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part of the money in question was received, nor what was the motive of any one person for giving the same. That he has, indeed, declared, that his motive for lending to the Company, or depositing in their treasury in his own name, money which he has in other places declared to be their property, was to avoid ostentation, and that _lending_ the money was _the least liable to reflection_; yet, when he has stated these and other conjectural motives for his own conduct, he declares _he will not affirm, though he is firmly persuaded, that those were his sentiments on the occasion_. That of one thing only the said Warren Hastings declares he is _certain_, viz., "that it was his design originally to have _concealed_ the receipt of all the sums, except the second, even from the knowledge of the Court of Directors, but that, when fortune threw a sum in his way of a magnitude _which could not be concealed_, and the peculiar delicacy of his situation at the time in which he received it made him more circumspect of appearances, he _chose_ to apprise his employers of it." That the said Warren Hastings informs the Directors, that he had indorsed the bonds taken by him for money belonging to the Company, and lent by him to the Company, _in order to guard against their becoming a claim on the Company, as part of his estate, in the event of his death_; but he has not affirmed, nor does it anywhere appear, that he has surrendered the said bonds, as he ought to have done. That the said Warren Hastings, in affirming that he had not time to answer the questions put to him by the Directors, while he was in Bengal,--in not bringing with him to England the documents necessary to enable him to answer those questions, or in pretending that he has not brought them,--in referring the Directors back again to Bengal for those documents, and for any further information on a subject on which he has given them no information,--and particularly in referring them back to a person in Bengal for a paper which he says contained the _only_ account he ever kept of the transaction, while he himself professes to doubt whether that paper _be still in being_, whether _it be in the hands_ of that person, or whether that person _can recollect anything distinctly concerning it_,--has been guilty of gross evasions, and of palpable prevarication and deceit, as well as of contumacy and disobedience to the lawful orders of the Court of Directors, and thereby confirmed all
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