said
false and counterfeit letter is directed as follows:
"To the Honorable J. Foley, Port Admiral, Deal, &c. &c. &c.
Dover, One o'Clock, A. M. February 21, 1814.
SIR,
I have the honor to acquaint you that the L'Aigle from Calais, Pierre
Duquin, Master, has this moment landed me near Dover, to proceed to
the Capital with dispatches of the happiest nature. I have pledged my
honor that no harm shall come to the crew of the L'Aigle; even with a
flag of truce they immediately stood for sea. Should they be taken, I
have to entreat you immediately to liberate them. My anxiety will not
allow me to say more for your gratification, than that the Allies
obtained a final victory; that Bonaparte was overtaken by a party of
Sachen's Cossacks, who immediately slaid him, and divided his body
between them.--General Platoff, saved Paris from being reduced to
ashes. The Allied Sovereigns are there, and the white cockade is
universal; an immediate peace is certain. In the utmost haste, I entreat
your consideration, and have the honor to be,
Sir, Your most obedient humble Servant, R. DU BOURG, Lieutenant
Colonel and Aid de Camp to Lord Cathcart.
"To the Honorable J. Foley, Port Admiral, Deal, &c. &c. &c."
And did then and there send, and cause and procure to be sent, the said
false and counterfeit letter to Thomas Foley, Esquire, at Deal; he, the
said Thomas Foley, then being the Commander in Chief of His
Majesty's Ships &c. employed on the Downs Station, with intention
that the said T. Foley, should, by Telegraph, communicate the false
matters in the said false letter, to the Commissioners of our said Lord
the King, for executing the office of Lord High Admiral, &c. and that
such false matters should be promulgated &c. to the liege subjects of
our said Lord the King.
And that said Charles Random De Berenger, did also then and there
unlawfully &c. assert and report to Timothy Wright, and other persons,
that he, the said Charles Random De Berenger, had just then landed
and arrived from France, and that the French were beaten, and that said
Napoleon Bonaparte was killed, and that the Allies of our said Lord the
King, were then in Paris; and the said Charles Random De Berenger,
on same day &c. did travel from Dover towards London, and did
unlawfully &c. falsely assert and report at Dartford in the County of
Kent, and at other places on his way between Dover and London, the
several false matters and things last mentioned, to divers other of the
liege subjects of our said Lord the King with intention that the said last
mentioned false matters &c. should be believed to be true, and should
be generally reported, &c. by the said liege subjects, &c. to whom he
asserted the same to divers other of the liege subjects, &c.
And more especially, with intention that the said false assertions &c.
should reach London, to be reported and rumoured and believed there.
And that on the said 21st February, at the parish &c. aforesaid, at
London aforesaid, to wit, at Dartford aforesaid, the said Ralph Sandom,
Alexander M'Rae and Henry Lyte, in pursuance &c. of the aforesaid
conspiracy did unlawfully &c. hire and take a post chaise to go from
Dartford, and did go from thence, the said Alexander M'Rae and Henry
Lyte, then and there having white cockades in certain cocked hats,
which they wore; and the horses drawing the said post-chaise then and
there being decorated with branches of laurel, to and over London
Bridge, and through the City of London, unto and over Blackfriars
Bridge, and unto a certain place called the Marsh Gate, in the Parish of
St. Mary Lambeth, in the County of Surry, with intention thereby to
induce the liege subjects, &c. whom they should pass, and who should
see them in their route and way from Dartford to near the Marsh Gate,
to suppose and believe, and to report and rumour to divers other of the
liege subjects, that they the said Ralph Sandom, Alexander M'Rae, and
Henry Lyte, were the bearers to the Government of this kingdom, of
great and important foreign news, highly favorable to the interests of
our said Lord the King, and his subjects, and thereby to occasion an
increase and rise in the prices of the said public Government Funds, &c.
in order and for the purpose that the said Sir Thomas Cochrane,
Andrew Cochrane Johnstone, Richard Gathorne Butt, and John Peter
Holloway, respectively should then sell and cause and procure to be
sold for them respectively to divers subjects, &c. divers large parts and
shares of and in the said public Government Funds &c. at higher and
greater prices than they would otherwise sell for, with
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