EDWARDS'S GENUINE EDITION. « THE BOOK !" OR, THE PROCEEDINGS AND CORRESPONDENCE UPON THE SUBJECT OF THE INQUIRY INTO THE CONDUCT OF HER ROYAL HIGHNESS Zi)* ^tintttiti of Wtalrt, UNDER A COMMISSION APPOINTED BY THE KING IN THE YEAR 1806. FAITHFULLY COPIED FROM AUTHENTIC DOCUMENTS. __________ * TO WHICH IS PREFIXED, % $arratita of ttje detent €btx\t$ That have led to the Publication of the Original Document*. WITH A STATEMENT OF FACTS RELATIVE TO THE CHILD, Now under the Protection of Her Royal Highness SECOND EDITION. Honbon: PRINTED BY AND FOR RICHARD EDWARDS, CRANE COURT, FLEET STREET ; AND SOLD BY ALL BOOKSELLERS IN THE UNITED KINGDOM. 1813. ADVERTISEMENT. THE publisher of the present Volume cannot but regret that circumstances, of an imperious nature, have rendered it absolutely necessary that the whole of the Documents upon the subject of the Inquiry into the Conduct of Her Royal Highness the Princess of Wales, should be submitted to the examination of the p «blic. This being the only means by which a fair and impartial judgment can be formed upon the "De- licate Investigation," — the publisher conceives that he is merely performing an act of justice in delivering to the world a genuine and unmutilated copy of the suppressed hook, as it was printed by him in the year 1807, under the direction of the late Mr. Perceval. Of the herd of spurious works on this subject, which are so industriously obtruded upon public notice, it is unnecessary to speak. The garbled ( iv ) extracts, also, that have been given in the News- papers are but ill calculated to satisfy the public concerning; this highly important and interesting Inquiry. In addition to the documents printed in 1807, the present work will be found to contain a Mi- nute of Cabinet of January 25, 1807 ; a Minute of Council of April 21, in the same year; and a Letter from the Princess of Wales to the King, dated the 2nd of October, 1806. To this edition, exclusively, are added, A Nar- rative of the Recent Events, that have led to the publication of the " Book;" — and A Statement of Facts, relative to the Child now under the pro- tection of Her Royal Highness the Princess of Wales; disclosing circumstances of great interest, which are exclusively in the possession of the publisher. Crane Court, Fleet Street, March 19, 1813. CONTENTS. Page A NARRATIVE of Recent Events, ix RLPO H i or the Commissioners 3 Letter from the Princess of Wales to His Majesty, dated August 12, 1806.... 10 Note from th< Princess of Wales to the Lord Chan- cellor, (.died August 17, 1806 *. 15 Letter from the Princess of Wales to His Majesty, dated August 17, «806 „\ IS Note from the Lord Chancellor to the Princess of Wales, dated August 20, 1806 19 No^e fjom the Lord Chancellor to the Princess of Wales, dated August 24, 1S06 20 Note from the Lord Chancellor to the Princess of Wales, dated August 29, 1806 21 Note from die Princess of Wales to the Lord Chan- cellor, dated August 31,1 806 22 Note from the Lord Chancellor to the Princess of Wales, dated September 2, 1 806 24 Letter from the Princess of Wales to His Majesty, dated October 2, 1806 \ 24 Deposition of Thomas Manby, Esq. dated the 22d of September, 1806 181 Deposition of Thomas Lawrence, Esq. dated the 24th of September, 1806 182 Deposition of Thomas Edmeades, dated September 26, 1806, 184 Memorandums of the Heads of Conversation be- tween Lord Moira, Mr. Lowten, and Mr. Ed- meades, on the 14th of May, 1806 187 Deposition of Jonathan Partridge, sworn on the 25th of September, 1806 191 Deposition of Philip Krackeler and Robert Eagle- stone, sworn on the 27th of September, 1806 .. 192 Letter from the Princess of Wales to his Majesty, dated the 8th of Dec. 1806 194 vi CONTENTS. Page Minute of Cabinet, January 25, 1807, 198 Note from the Lord Chancellor to the Princess of Wales, dated January 28, 1807 200 Note from His Majesty to the Princess of Wales . 201 Letter from the Princess of Wales to His Majesty, dated January 49, 1807 203 Note from His Majesty to the Princess of Wales, dated January 29, 1807 204 Note from His Majesty to the Princess of Wales, dated February 10, 1807 : --- 204 Letter from the Princess of Wales to His Majesty, dated February 12, 1807 205 Letter from the Princess of Wales to His Majesty, dated February 16, 1807 206 Letter from the Princess of Wales to His Majesty, dated March 5, 1807 243 Letter from the Princess of Wales to His Majesty, dated October % 1806.-/ 245 Minute of Council, dated April 21, 1807 246 LIST OF THE DOCUMENTS STATED IN THE APPENDIXES. APPENDIX (A.) No. 1. Warrant, or Commission, authorising the Inquiry, dated May 29, 1806 1 2. Deposition of Charlotte Lady Douglas, sworn June 1, 1806 .... 2 3. Deposition of Sir John Douglas, sworn on the 6th of June, 1 806 8 4. Deposition of Robert Bidgood, sworn on the 1st of June, 1806 - ... 9 5. Deposition of William Cole, sworn on the 6th of June, 1806 . 11 G CONTENTS. VU No. Page 6. Deposition of Frances Lloyd, sworn on the 7th of June, 1806 , 13 7. Deposition of Mary Ann Wilson, sworn June 7th, 1806 15 8. Deposition of Samuel Roberts, sworn on the 7th of June, 1806 16 9. Deposition of Thomas Stikeman, sworn on the 7th of June, 1806 17 10. Deposition of John Sicard, sworn on the 7th of June, 1806 2Q 1 1. Deposition of Charlotte Sander, sworn on the 7th of June, 1806 21 12. Deposition of Sophia Austin, sworn on the 7th of June, 1806 24 13. Letter from Earl Spencer to Lord Gwydir, dated June 20, 1806 „-. 25 14. Letter from Lord Gwydir to Earl Spencer, dated the2IstJune, 1806 - 25 15. Letter from Lady Willoughby to Earl Spencer, dated the 21st of June, 1806 27 16. Extract from the Register of Brownlow Street Hospital, dated 23d June, 1806 27 17. Deposition of Elizabeth Gosden, sworn the 23d of June, 1806 28 18. Deposition of Betty Townley, sworn the 23d of June, 1806 - 29 19. Deposition of Thomas Edmeades, sworn the 25th of June, 1806 ... 30 SO. Deposition of Samuel Gillam Mills, sworn the 25th of June,1806 32 21. Deposition of Harriet Fitzgerald, sworn the 27th of June, 1 806 . . 33 22. Letter from Earl Spencer to Lord Gwydir, dated the 1st of July, 1806 - 36 23. Letter from Lord Gwydir to Earl Spencer, dated the 3rd of July, 1806 - 37 £4. Queries and Answers of Lord Gwydir. . - . . . 37 25. Robert Bidgood's further Deposition, sworn the 3d of July, 1806 39 26. Deposition of Sir Francis Millman, sworn the 3rd of July, 1806 41 27. Deposition of Mrs. Lisle, sworn on the 3rd of July, 1806 42 28. Let ter from Sir Francis Millman, dated the 4th ofJuly, 1806 46 29. Deposition of Earl Cholmondeley, sworn on the 16th of July, 1806 «--. 47 Vill CONTENTS, APPENDIX (B.) No. Page 1. Statement of Lady Douglas, signed on the 3d of December, 1805 49 2. Narrative of the Duke of Kent, signed on the 27th of December, 1805 92 3. Examinations of Sarah Lampert and William Lam pert .» 97 4. First Examination of William Cole, dated the 1 1th of January, 1806 - - - 98 5. Second Examination of William Cole, dated the 14th of January, 1806 100 6. Third Examination of William Cole, dated the 30th of January, 1806 102 7. Fourth Examination of William Cole, dated the 28d of February, 1806 «--- 102 8. Examination of Robert Bidgood, dated the 4th of ^ April, 1806 103 9. Examination of Sarah Bidgood - - 106 10. ■ Frances Lloyd, dated the 12th of May, 1806 107 Statement of Facts relative to the Child now under the protection of Her Royal Highness the Princess of Wales 119 A NARRATIVE OP THE Utttnt <&btnt# fhat have led to the Publication of the Original Docu- ments relative to Her Royal Highness THE PRINCESS OF WALES. FOR the last three months, so many "hints, advertisements a and notices appeared in the daily papers, and in various other ways, that the public mind, was, in some measure, prepared to expect a full disclosure of the proceedings relative to her Royal Highness the Princess of Wales. The following occurs rence was the first that strengthened the conviction of every observer on this subject. On the 14th of January last, a sealed letter was transmitted to Lord Liverpool and Lord Eldon, by Lady Charlotte Camp- bell, as lady in waiting for the month, expressing her Royal Highness's pleasure that it should be presented to the Prince Jtegent j and there was an open copy for their perusal. On the 15th, the Earl of Liverpool presented his compli- ments to Lady Charlotte Campbell, and returned the letter Unopened. On the l6th, it was returned by Lady Charlotte, intimating, that as it contained matter of importance to the State, she relied on their laying it before his Royal Highness. It was again returned unopened, with the Earl of Liverpool's com- pliments to Lady Charlotte, saying, that the Prince saw no reason to depart from his determination. On the l?th, it was returned, in the same way, by command of her Royal Highness, expressing her confidence, that the two noble lords would not take upon themselves the responsibility ( X ) of not communicating the letter to his Royal Highness, and that she should not be the only subject in the empire, whose petition was not to be permitted to reach the throne. To this an answer was given, that the contents of it had been made known to the Prince. On the 19th, her Royal Highness directed a letter to be ad- dressed to the two noble lords, desiring to know whether it had been made known to his Royal Highness, by being read to him, and to know his pleasure thereon. No answer was given to this letter, and therefore on the 20th, she directed a letter to be written, expressing her sur- prize, that no answer had been given to her application for a whole week. To this, an answer was received, addressed to the Princess, stating, that in consequence of her Royal Highness's demand. her letter had been read to the Prince Regent on the 23rd, but that he had not been pleased to express his pleasure thereon. The following is a copy of this important document : " Sir, " Jt is with great reluctance that I presume to obtrude myself upon your Royal Highness, and to solicit your attention to matters which may, at first, appear rather of a personal than a public nature. If I could think them so — if they related merely to myself- — I should abstain from a proceeding which might give uneasiness, or interrupt the more weighty occupa- tions of your Royal H'ghness's time. I should continue, in silence and retirement, to lead the life which has been pre- scribed to me, and console myself for the loss of that society and those domestic comforts to which I have so long been a stranger, by the reflection that it has been deemed proper I should be afflicted without any fault of my own — and that you» Royal Highness knows. " But, Sir, there are considerations of a higher nature than any regard to my own happiness, which render this address a duty both to myself and my daughter,, May I venture to say —a duty also to my husband, and the people committed to his oare ? There is a point beyond which a guiltless womaa ( xi ) cannot with safety carry her forbearance. If her honour is invaded, the defence of her reputation is no longer a matter of choice $ and it signifies not whether the attack be made openly, manfully, and directly — or by secret insinuation, and by holding such conduct towards her as countenances all the suspicions that malice can suggest. If these ought to be the feelings of every woman in England who is conscious that she deserves no reproach, your Royal Highness has too sound a judgment, and too nice a sense of honour, not to perceive, how much more justly they belong to the mother of your daughter — the mother of her who is destined, I trust at a very distant period, to reign over the British Empire. " It may be known to your Royal Highness, that during the continuance of the restrictions upon your royal authority, I purposely refrained from making any representations which might then augment the painful difficulties of your exalted station. At the expiration of the restrictions, I still was in- clined to delay taking this step, in the hope that I might owe the redress I sought to your gracious and unsolicited conde- scension. I have waited, in the fond indulgence of this expectation, until, to my inexpressible mortification, I find that my unwillingness to complain, has only produced fresh grounds of complaint; and I am at length compelled, either to abandon all regard for the two dearest objects which I pos- sess on earth, mine own honour, and my beloved child, or to throw myself at the feet of your Royal Highness, the natural protector of both. " I presume, Sir, to represent to your Royal Highness, that the separation, which every succeeding month is making wider, of the mother and the daughter, is equally injurious to my character and to her education. I say nothing of the deep wounds which so cruel an arrangement inflicts upon my feel- ings, although I would fain hope that few persons wiil be found of a disposition to think lightly of these. To see my- self cut off from one of the few domestic enjoyments left me —certainly the only one upon which I set any value, the society of my child— involves me in such misery, as I well t m ) know your Royal Highness could never inflict upon me if yotjt were aware of its bitterness. Our intercourse has been gra- dually diminished. A single interview, weekly, seemed suf- ficiently hard allowance for a mother's affections. That; however, was reduced to our meeting once a fortnight j and I now learn that even this most rigorous interdiction is to be still more rigidly enforced. '• But while I do not venture to intrude my feelings as a mother upon your Royal Highness's notice, I must be allowed to say, that in the eyes of an observing and jealous world, this separation of a daughter from her mother, will only ad- mit of one construction-— a construction fatal to the mother's reputation. Your Royal Highness will also pardon me for ad- ding, that there is no less inconsistency than injustice; in this treatment. He who dares advise your Royal Highness to over- look the evidence of my innocence, and disregard the sentence of complete acquittal which it produced j or is wicked and false enough still to whisper suspicions in your ear, betrays his duty to you, sir, to your daughter, and to your people, if he counsels you to permit a day to pass without a further investigation of my conduct. I know that no such calum- niator will venture to recommend a measure which must speedily end in his utter confusion. Then Jet me implore you to reflect on the situation in which I am placed : without the shadow of a charge against me— without even an accuser- after an inquiry that led to my ample vindication — yet treated as if I were still more culpable than the perjuries of my suborned traducers represented me, and held up to the world as a mother who may not enjoy the society of her only child. " The feelings, sir, which are natural to my unexampled situation, might justify me in the gracious judgment of your Royal Highness had I no other motives for addressing you but such as relate to myself. But I will not disguise from your Royal Highness what I cannot for a moment conceal from my- self, that the serious, and it soon may be, the irreparable injury which my daughter sustains from the plan at present t xiii ) pursued, has done more in overcoming my reluctance to in- trude upon your Royal Highness, than any sufferings of my own could accomplish ^ and if for her sake I presume to call away your Royal Highness's attention from the other cares of your exalted station, I feel confident I am not claiming it for a "matter of inferior importance either to yourself or your people. " The powers with which the constitution of these realms vests your Royal Highness in the regulation of the royal family, I know, because I am so advised, are ample and unquestion- able. My appeal, sir, is made to your excellent sense and liberality of mind in the exercise of those powers ; and I willingly hope that your own parental feelings will lead you to excuse the anxiety of mine for impelling me to represent the unhappy consequences which the present system must en- tail upon our beloved child. (t It is impossible, sir, that any one can have attempted to persuade your Royal Highness, that her character will not be injured by the perpetual violence offered to her strongest af- fections — the studied care taken to estrange her from my society, and even to interrupt all communication between us ? That her love for me, with whom, by his Majesty's wise and gracious arrangements, she passed the years of her infancy and childhood, never can be extinguished, I well know, and the knowledge of it forms the greatest blessing of my existence. " But let me implore your Royal Highness to reflect how inevitably all attempts to abate this attachment, by forcibly se- parating us, if they succeed, must injure my child's principles — if they fail, must destroy her happiness. u The plan of excluding my daughter from all intercourse with the world, appears to my humble judgment peculiarly unfor- tunate. She who is destined to be the sovereign of this great country, enjoys none of those advantages of society which are deemed necessary for imparting a knowledge of mankind to persons who have infinitely less occasion to learn that impor- tant lesson j and it may so happen, by a chance which I trust is very remote, that she should be called upon to exercise the ( xiv ) powers of the Crown, with an experience of the world more confined than that of the most private individual. To the ex- traordinary talents with which she is blessed, and which ac- company a disposition as singularly amiable, frank, and de- cided, I willingly trust much -, but beyond a certain point the greatest natural endowments cannot struggle against the dis- advantages of circumstances and situation. It is my earnest prayer, for her own sake, as well as her country's, that your Royal Highness may be induced to pause before this point be reached. " Those who have advised you, sir, to delay so long the period of my daughter's commencing her intercourse with the world, and for that purpose to make Windsor her residence, appear not to have regarded the interruptions to her education which this arrangement occasions ; both by the impossibility of obtaining Sthe attendance of proper teachers, and the time unavoidably consumed in the frequent journies to town, which she must make, unless she is to be secluded from all intercourse, even with your Royal Highness and the rest of the royal family. To the same unfortunate counsels I ascribe a circumstance in every way so distressing both to my parental and religious feelings, that my daughter has never yet enjoyed the benefit of confir- mation, although above a year older than the age at which all the other branches of the royal family have partaken of that solemnity. May I earnestly conjure you, sir, to hear my in- treaties upon this serious matter, even if you should listen to other advisers on things of less near concernment to the wel- fare of our child ? " The pain with which I have at length formed the resolution of addressing myself to your Royal Highness is such as I should in vain attempt to express. If I could adequately describe it, you might be enabled, sir, to estimate the strength of the motives which have made me submit to it. They are the most powerful feelings of affection, and the deepest impressions of duty towards your Royal Highness, my beloved child, and the country, which I devotedly hope she may be preserved to govern, and to shew, by a new example, the liberal affection of ( xv ) a free and generous people to a virtuous and constitutional monarch. morrow, (the 19th inst.), to answer by whose authority they had published the depositions before the Frivy Council, and from whom they had received them." After some remarks from Mr. Ryder, Mr. C. Wynne, and Mr. Canning, Mr. Whitbread consented to withdraw his ori- ginal motion, and Mr. Tierney's amendment was then put, and negatived, without a division. Before the reader enters upon the perusal of the {< Book Itself," some account of the circumstances which gave rise to its important contents, may, perhaps, be acceptable. This indeed, is in some measure, necessary to the right understand- ing of that mass of extraordinary evidence now exhibited to the public. In the beginning of November 1805, his Royal Highness the Duke of Sussex made, known to the Prince that Sir John Douglas had communicated to him some circumstances in the conduct of the Princess of Wales, that it was of the utmost con- sequence to the honour of his Royal Highness, and to the se- curity of the Royal Succession, should be made known to him ; and that Sir John said, he and his Lady were ready to give a full disclosure, if called upon. He added, that his Royal Highness the Duke of Kent had been partly acquainted with the matter a twelvemonth before. ( Xxxii ) In consequence! of this, the Prince called on the Duke of Kent, to say what had been communicated to him, and why he had for a whole year kept from his knowledge a matter so interesting to the honour of the family. The Duke of Kent, in a written declaration, stated, that about the end of 1804, he had received a note from the Prin- cess of Wales, stating, that she had got into an unpleasant al- tercation with Sir John and Lady Douglas, about an anony- mous letter and a filthy drawing, which they imputed to her Royal Highness. She requested the Duke of Kent to inter- fere, and prevent its going farther. His Royal Highness ap- plied to Sir Sidney Smith, and through him had an interview with Sir John Douglas ; who seemed convinced that both the anonymous letters and the loose drawing were by the hand of the Princess, and that the design was to provoke Sir John Douglas to a duel with his friend Sir Sidney Smith, by the gross insinuation flung out. respecting the latter and Lady Douglas. The Duke of Kent, however, succeeded in prevail- ing on Sir John Douglas to ahstain from his purpose of com- mencing a prosecution, or of stirring farther in the business j as he was satisfied in his mind of the falsehood of the insinua- tion, and could not be sure that tbe fabrications were not some gossipping story, in which the Princess had no hind. Sir John, however, spoke with great indignation of the conduct of the Princess, and promised only that he would for the present ab- stain from farther investigation, but would not give him a pro- mise of preserving silence if he should be farther annoyed. — The Duke of Kent concluded with stating, that nothing was communicated to him beyond this fracas,, and that having suc- ceeded in stopping it, he did not think it fit to trouble his Royal Highness with a gossipping story that might be entirely founded on the misapprehension of the offended parties. Sir John and Lady Douglas then made a formal declaration ©f the whole narrative, as contained in their qent affida- vits, before the Duke of York, on the 3d December, 2S03. i This declaration was submitted by the Prince to the late Lord Thurlow, who said, that his Royal Highness had no al- ternative — it was his duty to submit it to the King, as the Royal Succession might be affected if the allegations were true, In the mean time, it was resolved to make farth, inquiry, and Mr. Low ten, of the Temple, was directed to take steps ac- cordingly. The consequence was that William and Sarah Lampert (ser- vants to Sir John Douglas), William Cole, II )eit and Sarah Bidgood, and Frances Lloyd made declarations, the whole of 'which, together with that of Sir John and Lady Douglas were submitted to his Majesty, who thereupon issued a warrant, dated the 29th May 180fj, directing Lord E^kine", Lord Gren- ville, Earl Spencer, and Lord Ellenborougb, to inquire into the truth of the allegations, and to report to him thereon. .'I ) .,11! .» THE PROCEEDINGS, $€. §C. REPORT OF THE COMMISSIONERS. May it please Your Majesty, Your Majesty having been graciously pleased, by an instrument under Your Majesty's Royal Sign Manual, a copy of which is annexed to this Report, to " authorize, empower, and direct us " to inquire into the truth of certain written " declarations, touching the conduct of Her 11 Royal Highness the Princess of Wales, an " abstract of which had been laid before Your M Majesty, and to examine upon oath such " persons as we should see fit, touching and con- " cerning the same, and to report to You* " Majesty the result of such examinations." We have, in dutiful obedience to Your Majesty's com- mands, proceeded to examine the several witnesses, the copies of whose depositions we have hereunto annexed; and, in further execution of the said commands we now most respectfully submit to Your Majesty the report of these examinations as it has appeared to us : But we beg leave at the same time humbly to refer Your Majesty, for more complete information, to the examinations themselves, in order to correct any error of judg- ment, into which we may have unintentionally fallen, with respect to any part of this business. On a reference to the above-mentioned declara- tions, as the necessary foundation of all our pro- ceedings, we found that they consisted in certain statements, which had been laid before His Royal Highness the Prince of Wales, respecting the conduct of Her Royal Highness the Princess. That these statements, not only, imputed to Her Royal Highness great impropriety and indecency of behaviour, but expressly asserted, partly on the ground of certain alleged declarations from the Princess's own mouth, and partly on the personal observation of the informants, the fol- lowing most important facts ; viz. That Her Royal Highness had been pregnant in the year 1802, in consequence of an illicit intercourse, and that she had in the same year been secretly delivered of a male child, which child had ever since that period been brought up by Her Royal Highness in her own house, and under her imme- diate inspection. These allegations thus made, had, as we found, been followed by declarations from other persons, who had not indeed spoken to the important facts of the pregnancy or delivery of Her Royal Highness, but had related other particulars, in themselves extremely suspicious, and still more so when connected with the assertions already mentioned. In the painful situation, in which His Royal Highness was placed, by these communications, we learnt that His Royal Highness had adopted the only course which could, in our judgment, with propriety be followed. When informations such as these, had been thus confidently alleged, and particularly detailed, and had been in some degree supported by collateral evidence, applying to other points of the same nature (though going to a far less extent), one line only could be pur- sued. Every sentiment of duty to Your Majesty, and of concern for the public welfare, required that these particulars should not be withheld from Your Majesty, to whom more particularly be- longed the cognizance of a matter of State, so nearly touching the honour of Your Majesty's Royal Family, and by possibility, affecting the Succession of Your Majesty's crown. Your Majesty had been pleased, on your part, to view the subject in the same light. Consider- ing it as a matter which, on every account, de- manded the most immediate investigation, Your Majesty had thought fit to commit into our hands the duty of ascertaining, in the first instance, what degree of credit was due to the informations, and thereby enabling Your Majesty to decide what further conduct to adopt concerning them. On this review, therefore, of the matters thus alleged, and of the course hitherto pursued upon them, we deemed it proper in the first place, to examine those persons in whose declarations the occasion for this Inquiry had originated. Because if they, on being examined upon oath, had retrac- ted or varied their assertions, all necessity for further investigation might possibly have been precluded. We accordingly first examined on oath the principal informants, Sir John Douglas, and Char- lotte his wife : who both positively swore, the former to his having observed the fact of tbe pregnancy of Her Royal Highness, and the latter to all the important particulars contained in her former declaration, and above referred to. Their examinations are annexed to this Report, and are circumstantial and positive. The most material of those allegations, into the truth of which we had been directed to inquire, being thus far supported by the oath of the parties from whom they had proceeded, we then felt it our duty to follow up the Inquiry by the examina- tion of such other persons as we judged best able to afford us information, as to the facts in ques- tion. We thought it beyond all doubt that, in this course of inquiry, many particulars must be learnt which would be necessarily conclusive on the truth or falsehood of these declarations. So many persons must have been witnesses to the appear- ances of an actually existing pregnancy ; so many circumstances must have been attendant upon a real delivery; and difficulties so numerous and insurmountable must have been involved in any attempt to account for the infant in question, as the child of another woman, if it had been in fact the child of the Princess ; that we entertained a full and confident expectation of arriving at com- plete proof, either in the affirmative or negative, on this part of the subject. This expectation was not disappointed. We are happy to declare to Your Majesty our perfect conviction that there is no foundation whatever for believing that the child now with the Princess is the child of Her Royal Highness, or that she was delivered of any child in the year 1802; nor has any thing appeared to us which would warrant the belief that she was pregnant in that year, or at any other period within the compass of our in- quiries. The indentity of the child, now with the Princess, its parentage, the place and the date of its birth, the time and the circumstances of its being first taken under Her Royal Highness's protection, are all established by such a concur- rence both of positive and circumstantial evidence, as can, in our judgment, leave no question oh this part of the subject. The child was, beyond all doubt, born in the Brownlow- Street Hospital, on the 1 1th day of July, 1802, of the body of So- phia Austin, and was first brought to the Princess's House in the month of November following. Nei- ther should we be more warranted in expressing any doubt respecting the alleged pregnancy of the Princess, as stated in the original declara- tions ; — a fact so fully contradicted, and by so many witnesses, to whom, if true, it must, in various ways have been known, that we cannot think it entitled to the smallest credit. The testimonies on these two points are contained in the annexed deposi- tions and letters. We have not partially abstracted them in this Report lest, by any unintentional omission, we might weaken their effect ; but we humbly offer to Your Majesty this our clear and unanimous judgment upon them, formed on full deliberation, and pronounced without hesitation, on the result of the whole Inquiry. We do not, however, feel ourselves at liberty, much as we should wish it, to close our Report here. Besides the allegations of the pregnancy and delivery of the Princess, those declarations, on the whole of which Your Majesty has been pleased to command us to inquire and report, contain, 9 as we have already remarked, other particulars respecting the conduct of her Royal Highness, such as must, especially considering her exalted rank and station, necessarily give occasion to very unfavourable interpretations. From the various depositions and proofs an- nexed to this Report, particularly from the exa- minations of Robert Bidgood, William Cole, Frances Lloyd, and Mrs. Lisle, Your Majesty will perceive that several strpng circumstances of this description have been positively sworn to by witnesses, who cannot, in our judgment, be sus- pected of any unfavourable bias, and whose vera- city, in this respect, we have seen no ground to question. On the precise bearing and effect of the facts thus appearing, it is not for us to decide ; these we submit to Your Majesty's wisdom : But we conceive it to be our duty to report on this part of the Inquiry, as distinctly as on the former facts : that, as on the one hand, the facts of pregnancy and delivery are to our minds satisfactorily dis- proved, so on the other hand we think, that the circumstances to which we now refer, particularly those stated to have passed between Her Royal Highness and Captain Man by, must be credited until they shall receive some decisive contradic- tion ; and, if true, are justly entitled to the most serious consideration. 10 We cannot close this Report, without humbly assuring Your Majesty, that it was, on every account, our anxious wish, to have executed this delicate trust, with as little publicity as the nature of the case would possibly allow ; and we entreat Your Majesty's permission to express our full per- suasion, that if this wish has been disappointed, the failure is not imputable to any thing unnecessarily said or done by us. All which is most humbly submitted to Your Majesty, (Signed) ERSKINE, SPENCER, GRENVILLE, July 14th, 1806. ELLENBOROUGH. A true Copy, J. Becket. The Depositions which accompanied this Report will be found in Appendix (A,) numbered from 1 to 29. Blackheath, Aug. 12, 1806*. Sire, With the deepest feelings of gratitude to your Majesty, I take the first opportunity to acknow- ledge having received, as yesterday only, the Re- port from the Lords Commissioners, which was 11 V dated from the 14th of July. It was brought by Lord Erskine's Footman, directed to the Princess of Wales ; besides a note enclosed, the contents of which were, that Lord Erskine sent the Evidences and Report by commands of his Majesty. I had reason to flatter myself that the Lords Commis- sioners would not have given in the Report, be- fore they had been properly informed of various circumstances, which must for a feeling, and deli- cate-minded woman, be very unpleasant to have spread, without having the means to exculpate herself. But I can in the face of the Almighty assure your Majesty that your Daughter-in-law is innocent, and her conduct unquestionable ; free from all the indecorums, and improprieties, which are imputed to her at present by the Lords Com- missioners, upon the evidence of persons, who speak as falsely as Sir John and Lady Douglas themselves. Your Majesty can be sure that I shall be anxious to give the most solemn denial in my power to all the scandalous stories of Bidgood, and Cole ; to make my conduct be cleared in the most satisfactory way, for the tranquillity of your Majesty ; for the honour of your illustrious family, and the gratification of your afflicted daughter-in- law. In the mean time I can safely trust your Majesty's gracious justice to recollect, that the whole of the evidence on which the commissioners have given credit to the infamous stories charged against me, was taken behind my back, without my having any opportunity to contradict or explain If any thing, or «even to point out those personsy who might have been called, to prove the little credit which was due to some of the witnesses, from their connection with Sir John and Lady Douglas ; and the absolute falsehood of parts of the evidence, which could have been completely contradicted. Oh ! gracious King, I now look for that happy moment, when I may be allowed to appear again before your Majesty's eyes, and receive once more the assurance from } 7 our Majesty's own mouth that I have your gracious protection ; and that you will not discard me from your friendship, of which your Majesty has been so condescending to give me so many marks of kindness; and which must be my only support, and my only consolation, in this country. I remain with sentiments of the highest esteem, veneration, and unfeigned attach- ment, Sire, Your Majesty's most dutiful, submissive, and humble Daughter-in-law and Subject, (Signed) CAROLINE. To the King, 13 Montague- House, Aug. 1 7th, 1 806*. The Princess of Wales desires the Lord Chan- cellor to present her humble duty to the King, and to lay before His Majesty the accompanying letter and papers. The Princess makes this com- munication by his Lordship's hands, because it relates to the papers with which she has been furnished through his Lordship, by His Majesty's commands. To the Lord Chancellor. Aug. 17th, 1806. Sire, Upon receiving the copy of the Report, made to Your Majesty, by the Commissioners, appointed to inquire into certain Charges against my Conduct, I lost no time, in returning to your Majesty, my heartfelt thanks, for your Majesty's goodness in commanding that copy to be communicated to me. I wanted no adviser, but my own heart, to express my gratitude for the kindness, and protec- tion which I have uniformly received from your Majesty. I needed no caution or reserve, in expressing my confident reliance, that that kind- ness and protection would not dq withdrawn from 14 me, on this trying occasion ; and that your Majes- ty's justice would not suffer your mind to be affected, to my disadvantage, by any part of a Report, founded upon partial evidence, taken in my absence, upon charges, not yet communicated to me, until your Majesty had heard, what might be alleged, in my behalf, in answer to it. But your Majesty, will not be surprised, nor displeas- ed, that I, a woman, a stranger to the laws and usages of your Majesty's kingdom, under charges, aimed, originally, at my life, and honour, should hesitate to determine, in what manner I ought to act, even under the present circumstances, with respect to such accusations, without the assistance of advice in which I could confide. And I have had submitted to me the following observations, respecting the copies of the papers with which I have been furnished. And I humbly solicit from your Majesty's gracious condescension and justice, a compliance with the requests, which arise out of them. In the first place, it has been observed to me, that these copies of the Report, and of the accom- panying papers, have come unauthenticated by the signature of any person, high, or low, whose veracity, or even accuracy, is pledged for their correctness, or to whom resort might be had, if it should be necessary, hereafter, to establish, that these papers are correct copies of the originals. I am far from insinuating that the want of such attestations was intentional. No doubt it was omit- 15 ted through inadvertence; but its importance is particularly confirmed by the state, in which the copy of Mrs. Lisle's examination has been trans- mitted to me. For in the third page of that exami- nation there have been two erasures ; on one of which, some words have been, subsequently in- troduced apparently in a different hand-writing from the body of the examination ; and the passage as it stands, is probably incorrect, because the phrase is unintelligible. And this occurs in an important part of her examination. The humble, but earnest request, which I have to make to your Majesty, which is suggested by this observation, is, that your Majesty would be graciously pleased to direct, that the Report, and the papers which accompany it, and which, for that purpose, I venture to transmit to your Majes- ty with this letter, may be examined, and then returned to me, authenticated as correct, under the signature of some person, who, having attested their accuracy, may be able to prove it. In the second place, it has been observed to me, that the Report proceeds, by reference to certain written declarations, which the Commission- ers describe as the necessary foundation of all their proceedings, and which contain, as I presume, the charge or information against my conduct. Yet copies of these written declarations have not been given to me. They are .described indeed, in the Report, as consisting in certain statements, respect- ing my conduct, imputing not only, gross impro- priety of behaviour, but expressly asserting facts of the most confirmed, and abandoned criminality, for which, if true, my life might be forfeited. These are stated to have been followed by declarations from other persons, who, though not speaking to the same facts, had related other particulars, in themselves extremely suspicious, and still more so, as connected with the assertions already mentioned. On this, it is observed to me, that it is most im- portant that I should know the extent, and the particulars of the charges or informations against me, and by what accusers they have been made ; whether I am answering the charges of one set of accusers, or more. Whether the authors of the original declarations, who may be collected from the Report to be Sir John and Lady Douglas, are my only accusers ; and the declarations which are said to have followed, are the declarations of per- sons adduced as witnesses by Sir John and Lady Douglas to confirm their accusation; or whether such declarations are the charges of persons, who have made themselves also, the authors of distinct accusations against me. The requests, which, I humbly hope, your Ma- jesty will think reasonable, and just to grant, and which are suggested by these further observations are, First, That your Majesty would be graciously pleased to direct, that I should be furnished with copies of these declarations ; and, if they are rightly described in the Report, as the necessary founda- 17 tion of all the proceedings of the Commissioners, your Majesty could not, I am persuaded, but have graciously intended, in directing that I should be furnished with a copy of the Report, that I should also see this essential part of the proceeding, the foundation on which it rests. Secondly, That I may be informed whether I have one or more, and how many accusers ; and who they are ; as the weight and credit of the ac- cusation cannot but be much affected by the quar- ter from whence it originates. Thirdly, That I may be informed of the time when the declarations were made. For the weight and credit of the accusation must, also, be much affected, by the length of time, which my accusers may have been contented to have been the silent depositories of those heavy matters of guilt, and charge, and, Lastly, That your Majesty's goodness will se- cure to me a speedy return of these papers, ac- companied, I trust, with the further information which I have solicited ; but at all events a speedy return of them. And your Majesty will see, that it is not without reason, that I make this last request, when your Majesty is informed, that, though the Report appears to have been made upon the 14th of July, yet it was not sent to me, till the 1 1 th of the present month. A similar delay, I should, of all things, deplore. For it is with reluctance, that I yield to those suggestions, which have induced 18 me to lay, these, my humble requests, before your Majesty, since they must, at all events, in some de- gree, delay the arrival of that moment, to which, I look forward, with so earnest, and eager an im- patience ; when I confidently feel, I shall complete ly satisfy your Majesty, that the whole of these charges are alike unfounded : and are all parts of the same conspiracy against me. Your Majesty, so satisfied, will, I can have no doubt, be as anxious as myself, to secure to me that redress, which, the laws of your kingdom (administering, under your Majesty's just dispensation, equal protection and justice, to every description of your Majesty's sub- jects,) are prepared to afford to those, who are so deeply injured as I have been. That I have in this case, the strongest claim to your Majesty's justice, I am confident I shall prove ; but I cannot, as I am advised, so satisfactorily establish that claim, till your Majesty's goodness shall have directed me, to be furnished with an authentic statement of the ac- tual charges against me, and that additional infor- mation, which it is the object of this letter most humbly, yet earnestly, to implore. I am, Sire, Your Majesty's most dutiful, submissive, and humble Daughter-in-law, Montague House. (Signed) C. P. To the King. 19 Aug. 20th, 1806. The Lord Chancellor has the honour to return, to her Royal Highness the Princess of Wales, the box, as he received it this morning from His Ma- jesty. It contains the papers he formerly sent to her Royal Highness, and which he sends as they are, thinking that it may be in the meantime most agreeable to her Royal Highness- The reason of their not having been authenticat- ed by the Lord Chancellor, was, that he received them as copies, from Earl Spencer, who was in possession of the originals ; and he could not there- fore, with propriety, do so, not having himself compared them ; but Her Royal Highness may depend upon having other copies sent to her, which have been duly examined and certified to be so. The box will be delivered to one of her Royal Highness's Pages in waiting, by the principal offi- cer, attendant upon the Lord Chancellor, and he trusts he shall find full credit, with her Royal High- ness, that in sending a servant formerly with the papers, the moment he received them (no messen- ger being in waiting, and the officers who attend him, being detained by their duties in court,) fee could not be supposed to have intended any pos- sible disrespect, which he is incapable ©f shewing to any lady, but most especially to any member ©f r Jiis Majesty's Royal Family, T& Her Royal Highness the Princess of Wafcs* m Lincoln > Inn Fields, Aug. 24, 1806\ His Majesty has been pleased to transmit to me the letter which he has received from your Royal Highness, dated the 17th instant; and to direct, that I should communicate the same to the Lords Commissioners, who had been commanded by His Majesty to report to His Majesty on the matters therein referred to ; and I have now received His Majesty's further commands, in consequence of that letter, to acquaint your Royal Highness, that when I transmitted to your Royal Highness, by the King's couintaods, and under my signature, the copies of official papers, which Imd been laid before His Majesty, those papers were judged thereby duly authenticated, according to the usual course and forms of office ; and sufficiently so, for the purposes, for which, His Majesty had been gra- ciously pleased to direct them to be communicated to your Royal Highness. That, nevertheless, there does not appear to be any reason for His Majesty's declining a compliance with the request which your Royal Highness has been advised to make, that tfiose copies should, after being examined with the originals, be at- tested by some person to be named for that pur- pose : and that, if your Royal Highness will do me tlie honour to transmit them to me, they shall be examined and attested accordingly, after cor- recting any errors, that may have occurred in the copying. 21 His Majesty lias further authorized me to ac- quaint your Royal Highness, that he is graciously pleased, on your Royal Highness's request, to con- sent, that copies of the written declarations, referred to in the Report of the Lords Commissioners, should be transmitted to your Royal Highness, and that the same will be transmitted accordingly, go soon as they can be transcribed. (Signed) ERSKINE C. The Lord Chancellor has the honour to add to tfee above official communication, that his Parse- bearer respectfully waits her Royal Highness's com- mands, in case it should be Her Royal Highness's pleasure to return the papers by him. Her Royal Highness the Princess of Wales. Lincoln's Inn Fields, Aug. 29th, 1806. The Lord Chancellor has the honour to transmit, to Her Royal Highness the Princess of Wales, the papers,* desired by Her Royal Highness, just as he received them a few minutes ago from Earl Spencer, with the note accompanying them. * N. B. These papers, being the original decla- rations, on which the Inquiry proceeded will be found in Appendix (A.) 22 Aug. 31st, 1806. Her Royal Highness the Princess of Wales acquaints the Lord Chancellor, that the gentle- man, with whom her Royal Highness advises, and who had possession of the copies of the official papers communicated to Her Royal Highness, by the Lord Chancellor, returned from the coun- try late yesterday evening. Upon the subject of transmitting these papers to the Lord Chancellor, for the purpose of their being examined, and authenticated, and then returned to Her Royal Highness, he states, that in consequence of the Lord Chancellor's assurance, contained in his note of the 20th inst. that Her Royal Highness might depend upon having other copies sent to her, which had been duly examined and certified to be so ; he has relied upon being able to refer to those already sent, and therefore it would be incon- venient to part with them at present : and Her Royal Highness therefore hopes, that the Lord Chancellor will procure for her the other authenti- cated copies, which his Lordship promised in his note of the 20th inst. With respect to the copies already sent, being as the Lord Chancellor expresses it, in his letter of the 24th inst. " judged to be duly authenticated " according to the usual course and forms of office, 11 and sufficiently so for the purpose for which M His Majesty had been graciously pleased to 23 " direct them to be communicated to Her Royal " Highness, because they were transmitted to " Her, by the King's commands, and under his M Lordship's signature," — Her Royal Highness could never have wished for a more authentic attestation, if she had conceived, that they were authenticated under such signature. But she could not think that the mere signature of his Lordship, on the outside of the envelope, which contained them, could afford any authenticity to the thirty papers, which that envelope contained ; or could, in any manner, identify any of those papers, as having been contained in that envelope. And she had felt herself confirmed in that opinion, by his Lordship's saying in his note of the 20th inst. " that the reason of their not having been authen- u ticated, by the Lord Chancellor, was, that he " received them as copies from Earl Spencer, who Sf recollect, that on the 13th I returned my grateful thanks to your Majesty, for having ordered these papers to be sent to me. • Your Majssty will readily imagine that, upon a subject of such importance, I could not venture to trust only to my own advice; and those with whom I advised, suggested, that the written Declarati- ons or Charges upon which the Inquiry had pro- ceeded, and which the Commissioners refer to in their Report, and represent to be the essential foundation of the whole proceeding, did not ac- company the Examinations and Report; and also that the papers themselves were not authenticat- ed. I therefore ventured to address your Ma- jesty, upon these supposed defects in the com- munication, and humbly requested that the copies of the papers, which I then returned, might, after being examined, and authenticated, be again transmitted to me ; and that I might also be furnished with copies of the written Declarations so referred to in the Report. And my humble thanks are due for your Majesty's gracious com- pliance with my request. On the 29th of August I received, in consequence, the attested copies of those Declarations, and of a Narrative of His Royal Highness the Duke of Kent; and a few days after, on the 3d of September, the attested copies of the Examinations which were taken before the Commissioners. 