Trial of Mary Blandy eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 351 pages of information about Trial of Mary Blandy.

Trial of Mary Blandy eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 351 pages of information about Trial of Mary Blandy.

APPENDIX V.

LETTER FROM MISS BLANDY TO A CLERGYMAN IN HENLEY.

(From No. 8 of Bibliography, Appendix XII.)

The following is an answer to a letter sent Miss Blandy by a worthy clergyman in Henley, upon a very extraordinary subject, and highly deserves a place here:—­

Rev. Sir,—­I received yours, and at first felt all the horror innocence so belied could do; but now, Sir, I look on it as a blessing from God, both to wean me from this world, and make the near approach of death less dreadful to me.  You desire me, in your letter, if innocent of my poor mother’s death and that of Mrs. Pocock, to make a solemn declaration, and have it witnessed; which I here do.  I declare before God, at whose dread Tribunal I must shortly appear, that as I hope for mercy there, I never did buy any poison, knowingly, whatever of Mr. Prince, who did live at Henley, and now lives at Reading, or of Mr. Pottinger, an apothecary and surgeon in Henley; nor did I ever buy any poison in Henley, or anywhere else in all my life; that as for mother’s and Mrs. Pocock’s death, I am as innocent of it as the child unborn, so help me God in my last moments, and at the great Day of Judgment.  If ever I did hurt their lives, may God condemn me.  This, Sir, I hope, will convince you of my innocency.  And if the world will not believe what even I dying swear, God forgive them, and turn their hearts.  One day all must appear together at one bar.  There no prompting of witnesses, no lies, no little arts of law will do.  There, I doubt not, I shall meet my poor father and mother, and my much loved friend (through the mercies of Jesus Christ, who died for sinners) forgiven and in bliss.  There the tears that cannot move man’s heart shall be by God dried up.  Farewell, Sir, God bless you, and believe me, while I live, ever Your much obliged humble Servant,

  M. BLANDY.

(N.B.—­This letter was attested to be M. Blandy’s, &c., Apr. 4th, 1752.)

APPENDIX VI.

CONTEMPORARY ADVERTISEMENT OF A LOVE PHILTRE.[28]

(From No. 17 of Bibliography, Appendix XII.)

(Here follows an exact copy of a most wicked advertisement, publickly distributed in the streets of London, and dispersed in the neighbouring Towns and villages; without any notice taken of such an enormity by the Magistrates, or any measures pursued to punish the miscreants who disperse them, according to their desserts.  However, the wretches who thus impose on the world, finding their account therein, as they certainly do, is a proof of multitudes being as credulous in this affair as Miss Blandy, and account for her being imposed on, in the manner she declares she was, by Cranstoun.)

THE FAMOUS LOVE-POWDER, OR LOVE-DROPS.

Sold for Five Shillings a bottle, at the Golden-Ball, in
Stone-Cutters-Street, Fleet-Market.

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Trial of Mary Blandy from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.