offended any body, which I am sure I could not by contradiction, for I said little, and opposed nothing. Sharpe

[2]

(a

[man]

of elegant mind, and who has lived much with the best—Fox, Horne Tooke, Windham, Fitzpatrick, and all the agitators of other times and tongues,) told us the particulars of his last interview with Windham

[3]

, a few days before the fatal operation which sent "that gallant spirit to aspire the skies."

[4]

Windham,—the first in one department of oratory and talent, whose only fault was his refinement beyond the intellect of half his hearers,—Windham, half his life an active participator in the events of the earth, and one of those who governed nations,—

he