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ENGLAND.
151

What healthy purpose does it answer to publish these details for the perusal of millions of Englishmen and Englishwomen?

The depravity of these cases were exceptional, but what specially struck the public in these cases was the amount of false swearing with which the parties supported their cases. Men and women in respectable positions in life came forward to swear to lies in court, and brought witnesses to support such lies.

Young men who go out to India without much experience of English Courts are often disgusted—and rightly disgusted,—with the perjury committed in Indian Courts, and often judge the nation's character from falsehood uttered in courts. Men, however, who have experience of Courts in England say that the offence is by no means rare here. London newspapers occasionally complain bitterly of the amount of perjury committed daily in the English Country-courts. The parties to a case generally support their respective cases by two entirely different accounts of a disputed transaction,—the court has to decide which is the true version.

Moral—Judge not a people by experience derived in courts.

The period of our stay in Europe was nearly up, and my people were very desirous of seeing a little,—even a week,—of real English Return Home.winter before we left. For we had come to England when the bloom of spring was still in the country and the trees in London and in the country were robed again with new young leaves. We