to admonish the Heir Apparent." No! we do not think it audacious: it is constitutional and proper. But are anonymous attacks the constitutional duty of a Peer of the Realm? Is that the mode in which he should admonish the Heir Apparent? If Lord
Byron
had desired to admonish the
Prince
, his course was open, plain, and known—he could have demanded an audience of the
Prince
; or, he could have given his admonition in Parliament. But to level such an attack—What!—"Kill men i' the dark!" This, however, is called by the
Chronicle
"certainly
British