Page:Terræ-filius- or, the Secret History of the University of Oxford.djvu/134

 Terr,e-Filius. xvx. "tmi?erfity;. Forbidding th.e tublicmlon of "which there is rmthi& mpious, fly he, implies "ether that re dJflru our cauj, or drufl our  l=es  our abideits: d it is but n ilhterate " to tht that fh inreR and u  tht author, and ai}ut, his ritings:  t eonaq, S he, 'till }t fod that the "riee =i  bd  a condmn'd or a forbid-  m. SlR iT Hough I have been your eonfhnt reader, and, by fatal experience, am convinc'd of the truth of'what is alledg'd againft the uni- ,, verlity of Oxvouo yet my own private buffneff ,, hashitherto orevented my being your corref_ndenti "and.I have, 'fore againlt my will, been obliged to �' defer a ha?pine which I have long ?romis'd "my fell. '- In your third paper, you have treated of the ,c oaths which are impos d on young ftudents; but , there is one inflance o the knavery of rome of ,' the great men o! the univertit), which certainly "muR have efeapd your knowledge, or doubtleE ,, )ou wou!d have thought it too flagrant to have ,, been omitted. "Whm I was matriculated I was about feven- ', teen years of age, and confequently entitled to "take ill the oaths i accord.ugly I �ubfcrib'd the "thirty-nine articls of religion. (tkongh, by the ', bye, I did n:t kno that I had done it titl near fix "months afterwards) and the then V--Chr u Dr B .... n, comin ot:t of the convocation- '� hot, :, Itc, ok the o.,r]. of furema, and of .,$ obtv:ug theftam;o, Irsvileges, &c. of the uni- - �_ vetfity,

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