A friend of Wilberforce and Bentham, Sir Samuel Romilly (1757-1818)
combined considerable legal expertise with commitment to
progressive political causes such as the abolition of the slave
trade. During his time in Parliament - he was Solicitor General in
Lord Grenville's 'Ministry of All the Talents' - he sought to
lessen the archaic severity of English criminal law regarding
corporal and capital punishment. Though he met with resistance, his
efforts raised awareness and influenced later reforms. Compiled by
his sons and published in 1840, this three-volume collection of
autobiographical writings and varied correspondence illuminates the
development of his outlook and the principles which guided him.
Volume 2 comprises selected correspondence for the period
1792-1802, the diary of a visit to Paris in 1802, an unfinished
narrative of personal events in 1805, and Romilly's diary of his
parliamentary life between 1806 and 1811.
General
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