35 The Papers which I have received are as follow : * The Narrative of His Royal Highness the Duke of Kent, dated 27th of December, 1805. A Copy of the written Declaration of Sir John and Lady Douglas, dated December 3, 1805. A Paper containing the written Declarations, or Examinations, of the persons hereafter enu- merated ; — The title to these Papers is, " For the purpose of confirming the Statement u made by Lady Douglas, of the circumstances ?* mentioned in her Narrative, The following ex- " animations have been taken, and which have '• been signed by the several persons who have " been examined" — Two of Sarah Lampert ; — one, dated Chelten- ham, 8th January, 1806, — and the otl^er, 29th March, 1806. One of William Lampert, baker, 1 14, Chelten- ham, apparently of the same date with the last of Sarah Lam pen's. Four of William Cole, dated respectively, 1 1 th January 14th January, 30th January, and 23rd February, 1806. One of Robert Bidgood, dated Temple, 4th April, 1806. One of Sarah Bidgood, dated Temple, 23rd April, 1806; and One of Frances Lloyd, dated Temple, 12th May, 1806. See Appendix (B). 36 The other Papers and Documents which ac? companied the Report, are,* .J 805. No. 29 May, 1. The King's Warrant or Commis^ sion. Deposition of Lady Douglas. of Sir John Douglas, of Robert Bidgood. of W. Cole, of Frances Lloyd, of Mary Wilson, of Samuel Roberts, of Thomas Stikeman. of J. Sicard. of Charlotte Sander, of Sophia Austin. Letter from Lord Spencer to Lord Gwydir. 21 14. from Lord Gwydir to Lord Spencer. 21 15. from Lady Willoughby to Lord Spencer. 23 16\ Extract from Register of Brown- low-street Hospital. 23 17. Deposition of Elizabeth Gosden. 23 18. of Betty Townley. 25 19. of Thomas Edmeades. 25 20. of Samuel G. Mills. 27 21. of Hariet Fitzgerald. 1 July, 22. Letter from Lord Spencer to Lord Gwydir. 1 June, 2. 1 3. 6 4. 6 5. 7 6. 7 7. 7 8. 7 9. 7 10. 7 11. 7 12. 20 13. f See Appendix (A) 37 3 July, 23. 3 24. 3 25. 3 26. 3 27. 4 28. }6 14 29. 30. Letter from Lord Gwydir to Lord Spencer, Queries to Lady Willougliby and Answers. Furtherdeposition of R.Bidgood. Deposition of Sir F. Millman. of Mrs. Lisle. Letter from Sir Francis Millman to the Lord Chancellor. Deposition of Lord Cholmon- deley. The Report. By the Copy which I have received of the Commission, or Warrant, under which the In- quiry has been prosecuted, it appears to bean in- strument under your Majesty's Sign Manual, not countersigned, notunder any seal. — It recites, that an Abstract of certain written Declarations, touch- ing my conduct (without specifying by whom those Declarations were made, or the nature of the mat- ters, touching which they had been made, or even by whom the Abstract had been prepared,) had been laid before your Majesty ; into the truth of which it purports to authorize the four noble Peers, who are named in it, to inquire and to ex- amine upon oath, such persons as they think fit ; and to report to your Majesty the result of their Examination. By referring to the written Decla- rations, it appears that they contain allegations against me, amounting to the charge of High Trea- son, and also other matters, which, if understood 38 to be, as they seem to have been acted and report* ed upon, by the Commissioners, not as evidence confirmatory (as they are expressed to be in their title) of the principal charge, but as distinct and substantive subjects of examination, cannot, as I am advised, be represented, as in law, amount- ing to crimes. How most of the Declarations referred to were collected, by whom, at whose so- licitation, under what sanction, and before what persons, magistrates or others, they were made, does not appear. By the title, indeed, which all the written Declarations, except Sir John and Lady Douglas's bear, viz. " That they had been taken for the purpose of confirming Lady Doug- las's Statement," it may be collected, that they had been made by her, or at least by Sir John Douglas's procurement. And the concluding pas- sage of one of them, I mean the fourth declara- tion of W. Cole, strengthens this opinion, as it re- presents Sir John Douglas, accompanied by his Solicitor Mr. Lowten, to have gone down as far as Cheltenham for the examination of two of the witnesses whose declarations are there stated. I am, however, at a loss to know, at this moment, whom I am to consider? or whom I could legally fix y as my false accuser. From the circumstance last mentioned, it might be inferred, that Sir John and Lady Douglas, or one of them, is that accuser. But Lady Douglas, in her written Declaration, so far from representing the information whieh she then gives, as moving voluntarily from herself, 39 expressly states that she gives it under the direct command of His Royal Highness the Prince of Wales, and the papers leave me without informa- tion, from whom any communication to the Prince originated, which induced him to give such commands. Upon the question, how far the advice is agree- able to law, under which it was recommended to your Majesty, to issue this Warrant or Commis- sion, not countersigned, nor under seal, and with- out any of your Majesty's advisers, therefore, being on the face of it, responsible for its issuing, I am not competent to determine. And undoubtedly considering that the two high legal authorities, the Lord Chancellor, and the Lord Chief Justice of the King's Bench, consented to act under it, it is with the greatest doubt and diffidence, that I can bring myself to express any suspicion of its illega- lity. But if it he, as I am given to understand it is, open to question,whether, consistently with law, your Majesty should have been advised to com- mand, by this warrant or commission, persons (not to act in any known character, as Secretaries of State, as Privy Counsellors, as Magistrates other- wise empowered; but to act as Commissioners, and under the sole authority of such warrant, to in* quire (without any authority to hear and deter- mine any thing upon the subject of those Inqui- ries), into the known crime of High Treason, under the sanction of oaths, to be administered by them, as such Commissioners, and to report the result thereof to your Majesty. If, I say, there 40 can be any question upon the legality of such & Warrant or Commission, the extreme hardship, with which, it has operated upon me* the extreme prejudice, which it has done to my character, and to which such a proceeding must ever expose the person who is the object of it, obliges me, till I am fully convinced of its legality, to forbear from acknowledging its authority ; and, with all hu- mility and deference to your Majesty, to protest against it, and against all the proceedings under it. If this, indeed, were matter of mere form, I should be ashamed to urge it. But the actual hardships and prejudice which I have suffered by this proceeding, are most obvious. For, upon the principal charge against me, the Com- missioners have most satisfactorily, and |C with- out the least hesitation," for such is their express sion, reported their opinion of its falsehood. Sir John and Lady Douglas, therefore, who have sworn to its truth, have been guilty of the plain- est falsehood , yet upon the supposition of the illegality of this Commission, their falsehood must as I am informed, go unpunished. Upon that supposition, the want of legal authority in the Commissioners to inquire and to administer an oath, will render it impossible to give to this false- hood the character of perjury. But this is by no means the circumstance which I feel the most severely. Beyond the vindicating of my own character, and the consideration of providing for my future security, I can assure your Majesty, tbat the punishment of Sir John and Lady Doug- 41 las would afford me no satisfaction. It is not therefore with regard to that part of the charge, which is negatived, but with respect to those, which are sanctioned by the Report, those, which, not aiming at my life, exhaust themselves upon my character, and which the Commissioners have, in some measure sanctioned by their Re- port, that I have the greatest reason to complain. Had the Report sanctioned the principal charge, constituting a known legal crime, my innocence would have emboldened me, at all risques, (and to more, no person has ever been exposed from the malice, and falsehood of accusers) to have demanded that trial, which could legally deter- mine upon the truth or falsehood of such charge. Though I should even then indeed have had some cause to complain, because I should have gone to that trial, under the prejudice, necessarily raised against me, by that Report; yet into a proceeding before the just, open, and known tribunals of your Majesty's kingdom, I should have had a safe appeal from the result of an ex parte investigation. An investigation which, has exposed me to all the hardships of a secret In- quiry, without giving me the benefit of a secrecy ; and to all the severe consequences of a public in- vestigation, in point of injury to my character, without affording me any of its substantial bene- fits, in point of security. But the charges, whicia the Commissioners do sanction by the Report^ describing them, with a mysterious obscurity aatber gentlemen, sitting upon the same sofa ; and I trust your Majesty will feel it the hardest thing imaginable, that I should be called upon to ac- 83 count what corner of a sofa I sat upon four years ago, and how close Sir Sidney Smith was sitting to me. I can only solemnly aver to your Majesty, that my conscience supplies me with the fullest means of confidently assuring you, that I never permitted Sir Sidney Smith to sit on any sofa with me in any manner, which, in my own judgment, was in the slightest degree offensive to the strictest pro- priety and decorum. In the judgment of many persons perhaps, a Princess of Wales should at no time forget the elevation of her rank, or descend in any degree to the familiarities and intimacies of private life. Under any circumstances, this would be a hard condition to be annexed to her situation. Under the circumstances, in which it has been my Miisfortune to have lost the necessary support to the dignity and station of a Princess of Wales, to have assumed and maintained an unbending dignity would have been impossible, and if possible, could hardly have been expected from me. After these observations, Sire, I must now re- quest your Majesty's attention to those written declarations which are mentioned in the Report, and which I shall never be able sufficiently to thank your Majesty for having condescended, in compli- ance with my earnest request, to order to be trans- mitted to me, From observations upon those de- clarations themselves, as well as upon comparing them with the depositions made before the Com- missioners, your Majesty will see the strongest reason for discrediting the testimony of W. Cole, 84 as well as others of these witnesses whose credit stands in the opinion of the Commissioners so un- impeachable. They supply important observations, even with respect to that part of Mr. Cole's evi- dence which I am now considering, though in no degree equal in importance to those which I shall afterwards have occasion to notice. Your Majesty will please to observe, that there are no less than four different examinations, or de- clarations of Mr. Cole. They are dated on the 11th, 14th, and 30th of January, and on 23rd of February. In these four different declarations he twice mentions the circumstance of finding Sir Sid- ney Smith and myself on the sofa, and he mentions it not only in a different manner, at each of those times, but at both of them in a manner, which ma- terially differs from his deposition before the Com- missioners. In his declaration on the 1 1th of Janu- ary* he says, that he found us in so familiar a pos- ture, as to alarm him very much, which he express- ed by a start back and a look at the gentleman. In that dated on 22nd of February^ however (being asked, I suppose, as to that which he had dared to assert, of the familiar posture which had alarmed him so much,) he says, " there was nothing particular in our dress, position of legs, or arms, that was extraordinary ; he thought it improper that a single gentleman should be sitting quite close to a married lady on the sofa, and from that situa- * See x\ppendix (BO p. 98. f See Appendix (B.) p. 102. 85 tion, and former "observations ', he thought the thing improper. In this second account, therefore, your Majesty perceives he was obliged to bring in his former observations to help out the statement, in order to account for his having been so shocked with what he saw, as to express his alarm by " starting back." But, unfortunately, he accounts for it, as it seems to me at least, by the very cir- cumstance which would have induced him to have been less surprised, and consequently less startled by what lie saw ; for had his former observations been such as he insinuates, he would have been pre- pared the more to expect, and the less to be sur- prised at, what he pretends to have seen. . But your Majesty will observe, that in his depo- sition before the Commissioners,* (recollecting, perhaps, how awkwardly he had accounted for his starting in his former declaration,) he drops his starting altogether. Instead of looking at the gen- tleman only, he looked at us both ; that I caught his eye, and saw that he noticed the manner in which we were sitting ; and instead of his own starting, or any description of the manner in which he exhibited his own feelings, we are represented as both ap- pearing a little confused. Our confusion is a cir- cumstance, which, during his four declarations, which he made before the appointment of the four Commissioners, it never once occurred to him to recollect. And now he does recollect it, we ap- peared he says, " a little confused/' — A little con- fused !— The Princess of Wales detected in a situa- * Appendix (A.) p. 1 1. 86 tion such as to shock and alarm her servant, and so detected as to be sensible of her detection, and so conscious of the impropriety of the situation as to exhibit symptoms of confusion ; would not her con- fusion have been extreme? would it have been so little as to have slipped the memory of the witness who observed it, during his first four declarations, and at last to be recalled to his recollection in such a manner as to be represented in the faint and feeble way, in which he here describes it ? What weight your Majesty will ascribe to these differences in the accounts given by this witness, I cannot pretend to say. But I am ready to confess, that, probably, if there was nothing stronger of the same kind to be observed, in other parts of his testimony, the inference which would be drawn from them, would depend very much upon the opinion previously entertained of the witness. To me, who know many parts of his testimony to be absolutely false, and all the colouring given to it to be wholly from his own wicked and malicious in- vention, it appears plain, that these differences in his representations, are the unsteady, awkward, shuffles and prevarications of falsehood. — To those, if there are any such, who from preconceived pre- judices in his favour, or from any other circum- stances, think that his veracity is free from all sus- picion, satisfactory means of reconciling them may possibly occur. But before I have left Mr. Cole's examinations, your Majesty will find that they will have much more to account for, and much more to reconcile. 87 Mr. Cole's examination before the Commission- ers goes on thus: — " *A short time before this, " one night about twelve o'clock, I saw a man go " into the house from the Park, wrapt up in a " great coat. I did not give any alarm, for the " impression on my mind was, that it was not " a thief.*' When I read this passage, Sire, I could hardly believe my eyes ; when I found such a fact left in this dark state, without any further ex- planation, or without a trace in the examination, of any attempt to get it further explained. How he got this impression on his mind, that this was not a thief? Whom he believed it to be ? What part of the house he saw him enter ? If the drawing- room, or any part which I usually occupy, who was there at the time? Whether 1 was there? Whether alone, or with my Ladies ? or with other company ? Whether he told any body of the cir- cumstance at the time? or how long after ? Whom he told? Whether any inquiries were made in consequence ? These, and a thousand other ques- tions, with a view to have penetrated into the mys- tery of this strange story, and to have tried the credit of this witness, would, I should have thought, have occurred to any one ; but certainly must have occurred to persons so experienced, and so able in the examination of facts, and the trying of the credit of witnesses, as the two learned Lords un- questionably are, whom your Majesty took care * Appendix (A.) No, 5. 88 to have introduced into this Commission. They never could have permitted these unexplained and unsifted hints and insinuations to have had the weight and effect of proof. — But, unfortunately for me, the duties, probably, of their respective situa- tions prevented their attendance on the examina- tion of this, and on the first examination of another most important witness, Mr. Robert Bidgood — and surely your Majesty will permit me here, with- out offence, to complain, that it is not a little hard, that, when your Majesty had shewn your anxiety to have legal accuracy, and legal experience assist on this examination, the two most important wit- nesses, in whose examinations there is more mat- ter for unfavourable interpretation, than in all the rest put together, should have been examined with- out the benefit of this accuracy, and this experience. And I am the better justified in making this obser- vation, if what has been suggested to me is correct ; that, if it shall not be allowed that the power of ad- ministering an oath under this warrant or commis- sion is questionable, yet it can hardly be doubted, that it is most questionable whether, according to the terms or meaning of the warrant or commission as it constitutes no quorum, Lord Spencer and Lord Grenville could administer an oath, or act in the absence of the other Lords ; and if they could not, Mr. Cole's falsehood must be out of the reach of punishment. Returning then from this digression, will your Majesty permit me to ask, whether I am to under- $9 Stand this fact, respecting the man in a great coat, to be one of those which must necessarily give oc- casion to the most unfavourable interpretations ? which must be credited till decidedly contradicted ? and which if true, deserve the most serious consi- deration ? The unfavourable interpretations which this fact may occasion, doubtless are, that this man was either Sir Sidney Smith, or some other paramour, who was admitted by me into my house in disguise at midnight, for the accomplishment of my wicked and adulterous purposes. And is it possible that your Majesty, is it possible that any candid mind can believe this fact, with the un- favourable interpretations which it occasions, on the relation of a servant, who for all that appears, mentions it for the first time, four years after the event took place; and who gives himself, this picture of his honesty and fidelity to a master, whom he has served so long, that he, whose nerves are of so moral a frame, that he starts at seeing a single man sitting at mid-day, in an open drawing- room, on the same sofa, with a married woman, permitted this disguised midnight adulterer, to ap- proach his master's bed, without taking any notice, without making any alarm, without offering any interruption. And why ? because (as he expressly states) he did not believe him to be a thief; and because (as he plainly insinuates) he did believe him to be an adulterer^ But what makes the manner in which the Com- N 90 missioners suffered this fact to remain so unex- plained, the more extraordinary is this ; Mr. Cole had in his original declaration of the* 1 1th of Ja- nuary, which was before the Commissioners, stated "" that one night, about twelve o'clock, he saw a person wrapped up in a great coat, go across the Park into {he gate to the Green House, and he verily believes it was Sir Sidney Smith." In his de- claration then, (when he was not upon oath) he ventures to state, " that he verily believes it was Sir Sidney Smith. " When he is upon his oath, in his deposition before the Commissioners, all that he ventures to swear is, c ' that he gave no alarm, because the impression upon his mind was, that it was not a thief." And the difference is most im- portant. "The impression upon his mind was, that it was not a thief! !" I believe him, and the impression upon my mind too is, that he knew it was not a thief — That he knew who it was — and that he knew it was no other than my watchman. What incident it is that he alludes to, I cannot pre- tend to know. But this I know, that if it refers to any man with whose proceedings I have the least acquaintance or privity, it must have been my watchman ;- who, if he executes my orders, nightly, and often in the night, goes his rounds, both inside and outside of my house. And this circumstance, which I should think would rather afford, to most minds, an inference that I was not preparing the Appendix (B) p. 9S. 91 way of planning facilities for secret midnight assig- nations, has, in my conscience, I believe, (if there is one word of truth in any part of this story, and the whole of it is not pure invention) afforded the handle, and suggested the idea, to this honest, trusty man, this witness, " who cannot be suspected of any unfavourable bias," " whose veracity in that re- spect the Commissioners saw no ground to ques- tion," and " who must be credited till he received decided contradiction ; ,, suggested, I say, the idea of the dark and vile insinuation contained in this part of his testimony. Whether I am right or wrong, however, in this conjecture, this appears to be evident, that his ex- amination is so left, that supposing an indictment for perjury or false swearing, would lie against any witness, examined by the Commissioners, and sup- posing this examination had been taken before the whole four. — If Mr. Cole was indicted for perjury, in respect to this part of his deposition, the proof that he did see the watchman, would necessarily acquit him ; would establish the truth of what he said, and rescue him from the punishment of per- jury, though it would at the same time prove the falsehood and injustice of the inference, and the insinuation, for the establishment of which alone the fact itself was sworn. Mr. Cole chooses further tb state, that he as- cribes his removal from Montague House to Lon- don, to the discovery he had made, and the notice he had taken of the improper situation of Sir Sid- 92 ney Smith with me upon the sofa. To this I can oppose little more than my own assertions, as my motives can only be known to myself. — But Mr. Cole was a very disagreeable servant to me ; he was a man, who, as I always conceived, had been educated above his station. He talked French, and was a musician, playing well on the violin.— ^- By these qualifications he had got admitted occasi- onally, into better company, and this probably led to that forward and obtrusive conduct, which I thought extremely offensive and impertinent in a servant. 1 had long been extremely displeased with him ; I had discovered, that when I went out he would come into my drawing-room, and play on my harpsichord, or sit there reading my books ; — and, in short, there was a forwardness which w r ould have led to my absolutely discharging him a long time before, if I had not made a sort of rule to my- self, to forbear, as long as possible, from removing any servant who had been placed about me by his Royal Highness. — Before Mr. Cole lived with the Prince, he had lived with the Duke of Devon- shire, and I had reason to believe that he carried to Devonshire House all the observations he could make at mine. For these various reasons, just before the Duke of Kent was about to go out of the kingdom, I requested his Royal Highness the Duke of Kent, who had been good enough to take the trouble of arranging many particulars in my establishment, to make the arrangement with re- spect to Mr. Cole ; which was to leave him in town 9$ to wait upon me only when I went to Carlton House, and not to come to Montague House ex- cept when specially required. This arrangement, it seems, offended him. It certainly depriyed him of some perquisites which he had when living at Blackheath ; but upon the whole, as it left him so much more of his time at his own disposal, I should not have thought it had been much to his preju- dice. It seems, however, that he did not like it; and I must leave this part of the case with this one observation more — That your Majesty, I trust, will hardly believe, that, if Mr. Cole, had, by any accident, discovered any improper conduct of mine, towards Sir Sidney Smith, or any one else, the way which I should have taken to suppress his information, to close his mouth, would have been by immediately adopting an arrangement in my family, with regard to him, which was either pre* judicial or disagreeable to him : or that the way to remove him from the opportunity and the tempta- tion of betraying my secret, whether through levity or design, in the quarter where it would be most fatal to me that it should be known, was by making an arrangement which, while all his resentment and anger were fresh and warm about him, would place him frequently, nay, almost daily, at Carl- ton House; would place him precisely at that place, from whence, unquestionably, it must have been my interest to have kept him as far removed as possible. 'J here is little or nothing in the examinations of 94 the other witnesses which is material for me to ob- serve upon, as far as respects this part of the case. It appears from them indeed, what I have had no difficulty in admitting, and have observed upon before, that Sir Sidney Smith was frequently at Montague House — that they have known him to be alone with me in the morning, but that they never knew him alone with me in an evening, or staying later than my company or the ladies — for what Mr. Stikeman says, with respect to his being alone with me in an evening, can only mean, and is only reconcileable with all the rest of the evi- dence on this part of the case, by its being under- stood to mean alone, in respect of other company, but not alone, in the absence of my Ladies. The deposition indeed of my servant, S. Roberts, is thus far material upon that point, that it exhibits Mr. Cole, nat less than three years ago, endea- vouring to collect evidence upon these points to my prejudice. — For Your Majesty will find that he says, " I recollect Mr. Cole* once asking me, I " think three years ago, whether there were any " favourites in the family. I remember saying, " that Captain Manby and Sir Sidney Smith were " frequently at Blackheath, and dined there '" oftener than other persons." He then pro- " ceeds — ■" I never knew Sir Sidney Smith stay *' later than the Ladies ; I cannot exactly say at *' what time he went, but 1 never remember his "s t aying alone with the Princess." As to what is contained in the written declara- , * See Appendix (A) No. 8, 9*- tions of Mr. and Mrs. Lampert, the old servants of Sir John and Lady Douglas (as from some cir- cumstances or other respecting, I conceive, either their credit or their supposed importance) the Commissioners have not thought proper to exa- mine them upon their oaths,* I do not imagine Your Majesty would expect that I should take any notice of them. And as to what is deposed by my Lady Douglas, if your Majesty will observe the gross and horrid indecencies with which she ushers in, and states my confessions to her, of my asserted criminal intercourse with Sir Sidney Smith, Your Majesty, I am confident, will not be surprised that I do not descend to any particular observations on her deposition. — One, and one only observation will I make, which, however, could not have escaped Your Majesty, if I had omitted it. — -That Your Majesty will have an excellent portraiture of the true female delicacy and purity of my Lady Dou- glas's mind, and character, when you will observe that she seems wholly insensible that what a sink of infamy she degrades herself by her testimony against me. It is not pnly that it appears, from her ^statement, that she was contented to live, in fami- liarity and apparent friendship with me, after the confession which I made of my adultery (for by the indulgence and liberality, as it is called, of modern manners, the company of adulteresses has ceased to reflect that discredit upon the characters of other * For the same reason they are not printed in Appendix (B). $6 women who admit of their society, which the best interests of female virtue may, perhaps, require.) But she was contented to live in familiarity with a woman, who, if Lady Doughs 's evidence of me is true, was a most low, vulgar, and profligate dis- grace to her sex. The grossness of whose ideas and conversation, would add infamy to the lowest, most vulgar, and most infamous prostitute. It is not, however, upon this circumstance, that I rest as- sured no reliance can be placed on Lady Douglas's testimony ; but after what is proved, with regard to her evidence respecting my pregnancy and deli- very in 1802, I am certain that any observations upon her testimony, or her veracity, must be flung away. Your Majesty has therefore now before you the state of the charge against me, as far as it respects Sir Sidney Smith. And this is, as I understand the Report, one of the charges which, with its un- favourable interpretations, must, in the opinion of the Commissionei*s, be credited till decidedly con- tradicted. As to the facts of frequent visiting on terms of great intimacy, as I have said before, they cannot be contradicted at all. How inferences and un- favourable interpretations are to be decidedly con- tradicted, I wish the Commissioners had been so good as to explain. I know of no possible way but by the declarations of myself and Sir Sidney Smith. Yet we being the supposed guilty parties, our denial, probably, will be thought of no great 97 weight* As* to my own, however, I tender it to your Majesty, in the most solemn manner, and if I knew what fact it was that I ought to contradict, to clear my innocence, I would precisely address myself to that fact, as I am confident, my con- science would enable me to do, to any, from which a criuiinal or an unbecoming inference could be drawn. I am sure, however, your Majesty will feel for the humiliated and degraded situation, to which this Report has reduced your Daughter-in- law, the Princess of Wales ; when you see her reduced to the necessity of either risking the dan- ger, that the most unfavourable interpretations should be credited ; or else of stating, as I am now degraded to the necessity of stating, that not only no adulterous or criminal, but no indecent or im- proper intercourse whatever, ever subsisted be- tween Sir Sidney Smith and myself, or any thing which I should have objected that all the world should have seen. I say degraded to the necessity of stating it ; for your Majesty must feel that a woman's character is degraded when it is put upon her to make such statement, at the peril of the contrary being credited, unless she decidedly con- tradicts it. Sir Sidney Smith's absence from the country prevents my calling upon him to attest the same truth. But I trust when your Majesty shall find, as you will fmd, that my declaration to a similar effect, with respect to the other gentle- men referred to in this Report, is confirmed by s* their denial, that your Majesty will think that i» a case, where nothing but my own word can be adduced, my own word alone may be opposed to whatever little remains of credit or weight may, after all the above observations, be supposed yet to belong to Mr. Cole, to his inferences, his insinua- tions, or his facts. Not indeed that I have yet fin- ished my observations on Mr. Cole's credit; but I must reserve the remainder, till I consider his evi- dence with respect to Mr. Lawrence ; and till I have occasion to comment upon the testimony of Fanny Lloyd. Then, indeed, I shall be under the necessity of exhibiting to your Majesty these wit- nesses, Fanny Lloyd and Mr. Cole, (both of whom are represented as so unbiassed, and so credible,) in fla?, decisive, and irreconcilcable contradiction to each other. The next person, with whom my improper in- timacy is insinuated, is Mr. Lawrence the painter. The principal witness on this charge is also Mr. Cole. Mr. R. Bidgood says nothing about him. Fanny Lloyd says nothing about him ; and all that Mrs. Lisle says is perfectly true, and I am neither able, nor feel interested, to contradict it. " That she remembers my sitting to Mr. Lawrence for my picture at Blackheath ; and in London ; that she has left me at his house in town with him, but she thinks Mrs. Fitzgerald was with us ; and that she thinks I sat alone with him at Blackheath." But Mr, Cole speaks of Mr. Lawrence in a manner that 99 ^calls for particular observation. He says* " Mr, Lawrence the painter used to go to Montague House about the latter end of 1801, when he was painting the Princess, and he has slept in the house two or three nights together. I have often seen him alone with the Princess at 11 or 12 o'clock at night. He has been there as late as one and two o'clock in the morning. One night I saw him with the Princess in the Blue Room, after the ladies had retired. Some time afterwards, when I supposed he had gone to his room, I went to see that all was safe, and I found the Blue Room door\U>cked, and heard a zvhispering in it ; and I went away. 1 ' Here, again, your Majesty ob- serves, that Mr. Cole deals his deadliest blows against my character by insinuation. And here, again, bis insinuation is left unsifted and unex- plained. I here understand him to insinuate that, though he supposed Mr. Lawrence to have gone to his room, he was still where he had said he last left him ; and that the locked door prevented him from seeing me and Mr. Lawrence alone together, whose whispering, however, he, notwithstanding overheard. Before, Sire, I come to my own explanation of the fact of Mr. Lawrence's sleeping at Montague House, I must again refer to Mr. Cole's original declara- tions. 1 must again examine Mr. Cole, against Mr. Cole; which I cannot help lamenting it does * Appendix (A.) No. S. ice aot seem to have occurred to others to have done ; its I am persuaded if it had, his prevarications, and his falsehood, could never have escaped them. They would then have been able to have traced, as your Majesty will now do, through my observations, by what degrees he hardened himself up to the in- famy (for I can use no other expression) of stating this fact, by which he means to insinuate that he heard me and Mr. Lawrence, locked up in this Blue Room, whispering together, and alone. I am sorry to be obliged to drag your Majesty through so long a detail ; but 1 am confident your Majesty's goodness, and love of justice, will excuse it, as it is essential to the vindication of my character, as well as to the illustration of Mr. Cole's. Mr. Cole's examination, as contained in his first written declaration of the 1 lth of January, has no- thing of this. I mean not to say that it has nothing concerning Mr. Lawrence, for it has much, which is calculated to occasion unfavourable interpretations, and given with a view to that object. But that circumstance, as I submit to your Majesty, increases £he weight of my observation. Had there been nothing in his first declaration about Mr. Lawrence at ail, it might have been imagined that perhaps Mr. Lawrence escaped his recollection altogether; or that his declaration had been solely directed to other persons ; but as it does contain observations respecting Mr. Lawrence, but nothing of a locked door, or the whispering within it; — how he happened at that time not to recollect, or if he recollected. 101 fciot to mention so very striking and remarkable a circumstance, is not, I should imagine, very satis- factorily to be explained. His statement in that* first declaration stands thus, " In 1801, Lawrence " the painter was at Montague House, for four " or five days at a time, painting the Princess's # picture. That he was frequently alone late in " the night with the Princess, and much suspicion " was entertained of him." Mr. Cole's nextf de- claration, at least the next which appears among the written declarations, was taken on the 14th of Jan- uary ; it does not mention Mr. Lawrence's name, but it has this passage. " When Mr. Cole found the drawing-room, which led to the staircase to the Princess's apartments, locked (which your Majesty knows is the same which the witnesses call the Blue Room,) he does not know whether any person was with her ; but it appeared odd to him, as he had formed some suspicions." The striking and important observation on this passage is, that when he first talks of the door of the drawing-room being locked, so far from his mentioning anv thins of whispering being overheard, he expressly says, that he did not know that any body was with me. The passage is likewise deserving your Majesty's most serious consideration on another ground. For it is one of those which shews that Mr. Cole, though we have four separate declarations made by him, has certainly made other statements which have not * See Appendix (B.) p. 100. t Appendix (B.) p. 100 ? 102 been transmitted to your Majesty ; for it evidently refers to something, which he had said before, of hav- ing found the drawing-room door locked, and no trace of such a statement is di3coverable in the previous axamination of Mr. ( ole, as I have re- ceived it, and I have no doubt that, in obedience to your Majesty's commands, I have at length been furnished with the whole. I don't know, indeed, that it should he matter of complaint from me, that your Majesty has not been furnished with all the statements of Mr. Cole, because from the sample I see of them, I cannot suppose that any of them could have furnished any thing favourable to me, except indeed that they might have furnished me with fresh means of contradicting him by himself. But your Majesty will see that there have been other statements not communicated; a circumstance of which both your Majesty and I have reason to complain. But it may be out of its place further to notice that fact at present. To return therefore to Mr, Cole ; — in his third* declaration, dated the 30th of January, there is not a word about Mr. Lawrence. In his fourth and last,t which is dated on the 23rd of February, he says, " the person who was alone with the lady at * late hours of the night (twelve and ope o'clock,) " and whom he left sitting up after he went to bed, " was Mr. Lawrence, which happened two diffe- " rent nights." Here is likewise another trace of * Appendix, (B) p. 102. t Appendix (B) p. JOS. 103 a former statement which is not given ; for no such person is mentionod before in any that I have been furnished with. Your Majesty then here observes that, after hav- ing given evidence in two of his declarations, res- pecting Mr. Lawrence by name, in which he men- tions nothing of locked doors, — and after having, in another declaration, given an account of a locked door, but expressly stated that he knew not whether any one was with me within it, and said nothing about whispering being overheard, but, impliedly, at least, negatived it; — in the deposition before the Commissioners, he puts all these things together, and has the hardihood to add to them that remark- able circumstance, which could not have escaped his recollection, at the first, if it had been true, " of his " having, on the same night in which he found me ci and Mr. Lawrence alone, after the ladies were " gone to bed, come again to the room when he " thought Mr. Lawrence must have been retired, " and found the door locked and heard the whisper- " ing ;" and then again he gives another instance of his honesty, and upon the same principle on which he took no notice of the man in the great coat, he finds the door locked, hears the whispering, and then he silently and contentedly retires. And this witness, who thus not only varies in his testimony, but contradicts himself in such impor- tant particulars, is one of those who cannot be sus- pected of unfavourable bias, and whose veracity is 104 fcot to be questioned, and whose evidence must be credited till decidedly contradicted. These observations might probably be deemed sufficient upon Mr. Cole's deposition, as far as it respects Mr. Lawrence; but I cannot be satisfied without explaining to your Majesty, all the truth, and the particulars respecting Mr. Lawrence, which I recollect. What I recollect then is as follows. He began a large picture of me, and of my daughter, towards the latter end of the year 3 800, or the beginning of 180K Miss Garth and Miss Hayman were in the house with me at the time. The picture was paint- ed at Montague House. Mr. Lawrence mentioned to Miss Hayman his wish to be permitted to re- main some few nights in the house, that by rising early he might begin painting on the picture, be- fore Princess Charlotte (whose residence being at that time at Shooter's Hill was enabled to come early,) or myself, came to sit. It was a similar re- quest to that which had been made by Sir William Beechy, when he painted my picture. And I was sensible of no impropriety when I granted the re- quest to either of them. Mr. Lawrence occupied the .same room which had been occupied by Sir William Beechy ; — it was at the other end of the house from my apartment. At that time Mr. Lawrence did not dine with me ; bis dinner was served in his own room. — After dinner he came down to the room where I and my Ladies generally sat in an evening — sometimes 105 there was music, in which he joined, and some- times he read poetry. Parts of Shakespeare's plays I particularly remember, from his reading them very well; and sometimes he played chess with me. It frequently may have happened that it was one or two o'clock before I dismissed Mr. Lawrence and my Ladies. They, together with Mr. Lawrence, went out of the same door, up the same stair-case, and at the same time. According to my own recol- lection I should have said, that, in no one in- stance, they had left Mr. Lawrence behind them, alone with me. — But I suppose it did happen once for a short time, since Mr. Lawrence so recollecU it, as your Majesty will perceive from his deposi- tion, which I annex. He staid in my house two or three nights together ; but how many nights in the whole, I do not recollect. The picture left my house by April, 1801, and Mr. Lawrence never slept in my house afterwards. That picture now belongs to Lady Townshend. He has since com- pleted another picture of me ; and, about a year and a half ago, he began another, which remains at present unfinished. I believe it is near a twelvemonth since I last sat to him. Mr. Lawrence lives upon a footing of the great- est intimacy with the neighbouring families of Mr. Lock and Mr. Angerstein ; and I have asked hira sometimes to dine with me to meet them. While I was sitting to him, at my own house, I have no doubt I must have often sat to him alone; as the 106 necessity for the precaution of having an atten- dant, as a witness to protect my honour from sus- picion certainly never occurred to me. And upon the same principle, I do not doubt that I may have sometimes continued in conversation with him after he had finished painting. But when sitting in his own house, I have always been at- tended with one of my Ladies. — And indeed no- thing in the examinations state the contrary. One part of Mrs. Lisle's examination seems as if she had had a question put to her, upon the supposi- tion that I had been left alone with Mr. Law- rence at his own house ; to which she answers, tli t she indeed had left me tkere, but that she thinks she left Mrs. Fitzgerald with me. If an inference of an unfavourable nature could have been drawn frorri my having been left there alone ; — was it, Sire, taking all that care which might be wished, to guard against such an infer- ence, on the part of the Commissioners, when they oinnted to send for Mrs Fitzgerald to ascertain what Mrs. Lisle may have left in doubt. The Com- missioners, I give them the fullest credit, were sa- tisfied, that Mrs. Lisle thought correctly upon this fact, and that Mrs. Fitzgerald, if she had been sent for again, would so have proved it, and there- fore that it would have been troubling her to no purpose. But this it is, of which I conceive myself to ha»e most reason to complain ; — that the exa- ran ion in several instances, have not been fol- io >vfcu up so as toaxHiiove unfavourable impressions. 107 I cannot but feel satisfied that the Commission- 's would have been ^lad to have been warranted in negativing ail criminality, and all suspicion on this part of the charge, as completely, and ho- nourably as they have done on the principal charges of pregnancy and delivery. They traced that part of the charge with ability, sagacity, dili- gence, and perseverance; and the result was com- plete satisfaction of my innocence ; complete de- tection of the falsehood of my accusers. Encou- raged by their success in that part of theirlnquiry, I lament that they did not, (as they thought pro- per to enter into the other part of it at all,) with similar industry pursue it. If they had, I am con- fident they would have pursued it with the same success ; but though they had convicted Sir John and Lady Douglas of falsehood, they seem to have thought it impossible to suspect of the same false hood, any other of the witnesses, though produced by SirJohn and Lady Douglas. The most obvious means, therefore, of trying their credit, by com- paring their evidence with what they had said be- fore, seems to me to have been omitted. Many facts are left upon surmise only and insinuation; obvious means of getting further information on doubtful and suspicious circumstances are not re- sorted to ; and, as if the important master of the Inquiry (on which a satisfactory conclusion had been formed) was all that required any very atten- tive or accurate consideration ; the remainder of it was pursued in a manner which, as it seems to me, can only be accounted for by the pressure of 108 what may have been deemed more important du- ties* — and of this I should have made but little complaint, if this Inquiry, where it is imperfect, had not been followed by a Report, which the most accurate only could have justified, and which such an accurate Inquiry, I am confident, never could have produced. If any credit was given to Mr. Cole's story of the locked door, and the whispering; and to Mr. Lawrence having been left with n\e so frequently of a night when my ladies had left us, why were not ail my ladies examined ? why were not all my servants examined as to their knowledge of that fact ? And if they had been so examined, and had contradicted the fact so sworn to by Mr, Cole, as they must have done, had they been examined to it ; that alone would have been sufficient to have removed his name from the list of unsuspected and unquestionable witnesses, and relieved me from much of the suspicion which his evidence, till it was examined, was calculated to have raised in your Majesty's mind.— And to close this state- ment, and these observations and in addition to them, — I most solemnly assert to your Majesty, that Mr. Lawrence, neither at his own house, nor at mine, nor any where else, ever was for one mo- ment, by night or by day, in the same room with me when the door of it was locked $ that he never was in my company of an evening alone, except the momentary conversation which Mr. Lawrence speaks to, may be thought an exception; and that 109 nothing ever passed between him and mc which all the world might not have witnessed. And, Sire, I have subjoined a deposition to the same effect from Mr. Lawrence. To satisfy myself, therefore, and your Majesty, I have shewn, I trust, by unanswerable observa- tions and arguments, that there is no colour for crediting Mr. Cole, or, consequently, any part of this charge, which rests solely on his evidence. But to satisfy the requisition of the Commissioners, I have brought my pride to submit, (though not without great pain, I can assure your Majesty) to add the only contradictions which I conceive can be given, those of Mr. Lawrence and myself. The next person with whom these examinations charge my improper familiarity, and with regard to which the Report represents the evidence as par- ticularly strong, is Captain Manby. With respect to him, Mr. Cole's examination is silent — But the evidence, on which the Commissioners rely on this part of the case, is Mr. Bidgood's, Miss Fanny Lloyd's, and Mrs, Lisle's.