To Sir RALPH MILBANKE, Bart.
Member of Parliament for the County of Durham.
SIR,
From personal respect and attachment, as well as from a long and perfect knowledge of your sentiments with regard to the subject of these Verses and Observations, I should, naturally, have been led to the gratification of inscribing them with your name.—Yet, when I consider, that you had the happiness to second that Motion, which, like the impression of an oracle, has given the death-stroke to the disgraceful and nefarious Traffic, I have the satisfaction to find, that propriety, in this instance, is linked with estimation; and, that the convictions of the understanding have, sometimes, the felicity of being associated with the sensibilities of the heart.
I am,
SIR,
With warm sentiments of respect,
Your most obedient,
Humble servant,
J. F. STANFIELD.