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Notes and Queries, Number 40, August 3, 1850 by Various
page 14 of 69 (20%)
And be judges of _fact_, tho' not judges of _laws_."

In the third verse are the lines Lord Mansfield cited from memory:--

"For Sir Philip well knows
That _innuen-does_
Will serve him no longer in verse or in prose;
Since _twelve honest men_ have decided the cause,
And were judges of _fact_, tho' not judges of _laws_."

Lord Campbell and Mr. Harris both make another mistake with reference to
this ballad which I may perhaps be excused if I notice. They say that it
was composed on an unsuccessful prosecution of the _Craftsman_ by Sir
Philip Yorke, and that this unsuccessful prosecution was subsequent to
the successful prosecution of that paper on December 3rd, 1731. This was
not so: Sir Philip Yorke's unsuccessful prosecution, and to which of
course Pulteney's ballad refers, was in 1729, when Francklin was tried
for printing "The Alcayde of Seville's Speech," and, as the song
indicates, acquitted.

C.H. COOPER.

Cambridge, July 29. 1850.

* * * * *

NOTES ON MILTON.
(Continued from Vol. ii., p. 115)

_Comus._
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