Manasseh Dawes


Manasseh Dawes was an English barrister and miscellaneous writer.

Life

Dawes was a barrister of the Inner Temple. He left the bar and lived quietly at Clifford's Inn for the last thirty-six years of his life. He died 2 April 1829.

Works

Dawes took the Whig side on the American War of Independence, and the law of libel; but defended William Blackstone against Jeremy Bentham, had doubts as to abolishing tests, and held that philosophical truth was beyond reach. His major works were:
Dawes also edited a posthumous poem by John Stuckey on 'The Vanity of all Human Knowledge,' with a dedication to Priestley.