my pocket upon my getting home,

and taking off the cover to De Porquet, I

read again the note, and examined the packet addressed to you

I sat to consider what I would do. It all at once struck me, that I would go before a magistrate, or some other public

functionary, to have his testimony of being present at the breaking of the seal. I then went to Lockhart, (who is living close by me, having taken lodgings in Surrey St.)

To resume and consulted

with him. He highly approved of my idea, and advised me to go to our solicitors, Fennell and Vaux, and ask them, as English lawyers, whether it was the proper mode of proceeding to go to a magistrate. I saw Fennell, and after long debating, he said that never having had any thing similar to it before, he really did not know what to advise. It was too late that night to get any thing done. We then fixed 10 o'clock yesterday morning for Lockhart and all of us to meet at their office. We decided at last when we met, that a public notary was the proper person to open the packet. Fennell and I then got into a cab, and to the great notaries of the Royal Exchange. The packet was then opened, and within it another packet cased in parchment, was discovered with the following words upon it," Some of my wife's family papers." In an instant, I exclaimed, "That is my grandfather's handwriting!" The parchment packet was sealed with three black seals-all the same impression, evidently my grandfather's seals,-not like those we have. I cannot describe them. We then examined the cover-it was addressed to you as before mentioned, and inside are the following remarkable words:" The enclosed was in a small cash box," &c. (here copied at length.) Here follows the notary's certificate upon the same paper, "This note was opened in my presence," &c. (here the certificate is copied.) The sheet of paper is a mourning one, with a deep black edge round, owing to the death of the thief. The notary then said his duty ended there; as he could not venture to witness the parchment packet, he said we must go to Doctors' Commons before a Proctor. We then went to the Proctor, Thomas Blake. Here we were five hours. I cut the parchment, and four persons as witnesses watched me. I cut over the middle black seal, and was then able to draw out the contents. I refer you now to the copies of the documents accompanying this letter; they have all been numbered by the Proctor, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5. No. 4, Lockhart tells me, we need not produce in Court, because it

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