J. Gurrey—I do not remember any such.
Cowper—Then did not you say these words, We must not concern ourselves with Sarah Walker, for she is the only witness against the Cowpers?
J. Gurrey—I cannot remember any such thing.
Hatsell, Baron—You may answer according to the best of what you remember; if you say you have forgot when you have not, you are forsworn.
Cowper—If your lordship pleases to give leave to Mr. Gurrey to recollect himself, I ask him, Whether he did not talk with his sister Davis about some suspicion his wife and he had about Sarah Walker, the maid-servant of the deceased?
J. Gurrey—I believe there might be some talk of a person that was seen to go into the churchyard at some distance with Sarah Walker.
Cowper—Did your wife say that she did suspect that person?
J. Gurrey—Yes.
Cowper—Did your wife say they behaved themselves strangely, and that she would have persuaded the widow Blewit to have watched her?
J. Gurrey—There was something of that.