*»-It respects my conduct at three different places; at Montague House, Southend, and at Ramsgate. I shall preserve the facts and my observations more distinct, if I con- sider the evidence, as applicable to these three places, separately, and in its order; and I prefer this mode of treating it, as it will enable me to consider the evidence of Mrs. Lisle in the first place, and consequently put it out of the reach of the harsher observations, which I may be under 11® the necessity of making, upon the testimony of the other two. For though Mrs. Lisle, indeed, speaks to having seen Captain Man by at East Cliff, in Aug. 1 803, to the best of her remembrance it was only once ; she s peaks to his meeting her at Deal, in the same season ; that he landed therewith some boys whom I took on charity, and who were under his care j yet she speaks of nothing there that can require a single observation from me. — *The material parts of her evidence respect her seeing him at Blackheath, the Christmas before she had seen him at East Cliff. She says, it was the Christmas after Mr. Austin's child came, con- sequently the Christmas 1802-3. — He used to come to dine there, she says, he always went away in her presence, and she had no reason to think he staid after the Ladies retired He lodged on the Heath at that time ; his ship was fitting up at Deptford ; he came to dinner three or four times a week, or more. — She supposes he might be alone with the Princess, but that she was in the habit of seeing Gentlemen and Tradesmen without her be- ing present. She (Mrs. Lisle) has seen him at luncheon and dinner both. — The boys (two boys) came with him two or three times, but not to din- ner. Captain Manby always sat next the Princess at dinner. — The constant company were Mrs. and Miss Fitzgerald, and herself — all retired with the Princess, and sat in the same room. Captain * Appendix (A.) No. 27. Ill Manby generally retired about eleven ; and sat with us all till then. Captain Manby and the Princess used, when we were together, to bespeak- ing together separately, conversing separately, but not in a room alone. He was a person with whom the Princess appeared to have greater pleasure in talking than with her Ladies. Her Royal High- ness behaved to him only as any woman zvould who likes flirting. She (Mrs* Lisle) would not have_ thought any married woman would have behaved properly, xvho behaved as Her Royal Highness did to Captain Manby. She can't say whether the Princess was attached to Captain Manby , only that it was a flirting conduct. — -She never saw any gallantries, as kissing her hand, or the like." I have cautiously stated the whole of Mrs. Lisle's evidence upon this part of the case; and I am sure Your Majesty in reading it, will not fail to keep the facts, which Mrs. Lisle speaks to, separate from the opinion, or judgment, which she forms upon them. — I mean not to speak disrespectfully, or slightingly, of Mrs. Lisle's opinion , or express myself as in any degree indifferent to it. But what- ever there was which she observed in my conduct, that did not become a married woman, that " was only like a woman who liked flirting," and " only a flirting conduct.' 1 — I am convinced your Majesty must be satisfied that ic must have been far distant from affording any evidence of crime, ©f vice, or of indecency, as it passed openly in the 112 company of my Ladies, of whom Mrs. Lisle her- self was one. The facts she states are, that Captain Manby came very frequently to my house ; that he dined there three or four times a week in the latter end of the year 1802; that he sat next to me at din- ner; and that my conversation after dinner, in the evening, used to be with Captain Manby, separate from my Ladies. — These are the facts : and is it upon them that my character, I will not say, is to be taken away, but is to be affected ? Captain Manby had, in the autumn of the same year, been introduced to me by Lady Townshend, when I was upon a visit to her at Rainham. I think he came there only the day before I left it. He was a naval officer, as I understood, and as I still believe, of great merit. What little expence, in the way of charity, I am able to afford, I am best pleased to dedicate to the education of the children of poor, but honest persons ; and I most generally bring them up to the service of the Na- vy. I had at that time two boys at school, whom I thought of an age fit to be put to sea. I desired Lady Townshend to prevail upon Captain Manby to take them. He consented to it, and of course I was obliged to him. About this time, or shortly afterwards, he was appointed to the Africaine, a ship which was fitting up at Deptford. To be near his ship, as I under- stood and believe, he took lodgings at Biackheath; and as to the mere fact of his being so frequently IIS at my house, — his intimacy and friendship with Lord and Lady Townshend, which of itself was assurance to me of his respectability and character — my pleasure in shewing my respect to them, by notice and attention to a friend of theirs, — his un- dertaking the care of my charity boys, — and his accidental residence at Blackheath, will, I should trust, not unreasonably account for it. I have a similar account likewise to give of paying for the linen furniture, with which his cabin was furnished. Wishing to make him some return for his trouble with the boys, I desired that I might choose the pattern of his furniture. I not only chose it, but had it sent to him, and paid the bill ; finding how- ever, that it did not^come to more than about twenty pounds, I thought it a shabby present, and therefore added some trifling present of plate. So I have frequently done, and I hope without offence may be permitted to do again to any Captain, on whom I impose such trouble. Sir Samuel Hood has now two of my charity boys with him ; and I have presented him with a silver Epergne. I should be ashamed to notice such things, but your Majesty perceives, that they are made the subject of Inquiry from Mrs. Fitzgerald, and Mr* Stikeman, and I was desirous that they should not appear to be particular in the case of Captain Manby. But to return to Mrs. Lisie's examination} Mrs. Lisle says, that Captain Manby, when he Q 114 dined with me, sat next to me at dinner. Be- fore any inference is drawn from that fact, I am sure your Majesty will observe that, in the next line of Mrs. Lisle's examination, she says " that the constant company was Mrs. and Miss Fitzgerald, and herself, Mrs. Lisle." The only gentleman,, the only person of the whole party who was not of my own family, was Captain Manby ; and his sitting next to me, under such circumstances, I should ap- prehend could not possibly afford any inference of any kind. In the evening we were never alone. The whole company sat together; nay even as to his be- ing with me alone of a morning, Mrs. Lisle seems to know nothing of the fact, but from a conjecture found- ed upon her knowledge of my known usual habit, with respect to seeing gentleman who might call upon me. And the very foundation of her conjecture demon- strates that this circumstance can be no evidence of any thing particular with regard to Captain Manby. As to my conversing with Captain Manby sepa- rately, I do not understand Mrs. Lisle as mean- ing to speak to the state of the conversation unin- terruptedly, during the whole of any of the several evenings when Captain Manby was with me; if T did so understand her, I should certainly most confidently assert that she was not correct That in the course of the evening, as the ladies were working, reading, or otherwise amusing them- selves, the conversation was sometimes more and sometimes less general; and that they sometimes took more ? sometimes less part in it; — that fre- 115 ^uently it was between Captain Manby and my- self alone ; — and that, when we were all together, we two might frequently be the only persons not otherwise engaged, and therefore be justly said to be speaking together separately. Besides Cap- tain Manby has been round the world with Cap- tain Vancovre. I have looked over prints in books of voyages with him ; he has explained them to me; the ladies may or may not have been looking over them at the same time ; they may have been engaged with their own amusements* Here, again, we may be said to have been con- versing separately, and consequently that Mrs e Lisle, in this sense, is perfectly justified in saying that " I used to converse separately with Captain Manby," I have not the least difficulty in admit- ting. But have I not again reason to complain that this expression of Mrs, Lisle's was not more sifted, but left in a manner calculated to raise an impression that this separate conversation, was studiously sought for, was constant, uniform, and uninterrupted, though it by no means asserts any such thing? But whether I used always so to con- verse with him ; or generally, or only sometimes, or for what proportion of the evening I used to be so engaged, is left unasked and unexplained. Have I not likewise just reason to complain, that though Mrs. Lisle states, that Mrs. Fitzgerald and Miss Fitzgerald were always of the party, they are not both examined to these circumstances ? But Miss Fitzgerald is not examined at all; and 115 Mrs. Fitzgerald, though examined, and examined too with respect to Captain Manby, does not ap- pear to have had a single question put to her with respect to any thing which passed concerning him at Montague House. May I not therefore complain that the examination, leaving the generality of Mrs. Lisle's expression unexplained by herself; and the scenes to which it relates unexamined into, by call- ing the other persons who were present, is leaving it precisely in that state, which is better calculated to raise a suspicion, than to ascertain the truth ? But I am persuaded that the unfavourable im- pression which is most likely to be made by Mrs. Lisle's examination, is not by her evidence to the facts, -but by her opinion upon them. " I ap- peared," she says, " to like the conversation of Captain Manby better than that of my ladies. I behaved to him only as a woman who likes flirting ; my conduct was unbecoming a married woman ; she cannot say whether I was attached to Cap- tain Manby or not ; " it was only a flirting con- duct. " — Now, Sire, I must here again most se- riously complain that the Commissioners should have called for, or received, and much more re- ported, in this manner, the opinion and judgment of Mrs. Lisle upon my conduct. Your Majesty's Warrant purports to authorise them to collect the evidence, and not the opinion of others ; and to report it, with their own judgment surely, and not Mrs. Lisle's. Mrs. Lisle's judgment was formed upon those facts which she stated to the 117 Commissioners, or upon other facts. If upon those she stated, the Commissioners, and your Majesty, are as well able to form the judgment upon them as she was. If upon other facts, the Commission- ers should have heard what those other facts were, and upon them have formed and reported their judgment. I am aware, indeed, that if I were to argue that the facts which Mrs. Lisle states, afford the ex- planation of what she means by " only flirting conduct," and by " behaviour unbecoming a married woman," namely, " that it consisted in having the same gentleman to dine with me three or four times a week ; — letting him sit next me at dinner, when there were no other strangers in com- pany ; — conversing with him separately, and ap- pearing to prefer his conversation to that of the ladies, — it would be observed probably, that this was not all ; that there was always a certain indes- cribable something in manner, which gave the character to conduct, and must have entered mainly into such a judgment as Mrs. Lisle has here pronounced. To a certain extent I should be obliged to agree to this ; but if I aan to have any prejudice from this observation ; if it is to give a weight and authority to Mrs. Lisle's judgment, let me have l he advantage of it also. If it justifies the conclu- sion that Mrs. Lisle's censure upon my conduct is right, it requires also that equal credit should be given to the qualification, the limit, and the res- 118 triction, which she herself puts upon that cen- sure. Mrs. Lisle, seeing all the facts which she re- lates, and observing much of manner, which per- haps she could not describe, limits the expression " flirting conduct" by calling it " only flirting," and says (upon having the question asked to her, no doubt, whether from the whole she could col- lect that I was attached to Captain Manby) says " she could not' say whether I was attached to him, my conduct was not of a nature that proved any attachment to him, it was only a flirting con- duct." Unjust, therefore, as I think it, that any such question should have been put to Mrs. Lisle ? or that her judgment should have been taken at all; yet what I fear from it, as pressing with peculiar hardship upon me, is, that though it is Mrs. Lisle's final and ultimate judgment upon the whole of my conduct, jet, when delivered to the Commissioners and your Majesty, it becomes evi- dence, which connected with all the facts on which Mrs. Lisle had formed it, may lead to still further and more unfavourable conclusions, in the minds of those who are afterwards to judge upon it ; — that her judgment will be the foundation of other judg- ments against me, much severer than her own ; and that though she evidently limits her opinion, and by saying " only flirting" impliedly negatives it as affording any indication of any thing more im- proper, while she proceeds expressly to negative it as affording any proof of attachment; yet it ? 119 may be thought, by others, to justify their con- dering it as a species of conduct, which shewed an attachment to the man to whom it was addressed ; which in a married woman was criminal and wrong. What Mrs. Lisle exactly means by only flirting conduct — what degree of impropriety of conduct she would describe by it, it is extremely difficult, with any precision, to ascertain. How many women are there, most virtuous, most truly modest, incapable of any thing impure, vicious, or immoral, in deed or thought, who, from greater vivacity of spirits, from less natural reserve, from that want of caution, which the very consciousness of innocence betrays them into, conduct themselves in a manner, which a woman of a graver character, of more reserved disposition, but not with one par- ticle of superior virtue, thinks too incautious, too unreserved, too familiar; and which, if forced upon her oath to give her opinion upon it, she might feel herself, as an honest woman, bound to say in that opinion, was flirting ? But whatever sense Mrs. Lisle annexes to the word " flirting" it is evident, as I said before, that she cannot mean any thing criminal, vicious, or indecent, or any thing with the least shade of deeperim propriety than what is necessarily express- ed in the word " flirting." She never would have added, as she does in both instances, that it was only flirting; if she had thought it of a quality to be recorded in a formal Report, amongst circum- 20 stances which must occasion the most unfavourabl« interpretations, and which deserved the most serious consideration of your Majesty. To use it so, I am sure your Majesty must see, is to press it far beyond the meaning which she would assign to it herself. And as I have admitted that there may be much indescribable in the manner of doing any thing, so it must be admitted to me that there is much indescribable, and most material also, in the manner of saying any thing, and in the accent with which it is said. The whole context serves much to explain it ; and if it is in answer to a question, the viords of that question, the manner and the accent in which it is asked, are also most material to understand the precise meaning, which the ex- pressions are intended to convey ; and I must la- ment, therefore, extremely, if my character is to be affected by the opinion of any witness, that the questions by which that opinion was drawn from her, were not given too, as well as her answers, and if this inquiry had been prosecuted before your Majesty's Privy Council, the more solemn and usual course of proceeding there, would, as I am informed, have furnished, or enabled me to furnish, your Majesty with the questions as well as the answers. Mrs. Lisle, it should also be observed, was at the time of her examination, under the severe op- pression of having, but a few days before, heard of the death of her daughter ;— a daughter, who had been happily married, and who had lived happily 121 with her husband, in mutual attachment till her death. The very circumstance of her then situa- tion would naturally give a graver .and severer cast to her opinions. When the question was proposed to her, as a general question, (and I presume it must have been so put to her) whether my con- duct was such as would become a married woman, possibly her own daughter's conduct, and what she would have expected of her, might present itself to her mind. And I confidently submit to your Majesty's better judgment, that such a ge- neral question ought not, in a fair and candid con- sideration of my case, to have been put to Mrs. Lisle, or any other woman. For, as to my con- duct being, or not being, becoming a married wo- man ; the same conduct, or any thing like it, which may occur in my case, could not occur in the case of a married woman, who was not living in my un- fortunate situation ; or, if it did occur, it must occur under circumstances which must give it, and most deservedly, a very different character. A married woman, living well and happily with her husband, could not be frequently having one gentleman at her table, with no other company but ladies of her family ; — she could not be spending her evenings frequently in the same society, and separately con- versing with that gentleman, unless either with the privity and consent of her husband, or by taking advantage, with some management, of his igno- \m ranee and his absence ; — if it was with his privity and consent, that very circumstance alone would unquestionably alter the character of such conduct;— if with management she avoided his knowledge, that very management would betray a bad motive. The cases therefore are not parallel ; — the illustra- tion is not just; — and the question, which called for such an answer from Mrs. Lisle, ought not, in can- dor and fairness, to have been put. I entreat your Majesty, however, not to misun- derstand me;— I should be ashamed indeed to be suspected of pleading any peculiar or unfortunate circumstance, in my situation, as an excuse for any criminal or indecent act. With respect to such acts, most unquestionably such circumstance can make no difference ; — can afford no excuse. They must bear their own character of disgrace and infa- my, under all circumstances But there are acts, which are unbecoming a married woman, which ought to be avoided by her, from an apprehension lest they should render her husband uneasy, not be- cause they might give him any reason to distrust her chastity, her virtue, or her morals, but because they might wound his feelings, by indicating a prefer- ence to the society of another man, over his, in a qase where she had the option of both. But surely, as to such acts, they must necessarily bear a very different character, and receive a very different construction, in a case where, unhappily, there can be no such apprehension, and where there is no such option. I must, therefore, be excused for 123 dwelling so much upon this part of the case; and I am sure, your Majesty will feel me warranted in saying, what I say with a confidence, exactly pro- portioned to the respectability of Mrs. Lisle's cha- racter, that, whatever she meant, by any of these expressions, she could not, by possibility, have meant to describe conduct, which to her mind af- forded evidence of crime, vice, or indecency. If she had, her regard to her own character, her own delicacy, her own honourable and virtuous feelings, would in less than the two vears, which have since elapsed, have found some excuse for separating her- self from that intimate connection, which, by her situation in my household, subsists between us. She would not have remained exposed to the repetition of so gross an offence, and insult, to a modest, vir- tuous, and delicate woman, as that of being made, night by night, witness to scenes, openly acted in her presence, offensive to virtue and decorum. If your Majesty thinks I have dwelt too long, and tediously, on this part of the case, I entreat your Majesty to think what I must feel upon it. I feel it a great hardship, as I have frequently stated, that under the cover of a grave charge of High Treason, the proprieties, and decencies, of my pri- vate conduct and behaviour, have been made the subject, as I believe so unprecedently, of a forma investigation upon oath. And that, in consequence of it, I may, at this moment, be exposed to the dan- ger of forfeiting your Majesty's good opinion, and being degraded and disgraced, in reputation through 1M the country, because what Mrs. Lisle has said of my conduct; — that it was " only that of a woman who liked flirting/' has become recorded in the Report on this formal Inquiry, made into matters of grave crimes, and of essential importance to the state. Let me conjure your Majesty, over and over again, before you suffer this circumstance to pre- judice me in your opinion, not only to weigh all the circumstances I have stated, but to look round the first ranks of female virtue, in this country, and see how many women there are of most unimpeach- ed reputation, of most unsullied and unsuspected honour, character and virtue, whose conduct though living happily with their husbands, if sub- mitted to the judgment of persons of a severer cast of mind, especially if saddened, at the moment, by calamity, might be stiled to be " flirting." I would not, however, be understood as intending to represent Mrs. Lisle's judgment, as being likely to be marked with any improper austerity, and there- fore I am certain she must either have had no idea that the expressions she has used, in the manner which she used them, were capable of being under- stood, in so serious a light as to be referred to, amongst circumstances deserving the most serious consideration, and which must occasion most unfa- vourable interpretations; or she must by the impo- sing novelty of her situation, in private examination before four such grave characters, have been surpri- sed into the use of expressions, which, with a better opportunity of weighing them, she would either not 125 have used at all, or have accompanied with still more of qualification than that, which she has, how- ever, in some degree, as it is, annexed to them. But my great complaint is the having, not, par- ticularly, Mrs. Lisle's opinion, but any person's opinion, set up, as it were, in judgment against the propriety of my private conduct. How would it be endured, that the judgment of one man should be asked, and recorded in a solemn Report, against the conduct of another, either with respect to his behaviour to his children, or to his wife, or to any other relative? How would it be endured, in ge- neral, and I trust, that my case ought not, in this respect, to form an exception, that one woman should in a similar manner be placed in judgment, upon the conduct of another? And that judgment be reported, where her character was of most im- portance to her, as amongst things which must be credited till decidedly contradicted ? Let every one put these questions home to their own breasts, and before they impute blame to me, for protest- ing against the fairness and justice of this proce- dure, ask how they would feel upon it, if it were their own case ? But, perhaps, they cannot bring their imagina- tions to conceive that it could ever become their own case. A few months ago 1 could not have believed that it would have been mine. But the just ground of my complaint may, per- haps, be more easily appreciated and felt, by sup- posing a more familiar, but an analogous case. The 126 High Treason, with which I was charged, was sup- posed to be committed in the foul crime of adultery. What would be the impression of your Majesty, what would be the impression upon the mind of any one, acquainted with the excellent laws of your Majesty's kingdom, and the admirable adminis- tration of them, if upon a Commission of this kind, secretly to inquire into the conduct of any man, upon a charge of High Treason against the state, the Commissioners should not only proceed to inquire, whether in the judgment of the witness, the conduct of the accused was such as became a loyal s object; but, when the result of their Inquiry obliged them to report directly against the charge of Treason, they, nevertheless, should record an im- putation, or libel, against his character for loyalty, and reporting, as part of the evidence, the opinion of the witness, that the conduct of the accused was such as did not become a loyal subject, should fur- ther report, that the evidence of that witness, with- out specifying any part of it, must be credited till decidedly contradicted, and deserved the most se- rious consideration ? How could he appeal from that Report ? How could he decidedly contradict the opinion of the witness ? Sire, there is no dif- ference between this supposed case and mine, but this. That in the case of the man, a character for loyalty, however injured, could not be destroyed by such an insinuation. His future life might give him abundant opportunities of falsifying the justice 127 of it. But a female character once so blasted, what hope or chanc&has it of recovery ? Your Majesty will not fail to perceive, that I have pressed this part of the case, with an earnestness which shews that I have felt it. I have no wish to disguise from your Majesty, that I have felt it, and felt it strongly. It is the only part of the case, which I conceive to be in the least degree against me, that rests upon a witness who is at all worthy of your Majesty's credit. How unfair it is, that any thing she has said should be pressed against me, I trust I have sufficiently shewn. In canvas- sing, however, Mrs. Lisle's evidence, I hope .1 have never forgot what was due to Mrs. Lisle. I have been as anxious not to do her injustice, as to do justice to myself. I retain the same respect and regard for Mrs. Lisle now, as I ever had. If the unfavourable impressions, which the Commission- ers seem to suppose, fairly arise out of the expres- sions she has used, I am confident they will be understood, in a sense, which was never intended by her. And I should scorn to purchase any ad- vantage to myself, at the expence of the slightest imputation, unjustly cast upon Mrs. Lisle, or any- one else. Leaving, therefore, with these observations, Mrs. Lisle's evidence, I must proceed to the evidence of Mr. Bidgood. The parts of it which apply to this part of the case, I mean my conduct to Captain Manby at Montague House, I shall detail. They are as follows.* " I first observed Captain Manby * Appendix (A.) p. 9. 128 came to Montague House either the end of 1803, or the beginning of 1804. I was waiting one day in the anti-room ; Captain Manby had his hat in his hand, and appeared to be going away ; he was a long time with the Princess, and, as I stood on the steps waiting, I looked into the room in which they were, and in the reflection on the looking-glass I saw them salute each other. I mean that they kissed each other's lips. Captain Manby then went away. I then observed the Princess have her handkerchief in her hands, and wipe her eyes, as if she was crying, and went into the drawing-room." In his second deposition,*' on the 3d July, talking of his suspiciens of what passed at Southend, he says, they arose from, seeing them kiss each other, as I mentioned before, like people fond of each other; — a very close kiss." In these extracts from his depositions, there can undoubtedly be no complaint of any thing being left to inference. Here is a fact, which must un- questionably occasion almost as unfavourable inter- pretations, as any fact of the greatest impropriety and indecorum, short of the proof of actual crime. And this fact is positively and affirma- tively sworn to. And if this witness is truly repre- sented, as one who must be credited till he is deci- dedly contradicted ; and the decided contradiction of the parties accused, should be considered as unavail- ing, it constitutes a charge which cannot possibly be answered. For the scene is so laid, that there is no eye to witness it, but his own ; and therefore there * See Appendix (A.) p. 40. 129 ban be no one who can possibly contradict him, however false his story may be, but the persons whom he accused. As for me, Sire, there is no mode, the most solemn that can be devised, in which I shall not be anxious and happy to contra- dict it. And I do here most solemnly, in the face of Heaven, most directly and positively affirm, that it is as foul, malicious, and wicked a falsehood, as ever was invented by the malice of man. Cap- tain Manby, to whom I have been under the ne- cessity of applying, for that purpose, in the depo- sition which I annex, most expressly and positively denies it also. Beyond these our two denials, there is nothing which can by possibility be directly op- posed to Mr. Bidgood's evidence.— All that re- mains to be done is to examine Mr. Bidgood's cre- dit, and to see how far he deserves the character which the Commissioners give to him. — How un- foundedly they gave such a character to Mr. Cole, your Majesty, I am satisfied, must be fully con- vinced. I suppose there must be some mistake, I will not call it by any harsher name, for I think it can be no more than a mistake, in Mr. Bidgood's say- ing, that the first time he knew Captain Manby come to Montague House, was at the end of 1803, or beginning of 1804; for he first came at the end of the former year f and the fact is, that Mr. Bid- good must have seen him then. — But, however, * Before 1803. 13© the date is comparatively immaterial, the fact it is, that is important. And here, Sire, surely I have the same com- plaint which I have so often urged. I would ask your Majesty, whether I, not as a Princess of Wales, but as a party accused, had not a right to be thought, and to be presumed, innocent, till I was proved to be guilty ? Let me ask, if there ever could exist a case, in which the credit of the wit- ness ought to have been more severely sifted and tried ? The fact rested solely upon his single asser- tion. However false, it could not possibly receive contradiction, but from the parties. The story itself surely is not very probable. My character cannot be considered as under inquiry ; it is already gone, and decided upon, by those, if there are any such, who think such a story probable. — That in a room, with the door open, and a servant known to be waiting just by, we should have acted such a seen© of gross indecency. The indiscretion at least might have rendered it improbable, even to those, whose prejudices against me, might be prepared to con- ceive nothing improbable in the indecency of it. Yet this seems to have been received as a fact that there was no reason to question. The witness is assumed, without hesitation, to be the witness of truth, of unquestionable veracity. Not the faintest trace is there to be found of a single question put to him, to try and sift the credit which was due to him, or to his story. Is he asked, as I suggested before should have 131 teen done with regard to Mr. Cole — To whom he told this fact before ? When he told it ? What was done in consequence of this information ? If he never told it, till for the purpose of supporting Lady Douglas' statement, how could he in his si-* tuation, as an old servant of the Prince, with whom as he swears, he had lived twenty-three years, cre- ditably to himself, account for having concealed it so long ? And how came Lady Douglas and Sir John to find out that he knew it, if he never had communicated it before ? If he had communicated it, it would then have been useful to have heard how far his present story was consistent with his former ; and if it should have happened that this and other matters, which he may have stated, were, at that time, made the subject of any Inquiry ; then how far that Inquiry had tended to confirm or shake his credit. His first examination was, it is true, taken by Lord Grenville and Lord Spencer alone, without the aid of the experience of the Lord Chancellor, and Lord Chief Justice ; this undoubt- edly may account for the omission ; but the noble Lords will forgive me if I say, it does not excuse it, especially as Mr. Bidgood was examined again on the 3d of July, by all the Commissioners, and this fact is again referred to then, as the foundation of the suspicion which he afterwards entertained of Captain Manby at Southend. Nay, that last de- position affords on my part, k another ground of si- milar complaint of the strongest kind. It opens thus : " The Princess used to go out in her phaeton 132 " with coachman and helper, towards Long Reach, " eight or ten times, carrying luncheon and wine " with her, when Captain Manby's ship was at " Long Reach, always Mrs. Fitzgerald with her. " She would go out at one, and return about five Ci or six, sometimes sooner or later." The date when Captain Manby's ship was lying at Long Reach, is not given ; and therefore whe-r ther this was before or after the scene of the sup- posed salute does not appear. But for what was this statement of Mr. Bidgood's made ? Why was it introduced? Why were these drives towards Long Reach with luncheon, connected with Cap- tain Manby's ship lying there at the time, examined to by the Commissioners ? The first point, the matter foremost in their minds, when they call back this witness for his re-examination, appears to have been these drives towards Long Reach. — Can it have been for any purpose but to have the benefit of the insinuation, to leave it open to be in- ferred, that those drives were for the purpose of meeting Captain Manby ? If this fact was material, why in the name of justice was it so left? Mrs. Fitzgerald was mentioned by name, as accompany- ing me in them all ; Why was not she called ? She perhaps was my confidante ; no truth could have been hoped for from her j — still there were my coachman and helper, who likewise accompanied me; Why were they not called ? they are not surely confidants too. — But it is, for what reason I g^nnot pretend to say, thought sufficient to leave 123 this fact, or rather this insinuation, upon the evi* dence of Mr. Bidgood, who only saw, or could see, the way I went when I set out upon my drive, in- stead of having the fact from the persons who could speak to the whole of it ; to the places I went to ; to the persons whom I met with. Your Majesty will think me justified in dwelling upon this, the more from this circumstance, because I know, and will shew to your Majesty, on the tes- timony of Jonathan Partridge, which I annex, that these drive's, or at least one of them, have been already the object of previous, and, I believe, nearly cotemporary investigation, The truth is, that it did happen upon two of these drives that I met with Captain Manby ; in one of them that he joined me, and went with me to Lord Eardleys, at Eelvidere, and that he partook of something which we had to eat ; — that some of Lord Eardley's ser- vants were examined as to my conduct upon this occasion ; — and I am confidently informed that the servants gave a most satisfactory account of all that passed ; nay, that they felt, and have expressed some honest indignation at the foul suspicion which the examination implied. On the other occasion, having the boys to go on board the Africaine, I went with one of my Ladies to see them on board, and Captain Manby joined us in our walk round Mr. Calcraft's grounds at Ingress Park, opposite to Long Reach ; where we walked, while my horses were baiting. We went into no house, and on that occasion had nothing to eat. 134 Perfectly unable to account why these facts were iaot more fully inquired into, if thought proper to be inquired into at all, I return again to Mr, Bid-' good's evidence. As far as it respects my conduct at Montague House, it is confined to the circum- stances which I have already mentioned. And, upon those circumstances, I have no further obser- vation, which may tend to illustrate Mr. Bidgood's credit, to offer. But I trust if, from other parts of his evidence, your Majesty sees traces of the strong- est prejudices against me, and the most scandalous inferences drawn from circumstances, which can in no degree support them, your Majesty will then be able justly to appreciate the credit due to every part of Mr. Bidgood's Evidence. Under the other head into which I have divided this part of the case, I mean my conduct at South- end, as relative to Captain Manby, and Mr. Bidgood is more substantial and particular.* His statement on this head begins by shewing that I was at South-* end about six weeks before the Africaine, Captain Manby*s ship, arrived. That Mr. Sicard was looking out for its arrival, as if she was expected. And as it is my practice to require as constant a correspondence to be kept up with my charity boys a when on board of ship, as the nature of their situa- tion will admit of, and as Mr. Sicard is the person who manages all matters concerning them, and en- ters into their interests with the most friendly anx.- * See Appendix (A.) p. 10. 135 iety, he certainly was apprised of the probability of the ship's arrival off Southend, before she came. And here I may as well, perhaps, by the way, re- mark, that as this correspondence with the boys is always under cover to the Captain ; this circum- stance may account to your Majesty for the fact, which is stated by some of the witnesses, of several letters being put into the post by Sicard, some of which he may have received from me, which were directed to Captain Manby. Soon after the arrival of the Africaine, however, Bidgood says, the Captain put off in his boat. Sicard went to meet him, and immediately brought him up to me and my Ladies ; — he dined there then, and came frequently to see me. It would have been as candid, if Mr. Bidgood had represent- ed the fact as it really was, though perhaps the cir- cumstance is not very material : — that the Captain brought the two boys on shore with him to see me, and this, as well as many other circumstances con- nected with these boys, the existence of whom, as accounting in any degree for the intercourse be- tween me and Captain Manby, could never have been collected from out of Bidgood's depositions, Sicard would have stated, if the Commissioners had examined him to it. But though he is thus referred to, though his name is mentioned about the letters sent to Captain Manby, he does not appear to hav* been examined to any of them, and all that he ap- pears to have been asked is, as to his remembering Captain Manby visiting at Montague House, and to my paying the expense of the linen furniture for 136 his cabin. But Mr. Sicard was, I suppose, repre- sented by my enemies to be a confidant, from whom no truth could be extracted, and therefore that it was idle waste of time to examine him to such points ; and so unquestionably he, and every other honest servant in my family, who could be suppos- ed to know any thing upon the subject, were sure to be represented by those, whose conspiracy and falsehood, their honesty and truth were the best means of detecting. The conspirators, however, had the first word, and unfortunately their veracity was not questioned, nor their unfavourable bias sus- pected. Mr. Bidgood then proceeds to state the situation of the houses, two of which, with a part of a third, I had at Southend. He describes No. 9, as the house in which I slept; No. 8, as that in which we dined ; and No. 7, as containing a drawing- room, to which we retired after dinner. And he says, u I have several times seen the Princess, after " having gone to No. 7 with Captain Manby and " the rest of the company, retire with Captain " Manby from No. 7, through No. 8, to No. 9, " which was the house where the Princess slept. " I suspect that Captain Manby slept very fre- " quently in the house. Hints were given by the " servants, and I believe that others suspected it as " well as myself." — What those hints were, by what servants given, are things which do not seem to have been thought necessary matters of inquiry. At least, there is no trace in Mr. Bid good's, or any , 137 other witness's examination, of any such inquiry having been made. In his second deposition, which applies to the same fact, after saying that we went away the day after the Africaine sailed from Southend, he says, " Captain Manby was there three times a week at " the least, whilst his ship lay for six weeks off " Southend at the Nore ; — he came as tide served " in a morning, and to dine, and drink tea. I " have seen him next morning by ten o'clock. " I suspected he slept at No. 9> the Princess's. " — She always put out the candles herself in c< drawing-room at No. 9, and bid me not wait so this plan of excluding him from the opportunity of knowing what was going on at No. 9> was part of a long meditated scheme, as he would represent it, planned and thought of six weeks before it could be executed ; and which when it was executed, your Majesty will recollect, according to Mr. Bidgood's evi- dence, there was so little contrivance to conceal, that the basons and towels, which the Captain is insinuated to have used, were exposed to sight, as if to declare that he was there. — It is tedious and disgusting, Sire, I am well aware, to trouble your Majesty with such particulars ; but it, doubtless, is true, that I bid him not take the candles away from No. 9* The candles which are used in my drawing-room, are considered as his perquisites. Those on the contrary which are used in my private apartment are the per- quisites of my maid. I thought that upon the whole it was a fairer arrangement, when I was at Southend, to give my maid the perquisites of the candles used at No. 9; and I made the ar- rangement accordingly, and ordered Mr. Bid- good to leave them. This, Sire, is the true account of the fact respecting the candles ; an arrangement which, very possibly Mr. Bidgood did not like. But the putting out the candles myself, was 140 not the only thing, from which the inference is drawn, that Captain Manby slept at my house, at No. 9, and as is evidently insinuated, if not stated, in my bed-room. There were water-jugs, and basons, and towels left in the passage, which Mr. Bidgood never saw at other times. At what other times does he mean ? At other times than those at which he suspected, from seeing them there, that Captain Manby slept in my house ? If every time he saw the bason and towels, &c. in the passage, he suspected Cap- tain Manby slept there, it certainly would follow that he never saw them at times when he did not suspect that fact. But, Sire, upon this impor- tant fact, important to the extent of convicting me, if it were true, of High Treason, if it were not for the indignation which such scandalous, licentious wickedness and malice excite, it would hardly be possible to treat it with any gravity. Whether there were or were not basons and towels sometimes left in a passage at Southend, which were not there generally, and ought to have been never there, I really cannot inform your Majesty. It certainly is possible, but the utmost it can prove, I should trust, might be some slovenliness in my servant, who did not put them in their proper places ; but surely it must be left to Mr. Bidgood alone to trace any evidence from such a circumstance, of the crime of adul- tery in me. But I cannot thus leave this fact, for I trust I shall here again have the same advantage from the excess and extravagance of this man's 141 malice, as I have already had on the other part of the charge, from the excess and extravagance of his confederate Lady Douglas. What is the charge that he would insinuate? That I meditated and effected a stolen, secret, clan- destine, intercourse with an adulterer? No. — Captain Manby, it seems, according to his insinua- tion, slept with me in my own house, under cir- cumstances of such notoriety, that it was impossible that any of my female attendants, at least, should not have known it. Their duties were varied on the occasion ; they had to supply basons and towels in places where they never was supplied, except when prepared for him ; and they were not dnly purposely so prepared, but prepared in an open passage, exposed to view, in a manner to excite the suspicion of those who were not admitted into the secret. And what a secret was it, that was thus to be hazarded ! No less than what, if discovered, would fix Captain Manby and myself with High Treason ! Not only, therefore, must I have been thus careless of reputation, and eager for infamy ; but I must have been as careless of my life, as of my honour. — Lost to all sense of shame, surely I must have still retained some regard for life. — Captain Manby too, with a folly and madness equal to his suppossd iniquity, must then have put his life in the hands of my servants, and de- pended for his safety upon their fidelity to me, and their perfidy to the Prince their master. I the excess of vice and crime in all this is believed, 14* eould its indiscretion, its madness, find credulity to adopt it almost upon any evidence? But what must be the state of that man's mind, as to preju- dice, who could come to the conclusion of believ- ing it, from the fact of some water-jugs and towels being found in an unusual place, in a passage near my bed-room? For as to his suspicion being raised by what he says he saw in the looking-glass, if it was as true as it is false, that could not occa- sion, his believing, on any particular night, that Captain Manby slept in my house ; the situation of these towels and basons is what leads to that belief. But, Sire, may I ask, did the Commissioners be- lieve this man's suspicions ? If they did, what do they mean by saying that these facts of great inde- cency, &c. went to a much less extent than the principal charges? And that it was not for them to state their bearing and effect ? The bearing of this fact unquestionably, if believed, is the same as that of the principal charge ; namely, to prove me guilty of High Treason. They, therefore, could not believe it. But if they did not believe it, and, as it seems to me, Sire, no men of common judg- ment could, on such a statement how could they bring themselves to name Mr. Bidgood as one of those witnesses on whose unbiassed testimony they could so rely? or how could they, (in pointing him out with the other three as speaking to facts, particularly xvith respect to Captain Manby, which must be credited till decidedly contradicted) emit to specify the facts which he spoke to that 143 they thus thought worthy of belief, but leave the whole, including this incredible part of it, recom- mended to belief by their general and unqualified sanction and approbation. But the falsehood of this charge does not rest on its incredibility alone. My servant Mrs. Sander, who attended constantly on my person, and whose bed- room was close to mine, was examined by the Com- missioners ; she must have known this fact if it had been true : she positively swears " that she did not know or believe, that Captain Manby staid till very late hours with me ; that she never suspected there was any improper familiarity between us. M.Wilson, who made my bed, swears, that she had been in the habit of making it ever since she lived with me, that another maid, whose name was Ann Bye, assisted with her in making it, and swears from what she ob- served, she never had any reason to believe that two persons had slept in it. Referring thus by name to her fellow-servant, who made the bed with her, but that servant, why I know not, is not examined. As your Majesty then finds the inference drawn by Bidgood to amount to a fact so openly and undis- guisedly profligate, as to outrage all credibility ; as your Majesty finds it negatived by the evidence of three witnesses, one of whom, in particular, if such a fact were true, must have known it ; as your Majesty finds one witness appealing to ano- ther, who is pointed out as a person who must have been able, with equal means of knowledge, to have confirmed her if she spoke true, and to 144 have contradicted her if she spoke false. And, Sire, when added to all this, your Majesty is gra- ciously pleased to recollect that Mr. Bidgood was one of those who, though in my service, submit- ted themselves voluntarily to be examined previous to the appointment of the Commissioners, in con- firmation of Lady Douglas's statement, without informing me of the fact ; and when I state to your Majesty, upon the evidence of Philip Krackeler and Robert Eaglestone, whose deposition I annex, that this unbiassed witness, during the pendency of these examinations before the Commissioners, was seen to be in conference and communication with Lady Douglas, my most ostensible accuser, do I raise my expectations too high, when I confidently trust that his malice, and his falsehood, as well as his connection in this conspiracy against my honour, my station in this kingdom, and my life, will ap- pear to your Majesty too plainly for him to receive any credit, either in this or in any other part of his testimony ? The other circumstances, to which he speaks, are comparatively too trifling, for me to trouble your Majesty with any more observations upon his evi- dence. The remaining part of the case, which respects Captain Manby, relates to my conduct at East Cliff. How little Mrs. Lisle's examination affords for observations upon this part of the case, except as shewing how very seldom Captain Manby cal- 145 led upon me while I was there, I have already observed. Mr. Cole says nothing upon this part of the case ; nor Mr. Bidgood. The only witness amongst the four whose testimonies are distinguish- ed by the Commissioners as most material, and as those on which they particularly rely, who says any thing upon this part of the case, is Fanny Lloyd. Her deposition is as follows. # " I was at Ramsgate with the Princess in 1803. f 6 One morning when we were in the house at " East CI iff, somebody, I don't recollect who, " knocked at my door, and desired me to prepare " breakfast for the Princess. This was about six (e o'clock ; I was asleep. During the whole time I " was in the Princess's service, I had never been " called up before to make the Princess's breakfast. " I slept in the house-keeper's room, on theground- u floor. I opened the shutters of the window for a light. I knew at that time that Captain Manny's " ship was in the Downs. When I opened the ff shutters, I saw the Princess walking down the " Gravel- Walk towards the sea. No orders had (i been given me over-night to prepare breakfast " early. The gentleman the Princess was with " was a tall man. I was surprised to see the " Princess walking with a gentleman at that time " in the morning. I am sure it was the Princess." What this evidence of Fanny Lloyd applies to, I do not feel certain that I recollect. The circum- stances which she mentions might, I think, have occurred twice while I was there ; and which time * Appendix (A) p. 13, U 146 she alludes to, I cannot pretend to say. I mean on occasion of two water parties, which I intended ; one of which did not take place at all, and the other not so early in the day as was intended, nor was its object effected. Once I intended to pay Admiral Montague a visit at Deal. But, wind and tide not serving, we sailed much later than we in- tended ; and instead of landing at Deal, the Admiral came on board our vessel, and we returned to East Cliff in the evening, on which occasion Captain Manby was not of the party, nor was he in the Downs — -but it is very possible, that having prepared to set off early, I might have walked down towards the sea, and been seen by Fanny Lloyd. On the other occasion, Captain Manby was to have been of the party, and it was to have been on board his ship. I desired him to be early at my house in the morning, and if the day suited me, we would go. He came ; I walked with him towards the sea, to look at the morning; I did not like the appearance of the weather, and did not go to sea. Upon either of these occasions Fanny Lloyd might have been called up to make breakfast, and might have seen me walking. As to the orders not having been given her over night, to that I can say nothing. But upon this statement, what inference can be intended to be drawn from this fact ? It is the only one in which F. Lloyd's evidence can in any degree be applied to Captain Manby, and she is one of tke important witnesses referred to, as 147 proving something which must, particularly as with regard to Captain Manby, be credited till contra- dicted, and as deserving the most serious consider- ation. From the examination of Mrs. Fitzgerald I recollect, that she was asked whether Captain Manby ever slept in the house at East Cliff, to which she, to the best of her knowledge, answers in the negative. Is this evidence then of Fanny Lloyd's relied upon to afford an inference that Captain Manby slept in my house ? or was there at an improper hour ? or in a manner, and under cir- cumstances, which afforded reason for unfavoura- ble interpretations ? If this were so, can it be believed that I would, under such circumstances, have taken a step, such as calling for breakfast, at an unusual hour, which must have made the fact more notorious and remarkable, and brought the attention of the servants, who must have waited at the breakfast, more particularly an4 pointedly to it $ But if there is any thing which rests, or is supposed to rest, upon the credit of this witness — though she is one of the four, whose credit Your Majesty will recollect it has been stated that there was no reason to question, yet she stands in a predicament in which, in general, at least, I had understood it to be supposed, that the credit of a witness was not only questionable, but materially shaken. For, towards the beginning of her exami- nation, she states*, that Mr. Milk attended her for a cold ; he asked her if the Prince came to Black* * Appendix (A.) p. 13. 