was all that he said.
[_Mr. Poole, of the Patent Office, was called, but did not
answer._]
_Mr. Gurney._ I will admit the patent to be of any date you please.
_Mr. Brougham._ It is a patent for the invention of a lamp; the date is
20th of February.
_Mr. Gurney._ I will take my learned friend's word for that.
_Mr. Brougham._ That is the case on the part of my Lord Cochrane.
_Mr. Scarlett._ The next witness is to the case of Mr. Cochrane
Johnstone.
_Mr. Park._ I shall use him also.
_Mr. Gabriel Tahourdin sworn._
_Examined by Mr. Scarlett._
_Q._ How long have you known Mr. De Berenger?
_A._ About five or six years.
_Q._ Were you the person that introduced him to Mr. Cochrane Johnstone?
_A._ I was.
_Q._ How long ago?
_A._ In May 1813.
_Q._ You were well acquainted with Mr. Cochrane Johnstone.
_A._ I had not been well acquainted with him at that time.
_Q._ Do you know, whether Mr. Cochrane Johnstone, at that time, was in
possession of a garden or some premises at Paddington?
_A._ Yes, in Alsop's Buildings.
_Q._ Which he was desirous of improving?
_A._ He was.
_Q._ What was the occasion of your introducing Mr. De Berenger to him?
_A._ It was mere chance.
_Q._ Did you, or anybody else, to your own knowledge, recommend Mr. De
Berenger as a person who could assist him in planning that place?
_A._ I had previously introduced him: I will just state the circumstance
that led to my introduction.
_Q._ I do not know that the circumstance is in the least material. You
say the introduction was at first accidental; was there, in consequence
of that accident, any connection with them, as to Mr. De Berenger
assisting him in this plan?
_A._ Yes.
_Q._ The place was intended to be called Vittoria?
_A._ Yes.
_Q._ Did Mr. De Berenger employ himself in preparing a plan, as an
artist?
_A._ He did, which plan is here (_producing it_).
_Lord Ellenborough._ The exhibition of the plan cannot be important, I
should think.
_Mr. Scarlett._ It may become material, because Mr. Cochrane Johnstone
had paid him for the plan.
_Lord Ellenborough._ Whether there were colonades, and so on, or not, I
should think cannot be material.
_Mr. Park._ The production of the plan is necessary only, to shew that
it is worth the money which was paid.
_Lord Ellenborough._ I only wish to avoid useless particularity; I do
not wish to curtail you of the least particle o
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