| English poetry - 1847 - 178 pages
...men of their honesty afraid, That for the time to come they may More willingly their friends betray; Tell them the men that placed him here Are scandals...loss to find his guilt, And can't commit his crimes. ***** What are thy terrors, that for fear of Thee, Mankind can dare to sink their honesty? He is bold... | |
| John Campbell Baron Campbell - 1849 - 696 pages
...aimed at the Attorney General, whom he suspected, however unjustly, of bavins deceived him : — " Tell them the men that placed him here Are scandals to the times : Arc at a ion to find hit guilt, And can't commit AM crime*. " This was published, and sold in thousands,... | |
| Samuel Greatheed, Daniel Parken, Theophilus Williams, Josiah Conder, Thomas Price, Jonathan Edwards Ryland, Edwin Paxton Hood - English literature - 1851 - 880 pages
...which he should not have told, That thus he is an example made To make men of their honesty afraid ! Tell them the men that placed him here Are scandals...loss to find his guilt, And can't commit his crimes ! " For this publication, however, the Government did not care to prosecute him, having already gone... | |
| 1851 - 854 pages
...which he should not have told, That thus he is an example made To make men of their honesty afraid ! Tell them the men that placed him here Are scandals...loss to find his guilt. And can't commit his crimes ! " For this publication, however, the Government did not care to prosecute him, having already gone... | |
| John Holmes Agnew, Walter Hilliard Bidwell, Henry T. Steele - American periodicals - 1851 - 608 pages
...which he should not have told, That thus he is an example made To make men of their honesty afraid ! Tell them the men that placed him here Are scandals...loss to find his guilt, And can't commit his crimes !" For this publication, however, the Government did not care to prosecute him, having already gone... | |
| John Campbell Baron Campbell - Great Britain - 1851 - 530 pages
...aimed at the Attorney General, whom he suspected, however unjustly, of having deceived him : — " Tell them the men that placed him here Are scandals to the times; Are at a loss to find his guilty And can't commit his crimes." This was published, and sold in thousands, the day he stood in... | |
| Electronic journals - 1851 - 554 pages
...these remarkable linea, referring to himself: 14 Tell them, the men that placed him here, Are scandids to the times, Are at a loss to find his guilt, And can't commit his crimes." De Foe, however, was afterwards received into favour without any concessions on his part, and proceeded... | |
| Robert Blakey - Greece - 1855 - 476 pages
...adorn." And well might he thus hurl his defiance at the parties who had so basely treated him : — " Tell them the men that placed him here Are scandals...loss to find his guilt, And can't commit his crimes." Within the grim walls of Newgate, he wrote his satirical poem, the " Reformation of Manners," in which... | |
| Robert Blakey - Political science - 1855 - 482 pages
...adorn." And well might he thus hurl his defiance at the parties who had so basely treated him : — " Tell them the men that placed him here Are scandals...loss to find his guilt, And can't commit his crimes." Within the grim walls of Newgate, he wrote his satirical poem, the " Reformation of Manners," in which... | |
| John Forster - 1855 - 286 pages
...that what it calmly had said, he heard far less calmly repeated from angry groups that stood below. " Tell them the men that placed him here Are scandals...loss to find his guilt, And can't commit his crimes." An undeniably good witness who was present, in short, being himself a noted Tory libeller of the day... | |
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