148 heath backwards and forwards ; or something to that effect ; for the Princess was with child ; or looked as if she was with child. This must have been three or four years ago. She thought it must be sometime before the child (W. Austin) was brought to the Princess. To this fact she posi- tively swears, and in this she is as positively con- tradicted by Mr. Mills ;* for he swears, in his depo- sition before the Commissioners, that he never did say to her, or any one, that the Princess was with child, or looked as if she was with child ;— that he never thought so, nor surmised any thing of the kind. Mr. Mills has a partner, Mr. Edmeads. The Commissioners therefore, Conceiving that Fan- ny Lloyd might have mistaken one of the partners for the other, examine Mr. Edmeads also. Mr. Edmeads, in his deposition ,-{■* is equally positive that he never said any such thing — so the matter rests upon these depositions ; and upon that state of it, what pretence is there for saying, that a witness who swears to a conversation with a medi- cal person, who attended me, of so extremely important a nature ; and is so expressly and de- cidedly contradicted in the important fact which she speaks to, is a witness whose credit there appears no reason to question ? This important circumstance must surely have been overlooked when that statement was made. But this fact of Mr.Millsand Mr. Edmeads's con- tradiction of Fanny Lloyd, appears to Your Majesty, for the first time, from the examination before the * Appendix (A.) p. 32. f Appendix (A.) p. 30. 149 Commissioners. — But this is the fact which I charge as having been known to those, who are concerned in bringing forward this information, and which, nevertheless, was not communicated to Your Ma- jesty. — The fact that Fanny Lloyd declared, that Mr. Mills told her the Princess was with child, is stated in the declarations which were delivered to His Royal Highness the Prince of Wales, and by him forwarded to Your Majesty. — The fact that Mr. Mills denied ever having so said, though known at the same time, is not stated. ' That I maynot appear to have represented so strange a fact, without sufficient authority, [subjoin the De- claration of Mr. Mills, and the Deposition of Mr. Edmeads, which prove it. Fanny Lloyd's original Declaration, which was delivered to His Royal High- ness, is dated on the 12th of February. It appears to have been taken at the Temple ; I conclude there- fore at the chambers of Mr. Lowten, Sir John Douglas's solicitor, who # , according to Mr. Cole, accompanied him to Cheltenham to procure some of these Declarations. On the 13th of February, the next day after Fanny Lloyd's Declaration, the Earl of Moira sends for Mr. Mills upon pressing business. Mr. Mills attends him on the 14th ; he is asked by his Lordship upon the subject of this conversation; he is told he may rely upon his Lordship's honour, that what passed should be in perfect confidence ; (a confidence which Mr. Mills, feeling it to be on a subject too important to his character, at the moment disclaims ;) — that it was • Appendix (B/ No. 103. 150 his (the Earl of Moira's) duty to his Prince, as his counsellor, to enquire into the subject, which he had known for some time. — Fanny Lloyd's state- ment being then related to Mr. Mills, Mr. Mills, with great warmth, declared that it was an infamous falsehood. — Mr. Lowten, who appears also to have been there by appointment, was called into the room, and he furnished Mr. Mills with the date to which Fanny Lloyd's declaration applied. The meeting ends in Lord Moira's desiring to see Mr. Mills's partner, Mr. Edmeades, who, not being at home, cannot attend him for a few days. He does, however, upon his return, attend him on the 20th of May : on his attendance, instead of Mr. Lowten, he finds Mr. Conant, the magistrate, with Lord Moira. He denies the conversation with Fanny Lloyd, as positively and peremptorily as Mr. Mills. Notwithstanding however all this, the declaration of Fanny Lloyd is delivered to His Royal Highness, unaccompanied by these contradictions, and for- warded to Your Majesty on the 29th. That Mr. Lowten was the Solicitor of Sir John Douglas in this business, cannot be doubted; that he took some of those Declarations, which were laid before Your Majesty, is clear ; and that he took this De- claration of Fanny Lloyd's, seems not to. be ques- tionable. That the Inquiry by Earl Moira, two days after her Declaration was taken, must have been in consequence of an early communication of it to him, seems necessarily to follow from what is above stated; that it was known, on the 14th of J5I May, that Mr. Mills contradicted this assertion ; and, on the 20th, that Mr. Edmeades did, is per- fectly clear ; and yet, notwithstanding all this, the fact, that Mr. Edmeades and Mr. Mills contra- dicted it, seems to have been not communicated to His Royal Highness the Prince of Wales, for he, as it appears from the Report, forwarded the De- clarations which had been delivered to His Royal Highness, through the Chancellor, to Your Ma- jesty ; and the Declaration of Fanny Lloyd, which had been so falsified, to the knowledge of the Earl Moira and of Mr. Lowten, the Solicitor for Sir John Douglas, is sent in to Your Majesty as one of the documents, on which you were to ground your Inquiry, unaccompanied by its falsification by Mills and Edmeades; at least, no Declarations by them are amongst those which are transmitted to me, as copies of the original Declarations which were laid before Your Majesty. I know not whe- ther it was Lord Moira, or Mr. Lowten, who should have communicated this circumstance to His Royal Highness; butthat, in allfairness,it ought un- questionably tohavebeencom municated bysomeone. I dare not trust myself with any inferences from this proceeding ; I content myself with re- marking, that it must now be felt, that I was justi- fied in saying, that neither His Royal Highness, nor Your Majesty, any more than myself, had been fairly dealt with, in not being fully informed upon this important fact ; and Your Majesty will forgive a weak, unprotected woman, like myself, Ib2 who, under such circumstances, should apprehend that, however Sir John and Lady Douglas may ap- pear my ostensible accusers, I have other enemies, whose ill-will I may have occasion to fear, without feeling myself assured, that it will be strictly regu- lated, in its proceeding against me, by the prin- ciples of fairness and of justice. I have now, Sire, gone through all the evidence which respects Captain Manby ; whether at Mon- tague House, Southend, or East Cliff, and I do trust, that your Majesty will see, upon the whole of it, how mistaken a view the Commissioners have taken of it. The pressure of other duties en- grossing their time and their attention, has made them leave the important duties of this investiga- tion, in many particulars, imperfectly discharged — a more thorough attention to it must have given them a better and truer insight into the characters of those witnesses, upon whose credit, as I am convinced, Your Majesty will now see, they have without sufficient reason relied. There remains nothing for me, on this part of the charge to per- form ; but, adverting to the circumstance which is falsely sworn against me by Mr. Eidgood, of the salute, and the false inference and insinuation, from other facts, that Captain Manby slept in my house, either at Southend, or East Cliff, on my own part most solemnly to declare, that they are both utterly false ; that Bidgood's assertion as to the salute is a malicious slanderous invention, without the slightest shadow of truth to support it $ that his suspicions 153 and insinuations, as to Captain Manby's having slept in my house, are also the false suggestions of his own malicious mind ; and that Captain Manby never did, to my knowledge or belief, sleep in my house at Southend, East Cliff, or any other house of mine whatever ; and, however often he may have been in my company, I solemnly protest to Your Majesty, as I have done in the former cases^ that nothing ever passed between him and me, that I should be ashamed, or unwilling, that all the world should have seen. And I have also, with great pain, and with a deep sense of wounded de- licacy, applied to Captain Manby to attest to the same truths, and I subjoin to this letter his Depo- sition to that effect. I stated to Your Majesty, that I should be obliged to return to other parts of Fanny Lloyd's testimony. At the end of it, she says, *" I never told Cole that M. Wilson, when she supposed the Princess to be in the library, had gone into the Princess's bed-room, and had found a man there at breakfast with the Prin- cess ; or that there was a great to do about it, and that M, Wilson was sworn to secrecy, and threatened to be turned away, if she divulged what she had seen." This part of her examination your Majesty will perceive, must have been called from her, by some precise question, addressed to her, with respect to a supposed communication from her to Mr. Cole. In Mr. Cole's examination, there is not one word upon the subject of it. Jn his original declaration^ * Appendix (A.) p. 14. X 154 however there is : anil there* your Majesty will per- ceive, that he affirms the fact of her having repor- ted to him Mary Wilson's declaration, in the very same words in which Fanny Lloyd denies it, and it is therefore evident that the Commissioners, in putting this question to Fanny Lloyd, must have put it to her from Cole's declaration. She posi- tively denies the fact ; there is then a flat and pre- cisecontradiction, between the examination of Fan- ny Lloyd and the original statement of Mr. Cule. It is therefore impossible that they both can have spoken true. The Commissioners, for some rea- son, don't examine Cole to this point at all ; don't endeavour to trace out this story ; if they had, they must have dicovered which of these witnesses spoke the truth; but they leave this contradiction, not only unexplained, but uninquired after, and in that state, report both these witnesses, Cole and Fanny Lloyd, who thus speak to the two sides of a contradiction, and who therefore cannot by pos- sibility both speak truth, as witnesses who cannot be suspected of partiality, whose credit they see no reason to question, and whose story must be believed till contradicted. But what is,if possible,still more extraordinary, this supposed communication from F. Lloyd to Cole, as your Majesty observes, relates to something which M.Wilson is supposed to have seen and to have said; yet though M.Wilson appears herself to have been examined by the Commissioners on the same day with Fanny Lloyd, in the copy of her examination^ • Appendix (B) p. 99. 155 as delivered to me, there is no trace of any question relating to this declaration having been put to her. And I have not less reason, to lament, than to be surprised, that it did not occur to the Commissio- ners to see the necessity of following this Inquiry still further. For, if properly pursued, it would have demonstrated two things, both very important to be kept in mind in the whole of this consideration. First, how hearsay representations of this kind, ari- sing out ot little or nothing, become magnified and exaggerated by the circulation of prejudiced, or malicious reporters; and, Secondly, it would have shewn the industry pf Mr. and Mrs. Bidgood, as well as Mr. Cole, in collecting information in sup- port of Lady Douglas's statement, and in impro- ving what they collected by their false colourings, and malicious additions to it. They would have found a story in Mrs. Bidgopd's* declaration, as well as in her husband's-}- (who relates it as having heard it from his wife,) which is evidently the same as that which W. Cole's declaration contains. For the Bidgoods' declarations state, that Fanny Lloyd told Mrs. Bidgood that Mary Wilson had gone into the Princess's bed room, and had found her Royal Highness and Sir Sidney in the most criminal situation ; that she had left the room, and was so shocked, that she fainted away at the door. Here then are Mrs. Bidgood, and Mr. Cole, both declaring what they had heard Fanny Lloyd say, and Fanny Lloyd denying it. How ex- traordinary is it that they were not all confronted! * Appendix (B.) p. 106. f Appendix (B.) p. 100. 156 and your Majesty will see presently how much it is to be lamented that they were not. For, from Fanny Lloyd's original declaration, it appears that the truth would have come out. As she there states that,* "To the best of her knowledge Mary Wilson said, that she had seen the Princess and Sir Sidney in the Blue Room, but never heard Mary Wilson say she was so alarmed as to be in a fit. ,? If then, on confronting Fanny Lloyd with Mrs. Bidgood and Mr. Cole, the Commissioners had found Fann)^ Lloyd's story to be what she related before, and had then put the question to Mary Wilson, and had heard from her what it really was which she had seen and related to Fanny Lloyd, they could not have been at a loss to have disco- vered which of these witnesses told the truth. They would have found, I am perfectly confident, that all that Mary Wilson ever could have told Fanny Lloyd, was that she had seen Sir Sidney and myself in the Blue Room, and they would then have bad to refer to the malicious, and confederated inventions of the Bidgood s and Mr. Cole, for the conversion of the Blue Room, into the bed-room ; for the vile slander of what M. Wilson was sup- posed to have seen, and for the violent effect which this scene had upon her. I say their confederated inventions, as it is impossible to suppose that they could have been concerned in inventing the same additions to Fanny Lloyd's story, unless they had communicated together upon it. And when they had once found Mrs. Bidgood and Mr. Cole, thus * Appendix (B.) p. 107. 157 conspiring together, they would have had no diffi- culty in connecting them both in the same conspi- racy with Sir John Douglas, by shewing how connected Cole was with Sir John Douglas, and how acquainted with his proceedings, in collecting the evidence which was to support Lady Douglas's declaration. For, by referring to Mr. Cole's declaration, made on the 23rd of February,* they would have seen that Mr. Cole, in explaining some observation about Sir Sidney's supposed possession of a key to the garden door, says that it was what " Mr. Lam- & pert, the servant of Sir John Douglas, mentioned - at Cheltenham to Sir John Douglas and Mr. ?' Lowten."— How should Mr. Cole know that Sir *John Douglas and Mr. Lowten had been down to Cheltenham, to collect evidence from this old ser- vant of Sir John Douglas's ? How should he have known what that evidence was, unless he had either accompanied them himself, or at least liad had such a communication either with Sir John Douglas, or Mr. Lowten r as it never could have occurred to any of them to have made to Mr. Cole, unless, instead of being a mere witness, he, were a party to this accusation ? But whether they had convinced themselves, that Fanny Lloyd spoke true, and Cole and Mrs. Bidgood falsely ; or whe- ther they had convinced themselves of the reverse, it could not have been possible, that they both could have spoken the truth ; and, consequently, the Commissioners could never have reported the * Appendix (B.) p. 103. 158 veracity of both to be free from suspicion, and de- serving of credit. There only remains that I should make a few observations, on what appears in the examinations relative to Mr. Hood (now Lord Hood,) Mr. Chester, and Captain Moore. And I really should not have thought a single observation necessary upon either of them, except that what refers to them is stated in the examinations of Mrs. Lisle. With respect to Lord Hood it is as follows : *"I was at Catheriugton with the Princess, — " remember Mr. (now Lord Hood) there, and the '* Princess going out airing with him, alone, in " Mr. Hood's little whiskey ;— and his servant was " with them ; Mr. Hood drove, and staid out two " or three times ; — more than once, three or four " times. Mr. Hood dined with us several times; — u once or twice he slept in a house in the garden ; " she appeared to pay no attention to him, but " that of common civility to an intimate acquaiu- " tance," Now Sire, it is undoubtedly true that I drove out several times with Lord Hood in his one horse chaise, and some few times, twice I be- lieve at most, without any of my servants attend- ing us ; and considering the time of life, and the respectable character of my Lord Hood, J never should have conceived that I incurred the least danger to my reputation in so doing. If indeed it was the duty of the Commissioners to inquire into instances of my conduct, in which they may con- ceive it to have been less reserved and dignified, * Appendix (A.) No. 27, 159 than what would properly become the exalted sta- tion which I hold in your Majesty's Royal Family, it is possible that, in the opinions of some, these drives with my Lord Hood were not consistent with that station ; and that they were particularly improper in those instances in which we were not attended by more servants, or any servants of my own. Upon this J have only to observe, that these instances occurred after I had received the news of the lamented death of your Majesty's brother, the Duke of Gloucester. I was at that time down by the sea side for my health. I did not like to forego the advantage of air and exercise for the short remainder of the time which I had to stay there ; and I purposely chose to go out, not in my own carriage, and unattended, that I might not be seen and known, to be driving about (myself and my attendants out of mourning) while his Royal Highness was known to have been so recently dead. This statement, however, is all that I have to make upon my part of the case, and whatever indecorum or impropriety of behaviour the Commissioners have fixed upon me by this circumstance, it must remain ; for I cannot deny the truth of the fact, and have only the above explanation to offer of it. As to what Mrs. Lisle's examination contains with respect to Mr. Chester and Captain Moore, it is so connected, that I must trouble your Majesty with the statement of it altogether. *" I was with her Royal Highness at Lady Sheffield's at Christmas in Sussex ; — I i nquired what * Appendix (A) p. 44. i6o company was there when I came, — she said, only Mr. John Chester, who was there by her Royal Highnesses orders ; that she could get no other company to meet her, on account of the roads, and the season of the year, He dined and slept there that night ; the next day other company came, Mr. Chester remained. I heard Her Royal Highness say she had been ill in the night, and came out for a light, and lighted her candle in her servant's room. I returned from Sheffield -pi ace to Black- heath with the Princess ; Captain Moore dined there ; I left him and the Princess twice alone, for a short time ; he might be alone half an hour with her in the room below, in which we had been sitting. I went to look for a book to complete a set her Royal Highness was lending Captain Moore. She made him a present of an inkstand, to the best of my recollection. He was there one morning in January last, on the Princess Char- lotte's birth-day ; he went away before the rest of the company. I might be about twenty minutes the second time I was away, the night Captain Moore was there. At Lady Sheffield's, her Royal Highness paid more attention to Mr. Chester than to the rest of the company. I know of her Royal Highness walking out alone, twice, with Mr. Chester in the morning alone ; once, a short time it rained, the other not an hour, not long. Mr. Chester is a pretty young man ; her attentions to him were not uncommon ; not the same as to Cap- tain Manby." 161 And first, Sire, as to what relates to Mr. Ches- ter. If there is any imputation to be cast upon my character by what passed at Sheffield- Place with Mr. Chester, (and by the Commissioners returning to examine Mrs. Lisle upon my atten- tion to Mr. Chester, my walking out with him, and above all u as to his being a pretty young man/' I conceive it to be so intended) I am sure your Ma- jesty will see that it is the hardest thing imaginable upon me, that, upon an occurrence which passed in Lady Sheffield's house, on a visit to her, Lady Shef- field herself was never examined ; for if she had been, I am convinced that these Noble Lords, the Com- missioners, never could have put me to the painful degradation of stating any thing upon this subject. The statement begins by Mrs. Lisle's inquiring, what company was there ? and Lady Sheffield say- ing " only Mr. John Chester, who was there by her Royal Highness's orders ; that she could get no other company on account of the roads." Is not this, Sire, left open to the inference that Mr. John Chester was the only person who had been invited by my orders ? If Lady Sheffield had been examined, she would have been able to have produced the very letter in which, in answer to her Ladyship's request, that I would let her know what company it would be agreeable for me to meet, I said, (( every thing of the name of North,all the Legges,and Chesters,Williara and John, &c. &c, and Mr. Elliott." Instead of singling out, therefore, Mr. John Chester, I y 162 included him in the enumeration which I made of the near relations of Lady Sheffield ; and your Ma- jesty from this alone cannot fail to see how false a colour, even a true fact can assume, if k be not sufficiently inquired into and explained. As to the circumstance of my having been taken ill in the night, being obliged to get up, and light my candle ; why this fact should be recorded, I am wholly at a loss to conceive. All the circum- stances however respecting it, connected very much as they are with the particular disposition of Lady Sheffield's house, would have been fully ex- plained, if thought material to have been inquired after, by Lady Sheffield herself; and I should have been relieved from the painful degradation of al- luding at all to a circumstance, which I could not further detail, without a degree of indelicacy ; and as I cannot possibly suppose such a detail can be necessary for my defence* it would, especially in addressing your Majesty, be wholly inexcusable. With respect to the attention which I paid to Mr. Chester, and my walking out twice alone with him for a short time> I know not how to notice it. At this distance of time I am not certain that I can, , with perfect accuracy, account for the circumstance. It appears to have been a rainy morning ; it was on the 27th or 28th of December; and whether, wishing to take a walk, I did not desire Lady Sheffield, or Mrs, : ^isle, or any Lady, to accora- r pany me in doing what, in such a morning, I m might think might be disagreeable to them, I really cannot precisely state to your Majesty. But here again, perhaps, in the judgment of some persons, may be an instance of familiarity which was not consistent with the dignity of the Princess of Wales ; but surely prejudice against me and my character must exceed all natural bounds in those minds in which any inference of crime, or moral depravity, can be drawn from such a fact. As to Captain Moore, it seems he was left alone with me, and twice in one afternoon by Mrs. Lisle ; he was alone with me half an hour. The first time Mrs. Lisle left us, her examination says, it was to look for a book which I wished to lend to Captain Moore. How long she was absent on that occasion she is not asked, but it could have been but ten minutes, as she appears to have been absent twenty minutes the second time. The Commis- sioners, though they particularly return to the In- quiry with respect to the length of time of her se- cond absence, did not require her to tell them the occasion of it ; if they had, she would have told them, that it was in search of the same book ;-^-that having on the first occasion looked for it in the drawing-room, she went afterwards to see for it in Mrs. Fitzgerald's room. — But I made him a presen| of an inkstand. I hope your Majesty will not think I am trifling with your patience when I take notice of such trifles. But it is of such trifles as these, that the evidence consists, when it is the evi- dence of respectable witnesses speaking to facts 5 164 and consequently speaking only the truth. Cap- tain Moore had conferred on me what I felt as a considerable obligation. My mother is very par- tial to the late Doctor Moore's writings. Captain Moore, as your Majesty knows, is his son, and he promised to lend me, for the purpose of sending it to my mother, a manuscript of an unpublished work of the Doctor's. In return for this civility I begged his acceptance of a trifling present. There is one circumstance/ alluded to in these examinations, which I know not how to notice, and yet feel it impossible to omit — I mean what respects certain anonymous papers, or letters, marked A. B. and C. to which Lord Cholmonde- ley appears to have been examined, upon the sup- position of their being my hand-writing. A let- ter, marked A. appears, by the examination of Lady Douglas, to have been produced by her; and the two papers, marked B. and a cover, marke4 C. appear to have been produced by Sir John. These papers I have never seen ; but I collect then* to be the same as are alluded to in Lady Douglas's original Declaration, and, from her representation of them, they are most infamous productions. From the stile and language of the letter, she says, Sir John Douglas, Sir Sidney Smith, and herself, would have no manner of hesitation in swearing point blank (for that is her phrase) to their being in my hand-writing ; and it seems, from the state- ment of His Royal Highness the Duke of Kent, that Sir Sidney Smith had been imposed upon to 165 Relieve, that these letters and papers wefe really written and sent to Sir John and Lady Douglas by me. 1 cannot help, however, remarking to Your Majesty, that, though Sir John and Lady Douglas produce these papers, and mark them, yet neither *he one nor the other swears to their belief of my hand-writing; it does not, indeed, appear, that they were asked the question ; and when it once oc- curred to the Commissioners to be material to in-* quire whose hand-writing these papers were,I should have been much surprised at their not applying to Sir John and Lady Douglas to swear it, as in their ori- ginal Declaration they offer to do, if it had not been that, by that time, I suppose, the Commissioners had satisfied themselves of the true value of Sir John and Lady Douglas's oaths,and therefore did not think it worth while to ask them any further questions. His Royal Highness the Duke of Kent, as appears by his narrative,* was convinced, by Sir Sidney Smith, that these letters came from me. His Royal Highness had been applied to by me, in consequence of my having received a for- mal note from Sir John, Lady Douglas, and Sir Sidney Smith, requesting an audience im- mediately ; this was soon after >.. • y having desired to see no more of Lady Douglas. I conceived, therefore, the audience was required for the pur- pose of remonstrance, and explanation upon this circumstance, and as I was determined not to alter my resolution, nor admit of any discussion upon it, I requested His Royal Highness, who happened * Appendix, (B) No. 2. 166- to be acquainted with Sir Sidney Smith, to try to prevent my having any further trouble upon the subject. His Royal Highness saw Sir Sidney Smith, and being impressed by him with the be- lief of Lady Douglas's story, that I was the author of these anonymous letters, he did that which na- turally became him, under such belief ; he endea- voured, for the peace of Your Majesty, and the honour of the Royal Family, to keep from the knowledge of the world, what, if it had been true, would have justly reflected such infinite disgrace upon me ; and, it seems, from the narrative that he procured, through Sir Sidney Smith, SirJobn Douglas's assurance that he would, under existing circumstances, remain quiet, if left unmolested. u This result (His Royal Highness says) he com- municated to me the following day, and I seemed satisfied with it." And undoubtedly, as he only communicated the result to me, I could not be otherwise than satisfied ; for as all that 'I wanted was, not to be obliged to see Sir John and Lady Douglas, and not to be troubled by them any more, the result of His Royal Highness's interference* through Sir Sidney Smith, was to procure me all that I wanted. I do not wonder that His Royal Highness did not mention to me the particulars of these infamous, letters and drawings, which were ascribed to me ; for, as long as he believed they were mine, undoubtedly it was a subject which he must have wished to avoid ; but I lament, as it happens, that he did not, as I should have satisfied 167 him, as far, a£ least, as any assertions of mine could have satisfied him, by declaring to him, as I do now most solemnly, that the letter is not mine, and that I know nothing whatever of the contents of it, or of the other papers ; and, I trust, that His Royal Highness, and every one else who may have taken up any false impression concerning them to my prejudice, from the assertion of Sir John and Lady Douglas, will, upon my assertion, and the evidence of Lord Cholmondeley, remove from their minds this calumnious falsehood, which, with many others, the malice of Sir John and Lady Douglas has endeavoured to fasten upon me. To all these papers Lady Douglas states, in her Declaration, that, not only herself and Sir John Douglas, but Sir Sidney Smith, would have no he- sitation in swearing to be in my hand-writing. — What says Lord Cholmondeley ?* — " that he is perfectly acquainted with my manner of writing. Letter A. is not of my hand-writing ; that the two papers marked B. appear to be wrote in a disguised hand ; that some of the letters in them remarkably resemble mine, but, because of the disguise, he cannot say whether they are or not ; as to the cover marked C. he did not see the same resem- blance." Of these four papers (all of which are stated by Ludy Douglas to be so clearly and plainly mine, that ttv an be no hesitation upon the subject), two . ^semblance to it, and although the other t j, writ! in a disguised h? i, have some letters re; : A ,embling mi'u„, .et, I trust, /idix (A) £, tff. l6s I shall not, upon such evidence, be subjected to so base an imputation ; and really, Sire, I know not how to account for the Commissioners examining and reporting upon this subject in this manner. For I understand from Mrs* Fitzgerald, that these drawings were produced by the Commissioners to her; and that she was examined as to her knowledge of them, and as to the hand-writing upon them ; that she was satisfied, and swore that they were not my hand-writing, and that she knew nothing of them, and did not believe they could possibly come from any lady in my house. She was shown the seal also, which Lady Douglas, in her Declaration, says, was the " identical one with " which I had summoned Sir John Douglas to " luncheon." To this seal, though it so much resembled one that belonged to herself, as to make her hesitate till she had particularly observed it ; she was at last as positive as to the hand-writing ; and having expressed herself with some feeling and indignation at the supposition, that either 1, her- self, or any of my ladies, could be guilty of so foul a transaction, the Commissioners tell her, they were satisfied, and believed her ; and there is not x>ne word of all this related in her examination.— Now, if their Lordships were satisfied from this, or iny other circumstance, that these letters were not my writing, and did not come from me, I can ac- count for their not preserving any trace of Mrs. Fitzgerald's evidence on this point, and leaving it eut of their Inquiry altogether ; but 5 if they thought proper to preserve any evidence upon It, to make it the subject of any examination ; surely they should not have left it on Lord Cholmonde- ley's alone ; but I ought to have had the benefit of Mrs. Fitzgerald's evidence also. But, as I said be- fore, they take no notice of her evidence ; nay, they finish they Report, they execute it according to the date it bears, upon the 14th of July, and it is not until two days afterwards, namely, on the iGth, that they examine Lord Cholmondeley to the hand-writing — with what view and for what pur- pose, 1 cannot even surmise : but with whatever view, and for whatever purpose, if these letters are at all to be alluded to in their Report, or the exa- minations accompanying it, surely I ought to have had the benefit of the other evidence, which dis- proved my connection with them. I have now, Sire, gone through all the matters contained in the examination, on which I think it, in any degree, necessary, to trouble your Majesty, with any observations. — For as to the examination of Mrs. Townley the washerwoman, if it applies at all, it must have been intended to have afforded evidence of my pregnancy and miscarriage. — And whether the circumstance she speaks to was occa- sioned by my having been bled with leeches, or whether an actual miscarriage did take place in my family, and by some means linen belonging to me was procured and used upon the occasion ; or to whatever other circumstance it is to be ascribed, z 1^0 after the manner in which the Commissioners have expressed their opinion, on the part of the case re- specting my supposed pregnancy, and after the evidence on which they formed their opinion, I do not conceive myself called upon to say any thing upon it ; or that any thing I could say could be more satisfactory than repeating the opinion, of the Commissioners, as stated in their Report, viz. (i That nothing had appeared to them which would warrant the belief that I was pregnant in that year, (1802,) or at any other period within the compass of their Inquiries — that they would not be warrant- ed in expressing any doubt respecting the alleged pregnancy of the Princess, as stated in the original declarations, a fact so fully contradicted, and by so many witnesses, to whom, if true, it must in vari- ous ways have been known, that we cannot think it entitled to the smallest credit." There are indeed, some other matters mentioned in the original declarations, which I might have found it necessary to observe upon ; but as the Commissioners do not appear to have entered into any examination with respect to them, I content myself with thinking that they had found the means of satisfying themselves of the utter falsehood of those particulars^ and therefore that they can re- quire no contradiction or observation from me. On the declarations, therefore, and the evidence, I have nothing further to remark. And, consci- ous of the length at which I have trespassed on your Majesty's patience, I will forbear to waste 171 your time by any endeavour to recapitulate what I have said. Some few observations, however, be- fore I conclude, I must hope to be permitted to subjoin. In many of the observations which I have made, your Majesty will observe that I have noticed what have appeared to me to be great omissions on the part of the Commissioners, in the manner of taking their examinations ; in forbearing to put any ques- tions to the witnesses, in the nature of a cross-ex- amination of them ; — to confront them with each other ; and to call other witnesses, whose testimony must either have confirmed or falsified, in impor- tant particulars, the examinations as they have taken them. It may perhaps occur, in consequence of such observations, that 1 am desirous that this Inquiry should be opened again ; that the Commis- sioners should recommence their labours, and that they should proceed to supply the defects in their previous examinations, by a fuller execution of their duty. — I therefore think it necessary, most distinctly and emphatically to state, thatl have no such meaning ; and whatever may be the risk that I may incur of being charged with betraying a con- sciousness of guilt, by thus flying from an exten- sion or repetition of this Inquiry, I must distinctly state, that so far from requesting the revival of it, 1 humbly request your Majesty would be gracious- Ip pleased to understand me as remonstrating, and protesting against it, in the strongest and most so- lemn manner in my power. 17*2 I am yet to learn the legalityof sueh a Commission to inquire, even in the ease of High Treason, or any other crime known to the laws of the country. If it is lawful in the case of High Treason, supposed to he cammitted by me, surely it must be lawful also in the case of High Treason supposed to be committed by other subjects of your Majesty. That there is much objection to it, in reason and principle, my understanding assures me. That such Inquiries, carried on upon ex parte examination, and a Report of the result by persons of high authority, may, ray must, have a tendency to prejudice the character of the parties who are exposed to them, and thereby influence the further proceedings in their case ; — that are calculated to keep back from notice, and in security, the person of a false accuser, and to leave the accused in the predicament of nei- ther being able to look forward, for protection to an acquittal of himself, nor for redress to the convic- tion of his accuser. — That these and many other objections occur to such a mode of proceeding, in 'the case of a crime known to the laws of this coun* try, appears to be quite obvious. — But if Com- missioners acting under such a power, or your Ma- jesty's Privy-Council, or any regular Magistrates, when they have satisfied themselves of the falsehood of the principal charge, and the absence of all le- gal and'substantive offence, are to be considered as empowered to proceed in the examination of the particulars of private life ; to report upon the pro- prieties of domestic conduct ; and the decorums of 173 private behaviour, and to pronounce their opinion against the party, upon the evidence of dissatisfied servants, whose veracity they are to hold up as un- impeachable, and to do this without permitting the persons whose conduct is inquired into, to suggest one word in explanation or contradiction of the matter with which they are charged ; it would, I submit to your Majesty, prove such an attack up- on the security and confidence of domestic life, such a means of recording, under the sanction of great names and high authority, the most malicious, and foulest imputations, that no character could possibly be secure ; und would do more to break in upon and undermine the happiness and comfort of life, than any proceeding which could be imagined. The public in general perhaps may feel not much interest in the establishment of such a pre- cedent in my case. They may think it to be a course of proceeding scarcely applicable to any pri- vate subject ; yet, if once such a court of honour, of decency, and of manners, was established, many subjects might occur to which it might be thought advisable to extend its jurisdiction, beyond the in- stance of a Princess of Wales. But should it be intended to be confined to me, your Majesty, I trust, will not be surprised to find that it does not reconcile me the better to it, should I learn myself to be the single instance in your kingdom, who is exposed to the scrutiny of so severe and formida- ble a tribunal. So far therefore from giving that sanction or consent to any fresh Inquiry, upon 174 similar principles, which I should seem to do, by requiring the renewal of these examinations, I must protest against it ; protest against the nature of the proceeding, because its result cannot be fair. I must protest, as long at least as it remains doubtful, agains the legality of what has already passed, as well as against thelegality of its repetition. — If thecourse be legal, I must submit to the laws, however severe they may be. But I trust new law is not to be found out, and applied to my case. — If I am guilty of crime I know I am amenable, I am most con- tented to continue so, to the impartial laws of your Majesty's kingdom ; and I fear no charge brought against me, in open day, under the public eye, be- fore the known tribunals of the country, adminis- tering justice under those impartial and enlightened laws. But secret tribunals, created for the first time for me, to form and pronounce opinions upon my conduct, without hearing me; to record, in the evidence of the witnesses which they report, im- tations against my character upon ex parte exami- nations, — till I am better reconciled to the justice of their proceedings, I cannot fail to fear. And till I am better informed as to their legality, I cannot foil in duty to my dearest interests, most solemnly to remonstrate and to protest against them. If such tribunals as these are called into action againstme, by the false charges of friends turned ene- mies, of servants turned traitors, andacting as spies ; by the foul conspiracy of such social and domes- tic treason. I can look to no security to my honour in the most spotless and most cautious innocence* 175 By the contradiction and denial which in this case I have been enabled to procure, of the most im- portant facts which have been sworn against me by Mr. Cole and Mr. Bidgood ; — by the observations, and the reasonings, which I have addressed to your Majesty, I am confident, that to those whose sense of justice will lead them to wade through this long detail, I shall have removed the impressions which have been raised against me. — But how am I to in- sure a patient attention to all this statement ? How many will hear that the Lord High Chancellor, the Lord Chief Justice of the Kings Bench, the First Lord of the Treasury, and one of your Majesty's Principal Secretaries of State, have reported against me, upon evidence which they have declared to be unbiassed and unquestionable ; who will never have the opportunity, or if they had the opportunity, might not have the inclination, to correct the error of that Report, by the examinationof my statement. I feel, therefore, that by this proceeding, my character has received essential injury. For a Princess of Wales to have been placed in a situa- tion, in which it was essential to her honour to request one gentleman to swear, that he was not locked up at midnight in a room with her alonei and another, that he did not give her a lascivious salute, and never slept in her house, is to have been actually degraded and disgraced. — I have been, Sire, placed in this situation, I have been cruelly, your Majesty will permit me to say so, cruelly de- graded into the necessity of making sueh requests. A necessity which I never could have been exposed to, even under this Inquiry, if more attention had been given to the examination of these malicious charges, and of the evidence on which they rest. Much solicitude is felt, and justly so, as connected with this Inquiry, for the honour of your Majesty's illustrious Family. But surely a true regard to that honour should have restrained those who really felt for it, from casting such severe reflections on the character and virtue of the Princess of Wales. If, indeed, after the most diligent and anxious Inquiry, penetrating into every circumstance con- nected with the charge, searching every source from which information could be derived, and scru- tinizing with all that acuteness, into the credit and character of the witnesses, with great experience, talent, and intelligence could bring to such a sub- ject ; and, above all, if after giving me some op- portunity of being heard, the force of truth had, at length, compelled any persons to form, as reluc- tantly, and as unwillingly as they would, against their own daughters, the opinion that has been pronounced ; no regard, unquestionably, to my ho- nour and character, nor to that of your Majesty's Family, as, in some degree, involved in mine, could have justified the suppression of that opi- nion, if legally called for, in the course of official and public duty. Whether such caution and re- luctance are really manifest in these proceedings, I must leave to less partial judgments than my own to determine. m In the full examination of these proceedings 3 which justice to my own character has required of me, I have been compelled to make many obser- vations, which, I fear, may prove offensive to per- sons in high power — Your Majesty will easily be- lieve, when I solemnly assure you, that I have been deeply sorry to yield to the necessity of so doing. This proceeding manifests that I have enemies enough ; I could not wish unnecessarily to increase their number., or their weight. I trust, however, I have done it., I know it has been my purpose to do it, in a manner as little offensive as the justice due to myself would allow of; but I have felt that I have been deeply injured ; that I have had much to complain of; and that my silence now would not be taken for forbearance, but would be ascribed to me as a confession of guilt. The Report itself an- nounced to me, that these things, which had been spoken to by the witnesses, " great improprieties and indecencies of conduct," " necessarily occa- sioning most unfavourable interpretations, and de- serving the most serious consideration," " must be credited till decidedly contradicted." The most sa- tisfactory disproof of these circumstances (as the con- tradiction of the accused is always received withcau- tion and distrust) rested in the proof of the foul ma- lice andfalsehood of my accusers and their witnesses. The Report announced to your Majesty that those witnesses, whom I felt to be foul confederates in a base conspiracy against me, were not to be suspected a a 1?8 of unfavourable bias, and their veracity, in the judg- ment of the Commissioners, not to be questioned. Under these circumstances, Sire, what could I do ? Couid I forbear, injustice to myself, to an- nounce to your Majesty the existence of a conspi- racy against my honour, and my station in this country at least, if not against my lifer Could I forbear to point out to your Majesty, how long this intended mischief had been meditated against me ? Could I forbear to point out my doubts, at least, of the legality of the Commission, under which the proceeding had been had ? or to point out theerrors and inaccuracies, into which ttife great and able men, who were named in this Commission, under the hurry and pressure of their great official occupations, had fallen, in the execution of this duty ?. Could I forbear to state, and to urge, the great injustice and injury that had been done to my character and my honour, by opinions pronounced against me without hearing me ? And if, in the exe- cution of this great task, so essential to my honour, I have let drop any expressions which a colder, and more cautious prudence, would have checked, I ap- peal toyourMajesty's warm