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<title>Petition to the House of Lords</title>
<author xml:id="fd"><persName key="nameid_28" sort="Fatio, Nicolas, de Duillier" ref="nameid_28" xml:base="http://www.newtonproject.sussex.ac.uk/catalogue/xml/persNames.xml">Nicolas Fatio de Duillier</persName></author>

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<extent><hi rend="italic">c.</hi> <num n="word_count" value="304">304</num> words</extent>

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<pubPlace>London</pubPlace>
<date>2006-11-06</date>
<publisher>Newton Project, Imperial College</publisher>
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<note type="metadataLine">April 1732, in English, <hi rend="italic">c.</hi> 308 words, 1 p.</note>
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<p>A plea for recompense for having foiled a plot to kidnap William of Orange.</p>
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<note n="pages">1 p.</note>
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<p>in English</p>
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<origDate when="1732-04-01">April 1732</origDate>
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<change when="2001-01-01" type="metadata">Catalogue information compiled by Rob Iliffe, Peter Spargo &amp; John Young</change>
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<head rend="center" xml:id="hd1">To the Right Honourable the Speaker and Commons of Great Britain <lb type="intentional" xml:id="l1"/>In Parliament assembled, <lb type="intentional" xml:id="l2"/>The Petition of Nicolas Facio Duillier humbly sheweth;<space dim="vertical" extent="2" unit="lines"/></head>
<p xml:id="par1">That, by a singular Providence of God Almighty, the Petitioner, in the Year 1686, took an expensive Iourney <lb xml:id="l3"/>from Geneva to Holland, with a Design of acquainting the Prince of Orange, afterward King of England, with <lb xml:id="l4"/>a most secret but most dangerous Plot against His Life or Liberty. That both the Prince and the States being <lb xml:id="l5"/>perswaded and convinced of the greatness of the Danger; proper and sufficient measures were taken by them, to <lb xml:id="l6"/>prevent the Effects of it. That althô this happened upward of forty Years ago, yet the Influence thereof, on the very <lb xml:id="l7"/>Constitution and Publick affairs, and on Places and Offices both in Church and State, and on the whole People in Great <lb xml:id="l8"/>Britain and its Dependencies, is exceeding great to this very Day, and it is hoped will continue so for Ages to come. <lb xml:id="l9"/>That Your Petitioner having acted in this, by a pure motive of Duty and Generosity, thô at the Peril of his own Life; <lb xml:id="l10"/>he neglected to reap the Recompenses, which he was in a fair way to have received in Holland, from the Prince himself, <lb xml:id="l11"/>and from the States; or, in England, from the same Prince, after the Crown was settled upon Him. But that several <lb xml:id="l12"/>considerable Losses having much <lb xml:id="l13"/>reduced Your Petitioner in his Circumstances, he cannot, in common Iustice <lb xml:id="l14"/>to his Creditors, and to himself or his Executors, but lay the matter before this Honourable House; that, examining <lb xml:id="l15"/>thorowly the Truth of it, and taking the Premises into consideration, They may have such regard to them, and <lb xml:id="l16"/>give him such Relief, as, in Their Wisdom, this Honourable House shal think fit: That so Your Petitioner <lb xml:id="l17"/>may ever pray &amp;c<space dim="vertical" extent="1" unit="lines"/></p>
<p rend="right" xml:id="par2">Nicolas Facio Duillier.</p>
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