[614] 6 State Trials 1511, 1512.

[615] Foley v. 233, 234.

[616] Ibid. v. 12. Lingard xiii. 64. True Narrative of the Horrid Plot and Conspiracy, lxxvii.

[617] Foley v. 233, 244, 245.

[618] Ibid. 223.

[619] 7 State Trials 91–101.

[620] Ibid. 101–104.

[621] Ibid. 105.

[622] 7 State Trials 105. L.C.J.; “You must be tried by the laws of England, which sends no piece of fact out of the country to be tried.”

[623] There is much evidence to show this. The following instances are from the same volume of the State Trials:—The Attorney-General not allowed to read a certificate against the accused 129. Whitebread not allowed to use Oates’ Narrative 374. Fenwick, Whitebread, and Harcourt not allowed to use the report of Ireland’s trial. Harcourt was, in fact, mistaken on the point for which he wished to refer to the report 360, 384–386. Lord Stafford not allowed to use the council book as evidence 1440. See also 451, 462, 467, 654.