heart,and generous feel- ings, to suggest my excuse, and to afford my pardon. What I have said, I have said under the pressure of much misfortune^ under the provo- cation of great and accumulated injustice. Oh! Sire, to be unfortunate, and scarce to feel at li- berty to lament; to be cruelly used, and to eel it almost an offence and a duty to be silent, 179 is a hard lot ; but use had, in some degree inured me to it : But to find my misfortunes and my in- juries imputed to me as faults ; to be called to ac- count upon a charge, made against me by Lady Douglas, who was thought at first worthy of credit, although she had pledged her veracity to the fact, of my having admitted that I was myself the ag- gressor in every thing, of which I had to complain* has subdued all power of patient bearing ; and when I was called upon by the Commissioners, either to admit, by my silence, the guilt which they imputed to me, or to enter into my defence, in contradiction to it — no longer at liberty to re- main silent, I, perhaps, have not known how, with exact propriety, to limit my expressions. In happier days of my life, before my spirit had been yet at all lowered by my misfortunes, I should have beeu disposed to have met such a charge with the contempt which, I trust, by this time, Your Majesty thinks due to it; I should have been disposed to have defied my enemies to the utmost, and to have scorned to answ r er to any thing but a legal charge, before a competent tribu- nal ; but, in my present misfortunes, such force of mind is gone. I ought, perhaps, so far to be thank- ful to them for their wholesome lessons of humi- lity. I have, therefore, entered into this long de- tail, to endeavour to remove, at the first possible opportunity, any unfavourable impressions ; to rescue myself from the dangers which the conti- nuance of these suspicions might occa: ion, and to 180 preserve to me your Majesty's good opinion, in whose kindness, hitherto, T have found infinite consolation, and to whose justice^ under all cir- cumstances, I can confidently appeal. Under the impression of these sentiments I throw myself at your Majesty's feet. I know, that whatever sentiments of resentment; whatever wish for redress, by the punishment of my false ac- cusers, 1 ought to feel, Your Majesty, as the Fa- ther of a Stranger, smarting under false accusa- tion, as the Head of your illustrious House, dis- honoured in me, and as the great Guardian of the Laws of your K'ngdom, thus foully attempted to have been applied to the purposes of injustice, will not fail to feel for me. At all events, I trust your Majesty will restore me to the blessing of your Gracious Presence, and confirm to me, by your own Gracious Words, your satisfactory conviction of my innocence. I am, Sire, With every sentiment of Gratitude and Loyalty, Your Majesty's most affectionate and dutiful Daughter-in-Law, Subject and Servant, C.R Montague-House, 2d October, 1806\ 181 The Deposition of Thomas Manly \ Esquire, a Captain in the Royal Navy. Having bad read to me the following passage, from the Copy of a Deposition of Robert Bidgood, sworn the 6th of June last, before Lords Spencer and Grenville, viz. " I was waiting one day in the anti-room ; Captain " Manby had his hat in his hand, and appeared to " be going away ; he was a long time with the " Princess, and, as I stood on the steps, wailing, I " looked into the room in which they were, and, in " the reflection on the looking-glass, I saw them sa- " lute each other — I mean, that they kissed each " other's lips. Captain Manby then went away. " I then observed the Princess have her bandker- " chief in her hands, and wipe her eyes, as if she " was crying, and went into the drawing-room." I do solemnly, and upon my oath, declare, that the said passage is a vile and wicked invention ; that it is wholly and absolutely false ; that is impossible he ever could have seen, in the reflection or any glass, any such thing ; as I never, upon any occasion, or in any situation, ever had the presumption to salute Her Royal Highness in any such manner, or to take any such liberty, or offer any such in- sult to her person. And having had read to me another passage, from the same Copy of the same Deposition, in which the said Robert Bidgood says — " I suspected that Captain Manby slept frequently in " the house; it was a subject of conversation in the v house. Hints were given by the servants; and I " believe that others suspected it as well as myself." I solemnly swear, that such suspicion is wholly un- founded, and, that I never did, at Montague House, Southend, Ramsgate East Cliff, or any where else, ever 182 sleep in any house occupied by, or belonging to Her Royal Highness the Princess of Wales ; and that (here never did any thing pass between her Royal Highness the Princess of Wales and myself, that 1 should be in any degree un- willing that all the world should have seen. (Signed) THO. MANBY. Sworn at the Public Office, Hatton Garden, London, the 22d day of September, 1806, before me, (Signed) THOMAS LEACH. The Deposition of Thomas Lawrence, of Greek Street, Soho, in the County of Middlesex* Portrait Painter* Having had read to me the following Extract from a Copy of a Deposition of William Cole, purporting to have been sworn before Lords Spencer and Grenville, the 10th day of June, 1806, viz. " Mr. Lawrence, the painter, used to go to Montague " House about the latter end of 1801, when he was " painting the Princess, and he has slept in the house " two or three nights together. I have often seen " him alone with the Princess at eleven or twelve * c o'clock at night ; he has been there as late as one u or two o'clock in the morning. One night I saw l f him with the Princess in the blue room after the " ladies had ietired ; sometime afterwards, when I " supposed be was gone to his bed-room, I went to " see that all was safe, and found c tbe blue room door " locked, and heard a whispering in it, and then " went away." 183 I do solemnly, and upon my oath, depose, that having received the commands of Her Royal Highness the Prin- cess of Wales to paint Her Royal Highness's Portrait, and that of the Princess Charlotte ; I attended for that purpose at Montague House, Blackheath, several times about the beginning of the year 1801, and having been informed that Sir William Beechey, upon a similar occa- sion, had slept in the house, for the greater convenience of executing his painting; and it having been intimated to me, that I might probably be allowed the same advan- tage, I signified my wish to avail myself of it ; and ac- cordingly I did sleep at Montague House several nights; —that frequently, when employed upon this painting, and occasionally, between the close of a day's sitting and the time of Her Royal Highness dressing for dinner, I have been alone in Her Royal Highness's presence ; I have likewise been graciously admitted to Her Royal High- ness's presence in the evenings, and remained there til! twelve, one, and two o'clock ; but, I do solemnly swear, I was never alone in the presence of Her Royal Highness in an evening, to the best of my recollection and belief, except in one single instance, and that for a short time, when I remained wiih her Royal Highness in the blue- room, or drawing-room, as I remember, to answer some question which had been put to me, at the moment I was about to retire together with the ladies in waiting, who had been previously present as well as myself; and, though I cannot recollect the particulars of the conversation which then took place, I do solemnly swear, that nothing passed between Her Royal Highness and myself, which I could have had the least objection for all the world to have seen and heard. And I do further, upon my oath, solemnly declare, that I never was alone in the presence of Her Royal Highness in any other place, or in any other way, than as above described ; and that neither, upon the oc« casion last mentioned, nor upon any other, was I ever in the presence of Her Royal Highness, in any room what- 184 ever, with the door locked, bolted, or fastened, otherwise than in the common and usual manner, which leaves it in the power of any person on the outside of the door to open it. (Signed) THOMAS LAWRENCE. Sworn at the Public Office, Hatton Garden, this 24th day of September, 1806, before me, (Signed) THOMAS LEACH. The Deposition of Thomas Edmeades, of Green- wich, in the County of Kent, Surgeon. On Tuesday, May 20, 1806, 1 waited upon Earl Moira, by his appointment, who, having introduced me to Mr. Conant, a Magistrate for Westminster, proceeded to mention a charge preferred against me, by one of the fe- male servants of Her Royal Highness the Princess of Wales, of my having said, that Her Royal Highness had been pregnant. His Lordship then asked me, if I had not bled Her Royal Highness ; and whether, at that time, I did not mention to a servant, that I thought Her Royal Highness in 'he family way; and whether 1 did not also ask, at the same time, if the Prince had been down io Montague House. I answered, that it had never entered my mind that Her Royal Highness was in such a situation, and that, therefore, certainly, I never made the remark to any one; nor had I asked whether His Royal High- ness had visited the house: — I said, that, at that time, a report, of the nature alluded to, was prevalent ; but that I treated it as the infamous lie of the day. His Lordship 285 adverted to the circumstances of Her Royal Highnesses having taken a child into her house ; and observed, how dreadful mistakes about succession to the throne were, and what confusion might be caused by any claim of this child: I observed, that I was aware of it ; but repeated the assertion, that J had never thought of such a thing as was suggested, and therefore considered it impossible, in a manner, that I could have given it utterance. I ob- served, that I believed, in the first instance, Mr. Stike- man, the page, had mentioned this child to Her Royal Highness, and that it came from Deptford, where I went, when Her Royal Highness first took it, to see if any ill- ness prevailed in the family. Mr Conant observed, that he believed it was not an unusual thing for a medical man, when he imagined that a Lady was pregnant, to mention his suspicion to some confidential domestic in the family : — 1 admitted the bare possibility, if such had been my opinion; but remarked, that the if must have been re- moved, before 1 could have committed myself in so absurd a manner. Lord Moira, in a very significant manner, with his hands behind him, his head over one shoulder, his eyes directed towards me, with a sort of smile, observed, " that he could not help thinking that there must be something in the servant's deposition;" as if he did not give perfect credit to what I had said. He observed, that the matter was then confined to the knowledge of a few : and that he had hoped, if there- had been any foundation for the affi- davit, I might have acknowledged it, that the affair might have been hushed. With respect to the minor question, I observed, that it was not probable that I should condescend to ask any such question, as that im- puted to me, of a menial servant ; and that I was not in the habits of conferring confidentially with servants. Mr. Conant cautioned me to be on my guard ; as, that if it appeared, on further investigation, I had made such in- quiry, it might be very unpleasant to me, should it come Bb 186 under the consideration of the Privy Council. I said, that I considered the report as a malicious one ; and was ready to make oath, before any Magistrate, that I had not, at any time, asserted, or even thought, that her Royal Highness had ever been in a state of pregnancy since I had had the honour of attending the household. Mr. Conant asked me, whether, whilst I was bleeding her Royal Highness, or after I had performed the operation, I did not make some comment on the situation of her Royal Highness, from the state of the blood ; and whether I recommended the operation : I answered in the nega- tive to both questions. I said, that her Royal Highness fead sent for me to bleed her, and that I did not then re- collect on what account. I said, that I had bled her Royal Highness twice ; but did not remember the dates. I asked Lord Moira, whether he intended to proceed in the business, or whether I might consider it as at rest, that I might have an opportunity, if I thought necessary, of consulting my friends relative to the mode of conduct I ought to adopt : lie said, that if the subject was moved any further, I should be apprized of it; and that, at pre- sent, it was in the hands of a few. I left them, and, in fibout an hour, on further consideration, wrote the note, of which the following is a copy, to which I never re- ceived any reply : " Mr. Edmeades presents Jiis respectful compliments to "Lord Moira, and, on mature deliberation, after leaving " his Lordship > upon the conversation which passed at " Lord Moira's this morning, he feels it necessary to ad- 4< vise with some friend, on the propriety of making the ;i particulars of that conversation known to her Royal " Highness the Princess of Wales-; as Mr. Edmeades •" would be very sorry that her Royal Highness should f* consider him capable of such infamous conduct as that " imputed to him on the deposition of a servant, by Lord % Moira, this morning. " London, MayW % 1806." 187 1 have been enabled to state the substance of ray inter* view with Lord Moira and Mr. Conant with the more particularity, as I made memorandums of it, within a day or two afterwards. And I do further depose, that the Papers hereunto annexed, marked A. and B. are in the hand-writing of Samuel Gillam Mills, of Greenwich afore- said, my Partner ; and that he is at present, as I verily believe, upon his road from Wales, through Gloucester, to Bath. (Signed) THOS. EDMEADES. Sworn at the Public Office, Hatton Garden, this 26th day of September, 1806, (Signed) THOMAS LEACH. (A.) Memorandums of the Heads of Conversation between Lord Moira, Mr. Lowten, and myself. May 14, 1806. May 13, 1806, I received a letter from Lord Moira, of which the following is an exact copy i St. James-Place, May 13, 1806, Sir, A particular circumstance makes me desire to have the pleasure of seeing you, and, indeed, renders it indispen- sable that you should take the trouble of calling on me. As the trial in Westminster Hall occupies the latter hours of the day, I musj, beg you to be with me as early as nine 188 o'clock, to-morrow morning ; iu the mean time, it will be better that you should not apprize any one of my hav- ing requested you to converse with me. I have the honour, Sir, to be Your obedient servant. (Signed) MOIRA. To Mr. Mills. This is the Paper A. referred to by the Affidavit of Tho- mas Ednieades, sworn be- fore me this 26th Septem- ber, 1806, THOMAS LEACH. (B.) In consequence of the above letter I wailed on his Lordship, exactly at nine o'clock. In less than five mi- nutes I was admitted into his room, and by him received very politely. He began the conversation by stating, he wished to converse with me on a very delicate subject ; that I might rely on his honour, that what passed was to be in perfect confidence ; It was his duty to his Prince, as his Counsellor, to inquire into the subject, which he had known for some time ; and the inquiry was due also to my character. He then stated, that a deposition had been made by a domestic of her Royal Highness the Princess of Wales, deposing, as a declaration made by ine, that her Royal Highness was pregnant, and that I made in- quiries when interviews might have taken place with the Prince. I answered, that I never had declared the Prin^ cess to be with child, nor ever made the inquiries stated; that the declaration was an infamous falsehood. — This 18.9 being expressed with some warmth, his Lordship observed, that I might have made the inquiries very innocently, conceiving, that her Royal Highness could not be in that situation but by the Prince. I repeated my assertion of the falsehood of the declaration, adding, that though the conversation was intended to be confidential, I felt my character strongly attacked by the declaration, there- fore it was necessary that the declaration should be inves- tigated ; I had no doubt but the character 1 had so many years maintained, would make my assertion believed be- fore the deposition of a domestic. I then requested to know, what date the declaration bore? His Lordship said, he did not remember; but he had desired the Soli- citor to meet me, who would shew it me. I then ob- served, that I should in confidence communicate to his Lordship, why I was desirous to know the date; I then stated to his Lordship, that soon after her Royal High- ness came to Biacklieatn, I attended her in art illness, with Sir Francis Millman, in which I bled her twice. — Soon after her recovery, she thought proper to form a re- gular medical appointment, and appointed myself and Mr. Edmeades to be Surgeons and Apothecaries to her Royal Highness; on receiving a warrant for such ap- pointment, I declined accepting the honour of being ap- pointed Apothecary, being inconsistent with my character, being educated as Surgeon, and having had an honorary degree of Physic conferred on me; her Royal Highness condescended to appoint me her Surgeon only. His Lordship rang to know if Mr. Lowten was come ; he was in the next room. His Lordship left me for a few mi- nutes, returned, and introduced me to Mr. Lowten with much politeness — as Dr. Mills ; repealing the assurance of what passed being confidential. I asked Mr. Lowten the date of the declaration, that had been averted to be made by me? He said, in the year 1802. I I hen, with permission of his Lordship, gave the history of my ap- ISO point merit, adding, since then I had nctcr seen the Prin- cess as a patient. Once she sent for me to bleed her ; I was from home ; Mr. Edmeades went ; nor had I visited any one in the house, except one Mary, and that was in a very bad case of surgery; I was not sure whether it was before or after my appointment. Mr. Lowten asked me the date of it ; I told him I did not recollect. He ob- served, from the warmth of my expressing my contradic- tion to the deposit ion, that I saw it in a wrong light; that I might suppose, and very innocently, her Royal High- ness to be pregnant, and then the inquiries were as inno- cently made. I answered, that the idea of pregnancy never entered my head ; that I never attended her Royal Highness in any sexual complaint; whether she ever had any I never knew. Mr. Lowten said, I might think so, from her increase of size ; I answered no, 1 never did think her pregnant, therefore could never say it, and that the deposition was an infamous falsehood. His Lord- ship then observed, that he perceived there must be a mistake, and that Mr. Edmeades was the person meant, whom he wished to see ; I said, he was then at Oxford, and did not return before Saturday ; his Lordship asked, if he came through London ; I said, I could not tell. Finding nothing now arising from conversation, I asked to retire ; his Lordship attended me out of the room with great politeness, When I came home, I sent his Lordship a letter, with the date of my warrant, April 10, 1801 ; he answered my letter, with thanks for my immediate attention, and wished to see Mr. Edmeades on Sunday morning. This letter came on the Saturday ; early on the Sunday I sent Ti- mothy, to let his Lordship know Mr. Edmeades would not return till Monday ; on Tuesday I promised he should attend, which he did. lgi The preceding Memorandum is an exact copy of what I made the day after I had seen Lord Moira. (Signed) SAM. GILLAM MILLS, Croome Hill, Greenwich , Aug, 20, 1S06. This is the Paper marked B. referred to by the Affida- vit of Thomas Edmeades, sworn before me this 26th September, 1806, (Signed) THOMAS LEACH. The Deposition of Jonathan Partridge, Porter to Lord Eardley, at Belvidere. I remember being informed by Mr. Kenny, Lord Eardley 's late Steward, now dead, that I was wanted by- Lord Moira, in town; accordingly! went with Mr. Kenny to Lord Moira's, in Saint JamesVplace, on the King's Birth-day of 1S04. His Lordship asked me, if I remembered the Princess coming to Belvidere sometime before? I said, yes, and told him that there were two or three ladies, 1 think three, with her Royal Highness, and a gentleman with them, who came on horseback ; that they looked at the pictures in the house, had their lun- cheon there, and that her Royal Highness's servants waited upon them, as I was in dishabille. His Lordship asked me whether they went up stairs ? and I told him that they did not. He asked me, how long they staid ? and I said, as far as I recollected, they did not stay above an hour, or an hour and a quarter ; that they waited some little time for the carriage, which had gone to the public- house, and, till it came, they walked up and down alto- gether in the portico before the house. His Lordship, in the course of what he said to me, said it was a subject of I 9 2 importance, and might be of consequence. His Lordship, finding that I had nothing more to say, told mef might go- Sometime afterwards, his Lordship sent forme again, and asked me, if I was sure of what J said, being all that I could say respecting the Princess ? I said, it was ; and that I was ready to take nay oath of it, if his Lordship thought proper. He said, it was very satisfactory; said, I might go, and he should not want me any more *" (Signed) JONATHAN PARTRIDGE. Sworn at the County Court of Middlesex, in Full wood's Rents, the 25th day of Sep- tember, 1S06, before me, (Signed) THOMAS LEACH. The Deposition of Philip Krackeler, one of the Foot- men of Her Royal Highness the Princess of IVales, and Robert Eaglestone, Park Keeper to Her Royal Highness the P?incess of JValesr These Deponents say, that on, or about the 2Sth day of June last, as they were walking together across Green- wich Park, they saw Robert Bidgood, one of the Pages of her Royal Highness, walking, in a direction, as if he were going from the town of Greenwich, towards the house of Sir John Douglas, and which is a different road from that which leads to Montague House, and they at the same time perceived Lady Douglas walking in a direction to meet him. And this Deponent, Philip Krackeler, than desired the other Deponent to take notice, whether Lady Douglas and Mr. Bidgood would speak to each pther ; 193 and both of these Deponents observed, that when Lady Douglas and Mr. Bidgood met, they stopped, and con- versed together for the space of about two or three mi- nuees, whilst in view of these Deponents •, but how much longer their conversation lasted these Deponents cannot say, as they, these Deponents, proceeded on their road, which took them out of sight of Lady Douglas and Mr. Bidgood. (Signed) PHILIP KRACKELER. ROBT. EAGLESTONE. Sworn at the Public Office, IJatton Garden, this 27th day of September^ 1806, before me, (Signed) THOMAS LEACH. To the King, Sire, I trust your Majesty, who knows my constant affection, loyalty, and duty, and the sure confi- dence with which I readily repose my honour, my character, my happiness in your Majesty's hands, will not think me guilty of any disrespect- ful or unduteous impatience, when I thus again address myself to your Royal grace and justice. It is, Sire, nine weeks to-day, since my counsel presented to the Lord High Chancellor my letter to your Majesty, containing my observations, in vindication of my honour and innocence^ upon the c c 194 Report, presented to your Majesty by the Com- missioners, who had been appointed to examine into my conduct. The Lord Chancellor informed my counsel, that the letter should be conveyed to your Majesty on that very day ; and further, was pleased, in about a week or ten days afterwards, to communicate to my Solicitor, that your Ma- jesty had read my letter, and that it had been transmitted to his Lordship with directions that it should be copied for the Commissioners, and that when such copy had been taken, the original should be returned to your Majesty. Your Majesty's own gracious and royal mind will easily conceive what must have been my state of anxiety and suspence, whilst I have been fondly indulging in the hope, that every day, as it passed, would bring me the happy tidings, that your Majes- ty was satisfied of my innocence ; and convinced of the unfounded malice of my enemies, in every part of their charge. Nine long weeks of daily expectation, and suspence, have now elapsed ; and they have brought me nothing but disappointment. I have remained in total ignorance of what has been done, what is doing, or what is intended upon this subject. Your Majesty's goodness will therefore pardon me, if in the step which I now take, I act upon a mistaken conjecture with respect to the fact. But from the Lord Chancellor's communication to my Solicitor, and from the time which has elapsed, I am led to conclude, that your Majesty had direct- ed the copy of my letter to be laid before the Com- 193 missioners, requiring their advice upon the subject ; and, possibly, their official occupations, and their other duties to the state, may not have, as yet, al- lowed them the opportunity of attending to it. But your Majesty will permit me to observe that, however excusable this delay may be on their parts, yet it operates most injuriously upon me ; my feelings are severely tortured by the suspence, while my character js sinking in the opinion of the public. It is known that a Report, though acquitting me of crime, yet imputing matters highly dis- reputable to my honour, has been made to your Majesty ; — that that Report has been communicated to me ;— that I have endeavoured to answer it ; and that I still remain, at the end of nine weeks from the delivery of my answer, acquainted with the judgment which is formed upon it. May I be permitted to observe from the extreme prejudice which this delay, however to be accounted for by the numerous important occupations of the Com- missioners, produces to my honour ? The world, in total ignorance of the real state of the facts, begin to infer my guilt from it. I feel myself already sinking, in the estimation of your Majesty's subjects, as well as of what remains to me of my own family, into (a state intolerable to a mind conscious of its purity and innocence) a state in which my honour appears at least equivocal, and my virtue is suspected. From this state I humbly entreat your Majesty to perceive, that I can have no hope of being restored, until either your Majesty's favourable opinion shall be graciously notified to the world, by receiving me !96 again into the Royal Presence, or until the fall dis- closure of the facts shall expose the malice of my accusers, and do away every possible ground for un- favourable inference and conjecture. The various calamities with which it has pleased God of late to afflict me, I have endeavoured to bear, and I trust T have borne with humble resigna- tion to the Divine will. But the effect of this in- famous charge, and the delay which has suspended its final termination, by depriving me of the con- solation which I should have received from your Majesty's presence and kindness, have given a heavy addition to them all ; and surely my bitterest enemies could hardly wish that they should be in- creased. But on this topic, as possibly not much affecting the justice, though it does the hardship, of my case, I forbear to dwell. Your Majesty will be graciously pleased to re- collect, that an occasion of assembling the Royal Family and your subjects, in dutiful and happy com- memoration of her Majesty's Birth-day, is now near at hand. If the increased occupations which the approach of Parliament may occasion, or any other cause, should prevent the Commissioners from enabling your Majesty to communicate your pleasure to me before that time ; the world will infallibly conclude, (in their present state of ignorance), that my answer must have proved unsatisfactory, and that the infamous charges have been thought to be but too true. These considerations, Sire, will I trust, in your Majesty's gracious opinion, rescue this address W from all imputation of impatience. For, your Ma- jesty's sense of honourable feeling will naturally suggest, how utterly impossible it is that I, consci- ous of my own innocence, and believing that the malice of my enemies has been completely detected, can, without abandoning all regard to my interests, my happiness, and my honour, possibly be con- tented to perceive the approach of such utter ruin to my character, and yet wait, with patience, and in silence, till it overwhelms me. 1 therefore take this liberty of throwing myself again at your Ma- jesty's feet, and entreating and imploring of your Majesty's goodness and justice, in pity for my mi- series, which this delay so severely aggravates, and in justice to my innocence and character, to urge the Commissioners to an early communication of their advice. To save your Majesty and the Commissioners all unnecessary trouble, as well as to obviate all proba- bility of further delay, I have directed a duplicate of this letter to be prepared, and have sent one copy of jt through the Lord Chancellor, and another through folonel Taylor, to your Majesty. I am, Sire, With every sentiment of gratitude and loyalty, Your Majesty's most affectionate, and dutiful Daughter-in-law, Servant and Subject. C. P, Montague House, Dec. 8, 1806. 198 MINUTE OF THE CABINET, Jan. 25, 1807. Dozening Street, Jan. 25, I807. PRESENT, The Lord Chancellor, Lord Viscount Howick, Lord President, Lord Grenville, Lord Privy Seal, Lord Ellenborouoh, Earl Spencer, Mr. Secretary Windham, Earl of Moir a, Mr. Grenville. Lord Henry Petty, Your Majesty's Confidential Servants have given the most diligent and attentive consideration to the matters on which your Majesty has been pleased to require their opinion and advice. They trust your Majesty will not think that any apology is necessary on their part for the delay which has attended their deliberations, on a subject or such extreme impor- tance, and which they have found to be of the greatest difficulty and embarrassment. They are fully convinced that it never can have been your Majesty's intention to require from them, that they should lay before your Majesty a detailed and circumstantial examination and discussion of the various arguments and allegations contained in the letter submitted to your Majesty, by the Law Advisers of the Princess of Wales. And they beg leave, with all humility, to represent to your Ma- jesty that the Laws and Constitution of their coun- try have not placed them in a situation in which 199 they can conclusively pronounce on any question of guilt or innocence affecting any of your Majesty's subjects, much less one of your Majesty's Royal Fa- mily. They have, indeed, no power or authority whatever to enter on such a course of inquiry as could alone lead to any final results of such a nature. The main question on which they had conceived themselves called upon by their duty to submit theiradvice to your Majesty was this : Whether the circumstances which had, by your Majesty's com- mands, been brought before them, were of a nature to induce your Majesty to order any farther steps to be taken upon them by your Majesty's Govern- ment ? And on this point they humbly submit to your Majesty, that the advice which they offered was clear and unequivocal. Your Majesty has since been pleased further to require, that they should submit to your Majesty their opinions as to the an- swer to be given by your Majesty to the request con- tained in the Princess's letter, and as to the manner in which that answer should be communicated to her Royal Highness. They have, therefore, in dutiful obedience to your Majesty's commands, proceeded to reconsider the whole of the subject, in this new view of it; and after much deliberation, they have agreed humbly to recommend to your Majesty, the draft of a Mes- sage, which if approved by your Majesty, they would humbly suggest your Majesty might send to her Royal Highness through the Lord Chancellor. Having before humbly solicited to your Majesty their opinion, that the facts of case did not warrant their advising that any further steps should be taken 200 upon it by your Majesty's Government, they have not thought it necessary to advise your Majesty any longer to decline receiving the Princess into your Royal presence. But the result of the whole case does, in their judgment, render it indispensable that your Majosty should, by a serious admonition, convey to her Royal Highness your Majesty's ex- pectation that her Royal Highness should be more circumspect in her future conduct ; and they trust that in the terms in which they have advised, that such admonition should be conveyed, your Majesty will not be of opinion, on a full consideration of the evidence and answer, that they can be considered as having at all exceeded the necessity of the case, as arising out of the last reference which your Ma- jesty has been pleased to make to them. The Lord Chancellor has the honour to present his most humble duty to the Princess of Wales, and to transmit to her Royal Highness the accom- panying Message from the King ; which Her Royal Highness will observe, he has his Majesty's com- mands to communicate to her Royal Highness. The Lord Chancellor would have done himself the honour to have waited personally upon Her Royal Highness, and have delivered it himself; but he considered the sending it sealed, as more respectful and acceptable to her Royal Highness. The Lord Chancellor received the original paper from the King yesterday, and made the copy now sent in his own hand. January Twenty-eighth, 180j f . To Her Royal Highness the Princess of Wales. 201 The King having referred to his confiden- tial Servants the proceeding and papers relative to the written declarations, which had been before His Majesty, respecting the conduct of the Prin- cess of Wales, has been apprised by them, that, after the fullest consideration of the examinations taken on the subject, and of the observations and affidavits brought forward by the Princess of Wales's legal sdvisers, they agree in the opinions, submitted to His Majesty in the original Report of the four Lords, by whom His Majesty directed that the matter should in the first instance be in- quired into ; and that, in the present stage of the business, upon a mature and deliberate view of this most important subject in all its parts, and bear- ings, it is their opinion, that the facts of this case do not warrant their advising that any further step should be taken in the business by his Majesty's Government, or any other proceedings instituted upon it, except such only as His Majesty's Law Servants may, on reference to them, think fit to rncommend, for the prosecution of Lady Douglas, on those parts of her depositions which may appear to them to be justly liable thereto. In this situation, His Majesty is advised, that it is no longer necessary for him to decline receiving the Princess into His Royal Presence. The King sees, with great satisfaction, the agree* ment of his confidential servants, in the decided opinion expressed by the four Lords, upon tho, falsehood of the accusations of pregnancy and de- d d 202 livery, brought forward against the Princess by Lady Douglas. On the other matters produced in the course of the Inquiry, the King is advised that none of the facts or allegations stated in preliminary ex- aminations, carried on in the absence of the par* ties interested, can be considered as legally, or conclusively, established. But in those examina- tions, and even in the answer drawn in the name of the Princess by her legal advisers, there have ap- peared circumstances of conduct on the part of the Princess, which his Majesty never could regard but with serious concern. The elevated rank which the Princess holds in this country, and the relation in which she stands to his Majesty and the Royal Fa- mily, must always deeply involve both the interests of the state, and the personal feelings of His Ma- jesty, in the propriety aud correctness of her con- duct. And his Majesty cannot therefore forbear to express in the conclusion of the business, his desire and expectation, that such a conduct may in future be observed by the Princess, as may fully justify those marks of paternal regard and affection, which the King always wishes to shew to every part of His Royal Family. His Majesty has directed that this message should be transmitted to the Princess of Wales, by his Lord Chancellor^ and that copies of the proceedings, which had taken place on the subject, should also be communicated to his dearly beloved Son the Prince of Wales. 203 Montague House, Jan. 29th, I807. Sire, I hasten to acknowledge the receipt of the pa- per, which, by your Majesty's direction, was yes- terday transmitted to me, by the Lord Chancellor, and to express the unfeigned happiness, which I have derived from one part of it. I mean that, which informs me that your Majesty V confidential servants have, at length, thought proper to com- municate to your Majesty, their advice, " that it is " no longer necessary for your Majesty to decline cc receiving me into your Royal presence." And I, therefore, humbly hope, that your Majesty will be graciously pleased to receive, with favour, the communication of my intention to avail myself, with your Majesty's permission, of that advice, for the purpose of waiting upon your Majesty on Monday next, if that day should not be inconvenient ; when I hope again to have the happiness of throwing myself, in filial duty and affection, at your Majesty's feet. Your JVJajesty will easily conceive, that I re- luctantly name so distant a day as Monday, but I do not feel myself sufficiently recovered from the measles, to venture upon so long a drive at an ear- lier day. Feeling, however, very anxious, to re- ceive again as soon as possible, that blessing* of which I have been so long deprived, if that day should happen to he, in any degree, inconvenient I humbly entreat, and implore, your Majesty's most 204 gracious and paternal goodness, to name some other day, as early as possible, for that purpose. I am, &c. (Signed) C. P. To the King. Windsor Castle, January 29th, 1 807. The King has this moment received the Princess of Wales's letter, in which she intimates her inten- tion of coming to Windsor on Monday next ; and his Majesty, wishing not to put the Princess to the inconvenience of coming to this place, so immediate- ly after her illness, hastens to acquaint her, that he shall prefer to receive her in London, upon a day subsequent to the ensuing week, which will also better suit His Majesty, and of which he will not fail to apprize the Princess. (Signed) GEORGE R. To the Princess ofJVales. Windsor Castle, February 10, 18 07. As the Princess of Wales may have been led to expect, from the King's letter to her, that he would fix an early day for seeing her, His Majesty thinks it right to acquaint her, that the Prince of Wales, upon receiving the several documents, which the King directed his Cabinet to transmit to him, made a formal communication to him, of his intention to put them into the hands of his lawyers ; accompa- 205 nied by a request, that His Majesty would suspend any further steps in the business, until the Prince of Wales should be enabled to submit to him, the statement which he proposed to make. The King therefore considers it incumbent upon him to defer naming a day to the Princess of Wales, until the further result of the Prince's intention shall have been made known to him. (Signed) GEORGE R, To the Princess of Wales, Montague House, February I2th 9 180f. Sire, I received yesterday, and with inexpressible pain, your Majesty's last communication. The duty of stating, in a representation to your Majesty, the various grounds, upon which, I feel the hard- ship of my case, and upon which I confidently think that, upon a review of it, your Majesty will be disposed to recal your last determination, is a duty I owe to myself: and I cannot forbear, at the moment when I acknowledge your Majesty's letter* to announce to your Majesty, that I propose to execute that duty without delay. After having suffered the punishment of banish- ment from your Majesty's presence, for seven months, pending an Inquiry, which your Majesty had directed, into my conduct, affecting both my life and my honour; — after that Inquiry had, at length, terminated in the advice of your Majesty's 206 confidential and sworn servants, that there was no longer any reason for your Majesty's declining to re eive me ; — if after your Majesty's gracious com- munication, which led me to rest assured that your Majesty would appoint an early day to receive me ; — if after all this, by a renewed application on the part of The Prince of Wales, upon whose commu- nication the first Inquiry had been directed, I now find that that punishment, which has been inflicted, pending a seven months Inquiry before the determi- nation, should, contrary to the opinion of your Ma- jesty's servants, be continued after that determina- tion, to await the result of some new proceeding, to be suggested by the lawyers of the Prince of Wales ; it is impossible that I can fail to assert to your Ma- jesty, with the effect due to truth, that I am, in the consciousness of my innocence, and with a strong sense of my unmeritted sufferings, Your Majestv's most dutiful, and most affectionate, but much injured Subject and Daughter-in-law, (Signed) C. P. To the King. Sire, By my short letter to Your Majesty of the 12th instant, in answer to Your Majesty's communica- tion of the 10th, 1 notified my intention of repre- senting to Your Majesty the various grounds, on which I felt the hardship of my case ; and, a re- view of which, I confidently hoped, would dispose 20? Your Majesty to recal your determination to ad- journ, to an indefinite period, my reception into Your Royal Presence ; a determination, which, in addition to all the other pain which it brought along with it, affected me with the disappointment of hopes/ which I had fondly cherished, with the most perfect confidence, becau&e they rested on Your Majesty's gracious assurance. . Independently, however, of that communication from your Majesty, I should have felt myself bound to have troubled Your Majesty with much of the contents of the present letter. Upon the receipt of the paper which, by Your Majesty's commands, was transmitted to me by the Lord Chancellor, on the 28th of last month, and which communicated to me the joyful intelli- gence, that Your Majesty was " advised, that it " was no longer necessary for you to dec-line re- " ceiving me into Your Royal Presence," I con- ceived myself necesrarily called upon to send an immediate answer to so much of it as respected that intelligence. I could not wait the time, which it would have required, to state those observations, which it was impossible for me to refrain from making, at some period, upon the other important particulars which that paper contained. Accord- ingly, I answered it immediately ; and, as Your Majesty's gracious and instant reply of last Thurs- day fortnight, announced to me your pleasure, that I should be received by Your Majesty, on a day subsequent to the then ensuing week, I was led most confidently to assure myself, that the last 208 week would not have passed, without my having received that satisfaction. I therefore determined to wait in patience, without further intrusion upon Yonr Majesty, till I might have the opportunity of guarding myself from the possibility of being mis- understood, by personally explaining to Your Ma- jesty, that, whatever observations I had to make upon the paper so communicated to me, on the 28th ultimo, and whatever complaints respecting the delay, and the many cruel circumstances which had attended the whole of the proceedings against me, and the unsatisfactory state, in which they were at length left by that last communication, they were observations and complaints which affected those only, under whose advice Your Majesty had acted, and were not, in any degree, intended to inti- mate even the most distant insinuation against Your Majesty's justice or kindness. That paper established the opinion, which I certainly, had ever confidently entertained, but the justness of which I had not before any document to establish, that Your Majesty had, from the first, deemed this proceeding a high and important matter of state, in the consideration of which Your Majesty had not felt yourself at liberty to trust to your own generous feelings, and to your own Royal, and gracious judgment. I never did believe, that the cruel state of anxiety, in which I had been kept, ever since the delivery of my Answer, (for at least sixteen weeks) could be at all attributable to Your Majesty ; it was most unlike every thing which I had ever experienced from Your Majesty's conde-^ 209 scension, feeling, and justice; and I found, from that Paper, that it was to your confidential servants I was to ascribe the length of banishment from your presence, which they, at last, advised Your Ma- jesty, it was no longer necessary should be conti- nued. I perceive, therefore, what I always be- lieved, that it was to them, and to them only, that I owed the protracted continuance of my sufferings, and of my disgrace ; and that Your Majesty, consi- dering the whole of this proceeding to have been instituted and conducted, under the grave responsi- bility of Your Majesty's servants, had not thought proper to take any step, or express any opinion, upon any part of it, but such as was recommended by their advice. Influenced by these sentiments, and anxious to have the opportunity of conveying them, with the overflowings of a grateful heart, to Your Majesty, what were my sensations of surprise, mortification, and disappointment, on the receipt of Your Majesty's letter of the 10th instant, Your Majesty may conceive, though I am utterly unable to express. That Letter announces to me, that his Royal Highness the Prince of Wales, upon receiving the several documents which your Majesty directed your Cabinet to transmit to him, made a personal com- munication to your Majesty of his intention to put them into the hands of his Lawyers, accompanied by a request, that your Majesty would suspend any further steps in the business, until the Prince of Wales should be enabled to submit to your Majesty e e 210 the statement which he proposed to make ; and it also announces to me that your Majesty therefore considered it incumbent on you, to defer naming a day to me, until the further result of the Prince of Wales's intention should have been made known to your Majesty. This determination of your Majesty, on this re- quest, made by his Royal Highness, I humbly trust } T our Majesty will permit me to entreat you, in your most gracious justice, to reconsider. Your Majesty, I am convinced, must have been surprised at the time, and prevailed upon by the importunity of the Prince of Wales, to think this determination ne- cessary, or } our Majesty's generosity and justice .would never have adopted it. And if I can satisfy your Majesty of the unparalleled injustice, and cru- elty of tills interposition of the Prince of Wales, at such a time, and under such circumstances, I feel the most perfect confidence that your Majesty will hasten to recall it. I should basely he wanting to my own interest and feelings, if I did not plainly state my sense of that injustice, and cruelty ; and if f did not most loudly coin plain of it. Your Majesty will better perceive the just grounds of my complaint, when T retrace the course of these proceedings from their commencement. The four noble Lords, appointed by your Majesty to inquire into the charges brought against me, in their Report of the 1 4th of July last, after having sta- ted that His Royal Highness the Prince of Wales 2H had had laid before him, the charge which was made against me by Lady Douglas, and the declaration in support of it, proceed in the following manner. * " In the painful situation in which his lloyai " Highness was placed by these communications, " we learnt that His Royal Highness had adopted " the only course which could, in our judgment, " with propriety be followed. When informations " such as these had been thus confidently alleged, " and particularly detailed, and had been in some " degree supported by collateral evidence, applying u to other facts of the same nature, (though going " to a far less extent.) one line only could be pur- " sued. " Every sentiment of duty to your Majesty, and " of concern for the public welfare, required that " these particulars should not be withheld from " your Majesty, to whom more particularly be- u " longed the cognizance of a matter of State, so " nearly touching the honour of your Majesty's " Royal Family, and, by possibility, affecting the " succession of your Majesty's Crown. iC Your Majesty had been pleased, on your part, il to view the subject in the same light. Consider- " ing it as a matter which, on every account, de- u manded the most immediate investigation, your " Majesty had thought fit to commit into our hands " the duty of ascertaining, in the first instance, " what degree of credit was due to the information, " and thereby enabling your Majesty to decide " what further conduct to adopt respecting them/' * Report, p. 6. ante. 212 His Royal Highness then, pursuing, as the four Lords say, the only course, which could in their judgment, with propriety, be pursued, submitted the matter to your Majesty. — Your Majesty direct- ed the Inquiry by the four noble Lords. — The four Lords in their Report upon the case, justly acquitted me ot all crime, and expressed (I will not wait now to say how unjustly) the credit which they gaYe, and the consequence they ascribed to other matters, which they did not, however, cha- racterize as amounting to any crime. — To this Re- port I made my answer. — That answer, together with the whole proceedings, was referred by your Majesty, to the same four noble Lords, and others of your Majesty's confidential servants. They ad- vised \ our Majesty, amongst much other matter, {which must be the subject of further observations) that there was no longer any reason why you should decline receiving me. Your Majesty will necessarily conceive that I have always looked upon my banishment from your Royal Presence, as, in fact, a punishment, and a severe one too. I thought it sufficiently hard, that I should have been suffering that punish- ment, during the time that this Inquiry has been pending, while I was yet only under accusation, and upon the principles of the just laws of your Ma- jesty's kingdom, entitled to be presumed to be innocent, till I was proved to be guilty. But I find this does not appear to be enough, in the opi- nion of the Prince of Wales. For now, when 213 alter this long Inquiry, into matters which required immediate investigation, I have been acquitted of every thing which could call for my banishment from your Royal Presence; — after your Majesty's confidential servants have thus expressly advised your Majesty that they see no reason why you should any longer decline to receive me into your presence ; — after your Majesty had graciously noti- fied to me, your determination to receive me at an early day, His Royal Highness interposes the de- mand of a new delay ; desires your Majesty not to take any step ; desires you not to act upon the ad- vice which your own confidential servants have given you, that you need no longer decline seeing me; — not to execute your intention, and assurance, that you would receive me at an early day ; — because he has laid the documents before his Lawyers, and intends to prepare a further statement. And the judgment of your Majesty's confidential servants, is, as it were, appealed from by the Prince of Wales, (whom, from this time, at least, I must be permitted to consider as assuming the character of my accuser) ; — the justice due to me is to be sus- pended, while the judgment of your Majesty's sworn servants is to be submitted to the revision of my accuser's Counsel ; and I, though acquitted, in the opinion of your Majesty's confidential ser- vants, of all that should induce your Majesty to de- cline seeing me, am to haye that punishment, which had been inflicted upon me, during the In- quiry, continued after that acquittal, till a fresh 214 statement is prepared, to be again submitted, for aught I know, to another Inquiry, of as extended a continuance as that which has just terminated. Can it be said that the proceedings of the four ricble Lords, or of your Majesty's confidential ser- vants, have been so lenient, and considerate towards me and my feelings, as to induce a suspicion that I have been too favourably dealt with by them ? and that the advice which has been given to your Majesty, that your Majesty need no longer decline to receive me, was hastily and partially delivered ? I am confident, that your Majesty must see the very reverse of this to be the case — that I have every reason to complain of the inexplicable delay which so lon£ withheld that advice. And the whole character of the observations with which they accompanied it, marks the reluctance with which they yielded to the necessity of giving it. For your Majesty's confidential servants advise your Majesty, " that it is no longer necessary for " you to decline receiving me into your Royal " Presence." If this is their opinion and their ad- vice now, why was it not their opinion and their advice four months ago, from the date of my an- swer ? Nay, why was it not their opinion and advice from the date even of the original Report itself ? For not only had they been in possession of my answer for above sir teen weeks*, which at least furnished them with all the materials on which this advice at length was given, but further, your Majesty's confidential servants ar^ forward to state* 215 that after having read my observations, and the affidavits which they annexed to them, they agree in the opiinmis (not in any single opinion upon any particular branch of the ease, but in the opniom generally) which were submitted to your Majesty, in the original Report of the four Lords. If there- fore (notwithstanding their concurrence in all the opinions contained in the Report) they have never- theless given to your Majesty their advice, " that " it is no longer necessary for yon to decline re- 4i ceiving me f ' — what could have prevented their offering that advice, even from the 14th of Juiy, the date of the original Report itself? Or what could have warranted the withholding of it, even for single moment? Instead, therefore, of any trace being observable, of hasty, precipitate, and partial determination in my favour, it is impossible to interpret their conduct and their reasons toge- ther in any other sense, than as amounting to an admission of your Majesty's confidential servants themselves, that I have, in consequence of their withholding that advice, been unnecessarily and cruelly banished from your Royal Presence, from the 14th of July, to the 28th of January, including a space of above six months ; and the effect of the interposition of the Prince, is to prolong my suffer- ings, and my disgrace, under the same banishment, to a period perfectly indefinite. The principle which will admit the effect of such interposition now, may be acted upon again; and the Prince may require a further prolongation, 216 upon fresh statements, and fresh charges, kept back possibly for the purpose of being, from time to time, conveniently interposed, to prevent, for ever, the arrival of that hour, which, displaying to the world the acknowledgment of my unmerited sufferings and disgrace, may, at the same time, expose the true malicious and unjust quality of the proceedings which have been so long carried on against me. This unseasonable, unjust, and cruel interposi- tion of His Royal Highness, as I must ever deem it, has prevailed upon your Majesty to recall, to my prejudice, your gracious purpose of receiving v me, in pursuance of the advice of your servants. Do I then flatter myself too much, when I feel as- sured, that my just entreaty, founded upon the reasons which I urge, and directed to counteract only the effect of that unjust interposition, will in- duce your Majesty to return to your original deter- mination ? Restored however, as I should feel myself, to a state of comparative security, as well as credit, by being, at length, permitted, upon your Majesty's gracious reconsideration of your last determination, to have access to your Majesty ; yet, under all the circumstances under which I should now receive that mark and confirmation of your Majesty's opinion of my innocence, my character would not, I fear, stand cleared in the public opinion, by the mere fact of your Majesty's reception of me. This re- vocation of your Majesty's gracious purpose has si; flung an additional cloud about the whole proceed- ing, and the inferences drawn in the public mind, from this circumstance, so mysterious, and so per- fectly inexplicable, upon any grounds which are open to their knowledge, has made, and will leave so deep an impression to my prejudice, as scarce any thing, short of a public exposure of all that has passed, can possibly efface. The publication of all these proceedings to the world, then, seems to me, under the present cir- cumstances, (whatever reluctance I feel against such a measure, and however I regret the hard necessity which drives me to it) to be almost the only re- maining resource, for the vindication of my honour and character. The falsehood of the accusa- tion is, by no means, all that will, by such publica- tion, appear to the credit and clearance of my cha- racter ; but the course in which the whole proceed- ings have been carried on, or rather delayed^ by those, to whom your Majesty referred the consi- deration of them, will shew, that, whatever mea- sure of justice I may have ultimately received at their hands, it is not to be suspected as arising from any merciful and indulgent consideration of me, of my feelings, or of my case. It will be seen how my feelings had been ha- rassed, and my character and honour exposed, by the delays which have taken place in these proceed- ings : it will be seen, that the existence of the charge against me had avowedly been known to the Ff 218 public, from the Jth of June in the last year. — I say known to the public, because it was on that day that the Commisioners, acting, as I am to suppose, (for so they state in their Report) under the anxious wish, that their trust should he executed with as little publicity as possible, authorized that unnecessary insult and outrage upon me, as I must always consider it, which, however intended, gave the utmost publicity and exposure to the existence of these charges — I mean the sending two attor- nies, armed with their Lordships' warrant, to my house, to bring before them, at once, about one half of my household for examination. The idea of privacy, after an act, so much calculated, from the extraordinary nature of it> to excite the greatest attention and surprise, your Majesty must feel to have been impossible and absurd ; for an attempt at secrecy, mystery, and concealment, on my part, could, under such circumstances, only have been construed into the fearfulness of guilt. It will appear also, that from that time, I heard nothing authentically upon the subject till the 11th ' of August, when I was furnished, by your Majesty's commands, with the Report. The several papers necessary to my understanding the whole of these charges, in the authentic state in which your Ma- jesty thought it proper, graciously to direct, that I should have them, were not delivered to me till the beginning of September. My answer to these various charges, though the whole subject, of them was new to those whose advice I had recourse to 5 219 long as that answer was necessarily obliged to be, was delivered to the Lord Chancellor, to be for- warded to Your Majesty, by the sixth of October ; and, from the 6th of October to the 28th of Ja- nuary, I was kept in total ignoranee of the effect of that answer. Not only will all this delay be appa- rent, but it will be generally shewn to the world how Your Majesty's servants had, in this important business, treated your daughter 7 in-law, the Princess of Wales; and what measure of justice she, a fe- male, and a stranger in your land, has experienced at their hands. Undoubtedly against such a proceeding I have ever felt, and still feel, an almost invincible repug- nance. Every sentiment of delicacy, with which a female mind must shrink from the act of bringing before the public such charges, howeyer conscious of their scandal and falsity, and however clearly that scandal and falsity may be manifested by the answer to those charges ;— the respect still due from me, to persons employed in authority under your Majesty, however little respect I may have re- ceived from them ; — my duty to His Royal High- ness the Prince of Wales ; — my regard for all the members of your august Family ; — my esteem, my duty, my gratitude to your Majesty, — my affection- ate gratitude for all the paternal kindness, which I have ever experienced from you ; — -my anxiety, not only to avoid the risk of giving any offence or dis- pleasure to your Majesty, but also to fly from every occasion of creating the slightest sentiment of un« 220 easiness in the mind of your Majesty, whose happi- ness it would be the pride and pleasure of my life to consult and to promote ; and these various senti- ments have compelled me to submit, as long as hu- man forbearance could endure, to all the unfavour- able inferences which were, through this delay, daily increasing in the public mind. What the strength and efficacy of these motives have been, Your Ma- jesty will do me the justice to feel, when you are pleased, graciously, to consider how long I have been contented to suffer those suspicions to exist against my innocence, which the bringing before the public of my accusation and my defence to it, would so indisputably and immediately have dispelled. The measure, however, of making these pro- ceedings public, whatever mode I can adopt (con- sidering especially the absolute impossibility of suf- fering any partial production of them, and the ne- cessity that, if for any purpose any part of them should be produced, the whole must be brought before the public) remains surrounded with all the objections which I have enumerated ; and nothing could ever have prevailed upon me, or can now even prevail upon me to have recourse to it, but an imperious sense of indispensible duty to my future safety, to my present character and honour, and to the feelings, the character, and the interests of my child. I had flattered myself, when once this long proceeding should have terminated, in my recep- tion into Your Majesty's presence, that that circuit £21 stance alone would have so strongly implied my in- nocence of all that had been brought againt me, as to have been perfectly sufficient for my honour and my security ; but accompanied, as it now must be, with the knowledge of the fact, that Your Majesty has been brought to hesitate upon its propriety, and accompanied also with the very unjustifiable obser- vations, as they appear to me, on which I shall pre- sently proceed to remark ; and which were made by your Majesty's servants, at the time when they gave you their advice to receive me ; I feel myself in a situation, in which I deeply regret that I cannot rest, in silence, without an immediate reception into your Majesty's presence ; nor, indeed, with that reception, unless it be attended by other cir- cumstances, which may mark my satisfactory ac- quittal of the charges which have been brought against me. It shall at no time be said, with truth, that I shrunk back from these infamous charges ; that I crouched before my enemies, and courted them, by my submission into moderation ? No, I have ever boldly defied them, I have ever felt and still feel, that, if they should think, either of pursuing these accusations, or of bringing forward any other which the wickedness of individuals may devise, to affect my honour ; (since my conscience tells me, that they must be, as base and groundless as those brought by Lady Douglas,) while the witnesses to the innocence of my conduct, are all living, I should be able to disprove them all ; and, whoever may 222 be my accusers, to triumph over their wickedness and malice. But should these accusations be re- newed ; or any other be brought forward, in any future time, death may, I know not how soon, re- move from my innocence its best security, and de- prive me of the means of my justification, and my defence. There are therefore other pleasures, which I trust your Majesty will think indispensable to be taken, for my honour, and for my security. Amongst these, I most humbly submit to your Majesty my most earnest entreaties that the proceedings, inclu- ding not only my first answer, and my letter of the 8th of December, but this letter also, my be direc- ted by your Majesty to be so preserved and depo- sited, as that they may, all of them, securely remain permanent authentic documents and memorials, of this accusation and of the manner in which I met it ; of my defence, as well as of the charge. That they may remain capable at any time, of being re- sorted to, if the malice which produced the charge originally, shall ever venture to renew it. Beyond this, I am sure your Majesty will think it but proper and just, that I should be restored, in every respect, to the same situation, from whence the proceedings, under these false charges, have removed me. That, besides being graciously re- ceived, again, into the bosom of your Majesty's Royal Family, restored to my former respect and station amongst them, your Majesty will be graci- ously pleased, either to exert your influence, wit>b 223 His Royal Highness the Prince of Wales, that I may be restored to the use of my apartment in Carlton House, which was reserved for me, except while the apartments were undergoing repair, till the date of these proceedings ; or to assign to me some apartment in one of your Royal Palaces. Some apartment in or near to London is indispen- sably necessary for my convenient attendance at the Drawing-room. And if I am not restored to that at Carlton House, I trust your Majesty will graci- ously perceive, how reasonable it is, that I should request, that some apartment should be assigned to me, suited to my dignity and situation, which may mark my reception and acknowledgment, as one of your Majesty's family, and from which my attendance at the Drawing-room may be easy and convenient. If these measures are taken, I should hope that they would prove satisfactory to the public mind, and that I may feel myself fully restored in public estimation, to my former character. And should they prove so satisfactory, I shall indeed be delight- ed to think, that no further step may, even now, appear to be necessary to my peace of mind, my security, and my honour. But your Majesty will permit me to say, that if the next week, which will make more than a month from the time of your Majesty's informing me that you would receive me, should pass without my being received into your presence, and without having the assurance that these other requests of 224 mine shall be complied with ; I shall be under the painful necessity of considering them as refused. In which case, I shall feel myself compelled, how- ever reluctantly, to give the whole of these pro- ceedings to the world. Unless your Majesty can suggest other adequate means of securing my honour and my life, from the effect of the continu- ance or renewal of these proceedings, for the future, as well as the present. For I entreat your Majesty to believe, that it is only in the absence of all other adequate menns, that I can have resort to that measure. That I consider it with deep regret ; that I regard it with serious apprehension, by no means so much on account of the effect it may have upon myself; as on account of the pain which it may give to Your Majesty, your august Family, and your loyal subjects. As far as myself am concerned, I am aware of the observations to which this publication will expose me. But I am placed in a situation in which I have the choice only of two most unpleasant alternatives. And I am perfectly confident that the imputations and the loss of character which must, under these circumstances, follow from my silence, are most injurious and unavoidable; that my silence, under such circumstances, must lead inevitably to my utter infamy and ruin. The publication, on the other hand, will expose to the world nothing, which is spoken to by any witness (whose infamy and discredit is not unanswerably exposed and establish- 225 ed) which can, in the slightest degree, effect my character, for honour, virtue, and delicacy. There may be circumstances disclosed, manifest- ing a degree of condescension and familiarity in my behaviour and conduct, which in the opinions of many, may be consideied as not sufficiently guarded, dignified, and reserved. Circumstances however which my foreign education, and foreign habits, misled me to think, in the humble and retired situation in which it was my fate to live, and where I had no relation, no equal, no friend to advise me, were wholly free from offence. But when they have been dragged forward, from the scenes of private life, in a grave proceeding on a charge of High Treason and Adultery, they seem to derive a colour and character, from the nature of the charge, which they are brought forward to support. And I cannot but believe, that they have been used for no other purpose than to afford a cover, to screen from view the injustice of that charge ; that they have been taken advantage of, to let down my accusers more gently ; and to de- prive me of that full acquittal on the Report of the four Lords, which my innocence of all offence most justly entitled me to receive.. Whatever opinion however may be formed upon any part of my conduct, it must injustice be form- ed, with reference to the situation in which I was placed; if I am judged of as Princess of Wales, with reference to the high rank of that station, I Gg 22S must be judged as Princess of Wales, banished from the Prince, unprotected by the support and the countenance, which belong to that station ; and if I am judged of in my private character, as a married woman, I must be judged of as a wife banished from her husband, and living in a widowed seclusion from him, and retirement from the world. This last consideration leads me to recur to an ex- pression in Mr. Lisle's examination, which de- scribes my conduct, in the frequency and the man- ner of my receiving the visits of Captain Manby, though always in the presence of my ladies, as un- becoming a married woman. Upon the extreme injustice of setting up the opinion of one woman, as it were, in judgment upon the conduct of ano- ther ; as well as of estimating the conduct of a per- son in my unfortunate situation, by reference to that, which might in general be expected from a married woman, living happily with her husband, I have before generally remarked : But beyond these general remarks in forming any estimate of my conduct, your Majesty will never forget the very peculiar circumstances and misfortunes of my situ- ation. Your Majesty will remember that I had not been much above a year in this country, when I received the following letter from His Royal High* ness the Prince of Wales, 22f Madam, " Windsor Castle, April 30, 1796, " As Lord Cholmondely informs me that you " wish I would define, in writing,* the terms *' upon which we are to live, I shall endea- " vour to explain myself upon that head, with " as much clearness, and with as much propriety, eB as the nature of the subject will admit. Our in- Cf elinations are not in our power, nor should either " of us be held answerable to the other, because " nature has not made us suitable to each other. x< Tranquil and comfortable society is, however, in " our power; let our intercourse, therefore, be " restricted to that, and I will distinctly subscribe iC to the condition-}- which you required, through " Lady Cholmondeley, that even in the event of t* any accident happening to my daughter, which " I trust Providence in its mercy will avert, I H shall not infringe the terms of the restriction by • The substance of this letter had been previously conveyed in a mes- sage through Lord Cholmondeley to her Royal Highness. But it was thought by her Reyal Highness, to be infinitely too important to rest merely upon a verbal communication, and therefore she desired that his Royal Highness's pleasure upon it should be communicated to her in writing, f Upon the receipt of the message alluded to, in the foregoing note, Her Royal Highness, though she had nothing to do but to submit to the arrangement which his Royal Highness might determine upon, desired it might be understood, that she should insist that any such arrange^ ment if once made, should be considered as final. And that his Royal Highness should not retain the right, from time to time, at his pleatujre, or under any circumstances, to alter it» 228 u proposing at any period, a connection of a mofe " particular nature. I shall now finally close this " disagreeable correspondence, trusting that, as " we have completely explained ourselves to each " other, the rest of our lives will be passed in un- " interrupted tranquillity. €c I am, Madam, ci With great truths <<> Very sincerely yours, (Signed) « GEORGE P." And that to this letter I sent the following answel* : " L'aveu de votre conversation avec Lord " Cholmondely, ne m'e'tonne, ni ne m'offense. " C'etoit me confirmer, ce que vous m'avez ta- " citement insinue depuis une annee. Mais il y " auroit apres cela, un manque de delicatesse ou, (C pour mieux dire, une bassesse indigne de me ee plaindre des conditions, que vous vous imposez a ci vous-meme. " Je ne vous aurois point fait de r^ponse, si iC votre lettre n'etoit concue de maniere a faire " douter, si cet arrangement vient de vous, ou de iC moi ; et vous savez que vous en avez seul iC l'honneur. La lettre que vous m'announcez " comme la derniere, m'oblige de communiquer ic au Roi, comme a mon Souverain, et a mon ;i Pere, votre aveu et ma reponse. Vous trouve- 229 if rez cHncluse la copie de celle que j'ecris au " Roi. Je vous en previens pour ne pas matti- '1 rer de votre part la moindre reproche de dupli- " cite\ Cornme je n'ai dans ce moment, d'autre " protecteur que Sa Majeste, je m'en rapporte " tmiquement a lui. Et si ma conduite merite " son approbation, je serai, du moms en partie, " consolee. ** Du reste, je conserve toute la reconnoissanee " possible de ce que je me trouve par votre 66 moyen, comme Princesse de Galles, dans une " situation a pouvoir me livrer sans contrainte, a " une vertu chere a mon cceur, je veux dire la u bienfaisance. Ce sera pour moi un devoir d'agir " de plus par un autre motif, savoir celui de don- u ner Texemple de la patience, et de la resignation u dans toutes sortes d'epreuves. Rendez-moi la " justice deme croire, queje ne cesserai jamais de " faire des voeux pour votre bonheur, et d'etre " votre bien devouee."* (Signed) « CAROLINE." " Ce6deMai, 179(7." * TRANSLATION. The avowal of your conversation with Lord Cholmondely, neither sur- prises, nor offends me. It merely confirmed what you have tacitly insinu- ated for this twelve-month. But after this, it would be a want of delicacy, or rather an unworthy meanness in me, were I to complain of those cmi- ditions which you impose upon yourself. I should have returned no answer to your letter, if it had not been con- ceived in terms to make it doubtful, whether this arrangement proceeds 230 The date of his Royal Highness s letter is the oOth of April, 179^- The date of our marriage, your Majesty will recollect, is the 8th day of April, m the year 1?9 5 > an d that of the birth of our only child the 7th of January, I/96. On the letter of his Royal Highness I offer no comment, I only entreat your Majesty not to un- derstand me to introduce it, as affording any sup- posed justification or excuse, for the least departure from the strictest line of virtue, or the slightest deviation from the most refined delicacy. The crime, which has been insinuated against me, would be equally criminal and detestable ; the indelicacy imputed to ine would be equally odious and abomi- nable, whatever renunciation of conjugal authority and affection, the above letter of his Royal High- ness might in any construction of it be supposed from y.Tu or from me, and yon are aware that the credit of it belongs to ,'ou alone. The letter which you announce to me as the last, obliges me to commu- nicate to the King, as to my Sovereign and my Father, both your avowal and my answer. You will find enclosed the copy of my letter to the King I apprize you uf it; that I may not incur the slightest reproach of dupli- city from you. As I have at this moment no protector but his Majesty, I lefer myself solely to him upon this subject, and if my conduct meets his approbation, I shall be in some degree at least consoled. I retain every sentiment of gratitude for the situation in which I find myself, as Princes? of Wales, enabled by your means, to indulge in the free exercise of a vir- tue dear to my heart, I mean charity. It will be my duty likewise to act upon another motive, that of giving an example of patience and resignation under every trial. Do me the justice to believe that I shall never cease to pray for your happiness, and to be Your much devoted CAROLINE, 6th of May, 179G. 231 to have conveyed. Such crimes, and faults, derive not their guilt from the consideration of the conju- gal virtues of the individual, who may be the most injured by them, however much such virtues may- aggravate their enormity. No such letter, there- fore, in any construction of it, no renunciation of conjugal affection or duties,* could ever palliate them. But whether conduct free from all crime, free from all indelicacy, (which I maintain to be the character of the conduct to which Mrs. Lisle's observations apply,) yet possibly not so measured, as a cautious wife, careful to avoid the slightest ap- pearance, of not preferring her husband to all the world, might be studious to observe. Whether conduct of such description, and possibly, in such sense, not becoming a married woman, could be justly deemed, in my situation, an offence in me ; I must leave to your Majesty to determine. In making that determination, however, it will not escape your Majesty to consider, that the con- duct which does or does not become a married wo- man materially depends upon what is, it is not known by her to be agreeable to her husband. His pleasure and happiness ought unquestionably to be her law ; and his approbation the most favourite object of her pursuit. Different characters of men require different modes of conduct in their wives, but when a wife can no longer be capable of per- ceiving from time to time, what is agreeable or of- fensive to her husband, when her conduct can no longer contribute to his happiness, no longer hope 232 to be rewarded by bis approbation, siirely to ex- amine that, conduct by the standard of what ought, in general, to be the conduct of a married woman, is altogether unreasonable and unjust. What then is my case ? Your Majesty will do me the justice to remark; that, in the above letter of the Prince of Wales, there is not the most dis- tant surmise, that crime, that vice, that indelicacy of any description, gave occasion to his determina- tion ; and all the tales of infamy and discredit,- which the inventive malice of my enemies has brought forward on these charges, have their date, years, and years, after the period to which I am now alluding. What then, let me repeat the ques- tion, is my case ? After the receipt of the above letter, and in about two years from my arrival in this country, I had the misfortune entirely to lose the support, the countenance, the protection of my husband — I was banished, as it were, into a sort of humble retirement, at a distance from him, and almost estranged from the whole of the Royal Fa*- mily. I had no means of having recourse, either for society or advice, to those, from whom my in- experience could have best received the advantages of the one, and with whom I could, most be- comingly, have enjoyed the comforts of the other; and if in this retired, unassisted, unprotected state, without the check of a husband's authority, with- out the benefit of his advice, without the comfort and support of the society of his family, a stranger to the habits and fashions of this country, I should, 233 in any instance, under the influence of foreign ha- bits, and foreign education, have observed a con- duct, in any degree deviating from the reserve and severity of British manners, and partaking of a con- descension and familiarity which that reserve and severity would, perhaps, deem beneath the dignity of my exalted rank, I feel confident, (since such deviation will be seen to have been ever consistent with perfect innocence), that not only your Ma- jesty's candour and indulgence, but the candour and indulgence, which, notwithstanding the reserve and severity of British manners, always belong to the British Public, will never visit it with severity or censure. It remains for me now to make some remarks upon the further contents of the paper, which was transmitted to me by the Lord Chancellor, on the 28th ult. And I cannot, in passing, omit to remark, that that paper has neither title, date, signature, nor attestation ; and unless the Lord Chancellor had accompanied it with a note, stating, that it was co- pied in his own hand from the original, which his Lordship had received from your Majesty, I should have been at a loss to have perceived any single mark of authenticity belonging to it ; and as it is, I am wholly unable to discover what is the true cha- racter which does belong to it. It contains, indeed, the advice which your Majesty's servants have of fered to your Majesty, and the Message which, ac- cording to that advice, your Majesty directed to be delivered to me. Hh 234 _ Considering it, therefore, wholly as their act, your Majesty will excuse and pardon me, if, deeply in- jured as I feel myself to have been by them, lex- press myself with freedom upon their conduct. I may speak, perhaps, with warmth, because I am provoked by a sense of gross injustice ; I shall speak certainly with firmness and with courage, because I am emboldened by a sense of conscious innocence. Your Majesty's confidential servants say, " they agree in the opinions of the four Lords," and they say this, " after the fullest consideration of my ob- servations, and of the affidavits which were annexed to them." Some of these opinions, your Majesty will recollect, are, that " William Cole, Fanny " Lloyd, Robert Bidgood, and Mrs. Lisle, are wit- 66 nesses who cannot," in the judgment of the four Lords, " be suspected of any unfavourable bias ;" and " whose veracity, in this respect, they had seen " no ground to question ;" and cs that the circum- " stances to which they speak, particularly as re- " lating to Captain Manby, must be credited until " they are decisively contradicted." Am I then to understand your Majesty's confidential servants to mean, that they agree with the four Noble Lords in these opinions ? Am I to understand, that after hewing read, with the fullest consideration, the observations which I have offered to your Ma- jesty ; after having seen William Cole there proved to have submitted himself, five times at least, to private, unauthorized, voluntary examination by Sir John Douglas's Solicitor, for the express pur- 235 pose of confirming the statement of Lady Douglas^ (of that Lady Douglas, whose statement and depo- sition they are convinced to be so malicious and false, that they propose to institute such prosecu- tion against her, as your Majesty's Law Officers may advise, upon a reference, now at length, after six months from the detection of that malice and falsehood, intended to be made)— after having seen this William Cole, submitting to such repeated voluntary examinations for such a purpose, and although he was all that time a servant on my esta- blishment, and eating my bread, yet never once communicating to me, that such examinations were going on — am I to understand, that your Majesty's confidential servants agree with the four Lords in thinking, that he cannot, under such circumstances, be suspected of unfavourable bias ? That after having had pointed out to them the direct, flat contradiction between the same William Cole and Fanny Lloyd, they nevertheless agree to think them both (though in direct contradiction to each other, yet both) witnesses, whose "veracity they see 7io ground to question ? After having seen Fanny Lloyd directly and positively contradicted, in an assertion, most injurious to my honour, by Mr. Mills and Mr. Edmeades, do they agree in opinion with the four Noble Lords, that they see no ground to question her veracity ?— After having read the observations on Mr. Bidgood's evidence ; after having seen, that he had the hardihood to swear, that he believed Captain Manby slept in my house, at Southend, and to insinuate that he 236 slept in my bed-room ; after having seen that he founded himself on this most false fact, and most foul and wicked insinuation, upon the circumstance of observing a bason and some towels where he thought they ought not be placed ; after having seen that this fact, and this insinuation, were dis- proved before the four Noble Lords themselves, by two maid-servants, who, at that time, lived with me at Southend, and whose duties about my person, and my apartments, must have made them acquainted with this fact, as asserted, or as insi- nuated, if it had happened ; after having observed too, in confirmation of their testimony, that one of them mentioned the name of another female servant (who was not examined), who had, from her situa- tion, equal means of knowledge with themselves — I ask whether, after all this decisive weight of con- tradiction to Robert Bidgood's testimony, I am to understand your Majesty's confidential servants to agree with the four Noble Lords in thinking, that Mr. Bidgood is a witness, who cannot be suspected of unfavourable bias, and that there is no ground to guest ion his veracity? If, Sire, I were to go through all the remarks of this description, which occur to me to make, I should be obliged to re- peat nearly all my former observations, and to make this letter as long as my original answer ; but to that answer I confidently appeal, and I will ven- ture to challenge your Majesty's confidential ser- vants to find a single impartial, and honourable man, unconnected in feeling and interest with the parties, and unconnected in Council, with those 237 who have already pledged themselves to an opinion upon this subject, who will lay his hand upon his heart, and say that these three witnesses, on whom that Report so mainly relies, are not to be suspected of the grossest partiality, and that their veracity is not most fundamentally impeached. Was it then noble, was it generous, was it manly, was it just, in your Majesty's confidential servants, instead of fairly admitting the injustice, which had been, inadvertently, and unintentionally, no doubt, done to me, by the four Noble Lords in their Re- port, upon the evidence of these witnesses, to state to your Majesty, that they agree with these Noble Lords in their opinion, though they cannot, it seems, go the length of agreeing any longer to withhold the advice, which restores me to your Majesty's presence ? And with respect to the par- ticulars to my prejudice, remarked upon in the Report as those " which justly deserve the most " serious consideration, and which must be credited " till decisively contradicted," instead of fairly avowing, either that there was originally no pre- tence for such a remark, or that, if there had been original \y, yet that my answer had given that de- cisive contradiction which was sufficient to discredit them ; instead, I say, of acting this just, honest, and, open, part, to take no notice whatsoever of those contradictions, and content themselves with saying, that " none of the facts or allegations ^ stated in preliminary examinations, carried on in " the absence of the parties interested, could be con- " sidered as legally or conclusively established ?" 238 They agree in the opinion that the facts or alle- gations, though stated in preliminary examination, carried on in the absence of the parties interested, must be credited till decisively contradicted, and deserve the most serious consideration. They read, with the fullest consideration, the contradiction which I have tendered to them ; they must have known, that no other sort of contradiction could, by possibility, from the nature of things, have been offered upon such subjects ; they do not question the truth, they do not point out the insufficiency of the contradiction, but in loose, general, indefinite, terms, referring to my answer, consisting, as it does, of above two hundred written pages, and coupling it with those examinations (which they admit establish nothing against an absent party) they advise your Majesty, that " there appear " many circumstances of conduct, which could not " be regarded by your Majesty without serious " concern ;" and that, as to all the other facts and allegations, except those relative to my pregnancy and delivery, they are not to be considered as " legally and conclusively established,''' because spoken to in preliminary examinations, not carried on in the presence of the parties concerned. They do not, indeed, expressly assert, that my contra- diction was not decisive or satisfactory ; they do not expressly state, that they think the facts and allegations want nothing towards their legal and conclusive establishment, but a re-examination in the presence of the parties interested, but they go far to imply such opinions. That those opinions are 239 utterly untenable, against the observations I have made upon the credit and character of those wit- nesses, I shall ever most confidently maintain ; but that those observations leave their credit wholly un- affected, and did not deserve the least notice from your Majesty's servants, it is impossible that any honourable man can assert, or any fair, and unpre- judiced, mind believe. I now proceed, Sire, to observe, very shortly, upon the advice further given to your Majesty as contained in the remaining part of the paper ; which has represented that, both in the examinations, and even in my answer there have appeared many cir- cumstances of conduct which could not be regarded but with serious concern, and which have suggested the expression of a desire and expectation, that such a conduct may in future, be observed by me, as may fully justify these marks of paternal regard and affec- tion, which your Majesty wishes to shew to all your Royal Family. And here, Sire, your Majesty will graciously per- mit me to notice the hardship of the advice, which has suggested to your Majesty, to convey to me this reproof. I complain not so much for what it does, as for what it does not contain ; I mean the absence of all particular _ mention of what it is, that is the object of their blame. The circumstances of conduct, which appear in these examinations, and in my answer to which they allude as those which may be supposed to jus- tify the advice, which has led to this reproof, since your Majesty's servants have not particularly 240 mentioned them, I cannot be certain that I know. But I will venture confidently to repeat the asser- tion, which I have already made, that there are no circumstances of conduct, spoken to by any wit- ness, (whose infamy and discredit are not unan- swerably exposed, and established,) nor any where apparent in my answer which have the remotest approach either to crime, or to indelicacy. For my future conduct, Sire, impressed with every sense of gratitude for all former kindness, I shall be bound, unquestionably, by sentiment as well as duty, to study your Majesty's pleasure. Any advice which your Majesty may wish to give to me in respect of any particulars of my conduct, I shall be bounds and be anxious to obey as my law. But I must trust that your Majesty will point out to me the particulars, which may happen to displease you, and which you may wish to have altered. I shall be as happy, in thus feeling myself safe from blame under the benefit of your Majes- ty's advice, as I am now in finding myself secured from danger, under the protection of your justice. Your Majesty will permit me to add one word more. Your Majesty has seen what detriment my cha- racter has, for a time, sustained, by the false and malicious statement of Lady Douglas, and by the depositions of the witnesses who were examined in support of her statement. Your Majesty has seen how many enemies I have, and how little their ma- lice has Been restrained by any regard to truth in the pursuit of my ruin. Few, as it may be hoped, may be the instances of such determined, and un- 241 provoked, malignity, yet, I cannot flatter myself, that the world does not produce other p rsons, who may be swayed by similar motives to similar wick- edness. Whether the statement, to be prepared by by the Prince of Wales, is to be confined to the old charges, or is intended to bring forward new cir- cumstances, I cannot tell ; but if any fresh attempts of the same nature shall be made by my accusers, instructed as they will have been, by their miscar- riage in this instance, I can hardly hope that they will not renew their charge, with an improved ar- tifice, more skilfully directed, and with a malice, inflamed rather than abated, by their previous disap- pointment. 1 therefore can only appeal to your Ma- jesty's justice, in which I confident!}' trust, that whether these charges are to be renewed against me either on the old or on fresh evidence ; or whether new accusations, as well as new witnesses, are to be brought forward, your Majesty, after the experi- ence of these proceedings, will not suffer your Royal mind to be prejudiced by ex parte, secret examinations, nor my character to be whispered away by insinuations, or suggestions, which 1 have no opportunity of meeting. If any charge, which the law will recognize, should be brought against me in an open and a legal manner, I should have no right to complain, nor any apprehension to meet it. But till I may have a full opportunity of so meeting it, 1 trust your Majesty will not suffer it to excite even a suspicion to my prejudice. I must claim the benefit of the presumption of innocence till I am proved to be guilty, for, without that pre- i i 242 sumption, against the effects of secret insinuation and ex parte examinations, the purest innocence can make no defence, and can have no security. Surrounded, as it is now proved, that I have been, for years, by domestic spies, your Majesty must, I trust, feel convinced, that if I had been guilty, there could not have been wanting evidence to have proved my guilt. And, that these spies have been obliged to have resort to their own inven- tion for the support of the charge, is the strongest demonstration that the truth, undisguised, and cor- rectly represented, could furnish them with no handle against me. And when I consider the na- ture and malignity of that conspiracy, which, I feel confident I have completely detected and ex- posed, I cannot but think of that detection, with the liveliest gratitude, as the special blessing of Providence, who, by confounding the machinations of my enemies, has enabled me to find, in the very excess and extravagance of their malice, in the very weapons, which they fabricated and sharpened for my destruction, the sufficent guard to my inno- cence, and the effectual means of my justification and defence. I trust therefore, Sire, that I may now close this •long letter, in confidence that many days will not elapse before I shall receive from your Majesty, that assurance that my just requests may be so completely granted, as may render it possible for me (which nothing else can) to avoid the painful disclosure to the world of all the circumstances of that injustice, and of those unmerited suffer- ings^ which these Proceedings, in the manner in 243 which they have been conducted, have brought upon me. I remain, Sire, With every sentiment of gratitude, Your Majesty's most dutiful, most submissive Danghter-in-law, Subject and Servant, (Signed) C.P. Montague-House, February 16, I807. As these observations apply not only to the offi- cial communication through the Lord Chancellor, of the 28th ult. ; but also to the private letter of your Majesty, of the 1 2th instant, 1 have thought it most respectful to your Majesty and your Ma- jesty's servants, to send this letter in duplicate, one part through Colonel Taylor, and the other through the Lord Chancellor, to your Majesty. To the King: (Signed) C.P. Sire, When I last troubled your Majesty upon my un- fortunate business, I had raised my mind to hope, that I should have the happiness of hearing from your Majesty, and receiving your gracious com- mands, to pay my duty in your Royal Presence, before the expiration of the last week. And when that hope was disappointed, (eagerly clinging to any idea, which offered me a prospect of being saved from the necessity of having recourse, for the vindication of my character, to the publication of the Proceedings upon the Inquiry into my Con- duct), I thought it just possible, that the reason for my not having received your Majesty's commands to that effect^ might have been occasioned by the 244 circumstance of your Majesty's staying at Windsor through the whole of the week. I, therefore, determined to wait a few days longer, before I took a step., which, when once taken, could not be re- • called. Having, however, now assured myself, that your Majesty was in town yesterday — as I have received no command to wait upon your Ma- jesty, and no intimation of your pleasure — I am reduced to the necessity of abandoning all hope, that your Majesty will comply with my humble, my earnest, and anxious requests. Your Majesty, therefore, will not be surprised to fmd, that the publication of the Proceedings al- luded to, will not be withheld beyond Monday next. As to any consequences which may arise from such publication, unpleasant or hurtful to my own feelings and interests, I may, perhaps, be properly responsible ; and, in any event, have no one to complain of but myself, and those with whose ad- vice i have acted ; and whatever those conse- quences may be, I am fully and unalterably con- vinced, that they must be incalculably less than those, wnich I should be exposed to from my silence : But as to any other consequences, unplea- sant or hurtful to the feelings and interests of others, or of the public, my conscience will cer- tainly acquit me of them ; — I am confident that I have not acted impatiently, or precipitate! v. To avoid coming to this painful extremity, I have taken every step in my power, except that which would be abandoning my character to utter in- famy, and my station and life to no uncertain dan- ger, and, possibly, to no very distant destruction* 245 With every prayer, for the lengthened continu- ance of your Majesty's health and happiness ; for every possible blessing, which a Gracious God can bestow upon the beloved Monarch of a loyal People, and for the continued prosperity of your dominions, under your Majesty's propitious reign, I remain, Your Majesty's Most dutiful, loyal, and affectionate, but most unhappy, and most injured Daughter-in-law, Subject, and Servant, Montague House, Afar. 5, I807. C. P. To the King. Sire,* In discharge of the duty I owe to myself, and the great duty I owe to your Majesty and your Illustri- ous Family, I have herewith transmitted a state- ment which I confidently trust will appear to prove me not unworthy of the protection and favour with which your Majesty has pleased to honour me. To be restored to that favour and protection, in consequence of a conviction in your Majesty's mind of my innocence, produced by the papers, I now humbly lay before your Majesty, is the first wish of my heart. Grieved, Sire, deeply grieved, as I cannot but be, that your Majesty should be exposed to so much trouble, on so painful an occasion, and on my account, it is yet my humble trust that yoi.r Majesty will graciously forgive rae. if extreme anx- iety about my honour and your Majesty's favourable opinion, leads me humbly to solicit, as an act of Justice, that scrupulous attention on your Majesty's * This letter accompanied the fVineess's Answer to the Commissioners' Report, and should have been inserted after page 180. 246 part to these papers, which cannot fail, I think, to produce in your Majesty's mind, a full conviction of my innocence, and a due sense of the injuries I have suffered. One other prayer I, with all possible humility and anxiety, address to your Majesty, that, as I can hope for no happiness, nor expect to enjoy the benefit of that fair reputation to which I know I am entitled, till I an: re-admitted into your Majes- ty's presence, and as I am in truth without guilt, suffering what to me is heavy punishment, whilst I am denied access to your Majesty, your Majesty will be graciously pleased to form an early deter- mination whether my conduct and my sufferings do not authorize me to hope that the blessing of being restored to your Majesty's presence may be conferred upon, Sire, your Majesty's dutifully at- tached, affectionate, and afflicted daughter-in-law and subject, (Signed) CAROLINE. Blackheath, Oct. 2, 1806. To the King. MINUTE OF COUNCIL, April 22, 1807. PRESENT, Lord Chancellor (Eldon) The Earl of Bathurst Lord President (^Camden) Viscount Castlereagh Lord Privy Seal (West- Lord Mulgrave morland) Mr. Secretary Canning The Duke of Portland Lord Hawkesbury. The Earl of Chatham Your Majesty's confidential servants have, in obe- dience to your Majesty's commands^ most attentive- 247 \y considered the original Charges and Report, the Minutes of Evidence, and all the other papers sub- mitted lo the consideration of your Majesty, on the subject of those charges against her Royal Highness the Princess of Wales. In the stage in which this business is brought under their consideration, they do not feel them- selves called upon to give any opinion as to the pro- ceeding itself, or to the mode of investigation in which it has been thought proper to conduct it. But adverting to the advice which is stated by his Royal Highness the Prince of Wales to have di- his conduct, your Majesty's confidential servants are anxious to impress upon your Majesty their convic- tion that his Royal Highness could not, under sucfi advice, consistently with his public duty, have done otherwise than lay before your Majesty the State- ment and Examinations which were submitted to him upon this subject. After the most deliberate consideration, however, of the evidence which has been brought before the Commissioners, and of the previous examination, as well as of the answer and observations which have been submitted to your Majesty upon them, they feel it necessary to declare their decided concurrence in the clear and unanimous opinion of the Commis- sioners, confirmed by that of all your Majesty's late confidential servants, that the two main charges al- leged against her Royal Highness the Princess of Wales, of pregnancy and delivery, are completely disproved ; and they further submit to your Majes- ty, their unanimous opinion, that all other particu- lars of conduct brought in accusation against her 248 Royal Highness^ to which the character of crimi- nality can be ascribed, are satisfactorily contradicted, or rest upon evidence of such a nature, and which was given under such circumstances, as render it, in the judgment of your Majesty's confidential servants, undeserving of credit. Your Majesty's confidential servants, therefore, concurring in that part of the opinion of your late servants, as stated in their Minute of the 25th of January, that there is no longer any necessity for your Majesty being advised to decline receiving the Princess into your Royal presence, humbly submit to your Majesty, that it is essentially neces- sary, in justice to lier Royal Highness, and for the honour and interests of your Majesty s Illustrious Family, that her Royal Highness the Princess of Wales, should be admitted, with as little delay as possible, into your Majesty's Royal Presence, and that she should be received in a manner due to her rank and station, in your Majesty s Court and Fa- mily. Your Majesty's confidential servants also beg leave to submit to your Majesty, that considering that it may be necessary that yotr Majesty's Go- vernment should possess the means of referring to the state of this transaction, it is of the utmost impor- tance that these documents, demonstrating theground on which) our Majesty has proceeded, should be pre- served in safe custody ; and that for that purpose the originals, or authentic copies of all these Papers, should be sealed up and deposited in the Office of your Majesty's Principal Secretary of State, APPENDIX (A). (No. 1.) GEORGE R. ADHERE AS Our right trusty and well-beloved Coun- cillor Thomas Lord Erskine, our Chancellor, has this day laid before us an Abstract of certain written Decla- rations touching the' conduct of Her Royal Highness the" Princess of Wales : We do hereby authorize, em- power, and direct, the said Thomas Lord Erskine, our Chancellor; our right trusty and right well-beloved Cou- sin and Councillor George John Earl Spencer, one of our principal Secretaries of State ; our right trusty and well-beloved Councillor William Wyndham Lord Gren- ville, First Commissioner of our Treasury; and our right trusty and well-beloved Councillor Edward Lord EHenborough, our Chief Justice to hold pleas before ourself r to inquire into the truth of the same, and to ex- amine upon oath such persons as they shall see fit touch- ing and concerning the same, and to report to us the re- sult of such examinations. Given at our Castle of Windser, on the twenty- ninth day of May, in the forty-sixth year of our reign. A * true Copy, J.Bkket. g. m (No. 2.) The Deposition of Charlotte Lady Douglas. J think I first became acquainted with the Princess of Wales in 1801. Sir John Douglas had a house at Blackheath. One day in November, 1801, the snow was lying on the ground, the Princess and a lady, who I be- lieve was Miss Heyman, came on foot and walked several times before the door. Lady Stewart was with me,|and said she thought the Princess wanted something, and that I ought to go to her. I went to her ; she said she did not want any thing, but she would walk in ; that I had a very- pretty little girl. She came in, and stayed some time. About a fortnight after, Sir John Douglas and I received an invitation to go to Montague House. After that I was very frequently at Montague House, and dined there ; the Princess dined frequently with us. About May or June, 1802, the Princess first talked with me about her own conduct. Sir Sidney Smith, who had been Sir John's friend for more than twenty years, came to England about November, 1801, and came to live in our house. I understood that the Princess knew Sir Sid- dey Smith before she was Princess of Wales. The Prin- cess saw Sir Sidney Smith as frequently as ourselves. We were usually kept at Montague House later than the rest of the party ; often till three or four o'clock in the morn- ing. I never observed any impropriety of conduct be- tween Sir Sidney Smith and the Princess. I made the Princess a visit at Montague House in March 1802, for about a fortnight. She desired me come there because Miss Garth was ill. In May or June following the Prin- cess came to my house alone ; she said she came to tell me something that had happened to her, and desired me to guess. I guessed several things, and at last I said I could not guess any thing more. She then said that she was pregnant, and that the child had come to life. I don't know whether she said on that day, or a few days before, that she was at breakfast at Lady Willoughby's, that the milk flowed up to her breast,^ and came through her gown ; that she threw a napkin over herself, and went with Lady Willoughby into her room and adjusted her- self, to prevent its being observed. She never told me who was the father of the child. She said she hoped it would be a boy. She said that if it was discovered, she would give the Prince of Wales the credit of being the father, for she had slept two nights at Carlton House within the year. I said that I should go abroad to my Mother. The Princess said that she should manage it very well ; and if things came to the worst, she would give the Prince the credit of it. While I was at Monta- gue House in March, I was with the child, and one day I said that I was very sick, and the Princess desired Mrs. Sander to get me a saline draught. She then said that she was very sick herself, and that she would take a saline draught too. I observed that she could not want one, and I looked at her. The Princess said, Yes I do ; what do you look at me for, with your wicked eyes ? you are al- ways finding me out. Mrs. Sander looked very much distressed ; she gave us a saline draught each. This was the first time that I had any suspicion of her being with child. The Princess never said who was the father. When she first told me she was with child, I rather sus- pected that Sir Sidney was the father, but only because the Princess was very partial to him. I never knew that he was with her alone. We had constant intercourse with the Princess, from the time when I was at Montague House till the end of October. After that she had first communicated to me that she was with child, she fre- quently spoke upon the subject. She was bled twice dur- ing the time. She recommended to me to be bled too, and said that it made you have a better time. Mr. Ed- meades bled her. She said one of the days that Mr. Ed- meades bled her, that she had a violent heat in her blood, and that Mr. Edmeades should bleed her. I told the Prin- cess I was very anxious how she would manage to be brought to bed without its being known ; that I hoped she bad a safe person She said yes, she should have a person from abroad ; that she had a great horror of hav- ing any man about her on such an occasion. She said, " f am confident in my own plans, and f wish you would not speak with me on that subject again." She said, " I shall tell every thing to Sander." I think this was on the day on which she told me of what had happened at Lady Wil- loughby's. That Sander was a very good woman, and might be trusted, and that she must be with her at the la- bour; that she would send Miss Gouch to Brunswick ; and Miss Millfleld was too young to be trusted, and must be sent out of the way. I was brought to bed on the 23rd of July, 1802; the Princess insisted on being present ; 1 determined that she should not, but I meant to avoid it without offending her. On the day on which I was brought to bed, she came to my house, and insist- ed on coming in ; Dr. Mackie, who attended me, locked the door, and said she should not come in ; but there was another door on the opposite side of the room, which was not locked, and she came in atthat door, and was pre- sent during the time of the labour, and took the child as soon as it was born, and said that she was very glad that she had seen the whole of it. The Princess's pregnancy appeared to me to be very visible ; she wore a cushion behind, and she made Mjs. Sander make one for me. During my lying-in the Princess came one day with Mrs. Fitzgerald ; she sent Mrs. Eitzgerald away, and took a chair and sat by my bedside. She said, " You will hear of my taking children in baskets, but you wont take any no- tice of it ; I shall have them brought by a poor woman in a basket; I shall do it as a cover to have my own brought to me in that way," or, " that is the way in which I must have my own brought when I have it." Very soon after this, two children, who were twins, were brought by a poor woman in a basket. The Princess took them and had them carried up into her room, and the Princess washed them herself. The Princess told me this herself. The father, a few days afterwards, came and insisted up- on having the children, and they were given to him. The Princess afterwards said to me, You see I took the chil- dren, and it answered very well ; the father had got them back, and she could not blame him ; that she should take other children, and should have quite a nursery. I saw the Princess on a Sunday, either the 30th or 3 1 st of October, 1802, walking before her door. She was dress- ed so as to conceal her pregnancy ; she had a long cloak, and a very great muff. She had just returned from Greenwich Church ; she looked very ill, and I thought must be very near her time. About a week, or nine or ten days after this, 1 received a note from the Princess, to desire that I would not come to Montague House, for they were apprehensive that the children she had taken had had the measles in their clothes, and that she was afraid my child might take it. When the Princess came to see me during my lying in, she told me that when she should be brought to bed, she wished I would not come to her for some time, for she might be confused in seeing me. About the end of December, I went to Gloucester- shire, and stayed thereabout a month. When I return- ed, which was in January, I went to Montague House, and was let in. The Princess was packing up something in a black box. Upon the sofa a child was lying, cover- ed with a piece of red cloth. The Princess got up and took me by the hand ; she then led me to the sofa, and said, " There is the child, I had him only two days after I saw you." The words were, either, "I had him," or, "I was brought to bed." The words were such as clearly import- ed that it was her own child. She said she got very well through it. She shewed me a mark on the child's hand ; it is a pink mark. The Princess said, " she has a mark like your little girl." I saw the child afterwards frequent- ly with the Princess, quite till Christmas, 1 803, when I left Blackheath. I saw the mark upon the child's hand, and I am sure that it was the same child. I never saw any other child there. Princess Charlotte used to see the child, and play with him. The child used to call the Princess of Wales Mama. I saw the child looking at the window of the Princess's house about a month ago, be- fore the Princess went into Devonshire, and I am sure that it was the same child. Not long after 1 had first seen the child, the Princess said that she had the child at first to sleep with her for a few nights, but it made her ner- vous, and now they had got a regular nurse for her. 3he said, " We gave it a little milk at first, but it was too much for [me, and now we breed it by hand, and it does very well." I can swear positively that the child I saw at the window is the same child as the Princess told me she had two days after she parted with me. The child was called William. I never heard that it had any other name. When the child was in long clothes, we breakfasted one day with the Princess, and she said to Sir John Douglas, " This is the Deptford Boy." Independently of the Prin- cess's confessions to me, I can swear that she was preg- nant in 1802. In October, 1804, when we returned from Devonshire, I left my card at Montague House, and on the 4th of October I received a letter from Mrs.Vernon, desiring me not to come any more to Montague House. I had never at this time mentioned the Princess's being with child, or being delivered of a child, to any person, not even to Sir John Douglas. After receiving Mrs. Vernon's letter, I wrote to the Princess on the subject. The letter was sent back unopened. I then wrote to Mrs. Fitzgerald, saying, that I thought myself extremely ill- used. In two or three days after this I received an anony- mous letter, which I produce, and have marked with the letter A, # and signed with my name both on the letter and the envelope. The Princess of Wales has told me that she got a bedfellow whenever she could ; that nothing was more wholesome. She said that nothing was more convenient than her room; " it stands at the head of the staircase which leads into the Park, and I have bolts in the inside, and have a bedfellow whenever I like. I wonder you can be satisfied only with Sir John." She has* said this more than once. She has told me that Sir Sid- ney Smith had lain with her ; that she believed all men liked a bedfellow, but Sir Sidney better than any body else ; that the Prince was the most complaisant man in the world ; that she did what she liked, went where she liked, and had what bedfellows she liked, and the Prince paid for all. CHARLOTTE DOUGLAS. June 1, 1806. Sworn before us,** June*l, 1806, at Lord|Gren- ville's in Downing-street, Westminster. ERSKINE, SPENCER, A true Copy, GRENVILLE, J. Becket. ELLENBOROUGH. • No copy of this letter has been sent to Her Royal Highness the Princess ef Wales. (No. 3.) The Deposition of Sir John Douglas, Knt I had a house at Blackheath in 1801. Sir Sidney used to come to my house. I had a bed for him. The Printeess of Wales formed an acquaintance with Lady Douglas, and came frequently to our house. I thought she came more for Sir Sidney Smith than for us. After she had been some time acquainted with us, she appeared te me to be with child. One day she leaned on the so** fa*> and put her hand upon her stomach, and said, " Sir John, I shall never be Queen of England.*' I said, tx Not if you don't deserve it" She seemed angry at finst. In 1804, on the 27th of October, i received Ufco- letters by the two-penny post, one addressed to me, which I now produce, and have marked with the letter (B)* 9 both on the envelope and the inclosure, and the other letter addressed to Lady Douglas, and \Vhich I now produce, and have marked with the letter (C)* both on the envelope and the inclosure. (Signed) JOHN DOUGLAS. June 1st. Sworn before us at Lord Grenville's house in Down- ing- street, Westminster, June the first, 1806. EKSKINE, SPENCER, A true Copy, G REN VI LLE, J. Bucket. ELLENBOROUGH. * No copy of these letters, or either of them, has been sent te H«f iR«y a* .Bigljaes^Jthe Princess of Wales. (No. 4.) The Deposition of Robert Bidgood. I have lived with the Prince twenty-three years in next September.- I went to the Princess in March, 1798, and have lived with her Royal Highness ever since. About the year 1802, early in that year, I first observed Sir Sidney Smith come to Montague House. He used to stay very late at night. I have seen him early in the morning there, about ten or ele- ven o'clock. He was at Sir John Douglas's, and was in the habit, as well as Sir John and Lady Douglas, of dining or having luncheon, or supping there almost every day. I saw Sir Sidney Smith one day in 1802, in the blue room, about eleven o'clock in the morning, which is full two hours before we expected ever to see company. I asked the servants why they did not let me know that he was there. The footmen inform- ed me that they had let no person in. There was a private door to the Park by which he might have come in if he had a key to it, and have got into the blue room without any of the servants perceiving him. I never observed any appearance of the Princess, which could lead me to suppose she was with child. I first observed Captain Manby come to Montague House, either the end of 1803, or beginning of 1804. I was waiting one day in the anti-room, Captain Man- by had his hat in his hand, and appeared to be going away. He was a long time with the Princess, and as 1 stood qn the steps waiting, I looked into the room in which they were, and in the reflection in the looking- glass I saw them salute each other. I mean that they kissed each other's lips. Captain Manby then went away. I then observed the Princess have her hand- % 10 kerchief in her hands, and wipe her eyes as if she was crying, and went into the drawing-room. The Prin- cess went to Southend in May, 1804. e went with her» We were there I believe about six weeks before the Africainecame in. Sicard was very often watching with a glass to see when the ship would arrive. One day he said he saw the Africaine, and soon after the Captain put off in a boat from the ship. Sicard went down the shrubbery to meet him. When the Captain came on shore, Sicard conducted him to the Princess's House, and he dined there with the Princess and her Ladies. After this he came very frequently to see the Princess. The Princess had two houses on the Cliff, Nos. 8 and 9« She afterwards took the drawing-room of No. 7, which communicated by the balcony with No. 8. The three houses being adjoining, the Princess used to dine in No. 8, and after dinner to remove with the company into No. 7, and I have several times seen the Princess, after having gone into No. 7, with Cap- tain Man by and the rest of the company, retire alone with Captain Manby from No. 7, through No. 8, into No. Q, which was the house in which the Princess slept. I suspected that Captain Manby slept frequently in the house. It was a subject of conversation in the house. Hints were given by the servants, and I be- lieve that others suspected it as well as myself. The Princess took a child, which I understand was brought into the house by Stikeraan. I waited only one week in three, and I was not there at the time the child was brought, but I saw it there early in 1803. The child who is now with the Princess is the same as I saw there early in 1803. thas a mark in its left hand. Austin is the name of the man who was said to be the father. Austin's wife is, I believe, still alive. She has had another child, and has brought it sometimes to Mon- 11 tague House. It is very like the child who lives with the Princess. Mrs. Gosden was employed as a nurse to the child, and she used to bring the child to the Princess as soon as the Princess woke, and the child used to stay with her Royal Highness the whole morn- ing. The Princess appeared to be extremely fond of the child, and still appears so. R. BIDGOOD. Sworn at Lord Grenville's House in Downing- street, the sixth day of June, 1806. A true Copy, SPENCER, J. Becket. GRENVILLE. (No. 5.) The Deposition of William Cole. 1 have lived with the Princess of Wales ever since her marriage, Sir Sidney Smith first visited at Monta- gue House about 1802. I have observed the Princess too familiar with Sir Sidney Smith. One day, I think about February in that year, the Princess ordered some sandwiches, I carried them in the Blue Room to her. Sir Sidney Smith was there. I was surprised to see him there — he must have come in from the Park. If he had been let in from Blackheath, he must have passed through the room in which I was waiting" When I had left the sandwiches, I returned after some time into the room, and Sir Sidney Smith was sitting very close to the Princess on the sofa. I looked at him, and at her Royal Highness. She caught my eye, and saw that I noticed the manner in which they were sitting together. They appeared both a little confused when I came into the room. A short time before this, one night about twelve o'clock, I saw a man go into 12 the house from the Park, wrapt up in a great coat. I did not give any alarm, for the impression on my mind was, that it was not a thief. Soon after I had seen the Princess and Sir Sidney Smith sitting together on the sofa, the Duke of Kent sent for me, and told me that the Princess would be very glad if I would do the duty in town, because she had business to do in town which she would rather trust to me than any body else # The Duke said that the Princess had thought it would be more agreeable to me to be told this by him than through Sicard. After this I never attended at Mon- tague House, but occasionally when the Princess sent for me. About July, 1802, 1 observed that the Prin- cess had grown very large ; and in the latter end of the same year she appeared to be grown thin, and I observ- ed it to Miss Sander, who said that the Princess was much thinner than she had been. I had not any idea of the Princess being with child. Mr. Lawrence, the painter, used to go to Montague House about the lat- ter end of 1801, when he was painting the Princess, and he has slept in the house two or three nights to- gether. I have often seen him alone with the Princess at eleven and twelve o'clock at night. He has been there as late as one and two o'clock in the morning. One night I saw him with the Princess in the Blue Room, after the ladies had retired. Some time afterwards, when I supposed that he had gone to his room, T went to see that all was safe, and I found the Blue Room door locked, and heard a whispering in it, and I went away. Wm. COLE. Sworn at Lord Grenville's House in Downing- sweet, the sixth day of June, 1806, before us, A true Copy, SPENCER, J. Becket. GRENVILL& 13 (No. 6.) The Deposition of Finances Lloyd, I have lived twelve years with the Princess of Wales next October. I am in the Coffee-room. My situation in the Coffee-room does not give me oppor- tunities of seeing the Princess. I don't see her some- times for months. Mr. Mills attended me for a cold. He asked me if the Prince came to Blackheath, back- wards and forwards, or something to that effect, for the Princess was with child, or looked if she was with child. This must have been three or four years ago. It may have been rive years ago. I think it must have been some time before the child was brought to the Princess. I remember the child being brought. It was brought into my room. I had orders sent to me to give the mother arrow root, with directions how to make it, to wean the child, and I gave it to the mo- ther, and she took the child away. Afterwards the mother brought the child back again. Whether it was a week, ten days, or a fortnight, I cannot say, but it might be about that time. The second time the mother brought the child, she brought it into my room* I asked her, how a mother could part with her child. I am not sure which time I asked this. The mother cried, and said she could not afford to keep it. The child was said to be about four months old when it was brought. I did not particularly observe it myself. FRANCES LLOYD. I was at Ramsffate with the Princess in 1803. One morning when we were in the house at East Cliff, some body, I don't recollect who, knocked at my door, and desired me to get up to prepare breakfast for the Princess. This was about six o'clock. I was asleep. During the whole time I was in the Princess's service, I had never been called up before to make breakfast 14 for the Princess. I slept in the housekeeper's room on the ground floor. I opened the shutters of the window for light. I knew at that time that Captain Manby's ship was in the Downs. When I opened the shutters, I saw the Princess walking down the garden with a gentleman. She was walking down the gravel walk towards the sea. No orders had been given me overnight to prepare breakfast early. The gentleman the Princess was walking with, was a tall man. I was surprised to see the Princess walking with a gentle- man, at that time in the morning. I am sure it was the Princess. While we were at Blackheath, a wo- man at Charlton, of the name ofTownley, told me that she had some linen to wash from the Princess's house. That the linen was marked with the appearance of *####*## # ^ rp ne woman nas s i nC e left Charlton, but she has friends there. 1 think it must have been before the child was brought to the Prin- cess, that the woman told us this. I know all the wo- men in the Princess's house. 1 don't think that any of them were in a state of pregnancy, and if any had, I think I must have known it. I never told Cole that Mary Wilson, when she supposed the Princess to be in the library, had gone into the Princess's bedroom, and had found a man there at breakfast with the Prin- cess; or that there was a great to-do about it, and that Mary Wilson was sworn to secresy, and threatened to be turned away if she divulged what she had seen. FRANCES LLOYD. Sworn at Lord Grenville's House in Downing-street? the seventh day of June, 1806, before us, ERSKINE, # »* SPENCER, A true Copy, GRENV1LLE, J. Becket. ELLENBOROUGH. 15 (No. 7.) The Deposition of Mary Ann Wilson. I believe it will be ten years next quarter, that I have lived with the Princess of Wales, as housemaid, I wait on the ladies who attend the Princess. I re- member when the child who is now with the Princess, was brought there. Before it came I heard say it was to come. The mother brought the child. It appear- ed to be about four months old when it was brought. I remember twins being brought to the Princess, be- fore this child was brought. I never noticed the Prin- cess's shape to be different in that year from what it was before. I never had a thought that the Princess was with child. I have heard it reported. It is a good while ago. I never myself suspected her being with child. I think she could not have been with child, and have gone on to her time without my knowing it. I was at Southend with the Princes. — Captain Manby used to visit the Princess there. I make the Princess's bed, and have been in the habit ©f making it ever since I lived with Her Royal High- ness. Another maid, whose name is Ann Bye, assist- ed with me in making the bed. From what I observ- ed, I never had any reason to believe that two persons had slept in the bed. I never saw any particular ap- pearance in it. The linen was washed by Stikeman's wife, MARY WILSON. Sworn at Lord Grenville's House in Downing-strect, the seventh of June, 1806, before us, ERSKINE, SPENCER, A true Copy, GRENV1LLE, J. Becket. ELLENBOROUGH. 16 (No. 8.) The Deposition of Samuel Roberts. I am a footman to the Princess of Wales. I re- member the child being taken by the Princess. I never observed any particular appearance of the Prin- cess in that year — nothing that red me to believe that she was with child. Sir Sidney Smith used to visit the Princess at Blackheath. I never saw him alone with the Princess. He never stayed after eleven o'clock. I recollect Mr. Cole once asking me, I I think three years ago, whether there were any fa- vourites in the family. I remember saying, that Captain Manby and Sir Sidney Smith were frequent- ly at Blackheath, and dined there oftener than other persons. I never knew Sir Sidney Smith stay later than the ladies. I cannot say exactly at what hour he went, but I never remember him staying alone with the Princess. SAMUEL ROBERTS. Sworn at Lord Grenville's House in Downing street, the seventh day of June, 1806, before us, ERSKINE, SPENCER, A true Copy, GRENVILLE, J. Becket. ELLENBOROUGH. 17 (No. 9.) The Deposition of Thomas Stikeman. I have been Page to the Princess of Wales ever since she has been in England. When I first saw the child who is with the Princess, it is about four years ago. Her Royal Highness had a strong desire to have an infant, which I and all the house knew. I heard there was a woman who had twins, orie of which the Princess was desirous to have, but the parents would not part with it. A woman came to the door with a petition to get her husband replaced in the Dock Yard, who had been removed. She had a child with her. I took the child, I believe, and shewed it to Mrs. Sander. I then returned the child to the wo- man, and made inquiries after the father, and after- wards desired the woman to bring the child again to the house, which she did. The child was taken to the Princess. After the Princess had seen it, she de- sired the woman to take it again and bring it back in a few days, and Mrs. Sander was desired to provide linen for it. Within a few day3 the child was brought again by the mother, and was left, and has been with the Princess ever since. I don't recollect the child had any mark ; but upon reflection I do recollect the mo- ther said he was marked with elder wine on the hand. The father of the child, whose name is Austin, lives with me at Pimlico. My wife is a laundress, and washed the linen of the Prince. Austin is employed to turn a mangle for me. The child was born in Brown- low-street, and it was baptized there; but I only know this from the mother. The mother has since lain-in a second time in Biownlow-street. I never saw the 18 woman to my knowledge before she came with the petition to the door. I had no particular directions by the Princess to procure a child. I thought it bet- ter to take the child of persons of good character, than the child of a pauper. Nothing led me from the ap- pearance of the Princess, to suppose that she was with child, but from her shape it is difficult to judge when she is with child. When she was with child of the Princess Charlotte, I should not have known it when she was far advanced in her time, if I had not been told it. Sir Sidney Smith at one time visited very fre- quently at Montague House, two or three times a week. At the time the Princess was altering her rooms in the Turkish style, Sir Sidney Smith's visits were very fre- quent. The Princess consulted him upon them. Mr. Morell was the upholsterer. Sir Sidney Smith came frequently alone. He stayed alone with the Princess sometimes till eleven o'clock at night. He has been there till twelve o'clock, and after, I believe alone with the Princess. The Princess is of that lively vivacity,, that she makes herself familiar with gentlemen, which prevented my being struck with his staying so late. I do not believe that at that time any other gentleman visited the Princess so frequently, or stayed so late. I have seen the Princess when they were alone sitting with Sir Sidney Smith on the same sofa in the Blue Room. I had access to the Blue Room at all times. There was an inner room which opened into the Blue Room. When that room was not lighted up, I di4 not go into it, and did not consider that I had a right to go into it. I had no idea on what account I was brought here. I did not know that the Princess's conduct was questioned or questionable. I was with the Princess at Ramsgate, When she was at East 19 Cliff, Captain Manby was very frequently there; went away as late at night as eleven o'clock. I don't re- member Fanny Lloyd being called up any morning to make breakfast for the Princess. I did not like Capt. Manby coming so often, and staying so late, and I was uneasy at it. I remember a piece of plate, a silver lamp, being sent to Captain Manby. I saw it in Sicard's possession. He told me it was for Captain Manby, and he had a letter to send with it. I have never seen Captain Manby at the Princess's at Rams- gate before nine o'clock in the morning, but I have heard he has been there earlier. I had never any sus- picions of there being any thing improper, either from the frequent visits of Captain Manby, or from his con- duct. I was at Catherington with the Princess. She used to go out generally in her own chaise. I think I have once or twice seen her go with Mr. Hood in his one-horse chaise. They have been out for two hours, or two hours and a half, together. I believe only a day or two elapsed between the time the child being first brought, and being then brought back again, and left with the Princess. I am sure the child was not weaned after it had been first brought. I don't re- collect any gentleman ever sleeping in the house. I don't remember Lawrence the painter ever sleeping there. The Princess seems very fond of the child. It is always called William Austin. THOMAS STIKEMAN. Sworn at Lord Grenville's house in Downing-street, the seventh day of June, 1806, before us, ERSKINE, SPENCER, A true Copy, GRENVILLE, J. Becket. ELLENBO ROUGH. 20 (No. 10.) The Deposition of John Sicai^d. I have lived seven years with the Princess of Wales, am house-steward, and have been in that situation from the end of six months after I first lived with Her Royal Highness. I remember the child who is now with the Princess of Wales being brough there, It was about iive months old when it was brough). It is about four years ago, just before we went to Ramsgate. I had not the least suspicion of the object of my being brought here I had opportunity of seeing the Princess frequently. 1 waited on her at dinner and supper. I never observed that the Princess had the appearance of being with child. I think it was hardly possible that she should have been with child without my perceiving it. Sir Sidney Smith used to visit very frequently at Montague House in 1802, with Sir John aud Lady Douglas. He was very often, I believe, alone with the Princess, and so was Mr. Canning, and other gentlemen. I cannot say that I ever suspected Sir Sidney Smith of any improper conduct with the Prin- cess. I never had any suspicion of the Princess acting improperly with Sir Sidney Smith or any other gentleman I remember Captain Manby visiting at Montague House. The Princess of Wales did not pay for the expence of fitting up his cabin, but the linen furniture was ordered by me, by direction of the Princess, of Newberry and Jones. It was put by Newberry and Jones in the Prin- cess's bill, and was paid for with the rest of the bill by Miss Hey man. JOHN SICARD. Sworn at Lord Grenville's house in Downing-street, the seventh day of June, 1806, before us, ERSKINE, SPENCER, A true Copy, GRENVILLE, J. Becket. ELLENBOROUGH, 21 (No. 11.) The Deposition of Charlotte Sander. I have lived with the Princess of Wales eleven years. I am a native of Brunswick, and came with the Princess from Brunswick. The Princess has a little boy living with her under her protection. He had a mark on his hand, but it is worn off. I first saw him four years ago, in the autumn. The father and mother of the child are still alive. I have seen them both. The father worked in the Dock Yard at Deptford, but has now lost the use of his limbs. The father's name is Austin. The mother brought the child to the Princess when he was four months old. I was present when the child was brought to the Princess. She was in her own room up stairs when the child was brought. She came out and took the child herself. I understood that the child was expected before it was brought. I am sure that I never saw the child in the house before it appeared to be four months old. The Princess was not ill or indisposed in the autumn of 1802. I was dresser to Her Royal Highness. She could not be ill or indisposed without my knowing it. I am sure that she was not confined to her room or to her bed in that autumn. There was not to my knowledge any other child in the house. It was hardly possible there could have been a child there without my knowing it. I have no re- collection that the Princess had grown bigger in the year 1802 than usual. I am sure the Princess was not preg- nant. Being her dresser, I must have seen if she was. I solemnly and positively swear J have no reason to know or believe that the Princess of Wales has been at any time pregnant during the time I have lived with Her Royal Highness at Montague House. I may have said to Cole that the Princess was grown much thinner, but I don't recollect that I did. I never heard any body say any thing about the Princess being pregnant till I came here to-day. I did no>t expect to be asked any question to-day respecting the Princess being pregnant. Nobody came over to the Princess from Germany in the autumn of 1802 to my knowledge. Her Royal Highness was generally blooded twice in a year, but not lately. I ne- ver had any reason to suppose that the Princess received the visits of any gentlemen at improper hours. Sir Sid- ney Smith visited her frequently, and almost daily. He was there very late, sometimes till two o'clock in the morning. I never saw Sir Sidney Smith in a room alone with the Princess late at night. I never saw any thing which led me to suppose that Sir Sidney Smith was on a very familiar footing with the Princess of Wales. I at- tended the Princess of Wales to Southend. She had two houses, No. 9. and No. 8. I knew Captain Manby. He commanded the Africaine. He visited the Princess. While his ship was there, he was frequently with the Princess. I don't know or believe, and I have no reason to believe, that Captain Manby staid till very late hours with the Princess. I never suspected that there was any improper familiarity between them. I never expressed to any body a wish that Captain Manby 's visits were not so frequent. If the Princess had company, I was never present. The Princess was at Ramsgatein 1803. I have seen Captain Manby there frequently. He came to the Princess's house to dinner. He never stayed till late at night at the Princess's house. I was in Devonshire with the Princess lately. There was no one officer that she saw when she was in Devonshire more than the rest. 1 never heard from the Princess that she apprehended her conduct was questioned. When I was brought here I thought I might be questioned respecting the Princess's conduct, and I was sorry to come. I don't know why I £3 thought so. I never saw any thing in the conduct of tht Princess while I lived with her, which would have made me uneasy if I had been her husband. When I was at Southend I dined in the Steward's room. I can't say whether I ever heard any body in the steward's room say any thing about the Captain, meaning Captain Manby. It is so long ago I may have forgot it. I have seen Cap- tain Manby alone with the Princess at No. 9, in'thedraw* ing-room at Southend. I have seen it only once or twice. It was at two or three o'clock in the afternoon, and ne- ver later. I slept in a room next to the Princess in the house No. 9, at Southend. I never saw Captain Manby in any part of that house but the drawing-room. I have no reason to believe he was in any other room in the house. I was at Catherington with the Princess. She was at Mr. Hood's house. I never saw any familiarity between her and Mr. Hood, I have seen her drive out in Mr. Hood's carriage with him alone. It was a gig. They used to be absent for several hours. A servant of the Princess attended them. 1 have delivered packets by the order of the Priucess, which she gave me sealed up, to Sicard, to be by him forwarded to Captain Manby. The birth-day of the child who lives with the Princess is the 11th of July, as his mother told me. She says that he was christened at Deptford. The child had a mark on the hand. The mother told me that it was from red wine. I believe the child came to the Princess in November. C. SANDER. Sworn at Lord Grenville's house in Downing- street, the seventh day of June, 1806. ERSKINE, SPENCER, A true Copy, G RENVILLE, J. Becket. ELLENBOROUGH. 24 (No. 12.) Deposition of Sophia Austin. I know the child which is now with the Princess of Wales. I am the mother of it. I was delivered of it four years ago the 1 1th of July next, at Brownlow-street Hospital. I have lain in there three times. William, who is with the Princess, is the second child I laid in of there. It was marked in the right hand with red wine. My husband was a labourer in the Dock-yard at Depr- ford. When peace was proclaimed, a number of the workmen were discharged, and my husband was one who was discharged. I went to the Princess with a petition on a Saturday, to try to get my husband re- stored. I lived at that time at Deptford New-Row, No. 7, with a person of the name of Bearblock. He was a milkman. The day I went to the Princess with the petition, was a fortnight before the 6th of November. Mr. Ben net, a baker in New-street, was our dealer, and I took the child to Mr. Bennet's when I went to re- ceive my husband's wages every week from the time I left the Hospital till I carried the child to the Princess. I knew Mr. Stikeman only by having seen him once before, when I went to apply for a letter to Brownlow- street Hospital. When I went to Montague House, I desired Mr. Stikeman to present my petition. He said they were denied to do such things, but seeing roe with a baby he could do no less. He then took the child from me, and was a long time gone. He then brought me back the child, and brought half-a-guinea which the ladies sent me. He said if the child had been younger, he could have got it taken care of for me, but desired that I would come up again. I went 25 ap again on the Monday following, and I saw Mr» Stikeman. Mr. Stikeman afterwards came several times to us, and appointed tne to take the child to Montague House on the 5th of November, but it rained all day, and I did not take it. Mr. Stikeman came down to me on the Saturday the 6th of Novem- ber, and I took the child on that day to the Princess's house. The Princess was out. 1 waited till she re- turned. She saw the child, and asked its age. I went down into the coffee-room, and they gave me some arrow-root to wean the child ; for I was suckling the child at this time, and when I had weaned the child, I was to bring it and leave is with the Princess. I did wean the child, and brought it to the Princess's house on the 15th of November, and left it there, and it has been with the Princess ever since. 1 saw the child last Whit- Monday, and I swear that it is my child. SOPHIA AUSTIN. Sworn at Lord Grenville's house in Downing-street, the seventh day of June, 1806, before us, ERSKINE, SPENCER, A -true Copy, GRENVILLE, J. Beckfl. ELLENBOROUGH. (No. 13.) Earl Spencer to Lord Gwydir. 20th June, 1806. My Lord, In consequence of certain inquiries directed by his Majesty, Lady Douglas, wife of Sir John Douglas of the Marines, has deposed upon oath that she was told by her # ig so Royal Highness the Princess of Wales, that at a break- fast at Lady Willoughby's house in May or June, 1802, &c. [Extract from Lady Douglas's Deposition.'] It being material to ascertain, as far as possible, the truth of this fact, I am to request that your Lordship will have the goodness to desire Lady Willoughby to put down in writing every circumstance in any manner relative thereto (if any such there be) of which her Ladyship has any recollection ; and also to apprize me, for his Ma- jesty's information, whether at any time, during the course of the abovementioned year, Lady Willoughby ob- served any such alteration in the Princess's shape, or any other circumstances, as might induce her Ladyship t« believe that her Royal Highness was then pregnant. I am, 8cc. A true Copy, J. Becket. SPENCER (No. 14.) Sidmouth, 21st June, 1806. My dear Lord, In obedience to your commands, I lost no time in com- municating to Lady Willoughby the important subject of your private letter, dated the 20th instant, and I have the honour of enclosing a letter to your Lordship from Lady Willoughby. I have the honour, &c. A true Copy, J. Becket. GWYDIR. *7 (No. 15.) My Lord, In obedience to the command contained in your Lord- ship's letter communicated to me by Lord Gwydir, I have the honour to inform you, that I have no recollec- tion whatever of the fact stated to have taken place, du- ring a breakfast at Whitehall in May or June 1802 ; nor do I bear in mind any particular circumstances relative to her Royal Highness the Princess of Wales, at the pe- riod to which you allude. I have the honour, &c. WILLOUGHBY. June 21, 1806. Earl Spencer. A true Copy, J. Becket. (No. 16.) Extract from the Register of the Births and Baptisms of Children born in the Brownlow- street Lying-in Hospital. Born 3802, Baptized, May, 8, Thomas, of Richard and Elizabeth Austin, 20 July, 11, William, of Samuel and Sophia Austin, 15 The above are the only two entries under the name of Austin, about the period in question, and were extracted by me. No description of the children is preserved. CHARLES WATKIN WILLIAMS WYNN. June 23, 1806. A true Cop}^ J. Becket. 28 (No. 17.) The Deposition of Elizabeth Gosden. I am the wife of Francis Gosden, who is a servant of the Princess of Wales, and has lived with her Royal Highness eleven years. In November, 1802, I was sent for to the Princess's house to look after a little child ; I understood that he had been then nine days in the house. I was nurse to the child. One of the ladies, I think Miss Sander, delivered the child to me, and told me her Royal Highness wished me to take care of him. The child never slept with the Princess. I sometimes used to take him to the Princess before she was up, and leave him with her on her bed. The child had a mark on the hand, it ap- peared to be a stain of wine, but is now worn out. I wa6 about a year and three quarters with the child. The mother used to come often to see him. I never saw the Princess dress the child, or take off its things herself; but she has seen me do it. The child is not so much witb the Princess now as be was. ELIZ. GOSDEN. Sworn at Lord Grenville's house in Downing-street, the 23d day of June, 1806, before us, ERKINE, SPENCER, A true Copy, GRENVILLE, J. Bechet. ELLENBOROUGH. 39 (No. 18.) Deposition of Betty Toxvnlty. I lived at Charlton sixteen years, and till within the last two years. I was a laundress, and used to wash inen for the Princess of Wales's family. After the Prin- ess left Charlton and went to Blackheath, I used to go over to Blackheath to fetch the linen to wash. I have had linen from the Princess's house the same as other ladies : 1 mean that there were such appearances on it as might arise from natural causes to which women are sub- ject. I never washed the Princess's own bed-linen, but once or twice occasionally. I recollect one bundle of linen once coming, which I thought rather more marked than usual. They told me that the Princess had been bleed with leeches, and it dirtied the linen more : the ser- vants told me so, but I don't remember who the servants were that told me so. I recollect once, I came to town and left the linen wilfi my daughter to wash ; I looked at the clothes slowly before I went, and counted them, and my daughter, and a woman she employed with her, washed them while I was in town. I thought when 1 looked them over, that there might be something more than usual. My opinion was, that it was from * * * * # * The linen had the appearance of # * * # # # , I believed it at the time. They were fine damask napkins, and some of them marked with a little red crown in the corner, and some without marks. I might mention it to Fanny Lloyd. I don't recollect when this was, but it must be more than two years and a half ago ; for I did not wash for the Princess's family .but very little for the last six months. Mary Wilson used to give me the linen, and I believe it was she who told me that the Princess was bled with leeches ; but the appearance of the linen which I have spoken of before, was different 50 from that which it was said was stained by bleeding witfe leeches. I remember the child coming. I used to wash the linen for the child, and Mrs Gosden who nursed the child, used to pay me for it. I kept a book, in which I entered the linen I washed. I am not sure whether I have it still : — but if I have, it is in a chest at my daughters, at Charlton, and I will produce it if I can find it. B. TOWNLEY. Sworn at Lord Grenville's House in Downing-street, the 23d day of June, 1806, before us, ERSKINE, SPENCER, A true Copy, GRENVILLE, J. Becket. ELLENBOROUGH. (No. 19.) Deposition of Thomas Edmeades, of Greenwich, Surgeon and Apothecary. I am a surgeon and apothecary at Greenwich, and was appointed the surgeon and apothecary of the Princess of Wales, in 1081. From that time I have attended her Royal Highness and her household. I knew Fanny Lloyd who attended in the coffee-room, at the Princess's. I frequently attended her for colds. I do not recollect that I ever said any thing to her respecting the Princess of Wales. It never once entered my thoughts while I attended the Princess, that she was pregnant. I never said that she was so to Fanny Lloyd. I have bled the Princess twice; 31 the second bleeding was in 1802, and it was in the June quarter, as appears by the book I kept. I don't know what she was bled for — it was at her own desire— it was flot by any medical advice. I was unWilling to do it, but ahe wished it. If I recollect, she complained of a pain in her chest, but I don't remember that she had any illness. I did not use to bleed her twice a year. I certainly saw her Royal Highness in Nov. 1802. I saw her on the 16th of November, but I had not any idea of her being then with child. I did not attend her on the 16th November, but I saw her then ; I was visiting a child (a male child,) from Deptford. I iiave no recollection of having seen the Princess in October, 1802. The child must have been from three to five months old when I first saw it.- I have no recollection of the Princess having been ill about the end of October, 1802. I have visited the child very often since, and I have always understood it to be the same child. The Princess used sometimes to send for leeches, and had them from me. I don't think that I attended the Princess, or saw her often, in the summer and autumn of 1802. I had not the sole care of the Princess's health during the time I have spoken of. Sir Francis Millmaa attended her occasionally. THOMAS EDMEADES. Sworn at Lord Grenville's House in Downing-street, the 25th day of June, 1806, before us, ERSKINE, SPENCER, A true Copy, GRENVILLE, J. Becket. ELLENBOROUGH, St (No, 20.) Deposition of Samuel Gillam Mills, of Greenwich, Surgeon. I am a surgeon at Greenwich ; have been in partnership with Mr. Edmeades since 1800. Before he was ray part- ner I attended the Princess of Wales's Family from the time of her coming to Blackheath from Charlton. I was appointed by the Princess her surgeon, in April, 1801, by a written appointment, and from that time I never at- tended her Royal Highness, or any of the servants, in my medical capacity , except that 1 once attended Miss Gouch, and once Miss Millfield. There was a child brought to the Princess while I attended her. I was called upon to exa- mine the child. It was a girl. It must have been in 1801, or thereabouts. The child afterwards had the measles, and Iattended her. When first I saw the child, I think it must have been about ten months old. It must have been prior to April, 1801. I understood that the child was taken through charity. I remember that there was a female ser- vant who attended in the coffee-room. I never said to that womam, or to any other person, that the Princess was with child, or looked as if she was with child, and I never thought so, or surmised any thing of the kind. I \*a$ once sent for by her Royal Highness to bleed her. I was not at home, and Mr. Edmeades bled her. I had bled her two or three times before ; it was by direction of Sir Fran- cis Millman. It was for an inflammation she had on the lungs. As much as I knew it was not usual for the Prin- cess to be bled twice a year. I don't know that any other medical person attended hei at the time that I did, nor do I believe that there did. I don't know that Sir Francis Millman had advised that she should be blooded at the time that I was sent for and was not at home, nor wh« wag the cause of her being then blooded. I do recollect S3 something of having attended the servant who was in the coffee-room, for a cold, but I am sure I never said to her that the Princess was with child, or looked as if she was so. I have known that the Princess has frequently sent to Mr. Edmeades for leeches. When I saw the female child, Mrs. Sander was in the room, and some other servants, but I don't recollect who. I was sent for to see whether there was any disease about the child — to see whether it was a healthy child, as Her Royal Highness meant to take it under her patronage. The child could just walk alone. I saw the child frequently afterwards. It was at one time with Bidgood, and another time with Gosden and his wife. I don't recollect that the Princess was by at any time when 1 saw the child. I never saw the child in Mon- tague House when I attended it as a patient, but when I was first sent for to see if the child had any disease, it was in Montague House. SAMUEL GILLAM MILLS. Sworn at Lord Grenville's House in Downing-street, the 25th day of June, 1806, before us, ERSKINE, SPENCER, A true Copy, GRENVILLE, J. BeckeU ELLEN BOROUGH. (No. 21.) Deposition of Harriet Fitzgerald. I came first to live with the Princess of Wales in 1801, merely as a friend and companion, and have continued to Jive with her Royal Highness to this time. I know Lady 34 Douglas. I remember her lying in. It happened by ac- cident that Her Royal Highness was in the honseat the time of Lady Douglas's delivery. I think it was in July, 1802. I was there myself. The Princess was not in the room at the time Lady Douglas was delivered. There was certainly no appearance of the Princess being pregnant at that time. I saw the Princess at that time every day, and at all hours. I believe it to be quite impossible that the Princess should have been with child without my observing it. I never was at a breakfast with the Princess at Lady Willoughby's. The Princess took a little girl into the house about nine years ago. I was not in the house at the time. I was in the house when the boy, who is now there, was brought there. She had said before openly that she should like to have a child, and she had asked the servant who brought the cbild, if he knew of any persons who would part with a child. I was at Southend with the Prin- cess. I remember Captain Manby being there sometimes. He was not there very often. He used to come at different hours, as the tide served. He dined there, but never stayed late. I was at Southend all the time the Princess was there. I cannot recollect that I have seen Captain Manby there, or known him to be there, later than nine, or half after nine. I never knew of any correspondence by letter with him when he was abroad. I don't recollect to have seen him ever early in the morning at the Princess's* I was at Ramsgate with the Princess. Captain Manby may have dined there once. He never slept there to my knowledge, nor do I believe he did. The Princess rises at different hours, seldom before ten or eleven. I never knew her up at six o'clock in the morning. If she had been up so early I should not have known it, not being up so early myself. I remember the Princess giving Captain Manby an inkstand. He had the care of two boys whom she protected. I can't say that Captain Manby did not sleep at Southend. He may have slept in the village, but I be- 35 lieve he never slept in the Princess's house. I was at Ca- therington with the Princess. I remember Her Royal Highness going out in an open carriage with the present Lord Hood. I believe Lord Hood's servant attended them. There was only one servant, and no other carriage with them. I was at Dawlish this summer with the Prin- cess, and afterwards at Mount Edgcumbe. The Princess saw a great deal of company there. Sir Richard Strachan used to come there. I don't know what was the cause of his discontinuing his visits there. I remember Sir Sidney Smith being frequently at Montague House. He was sometimes there as late as twelve and one o'clock in the morning, but never alone that I know of. The Princess was not in the room when Lady Douglas was brought to bed. I know she was not, because I was in the room my- self when Lady Douglas was delivered. Dr. Mackie of Lewisham, was the accoucheur. I don't recollect Sir Sidney Smith ever being alone with the Princess in the evening. It may have happened, but I don't know that it did. I used to sit with the Princess always in the even- ing, but not in the morning. I was with the Princess in the Isle of Wight. Mr. Hood and Lord Amelius Beau- clerc were there with her. She went there from Ports- mouth. HARRIET FITZGERALD. Sworn before us at Lord Grenville's house in Down- ing-street, the 27th day of June, 1806, before us, ERSKINE, SPENCER, A true Copy, GRENVILLE, J. Becket. ELLENBOROUGH. 56 (No. 22.) Whitehall, July I, 1806. My Lord, The extreme importance of the business on which I have before troubled your Lordship and Lady Wil- loughby, makes it the indispensable duty of the persohs to whom His Majesty has entrusted the Inquiry, fur- ther to request that her Ladyship will have the goodness to return in writing, distinct and separate answers to the enclosed Queries. They beg leave to add, that in the discharge of the trust committed to them, they have been obliged to examine upon oath the several persons to whose testimony the} 7 have thought it right to have recourse on this occasion. They have been unwilling to give Lady Willoughby the trouble of so long a journey for that pur- pose, well knowing the full reliance which may be placed on every thing which shall be stated by her Ladyship in this form. But on her return to town it may probably be judged necessary, for the sake of uniformity in this most important proceeding, that she should be so good as to confirm on oath, the truth of the written answers re- quested from her Ladyship^ (No Signature in the original,) 37 (No. 23.) Sidmouth, July 3, 1806. My Lord, I immediately communicated to Lady Willoughby the Queries transmitted to me in the envelope of a letter dated July the first, which I had the honour to receive this day from your Lordship. I return the Queries with Lady Willoughby's Answers in her own hand-writing. We are both truly sensible of your Lordship's kind at- tention in not requiring Lady Willoughby 's personal attendance. She will most readily obey the Order of the Council, should her presence become necessary. I have the honour, &c. GWYDIR. To Earl Spencer, fyc. 3$c. fyc. A true Copy, X Becket. (No. 24.) Queries. Answers. 1. Does Lady Willough- 1. In the course of the by remember seeing the last ten years the Princess Princess of Wales at break- of Wales has frequently fast or dinner at her house, done me the honour to either at Whitehall or Bee- breakfast and dine at White- 38 kenhani, on or about the months of May or June, 1802 ? hall, and Langley, in Kent. Her Royal Highness may have been at my house in the months of May or June, 1802, but of the periods at which I had the honour of receiving her, I have no precise recollection. <2. Has her Ladyship any recollection of the circum- stance of Her Royal High- ness having retired from the company at such breakfast or dinner, on account, or under the pretence, of hav- ing spilt any thing over her handkerchief? And if so, did Lady Willoughby attend Her Royal Highness on that occasion ? and what then passed between them rela- tive to that circumstance r 3. I do not remember Her Royal Highness hav- ing at any time retired from the company, either at Whitehall, or at Langley, under the pretence of hav- ing spilt any thing over her handkerchief. 3. Had Lady Willoughby frequent opportunities in the course of that year, to see Her Royal Highness the Princess of Wales, and at what periods? And did she at any time during the year, observe any appear- ance, which led her to sus- pect that the Princess of Wales was pregnant ? 3. To the best of my re- membrance I had few op- portunities of seeing the Princess of Wales in the year 1802, and I do not re- collect having observed any particular circumstances re- lative to Her Royal High- ness's appearance. 39 A. Is Lady Willoughby acquainted with any other cir- cumstances leading to the same conclusion, or tending to establish the fact of a criminal intercourse, or im- proper familiarity between Her Royal Highness and »any other person whatever? and if so, what are they ? 4. During the ten years I have had the honour of knowing the Princess ©f Wales, I do not bear in mind a single instance of Her Royal Highness.'* con- duct in society towards any individual, tending to estab- lish the fact of a criminal intercourse, or improper fa- miliarity. WILLOUGHBY. (No. 25.) Robert Bidgood-— further deposition. The Princess used to go out in her phaeton with coach- man and helper, towards Long Reach, eight or ten times, carrying luncheon and wine with her, when Cap- tain Manby's ship was at Long Reach — always Mrs. Fitz- gerald with her — She would go out at one, and return about five or six — sometimes sooner or later. The day the Africaine sailed from Southend the Princess ordered us to pack up for Blackheath next morning. Captain Manby there three times a week at the least, whilst his ship lay for six weeks off Southend at the Nore — he came as tide served — used to come in a morning, and dine and drink tea. I have seen him next morning by ten o'clock. I suspected he slept at No. 9, the Princess's — she always put out the candles herself in the drawing-room at No. 9; and bid me not wait to put them up; she gave me the or- 40 j ders as soon as she went to Southend. I used to see water-jugs, basons, and towels, set out opposite the Princess's door, in the passage, — never saw them so left in the passage at any other time ; and I suspected he was there at those times. There was a general suspicion throughout the house. Mrs. and Miss Fitzgerald there, and -Miss Hamond (now Lady Hood) there. My sus- picions arose from seeing them in the glasses kiss each other, as I mentioned before, like people fond of each other — a very close kiss. — Her behaviour like that of a woman attached to a man; — used to *be by themselves at luncheon at Southend — when ladies not sent for — a num- ber of times. There was a poney which Captain Manby used to ride ; it stood in the stable ready for him, and which Sicard used to ride. The servants used to talk and laugh about Captain Manby, it was matter of discourse amongst them. I lived there when Sir Sidney Smith came, her manner with him appeared very familiar. She appeared very attentive to him but I did not suspect any thing farther. All the up- per servants had keys of the doors to the Park to let her Royal Highness in and out. I used to see Sicard receive letters from Mrs. Sander to put in the post instead of the bag. This was after Captain Manby was gone to sea I suspected this to be for Captain Manby, and others in the house suspected the same. (Signed) R. BIDGOOD. Sworn before us in Downing-street, this third day of July. (Signed) ERSKINE, SPENCER, A true Copy, GRENVILLE, /. Becket. ELLEN BOROUGH. (No. 26.) Sw Francis Millmans Deposition, I attended the Princess of Wales in the Spring and latter end of the year 1802; i. e. in March, and towards the autumn. Mr. Mills of Greenwich attended then as her Royal Highness's apothecary, and Mr. Mills and his partner Mr. Edmeades have attended since. I do not know that any other medkai person attended at that time, either as apothecary or physician. In March 1802, I attended her for a sore throat and fever. In 1803, in April, I attended Her Royal Highness again, with Sir Walter Farquhar. I don't know whether she was blooded in 1802. She was with difficulty persuaded to be blooded in 1803, for a pain in her chest, saying she had not been blooded before ; that they could not find a vein in her arm. I saw no mark on her arm of her having been blooded before. I observed her Royal Highness's person at the end of that year 1802. Never observed then, or at any other time, any thing which induced me to think her Royal Highness was in a pregnant situation. I think it is impossible she should, in that year, have been delivered of a child without my observing it. She during that year, and at all times, was in the habit of receiving the visits of the Duke of Gloucester . I never attended Her Royal Highness but on extraordi- nary illnesses. Her Royal Highness has, for the last year and half, had her prescriptions made up at Walker ani Young's, St. James's-street. 42 f she had been a pregnant woman in June 1S02, I could not have helped observing it. FR. MILLMAN. Sworn before us in Downing-street, July third, ] 806, by the said Sir Francis Millman. ERSKINE, A true Copy, SPENCER, J. BeckeL GRENVILLE, ELLENBOROUGH. (No. 27.) The Deposition of Mrs. Lisle* I (Hester Lisle) am in the Princess of Wales's fa- mily ; have been so ever since Her Royal Highness's mar- riage. I was not at Southend with the Princess — was at Blackheath with her in 1802, but am not perfectly sure as to date. I am generally a month at a time (three months in the year) with Her Royal Highness ; in April, August, and December; was so in August, 1802. I did not ob- serve any alteration in Her Royal Highness's shape which gave me any idea that she was pregnant. 1 had no reason to know or believe that she was pregnant. During my at- tendance, hardly a day passes without my seeing her. She could not have been far advanced in pregnancy with- out my knowing it. I was at East Cliff with her Royal Highness in August, 1803. I saw Captain Manby only once at East Cliff, in August, 1803, to the best of my 43 recollection. He might have been oftener : and once again at Deal Castle. Captain Manby landed there with some boys the Princess takes on charity. I saw Captain Manby at East ClifT one morning, not particularly early. I don't know of any presents which the Princess made Cap- tain Manby — have seen Captain Manby at Blackheaih one Christmas. He used to come to dine the Christmas before we were at Ramsgate — it was the Christmas after Mrs. Austin's child came. He always went away in my presence; I had no reason to think he sraid after we, the ladies, retired. He lodged on the Heath at that time — I believe his ship was fitting up at Deptford. He was there frequently, I think not every day — he generally came to dinner — three or four times a week, or more — I suppose he might be alone with her, but the Princess is in the habit of seeing gentlemen and tradesmen without my being present. — I have seen him at luncheon and din- ner both. The boys came with him, not to dinner, and not generally; not above two or three times— two boys; — 1 think Sir Sidney Smith came also frequently the Christmas before that, to the best of my recollection. At dinner, when Captain Manby dined, he always sat next her Royal Highness the Princess of Wales. The con- stant company were, Mrs. and Miss Fitzgerald and my- self; we all retired with the Princess, and sat in the same room. He generally retired about eleven o'clock; he sat with us till then. This occurred three or four times a week, or more. Her Royal Highness, the Lady in wait- ing, and her Page, have each a key of the door from the Greenhouse to the Park. Captain Manby and the Prin- cess used, when we were together, to be speaking together separately — conversing separately, but not in a room alone together, to my knowledge. He was a person with whom she appeared to have greater pleasure in talking than to her Ladies. She behaved to him only as any woman would who likes flirting. I should not have thought any 44 Sttarried woman would have behaved properly who should have behaved as her Royal Highness did to Captain Man- by. I can't say whether she was attached to Captain Manby, only that it was a flirting conduct. — Never saw any gallantries, as kissing her hand, or the like. I was with her Royal Highness at Lady Sheffields's last Christmas, in Sussex. I inquired what company was there when I came. She said only Mr John Chester, who was there by Her Royal Highness's orders ;that she could get no other company to meet her, on account of the roads aad season of the year. He dined and slept there that night. The next day other company came ; Mr Chester remained. I heard her Royal Highness say she had been ill in the night, and came and lighted her candle in her servant's room. I returned from Sheffield Place to Black- heath with the Princess — Captain Moore dined there- — I left him and }he Princess twice alone, for a short time — he might be alone half an hour with her— in the room be- low, in which we had been sitting — I went to look for a book, to complete a set her Royal Highness was lending Captain Moore. She made him a present of an inkstand, to the best of my recollection. He was there one morn- ing in January last, on the Princess Charlotte's birth-day; he went away before the rest of the company : I might be absent about twenty minutes the second time I was away the night Captain Moore w r as there. At Lady Sheffield's, her Royal Highness paid more attention to Mr. Chester than to the rest of the company. I knew of her Royal Highness walking out alone twice wirh Mr. Chester — in the mornings — alone— once a short time ;- — it rained; the [ other, not an hour; not long. Mr. Chester is a pretty young man. Her attentions to him were not uncommon ; not the same as to Captain Manby. I am not certain whether the Princess answered any letters of Lady Doug^ 45' ks. I was at Catherington with the Princess. Remember Mr. now Lord Hood, there, and the Princess going out airing with him alone in Mr. Hood's little whiskey, and his servant was with them. Mr. Hood drove, and staid out two or three hours more than once. Three or four times. Mr. Hood dined with us several times. Once or twice he slept in an house in the garden. She ap- peared to pay no attention to him but that of common civility to an intimate acquaintance. Remember the Princess sitting to Mr. Lawrence for her picture at Black- heath, and in London. I have left her at his house in town with bim, but I think Mis. Fitzgerand was with her; and she sat alone with him, I think, at Blackheath. I was never in her Royal Highness's confidence, but she has always been kind and good-natured to me. She never mentioned Captain Man by particularly to me. I remember her being blooded the day Lady Sheffield's child was christened. Not several times, that I recollect; nor any other time ; nor believe she was In the habit of being blooded twice a year. The Princess at one time appeared to like Lady Douglas. Sir John came fre- guently. Sir Sidney Smith visited about the same time with the Douglases. I have seen Sir Sidney there very late in the evening, but not alone with the Princess. I have no reason to suspect he had a key of the Park gate. I never heard of any body being found wandering about at Blackheath. I have heard of somebody being found wan- dering about late at night at Mount Edgcumbe, when the Princess [was] there. I heard that two women and a man were seen crossing the hall. The Princess saw a great deal of company at Mount Edgcumbe. Sir Richard Strachan was reported to have spoken freely of the Princess, I did not hear that he had offered a rudeness to her per- son. She told me she bad heard he had spoken disrespect- 46 fully of her, and therefore I believe wrote to him by Sit Samuel Hood. (Signed) HESTER LISLE. Sworn before ns, in Downing-street, this ihird day of July, 1806. ERSKINE, SPENCER, GRENVILLE, ELLENBOROUGH. A true Copy, J. Becket* (No. 28.) Lower Brook-street, July 5, 1806. My Lord, Before your arrival in Downing-street last night, I be- spoke the indulgence of the Lords of his Majesty's Coun- cil for inaccuracy as to dates, respecting any attendance at Blackheath, before 3803. Having only notice in the forenoon of an examination, I could not prepare myself for it to any period previous to that year, and I now hasten as fast as the examination of my papers will permit, to correct an error into which I fell, in stating to their Lord- ships, that I attended her Royal Highness the Princess of Wales in the Spring of 1802, and that I then met his Royal Highness the late Duke of Gloucester at Black^ heath. It was in the Spring of 1801, and not in 1802, that, after attending her Royal Highness the Princess of Wales for ten or twelve days, I had the honour of seeing the Duke of Gloucester at her house. I have the honour, &c. A true Copy, JBecket. FR. MILMAN. 47 (No. 29.)] Earl Cholmondeley, sworn July 16th, 1806. I have seen the Princess of Wales write frequently, and I think I am perfectly acquainted with her manner of writing. A letter produced to his Lordship marked (A.) This letter is not of the Princess's hand-writing. A paper produced to his Lordship, marked (B) with a kind of drawing and the names of >Sir Sidney Smith and Lady Douglas. This paper appears to me to be written in a disguised hand. Some of the letters remarkably resemble the Prin«* cess's writing ; but because of the disguise, I cannot say whether it be or be not her Royal Highness's writing. On the cover being shewn to his Lordship also marked (B), he gave the same answer. His Lordship was also shewn the cover marked (C), to which his Lordship answered, I do not see the same re* semblance to the Princess's writing in this paper. CBOLMONDELEY. Sworn before us, July 16th, 1806. ERSKINE, SPENCER, GRENVILLE, A true Copy, J. Becket, 49 APPENDIX (B.) Statement of Lady Douglas. jHis Royal Highness the Prince of Wales having judged proper to order me to detail to him, as Heir Apparent, the whole circumstance of my acquaintance with Her Royal Highness the Princess of Wales, from the day I first spoke with her to the present time, I felt it my duty, as a subject, to comply, without hesi r ation, with his Royal Highness's commands; and I did so, because I conceived, even putting aside the rights of an Heir Apparent, his Royal Highness was justified in informing himself as to the actions of his wife, who, from all the information he had collected, seemed so likely to disturb the tranquillity of the country; and it appeared to me that, in so doing, his Royal Highness evinced his earnest regard for the real interest of the country, in endeavouring to prevent such a person from, perhaps, one day, placing a spurious Heir upon the English Throne, and which his Royal Highness has indeed a right to fear, and communicate to the Sovereign, as the Princess of Wales told me, " If she were discovered in bringing her son into the world " she would give the Prince of Wales the credit of it, for " that she had slept two nights in the year she was preg- " nant in Carlton House." 50 As an Englishwoman, educated in the highest respect- ful attachment to the Royal Family ; as the daughter of an English Officer, who has all his life received the most gra- cious marks of approbation and protection from his Ma- jesty, and from his Royal Highness the Prince of Wales : and as the wife of an Officer whom our beloved King has honoured with a public mark of his approbation, and who is bound to the Royal Family by ties of respectful regard and attachment, which nothing can ever break, I feel it my duty to make known the Princess of Wales's senti- ments and conduct, now, and whensoever I may be called upon. For the information, therefore, of his Majesty and of the Heir Apparent, and by the desire of the Heir. Ap- parent, I beg leave to state, that Sir John took a house upon Blackheath in the year 1801, because the air was better for him, after his Egyptian services, than London, and it was somewhat nearer Chatham, where his mili- tary duties occasionally called him. I had a daughter born upon the 17th of February, and we took up our re- sidence there in April, living very happily and quietly ; but in the month of November, when the ground was co- vered with snow, as I was sitting in my parlour, which commanded a view of the Heath, I saw, to my surprise, the Princess of Wales, elegantly clressed in a lilac satin pelisse, primrose-coloured half boots, and a small lilac satin travelling cap, faced with sable, and a Lady, pacing up and down before the house, and sometimes stopping, as if desirous of opening the gate in the iron railing to come in. At first I had no conception her Royal High- ness really wished to come in, but must have mistaken the house for another person's, for I had never been made known to her, and I did not know that she knew where I lived. I stood at the window looking at her, and, as she looked very much, from respect courtesied (as I under- stood was customary) ; to my astonishment she returned my courtesy by a familiar nod, and stopped. Old Lady 51 Stuart, a West Indian Lady, who lived in my immediate neighbourhood, and who was in the habit of coining in to see me, was in the room, and said, "You should go out, her Royal Highness wants to come in out of the snow." Upon this I went out, and she came immediately to me and said, " I believe you are Lady Douglas, and you have a very beautiful child ; I should like to see it." I answered that I was Lady Douglas. Her Royal High- ness then said, "■ I should like of all things to see your little child." I answered, that I was very sorry I could not have the honour of presenting my little girl to her, as I and my family tvere spending the cold weather in town, and I was only come to pass an hour or two upon the Heath. I held open the gate, and the Princess of Wales and her Lady, Miss Heyman (I believe) walked in and sat down, and stayed above an hour, laughing very much at Lady Stuart, who being a singular character, talked all kind of nonsense. After her Royal Highness had amused herself as long as she pleased, she inquired where Sir John Douglas and Sir Sidney Smith were, and went away, having shook hands with me, and expressed her pleasure at having found me out and made herself known. X concluded that Sir Sidney Smith had acquainted her Royal Highness that we resided upon the Heath, as he was just arrived in England, and having been in long ha- bits of friendship with Sir John, was often with us, and told us how kind he should think it if we could let him come to and fro without ceremony, and let him have an airy room appropriated to himself, as he was alwavs ill in town, and from being asthmatic, suffered extremely when the weather was foggy in town. Sir John gave him that hospitable reception he was in the habit of doing by all his old friends, (for I understand they have been known to each other more than twenty years,) and he introduced him to me asa person, to whom he wished my friendly attention to be paid; as I had never seen Sir Sidney 52 * Smith in my life, until this p^nod, when he became, as it were a part of the family When I returned to town, I told Sir John Douglas the circumstance of the Princess having visited me, and a few days after this, we received a note fioin Mrs. Lisle (who was in waiting) commanding us to dine at Montague House. We went, and tnere were several persons at tne dinner. 1 remember Lord and- Lady Dartmouth, and 1 think Mr. and Mrs. Arbuthnot, &c. &c. From this time the Princess made me frequent visits, al- ways attended by her Ladies, or Mrs. Sander (tier maid). When Sander came, she was sent back, or put in another room ; but when any of her Ladies were with her, we al- ways sat together. Her Royal Highness was never at- tended by any livery servants, but she always walked about Blaekheath and the neighbourhood only with her female attendants. In a short time, the Princess became so ex- travagantly fond of me, that, however flattering it might be, it certainly was verv troublesome Leaving her at- tendants below, she would push past my servant, and run up st; us into my bed-chamber, kiss me, take me in her arms, and tell me 1 vvos beautiful, saying she had never loved any woman so much; that she would regulate my dress, for she delighted in setting off a pretty woman ; and >uch high-flown compliments that women are never used to pay to each other. 1 used to beg her Royal High- ness not to feed my seif-love, as we had all enough of that, without encouraging one another. She would then stop me, and enumerate all my good points I had, saying she was detei mined to teach me to set them off. She would exclaim, Oh! believe me, you are quite beautiful, different from almost any Englishwoman; your arms are fine be- yond imagination, your bust is very good, and your eyes, Oh, I never saw such eyes — all other women who have dark eyes look fierce, but yours (my?deat Lady Douglas) are nothing but softness and sweetnees, and yet quite dark. In this manner she went on perpetually, even be- 53 fore strangers. I remember when I was one morning at her house, with her Royal Highness, Mrs. Harcourt and her Ladies, the Duke of Kent came to take leave before his Royal Highness went to Gibraltar. When we were sitting at table the Princess introduced me, and said — • Your Royal Highness must look at her eyes ; but now she has disguised herself in a large hat, you cannot see how handsome she is. The Duke of Kent was very polite and obliging, for he continued to talk with Mis, Harcourt, and took little notice, for which I felt much obliged ; but she persisted, and said — Take off your hat. I did not do it, and she took it off; but his Royal Highness, I suppose, conceiving it could not be very pleasant to me, took little notice, and talked of something else. Whenever the Princess visited us, either Sir John, or I, returned home with her and her party quite to her door; and if he were out, I went with her Royal Highness, and took my footman ; for we soon saw that her Royal High- ness was a very singular and a very indiscreet woman, and we resolved to be always very careful and guarded with her; and when she visited us, if any visitor whosoever came to our house, they were put into another room, and they could not see the Princess, or be in her society, unless she positively desired it. However, her Royal Highness forgot her high station (and she was always forgetting it); we trust, and hope, and feel satisfied, we never for a mo- ment lost sight of her being the wife of the Heir Apparent. We passed our time as Her Royal Highness chose when together, and the usual amusements were — playing French Proverbs, in which the Princess always cast the parts, and played; Musical Magic, forfeits of all kinds; sometimes dancing; and in this manner, either the Princess and her Ladies with me, or we at Montague House, we passed our time. Twice, after spending the morning with me, she remained without giving me any previous notice, and would dine with us, and thus ended the year 1S01. 54 In the month of February, before Miss Garth was t© come into waiting in March 1802, the Princess, in one of her morning visits, after she had sent Sander home, said, " My dear Lady Douglas, I am come to see you this " morning to ask a great favour of you, which I hope you " will grant me." I told her, " I was sure she could not " make any unworthy request, and that I could only say, " I should have great pleasure in doing any tiling to oblige " her, but I was really at a loss to guess how I possibly " could have it in my power to grant her a favour." Her Royal Highness replied, " what 1 have to ask is for you to come and spend a fortnight with me; you shall not be se- parated from Sir John, for he may be with you whenever he pleases, and bring your little girl and maid. I mean you to come to the Round Tower, where there are a com- plete suite of rooms for a lady and her servant. When Mrs. Lisle was in waiting, and hurt her foot, she resided there: Miss Heyman always was there, and Lord and Lady Lavington have slept there. When I have any married people visiting me, it is better than their being in the house, and we are only separated by a small garden. I dislike Miss Garth, and she hates to be with me, more than what her duty demands, and I don't wish to trouble any of my ladies out of their turn. I shall require you, as lady in waiting, to attend me in my walks ; and when I drive out : write my notes and letters for me, and be in the way to speak to any one who may come on business. I seldom appear until about three o'clock, and you may go home before I want you after breakfast every day." I replied, that being a married woman, I could not promise for myself, and, as Sir John was much out of health, I should not like to leave him ; but he was always so kind and good-natured to me, that I dared venture to say he would allow me if he could; and when he came home I asked him if I should go. Sir John agreed to the Prin- cess's desire, and I took the waiting. During my stay I 55 attended Her Royal Highness to the play and the opera, I think twice, and also to dine at Lord Dartmouth's and Mr. Windham's. At Mr. Windham's, in the evening, while one of the ladies was at the harpsichord, the Princess com- plained of being very warm, and called out for ale, which, by a mistake in the language, she always calls oil. Mrs. Windham was perfectly at a loss to comprehend her wishes, and came to me for an explanation. I told hei I believed she meant ale. Mrs. Windham said she had none in the house ; was it any particular kind she required i I told her I believed not ; that when the Princess thought proper to visit me, she always wanted it, and I gave her what I had, or could procure for her upon Blackheath. We could not always suddenly obtain what was wished. Mrs. Windham then proposed to have some sent for, and did so ; it was brought, and the Princess drank it all. — When at Lord Dartmouth's, his Lordship asked me if 1 was the only lady in waiting, being, I suppose, surprised at my appearing in that situation, when, to his know- ledge, 1 had not known the Princess more than four months. I answered, 1 was at Montague House, acting as lady in waiting, until Miss Garth was well, as the Prin- cess told me she was ill. Lord Dartmouth looked sur- prised, and said he had not heard of Miss Garth being ill, and was surprised. I was struck with Lord Dartmouth's seeming doubt of Miss Garth's illness, and after, thought upon it. From the dinner we went at an early hour to the opera, and then returned to Blackheath. During this visit, I was greatly surprised at the whole style of the Prin- cess of Wales's conversation, which was constantly very loose, and such as 1 had not been accustomed to hear; such as, in many instances, I have not been able to repeat, even to Sir John, and such as made me hope 1 should cease to know her, before my daughter might be old enough to be corrupted by her. I confess I went home hoping and believing she was at times a good deal disor- 56 dered in her senses, or she never would have gone on as she did. When she^ came to sup with me in the Tower (which she often did) she would arrive in a long red cloak, a silk handkerchief tied over her head under her chin, and a pair of slippers down at the heels. After supper I attended her to the house. I found her a person without education or talents, and without any de- sire of improving herself. Amongst other things which surprised me while there, was a plan she told me she had in hand ; that Prince William of Gloucester liked me, and that she had written to him, to tell him a fair lady was in her Tower, that she left it to his own heart to find out who it was, but if he was the gallant Prince she thought him, he would fly and see. I was amazed at such a con- trivance, and said, Good God ! how could your Royal Highness do so ? I really like Sir John better than any body, and am quite satisfied and happy. I waited nine years for him, and never would marry any other person. The Princes3 ridiculed this, and said, Nonsense, non- sense, my dear friend. In consequence of the Princess's note, Prince William actually rode the next morning to the Tower, but by good fortune Sir Sidney Smith had pre- viously called and been admitted, and as we were walking by the house, Her Royal Highness saw the Prince com- ing, went immediately out of sight, and ran and told a servant to say she and I were gone walking, and we im- mediately' walked away to Charlton, having first, unper- ceived, seen Prince William ride back again, (of course not very well pleased, and possibly bdieving I had a hand in his ridiculous adventure.) It seems he was angry ; for soon after His Royal Highness, the late Duke of Glouces- ter, came and desired to see the Princess, and told her, that his son William had represented to him how very free she permitted Sir Sidney Smith to be, and how con- stantly he was visiting at Montague House ; thai it rested with herself to keep her acquaintance at a proper distance, 57 &nd as Sir Sidney was a lively, thoughtless man, and had not been accustomed to the society of ladies of her rank, he might forget himself, and she would then have herself to blame — that as a father, and an earnest friend, he came to her, very sorry indeed to trouble her, but he conjured and begged her to recollect how very peculiar her situation was, and how doubly requisite it was she should be more cautious than other people. To end this lecture (as she called it) she rang the bell, and desired Mr. Cole to fetch me. I went into the drawing-room, where the Duke and Her Royal Highness were sitting, and she introduced me as an old friend of Prince Wil- liam's. His Royal Highness got up, and looked at me very much, and then said, " The Princess has been talk- ing a great deal about you, and tells me you have made one of the most delightful children in the world, and in- deed it might well be so, when the mother was so hand- some and good-natured-looking." By this time I was so used to these fine speeches, either from the Princess, or from her through others, that I was ready to laugh, and I only said, " We did not talk about much beauty, but my little girl was in good health, and Her Royal High- ness was very obliging." As soon as His Royal Highness was gone, the Princess sent again for me, told me every word he had said, and said, " He is a good man, and therefore I took it as it was meant ; but if Prince William had ventured to talk to me himself, I would certainly have boxed his ears: however, as he is so inquisitive, and watches me, I will cheat him, and throw the dust in his eyes, and make him believe Sir Sidney comes here to see you, and that you and he are the greatest possible friends. I delight of all things in cheating those clever people." Her speech and intentions made me serious, and my mind w r as forcibly struck with the great danger there would follow to myself, if she were this kind of per- 58 son. I begged her not to think of doing such a thing, saying, Your Royal Highness knows it is not so, and although I would do much to oblige you, yet when my own character is at stake., t must stop. Good God, Ma'am, His Royal Highness would naturally repeat it, and what should i do ? Reputation will not bear being sported with. The Princess took me by the hand and said, Certainly my dear Lady Douglas, I know very well t is not so, and therefore it does not signify. I am sure it is not so, that I am sure of. I have much too good an opinion of you, and too good an opinion of Sir Sidney Smith. It would be very bad in him, after Sir John's hospitality to him. I know him incapable of such a thing, for I have known him a long time ; but still I won- der too in the same house it does not happen. By this time I was rather vexed, and said, Your Royal Highness and I think quite differently—Sir Sidney Smith comes and goes as he pleases to his room in our house. I really see little of him. He seems a very good-humoared, pleasant man, and I always think one may be upon very friendly terms with men who are friends of one's husbands, with- out being their humble servants. The Princess argued upon this for an hour, said, this is Miss Garth's argu- ment, but she was mistaken, and it was ridiculous. If ever a woman was upon friendly terms with any man, they were sure to become lovers. I said, I shall continue to think as Miss Garth did, and that it depended very much upon the lady. Upon the 29th of March, I left Montague House, and the Princess commanded me to be sent up to her bed-chamber. I went and found her in bed, and I took Mrs. Vansittart's note in my hand, an- nouncing the news of Peace. She desired me to sit down close to the bed, and then, taking my hand, she said, " You see, my dear friend, I have the most complaisant " husband in the world — I have no one to controul me — 1 see whom I like,, I go where I like, I spend what I 59 « please, and His Royal Highness pays for all — Other cc English husbands plague their wives, but he never u plagues me at all, which is certainly being very polite " and complaisant, and I am better off than my sister, " who was heartily beat every day. How much happier "am I than the Duchess of York. She and the Duke " hate each other, and yet they will be two hypocrites, u and live together — that I would nsver do. — Now I'll " shew you a letter wherein the Prince of Wales gives f r me full leave to follow my own plans." She then put the letter into my hands, the particulars of which I have mentioned. When I had finished, I appeared affected, and she said, " You seem to think that a fine thing; now '* I see nothing in it ; but I dare to say that when my be- " loved had finished it, he fancied it one of the finest " pieces of penmanship in the world. I should have " been the man, and he the woman. I am a real " Bruinswick, and do not know what the sensation Fear t( is; but as to him, he lives in eternal warm water, and " delights in it, if he can but have his slippers under " any old Dowager's table, and sit there scribbling notes ; " that's his whole delight." She then told me every cir- cumstance relative to her marriage, and that she would be separated, and that she had invited the Chancellor very often lately, to try and accomplish it, but they were stupid, and told her it could not be done. It appeared to me that, at this time, Her Royal Highness's mind was bent upon the accomplishment of this purpose; and it would be found, I think, from Lord Eldon and the others, that she pressed this subject close upon them, whenever they were at Montague House; for she told me more than once she had. # Her Royal Highness, before she put the letter by, said, " I always keep this, w for it is ever necessary, I will go into the House of i »* The Chancellor may now, perhaps, be able to grant her request. N, B. The passage contained in this Note is, in the authenticated Copy transmitted to the Princess of Wales, placed in the Margin. 60 " Lords with it myself. The Prince of Wales desires me " in that letter, to choose my own plan of life, and " amuse myself as 1 like, and also when I lived in Carl- tf ton House, he often asked me why I did not select tf some particular gentleman for my friend, and was sur- " prised I did not." — She then added, " I urn not treated " at all as a Princess of Wales ought to he. As to the " friendship of the Duke of Gloucester's Family, I " understand that PrinGe William would like to marry " either my daughter, or me, if he could. I now " therefore am desirous of forming a society of my fe own choosing, and I beg you always to remember, lc all your life, that I shall always be happy to see you. " I think you very discreet, and the best woman in the tf world, and I beg you to consider the Tower always "as your own; there are offices, and you might almost " live there, and if Sir John is ever called away, do not " go home to your family ; it is not pleasant after people u have children, therefore always come to my Tower. " I hope to see you there very soon again. The Prince " has offered me sixty thousand if Til go and live at if Hanover, but I never will; this is the only country in " the world to live in." She then kissed me, and I took my leave. While I had been in the round Tower in Montague House, which only consists of two rooms and a closet on a floor, I had always my maid and child slept within my room, and Sir John was generally with me. He and all my friends having free permission to visit. Mr. Cole (the Page) slept over my room, and a watchman went round the Tower all night — Upon my return home, the same apparent friendship continued, and in one of Her Royal Highness' s evening visits she told me, she was come to have a long conversation with mc, that she had been in a great agitation, and I must guess what had happened to her. I guessed a great many things, but she said No, to them all, and then said I gave it up, for I had no idea 6l what she could mean, and therefore might guess my whole life without success. " Well then, I must tell you/' said Her Royal Highness, " but I am sure you know all ." the while. I thought you had completely found me " out, and therefore I came to you, for you looked droll " when I called for ale and fried onions and potatoes, " and when E said I eat tongue and chickens at my break- " fasts ; that I would sure as my life you suspected me; " tell me honestly did you not ?" I affected not to un- derstand the Princess at all, and did not really compre- hend her. She then said, "Well, I'll tell; I am with '* child, and the child came to life when I was breakfast- " ing with Lady Willoughby. The milk flowed up mto " my breast so fast, that it came through my muslin " gown, and I was obliged to pretend that I had spilt " something, and go up-stairs to wipe my gown with " a napkin, and got up-stairs into Lady Willoughby^ if room, and did very well, but it was an unlucky adven- " ture." I was indeed most sincerely concerned for her, conceiving it impossible but she must be ruined, and 1 expressed my sorrow in the strongest terms, saying, what would she do ? she could never carry such an affair through, and I then said, 1 hoped she was mistaken. She said No, she was sure of it, and these sort of things only required a good courage, that she should manage very well; but though she told me she would not employ me in the business, for I was like all the English women, so nery nervous, and she had observed me so frightened a few days past, when a horse galloped near me, that she would not let me have any thing to do for the world. The Princess added, " You will be surprised to see how " well I manage it, and I am determined to suckle the a child myself." I expressed my great apprehensions, and asked her what she would do if the Prince of Wales seized her person, when she was a wet-nurse ? She said she would never surfer any one to touch her person. She laughed at my fears, and added, " You know nothing 62 " about these things ; if you had read Les Avantures " du Chevalier de Grammont, you would know better